HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1890-3-6, Page 6a
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DISASTROUS D II BURST
SUICIDE BY STARVATION.
A Tiotritoncig otIOST.
Alti gx.PLO•oto0 B.Oxr..BIt
—
, A tiotfoo saug.
---
Terrible Etnerieneee of the ntenitenan
• at sea-Bighteen Data Out Bettling
With the WSW..
. • ,
• t
A. Roston deepatolt gap : News nes tee
been received here of the terrible expert.
eine of the Allan Line steamehip Moni
toban, Captain John Stone, on her outward
'
passage from here to Glesgow. She 'Allen
from Boston Jan. 10th with 4 full oargo and
300 head of live cattle She had Jamey
' ' • '
weather until the 18th, when o hurricane
overtook It
from the nort weer over.00 er. was
near sunset when she shinned a mountain
sea that came 'up from windward like a
tidal wave. All bonds OW it coming and
nodded for Eltielter. When the niess of
water stria* the snip she Was Aimed dOwn
f• b• 1,•1
sur age, being en ire y sub-
merged. All hands. thought slae was Sink-
ing. It was Ave mimites-before she righted
and when she 'a ' feerful eight . met. the
crew's view. All the liftheate were gone,
sinasbed into matchwood. The iron davia
on w ao . y pr,
Whthe hdh g bent
' a rin" were -''
twisted like serpents. Strong hatohell
had b firmlybattened• • had
clown.
been..,
been buret open 50 hough they .had been
d d " ' f
oar boer , an tons upon tone n
had poured down . on the main deck.
A 13 • t ' ' b • a r• ht
heavy s eam wino was came ig
over • the 'side. The cabin skylight was
gone, wrenched off like e pieoe of .frez.1
earthenware and those living down in the
• ' •
officers' quarters were standing up.to the
.
shoelders in Witter. The immense weight
Of water threatened every moment to
swamp the steamer. She was top .heavy,
for the hold was free end the cabins full.
.... .
bulwarks were just clear of the water,
• '
and ehe wallowed like a bog, and gen after
• f el •Th ' b•
, sea swept her ore an alt. e oa ins
were full' to the deck ceiling and the cattle.
The trouble was that the rush
d 1 dh 1
, of water a o ogge the scupper holee.
How. to get. at them on the submerged'
decks was the question. One of the crew':
n
volunteered to go below, • eria fast-
- b• if i
ening ii. line . to . mum lie went
into the flooded cebtn. At each roll of
the ship be was submerged or
floating. The first time he went down he
oleared ten holes, and on three other trips
most of the remainder. The water rushed
through the vents, and in an hour the
°thine were free, but on the main deck
Most of the cattle were drowned and the•Arthur
cargo was pretty well Wet. Tbe seas also
Poured downthe funnel, and put out the
fires in half the furnaces, the swain blow.
.
mg open the doors, badly burning several
of the 'Makers. • On the 25th she entered
• the Clyde. but a heavy gale diove her to
sea for three days and broke her steam
..
steering gear, and tarried OWoy all her
'yards and the topmasts. Culla 28th she
Put into Tail.of-the-Bank, looking like a
wreck. • Shelves so used up that it was
only i week ago she could start on her re-
trio trip for Halifax , and Philadelphia.
E WI offitterei despite their experience, de-
alined to leave her, although offered better
positions elsewhere =account of 'their ilea-
.
manstup in saving her.
rontetrona. BEM.
_ , "--
TI•tle gritun 1,40ge ot I.O.O.F, is intee-
OM it) flay '
;pa, residents of Baeff National ,Park
he* held ••setertal nieetirge to protest
:-.., , . . : ,
°galSst,'• l'htt•„regeletions , prepoeed .tg 14
netted bet in the ' etionet Park ' the
. • 0 e. - N . 1;17 . ,
Dominion, Goveroment, as well as asexual
the font o lute o re to thot who ma •
, - . f e ffe d ey
wish to take lots.
A convention of the retail miarolients cif
Manitoba will be bela in Wieni e during
. - P g g
first week in March
F. G. L • •
• roprietor of the Royal
afentoire, P _ • • • •
Hotel, Calgary, bee essigned, Liabilities,
§7,000.- , • '
et was brought down in the,
The Budg a.
House to -de Treasurer MoMillan.
. .to.day. Y. , , ,
made an able speech. . Itle pointed. out the -
eoenomy of hp present minis tit rt.
. t t Ad " t tio •
coinpared with tbe extravagance of his pre*
deoessors and roved his assertions by
. a It ., . .
figures. The estimated expenditure, tins
Year is $686,571, egeinet 551e,476, an in -
crease of ever 5100,000. The, estimates in.
1' d 'th ' f 11 ' • it f ex enditnre -
c ti e e o owing erne o , p •.
Legielation $42 700 last year • $36 066 •
.., , « f •
E t' C il 55 350 last year 53 705 •
. seen nee own , • 9 '. 9 4..
Treaenry Department $15 620, last year
-, ' - , . ' 0 1 t
514,625 ; Protinoial Seeretery $8,45 , ae,
. year $8,055•; agrioulture and immigration,
$68 696 lailt year $44 668 .. Attorney.,
• . • • •
General's Department 5127,300, last year
§ 83 Th • • tit' ase is for
72,3 . e increase in is ..o ..
Rail. -
organizing the new land title system, Ben -
oronaissioner 576 600 last year $77..
WY 0 . , . t
will be used inputting 40
902. This sum . .
ranee of the Hudson Bay Railway in shape,
13(1 that it will become seettrity for the bonds
issued by the Norquay Government. Pub.
- .
lio works $219;210, . last year $202,704 ;
.
ednoation 5120 000 last year $126 000. 'the
, • , . ,
notated at 422 095
nirect revenue te es , e , •
The 2 prill011311,1 sources thereof are t
Dominion subsidy,ff435,000 ; Land Titles'
. .,..
°fame. 660,000 ; law stereps,... 119,000 ; liquor
licenses, $26,000 • ietertst, $40,000. With
interest on ontEdlanding loans to munici.
polities, eto ; the revenue will be swelled to,.
$967 000. * •
, . „. • • •
The city hail been for a few-dayeinfested--
, , .
wlth a gang of crooka released recently
from Pembina jail. They were arrested to.
day as vagrants, and will be given twenty
hems to leave with the alternative , of two,
months in jail.'
A Port . despatch Nays that
Engineer garden returned to.day from the.
Proposed Canadian Pacific Railwaybianoh
line to Attikokan, and 'reports the route
as indeed there bein only four
very 8 9, • , . g Y
miles which could Feasibly cost . $15,000.
Per mile. It is likely that the location and
will be, precetded with im-
mediately. , •
Col. McMillan i n his budget speech
shOwed . that $120,000 WBB saved by the.
Present Government one year in the costokenburg,„
of adinthistration. ,
T M. N. Railway are. arranging to
' . he Ss
run passenger trains into the oity over , the'
C. P. R. From Portage la Prairie. The
Northern .Ptioifiii was looking for the con -
intotion. .
It Arises Viola au team% in t,lte south Sete
A New York despatch eats ; A, bronzed
ond weather-beateu sailor entered the
Work? °glee thio afternoon mad annouoced
that he bad a yarn to spin. ilia' yarn, if
true; effectually eettles all claims to the
Tichborne estate in England, over which
there bas been Era ranch controverey. The
old Fidler Ewa be was William Edwards,
and that be bad sailed the seas man and
. • • ,
boy, for forty years and more In the
, , . ... . .,.
, , . ,the
60's, so goes bis yarn he found himself
on one of the Smith Sea Islands, from
which he shipped on the Rena Ruffin;
boned from Tahiti with a oargo for Beach
•La Marr. • ,
Two day ou ey pio e up itcon,
T d t they • k a* boat
. . , . . .Local
taming six men who were apparently deed.
One of them, however, revived. He was a
' :handsome young fellow' and was Oppar-
, . , . ,
ently a gentleman. Be gave his name as
. Roger Tichborne,• and when; years after,
heard the story he kn this was
. . ew .
the real Sir Roger., Finally , tbe Belle
sighted.Mar Island and Edwards
Baffin . r, , , . .•and
and a sailor were Bent whore while' the
ed for taborets' The' young
. vessel tetntil . • ..
' man was vet weak and he also went
w. y .
ashore, . g . . .water
hopingthe clan e would brace him
up. The sailor finished ha yarn in his
own words: --.-
"The Belle Raffia eater cum batik, an'
nary an eye hove .Lolapped on her from
that day to this. , The brat day on', the
took with a'spell, an'
island Tiohborne Was t w a up ,
grew worse; of) we bt1i4 a }ant of cocoanut
leaves and put him :Unit; and' - took care of
him ez fine ez we kud. Meantime 'Etch-
borne got sinker, I. was. Ter y much snti-
" a' finer gentleman thee
mated wid 'Int,. an, , , , .
d
never wuz. He:told me that et we codanbands;
only .git to China. there. w uz plenty o'
, ,, . .drowning
money waiting for him at Jardine ta Wad.,
o . bankers m HongKong. Then
. dington' , k
'.'he used to tat about . le mother tan'
' h'about
his people that lived in Hanmehos, Eng-
Utile end Wounds manv OmaintWOrhinen.
An Omaha, Neb., deepateh of Saturdey
nye : This morning an explosion ooperred
io the boiler room of the old peeking house
of the Armour Cudahy Company at South
°matte. Tho eutside beiler of it better), ot
nine buret, tearing a great hole in the walls
of the waohinety department adjoining.
The noise of the explosion attraeted the
great army of employees to the scene
where beneath the Mins perhaps twenty-
. .. . . . .
1•wounded. Ah
live men ay n alarm WBB
'ilounded and thp fire department soon ar-
• rived, joining forces with the Armour-
Cudahy Are department, and the two goon
„ . , ,
quenched the flames. A crowd of 100 men,
Went to work, and in a short time bed the
dd d'" d removedbeneathth
. ea an injure remove., o .. Joseph'se
Hospital. The following is a list* of the
dean and injured : ,
. .
Jaok•Tigh, head fireman, instantly killed;
Rene Olsen, otial sivbeeler, died from in.
halinghot Sir; ' .* '
,
attain Gibson,a ou e head
S1burnedbtthhd
and thee will probably die; • • •
D. le t. ; rectum B a an severely
D ill''k I ' f' d k 11 ' d•which
bunted, will probably die; • . .
Bisok, ' 1 burnedad
James ack, Revere .yan skullmerely
•
fractured, will probably die;
' Sheridan,'badly scalded bout the
James a
• head and neck; . .
Al. Harden, scalded ' and burned, but
injuries not serious,'
. , ,
1 b d'
James McGoire, severely lir ei .. about.
the hencle andhead • • 'A l:
. . a .. , - ii
George J. Meahen burned t the
head d• ' ' ' -•'
.an eyes;
found,•but believed to
F.Lenham,,noti.
be dead and lying beneath the ruins; ,
. .._ , . . ,.Her
t h
Mike 'Heathen, b dly 'burned about t e
head d • 'a •
•
James Armstrong badly burned about
,
the bead;
Billykl' JohnPeter-*h
Mr. Leonard, Dun na,
sen and Dan Harlan were also hurt.
Manyothers' • were eli hil injured, and
w g Y
any • narrowl eau ed from the felling
m y p . .
);,'"
walls. The cause nt the ettplesien is Yet to e
determined, but =probable that the well
of the boiler room caused the explosion by
' falling on the boilers. The loss reaches
many thousandsof dollars.
The 'Axial Alternetive Freferfil?le, to
Siberian Prison 1,ife.
.
RtSerVOit Gm Way vat Forty Nana
.,
lint Death.
rmeisa. NUBIAN EARBARITIER.
. ;
.fa, London oable !Jays . Further deteile of
.. •
the politicel prison at Nara
the outrage in . . , .
thatched the Ruesialt exilee in London yes-
. . . .
terday from friends who are looeted a short
dietance from the eoene of the horrors.
They are, brief, but confirm folly & report
of the affair received hem from an dacha
12 • li • ' m ath with
in St. Peters .urg, w o ism ey p y w
the 05055 01 the people,
,,
.• : • A '' RIMER eTRIICE.- •
' • '
. , , ' . „
ording to the details received yester-
A" - - that the troublet the Kara
day it appears .. e.a . .e ,, .
Prugni originated 10 n " hunger strike inEdwards.3'
August, when the female, politigal prisonere
tried to starve thereselves to death to
escape the brutalities of their jailers. All
tne . women imprisoned,' there abetathed
from food for fourteen days. The j inlets
did not believe they .would be able to keep
up the struggle. At first they jeered at
the women, then tempted them with
food, and then finding this of no
avail threatened thent. When several
ot the women were .at the point of
death from , their voluntary abstinence.
from food, the priorm officials resorted to
artificial mane to compel them to take
nourishment. The rnethOdo adopted, how.
1' Miens
ever, were violent and toe , and the
, women were clitopelted to abandon their
strike. .A.bominable otitrages followed, and
werauLdelly eodhotArly peturrenoe. Tins
state of things led kadaine Sleds; Whose
death ,,• by flogging, has already, „ been
announced, to melt for an interview with
the'direetsar ON= prison, in hope of.oecur.
• . • • *
'Mg an amelioration of the cooditton of the
• prisoners. This requeet was granted, but
when !thews(' taken before him she found
him abusive. It is said • that in her ens.
per tion t his abuse she called him a vil-
. a a ,
. tem and slapped his face. , .„ ' • •
2121122,012apia EDICT.. ' ,'1'
It is net poeitively khown, however,
whet thok place during the interview, but
whatever did happen, Madame Sigicia did not turth her, coah
ren .mpnion.s. . Se we
- -''-' - s
Skew from the director's ofnui•Mid ccov
la risen in Which ceramon
meal to th p
offenders are confined. Three of her man
panions from aniong th'e political prisoners
were permitted to join her. The &dykes
reoeived stete that these 'were Miry Noel-
easy, wife of-Pinfeethr•Koeiesky, of Xie; ;
Maclaine .Snairnitelly "and•••Mary licdujny.
The two lest ladies were from Odessa.
Two months elapsed after these events
• before Lieut.:general Baron- Korff, gover.
nor -General of the Province of the Anioor,
.infitnnited the directors prisont that
seeret edict of March, 1.888, which, oidered
that.pelitioal ,priminers ' should betreated
by prison °Meals in ,preeisely the same
manner as criminals condemed for common
law offences Would be enforced, and or-
ere tie -directorate Eon y ,t e ,pb a toe
'd • d 6 ' ' ' ' ' 't 4 i t* I
- ri , •' ' 't both: that they'' lel b
goner° oeexee .. wou •. e
?labia 40,.:OorPoral Funishreent It ihey
violated catteirt of the Onion 'regulations
'Prisoners; foreseeing
Theniale * '' immediate.
ger, e a vonen a ion, an sen o e
danger, h Id" • ' It t• d -4 t th
. ;director:Of the:ptison: a petition that , he
:Would telegraph loAlmt 'Minister Of the
n erior a .. e ers tirg, reques mg im.
I t ' t St P t b t* b'
to aospend the ' Opplioation of the edict.
Thp director refused to pay any attention '
to,their:patitilin, and thereupon the keen
vieritedhi'm "that' the Ara - ffoggieg; Oa
political ''' • ' v 'al& be'ilr • • 1
,tpinsoneremo , , e egos
the' others id *ceiiiiiiii "Suicide together.
Three .dites ,afterwards Lieut. - General'
Muff Beni ' ' I • *d '' directing'•"' that a specie or er - a
-
Madame Sigide be punished according to
the regulations , end the order was executed
' •
• gVring
to the fullest extent Madame SI ide was-
stripped and receiyed'oped.hundred laehes.
She wae.. tarried • off bleeding and in an
urtooneceous,conditiop, and.ner deathenotted,
I lteitrt • •-• ••• " , •
fretOtiPtgre.t0g•-he- .- • ,' ., • * - . • es.
. • .. ..,„. • ,,
• -Behring•Streits
' `• e.wher:08Ahtt otuOteh. •-' ' :-. , * • .
Her three companions Orliminitted maid&
within an hour of the tikne • of hearing of
Maalune •Sigida13..0B244., „The amine of
the four ' ' • .• .12' --d, * t th' 31
women -were nne., a e a me
time. in 'the l•ootirttard tif the itommon
offenderepriion. For weeks' a :Orden. of-
vigilance waits° closely maintained around'
the prison that , nothing Was known of
what was h - • d• th •
appentng within. wee e
secret channel of information has been
re.° d 't h b I d that th'employment•
.pene z as een wile ,., e men
aimed:out their -threat of: tiuicide. 1 They
met to th d th• t f th h d
ge . er an a y o em s are
what poison they could :obtain, and then
went to their °elle to die. The quantityof.
poison Which hod been smuggled into the
prison was not Sufficifterit to kill quiokly,
but in the course of the evening two of •
those who had' ehared' •it; B 'b Itel . • d
° o p an
Kolojny, died. Their convulsions and the
dead silence which reigned in the other
cells roused the Itttention of .• the guirde,
and they' immediately • summoned phylli.
who adminietered emetias to the
survivors Boa endeavored by every means
to counteract the effects of thpoison. -
. . , , e . ,
, . ,
.
..
, rirTY-rooT WALL or WATER.
A Prestiott, Arizone, amid,* Of EltindnY
tyo : The flee large storage aitte hwit
alma
ainse Hasoayompo River by the W ,
Tine' Water Storage Company two tears
:to, at it cost of $300,000, gave way toaster-
ay under the great preseare ofthe heavy
eget and swept everything before it. Forty
Igeone are known to have lost their lives.
0 the town of Wiokenburg, 80 miles below
iel dam, we on the IMMO stream, great
ors are entertained for the safety of that
wit, but AB there is no telegrapliie com.
methadon. no newel will be obtainable of
fate until to -morrow.
The servioe.dam of the company, located
Wean miles below the reservoir, and fifteen'
'ilea of finme just approaching completion,
ere aloe swept away, although the cern.
my has spent over $800,000 on the enter.
rise of storing the water. The hydraulic
Lining machine had arrived and they
, .
tpected to begin operatione this week,
The dam whioh held the water) baok was
LO feet long at the ben and 400 feet et the
-' • "
p. It was 110 feet thick at the base and
/ at the top, forming a lake three miles in•
ngth by three-fourths of a Mile wide and
AO feet deep. ' . , • •
Lieut. Brodie, in ()barge of the work, was
,sent at Phomix superintending the ship-
Lent of the machinery to the Works, and
as saved. Of those known to have been
sowned• were J. Haines, wife and four
tildren ; H. Boone and daughters; John
ilby, Joseph 'Reynolds, MM. Moglarthy
ad S. McMillen - • , .,
& GREAT WALL OP WATER.
Not the slightest doubt bed been enter-
aimed of the gaiety of the dein. across the
Oteeitylimpa River, which gave way«
ssterday. Numerous homiest had been
mated by miners at various points along
le 0011013 Of the• stream. 7. These were up-
Ned by the raging waters•os though they
sd been corks, and floated down the
ream until they were daehed to pieces.
he first intimation of the dieester was a
und resembling thunder, and afthe mine
dant a perpendicular wall of water, fully
ty feet high, came rushing down 'the
Arrow valley with alomettnetedible speed.
trtunateltethere were but coronaratively
w people living near the ,bottoin of the
Asides, and of these a large 'number were
111104 by .the.awfnl sound arid".elienned.'.10
her .ground. The villey '' vridefie abbve
and' much of the town Nes
on the low lands close to the . (bonnie -of
e stresin, and Ma athisetcertalli that
13 vent body of water which rushed out of
e reservoir has carried away many houses
place. It is believed here that fully
.
many people were drowned there as im.
many
Adiately below the Zane,' , • ,
- TEE RIIINEp DIX. . . -
'' '
The ruined dem is 'cut' from the top
moat to the bottom, as though a section
el been dragged onti..and the witterabove
only a few feet deep. Heavy reins had
Ilan for several days and Friday night it
es app.erent, that the wetter tin the lake,
is" approachinn the .danger Ifni), The'
in contintied'•throughbut itheiniglit,,and
., . , , ..
rly yesterday morning the:water rosetto
Le top of the dam and out. a small vas,
,ge near the centre, which rapidly widened
id deepenen !tithe water. pouredever it,
etil in less then .O0 iniantes the little ,
rostra had -"become, a roaring ciateraot. •
. . .
heretorage company is Warned for not
soviding a auffioient outlet • for the'vrater
, times of danger.
. . LAT,FR NEWS.
'
Aittfur Allen erid,dolin • McDonald. have
sI returned 'from the Doioria• divide' .14
Iles atm% of the• town, from *Urea view
the dam could be had with powerful
sues. The break in the stonework of
3 dam was plainly seen. Thete:oan be
estimate' of the loos of life yet, or of
operty, bat the letter will resat into
Mons, while the lose' Of life without
abt will be great, as many families were
ing near the stream in the narrow can.
as. The confirmation of the news of the
s of the big dam hes heightened the
iitement. As the wires are now down
Ar Prescott Junction', it is hardly pro.
de any additional information will. be
eived to -night. A Courier who brought
/groans for the. owners of the Walnut
eve dant artived 'at 8 o'olook leek night,
I left this morning. He stated five
Lies had been reoovered -and identified.
e distance to the storage darn from
soott 'is 40 ranee, while the eervice dam
ere the employees were located itn16 ,
es further down stream. It was from
latter place that the milder came.
I. last night's Prescott, Arizona, despatoh'
e; The worst fears, in regard to the
&nut Grove disaster are realized: The
,speotors arrived last night from the inane,
ar dam. They say they camped about
dam on Friday night. , At abOut 1
ook on Saturday morning the demthd
.
ke, the water rushing. down • the narrow
yon in a solid body eighty feet 'high.
3 man was rescued from the top of a
i. They state not even a remnant of
dam exists. The immense body of.
.. .. _
;er, one and a halt mime square and sa
y feet deep, was emptied, in' an hour.
.y. had talked with many from the
iller dam fifteen miles ,who said tragedy,
4 , an&
in p to Saturday evening twenty• -five . with
les bad been recov x
e ed; The eurvivors May
e in the 'greatest destitution, havingThey
d
her provisions nor clothing: Coarse•
positive
n smoke' were being need in lien of
hes. The camp. of workmen engaged a
Inkling a flaree have not been heard ' Intonsedot
2, and it is feared all are . lost. No h
s hae yet been reamed, here from weir
keiburg or the settlement below the
• the
. Particulate are looked for every man
wt. , '., ' , • . ,..' '
- • failed
. land, which place he said wa liiely. He
• Midi bed a great . many mistorturies, he
said, but , some day the storm wotild blow
over, but he live to see it, for he died
eighteen dayserter we tended, leavin" me a
' ring an' a 02086 with a *done stone in to
take to his people. • • •
"Tommy and me buriedhie,..as boner*
able int we,,Iind, an'. 'he's aolayin' in the
sand there to -day. We lived 'along on
cocoanuts ito'' fish eggeoleverthinkint
to leave the mis'able plaoe, but all the
time plennin' foolish' ways ol gettin' off.
• ' • - ,- • • , . - - ..
I came. near a,'.fdayin anyhow. t.,_. . One day
I witeltuntin' among •thetrocke ttnr,n1stets
when a cuttlefish grabb' nie, end if 1
hadn't known the trioke of t e east it
WOrdd a bin the end Ol- William Edwards,
but 1 capsized -his. bonnet ann•thet. ended
him. - His bonnetis the little cap over
eyes, and ' ' when ' .' ! you .1 km&
Aback he'e paralyzed an done for., .. At
last, down. comes a ,,Honoltile outtet and
takes tis•Cif, end We went without :nraoh
• grievin', I oan • tell you. .I lost the jewels,
but I didn't forget youngeT.Lehborne ; so
when .1 ' Wag In •,Eineepted five ears ago
p, tair.
and when' they noinfed'otit:aibig !..fett man,
.,,,..t id h
o me e wtiz Sir Roger, I told 'em
• --- • . ' , . • • 'o • if - - •
they hea: Are • you Sir . oger Tab-
borne?' see I, Makin :, old, t step up to
b 'o
hi__ ..
m '1 am sir,., -see be ' l and who the'
d :1 ' • • t,.A.' „ t ... Roger.'
e you?'- ' if you re Sir see
0.71 arcurious
I, ' dash me if I ain't Lord Reaconstield.'
' m '' I 'AAA seen him
Then lie shove e byotie
since neither. " '. ' •N•17 •••*:''' •.•' -
d. • • - - '
E wards hate. net .mturned from theehery•
•' • • - - - J • : :- • .,. .
th Aims
diamond.fidae of Son , .
- • • ., . . ,
'MAUD AND HENKE.
—
Sketches or Two 14otable Young People
.. . . - Who. Have Just Been ricarriel.
Mies Maud Bendel, who wae married to'
Mr. El GI d t • tl • the
enry a e one recto) y, is
eecond daughter of Mr. Stuart Bendel, the
g o B
. well.known M.P. . In the sprits f 1 st
year, te en r. a s one s .aye • .
b ' NC GI d t t d at Mr
Rendel's Vitt ' • l'T • 1construction
Misei.Re del
, a near ap es,. n
played the part of begonia in the•absenee of
her mother. A•.warm friendship grow np
between the younger branches of • the,two-
" thrall' f h• hi thi ' ' ' th
tee, v w io s• marriage As e re-,
salt. „ Kies Renders talents'. are artistic',
and she is an ixoellent violinist& the gives
her sympathies, but not her labors, to
politics.. -In . personal appearance she ie.
- • ' d ' IP a 1131 t f ft
petite an a en er, wt p en y o so
darki, • •
Mr. Henr GI d t ' ' th f th -
y a s one xe e our son
of Mr. W. E. Gladstone. ,He was.educeted
first Si a tutor's" where weren't'', his relit-
tions, the LyttletOne; and enbilequently
they all moved on to Eton, where by it
•
coincidence Ble,litenry Gladstone
was in the Sen3e house as that of his Pro-
speotive father -in daw-namely, Evans.
He did.notago to the university from,Etont
...,.. , , . Na I was
but straight into badness At 1iab V'
intended that hethould jciii:the 'old' glad,.
tone firm, but subsequentlY this ' pro-
gramme was altered, and he entered the
firm of Ogilvy, Gillander & Co., East India
merchants, where he now. is. ., The Ogilvys
are cousins of thegladatonee. Mr. Henry.
illadatone a dark :eia clean shaven: , In'
. features he is•very like his brother Herbert,
but is taller, Ana:lacks ,the :mustache and
thick curls of the latter. ' Er t' t
. ts as es are
insentient,. 'active. -. He, is 'great at polo,
fond of most field snorts, and ie a good gun
for 0 warm Fatty. As the elder brothers
do not slioot, 'Meats. Herbert and Henry
GI d t h divided the shootingf
a s one ' have .. , e e
-Hawarden for severel yeare't•Iii politics
If ' h of f h b t
is views are t ose o a at er, but as ye
he has not given active expression to them;
• '
' IS IT a. SEREENDEB, ?
. . _ ,
'. TBE BRAWN PAW.
' • ----. •
How Russian. Authorities Deal with Strikes
• •• •
• • -Borrible Cruelties. , .
. , .. ,
, A' St. Petersburg cable tO the 'London
Times seys that ft strike in • Russia', is• ip
troth a revolt, and. is so treated. by the
ituttiorities. The reason given is that
R ' *"•li -gun t tin
neaten workmen are suo I ran , .7
ieasoneble beings that they Would become
utterly unmanageable without vigorous and
summary itotion.of, the judioiary. About ,a
month aeo a Mae occurred. thot illustretes
• 9, . , ,
• ' - , •
'the childish abeurdity ot the 'Dien and the
- • .
effibacions action of the authorities .a, •
fellingeffin trade caused the proprietore
• ,
of -certain large mills to reduce the proquo...
lion and discharge n number of thp•konitts
h • • l f I A
,W, ego services were no onger use a - s
- • •
soon ae this deinsion was known a raving
crowd of eemisanage• workmen stir-
rounded - the manages% and insisted
that work should be found for the
1 b f la HI threatening
num nuna er o an a, • Per'
sonal violence. if •their demand was
tm ee e , while at e eame • un a Tian-
h adth ' • t• et
tity of valuable machinery tvaa destroyed
,
by the rioters • • ' . ' , .
'Theipolice were 'called in and settled the
,
matter ver najokl . During the ni ht
IT . . T. . 81
any or t e ring ea ere were quiet y
spirited away, ne One new where or how.,
The rest, 1 ft le d rl tis • wit"' _ _. like,
• e a e e , , impanel
batten children and prayed to their favotite
saints ' Not receiving any satisfixotoiy
• ,
* ' S V " •• ' 13 •
• answer . from 6. • ladunire, snit George
f 0 • d ' d th • tibl f
° ePPe °°'°' an e 31 e ermv 1°
.
6 " th Hol I n r • • 'd f
meaning ea
Mer Yrs' e T ec) 44 e . • .
and unsympathetic, the strikere quietly
.
gave in an were eaten o wor, corn-
d b t k
pletely deinoralized. By•and•bye it leaked
out among the diplomettiets that, the fifty
poor fellows had been harried off to tbe
salt ,mines of Cracow, 'where they were
scour ed, starved and ill used till they
. .
imitate e examp e o re. 1 1 a an •
g i th • ' 1 f M • Sled d
sought death as a refuge from tyranny.
All this horror was kept as quiet as poem-
ble that the:element of
added to the other atrooities - mystery might be so that while
. • - ' . '
the Government got rui of fifty dangerous
- - - • '
because mainly enemies • their former
e ' • ' -
fe•
b b
llo*.eorers were awey' e mom-
l
preh ppe .
'eneible dies aroma of their leant
This is ho they things in Russia. ,
.
The Behring Sea Case No01,1110 the Portu-
gal Difficulty.
A Washington deapatah totbe New York
az an 0 aseore au. Mean
Ili"t • d E• "i" aye-iiifilv ' *It B1 ' d
'Sir Julian. Panncefote have reached an
. - .
mineable agreement upon the Behring Sea -
4 . . .. . .
'-'• controversy, ana the question of
. . . . , , .
aamages.sustained by British vessels. will
, . .- , . . • , : :- .
be submitted to arbitration The 'details' of
• - •
the agreement.oannot be ascertained, but ib.
is known ' that '• the . Government cif the
. • -r ‘., . • ,
'United tetatestkilt not, 'under any °imam -
e sweet permit , oreigners to cm o sea e •
t 't I ' ' `,' oatoh 1
. . -,3" 't d • ' 4
even utpu e waters •during the seasons.
• • • . - •.,. - .. ...... .......-__. _
whealnie ownsnojects are pro aqua 'warn,.
,. ,,. ..„,„_ ..
d 't- t believed that
ce"°,"'no.'.'lleSit St?: _ ' le P,C/. • '
Ur. Biome would yield the• est:dome'right.
to the fisheries.in that portion of the Beh
Bea ,whioh is eeolosed entirely by the -
territory . of - the United. States. 'When,
Alaska was purchased from Moeda the
boundaryhetween the United States and
the R • E ' ' ' fixed b ' '
wasan inn a
sesianY g
nary line drawn- from the centre of
.
southwest to the further-
moat island in, the Aleutian group, but
England And -other European powers have
never .been formally notified that , these
watere are a dosed ees,. Therofore British
seal fishers had the nominal or 'moral
.
liberty to enter those webers es they have-
to enter all we,tere,from which they have
not been formally prohibited. The IJ. 13..
revenue marines and naval" vessels had,.
therefore, no right to wise vessels' engaged
' ' h fi b '' ' d tit' • G - '
in eno s eras, an ts overnment ia.
. -
heble to damages for the loaves sustained
y eir owners. enoe e no oral con -
. . . .
clusion is that in his agreement with Sire
Julian Patutoefote. Mr. Bain° concedes the
seizure of the British vessels ,to heve been
,
unlawful„and tbat Sir Julien pomades the -
tight of the United States to prohibit
poaching' upon its territory hereafter. In
ed States will ay
other words, the Unit P
oaohers have '
whatever , damages the p . ,
suffered in the • pest,. where there was no
sign up prohibiting peapners, and Englond.
guarantees that they shall ' not troilism.
. .
&gam. It te not known -who the arbitrators
will be ,
'
'
• .• ' o NEE NOE
' • LABOB , till, .. • .
—
Inter. uestions to be Discussed at ,
Qthe
ti o Com tie , ,. ..
,. ' - • ; „nti nnt,..„, en._ .
- 4- fasSev° °°t- .--- - • -:- .' - . le 0--v-
•
Strut:tent' hatiriesned the program e which
le to forin the basis '01 os. Mora: and
in uiries of tint Labor Conferenbe ' se tot.
q , . , ,•' '
lows : . - . - • . ' •
. . .. •
1 In what degree if at all, should the
' ' :
State restriet Sunday work? ' ' • ' • •
2, What is the minimum age below which
the .emplovoient,of •children ni f t • 0
. ao one .
, ••
b Id b 1 ii'b't &I , 'mime
a on a ro i i e
• • • a e on e e a • maximum
3 Wht h ld b fixda•am ' '
day work for working 'men and women
under tali age?' ...' • . ; :. .' ' .
4. ,Shoold the hours of. compulsory at-
tandem it oehool, *hi& are dow' required
b 1 • b . t a t of th d •
y ave, e °Dun. e_ :an pat et e ay 8
.work for juvenilea? ot, t• " •..
5. ShoulitheMaximtim lengthota day's
' Work for juveniles. trarY •,itociorditig to' the
'agetitand during ewhot limits should the,
, ' t• h d • • a f • - -- .-
working. ma e xe , • - ,
.. '6. :"What restriotthrielito neeeeseryin the
f ' and tthild e . • ' n '
o women, r n In n-
healthy and,dengertme ocenpetions 2
7. Shoild therStaii4Ormtt, the employ- •
mot of wornen,and ...children in °coupe- .
tieing carried on attnight time? . , .
8. How' cen ihe • State hest -put intca
sired end enforce thedthor regulations A
makes ? • ' ' • •
The programme'submits to the Confer-
ence the proposition for periodical labor
conferences, which- will become an estab-
tithed institntipn if this Conference ap-
proves the ides. ea
' -
. .
Truthful Words '
11 ' - '''' ' '
Advertising 'pekes the' business
. . . . .
. and by multiplying the Iiiimher of custom -
era thedesler obtains thetmeaes of. attract -
tog more. ,lie has, rears ratioey to expend
'on his etouk;'osit improve the opportunities
'Which COMO so frequently to the cash buyer,
. .. , ... . . .
and can make his margin of profit smaller.
• h
The whole snocees of the great retail oases
. - , . . . .
hen been build up in.this way, There are
th h•h h iladth'
few of emt w, lo eve no a tem
entire development within very recent
yeare, before wbioh they were very halter -
daehery shops,. with a neighberhood trade
only, or they bad no existence at all. There
ie not One of them which does net owe its
success to this same advertising.
In the clothing trade the history is the
-
The houses which are etting the
mms• . g
- ^
custom are thoee thet advertise the moat
liberally and the, ro
_ost judiciously, and as
their custom inereaseS they are enabled to
make their prices lower and thus invite a
wider range of the .publio. The teflon'
who have followed their example are reap.
ing a like reward ' and gaining the same
advantages. So it is also with. the shoe-
rankers, and es the time goes on there will
b ' f • • •
e no.department o lawmen which will
net profit by the legion ' that experience
teaches so emphatically. So for from
having' -I t d h d 1 t
been.coup e.e ., t a eve opmen of
is still in 1 a rl g
g t ,ea y eta ee-only.
-New York Sun.' ,
' '
. tie .
. . .. Again the Exploding Lamp.
'
A Sunday's New York despatch says:
Last night a • lamp which ,had been left
lighted and turned down low, exploded in
the cabin of the canalboat A. C. Chandler,
1 ' thf1t1W West
ying a t e foot o es ix y- re street,
. .
Nortb River. •Oaptein Patrick Daly, his
. , . • .of
wife and -their five .ohildren--Honorsh, 10
veers Alice, 9; Richard, 8; John, 7 and
I) •; 3 -lived th b t Th family'•
ening,. . on e. pa . eadvertien
' " •• ' ' • ' • ' '' '
were awakened by , the explosion. The 'oil
Spattered all over the cabin and get it on
fire .in a moment. By heroic work the
bld r taken out to a boat el e'd
o i ren we .e . . ,..,ong i e.
The.oapteinand • wife , were also- tesoned
Theilanther,hewaver forgot her Yeitogest
• laild," Donnie and when. she rushed back t •
Q ',, 0
'sate • nift thereon m covered•witn, fire, .
The child was unconscious and died a few
a Di D
hours later 9aplain an re.. al and
, P • . .. • • 9 - •
• • ' ''. '
their . , sons.
fur two other, were badly burned.
•
girld atiAnteieizijured. : They were' ill
i )16 -.--i're'v ',.; -., . ' • - '
a n to -1111.• 0
, . , , . PAP ,1‘ ,' 4 '
' ' • '
, ,
. THAT CRONIN prisizgr.
• -- • ' ' '
Beware of widders.
.
=at Ttri-ie it that the widow is mora'
Poi:41)14i Menthe maid 7 I have asked the •
question over and over and here pre Bona •
•
• the replies : That a pretty figure looks.
tt• ' bl k
pre ler in no ; that the widow is not ae
conservative as *be maid; that she has
,more " go " • that she is always ready to-
help out a besehfill swain; that she'ilbesn't •
generally reside' under the parental roof,
where the olock is won't to be wound et:1
eherp 10; tbet ebe very often has life -in -
a noe • that a a d t b s owl-
ura , noan nee . no a ,o g
looking to win a widow, neither ' hes be to -
placate thet• arch -nand the little idother ; ;
that she hike become used. to viletobacco
and 'inferior cigars; flat she aseninee the
air of bandeau:3m which byway of con -
trent mekes a man appear strong and great,
d • -
an men - love • greatness, 'even when it is .
thrust upon them •• that knowing the.. ,•
, , ..
will= she employed at captivating one man, :'
she nes em awn, an again snocee o •
't ' them ' d . '' • • - do'
• • ' ' • given- b old •'
(this was the . reason' . y an o ••
bachelor); ' d lend . . . 1 a •'-'
anme your ears, gir s, a •
tide' it probably the trne reason, she has, or • ,,
is stippoged to lame, learned:to initypn but- ''
tone -Edith Grey in Chieogo Napa; ...
- • • • ,
He Is Not Known, to the Police -The Jury
Bribing Case.
A Chicago of Wednesday ,night
e : • J. B. Kelly, arrested 'in Eit. Louie,
dm d - with cornialt• In in. •the :Orem'
,ft "e. Sg• . - el'. "M ' ' -12
arrived here to -night. - re. Conklin
— ' ' e
Frank ,Scenlon, who . um thet person
wham Cronin drove away tlienight of
4 both failed to indentif Kell as the
river' f • e•-• White, horse.,Y Y
o ,. th" ,• Scanlon was
kellY was not the man.
Thebuildingoontractor Thos. Ravens ugh,
• 36 Cl G - 1
member of, Comp, t... , pa2-a11. ae ,
being implicated 'in attemiate to
h.- - h • - - ' ' ' - -
n e p ossi le jurors on the Cronin trail •
I, -a • • '
released lo•dity,efteu t e evi ern= for
prosecutthn was all in. Judge Wetet--,The
• - •
i" ' h • 13 At ' a
ruled that t e tete torney. had
to make °At ,a, case. Thio leaves one
. . .
lerry (51Dbmiell; on trial. '
, .
- -- •
IF to Make the Feet Look SmalL
11w
"There is everything in knowing' how to
dress the feet properly " said. a lady of
a
fashion yeeterd 0.37.
4 . gy feet are not small, yet I manage th
get credit or deoidedly Cinderella - like ex-
teen:titles. The trick is in knowing how th
dress them. , See now, my foot, je exactly
ai long as a No: 3 ehoe, end it C'tvidth. «Do
I therefore wear a 'No. 3 0, as most women
Would ? Not a bit of it. I wear a 4.1
., .. ,
double A.. ,The longer et shoe is, the ner-
rower it &heap, looks, Of couree-so that's
Atilt gain ; and in the second place, I
can *mere .thoe that is narrower • thins ray
foot reelly is with perfect comfort, because
there is so much morn in the length of the •
shoe. • It just traneforrne • the undesired
width into the desired length, yo u see.
Most women have an idea that a short foot -
S rett' ' noma how .wide and skin •
1 P 9, n Pet
leap 11' may be, and only a few of those who
• •
malty see the, beatity 0 tt lOng, slender foot,
know how tO fame h for tbemeselvee. An
French booth:Laker taught meibe trick
yeers ago, and my feet lane been an
inettpreesible Comfort to me ever some -
Chicago Herald.
.. ... . .
-.•
• BeivsysL;vel Head. . .
• * '
.. olaim " says taloa Looktvood,
t ' ' •
" the we have 12 000 miles of unprootected
• ' ' • - ' •
coasts, end *hat any nation is liable to
swooptlown on us and -wipe • us off the face
of the earth. Welt, I-. tell • them that V78
h • -
eve had this Country for 400 years, and •the
tlast we do not need to epend.10 cente if we
-
a b * '
min our own twiner= as we always have
•d- • IN ,i •td. " t
, one, . e are too pea ea e a nation to.
make any preparations for 'We' •
r and jt
' d • • • ' e .:-,6 .-- ;-
-be, a very foolieb outlay •
• • . . . : . ' '
Massacres Feared. Man;
.., . ,
London cable says: The , continued
ntion,of Modes, Bey in Constantino I
, „ p e
his perseentionty Christiana creeper.
the Moslems of Armenie, by whom -he • The
egercied eis a ' model Governor. The EL
Leh tribee are in a State of indig.netiOzi in
are being furnished •witiv:Illartitu rifles ing
hi ' ' ' ' • '
oh, A a said, 60,000 have been intro- him
,
d into the l'rovinoe by the connivance . her
..
ie anthoritiee. Magertores itre feared The
lie Christiens whOUppe 1 f help•
, . a , or to his
Weetern 'o e • 'e '
p w re. Rum , continued to pistol
1gthen her forces on the confines of arid
ends, end would only be ton reedy to when
mine if called, upon to protect the proditoed
istian population.
, • - • . .shoot
'
, , . . .woul
Husband (antem„ber et the Sportmen's
Clob)-e-I, stet,they have arretned some. men
t•t• u '"t1 l'• ' ebOothag•blidfitin theiving •
...q...e••..eile. far , , ,. ,
• ' them right. . The ebonkl
We -Serves.„, h y ,
shoot theft on the heed or on t e foot. Yon '.,...„,
men have =aide& 'hoetaigly ,e spoiled wing
en shat. et ,
• , . • • . , , ,
"Wooten would inee sten politics,” say
the advddetes of woman suffrage, but others
.. . , • . , - . , - . , . •
are asking would polities sweeten or keep
. . , : • . .. • . , ,
to ?, It genre:end dirket/ a geed twiny
. - ,. z ,. .•: , . ,
, , , ,
'-',..t.j•est at fyrssent the,. isstmart, , ie iho
• ' ' • " t t k h
aidividuel who ittanxiotie o a e t e cake.
- • '
noti eable thing about a v
A ' o • d ettieing of
1 .t•• ' i • it, ' '' d el , - • " ' "
a e yea o to e gra ti .inoreage .113 the
t thf hi ' f 'V P ople I •
ru ti as A) ,x ., , e are earning
that 4 doesn't„ pay to lis 10 an eidvertiee.'
Mont anyllaitterlheta it does anywhere
' ' ' - ' •,- ' ., •
eltie. The' tteory thet .a sucker a born
evety minute and he'd jilet he likely o
. '
" ' hero es linywhere else," won't do
come in,, , , , „ . ,
tor a permanent thing, I think thitt there
bas been a noticeable improvement in this
reSpect hitely, end that btisitiomt men are
p•dly IMMO that •htiziotity is the best
m 1
Daley in an•eavertitement aS well SO out
- , '
side Of it.-Aoyeri, .rest & Coto, Advertiein 9
AGeotn...s. irannii,
. . ,
she Intended to Suicide. _ .:
' ' ' •
A London cable of Wednesdey Sayre :
nese of Miseltincent,- priremour of L.
Isasce, m.ember, of Parliament for New-
t W 11 ' th ' a'- •• arrest. , . looks
g on, a wor , un er for finoot. .
him in the arm on her failure to compel
to oign certam ptorktifithr t " '
. y no es •iin
favor, , came ' f h • d
:np.. or eating le ay.
prisoner was committed for trial. In , thein
' ' • ' • • ' ' - ' - •men.
testimony 'thence adraitted that' the
' • I. t• 4 1-
-might have been fired by accident, - '
created a great sensetion-in O ti t .
o r
lie smarted that wbe DI' Vincent
a , as......
the pistol the fleet threatened to
home% and thus make hie conduct
, , :
..-..........--.....-.....-..,...--. •
' • • ttivaien•tocti - ' - r -
Boort/ -.. ' ,.
• . "ge a '
td To 1 .
, erafe-why, only lett week:Yon , mild
that nothing yont father and -mother. coald '
lottiatevet mon 3,43n n3arr RA, R
"mf n
bett, and now you've e 'it erlY' ourself to 'cild
. . . Y
- ng g Y• '
lum. 'Why did you do it ? ' •
Lon -It WWI flom th' R b • 'd L.
__ _ _ _ .t e , nig o ion na-
self. He hadn' &eked me last week. : ,
'Poor an !
Mr. N. Peok-Adexaoilre Dumas says that-. ',.•
,, anything useless is derigerous.. , What ,
.,
do you think of that, my dear?
- - - . . . .d ..
lure. N. reom-1 think ne WSB. an Ox .
fo I wh d'd 't k w hat he was talking • ",
o o i ii ne tv . • ,
•
about There is nothing demgerotte About t
yen, is there ? -
, .
•
The Mime E il ' ' '
s m 3: and Georgian& Hill,
Weettitiniter grid? • Lon& itt' • 'E 1 d-
0' ° I'. 13g 3/3 i
have titatlede oboe ler women josnialiste
Th We Wif 'in' ii ' •fr • ' '•• .
e, i ses. 1 e i t. ,e rigOttester Mad
„ ... ,
Zatapttkdatette 'end' are iitileng • the very
few Joiontiliete ntotheintlieg1- in Ehrojee. fire
They intend to teach typesetting eliort•
hand , ... t.
writing, proof reading aod repor.ing
The late Earl of Sydney was the lest of
his tll
, 1, e...., Ete, *es 95 years et ,ege When he
died Be began his Oink ce, eer n di
reign of George Ili, He was a fine old
, . . .
u
so 061 gentlemen and served se the model Ida
D. k ' '
or , it sne. Sir Leioester ,Dedlook. , Queen.
Vinton - • * -
, e, Wee very fond of him, although
he Wise disdain -rani lintrin Mend, end en
-
ardent llome Baler, - , ' ' • ' •
, •
-A'S it, 'Oil t ' • • b ' ' ' •
.3 0 ktiOnni y the itoropally be
—
• , . • .
t it
Now they are firing oannon by .s ea
•
Thts may interfere with the adoption by
' -'. • ••
England of the pheumatio gun which
Lieut. Zalineki has perfected. The elements
b • - • • • • a . • - .
are sin thresh. utilize for won Atr,
- g t - . • h .•'
end wa er are in A, and t e earth will
ell ' 1 at 13 t t
- ere e nanny a gir can are o go 0
itt Th ' '
a fall 'dress ball.
- ' • '
-Man ottly levee Woman betterthat
himself while she keeps him at a distence.
_ ,
The man wbo defied anybody to Viols
paintet hadn't dnythilig fia kw poOket to
. • 1
pich. . , ' '
te-Confine your adverilsemente to iota-
. -
mile of esteblished • reputation., You may
get iess soca tor your money, but yeti w 11
• ' --
get better returne for your inVestment.
. ... ,
Ent P 1•• t B d Al „,
..o., . erto Caen. oar er- re slat- • '.
Star -
. i - = a havinghash ' d
vent, i can stem -every ,i ay
in the week, but when tki Sunday you pet , ,
redoing in it and call it habit= pie, I „draw '' '
the line. -Harvard Lampoon.
) '
_ • ' t
minis or of a rather florid style :.
mice met Mr. Bartow, the showman, and -,-
it le fetid that their conversation was about 1
se follows • "Mo. Barnum, you and I have- 0
" b ' ,
Met afore on the tempeninen platform
ea I bope we ehall me.et in heaven. . 2
41 " ' . . - i.
'We than, replied Barnum, confidently „.
' '
. ptiblio.
Man seldom ' reelizee whet " Ω to:
5,” meant"' tintil he has to alit some
n the wind is blowing great gam
., store
minima bete-ontoker, named Pare, often.
. -- 9
hika jaet finished Serving is term of '
a •yeerti in, the penitertitiety, , wee iee
sited gelidity night in &Contrite for Sof atone
ring. Tuesday morning . ., . et
be ego/Aped from Barn
°uteri° Street Polios Station, right. he
tt the TINOS of the police on &Ay, and' a
nava haeu tecopttued. - whole
'Tit ' ., '.
The nien who is em lo ed in a featner
P Y. .
• '
is apt to get dowoort hie knees pretty
M • ' '
any good people in this country will
' 1 '
'great y ehooked to learn that Mr, Plod. '
• it d hie entire family recently visited
tureff oirons in Lyndon, We suppose
trent only t ' ' h
a the animate, bat it
f Q Be i • ' '
ppears rom the repor 0 that he saW the
'how.
san LVewi. you're ere.