HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1907-01-18, Page 3f l [MAN TELLS STV RY OU RESCUE.
ist we are led to.believe," h
"that Steele entered• into ti,
dangerous class, those who
of anarchy fv•tivze 'tr.from tl
Fell With DL'jyc 'j5 From Fourth Floor to Basement t�amt sear ading.ottaicereOthinks they
Leading ofiicers cftho l+u
Z\ationaI Hank to -clay questa
of Lgg+Igq rBuilding. 1 tives in the search
employees'in an effort to al
• ivlrreli
Netv York, Jan, 14,—J, J. C, Seufert, because I knew 1 would not be burne
the 'firenian Whcie was rescued form a to death:
burned warehouse in Roosevelt street "I shouted all the time. I could hear
this morning,• where he had been imps]- the people talking, but they could not
agoned in the debris' for nearly30 hours hear e. I got the idea after awhile
, tlittt ley knew that I was there and
is ata hosOtgl+lr"to-clay, did not want to rescue ore. I kept on
Exec eekir4'r aiirmy bruises on his arms shouting and it seemed a long time be -
meg. .i Seufert was. not hurt, and fore anyone answered me. I pounded
tan be recovers from the nervous on the beam near rue, and I finally
shock of ,his :ordeal he will leave the kneweard a voice safcae." to me, Then 1
knew I was safe.
;ttoapital ! \V'']rile Seufert was telling his story,
•C1eornes vet down with Sou- j
• the firemen of truck No. 20 were della
tfeets siert the rnins collapsed on Sun- j inthe interior e •mass of charred paper
(lay night:: Tlrc body of one, Thomas 'of the burned building. s
hoping that fate might duplicate its
Lennon,,,�,el ii s been recovered. The trick and that they would find Fireman
other, inii'it, Daniel Campbell, was still Daniel J. Campbell, of engine No. 32,
in the ruins k ;, still alive. They found him dead.
There' is „lent little hope that he es- Seufert chuckled when his wife ad-
capesdeath as did Seufert, but the res- mitted to him to -day that she had sent
cuers arc working with renewed vigor friends to make arrangements for his
to reaeh,:his body. burial and that one of the neighbors
Seufert to -day was able to give a brief had even advised her as to what she
account of his experience. He said: should wear.
"1- was on the fourth floor, taking a "Well, no undertakers for me for
line of hose out. There came a ;crash, some time," replied the fireman. "1
followed •by three more. It was the was born lucky. 'While I was lying
roof falling in and carrying the floors there under all that guess I wondered
to the. basement. I felt the •floor sink. just how you would take it. I knew
"I jumped between two big bales and you would see the undertaker and I
I fell to the bottom between them. I wondered whether you would need him
retained my senses all the time. The after all. It was like lying at the bot -
bales saved rue. They made a cushion tom of the sea in a divine' bell with a
for me. The timbers formed above me rope cut away from the top. I was
and penned me in so I could not move. alive and yet I knew I was as far from
One sensation was that I thought I had New York, from you and all the boys
been struck .by lightning. The water in the company, as if I had been in
•poured' in on me, but I was glad of that, Greenland."
for the accomplice or a
d Steele.'
i William Wright, 6' ice a ' ' in the
cashier's department, stated iia day "to a
reporter that he was sitting'. 'tAt behind
Mr, McLear's desk and tltat'la.e'..watehecl
Steele when the cashier tutiled to the
telephone.
1 The boy says that he saw Steele take
a small, bright object seemingly from
under his ]eft rim, although . it may
have been from the breast ',,ioeket . of
Ilos coat. The Iran held the sir4 int; object
in his hand and turned • to, ilitpw it, sive
Wright, It seemed rather tb ,have hien
knocked from his hand. Th. 'tends` -to•
confirm the theories of 'Donaghy and the
vice-president of the bank tilt, the ex-
plosion was premature, "-'c "•
NEWS IN BRIEF
11 N
TI ere were no clecelapm•ents today in
the niyeteri'ous dieath on Monday night
of Dr. Philip E. Johnson, 'the physician
whose deitdbody was fo•umcl under the
Road street bridge, Portland, Ore. -The
coroners jury, .after a brief inquiry last
.alight, cane to the conclusion tluvt with
,robbery as the motive, Dr. Johnson was
murdered and his body thrown off the
bridge.
A genera,' alarm Was turned; in laist
might for a fine at the 'ltiielidessu Stove
,Works, one of the gamest asran'ufactur-
dno establishments in 1)etmoit. President,
.George Ii. Baalbour estimates the loss at
$750,000; insurance $380,000. Several
,;foremen and hnif a dozen speetators niers:
injured.
Louise Harcourt, Liberal member of
Pealianient from Lancau,dth-.e, and son of
the late stir Wm. Ilu,rcourt, is under-
sitoo4 to have been appointed to the
Irish" Secretaryship, to suceeead James
Bryce.
James McCrea, President of the Penn-
sylvania Railroad Co., was to -day elected
1,President of the Pennsylvania Co., and
President of the Pittsburg. Cincinnati,
Chicago & St. Louis Railroad Co., to suc-
ceed the late A. J. Cassatt,
` The Viceroy of Canton has ordered the
arrest of leaders of the proposed anti-
American boycott meetings.
The Princess Mary of Saxe -Altenburg,
!former Queen of Hanover, who had been
suffering for some time past from ingual
hernia, necessitating an operation, which
i was performed on January 6th, died to-
day.
A disastrous fire aecurred in South
London early this morning, which cam-
pletely gutted the old Trebilcock Hall,
at the corner of the Wortley Road and
Bruce stret. An axe slipped off the •
veranda roof and struck Fireman Mason
. on the head, inflicting a nasty scalp
wound. Fireman Coles was struck on
the back by a falling eavestrough.
In order to punish the Catholics of the
Canton of Quend,°76 miles from Amiens,
who were preparing to form a Cultural
Association under the Church and State
Separation Law, Mons. Dizien, the
Bishop of Amiens, has ordered the with-
drawal of the parish priest at Quend,
thus compelling suspension of public
worship there.
Announcement is made by the trustees
of the University of Chicago that John
D. Rockefeller will soon endow the Uni-
versity of Chicago with $3,000,000 to
maintain a fund for superannuated pro-
fessors of the institution.
Early to -day the steamer Ponce of the
\ew York and Pacific coast steamship
company now S days overdue, was still
missing.
The first annual conventiono
of the Am-
erican Railway Industrial Commission-
ers' Association will be held at Chicago
to -clay. Twenty-five Commissioners re-
presenting as many big railway systems
are expected to attend.
BOMB OUTRAGE.
WAS IT PLANNEL BY A BAND OF
ANARCHISTS?
Police Believe They Have Evidence to
Show That Steele Was But One
Member of Well Organized Society.
Philadelphia, Pa,, .Tan. 14.—"By the
action of holland Steele in dropping the
bomb in the fourth Street National
Bank we have probably been able to
strike the trail ,of the most gigantic
conspiracy of modern times. Steele was
an anarchist member of a band who had
started out to pillage. This we no\v
believe from what we have learned from
Chicago and from certain sources. here.
We expect to find among his papers—
those which, we have found here and
from those in Chicago and Lynchburg—
evidence which will lead us to the other
members of this conspiracy." Captain of
Detectives Donaghy made this statement
last night.
"Frons the mere constructive
ntillued, �.,I,44.4 °ir>.14,°1.40+f00 41.4 mom4.41 .4 ..w i.1.3..1,° .a°i.el.or a°..3°,i.°g+.g.°l,.& . o 1.° a F°° *i" °
tly snore of`s.' .�.� .e,.
i he tools
krSki they. rb
w" a. Ce Testig Assoc edallth�. ��slie tket;o ;�,
'jeep 'of
Ping,•611 .p.i. l° eE` °I"3'l(E°'{(a` ai legaleiet•.E'°Z".ia+°1y.i'eleas eeieessee44,44n14' ease l"F.q' j'el d+°¢°°leleileleHeio
tawa, vide themselves with scales, sample bot-
tles, cue fur each cow and a box for
holding the samples.
with 0. Members shall assume the respon-
sibility of delivering the samples to the
e Place where the testing is to he done,
aniing ort such clays as nrav be directed by the
rn,e of person in charge of that work.
b}]cissas I am authorized by the Honorable
i o Minister of Agrieulture to announce that
a
P".
ed blank forms will be supplied and that
rcnees the testing will be done free of charge
inti for the season of 1907 for any regularly
reatie organized assoeiation; the members of
atdian tiro association to provide their own out -
mite: fits and the association to provide a
suitable place in which the testing may
same be done,
se in 1 cheese factory or a creamery is a
Mr" natural centre for an association of this
s 'of nature. The facilities for testing are
3 -oar, available at any properly equipped face
cows tory, and the samples can be delivered
easily on the regular milk wagons.
of a I shall be pleased to hear from any
ex- person interested in the formation of a
e of cow testing association, and, I am au -
and thorized to say, that whenever it is pea-
due- Bible to do so a member of my staff will
not be sent to attend an organization meet-
gtlhy ing.-J. A. Ruddick, Dairy Comniissiorrer,
dike
here
as
CATTLE STAR`
WESTERN RANCHMEX
ED FOR FAMINE PE
Hay Crop Shortest in YearsTheGreat
Storm Drove the Herds From Thei;
Usual Feeding Plates---4s'i ny Anil:
mals Lost.
Lethbridge, Alta., Jan. 14 A great
herd of cattle, variously estimated at
from 5,000 to 10,000. in num*, which
for a month past has subsisted on the
bank of the Belly River )m0,110,114 -
with
, 'having
with other animals, drifted 'Wore the
big storm of December,; was taken in
charge yesterday by men' from the vari-
ous ranches, and a big drive balk to the
original grazing grounds was "heg ua,
Hundreds of carcasses were left behind.
Similar stories come from al;' points of
the country of cattle starta.tion. Hard-
ly any ranchers were prepared with hay
to attempt to tide theirrlierds over the
famine period. and it is said'- that, even o
had the conditions been forekeen, ade-
quate preparations coot•. not <have been
made, as the hay crop was '.the short- la
est in years%
$ 6 -
POLITICAL JUGGLING.
Glasgow Herald Criticizes Chamberlain's o
Message: e
Department of Agriculture, tit
Dairy Commis'sioner's Office,
A good start was made in 1900
the organisation of eow tenting as
tions, but we hope to see a great
~Winn cf the 'movement during the c
pea r, ,the
there is no other 1.
effort which ,offers the same pocssi
for increasing the profits of miibk
duetiah. Judging by results obt
elsewhere and ails, by the lexper•
of progressive fanners in this cot
it would seem to be posdbl•e to ins
the average production of d.,Nan
herds by at least 2.000 pounds sof
per row per year, by applying the
rational methods. Such an inerea
rolt.eticn would mean an additional
eriue-'frani dairying to the farmer
Claa.nada .of at least $30,000,000 a
without increasing the nttniaber of
kept,
aim ]clan:~ for the improvement
dairy herd need not be ,elaborate or
pensive, and should take cogaiizane,
the fact that there are good canis
p�.ur Cott judged by their milk pro
tion, in all breeds, and that it does
follow because a cow may have a len
pedigree that her performane.e at
Mille pail is up to the nark; that t
are •`scrub" thoroughbreds as well
ecmi:mon "scrubs." It will require some
moral courage to discard the extpenasive
thoroughbred scrub after she has been
shown up in her true colors, but that
i5 what should .he done. There is only
one true standard, and the teat must be
production. This is not an argument
against the thoroughbred animal ars
snail, but rather an attempt to place
pesfbamranee ahead of pedigree. Ances+-
tny is a most important consideration,
but unless the record carries with it
owe aceonnt of production, it lacks the
my really important feature, and the
man looking for superior animals gets
information from it that is of real
'ansae to him. He may have personal
nowl'eclge of the strain in question, but
that is another mater.
• Axrry scheme which has for its ,object
the improvement of our dairy stork
must' ,provide for a study, and record.
f the performance of the individual
o1,v, as well as deal with the manage-
ment of the herd, including its care and
'feeding, and the breeding of animals to
replace those which are discarded in the
ruweedine-" process. Individuality can
only be determined by the weighing and
testing of each cow's milk.
1t iu quote+p?ta . individual
lrrr:aie d'. q lra x.L ,fors of'.
cooperation nineties the work ,easier and
'eaper and at the same time more use-
ful, inasm�uclr as eae]i member of am as-
soe]ation ]rats the information relating to
Other herds as well as his t.in•n,
CHEESE FACTORY AND CREAMERY
OWNERS SHOULD BE INTERESTED.
Owners or managers of cheese facto
ies and creameries naturally take an '
terest in this question and there is no
reason why testing of individual cows
should not be done by the factory man-
agement. Most factories have the ne-
cessary applianees (except the sample
bottles) and the manager is, or should
be, more competent to do the work pro-
perly than the nverngc farmer is. It
needs no argument to prove that if ti
patrons of a. fac-tory increase the yie
of milk from their cows the facto
will derive a corresponding benefit. If
the efforts which are now mad,, by the
owners of most factories to increase
their mills supply at the expense of nmigh-
boring establishments, were to be direct-
ed towards securing an increased yield
of milk from the herds alreadt- supply-
ing the factories, a more abiding and
better general result would be obtained,
even from the individual factory stand-
point.
London, Jan. 14.—The Glasgow Her-
ald, referring to Chamberlain's message
to Canada in connection with�theyear's
trade returns, says a oonsid4 ittion of
the latter leads Chaniberiau"lto once
more empl}asiza •preference Yom: -=pas
n ;+ protectimi 'r g
illi 'linpirralzsoif
tails " v teptive duties' is the slag, ''o us
political version of `Beads I ]pin tails ch
you lose.'" '
The Scotsman says the sentiments
embodied in the' message should go
straight home to the heart of every
patriotic Briton. The Scotsman asks
"11 we continue to show no inclination
to meet the approaches of Canada, can
we depend upon the people of Canada
to maintain their present mood and
attitude." The issue has never yet
been fully raised In this country.
A FOUR-DAY :'VOYAGE.
Scheme to Shorten Time for Crossing
Atlantic.
London, .Tarn. 14. ---An important seheine
•
for the development Of an"all-British
route to the far east is likely to be pro-
duced at the coming Parliamentary ses-
sion The object, says the Tribune, is
to accelerate the carriage of mail by es-
tablishing a packet station at the point
in the British. Isles nearest Canada;, viz.,
Blacksocl Bay, Mayo, where there. is a
deep, spacious harbor.
'.Che railways and ferry steamers will
carry snails and passengers across to
Ireland. It is stated that if twenty-
five -knot steamers are used Halifax can
be reached over the route•�in four days.
The capital which it is ;estimated tvi11
anarelie be required is £1,250,000.
te
Your Gr
I, d
raisons .111 ' e
en Bef re 141~
sh& a" `.t. to Wears
'S;a Lri • h"+,,Jar,t. :3• '
Roof your buildings with "Oshawa " Galvanized Steel Shingles
this year, and that will be a GOOD roof in 2007. We will'tive
you a written guarantee, backed by $250,000, that such p t'oo$,
properly put on, will need no repairs and no painting for at least
twenty-five years.
9' Eroa1Vaa'n1ZG-'d ? yr. .
la .STEEL
make roofs water -tight, wind -proof, weather-proof, rust -proof,
fire -proof for a century,—our plain •guarantee keeps it .r so for
25 years without a cent of cost to the man who bitya iit,
Get the facts
e, a i ar before .
you roof
" a thing.
•fie 6, l a of Oshawa
D44.4),)';44111$14;
fhk�
II 1}Si1f6.... Na`, SNF �t. '� a` 1.a'i i1 114 1'3s'.•
Made in r NE QUALITY ONLY,—of 28 uaife,
semi -]hardened STEEL double-ga1vanj d
They lock on all FOUR sides—the ONLY METAL„
shingle that need NO CLEATS. Easy to pi:t''on--a barn.,
mer and a snips (tinners' shears) are tools enough. Cost'';
LESS and last longer than any other roof. Tell us the,.
surface area of any roof on your place and we will,.;
tell you exactly what it will cost to roof it right.
Mos,try t. Toronto Ottawa mimosa don sa St. 10 LaWinnipeg 9t. 01s Pondeer .`rat, 102 :Y
11!18 Craig St. 33 Oolhontoa3E, 1.28 Sawn Sts 60 sae
m•o
JAPANESE BUD6L T.
PROVIDES FOR EXPENDITURE OF
6ix,000,000 YEN.
Nearly Two Hundred Millions for Ex-
traordinary Purposes—Revenue for
Current Year Greatly in Excess of
Estimates.
London, Jan. 14.—The Times' corre-
spondent at Tokio Fends the following
cable despatch: The budget for the next
fiscal year, which the Government ex-
pects to present on .Jan. 21, provides for
the expenditure of 011.000,000 yeas, of
which 412,000,000 yen is for ordinatry pur-
poses and 100,000,000 yen for extraordin-
ary purposes. In addition there are sup-
plementary budget outlays amounting to
8,000,000 yen, which will be met from the
current year's surplus revenue. The
country's foreign trade and domestic
commerce and industry- being prosperous.,
the revenue for the current year greatly
exceeds the estimates.
The Finance Minister is devoting his
energies to the curtailment of State ex-
penses and the encouragement of na-
tional thrift. His programme seems to
'�e'"1�'• ra* 0:41. - nipprOvsd .�aryd this session
of th.e Diet is expected• to past, off quiet-
ly, especially since the financial outlook
in ltlanchuria and Corea is favorable,
A WEALTHY BRIDE.
YOUNG HAMILTON DENTIST MAR-
Y- RIED ON THE QUIET YESTERDAY.
rn-
A St. Louis, Mo., despatch: Miss Edith
V. Beall, of Alton, I11,, niece of Mayor
Edmund Beall, of Alton, famous !ae of
"race suicide," and Dr. Frederick 0.
Browne, a dentist, of Hamilton, Can-
ada,
am
ada, went to it. Louis yesterday and
were married.
to Dr. Browne raid that they would
Id spend a few days in St.' Louis, after
rv' which they would go to Calgary, A1-
berta, where they will remain a year.
Dr. Browne and Miss Beall have been
engaged for a year and at half, but the
fact had been kept a secret from all
except the bride's mother. Even a twin
sister, Miss Effie Beall, was in ignor-
ance of the fact that the marriage was
to occur.
The bride is a member of one of that
most wealthy and prominent families
of Alton. Two years ago she gradu-
ated from the Woman's Medical Col-
lege of Philadelphia. She never engaged.
in practice. It was • while attending the
medical school that she "tet Dr.
Browne, who was taking a course in
dentistry as New. York.
-----tea. d.
NO FUEI; No FOOD,
Desperate Plight of Hanley, North Sas-
katchewan.
Regina, Jan. 14,—The town of Hanley,
north of here, on the Prince Albert
branch of lite Canadian. Northern, is in
a desperate situation, fairing both a fuel
and food famine. A merchant of the
town by ths name of Presthol;lt arrived
today to call the attention of the Gov-
ernment to the eon:lition of affairs and
to seek instant relief by having grocer-
ies and flour Kant out.. Stocks sof
food available there will last only a short
time nrnlcss hirments can be got in. He
says the (0101018 are even tearing down
then barns, to taut firewood to pre -
t'• ; t th :rr- t " f.,..-...ee ft om l
test no ears czar be got through.
11r, al'restho'dt a•du-, that the citizemsyef
n
Haey are threatening to b urar the 'box
carr; etareline on tee eiclinees there.
•
GREAT FIRE AT DETROIT.
Michigan Stove Works Burned at a Loco
of Seso,000.
Detroit, Mich., Jan. 14.—A general
marina was turns] in to -night .for fire
at the .Michigan .stove works, one .of the
hugest mannfaeturing establishments in
the city, ,\t 9 p. nu President George a.
Barbeur estimated. the loss at $750,000;
insurance, :1-380,0110. Several firemen and
half a dozen spectators were injured.
The fire was under control at 9 o'clock.
COW TESTING ASSOCIATIONS.
It is probable, however, that the most
popular plan for getting the testing
done will be through the organization
Of Cow Testing Associations. There
are some twenty of these associations
already in existence in the provinces
of Ontario and Quebec, which hove been
Organized by the members of the Dairy
Commissioners Staff, and the number
is increasing almost daily. The organi-
zation is being effected in the follow-
ing basis:
RULES AND REGI'LATIO S,
1. Tho organization shall be known
as ... ... ..
Cow Testing
Association,
2. The officers shall consist of a pre-
sident, a vice-president and a secretar•y-
treasurer. Three other members shall
be appointed to act along with the of-
ficers as a committee of management.
3. The officers shall be elected to
]told office for one year or until their
successors are skates]
t4. :Clue aurnunl nic a, clog stall be held
at the call of the president.
5. Meetings of the committee of man-
agement shall be held at the call of the
Secretary -treasurer. Three members
shall form a quorum.
0ts. Any person who will agree to keep
a'i,ecord of individual cows during the
whole milkcing period, to the extent of
] Weighing the morning's and evening's
milk on at least three days every
math, and also take it sample for "teat-
ing,'will be admitted to membership. The •
nutuiier of members may be limited at
.(liediscretion of the committee of man- .
gement.
7. The milk will be preeerved and a
'composite sample tested once a month
with a Babcock milk tester,
_ 8. Members wilt be expected to pro-