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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1903-03-13, Page 2One-third of a man's Body Cut Away to Save His Life. Philadelphia, llfarch 9—For the feted from an ostoo, or bone sarcoma fIr'ist time in America, one of the most of the pelvi:4, wlli%h involved the area wonderful operations known in the between the slip and lower ribs of the left sidq. siclezlies of surgery has just been per- &-Lrooma is a malignant tumorous formed at the Jefferson Hospital by growth. This sarcoma, ivhlch involved P..rofessor W. W. Keen. The patient, i the lymphatic glaa;is, lay- against the a man abalnt 40 years old, was tinder stomach and w'l,s surrounded with th=, principal arteries of the body. ,the knife for almost three hours, and Beclllso of the position of the sur- f !%merth rdcofrIl stton bod f the h�adobeentre , thigh, the hi ajahlt a'nd Ieft civis ncl the ;moved. In this case the patient was inftetod area,.whinh extCnded it;) to doomed to ed • death unless there the ribs, s nr' s ' speedy b , wr a cP sliry. There was _! l„ 'eras surgical in;lesfetemce. 130 su% t hare, el.aure t1 ,.t he would recover. " 'r �aui63'aw d' '' , 46'Tialffax MR. 1T'S , STO DENIED BY A. PATENOTRE. amous1 S 'tinder Says She Used -to Meet 119m in Madrid. ,1LAarfs, March,` 9.•-11. Ledyte, the Dime, Thorose Humbert during her '3lmagistrate who has charge of the interrogatory yestorday asserted Investigation into the Humbert af- that she and members of her family •fair, is continuing daily hIs interroga- frequently met the Trench Ambas- Won of the. arrested members of the sador, Patenotre, while In Madrid. i$umbert family, but without elicit- The Ambassador knew them well, as Ing any now facts of importance. he had often been at parties given he physicians have decided that at their house about the year 1.880. 81110. Maria DAuri,gnae is hysterical The Matn has interviewed M. and not responsible for her actions. Patenotre, who emphatically denies 9fagistsate Leydte has therefore con- ever having seen the Humberts in Madrid ; that h0 knew any of the eluded to release her provisionally. family ill Paris, or that he ever The Matin this morning states that attended parties at their house. (a without modesta,tion, .even thoug=h he AN HEROIC ICAC. OPERATION One-third of a man's Body Cut Away to Save His Life. Philadelphia, llfarch 9—For the feted from an ostoo, or bone sarcoma fIr'ist time in America, one of the most of the pelvi:4, wlli%h involved the area wonderful operations known in the between the slip and lower ribs of the left sidq. siclezlies of surgery has just been per- &-Lrooma is a malignant tumorous formed at the Jefferson Hospital by growth. This sarcoma, ivhlch involved P..rofessor W. W. Keen. The patient, i the lymphatic glaa;is, lay- against the a man abalnt 40 years old, was tinder stomach and w'l,s surrounded with th=, principal arteries of the body. ,the knife for almost three hours, and Beclllso of the position of the sur- f !%merth rdcofrIl stton bod f the h�adobeentre , thigh, the hi ajahlt a'nd Ieft civis ncl the ;moved. In this case the patient was inftetod area,.whinh extCnded it;) to doomed to ed • death unless there the ribs, s nr' s ' speedy b , wr a cP sliry. There was _! l„ 'eras surgical in;lesfetemce. 130 su% t hare, el.aure t1 ,.t he would recover. " 'r �aui63'aw d' '' , 46'Tialffax J.'lle n,nnounc., 1ment c0'_les from that iL provisional agree - d �TT gg BRIEF 1 ment has been made. under which the, l Hallfax ranklug' Company is to be ' 1 R ama:l a11n t d 1• a (' with the Canal an 00.-11 "'TRI T COMMISSION',. Bankof Commerce. CANADIAN Mr. Hallingsworth, the Ottawa 1 t veterinary surgeon, sentenced to J ohn Burtch, injured by a blasting + six months' impri.ionnlent for vot- Ing twice on the referendum, has accident at Gananoque, *lied at Kingston. been released Om recommendation of 4 the 3iof 1 er Justice. Air. Justice Street has dismissed the City t Ci of Toronto's action against the y 21,o prcl'rnaiu:try steps have been Iaas�Co. tai,,. nfo•t x h0 alg;laizi(ifon in A2ont- i Ontario mines produced of ",- real, o: a new l oy.+ and newsagents' I union, Ail 1pplic,ation hats been $Th4 7, 40 last icet>a, an increase 1 1111 r_lade< to tilt r l wrif-an Federation of per cent. L Labor for v t Ila! rter, and the or - Brockville City. Council has decid- gatlization will soon be completed. ed to ask for a grant from Mr, Car- i negie for a public library'. BRITISH ANIS FOREICIN. Zia Toronto B=oard of Control re- without modesta,tion, .even thoug=h he , ced the estimates for part; purr Filipino 11rtui gi•Ilis Uiptared a - poses. l town in :ilbay Province. i Rev. J. G. Shearer has organized The London fStandard predicts an a branch of the Lord'sy Day Alligance, early anti-foreigu uprising in ill Z�tolzffcllle, Cllina. !,'IW. T. Devlin, of li'Inlllpe'g, i Ifas, Germain econaulists are forming an 'been elected Grand ,,faster of the industrial combination to combat 3 al.nitoba Grand Lodge of Oddfellow.a. American competition. A. deputation of manufacturers Tho widow of M. Robert Piauquet- stated to Premier Ross that 5,000 te, the Composer of "The Chimes of skilled mechanics were needed in Normandy;' is (lead. , !Ontario. Tho Dominion liner '_lferion is still rl""ae Toronto Public School Board ashore near Queenstown. Iter pas - decided to masse typewriting and sengers have been taken aff. shorthand optional in the commer- Three persons were killed and sev- cial course. • • oral injured by ilia collapse of two Angus a Macdonald, aged 25• years, I pauses at Cork, Ireland. 3vas instantly killed by a falling tree near Rossland. His relatfv.es . ( ;1 proposal t0 re -submit rile pro - ' hibitory la.w to the reside at Lancaster. electors was de - feated lit the Legislature of Maine. Postage on newspapers and period- locals from, Canada to Great Britain The German Crown Prince and ill s i vrlll be reduced to an equality, with brother Eitel are on their way, I gyps, 1 ' ` the domestic rate at once. • The contract for 2:5,000 tons of A Russian engineer has been ar- I I �tse rails has been awarded b the y rested i -r a for a t . m )till to el the 1 g !,ter h aovernment to A. G. Kitson & Co., British fortifications at Aden. lasgow. i Mr. J. Lorne dale, of Pembroke, Solicitor -General Campbell was elected member of Parliament for was nominated for the 'Legislative Dublin University, in succession to Assembly by the Liberals of North 'Mr, Lecky, who resigned, Renfrew. , 4• A syndicate of Canadians and Am- Committees of the (louses at Wash- erican.& have purchased about six ington agreed to recommend an ap- rtllousand acres of land near Ayles- ro battleships P priation for three of bury, north of Moose Jaw, for $8 16,000 tons and two of 13,000 tons ail acre, , , disitlacement, , The Toronto Ilfgll School hoard's The, Fiankfurtor Journal, one of estimates for the ;rear require the I tho oldest newtjpnpers in Germany, city to raise $60,480. It has been I has suspended publication. Its exact to offer ten scholarships in ago, is notknown,1 t the g n .tu lie paper was each Institute. first mentioned in 1673. The Canadian Northern 'Railway Bitter nartf:an feeling at the clos- ,Company has purchased 21 acres, lug session of the T_nited States Cou- I,ncluding fort Garry, Part:, in the gloss was so marked that the vote centra of Winnipeg, for station and Of thanks to 61)(raikf r Ilenderson rias terminal purposes. not made unanimous. Four ,hundred and fifty passengers, Fivo thousand bales of cotton, or bound for the Nortinvest, left To- as good quality as the imported ronto yesterday by the Grand Trunk staple, and 3,000 ]sales of silk have, and C. P. R. colonist excursion, the been exported from Port Arthur. first of the season. There is a rush of spring shipping A't a. ipeclal meeting of Barrie to Dalny, Presbytery the transference was grated of Rev. James Rollins to Bing Over 2,000 Immigrants left Liver - POOL yesterday for Canada. The emi- :,Street Presbyterian Church, Lan- S'ration season is con+,Idered as hav- d°n' ing Opener). This month's books by :ell the Canadian a:triimshlp lines are A deputation of County Court p the largest for for(\ years. g a s. .judges waited upon x113 ,Sinister of I In the Ilous(t of Commons yester- Justice at Ottawa, i11 r'egai'n to an Increase of the stipends of the Ju- , day Primo Minister Balfour an - d1clary. pounced that the Government bad accepted an Invitation to t>va,ko part There is reason to believe that the in the 5t. LoixL.: T xposition. Theex- proposition Originally submitted to tent of this prtrticipation and the the Government by Mr. C. M. ITaXS exact modus operandi were still un - for aiding the Grand 'Trunk PacifiC, der consideration. Maas been considerably modified. Mfr. Quaritch, the well-known Rug - Vest Durbam Conservatives pec- ]tali bookseller, hn.s bought in Gllent sented Mr. C. J. Thornton with a for £800 a copy of a work by Raoul check for $1.000 towards his election Do Fevre, which is credibly supposed expenses, and presented Air. W. II'. to have been printed by Caxton. T'lie Reid, ox-M.P.P., with. an Oak cabinet Inst copy Of this work sold re41,117.0d of silver. £600. It belonged to the Ashburn- 'Vi?'esley Griffith. n, young man em- �lloyred in the C. P. R. yards at ha.m Collection, Lieut. Steffells has been sentencer] hioo,se Tmv, was crushed to death by b,v t courtlma,rtiad at Xtiolligsberg the sudden fall of five tons of coal to three 1110( thsa Imprisonment In it fortress fortill-trrating privates. One from one of the chutes. hundred d an.l elghloon charges were The mortgages on the London brought against Steffens, twonty-five Young Men's Gllristian Usoclation of which wore of boating soldiers building were burned at a banquet with his sword, hold there last night, Tho Associa- A . nrgrtl entered the home Of a Zion I1all cost slightly; more than OPI21000. whito man att Cordova, Ala., early I yesterday, presumably for tie .pur. Robert Stewart, employed in Neil poso of robbery. A fight ensued, In Keith s camp at Nrwood, Alan.,• met which the negro killed the nxaster with instant death from the failing of the house., and then butchered his of a tree. Deceased was 35 years wife and child, The names of the of age land forinorly, resided at (Fur- victims cannot be Icarned yet. Blood - ham, Olit. , I i , , i hounds havo boon put on the scent. MARINE AND F'ISHt:I: E , The Annual Report ShOws a jllkaltby Condition, .Axl Ottl\vaa duspatch ,says;; ICha annual report of the Marine olid ]:`fs lleries .Uap'artlnent, distributed to - (lay, lids as usual rather belated, fila- ureis. Tile invested oapititl in the in- dustry for 10111 was over eleven lull- lian,i, nearly* a mllllon greater than for the previous year. The product for the year wa,s over twemrty-five millions, .Mile British Columbia Indus- try showed an increase of over three miiliolnls. The estimated results for the past seasan will show a decrease in the British Columbia industry by about three, millioma. rThere will be, also a decrease in the Maritime Prate viaces. T`,he year in lUtwitoba and the Northwept. was a ,good ane, and the !results in Ontario satisfactory. A delegation w.a•s here to6day In connection with binder twine. . Ae. they would not say what they wan't- ec:t, the inference is that they are afteT placing a stiff customs duty on it MARTiNEAU'S STEALIIVGS. The Total is $J5,705—Charge Vor- gery and Uttering. An Ottawa despatch says: The 31arttneau case was called, at the police court to -day and adjourned for a week it 'tile request of Afar- tineau's counsel. The amounts which' Martineau is alleged to have approllriated from the department and deposited are as follows Quebec Bank, Dec. 19, 1901, $363; Dec. :3.1, 1901, $2,851; Jail. 18, 11103, $2,965; Feb. 8, 1902, $;31819; July ::ti, .190 ', $$,801; July 38, 19.03, 41,'15"5 ; July :M, 1.902, $5,- (3,30. Sovereign Billie : July 8, 1902, $6,700 ; July S. 1002, *7,500; July 23, 1903 $8,:;0,0; July 30„ x90`3, $7,700. royal „13arlk : Oct. 14, $1,'J,500; Oat. 17, .100_', $12,000. To- tal, $73,705). Tha cheques deposited in Uin Quo bee Bank were in the name bf Ch-irlos 1). Coote. The four in the 5-avered--n Bank were in the same name, • t n <Irl1 the two in the . 1, w •O< i l Dank Ili t ( 11 lutltxe 1f A. Aiar- tineau. Tlla charge against _Mar- tineau i,s uLteruig and forging Ch'egnes. BIG FIRE IN WA I Ir:,R'Ei OWN. The Otis Block Gone and Other Buildings IMIlla;,'ed. Watin town, \, Y,, deTSpatch : Fire to -dozy de,'s(.2•oyed LIle Otis IIOuse, One Of the: largest 11oteln Ili this city, and completely ;;Witted the Ilumerouti ,stor(„ In the block. 'i)lie fire started lt.t 8.:30, in the cellar, and, running up tele elevator shaft, soon enveloped Lila ( Ilille e;L L l e 1 Tl flames. 1@ stat r el was czar pled with guests, and In fry narrow ",;,'apes were report - ad. Peter W. VviiBrnut, of this city; wa.s confined to hi beta on tile fourth floor, ,sick, anti was lot clown by, ropews. Dr, R. �i. Sargent, Of this qtly, l also a guest, was; removed from the folir•th flout• by the firemeth from his froom, whieil was soon• after a mass of flames. All the guests were 1•escued by fire escapes and ladders, all inter- i Tor xneasia of escape having been ew off, Had the fire occurred at iftitt a great loss of life would necessarily have occarre(4 i The flames 1*xirtly destroyed the Fairbanks block, adjoining the hotel, and threatened for a time.. the Tl:loner block, on Arsenal street, and Roth & Santa blocs:, on Court street, At 10 o'clock the wall,,,, of the Otis House crnshal inward, and the fire was an hour later under control. TO DISFRANCHISE GAIN( tY. 31ot•ion IDe:feated in House ofContnio.ns by Cote of'.248 to 45. London, March 9.—:1 motion to dis- franchise ualway do conse(lueuce of its action in electing Col. LLrulir Lynch, reccntiy convicted of high treason, was defeated in the'Ilourle of Commons yesterday by 218 to 113 votes, . Tile Attorsi ey-,leneral having 11107 - ad the issue of a writ of Plcelton for a member of PaLliameint ill place of Col. Lynch, tilr George Bartley, Con- servative, proposed as an a.mendinent that a writ be not issued during the life of the present Parliament. 13e claimed, that eialwa.y rlect(ad Colonel Lynch simply because he wins a trai- tor, and quoted aril alleged 111erua ;e front. is. John Redmond asking han r vateas to Plect col Lynob and down the 1)'.00(1-s Lit In ml flag Of I:ug- la:ad," .Ur. Re0mond wnrnily denieil s tt,l Ing such a nioss go, n.ud vxpialllod that be was fn America at tl% thno, Sir George Bartley th•ni wvithdro%v Ills statement, the ail ndinvint• Wits defeated, and the is ille of the wvrit was agreed to.-� t LAIZ(!Fs,' SUM FORZ A LIFE. 4fxs..Dillicit Gets aL Clwck. tin F ti(i,(3(37 tot, Loss ol'llusband. Mount Vernon, N. ;'., Milrclt 1),.-D;s- triut .ittoriiv;, 1'vanx, ieI>r•':1;uht Mrs. Lottii!.Cr. Dimon, rvirlot\• of 1Trary G. Dimon, of New llochelle, who was lcllled In the R'lrk avenue tunnel wreck on Jan. Fath, 7.;10', N­4torday received a chcalue frail the, 'Now fork Central Railroadd Company 1 rev t 1 56a,_ 607 in behafof Mr-. Dinion. This cheque covered a verdict of $G0,000, together with interest and costs, ur. Dimon was an officor of the Ameri- can Bridge Company and received tl salary of $15,000 it, year. "This is the largest judgment aver 'paid for the loss of a human lire in New "York State," said .lir. Young, •Che corporation fought againsttlle payment through alt the courts," BRITAIN'S FOOD SUPPLV, Cost of Procul ing Thetis ill lVar 'Tillie the Blain (:,1'uestiott. London, March 9.--1teplying to .a large and Influentin•1 deputation which visited the Foreign Office to- day to urge the appointment of a royal commission to enquire into the question of security of tho foo i sup - Ply of Great BrUaill in time Of war, Premier Balfour expressed ilia opine Ion that tie damg er she had to meet was not alio exclusion of grain and the raw materials nee.^,scary for the country's national oxdstence, but the cost of itrtloducing athea, an(1 the question of prlee :tws ultimate- ly a question of insurance. Ile admitted that an enquiry inter the matter was advisable, because It would tend to atlla,y solne unfound. cid, foArs as xyell as !show that some .r++w.narwa•.w.rFr,w.+'mr:.a......•.....a,,.w. ,. www,mrv. of the, diflicnit 1'., of IlItilatdon could I10L De 1 holly t ,•,\ c i. ltL•. L'alfour added thalt ill,+ thutip It the i•nquil•,• ought Lo in •Inde th; (Illov. tr,'�na of itlsurl ,ct, zlur culldltiouk,• of nlOtlern lli:lri.thun wv rlrue, the ale- thod,s by wvhiell colwafr cc; could be proteetxl Will destroyed, and the amount of the actual grain supply, of l the country. Ile hoped, however, that nothing would . be done to estalillsil a lxov- ernmcnt machinery which wouldin- jure the national commercial ina- ohinery by which Great Britain was supplied. , THE BLIND ChN SEE, q.ecret of Restoring Sight Dis- covered .by Paris Doctor. SEEING WITH THE BRAIN Paris, 'march 9. Prof. Peter Steins, claims to have discovered the secret of restoring- sight to the blind. 'l"h'e announcement is publi0tted in the l.evue des Revues by- Dr. Caze, wh'o explains bow, Prof. Steins tested on• Trim a (vo•nderful apparatus of Prof. Stefnsr invention, by which lie is not only able to restorelost sight but to give vision to those who have never known- it. Prof. steins took Di Ca ce Into a, dark room, and bandaged leis eyes so, he could see ikoth;iigg. He heard the. professor rcllk to and fro, strike a match and light it lamp. Then ha felt an ai,paratus fixed around his tem- , whereupon Ile instantly saw a dins light, whfclr enabled him to distin.-dish surrounding objects.. I're.-entl;: tha light became strong- er, and Dr. Ctize was able to Count the plol'ossor's fingers when they were hr ld up before ilii*, and, to en- unleraL( other things ill the ruanl. Just is lie n,a.s feeling that his vision wvas clearing furtivsr, andlic r- rxl\•inc • s w a; (d tll.it ixP would soon 'Fee nOrnlaliy, Prof. Steins suddenly reulor'ed the al,l,. ratus, and Dr. U37P War In Lotal darkluoss. Prof. � Steins, el un r.,,ts (>u til^ theory that 131 1111 tineas lent see rviL11 the eye, but ii -11h: 'the brain, the eye only serving to rrevive tis ilun,ge w\-Ilich the optic nerve tnult-snits oto the Feat of perception. If then the 1&n r •+r age Call be 11 r1F -' P nl t t .d to t 'e f, t h , brain rvttl,uut rye,;, 1 glints person can see Was w,eli its an};)mly else. The professor's 1111).1ratu•, iris the same sclenti.fle bn cls its the telephone, with the mlbstitution of Ilgh•t fur Found. Dr. Caze statee tIYat Feveral otly^r 1,114Ficians hive experimented rvi.th' the allparatus, but none of them is able to explain horn till, 1 t Il g rt < . OU lin 1 ..t ' e lits are o.ltained, ra 1 all Requests; for Audiences Are Defused, 1ASSED A RE63TLESS NIGHT London, March 9.—A (R.,patch to ;he Cent,til News front home. says :he, Pope pa s,sed a restless night swing to the attack of dy.sentry. )r. Lapponi state.l this morning that :Ile cold 1102D which His Holinea s, is inffering has also bi,cowa slightly Torte. A deng11tcn tions Dome• a>tatee that h I'uil remainod in b^d all dal :Te wwL rasitetl frequently by hdspby- . v u• abating, 1 Ills GOLIG,Il tat al1at111�, blit As fceblenecr, p- rsists, notwith- itanding thct fact that oAlmalants t.n•e, administered to him. Requests or audiences rvitll His holiness pour I 11 from all ditmtlous, but of couroso .hey are refuse,,]. 'Lltc, 1':nglish pit- Irdtns will probably not. be received rlonday. It 111.1y bc, however, that ;110 Polio will see the Duke of Nor- 'elk and a few others of x110 Eng - 1.3h Caiholic,:•s. Late this evening at high authority hater that Lhe Tolle wavy suffering T iflVNSIOfl or Whog. 1 1 e eapellmCntal wvo1. was e„un I by Dr. Shiga, a famous Japanese bac- i teriologist, who during the Chinese campaign of 1902 isolated the true e;erm from epidemic dysentery. Dr. •'lemur did tile •.rule thins in the I c d I as g , 1 stili in CF4. PP a, It was found tllnt the ertia,<nuc dyF (.utery !genu and or,linazry dysentery germ were the raine. Mien followed the d3scovcty that (h` germ that ,,c c al,. rsIit 'nf• o.et � was identt- c I a utut u cal with tho dy>,<�endery germ. Lxperi- me,nts were made with the view of obtaining it scrum from animals. %alik(lvaccine viila:-,t hien minim'z `s fmallpox, Dr. Floxnes's anti -toxin, .q. lie. Fa attacks n -i is antri ht <cv5adbl g 1 tile poison germs In the blood. I WHI'T N15PIL, PRY. Deputation Goes to Ottawa to Ask for it. FORESTRY ASSOCIATION WORK An Ottawa despatch says: The County Judges are after more pay. :l committee% appointed by the Judges; to talk file matter over with Mr. Fitzpatrick arrivel burn yesterday. The Iuemllel'ls a: the committee met the Minlcster of Juatice, and their reatsons for asking for an increase in Isular:es were somewhat similar to that advanced I)y the civil s'er-, rice a few clays ago. Duiring -he meeting of Parliament •a delegation will at aln visit the city and talk the matter over with, members of the Clovernment and members of Par- liament with a view of obtaining 1•tr•p;i,slation on the subject. But de- I islifie the salaxles there is no scar- city ill the number of applicants whenever a vacancy ari.�es. - the Forveiry AFsoeiation Ing this this fo-renoon U. P. Stevenson, of \elson, M4iiiitob<a, gave a paper on ,,Tree Planting in Manitoka.'' Bir. R. H. Campbell, the 6seretary of the a15soCiailon, In a report on forest finers, pointed out that in 3.902 the damago ryas nat so great as in 1901. Mr. T. Alacoun, of the lrxperlmeutal 1�.<a,rm, gave an interesting paper on "The Growth of Trees at the Ex- pet•imento1 Farm." vitlr nothing that could Ile called Preaclie'r Becomes "Memnon. • � f Illcifallapolis, March 9.•—The Rev. E,r*m�, S 6 AT OF k + , , - a r.tc.,u,�lon. lIi; TTOliness is 11 00.-11 "'TRI T COMMISSION',. But They are Merely Opinions Wthout Official Value. New York, March 9.—Tile Herald will practically amount to a, second Prints the 10,110wving summary of the, M cease in, ravages. findings of the coal commission, ap- There will be indirect recoglx3tlon of the union, which will come whela Pointed by President Roosevelt, 'the findings ,are submitted by Presl- which it is expected will be handed dent Roosevelt to John *Mitchell, ass to the PreSideutwithin a week. President of the Miners' Union, Tnere will undoubtedly. be at least Tile cause sof the strike, as found by the commission, will not be com- a ten per cent. advance in the pay' fol•ting to the coal miming eom- for mining, to tale effect from time panies. the miners returned to -work Jast Oo- The boycott will be condemned, tober, The per diens employees will and the principle ;will be laid down that a miner has a right to work not have their wages es increased, but without modesta,tion, .even thoug=h he will be recommended for the same does not belong to 'the union. The pcog, for a day of nine hours. terms of the verdict are to hold The system of pay will be regular_ good for three (pears and recommen- dations are tobe made for settle - ed. Wherever practical, the opera- ments of wage and olAber questions tors will be required -to pay, by, at: the end of that period. In local weight, instead of by the car, and disputes the operators will be ad- vised vised to treat mvitb committees of by :the lineal yard. The the miners, and there wa,p be a sug- miners have check docking represen- gestion for local board of arbitra- 1 tatives at tbei•r own expense. This tion, I FINDS SERUM GUI•tE.I Itflay Save Lives of Countless Littie �-(I CHU U E EL. Ones. the scaudirl which led to lire retire- mpnt on hitlf pay of Col. Kinloch. It Baltimore, old., March 9. ---Dr. Simon had not liven the pr-actice hereto. Flexner, who is to be the chief of the Canadian Nettled (� insults Rockefeller Institute of Medical Re- y search, believes he has discovered a serum infan- 'l D Demands Retraction, which will cure cholera tum, as well as dysentery. b n I rn`e (.lot, Ts ftloah would be the first T iflVNSIOfl or Whog. 1 1 e eapellmCntal wvo1. was e„un I by Dr. Shiga, a famous Japanese bac- i teriologist, who during the Chinese campaign of 1902 isolated the true e;erm from epidemic dysentery. Dr. •'lemur did tile •.rule thins in the I c d I as g , 1 stili in CF4. PP a, It was found tllnt the ertia,<nuc dyF (.utery !genu and or,linazry dysentery germ were the raine. Mien followed the d3scovcty that (h` germ that ,,c c al,. rsIit 'nf• o.et � was identt- c I a utut u cal with tho dy>,<�endery germ. Lxperi- me,nts were made with the view of obtaining it scrum from animals. %alik(lvaccine viila:-,t hien minim'z `s fmallpox, Dr. Floxnes's anti -toxin, .q. lie. Fa attacks n -i is antri ht <cv5adbl g 1 tile poison germs In the blood. I WHI'T N15PIL, PRY. Deputation Goes to Ottawa to Ask for it. FORESTRY ASSOCIATION WORK An Ottawa despatch says: The County Judges are after more pay. :l committee% appointed by the Judges; to talk file matter over with Mr. Fitzpatrick arrivel burn yesterday. The Iuemllel'ls a: the committee met the Minlcster of Juatice, and their reatsons for asking for an increase in Isular:es were somewhat similar to that advanced I)y the civil s'er-, rice a few clays ago. Duiring -he meeting of Parliament •a delegation will at aln visit the city and talk the matter over with, members of the Clovernment and members of Par- liament with a view of obtaining 1•tr•p;i,slation on the subject. But de- I islifie the salaxles there is no scar- city ill the number of applicants whenever a vacancy ari.�es. - the Forveiry AFsoeiation Ing this this fo-renoon U. P. Stevenson, of \elson, M4iiiitob<a, gave a paper on ,,Tree Planting in Manitoka.'' Bir. R. H. Campbell, the 6seretary of the a15soCiailon, In a report on forest finers, pointed out that in 3.902 the damago ryas nat so great as in 1901. Mr. T. Alacoun, of the lrxperlmeutal 1�.<a,rm, gave an interesting paper on "The Growth of Trees at the Ex- pet•imento1 Farm." vitlr nothing that could Ile called Preaclie'r Becomes "Memnon. lisen.se. His trouble w\ is na::rely pros- :ratlon arl drag from overfatigue, f Illcifallapolis, March 9.•—The Rev. vl.icll, in view of ll*tq ago, c:•alwou D. T. IIe.lge% a- wveli-known Metilo- + , , - a r.tc.,u,�lon. lIi; TTOliness is 11 dist pastor of C•onnorsvxl.o, has re- a r t. r r• n t_ oafs •llrlt•. 1anL he lrnowvl.(1 e t: t 1 r, r from elle ministry diel from si lAe(1 1 I :hat so many aro awaiting 1ne1111 ced the j \torula nrtfaltlua1I ttFleftn)z home, Inst 0 Nv Lad1e11Ca'9 wr'lill hiIta \\'(Irr'tt':i him al- nost' into fever. He dura protestedi wvewk, mtensibly to visit his son in lgainet Dr. Lulllrnni koepin; him in (111101llnati, but Ifni. Hodges re- )c•d, sat.ving, "I wvl,,h I could doctor colvet.t a Ietter front him to -day, say - To, �, ., ., r It •, Tlr a.)f, 1.�CIlt'nl9talt ,O,.ti m( O( 1. b Ing that Ile mms oil the way to Utah and wcouk.1 tUe1O bCt011e a AP-I'mon. THE( POPE'S COUCI L Ile dir0^trd Mei . fledge:; to take _» possession of his l;roperty and (its- Ciro �tlllr•nld:.t.s Declare "That He is 1 ul;'(* of pleased, 'it as she ! for he I Ilraalt� lifl, wc•ould newer return, ,as Ile wag i1 I convert to 'tile Mormon religion, a nil1••1 ine, 1Ii1:I ell 0—flip nlarIltisty are to 'Lit(, fore (hIs evening, and l hi"4 eonsvionce world no lonl:cr per - � %gain fleclare the fullo •lo be reallly ill• nlit hftn toremalln in the; Nlmtlodfst They point *.to the O[tlelal Clot(', In to - nigh Vs Ossprvatory Rotmanotij, the probe Guards' Scandal. ting that Oil the Vatican organ, s=taocLol, te ltiztrch 3.-Rr�rlying to a advice of his dndon; the 1o,pa decided to take sovrrnl days' ab- qu(rstlon In the House of Commons solute rest. The 'truth is that the to -day, lir. Brodrick, ;secretary of State, for War, said l.arl Roberts Pope never sueeeedei in getting lid of the cold which caliseal a slight hada at the Instances of Lord Bel - cough and hoarsoness, Dr. Lapponl havl,n and Lord de Stinmarez, insti- on visiting 9115 11oliness to -day found tuted ars Inquiry into the calling of that he was so•mewliat better, blit their rola.tir('s, who were subalterns frankly- told frim that he must eith- in the Grenadier Guards. This was er consent to cure his cold or lie the scaudirl which led to lire retire- mpnt on hitlf pay of Col. Kinloch. It would run the risk of something ser-, had not liven the pr-actice hereto. ions, The Pontiff thPrenpon gave fore, Mr, Brodrick said, to Inform way and promised to saspPnd his au- Nra' tho dismissed officer of suc'ti ail I11- Ce5. The condition of the Topa, taking, quiry having been instituted. In thi: into consideration his whratnced ag(, rn`e (.lot, Ts ftloah would be the first is not without dango , all() is calls- rC stile's. Ing considerable, anvil ty. Mo much Will stun for Galway. so, it is assertad, that Some cardin- als who have C.onle to Rolm 1'rom a Lon,lon, Va.rch 9_ -Captain Sbawe- d'Istanee have postponed their de- Taylor, secretary of the Dublin Land- parture. loldW and T.eiilillW Conference, who -----""-`••'- "— re-coaltly return O(1 from it visit to the New Naval Mwc, United Staters, announces his. Candi. London, March 9,• --.In titer House of clary for the iseat in tho house of CoixinionS thlr, aftvi•uoon 'Mr. Histol*„ Commons representing; Galway City, announced that a new n;lva i ba:.r nlafto vacaalt by the uonvaction Of Col. would be built oil tile northside of Arthur Lytiah. the, estuary of the D'irth of Forth. The, unprotected c.onditlon of the For Lille Palace of pewee, British coast bOuildetl by the North The Iln.MIn, Ala,reh 9. --The Director sea had berm the sullivot of consider- of the compaaly wvhich owns the do• alblo comment, a,nd in Gormanv ft is lnai'n called 'Longvifet, hear The held that the estaiblishinpnt of the llar.,fgne, tormerly the eyptate of the naval brise showvq distrust of that Grand Duke, of Saxr-` olmar, upon country and h,ir naval plans, as the wvh•icll It hap becnl proposed to build suggested base could only 'be In- a. pi'moo palace, will Ivavo soon for I tended to meet itpossibi0 attack from the thlited States for. the purpose of Germany. ,_ • , 11c atlaArrg wlth Mr. Carnegie. i THiS BOER HAD TO APOLOGIZE Birace- O2 Td O de %LLC. -- n Genera' De g s1) a Jul in, o: • ell r �* truer army,' - 2 3, cllallengel to a duel by al Canadian civilian, That is what actually occurred a few days ago, but the general made h,aate to apolOglva nest morning for the alleged affront, and the aggrieved party accepted the saris - taction o.t(ared, fYe Juhn, who hasp ,lme•n in this part of Ontario for a coupler Of-vcckct, has been making; tme, f offensive O<• f b 'tat ul a f and o f ..r (n we tan- gu'ag , in dvocrilting ills experience in ::south Africa, and uue• of the, party, "Admiral" Cooper, Of tale Muskoka Lakes Fleet, eras prompt to inform Flim that any Remark of an uncom- plimentary natutr., to•uelling the von - duct of the war by the British Gov - a nt >,rnnr e would not a tolerated � lerate(i ora • thriLs ' free -r.British sail, and lie de- man310d a mtrtteiion, or the resort to the well -understood method of gaining (satisfaction. The challenge was hurled :Lt. the doughty Boer fighter in a manner whl-ell denoted earnestness, and for a time the comp=ly, wiloee guest De Juhn was. wets in a Kliec•fded state or commotion. The general wva,s -taken away to his room in the hotel, and next morning lie hunted up his adversary and apologized. Dao Jubu As of athletic t4u71d, tall, (sinewy and handsome. He has a pro- ilounced CocknOy accent, although horn and reared on t11e veldt. He it was wvhio surrendered to Col. Sam Hughes, Turpin and an army of 13 men. Cal. Hughes went out under ,a flag of truce and informed the Boer, leader that lie bad an army of 20,- ,000,, men and that lie had Do Juhn'a commando completely (surrounded. The surrender followed. De Juhn maintained that his scouts were prlbed. The Boer .general is delighted with Canada, and (says he will settle a colony at 'Midland. Col, Kitson's Note of Warn- Ing at Canadian Club. ` IS DEFICIENT IN AMMUNITION London cable—Colonel Kitson, for- ' merly,• jIritlsh military, attache at Washington, and now commandant of the 6andlluraL :11111tary College, in a speech in the Canada Club last night, under t.he chairmanshipman,h 1p of Lord Strathcoua, said: ,Fortunate- ly, at present, the possibility, of trou- ble is farther off •Lh an ever, but I assure you that the Canama lls would enter a campalgn under •l.ne great- est strategical dit"adw Lntages. You ,will be very, lucky in Capp:+r .,anada if you have any alulnunition. The American regular Army, quarLered oil the rtontler would be ready to raids your lines of communications, which Ile a•loni; Lhu frontier. •lour only, arsenal Is a,t (,)uebec, at the end of the 11110, nVlaliout better organi- zation and without another arsenal in the intortor n will never be , wr •vu safe from raids" Ile begged the Canadians to sup- port Lord DundOualtl, who is DOW commanding the Canadian militia. Lord StratIlcona said, that Cana - Mans were ready; to defend their country and tbeir homes Nvitb their lives. Another .,arsenal was being built at Ottawa. Admiral Fremantle urged Cana- dians to remember that they bad considerable at stake in the Em- pire, which rested upon the naval strength, towards which Canada gives nothing, though be thoroughly; agreed that Canadians could not be. expected to contribute till given il, voice in the management of the Lila - Lord Straiitheonal•, replying; to :yid wir•al Fremantle, istdd it mwA uat• be forgottenthat the colonies re- quired to develop very much. Can- ada bad done a great dent for the proteeLfon of the mother country,, and herself by building the Canadian, Pacific and flilin • vacant lands with- brave ithbrave defenders of British ]interests. Ianlogiz n,g Mr. C;ho mberlain, lie Bald Ile thought It probable that lie would. vi5d.t Canada. Mr. Power, M. Iy. for West Qnebec, warnad Lloyds 9t it -would notplace Calnadlan sblpping on a fa,vorabiq basis Cann4la.ns would protect themselves.