HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1903-05-22, Page 2URKISII lOPS tEST
A SUSPECTE VIL
lice Capture ', tti u ntaie '
plosives Hgd at Salop ,*Ic o
kub, European Turkey, May 18.
rkis+h troops have destroyed the
e of Wa.rkovo, near Scbeiplge,
e. they suspeeted jsambs were
ealed. l
An Important. Capture.
onica, May, la—The malice have
thed 700 pounds of dynamite
quantities of gunpowder.
Troubles in Croatia.
Pelt, May, 18.—..There was re -
a serious peasant demon-
lon. in Croatia, especially in
euz district where the wa-
nd houses ,of Hungarian land-
s were attacked and pillaged.
tial late was declared. Similar
ers have occurred at Brod,
and other, places.
ler De Szell has had an au -
oaf 'Emperor Francis Joseph,
ived here to -day. After this
law the Premier. announced in
wer House that troops would
t to every place where a
of the peace was threatened.
Lai army corps has been placed
disposal of the Ban of Croa•
or that purpose, in addition to
ordinary garrisons. T,he peas -
are actuated by absurd rumors
he effect that the late Crown
nee Rudolph is alive, that he is
ming to help the peasant get his
, and that the Emperor has for-
bidden hie soldiers to shoot at
them. , ,
Massacre Story Denied.
St. Pe;te:rslburg, May 18.—Tae de-
port pttblished in the United States
that a massacre of Jews, similar
to the one whieb took place recent-
ly at Kisheneff, capital c Bessar-
abia, had occurred at Tirospol, seven
miles from Kisheneff, is officially
denied and is universally discredited.
The Story Reiterated.
• St. Petelrisbuirg. May 18.—Additional
deltails of the Kisheneff massacre of
dews are printed Here daily. The
correspondents give the number of
;victims thus far buried in the Jewish
cemetery as 44, and say that 34 per-
sons seriously wounded are still in
the Jewish Hospital. The horrors re-
ported scarcely bear repetition. In
one. instance spikes were driven
'through a woman's head into the
floor, and cases of boy mutilation
have been authenticated. About 800
Ito 1,000 persons were arrested, an
official having been sent from Odessa
to deal with the, situation. The apa-
thy of the local authorities during
two days of rapine and murder has
been] fully established.
Trouble Feared To -morrow.
Rostoff-in-the-Don, Russia, May 18
'-The Social Democrats aro doing
their utmost to induce the public to
Co-operate in starting disturbances
en labor day, to -morrow. The agi-
tators are alleged to possess arms
and ;boxes of dynamite. The authori-
ties have posted placards announc-
ing that stringent measures will be
adopted -for the preservation of or-
der. i r
Constantinople,. May 1a..—The Sul-
tan has warned the Governors of
Y
town6hlp, East I?urhalu. The tete.-
many will crake place gn Monday,
June i. t.
The Grand Trunk 'Company has
)begun the wort: of lowering tido
re tracks of tkei;r Harrisburg-Tlison-
>aurg dis i�rion at tiie auaaction• with
e :rat:::
and Goderieh division,
sa thin they �vXil pass uncle' the
matter tracks. This will greatly. les-
eon the danger of accidents and will'
also greatly facilitate work in the
yards,
Jit•he J•oynt, 102 ,years of age,
baud and deaf, has just diad in
the I3omo fo, Friendless Women, Ot-
tawa, She was born in Ireland Jan,
5, 1801, and hae not a relative in
this country. The remains •were in-
terred in Beachwood Cemetery.
Smallpox has reappeared in Ot-
tawa The vietiur is Mrs. Beauca„e.
La•et night she was taken to Por-
ter's Island, but as she lived only
a short distance away, returned
home again. .She Was taken back
and will be kept under strict sur-
veillance.
BRITISH AND FOREIGN..
the provinces of European Turkey
that they • wi11 be held personally
responsible in the event of massa-
cres occurring in the ,territories
under their jurisdiction.
Turkey Hard 17p,
London, May 18.—Tho resources of
Turkey are said to be so strained
as to compel the advance against
the Albanians to be suspended. It is
believed the mobilization ot• 100,000
men was only effected with the aid
of the Suntan's private purse. The
Sultan has just consulted the former
Vizier, Said Pacha, on the situation,
and it is reported that His Majesty
has just summoned a financial oom-
mission to consider means to effect
the payment of troops in Macedonia
and Albania, the army contractors
having refused further supplies.,
Bulgaria Denies Responsibility.
London, May 18.—Cabling from
Sofia, the correspondent of the Daily
News; says he has had a long inter-
view with. Premier Daneff. The Pre-
mier repudiated Bulgaria's responsi-
bility for the Macedonian outbreaks,
which, he said, were the work of a
few irreconcilables, and he protested
indignantly the charge that Bul-
garia had winked at the revolution-
aries. The Premier admitted that the
Bulgarian army was strongly in sym-
pathy with the movement ; he said,
however, that this sympathy would
not be allowed to interfere with its
loyalty. He could not avoid seeing
that some accident might precipitate
a war involving Bulgaria, but Bul-
garia would not be the aggressor,'
and in the event of such a disaster
it would hat be her fault. In con-
clusion, the correspondent quotes
Premier Daneff as saying he coun-
selled Prince Ferdinand to issue an
appeal to the powers to intervene
in behalf of Macedonia. "' Bulgaria
has no ambition to annex Mace-
donia," he said, and the existing
reform scheme is quite illusory."
Statement in British house.
London, May 18.—T,he Under For-
eign Secretary, Lord Cranborne, in
the House of Commons to -day read
a telegram from the British Consul
at Monastir, European Turkey, say-
ing that, while several 'Christians had
,been killed during the recent disturb-
ances, there had been no further dis-
turbances during the last few days,
and adding that business isaproceed-
ing as usual. The Consul also re-
ported that the loss of life was
exaggerated. t , ,
Slaughters Arouse Bitterness.
London, 11Say, 18.—The correspond-
ent of the Times at Sofia says in a
despatch; "Some of the worst out-
rages during the recent outbreak at
Monastir were perpetrated by Jews,
who, anxious to show their sympnr
thy with the stronger side, joined
the Bashi-Bazouks in maltreating
Bulgarians. According to official ac-
counts the slaughter of Bulgarians in
neighboring villages was, considerably
greater than at first was supposed.
At ,2apari thirty were killed- or
wounded, the Bashi-Bazouks partici-
pating in the slaughter. It is useless
to conceal the fact that these oc-
currences are arousing an extremely
bitter spirit In Bulgaria, and if they
are allowed to continue the dangers
of a conflict With Turkey will be
greatly increased."
SLAIN BY lli3llI-BA1011K1
Bulgarians Killed on Streets
!Lkof Monastir.
A PANIC STRICKEN TOWN
Mobastir, Maoedo'hia, via London,
May 1a. — Hearing from s ecret
sources that something of great im-
portance was likely to happen here,
I came from Salloniea by train. The
predicted movement did not occur,
but the unexpected 'happened. A
miniature massacre took place, of
!which exaggerated accounts pro-
bably have been telegraphed from
the coast. It was begun. entirely
by Bashi Bazouks, Was carried on
by them, and was only stopped by
Turkish troops, under the direc-
tion of the Goverao., Ali laza Pasha.
There was a quarrel betweoni a Bul-
garian and a Turk. The Bulgar-
ian, muck to the astonishment of
the Turk, was armed, When several
!Turks came to the rescue of their
comrade, the Bulgarian• drew, a re-
volver and shot one of them, As
' the news spread a crowd collected,
and the Bashi. Bazouks, when the
Outcry to kill was raised, swarmed
into the Bulgarian quarter, Shoot-
ing right and left, and beating the
unfortunate persons• whom they
overhauled.
Thirty victims were reported kill-
ed and several hundreds were beat -
ea unmercifully, knocked senseless
and their brines broken,before the
troops could arrive in sufficient
strength to drive off the Mussulm.an
population. Tire troopsmade it a
point neither to kill nor hurt a Mos-
lem, but drove into their homes all
the Bulgarians found on th'b streets,
f1'lley did not allow, Turkish' civilians
to -enter the houses of the Bulgar-
ians, nor dictthey go themselves,
me rioting began at Waif -past
twelve, and was quelled by three
o'clock. The bodies were taken, off
is carte, as was done in Solonica.
Even the Consuls were stopped by
the soddlet% from. going to the scene
of the disturbance and making roves.•
tigationat
/,I hie town toll into a panic;. the
shops wore sli',.tt, and the new
braanrsh of tire Ottoman hank dose;
and strongly guarded. The nest
day there were a few email out-
breaks in other portions of the
town, and a few more Bulgarians
were killed. The Greek villagers liv-
ing in the Bulgarian quarter were
warned by their Turkish friends to
leave town, as a general massacre
w,oukl undoubtedly bo brought on
Xf the committees should begin
throwing bombs. There were cav-
alry patrols going about the
streets that day, and 4,000 troops
were massed in the town. •
Z, oe�36"�..e8d am$
W INBRIEF
CANADIAN.
All the railroads in Florida are in-
capacitated on account of th.e floods.
It is reported that the Bagdad
Railway project is to lee revived in
the form of a new international
route to India.
R. H. Stoddard, the well-known
American poet, and reviewer, is dead.
Mail advices say that hundieds of
people are dying of famine in Kwang-
si province, China,.
Dr. Schlamp, the largest wine
grower in Germany, is on trial'
charged with wholeeale adultera-
tion.
• Owing to heavy raine in many
parte of Kansas, serious floods are
reported, resulting in loss of life and
destruction of property.
At San Francisco the Federal Salt
Company wasconvicted of maintain-
ing a Iinonopoly contrary tea the Sher-
man anti-trust . law.
The newspapers of Bogota, capi-
tsj of Colombia, have started an
agitation against the ratification
of the Panama Canat treaty.
ARTHUR PiERS, MANAGER.
Will Control the Pacific and Atlantic
C. P. R. Meets.
Hon. Sydney Fisher has arrived at
Vancouver from Yokohama.
Miss Mabel Cartwright has been
chosen Principal of St. Rilda's Col-
lege, Toronto.
Rev. Dr. Bayne, of Pembroke, was
elected Moderator of the Synod of
Montreal and Ottawa.
Rev. John Neil was elected Modera-
tor of the Toronto and Kingston
Presbyterian Synod.
Two Toronto hotel barbers have
been summed for shaving on 'Sun-
day.
• A sight lags been selected at Syd-
ney, B. C., for Britieb admiralty pur-
poses.
I The College street Baptist congre-
gation, Toronto, hare 'extended a sec-
ond call to -Itev. Dr. Sowerlay,' of Lon -
i don.
The Lord's Day Alliance will pro-
secute the Scarboro' Electric Rail-
way Company for running Sunday
ears. ,
Charges of inefficiency and neglect
of duty against some employees of
the Kingston Post Office are to be
investigated. •
Rev. Principal Craven addressecl the.
Presbyteriaa,n Synod on "Tire Bible
in Our Thlucetional System." Rev.
Principal Gordon took part in the
discussion.
The ease of Rea ve. Ch,rlisie, arts-
ing out of the personations in the
referendum voting, wee adjaerned In
the Court of Appeal to notify the
Dominion Attorney -General.
ton. J. 1t. Stratton has accepted
i an invitation to be present and as -
t slst at the laying of the eorner
' atone in the now Presbyterian Sun-
'day School at Cc*..tr••vi le, in Cavan
•
Motnetreal, May, 18.—The officio,, lan-
ncuncement of the appointment of
Arthur Piers, of the C. P. R., to' the
position of manager of the steamship
line was only issued this morning.
Mr. Piers will have both the At-
lantic and Pacific fleets of the com-
pany under his control. His office,
as 'heretofore, will be in Montreal.
Mr. Piers sai4 this morning that -ail
the C. P. R. vessels plying 'in At-
lantic waters would now come to
Montreal, and that four of them,
the Montrose, the Lake Erie, the
Mount Royal and the Monterey, were
now in port.
TO HONOR MACDONALD.
Ottawa Scots Would Have a Canadian
+sed;•. Memorial.
Ottawa, May 18.—At a joint meet-
ing of St. Andrew's Society and
the .Some of Scotland last night a
committee introduced a • resolution
embodying a panegyric on the late,
Gen. Hector MacDonald; and recon-
mending that a committee be ap-
point ' tons of
°pi'nt
tisk
the
went
in cc
meat
The oea, erecting a distinct Can-
adian memorial seemed to prevail,
and eloquebt speeches were made
in support of it by Rev, Mr. Mcin-
toeh, Rev. Norman McLeod, La—Cal.
McMillan and othere. The committee
which drew up the resolution was
again appointed to carry on the
work.
MADMN IN VESSEL'S NGt�
Has Been.There Nineteen !Jays
and Scares the Crew,
MAY BE DEAD OR AL VE NOW
Halifax, N. S., May 18. -,--The Nor-
w4egian barque Emigrant; Capt. T.
Eroldsen, arrived to -night from Ber-
muda, with a madman in her holci,
who has been there for the post 19
days. The Enaigra.nt left Bermuda
for ll'allfax on the 16th of April,:
and has therefore been 26 days on
the passage. A few days out one
of the crew, the carpenter, who had
been shipped at Bermuda, showed
signs of insanity, and got into the
hold, where lie said he would stay.
lie kept his word for three days,
food being sent down to him. At the
end of that, time he returned to the
deck, but crazy as ever. no so -an-
noyed and alarmed the crecv, that
they overpowered him, put him in
irons, and locked him in the fore-
castle, the crew going att.
Not hong afterwards, with sue
perhuman strength, he broke his fet-
ters, dashed down the door, incl
again rushed into the hold. This
was 19 days+ago. Every effort was
made to capture him, but none of
these were successful. As a last
attempt,the mate and one of the crew
went down to see what they could
do. They beat a retreat and turned
when fired upon by the madman,
who had, no one knew how, pro-
cured a revaiver. T,he crew were
afraid to go near him again, ' and
he w -as allowed to remain. This
time everybody on board was thor-
oughly afraid, so they fastened down
the hatches to prevent his corning
up and perhaps committing mur-
der. •Food was lowered to him by
a bucket, andl for the first five days
the madman helped himself to it..
. Since then, however, the food has
remained untouched, and no slgn
scan or heard of the frenzied man.
It is possible that he hes crawled
Into some
nd died, or he.
array have Phot himself. '!11he crew
tonight are still afraid to go into
the hold, fearing that the irean is
;vet alive, and may nese as .a pro-
tection the empty °asks, with which
the barque is loaded. With sa pis-
tol in his hands' be might be able
to do considerable damage before
being captured.
A MACEDONIAN LEADER
'.co Marry Mise Calhomeri Well-known
' Emelish•Aetress.
London, May 18 —Miss Eleanore
Calbow iN receiving congratulations
upon her engagement and approach-
ing marriage. Her stage career,
which has peen an Imeoranie and'
brilliant one, both in London •aud
Paris, is closed by an Oriental ro-
mance. She will soon bo marrie4 to
one of the founders and leaders of
the Maoedaniaan 'movement. He is
Eugene Lazar Lazarovitch. From his
countrymen living in London 1 learn
that he is the present head of an old
dynasty ruling for 700 years In the
Balkans, of which ancient kingdom
and empire Macedonia was a pro-
vince. For this reason he cannot en-
ter Servia, as the Government there
oonsiders him to be a possible pre-
tender to the Crowm. He has taken
an active part in the Macedonian
movement for twenty-five years, and
has expended a large fortune in pro-
moting the cause of the liberation of
the Balkan population. He has been
In England during the last year, and
ba,s been laboring arduously for the
Macedonian cause, holding confer-
ences with Sarafoff and other lead -
ere, helping to raise money for the
movement, and to arouse sympathy
for it among the western nations.
Miss Calh:otsn is the daughter of
Judge Calhoun, of California. ,
SPIRITS MADE HIM SIGN.
Explorer Cavendish Deeded Away
Property at Request of Ghosts.
•London, May 18.—The Chancery
Court to -day ordered the cancella-
tion of the deed by which R. S. H.
Cavendish, the explorer, provided
that his property should go
to Mrs. Strutt, wife of Major C. R.
Strutt, and her children, to the ex-
clusion of the plaintiff's own wife,
who was Isabel Jay, formerly lead-
ing lady of the Savoy Theatre. Mr.
Cavendish, in his appeal to the
Chancery Court, charged Major
Strutt and Mrs. Strutt with in-
fluencing him through table -turn-
ing, and claimed that Mrs. Strutt
obtained the deed by pretending to
be the ghost of his (the plaintiff's)
mother, and by representing that
she was speaking from Heaven and
advising him to dispose of his pro-
perty.
NEW PRETENDER CFSEN
Spanish Cruiser Rescues Fug
itives From Tetuan.
MAtIARA FALLS TO BYE' ;
PEAT SUIE ES PROJBCTEDI
Capitalists With $10900 000 Going East
Vast Projects.
Niag'a,ta Falls despatch : A. T.
?Wright, of Buffalo, has purchased be-
tween 2,000 and, 8,000 acres of
land on the 'Canadian side of the Ni-
agara River, between Slater's Point
and Drummondville. Mr. Wright
is 'presumed to represent a syndi-
cate which desiree to control all
the property •in, the vicinity of the
big generator plants now being pro-
posed or beim; constructed on the
Canadian side.
The new syndicate, It is said, will'
conatruet a largo. number of manu-
facturing plants 'to take part of
the electrical energy generated there.
Idle first of these is to be a mam-
mothsteel converting plant and
roller mill. Ore will be brought down
from the upper lakes to a point
near Chippewa. The Hennepin Se-
curities, (Company, recently incorpor-
ated at Aib:any, ie slated to take
r charge of the manufacturing de-
velopments.
The reason that the Canadian side
of the river ha -s been chosen lies, it
is claimed, in the difference in land
values. With precisely similar op-
portunities; for advancement, ,land
on the American side is worth $6,-
000 an acre and on the Canadian
side but $100 to $200 an acre.
These capitalists have $10,000,000
to spend in obtaining and develop-
ing the immense area , of factory
PEOPLE FLEE FROM NEAR COLIMA
Madrid, Map, 18.—A deispatch from
Melilla, Morocco, says the Sultan's
weave w.ho are charged with a pac-
ificatcvey mhirsion to the rebel',' have
arrived there with al.a000.
'1'he rebel chiefs, it is added, have
a new pretender, named Hub-
er. He is a Moor of goodl fani-
Fu ;itives Rescued.
ad, May 18.—The Spanish
Laterite Isabel, bas rescued a
numbei of Spaniard and other for-
eigners, from Tetuan, Morocco.
It is announced from Melilla that
Colonel Is1a.rchand is on the Alger-
ian frontier with two regiments of
'sharpshooters, and other troops.
People Flee: From Volcano.
Tuxpam, Jalisco, Mexico, May 18.
—There hada been another eruption,
et Colima volcano, accompanied by!
deafening subterranean noises, an
abundant flow of lava and a heavy)
rain of ashes. People on the hacien-
das and ranches in the neighborhood
of the volcano, have abandoned their
pueblos. for safer places.
LONDON PASTOR CHEERED.
Dr. Campbell Declares He Will Resist
Education Bill.
London, May 18.—There was a
remarkable scene in the City Tem-
ple at the midday service to -day,
when the pastor, the Rev. R. 3,
Campbell, the, successor of the late
Dr. Parker, announced his adhesion
to th.e "passive resistance" n3ove-
inent against the new. Education
Bill. Rev. Mr. Campbell is regarded
• as the head or the Noneomformists
in this country, At Its announce-
nient to -day the audience, num:-
boring
umbboring about 3,.000 persons, stood
up and cheered lustily for' Several
narrates.
The pastor added that he had
heard that Co:o•nial Secretary Cham-
berlain le likely to advocate the im-
prisonment of thoso who parLioi-
pa•te in the "passive resistan•ce"
movement, but he believed, should
Mr.. Chamberlain imprison him, las
•da.ys as a'Colonial Secretary will
be numbered, for the Nonconformity
represents half 'the religious life
of the patian.;
A TERRIBLE STORY.
Woman Terribly Tortured and Child-
ren Killed.
1
sites which has been secured. Al-
ready several big plants are prac-
tically arranged for, the biggest be-
ing a steel converter plant.
The plan involves the building of
big docks along the Canadian side of
the river, the channel on the Cana- •
dian ,side being superior to that on
the United States side. The or-
ganization of the Ronnepin Securi-
ties Company recently is said to
be a part of the scheme. J. 1'. Mac-
Donald, the local agent of A. J.
Wright, would not talk for publica-
tion, but admitted that Mr. Wright
was behind the big land deals -which
have excited interest in Canada for
the last six months. •
Taken in connection with the 350
acre shipbuilding plant to be built
by the Toronto & Niagara Power
Company at Bridgeburg, It is evi-
dent that the Canadian side of the
,river, which has been dormant since
1812, is to have a general develop-
ment under the impetus of electric
power similar to that on the Am-
erican side.
Another plan winch is spoken of
Is the possibility of deepening the
Chippewa River channel to the
Welland Canal, which will admit big
lake vessels to reach industries using
Niagara power on the Canadian side
at little expense.
Later—Ma. Wright ,says the lame
bought is near Hamilton.
New York, May 18.—The Ameri-
can, which bas sent Michael Devitt
to iCishenev to report upon the
recent anti -Ste site outbreak there,
publisalies the following special from
5t,
Petersburg : The papers here at
last publish the horrible details of
the Jewish 'massacres at Kishenev,
It is adrnitte+d that a carpenter had
boll bands saw °sr, that women
batt their eyes gouged out, that some
vie -thee bast their arms pulled from
the body, and that scores of Children
were thrown out of windows and
killed. The condition of those that
are left is terrible, and at least four
thousand families aro in absolute
want.
VICTOBIAN TfflKE EVERJ
'Same men trho have more money
thein arcane, are not burdened with
fXtlaa Xucre.
Railway Employees Call it Off
Unconditionally,
THEY FEAR THE NEW STRIKE LAW
Melbourine, Victoria, May 16,—Pre-
mice Irvine announced in the Legisla-
tive Assembly to -day that he had re-
ceived a. letter from the officials of
th•e Engine Drivers' Association de-
claring the strike off and submitting
unconditionally.
The President of the Engine Driv-
ers' Association, in an interview, said
the surrender was due to the drastic
nature of the strike bill wlhich was
aura of adoption.
SENTENCED TO DEATH.
The Veronica Mutineers wound
ixutity. •
St. John, May. 18.—A cable to Wil-
liam Thomson & Co. this evening
brings word from Liverpool that the
Veronica mutineers were convicted of
murder to -day in the Liverpool court,
and were sentenced to death. The
prisoners numbered four. Tho Ver-
onica was a barque, owned by Wil-
liam Thomson & Co. On the high
seas last December some (of her
crew mutinied, and then ensued one
of the most atrocious series of mur-
ders which have been chronicled in
the annals of the modern merchant
marine. Captain Shaw, who was a
Prince Edward Islander ; his mate
and five of his crew were shot or
driven overboard. Then the mu-
tineers provisioned a boat, fired the
barque and left. They were picked
up and taken to Liverpool, but the
story of their awful crime was given
cut by one of the number, and the
trial of Tour of the men followed.
SUNK EP( ['MITERS,
Evidence in Papers of An-
other Cunard Plot,
A STARTLING MEMORANDUM
New York, May 18,—Among the ef-
fects of the men who sent the in-
fernal machine to the Cunard Line
dock last week was a piece of paper
on which' was written in French;
"The destruction of the . Naronic
was complete. Mr. Le Brun, who
made the box, has this moment gone
to Chicago."
The X arontc left Liverpool, Feb-
ruary 11th., 1.893, with 4,000 tons
of freight, a crew; of 613 mein, and
fifteen passengers, who had gone to
England on the previous trip in
charge of a cargo of cattle. Shu•*
wan never seen after she left the
Mersey.
Machine Made 'in Chicago.
Chicago, May 18•—The Chicago po-
lice this afternoon discovered three
men, who, it is believed, unsus-
peotingly assisted the mysterious
G. Russell " in manufacturing his
deadly device. They are J. W. Sey-
mour, carpenter ; 3. W. Eisenberg,
blacksmith, and Jolrn Clarke, m,a-
chinist, whose shops are in the vi-
cinity of the apartment occupied by
Russell.
MASSAGE RESTORES LIFE.
New York Docto Auneunces Start-
ling .Discovery to Profession.
New York, May 18, -Dr. Robert
Coleman Kemp, of No. 107 East 57tlai
street, has proved that scientific
maesago can restore 'a patient, ap-
parently deard, to life. This was his
startling announcement to the Newt
York Academy of litedieine at its
meeting last night, Dr. • I gimp's
method is to cut e email 'notelets
between the ribs, insert the finger
behind the heart, and, with a feta,
gentle, rytbmic pressures, revive the
circulation.. In conjunetton with this
process is an artificial resplratioa
produmed with a. pump.Experiments
made on dogs have proved success -
WANTED TO SLEEP T &ETiHER
Toronto Women Threw Un Posts in
Hoboken Hospital.
New York, May 18.—Ionise arid.
Anna Stoot, who claim Tpronto as
their home, suddenly left South Hud-
son Hospital, Hoboken, with three
other fellow nurses and went home
because the matron and the man-
agement would not let them sleep
together, whicb was against the
rules. The management is investi-
gating the sudden departure with
the hospital full of patients.
h'EATE THE
1
3
Wife -Murderer Poisons Him-
self With Morphine
AS THE HANGMAN WAITED
Lexington, Ky., May 18.—William
McCarty, wife murderer, w.uo wa,s to
have been hanged at 8 o'clock th1,s
morning, took morphine some time
durthg ibo night, and died this morn-
ing,
'C,bo death watch, Alexander McKee-
ver, sat within three feet of McCarty
all night; but says he is absolutely
at: a lose to know how or when Mc-
Carty took the drug. At 10 o'clock
McCarty became restless. Jailer
Robert Wallace wa,s in the cell at
the time. McCarty called for whiskey,
but Walbaee brought him coffee in-
stead, He drank the coffee and went
into violent convulsions. t ;
SAVED A PRISONER
From a Colorado Mob of Woutd-be
Lynchers.
Trinidad, Colo., May 18.—An Ital-
ian coal miner, giving his name aq
Augustin Garibaldi, last night oho*,
and killed another miner in theirt
cabin at Majestic. He then fled, but
was captured by a Sheriuf's posse.
While returning to Majestic with
their prisoner, the posse was met
by a mob of miners, who tried
to take Garibaldi away from! the
officers. A running fight ensued.,
and three of this officers, securing•
a team driven' to this city with thed
prisoner. It is not known whethler
any of the mob was injured or not.
There are Imre of a lynching.
The L olpher's Paradise.
I ask but little when I'm dead
As recompense for earthly woes
No gokien cr'ow'n upon my head,
No harp to weary hiands and toes;
No halo world I wear, indeed,
No purple robe beyond my means—
I only ,ask a well -rolled mead.
Witheighteen holes and putting
gre en:se.
A caddy with a lynx -like eye,
And wings upon his shoulder tips,
Shall swatch mc whack tate balls,.•
then, fly
To follow on their airy trips;
And when I come on gentle wing
,He'll hand me then, the watchful
soul,
Al putter fit for prince or king
That's guaranteed to make the
goal.
The tees wall be the sort from
:which
One driver two hundred yards at
least,
'Male over hhudle, bunker, ditch
Tao balls shall rise as though of
• 'yeast;
The niblick, mashie and the eleek
Shall never miss or make a slip,
While only those who Scottish
gpeak
Shall have a card of membership.
Here on this field of perfect strokes
la
I l
'1 in amwith all
play y a svinua g game
Who beat me when On earth, the
folks
Who gay I cannot Mt the ballla
And best of all, the. games between' J
When o'er my nectar I am heard'
1d1' triennials to •recount, I ween,
There'll not be one to doubt my
Woad, •
-W. W. Whitelock, in Life,
'ilh'e •poor we have always with ass
but that is better than having them
{i'gainet lis.