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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1902-08-07, Page 70[0001 RIOT AT RIENNINIIII, • Murderous Attack by Strikers on Workman rt! LEADS TO SERIOUS TROUBLE Police Ale° Attackett Vire on the Mob and Many are Hurt -Several Volleys leiree-Mintary Ordered Out at bust -That Injunction Vase Not What it Was Reported to be. Shenandoah, Pae Aug. reign of terror holds Shenandooli in its grate) to -night. Since 6 &Wools tide evening Centre istreet, otte of the principal streets or the town, has been in the hands or an infuriated mob. Two of the borough polteemen were shot, ono fatally. joseph Bed - dale a leading merchant, and couein of Sheriff Beddall, wa0 brutally club- bed to death, and upwaada of a score of strieers were snot by policemen, and it is expectedthat many deathe will result. Sheriff Beddall arrived from Potts- ville at 7.15 o'clock, with a posse of deputies. He took up his headquar- tore at the Ferguson Hotel, which ,wag surrounded by several thousand men. To a reporter he admittea that be haa asekd Governor atone to send the militia. The Governor wired that If the citizens of the town petition for troupe be will send them, and a petition wag cleculated for that pur- poise. Wben Troubie Started. The trouble started about 6 o'- clock this evening when Deputy Sheriff Thomas Beddall attempted to escort two Mem-union workere through the atrtkertr Owe of pickets. The workmen% were dressed in their street °lathes, but one of them car- ried a, bundle under ids arm and this aroused the suspicion, of the etrik- ere. The bundle was torn from lane and, when it was found to eontain a blouse and o•veralls, the man was taken from the deputy and beaten almost to deaths. In the meantime, Beadan opened fireow the. utob which heel gathered by this time,• and emptied las re- yolver. Two of the shots took effeet, one man being shot in the leg and the other la the foot, The deputy mid the other strike-breaker were c•onspelled to flee far their lives, and took refuge iin the Philadelphia and eteadteg Depot. The depot was moon eurrounded by an angry mob of 5,- 000, whieh were becoming more threatening and demonstrative ev- eey usomesent A Itiorrible Murder. REVERY'S BLOW OUT. .,••••••••• Gives an Outing' to 20 000 Women ena Children in Now York. liew York, Aug. 4. -Between eene 000 and e0,000 Women and children were tee gueitts of ex -Chief or Pollee Devery on a w.a.tee picnic to a eau:i- con River resort to -day, ?Len were exoluded, It was a part or the spec- tacular campaign the eieles Mete is eonclocting in les fight for the Demo - °ratio leaderelap of the Ninth DIO- trict, It was the biggest eXenrelon that ever startea from this city. SIX boatel (tarried the excurbiontsta In addition to a, corps or phy,siciana and trained nurses, Dever y had en- gaged an opera. company, a vaude- ville troupe and four lbande. The euppllee ineludea 1,000 ponds of beef, 1,200 pounds of corned Wet, 1,500 pounds of luon, two barrels of eager, four tabs of butter, 20 bar- relof potatooe, 20 orates of tinned tomatoe,e, 10 orates of raw tome - tow, 500 heads of cabbage, 250 pounds of coffee, 2,500 loaves of bread, elson chowder for 80,000 per - one, 1,500 pounds of fancy cakes, 5,000, gallons Of lee cream, 8,000 quarts of milk, 250 boxes of eoft drink, ten barrels of biro)) beer, 1,400 bags of popeorn and catulY., Joseph Beddael, a hardware mer- chant, and brother of the deputy glieriff, was fileoc Waking his way through the crowd to an °Hoyt to reach his brother, and the mob, divin- ing that he was carrying ammunition to those inside the depot, seized him and beat lam with clubs and billies late% ingensibillato He died en voute to the Miln.ers Hospital./ Shortly after • this, tho entire borough pence force arrived on the scene, and escorted the deputy sher- iff and his man to an engine, which had been backed into the depot for that purpose. When the mob realiz- ed 'that their 'prey was about lo escape, they surrounded the engine, and the engineer was afraid to move. Dispersed by a Volley. ' In a few memento, however, the pollee fired a volley, dispersing the crowd for a brief period, and the engineer turned on full steer, and get away: with his men. atones were thrown thick and fast about•the beads Of !the • pencewhereupon Chief John. Fry gave 'the order to flee. Al the first volley tee mob fell, back, and several were seen to fall. Trbeir retreat, however, was but mo'mentarily. They turned, and, with revolvere, stones and a few sitertguns, they charged on the lit- tle band of policemen, and made them flee far 'their' Doom The pollee - men turned in their flight, at short intervals, and fired volley sa- tes. volley ot their pursuers. Wheu tho Lehigh Railroad crossing was reached a passing freight train blooked the passage of the pollee, two of whom wore 'caught and brutally beaten. One of them, Sid- ney Yaeopsecy, will die. • Twenty Strikers Shot. It is estimated that upwards of ,a,000 shoes were fired, and the wonder is that more fatalities did not result. More than twenty etrikers, all of Imam are foreign - erg, sv,ere shoe, and at least two of them will die. Many of the merchants and politicians are re- fusing !to sign the mill for troops, fearing that the minere will boy - mitt thorn after the trouble le over. At 11 o'clock to -night the streets were still crowded with people, but everything wag quiet. Governor at .T.te.st Movee. ' Ilarrieburg, Pa., Aug. 4. -At 11.45 p.m. the 8th and 12th Regiments and the Governor's; Troop Wore ordered to Shenandoah. • That inj u n aloe. Wheeling, W, Va., Ang. 4.-A wrong impreasion of the injunction handed down by judge Kellar, sa the United eltate et Court, last itight on the poll - lion of the Gullies, Coal and Coke Company eeeins to have gone abroad from !the first reports. The report that the injunction pro- hibits the furnishing of food: and Money to the strikers le errotteous and grew oat Or the fact that Wilson neat ketatue, the alleged agitators •nanted in the precess, ameng a num- bet of ethers, aro engaged solely in thie plinth of the strikers' manage - Mont. They have been ;shipping pro- vielons into the Motley district for f OM; lime and basemen. the netting of them in the peoetesaings gave the impresision to the mittere, eineo re- moved, that their agnate were not permittalto ho tleen any farther enet onitnee. The itijunetion restraints etrike lead- ers; or agitators from encroaching upon the property of the company, but la not a blanket inertia:ion In the Mee that it is intended to cover the entire juriediction. Seel' a blanket injanetlen the alert may hand down later if alleged interference with Coin- prodee now operating continues. Forty-four auger vest/sett; are On their Way or are towline; carf0M et jaVa sugar 101' ILO, refineries'. There wfli be ObOlet 250,000 tone. ITCIICRAFT IN CHICAGO. Lawsuit Brought by Woman Under Spell. EISIITEEN NOT A Sufficient Speed for Boats From Canada. HON, A. G. BLAIR'S OPINION. Montreal, Aug. 4e -"I cannot an - sever as a Minieter ler the Orawn, but e do not objeot to expressina my personal opluien, ealiell "hos always boon favorable to a fairly fast line of steamers between Canada and Great Britain, and by title I mean a service or about eighteen Witte au hour. Anything better than that would tx,) beyond the requireutente of the country, whiee would not justify the excessive west, and think it would also be good polies, to make Sydney a port of call both outward and inward." Tito above statement was mole to- day by Hon. A. G. Blair, who aaTived here to -day from Se. John, N. B., having oompleted his tour of inspec- tioe over tee Canadian Govermnent railway system. • The •elinieter or ltailways and Catt- alo after stating that ho would leave, Ottawa on tletureclay for England, woe asked if his comparatively sudden decision lot mese the Atlantic bad anything to do with the discussion proccediaa between els colleagues in London and the Imperial authorities, Although Mr. Blair did not say so dtreetly, hie reply smutted to intimate that he had been called to London for the purpose of aiding Sir Wilrld and the other Cabinet Ministers on the other side in reaching a decision In 'the fast line matter. Grand Trank lias No Fear. THE QUEER LIST OF CHARGES, Chicago, Aug, 4.-Solem outdone, Calcago as the centre or witchcraft. Broomsticks, black cats, spelie. And the outcome is a suit in the courts for $10,000. Mrs. Louise Goldhorn is the complainaut. Mr, Dorothea Stenzel Is the defendant, P There Is nothingan the appearanee of the two Wale cottuges4 at 470 and 47e Hue -tinge street to indicate -that the spirits or the ale are homestaking there. Two women were 6r:rubbing vigorously at the week's wash yes- terday morning when they were ask- ed as to t)10 alleged witchery. Mrs. Goldhorn confessed that the heti never seen any posltive evidence of the black art on the part of Mrs. Stenzel, ;bee she declared that others Mal told ber that Mrs. Stenzel had boasted of having compelled the Guld- items, throagb sorcery, to move their barn. i Bat over and against that the Stenzel famay declared that the 0°e:t- horns had accomplished tho follow- ing thine: Caused the death of a daughter of the family. Administered a Blow poison to Mr. Stenzel. Caused . two pretty daughters 'to lose their hair within a week. ' Atteinpted to beWitch Mrs. Sten- zel. Killed trees, plants and cast a general blight over the Stenzel home. Ida Stenzel, the 25 -year-old (laughs ler, who was one or the sisters whose hair dropped out, told of her expeti- elle 0. "Mos. Coldliorn called inamma: be- neath her svindow " 6ho said, "and forced her to sit in a chair. Then she bused the .window three times and towelled the coffee ,pot. name times the said in passing, 'Look at that beautiful hair, and panted at Ma head with the hand that had touched the coffee pot. rn a week all my hair had fallen out." !IGO) MN'S !Nig-RATION. Left Fortune of $100,000 to a Young Actres. MAMA CHIEF, CONVICTED, Thirty Years' anarlsonntent for Alter - tierce and, Aecomplities. beroriag•tniale' 1244014'0 tOtillgr. t4.1-terfell,e1Vt113:141c111 been going on for tsorne time, of Trapani, Fontana, and Palizzolo, the last named formerly deputy frOni Palermo, ox s chargee of murder, was concluded at eleven o'clock lost night. ne jury returnee), a verdict of guilty againee TraPeed and Paitzzolo for the murder of Signor 14teeli, and againet Fontanu and Pallezolo for the Mur- der of feignor Notarbartolos Sen- tences of tiarty year' imprisonment each were imposed epon the three guilty wee., wile are Members of the MPa,494116010 Was accused of having, as the head of the Mafia, procered the murders ssf algaor Miceli and Signor Notarleartolo. The latter, who was a reenter Mayor of Palermo and a dlr. Actor of the 'Rank of Molly, was rob- bed aga Wiled in a railroad car near Palermo in December. 1890. The Proceedings against Palizzolo Were coneitlered particularly Motors testa in the efforts of the Italian Government 'to overthrow the Sion- ista Mafia. Bologna, evas °Isogon as the place of trial in order that wit- nesses and judges megat not be In- timidated by the Mafia, 'With regard te4 the route of through traffic to and from the intereor, M. We Es Davies, the Pas- senger Traffic Manager of the Grand Trunk, said to -day: "We have no :ear of the fastellue, ehold It be establithed, being operated on Other than fair loudness principles. That is the only way by which IL can be made a success. The Canadian Pacific, although our rival% in rail- way competition, will not be our rivals so far as the steamship line is concerned. The steamship com- pany will train every item to tenece the line pay. It weld not be made to pay were it dependent on the C. P. R. alone. In other words, its success will probably be dependentas much, upen us as it will be upon their own railway. They will loolc after • our business just as they would their own. Tien; have re slight advatitago. in the mat- ter or through traffic under their own syetem, but it is most unlikely they will abuse that, for, if they did, they would antagonize us and drive our 'business into the hands or 1110 N0W! ,Xork combleatiou. That is wpat they .would not, wont, what the Cant-tellan Government would not want, what the people of Canada would not want, and what we would met want. Vto you see how ens lightened self-interest would oper- ate.' Mat is hew we shoeld con- duetthe business were the condi- tion& reversed, and wore we to es- tablish the steamship lino intend of them. We have every confidence tu the belie that they would do just as we would."; WHERE IS DOLLY EMERSON NOW. .eNw• York, Aug. 4. --Dolly Enter - Sou, an uotress, whose present where- abouts is unOriown, on proving Iter identity can stequire possessictn of .an estate vadued at, $100,00e, belt to her by an admirer wbo,bad not aeon her los years send was) Wi8h0C1 10 prove his fondness for hoe in some subsetan- tial manner. aince see wag la.sb in this city It is Irelineee, Miss Einersen bas been marrien, to man named 'Wilkinson, with. ethane it is. supposeei she is now living in tee weet. MrS. Ellen Donnelly, of No. 138 East 127th. street, bas been seckina her for several mouths, but trays she has been unable to get any trace of her. Jos- eph E. Donuelly, a brother-in-law of Mrs. Boranelly, is the benefactor of the Actress. Ile had, a large estate in Kausue. Fifteen years ago lie met bar at Junction City, Kan., when see was twenty-five years of moo, pretty and vivacloue. Ile eonceived, a deep Int/Its uation for her and corresponded with hex folr several. years. $he went oe tbe stage Ond travelled all over the country, singing, and danoing in oxtail inutile halls. Ton years ago lie heard she had married, but that fact did nolt 000111 '10 lessen the ardor or the rich old anao-ho was sixty -or affeet h.er status' in his estimation. What' they hest parted, he declared that he purposed to show his affec- tion for the attraotive looking eiren ol the stage in sante unmistakable way. Wm thought nothing more of hie promise and had not been in commun- ication with him In recent , years. When he dled, throe menthe ago, it was found that he had deeded his estate aid the stock on it tothe. ac- tress. The bequest, which Is worth fully $100,000, Is asvalting Iler pres- ence in I(.21118218 to 01111111 it. She doubt - leas has no idea of the good luck awAttleg her. Mrs. Donnelly hopes the 1 through the aid of the newts - papers SOMe trace of her cat be found. BY AEROPLANE SYSTEM. CNN UNDER WIESE Charged With Defrauding the U. S. Mails, TUHNEA HOSE ON MEHL Riot Between Hebrews and Factory Employees. A WILD PANIC IN THE CROWD. NeW York, Aug. 4. -The funeral of the late Chiot Rabbi Jacob jacobY, head. Of the Orthodox Hebrews of the Meted States, which was beld bore to -day, was the occasion' of one of the rnost remarkable demonstrations ever witnessed in this city, and led to a• collision between the Masses of Tewieh mourners and the police. The streets were packed teeth thousa,ado of Hebrews, the eteres were gener- afly and every point of yan- teem silting the route taken by the funeral procession ta- the different Synagogues was crowded with per - song of every age and size. Directly in froat of the house where the body has iota in state for tlie last few days over 100 patrolmen kept the surgtng crowd from the en- trance wieli considerable difficulty, After the service at the house the body was taken to each of the six synagogues on the East Side, where brier services were held. Whets the processiou, was passing the printing press factory of It Hoe and Cern- 011 Grand street, on tts way to, the cemetery In Brooklyn, several employees of the factory emptied pails of Water from the windows of an upper floor on to the spectators massed upon the sidewalk. Pail after pail, it was said, was emptied tee the ‚throng, which shouted and :etruggied and stampeded id vain to escape. Theo overalls and clo•thing soaked in water came down, from abeve, and even tools, scraps of steel, bolts, and a dead cat. , 'ranted ou the llose. A MURDER CASE HINTED AT. New York, Aug. 4.- George! Gs Coney, of St. jean, N. B., hold to -day in e2.500 bail for grand jury, charg- ed wall using the mails to defraud, is believed by the authorities to know much conerning the mysterious mur- der of old Solomon,13, Diego()) in New York, lil 1805., Atter Dieeree's body was recover- ed from the .Etudson, River relatives; searcired ids office for inmortaret pa- pers he had beets accumulating for five years, papers supporting Ida claim to the Dingee encl. Dralooses- tates Ini Dutchess and Putnam Coun- ties, New Lora, but the papers *ere miesing. Tao following year Oerey adyertiseel for the heirs to the Dine gee estate, claiming he had picked up from the Hudson: Rimer a bottle' containing the documents proving their claim, Many people answerea Itis advertisement. Ife represents himself as one of the heirotel asked co-operatien,, He induced many to ad- va.nce money, The pelice say he got About P0,000. . I ' BANK WITHOUT ITS CASH-- - Time Loeb. Wrongly Set Kept Vault Closed. N0W York, Aug. 4. -.There was eon- siderable commotion in the Phoenix National Bank early yesterday morn- ing when the ponderous doors of the big' vault of that institute:tit refused to respond to the efforts made to open them. From half -past eight in the morning, the usual time tit which the vault is opened, until ten o'clock, when the business of the day begins, every possible moans wee tried by the senior and junior clerks and offie cials, but all their efforts were un- availing. The vault of the Phoenix Bank pos- ses/les a time look, which is wound up and then set for a certain hour. At that time only the locks will respond to the workings or the come- plea:teen. It WitS learned from a clerk that Ito 'wound up the look so that the doors or the vault would be opened In forty-niae hours.. It W118 011 Set- urelay afternoon when the lock was wound up, so that it was figured out that the extra nine hours, due to a mithalculation,• would force the bink to du Without its cash, securities and loan collaterals, for the day, at least. Ps , At twenty-nine minutea after five o'clock cliceri3 from the assembled clerks in tile rear office told plainly that the day's anxiety was Over, and that the doors had been opened. Alfred M. Bull, the cashier of the pank, wito was present at the time, said that everything turnexl out most satisfactorily, and that the whole affair was oocasioned by the miscal- culation or a clerk. The bank suf- fered little iticonvenienee. Prof. Graham Bell Will Try to Nevi - gate the Ala Po'dney, C. II., Aug. 4. -Prof. Alex - eerier Graham Bell has nearly com- pleted his flying machine, which he expeota to test very shortly. The machine is being bent under hie per- sonal direction, and le reale:Illy dif- ferent from 1.1a0t05-Ihtmont'S citine. Every effort has bean made to keep geeret not only the delaile of contstruetion, but the feet that Stiehl a Machine is being built. It is reported to be twenty feet long, and in to be composted of 25 dietillet parte. It is .celled internal- ly With canvass, and in places witit 1111011' etrattlied on pleno wheel. Elva Miles bf tbis wire were Used in the constnietion. "rile principle or ilia kite Will be utilizedto it considerable extent. Thai meang that the aero- plane *systole, not used in any of eltottes-litutionta airshipe, will be the feature Of Bellee Mathina . HEED, Fll 4 MS. A BIG MACHINE To Make 35 Tons of Paper Per Day. The Canada Paper Company has placed an order with the Pusey & Jones Co., elf Whimington, Del., for a new large paper ntaelsine. This ma- chine will be 166 ihches wide and will Mae a Wheat of paper ever 14 feet le width. The =chino win be 'OD Per cont. larger them any other 110W in use in Canada, and will make the vary rimiest grade of news paper. It will weigh toarly 400 tons and will require a, train of 25 care to transport it to the company's works en the Si. Fronds River, at Wind- sor Mille, Que., evhero it will be In, op- eration about the end of the year. This machine will make 35 tots of finished 'newspaper per day, arid as soon as the new' pulp mill is complet- ed the company teal be turning out 50 tons of ground wood pulp per day, The new building now being erected, will be 435 feet long, varying in Width from 50 to 150 feet. Reduce l Her Weight From 260 to 120 Pounds, BUT NOW SHE'S A CORPSE, San Francieco, Cal., Aug. 4, -After having kept a fast for forty-five days, Mrs. Kathertne L. Ball, oee of the proprietors of The Hedges, a family hotel, died of starvation this morning. Mrs. Ball was about 50 years old and her weight short- ly 'before her fast begao, was in the neighborhood of 250 pounds. Her imereasing size caused her 'flitch worry. On the advice of Dr. j. C. An- thony the undertook a fast that was to last fifty days. At the end of fifteen days Mrs. Ball had lost forty pounds, but -she felt strong and had no % Oravieg for rood. On that day site' climbed three flights of stairs without stopping for breath. This was e, feat she had not accomplished before in years. Until the twenty-first day Mrs. Bales iinprovement continued. ' In- stead of bee,mideise, weak she became stronger and more active. She talked constantly of her marvellous fast and often expressed her inten- tio:a of keeping it for fifty days. But her endurance had been put under too severe a strain. On the forty-fifth day or the fast, just four days ago, the members of the fain- tly sent for Dr. J. Stow Ballard. She was induced that day to ' take some food and strengthening med:cine. Traened nurses were employed 'and stren: toms efforts were made to save her, but all failed. At the time of her death Mrs. Ball weighed not more than 120 pounds. CIRCUS TRUST COMING, ....- Positively the Most Steven/1mm, tin. rivaled Aggregation Itver Seen, NOW York, Aug. 4. -The circus folks are getting up 0 truet. Barnum & ilalloyes clams, 1111111111) Billet 'Wild Wetta and the loorepatigh es Sells eireue aro to form the nucleus of the emnblottelou, which Is to be Maier the 'control or the 'Barnum & Bailey Co., I/initial. Mr. Bailey, of the Bar- num ee Bailey combination, is not in title country, but he 10 expected in a 011001 time and It is believed that then the NytiliO1t0 ivill be formed wititout trouble. The ebisot et the arrangern.ent is to divide the United States, England and Germany up between tho three eltoveg, se that etteh will be able to devote two yearn to earl) Of these coantriee, and there Will be no opposition. • - A $2,000,000 FRAUD. ClIgilIMOGIC009004:54099090909414111.204,211114474100410000000004141 THE BOERS OF MEXICO: The Yaquis Will Not (live Up and Are Nearing gxtermination, 00002410020060240.440000g000dOoompoo00o00000 Los, Angeles, Cale-A.14g. 4.-aut4 Col. W. B. Eaton on .leits return from Teo - nova, Welt*, the otner day: "Tao leagues of Mexico, be most remarkable Indian tribe in all Am- erica, will Ise exterminated by. the Mexicanarmy in a few years more unicee they abandon their hopeless guerrilla warfare in Sonora ana Chilmalma, and that menus veto: Unlikely. The Yaquis are truly the Spartans of America. • "They have taken a eolenut vow never to cease fighting for their righte. If they keep up this battling against ench desperate:odds it isonly a matter of time when there wD1 ne no Yaquis left to renew the vow. "It le a pity, that the record of their long years of warfare with Mexico has not been preserved, The Yaquis are natural soldiere. Some of the strategy of their sufbohiefe Is as- toniseing and ought to be put be- fore readers. "For fifty-two years practically the Yawns and Mexicans h'ave been at War. In 1877-78 there was a cessation of hostilities for stxteen months, bat both Mexieans and Yaquiff went 'armed just the same. "In May, 1897, the Yaquis made e, treaty of peace with Mexico at Ortiz and for about two y,eare the Mexican army thought It had at last done with fighting the Yaquis, only to have the old tribal spirit of re- venge break out anew. From that time to this some, 8,000 lidexicam sol- diers/ have been kept busy, In cane paigne, against the Yaquis. • "The war leas been most aggres- sively fought and the Yaquis have been more reckless than ever be- fore. Lust year, it is estimated that the Yaquis lost some 800 of their braved in war, and since last Janu- ary 'they bay° lost even more than that, In one skirmish, on June 4, sixty, miles south of Torin, the Mexi- cans lost twenty-two and the Yaquis nearly 6ixty. All the engagements between the Mexioane ani the Yaquis In the beet two years have resulted In losses dogleg and trebly severer te0 the Yaquis than to the Mexietans. "Ameriean miners, cattlemen and ranchers in northern Mexico find the Yaquie an industrious, plodding, Tile angry populace, moat of wimen were Hebrew, retaliated by throw- ing back into the factory windows the mimeos that fell on them. They caso gathered up stones and sticke, and In a few minutes there wee scarcely it whole pane of glass on the Greed street side of the fac- tory. Then someone in the fac- tory turned on the hose and played it indiscraninately all over .the funeral procession. At one time as many as five streams were playing on the crowd. Drivers of mourn- ing carriages whipped up their horses, trampling over citizens, and the stronger men trampled women and children under foot in their ef- forts to escape. Tho police Munn the meantime taken a hand in the trouble, and were clubbing the peo- ple riglet and left. They were, how- ever, unable te cope with, the crowd, and the reserves of half a duce precincts were despatched to the scene, It was more than half an hour before order was restored, and the streets in the v)elnity of the factory cleared. A number of arrests were made, among them being several employees of tile Iloo Camp a ny,. Many persons were found about the etreets, bleeding from wounds upen their beads and other parts of their bodies. Ambulances had been summoned in the meantime, and three responded. The druggists were kept busy for some time dress- ing the wounds of the injured. Sev- eral policeman oleo were injured. receiving cuts and bruises. Turd men were taken to the hospital. One of them had sustained internal injuries and contusions, and the other a sprained leg. Later in the day the persona arrested were ar- raigned in Police Court and fines of $5 and $10 were imposed in! Hey - erne lastances. Bad feeling is said to exist between some of tile em- ployees of the Hoe Company and the Bebrews residing in the neigh- borhood, of twhom there are a great number, and this Is said to have been the cause of the trouble. Clayton Porces Conspirators to Sur- render Stolen [funds. Washington, D. C., A•ng. 4. -Unit - ea States Ambassador Clayton in Mexico lute succeeded in getting re, etitution in one of the largest em- bezzlement cases before the Mexi- can Slate Department. &once Brown Pottee, representing farge .Americanand English inter- ests in the Titthaullio Mining Com- pany, of Mexico, appealed to the State Department at Washington for justice, asserting that by a fraudulent conspliacy some of the directors of the company had em- bezzled funds to the amount of none than $2,000,000. This, it was charged, was aceion- plishea by packed eleetions and the bestowal of illegal powers npon One of the 'directors; in the com- pany. The fact that Rome Minor Mexican officiate were involved in the conspiracy made it very alai - cult to obtain justice by the ordin- ary enuititOcle., The State Department referred the caste to Ambassador Clay toe, and lie btotareet it to the attention of 1,ite. Mexican Goyermuent and pressea 11 so 'vigorously that he is now able to report that the colts smirretors have been obliged to dis- gorge all of the money and 8C0111'.. ides they had obtained by their fraudulent operation. LONG LIFE IS ENDED. LOS UM DEWED. Parte, Mtg. 4. -Baroness de Lisle du Fief is dead, aged 105 years. At the age inr.100 An published a book or peenia that attractell wide at- tention. This maiden lady never Used eyeglaase0s. and read the pup - 01t5 even On her death bed. She drank and Mote& and engaged in long promenades all her life. In her youth sho lied been ladysin-Waiting to the Unhappy Duellesor de Berry, whom the attended when she lied fro% the Wrath Of the Freiteli owe- plee Every Building in the City Wrecked by Earthquake. laborers in the .sliver minas, tie Oahe ore 011 the gulf of psalm*, as formers and rateroad laborers, has boon contributed to the trIbal fund prosecuteng the war. "The ;tribe had a remarkable -Chief !muted (Jaime an Indian borne in fildhualraa about 3810, And edtleat- ed at a mission school In California. He was a lieutenant In the Mexican Army for Several years, and WY - ember 10 the Yaqui. country Oval 1878, •whea the Toques; under Ca- Jena's; direction, held a eonvention anssi Declared 'IShemselves rree from tho yoke of Mexioo, Tee Maxie can Government forthwith trebled Its army tu the field, and the hard- est campaign in all Yaqui warfare began. The tribal army was led by Oajemi, and the Mexican forces by General Petsqueera. "For seven years the Yaquis and Mexicans faced each other, and of. ten•est the Mexicans were defeated. Cajemt as ambushed and elan in, 1880, and while the tribe appar- ently gave up fighting for their po- Ittical freedom, they were secretly renewing their resources and pre- paring to strike the Mexican army heavier blows for its UhIng or the Yaqui. hero, Cajemi. "In November, 1890, the Yaquis were again lu rebellion against the Mexecan Government, and the war was continued ceaselessly from ltbat time to this. The cause of the re- newal of warfare was alleged to be the removal of the Yaqui women and chadren from their homes by the Mexican soldiers tO a reservation near Hermosillo. Ali that Mexico eater was that one day the old-time Yaqut fortresses in the mountains Were opce more occupied by hostiles and that maraudtn•g and killing were gang 011 218 actively as before the last treaty of peace. "Since hostilities have been reuew- ed the Mexican, soldiers breve adopt- ed new methods with the Yaqui en- emy. Nowadays the Mexican. soldiers Make prisoters of all Yaqui women and children found in the enemy's territory. The Yaqui crops are des- troyed and every form of suaten- ance to the Yaquite is destroyed. "This is done because the women at home eupply the fighters Int the field with ammunition and food. Even. tbe 1303's and (Saris Risk Death !lights, Religious Bac°. who have been taught from child- hood to bate Mexico and Mexicans and to deal well witib every one else. Ali Yaquis make sacrifices to aid them in the war with Mexico/ "The women do nietes work in the fields that their husbands and brothers may be in the mountains fighting the common enemy. Old and young •starve and stint to lerovide money for buying arms and amuuni-. tion for the Yaqui brave. Boys of 13 and 14 are trained to endure hardships and to bear arms, anat 15 and 16 go out into the mountain fastnesses to fight Mexico. "The Yaquis are devout Roman Catholics, and they will not have priests among them or Spanish or- igin. They are farmers, cattle ranch - men and miners. All are poor in pocket and live in little adobe houges along the Santa Inez Mountain e and along the Yaqui River, which flows into the Gulf or California. Torin is the chief towel{ of the& Yaqui coun- try and is also the militaryi head- quarters of the Thera Zone in Mexico. "The Yaquis say that they are the only people in 'Mexico who have preserved their tribal orgeniza- Bon and legends from the pre -con- quest days. When Cortez came to Mexico in 15.19 'Mere were more than 300,000 in the tribe. In one war against Coronado in 1536 the Yaquis lost 25,000 men. "Still the tribe resolutely held out against the Spanish conquista- dores. and they paid for their pa- triotism by losing some 30,000 more men during the Corenaclo cam- paigns in northern Mexico. When Mexico gained her independence in 1821, the old tribe had diminished to about 40,000. The . • Undying Bate of Yaquis THE PEOPLE PANIC-STRICKEN. Los Alamos, Cal., Aug. 4. - The most severe earthquake in the history of this place occurred at 1.20! this 'morning. It is not pos- sible as yet to estimate the dam- age, but it is very heavy. No lives are known te bave been lost, though there were many narrow mapes. Every brick- building in the town was destroyed or badly wrecked.10 reearly evety house windows were inoken. The Presbyttrian Chino b, a, large and handsome brick struc- ture, was razed to the ground, and stmilar fate befell the geeeral store of W. S. Wiekenbete also a brick Th•e shock seems to have had it viral, motion. Goods were hurled from elestves of stores and piled in the middle of the rooms. Even suelt Imlay artieles as desks were thrown about. Not a clantnee is left standing in the town. All bleat walla aro badly damaged, but frame strustures generally oecaped serious 11111117. The whole tewn was aroueee, and people fled Nom their 'tomes lathe etreets in pante, There have leen ;several light shoeke since :July 2,7th, whenthe first heavy shock oc- curred, but that of tilts morning ex - (mated 141 VIO101100 anything yet ex- perienced. It isteted thirty iseconds and threw people front theta beds. Lost Alamos is a town of about (i0.) iinbabitants in Santa Barbara Ceninty. TWO MEN DIE OF. GLANDERS. Brothers in Min-nesotet Stricken by Dieense Peduller te llorses. St, Paul, Mime Aug. 4. -The board of health; has just beennOtifieti that Henry 111141 110bOrt Schram, brother's. who Mal on 0 farm in Becker eoun- ty, Med or glandere, a. Montle° cam - Moo among horses. They cared for a horse strfeeted with glanders and ono of them was stricken down,. After seventeen day's' illness% lie died. Shortly -alter the se - nod brother was stricken thieve by the same illneee and also .died after seventeen days' sielotese. The matter 'wee reported 10 the nate Ward of Ilealth, tot the death of the brothers watt itttributed to ariletilpteX. InVestigatiOn eleteted the thecae() -to be glanders. and deny themselves food In order secretly to carry munitions of war- fare aaid corn and wheat away up among the rugged mountain fast- nesses to the fighters. • "'Recently 600 women and children were brottght to Hermosillo as pri- soners of war. Some of the captured children Lave been sent away to Gov- ernment echools and charitable In- stitutione in the interior cities of the republic, while alt every post in, the Yaqui counery numbers of these captives are being held during the continuance of hostilities. "The Yaqui boys, by reason, of their natural instinct for war, are being trained as cadets for the Mexican Army, while the women, will be re- turned to their warrior husbands if the latter ever eurrender. "It is no longer the policy or .the Mexican troops to make prisoners of the Yaqui braves. They have tried that repeatedly, but without suc- cess, for as soon as released the Ya- quis invariably resume their bloody WOR1c on, the rural highways. Besides the Yaquis are never known to make prisoners of Mexican soldiers, ex- cept to eat them to death ia fiend- ish for the Spaallpai dates from the con- quest. Yaqui lore deals with the bar- barities inflicted upon the tribe be- cause secret treasure vaults and gold mines were not revealed to the Spanish army. Five aboriginal pu- eblos in the Yaqui country were razed to the ground during the long years that the unarmed tribe fought the soldiers of Spain. "When Mexico rase in rebellion against Spain the remnant of the great tribe joined heartily in the war. The Yaquis were Gen, Itur- blade's beet soldiers. Tliey had been waiting nearly three centuries to strike at their old persecutors and tyrants. The Yaqui wOmen even carepea on the battlefields with their husbands and sons. "When Mexico was free the Yaquis returned to their homes among the nmentains and valleys of Sonora. For twenty -live years the tribe was at peace. It developed itslields, reopened its mine% and for the first time since Curtez increased rather than diminished its population. "The Yahuis are famous workers, and in 1822 tend in 1845 were wide- ly known for their profitable grain fields and silver mines. When the American army marched into Mex- ico in 1.84.7 the Yaquis could not at .firet bo whoa() front the mount- ains and valleys of Sonora, to join the Mexicans. Finally, on promises that additional land would be given them, some 800 Yaqut braves join- ed the Mexican forces. "From the time of the treaty of Guadeloupe Ilidalgo, in February, 1818, until July 1897, tho Yaquis were never really at 'peace with Mexico. Their grievance was that the Mexican Government had not kept its promises of more land. "They have spent their earnings of fifty yeare and sacrificed Therri are a great Many legmart Aleeks," but no One lute e:et sect a eltiert "sMart Alook;P , , TO INSURE PEACE tlIS TASK. Kaiser Says Thetis His Dutk-Others Should Keep Silence. Berlin, Aug. 4. --Replying to an ad- dress of welcome at. Emden yester- day, the German Emperor, said Prus- sia now held the foremost position within the Empire, and the King of Prussia, now had what no other 'Ger- man Emperor had been in a position. to acquire, namely, the necessary mastery of kis own house. On this basis it was again possible to take up the old problems which his pre- decessors had always kept in 'view. Emden, the Emperor said, had never given way to cries and lamentations, but had awaited the future in God- fearing silence, an example which many Germans might imitate. Better days were in etoee for the city, with which it lay to turn circumstances to account, while on himself devolved the task of malotaining peace, sio that Emden might look forward to pros- perous development Malty Thousand Lives in their warfare. mhe, Mexican Gov - e• I.ment lost 15,000 soldlers Imi the Same time. • "Until a fettle years age, When the tribe became decimated by its teaseless struggles, the Yeeluis gain- ed ne much ass the Mexicans, and On some occasions the Tomtit; van- quishal 'their more powerful enemy. Almost every equare mile of the mountains and Valleess in Eastern Sot ora one northern Chihuahua has been the Keno of an engagement between the SpnalanslIke Yaquis and the elexiean itrmy. "Yaqui. women And girls have had their share in the long fight for tri- bal tights by earning money for buy.% tng Ammunition iser the soldiers. In the summer of 1893 Sonic Yaqui wo- Men 111 Menis clothes/ were fOntia Among the dead after skirmishes. "The youths etre taught to be - conte eiterpthOotere at 1.6. They Iwo bought thousands of Improved rifles from the AMericana and haVo gone without food to buy eArt- rklges, leeenry context) that the teens Weliten and children could earn as CUT TO PIECES BY REAPER. Waiter Dutton, of Pavillon, Fond Dying by His Wite. Pavillon, N. Y., Aug. e. ,Walter Dutton lost his life yesterday aftere noon while at work cutting wheat. It is supposed some part of the binder/ refused to work and that he alight. ete In front of the maehine to repair it. While thus engaged the horses became frightened, two of them be- ing colte. Mr. Dutton was caught in the knives and his hips and arma horribly mangled. The hare were cut all the way across 80 that the bones were exposed„ The reeire arm near the wrist was nearly severed, and there was a deep cut near the el- bow. The horses ran abotit the field' scattering the bundles of grain. Mrs. Dutten, seeing the horses standing In the middle of the field eating gtain, know WM/Ailing must be wrong. Site found her husband where be had been thrown. Neigh- bors 021,1118 and carried him to the house, where Dr. 13,urbank, Sweeting and Belknap attended lane He died at 0.30 o'clock this morning. .....••••••••••1611•••• ••••,..1.••••• Fall Faint. Central Canada, Ottawa,hug. 22-30 ngs; on A.ug. 25-20 Morrieburg . Aug. 27-29 Sherbrooke Jag. 30 -Sept. 6 Toronto V.. Sept. 1-13 Harrowsruith ..• Sept. 4- 5 Peterboro Sept. 0-11 Halifax, N. 8. ...... Sept.10-18 London Sept.12-20 Owtsn Sound Sept. 16-13 Guelph ... Sept. 16-18 South Ilaidimand ... Sept 17-18 Iialdintand Sept. 23-21 Woo/Week Sept. 25-26 Paris Sept. 25-20 Listosvel Sept. 30-Cset. 1 leetteltburg -.a.. mt. 2- 3 Iloekton Oet. 7- 8 CAledonia . .... .... ....,. Oet. 0-10 Woodbridge ...... Oct. 13-10 Central Blume, IlarrieSept. 21-26 Hanover Sept. 30-Oet. 1. Ingorsoll Sept. 25-26 Wegt Zorra and EmbrO ... (Sets 2 EWA Nieeteuri and Thaniesford. 0tt.10 COoltsville Norfolk Union) Binicon Oct. 3.444.14