The Wingham Advance, 1911-11-02, Page 7erle4,014100,,4104,1•4•,•••••14-4014-rn•W
ROYAL MBAR
AT DELHI, INDIA
••••••••••••••
Will Perhaps be World's
. Greatest Spectacle,
King George and Queen
Mary Ready to Sail, c
44,•••••••••••
A Wonderful Gathering of
Indian Celebrities.
Lendon, Oct. 30.—All is ow ready for
King George, Queen Mary and their
dietinguished suite, including Secretary
tif state or India Lord Crewe, to em-
bark on the P. it 0. liner "Medina" for
°the Durbar at Delhi. The event is one
of the utmost "significance, for this is
the first time a King-Emperoy, ascent-
panied by his consort, ha a set out in
person, to his Wien Empire to an-
nounce "the solemnity of his corolla -
tion" to his dingy subjects.
The wardrobe Queen Mary is taking
with her includes dresses of cloth of
gold, a fashion followed by her ladies-
utevaiting, headed by the Duchess of
Devonshire, Mistress of the Robes,
Lady Shaftesbury and Lady Ampthill
have els.° taken special care to see that
their, clothes barmonize with the tastes
of their royal mistress.
The first imposing scene in the great
Oriental pageantry will be the state en.
try in Delhi December 7th, when the
British monarch will ride through the
Xing's Gate, an historic passage esed
only by the great Mogul emperors. Af.
ter receiving Viceroy Lord Hardinge
and the members of his council, the
King -Emperor will accept the homage
of some of the native rulers, Thence
there will be a state procession through
the principal streets of the city to the
Ridge, where the King and Queen will
be greeted by more haehaplaced repre-
sentatives of British rule in India.
Outside the city is the scene of the
great tableae which is calculated to
tininess the imagination of two hundred
millions of Indians. The ground cover-
ed by the four hundred and thirty-sev-
en &nips exeeeds twenty-five square
miles, and provides accommodation for
over 200,000 people. Every tent is lit
with electric light tend, the large double
.tents in the Kudeit camp heve bath-
rooms. The laing's camp is centrally
situated, lama hree mites from the
Durbar arena.. Four markets will °flee
food and other necessaries at ordinary
prices in the city of canvas, waere for
a few days life will rival the gayest
scenes of the London season.
When the aunlight first touches the
minarets of Delhi on. the morning of
December 12th, a thrill of expectancy
will pass through • every province from
the Himalayas to the Indian Ocean,
from the borders of Baluchisan to the
Bay of Bengal, for to the Oriental mind
the presence of the King -Emperor is
• an epoch-making event. Accompanied
by a squadron of cavalry, King -George
and Queen Mary will drive from their
camp to the royal pavillion in the Dur -
bar arena, a semacireular space in
which the rank and fashion of the
eastern and -western worlds eval be
massed, with standing room on high
greund which will enable 100,000 people
to view the magnificent spectacle. 'There
will be no procession of elephants, as
on the occasion of the last Durbar,
when Lady Curzon sattred as Vieereince
In the honors of the day.
When King George has taken his seat
on the throe of India, and bowed to
and bejeweled crescent of one bundred
and fifty Indian potentates, a fanfare
of trumpets will announce the opening
of the Durbar. 'Queen Mary will appear
in the robes she wore at the corona-
tion, Inte out of compliment to the
Indian Empire the famous Kehinoor
iliamond will ;litter in her crown. If
the Nizatu of Hyderabad displays the
"Nizam" diamond, the largest crystal
in the world, and the Clitelewar of %r-
ode "The Star of the South" the Indian
eun will light.a s,plender of 'jewels never
before seen in unisote
The King will then read the Royal
Proclamation, an event of real import-
ance to the Indian people, for it is ex-
pected to contain good news inthe
form of remission of taxation. This
Revd Proclamation will be simultane-
ously read in every town and village
throughout the •Indian Empire, The
British.National Anthem will then be
played by massed 'bandit as the King.
puts on his erown, after which there
will be a formal presentation to the
King -Emperor of prominent Wien
rulers. Apart from the presence of the
English sovereigne Durbar day will be
memorable for the finest display of
tare geins to be seen in the world. All
the treasure chests of the great feuda-
tory princes will be ransacked to find
the most priceless ornaments of flute
big beauty, which will throw the jew-
els ot the American Duchesses quite.in
the eluade. The day following the Dur -
bar abestowal of honors will bring the
Delhi programme to a close.
While Queen Mary rests at Agra, her
royal husband will go for te short hunt-
ing 'trip to Nepal', a welcome change
after a surfeit of ceremonial, and a
neeneary preparation for the ceremon-
ies to take place at Calcutta at the be.
ginning of January, whom, Court will
be held at Government House and a
seties of feasts for all sort e and coudie
tions of people will take place.
- •
BLACKSTOCK SORE
•••••••••••••••
Deprecates Abhorrent State
of Mind of Men
••••••••••••••••
Cornwall, Ont., deep:debt atatinton
MeGillivray, aged 24, of Morrishutg, evite
'found guilty at the assizes elf attempt -
'ed rape on ii girl of 14, at that village
*early in September.
' Mr. Bineksteck, in bis Address; to the
jury, severely flagellated the young nien
who loiter at street corners.
"•They make it impossible for tie tO
iag it without hearing their filthy !an-
tennae and profanity," he said. "They
lite the rotten Apples In the barrel."
' He depreeated the abhorrent state ef
'mind which. Made it pitiable for frith.
are, brothers and sons in the court room
to titter at the havoltitig fitOry, and
to regard its (Walls with anything hut
vevulsion.
"It is a story whielt /amnia make us
hank our lietuls. and feel thitt we ere
Men." declared the ernwn provienter.
afeGillivray was owintenetel to three
ye:11,1.
It doesn't take an egotist to make
rpm at tha OrTs.
SAVED WOMAN.
•Ii.e••••••••••
Talk AboutIntelligent Cow
This is It.
1••••••••••••••
• Kenos titye Oct. aliee-A Row took
'sides against its own kind ht an encoun-
ter between Mrs. Kate Vermillion, of
Old tiblhi and another. The friendly
VOW prOtably saved Airs. Vermflhiou
'from being gored. to death. As it is she
was injured dangerously.
•
Mrs. Vernullion, wife of L. Vernal -
lion, it farmer, bad gone to a pasture
to gather persimmons, and had started
'home, when she saw a cow running to-
ward her. She picked up a stick to
:drive the animal away, but it became
more infuriated, and knockea her down
anti was trampling aud goring her when
the second cow came up. The latter,
whether from enmity toward the first
or affection toward Mrs. Vermillion,
promptly attacked the first •cow, while
Mrs, erawled out of the
way.
*et.
THE LUTHERANS
Have Their Own Seminary
in Canada.
Rev. J. A. Miller on Board
of Seminary.
We.terloo, Oct. 29. — The Lutheran
Church Is not a young body in Canada.
Fifty years ago the first Lutheran syn-
od was founded by German pastors,
forming the German Canada Synod,which
in July of this year celebrated its golden
Anniversary. la 1909 another Lutheran
body had come into existence, the Eng-
Ish Lutheran Synod ot Central Canada.
Both synods have sixty‘ininisters and 100
congregations in Ontario. There is also
the synod of Nova. Septia and the Man-
itoba Synod, This year it has added
two other Institutions for the trebling or
its ministers, pro -seminary in the
Northwest, located at Winnipeg, :aid it
theological seminary In Waterloo. it
has more and more become a necessity
for the Lutheran Church in Canada to
educate Ito young men on Canadian ter-'
ritory for its own field, 0.11d to abolish
the education of Its students for the
inipistry in the States, winch so far had
been it necessity, but -without good suc-
cess. Since the last three years Lite
Lutheran SyuOds have been working for
au institution on its own grounds, but
nkt until a few months ago have they
seen their way clearly to establish the
Lutheran Thelogical Seminary In Wat-
erloo, Ont., where there is a large con-
stituency of Lutheran people andcon-
gregations, which are in a flourishing
condition. St. John's Church, Waterloe,
Rev. E. Boekelmann, pastor, will be the
parish In which the seminary is located.
A. well suited building„ giving aecommo.
datleri for about twenty studenta,'. was
offered and bought in Waterloo. The
Board of Trade immediately offered 0.
site of five acres nexitrae the seminary.
gmunds, with monetary assistance for
atiother two acres. witich had to be
bought. so that the whole area comprises
about 11 acres, lying between the two
main streets, Albert street, where the
seminary is located, and King street.
The kwatIon is the finest in the town,
and the building a most substantial one.
Tme board of the seminary, formed by
the German Canada Synod and the Cen-
tral Synod of Canada, is constituted by
the following members: Rev. J. A. Mil-
ler, A. M., Hamilton, President; Rev. A.
nedderoth, Ph. D., Toronto; German
SecretarY;,diev, J. 13. Beiber, A. M., Eng-
lish Secretaty; 10, Neruich, Toronto,Trea-
surer; Rev. J. Maurer, A, M., Unionville,
Rev. F. Veit, Tavistock; Mr. R. Sliver,
Unionville; Rev. E. Hoffmann, D. D.,
President of the Canada Synod.
. The dedication and the school of learn-.
ing took place last Week, and the
founding of the first Lutheran senriinarY
marks an epoch in the history of the,
Lutheran Chum' in Canada. One of the
nrineipal speakers was the Rev, G. C.
lierkemeyer, D. 33., nom 'Mount Ver-
non, N. Y., from Mount' Vernon, ar. Y.,
director of the largest Lutheran Orphan-
age in America, and editor of the Ger-
man Lutheran. Rev. IT. BrezIng,. of
Niagara Falls, N. Y.; Rev. 1'. Altneter.
of Buffalo, N. Y., and many of the well-
Inicwn ministers of the Taitheran Chareli
in Canada took part in the programme.
ONLY THREE HURT
The Boat
Net
SEVERE I OSS
FOR ITALIANS
01•••••••••••••••
Censorship too Strict to
Publish Truth,
Afraid That Socialists WW
Object to War.
• Campaign lifleeting With
Many Setbacks.
Paris, Oct. 29,—There is sufficient
news from Tripoli froin Various
sources in the last few days to show
that the Italians have been suffering
far more severely than is shown if
in the reports: which are known
to have minimieed the casualties. but
the censorship i§1 still close enough to
prevent any accurate knowledge of the
figures.
The Italiau government's Aaiun in
the.suppression of casualty !1st, 'he
exaggeration of small successes ard
the postponement of the assenibling of
otualament eimply shows that the gov-
eminent not only fears losing the pop-
• ular support of the war, but of incur-
ring opposition of a serious nature.
News of any serious reverse or the con-
tinuance of unsuccessful operetitins
would stir the Socialists to active hos-
tilities and the declaration of strikes,
Italy. therefore, is anaious for peace.
Italy, with a view of forcing Turkey
to submit, has taken two steps, while
it is preparing a third. Firstly, there
Was the threatened naval attack upon
the Turkish possessions in the Aegeak
sea, which produced to protestfrotn
the powers as being against ltalaasile.
elaration that tae war would be lim-
ited to North Africa.
The Popolo Romano, the organ of the
foreign office, then 'Made the sendioa
field announcement that the aetion in
the Aegean sea was inopportune from
.political and military viewpoint,
statement was widelypublished.
But a Rome telegram this evening
repeats that the government hes de-
cided upon a naval demonstration, the
situation of which would be to make the
situation of Southeast Europe more
eritleal than ever.
'Italy's other step was the formal de-
clieration of the annexation of even -
eke. This has been criticised as
ly justifiable at a moment when the
Jtalians are practically en the ac-
lensive.
Information from Rome is that a col-
umn under General Raynaldi, eoneist-
ing of three regiments and strodg de-
tachments of artillery, cavalry and en-
gineers is intended ebortly let mirth
upon Colgan, which is 22 hours distabt
from Tripoli by caravan. Tha columa
will take three days to make the atilt -
hey.
After the event of the week, Or
ian expedition will probably he delved
until the arrival of reinforcemeets frem
Italy. Several infantry regiments are
already ender orders and Gre metiers
left Rome last Wedtiesday. Moe.. will
follow as the first expeditionary force
of 50,000 is deemed hardly euffi:iyat to
garrison Tripoli, Dengeazi and Tobruk.
• •
•
'A SLANDER
••••••••••.•••••
To Hint That a Catholic is
a Freemason.
•••••••••••••1•14.0,11,
:Montreal despatch: That the creation
of a suspicion in the public .mind• to the
hiffect that a 'Catholic is an active pro-
moter of an organization partieipating
• al the spirit of Freemasoirry constitutes,
for that 'Cetholie, damage to stieh an
Train Collision extent that he may rightfully ecek re-
dress at the ha-nas of the civil tribunal
Sei ious. the ruling handed down by Ala Justice
10•••••••••••••.••
Weir itt an interesting ease brought to
• •J judgment Friday.
The action was o claim for $5,000 dam
-
aims entered against Dame Herniate
trrunelle et al., relict of Paul Tardivni,
and publishers of La Verite, a haenelt
Catholic organ of Quebec, the plaintiff
Rodolphe Girard, a civil servant and au-
thor, complaining on account of an' arti-
cle published in the issitte of Nov. 21,
1908.
The article forming the suWeet of tat
libel was written on the occasion of the
appearance of a new book written by
Mr. Girard, and entitled Marie Calumet.
In the course of the eritiersm the Jour.
nal made reference to the .A.Illance Frani
calse, which it stigmatized as a (Unger.
011FI association, of a neutral character,
eonfprising amongst its members Catho-
lics,. Protestants, Freemasons end even
Mussulmans.
Train Got Away in Time to
Catch Luistania.
1
London, Oct. 3L—The boat train
which left Easton station nt noon to-
day filled with passengers for the
steamer Liteitaeia, sailing frotn Liver -
poet' for New York, ran into the Trent
Valley 1ociti at Colwiela About six miles
soittli of Stafford, about 2.30 'o'clock.
Nona°, the passengers on the boat
treat. Were' Maned, but three of these
on the local train were lima, two seri-
ously, and the third slightly. Alarming
reports were at firet circulated, one from
Stafford saying that score of people
had been killed. This wits promptly
denied by the officials of the London &
Northwestern road, which operates the
line. They described the alicident as
not serious. Later it was learned that
only three persons were injured,- and
those were on the local. ee
General Manager Ree'of the London
& Northwestern, went to the ecene of
the eollision on e wrecking train very
soon after the news of the aecident had
been received here, lie later reported
thet the boat treat hail run into' the
rear of the local, Only the last car
of the total train wee damaged. The
engineer of the express had seen the
danger in time to very much reauce its
speed before ,the crash, The, express
was made up of fourteen coaches and
carried 05 -passengere first elass. The
kieontotive was somewhat damaged, but
it brought the train baek to Rugley,
where' a new engine was attaelied. The
express then.proceeded to Liverpool, and
Would likely egad% the steamer.
MILK SUPPLY
•••••••••••••••
Not Properly Handled by
Shippers on Railway.
Ottawa,. Oct. e.1.—That the conditions
surrounding the handling of milk in bag-
gage tAre by railway memento are not
buzioesNike, (ma that ellpshod methods
are in lose, for lebieli all or more or len
reheonelble, was the Milt 01 a, statement
issued by the Boatd of Railway Commis-
slorterit in connection with the appilea.
tion et the Montreal 14111k Shipper's' As-
sociation for an order requiring uniform
telex mede mete time ago.
Judgment wee rimmed for thirty days
In timer to gild, time for a settlement.
but thia Ilaft nut btell arreved at, and
the W(1018 matter may vome egein before
the 33ortre,
WOMANCONFESSES
••••••••••••••µ0
Troubled by Conseience,
Surrenders to Police.
• Termite despatch: "I have commit -
tea a sin and I am willingto retina. I
stole money and I ain anxious that it
should be returned, to the rightful min-
ers," Thus exclaimed Mrs. Elizabeth
Nicholson, of 632 Parliament street, last
night as she hatidel to Sergeant 12.0WO,
at the Wilton avenue police station an
envelope containing $41.98. "My con-
science pricked me, ana I felt it My
duty to eurrander and tell the truth,'
added the womb, as she offered ber
neme and dadress,
"What sin have you eommittea?" nett.
ea the sergeant.
9 stole money that does not right -
folly belong to me," tutsWered the wo-
man, who was somewbet exeited. "There
has been n man on iny ttall, and I foci
that he knotv 1 AM the guilty party.
know that I havecommitted a sin,
and 1 ant now prepared to wept the
consequenees."
The weinatt told the sergeant that the
money Itandea over represeittea the to-
te' amount Whit+ she had stolen front
chatelitinee left on counters and, eltairs
by shoppers while trying on hats in
the millinery department at 'Fatten's
More,
.At midnightlithe wee admitted to bell
in one sittety of $400, furniebed by her
brother.
- S4•
Iroax.. Ite le such an egotist it seems
NUM' ig so neatesighted. Joaa—
I th,n't me the eonneetion. Ilea% —Ile
teem to have eapitid Ps.
WEDDED AT at JIMERN
Are Both Old Enough to
Know Better,
•••••••••••••
Sault Ste. Marie, Out., despatch: At
the age of 81 end for the fifth time
in his life, Jacob &nue has entered the
bonds of matrimony, and the woman of
las bead 18attrs. lames Vole, it widow
of 73 stunincrebro has been married
once before,
The ceremony WAS performed here last
night by Rev. A. A. Wall, and was wit-
nessed by a large crowd of well.
wishers, whogave the conple many beau-
tiful presents.
Somes has lived he for many years,
and Mrs. Cole conies from Thessalon,
where they will reside.
The bridegroom. is ..reputed to liaVe
amassed it large sum on the sale of
latent medicines.
SECOND, WEDDING
••••••••••••••••
Sobbing of Children Marred
Honeymoon
Had to Give Up Little Ones
. if She Remarried.
New York, Oct. 30.—The sobbing
voices of her two children are nutrring •
the -Itoneymoon. of Mrs. George Walsh,
divorced, wife of Capt. Walter Blackman,
a real estate dealer of New Rochelle,
According to an agreement reached at
the time of the divorce five years ago,
Mrs. Wattle then Mrs, Blackman, re-
ceived permission from her exhueband.
to keep the cbildren as long as she re-
mained single.
Airs. Blackman became Mrs. George
Walsh last Thursday, and. Sende,y, true
to her agreement, sent little Geraldine
and Dean, aged 10 and 9 years, to their
father. Their governess was with them.
'In the agreement papers committing the
children to their mother's care stipulated
that a governess must "be tolerated" in
the house.
Mrs. Welalt and her Ituaband are tour-
ing In Connecticut. ''A friend of Mrs.
Walsh talked with a reporter at the
Walsh home on Coortlandt avenue on
Tuesday afternoon.
"Mrs. Walsh ens. swaying between
two desires," she said, with her eyes
filled with tear, "I lever saw a mother
so wrought up ale. She wanted to
marry Mr. Welsh 'because she wanted
what every woman in the world wants,
her chance of Imppinees. And she had
had so muck sorrow. The divorce had
so worn on her, •
CONFLICTING TIES.
"And she knew if she married—if she
.found her happiness, there would be
the cartker in it of having to relingaish
her chilaren, She may see them some-
times, of course, but oh! she can't tuck
them itno bed. .And .she can't brush
their curls in the morning, and she can't
have them within her arms when she
wants them there. Can you imagine a
woman having to give that up? It was
awful. She talked it over. with, Mr.
Walsh, and he understands thoroughly
just how she feels. He is an excellent
man—a southerner.
"Last Sunday she took her children
in her arms and said good-bye to them.
She wept bitterly and eo did they.
"Well, the ehildrea went. It was early
in the morning, At 10 otiloek there wits
a stampede of little .fect, ana there they
were, sobbing. They had come all the
way back to her.
• "It was a miserable ecene—inother
and children weeping. She gave them
candy and soothed. then and rocked
them and cried over Ohm. And she
reasoned with them. Site told them as
best she could how they must tm to
their father. They left with hand's full
of bonbons and smiling through their
tears at the assurance that site should
seen them • often upon her return.
"They mine back twice to hug and
kiss her, once ift the afternoon and
again early in the evening."
Geraldine was waiting for her little
*other on the porch at the boarding
house of No. 8 Rochelle avenue Tuesday
afternoon. She was reading a boole
"How do you feel about leaving your
memme?" asked the 'reporter.
"Itaelf, I don't feel very nice," salt the
child. "I love my mamma so, yen see.
1 can see her sometimes, thoegh—and
Dean, too. We musk -see my mamma,
because we love her so much."
"The ehildren will stay with me," said
Capt. Blackman.
Mr. Blaekman won 4), divorce five
years RV al; White Plain.
' 4 •
MEAT DEARER
jump in the Price of Beef
fi New York.
New York, Oet. 31.—There has been
another jump in the priee of bleat in
New York City, According to figures
furnished one of the largest wholesale
dealers in the city, within the last
three days ribs of the first class Lave
advanced front 101/2 to 1? cents a pound,
and of the tecOlid Oasis front 121/2 to 14
emits.
Loins of the first class are selling for'
17 eents a pound, as against 401/2 eents
three weeks ago, while those of the
second class show anadvance of a eeht
and it lialf.
• • 4
FLOUR RATES
May be Reduced Between
Minneapolis and N. Y.
*Washington. Det. 21.—.Freight rates on
ad:110ns of barrels of flour annUtilly Will
be affected bs, PrOceedings. institute.d to-
day before the tnter-State commeree
Commission. looking ter a reduetion from
23 to 21 1-2 eents a hundred 13011rals be-
tween Minneapolis and Nevi York City.
The Fleur 'City Lint, an Independent
lake carrier, asks the establishment of
a new through route between these
nOints. Italiroads operating betWeen Ilut-
falo and New York refuse to recognize
new tete, and exttet from Buffalo a rate
of it tents per bundred pounds on he tree -
fie, while it MA of 9.2 taints IS attOrded
so -celled "stendard lines,"
Attorney lerarees 11. Ji11110P. for the
complainant, iteelarcelthe refusal Was
ttitPrtort mi the part of the toetern aloe(
to linty() Alike traffic.. The eaee pro-
evill not be Aeterniitted for eciverat
week*.
COAL PANIC
•••••••••••••••
The Threatened Strike Has
Frightened Conumers,
Owners Getting Any Price
They Dare to Ask,
People Buying and floa,rd-
ing Up Supplies,
London, Oct. 29. --About this season
of the year careful English householders
began to think about laying in. the whe
ter's supply of coal, for in ordinary
years summer prices still rule in Octo-
ber, but this year these who Weren't
beeu beforehand are in a penic, for coal
prices tore at the top midwinter mark
and, promise to go it good deal bigher
before they stop soaring.
The primary reason is that the min.
(.1'.$ are talking, about a netional strike
when the first snow falls and on toy of
that has come the consumers' pame to
which one eould buy a month • ago for
$0 a ton is now $7.25 and ordinary
kitchee coal. which cost about $5.50,
can't Ire' got now for leas then 50.50.
This. it must be remembered, is sot
COAL and not the antbraelte conunonly
uinsekilnovalnin4gi
eross the
Atlantic, but practically
t
Coal merchants say that the present
panie is unjustified, and that they are
being forced to put up their prices to
cheek the rush. One man, who esuelly
has 5,000 tons in his yara at this (late,
saye, that he has only 500 tons now, in-
cluding that on its weer from the col-
liery, and he doesn't know when he can
get more. Stocks at the ,pit head are
almost exhausted, and there are not
wagons enough to bring the coal from
the mines to the cities. Nothing like
the rapid rise la price has been known
for years in London. Usually tut ad-
vance of 25 tents it ton is declared about
the eud of November, anotherain De-
cember and Another in January or Feb-
ruary, and in March or April peices
begin to drop Again. This year the first
rise occurred in the , middle of Septem-
ber and then a jump of 50 cents took
place about the beginning of October.
The recent railway drat° bas inten-
sified the panic. Londoners then came
uncomfortably chin to short rations of
food, and for the first time ,in their
Rees they realized how serious a gen-
eral strike of the tramtportittiop trades
might be. This experience has helped
them to visualize the prospect of a
winter without coal and everyone who
lias a cellar is filling it. Some suburb-
anites whose cellarage is limited, . are
stacking the coal in the garden, and
there are cases reported where bags of
tiek
tlite precious fuel have been piled up in
The original cause of the trouble
seems ridiculously trifling. The Eng-
lish miners as a rule are paid on tbe
piecework system; so much for each
ton of coal raised, Some time ago they
made a demand for it guaranteed mini-
mum wage for work in unusual
places, which means work in those
parts of a mine where a man's output
is restricted by the physical conforma-
tion of the mine or by some such cir-
cumstance as an unusual quantity, of
rock or other useless mineral. This was
refused and the men now have amended
their demand to a national minimum
wage agreement.
So far neither the miners nor the
public. have beriefited. The colliery
miners end the coal merchants have
divided a big extra profit, but probably
the men who rejoice most over the sit-
uation are the collies, ns the men who
deliver coal to the consumer are .called.
Usually tliey earn a,bont $5.50 a week.
Now, most of them are making $15 a,
week by overtime, bonuses for ctuiek
delivery and- tips from panic-stricken
householders. They were thaking about
it strike a few weeks agoebut they are
too busy now to think of anything but
delivering coat.
4 •
VIOLENT. DEATHS
Number of People Killed in
Toronto in a Year.
Toronto, Ott, 31.—Torouto's list of
violent deaths increases every year.
Thia year there were no less than
177 people wile met death es a re -
salt of violence.
The nutaber of arowniugs as usual
head. the Mit. This year there were
29 who met death in that manner as
compared with. 30 last year.
This year five people were &owned
by the upsetting of their craft. Tyro
were girls who "were out sailing .in
a dinghy with two men. Their bodies
so far have not been recovered, Two
were men who were in a rdw boat and
one was a woman who wee thxown 'out
of it launeh when it •collided with a
ferry steamer.
The list follows:
Dtowned in bay and lake ...
Carbone acid poisoning ... 38
Street cat accidents ..... 17
Steam railway accidents ,. 13
Burned to death ... 11
Auto aoeidente 7
Gas poisoning .. 13
Electroeuted e40 000 0
Elevator accidents .,.
D8he°a°dtin'legmbi•es. •fo• u• 11.d— 4
Foundry accidents 4
Run Over by wagon 4,
Cut throats 3
Murders 3
Killed by heat • 3
Laudanum poisoning „ • 2
Frozen to death 2
Fell from wintlewe 2
Pelt frail pits ... 2
Scaffold accidente 2
Fell downstaire ..... 2
Runaways2
Fell off roof ...
Hanging
Pell out of roller eotteter 2
Took fly poison
jumped off bridge ...
Over-exertion
•• . . . • •
1ellfetnl.. ..... :
Plower ot fe
Thrown from bitwele
Cruelted to dettai..
Fell ()ft 1.tultler .
Choked to 110,0010 1
1
1
1
1
1
/77
WHEN ams STICKS.
Wite two glass waters et iehes etlek
togethet sd thnt there is tio ditne:or of
Welting in getting them apart, put eold
Water in MP inner oie. and hoia imter
one in warm water, and they will sepal
. -
ate at once.
DRINKING MORE
Also Smoking More is Re.
cord for Catadians.
4•11•••••••••
•
-Ottawa, (tet. 31e-annadeas canetunp-
tion of liquor:4 and tobacco shouti
marked increase fix tte pest 118051 year,
The per capita, consumption of spirits
WWI .850 gallons against .845 gallons in
1910.1 that of beer WAS 5.434 gallop,, as
against 0.270 gallollei. that of wine 104
gallons as ageinst .097 gallons, while the
tobacco- uaed grew front 2,940 lbs, per
Capita to. 2.011 lbs,
The total meautity of tobaeco 'smoked
wits. 18,200,3a2 lbs, against 17,901;479 ilea
in. 1010 and 17,217,710 lbs. in. 1909.
The cigarettes smoked reached the en-
ormous total of 585,935„370 against 451,-
99.5,130 in 1910, and 330,760,130 in 1909,
The eigare smoked numbered 227,585,-
602, as compared with :305,8e0,851 io
1910 and 192,105,371 in 1909.
•iete
GETTING A
0.401414,00i4p
JURY
Judge Held Two Men for
McNamara Trial.
Was McNamara, in This
Dynamite Conspiracy?
a
Los Angelee, ('al., Oct. 31. — Judge
Bordwell to -day decided it four dive'
controversy over Taleaman A. 0. Win-
ter in the McNamara murder trial by re-
fusing to excuse Winter from, jury ser-
vice, The defence challenged Winter .af-
ter lie bad said that he had a fixed
opinion as to the guilt or innotienee ot
the (lefendant.
The judge also retained Walter N.
Frampton, who was challenged late yeti.
terday by the defence, because he said
he believed that labor unions blew tip
the Thews building and that John J. and
James la McNamara were guilty of the
deed.
ANOTHER, LEAD IN CASE.
Indianapolis, Oct, _31.James .1. McNa-
mara, ,Tames B. McNamara, Ortio Me-
Manigal "and others working in concert
with them," are the. peasons alleged by
the United States Attorney for this
district, Charles W. Miller, to have en-
gaged 111 the conspiracy. Dynamite and
nitroglycerine were unlawfully trans-
ported on pas,senger trains in inter-
state commerce through Indiana, Ilia
nois, Pennsylvauia, Miseouri and Califor-
nia., according to the petitioner.
Admissions, incriminating letters and
other evidence, the petition recites, are
contained in books,- papers and boxes of
explosives and weapons seized by the po-
lice in a raid on the officer in this city
of the International • Association. of
Bridge and Structural Iron Workers, of
Which John J. McNamara is secretary.
Evidence, it is charged, Was also found
in a box -at the home of D. Jones'an
ironeworker, and was found at the lodg-
ings of John a. McNamara. All of this
evidence is now in charge of Judge Jos.
Markey, of the criminal court, and it is
desired for a federal grand jury enquiry
to be opened on Nov. 7. The dynamite
and exploding apparatus taken in the
raids and now in charge of the police de-
partment are not sought to be produced
in the grand jury room.
la was partly on the evidence describ.
e Mat the grand jury of title country
returnea an indictment against John J.
McNamara, charging conspiracy to de-
stroy property by dynamite.
Judge Markey denied a petition that
the evidence be taken to California for
use in the trittI of the MeNanutrae there.
NOT HAWKE'S FAULT
The Collision Between Cru-
iser and Olympic.
•
Will Cost White Star Line
Lot of Money.
New 1'01'k, ()et. 31.—The British
naval court of inquiry into the col-
lision between the White tater liner
Olympic and the Britiell cruiser
Hawke on Sept. 20, has completely
exonerated the Hawke .and placed the
blame on the liner, aecordiag to dig -
petalled received by ehipping niex
here. The British naval court of in-
quiry is entirely private, and its its -
emits are not officially ina,de
The advices which reach this oity
were obtained, it is saia, thronglt
Board of Trade officials.,
The /*pert ae received here say%
that under the navigation laws, the
raiser was passing up the Solent
and had the right of way. The liner
thus became the overtaking ship -.and
is found to have forced the cruiser
over to the ehoals at the edge of the
narrow fairway. Then the suction
drew the stem ot the Warship under
the Olympic.
The loss caused by the collision will
be a heavy one to the White Star
Liae, es it hae to bear the burden, ma
in addition to the repairing of the
Olympic, which is expectedto cod
oloee to $500,000, the liner bets missed
three round trips in the busy eeason,
which would mean a loss of at lets%
$750;000.
TWO ABLAZE.
••••••••••••••
One Leaps in River—Other
Rolled in Rug.
• 1•1....6•.••••••
Chester, Pa., Oct. 81. — ith (1 WoLliitla
annum, soung Martin Donohue leaped in
to the Delaware River Yesterday. 1018-
1110Yeti at the Federal Steel Casting Com-
pany's plant, he was splasheil with% hot
metal from an onen hearth furnace. and
the flames Ignited hisielothing. ite tart
to the wharf a once end threw himself
over. lits- teething was burned from
his body and he sustained eerlotis Mime.
While playing about tut one of burning
IttiVeYs All it Int p1 Ridley Perk veteran'
Serah Stewart. a glrl Min Eddystone,
Ignited her drese. In rtn instant she was
eriveloned In amen. etre Ellen Dongh-
tirty. who livea nearby. ran to the girro
rosette. 'Wrapping Iter in a rue Atte poli-
o her ever the ground, extinetilelling
the blame The girl's hair wan all iingen
off end she wila eerionsly burned on
the fttee, arms and body. Mt s. neigh-
ritty'e bands and t11111:4 were NeveMY
hurnea. The ebila AWN removed to Dr.
Taylor's linnital.
NEWS Of THE
DAY IN BRIEF
•••••••••••••11
C.P.R.SteamerLakeChamp-
lain Runs Aground.
••••••••••...
Ontario Man Drops Dead in
the West,
404404,40001404•010.0
Tax Imposed on Unmarried
Men and Women,
••••••••••••••••
1'llbicerd2a.te of the banquet to Premier
Borden al, Halifax has been eet for No-
enA $200,000 addition Will be matte to
Ottawa, 'University on the Laurier aven-
ue eitle.
ibitj
4.1.:t° for Mount Clemens to take a
11101 the Duke of Connaught has
week's rest.
ted to Atte Rapti College of Physie
consented to open next year's Toronto
A. Claude .31nedonnen, M.P., left
rouTo.
Steriley Kaufinna, Toronto, is admit-
alart Grey had an enthiodastic recep
tion wheu he arrived at llowick, lits
northern residence.
Judge Latcliford has advised the city
and Areltiteet E. J. Lennox to reach itu
adjustment of the City Hall suit.
The C. P. R. liner Take Champlain
ran aground opposite Longuetal, and is
still fad. She has sustained ,pat dam -
lege.
Sir William Mackenzie has subserib.
,
tion fund of the Society of Knights
housand dollars to the habita.
Sir W. IL Lever ,the soap maker, has,
it is said, purehased the Richard Ben-
nett collection of Oriental china, for
$1,500,000,
North Toronto has now the Hydro-
Eleetric system. The ceremony of turn-
ing on the lights was performed by Mr.
It. A. James, the town engineer.
The proposed advence in the .price of
mills to the Brantford consumers has
gone into effect, the retailers charging
four eents a pint, instead of three. '
The Temiskaming & Northern Ontario
Railway has placed with the Canadian
Locomotive (o. an dorder for four loco-
motives of the "Consolidated" type.
AI. J. Conuolly, Brockville fishery in-
spector, tens notified by the Department
of Marine and Fisheries that his services
as inspector are no longer required.
At Rheims, France, white trying out
a military aeroplane, the pilot, Jean
Desparmet, fell with the machine from
a height of 000 feet and was crushed to
death.
Hon. W. J. Hanna addressed the Can-
adian Club, Guelph, on the prison farm,
He gave an outline of what is being
done and what is intendecat this in-
stitution.
St. Andrew's Society, Toronto, will be
seventy-five years old next mouth and
will celebrate the event by holding a
iiiiielinte310..at the Queen's Hotel, on Novente
J. L. Englehart, elmirman of the
Temiskaming & Northern Ontario Rail-
way Commissibn, will address the Ot-
tawa Canadian Club On the resources
and future of Northern Ontario.
.After being in operation for almost
a century, the Hudson Bay Company
is closing out its store at lower Fort.
Garry, and henceforth the old fort will
be preserved only as a historical land-
mark.
A committee has been appointed to
toiled Miele for the purpose of placing
it pulpit in the Chureh of the Holy Trin-
ity, Toronto, to the memory of the late
Ilev. John Pearson, D.Caa, late rector,
and his wife.
Word was received at Mitchell, Ont.,
that Frank Francis, son of John Fran -
els, of Fullerton, dropped dead near
Weyburn, Sask.. He was 25 years of
.age, and went out west during the har-
vest excursions.
The Diet of Reuss, Germany, elder
branch, Ilas sanctioned a surtax on un-
married men and women over 30 of 5
per cent. on ineomes of from $750 to
$1,500, and 10 per cent, on amounte
above those stated.
- The steamerW. J. Carter, bound tm
light, broke luir shaft in Lake Hume
off Port Sardine, and wag helpless. The
wrecker Favorite was sent, to her assist.
anee and brought her back to Port
Huron for repairs.
The bedstead by-law carried at Cites -
ley, Ont., by a large majority, there be-
ing only seven votes polled against it.
This factory NMI formerly operated by
the Garner Manufacturing Co., which
went out of Mullion a few years ago.
Robert Weat, of Teeswater, lets made
arrangements for the erection of a skat.
Mg and curling rink at Mitchell, (hit.
His proposition was thet he be given a
bonus of $500, and the amount has been
raibsseedriptuthe citizen of the town by
sn
The Polson Drydoek '& Shipbuilding
Company, of Toronto, hes been incor-
porated with a capital of a million. dol-
lars. A similar charter hits been grant-
ed to the St. Lawrente Shipbuilding &
Drydoek Company, Montreal, capital-
ized at a million.
Twenty-eight et:adonis are enrolled in
the Toronto YatI,C,A. educational de-
partment and taking junior matricula-
tion work. The average age is nineteen,
which is higher Om the age of colleg-
iate students. The majority of them
have the ministry i5i4 *view,
A RICH FIND
••••••,•••••.m.
Boy Found Silver Brick --
Mother Returned It.
Niagara Falls, Ont., Oct. -31, Ilaroki
Campbell, waose pewits live on the
Thorold Road, Wa4 on lolo Way frOM
8011001 yestertlay when Ito picked up ft
pure white brick. With several other
boys he played With the mass for it time
and then he tattle it home, thinking it
would make a fine pleythiug, bemuse it
wee so shiny. The wagons of theaConie-
gee tteduetion tO., whole smelter la 10 -
rated near the Campbell home, pasellte
limete, and when IlltroWs Mather SW
the "brick" the eeeognized it at mice ne
to bar tif silver wbich must have droppea
from one of the wagons. When ono of
them paegeil elle bailel the driver and
turnell- the bar over to him. It was
Wtttfh IY1300. The report Mee not date
weether lama) reeeivea anything for 1)14
tiell find.
CHICAGO TRAGEDY
••••••••••••••
Young A.ctress Found Dead
Chicago, Oct, 31.—What the police of
:7114 Otlei
Chicago say v m der with many
featuree of which they were unable to
explain, was revealed today when the
body of Illanehe Dow, a young woman,
zosi,utnat,ideolawkneeltoowint thloteteit.loor of her
The furniture was broken and the
young woman% hair was torn down,
giving evidence of A struggle. Despite
these facts there were Ito woundon the
body and both doors and the windows
or the room were locked,
The police believe that Miss Dow, Wile
eithlable 3ewele 011 her fingere were
IN:00.16 d 21 s5t nyrebae dr:. was an actress. Several
The police as yet have been unable to
logate any relatives or intimate Molds
of the dead girl,
4 •
LEAP FOR LIFE
140•••••••••••••••••
Girl Faces Death to Save
Canary.
She Saves Her 1Vlother and
Grandmother.
New York, Oct. 31.—Love for a canary
which had been a pet in the family for
several years may cost Miss Katherine
Oetes, twenty-four years old, it teacher
in Public School No. 150, at Backman
etreet and Chrietoplier avenue, her life,
according to physicians in the Brooklyn
Hoepitel. She was removed there late
host night after aumpnig from a third
etoeey window into the yard of her
home, at No. 97 St, Marks mace, Brook-
lyn. tier elohing and hair had caught
tire in her attempt to save the bird
from being burned to death.
In'falling the young woman's body
struck a clothesline opposite a first
neer window. She was picked up un-
coscious by firemen and an ambulance
surgeon found that, in addition to hav-
ing broke,: het lift shoulder and sus-
tained cute aed liraisee, she was prob.
ably injured internally.
Before attempting to rosette the can-
ary Miss Oates, saved the life of Iter
mothee, fifytatme: years old, and her
grandmother, MIN$: Katherine Duffy,
seventy-five year old,. both of whom
were in the apeetmeat when the fire
started, Mies Oaepe and her mother were
hanging aecurtain. in the diningroom, a
ehort tlistanao from where the canary's
cage hung on the wall. One end of the
curtain swung over the flame from a
gas stove and became ignited. Before
the young woman or her mother noticed
it the flames had spread to Mrs. Oates'
clothing.
45 soon as she saw the danger to her
daughter Mrs. Duffy. screamed. Miss
Gates leaped from the ladder and assist-
ed her mother in extinguishing the
flames in her clothing. Mother ana '
daughter, as well as Mrs. Daffy, were
burned badly about the hands and arms
before they succeeded in extinguishing
the flames. In the meantime the fire in
the burning curtain had communicated
itself to the woodwork and furnishings
in the room.
Pushing her mother and grandmother
before her, Miss Oates succeeded in get-
ting both ottt of the room and. then led
them to the floor below, where she in -
',eructed Ahem to hurry to the street.
"Pm ging back and get Bunnie," she
(old her mother as she darted upstairs
again. She managed to fight her way
through the heavy emoke and lift the
bird eage from the well. When she
turned to leave the room she found her
self hemmed in by a wall ot flame that
was creeping into the hallway through
the door.
Without a moment's hesitation the
young woman took the only other eve -
nue of escape open to her—mounted the
windw silt and jumped. When firemen
found her, the birdcage was lying along-
side her unconeeious body, but the bird
in it had been burned to deth.
THE STEEL TROUBLE
••••••••••
Delay in Issuing the Sub-
poena Papers From Office.
.040444.0,14.
Rockefeller Invited the
Marshall to Breakfast.
•
Trenton, N. J., Oct. 31.—The sixty-
one subpoenaee issaed by the clerk of
the United States. Circuit eourt in the
snit of the Government against the Un-
ited Steel Corporation still lie on the
desk of the clerk awaiting word from
Washington. Saturday is usually an ceff
• day in the courts and for this reason
11 18 not expected that any of the sub-
pouaes will be served mita next. week.
No reason is known in Trenton for
Waeltingtona delay in ordering the sub -
pones sent out, but the theory is that
the department of justice is making up
it list of marshals to act when the pap-
ers Shall be sent for service.
SERVED ON JOHN.
New„ York, Oct 3L—A eopy, of the
suatmons and complaint in the govern-
ment suit for the dissolution of the
Steel Trust, was served tide morning
on John D. It. Itoeltefeller at hie home
in Potonta, Hills, The serviee of the pa-
pers were arranged for by Mar-
shal Henkel, and when Deputy Marshal
lailWards arrived at Tarrytown be foutel
Mr. Rockefeller's rig waiting for lam.
The depttty drove over to the mansion,
servea the vapors on Mr. Tateltefeller
nail received an invitation to breakfast.
The deputy bed already lirealefaetea
nna decline.' the invitation.
BRIGHT LADY STUDENT.
Cineiph despateh: A further 'honor
boa bon eenierred upon Miaa N. M.
Plunimatfelt, the young lady ettIderit
of the Guelph Collegiate Instituto,
Me«Itt ha6 bon awaftiM tho Wm.
Dale Stholarship itt elatades, -valued
at $122. She has alteady ubtained
the Edward flbake 8abo1avanip, valuta
ot $109, awarded for general pre-
fieieney, eitil the Carter Scholarship
el $100, lag° for ganotal protitianty.