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The Wingham Advance, 1906-06-21, Page 7I I I 41 WOMAN FALLS ON YOUNG MAN; TRIED TO CUT puit IMMIGRANTS. OFFEARRINGS MORE NUMEROUS AND MORE RIO BREAKS HIS NECK CALiSING DrAT11. SPECTABLE TITAN FORMERLY. He Was Calling Upon Her When She Tripped and Fell Downstairs, Falling Upon Him. • Union Sailor Shot and Killed and Three Wound- ed by Shots FroxrA a Vessel. They Were to Make an Attempt to Have the Non-union Men Desert the Ship. 1)3 the Litegnitz court upon drunken in nu es tato. the eo ne himself and a • • oceapied by about 15 intim wen . workman, who was sent to prison for policeman who had arrested him were fired on trout the selmoner National three years for vilely abusing the fighting. for their lives against a crowd .cf hundreds of Hebrews who sought to City as it lay near the Union: iron Kaiser. Works. avenge the assault. The robber was - According to the news from Belgrade, kicked and Atoned and repeatedly knock - According to the men who were in ehe those guilty of lese =jests in Servia cid down before the policeman sueeeded in safely landing him in jail. The victim of the assault was Mts. Rebecca Kupfer, and the assailant Jos- eph Carpitecia. lie is 23 years old and has been in this country only about four months. 'Mrs. Kupfer is 24. The top lobe of her ear hae been nearly cut off, and other articles had been severed and she was in great. danger of bleeding to death, but will recover. _ Illation Nearly Cut Hebrew Woman's Only n. small proportion of the proper - ea opium is consumed in India, being I handled by the lexeise Department,. Car Offs while the bulk is Rola by monthly aue- 'lie Was Attacked by Hebrews and tions at Calcutta for export to China. Nearly Killed, Britain from its opium monopoly. T. ; :1• - • • New York, June 18. -The attempt of ABUSED THE KAISER, an Italian brigand to rob a woman of a •pair of diamond earrings nearly cost Vac) , Drunken Berlin Workman Sent to Jail lives early toelay. The would-be rob- _ for Three Years. bees victim was terribly cut about the Berlin, June 1 7. --The severest sen- fa" and in'ad, by it knife, with which . Thus a huge reveuue Irs derived by . tone° imposed in recent years for the the thief attexopted to cut the jewele - crime of lese majeste has ,been passed from the woman's oars and scarcely hie Nev York, June 18.-Jamae Condone 25 years old, of Summit, X. J., died, yes- terday in All ouls' Hoopital at Mor. ristown from a broken neek, after three weeks of treatment, in *Mika every re. course of modern surgery was .exlmusted, Condone callea on a young woman in Summit three weeks ago yesterday, The yoting woman, who weighs upward. of 230 pounds, was dressing, and he eat down on the stairs in the hallway to wait. The young woman tripped near the top and fell squarely on *Oondern, who was picked, up uneonecious and taken bo his home, whore physicians ;found his neck had been broken. It was decided, last Friday bo take him to the hospital for an 'operation. Sat- urday it was discovered that his spinal eord had been injured ja,nd the surgeons were unable to save ids life. The young eveman is prostrated .with grief. SAILORS' LABOR 'TROUBLE. Union Men Fired Upon and Shot in San Francisco. San Francisco, June 18. -As the result of the lock -out and the trouble existing between -the ship owners and union sail- ors in this port, one union sailor was shot and killed and three ,were wounded last night. The dead man, is Andrew Kellner. The shooting occurred when a launch. MRS. BURNS PRE-SiNTED BECOMINGLY DRESSED, BUT WORE NO JEWELS. London, June 17. -For the first time, probably in the history of the Court of St. James, a woman hate been pre- sented who is distinctly not in society; a woman who is not above keepiege, house herself, and does not mind being seen sweeping tho dust from her front doorstep. ' The women thus presented is Mrs. John Burns, wife of -the Labor mem- ber of the British Cainet. The haugh- ty duchesses, English and. American, stared at Mrs. Burns when they karma her identity after her. name had been given to the King and Queen. Their Majesties were unusually gracious to the woman from the unaristocratie section of London, called. Battersea. Mrs. Burns' manner was above criti- cism by even the haughtiest peeress. She was dressed becomingly and properly. Like her husband. she was not at all rimed by the splendors of this gathering of English aristocracy and American heiresees, titled and unti- tled. Unlike the other ladiee presented at this court, Mrs. Burns wore no jewels. 7 t MURDER CHARGE. RELATED STORY THAT TWO BOYS WERE MURDERED. Kingston, June 18.-(Speci51)-A. ease of murder, alleged to have been com- mitted four years ago, near Sharbot Lake, is being looked up. Mrs. Neddo, told at Bathurst, that two boys, Bab- cock and Marten, supposed to have been drowned in April, 1002, were murdered by Bedore (three weeks ago sentencell to fourteen years in penitentiary for shooting at a pedlar) and an Indian, named Frank Beaver, who lives at Rim Lake. Badore used to live with Mrs. Neddo and she says he told her where ;Um bodies were buried. The authorities found hump bones in the ground. The boys, watering logs for W. Y. Cannon, had between ;1;70 and ASO with -them and the Indians knew of ;this. Beaver is being searehed for. An Investigation will be held. :- COMPANY FINED, t ' 11 • BUT CHARGE AGAINST MANAGER • CLARK WAS DROPPED. Welland, Ont., June 10. -The charge agaiiist the Ontario Silver Company, of Niagara Falls, of fraud in the im- proper use of a Sheffield triuteenark, was heard before Judge Wells, in the sessions here. The charge of eonspir- nay against Manager Clark was dropped, but four indictments of fraud were pre- ferred against the company. The com- pany made no defense,. and was fined 4600. J. W. Nesbitt, K. C., of Hamilton, who appeared for the company, pleaded for leniency, and blamed a former owner of the company for the trouble. Before passing judgment Judge \Irene spoke strongly and stated that the great- est eurse of the present day was that men would sacrifice their character, their integrity end their souls for the gaining of a few paltry, miserable dol- lars, The action of a company put- ting out goods wrongly marked. was As though a &entered bank issued counter- feit money to its patrons. . DEAF MUTE ASSOCIATION. latmeh, several volleys were fired. at them without warniug when they were within a few ,feet of the schooner. It is said that it was tbe intention of the union sailore to make an attempt to have the non-union crew of the eNa- tional City desert the vessel, which was scheduled to sail to -day. As a part of the plan to carry overtures to the non- union men a launch was engaged and filled with volunteers front the Sailors' Union. The trip wee( made with the ut- most seereey, but it ia evident that the 111611 On the National City were ,expeet- ing a visit. After the launch came up to the Na- tional City a rifle was thrust over the side of the schooner and a shot rang oat. followed by several volleys in mpid suc- CCSSIOfl. The terrified union men imme, diately sought the shelter of the small ealmt of the launch. The engineer eur- ried his boat from the 1100113 as rapidly Several firemen were cut by flying me possible. A run of nearly two miles glass ,and thirty-seven were overcome was then taken to the harbor emergeney hospital, ,where the men who had been shot were quickly lifted 'from the boat by their friends. At the hospital it was found that Andrew Kellner had been al- most immediately killed. Two bullets had entered, his chest, and one of them had evidently ,penetrated his heart. The wounded men will recover. No arrests PHONOGRAPH TRAPS BOODLERS. have been made, a1 t -he schooner at owe moved out into the bay. Men "Approached" Said to Have Records That Will Startle. New Rochelle, N. Y.; June 16. -One of the reports in circulation in New Ro- chelle, about the .attempt to bribe the aldermen, is to the effect that D. A. Reynolds, President of the State Line Telephone Company, besides having his young woman stenographer hidden be- hind, his desk to take the conversations, when it is alleged, the aldermen called looking for "boodle," also took the precaution to have a large phonograph concealed in the room which recorded everything that was said. Mr. Reynolds, it is said, in order to get the remarks in full recorded. by his machine, told the aldermen that he was deaf need got thesm to talk very loudly to him. It is conceded on all sides that if the State Line Telephone officials are able to produce phonogra- phic records before the grand jury it will mean conviction of the aldermen. p EMPRESS MAKES RECORD. • C. P. R. New Boat From Neville to Rimouoki Via Cape Race,. Montreal, Juue 16. -The Empress of Britain docked at Quebec to -day at 12.50 p. in., after making a record trip from Annelle to Rimouski, via. Cape Raee, The Canadian Pacific flyer left the form- er port at 10 o'clock last Sunday morn- ing and arrived at Rimouski at 2.47 Ws (Saturdey' morning, thus making the trip between these points in five days sixteen hours and forty-seven mittutes, and adding to this the difference in time, amounting to four and one-half hours, completes a recoed voyage of five days twenty-one hours and seventeen minutes. The previous record for this route was five days twenty-two hours and twenty minutes. FETE DAY AT MONTREAL. are even more savagely treated. .A. man who declared that King Peter did not seem fit for much was sentenced to seven years' imprisonment. Other equally harmless critlee of ,His Majesty* were sentenced to four and five years' servitude. 37 FIREMEN OVERCOME. $45o,000 Damage to Big Building in St, Paul, Minn. St. Paul, Minn., June 17. -The six - storey Ryan annex building was gutted by fire to -day. The damage to the building and stocks of the occupants is $450,000. A series of gas explosions prevented the firemen from getting at the flames and caused the braze to spread through - set the structure. by heat and smoke, All of them will recover, with the possible exception of Lieut. Edwards. The Ryan Hotel across the alley from the burnedstructure was not damaged, and there was no alarm among the guests. . dente, George Reeves, Toronto, and A. S. Waggoner, Hamilton; Secretary, Wm. Nurse, Belleville; Treasurer, A. W. Ma- son, Toronto; Interpreters, Mrs. J. R. Byrne, Toronto; Geo. F. Stewart and W. j. Campbell, Belleville. DOUBLE DROWNING. ONE OF TWO MALE COMPANIONS IN BOAT DROWNED LATER. Unaccountable Apathy of Spectators - Man Stood Up in Boat- Mrs. Yvonne Gagnon and Emile Picotte the Victims. Montreal, June 17. --Mrs. Yvonne Gag- non, a widow, of 8 St. Dominique street, and Emile Picotte, engage' at Belle's coal yard, were drowned this afternoon owing to the foolhardiness of a compan- ion, who stood up in a rowboat and upset all three into the water. The acci- dent happened near Dominion Park, and was witnessed by a dozen men, who were fishing not far off. No effort was made to save them, until their cries at- tracted three Englishmen, who lived with- in a few hundred yards of the scene. These men quickly got a boat and pulled out. The place where the upset occurred was only a few yards from shore. The woman had sunk almost immediately, and the two men, being unable to swim, struggled violently. Picotte tbrew up his hands and sank, just as the res- cuers were about to seize him, but his companion held out and was saved. Be- fore Pieotte's body had been in the ,water more than ten minutes a fish hook eves fastened into his coat, and the body dragged to the shore and made fast there, face downward in the water. No effort was made et resuseitetion. About four hours afterwards Pieotte's body was taken out and removed to the morgue. The body of the woman has not been recovered. THE RAMILLIES . - HURT IN COLLISION DURING THE MIMIC WAR. London, June 8, -The British battle- ship Ramillies was asentea back to Sheerness to -day, having been in collis- ion in the channel with the battleship Resolution. The latter was not dent - aged, but the former mitt be docked for necessary repairs. principally to nor propellor. So far as known the Ra- millies is the only big Alp crippled by collision during the week's manoeuvres. Two or three torpedo craft have been in collbnon or aground end some mechinety defects have developed, but very few compared with forber manoeuvres. An Interesting -Convention in Progress at Belleville. Relleville, Jona 17.--4ast evening the tenth eonventiont of the Ontario Deaf lute Assoeiation began at the inetita- eon here and will continue till Tuesday evening. Six years ago the eonvention wee held here, and at it meeting held at Hamilton in 11)04 Hon, Mr. Stratton, then letinieter in eltarge, extended the unioelatioit a hearty invitation to return tittle year, Superintendent Mahe:on IA thung n11 pe5sible to entertain thern. The offieere of the aemciation are: Iton. Preehlent, fl. Manlove R.. It; Preei- dent, X, O. fliaiteruTorontol. Viee-Presi- • THE -OP -ail -Y -0E GREAT BRITAIN DETERMINED FREE CHINA OF INCUBUS. 1•••••••••• Mgr, Sbarretti Carries the Host in an Imposing Procession. Montreal, Juno 17. -Mons. Sbarretti, Papal Delegate, carried the Host to -day in the annual Fete Dieu procession, which was one of the ,most imposing spectacles of religions fervor ever seen in Montreal. Thoueands joineIl in the procession, and among them were many well-known citizens. The Fete Dieu proceesion is the most pretentione of many religious festivals in the Province of Quebee, and as the weather was fav- orable to -day the occasion wag doubly noteworthy. All along tee ;elute flaga, banners and evergreens w re displayed in much pro- fusion-. SAYS RADIUM DOES NOT CURE, Dr. Hericcurt, of Paris, Abandons It as a Curative Agent. Paris, ;lune 17. -Dr. Ifericourt, ing srlys quite abandoned 'radium as an ele- ment in pathology. He says that as it therapeutic agent it has done more harm than pock Instead of being curative or even lenitive of cancer, 1 simple wounds have been 11111(10 really canceroue by radiotherapy. In . tuber- culosis its efficary is no greeter than 1 TO sun rays, and. it is far more dangereus. writ' has in the Revue, that he A Hundred -Year Monopoly -Last Yeat Britain Derived a Revenue of $25,- 000,00o -Labor Parliament Move. London, June 17. -After many years it appears that England will consent to remove the opium yoke which she imposed upon China MON t114.11 a 111111. dyed years ago. England's anneal revenul from the taX upon Wont produced in India :ma sold to China is enormous. Last year It wits over 523,000,000. It WAS 40 eum this revenue that rendend for more than 100 years has &mien Thine the right to prohibit the import of opium. The peeved Tabor -Liberal Parlia- ment, however, has eoneented to put An end to England's traffic ill opium, and awaits word from China. Opium, the dried juiee of the peppy, is grown in certain parts of India miler strict regulations. The acreage under poppy etiltivatiou 15 ihnited by law, tho p40sOflt I mit being 627,000 acres. The eultivation of opium is carried on 1 • under lieenee from the Govern- nutent, whieh fixes the Klee at whieh the groever must sell his enip te tiov- eminent 011111111 egents, who ship the Muff to the 'GoVernMent fnetoriee, CACHE KEEPER DROWNED. Transcontinental Railway Employee -Meets Death at Kippewa. Ottawa, June ^ 17.--A telegram, re- ceived yesterday states that 3'. A. :Mc- Donough was drowned near Eippewa 00 June Ith. Deceased, who NVI1:4 twenty years of age, was employea on the Trans- eontineinal Railway 415 raelgt keeper allti left Ottawa last October. No (lentils of the aceident tent been received. Boy Sank to His Death. AMONG; SAINTS. Decoration Day - The Made -in - Canada Exhibition, St, Catharines, Ont., June 18.--(Spee- ial).-Under the auspices of the Welland County. Veteran Volunteers' Association Decoration Day exercises will be held in Thorold on Sunday next. Protection Hose Company, Thorold Reel Band and the local lodges of the Orange Order, Canadian Order of Foresters, Indepen- dent Order of Foresters, Canadian Order of Home Circles and of Chosen Friends will participate and decorate the graves of their deceased brethren. Addresses are expected from the local clergy and from Mayor Miller and Ex -Mayor Monroe. The Made -in -Canada exhibition, under the auspices of the Daughters of the Em- pire, and for the benefit of the General and Marine Hospitel, opened ou an ela- borate scale at the Armories this after- noon. His Honor, the Lieutenant -Gover- nor of Ontario, Hen. W. Mortinfer Clark, formally opened the fair in the pre- sence of assembly. He was presented with an address. "Bs Honor arrived. this morning, and is the guest of the city. He was entertained to a trip through the picturesque Niagara District in the N. S. T. R., officiarcar, "Font - hill," and later will be tendered a. din- ner at the Welland. His Honor and Miss Clark, who accompanied him, and Capt. MacDonald, his aide de camp, return to Toronto this evening to fill other en- gagements. • p. C. Smith had an exciting tame on Saturday evening when effecting the ar- rest of an intoxicated colored man, mull- ed William Dorsey, at the corner of Wel- land avenue and Geneva street. Dorsey resisted arrest and the noise he made at- tracted a large crowd of spectators. The constable called upon Wm. F. Klock, to assist him and Fred Burton, colored, it is said, took a haild to prevent the ar- wets, while Jas. Morgan, also colored, it is alleged, set upon. Klock. Wm. Em- ery, who also came to the assistance of the policeman, was assaulted by Wm. Hilson, it is stated. The arrest, was, however, effected, after considerable dif- ficulty, and Dorsey was locked up. He and those charger"! with interfering with the officer in the discharge of his duty, came up before Magistrate Comfort in the Police Court this morning ,and were remanded until to -morrow. --4114•4••••••••-. THREW HERSELF INTO RIVER. Peterborough Girl, Mentally Unbalanced, Commits Suicide. Peterborough, Ont., June 17. -Alice Corbman, daughter of Stephen IL Corbman, Aylmer street, left her home this morning about 7 o'clock and, going to the Otonabee River, it short dis- tance away, deliberately threw herself in. The body was recoveren a few hours later. Last winter the young woman was nearly drowned by having a fainting fit while taking a bath in her home. The shock received seemed to -have affected her mentally, and since then she lied been in 11. melancholy mood. She was 22 years of age. -*111•-• • TO REAR STATUE TO COLUMBUS. Pope Montreal, dune 18.-eitepecial)-The en - 'negation reeord neepe abewl of all previous. yearm. 5,000 immigranee arrived in the last two weeks and near - Iv all are bound for the Northwest. Tee majeeity were from Neotiand. Mr. Bob- ert Miller, station agent at Windsor street depot, declaree that not only are this yeaies arrivals far superior in world- ly goods to the immigrants of previous pql1S, but appear to b0 11111011 14070 re. speetable and intelligent eill.SS of 110). 1111'. TOBACCO PLANTING. UNFAVORABLE WEATHER DURING MAY FOR THE WORK. 'Washington, Juno 18, -The Department of Agriculture ananuces that on account of unfavorable weather for planting to- . Immo during the month of May thrungin out a large pert of the tobacco growing area of the Le Fig it is bnpoesible Um present time to give an accurate idea of Mutt the acreage will be this year, With the exception of some of the more south- erly States practically no tobacco hes been transplanted up to May 25,:when the reports were made to Ilia depart- ment. •••••••41••••••••• A HELP TOWARDS HEAVEN. Archbishop Beuchesi's View of Gril- elastics. Montreal, June 17.-Addreeeieg We competitors in the firet annual gynman tie -exereses of tbe Roman Catholic schools of Montreal on Saturday, Arch- ie:4ton Bruchesi spoke as followe on the influence of physical culture; "The ;ben- efit it will confer upon the nising genera- tion is incalculable. It will not only give them free and strong limbs and a clear brow, but it will be. it great moral- izer, It will make the youth of our city ,strang, and robust, intelligent and moral, which will make them the pride and boast of the land. I personally consider gymnastic exerases a means to gain heaven, for it will strengthen the soul and do good to the mind." - CRUSHED TO DEATH. LAY BETWEEN 'THE RAILS ON A BRIDGE -AFRAID TO JUMP. Chicago, June 18.-Fearine to jump from a trestle on which a train was ap- proaching, Max Mozzcksynski, 15 years old, lay between the rails on the bridge over the Calumet River at Riverdale, yesterday, and was crushed to death. His father and a companion, eonfronle ed by the same alternative, jumped from the bridge and swam to shore. The en- gineer saw tile danger of the party, but was unable to stop the train. 4114.14-011. ELLEN TERRY HONORED. Winston Spencer ChurchilPs Eulogy at a Public Dinner, Loudon, June 17.-A dinner 'MS given at the Hotel Cecil to -night in hon- or oi Ellen Terry, The two hundred. guests included persons prominent in the theatrical world. Winston Spencer Churehill, during the course of a, brilli- ant eulogy of Miss Terry's genius, said he considered it regrettable that Great Britain had no national theatre. It was announced that the total sum realized for the Terry jubilee fend, in- cluding the receipts from the benefit per- formance at Drury Lane 'Theatre and subscriptions raised by The Tribune and in America,- amounts to $43,020. ATTACKED BY DOGS. A Little Girl Badly Mauled at Cummings Bridge. Ottawa, June 17. -An eleren-year-old gni! named Evelyn Bunnell wile attacked ley •sevcr 1 dogs, whieh escaped from a kennel near Cummings Bridge yester- day, and badly bitten. The child stoop- ed to 'let one animal and all the dogs jumped at her, at first apparently in it spirat of play. Tbe gambol soon turned to01010115mauling. and -the girl was sty - 1011117 injurea before Om wee rescued. - VISCOUNT HOWICK MARRIED. Eldest Son of the Governor-General Wed- ded to Lady Palmer. Dubbin, June 16. ---Two of linglandn leading Limiting were united tine after- noon by the marilege at St. Margaret's Ohureh, Ienntinineter, of \lee:aunt llow- iek. West eon of Feld Grey, Governor- General of Canada, to Lady Mabel Palmer, only (blighter of the leer' of Selborne, High Comndseioner for South Africa. WANTS 25,000 HARVEST 111ANDS. Railways Afraid Their Employees May Defiert Them -Fried Chicken for Sunday Dinner. ChieitgowItine 18.-A deepatch to the Reeord•Ilerala from Topeka, Kansas, says: Muses I; sending the strongeit appeal of her histury for men to work. in the harvest 'fettle, At best 25,000- 15010 'men. than are in sight now will be needed, awl desperate aneasuree will he adopted to draft men into the service behind the eelf-bintlers. State Free Employment .Agent Gerow 11.01514 that ve number of railroads sire largely to blame for the eltortage of har- vest benne. He says the railroads need every man they eau get to complete thole own work, and for this reason have refosed to g,raut the one cent it mile pate- sengee vita that usually roads for the harvest hands, They. fear, it is said, that Ow call from the wheat fields, with the attrartive wages, will drum away their labarere, who get only $1.25 for work- in; on tbe tracks. All sorts of inducements 47* belil ,1114 to laborers to go to the wheat fields. Along the .Santa Fe road yesterday far- mers drove into town in Surreys and ear - &wee anti pieked up the straggling lab- orers who alighted. At Ikalstead,one farmer made a dee! with five men, who left the train, and conney0 them to his home, five miles distant, in 4 big auto- mobile, Ins promise of it fine fried, ehieken Sunday dinner was. an adelitionel incentive. COUNTED 290 JEWISH CORPSES. Rupture Between the People and the Czar Cannot Long Be Delayed.. Odessa, June 18. --The Novisti, of this eity, published a deepatch to -day from its correspondent at Bialystok, saying: "1 pereonally counted two hemdred and. ninety corpeei, a great number of which were horribly inutila.ted. Only six Christians were killed and eight wounded," Warning at Warsaw. 'Warsaw, June 18. -The Ohief of Pollee of Warsaw to -day issued a proclamation warning the people against the efforts to provoke racial hatred, and stating that every attempt at rioting will be mercilessly suppressed. by force of arms. Anti...km*1th riots have broken out at Zabludow and Gouiondz, in the Province of Orodno, and Ossowie, in the Province of Lannza. The Constitutional Strugle. St. Petereburg, June 18. -The Consti- tutional Democrats seem almost ready to throw in their lot with the revolution- ists. The popular agitation is so great that at a caucus lasting three mornings the question of ebanging the parties' We - tics and abandoned any further attempt to postpone au open rupture with the goeernment was seriously debated. The Nome Vremya to -day says that the Con- stitutional Democrats have actually re- solved to break with the government within a kw days, but M. Struve, editor of the Osvobojdenie, informed the Asso- elated Prese that no decision had been taken. The bakeries continue closed to -day, the strikers threatening to wreck the bread. The attempts were made to bake The strike of the bakers is to be -fol- lowed in a few days by a "butchers' strike. The news from the interior shows that the wave of .strikes is spreading, but it is too early to tell whether this mom- ment, which seems more spontaneous than organized, will pretipitate a crisis. New strikes are reported at Yekatorin- oslav, at Saratoff and. at the collieries of Bakmutle The usual number of robberies are re- ported to -day, emphasizing the growing lawlessnes and anarchy in the country. The government seeing to fear it repeti- tion of the November mutiny at Cron- stadt fortress, where the sailors and marines and the soldiers and workmen are reported to be extremely turbulent. The streets of Cronstadt are filled with troops and the. well-to-do inhabitants are hurriedly leaving the island, on which the town is situated. No Fresh News From Bialystok. No fresh news was received limn from Bialystok this morning, and none of the newspapers received word from their correspondents there. The Jewish outrage at Bialystok was produced by peoveeation. The police par- ticipated in it, and the troops actively supported the rioters. The military au- thorities now have full control. The gov- ernor-general has kft the ety. Persons who tried to leave Bialystok were killed at the railroad statino, and those who encemeed in reaching open fields out- side the town were run down by dra- goons. There seems to be no bye of etopping the attacks. The number of victims is large. While the appeal for aseistance 1Ifigveuttytsen we hear about ne the 'MASSACRE ECLIPSES ALL VIOUS OUTRAGES. LontIon, ;Rale 1s. -Tie.. Times' St.• Peter:4)11re, eorrespoaent deelaree that the Bialy,tok rnaseaere far eclipses in horror and elnetardly premeditation all previonv outrages. It is now lemma Will and offieial:y admitted that the tele - is be - sound PRE - Ask All Christendom to Aid JAPAN DECL_INES' TO PAY. Thinks Russia is Charging Too Much for Care of Her Prisoners. Tokio, june 1 7e -The Nichi 'Mehl re- ports that the Government recently received a detailed. statement of the met of the quartering. of the Japaneee prieonere, in 1151511e (bring the war. and declines to. eettle on the ground et the exorbitance of the charges. The negotiation of the matter ie te prove difficult. SPLIT RAIL WRECKED FLYER. A tad Smasla-Up on the Lake Shore, But No One Was Killed. Buffalo. June 17. -The Twentieth Century flyer on the Lake Shore Rail- road was wreeked near \Wet. Seneett, two miles. west of here, to -day. 'lite wreele 'MIS a bad one, and it is 001114141 011011 miraculoue that no one WzIA , One ihly 00401 and five skeperti were badly mashed. The evreen, it is believ- ed, was causea by a split rail. t in ..;raan tied dewe Ilan attacked a permeseion and kitten prieete tine chil- dren was base:ess fabrication. lt, has been aseerteinee thet several regi- ments quartered at Bialyeton were eee,t, not to cheek the matieacre, whit+ emse- quently lasted all of three days, but to fire intlisetiminately into Jewish honees, thus completing the ruin and bloodshed, The correspondent, deseribing the eite uation as one of anareby everYwhere, Aro the outlook well nigh desperate, eeys there ie -only oue meane left of pre- venting 04taqt;',*Vic, -only one chance, af bringing the Government to listen to mitten. That is the fear of a financial erieis. The newspapers claim that the Government is already anxious to re- plenish its eoffere. The bet, loan 0751 negotiated on the underetanding that it would. not lie directed against the Teomea. Foreign bankers must 1104. TOM - iv.;, that they were deceived, and they may be expeeted to aet aecordingly. This is Already nulhoted the fall in Rue- sian bonds aleneel ilea the bourses in St. Petersbarg 1521 1 Mo=vow are in a etate bordering on panie. The broker.; talk of eendiug a eollective memorial to the tliroue pointing out the eertainty of fin - helm about 3 (Meek on Imlay often- deeaetee v ideee the Government noon. Ho etabbee himself in the head Strikebreakere Gallery. itidhul Odeon, June 17.-eThe 041.11074 '1111 Y.1141" 1" 1141 1 1""1""' 1 he .iteepetthee from lin:Aft eontinue with a knife, but beyond severe -cuts . Itis 'Wounds, NVIIICh 1510T0 dresseel„ are His New Project. Rome, Jpne 17. -Pope Pius has di- rected Cardival Itichelmy, Archbishop of Turin, to appoint a committee to colleet money to pay for a Stable of ChriStOpile7 ttolumbne to be placed in the Vatican eardens. All Christendom will be risked to enntribute and the teculptors in all lenesovill be invited to submit deeigne. .ellegorital figures representiug naviga- Wm. astronomy, reletion and hepe are to stend at the gretrit navigatorn feet, end the pedestal will be Adorned with bas t•eliefs illinnineting scenes in Ms life. The Pope hopes to be honored with the preeenee of many of the leading men of he American continent when the monu- ment is unveiled. ,!! STABBED HIMSELF IN HEAD. Half -Crazed Italian Attempts Suicide in Blenheim Township, 'Woodstock, Ont., Jenne 17. -In it half - demented condition, an Italian, whoee -name is unknown, attempted to commit (aikido on the fif tit concession of Bkn- 110W09i stril.e wetwon t,t) bet... employed senitith's leals, Ont.., ;lune 17. -While not serious. and he W441 50114 to. Toronto sly. -. tC04A 11 y' by Amiens. rypoglaphi- 1 11 1 . ^ • • to let of the 1105.4 import. They bring eteviee of nest itittion, 151110141120 '4 mitt - several small boys were swimming in to the Italian Consul in that eity. eal Unio tlw cut near 'McCreary's leeks yes- .-en-esent------- Union No . 16 announeed yesterday ' II • it has secured more than 200 photo- tvri , ot ontreee, 411t1151)11011)1141(1 mans tertlay Afternoon, the little eleven -year- CHIEF'S SONS SURRENDER. graphs of non-union econemsetors ea*ercee oiefews. Another teener -al railway seilee can s to be impolutin,g. old eon of Mr, ,Iames Bigford got out . working ht "struck" priining houses. , 11. of his depth end 552111, Ana by the time .11early All Bamblata's Followers Killed The pictures will be time' ' for pur- he was pulled out life was extinct. Inwl an, Natal, June 17. -Two of the • • intion. says it is daily more epparent An Athlete's Suicide. ' Htmereal, :rune 17harles SMenittwayo aninnipe lad Wg. Chief Sizin-anda's sons have surrendered that theb real fi!rlit will take pleee ele Feat. au employee of the Canadian - .-----C. - In the Natalian forces, find nearly all London, Tone 17. --Writing to The • pendent of the bonnie:, The Constitn- pa,,,lw nano., an, 1 1 ir • ' of Cilia Bembaate's followers wore ' Pm Sou ost from Afriea, 1i '1(11 ld Webb tional Dm eocrate ttre being euperseded - atbletie (.1111A, eourmittej -suicide by killea in the remit fighting,. Cols eomparee Ilitlitwayo end U'inuipeg, Al- by the Male& ant Detainee of Mode, ebootitig himself through the head at- McKenzie, of the Natalian tontiegenti though .solnewilat similar, he Clove net s1 os, fiery evert lee, opening up vietas he home on Saturday morning. Me. -has given the eelads, who ore leaderleee think linlawayo will fill up so rapidly, ae tef land eind loot, are more enticing. than . . ' - 1 i tier 1 far xtud wide,. mill Jinte 'gold is less certain than Manitoba, wheat. the duller programme of the moderates. - *CUM Gould be peralleled trona the nr17 Coming Revolution. in the Zulu Campaign. poses of identifiea,tion. , ing with the evideneee of a (mining revo. A $t. Peteesburg eorrespondent, deal - dap of the French Revolution, only in Run -da the war cry of "Zemlya. i yo" (land and liberty), takes the place of Liberte, itgalite Fraternite." The Governtnent must decide at once wlether 44 will resign. If it does not soon a great fight will begin. 'The St, Petersburg, correspondent of ,the Tribune says that the Governor- General of Grodno has telegraphed, eaying that the first official account of the Bialentok affair was mendacious in stating- that the Jews first attacked a procession, The procession was not attacked at all. The correspondent says he learns that a local official of the name of Stukalich was responsible for the assertion that Jews started the trouble. The chief of police at Bialyetok, re- porting oft Sunday evening, said the trouble woe ended, but added that an- other massacre is threatened Grodno. Mob ORDER RESTORED, Continued Demonstration Until More Troops Arrived. Bailystok, June 17. -More troops, in- cluding a battery of artillery, arrived here to -day. Quiet was restored this evening.. Numbers of Jews who are fleeing from the city, were escorted by soldiers to the railway station. The refugees have lost all tbeir property and money, and all of them are hungry. There was furtber rioting on Saturday, night and tide morning. The mob was swelled by thousands of peasants, and plundered and burned the deserted dwellings of Jews. e The suburb of Boudary has been to. tally burned. Eight streets have been totally devastated. FOMENTED BY THE POLICE. Uncensored Reports Give Real Cause of the Massacre. Vienna, June 17. -The Austrian and Polish papers, which sent correspond- ents to Bailyetok, publish their first reports to -day. These were not asserted, chose the feast of Clo'rpeteills sored. The correspondents con= n statiug that the outbreak was arrang- ed by the local officials. These, i s Christi because events prepared the way for disturbances, inasmuch as the Catholics, for the first time since 1803, were able to organize Under the Czar's edict grantin,g religious tolerance. The members of the Orthodox Church were also organized, and religious partisanship made it clash inevitable. Agents ern - cloyed by the police, say the cor- respondents, started the bomb - throwing and discharging of revolvers, their acemaelices hi the crowd starting cries against the Jews. The Hebrews immediately blazed away among the in- dignant crowd, and the inassacre began. The correspondents declare that the re - stilt was as sanguinary as those of the of the worst outrages in the past. Most wounded at 700. One places the number no: 421;00a.ceounts prime the killed and (40 1 1. unitient in sporting 10 to snriender Raying that 'otherwise lie found numbans in many putts o Every symptom of ItaProa s present cnn- Veat was a primula t 1E4 14201 NT. A. A. A. ank p -circles. they will be shot altptuttd. the r70142e4, GARRISONS STRENGTHENED, Increased Apprehension Caused by Strikes in Leading Cities. St. Petersburg, June 17. -Two regi. meats of infantry and it battery of ar- tillery have been sent to reinforce the garrison at Crenstadt. Several regi- ments of cavalry have been added to the garrison at Peterhof. These move- mente are signifieaut *of the increased apprehension created by the strikes in it. Petersburg and Moscow. The labor demonstration to -day at Terioki, on the Finland border, which was arranged by the revolutionary members of the Douma, was attended by 10.000. The speakers demanded am- nesty for all political prisoners. NO ONE HURT. AUTOMOBILE MADE A LOOP THE LOOP PLUNGE. Chicago, Jame 18.-A runaway automo- bile, tontaining de 15. Loverin, of Racine. Wiseonsin, and his three (laughter's, yee- terday dashed beekward down one of the 11111s notth of Glencook, Prashed through the guard rails of a rustic bridge and fell twenty feet to the bottom of a 1'aVi110. An the mayinne plunged off the bridge it tinned over, throwing the ter- rified eempants to the ground, while the moment= of its great weight -caused it to shoot ever awl pest them, This un- noubtedie saved their lives, but their es' 1421)014 with enly slight brnises and, cuts 1044 remarkable. Young Actress Suicides, Philadelphia. June 10. -The body of young woman who suieided by drink- ing carbolic acid in an apartment house last 1\to1lday has been identified that of Mignon Phillips, evhose last , professional appearance in this city was in Smiling Island, a rausieed tomedy. DIED or HIS 'INJURIES:. Kingston, Ont., June 18.-(Specia1)- On Friday morniog, while -coupling tars at Collins Bay, William Weir, a G. T. R. brakesmao, was ernehed, an 'engine back- ing 510w1) epon him. lie wits brought to the general hospital and bis wound, at- tended to, but apparently be wits inter. nally I11:1117Pti for he sank rapidly, dying at a late loner on -Saturdny night. Ile wee nged 32 yettre. Itis *tont% from Al- gonquin. were sszmmoned and were with Met when the end 018542.