West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 2 Oct 1902, p. 2

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. titl0ill [If HIS WHEY. . The generals any that having failed to induce Grout Britain to grant tin- nnciul assistance. it only remains for them to address thenmelves to the mttple of Hump: and Amerjca. "“The mull Boer nation," goes on the manttesto, "can nevu- forget the help it received in its dark hours of altering. Our people are completely ruined. It has been impossible to make a complete inventory, but at least 30000 houses ot Bore farms and mny Villages were burned or do. “my?! by the British during the war 1vtsrything was destroyed, and the country was completely laid waste. The war demanded many victims. and the land was bathed in tears. and our orphans and widows were Aha mioned. SY e arc appealing to the world tor contrihutione to assist the destitute. and help in the educa- tion of the children. The generals re- pudiate all desire to inflame the mind. of the people and declare 'the word is now sheathed. and all dltts r- men are silent in the presence ot no?) great miners.' " Amsterdam. Sept. 29.-- The Boer generals. Botha, 1reWct and Delarey, late Issued a munilrtsto in the shape of on appeal to the Utilized world. This document rrealltr how after the terrible struggle in South Africa the Poertr were compelled to accept the British terms of peace, the generals were commissioned to proceed to England and appeal to the new Gov- tl'nment to unity the distress which io devastating the colonies. and in the event of the future of the min- Mon, to appeal to the chimed world for charitable contributions. MILURE OF LONDON MISSION. SPLIT ill [llllllll MIG, Manifesto lssmd to the Civil- ized World, John Brown Relates How He Lost a Roll of Bills WEB (lfllfllllS APPEAL quite tt Gutter ot excitement has been caused in labor ell-ole: all over the Dominion by the recent action at the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada at It. annual meeting at Berlin. Efi'ortto Crush Out Canadian Organizations. _ “tonic. Dearateh-htrred Inch. 3 when is standing trial in the Geo- ornl Be-ions on a charge ot being implicated in a theft iron John Down. a farmer, whose home is in Halton County. no complainant is n man of " and since his youth has spent his life on the inrm. For may years he carried the malls in various places in Halton County, hlving been engaged in that work before the crowning of Queen Vie- toria. On May 20 last he came to the city to sell a load ot live stock, and he brought 33.300 in his sat- chel, which he deposited in the bank. lb also had 8523 which he received toe his live stock. After visiting Eaton's. he said that he had wander- ui into tho barber shop, thinking it was it grocery store. He was ac- comlnnied by a friend. The prison- er! induced him to remain for a hair out and have his whiskers trimmed. "I trial to persuade him that: I did not need it." said Brown. "Inch int- lediately commenced the regular (in. ties of a. barber by placing a towel around my molt." Just at that mo- ment Inch turned around and lifted by the whiskers a man who was sit- ting in the next chair. Brown said that he could not stand seeing the man trentui in that: way, so he call- ed at him. and then a young man snatched his pocket-book and ran nway. Brown declared that the prisoner hold him in the chair when ha attempted to follow the man who took his money. The police found out the name of the man who stole‘ the money, but have been unable as yet to lot-ate him. i MAY LEAD TO LABOR FEUD. Tho national or Canadian bodies have up to the present been recog- uhed no genuine labor organizations, “(I admitted to the Trade. and Labor Conirrrtur, which body In some Instances gave them being through the charter wan-x) by its omeera, and have also been admitted to the local Unde- Councils. Recentlv the Anwriean Federation of Labor has displayed great activity In the Dnmirtion, especially in the eastern provinces, and there has been More or less friction in consequence. A number ot the looals chartered by It have refused to recognize the Canadian congress. These local or. tl),'ei'l,til',i,t,s, have also organised adeo Councils. and in at least one Instance. at Charlottetown. P. E. 1., the council so fornrd has refused to recogniw a local labor organization holding a charter from the Trades Ind Labor Congress of Canada. 2ho executive of that province reported to congress. protesting against Trade- t‘ounclfs being chartered by outside bodies. WHILE IN A BARBER’S CHAIR. By the action ot the Trades Con- treu at Berlin all these purely Canadian bodies in trades where International organisations exist ore refused recognition as genuine labor organizations. even although In some can" at all event.. they were the pioneer organlutlou in and; This policy In ulopted " the majority, coupooed of re- " The Doukhobors are not destitute, and will not need help this winter. They never have obtained any tood from the Government. They never have got any special privileges or assistance from the Government. iThnt a few or them in certain vil- ‘lnges have turned loose their cattle under the influence of a fanatic preacher is quite true, as it ls also true that none of them eat meat, but they have a perfect right to be vegetarians if they wish, and also to quit using beasts of burden. That this diet is good enough to sustain them in the hardest work is shown by tho Met that they are well liked as laborers, working the long hours required as sectionmen without being used up by it. We have each year requests from farmers to send the mole Doukhobors to than as they had last year. These very villages from which they have driven cattle are building three flour mills this your, and so tar trom being in want they have two years' subsistence nhrad of them. It is sensational re- ports which are doing the most harm to thoso people. They are all right it leit alone, and are going on quietly homrstca0ing and falling into the ways of the people. All that is wrong with them is Your They have been so persecuted that they are afraid to sign a paper or illl,in any legal document, but they are getting over this also." Taunton, Muss" Sept. 29.--Thirty thousand persons who attended the fair of the Bristol County Agncultu- ml Society to-day witnessed an ac- cident which resulted In the death of Louis Gil-am. one of the aeronauts who attpmpted a balloonpeemrion, Acton-at Falls From Ills Balloon to a Terrible Death. A triple ascension by Prof. and Mlle. Stafford and Louie Girard was Khmer}. Yo sooner had the balloon eon freed when it was seen that something was wrong. The woman out loose at once. and did not leave the ground. The balloon shot up rapidly and had gained " height of about 400 feet. when Prof. Staf- lord’s parachute was seen to drop ahgo. It spread. and Prof. Stafford "lighted safely. The balloon ripped in babes and collapsed Ike " paper bag. There was a frantic motion on Glrard’a part as he tried to cut loose. hut the line refused to part, and he fell to the earth litre a shot, striking with awful force. FOR A CANADIAN ALDERSHOT Winnipeg. Sept. 29.--The reports of detrtitution among the Doukhoborl are absolutely false, according to the statements of Mr. J. Obed Smith, Immigration commissioner, who says; Ottawa Degmtch. (speeial(--1t is reported here that Lord Dundon- ald is in favor of tho Government purchasing a large tract of land, the same as the British Government ha. got at Aldershot. so that the training ot the (‘anmlian militia can be conducted on a large scale. PrirteetW0pposetr the Programme of the Queen Mother. Madrid, Sept. '29.--fh,nt?wed dissen- a’lons tho occurred In Spain's royal family. With the consult ot the Queen mother, the-Infanta Marla Theron has been eorrtrsponding with Prince Jenara Bourbon, a milk-hip- man In the Spanish navy, and a bro- ther ot the Prince ot Asturias. The Militia Department has noti- fied the Halifax garrison regiment that it is to be disbanded. Lieat... Cpl. White, who is in command. will be Ds o. C. of the St. John and Fredericton district. Those mem- bers of the permanent norps who are with the regiment will return to their old positions. and the militia officers will go back to their regiments. Ono month‘s pay will Ito given when the regimen“- disbanded: , SPANISH CUPII) IlhlsEstiAY0C When the Quern mother went to Austria recentlv. Emperor Franz Josef lwrsunded her that the Infants should marry a certain Austrian nrchduke. Accordingly, on her return to Spain, the Queen tried to break the old engagement. The Infants, however, resisted the attempts. an this she was backrd by King Alfonso, and violent scenes occurred In the palace. A _ Statement by Immigration Commissioner Smith, THEY ARE NOT DESTHUTE. The anen Is doing her utmost to further her aims. She prevented Prlnce Jenara from accompanying his. brother otncnrs aboard the Nam 'ttlt, to the audience at Ban Sela.- t n. Court omen-s believe there will be a min marriage between the tre !anta and the grand duke bt the Queen mother's ehoiep. (lillll(llllllllllt All flltifl, congress. In Toronto the Longshoremen'a Union may he taken " an illustra- tion. Owing to local conditions this union contends it cannot with ad- vantage affiliate with the Inter- national Longshoremen'n Union or with the Freight Handlers' organ- ization in the west. A movement in on foot to exclude this union from the Toronto Trades Council, to- gether with other local organiza- tions coming under the ban of the presentatives ot international or- ganizations, in an endeavor appar- ently to crush out the Canadian organizations as such or to force them to identify themselves with the International _ organisations. ._‘ Many of the advocates ot tho change contend thct the clam oe the constitution excluding the” bodice from the connect also - plies to the local Trade. and Labor ('ounciln. " this contention be up- held hy the council: it will in al- moat every city and town rennlt in the exclusion ot organisation. which have hitherto been recogniz- ed as members. IN SIGHT OF THOUSANDS. In desperation, after laboring since midnight Sunday to quell the disturb- ances, the Sheriff issued a proclaim ation calling upon the strikers to disperse and preserve order. . For an hour this was effective, but at the time the workers were re- turning home. between six and zeven o‘clook lasts night, the riot burst tom: again and raged more Iiercély than bcrorts Workers Wore tstoned, ciubbed and beaten. Workman were attacked, houses stoned and compzn)‘ ortifera, held, up. A mob attacked the Raymond col- liery and waehery, ripped down the Stockade and broke the steam pipes. A train of workmen being taken trom one place to another was tired upon with revolvers and stoned. Attacks were made on the Saylor- ville colllerles and the Iteum pipes were blown up with dynamite. At Priceburg, several deputies were tired upon while trying to disperse a mob and returned the tire. One man was so severely injured that he may dies All day long and into the night the rage ot the miners burst, now here, now there. Near Priceburg Eugene Detty was {ound unconscious and fatally beaten. He had walked over trom Greenridge to call upon a young woman. Truln Wrecking, Too. At Plttaton the fish-plates had been removed tront the Erie Railway tracks, and the work train which went over it this morning was wreck- ed, bat no one was injured. . . ’Dlel call for troops followed a day of wild excitement-a day of run- ning fights, of bloodshed, ot sieges to houses where women and little children cowered in corners. while men, whose only offence was that they wanted to earn bread for their starving ones, stood their ground in the shadow by the windows, with loaded Winchesters at their shoul- ders. ' t ' Innocent men were felled. Others! were left for dead in the streets. Sixteen workers were attacked on their way to the Johnson Colliery, near Scranton. Another attack was made upon workers at the Bull's Head comet-y, _at Dunmore. . -ii"oiiFGG'i 'tfl/ Lolita, ot a. number ot non-union men were stoned and the windows smashed. 7 -itixiridr thi, police rescued a man from a mob and had to lock him up to pt9tect. "issy t ACi'Ghoij'tun, a non-union wor- ker, removing Ititr)1otyrttro1t.1 goods to a mine where he had obtained work, was attacked and last night war- rants were out for some officials ot the township, charging them with being participants in the attack. -i"i'rappTr" tidin was stopped on its way to the colliery with food for the workers. -- At Mahanoy City the strikers sur- rounded the house ot William Mere- dith and Ill: son. who are non-union workers, and where Ills family was concealed, and after besieglng it tor seven hours the foreigners among the crowd tried to set fire to it. When Sheriff Schadt nrtrt asked for troops Governor Stone told him to organise a pose from the citlsenl. Schadt repiied that ho could not and that he must have. the troops. _ The Silver Creek bridge which wus dynamited on Thursday night and burned on Friday night, was again attacked last night and the timbers were sawed through so that the weight ot a. train would have wreck- ed it. -li%iyi, Bf five thousand defied the Second City Troop, ot Philadelphia, at Shenandoah. When the crowdl were passing Gen. Gobin'g headquarters they kept up a mighty uproar. and Governor Stone’s name could be plainly heard intermirttrlirttt with the curses that were heaped upon tho soldiers. The Collapu Near. Minneapolis. Minn.. Sept. 29.-ctyr- roll D. Wright, U. S. Commissioner ot Labor. asserts that the fight will collapse within tour weeks. and that the men will lose. The troops will reach here shortly after daybreak, and serious trouble lei looked for on thelr arrival. ' county. His .tuttion is the result of an ap- peal last night from Sheriff Schadt, who declared that ho was powerless to stem the tlde of mob violence, which was rising hour try hour. “This anthracite strike," said he, "may last three or {our week: long- er and then it will collapse. The men will lose. There can be no other outcome. The railroad. nev- er will arbitrate or even oonsentto methods ot conciliation." Wilkesbarre, Pts., Sept. 29.-tloTer- nor Stone this morning ordered out the Thirteenth regiment, of Scran- ton, to suppress the lawlessness of the coal strikers in Lackawanno "The bridge will have to be torn down and rebuilt. -- - The rtti1roadtfinsoVed in the tittht, it was asserted, are battling tor a larger point than 'tiotpr, In MI dispute. mm, are backed by ”the Questions an to possible interven- tion in any way met the same re- Nr, -- -- --- -- "The railroads will never arbi- trate," contended the commission- er, and then he gave. for the tirgt time. the ground on which thlu al- sertlon ls based. Outrage: Numerous and an Army of Picket: Hold Up and nurdemusly Beet er Stab net, Who 00 to work-----' Fired and Railway Trains wrecked-Carroll D. Wright Sees In the Violence at the Striker: in Early Eu ot the Trouble. Strikers Defy All Law and Chaos Reigns. can SME. DYING, " IN MURDEROUS manna. Strikers Enraged. I HIV TORONTO There is a. great deal of building going on In the city for the past I two years and especially thil year. 'ne over two millions of dollars are .being loved“ in new buildings for. the firtrt eight months ot 1902. The price of real estate in Winnipeg I. golng up fast. especially in the cen- tre or the clty."but It in bellevod it i will take me time before land Witt ' be as high in the "outlying portion- "an in the ‘time of tha "boom" 3 to. year- afo. "Biecohnato. ot course, in wide: When the real work of the pickets in the darkest hours of the night be- gins the situation becomes tense. Menace of wounding and death is in the air at the hands of inditrereet strikers for the non-unionist who at- tempts to pass through the lines, death for the strikers when Violence brings rifles and mines to the rescue. Non-Unlonlsts Hold Up. A slight commotion brings together a. dozen ot the pickets nearest to tho point of disturbance. Tho oth- ers are too well disciplined to leave their posts. A man carrying a bug, screen and shovel has been caught trying to slip through the line. "Who is he, Jim y" “Shut your mouth. Po you want to bring the soldier: on us. Now. you tell us quick who Joa are and whnt JOtt are doing here." "Me do coal pick. Me no scab." In an instant the bag is emptied and its contents examined. ll the man proves to be only a coal pick- er, he: is sent home with a warning: not to go out on the eulm dump until after ti o'ciorek in the morning. It it be found that he intended to work in the wn'ehery, he is urged to give ‘up his non-union employ- ment and join the union. It he re- fuses the pleas and presses on to- ward the breaker, the chances are that some of the more enthusiastic of the pickets will vent their dis- pleasure in sundry kicks and cuffs, notwithstanding tho cautions ot their lenders to avoid alt violence. A tatht (llllllllll1 The Province. of Manitoba. is 3 won dcrlul country tor such a newly discovered one. You can reach it from here by the Canadian Pacino Railway all the way, or in tho pro per season take steamer part ot the way from Owen Bound to Fort Wil- liam, situate at the northern part ot Lake Superior. Or you can also get to Manitoba xia the cities ot Chi- wgo and St. Paul through the United States. On arriving at the city ot Winni- peg you are at once struck by the apparent newness. so to speak, of evcr,ytt1ing in the country. The city of Wtnnipeg has a somewhat less population than the city or Hamil- ton. It covers an area, [was to”. or about thirty sonata miltln. " In S. F, Lazier's Impressions of Manitoba. THE GROWTH OF WINNIPEG. tro complete is the blockade made by thousands of pickets that no one has run it in the last forty hours. Deputies with ready Winchester:, and tingetw that are eager for the trig- gers nightly chute on the inside of the picket circle, while the men or the Barond Troop or Philadelphia City Cavalry gallop rostlessly along its outer side. of about thirty square miles. It Is well (qulpped with churches and business blocke. It has especially a number of line new bank buildings. as well as a. large post-office, though said to be too small tor the immense volume ot basilica" dose it. It also has handsome butidlngs put up by other corporations, and contain. Sirlken’ Tactics. Mahanoy City, Sept. L'o.--welrd in its working and effective in its ex- ecution is the new plan adopted by the striking miners to checkmate the attempts of the operators to resume work in the North Mahanoy and St. Nicholas colIerics. In brief, the idea " the shutting out of non-union work- men from the mines by a living wall of strikers. other great industrial corporations of tho country in their endeavor to break the back of the miners' or- ganization. ' n number of Very fine Government tdllicmr. Most of the streets are wide thoroughfares. or these the principal business street is Main street. which is a wide avenue. ox- tendiug the length of the city and over which the street railways run. However, the streets are not all re- gularly laid out, some parts of the business portions hung quite intri- (nte for strangers. There is an air ot business push and hurry about most ot the citizens, of whom a good- ly number are ts-Hamiltonian., who all appear to be dong well. There is a very large number of beautiful residences on both sides of the river, which runs through the southern part of the city. as Well as others scattered through the city. The city is well supplied with Common or Public Schools. as there are a large number of school children. They al- so have colleges and a Provincial University. Quite a large number of foreigners, reside in the city. and consequently several different lan- guages (some put It as high as tw_enty) are when by the residents. Death In In the Air. Detective U. It. Wouiurid, ho was in charge or the F'?,?.,:),'? thrre is n, matrimonial and mb- 1.ingt "trust" controlled by the same man, and operating many branch- ru under val-Iona names. In some CHE-‘8 corporate names have been as- svar.ed, and tho literature issued rtntirs that these concerns are in- ror'porated. ' " detail of detectives from Chief O‘Ndli's ottieea. Both commission bur- vuuo were looted of their comes“. and throe men were placed under arrest. F Tito “turf commission" offices ran. a! trcrc than: of the Armstrong-Bald- win Company and tho [humane-Duly ('mnpauy. TIre matrimonial agencies; Wit-1] were the Bell Advertiping Agency, Il. tL. Wells. aims C. L. Wrtllrr, l’nity Publirhim: Company. Lorrrun Pnblzrhing Company and J. H. Main. Tho literature ot the “TEN Commissioners" was himilar. and tho Ivttnru found in the various matrimonial om we also were .0 mn- ilnr an to suggnst a. common author, on: the same photograph or hand- romn women nut propperoua appear- ing mrn wrre {cum in use in the nev- oral agenvien. ' Chlcago, m., Few. 29.-Five innt. rimonial ngnnciea and two "turf com- mission” others have been ”nailed by Three other men and one woman. tor whom the police had val-mum, (waded arrest, ,, _ Movee to " at Abrulli on Spanish Throne Alann- Madrid. Madrid, Bent. '..'.S.--Great excite- ment has been caused by the discov- ery that influential mtr1eontentq are organizing committee: with the object of proclaiming the italinn Duke of Abruni a candidate for the Spanish lhrone. certifleaste. to be tuned by Novem- ber 1. Toronto detrpatch--Hou. K. J. Davis, Minister ot t rown Lanai. suit yester- day that he was in a position to un- noe"' that eertit into. will be “610d "395W“ - w w..- ---' one of the great quantlty ot grain. M the farmers have hardly any barns. they thrash the grain In the open tteicu and then take the grain to the clusters at the at:- tions. as nearly every station bu at least one elevator. They burn up the most ot the straw. an 1t ll only in the way. The soil In very rich, being mostly a very black loam, and they any requires only one ploughing before putting in a cum. The ploughing in madly done by gang plough: drawn by never“ Doreen at a time. Farm hands are required this year to get in the chops. and they command high wages. As the weather has been tn- vorable, a large part of the crops has been already secured. TURF SCHEME-IRS ALSO TAKEN. It is a your: mum'- country. and for hint It should prove one ot the best 1n the world. The Province In last filling: up and will soon have a very large population. The Duke, who has won renown as an Arctic explorer. was born in Ma- drid, and Is the third son ot the for- mer Spanish King, Amadeus of Savoy. He is now visiting Mediterranean ports aboard the itallan cruiser Liz- uria. Everywhere he. gee. he is the object of enthusiastic and obsequi- Gus demonstrations. . Attempt to Kill “In by Der-lung "In from. London, Sept. 29.-- In . dental) from St. Peterdburg the correspond- ent there' ot the Daily Expre& re- ports an attempt to derail the train upon which the Czar unveiled from Kurt. The Car vrfénvglgé at many. on Nov. 1 to all volunteers entitled to land grants. The delay had been caused by the practically unanimous opinion ot those interested that no ttertifUsategr should be lent out until all Were ready. so that they might all be~placed on an equal basil In se- ltctlng lands. t Rails were remved on the routes over which the Czar I: travel: In one Instance the plot dimsovered, and in the other, tep' was wrecked. fglollilillllgllltlllfllS Matrimonial Agencies Visited by Detectives. It is asserted that the Govern- ment ha- requested the Duke to has- ten his departure from Spanish water. Anomor advantage will be that twc-lw townships which were aur- vryed this summer wilt he included in the land available tor selection» and will thereby greatly increase the area ot choice. It in pouible. how- ever. that there will be a “-1th number of applications, in which spe- cial pointer have arisen, that " may be necessary to hold over for a short time. but the whole list wi'l be com- pleted if at all possible. at“... then In this can,“ out .- -.._.,_, Very bracing. and thou who llve there declare it lie healthier than In Gama-lo. One doe. not reelleethe Tunnel. ot this Cenede ot on". Which extends from the Atlentb to the Pacithit, until he he.- been " but u for welt u Wlnnlpex. Noe has one a. cleor ldoe of the lumen-o wheat tietdte until he actually nee. them, as some of the lame cover hundreds of acres. Farming land ll more saleable now than ever before, and the prlcea are going up. 11!. proprthle yen: ll one of the belt and . ,4 "4;- " southern od st Port Au Prini/eraire' Pratt;, In]. and to Venezuelu The Colombian vaernmont has for.. any protected again-t the kn... ot med States mar-Inn. an "2 crop lulu your - - v- "H in the wheat fields of Southern Manitoba you lee vast quantltlol ot wheat and oats stacked up waiting to be thrediod. but there are not enough mutual. or men to man them to take “lentils.“ - --=tA-- A .9. n, WOULD CROWN EXPLORER. VOLUNTEER LAND GRANTS. Two German cruisers are TRIED TO KILL CZAR. In this city. but it Staten" hang; 9m. m; recline .th. ot on". Atlanth to .0 been " IIIIPES- Nor ho tunnel!” :tnslly - M? mot wa- other the Peter-lbw; two MEAT Wil HEAL (h, Chicago. Sept. 29.--'Phe com-bim- tion or the great packing houses of the country. wharh Inna been un- der consideration and in process of actual formation {or the Inst an months, has been nbnndonad. u .east tor, the, pXjegent. - The Minn not to oomph” th, culmination In due In a large (ii-gru- to the atutndo ot the. national nu. minlntratlon toward!» trugtat as out- rined by Preddont Roosevelt in My recent speeches. and to the pry-wi- but, that In the "out of a comm” dation Congress might remove the tan" on cattle. This was to'.iowed by an and” u. sued from the omee of Mwitt a to. that the “run emp'oyeu should 'rr, continue the inventory of propp tr and stock. which had been "Mm-wt and started tor the purpooe or tub-w lath): a. report ot the Lnnncitil mo- ditiott ot the company which uni to have been used an a ham o? tho division ot chum in the mmhinv SAID TO HAVE BEEN THE CAUSE. Surgeon Opel-nu. on lulu-t lo Pre- ve-I _ Trenton, N. " Sept, '2V--trr, Tum» Bore Komorsai, of this an. is op r rt- h" on the 17-mvnths-uld dunghtr p. 'd Henry Clirhi. u butcher M N, in? Federal “net. to reduce the size of httttaytto prevent tum-5'. It wan learned Inn night that a final meeting of the head- of the firms known as the " Four Pare" Hon-ea in Chicago had been held, a: wh'ch It was agreed to Fnri all now muon- at once. At birth "the Md oi the r M measurcd 23 1-4 inches Dr. Kam' r.“ you!" tthnIEnt by moans at In"!!! bands, and no far has surcn-m. m lmnlng the drouvaroncn of 7h. heed go Inch and a half. Dr. Kauai-ski has sent to NM ' " for an instrumont with Win": I,,. Intends puncturing the. skull of 'r- (-hlld to "more waterfrnm tttol-ai': to which he attribute thr alumni-m slze ot the head. Promoters' Fears That Tav6 Might be Repealed you r Funk Jacket. another loop" h‘u: heard Dotes cries. and ran tn mu nulstance. He broke a Ftoat m. over tits elk‘I head before he y". 000de In driving tt away from 'Ly fallen man. _ Jacket then minted Doig .-,; The unfortunate man was cm. "a! with blood. his clothing want ‘n shreds and his left arm hung huh-- lens. He was taken immediately m the Butcn' Hospital. He wanna-m to be bruised from head to mm and his arm was broken. The w: side of his face was badly torn imam av mamas an. Therm lit the " elk norm-ed from Prof. Burned diving-elk show at the Pan-American Exposition mu 'noig we: dazed by the wound-nu] with difficulty guided the lurmm chm-(es at the elk. maddened try the smell of Mood. The keeper um. edging toward the fence and mu about fetched it when the p];- ovum him m a savage minimum Dole was thrown with great (an... to the ground, fortunately tall”; part way under one of the mm braces of the fence. That sand n:- me. tor the " could not got ut him very well there. Wtttdsor, Ont.. Mlnlrlzvi'm' N first tile in history " Prrr, rrt ot the United States rrsivtsri n regiment ot British Mbldmrs us!” "TI". and on Aim-rival: um 7| vi afternoon. in the prch'tivr ‘9 " V.“ concourse of people “unsw- in; ten. ot momentum Thanh-ts Boo-even at In a rmiq-uing Wand opposite the City Hail in "r r-t and looked earnest” nt vu' . M the. “K companion oi the Tttr _ first Regiment, Eswx Fusihors _. ttter “felled [not in vulumn. "l,tl the "Fords ot the OHM-0n. "I W" pooliion ot the general mluu- Th" line ot march wan about sis In“ I. Hutu. and from start to c, " ur" Canadians received a -ptxrfr"' “an: Iron the throntrs on M?" side of the broad tttormtgl:itsrw Tu" 'Qi-Ollt WI.- under the x-umnm'di {tyne-cecal. N. A. Bartlet. "srrti, the plrlde aa, sin'émii'x' £12514 nH, PM“ present. in addition lo " two bands. brass and huglv Ott that; "(In lo Windsor. the " 2tet "q escorted tc the I"?! do“ by the Inehltrnn Mama! Gard. who (seem! with mm 'i.'. tfmt, II t Visitors “a! p. Us 'Ptttt the 'i'Jn.'t'i1',eu't' fw- Bartiet tttatt ed them persori".l for the lplondld showing made ttr- 1tttuir" American comma» " aescusn BY worm KEEPER. ”an; out: SOL-Lanna. the tug. gut o! the at at the Park too, nearly who ' keeper. June: In; ”teak! “brawn. Doig had "tl. tend the paddock to teed the elk. The sol-uh It. not considered an. tnmtsiir Helm“. but cautlon is al. ways exercised by the keepers a, thll time of the year. Reno mum, ed the keeper emu-ouch. He thrsaw up his head and loomed " horns, Dal. coated trouble and turned 1c make tor the gate. In an itirilant the elk charged“ not: Jumped nimbly to one .4” and the bl; brute crashed by Tho elk checked himself as noon as we. slble had Doiq found his Petr-ut to the gate cut on. The " Chung, ed again and this time Dom mu tttyt no lucky. for the horns of q... lnfurlated animal grazed llle ml slde of his tare, almost rippmg 'hr eye but. __ - _n_--" I.-. ‘l‘n nu...n.l “m. Buffalo Zoo Kehper Terribly Manglod by it, THE ESSEX FUSILIERS T0 LESSEN BIO HEAD. WI prime 1 [Inn-Mid [tau uh bu? an 1 ‘I- Oh 'Hr u, no: Own Tu] tmub‘ml. mum-z. We“!!! qtm,orttr can“: th, u eet And up! Ml term. In" _ chub)“ " Arrtt W tou " at any [and Ct Clul t ll n met Ave-su- I m bel, "ot In t u out. it“ le "we!!! mg [in W I walk] ad Mu u-r lit Irretot 0! Input mg MU “It .'hrrr In u Pr..e do“ I " um 91 ternun " B ar “HIM antinuw "PM. It 1 MM . ahoq mm. I MAD“ W t ha not our Wt rum It " cv' n M1 um "'01 no lb do mit w NI no "

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