West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 22 Mar 1906, p. 3

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Lgime Displayed in is Enemies. Â¥ found in Jackson between the coyote ot s and the big woires k region. In generat ear a resemblance to og. They live in unâ€" generally in the timâ€" reams, and a favorite r overhanging ledges PE ART Â¥4 or Loaion, Bag 12. w hole in the h amaill sticks e mother wolf rhile the father r miles around rarely seen by in instant, for ke a mist into 1 tawny hide disappear from "dZ.InG slad 1i W mmbk and that ere sheep turn his ind when Te to his MENT in vee th r::’t: ne totâ€" ul Bleâ€" emies, d this thingsw tough oat of 1ances »me & used a an opes be 4 by S: foreed deek. board drow1 would have to be abandoned. At 8 o‘clock she sent another signal, which read, "Do not abandon me." Previous to this every small boat from the British King had been deâ€" molished. The half hundred or more men of the wrecked steamer were in plain view of those on board the Bosâ€" tonian and Mannheim, who could, however, do nothing at that time ii the way ~of rescue, since it would have been suicide to launch a boat in n hakey sox....‘" :. "__ T @rl . Ihe from ex; from hun juries â€"r ward and deck. anc ing@ _ At 140 p, m. the British King sigâ€" nalled, "Help us; we are sinking," and ard her bou 17 de "Do Not Abandon Me." At 6 w‘clock Sunday morning Capt O‘Hagzen sighted the Mannheim, and shortly afterward _ the _ Bostonian. While proparing to lower the boats the Mannheim signalled to the Bosâ€" torian that the British King was in distress, and Capt. Perry, of the Bosâ€" tonian, immediately altered his course and ran down as close as safety would permil. _ The Pritish King sigâ€" malled that she was waterlogzed and W Im uneve the We lo bo tak afte con: ec, me but w from to rei cessful O‘Hag: Then : the lif ship a into t an how 101 seas, 1 board t lowered avainst were volu gineer, ard, ‘ sailors stoway York. sustained The re: clude Jas nee lice irom Capt KI'DS!, 1 vCen slucaed aown which the Eritish were picked up by a frail bit of w had grasped after for life in the whi i1an, which Mancheste: tank _ stea for New \ been sucke by the () Line stea; Sunday la foundered Sable Isla members of the ecre were rescued from + 11 l“‘ and physic heroism in in the erin @re Magnificent Rescue Work by Crews of Other Steamers. A Terrible Tale of Suffering Sacrifice. The Vesse! Sinks With 27 Men Off Sable Islacd. BRITISH KING _ LOST AT SFA. 1€ T w n n a frail bit of wreckage, wh 1 grasped afiter a desperate life in the whirlpool. lapt. James O‘Hagen, of th ig, died on board _ the _ ] m the effects of the terribl tained trying to save his si ‘he rescued brought here t le James Flannigan, the sc r; J. D. Crawford, the chi r; Adoiphus Beck, the fou eer, and Wm. J. Curry, t & The others were coal pas ors, _ mostly _ Belgians, waway, â€"Heary Parkotch. 0 vbi The aT th O‘Hazen refused to be carrieda to bin. _ He ordered that his leg be up, and then resumed command, rected the efforts which were beâ€" ade to plug up the hole in the CrHshex 11 atten 108 L OT H & Desperate soon this, too, was swept seamen suffered constantly sure, from lack of sleep, »r, and from bruises and inâ€" cived by being tossed forâ€" backward on the vessel‘s Xi1 1) n t arrived here toâ€"day _ from _ and 11 by the German ner _ Mannheim, Rotterdam ork. Five others who had 1 down in the vortex _ into Eritish King was engulfed up by the Bostonian from . of wreckage, which they l aiter a desperate struggle ‘he whirlpool. aes (Vilagen, of the British on board _ the _ Bostonian fects of the terrible injuries ying to save his ship. ‘ ed brought here toâ€"day inâ€" _ gained continually, and nisht all hands were ake refuge on the main cattle were swept overâ€" rally by the egea and ‘ despatch: Suffering, mental al, and numerous _ acts of saving life rarely exampled 1 record of tragedies of the lod the loss of the Phoenix er British King, which on t, in a raging Atlantic storm the British King had bly in the water, and himself went into the ve to repair the most is,. While doing this a fractured one of his legs In spite of this lnju;y hurts eaused by his fall, rofused to be earried to ind s which _ ito the were safely ighter. . ritish Kin ut 150 miles south of ind carried to _ death 27 to from with the waves, n the British Kin of the steamer ) Wi we ram, were . driven steamer‘s sides with ening up her plates water to pour into crew. Thirteen men i the sinking â€" vessel Line steamer Bostonâ€" trom n Strugsle fely landed _ on The first lifeboat tonian was swept tern and destroyâ€" amen were hurt, lines thrown out A second n:,tcmpt‘ â€" ships was sucâ€" including _ Capt. to the Bostonian. l1 billow erushed the side of the ‘rs _ were thrown scued only after cir comvrades. Mannheim, after | r M the fourth enâ€" Curry, the stewâ€" coal passers and zians, _ and one rkotch, â€" of New the chief TC n rC t rUDHI t n and that ever cam judge, and I d returned to the who wou at large Hunt. One of the settlers was driven clean through the top of a box car and esâ€" caped with a few scratches, Had it not been for the prompt acâ€" tion of Conductor Hunt nine men would almost certainly have been killod. Ernest Thurston, of Stayner, the Victim at South Riverâ€"Conductor Hunt Warns Several People in the Cars in Time to Escape. ; ne rescue of a portion of the crew | was gallantly effected. Sailors of the { Bostonian vied with each other for the honor of sitting in the lifeboat, ?and were not deterred when the first boat was dashed to pieces against the ‘steamer‘s stern. COLLISION BETWEEN TRAINS OF SETTLERS‘ EFFECTS. th After, the vessel had disappeared the )e'IJnnheim and _ the Bostonian steamed to the point where the ship had foundered, and it had just been decided that all left on board had perished, when a feeble cry from the darkness told them some at least had not been drowned. Haldf an hour later Capt. Parry, of the Bostonian, locatâ€" ed a small section of a cattle deck to w-ilich five men were clinging. _ These the rescue of I JUDCE‘S SEVERE CENSURE in de worst SETTLER KIHLLED. came t I direc c€ pieces <at w rl A tenâ€"cent fare and a motor bus serâ€" vice is talked of in Toronto. _ Many residential â€" districts which the street car service does not connect with closely will be given a service in motor ears to accommodate thirty people, if the scheme goes through. The Niagara, Queonston & St. Cathâ€" arines Railway Company are asking to be allowed to increase their capital stock to $500,000. _ They also want the time for commencing the construction of the railway extended for two years and for its completion for five years. Ottawa â€" wants $10,000 for a dairy milding. and a large doputation, headed \Wm. Talbert, a resident of Harrow; Essex county, Ont., who is wanted â€" at Ypsilanti, Mich., on a charge of alleged forgery, was lured to the United States by an acquaintance of his, who acted with an officer from Ypsilanti and the Detroit police. teen 1 A specia aespat night states that formed at the head worth. is The Toronto License Viectuallers‘ Assoâ€" ciation want the old custom renewed by which the hotelmen may buy from brewoers who advance money to pay the license fees. ( bringing The Synod Augmentation Committee of the Presbyterian Church has made grants on the basis of an increase of £50, By decision of the Privy Council the city of Montreal will lose about $250,000 in the Cantin expropriation case, which grew out of the widening of Notre Dame street. The first railway in Canada to be operâ€" ated by motors run by gasoline generatâ€" ing steam, with a speed of thirty miles, will be the Port Credit, Brampton & Guelph road. Contracts were signed with Toronto capitalists whereby the latter undertake to erect a new theatre in Toronto, the site to be on King street. Picton has decided to accept Mr. Carâ€" negie‘s offer of $10,000 for a library, and steps will at once be taken to secure a suitable site for the building. Julius Flagg, formerly of Matilda township, Ont., died at the residence of his son in Buffalo, as the result of a motor accident. At Walter A. Durham, « ‘Toronto moulder, was found guilty of uttering and passing counterfeit money by ua jury in the genâ€" eral sessions. Fifty thousand dollars damage was done by a fire in the wholesale station ery premises of Grand & Toy, Toronto. Wm. R. Howell, of ‘toronto, the young man who was struck by a G. T. R. engine at London a week ago, is dead ofâ€" his injuries. 1 Ford‘s ESE}) news severa surucuve fire last evering cai: $10,000 damage, three stores, nd door factory, four residenc veral stables being burned. at T: W ire was 12 i below. and at the minimum stipend probably meeting# o lespat CANADIAN (nf from Duluth reat ice field Lake Superior elow zero, at Port Arthur ; 0i London local optionists sire of the of typhoid fevâ€" Ontario health thai h: U L1 10 18 iC i _ The plague has reappeared at Sydney, iNcw outh Wales, Two cases were reâ€" ported yesterday and three more were discovered toâ€"day in the same block of ] house. A train on the Chicago & Northwestâ€" orn Railway is said to have fallen off an embankment in the northwest part of Chicago. Several men are reported kued or seriously injured. Harry Orchard, who is alleged to have confossed that he killed former Governor Steunenberg, at Roisse, Idaho, vesterday, A committee of prominent men has been formed to take charge of the plans for the erection of a monument in Conâ€" tral Park, New York, in memory of Josâ€" eph Jefferson. A train on the Chicago & Northwostâ€" orn Railway is said to have fallen off an embankment in the northwest part of Chicano. Several man arewanaortad Hirted Watt Insurance men began to gather early toâ€"day for the continued hearing on the ton pending bills of the joint special | legislative committee at Albany, N. Y. ‘ The condition of Francis Kossuth, leadâ€" | er of the united opposition in the Hunâ€" ; garian Diet, is causing anxiety to his friends. He is suffering from an attack of gout. A popular demonstration was made in Hibaya Park yesterday afternoon against an increase of fares on the street railâ€" would not be too drastic a measure. He had known American sports, who, with rowboats, attached to a tug, would make a bet on catching the greatest number and then leave the fish on the rocks to rot. He thought a fee of $10 a rod should be placed upon American fisherâ€" men, which would help pay officials. At the meeting of the Georgian Bay Commission in ‘Toronto yesterday, Sir John Boyd said he was of the opinion that the total prohibition of fishing for anything other than sport‘s sake, with a view to retaining the fish for private use, Unless the Toronto City Council reâ€" fuses the request of the deputation â€"of physicians that doctors should be allowed to follow their patients into the new hosâ€" pital, without regard to the amount paid by the patients for maintenance, the trustees of the new hospital will not accept the grant of $200,000 voted by the city. held in Brantford yesterday a resolution was unanimously carried recommending that each municipality in the County of Brant, including the city of Braniford and the Town of Paris, shall pass a lccal option byâ€"law . a meeling of the repre independent telephone « : at Des Moines, yester zation of a qanuarter mi t BRITISH AND FOREIGN®. n announced thi Pove that eon fFoki HEN THE GREAT CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS first explored Jamaica, W he was stricken down by iliness, and would have died but for the herbal medicines the natives brought him. When the great Livingstone was in Central Africa, native herbs saved his life. The natives of Australia knew so well the secrets of Australian herbai extracts and juices, that when first discovered they were practically free from all disease. Herbal essences are, without Jogubt, man‘s proper medicines. â€" Bileans for Biliousness differ from other medicines. in Nort singing was introduced thedral mass yesterday first time. . The Bishop iced that it was the deâ€" hat congrecational sing. e representatives of phone companies of , yesterday, the orâ€" rter million corpora Telephone Company m ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Capt, c W.â€" 8. Duluth, Minn. l for a tugs to zen im cou Mr. Jolhn Geo. Wisdom, shoemaker, living at No. 12 Cray{ord Ter race, Crayford, Kent, says:â€"*" For between ten and ff:~en years I suffered untold agony from constipation and piles. The consipation was so seâ€" vere that many times I have gone for weeks withou naving passed anyâ€" thing. _ Even the doctor who atternded me grew alarmed at this proâ€" tracted stoppage. The piles, which arose from constipation, were very troublesome, and although I consulted a London specialist in addition to my own doctor, I did not seem to be any the better. I also had splittinge headaches in the morning. Soon after commencing with Bileans i ieit an improvement. I continued taking the Bileans until I found myself quite cured of both constipation and piles. To a man whose occupation necessitates sitting almost the whole of the day, you may imagine how painful an ailment like piles would prove, and may imagine my gratitude for my . cure. Since I was cured I have heard from several of my customers to whom 1 ® ‘ ‘ I recommended Bileans, that they also * .." 2‘ " have benefited from their use." A meeting of the Roard of Directors of the International Association of Firs Engineers of America was held at Patâ€" erson, N. J,. yesterday. It was called to prepare for the annual convention, which is to take place from Oct. 9 to 12. It was decided to convene in Dallas, Texas. The jury in the district court at Cripâ€" ple Creesk, Col., yesterday returned a Louis Nosser locked _ ins wile in a â€" bathroom at New â€" York yesterâ€" day, and while she was a priâ€" soner there shot and _ killed Stella Reynolds, of New Orleans, an actress, who was a visitor at their home, and then killed himseif. She was about 25 years old; Nosser was 40. Dr. John H. Murn, physician to Senaâ€" tor Chauncey M. Depew, who is ill at _his home in this city, denied last night that the condition of his patient was critical. He added: "Senator Depew‘s present indisposition is, I believe, only tremporary" The Moroccan situation is unchanged. A complete deadlock prevails. The conâ€" ference is not holling any sessions, and it is not known when the delegates will reassmble. Th interruption ‘of the disâ€" cussions is due to the lack of elasticity in the French and German instructions. An explosion of molten lead in the conâ€" verting mill of the Edgar Thomson Steel Works, at Braddock, Pa., toâ€"day resultâ€" ed in serious injuries to eight workmen. All were terribly burned by the molten metal, and a number may die. _ The explosion occurred while the men were at work in the cider pit. who was then kille vears old cnut States, a seven per cont. differe tween machine and pick minin ’pm' cent. advance for yardage : work, prohibiting the employ boys under 16 years old, an ci day, a one year contract and ; mine basis. The miners also adopted a r offered by Mr. Ryan, of Niinois, district should sign a wage a: until all the districts signed ticn, known as the Ryan resolui come before the convention. Un rescinded, the bituminous miner sign a wage agreement until the cite miners sign an agreement w operators. ‘The operators, on t In 0 At that convention the mi ed an increase in wages of ] the admission of the _ Sc States, a seven per cent. di tween machine and pick m Indianapolis, March 19.â€"The National Convention of the Unitedl Mine Workers of America cpened here toâ€"day in the German House, with over 1,000 delegates, representing 1,461 locals. The convenâ€" ticn has been called by President Mitchâ€" ell to consider action which may ‘result in an agreement with the coal operators that will prevent a general strike, that would bring 425,000 men from the mines on April Ist. The coniference with the operators will begin on Monday next. When the last convention of the mine workers adjourned, Feb. 2nd, following a joint conference with the operators, which had failed to arrive at a wage agreement, a strike on April Ist was inâ€" evitable, unless something was done imâ€" meidatelyv. ‘ The Miners Will Try to Come to an Agreement With the Coal Operators. MINERS HOLD MEETING; JOHN MITCHELL SPFAKS. cONSTIPATION AND PILT CURED sheuld be enc lox n â€"~/» per cent., uth Western 27 vment An i run demand itial beâ€" , a 1214 Sonzon that no inihirdâ€" h their tâ€"h Ni( nn cad 11 of ui of ' An old legend in connection wit castle runs to the effect that age l the remains of one of the most por | of the Connaught clans took refu; this castle after their gefeat in } ‘ and being driverinto the passoge ; pclosed up at éither end by their and the warriors were thus left to death. se ty o led to an old castle &bout a quart a mile distant. The underground passage is well and some of the walls bear trac inscriptions, while at a certain a number of skelotons and bores found, together with a quantity metal, which proved to be armor weapors, evidently of great antiqui An old legend in connection wit} ; ti0 | the 8a A Cavern Vit* an Arched Roof Which Led to E:wiiding Where Skelctons, Armor ard Weaporns of Great Antiâ€" quity Lay About. LIVING TOMB OF AcEs Aco DISâ€" COVERTD IN CASTLE. verdict finding John Vartley, alias Crowâ€" ley, guilty of conspiracy to defranud the Northwestern Mutual ‘Life Insurance Company out of $3.000 by blowing up a body in the Three Jacks tunnel and eolâ€" lecting the money upon a policy issued to his partner, MceEachern, .ondon, AMay ays: While dig ark .County 3 laborer disco ourselve another take th that the ‘Co., and with other operators. At these conferences he said the question of their disagreement upon the wage scale was discussed in an informal way. He ailso held conferences with sevoral of the leadâ€" ers in the miners‘ movement. "As a reâ€" sult of these meetings," Mr. Mitchel] conâ€" tinued, "we came to believe that there had been such changes in the coal trade, or at least in the attitude of many oporaâ€" tors, as to justify the hope thare was a possibiliy of reaching an agreemenrt proâ€" vided the joint conventions were reconâ€" vened. _ Aside, however, from my own impressions, or those of my colleagues with whom I consulted, the letter from the President of the United States ad. hand, demanded a reduction of from 10 to 15 per cent, protection against stampâ€" ed strikes, and a better system of adjudiâ€" cating local troubles. Mr. Mitchell told of his conferences in New York last December with Francis L. Robbins, President o fthe Pittsburg Coal Irc n pressions, th whom | e Presiden essed to M sufficient GRUESOMF SECRFT. will res tlations t tims a â€" narrow windi; an old castle &about a distant. underground passage is me of the walls bear rood en such change east in the attit s to justify the liv of reaching very la make such reasonable « the matter of wages and will enable us to join th bilitation of our joint moy perpetuation of the pr relationship _ inder whi ked with mutual advantag past eight years, And t 1 it incumbert upon me \side, however, from my own ns, or those of my colleagues m I consulted, the letter from lent of the United States, adâ€" » Mr, Robbins and to me, seomâ€" ent _ justification to warrant and our employers in making ffort to reach an agreement. 1 occasion to report officially oporators ef both the centraft ce and the southwestern fields ced, that the urgene of the sitvation will ; ike such reasonable « rch 19 arce degt upon us DOu a the southwester ectings of their i held in this city 0 th. I am hopeful nobDbms i justifica mir empl: to reach sion to n al advantage durâ€" irs. And to this uptin me to say ee of responsibilâ€" if these nvronosed n vinuing? passage it a quarter of vorn of many of pe thare w agreement l0 success on ors. At these estion of their age scale was wavy. He also is well built, ir traces of ertain point bores were uanlity â€" of armor and antiqurity. Daily _ powertu efuge â€" in in baittle n 1 moe W it represenâ€" on Monâ€" 1, if not ney and 61 toes M ondiâ€" m in ment ctical a owe Mail nchâ€" the 1g0 ful in owin ues from . adâ€" n n h. ed L (U h n

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