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Durham Review (1897), 23 Aug 1906, p. 7

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y‘$ MLLS May â€"$§10 ANKING ARDS 1906 ¢» $» t Bands, Catholic societies and sodalities of the cosmopolitan population of Winniâ€" peg and St. Boniface were there in mu!â€" titudes, and the immense â€" unfinished erypt and foundations of the edifice were erowded to suffocation. Winnipeg, Man., Aug. 20.â€"The founâ€" dation stone of the $3.,000,000 cathedrat was laid toâ€"night by Archbishop Duâ€" hamel, of Ottawa, and Archbishop Lanâ€" gevin, and Rishops Legal and Pascal, beâ€" fore an immense concourse of clergy and laity. Prelate« and primates with mitre, eope and pastoral staff, and French, Engâ€" lish, Polish, German and Galician clergy delivered addresses from 7 p. m. until long into the night. Cavalry Also Charged Upon the People and Beat Them With Their Whips. Glittering banners and insignia of all nations were ranged on platforms of the unfinished works. Had Remarked "They are as Gay as if They Had Captured Port Arthur.‘" Her Flesh Was Horribly Lacerated, Her Back Swollen and Her Clothes Cut. W han RUSSIAN GIRL GETS.27 LASHES FROM CHEVALIFR GUARDS TROOPERS. Impressive Ceremony Held at Winnipeg â€"To Cost Over $3,000,000. AI the con serious. approa« the exa that But Trainman Runs it Into a Shopâ€"yard and Man is Captured. » Declared to be Serious, Despite Official Denials. One Nonâ€"Unionist Stabbed and Two Others Reâ€" ported to Have Been Killed. Woman Charged With Persecuting Lady Gwendslen Cecil. H 11 m panl irk UNION AND NONâ€"UNION MEN FIGHT. inimp LAID STONE OF CATHEDRAL. ns t n M »TDC a1 ts s1M THE SULTAN‘S ILLNESS. tersburg, Aug. 20.â€"Intense popuâ€" gnation has been created here brutal treatment of Mlle. Smirâ€" refined voung woman, at the m, Aug. 20.â€"The Constantinople mdent of the Daily Mail says twithstanding the official declarâ€" o the contrary, it is certain that lition of the Nultan still remains His servants permit no one to h him. It is difficult to learn t nature of his illness, but ther« peachable authority for stating‘ s gravel, accompanied with hemâ€" NFGRO RUNS OFF WITH TRAIN, A MALICIOUS LIBEL. Lre the Th juadron of r along the Mlle UOmn ind quite drawn whips. The troopers 1 the crowd, laying about ind left. Mlie. Smirnoff and on, who in the meantime m down a side street, were y tried to escape into a t were caught. Under the an officer they were forced ab and were driven to the icks, where they were taken e Stenbockfermer. The latâ€" osed to turn Mlle Smirnoff la., Aug, 20â€"A Lowusville freight train reached here sham yesterday practically ntrol of a desperate negro. of two revolvers the trainâ€" mpelled to obey the negro‘s is to where the train should what speed the engineer is engine. from New Castle hearit . 20.â€"In the Bow Street oâ€"day Matilda Stanley, a narred _ woman, was maliciously libeling Lady il. Counsel did not read y recently the prisoner possession of large quanâ€" ed leaflets containing a ad been distributed from CY )len is a daughter of the f Salisbury and a sister holder of the title. The ormerly organist of the . She was married these William Cecil officiating. is remanded on bail. inother voun ives who were despatch rt are Smirnoff â€" 20.â€"Butler Junction, P‘a., was the seene toâ€" affray between union il miners, during which ier was fatally stabbed. reported to have been odies thrown in the Alâ€" it this lacks confirmtâ€" erin k Chevalier Guards. of these guardsmen the Newski Prospect si Arthur i crow the aiy as if they wad collected * commander wheeled his mD 10 V was ac d r€ re oves to the police, but other officers interfered and the girl fihally was takâ€" en to the court yard where troopers, in the presence of two officers, administerâ€" ed to her 27 lashes with their whips. The girl‘s clothing was cut out as if by knives by the wire tongs of the whips and her flesh was horribly lacerated. The papers are demanding the trial both of the officers and men, who parâ€" ticipated in‘ the affair. Reports of both police and private surgeons have been made, describing in detail the extent of the wounds inflicted. The girl‘s back is so swollen that it is impogsible yet to ascertain whether any of her ribs are broken. No action on the part of the military authorities has yet been announced, The Twentieth Century, which printed anâ€" other story of the case toâ€"day, has been confiscated. _At Wloclawek the chief of police and a provincial police captain have been murâ€" dered. Warsaw, Aug. 20.â€"Attempts were made toâ€"day in various streets to murâ€" der police officials. It is reported thai twenty murders have been reported to the authorities. The Warning Given to _ Woui!câ€"D¢ Lynchers. Raleigh, N. C., Aug. 20.â€"In an adâ€" dress issued to the people of _ Nortl. Carolina toâ€"day _ Governor (Glenn, afâ€" ter calling attention to recent lawâ€" less acts by the mobs, announced that in â€"the future the â€" militia would be â€" instructed to fire on the erowds when that step was deemed necessary by the sheriff of the county in which the trouble occurred. The sheriff is inâ€" structed to use every means in his powâ€" er to arrest wouldâ€"be lynchers and when a jail is attacked to warn all citizens to move. If these demands are not comâ€" plied with, and in the event of attack, the sheriff must order the militia to fire. Similar orders were transmitted to the militia. to this place, a distance _ of 65 miles. Threatening to kill the first man atâ€" tempting to molest him he sent the train through to Decatur where by a ruse of the engineer‘s, the train was sent into the shop yard and with the assistance of five other men the negro was capâ€" tured. It is believed he is wanted for some crime and was seeking in this way to escape. King Alfonso Has London, Aug. 20.â€"It is not unlikeiy in view of the death of Mrs. Craigie, that King Alfonso will either lease or purchase Norris Castle. adjoining the King‘s residence at Osborne, for use during yachting seasons. _ The palace until recently was occupied by John M. Richards, Mrs. Craigie‘s father, who had rented it for a long term. Fredericton, N. B., Aug. 20. â€"Albert E. Edgecombe and L. A. Tibbits, of this oi#‘v. were poisoned here toâ€"night. They had entered a jewerly . store and sat down to talk with the proprietor in the back shop. While the proprietor went out to see a customer, Mr. Edgeâ€" combe picked up a jar which he thought contained water, and took a big drink, followed by Mr. Tibbits. The jar really contained eyanide of potassium used for cleaning _ silver. . It took effect at onee, and both men died a little later. _ Thkey were two of the most prominent business imen in this mos city King Alfonso is at Fyvie Castle, where he and Queen Victoria are the guests of Lord and Lady Leith. This morning he shot grouse. and the Queen joined the party for luncheon. ed to the scene from Pittsburg by a speâ€" cial train, arrested 11 union men alleged* to have been participants in the riot. Fredericton Business Men Took Poison in Mistake for Water. Two months ago the miners employed by the Freeport Coal Co. struck for an advance and the mines were closed down. During the latter part of July the comâ€" pany resumed operations with nonâ€"union miners, and while the strikers frequently made threats, no serious trouble was feared. MAY BUY ENGLISH CASTLE. pRINK PROVED FATAL, WILL FIRE ON MOBS. Police Murdered. Has His Eye on Yachting Headquarters. to â€" Wouldâ€"be ‘ BULGARIANS _SERIOUS FIGHT BETWEEN GREEKS ‘ AND BULGARIANS. | Sofia, Aug. 20.â€"The antiâ€"Greek outâ€" break at Anchialos turns out to have !been more serious than was at first believed. _ Five hundred houses _ were burned, including all the public buildâ€" ings. It appears that _ the primary cause of the trouble was the con'Juct{ of the Greeks, who tried to prevent a ’P.ulgarian meeting. . The promoters of | the meeting invited the neighboring | peasantry to attend. When they beâ€" | gan to arrive the Greeks receive dthem ; with rifle shots.. The peasants forthâ€" ‘ with returned to their villages to proâ€" | cure arms. They returned and attackâ€" | gan to arrive the Greeks received them selves in a church, where there vas lfighting all day, The police were unâ€" able to disperse the peasants and the '(;reeks refused to cease their firse on ; account of the hostile attitude of their . bishop, who commanded them. ‘Then | the troops were summoned. The nearâ€" est of them were distant 70 kilometres and they arrived too late. The peisâ€" anst had already set fire to _ several houses. _ Eight charred bodies _ Lave been found thus far. NEW ENGLAND COTTON MILLS NEED MORE HELP, Boston, Aug. 20.â€"Reports from m;ln.\'{ cotton mill centres indicate that in numerous mills the marked shortage of: help which became apparent last spring still continues, although some of the corporations have mads additions to the names on their pay rolls since the recent general advance in wages. Many agents say that the entire cotton textile trade there has been a curtailment of 20 per cent. during the past two months, largeâ€" ly due to the shortage of help. The deâ€" creased production has affected the cotton market to some extent, and has been influential, it is said, in lowering the price of the raw material, In New England several strikes have closed entire mills for a woek or more, thus taking large quantities of goods out of the market. On account of the curâ€" tailment of production, it is expected that cotton goods will sell at â€" higher prices. o Insurance Company, Sued for Amount of Policy, Make Search. Lafayette, Ind., Aug. 20.â€"Martin Hamâ€" mond, who disappeared more than five years ago, deserting his wife and childâ€" ren, was insured in the National Insurâ€" ance Order. His wife continued to pay the premium, hoping to keep the insurâ€" ance alive. Two years ago she sued to recover the amount of the poliey and also asked the court to find that her missing husband was dead. The insurance company then began to search for Hammond, and he was found toâ€"day and fully identified. _ He said he had been travelling all over the world, but said nothing about his reaâ€" sons for deserting his family. Will of Late Founder of White Star Company. London, Aug. 20.â€"The will of the late William imrie, one of the foundâ€" ers of the White Star Steamship Comâ€" pany, who died Aug. 7, leaves his enâ€" tire fortune of £300,000 eventually to charity. His daughter has a life inâ€" terest in the estate. At her death oneâ€" third will go to the Liverpool Catheâ€" dral Fund, oneâ€"third to the Liverpooi Seamen‘s Orphanage and the Home for Aged Mariners, and the rest, to other Liverpool charities, coast. After Devastating 19 Villages, He Bumps Into Sultan. London, Aug. 20.â€"According to the correspondent at Aden of The Daily Mail, after devastating nineteen Ogaâ€" den villages, the Mad Milah, inflated by his success, ‘attacked the Sultan of Mijertain‘s territory. Both sides lost heavily. The Sultan had nine near relatives and 700 warriors killed, but eventually reâ€" pulsed the mullah towards Illig and the Late Mrs. Craigie Based Conviction on Occult Science. Birmingtam, â€" Aug. 20.â€"The London correspondent of the Post, writing of Mrs. Craigie‘s sudden death, says: "I may recall two conversations I had with her on the subject during the past year, in both of which she expressed the conviction she would not see the age of 45 years. _ This conviction she based on certain occult grounds, she having alâ€" ways had a strong leaning toward such studies, If she had lived longer it is very probable that she would have writâ€" ten a volme on the seen and the unseen, in the hope that it might be put to stage * o Queen Alexandra has telegraphed to Mrs. Richards, Mrs. Craigie‘s mother, saying: â€""I am much shocked and grievâ€" ed by your poor daughter‘s.death. I ofâ€" fer you and Mr. Richards my warmest sympathy in your loss." FINDS MAN AFTER FIVE YEARS. purposes ENTIRE FORTUNE TO CHARITY. PID NOT EXPECT LONG LIFE. MAD MULLAH REPULSED. HANDS WANTED. BURN HOUSES. May Become Settlersâ€"Over 5,000 lhr-‘ vest Hands From Various Eastern Sections Have Arrived at Wmmpegl Winnipeg, Man., Aug. 20.â€"Brought 5â€", 000 miles to assist in the harvest, 500 ;English farm hands arrived in the city toâ€"day from Montreal. _ The English 'har\'esters arriving are the first workâ€" men brought directly from Great Britâ€" ain for the express purpose of asistâ€" ing in harvesting operations in this country, but it is undoubted that the ‘experiment tried for the first time this season will be repeated from year to year, and that farm hands will be brought out regularly from the Motherâ€" land to aid the westerr agriculturists in securing the annual wheat crop of the country. The work done during a single harvest season by the men brought out from Great Britain would hardly comâ€" pensate for the intrinsic expense . of bringing them to Canada from Great Britain. It is believed, however, that a very large proportion of these agriculâ€" turists will settle on the vacant lands of the new Provinces, and that the annual movement of workmen to the Dominion at the harvest will tend to stimulate a general movement of the agricultural classes to Canada. They toâ€"morrow will be scattered over every part of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, The new farm hands are from almost . every shire in England. The distribuâ€" . tion of the Maritime harvesters over Manitoba has been practically comâ€" pleted, extra coaches being added to all the western trains of the C. P. K. and C, N. R. syetems, over 1,500 imnen leavâ€" ing the city in this manner during the day, Such as remain will no doubt ticket to points near Winnipeg. In all 5,00¢ harvest hands have gone out over the country, Quite a number of hands are leaving the city en route to the grain fields by way of the C, N. R. One hunâ€" ‘dred and twentyâ€"five men were taken on the Miami branch and several are leayâ€" ing for the west by every woestbound train. Additional coaches are being added to every train, and nearly 500 in all have already gone out on the C. N. K. Extra coaches are being held in readiâ€" ness, and the traffic department is preâ€" pared to ship out the harvest hands as fast as they come. The excursion from western Ontario will reach Winnipeg on Thursday night and Friday morning if the usual time is made. ¢ FARM HANDS FROM ENGLAND ARâ€" ; RIVE IN WEST TO HELP. St. Petersburg, Aug. 20.â€"In addition to the details of the sweeping changes of regime presented by the Reform party in Persia and to which the Shah has wiven his tentative consent, as announced last night, which came directly from the correspondent of the Associated Press at Teheran, another telegram received toâ€" TURKISH FLEET DESTROYED EIGHTY YEARS AGO. day says the Shah‘s action was preceded by fighting of a revolutionary character, during which many persons were killed l“)ytfl’e troop«. The correspondent eviâ€" dently was prevented by a censor from telegraphing the particulars. PERSIAN REFORMS â€" FOLLOWED SEVERE FIGHTING. Sixteen of Seventyâ€"two Vessels Visible at a Depth of One Hundred and Twentyâ€"five Fectâ€"Also Find Hull of Ancient Galley. New York, Aug. 20.â€"A cable to the Sun from Rome says: Some time ago the Sun announced the departure of skilled divers from Leghorn for Greece with the double object of getting at the Turkish vessels that were sunk by Adâ€" miral Cadrington in 1827 in the Bay of Navarino, and recovering more of the bronzes from the sea near Anticythera, where the statue »of the beautits "Youth of Anticythera," now in the National Museum at Athens, was tound a lew years ago. The chief of the divers has returned and reports that sixteen out of the seventyâ€"two â€" sunken Turkish ships are visible at a depth of 125 feet, but as there is thirtten feet o. sand in them «pecial machinery will be required. In the Channel of Anticythera the divers found at a depth of 164 feet the ruins of an ancient galley, which was conveying bronges,. The galley is 160 lfeet long and 33 feet wide . It is now Framing Modus Vivendi Respecting Labâ€" rador Frontier. St. John‘s, Nfld., Aug. 20.â€"The Newâ€" foundland and Canadian Governments now are negotiating a modus vivendi reapecting the Labrador boundary which will enable the lumbering interests opâ€" erating on Hamilton Inlet to continue working pending a setgement delimitâ€" ing the territory involved in the dis pute, recent developments of which have tended to alarm capitalists conâ€" templating mining and other invéestâ€" ments in the region affected. Meanwhile the chief diver will be ocâ€" ecupied in trying to salve the Italian steamer Sirio, sunk off Cape Palos, Spain, feet long and 09 leet wide . it is now a â€" mere hulk, filled with five feet of sand. The precise epoch of the galley was not ascertained, but some of the deâ€" tails of its construction are unique in the history of â€" ancient shipbuilding. Eleven amphorae of the Roman period have been brought up. The divers will continue their work when the machinâ€" ery is ready and the winter gales are over. Some men are always on the offenâ€" ye and others are always in the WwAS SHAKH FORCED ? TO REAP HARVEST. NEGOTIATING BOUNDARY. SHIPS LOCATED. ONTARIO ARCHIVEs TORONTO (RUSSIA‘S Dr. Wiliam Hunter Workman, who was born in Worcester, Mass., during _ his mountain climbing in India, reached the record altitude of 23,044 feet on a peak of the Chogo Lungma glacier in Northâ€" ern Baltistan. (He married Fanny Bulâ€" lock, daughter of exâ€"Governor Bullock, of Massachusetts, who has travelled exâ€" tensively among the Indian mountains and in nearly all other parts of the world. DR. WORKMAN AND WIFE AT GREAT ALTITUDES IN INDIA. Saturday‘s Action at Winnipeg Moves Council to Action. Bombay, India, Aug. 20.â€"Dr, William Hunter Workman, the wellâ€"known travâ€" eler and mountain climber, and his wife, Fanzny Bullock Workman, recently asâ€" cended a peak of the Nunkem range, over 23,000 feet high, and camped for two days at an altitude of 21,000 feet. Winnipeg, Aug. 20.â€"The City Council will encourage the art of swimming by erecting a number of places where bathâ€" ers can go safely. This is the result of the jury‘s verdict in the drowning acciâ€" dent of last Saturday. Other safety deâ€" vices will be buoys and ropes placed at different points, hung on red posts every 200 yards, also on both rivers within the city limits. Grappling hooks will be proâ€" vided at each bridge. No Prejudice Against Englishmen in the Canadian Northwest. London, Aug. 20.â€"Wm. Trent, writâ€" ing to the Yorkshire Post from Regina, quoting a Canadian â€" Associated _ Press cable of July 26 regarding "No Englishâ€" men Need Apply," acknowledges having seen such a notice, but claims also to have seen a sign, "No Canadian Need Apply." Mr. Trent says Englishmen of the right stuff have as much chance of success in the Canadian west as any Lands Abandoned Temporarily or Perâ€" manently by the Doukhobors Will Not Be Allowed to be Gobbled Up by Other Peopleâ€"Notices Bsing Served. Borden, Sask., Aug. 20â€"A _climax has been reached in the trouble beâ€" tween the squatters on the Doukhobor reserves near here and Spirit Wrestlers, who have practically forsaken the land to join communities, temporarily or othâ€" erwise, and to work on railway construcâ€" tion. Trouble has been brewing for 18 months and in the meantime the squatâ€" ters have broken considerable areas and sown crops, which the Doukhobors have threatened to return and reap. other emigrant AND TWENTY INJURED BY A DYVNAâ€" MITE EXPLOSION. GOVERNMENT ACTION TO PROTECT THE DOUKHOBORS. It has culminated now in an order by the Northwest Mounted Police, acting presumably under Government instrue â€" tions, to the squatters to vacate the land or be cjected. They have not yet decided to peacefully acquiesce, and leâ€" gal proceedings may be instituted. A_ ce o ae N T o q2 o o n i n 2 295 uNt _ They claim that the homestead law has been violated by the Doukhobors and will demand that the entries be cancelled on their lands, as they would be on those of any other settlers who do not comâ€" ply with the regulations fully, NORTHERN TRIBES SUSPICIOUS OF THE GOVERNMENT. Mgr. Pascal, cf Prince Albert, Who Possesses the Confidence of the Red Men, May Accompany the Governâ€" ment Expedition. Prince Albert, Sask., Aug. 20.â€"It is probable that Mgr. Pascal will go north with the Dominion Government expediâ€" tion, which leaves here this week to treat with the Indians outside the treaty limits in the northern portions of Sasâ€" katchewan and Alberta, There is much hostility among the Indians to the negoâ€" tiation of a treaty, according to reports which are brought down by mounted policemen and others, The tribes have conceived the idea, how it is difficult to say, that the Government desires to take away forcibly the land which they look upon as theirs, and impress them as soldiers. Two men have their confidence, and with the help of these there is no doubt that a treaty could be concluded withâ€" out much trouble. _ They are Bishop Pascal and Father Rapet, the veteran missionary at Isle a la Crosse,. . Mgr. Pascal spent twenty years in the counâ€" try which will be visited by the expediâ€" TO EJECT SQUATTERS. El Paso, Texas, Aug. 20.â€"Information was received here toâ€"day from Chihiuaâ€" hus, Mexico, that 12 men were killed and 20 injured, many of whom will die, as a result of a dynamite explosion there yesâ€" terday afternoon. _ No further details have vet been received. tion. Cleveland Leader.) Mr. ‘Titewoodâ€"If I promise you & dollar and your Uncle Joe promised you 25 cents, how much would you have? ‘Tommy Titewoodâ€"I‘d have a pretty good PROTECTION FOR SWIMMERS. TWELVE MEN KILLED. HAVE AN EQUAL CHANCE. INDIAN TROUBLES. A BIG CLIMB. at de Easily Figured Out. RFPORT OF FIFTY ASSASSINATIONS. St. Petersburg, Aug. 20.â€"The war of Terrorism which the fighting organizaâ€" tion of the social revolutionists declared immediately after Parliament was disâ€" solved seems now to have begun in earnâ€" est. From all parts of the Empire the telegraph brings the same story of atâ€" tacks on police officials of all classes, accompanied in the majority of cases by plunder. The polish revolutionists are esâ€" pecially active. There is a vertiable reign | of terror from the Vistula to the (ier-l man frontie. Almost fifty cases of asâ€" sassinations were reported _ early last, night. The Novoc Vremya toâ€"day heads its list of murders and other crimes "St.| Bartholemews night in Poland." ! The resumption of terroriem activity . on a large scale renders the task of the: Government more difficult and llal’kt‘llfi! the prospect of the present Ministry accomplishing anything in the direction of amelioration of situation, While for the moment the campaign of the terrorâ€" ists is bound to increase the revuision of the more conservative, publifc ppinion against the wild excesses of the extremâ€" ists, it is at the same time certain . to force the Government to redouble the measures of repression which it is claimâ€" ed will in the end drive public sympahty back to support almost any means of relief. Some of the despatches from Poland assert that the outbreak of terrorism is in retaliation for the wholesale _ arâ€" rests and repressions of the Gevernorâ€" CGeneral. The Resumption of Terrorism Makes the Govâ€" ernment‘s Task More Difficult, Wanted to Disperse Meetingâ€"The Indictment of General Stoessel and Other Officers. Five Policemen Milled and Two Wounded Last Night at Plock, Poland. The Government announces that (the new Parliament will not be deprived of the right to revise the budget for 1907. The budget will be submitted to Parâ€" liament when it assembles in March and in the meantime the credits for the first two months will be oneâ€"sixth of the creâ€" dits of the present year, under the auâ€" thority of the fundamental law _ asâ€" signing the credits for the preceding year in case of the failure of the passage of the budget. Transit Officials Arrested, Charged With Inciting * to Riot, and Held in Bail. New York, Aug. 30.â€"Three officials of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company, were arraigned in a police court in Brooklyn, toâ€"day, charged with inciting to riot, and were held in $1,000 bail each which was given. _ They were John F. Calderwood, â€" Viceâ€"President; Dow, 8. Smith, General Traffic Manager, and Wil. liam Newberry, District Superintendent. THEF DOUBLF FAREF TO CONFY ISLAND. Several liberal papers have been per mitted to resume publication, either un der their old names or with new franch ises. The cases grew out of the disorders re sulting from the attempts of the com MHarry Wagner, one of the men who has been drawing a «alary of $15 a week from the union tor patrolling the neighâ€" borhood of the Ideal plant in what he explained was an effort to secure memâ€" bers for the union by peaceable means, is sentenced to jail for 40 days, there beâ€" ing two separate chargos against him, Louis Krauss, also a unionâ€"salaried pickâ€" et, or solocitor of new members, is given 30 days, In doclaring the two defendants guilty of disobeving the court‘s injunction by Metal Polishers Sentenced to 40 Days‘ and 30 Days‘ Imprisonment. of disobeying the court‘s injunction by acts of violence and intimidation, Judge Murphy talked plainly of perjured testiâ€" mony and manufactured alibis, He declared that personal liberty, guaranâ€" tesed by the constitution, included the individual‘s rignt to control his own acâ€" tions in the buying and selling of labor under legal conditions. In commenting upon the use of force and intimidation by either side, he said: To subject either an individual emâ€" BOMBAY CARRIERS WANT MORE PAY, BUT GOT JAIL. Bombay, India, Aug. 20.â€"About five hundred postmen here struck toâ€"day for increased pay with the result that the deliveries of mail is almost stopped. The Holy Synod has declined to vield DFTROIT UNION MEN IN TROUBLF. POSTMEN STRIKE. to the request of the Minister 0f Jusuce to allow divorce cases to be abjudicated by the civil courts, except in cases of adultery. The Minister himself is now the defendant in a suit. The wife of Vice Admiral Rojestven sky is seriously ill. Plock, Russian Poland, Aug. 1 Last night five policemen were kille two were wounded. The assassins caped. Moscow, Aug. 20,â€"While the constiâ€" tutional Democrats were conferring at the house of Prince Dolgoroukoff toâ€"day a sergeant of police appeared and orderâ€" ed them to disperse, but on the represenâ€" tations of Prince Dolgoroukoff to the prefect of police that the meeting was of a private nature the conference was allowed to continue. It is the intention of the Constitutionâ€" al Democrats to issue a campaign text book containing articles by M. Roditâ€" cheff, Professor Paul Milukof{ and other leaders. St. Petersburg, Aug. 20.â€"The :« ial Mesenger toâ€"day prints a deni the recent announcement that the Commission had returned indiatm against Lieut.General Stoessel, the mander of the Russian forces at Arthur; Lieut.Gen. Fock who comn ed the fourth East Siberian divisic Port Arthur and others. The Official Mesenger says it is duty of the Commission simrly to sent the results of its investigatior on which the indictments will be 1 The denial is more technical thar as the conclusions of the Commissic der the regulations necessitate i ments on the lines published. Denounce Anarchists. Warsaw, Aug. 20.â€"The Polska ( and the Dxvon Polska, organs of t] ish Nationalists toâ€"day published . leading articles denouncing the t anarchy which the socialists are p ing in Poland, whose object, the ; declare is not the attainment of dom, but the bringing about of ; pany to collect a double fare to Coney Island, after conflicting court decisions as to whether or not the company is enâ€" titled to more than five cents, Police Magistrate Higginbotham orderâ€" ed the arrests last mght. _ Toâ€"day he arraigned the prisoners before himself and read a complaint charging t‘em with committing acts productive of piblic disâ€" orders, _ Each pleaded not guilty and at the request of their counse! the hearâ€" ing was put over until toâ€"morrow. proceedings to prepare for an appeal T the Supreme Court, _ Attorneys Mona ghan and Murfin objected to the delay and Judge Murphy finally allowed . stay until Sept,. 15. In the meantime the two respondents are admitted t bail of $500 each. surprise to the anion men ar attorneys. They had been c of an acquittal, and the declara the judge nearly took them 0 feet, Attorney Frank Donanny asked the court for a 60 days‘ proceedings to prepare for an ay the Supreme Court, _ Attorneys eriticism, The de surprise 1 attorneys of an ac« the judge The court‘s decision is a lengthy and goes deeply into the merits o question _ under _ consideration. striking workmen who have indulg riotous conduct or intimidation to the peaceable workmen at the plant are not members of the union con for a plain and unvarnished â€"lin« Warrants have been issued for the rest of the ringleaders. In Germany ehidren ut of age cannot be employed pation, A flood, caused by the fall of twenty inches of rain, is devastating the Durâ€" bunga district. It is feared that there has been much loss of life. The railways and roads are badly damaged. ‘ Al Was a Private Meeting Killed Five Policemen. Gern. Stoessel‘s Case cision of the court to the anion â€" me children under e Polska Gazeta rgans of the Polâ€" published strong ing the «tate of lists are producâ€" mject, the papers inment of freeâ€" der 13 years at any occuâ€" 04 mHL onti atio ff 4 14 11 t to arâ€"

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