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Durham Review (1897), 4 Jul 1907, p. 7

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ugha W ar. agly York rator NT Knopt avin ifles ral get advice these 1r®e ok1y san Francisco, July 1.â€"Postal teleâ€" rers who remain out on strike after r y thereby sacrifice their accumuâ€" lated standing entitling them, after fifâ€" teen years‘ service, to a pension equivaâ€" lent to 20 per cent. of their wages, if Imespacitated. The company has ordered that all who now retwrn -Mdonul individuals sond new raen. There is to be no dealing with the wnion. Postal Men Lose Service Standing, Even Though They Return. San Francisco, July 1.â€"Postal tele Mr. Coultman has not for a year, but has bee mining stocks, and doig London and Toronto. A resolution was passed at a meeting on Monday at which charges of imâ€" morality were preferred against Mr. Coultman, and at which he was sumâ€" marily deposed, which divests him of the right of ever again halding a posi-‘ tion as an ordained ministor. Taronto, July 1.â€"Charged with imâ€" moral conduct, Rev. D. M. Coultman, forâ€" mer pastor of a Baptist church in St. COrtiarines, has been expeiled from the ministry by the Baptist csuncil. Charges of Immorality Preferred Against Rev. D. M. Coultmsa. Taronto, July 1.â€"Charged with imâ€" E o s ie es uo the mine owners, that the Federatior would be crushed, and tZat within thirty days something would hapten that would startle the world. Within five weeks Steunenberg was assassinatâ€" ed. However, Orchard, when confronted by Elliott, declared he never had acen him before. John D. Elliott, an inmate of the Boise Soldiers‘ Home, then detailed a long conmversation with Orchard on a train in November, 1005, when Orchard he said, told him he was employed by the mine owners, that the Federation would be crushed, and tZat within thirty days something would hapten‘ that would startle the world. Within five weeks Steunenberg was lmssinat-‘ d. However, Orchard, when confronted [â€"â€" emus is x i 10. *wo years prior to 1904. Haywood, she said. asked for Orchard, and went up to his room. Pettibone, she said, never went up to Dempsey‘s room. _ Witness said Orchard had told her he would have been a millionaire had it not been for Steanenberg. STRIKE TO COST PENSIONS. Mrs. Day was introduced to by Pettibone, whom she had k two years prior to 1904. Havyy retary â€"Tr the murd Dmpoe_v, BAPTIST MINISTER EXPELLED fiotely undone _ on _ cross rs. Day stuck to her sto threats Orchard had made a enberg, while talking to h tributed the new informat one occasion while she was him in the Belmont Hotel, where she knew him under Dempsey, Haywood came in looking for hirm. Dempeey her to Haywood, and after ments general â€" conversatimn tween Weige 1905, and W frequently i Â¥Yiolent doin: Boise, Idaho, July 1.â€"Four witnesses were called by the defence in the Hayâ€" wood trial toâ€"day. Two of them were torn to pieces by the crossâ€"examination of the prosecution, and from each of the other two, testimony of decided importâ€" ance to the State was elicited. Three of them were witnesses upon whose tesâ€" timony Mr. Richardson had based the formal impeaching question which had already been propounded to Orchard and which he denied. These witnesses all emphatically reaffirmed the statements on which those qugestions had been based and to that extent the defence fulfilled its object in calling them. But the crossâ€" examination utterly discredited two of them and left the other in the unbappy | situation of having contributed more to the State than to the defence. The four } . witnesses examined were Mrs. Lottie | Day, keeper of a Cripple Creek rooming | « house; John M. O‘Neill, editor of the | 1 Miners‘ Magazine; John T. Eliiott, the | © man who says he held a remarkable conâ€" | versation with Orchard on a truir beâ€" | a tween Weiser and Caldwell in November, 1905, and W. F. Davis, the union man so | ©l frequently implicated by Orchard in the | b: Fiolent doings about (C‘rinmla Cwaol 1. | w ng olent doings about Cripple Creek durâ€" « the 1903 strike. Davis and Elliott were the two comâ€" ‘tely undone on crossâ€"examination. s. Day stuck to her story about the Two Witnesses for THE EVIDENCE AGAINST ORCHARD BREAKS DOWN. its Orchard had made against Steunâ€" rg, while talking to her, but conâ€" ‘ted the new information that on vecasion while she was talking with in the Belmont Hotel, at Denver, e she knew him under the name of sey, Haywood came into the hotel HAYWOOD‘S DEFENCE. be reconciled to hin refused and the man her. the bullat inflias Crenshaw aAppeared at Mrs. Williams‘ home about 7 o‘clock this morning, armâ€" ed with a revolver. He demanded to see his wife, and when she entered the room where he was seated be told her â€" ne ‘wantod her to H0Â¥0i8 his semalie «.4 21â€" NP Airivntrmcmenic? Bs S thacs 4h â€" g," |,£ / Prévent the tragedy, was shot stant in the th:mb of the right iand. Con Crenshaw was married several years | sound #g0, and lived in Tioga, Philadelphia. | house It is said that he was insanely jealous | rest. and quarrelsome, and the woman was | yq GNi?d to leave him and take refuge in | shaw the home of her cousin, Mrs. Williams, O‘clock here. She applied for a divorce, and * |ing in tn was granted her on May Xth J ® t. es CCel NT CHo 1 O'Qnflhl' was marri qo» and fived, in no It is said that he was .Pd. quarrelsome. and trying to prevent in the thumb of laywood, and after a few moâ€" eneral _ conversation Dempsey vwood to his room for a private This was the first testimony out from any witness except that directly linked Haywood hard and that coupled the Seeâ€" easurer of the Federation with er machine under the name of . Wayne, P2,, July 1. tds former wife when he dor “’fi"neu and reconc ten Crenshaw, a negro, si the woman in the homa . Utterly Discredited Under Crossâ€" examination, and a Third Helps the Prosecution More Than Haywood. l Repmemnrene potgpsmmmnin t | Made Plea four Reconciliation and Used a Revolver’ When He Was Rebuffea. | Talk on a Train \_‘\‘?â€"â€"“â€"\_ IN A Fit or JEALOUS RAGEF NEGRO SI!OOTS HIS FORMER wIFF has not been preaching has beem interested in nd doing business in keoue s °C Ts UPed stt ie bullet inflicting a slight wound. woman rushed out, screaming. and Williams tried to prevent Crenâ€" as introduced to Orchard whom_ she had known for in in the home of here toâ€"day. Mrs, Dempsey introduced seated he told her _ ne forgive his cruelty and to o him. This the woman * man, in a rage, fired at the Defence Are Y 1.â€"Rebuffed by en be made a plea reconciliation, Fenâ€" 3r0, shot and killed his morning, armâ€" | 4t Middletown, _ demanded to see ’ "this would never entered the room | , "What did you « he told her _ na l detective. * the Hayâ€" | A Niagara Falls :hem weri most 8 o‘clock th camination gm;"d C:;.mp Ofd * inally adjourned, ”df of the cers was complete ed importâ€" der Fraser, of d. _ Three Grand Chief; F,. g, whose tesâ€" | Grand Chieftain ; based the Toronto (reâ€"elected which had | Alexander Hay, of rchard and I Grand Trenawaie. 1 C e oi se ies CHl, Wds Comparing the loss of life by arcciâ€" dents with the tonnnage and production of the Pittsburg district, one life hase been snuffed out for every 50,00 tons of coal that is shipped, and the cnrual shipment is about 50,000,000 tons. For every 3800 cars that carry freight out of or into Pittsburg some soul has g‘ven â€" up the ghost. This is exclusive ol cars â€" may seem abnormal they so regularly that their scarcely realized. The av of deaths reported to t} about 250 a month, and i variation from this from ve the city. In the same period la the total number of deatha recor 1.015, and those laid at the door city‘s industries numbered 340. 250 Deaths Every Month While in the aggregate these Mrs. Annie I ther Williams, in IQ't 1 1 Pittaburg, Pa., July 1.â€"The grin , | and tragic side of Pittsburg‘s industrial , | supremacy, as reflected in the county t | coroner‘s log book of violent deaths, is 5 beginning to arouse a feeling of homer | at the frightful cost of the wealth which | its millionaires are piling up,. ‘ When the coroner closed bis log for 1906 he found that in the year he had been called on to record a total of ? 660 deaths. Of these 919 were the result directly of accident in mill, mine or cnl railroad, the industries most esiâ€"ntial to the city‘s progress. Sufficisat mere of the total number of deaths in the city were indirectly attributed to the same causes to make more than 50 per centy of all the deatis the cost in haman life of the steel and money made in Pittsâ€" burg for 1906. Appalling as these figures are, the chances are that a new record wil te established this year. Already in the | five months that have clapsed, 1,Cf5 | deaths have been recorded in the corcnâ€" | er‘s log book, and of these 344 came sudâ€" | ! denly and violently in the mills and | I mines and on the railroads that vriJiranm ‘ Death Bu NY ©CreREce R ments, rsses Tayâ€" A Niagara J were | MO#St 8 o‘cloch tion | Grand Camp the | finally adjourr cers was comp °*t* | der Fraser, o iree | Grand Chief ; ] tesâ€" | Grand Chiefta; the | Toronto (reâ€"ele had | Alexander Hay ind | Grand Treasure all | Ripley, Grand ats | Wylie, of Tord sed | Medica] Examin led | Lorne, Grand M ssâ€" | Calgard, Grand of | Macdonald, of B py | Guard ; George to | (reâ€"elected), Gra ur | Jolinson, of Relle ie | The Executive ( ng | John Ferguson, . he | Rev. Dr. MceRae, e | of Toronto; W nâ€" | Mary‘s; Poter _ »â€" J and W.OC. Gilch r, After a long o | change in insura e | back to the Exec â€" | will report at th The capitation t . | two dollars per c . | nually, to fifteen » J able monthly. T . | tion was left to t . | tee with power t | will report on the | members to ente branch without er |ance branch. Wh meeting place for was a lively cont ston, Windsor, W real, Hamilton, 0 were all after it, cided to go back t« ’nonn Was snont i. CORONER‘s 1Log TRAGEDY or yaiutbitantatngire d c dth 04 431109 After a long debate the proposed change in insurance rates was referred back to the Executive Committee, which will report at the Grand Camp in 1909, The capitation tax was changed from two dollars per year, payable semiâ€"anâ€" nually, to fifteen cents per month, pay. able monthly. The matter of organizaâ€" tion was left to the Executive Commitâ€" tee with power to act. The executive will report on the proposition to permit members to enter the sick _ benefit branch without entering the life insurâ€" ance branch. When the question of a meeting place for 19090 came up â€" there was a lively contest. Toronto, Kingâ€" ston, Windsor, Winnipeg, Galt, Montâ€" Feal. Hamilian © us * m John Ferguson, of Rev. Dr. McRae, of of Toronto; Will Mary‘s; Peter Be and W. C. Gilehri ~me | ther words he firi 8, in | let entering her shot | stant death, Constable Tou th Busy in Shopsâ€"â€"Fifty Por Cent. of Year‘s Fatalities Comprises Human Sacrifice in Industrial Progress, Capitation Tax Month He _ â€", lout entering the lif branch. When the questi Ing place for 1909 came uj a lively contest. Toront« Windsor, Winnipeg, Galt Hamilton, Ottawa and all after it. The Grand OoFFICERS ELECTED By GRAND CAMP at NIAGARA FALLS, "I did it," ready to sta No direct ans, timated that hi caused by Mrs3, 1 the murder was uo Pmotiee Te Executive Committee sA 1 staw was landed oclock this after ing insanely jeale give no reason for "I "gBe had‘"®ns CA y _ "" Oy aAte r::0rded that their magniture is zed. The averige numler porterd to the coroaer is month, and there is liitle w UKEC B1 us ‘ C Pa., July 1.â€"The grim * side of Pittsburg‘s industrial ‘, as reflected in the county log book of violent deaths, is SONS OF SCOTLAND t Rer. "shooring‘ . , #f Otupon he | human lives fired at her, shooting 0“‘1‘ portion of l progress, F her right thumb, Forcing his way past | the clouds . her, Crenshaw went out on the porch, ceaseleasly / where his wife had stopped. Without fur. naces furnis] ther words he fired at her again, the bul. | whose lives let entering her brain and causing inâ€" | the making stant death. surarce Ra+ ments, ‘lation Tax Will be Fifteen Cents a Month Hereafterâ€"Executive Wwill Report on Proposed Changes in Inâ€" surarce Rates and Other Amenaâ€" m andé ~ shaw â€" from following, v;;;ex fired at her, shooting off"a her right thumb, Forcing his her, Crenshaw went out an Media, P nese J19 were the result‘ cident in mill, mine or on industries most q-siemi'\l, progress. Sufficisat mere P yb Te o NUORG °0 o lt UV @Wrand Standard Bearer; R. Id, of Br:u-ebridge, Grand Senior Feorge Hamilton, of Attwood d), Gradn Junior Guard; Albert of Relleville Crant pea‘ 44 4"*" uson, of Toronto (reâ€" cRae, of London : Joh 0: William Johnson eter Bertram, of F Gilchrist, of Orillia, long debate the \ farroads that str‘Jiron same period last yegr. ‘TCs¢ Iigures are, the a new record wil te year. Already in the & x _ & ttmbuted to the same nore than 50 per mnt. the cost in hamen life money made in Pittsâ€" this afternoon. 1 ‘anely jealous, the ) reason for killing be had gone home ‘dletown, Va.." s 0G BOOK REVEALs OF STEELMAKING. TL Lew!s, attracted of the shooting, rushed and placed Crenshaw ur hag p5, 3 _ TS Eiven, but he inâ€" hat his domestic troubles were Mrs. Williams, in whose house er was committed. it," he blurted out, "and am Sttend "Lihe CONKAMILsnzs« Ts able Lewis ,.. CUtS per month, p'l_v The matter of organiza ) the Executive Commit §« "ses wa answer was year to vear a.. June 26 Chaplain ; Dr "7°© Committee, which rrand Camp in 1909, was changed from Ir, pavable semi.an. ‘F recorded was : door of the Gr (reâ€"clected) ,â€" C;';.nd _McKillop, of West * bave do it rrand Pipe Major. ee is composed of nto (reâ€"elected) ; lon; John Tytler, Wtc .. £ ; George Hill, of killing his wife in jail ‘rted out, "and am consequences," for?" â€"Fenton ® to her peopl said Crenshaw happened." n, of St Hamilton â€"renton Cren. 1 here about 3 Except for beâ€" * murderer can Detroit, Mich., July 1.â€"Miss Mary Rutledge, of this city, has donned the white veil at the Loretto Abbey, Toâ€" ronto, and received the title of Sister Mary Ursula, Miss Rutledge is nize. teen years of age, and heiress to a small fortune in her own right. She graduâ€" ated in music last year at a Burlington, Vt,. convent. A number of Detroit reâ€" latives went to Toronto to bt present at the ceremony, Thomas $ fiuring May there were 287 work peoâ€" ple injured in industrial accidents. Of these 91 were fatal and 196 resulted in serious injuries, Railway accidents were responsible for twenty fatalities and thirty by them were injured. l iffmmmen «_ SHE FOREGOES a FORTUNE. Detroit Girl Takes Veil at Loretta Abbey, Toronto, Detroit, Mich. July 1.â€"Miss Mary Rnfledge,’ of this city, has donned thL latie iess SB ce le t c d s on asked the ,_There was a m: in wages in near during the month agreements with ported to the dep ably in excess of responding period since 1903. _ Neq: ments were on the schedules. _ In }] the increases were of amicable negot frictiGH " betwaan ed to under d _ Ottawa, July 1.â€"Reports Tabor Department show that ber of trade disputes during 49, an increase of twelve corresponding month of 1906, in working days was approxim nom _ Strikes Resulted in a Cons of Time, But Wages in Industry Show an Unws NO Quarrels result ’firearms are used cases to be cared quently result fr so commonplace . it is counted a ® newspaper ofices ; not been reported Revre@aumnt ie imont: HbRR of the country‘s immigrant in the week supplying the and museular power to the chinery, these aliens, surfej freedom of their newly adog resort on their one holiday tivities and customs of t homes, Weddings, christe; and parties, at which vario beverages are used most co held. can be classed as shop." The inor nocessarily attra P dn Nlfindo® stt t 4. alt .. . ‘ |_Then there are the giant ro crush out steel plate and ofte lives, and murderous machiner everywhere a death trap for th workman. The record contains, names of men who worked, fc stant, too near the great electri those huge mechanical arms t almost human precision pick up pieces of structural steel abo plants and place them wherever indicated at the simple moving o Mines and Railroads Swell * __ Th mines and the railroads their quota to the coroner‘s log, slate, gas explosions, derrick, fa) scaffolding, in the shunting ca other accidents on the rail all swell the cost in human life, No# all the vidtank aoluy. . n uc _/ VCP AHAYF n of , progress. Every day and every night past | the clouds of black smoke that atise rch, | ceaselessly and the glare of the furâ€" furâ€" | naces furnish a funeral pyre for trose bul. | whose lives have been snuffed out in inâ€" | the making of the city‘s _ steel ond wealth, ths Day by day the death log of the Cur pe the ; tÂ¥ coroner, the bare official record deâ€" ,manded by law, keeps track of thase vie. t« tims. â€" The coroners deal only in the hardest facts, The world of tagcdy °"~ | and suffering, of broken hearts and , _3 | homes, entailed in his entrics are beyerd beâ€" | his province. _ Name, place, date," and *" i cause he can give of almost every casuâ€" alty, but that is all. Sometimes cven ple | the name is lacking, for when a man, w, | unknown, as often happens, is swatowâ€" ed up in a giant ladle of molt‘n stsel, he | identity becomes a mere numeral in the log book., mille . Mfay, @221 1° SA0Hâ€"bAING in the mills. Men work there at a frantic pace. Demand runs far ahead of the output of the mills and no time is wasted in the making of steel. Men who work nlwafs alongside of death are not especially careful. Thus, often, the ladles spill over. Sometimes in these spills a man yanishes. But the rails go out. Imagine travelling over rails built partly of flesh and blood. ‘The logbook of the Aue-] gheny county coroner s@Â¥s it is nacuil1â€" PERILS OF LABOR LELSS THAN REPORTED 1 between There is A unknown,. un dustrial jugs out steel and for the anray Evex"y 7,600 tons of the 7,000,000 1 _ fannual production of iron and steo] ; __| been put out at the cost of the life * ’onc of the manipulators som 2.71.~.. Head sula inss ° ° TevIRed upward tendency nearly all liney of industry month, ; Pha meusk L2 es s result frequently are used, And there be cared tor, Dan t} 1000 EACmAIUCEâ€" "s of that during the corâ€" eriod in any previous year Nearly all the new agreeâ€" n the basis of higher wage In the majority of cases were obtained as a result negotiations and without Vaam â€"â€"eucans _ __ J 2 "°°0 _ SOmrrpe J its manufacture, and of the $09,.99 | annual output of steel rails evéry 8 tons have been put upon che ‘n; ’nnl_v after some one of its prod4acers ’lnid down his life, ‘ Reaper Seeking a New Record. No other city in the couns>y proaches Pittsburg‘s ghastly ravv» Rutbriass oanc l . IP a marked nth. The ndnl-i);x:"ouf ‘ith respect to wage department Was mnns was CCC NCE Yeddings, christenings, balls, 8, at which various alcoholie are used most copiously, are that are c other points, mace are these reports ‘d a "slow night" in a fices if at least a dozen ported by Sunday mid: lents on the railoa]'lâ€"ix:lp ost in human life, the vioient deaths, hows. _ ‘°cIeHt deaths, however, d as accidents in the "workâ€" nordinato demand for labor ttracts a large percentage ry‘s immigrants, Nix days supplying the human forL.s "Ly coromer says i re are the giant steel plate and c murderous machit ‘ a death trap for w o# ' from th;se employers and by day the death log of the c mer, the bare official record by law, keops track of thase The coroners deal only in fants m 000 12 juggernaut goes & gap and sorrow â€" unheard of home, but Yages in All Lines of an Upward Tendency, 1.â€"Reports to the T uts 7 ns, derrick, falls from the shunting cars, and o 4Â¥ ow L % 91 ~FATALITIEsS DURING MaAy, piate and often human lerous machinery that is rath trap for the unwary record contains, also, the who worked, for an inâ€" the great electric crancs, hanical arms that with rails built partly of f?esh e logbook of the Alleâ€" roner says it is possible. e the giant rollers that ut uk â€" 1 ° city in the Counsâ€"y ‘op. ittsburg‘s ghastly rscord of s sacrificed on the alts1 of Every day and every night of black smoke that rtise and the glare of the furâ€" h a funeral pyre for trose have been snuffed out in of the City‘s " steel ) ani hn 4. ng the human force _to the integral maâ€" , surfeited with the ‘ly adopted country, L a+a 1 Considerable carrying freight throu sh ba.. Bi donned the ently, knives ang there are hospital Deaths not infreâ€" that thé 4 pICK up massive stecel about the wherever may be moving of a lever, \Vfl.ges reâ€" considerâ€" sources, and reports that Usp sal annt n aiy y to the fesâ€" their former M ay w;g ozen have midnight, cost of the life *f tors som »zrore in of the ©09,99 tons y un " new numâ€" Total. :% u{)ply Fu. ling OW in some y but the inâ€" on . belching more entries _In some manner it collided with a spindle which marks a ledge at the sunkâ€" en Meadows and the airship was badly damaged, and he was thrown into the water, but was rescued by a boatman. U Ch2se vicâ€" only in the ’ uf "a?('dy hearts and sCrupers of e " y [1 .TL prer ‘the ‘sky. scrapers of Manhattan Island. The ship was in charge of Lincoln Beachey, who seemed to have perfect control of the big machine. After passâ€" ing over Manhattan Mr. Beachey sent his airship out over the East River toâ€" ward Long Island Sound. New York Aeronaut‘s Flight From Staten Island, New York, July 1.â€"A bi cigarâ€" shaped airship sailed across the fiay from Staten â€"Islanrd toâ€"day, cireled â€"around abov > the high office buildings in Brookâ€" lyn, and then swept across the East River and alighted gently in the midst of a crowd numbering thousands which had gathered in Battery Park. A few moments later the operator set the ma. chinery in motion again and the ship rose to an altitude of about 500 feet, and started northward over the skyâ€" scrapers of Manhattan Island. emul s 4 +0 . : 1 -:he-';n‘élr’l‘:‘e"g'ISTORY OF aAn prodazers bas Cawre Toronto, Onts : July 1.â€" An eviâ€" dence of the fact‘that though the wheels of the law courts are very slow in turnâ€" ing they grind exceedingly small grain was given this morning when J. E. Jones got an order from Justice Riddell at Osâ€" goode Hall for the payment out of court of $22 and interest, Alex. Eddie, of Glencoe, died fifteen years ago, and left this sum to his three grandchildren, Cora, Alexander and George MceBean, They have now become of age, and this amount, with interest, is to be handed over to them. THREE GRANDCHILDREN RECEIVE $22 AND INTEREST Murray denied any knowledge of the crime, and declared that his arrest was the result of political illâ€"feeling against him in Little Falls. He was taken to Pelham and locked up. v""""s RNosenheimer, of Pelham., The arâ€" rest followed the receipt of a letter from former District Attorney Ward, of Herkimer County, which was brought to this city by Chief of Police Long, of Little Falls, Murray denied any knowledge of the erime awd quuplo qon d CSeec‘t New â€" York, July 1.â€"James ’a Bronx contractor, who form in Little Falls, N.Y., was arr day in connection with the n Julius Roaenheimer, of Pelham. rest followed the receipt of from former District Attorney Herkimer County, which was br this citw he Akise l2 q 118 O â€"y. (a pâ€" cord of CHARGED wITH THE MURDER Oor JULIUS ROSENHEIM®R. New AFTER MANY DAYSs CRUISE OF An AIRSHIp TIM FLOOD cgors TO JAIL FOR ASSAULTING UMPIRE, fintar ____*, C CSAUCG it ears of every official and citizen, and the hsien was compelled to make an investigation. He tried to quieten matters by making the water carier retract the story he had given out. The water carrier did not deviate a hair‘s breadth from the story, He said: "Hang me if you like, but I will not take back one word." nave MURRAY ARRESTED y ""} fhe water carrier had ’They made him do it, therel him see how terribly the j had been mutilated. He call others, and together they c; corpse out at the south gate. The story reached the ears official and citizen, and the ] compelled to make an investioa Con sn 22 SS CHUL brain and two through her neck, l The motherâ€"inâ€"law was assisted in the cruel deed by a couple of other feâ€" males in the family. They cut the flesh off portions of the body, but after all was done they lacked the courage to wrap the corpse, and put it in a box which the water carrier had brought, They made him do it thayi1. OU"C"P match, GOT FIFTEEN DAYys Fh w ol c o ul o0 e Nn . NE l y Shortly after her coiming the fatherâ€"inâ€" law took sick and died. The ignorant and superstitious mother at once put the blame on the little daughterâ€"inâ€"law, claiming that some mistake had been made by the geomancer in reckoning with the eight characters, and that she, therefore, not being the one peychâ€" ologically fit or intended for the home, had brought bad luck and evil influences which had caused the death of ‘the old man. _ She therefore pronounced the death penalty, and proceeded to execute it. _ She poured boiling oil over the poor girl, drove five big nails into her brain hnd i tudnnliWhe nsc n t us d ms ;| MUTHLATED Vancouver, B. C., July 1.â€"News of one of the most atrocious crimes ever heard of was brought to this city by passengers on the steamer Monteagle, which arrived in port this morning. lt Appears that a family living near the hsien yamen, . in Sianyang, China, re-‘ cently received into the household a wite for ‘one of the Sons _ ‘I‘he acito ~â€"Ri OF AN ATrRocioUs CRIME COMES FROM CHINA, Young Bride Murdered azd Her Body Cut Upâ€"Boiling Oil Poured on the Poor ‘Girl and Nails Driven Into Her: Head. | «Wy 1.â€"James Murray, rictor, who formerly lived , N.Y., was arrested toâ€" "~*@LOF Bet the ma. gain and the ship of about 500 feet, ird over the skyâ€" n Island. charge of Lincoln 1 to have perfect chine. After passâ€" Mr. Henchaw "ucus 1€ eceived into the household a one of the sons. The wife girl of sixteen years of age, 12â€" Carmer hbad brought, im do it, thereby letting Â¥ terribly the poor body illated. _ He called three ogether they carried the the south gate. eached the ears of every citizen. and tha hein. _._" up ""CPCIOre gave the for the offence. THE CORPSE. the murder of ©MCE_C S Cl A Sudbury, Ont., despatch : A double first trial murder and suicide took place at material 1 Creighton Mine, some twelve miles ‘ from Sudbury, on the Manitoulin & ' North Shore Railway, about 11 o‘clock They w on Saturday night. The victims were h'.m’, thea Jokn Restula, his wife, Bophia Restula, of that r and the latter‘s lover, Herman Vick, Knythtu W jun., all Finlanders, _ The three bodies | â€",) the ro: were found early Sunday morning on yor were o the railway track between three and | that you ; four hundred yards west of the station, | st aw Yyour which is at the west end of the village, "What n Apparently Restula had shot his wife Goorge, "H, first in the back of the hend. close to and me onl the neck. Vick, who had evidently lep, Finlander Perpetrator of Double Murder THEN ENDED HIS OWN LIFE COMPLETE THE TRAGEDY. _ , "" nemament toâ€"dar embarked $ ;t Ville Franche for Sfax. Tunic. Money Returned to Clemeneeau, Paris. ~ July 1.â€"M. Albert toâ€"day gave himself up to the authorities at Mont Pellier. _ He received a chilly reâ€" ception from crowds at Narbonne. _ His comrades of the committee of Argelliers TmMPAA I TD and Suicides at Creighton Mine, iur Sudbury, ‘ M. Albert then made the admissior that he met with a decidedly icy recep tion. He remarked that M. Clemenceau had advanced him 100 franes for railway fare to his home. Murmurs that followed this avowal and cries of "T faut Iuni renvoyer l‘Arâ€" gent," "Nous ne voulons pas de son anâ€" mone," _ revealed with unmistakable clearness the general dissatisfaction it had aroused. _ After that damaging adâ€" mission â€" further remarks were almost useless, and. though applause broke out at the end of the speech, it was scattered and halfâ€"hearted. It was manifest, in short, that M. Clemenceau has won the first heat and that the Government has gained time,i which presumably means vukimate vie: & mesw e In substance he declared that he went | to Paris to avert further bloodshed, and intended to go to the Chamber of Depuâ€" ties to give himself up, but he was disâ€" suaded from this project by friends of the movement, who also advised him to see M. Clemenceau,. In jerky sentonces and with certain homely eloquence, he toid how he en tered the Ministry of Interiorâ€"valise in hand and overcoat on arm, "just as ] would go into my own house," He sketched rapid!y points of his conâ€" versation with M. Clemenceau, who deâ€" clared energetically, "%! faut que force reste a ln loi," and said that the Govâ€" ernment woulid not yield an inch until the _ recalcitant municipal authorities returned to the path of legality and order, and finally counselled him to go : back to the south and aid in the cause F of pacification, | He delivered his speech fron terrace of a little cafe which some eight hundred or a thou ?le, vineyard proprietors and rom the vicinity assembling in square to listen to what in re ounted to a justification of hi Paris and the President of the jal Council. SHOT HIS WIFF | nSw.. INF GROWERS‘ TROUBLES. | JUDGPS CONFF:S:on ert then made the admission et with a decidedly icy recepâ€" remarked that M. Clemenceau ced him 100 frances for railway 6 rinskes TORONTO e m ns o nemium on "What more do you Goorge, "Haven‘t 1 agre and me only cattin» / C e ©20al â€"Â¥ e romantic maiden, "how I wish yor were one of the old time knights, ap vhat you could do eomething brave to stow your love for me " cver since arrival. The were asked by the off; capture,. but {hey dectin they were on duty, Victiroa, B. C., July 1.â€"Whe the British warship Monmouth cleared from here toâ€"day she was ahort about forty men, who had deserted since her arrival here two or three days ago. â€" British Columbia â€"looked particularly good to these men, who have bo; serving on the China station, and the floers have had to keep a sharp lookout for duertenl CÂ¥er since arrivel Wl _ UUf. 36 per cent MORE OF THEM AND A BETTER QUaALITY or IMMIGRANTS, Ottawa, Ont., July 1.â€"(Special.)â€"Canâ€" ada‘s immigration is not only increasing in volume, but the quality is superior to former years. There is a hr%e inâ€" . crease in immigration from the British Isles. The total immigration for the month of April was 44,051, as compared with 35,313 for April of last year, an increase of 25 per cent. For the ten months, July 1 to April 30th, the im. migration was 168,718, compared â€" with 124,031 for the corresponding months of the fiscal year, an increase of 4,687, or 36 per cent. FAILED IN ATTEMPT _riaven‘t ! agreed to marryâ€";; only getting £3 a week ‘â€"Tat and witnees His Courage Proved. â€" NCY3 TCT & was ordered by the Supreme Cew Brunswick 04 appeal of er‘s counsel, because of the itge to the jury. Since tie Father MceAulay, who was a iimnse / uw ios & °s as given above, estula â€" was about 1 Vick about 23 ves CREWS ARE DEPLETED STILL THEY COME British Wnu;ipo Victoria, B, ( st coming out of Wyndâ€" er seeing a performanue laughable play, "Wheq 0338 un SA has died. want ?" The Dominion police : officers to assist to declined, saying that ieorge," sigh. vyears foreman y, but a 28 years of asked n, brought with the may allay the pain, but septic property in them; excellent culture media London Hospital, e Majority ,¢ 4 "",l° 18 probable that the majority of deaths due to septicae. mia after burns would be prevented, *For the whole aim and object of the local treatment is to prevent sepsis; flour and olive MLMHW Tuk o can td 7 bee EuU In cases of figst 10 asphyyi thirdly, to sep The medica} Cse in time to the second is ¢s tion, while the â€" ing the third 4, atelocal treaty last condition m here, mong t) accented idas 11. tC The Use of PROPER Lotbiniere, Que., May 30, 84 age 653 1b, milk, testing 3.4, : MHighest yield, 940 Ib, East and West Oxford, Onq 104 cows average 842 1b, mi 8.2, 27.4 lb. fat, Highest yiel milk; lowest 290 Ib, Central Smith, Ont., June 2 average 828 ]1, average test 2 fat. Highest yield 1,530 11, , da vs, age, 1. \\'omlLurn, Ont., May average 6098 lhs, milk, to Ib. fat .Highost yield of lowest 245 1b, Cowansville, Que.,, May average 519 }b, milk, tes Ib. fat . Highest yield of 1,290 1b. milk testing 4.5, Keene, Ont., May 28, g2 730 Ib. milk, testing 3.3, Best yield of milk 1,260 )1 yield 200 Ip, Mansonville, Que., May average 568 lb. milk, testin y FL CCE P CRuTUs weighing and testing for the perioda__o{ thirty days are as COW TESTING Associations TREATMENT septicacy; T COPPTORE* would be prevented, e aim and object of the is to prevent sepsis; oil may he soothing and ain, but tlm:;ei: no antiâ€" n them; ra they are e media for b.ct«'l..-. ! man seldo 0 treat the ssentially a : whole suee d’Pf'ndC up ment. It js which must Flour or « Deprecated burne deat q0 Department of Agr of the Dll'ry and C mmissioner, the recent applications cannot be ecated. and indeed if d be taught that the on a burn before the a hot compress which e boracic acid, if there » May 29, 118 ; k, testing 3.6, 2 865 Ib, milk tc 5 Ib. second]y rd, and added th s daughter Eliz h T Com gets to the the first condition, ly a general «ondjâ€" success in prevent. ’u;:)on the immedj. Lo. 8 _ Cays are as fo] t., May 26, 139 milk, testing 3.2 yield of milk ] 27 rowin lissipation h . Was ,c--‘lifim lohn P.‘Beard the trial of th Nan ma Oil is 1 testing 4.} of any on st 2 to she mill vield Ont.. M results oF BURNS, considereq \ generally ) do in the ovin four milk in genia 10 VCm 1 )ks on arrom vin owae F. w Agriculture trongly 3 lb. fat © the % cows 24.1 Ib. 130 cows Ib. fat. lor average Ib. fat. lowest due OF T Aver ting ) Jb test 4.0 30 COWs lb, £90 Cow It Lor the lar V e ormner hile god disâ€" Nor by he on §3 N f

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