the pride, pomp ivic state costs the n a vearly sum of PANKING. Pure Mayor Costs. which is a 45 1907 ge‘s wder rakes th very nonaire*s cases of iniversal can only ree that Levs use for ANCO® resent ew fTurniâ€" on £200. s payable ural and Agt utia y ipply r re in young woman presented herself gt the weekly reception of General Maxâ€" imefisky, and remained quietly in the ercwded anteâ€"room until it was her turn to enter the general‘s private office. Wher she was in his presence she drew a revolver and fired seven shots pointâ€" blank at the general. _ Six of them toox effect. The wounded man was hasâ€" tily taken to the hospital of the Grand Duchess Catherine Pavelovna, but his St. Petersburg, Nov. 4.â€"General Maxâ€" imotfsky, Director of the Department of l\iâ€"ons in the Ministry of the Interior, " shot and killed yesterday. ‘llhe general was the highest responâ€" si%‘~ official connected with the Russian prisons, and it is supposed that this w is the reason he was selected for asâ€" *sesâ€"ination by the terrorists. The murderer was a young woman, . Mli~. Ragozinikova, the daughter of a teacher in the Imperial School of Music. . Suc avowed herself to be an emissary | oi the northern flying section of the | Socia! Revolutionists, who had been enâ€" | trusted with the task of punishing | Merimoffsky for the stern regime which ; h Lad lately introduced in the treatâ€" men‘ of important political prisoners, whom he ordered to be treated like orâ€" dinary criminals. Th« young woman presented herself zt the weekly reception of General Maxâ€" ‘mefisky. and remained amnietiv in the | Admitted to Room With High Explosive in Her Bosomâ€"Tried to get at It on Being Arrestedâ€"The Assassination 2 Prelude to a Creater Terrorist Outâ€" SUPREME Cambridge, Mass., Nov. 4.â€"* Prof: Schoireld is still a British subject," said Jerome D. (Greene, Secretary of the Harâ€" vyard corporation, last night. â€" "Although th» previous Harvard exchange of proâ€" ’-».-n rships with Germany have all been Amecricans, it was thought very opporâ€" tune this year to send a professor who ‘ wias not, in that too much stress hnsi‘ been laid on a supposed diplomatic charâ€" acler of the exchange idea." | parison of tures." pievails in the highest Americal;'qmu; ters in Berlin over what is called Harâ€" vard‘s "bull" in deputing Prof. Schofield, a Canadian,. to lecture, insteadof an Amâ€" erican, which it is feared may seriously hamver the Kaiser‘s whole purpose in ivitiating an interchange ot American and German thought and teeling. ‘ Ambassador Tower first heard of Prof. Sehofield‘s allegiance to King Edward when Sir Frank C. Lascelles, the British Ambassador, to whom Prof, Schofield brought letters of introduction, casuâ€" ally remurked: "Well, 1 see that one of my fellow subjects has come over to> take part in your Germanâ€"American inâ€" ! tellectual recipregcity schome,." | W hat the diplomats and court officiais corecrned are now trying to determine ‘ is, who is going to present the Harvard | report io the terman court? Court etiquette, which is rigidly adâ€" hered to, requires that a foreigner shall be introduced by his own Ambassador. The situation is regarded as being full ; oi «Jiverting possibilitics. Prof. Schofield‘s topie wili be "A Comâ€" parison of English With Other Literaâ€" | h SHOT BY WOMAN. His Appointment galmng ladignaâ€" h EMZ HEAD OF THE RUSSIAN PRISONS ASSASSINATED. PROF. SCHOFIELD. â€" noovd at ti by Mrs. Vik 1417 t1 U The Ten rlin 1 KiLLED FRIEND AND â€" WIFE AND SUICIDED Nlek Memphis, Tenn.. Nov. 4.â€"A startling ple tragedy, the result of domestic happiness _ and divoree proceedings, s cracted at 5 o‘clock yesterday afterâ€" ‘a at the boarding house conducted Mrs. Victoria Rutherford at 81 Washâ€" . ton avenue. J. B. Rutherford wielded pistol that smnuffed out the lives, and "» the bloody work was concluded i~ lay upon the floor of the room dead bodies of E. P. Peete, former | uty court cletk, <of ‘Tipton coumy,r Rutherford himself, while over the | y of the latter lay his wife gasping } breath, with a mortal wound ia her omen. _A fourth man by t%he m:m' uther, who witnessed the t.ragmly,l wh> is supposed to have also beea | . has eseaped, and cannot be locatedq f he police. it 1 Still a British Subject. rerford ago Peete was ( ce of county clerk : charged that he Dunts. oA shork + ition of * _ wile _ opened In her _ divoree I ord _ alleged that rk adter coming he 1 upon her for su ¢ with his w hort time ag t a divores, ity about nin tion i Years of Constant Quarreling Culminates in Murder and Suicide. OV ten years of t short time le Tragedy Followed the C mine y where it the sal opened Intense indignation dismissed from k at ('uvingt(m, e was short in doed was i ue over the wife gasping wound ia her by the nams afterward LrCera constant New York Banker Tumbles From Win | dow Into Street. _ New York, Nov 4.â€"Through a report to the police made 24 hours after his _death, it became known toâ€"night that Charles Rapelio Henderson, head of the banking firm of R. Henderson & Comâ€" pany, 24 Nassau street, and a director in several of the largest financial instiâ€" tutions of New York, died on Sunday after a fall from the window of his home. There were no witnesses to the â€" accident, and Mr. Henderson lingered only an hour and a half after he was found. He was partly conscious, but his 1 efforts to talk were incoherent, so that | 8°C@CZCSU PME i James Campbell Committed for Trial at | son of the North Bay. | _ Their Ma | from death | Cobalt, Nov. 4. â€" James Camp'bellfl between PA | charged with stabbing Ethel Stone in a | train, just |resor't near Argentite about a month city, ran off | ago, came up for trialbefore Magistrat» body was In | Brown toâ€"day. Nothing in the shape of | _ | evidence, was â€" produced to absolutly | k prove Campbell guilty of the stabbing, | CRIM but the civrenmstantial evidence was lrie s t * P strong against him. Many inmates of | Eighwaymen the hottse were present and gave eviâ€" denee. A small handsaw, alleged to have | Montreal, â€" been the instrument used in the stabâ€" | fering â€" from bing, was produced. Mr. Sol. White, Coâ€" | and burglarie balt, and Mr. MeCurry, North Bay, apâ€" | day there we peared for the defence, while Mr. George | Radiator Con Ross, Cobalt, prosccuted. Magistrate | Fruit Auctio: Brown committed Campbell to stand | store, Notre trial by a jury at North Bay on Novemâ€" | Lambert & ber 12. PWE | Ao Irdian Named Sugar Committed to | Tâ€"ial. | _ maple ,Creek, Sask., Nov. 4.â€"Williar | Grayson representsd the Attorneyâ€"CGen | eral this week at the preliminary investi | gation held at Maple Creek before In | spector Davidson, of the R. N. wW.M. P. | into the fighting fatality there in whic} | an Indian namea Nugar was charged wit} !the' murder of another Indian, Shortlegs | On Sept. 26 there was a dance in _ Maple Creek, and a lot of Indians â€" and halfbreeds were in attendance. The day wound up with a dance in the Indian encampment, where considerable whiskey was drunk. The deceased Indian was educated at Qu‘Appelle Industrial School, and aspired to be a leader among his people, which was resented by some of them. During the fight Shortlegs was struck by someâ€" one, and his skull was fractured, as the result of which he died some days later. After a long investigation, lasting for three days, the accused was committed for trial at the next sitting of the Supreme Court at Maple Creek. ‘ 10 PIyuF | r. Crummy | _ The assassination apparently was deâ€" | gencral positi | signed to be only a prelude to a greater j many of the | act of terrorismâ€"the destruction of the | who have 8pe | h(-mlqlmrtcrs of the secret police, which | ment, and tha | has been the object of at least three | ly accepted by terrerist plots of recent months, of the Metho |__ When the assassin was taken to the |an quite in a police station her agitated attempts to | man‘s position free her bound hands and reach her | my, who while { breast led to an investigation, and it | wards dogmat was found that she carried inside her | fessor, maint; _breast led to an investigation, and it | views are not _was found that she carried inside her | word is used corset a case containing thirteen pounds | denies that Dr of high explosive, a charge _ powerfal ‘t'ontrury to th encugh to blow the entire building and | ce its occupants to piecés. Her portrait | PRIS( is in that part of the police gallery | marxed â€" "dangerous suspects." _ Neverâ€" l Fisticuffs in : theiess, she remained three hours in the ‘ general‘s reception room before being | Moneton, N. recognized. She pretended that her mis. | constables / for sion was to obtain better diet for her | EERIR, en rout brother, who is sick in prison. It is unâ€" | pner "fh cHarue derstood that she will be courtâ€"martial. | 7. " !" caarg iWtabafin? en marxed â€" "dangerous nllspe::ts.†theiess, she remained three hou general‘s reception room befo recognized. She pretended that SIOn was towhlain bettar Al+ STABBING CASE AT COBALT Hutinn _ _ ~_ V **CClo reach that instiâ€" ‘ E',l ‘ tution, | t‘I h \ ! ac | condition was immediately recognized as | of | hopeless, i Di _ The assassination apparently was deâ€" | ge _signed to be only a prelude to a greater . me act of terrorismâ€"tha 3.., ____;° STeat Plh un a d Rl! erford was in a dying . though she was rushed pital she hardly lived to tution. Hith cool deliberation the murderer placed the pistol to his own head and sent â€"a bullet erashicy through his brain, expiring in.me«liau-ly. When _ the police arrived the POOuis presented a ghastly sight. Mrs. Ruthâ€" erford was in a dying condition and alâ€" though she was rushed to the cite Lo. tk Y us T 8 | ) _\ ) "| aivorce and return to h | the woman refused to do, decla. | she had determined to quit him | A few angry words passed and | of the quarrel atttracted Peete man Luther to the room just as ftord was drawing the pistol | pocket, | . _ "Well, it you won‘t live with Can‘t live at all," declared Ru as he flashed the weapon. _ Peete tried to grab the pis Rutherford was too quick for | sent him to the floor dead, bullék it is Raure :: prli CA With co placed the sent a | brain, expi | his wife applied for and secu vorce. Peete then came to and took up his â€"residence at â€" of â€" the Rutherfords, _ He I drink heavily after his arrival Some months ago Rutherforc | wife arrested on the charge ‘cious cutting, alleging that s | a plate at his head and cut | severely that he came near ble | Yestcrday afternoon Rutherf | had been drinkimg, ‘went to the | his wife and asked her to with | suit for divoree and return to hi F oite womim.ref.. @1 ) ""Il" to hi shot her thr Luther ran ford fired at door. FALLS TO DEATH KILLING OF SHORTLEGS turned _ "asdssin was taken to the tion her agitated attempts to bound hands and reach _ her l to an investigation, and it Ethat she carrint Inclls L. eK, ask., Nov. 4.â€"William resentod the Attorneyâ€"Genâ€" k at the preliminary investiâ€" at Maple Creek before Inâ€" his heart. Quichk d the weapon on through the body. ran from the room at him as he wen l de Py â€" Nes NOort ns Ht° enarge of w U SHORTLEGS, | stable Uharles Thomas, of this x | Shortly _ after leaving Moneton med Sugar Committed for | stable Belyea claimed the right a Tâ€"ial. lrz'sting the young man. An argu Cov. 4.â€"William | [Ollowed, which led to blows, and _ Sask., Nov. ~..â€"“lâ€lfl"\;in8 the encounter _ the young entsd the A“O'm‘."'fl“n"jumpwl off the train at Harris t the preliminary investiâ€" | walked back to Moneton and left Maple Creek before Inâ€" morning for Boston, n, of the R. N. W.M. P., During â€"the fight some damage a fatality there in which | done to the interior of the car i Sugar was charged with | the railway â€" authorities will prob another Indian, Shortlegs. i take sction awainas 1. .1 "VL PrC sk s - ere was a dance in | a lot of Indians and | attendance. The day | dance in the Indian considerable whiskey | n apparently was a prelude to a gre: the destrnatinn ~s ‘Tords,. _ He began to ter his arrival here, ago Rutherford had his on the charge of maliâ€" lleging that she throw e omiimd NCE 10 Theâ€"city hgy. | M (10%€ resi,-.g.{ntion has been requested by d to reach that insti. ‘ the isoard of Governors of the .\lontrm_tl uce Methodist College on account of his ‘th;-ulngicnl views, has been misjud sod, ~â€"â€"â€"â€"mmmmemmmmes !ncounllng to Rev, Dr. Crummy, pastor udiat..l_\- recognized as | of Bathurst Street Methodist Chiren, | Pr. Crummy says that Dr. Workman‘s 1 apparently was deâ€" ;m-n(‘rnl position is quite in accord with prelude to a greater | many of the best theological scholars he destruction of the | who have specialized on the Old Testaâ€" > secret police, which | ment, and that his views are substantialâ€" ct of at least three ; ly accepted by many of the younger men ecent months, of the Methodist minifltry toâ€"day. _ "I in was taken to the | an quite in agreement with Dr. Workâ€" igitated attempts to | man‘s position myself," states Dr. Crumâ€" nds and reach her | my, who while udmitting a tendency toâ€" nvestigation, and it " wards dogmatism on the part of the proâ€" e carried inside her | fessor, maintains that Ry . .1* P"*" hesulat us wC return to him. This to do, declaring that to quit him forever, passed and the noise ondition and al to the city hos reach that insti Filing of a that she threw and cut him so near bleeding to Rutherford, who t to the home of to withdraw her a Peete and the just as Ruther. pistol from his secured a diâ€" to this city _at the home th me you ’.utherfurd_ Father Tyrrell Deprived of Right to Administer Sacraments, Rome, Nov. 4.â€"The Vatican organ toâ€"day announced that the Rev. Father Tyrrell, the noted English Jesuit, whose books on religious subjects were conâ€" demned by the Holy Offiean ‘ani wr. verâ€" ! Fisticuffs in Train Over the Right to the | Arrest. MK | Moneton, K. BE., Nov. 4.â€"While two "‘* | constables fought on _ last evening‘s her | train, en route to Dorchester, a pris B4 | oner in charge of one of them, who was falâ€" | being taken to HMil maka hio ao... s Montreal, Nov, 4.â€"Mor fering â€" from an epidemi and burglaries. _ On Satu day there were robberies . Radiator Company, Lach Fruit Auction Company store, Notre Dame west, Lambert & Marcotte‘s stc Royal avenue. _ In every glars were successfq} in c goods of money. The poli erless to prevent these ra | __London, Nov. 4.â€" of Spain arrived ; | It was raining hard | depressing weather â€" met at the railway of the English Roy Npanish Ambassador Nenor Villa y Urru drove at once to . where they wil lres: day. They will then and Queen Aleaxnd; The London popi greatest interest toâ€" son of the Spanish ] Their Majesties ha from death or injur; between PArig and _ train, just before ¢ CitÂ¥. ran off tha «ui. MODERNIST PRIEST ALFONSO IN LONDOoN Atrival of Spanish King and Hi * in the Cani+al S s 920 oR cen Paris and Cherbourg, + JUst before entering ¢] ran off the rails, Fortun was hurt, Toronto, Nov, 4 whose resignation | parture . forty y | companied to t flim- by Joseph police oficer, esec lruutc- on the fir ford witnessed hi istered an oath IS NOT A UNITARIAN, The Rev. Dr. Crummyv â€" Nafanm Portiand, Me., Nov. 4.â€"~Phnning to duplicate his feat of forty vears ago of walking to Chicago. a aistanse of 1,230 miles, in 26 days, Eaward Payson Weston started at 5 o‘crock last night from the Portland Postoffice, amid the cheers and good "wishes of fully one thousand people, who had gathered to see his start. He is .69 years of age. Mr. Weston was‘ greeted by a number of _ friends, including former Mayor James P, Baxter, who watched his da. CRIME At AN OLD MAN‘s evidentlybhgd He â€" mumbled about an hou?t physician, brein, Ap . _ _ /Cnd at the base of the brein. An examination showed that seyâ€" eral of his ribs had been broken and he e\'idently,bhad suffered internal injtiries, He â€" mumbled incoherently and lived about an hou?P after the arrival of the physician . g, & uj [festde until next Monâ€" hey will then visit King Edward een Aleaxndra at Sandringham, London populace displayed the _ interest toâ€"night in the infant the Spanish King and Queen, Majesties had a narrow escape ath or injury on their journey Paris and Cherbourg. Their ust before entering the latter _off the rails. Fortunately noâ€" a lmu+é Mr. Henderson was then condition. _ There was an the back of the head at the hnain fics c 0s ‘ in arrived in Lo raining hard, but ng weather their the railway stati 1 ALFONSO IN were robberies at Company,. Lachine prisoner was lon against A y Urrutia, Thy onece to Kensington y wil lreside unti] ne will then visit King Aleaxndra at Sand and Burglars in the City. gmatism on the part of the mintains that Dr. Workn e not unitarian. . He says used. too freely and exny. Holy Office, and into the house :;nvai mmoned, Henderson was then "U, Me., Nov. 4.â€"~Phnning to : his feat of forty years ago, ing to Chicago. a aistanse of es, in 26 days, Eaward Payson started at 5 o‘crock last night : Portland Postoffice, amid the nd good "wishes of fully one [ mpsunLe. Ceultl c l Hlgl s d Te & q006 00204 . 3 Am neps )r. Workman holds any the Divinity of Christ. 4.â€"Montreal is â€"guf. epidemic of holdâ€"ups On Saturday and Sun. " _‘ in carrying The police seem the Pope‘s enc)â€"'cl'i'\;;l‘i beeq deprived of the sn Ring and Hig Queen the Capital, / â€"The ELo. cnpdur Gemeer, it PFigâ€" f one of them, who was jail, made his escape, MONTREAL, Crummy Defends Dr Workman. station .l')y I fumil.v: and _ the to Great Britain, 10r of the car and rities will probably both constables. raids [ _ CY 77 ) CS . ¢lfÂ¥, ing Moneton (Con. d the right of ar. nan. An argument to blows, and durâ€" PUNISHED at the Canada C ondon LONG WALK. King and Queen Rev. Dr. Workman, sacraments, e Pontiff in Running Riot in spite of the Majesties were ThSJ â€"\:l"s.i.tors ; Montreal Blanchet‘s and at St. on Mount se the burâ€" e young iman at l[nrriqvi!le, and left this ©"% 0° the proâ€" r. Workman‘s He says the and expressly * . selg * * I State Joniihe *areattaones 2 4d is M A 111 5) Wostulie uds 4. n P | States steamer John Lambert, w _ J o: aPie ht once next “‘]l“:"' | rested at Lachine on a charge ’ot'“'lv‘fl 1;" |oe > it ons or 0 t Monâ€" | ing the rul A charg violat. | and pushing his wa; ng Edward l;‘;‘iliding 'v':.:; :l§ navigation and nearly !:flf‘,’,"““",’ waved it b fio i s ch goo riringham, | Sfouqieqy nadpon® "oomer Cassandre dn | M sRogustiien, that | x e horses h the infant | ,, A resolution was passed by the Guelph | dren, and had ai? :«lxlzx Queen, :Co-ogergm'e Association in favor of a | 32‘.1‘»’? t? 1. fhn principat ow escape Provincial law providing for a one and | °" 0r morg h;t“:’t:‘e;ie + ir journey oneâ€"half pound loaf, and that all bread ' jured, if net killed. _‘ . ‘ ‘Their | 8€zed be weighed in a lump, and not . it he latter‘:vhifl ;:Pfamte loaves. This resolution â€" INFLUX nately noâ€" orwarded to Mr. J. P. Do . | F ~« | M. P. p. wney, ‘ Boarding House Kee | _ The annual convention of th i wi ‘ § C e Ontario ith P AL {Lord s Day Alliance has been postponed | _ V@ncouver, B. C., Nc "::i'::lll Ihurs;i.ny, Nov. 28, and the trienâ€" ll;e Kt'.‘“"“ deputy â€"min ; sA convention of the Lord‘s D o vestigating the claim ning Riot ) ance of C a rd‘s Day Alliâ€" | out of th i anada is to be held on Friday, | showir :hrecem o Nov. 20. 3, | y n ofoihe existence . y, Utica, Syra and Cleveland then in members toâ€"night EOE an abrasion on conditions of who off powâ€" was . _ Mr. Chicago _ According to the story told by Night ’ Operator Cooper, at the C. P. R. station at Milton, two masked men on Tuesiay night hurled a large stone through the window facing which he was sitting, and knocked him unconscious. They then bound him, took his watch and ring and some money, and then cleaned out the till of $10 and some loose silver, There is not much probability that the Sunday playing of lacrosse, baseball and other professional games at which view Paysician Henry the mt ol n in ces c 2 c h meal opposite the fire hall A large crowd ot the westâ€"end citizens were atâ€" tracted by the band, but they were not interfered with. The Doukhobors are at Fort William. Chanting their quaint dirge, the first party, numbcring eleven, entered West r‘ort about noon and had their midâ€"day a dying Barbara Laponkhin, daughter of exâ€" Governor Laponkhin, of Reval, Russia, who mysteriously disappeared after Jeayâ€" ing the Aldwych Theatre at London on Uctober 24, returned yesterday to the house where she had been staying preâ€" viously to leaving her friends o«.tside the theatre. Capt. Dennis Sullivan, of the United States steamer John Lambert, was arâ€" rested at Lachine on a charge of violatâ€" 7 CBHD T Romeiin i Gonnits 1 B Two British officers and a civilian have been arrested for desecrating the grave of President Kruger in the cemeâ€" tery at Pretoria some days ago. It is aleged that their action was a drunken freak. ’ The Presbyterian Genera} Assembly‘s Committee on Moral and Social Reform recommended public ownership of the traffic in liquor in places where there is no prospect of carrying prohibition. __President Hutchins, of â€" the Detroit United Railway, has sent money â€" to Montreal to pay the expense of an in vestigator to come to Detroit in the in terests of Montreal shareholders. British newspapers in China are trying to force the British Government to inâ€" tertere in the Chinese customs departâ€" ment, the management of which was reâ€" ‘ cently relinquished by Sir Robert Hart. It was announced at the annual meetâ€" ingy of the Toronto Home for Incurables that a grant of $50,000 had been recomâ€" mended by the Board of Control to be given to the institution. Church, Toronto, on Thanksgiving Day. A Coroner‘s jury at Pottstown, Pa., has censured the Chief Burgess _ and covncilmen of the borough for allowing trains to run at fast rates over unproâ€" tected grade crossings. Church, Toront}), --t;n The Canadian Mining Institute memcrialize the Provincial Gover for changes in the mining act reg: the payment of royalties, Cencerted action for social refor agreed upon at an interdenomina conference held in St. James‘ S l 0 C007 45. ty B Company‘s mills. Three United States railroads temporarily discontinued making tracts for the shipment of grain Buffalo to the seaboard. d Mr, A. Graham Thompsc pointed Assistant Post O for the division between Port Arthur, The French treaty will t the Parliament of France 28, the day for opening Pa:rhament, Owing to the Professor John _ with his lecture ] School. EOECOOO P NTCUTEANT CHIP datron from drinking poison. N. J. Robinson, express messenger, and Charles Britt, fireman, vere killed in a collision near Regina, Bank robbers at Pskoff, Russia, yesâ€" terday killed a cashier and seven men who were acting as his escort. dega] f,,/, 1j "OTd about a week ago, is dead from his injuries, The twoâ€"yearâ€"old daughter of Rev, T A. Rodger, of Orillia, is in a eritical con: dition from drinkine naisas James Heron, who a fire at Brantford a dead from his iniur Fireman Robertson died at â€" London_ from injuries received in the explosion at" Newbury. | Duties coliected at the port of . or for Octover were Wlï¬.flï¬ggfl Eight Toronto bakers have been mone«" for working on the Lord‘s di The steamer City of. Grand Rapids burned near Tobermory, Three Indians were Utah in a fight with troops,. launched The steamer Montreal Lake St. Peter, at Bh}r_xtf'qrdâ€;tl;nâ€"l‘t‘ ; iraham Thompson has been steamsliip Collingwood at Collingwood. ans, a man, a woman and _found murdered 15 miles thbridge yesterday. ihey uck e Pac _ students‘ disturbance King refused to yo on before the Toronto Law ‘ining Institute will rovincial Government mining act regarding Lage _ ty will be submitted to f France on November opening the Dominion ation have arranged the association‘s next Post Office Inspector was injured during s escort. f ; assistant manaâ€" a Steel Company, fall of a brick killed in South United States I88 at braairmc{1/ ". _ "OEb®s was noticed headâ€" ing at breakneck speed straight in the dirâ€" + ectioun of the group of school children, e United Mr. lrvine at once seized a large Union wWas arâ€" | Jack, which one of the pupils was carrying, f violat. | and pushing his way towards the horses, 1 vigorously waved it before the animals with d ne&rIY | such good effect that they swerved around andra in | and headed in another direction. | _ The horses had almost reached the chilâ€" * | dren, and had it not been for the prompt e Guelph action of the principal there is not the least or of a ! doubt but that there would have been a dozâ€" one and | °D Or more seriously and nername u.. 8 * Toronto and have been sum ie Lord‘s day, ran aground in , Lumber Ontario have conâ€" from A._ Massey, a lorï¬:;}-â€"fr;l;t;‘ o? stitute, p 7 RRcoRcCeatt CEOT 500. This surplus will be spent in payâ€" ments on the new building block on the Assembly grounds, and also in enâ€" larging the theatre so that it can proâ€" perly accommodate the new organ, a recent gift from the Massey estate of Toronto as a memorial of the late Hart A. Massey, a former trustee of the in save cg Buffalo, Nov. 4.â€"The trustees of the Chautaugqua Institute, which owns and controls the Chautaugqua Assembly â€" at Chautauqua, N. Y., met here toâ€"day. Mr. C. D. Massey, Toronto, is a member of the Board of Trustee_‘b of the Assembly, The or&animtion has‘ a surplus of $10,â€" »aa 7 <maponsi e s Letee Will Be â€" oronto t i P e BTUTE . care of by boardlng-housekeepers I supply them with work, and take : per cent. of their wages as long as on the job. ‘The men have also to companies in Japan. Vancouver, B. C., Nov. 4.â€"W. L. Mackenâ€" zie King, a deputyâ€"minister of labor, who is investigating the claims of Japanese arising out of the recent riots, has secured evl?ence showing the existence of a «ystem employed by baardinx-houtekeepers to bring Jap laborâ€" ers into the country. Four organizations here, who have conâ€" tracte with the railway companies and othâ€" ers to supply laborers, deal with similar comâ€" panies at Japan. The immigrants are taken care of by bo@rdingâ€"houseltaanaws 122. "RC Apâ€" | narrowly o0 "ubV; 4:A serious accident was narrowly avoided on Wednesday afterno@i by the heroic conduct and great presence of mind of Principal Irvine, of the King Edâ€" ward School. As the children from the schoo! sotu= three or four hundred in number were about to cross the railway track on 23rd street, on the way to participate in the opening ceremonies at the Alexandra School in Saskatoon West, & team of runaway horses was noticed headâ€" ing at breakneck speed straight in the dirâ€" ectioun of the group of school children ‘ noul es ud P Lo ie o on C CR Ece s | of the case, on hearing this story from 1 | the man‘s relatives, decided to try the o | effects of counterâ€"suggestion. and advisâ€" . |ed Weiss‘ relatives to recover the deed of sale. l’ Krauss, however, declared that since , | he had bought the other man‘s salyaâ€" _ | tion his own business had rospered exâ€" ceedingly, and he refused !o give it up under £40, _ Weisg was unable to pay _| this, but finally the chief rabbi of Pressâ€" | burg, to whom the matter had been re ported, induced Krauss to hand the deed back to the sick man on reecipt of £20, | The effect was most nmrke«f Weiss, reassured as to the fate of _ his soal, ’iuunediutely improved. _A new deed | was drawn up, in which Krauss solemnâ€" ly reconveyed the other man‘s Ml'\'il" tion to him, This was witnessed by | |two doctors and Weiss has now been | | discharged cured, | Saskatoon, Nov. 4.â€"A se narrowly avoided on We by the heroic conduct and mind of Principal Irvine, ward School. SAVED LIVES OF PUPILs Waved Large Union Tack in r. THE CHAUTAUQUA THEATRE | 5 p j C _ [GJ60 Arauss accepted the of. | fer om condition that the transaction | was put in writing. A regular deed of sale conveying Weiss‘ salvation in the next world to Krauss was thereupon drawn up, executed by Weiss and duly witnessed. _ Krauss Look the doed and handed over the 10s to Weiss, who boastâ€" ed that it had been easily earned. A fortnight later Weiss lost his wife, who was killed in a carriage accident, He regarded this accident as a sign â€" of the Divine anger with his impious barâ€" gain, and the idea so preyed on his mind that his reason gave way and he was | taken to the hospital, f Professor ()bermayer, who had charge of the case, on hearing this story from the man‘s rilntioass P 146. ® f Vienna, Nov. 4.â€"A remarkable case in which the eitects ot mediaeval superstiâ€" tion and suggestion are curiously â€" minâ€" ’gled has come under the notice of the uoctors of the â€" Rudous Mouspital in Vieuna. A HMungarian tradesman named Weiss was recently admitted to the hospital suffering from an illusion which caused him continually to lament the loss of his salvation, ~ It appears that some weeks before _ Weiss was sitting with friends in a coffeeâ€"house in Pressburg, when the conversation turned on reuâ€" gion ad a future life, / A Hungariaa Shopkeeper Sold His Chance of Salvation and Became Insaneâ€" Recovered When It Was Brought SCIENCE BROUGHT To BEAR STRANGE INSANITY CASE 1 Enlarged to Accommodate the Massey Organ., would â€" benefit '.i)‘o‘t'l-l- Canada. â€"__" "~"} previous record was 67 1â€"2. Regarding the letting of the Aldwych site, the London County Council is comâ€" municating wth Lord Strathcona, and may effect a direct letting to the Canaâ€" dian Government, thus savi the interâ€" mediate rrofit of the l-‘nen:ï¬ syndicate which held the option till recently.â€"This Would (hana#te PX in us P admission is charged : will be stopped in Montreal within the near future, if at any time. Mayor Ekers gave out a statement that he was in favor of amendâ€" ing the civie Sunday byâ€"law so as to permit such games, which at present are conducted in the suburbs, where no one is disturbed. The record for New Brunswick moose has been broken. Dr. W. L. Mupro, of Providence, arrived at Fredericton, and had with him the head of a moose he shot ten days ago. Its anthébts" Ha c / g spread of 68 1â€"4 inches, which is the largest of which there is =any record. The best previous record was 67 1â€"2. Regarding the letting of the Aldwych site, the London County Council is comâ€" municating wth Lord _ Stratheomna . and SOLD HIS SOUL. FLUX OF JAPS. : Red Star Stu‘:::t!'ulhnd Suffers Dam use Keepers Fave Contracts .. Dover, Nov. 4.â€"While the Red Star With Railwgy., I;liner Finland was attempting to enter &. C.. Kov 6 | this port toâ€"night to land her passenâ€" El;lll;m‘ig‘ls'tet:riatl;éry:-chke’:' | gers for England she crashed into the the claims of Japanese u,:m: } southern end of the breakwater. _ Her ent riots, has secured evl?ence bows were badly smashed and about o eeneupent I TCOs fmployed | twenty feet of her deck planking was ountr;,’per‘ O.Aring Jap daborâ€" ripped up. The damage she sustained ‘ :".f?.",:,..?.e’e.'_"h". have conâ€" [extends below the water line. I ¢ Union Jack in Faces of Runaway Horses, is oo e TeRe &1 iously and perhaps fatally led ul oCUs Cemdt This was witnessed by _ Weiss has now beean leal with similar comâ€" immigrants are taken usekeepers here who , and take about ten s as long as they are have also to pay the ez O give it up _was unable to pay chief rabbi of Pressâ€" matter had been re iss to hand the deed n on reecipt of £20, st marke«f Weiss, there was no such _or salvation, and my chance of salâ€" stion, and advisâ€" recover the deed ed the chilâ€" _the prompt not the least : been a dozâ€" of his aoa-xl \ new _ deed the council and < will be stopped he near future, if Ekers gave out a in favor of amendâ€" salva inâ€" since Rochester, N. Y., Nov. 4.â€"Mrs. Henry M. Leonard, 23 years old, the wife of a mason of this city, attempted to kill herself and two small children yesterday afternoon by taking laudarum, giving some of it to the children and then turnln: on the gas in her room. The return of her busband from work frusâ€" trated the woman‘s attempt in part, _ at Marie, a fourâ€"yearâ€"old daughter, _ seems practically unaffected, but the mother and utnm&a’ouuummllmcuy Pcn_p‘lw “.f critical condition. I!iâ€"health luighter are in the city l ut -d:a‘l" s.tr;:- nats Ulild year, lï¬d Lonâ€" 2 VC7 JCSuIns old da don ers ve iuppo ted Ub condition. Iliâ€"health been :“:llvt:zlx ll: t:o:'u'::llu the woman‘s act. _ the small demand. T 1 EOmE sn ol The breakwater _ was considerably damaged by the collision. _ A man who was working there had his thigh broken, The English passengers landed after the steamer was moored. The others will probably cross to Ostend on the Chann>] steamer, Attempts to Poi;oivï¬crc Commit Suicide. A lifeboat and tugs were summoned by rockets to assist her. _ The tugs brought the Finland alongside the Prince _ of Wales pier, where they moored her for the night. The steamer will have her bulkheads strengthened before proceeding for Antwerp, m _ 1 P ie 1 1 hi iininist Autiistietelirsisintiiircacacs se kt. s / Â¥k :Â¥ ‘ fortnight. | |__ Neighbors finally grew curious from’ I the fact that the young man never went | abroad, and peeping one day through{ \his shuttered window, they saw Alessanâ€" ; dro seated alongside the dead body of the woman who was to have been his wife, affectionately holding her hand. The police were informed, and Alessandro l was arrested. [ Naples, Nov. 4.â€"A particularly grueâ€" l‘some story has come to light in this | city. â€" Elisa Soalisi, a beautiful young !woman. was engaged to be married to a young man named Alessandro, but she fdied a few days before the date set for/ the ceremony, and was buried in a local cemetery, Alessandro was heartâ€"broken | over his bereavement, and one night he | dug up the body and carried it to his | lodging. He embalmed the corpse of the ’young woman, dressed it in its bridal ‘l i-lo?h(_‘s_, and kept it in his rooms for a ON Young Italian Could Not With Her, Springfield, Mass., Nov. 4.â€"Hearing two shots fired in rapid euccession early toâ€"day the employes of the Highland hotel, burst into a room and found Mr. and Mrs, A. M. Kirwan. of this city, apparently dying from bullat wounds which the husband claimed were selfâ€"inflicted. They were rushed to the bhospital where they were both reported in a critical condition. Husband and Wife Shot and Apâ€" CRASHED INTO BREAKWATER ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORoNTO But an Old Fashioned Faction Fight is Better. A Brampton despatch: In the Police Court here yesterday Neil McCallum, a wellâ€"known farmer and dealer in horses, was committed to stand his trial for alâ€" leged fraud in connection with a note given in a horse deal. _ The complajnâ€" ants were John MeBride, Belfountain, and his son, Deputy Reeve MeBride, willâ€" known farmers of Caloden township. The . latter with friends were at the C. P.H. station waiting for the 6.30 p. m. train ‘ to go home when McCallum and his two sons, young men, made their appearâ€" _ance. A hot dispute arose, followed _ by blows, and the waitingâ€"room of the staâ€" tion became the scene of the worst row seen in that town for years. When the battle was over the elder McCallum was unconscious, and remained so for half an hour. _ Reports came down town that he was dead, but an hour and a half latâ€" er he had recovered sufficiently to admit of his being driven home, The Caledon party took the train for the north, some of them bearing wounds received in the encounter, The row is the talk of the town. But an the disaster, h4 C200 C,." eC00eY Of Over live hundred miles through the mountains from the nearest Russian point. It is not known here what steps the Bokarâ€" an Government is taking to send in reâ€" lief, but it would appear to be acting with the usual and characteristic Asiatic fatalism and procrastination. Newspaper correspondents at Samarakand, _ ‘Tashâ€" kend, Bokhara ad Kokhand have not yet been able to SUDDIYÂ¥ furthor Astiain * s in the internal affairs of it would involve a journe The ï¬u;in'l;-‘(?zwxr.nment 8 to send a relief exped ï¬m; To do so would be . 4 _ SW/an Covernment is taking no steps to send a relief expedition to Karâ€" atagh. To do so would be contrary to the Russian policy of nonâ€"interference in the Iinternll aftairs of Bokhara, and IF MenuTA tollle.. . & information has been ;'e;-ived here reâ€" garding the disaster at Karatagh, in the province of Bokbara, which was aiâ€" most completely destroyed by a landâ€" slide following the earthqaake of Ocâ€" tober 21, resulting in the majority of the inhabitants losing their nves, A desâ€" patch from Tashkend toâ€"day says that the total population did not exceed 5,000 as a rule, tgougb the number of inhabâ€" itants was somewhat larger in the sumâ€" mer, as Karatagh is frequented as a pleasure resort by the people of Hissar, in which district of Bokhara the strickâ€" I en town is situated. HOTEL TRAGEDY. 12 mEqiStering Lemperature of :11 Nonâ€"Interference Policy Prevents Sendâ€" Degrees Below Zero in Upper Air. ing of Assistance to Karatagk. ; m« ire . New Nerts, Arovs . 4.â€"That a balâ€" Bt. Petersburg, Nov. 4. â€"NXo .further| ‘°°" ol---.-f!A~l“ ght of 46,680 feet RELIEF EPEDITION HELD BA TANGLES OF RED TAPE THE HORROR / _ NINE MILES UP. AT KARATAGH, | vo»=u_ruom oo on DEAD BODY OF FIANCEE COURTS MAY BE GoOD supply further . &*t;‘i'l‘s J;; . apparently dying from h the husband claimed They were rushed to the were both reported in a "rOugh the mountains t Russian point. It is what steps the Bokarâ€" s taking to send in reâ€" "nection with a note deal. _ The complajnâ€" MeBride, Belfountain, y Reeve MeBride, willâ€" & journey of over five to Part d | vbeen seen in the vicinity of the pass Il.nd was said to be making for the | hills. _ He â€"was â€" armed heavily, and , those who saw him are reasona ol y sure of his identity, The commanding officer at Prince A}â€" bert sent orders to Corporal Monday, who is on detachment at Cumberland House, to proceed to the pass and capâ€" ture Miner dead or alive. The corporal left for the scene of his investigations about a week ago, l0 onl CCC St TaRk the sale of «traw hate tll:ll don dealers have been . Toronto, Nov. 1.â€"In consequence of &A threat made by an Italtan against Father Macdonnel] and overheard by Mrs. Nelil Meâ€" Mullen, 365 Wilten avenue, police were in attendance at St. Paul‘s Church yesterday . Mrs. McMullen beard the Italian talking loudiy of what he would do to Father Macâ€" donnell, who some time ago married him. She at once informed Mr. E. Gardner, 416 lWflum avenue, ll‘.':Q oommflreued with nepector Gregory. o police officers were sent down to St. Paul‘s Church, where FPaâ€" ther ‘Hand was celebrating the twentyâ€"fifth year of his service, and where Father Macâ€" donnel! would be present, but the Italian did not 2ppear, C moe E. ced in the fastnesses to the northeast of Prince Albert, _ Some time ago â€" the news reached here that Mincr had be;n seen in xthe vicinity of the pass, an era s o dn Te Wo 8 On Account of Menace Made Against FatherO‘Donneil. Mounted Police Corporal Sent After Noted Desperado. Winnipeg, Nov. 4.â€"Bill Miner, the American _ traimn robber, who escaped from the penitentiary at New Westâ€" minster, is believed to be a fugitive EO UXE er d f L There has been w 22 CCC mmder OC mon discharged was greater only because the amount of construction work done during the summer had been greater, No curtailment of business is looked for, but rather an increase, g; 3o t NeDs Nov. 4.â€"The Union Paâ€" | cific Railroad toâ€"day discharged between four thousand and eight thousand workâ€" men. ‘The discharged men are from the construction department, and every piece of construction work on the entire sysâ€" tem is abandoned. General Superintendent Park said toâ€" day: "We expect a curtailment of busiâ€" ness, and as fast as this occurs we will lay off train crews. For the present this will not be done: our orders are to disâ€" pense with every available man, and to stop every piece of construction work 01 the system. We are ordered to cut expenses in every poskible way," These orders came from New York, _ New York, Oct, 20.â€"At the office of the Union Pacific Railroad Company in this city there was a prompt denial of the accuracy of the telegram from Omaâ€" ha announcing that all construction on the entire system had been abandoned, It was said that a discharge of emâ€" ployees always took place on November Ist, after the construction work of the sumumer was ended, because construction work in Iinter was much more expenâ€" sive, and that this year the number of meon discharged was greater only because 4 e s POLICE WERE at cHURCE . THOUSANDS DISCHARGED, Union Pacific Railway Co. Cutting Down Interviewed afterwards, Commandant Sylvain said he had come to Canada to hold a series of meetings in regard to the social uplifting of the colored races, a work in which he had taken the ini tistive, and which he was pursuing with all his power. Ee feels very indignant ar being barred from the local hotels. h 1 &Â¥ \ntstet M stnais s a2 22 among the upholders of the slavery sysâ€" tem in the southern States." This inâ€" dignant outburst was made in one of Montreal‘s hotels by Commandant Benâ€" ito Sylvain, a doctor of law of the facâ€" ulty of Paris and aideâ€"deâ€"camp of his Majesty the Emperor Menelik of Abysâ€" sinia. on being informed that he could not be admitted as a guest of the hotel because he was a gentleman of color. Montreal, Nov. 4.â€""It is absolutely odious and scandalous that in a country imbued with the generous traditions of France, and which claims to be under the English law, reputed to be so liberal, people can adopt principles so retroâ€" grade as those which are still prevalent bvine ns ine (aplc s c ce 7 @7 C Omaha, Neb., 8t TO CAPTURE BILL EPOV B PEememyel IallE'V travel upwards with great velocity for about two hours, and then remain nearâ€" l{ stationary for another hour before they explode, _ ‘The descent of the paraâ€" chute requires about an hour more. The longutnaight of any one of the balloons was 155 miles.. loon startling statements made in the course ofucddn.intheh-td.y’-udo- of the Aeronaut Congress here toâ€"day by Prof, A. Lawrence Rotch, of the Blueâ€" hill Observatory, Boston. Prof. Rotch tolid of his experiments with miniature balloons for the purpose of testing air currents and obtaining temperatures at high altitudes. _ The bailoons are made of rubber and carry special instruments â€" for recording +ha and there recorded a temperature of 111 dque_o_lnlowmwu one of the of Abyssinia, in Registering Temperature of 111 Degrees Below Zero in Upper Air. aid to be making for the was armed heavily, and saw â€" him are reasonaoly COLOR LINE. RUBBER BALLOONS. marked decline in of Boston, Tells Aeronauts are released they .0