Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 29 Nov 1906, p. 9

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J. FARMER, Barrister, Etc. EKOUSE3 ice Farm Properties or Sale or To Rent sU ] MER‘S SONS $1Da 1881 LE ang FARMS FOR SAL DR. LeRoyr‘s EMALE PILLS WA 3 nosmu E__ II‘.HY\“ 1 9016 brain in my cente. tas to w ere «s a ]J-l 102 da adjoinimg ust in‘t al He farme t€. bank aruh ; unty ; gan Fil ad all ot | ) CF Lake emircel O" Sn o iinin HREEX | nfocl ty .. | over lake Ontario yesterday mormning, i(‘lul»houw the _ steam barge Reswlute, belonging | ‘Their ‘boat to Hane Â¥ _ & _ Milier, contractors, went i\\'ater wher 4 to picces just outside the western &4 |laghan, â€" the and six lives out of the crew of twerve ‘from the were lost in one of the v'viie!xr.us,.b" into the which capwized in the heary seas ar ,\\’llnrf. he h It was iwaving the wreck. ‘A second | Capt. Hall. lifeboat, in command oi Capt. Join ‘fnnnd their f Fakey, svacked the land in salety atâ€" i p p ter an hbour‘s hard baitle agtinst the; y £ wory‘s, Capt. John Suilivar, who stuck | W ith the * to the vessel until she broke up, was Iw-.m disclose y washed ashore through the gap, ciingâ€" }hl:md. sand] * in@ for life to the top of the wrecked ped owith ow vessei‘s cabin. _ Thomas Topping, the ithe illâ€"fated second emgineer, one of thow> capâ€" | ropes, spars § sized from the first lifeboat, ching to | lined the be the cabinâ€"top with Captain Swilivan unâ€" | togsed expar e til hbe lost his hold and sank from ‘ consort, the exbaustion. The schooner P. 1. Locke, {nt her anch which was in‘ tow of the lesolute, t mained of t 4 withstood the foree of the storm, and | was anchore lies anchored a short distance from |loaded with the spot where one mast and the top | the lake fro of a wheelâ€"house mark all that is lett I\vin . and sc of the wreck. The Locke‘s crew was R Island. _ Bot takem ofi by a surf boat towed out ) nals of dist: J by the â€"bug Maggie Mitelll and in l!wfiro any â€"command of Capt. Ward. ‘The erew of | them assista the schoomer St. Louis, which had aiâ€" I.\I«-Rno. belo: so souglht shelter from the storm near ; and the Roy the gap, was agiso taken off by the | the gap, but surf boat. !.\lng{.’ie E. j The Kesolte in enmmant at unum tb uts e Again shelter was sought down _ at the western side of the Island, _ and by that time the barge was leaking badly. The steam pumps had been working . steadily â€" since three o‘clock in the afternoon, but the water in the hold gained steadily and as soon as she reached her anchorage she began to fill rapidly. â€" Seas twenty feet high swept the vessel from bow to stern and the water continued _ to rise in her hold. _ The rumps and _ syphons were worked to their full limit until the water put out the fires under â€" the boilers, and the 500 tons of loose Finding an entrance impossible, Capt. babhey put about and headed for _ the Western Gap, where an anchorage was found on the sandbar. All day Wednesday, the gale _ graâ€" dually increased _ i force, and both vessels began to be in immineat â€"danâ€" ger. _ Capt. Sullivan, who is commoâ€" dore oi the HManey and â€" Miller fleet, knew that it would be even more dangerous to try to go through the Western Gap, and he decided to lie there until the sea went down. About eleven o‘clock that night the wind shifted suddenly to the west and beâ€" came a regular _ hurricane. _ exposing the tugging, straining, vessels to the danger of the leeshore, and the prosâ€" peet of being dashed to pieces on the sandbar. For a time the two vessels rode the breakers, but the barge could not stand the battering. that the scoomer could and the heavy _ seas broke heavily over hber. . Another atâ€" tempt was made to _ take the barge through _ the Eastern Gap, but the storm ~swept the vessels past the enâ€" trance _ by ‘a. good . lv&«l & .. yards.© lrp. I , ihc ing The Resolute, in command of Capt.l Mahey, came from _ Erie, Pa., laden | with a heavy cargo of coal for Haney | and Miller. and bringing in â€"tow t!le’ P. B. Locke, also coal laden. The two | vessels locked _ down _ the \\"o-llaml! Canal and left _ Port Dalhousie on | Tuesday evening. Alithough _ the s(‘ns" were heavy they crossed â€" the lake | without mishap reaching the Eastern Gap on Wednesday morning at four o‘clock. They tried to make the gap, but the hcary northwest _ wind was too strong and they were beaten back. Capt. Sullivan, with a couple of men in a boat, made a landing, and after seeing Capt. Hail, Deputy Harbormasâ€" ter, and S. W. Ross. superintendent of Haney and Miller, he went back to the steamer. As there was said to be only ten feet of water in _ the eastern gap, and as the Resolute in her â€" heavilyâ€"laden _ condition drew eleven feet, six inches, it was decided not to make the trial woares. Capt. Joh: to the vessel unt tea W lifeboat Di over 1 the : to W wagzic anuals crew of Lae He down, and | the ber in trying t« otner craft, the the Resoilute‘s . the Resoiuie‘s eonsort, t1 Locke, rode out the st united crews of fiftoen e During the terrific ga. over lake Ontario yeste the steam barge Iesol: to Haney & _ Milier, cont to picces just outside the and six lives out of the c wore lost Cimn me mt Wini that throu, ovew w eficuar worth the ic ing t ie suore and safety w ing discance, but the « men knew too wellâ€"tha come from it. They re: Lb the suie waters shallow channels worse than time open ‘.ke. 1j cuast was in sigh solute, but â€"the entance â€" and long day and niglt . for the stcam barg, their npay im tha 2. Wb Captain Sullivan‘s Low . Water and Graz»khic WRECK OF RESOLUTEF Ai TORONTO HAREBOR. H C 1 C «ow (dury of the gale imto sule waters of the harbor, but the low channels presented dangers even se thanm tine ship could fear in the i F.me. ‘Tue best harbor upon the t was in sight of the crew of the Reâ€" te, but the storm had blocked the ance and kept the vessel in the t, where the wind could work its will, suore and safety were within calâ€" discance, but the drowning sailorâ€" Hewuesens Sapze c ie Paos Watnt 3 in h SSEmEE from it. ‘They realized when ) soums were opening under t no liteâ€"saving rocket would c iya tire darkness, that no lifeâ€"sa would take thein off, because a e tiovermmeut had not though i while to provide safeguards he oi & lake sailor. So after n the bravest fight recorded in 5 anuals of tm» Tukus akbsserus N Found art Anchorage M â€"2°~ CCNC SNCQd On, Dectus3e a benâ€" overmmeut had not thought it while to provide safeguards for oi & dake sailor. So after makâ€" e bravest fight recorded in the anuals of tne lake storms the the Resouute saw their sinp go ird _ then lost half their num rying to save themselbves,. ‘I‘wo rafl, the schoomer St. Louis and omuics consort, the barge P. 8. rode out tire storm and their crews of filtwen escaped. § tie terrific gale which raged ke Ontario yesterday morning, eam barge Reswute, belonging ty & _ Muller, contractors, went s just outside the western wap lLves out of the crew of tweve ost in one of the iifebouts, capsized in the heary seas ar waving the wreek. A second in â€"command oi Cant .Lons wronto despatch: The yawneil hungrily t CY Ernig‘t mt gap, cineqâ€" to the top of the wrecked i. Thomas Topping, the neer, one of thowe capâ€" the first lifeboat, clung to ) with Captain Swllivan unâ€" _ lis hold and sank from °O Nespavca: The great waves mei hungrily throughout a ud night off Toronto lsland, cam barge Resolute gained in the early hours of yesterâ€" 3. ‘The prize of the storm ip and six sailors. The Jong i been unequal. _ Tive barge rl to protect and the chances haven cut off. _ More thazn w had manoeurred to escape bombife ucce mls . 3 e schooner P. I}. Locke, tow of the lesolute, wee of the storm, and a short distance from one mast amd the top e mark all that is left The Locke‘s eraw woas Description of the Desperate Struggle for Life With the Waves. Lockes crew was rf bout towed out : Mitelsell and an anl. ‘The erew of 1is, which had aiâ€" m the storm near taken off by the pering under them rocket would come , that no lifeâ€"saving _ and No Lifeâ€"Saving Appliances Blamed for the Disaster, n‘s Thrilling Escaps on Wreckageâ€"â€" Story of the Wreck. no lhelp coubl four gap, was Wls Harry Gregory, the fireman, who was drowned, was an Englishman, who came out last spring. He was only 22 years of age. David White, the deckhand. who was in the illâ€"fated lifeboat. is believed to belong to Cleveland. That was where he originally shipped with the Resoâ€" lute. He left her a couple of trips ago. and only rejoined h8r at the canal on Tuesday. _ He was a young man. , Chief Engineer Harrison was 56 years of age, married, and also lived in Beseronto, He was well known in the Bay of Quinte and through the islands, and was for many years chiet engincer of the: pagsenger steamer, Eliz Ross: * * $Â¥ C F ons ( y Topping‘s Body Recovered. The bouy of ‘Topping, who was drowned from the improvised raft to which Capt. Suilivan owed his life, was recovered about 10 o‘clock yesterday morning, in the western chanel. _ Jt was removed into an undertaker‘s. Topâ€" ping‘s borthers at Deseronto were notiâ€" fied by telegraph, and they arrived in the city last night to take charge of the remains. _ The deceased was married and leaves a widow and two children. None of the bodies of the other victims were recovered yesterday. | the gap, but turned back. ‘Then the ’.\l:tggi" R. Mitchell, of St. Catharines, | with the lifeboat in tow, steamed laborâ€" dously out past the Locke and dropped | the lifeboat nearby. By rowing it was | brought up alongside the plunging vesâ€" i soel and the entire crew of seven people, five men and two women, were taken }nff. The lifeboat cast off and after a j long, hard pull the reseued ones were ‘landed on the Queen‘s Wharf. _ They were: Captain Barney Melntyre, Port Dalhousie; William Staunton, Port Daiâ€" housie; Harry Johnston, Toronto; Richâ€" ard Marsbhall,. Port Dalhousiec: R. Mor: rison, Mrs. Delia Ayres, Kingston; Lizâ€" zie Jones, cook. The tug Mitchell, picking up the lif»â€" boat a second time, made her way to the St. Louis, which was also f!ving a Watchers on the Island beach found the boat in which Harrison and his {ive unfortrnate comrades _ were â€" eapsized, washed up on the beach. distress signal, _ The difficult job of dropping the lifeboat a second time was accomplished, and Capt. Williamson, his crew of five, and the cook were taken off. Mr. Solomon Sylvester, one of the firm owning the St. Louis, criticized the action of the crew in leaving the schoonâ€" er. She was not dragging. he declared, and there was no need for them to come (vf'. the St. Louis, distress signal dropping the 1i accomplished, : crew of five, f\\'m anchored the schooner St !ln:\dod with coal, which had . 'llzn lake from Oswego with | wind. and sovight shelter in bel \ Tsland. Both schooners displa ea with wreckage washed up from the illâ€"fated barge. _ Trunks, bedding, ropes, spars and portions of the huil lined the beach. Out over the waveâ€" togsed expanse the wrecked â€" vessel‘s consort, the P. B. Locke, heaved hbard at her anchor ont far from what reâ€" mained of the steamer. Further south eogl in the hoid begau to make the | Â¥essti iual _ uceper and deeper â€" wicn | each succeeding wave, _ A mssing _ of i'alc.un dAud . several muffied esxpiczsions 'wm ithe now aiarmed crew thas _ tue water had reached the boulers. They llound that the doomed vessel was beâ€" ginuing to list badiy at the stern. She Was sinking fast and there was no kumc to signal for _ assistance. _ The whole _ crew hurriedly _ donued difeâ€" belts and prepared $# leave with all haste. â€" The first boat was lowered from the top of the cabin deck. Harâ€" rison, _ the _ chief engineer, _ and five others, ‘Topping, _ second engineer ; Uregory and Barnes, firemen; Neilson, the _ Norwegian wheelsman, _ and White, a deckhand, all got into it. The remaining members of the crew busied themselves with the other boat. Harâ€" rison and his comrades pulled _ away into the darkness, but they must have been immediately swamped, _ for they vanished from the sight of those left no board, and they _ were never seen again. remaining members of the themselves with the other rison and his comrades p! futo the darkness O hut y move was made to send stance. Two tugs, the W. R. ‘longing to Haney and Miller. toy Mace tried the passage of but turned back. ‘Then the . Mitchell, of St. Catharines, but it was 10 T had come vp with the cast in behind the displayed sigâ€" 10U18, Hundreds of letters from young girls and from mothers, e‘x%&r‘ vluta%? (&:hn Iay(ii:. E. Pin ‘s e poun accom lore‘ethem, have been received w the {.ydh )% Pinkham Medicine Co., at ynn, Mass. Miss Milis has written the two folipwâ€" ing letters to Mrs. Pinkbham, which will be read with interest : Dear Mrs. Pinkham :â€"â€" (First letter,) _ When a girl’s thoushts become elugâ€" gish, with hoadache, dizziness or a disâ€" roaition to sleep, paing in the back or ower limbs, cyes dim, desire for solitude; when she is a mystery to herself and friends, her mother should come to her aid, and remember that Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable Compound will at this time preparo the #ystem for the coming‘ change, and start this trying period in a young girl‘s life without fin or irregâ€" Girls‘ overâ€"ssnsitiveness and modesty oiten puzzle their mothers and bafflc physicians, as they so often withhold their confidence from their mothers and conceal the aymfiwms which ought to be told to their physician at this critical period.!}} _: ‘1@ay‘"~%. Too often thi@ is never imparted or is withheld until serious harm {:‘L! reeulted to the growiny girl through heâ€" ignorance of natura‘s mysteriovs and wonder{cl lawe and ponaltice. . Sstheg Every mother possesses information which is of vital interest to her young daughter. _ _ a 3 Mothers Should Watch the Development of Their Baughtersâ€" Interesting Experiences of Misses Borman and Mills. FROM GIRLHOOD TO WOMANKOOD b & tremendous wave struck him on the head and forced him under water. Anâ€" drew Hicks reached out and grabbed him and pulled him into the boat. Cook is in the Hospital. Mrs. Elizabeth Callaghan, the cook, was prostrated by her terrible experiâ€" ence on the wrecked vessel, and the venturesome trip to land in the boat. She had lost nearly all her clothing when the steamer went down. Yesterâ€" day afternoon she was removed to St. Michael‘s Hospital in an ambulance. Mr. E. Haney, of Buffalo, one of the Resolute‘s crew, had a narrow escape from being drowned. He was standing near the stern paying out the line of the first boat that got away from the vessel, when suddenly the iron davit on which the stern yaw! boat swings, was carried away, striking him on the back of the neck and throwing him overboard. Forâ€" tunately he fell within arm‘s length alâ€" most of the ship‘s boat that was ready to get away, for, as he reached the water VE ECRaCs oo 290 mmutes past 4, and it was halfâ€"past 5 when he was pailed out. Iie had been in the water for nearly an hour and a hali. The captain is 58 years of age, and has been in several other wrecks, but never before in one in which lives were lost. The cabinâ€"top on which he floated to safety was cast up at the foot of York street yesterday, and an examinaâ€" tion showed the wood in it to be rotten with age. Capt. Sullivan‘s watch stopped at 10 Speaking yesterday he said that the harbor facilities provided here, for a city and port of this size are shameâ€" fully inadequate. With the sea running as it was on Wednesday morning at 2 o‘clock it is dangerous to attempt the gap with a draft of more than eleven feet. The Resolute drew about eleven feet six inches. commodore of that section of the Haneyâ€" Miller service. â€" Last Sunday he boarded her in Toronto and went â€"to Erie Pa., on Lake Erie, for a load of coal for the Toâ€" ronto Electric Light Company. ‘They left Erie Monday night, with the schooner Locke as consort, in tow, also laden with coal for the Haneyâ€"Miller firm. "It is with the feeling of utmost rratitude that I write to you to tell you what your veluable medicine has done for me. When I wrote you in regard to my condition I had consalted several doctors, but they fiiled to understend my case and I did not receive any benefit from their treatment. I followâ€" ed your advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable Comgound and am now healthy and well, and all the distressing symptoms which I had at that time have dfsappearcd."â€".\lynle Mills, Oquawka, 111. Miss Matilda Borman writes Mrs. Pinkham as follows : Dear Mrs. Pinkham :â€" II1. ESCn xn‘ Aubity butwsa y dn ... s wlpicn Dear Mn._!’iq_kht{.m_;-â€" _(Second letter.) ‘"Before taking Lydia E. Pinkham‘s V. was not prepared to su)‘r whether the nciion / of â€" Newfoundland involved a tcehnical breach of the modus vivendi, the practical working of which had, however. not been interfered with. The United States had, he said, made repreâ€" sentations, which were now under conâ€" sideration. ptoms, and Newfoundland‘s Action C 3 L _ "| 4 110 2006 EORnXE Nave hneen sitot nut to the crew of the Resolute and no lives need have been lost. In the Amâ€" crican ports a sailor is sure of lifeâ€"sayâ€" ing applinaces and a lifeâ€"saving crew." MODUS YIVrENDI Government saving crew ances which shore, Lf Why Lives Were Lost. Captain Williamson, of the St. Louis, commented bitterly apon the entire abâ€" sence of lifeâ€"saving applianees, which lack occasioned the loss of life, "It ‘is a shame," he said, "that the Government does not maintain a lifeâ€" saving crew or at least certain appliâ€" ances which coull be use by those on e 4n uid in SE Ond 2 En e ose ; ud iigy Dum p(,‘(l llp against the piers at the Queen‘s Whart, and then swished around the corner, 1 hung on for al I was worth until 1 struck the booms near the stcamer Chippewa. Then one of the mates and a care taker of one of the steamers came to my assistance." Captain Sullivan‘s watch stopped at ten minutes to four, He was reseued at 5 o‘clock. His Battle for Life. "I was trying to launch one of the Yicloats when it lurched, andâ€" 1 was thrown into the water. â€" Mrs. Collkuzhan, the cook, and some of the en manuzed to get into the other boat. That was the last I saw of them. I sot into ‘a lifeboat for the second time, only to be again hurled into the water, _ Topping was with me, and after a desperate strugge we managed to get on a piece of wreckage. ‘Topping Clung to the wreckage until we struck the breakers. He dropped and was thon washed on the breakers, On the anchorage ofl/the west Istand shore Captain Sufi;mn thought himself fairly safe, but about 11 o‘clock on Tuesday evening the wind yveered around to the southwest, and a hurricane came. For a time the barge and her consort rode on the waves, but it was soon noticeable that the steam barge could longer breakwater at both gaps before } they have any more wrecks." remember â€" being _ bumned If there had been & line could have ¢s Action Has Not Interâ€" fered With It. irey replied _ that he 1 ETILL WORKING. en proper ap nlive." said Kerwin toâ€"day. He paid a name line and _ left for his Canadianr home. _ ; sizes. Cattle Buyer Declares He is Glad Atâ€" tempt Was Unsuccessful. Port Huror, Mich., Nov. 26.â€" Chaâ€" grined at his arrest on a charse of drunkenness, Martin Kerwin, a cattie buyer, of Wonsterd, Ont.., attempted to â€" commit suicide in the St, Clair eotmtz“jai!. He hitched his suspenders to a bar of his cell, slipped a loop over his neck, and was noarly (ehoked'vhon a fellowâ€"prisoner raisol an alarm, " Sheriff Moore cut him down. "I‘m glad I‘m Toronto, Nov. 26.â€"Margaret Gardiner, a twelyeâ€"yearâ€"old girl, was cleaning the stove in her home at 19 Euclid avenue yesterday, when some polish that she spilled exploded, severely burning her hands and face. The gir{ran out .in the street, and a man who was passing exâ€" tinguished the flames by wrapping his overeoat about her. Carrying her back into the house, the man called in Dr. A. 1)> Watson, who did everything possible to relieve the girl‘s shiffering. She is in a serious condition. * Margaret Gardiner Badly Burned at Her Home in Toronto. ‘St. Paul‘s is built upon a foundaâ€" tion of pot earth, under which is a bed of water bearing gravel. Beneath that again is the London clay. The danger has been caused by the gravel bed sinking, owing to its moisture beâ€" ing withdrawn. Nearly two years ago it was disâ€" covered that the cross which surâ€" mounts the dome of St. Paul‘s, nearly 400 feet above the ground, was three feet out of plumb. Mr. _ Hovenden, secretary of the London Association, then said ; The discovery probably will compel the abandonment _ of the proposed sewer near the cathedral. Experts say that the excavation for the sewer would naturally increase the risk of further subsidences. London Cathedral Endangered by Underâ€" 1 ground Railway RMoods. London, â€" Nov. 22.â€"The architect to St, â€" Paul‘s, has discovered that Luo southwest tower of the cathedral is leaning 13 inches to the souis, and that its movement to the southward has by no means ceased. The ilooding of the _ unaderground railway in the vicinity of the cat#eâ€" dral has made constant pumping neâ€" cessary. This operation, by withâ€" drawing the moisture from the soil, has caused a gradual subsidence of the south side of nudgate Hill and of St. Paul‘s churchyard. HMighland was 28 years old and his 3 wife was 22. He owned a valuable farm and was wellâ€"toâ€"do. The couple were married only three months ago, the bride being a popular school teacher of this t place. Mrs, Highland jlay at the head of the stairs, shot in the back of the neck, while her bushand lay in the centre cf the room with a bullet hole in his temple. _ The position of the bolies indicated that the young woâ€" mar was attempting to escape from her husband‘s attack when the bullet overâ€" took her. stil in evidence between her hushand | "V9"* s240 and herseli. During the day the nus. | POt@@ting band went to the town and seenr»d4 a reâ€" | 1088 and volver. _ At 5 o‘clock, when Mis,. | 88ipP8s whic Highland returned home, no fol« wed ! Koue ever her into the bouse, and in tireir sicep. | Prussia hg ing rocm upstairs the quarrel was reâ€" ; intensified newed. . Mrs, Highland‘s mother, who i Not only i was _ downstairs, heard hoz daaghuer | With «yiup: scream, and then several shocs. listers have The old ladvy ran to the hous> «f a :\vhich. in t ncighbor. erving for help. and when , tions, are 1 the ncighbors retursed with her to the |of a spirit Highland Lome, both husband and wife ; oppression, were dead. I Senkferm! the proposed purchase of ome hold furniture. _ The pair came ter words over the matter on We\ morning, the husband oppos‘.; buying of the furniture desisod wife. Mrs. Highland has been ing in the town schools, an] «& left for her work the illâ€"fee iag still in evidence between her h and herself. During the day :h Casnovia, Mich., Nov. 26.â€"Delos Highâ€" land, a wellâ€"known and respected farmer living a half mile west of town, on Weodâ€" nesday evenring shet ard killed his young wife of three monihs and then ended his own life with the saimc revolver, The double the Hishland Had Quarrelled Over the Purchase of Seme Furniare. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Nir Edward Grey‘s choice ought to be "as unfettered as the initiative of the American President‘s in going outside the ranks of professional diplomacy to send us that brilliant line of represenâ€" tatives, admirably continued Â¥y Withlaw Reid, who have been for the last genâ€" eration among the most persuasive and influential figures of our own social." KILLS WIFF ie AND HIMSELF = } London, Nov. 26.â€"The Daily Telegraph , this morning devotes a two columm / leader to the importance of properly fil | ling the diplomatic vacancy in Washingâ€" | ton, and says the government never had | a more important and rarely has had a l more difficult task than finding a sucâ€" , cessor to Sir Mortimer Durand. What is wanted, what in the strictest sense is ; necessary, is an unconventional ambasâ€" ;. sador, The time has come for a notable ! bg‘eal_(__\\'ilh_ all formal traditions, and |] |MODEL MAN WANTED AS BRITISH _ AMBASSADOR TO WASHINGTON. TRIEP® TO®KILL HIMSELF. STOVE POLISH EXPLODED. ST. PAUL‘S OUT OF PLUMB. tragedy â€" farmi hom betweesg ageay fook place at 1 home, aad folow» tween the vair ver chase of ome houseâ€" The pair came to L‘tâ€" lacsday iz the 164 b_\’ 1.5 teach uns enemeens aonminnemnmnmems sns v.as she 18 Danger of Sequestration, London, Nov. 26.â€"The relations beâ€" tween the Pope and France are likely to cost the Church of France the loss of ten million francs a year from one single source, This is the fund for perpetual masses, _ which brings in over $2,000,000 a year; and has done so for a hnudred years. Catholies on dying have left sums to be invested, the interest to be deâ€" voted to saying masses in perpetuity, These invested funds amount to over 20,000,000 frances _ or _ over £40,000,â€" 000, _ On ine 1l1th of next month, . if no public worship associations â€" have been formed under the church and the State seperation law to whom _ the money can be transferred in trust, it will all go, into the hands of the Govâ€" ernment. As it is extremely unlikely that Clemencelu’l‘ or any other _ French Government " will give orders â€" for masses to be said, the money will lie in sequestration and the church _ will find itself deprived of the revenue. Firunc, an Italian, was found guilty of the murder of a fellowâ€"countryman Snoe ane oo c N is c an ced i on P ~ Ching has put zn of opium into force. named~â€"Angiello at the Port Arthur Asâ€" Then be started i passing through the . so maiy lives were | venture occurred reow attacked in his fathe savage Ho!stein bull. be could escape, the { gored him and czuse CiiURCH MAY LOSE BIG INCOME, Fund for Perpetus!l Msscen in Tramaâ€" few burns, but that was ond accidenrt was when in between the top of load of hay, It was a but he was shoved off to safety. Weilington County Farmer Has Had Many Narrow Escapes. A Guelph, Ont., despatch: Four times durine the nast few omonths hae Maiesty‘s roval make itsolf kno deeds." _ Nenkicwiez denics that the Polish unrest is promoted, as the Prussian officials contend. by political agitation, and he declares that the school laws arc persecution, He adds:; "Year by year the martyrdom of the children grows heavier, and the sound of blows and weeping is lovuder and frequenter in the schools. _ The measure is overflowing, Its overflow brings with it. besides God‘s wrath and the indignation of men, your own disgrace as well." After referring to the great wars waged by the Kaiser‘s ancestors, the letter continues: "In your day. sire, there is but one momentous conuflict, that wnf! MELIDLEH Kheweskt, 5orgk _ ansv, uf time ilate. l cree of d‘rovideno over one Constue: 444 wat digss [‘ briusn Ambassador at Washington will ! |have to face a movel and stimulating !sittmticn, Germany‘s representative Rarâ€" on Speck von Stermberg, is "one of the most able and most popular figures in ‘the diplomatic service of any country," | while France never has been better rcâ€" |presented in Washington than now, othâ€" ‘er diplomatic corps possessing "no more ‘brilliant and engaging figure than M.| ‘Jusserand." The paper points out that | ‘ both these diplomats sr:re President ‘Rossevelt‘s enthusiasm for a strenuous {like. Sketching a "picture of the un®tâ€" | | tainable," the Telegraph says the ideal J should combine John Morley‘s literary | . :reputation, Alfred Lyttleton‘s n|hl<~ta‘c,1 prowess and Lord Charles Boresford‘s I poprlar tmeperament. "Whoever he may l 4 be." the paper says in conclusion, " he 1 will have one of the noblest cppur::ufi-, ties ever opened to a man." 4 upen seitver to duimperor MWily nodnutiag Prussia‘s treatiment c especutiy in counection wilth t questiou, wiuch has allcady bec; NOVELIST ADDDRESSZS OPEN LET. TER TO EMPEROR WILLiIAM. Evil and Wrongdasing Neced Redress, He Declaresâ€"He Denies That Folish Unrest is Promoted, and Asks for Justice. London, Nov. 26,â€"HMenry Siecnkicwiecz, the weil known Polish noveljxt the sanr to iitish ter continues: _ "In ere is but one mo at of mighty Prus ot omiy have their c ith «yimpathy, but y« ters have answered i hich, in the eves of a ldren Conrtinuing, the paper British Ambassador at ° have to face a novel â€" RGHNING CHILDRFN BEARS CHARMED LIFE . _ Om one side and on the nthe etter concludes: *s roval and Chr Gouidit . ie ecter P1 wC u\'ap.’l Wwites ulsmer iinilzs: tarted for the Northw gh the Azilda wreck. w ddi vugae 2123585 vere lost. The dlast adâ€" 1 recently, when he was father‘s barnyard by a bull. This time, before the frenzied animal had ceoused serious injurics. cn edict against the use rench n ish nove.st n «rance in Willinan, bt m CA Ape‘s ad â€" and | bridge â€" she n the | grabbed her wing, ; tle girl ser Glod‘s | tention of « your #ide of the Th unkno ware j the bridge, Mr. Ziegler withdrew in 1903. Thereâ€" after the count sought other money lenders. The countess was unable to speak _ French fluently, and _ conseâ€" quently the count was obliged to run ;he houschold, even to the laundry ists. Pope Approves of Cardinal Lecot‘s Dioâ€" cesan Associations. Paris, Nov. 26.â€"The Pope‘s approval of r‘d‘? Diocesam Associa fi::,e formed by Cardinal 1 Archbishop of Bordeaux, according m Matin, arrived yesterâ€" day. It is added that if the Pope proâ€" nounced it to be in accordance with the canons of the Church it furniches a possible solution of the association quesâ€" tion under the Church and State separaâ€" tion law, as Minister of \\onh'lp â€"l‘irri;;; has already accepted the Lecot schome as legal, Netted $4,200,002 Debts in Five Yearsâ€" Looked After Laundry Lists. Paris, Nov, 26.â€"At the continuation of _ the Castellane creditors‘ suit it was stated that during the first five mn of the count‘s marriage 41,000,â€" france were spent, The income was only 20,000,000, leaving debts of 21,000,000 franes. Miss Sehnoider gave var for the shooting, asserting # was revenging hersel{ for , fessional â€" malpractice, and said that the doctor had «t ideas for French waists w1 designed. Woman Fired Fiv nave . been half and at present venture out,. the n tle girl screammed, which drew t tention of some yourg men on th« side of the bridge, Th unknown man ran to the « the bridge, jumped into the rive started to wade across, The polic sent for, and in a few minutes t tire foree was on the seone, but â€" A Nineâ€"yearâ€"old Girl Assaulted on a Bridge. A Belleville despatch: A few minutes before 6 o‘clock toâ€"night a little girl, nine years old, named Dorothy Macâ€" Keown, had been over the etroct on a message,. _ She was returning to her home on Coloman street, across the river, when in the middle of the lowe: bridge she was seized by a man who 1( Strong efforts are being m: influential Moderate quarters rante some workable comprom with this Object in view a de: of prominent persons intereste education question toâ€"day ow the Archbishon of Canterbury . beth Palace, The Primatc, in a Jong rep} feesed himself anxious for a schools will be reed elementary _ schoo formists are so in of Lords amendm hiandred _ Nonconfo Parliament already morial _ asking t promptly reject ail the Upper House, deadiock and an it tween the two Ho erates on both sid avert. | Delegation Waits on Primate to Sock | Compromise, As amended } the bill is wholl Government and House of Commo it has become f; since it requires instruction be 1 that it contained the spirit of Rule, the House of Lords this struck out the clause in the tion Bil empowering the e; ment of a Central Educational cil for Wales. The bill was th« ed through its committee stage having oceupied 15 days in its sion, or longer than any other ; measure in the House of Lords. LORDS PASSES EOUCATICXN Big r‘im CASTELLANE FINANCES A SCGLUTIQON AT LAST 11 UTBAGE AT BELLEVILL ent already have signed a asking the Government ly reject ail the amendment per House. This would mes k and an inevitable conflict the two Houses, which the : on both sides are anxious rl TRIED iment aroun me frankly denomi quires that unjess be given in _ th be recognized _ as schools, _ The °* so incensed at th imendments that « onconformist mem}b 1\ omimons wholl y' unac re and gener said he was promises in ie objections han hbave th "ive Shot Aimed A most leput unaceeptable to the majority in n might eornest ition co ummati Jays in its dis any other prev e of Lords, the Upper H« wh n tt] ho y v in n a¢t 9« mbers it 1 diff ntroy ther en stru m ty tio h H t] n vy 1 M n 14 U the B

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