Plymouth Tribune, Volume 2, Number 42, Plymouth, Marshall County, 23 July 1903 — Page 6
MM. IS EMPHATIC
Kischeneff Petition Incident Is Closed So Far as Uncle 1 Sam Is Concerned. DOCUMENT DEOLIBED BY THE OZAB V7hcn Asked by Kiddle if It T7ould Be Received. Committee or the D'nal D'rith Informed of the Fact Te-t of ; the Paper Russia Was Aaktd to Consider. Washington, July 18. Secretary Ilay has sent the following letter to Messrs. Straus, Wolf and Levi, the committee of the B'nai B'rith on the petition to the czar: "Sir: I am directed by the president to acquaint you that this department Is informed by the American embassy In St. Petersburg that the imperial government of Russia ha declined to receive or consider the petition in relav CZAR 07 RUSSIA.. tion to the condition of the Jews In Russia which was addressed to his majesty the emperor by a large number of citizens of the United States, and which this department, by direction of the president nnd at your request, undertook to transmit to its high destination. I am, sir, very respectfully yours. . JOHN HAY." Makes It a "Closed Incident. - This makes th3 celebrated petition to the czar a "closed incident and nothing more will be clone except to complete the petitions and file them with the archives of the state department. On July 15, following the conference of the Jewish committee with the president at Oyster Bay, a dispatch was fcent to the United States charge d'affaires at St. Petersbu: g. Riddle, In which he was Instructed to ask audience of the Russian minister of foreign affairs and communicate to him the fact that the president was in -receipt of many petitions relative to the Kischeneff atrocities, a copy of the petition being also cabled for presentation at the same time. Hassla's Reply I Emphatic Riddle sought the audience the same day and was informed by the Russian minister for foreignaffai s that In view of the publications which had appeared In the newspapers the Russian government wished to notify him that the proposed petition would not be received under any circumstances, and that this resolution of the Russian' government was taken independently of any consideration of the substance or the terms of the petition. P2rririotr is made public Text of the Document That the Czar Was Asked to Rerelre aad Consider. The petition is addressed to "Ills Imperial Majesty, the Emperor of Russia," and is as follows: "The cruel outrages perpetrated at Kischeneff during Easter of 1903 have excited horror andreprobatlonthroughout the world. Until your majesty gare special and personal directions the local autho.ltles failed to maintain order or suppress the rioting. The victims were Jews , and the assault .was the result of race and religious prejudice. The rioters violated the laws of Russia. The local officials were derelict in the performance of their duty. The Jews we. e the victims of Indefensible lawlessness. These facts are made plain by the official reports of, and by the official acts following, the i lot. "Under ordinary conditions the awful calamity would be deplored without dee fear of a recurrence. But such Is net the case in the present Instance. Your petitioners are advised that millions of Jews Russian subjects dwelling in southwestern Russia are in constant dread of fresh outbreaks. They feel that Ignorance, superstition and bigoiry, as exemplified by the rioters, are ever ready to persecute them; that the local officials, unless thereunto specially admonished, cannot be relied on as strenuous protectors of their peace and security; that a public sentiment of hostility has been engendered against them and hangs over them as a continuous menace. "Even if it be conceded that, these fears are to some extent exaggerated. It Is unquestionably true that they exist, that they are not "groundless and that they produce effects of great importance. The westward migration of Russian Jews, which has proceeded for over twenty years, is being stimulated by these fears, and already that movement rs become so treat as to overshadow in magnitude the expulsion cf the Jews from Spain and to rank with the exodus from Egypt. "No estimate is possible of the misery suffered by the hapless Jews who feel driven to forsake their native land, to sover the most sacred ties and to vrunder forth to strange countries. L'dther U it possible to estimate the rnl3ry surTered by tliose who are ua--tttTAhz cr unatla to leave the land of ttc!r tirth: who must part from Zz:z.li c.r.3 relatives who emigrate, L3 rcnain in ncvcr-cndlna tcrrcr. tztzzzi even ttin vtzt. i 4, . , , . . .
ble and just; religious persecution is never defensible. The sinfulness and folly which give Impulse to unnecessary war received their greatest check when your majesty's initiative resulted in an international court of peace. "With such an example before It the civilized wo: Id cherishes the hope that upon the same Initiative there shall be fixed in the early days cf the twentieth century the enduring principle of religious liberty; that by a gracious .and convincingexpresslon your majesty will proclaim, not only for the government of .your own subjects, but nlso for the guidance of all civilized raen, that none shall suffer In person, p.operty. liberty, honor or life because of his religious belief; that the humblest subject or citizen may worship according to the dictates of his own conscience, and that government, whatever its form or agencies, must safeguard these, rights and immunities by the exercise of all Its powers. "Far removed from your majesty's dominions, living under different conditions and owing allegiance to another government, your petitioners yet venture. In the name of civilization, to plead for religious liberty and tolerance; to plead that he who led hU own people and all others to the shrine of peace will add new luster to his reig.i and fame by leading a new movement that shall commit the whole world in opposition to religious persecutions."
FOUR DAYS OF RIOT Impels Chicago's Major to Issue a Proclamation Mob Tries to Impress a Rtraet Car Chicago, July IS. The riotous conduct of the strikers of the Kellogg Switchboard company and their sympathizers during the last four days has impelled Mayor Harrison to Issue a proclamation urging all people to remain away from the scene of the trouble, and calling upon the rioters to cease from their work. Heavy rain prevented the necessity of dlspering mobs, and the work of handling freight from the plant of the Kellogg company was not interfered with as much as on former days. A mob was chasing a wagon of freight from the Kellogg plant on Taylor street and finding itself distanced in the chase members of the mob boarded a street car and ordered the motorman to hustle and catch the wagon. He wanted his fares, and they refused to pay so he stopped the car. Then the mob wrecked it and would have killed, the crew, probably, if police had not come to the rescue. There have been no further developments as to the teamsters, and Pretldent Young has not yet made his demand on the Edison company to cease supplying power to the Kellogg plant MAZZONI SIGNS A STATEMENT Gl ren the Exact Condition or Ills Dlstlngalshed Patient as lie Sees the Same. Rome, July 10. Dr. MazzonI, In reply to the question, "Can the pope lecover?" gave the Associated Press correspondent the following signed statement: "At the present moment the disease of his holiness has lost its character of absolute gravity which it had at its acute period. It might be considered to have entered the period of a possible solution. This might occur In a man of strong fiber and young, but It is impossible to entertain such a hope in the case of a man In his i4th year. With him the physical energy absolutely Indispensable to: recovery is lacking. "Pope Ieo's organism is perfect, and as such maintains itself after ninety-three years of never-Interrupted work, but his motor force Is no longer sufficient for the complex functions essential to life. In other words, the ninety-three years of Pope Leo XIII b ing him Into that category of extraordinary longevity when life Isdestined to flicker out independent of the action of any pathological complication. The only service that science and affection can render Is that of struggling to have this precious existence preserved to us as long as possible . POPE OAS NOT GIVEN CP HOPE Thinks the Trouble In Ills Chest Will MPass On la a Few Days." In the evening his hdlness complained of a slight uneasiness in the chest, but that he has not yet completely given up hope was Indicated by his remark that he expected the oppression of his chest to "pass off in a few days," which he made to Secretary AngelL During the day the pope drank a few drops of the healing waters from the shrine at Lourdes, several bottles of which were sent to the Vatican by the French bishop In whose see Lout des is situated. A local paper gravely announces that from the moment Pope Leo swallowed the water an improvement in his condition became apparent The doctors are well nigh exhausted with their unceasing cares. Dr. Lapponl, in particular, spends his entire nights as well as days -in the sick room. Just before midnight his wife, wishing to see him, went to the Vatican. She was taken to a corridor near the sick room, where she saw her husband for a few minutes. An important case now before the tritlsh consular court in Rome requires the presence of Dr. Lapponi, but this is impossible because of the pope's condition. When Dr. MazzonI was asked. "Is the end Imminent?" he answered: "It cannot be called so." "Then Is it near?" was asked. To this Dr. Mazzoni replied: "In order not to make a mistake let us say it is not far distant. During the day the pope was delirious, reciting Latin verses and crying out in fear. At 4 p. m. this delirium passed away. - ' Called to ?eet at Winona. Boston, July 17. W.T. Hartshorne, af this city, chairman of the executive committee of the International Sunday School association, has issued the official call for the annual meeting of the committee to be held at Winona Lake, Ind.. Aug. G-10, 1003. Grave Charge Against TIalow. Petersburg, Ind., July 17. Hovey H. Tislow, member of the school beard, has been arrestee charged with buncocteerlng in a fect race at Colorado Springs, Colo., last Gcptcber, vLa which Frnnk C. Lcry, cf this f l-cr,
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World's Fair Board AUyo and Un hurt Because It Was in a Hurry. CLOSE TO A BOILER EXPLOSION While Looking at Quarries Husband Forgive- a Wife Who Cnt His Throat. Bloomlngton, Ind., July IS. What might have been a frightful tragedy, though it only resulted In one man being seriously injured, was the closing scene in the visit of the Indiana World's fair commission to the stone fields of Monroe and Lawrence counties. The commission had just completed a two days' tour Inspecting the fifty or more quarries in the stone dist:ict. and was preparing to leave the famous . Parry, Mathews & Busklrk quarry, when a boiler of a channeling machine exploded, and one man, Willlam Payne, was dangerously Injured. The members of the commission and the reception committee were on the ban lis of the quarry, about fifty feet above where the explosion took place. How Near Thej Came to Trouble. The narrow escape can be appreciated when It is known that with few exceptions thecommissionhad been going down into the qua. lies about the channeling machines for observation, but owing to the lateness of the hour and the anxiety to finish the work, the party viewed this plant where the accident occurred by walking about on the outside banks. Without warning there was a terrific report that might have been heard for a mile, and the t ha under was blown f.cui the track, and before Payne could escape the machine had fallen on him. Holler Ulew Oat at the End. Only for the iron rim at the top of the boiler he would have been Instantly crushed to death. Fifty or more men who were at wrk rushed to his assistance and rescued him. Had tL force of the explosion torn loose the sides of the boiler instead of blowing out the end. thus preventing pieces of iron being . thrown into the air, there would have been many Injured, both among the visitors as well as the workmen. Board Cheers the Resuers. Tayne's home is at Oolitic, and he is 25 years old and has worked at the quarry for a number of years. When the unfortunate man was released the members of the fair commission gave a hearty cheer for the heroic effort of the workmen in saving the man alive, for in a short time he would have been burned to death. SflE RAS A FORGIVING HUSBAND Wife Cats Ills Throat Wilfully and He Will Do All fie Can to Ac quit Her. Munde, Ind., July 18. As soon as his severed windpipe was patched up sufficiently so that he could articulate, after having been cut and slashed by his wife in an effort to kill him, Chilstidn Reck gave Instructions that his wife, now in the county jail for the crime, be given every possible consideration, and that she be furnished with everything that money could buy to make her comfortable. Barring septicaemia, or some similar complication, physicians think Deck's chances for recovery a;e good. Mrs. Reck made the, attack upon her husband with a razor, on account of jealousy brought about by the gossip of her neighbors. She had intended to kill herself, but her husband wrested the weapon from her. Beck condones his wife's crime, saying 6he was not In her light mind or she would not have done It. It Is likely the state will have to make its case against Mrs. Deck without the testimony of the husband. Constitution Wins a Race, New Haven, Conn., July 18. The Constitution won from the Reliance on time allowance In the first run of the New York Yacht club, cruise of thirty-even miles from Glen Cove to this port. The Reliance led the Belmont boat at the finish by fifty-nine seconds, but. she had to allow her rival 2 minutes, 17 seconds. The Reliance beat the Columbia 7 minutes and 21 seconds. Declaration of 'Longshoremen, Bay. City, Mich., July 18. A declaration of principles was made by the 'longshoremen at the convention of the International 'Longhoremen Marine and Transport Workers' association to the effect that they regard as inimical to their interests any vessel owners not belonging to the Lake Carriers association. British Soldiers in South Africa. London, July 17. During the discussion of the ai my estimates in the house of commons War Secretary Brodrick said it had been decided to keep a force of 25,000 mo permanently In South Africa, whence reinforcements could be readily dispatched to Int"a in the event of an attack on the frontier. Death Uay Cheat Ulm of tils Bride. Indianapolis, July IS. Miss Alice Smitlr, a young woman living with her mother, Mrs. Esther Smith, near Cumberland, was terribly burned and she is row. lying at the point of death. Miss Smith is 20 years old. Her marriage to Ephriam Jeffries, a young farmer, living In the neighborhood, had been set for a near date and she was preparing for the event when the accident happened. Chane for the Panama Trexty, Washington, July 10. Dr. Thomas nerran, the Colombian charge, has received advices from friends In Bogota that the chances of the ratification of the canal treaty have improved greatly in the last few days. Cetil Quarantine HatisJ. Boston, July 1G. The quarantine placed upon ccttl-j in this etata'last November because cf the outbreak cf foot and mouth disease has been r moved.
KILLS AIIO DESOLATES
Tornado Brings Death and Havoc to a Section of the Prairie State. NINE ARE ON THE ROLL OF DEAD While XTineteen Others Are Reported To Ba Mortally Hurt. No Nvs from One Town Said to Have Been Wrrckrd Property Worth C2.000.000 Said To Be in ltulns. Chicago, July 18. There were unconfirmed reports that the town, of Gardner, In Grundy county, has been destroyed by a cyclone and many people killed. All wires leading to the town are down and no definite Information can be secured. St.eator, 111., July 18. A tornado killed five persons, Injured a score of others, and caused a property loss of $2,000,000. The dead are: Harry Doyle, Nels II. Blvens, It. Turcell, Charles Snyder and William Brown Jjolored). All but Percell were killed at the race track. New buildings had just been e.ected, and the races were to have been given week after next. Nineteen Fatally Injured. The following a.e reported fa tally injured: George Doyle, Mrs. Doyle, Bessie Boucher, Charles Snyder, Fred Crono, Mrs. Crone, Mrs. Smith, Miss Smit.i, Captain Peabody and wife, Ralph Boucher, Mrs. Henry Pease and baby, George Hunter, George Doyle's little child, th.ee children of A. J. Dargherty, and a man employed on the latter's farm. A score or more are reported to have sustained broken bones. Workmen Saved by Early Quitting. The first damage reported was the stripping. of the covering of C. 11. Schurmau's Ice plant, about two miles west of the city. The. wind to e away the roof and sides. It next reached the river and cut away the trestle of the west side of the Three-I bridge. About a block away was the western Vulcan works, erected at a cost of $loOf000. This factory was blown to pieces, not a wall being left standing. About fifty men are employed here, but had stopped work for the day about an hour befo.e. Only one man, Kit-hard Purcell, the night watchman, was in the factory and he was killed. Smashes Another Factory. A quarter of a mile northeast was Stauber's clothing factory. This factory was also razed to the ground. About 100 people are employed here, but they had all left a half hour before and no loss of life occu.red. Passing on the tornado caught a number of small houses, wrecking some, turning others half way around, twisting huge trees three feet In diameter and breaking them off at the base. At the dairy farm of A. J. Daugherty, on the edge of the town a house was blown down and several who were In It at the time we e badly Injured. Two Parks Are Kntlreljr W recke 4. Not a building is left standing. All of the buildings at Electric park were destroyed and the fence and amphitheater of the ball park were blown away. Staubers pants factory was blown down and all the stock" was ruined. The hoisting works and buildings at Spring If ill shaft were ruined, many buildings in Kargkley, fou miles west of trer.tor, were blown town and several persons were Injured. FOL K MOHZ: KIZ.LEl AT 51 KN DU I A Nine Others In.'urcd and Wreck aotl Uulo fur Eight Mites. Mendota, 111.. July IS. Four person.were killed and ten ethrrs jiiiously in Jured by a tornado, which struck the northern part of this city. The ath ol the siorm vss about ei.ht ml.ts ii length. . - The known deed are: Cera Holtdorf aged 15; Cia Luuy. rgid It': fcchamel (boy), acd 13; Schäme (boy), aged i. "he irjr. ed Mrs. Joh: Wtrschrm. M-:s Wachem. Mrs. L5cs:i Milllgau. Zq tn.e Milzau. Alice Wilson. Eda Austin. Jau.es n;llh, ITenrj Schweiber rrd Mis. Jr.mes i-miili. Besides the a Love uailv every mcir ber of the Bcisfo f frmHy wns in jured. Tiny totk refuse tn tht'.r te! la.' to Cr-eupc- t lie sloti 'ihe Leu fell In on ihim. . Death and lains et Other Points. Peoria, Iiis July IS. Lmln-ton end Campus, two snu-.ll towns on the Wabash railroad. sv.Se ed se verely from the storm. At Emington several houses were utterly demolished and four people wtie seriously if not fatally Injured. At Campus one man was killed while two ethers sustained injuries which may prove fatal. Gave Olm Folsan for Medicine, St. Joseph, Mo., July 18. Major Andrew Itussell, for many years prominent in militia work in Kansas, was killed at the state hospital for the insane here by the accidental administering of a dose of carbolic acid instead of medicine. O. T. Laftwlch, one of the most faithful attendants of the Institution, gave the poison to the patient and in live minutes he wag dead. - " . Would Kilt ttio "letl W -on. Milwaukee, July luVOwners of driving hoises, especially at the summer resorts, will try to have the traction engine law of this state applied to automobiles. Under this law two men must go ahead of an engine and twe behind to warn horsemen who may be on the road. Such a regulation would practically prohibit the use of automobiles ii sthe country districts, ronnd f. ilty of Grave rto'ibery. Ncblesvih, Ind., July 17. Hampton West was found guilty of grave robbery. ThV law fixes the punishment ct from tlircs to trn years' lmprin-ment
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