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Show YOKOHAMA 10 THE HER Pathttle Story of a UN CIH Who Had Been New York. Iurcnso Berry, a car-fntof West Medford, Mass., baa Identified as that of bis daughter Ella the body of the young woman who committed suicide on Wednesday of last week In the Hotel Manhattan. ho was a stenographer In her home town. er Mr. Berry declared that the ptiblica-Crow- n Non of an untrue story In a Boston Harry Ifohman, I pof Hammond, Ind., scion of a wealthy IJwr a year ago that his daughter run away with a married man was f amity, angered because his fiancee cause of her self destruction. The of the (had married Charles Jeannette, Steger, 111., on Sunday, in the presence next day, Mr. Horry said. It turned of many persons fired four bullets Into I out that she had merely been on her vacation alone Althonch the rai- -r heart anJ then killed himself. a retraction. Mr. Jlerry ad- I Miss Ida Taj lor had been betrothed.published ed, the njliry done her was great to Hohman for five yo,ars, but two I and she never recovered from it, but weeks ago she was married to Jean-- grew more and more downhearted Inette. llobman came to Crown Point an,1, niorosoIt Is now stated that a letter had Saturday and secured a room at the been received by the family from the hotel where the Jeannettes stayed. girl. In which they were notified by Mrs. Jeannette her that she had died to put au end Sunday afternoon went Into the back yard, and Hohman to it. "I cannot bear this false stain upon followed her. As she turned her face my character," she wrote to her fathto him Hohman drew a magazine re- er, "and I see nothing else left for volver and fired four shots at the wo- me to do than to kill myself. Please man. As she fell dead, amidst the forgive me and believe that I would not do this thing If it were not that I tartled cries of the summer boarders am nearly out of my mind with grief .who rushed to see whence the shots and horror at the awful story which came, Hohman fired two bullets into everybody seems to think is true. The man with whom Miss Perry his breast and fell dead beside the wo,was charged with eloping suicided in man's body. June. Point, Ind. br - CRUISER RIDDLES STEAMER TUG.! CANADIAN PAYING Of SWITCHMAN'S BLUNDER IIFE FaUely Accused of Eloping With a Married Man Scion of Wealthy Indiana Fara ily Slays Unfaithful Fiancee During Her Honeymoon TWELVE KILLED AS RESULT THE SCENE OF HER DEBTS. Over Five Thousand Men Attack Po lice Station and Custom House When Troops Are Sent For, Loaded Passenger Car on New York Elevated Railway Leapt to the Pavement, Cringing Sorrow to Many Homes. Yokohama Toklo. Adi lees from New York. The death lit of Monaay that a riot oecurred there shortly after midnight Tuesday night. The day accident on the Ninth avenuo elevated railroad, when a car crowded xnot) was divided Into two bodies numbering alnust r,roo. mostly coolie, with early morning worker on their boatmen anJ outcasts. Eight police way down town pitched headlong into the street, elands at twelve. Threo boxes were demolished and burned. The mob directed its attack against men are In hospitals wtth fractured three objects: The police stations, skulls. One of thee, who as yet unidentified at UMvelt hospithe residences of the custom officials tal, Is unconscious and not expected and the large commercial house. Four hundred troops were sent to live. More than two score of per-muw ere Injured, many of them serfrom Toklo on a special train, a little before dawn to suppress the riot- iously. The cause of the accident and tho ing. Six hundred Italians, prisoners Immediate tesMmlldlity remain to bo from Karnfuto. who were staying at ascertained. The motorman on tho tho different hotels, lime been placed wrecked train U a fugitive, whilo a tinder a special guard. During tho riot the jvdlce used drawn swords, switchman, conductor and four guards while the ni4b was armed with pis- are under arrest. tols and sword sticks. The casualties The switclim.iu is charge.! with manamong the police were three severely slaughter and tin trainmen are held aw wounded and thirty-seveInjured. w It nesses. The motorman. expecting a clear Nlnty slght of the mob ate under arrest. track on the direct line of the Ninth Tho mob set file to the police boxes avenue, without regarding tho warnby soaking hats in oil. firing them ing signal that the switch was open, and throwing them at the object of rushed his train along at a high rate of attack. speed. The first car sw ung around tho been restored. Quiet has apparently right angle rune, holding to the rails because of the weight of the train beThen the strain became too TEXT OF ARMISTICE PROTOCOL. hind. great. The couplings broke, tho secAi Signed by Russian and Japanese ond car was whirled ab.nu almost end for end. and. ft the horror of those Envoys at Portsmouth. who looked on from below, pitched into I5ndon. The Japanese delegation the street. on Wednesday evening gave out the The first indication people on the had of the accident was a Russo-Japanessidewalk armistice text of the loud rumbling along the overhead protocol as follows: structure. Looking up they saw a "I. A certain distance as a zone of shower of sparks. Then followed splindemarcation shall be fixed between ters and the sound of splitting timthe fronts of the armies of the twe bers. Suddenly the outer guard rail powers in Manchuria as well as in the of the railroad structure gave way, a region of Tuman river, Korea. score of bodies were hurled through "II. The naval force of one of ihe space, and witli a deafening crash the belligerents shall not bombard terri- car fell to the street. For an instant tory belonging to or occupied by the It stood fairly on end. Then the sides other. gave way as if they were made of "in. Maritime captures will not be pasteboard, belching out a mass of hususpended by the armistice. manity. "IV. During the term of the armisThose passengers who had not tice new reinforcements shall not he jumped from the platforms and win-dodispatched to the theatre of war. before the plunge came were Those which are already on their thrown into a mass at the forward end way there shall not be dispatched of the car. As the injured men and north of Mukden on the part of Japan, women were struggling to free themor south of Harbin on the part of Rus- selves the heavy front trucks of the sia. third car on the train fell almost, in V. The commanders of the armies their midst as the car itself jumped and fleets of the two powers shall de- partly off the elevated structure and termine in common accord the condi- was wedged against a building at the tions of the armistice in conformity southeast corner of Ninth avenue and with the provisions above enumer- Fifty-thirstreet. ro-mai- ns is e Abolishes Retaliatory Duties Upon American Imports. St. Petersburg. The Imperial ukase Russia Fourth Attack in a Week on Poachers Lake Erie. Erie, Ta. The fourth of tho fish tug Incidents of the past week took Erie Sunday, when place in mid-lak- e the Canadian cruiser. Vigilant, riddled the big steamer tug, Harry G. Barnhurst, with small shells from the rifle on the patrol boat. Captain Nick Fasel of the tug admitted after he escaped that the Vigilant could have jsent her to the bottom if Captain Dunn had so desired. They ran more than eight . miles under full head of Bteam before they crossed the boundary line and escaped from the In JUMPED OVER A CLIFF. abolishing the retaliatory duties on American Imports was gazetted Friday and was placed in imediate effect at all custom houses be telegraphic orders from the ministry of finance. The ukase is as follow's: "Acting on the recommendation of the minister of finance, Sept. 7, the emperor has decreed: "First To revoke the order placing a high duty on certain goods of United States origin which are included under sections 82, 150, 152, 153, 161, 167B and 173C of the general customs tariffs for European trade, and to revoke also the necessity for showinj a declaration of origin and manufacture. "Second This order shall be published in the index of laws and telegraphic instructions shall be given to all customs houses to put it into effect at once. The imports affected by the foregoing sections include raisins, tars, finished and unfinished cast iron, wrought iron and steel manufactures thereof, such as boilers, tools, sewing machines, agricultural implements, traction- engines and gas and water These are now importable Pieters. under the general European tariff, and after Jan. 1 under the schedules of the . Chief of Cavite Outlaws Did Not Wait to Be Pushed. Manila. Felizardo, chief of the outlaws that have been active in the province of Cavite the past year, is dead. When surrounded near the border of the province of Bantangas recently by the constabulatory, Felizardo jumped over a cliff and was killed. His death, it is believed, will end disturbances in Cavite. On January 24, 300 ladrones led by commercial treaFelizardo and Montalon attacked the pew Russo-Germaties. town of San Francisco de Matabon, looted the municipal treasury of Fatally Shot His 12,000. killed Contract Surgeon J. A. Noblesville, Ind. Henry Ebberts, ONeill, and abducted the wife and one of the most prominent farmers two children of Governor Trias. of this section of the state, shot and Noted French Explorer Dead. Daniel fatally wounded his a at hour late Paris. The minister of the colonies Young Sunday night, has received a cable dispatch from at his home four miles southeast of the governor of French Africa an- this city. The shooting is the result nouncing the death of Count de Braz- - j of bad blood that has existed between I for some a, the explorer. The minister noti- - Ebberts and his I is whole affair surround6ed Countess de Brazza, saying that dewith and the perhaps France had lost one of her most glo-- ail 0j mystery, . in the struggle rious citizens. Count de Brazza was moonlight will never be known unI returning from a special mission to I less the wounded man recovers Africa to investigate charges ciently to tell the story of the meet-- f cruelty against natives. He was ing with Ebberts. But his recovery is doubtful. attacked by dysentary. - n Son-in-La- son-in-la- son-in-ia- w .....led I suffi-Centr- al d ated. "VI. The two governments shall INNOCENT MAN HANGED. order their commanders immediately after the signing of the treaty of After Carrying Secret Thirty Years, peace to put the protocol into execuOne Suicides. Guilty tion. The protocol was signed by M. Minot, N. D. The following note has Komura Baron Baron Rosen, Witte, been found on the body of a suicide and M. Takahira. Dear Mr. Byer: In the early here: seventies Charles SI oi ling, supposed BRINGS JOY TO JOHN. tram)), was tried for the murder of Liz- Chinese Driven From Home by the zie Grombacher, a beautiful young woman residing near Youngstown, in MaWar in Manchuria Returning '-- Droves. Manchuria. Whatever Liziapudze, be the feelings of the Russian or Japanese soldiers regarding thp conclusion of peace, one man welcomes it with and beaming unreservedly Bmiles. This is the Chinaman, on whose land the war was fought for nearly eighteen months. Today the roads around here are filled with happy, smiling Chinese, men and women, old and young, who, in clumsy carts, loaded with their household goods), are proceeding in long lines back to their old homes. The Chinese greet the Russian soldiers with the one word "Peace, which is repeated over and over again. Many of their homes have been dein vastated, but, notwithstanding, they express their joy at getting hack into peaceful and industrious occupations. honing county, Ohio, lie was convicted on circumstantial evidence and wa hanged for the crime in the county jail at Youngstown. Charles Sterling was an innocent man. I am guilty of the murder of that young, girl. Charles Herzig. KEEP THEM GOING., Armenians Went Home, Sent Back. Will Be Deported. Boston. Advices have been received at the local immigration office that 500 Armenians have been gathered at Har-poo- t and 200 at Malatia, Turkey, and thrown into prison to be deported to this country. The prisoners, it is said, are all returned emigrants, some of them having gone from the United States as far back as ISOS. |