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Show Ghastly Discovery in Siberia I :: x 4- . , BY GEORGE PHASER. j- Special Cablo to Tho Tribune. r ST. PETERSBUUG, Aug. 20. Details have reached here of a shocking X T discovery, which has been made in a deserted inn in the Siberian hamlet of X A. tiiezgor. Some time asu a man named Domlclzoko. on bolnc di.scharccd X after BervIiiK a term of Imprisonment, secured a mnall nutate, on which .j. I Blood an Inn. TIiIh Inn. In duo course, became a harbor of refuse for J. Hunted criminals, tho lnrger number of whom were "wanted" for thefts of Kpld from the mlnen In the nolphborlnp district. The niKltlvu.s received 4 T lUi V,?,h,"ul3 f Domtelzeko both food and shelter, in return for which they . paid him in pold dust. At nlprht time, when the criminal had enjovi-d the 4 kfopor s hOHpltallty throughout the day, and was preparing- for bed, Do- V Y mlelzeko would mix a powerful narcotic with wine, and when the unsus- ! T re-cling Kuest had fallen asleep he was calmly murdered and robbed of ev- T Y ery particle of gold In his posseB.slon. 4-T 4-T , Tl,e corl?se5 ot o luckless men thus victimized were preserved bv the T T Inn keeper In barrels of suit, and It was us well for oach successive "guest -r that never till the day of his death did ho know that It was from the T j ghastly contents of these barrels that tho Inn keeper prepared his suests T meals. Ho succeeded In keeping-tho secret of his lardor until he died, T t and It was not until the police commonced to mukc an inventorv of . tho T J. (,JSCE' . ,nn lluU 110 ,md thc slightest suspicion of the whereabouts of somo T X of their most searched-for criminals. The total number of his victims Is T 5 not known, but tho barrels, with their awful contents, show that It must T X havo been considerable. T .1 A terrible case of lynching in mportcd from the Vintka provinco of X j. eastern Russia by tho Central News. A group of peasants, who noticed 3. T I . ar"iynI of ,l atnneer In tho village of Polosovka. called upon him to 3. halt. The man did so. but he also fired upon the villagers, who then roc- Y ognlzcd him us ono of the most daring horso thieves known to tho prov- 4-T 4-T IF00-, Dlt-"nlned lo punish him for his misdeeds, thc peasants captured 4 Y the Intruder, and Inllclted horrible tortures upon him, until ho guvo the 4- Y names of somo of his accomplices. Thon the fiendish cruoltv of the -aveng- i Ing mob knew no bounds. Horso whipping was tho mildest of thu punish- V T mun?. luillcted upon tho captives, and some of thc acts wore indescribable. T X Ihe scenes lasted not one, but two or three days, until tho governor T j son I a. detachment of troops to assist the local ofilcials. who had been so T overcome by tho horrors they had witnessed as to bo Incapable of effective T Jt icpresslve action. |