*Al-I.. OVER .P'R|N¢>E EDWARD : iloimm 'D ua $5 l ' me - _gg 'U _“£5 “cc E i< sf EF _£2 25 4 ;lr¢gi_ W Evra HARRY .fir ~ 2 i~ ~ -‘ ' ` ”§’f..f.1“f.i`i‘l‘..Z" nil nnuiii turn 7 sinnin ns ”§I.‘§fiilZ°..f.llZl“ _ ~ . - dence lldduced tF ill ya f$ea§lan ol_‘-Pre- 0|: _MAGN:M'E'§ _ '*°°“"““ "°" iii. ninnn _........... ....‘I.. .1 l.l........... ,,,,,,,,,-,E,, uisiinii b Special to The Guardian. _ HAVANA, ,June --4.-Ciprlano Cas ls- ____ .l_ iro, the .deposed President of Vene:'Rep0rt of to Advancg Special by Telephone. _bluish wound. Colin not tell whether 'IIBS sflfl\lgfl|l8880] 'w0ddld Gt The Northland Burned a zuela could not be found in the stea GEORGETOWN June 2-The pre it was a fresh br se oi otherwise mer Lagmti which reached hem 1”? Reyes Causes C0ilCei°n liiiiinary hearing|ln the ease of the At 12.30 Court' k recess for one st' Andrews' A Dock in Buffalo: Result ,light when the detectives board gli her to search for him. 'et it is full believed that Casti 0 to,Madero’s Party f,‘,‘§f,f,§",{ff,,M,;'f,‘,_,§',f“' ,f','°‘f,§‘_°,'g‘_“ '°"’f’ .'“"`"' “V S0¢iul_Eiienl- of an Oil Explosion. Y Y ' K _ _ was UH? DHSBBDSBF-W\|0 Under an ns- l The following testimony was sub- ’ AFTEHNOUN SESSION- ' --'- -_ sinned .name boarded the. steamer at llllltelp nndiz and disembaiiked at Laspalmas. I 'l‘llI[lier was present when body was re oved to casket. Found the body in the kitchen lying on boards resting onltworboxes. Saw wound below knee; it; was about one- qilaijter or one eighth of an inch wide and about an inch long. There wus a tinge of blood on the finger nails, and there appsired to- be sand or clay on the palms of the hands, also some substance which did not come entirely off at the first wiping. " She had no rings on her fingers. There was a ribbon around her neck There wan a small mark at the tip of the nose. another on one side of the jaw, and a dark mark on othe forehead. ‘The eyes were partly closed. Saw a small mark at top of shoulder, run- ning up and down. Saw spots of blood on the pantry door about seven inches down from the i'oller. Saw a stain on the kitchen floor near the stove. It appeared to fbe milk. Saw some sewing work on the machine. I burnt the waist and stockings taken off the body. A piece of rope about a yard long was picked off the lounge by Mrs. John McBetlJ, and Mr. Moly- nesux senior said it was kept for the inquest, but there was-. going to sc none, and we conented it should be pfit in the\stove, whiclrwas done. It must have been Mr . ‘ohh McBeth who put it in the stlivsnl-lad n`o im- portant conversation with the prison- er. He said that only for the poor little children he would as soon be with her as where he was. I said he must look for the best. He made no reply. He showed a card he got ask- ing him to go for a pig and said, “If I had been .at home this would not have happened." When Mr. Campbell asked if there -were any marks on the body, that was the first intfmation that I had that there might be trou- ble in the matter.. _ (li-oss examined by Mr. Stewart: The mark" on the shin was a dark bruise and might have been made by striking something while walking. I thought the bruise on the face might have _ _been made by contact with the door while hanging. The pantry is a small narrow room. There was a sink it in along the wall, and when open the door would strike the sink. There was a shelf in the pantry near the cell- ing. Harry Molyneaux, (sworn.) Examin- ed by' Mr. Johnston. Have spoken to Dr. Barnes and mv grandfather regarding this case. ice- member the night my mother died. Elsie and I and Arthur and the babv were home that night. Mamma was home all that day. I found a brass bell which had been lost, out in the woods by the house after school hours. I told father I found the bell. The bell was lost a long time. This bell was brought from Charlottetown by maininn. There was a little trouble home about the bell. I was told that mnmnia blamed Grandpa for stealing the bell. I went to hed that night sf- ter slipper. It was kind of dark when I went to bed. Mamma and .papa were separating_the milkiln t.h_e__l§it- (Continued on page 3) O"II“nsiinrnfrcnrrisrm Special to The Guardian. ` Windham Beaiiclerk of Montreal Rev. Father ()’F‘lagherty oillciated, mony and was attended by the Up- per Canadian visitors and residents of the town. ` The newly married couple will re- main here for some weeks. nina iiuin ii iii crisis sciniuii 1. OTTAWA, June 2-The first of the taking of the census in Ottawa brought to light an error in schedule seven which it is feared gave rise to difficulties in every city andtowii in the Dominion. It was discovered by Dr. Cross, one of 0f.taws's Commis- sioners and immediately brought to the attention of the Department which has issued a. bulletin to all Commissioners, and may cause the first day's work to be gone over again. At the heading of the schedule seven it reads as first issued: - “Values for agriculture only.” See- ing this the City _Commissioners eliminated. the form from their work. On the sehediile,.however.--is -ironi- umn providing for farm and urban values, which of course covers city properties. The schedule is being cor- rected to prevent any difficulty. N0 GROUND FOR. COMPLAINT. Replying to the objections of the Metropolitan Bridge Company, a Bri- tish firm regarding the manner of awarding the Quebec Bridge contract, it was said in official Government 'circles today thae the Company had no ground for complaint. The charge made was that the Government ac- cepted tbe tender .of a Canadian firm which did not bid on the type of bridge called for, but on a railway bridge. The design of F/ngineer Vatu- let called for rail, horse and foot traffic accommodation on the bridge, but the two othet engineers on the Commission objected to his design, and in calling for tenders the Gov- ernment gave the tendering firms per- mission to siibmlt altenatlve de- signs. One of these alternatives was accepted, and the British firm had the same privilege at the Canadian. AUBTRIANS PROSPERING. R. De Yourstowski of Vienna, an ofllcisl of the Austrian Government, is in the Capital today interviewing officials of the Dominion Government with reference to the conditions of his fellow countrymen in Canada. He called on Earl Grey, but failed to see His Excellency who is out of the city. .The Austrian Emissary was reticent as to the exact nature of CONDENSED Aim=|il`isi':‘ni=nia Special to The Guardian. ALGONQUIN I-lC’IIEK, St. An- BUFFALO, June 4-The passenger drews, June 4-On Saturday Miss steamer Northland, owned by the Alice Shnughnessey, daughter of Sir Northern S. S. Co., was burned at Thos. Shaughnessey, was married to her dock here early today. V She was being prepared for suninier service on the Great Lakes. A reception was held after'the cere- The fire WHS ‘me U9 Lin €XI»'l0'Si0Ii of oil and resulted _ in a damage of fully a half million dollars. ISCHEIH STICKS NEW YO-RK, June 2.-Henry A. Seheib, the only suspect nrrested in the bath tub murder case continued his fight for freedom today. 'l‘lie chauffeur sticks to the story that he knows nothing about how his wife‘s body came to be in the tub at the flat they had formerly occupied and in a state of decomposition which in- dicated that death had occurred four months ago. Three times freed and four times arrested Scheib through his attorney is seeking to reach the Supreme Court today with another writ of Hsbeas Corpus. Now he is held on definite charge of ilrst degree murder whereas there was no serious charge against him yesterday when the Court felt obliged to grant his re- peated application for freedom. " Since then, however, evidence has accumulated, Connor O’Grady, of Springfield, Mass., has identified him as the man who married his daugh- ter under the name of Hugh Allerton Sherman. The coroner’s physician says he has satisfied himself that thc dead woman was _Mrs. Scheib, or "Mrs, Sherman" regardless of her husband's admission of her identity. He has not determined, however, what killed her, or whether chemi- cals were used for the destruction of the body. . his`interviews with Canadian offici- Canada, all prospering in their adop ted land. He goes from here to Win- nipeg, and will later tour the West. A-FTER THE C.P.R. 'A. B. Low, and S. J. 'Pegg, of St. Louis, respectively president and sec- retary' of the International Brother- hood of Maintenance of Way employ- ees will be in Ottawa next week to ed the length of sections served by wages promised last December have I] y Canada r ll] HIS Slillll Before ~fdagistrate’s Court at Georgetown Evl- M ln E i l - 3.. ¢ i i F I Special to The Guardian. OTTAWA June 4-A cable from t liondon that the Imperial Conference had voted in favor of complete naval anatomy for Canada is given consid- erable weight here in the Government circles, though the officials directly concerned in the matter are in Lon- don and therefore no statements from their' side could be secured. The Canadian Naval Bill makes it clear that the navy shall not go to war unless the periiiission of Parlia- ment is first obtained, although the i'i'iine Ministci- points out that when Britain is at ivnr Uanalla is at war. This is considered probable, that so mncli talk, has asked the confer- ence to define exactly the. position of the Canadian Navy in the event _of Britain becoming involved in hostili- ties with any foi'qign country, nouns win _ ini wnuinnl _.___ lil?tn iamfjiiar Pliriisflii fectiedelby the adverse trust decisions, Saturday the Norfllunibeflmid 1°” The temperature at three o'clock Euston Bt. v 6j5_<_12W- The second match bcf.wcen_ the ith I.ieut. J. A. S. llnycr...... Hugh Quill;-‘i M PF ll m,‘_Gnei.. ns rspiiear 'I aon't know. I am not thi' P01* B* 9-20 ii- ""- '°’ P‘°“’“ this morning was forty iiesrces il- .AR`N1No, take nouns that any. Regiment nnd cns oiisrinciccown uw- ‘ir-_‘L Kfiniiriiy-»--~~ _ e, . an _ , ne,_(lnelph_ The lglmljl-sn mr;-|¢¢1 over a gambler. I have never gambled in witll_P&5*5“£;‘8ars,t 11|;-i`g)llt, ¢Sl\l>el‘elies!ta‘I;g bovo zero. d mt WI psi-gon tr-sspsssing on my pro- llllm llllle Club ln The Gllnrdien cup |l\;I;_i.i