1 -M- answer-.sc fmsawa no 1'" uluuill smlu. _ usl null Milf if , lll-Mllllllli Pllllll CllUlllll1 I _ A A Slllilllli lllll .' _ _ ____ _ » _ ' ___ First Lordof 'file lidmlgcltyln tlfoducesSupple-- MH ' _.__ ' ;BAL'I‘IMORE, Md., July 22- The gitatemeht that Captain E. J. Smith, °l'l1l1l8nder_ of _ the ill-fated Titanic, Lis not drowned, but was seen Fri- ‘day morning in Baltimore, is made by Peter Pryal, 5 retired marlner of this city. who was quartermaster on thesteemshlv Maiesuo of the white Btar line thirty years ago when Cap- tain Smith commanded the vessel: Pryel said that he had not only seen the captain, but talked with him. Pryal also said that he saw Captain Smith last Wednesday morning but -was skeptical as to his identity, and to confirm his belief that the captain was alive, went to the same spot on Friday morning and again saw the captain, and walking up to him, im saéiill, “Captaé;l Slltllth; how are you?" 6,11 80,001' ng o ryal, the man answered “Very well, Pryal, but 'wee don't detain mo, I am on busi- B . Without realizing whathe was do- ing. Prvel followed the mah. who lu- UPF l19l18l1¢,a ticket to Washington. Sllll llflll IN Mllllll lllllllfllllll |_i,"i "_ . ____ MEXICO CITY, July 22-According to reports which have leaked out, a number of passengers in the second class coaches of the passenger train which was attacked by Zapatlstas be- tween _here and Cuernavaca Saturdav were burned to death when .the rebels set fire to the train/ More than six- ty people- were killed and many were wounded' in the assault and it had been reported that the thirty passen-‘ Kors in the second class coach were shot down but it is nom said that ggly were slain outright. l* and at t e rest perished in the flames. A strict, guaril_ha__s been placed over alleurvivore since their arrival here. The Zailatistas robbed dead and liv- ing and looted the express car. Among the first to fall was the ten-year-old daughter of Capt. Rosen- do, Nuns. She was sitting near a Willdbw and the first volley from the attack band literally riddled the child with bullets. A Spaniard who was on the train, a land owner in More- los, known- to the rebels, had a nar- row escape, when a priest interceed-_ ed for him and he was saved. Wit- nesses say the priest walked into the thick of the fray. and sought out Dalao, the leader, and said to him "Genevsve,. what are you doing? “Would” you have thu bloodof in- nocent people on your soul?" The ex- ecution was then stopped. _ ' TY-PHOID IN OTTAWA. ` o'i"rAw.A,,July za-The water si- tuation in Ottawa has suddenly as- su rl a most serioussspect. A typ- hots; epidemic is abroad in tho city. Only aifcw days have gene by since "the Medical Health Officer issued his warning tothe people to boil the water, and already the situation is perilously near that of last year in the beginning of the epidemic. It will be remembered that matters ultima- tely bccame 'so gl'ave`that about twelve hundred cases of typhoid de- veloped and about ,sixty deaths re- sulted. , . Only 3, few days have elapsed since the water was declared polluted and already there are at least sixty cases of typhoid in the city. There are 23 certain cases in the hospfte/ls and several inspected cnscs. Besides these there are many cases being treated at home. ` ` san e'ronM IN Nunsou. f`Nialisoff, B. 0., July zz-several 'persons aresald to have hour' drown- ed, the city weigh scale lbuildinz WM isvglledin the groilnd, bosrdlngs were picked-`up.-bodily and carried scores of feet, street, cars' and houses were stiiudkfbf ghtning, and gardens and ,ibn s‘dw;;euda'ma¢'ed bycgq te; "I ' ,.°"l.“»P“l' 5 ‘ .iirhilfiimhrs oi llghiulrs. which rw” ovir r Nelson -shout 8 r°'°lgfl\° '” ANADA. WEDNESDAY M RNING gl1.y_24__ 1912 ' riaerofw- lrllliEi”L`il”`i LONDON, July 22-In the Privy Council chamber at Whitehall today the clawing remarks were heard li. an aplleal which will undoubtedly rank as historic in the annals ol Canada. The famous marriage law 0550 lllvolvilllz the principles of the Ne Temere decree of the Roman Catholic Church. The case cams b‘¢. fore Lord Chancellor Haldane, Lord Loreburn and Lord Hals'bury, ex. Lord Atkinson, Lord Shaw and Chief Lord Cliancellor, Lord lvlcunughtou, Baron Pallas. This morning Wallace Nesbitt Opened with a formal recital of the grounds of appeal. The first question, for the court to decide. he said, was Has the Parliament of Canada au- thority to enact in whole or in part Bill 3 ofthe first session of the twelfth Parliament of Canada? The Lord Chancellor-That was an Act entitled. An Act to amend the Marriage Act, ` Mr. Nesbiglifcs and the Bill pro- (Continued on page 6.) ulunullll c _ ulllul null sHlPPus <- OTTAWA, ` July 23'-The depart- ment of trade and commerce will probably take action against cer- tain Canadien shippers, based on complaints received from the old country that dried apples marked fancy evaporated have been found to contain seeds and cores below thc top layer, which consisted of high V ciugu products. POPE lvius'r REST. _ . -,-_ , ROME, July 20--Following the Pope's participation to-day in the ceremonial of the ninth anniversary of Leo XIlI's death, his doctors or- dered l’ius to suspend all public aud- iences, and as much otha; work as possible during the‘rest o the sum- mer. His condition is not alarming, but the physicians say he must have rest if he is to survive heat. AUSTRIAN EMPEROR IS D\ING. VIENNA, July 22-'Upon the aged and feeble figure of the Emperor Francis Joseph the oyoe_ 0! Hll EMO-l penn diplomates are xlow\’-llrnod in deewoncern, not mingled with alarm and ncertalnty. To all those brought in daily con- tract with him it is becoming M0" and more evident that the span 0! life of the venerable monarch is rap- idly drawing to a close. UD *-0 ~ 16W months, even a fcw weeks B80. the ggi,” of fps Emperor has lost .none ol' its stalwart uprightness and sold- ierly bearing. He had lost little if any, of the inordinate indllstry and capacity for work which had made him one of the most remarkable of all European r\ll0l`B- And then, before 11"! 01"’ C0111” realize the change, the familiar liz' the touch of a wand into that of n shrunken, stoopfng fr8i§i1° Bh°“ 01 B man. Gone; is the precise 'military step, gone the splendid poise and lm- posing presence which made him kim!- l_v even among kings, and in place is the shsmbling. loose shuffle. the Worn wandering, furtive look of one Who feels that he has somewhat lost his place ‘in the world. r The-signs nf`thu approaching ond have set all Australians .asking What is to hs the future of their country. of the shllltv of the Archdvke ~Ferf1.- nand the heir apparent. to hold to- gether the ‘various provinces and races which so to make up the dual monarchy there is considerable doubt. Disadectlon, long sm0ul“|0\'\D8 ‘fl Hungary and among the various Bl`sv races and held ln'clieck' only bv tp, aged emperor, will, it is feared. burst with his death into a. flame which may bring about the destruc-_ tlon of the government. ‘ _...___- urc seemed to have changed as bv, -pnmn-ii. 'liuiment curse cernt in row. I rilirms iliilus; lull LONDON, July 22-Right Honor- ablc Winston Churchill the First. Lord of tile Admiralty, introducing in the ll-louse of Commons this afternoon the Bllllplcmentary naval estimates, said that the direct cause of these addi- tional estimates was the new Ger- man naval law, which he proceeded to examine in detail. Its main features, he said, was the increnseimthe strik- ing force of ships of all classes im- mediately available, and its general ellect was the maintenance iof four- fifths of the German navy in full pcr- mancnt commlission. This meant that it Wag constantly and instantly ready for war. Such preparation was re- markable and, so far as he was n- ware,'found no example in the pre- vious practice of modern naval pow- 'ers. The German plans, he added, ln- Vol\{ed a remarkable expansion of strength and efficiency. Mr. Churchill, discllssinl! the gen- eral question of the growth of mod- ern navies, said that cool, steady and methodical preparation prolonged over successive years couls alone raise the margin of naval power. It. was use- less flinging money about on the impulse of thc moment. The strain we should have to bear would be long and slow. No relief could be gained from imlpulsivo and erratic action. We should leurn from our German lilelliliatler ill Wallace NesbiltOpened With menmry Num.-_ljEmmqtcsfpri-min*-tg 4 Representative Germans Ans- »llllaird;~Tlun.l¢'wa= Seen in# A Formal nuclei oferouuur Supremacy Must ‘Bullilihi0r#'ShipS#Exp'an- 1 1 ' ~ wer Englishmen And claim MC"5‘o°fB“'""‘°'t" °fAPP““' ' ` ‘dlturee Will lie Enormous A »-iiliii. liiisi Almost F-___...... ml- "I:.'_&f-`~f-34-1- . rw. v ,,,,.-r