TERROR IN SYDNEY
A BOMB THROWN "BY'A PUSH. A SENSATIONAL OUTRAGE. A bomb thrown into a passage at Mrs Louisa 1 Burns's street, two doors from Reservoir street, Surrey Hills, Sydney, at about 12.30', o'clock dn Tuesday week, exploded, the result being that a door and portion of the ceiling were blown into the street. Mrs Burns, who was sleeping in a room close by, was partly stunned. Her sons, Leslie and Frank, 12 and ; 14 years respectively, were upstairs, and were so alarmed that they stayed in their room until neighbors arrived on the scene and induced them and Mrs Burns to co outside. b The sound of the explosion woke hundreds of people living in the locality, and for a while a good deal of excitement reigned. Considerably frightened men, women, and children rushed into the street. They soon learned what the trouble was, whose house had been bombed, and they all .seemed to know why it had been attacked. Mrs Burns, it appears, was suspected of having given the police information which led to a raid on a slygrog shop. But there was no one, because of the fear of what the gang would do to them, willing to impart any information to the police, and the perpetrators of the outrage are still at liberty. They are known but no evidence can be obtained against them. Only the previous morning at 12.30 o'clock a woman was attacked) on a vacant piece of ground not very far from Mrs Burns's house. ■ She was outraged, so neighbors say, and then robbed of a gold bangle, a brooch, and a half-sovereign. She screamed loudly for help, but before anyone could go to her assistance she had been badly treated and robbed. One man had the that is something in the locality— to chase the men down a lane, but he was unable to catch them. The woman refused to give her name, and went away. On Christmas Eve a man was beaten up in a house of questionable character in the vicinity, and tossed out on to the roadway with very little clothing on. Bloody was pouring from his wounds, and the man was in such a bad way that someone got hold of him and had him driven to a hospital, where he was attended to. The affair was hushed up, for the very good reason that members of the gang who frequent the place would have dealt out punishment to anyone passing the word to the police. Only a few nights ago, in Reservoir street, not far from where the man was shot in an hotel last Saturday week, a bomb was exploded, and the residents of the street awakened from their slumbers. To be Toused from sound sleep is nothing for people living in Reservoir street, or the streets crossing it, as every night tho rioters explode fire crackers. They are mostly all in a drunken condition during their spells of terrorising the residents, and they seem to care little whether or not there is such an organisation as the police force. ...
An officer of the Police Department, when spoken to about the matter, stated that it was impossible to obtain any evidence from the residents to convict the gang, the members of which, ho stated, were well-known criminals. r
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Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 16051, 1 March 1916, Page 3
Word Count
553TERROR IN SYDNEY Evening Star, Issue 16051, 1 March 1916, Page 3
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