The first article identifying what would later be known as
Crohn's disease, by Polish surgeon
Antoni Leśniowski, was published in the weekly medical newspaper Medycyna.[9]
The
Paris–Madrid race for automobiles started from the gardens of
Versailles. The race became notable for the number of accidents, including at least eight rumored fatalities. It was cancelled when the competitors reached Bordeaux.[15]
The Australian passenger-cargo ship SS Oakland foundered in stormy weather in the
Tasman Sea near
Cabbage Tree Island off
New South Wales; 11 people lost their lives and the remaining seven were picked up by the steamer SS Bellinger.
On departure from
Antwerp, carrying emigrants to Canada, the British passenger-cargo ship Huddersfield collided with the Norwegian steamer SS Uto in the
River Scheldt. All 22 passengers were drowned, but the 17 crew survived.[16]
Died:Marcel Renault, 31, French racing driver and industrialist, of injuries incurred by crashing into a tree while competing in the
Paris-Madrid race.
^Foreman, J. (1906). The Philippine Islands, A Political, Geographical, Ethnographical, Social and Commercial History of the Philippine Archipelago. New York:
Charles Scribner's Sons.
The first article identifying what would later be known as
Crohn's disease, by Polish surgeon
Antoni Leśniowski, was published in the weekly medical newspaper Medycyna.[9]
The
Paris–Madrid race for automobiles started from the gardens of
Versailles. The race became notable for the number of accidents, including at least eight rumored fatalities. It was cancelled when the competitors reached Bordeaux.[15]
The Australian passenger-cargo ship SS Oakland foundered in stormy weather in the
Tasman Sea near
Cabbage Tree Island off
New South Wales; 11 people lost their lives and the remaining seven were picked up by the steamer SS Bellinger.
On departure from
Antwerp, carrying emigrants to Canada, the British passenger-cargo ship Huddersfield collided with the Norwegian steamer SS Uto in the
River Scheldt. All 22 passengers were drowned, but the 17 crew survived.[16]
Died:Marcel Renault, 31, French racing driver and industrialist, of injuries incurred by crashing into a tree while competing in the
Paris-Madrid race.
^Foreman, J. (1906). The Philippine Islands, A Political, Geographical, Ethnographical, Social and Commercial History of the Philippine Archipelago. New York:
Charles Scribner's Sons.