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- ‘4-*~‘v—fl—"~”_—————-'<flmw—-—'—w'——_‘ —— Another Vain Attempt of Suffragettes to cure Audience with Premier Asquith gDttt BT V25 WILD NIGHT SCENES IN LONDON . res Several Thousand Policemen Surround House of Parlia- ment—Militant Suffragettes Smash Windows of Gov- %! ernment Buildings with Stones Wrapped in Pape Folice Inspector Gets His Face Slapped. London, June 29.—The thi vain attempt of the militant su: ettes to obtain access to Pramier As- quith by deputation resulted in excit- ing scenes in Parllament square to- night and the arrest of more m e hundred women. 8 parliam hall at 8 o'clock sént a deputation, headed by Mrs. Parkhurst, to endeavor to see the prime minister, who had previously decided not to receive the deputation. - Deputation With Police Escort. i i i E tion under commend Mra. d it was recefved by ul:; the deputation arrived at eshen's-ontrance to parlia- i1 oot et by Chief Tn- spector Scantlubiry,¥ho Fandet Xt Parkhurst a letter from “he premi regretiing his inability to receive the deputation. Angrily throwing the ietter on the ground, Mrs. Parkhurst exciaimed: “[ stand on my rights as the king's sub- ject to enter the house of commons.” And she endeuvored to force an en- | trance. Mrs. Parkhurst Slapped Fao The police tried to induce the wom- ment Inspector’s \ ALUMNI DAY AT YALE. ngs of Graduates—Two Memorial Tablets Unveiled. New Haven, Conn., J;m- 29.- —A}u:nm at Yale was one of especial inter- ::t'ta graduates today, as there were many ntuqfim out of the ordinary, Mémorial hall n\i #nno was made that Cvrneum Vanderbilt has founded a memerial fund to Dean Wright. Tomorrow Presidene Tlft will honor the commencement exercises in Wool- sey haH with his presence, coming as a fellow of the corporation and march- fhg with the other fellows in the col- umn . which is formed on the college campus. Last year President Taft marched in column for he came here for the reunion of his class of 187§, and in cap and gown followed the great mace which always precedes the cor- tion and the university officers. mideflt Taft will be a speaker at the alumni dinner in the afternoon..Amonz those whom he will see here will be his brother, Charles P. Taft, who is for his ‘class reunion, the class of "64. Thers will be given at the Yale com- mnt tomorro;v 814 dm;alll ex- as follows: BR Bt S hy 200, lor of ne s fmmw-r of Laws 77, Bachelor K Civil Law 1, Bachelor of Divinity 2 Masteriof Arts 83, Master of Laws 1! Master' of Sciemce 3, Master of Oivil 7 1, Doctor of Med- e ctor o jcine 15 and Downl Philosophy 44, BOSTON RAILROAD HOLDING CoO. e ansce s Ll g Vote to Purchase Billard’s 110,000 Shares of B. -ni M. Stook.. Boston, June 29 —At the first mes fng of the Boston Rallroad Holding company, an organigation incorporated by the last legislature to settle the rail- road situation in this state, it was voted to purchase the 110,000 shares of Boston and Maine stock now held by Jobn L. Billard of Meriden, Cona. The Incorporators algo admitted two Beston business men, Theodore C .Vail, president of the Aluthm Bell Tele- phone company, and Philip Dexter, as members of the comm, incorporators adepted by-laws and elected the following officers President, Frederic C. Dumaine of Coneord, Mass.; vice president, W. C. of Boston; secretary, Robert M, Butmett of Southboro; clerk, C. F. Choate, Jr., of Southbero. SEVEN WIFE BEATERS JAILED. Claim That the Hot Wave Is Respon- sible for the Assaults. ‘Whiting, Ind., June 29.—Seven men ‘whe were taken tuw_hul md-‘{ for beut- ing their wives will plead in coi that the hot wave drove thi to ls- sault. The most sertous of the at- tacke made was by James Brown, who threw a shoe at hu ‘wife and tore off one of }ar ears. He was fined $25. Returning Nome last night he beat hi wife so flercely that she prebably will die. He sald his anger against her had been heated to frenzy by the weather. The other six alleged wife- beaters also charge thelr rage to the ‘weather. Annual Congress ef “Descendants of the Signere.” New Haven, Conp., June 29.—An- nouncement was matle here today that the second amnual congress of the “De- seendanty of the Signers” would be held in Philadelphia July 4 and 5. Sun- day service will be held in old Christ church, at which Rev. George Wash- hfll Dame will take part. On Monmday the members of the so- will take part in the patriotic of the city, and in the after- will be hela This meet- the hell In Taft in New Haven. M for com- versity, his ‘Waeh- or New aven. Hi ‘the com- mencement auuim at Yale t:'u'r- Wfi%‘m "I £ M left Caxton M | ment en to disperse quietly, ud ‘then bapn to take the members of the by the arms and lead them away. To e surp o the surprise of the were massed around the entrance, Mrs. Parkhurst. slapped Inspector the face, knocking his cap in the mud. There were cries of “Shame!” and sev- eral of the inspectors told the suf- fragette leader that she had no right/ to do such a thing. A moment later another member of Solomon, spector’s ond ttme, while others made mined to rush the cordon of police. Eventually the entire deputs- | placed under arrest. tion was Attempt to Force Underground Pass- age. time a second deput accompani By this: some hundreds of. the under from wemh'l'gaubfld‘e This, too, was unsuccessful, but for two hours the whole district was in a state of up- roar, the police dispersing the crowds! and arresting women by the whoiesale. { Windows Smached. The winds v of the govern- builcl ™ smashed with, stotes W Japer. Promuiz..t \Wohen Arrested. Altogether 112 women were arrest- ed, ivclutting Mrs. Parkhurst;, -~ Mrs, of - | Solomon, the Honorable Mrs. Haver- field, daughter of Lord Arbinger: Miss “gesaon, daughter of Tady Marges- Miss Maud Joachim, niece of the violinist, and many other prominent ‘women. FORMER PRESIDENT ELIOT Elected President. Emeritus of Harvard —Talks of Presentation of Fund. Cambridge, Mass., June 29.—Former President Charles W. Eliot of Harvard university has been elected president emeritus of the institution ,aecording to announcement made tonight. The honor was bestowed on Dr. Eliot yes- terday by the Harvard corporation at the regular meeting. It was stated to- night that- there is “a. stipend con- nected with the honorary on a percertage of his salary ‘a8 pres-’ ident, but the amount was ot made public. Reports were current throughout the alumni meetings and class reun- jons today, that Dr. Eliot will to- morrow be presented with a fund, the proporitions of which are said to have reached nearly $500,000. The subscrip- tions have been secured from gradu- ates and undergraduates of the college since a few weeks after Dr. Eliot's resignation ‘was firet announced. The reports as to the oresentation and the size of the fund could net-be confirmed tonight. RED MEN WILL HAVE BIG NUMBER. Headquarters Secured at Froehlichkeit Hall—Many Odd Fellows Coming— Other Celebration Not: Tecumseh tribe, No. 43, L. O. R. M., has received word that three other tribes of Red Men will accept invita- tions to participate in the parade, and headquarters for the order have been en ged in the Froehlichkeit hall on jan street. Practically all of the Red Men in the parade will be in cos- tune. Arawana tribe from Middletown will be here with 35 braves, who will arrive on the 9.25 train Monday morn- %1" with a drum corps. The tribe from terl yis coming with probably 25 or 30, who will be mounted if they can find the horses. Nonowantuc tribe from New London is the other one to take part. They will have from 35 to 40, of whom 21 will be mounted. A camp has * been engaged for them on Thamesville park back of the Thames- | ville school house, where they will pitc htents and stay till an hour or so before the parade. Big Assembly of Odd Fellows. Uncas and Shetucket lodges, I. F., which have sent out Invita- tions to all the sixteen lodges of the order In the eastern end of Connectl cut to join with the two Norwich lodges in the parade, has heard from several that they will be here with delegations and the Norwich Odd Fel- lows are expecting acceptances from The following have accepted: Narragansett of Westerly, Mohegan and Pequot of New Londen, Thames of Montville, Goethe of Taftville, Wau- seon of Stafford Springs, and Fair- view of Groton. As all five cantons in the state have also signified their in- tention of being present in numbers, it will be a big day for Odd Fellowship and the two local lodges will hold open house in their hall in the Olympic | bullding. Fine Programme of Sports. The committee on sports has held two meetings this week at the office of itg chairman, Dr. D. J. Shahan, and reports that it can promise the finest programme of twnd judging from the list of entrie: tn these are all filled out there will be probably a total of 100 athletes to compete next Mon- day morning at the Fair Grounds. Of O. e enietor Gheet B8 oii oo paws 1 of Norwich, - Afteb her death he mars the professional clasees, and the bal- ance in the amateur and schoelboy novice svents. A plan numbers to be wern by all cont ts, with a score card index, has been adopted, which will make it an easy thing for «ll spectators to identify the competi- tors as the evemts are run off. In some of the events, notably on the amateur list, there are big flelds to ht for the prizes, as many as 15 or 20 entrles being on the list in some of the events. As an athletic attraction Yor «the afterneon. of Tuesday, the tation M”Jfl others, and an attempt was made to reach the house ef commons thpough dcchuud fire-lnm. June 29, —Bo bs were :fl midnight last night in two Iy one already ‘was empty, but the other was cuzded and the sudience “was fhtows o, paat. | mmmflm munmmm One man was fatally wou ‘Willemstad, ~Curacao,- June n here today that . one of the banks o! mmuull. nmct‘:yfl fled and, came to ca0. Evdwn tm-urnd to another steam- er which is nows carrying him beyond Venezuelan tetion. STATE NO.'TAL BILL BOR CURRENT EXPENSES Passed, /by House for $108,600, and Will Now Go to the Senate. (Special te The Bulletin.) |, Hartford June 28.—The house pass- ‘ed_the appropriations for the current expenses of the Norwich hospital for the insane reported by the appropri- ations committee this morning. and which are as follows: For current expazuu. $15,000; for support of pau- pers and tndmnmnune $93,600. The bill must now go to the senate. COUNTERFEIT TICKETS. 250 Disposed Of for the Yale-Harvard Baseball Game. New Haven, Conn., June 20.—Julius Robano, Abraham Cutter and Louis ‘Weiner, all of this city, were arrested today. charged with counterfeiting tlckm for the Yale-Harvard baseball Robano when arrested had sev- eral STl ot the tckets ia bis nossesaton And it ‘is believed that at least 200 admis- sion tickets were sold for 50 cents apiece, The men claim that they se- cm the tickets from Cambridge, be- ing part of the Harvard allotment, but they are of a different color and size Jrom, those sent. All three men are held under $2,000 bonds each on a charge of forgery. VERDICT OF $300 FOR THE PLAINTIFF. Suit of Harringten vt. Downing Last o Be Tried at This Term of Court " In the superior court on Tuesday the case of Harrington vs. Downing et al, a, suit over a monument, which wi ‘started last week, was completed and the arguments made. Following Judge Case's charge, the jury took the case in the afternoon about four o’clock and rotumed at 4.30 with a verdict for the intiff to recover the sum of $300. Thll was accepted and ordered record- ed by the judge. Judge Case then stated to the jury that the business for them was over for the term, and after thanking them for their services discharged them and they were paid off by Clerks Parsons and Norman. The case of Furlong, adm., vs. the Aspinook (o, e over untll next term. Attorneys Perkins and ex-Gov- ernor Waller had a conference with Judge Case on Thursday, and it was ‘decided that the case could mot be tried this week and’ it was decided it would ‘o ‘over. Court will .come in this morning te clear up (he husinela of the term. theaters. Fortunate~ CUSSION nit i floin m.-%;; unn:u * ...-.s-_) Ho Confossed Ni’ M.ouy,dl Cor= _poration Tax as a Means of Defeat- | ing the Income Tax. 4 '_.... ashington, Jung 20— With tarift nn«!ul- disposed qu and the uour locked for a while at least against the | intrusion of amendments,. the scnate | toddy began consideration of the. in- come and corporation tax questions. Gh‘lrmn Aldrich’s Attitude. While the senate wis more than four tion of the taxation of Incomes, the subjeet received more or less inciden- | tal attention while the tea provision wn under cohsideration and it was during that stage of the proceedings that the most int occurrence of the day took place. 'his was the announcement of the real attitude of Chairman Aldrich of the finance com- mittee towards the corporation tax of pro\lllnn. which he had introduced at the instance of the president. Whispered Rumors Prove True. 1t had for some time been whispered around tne semate corridos at tlie Rhode Isiand senator had become an advocate of a tax on the earnings of corporations as the m effective means of defeating a ~eneral income tax amendment to the pending bill: Mr. Aldrich today stated hh own po- sition, which was in with the mmorl He spoke in response to a qnutlon from Senator Clay and in se many words confessed his advocac+ of'-the ‘corporation tax as a means o1 defeating the income tax. He added another reason, which was that he thought for the next year or two there would be a deficit in the treasury re- ceipts which he was willing to have made good' by the proposed corporation tax. With this service performed he thought the law could and would be ;“mr ly modified if not entirely re- Tillman’s Tea Amendment Lost. With only one amendment pending wherl the senaté met at 10 oclork it was supposed that it would be put out of the way soon and that, in accord- ance with the unanimous agreement, the senate would hnm htely take up the internal tax it t th: amendment ;-u o. propasition for a duty of ten cents a pound on tea, nuu Mr. Tillman was behind it. - Notwithstanding Mr. Tillman's l!!‘an- uous effort, his tea amendment was losit’ by ‘the decislve vote of ‘55 against as opposed to 18 for. Phe provision had the support of only two democrats 0' TUARV. Dr. Edward Cornet. The many friends of - Dr. Bdward Cornet will” regret to learn of his) death, which occurred at his home in Uncasville at 5.30 o'clock Tuesday af- ternoon from paralysis. He had been sick for three years. Dr. Cornet was besn in Brussels 62 years ago, but has been a resident of this country for many years. . He studied in Germany and was a prac- ticing physician in Norwich for a number of years, after which he locat- ed at Montville, where he built up quite a practice. when he suffered a shock, from which he never fully re- covered, and subsequently had two others. He was a preacher nr. offi- clated often in country churches. He Dbelonged to the Knights of Pythias, in which hé was much interested, partic- ularly the uniformed rank. He was a man of companionable dis- position, kind and courteous, and made many friends by his genial qualities. He is survived by his wife and eight children, four sons and four daugh- ters, John W. Wolven. John Wesley Wolven died at his home in Hartford Monday. For the past two years he had been in feeble health with Bright's disease. Last week Tuesday he had a paralytic shock and went info a state of coma from whiah he never rallied. Mr. Wolven was born in Saugerties, Mr. Wol- ven learned the carriage | painting, in which he became an ex- | pert. He first located in New York | ity 2nd later at Albany, N. Y. From | Albany he came to Norwich, where he started a carrlage painting business. | In 1866 he located in formed a partnership which continued until 1 when Mr. Wolven retired. Hle then worked at his trade until 1830, when he was appointed messenger of the supreme and superior courts of Hartford. He had since served as messenger of both courts and was the oldest mesrenger in continuous service in_the state, During his residence in Norwich he was chairman of the republican town { committee for a time. nen tin fraternal organizations. At the time of his death he was a member of “’n!hln&ton lodge, Knights of Pythias; temple, Pythian Sisters; arter Onk ‘council, 0. U, A. M. Sicaogg tribe, L O. R. M.; Wauwamee council, f Pocahontas, He was rrlnd Tlor of the grand lodge. Knights of Fythias, of Connecticut in 1892, and last year in Boston took the supreme lodge degree. He was a member of the Windsor avenue Congregational church. Mr. Wolven was married three times. His first wife was Miss Elizabeth Case Hartford and | He was promi-4a bloody outbreak of Russian Mr. Bajiey-and Mr. Tillman. "'P"" Tax Formally Taken Up. ‘When the income tax question was formally taken up . . Senator Lodge moved as a substitute for Senator Bailet's income tax proposition a measure _providing for. countervailing duties against countries imposing du- ties on articles exported to the United States. Mr. Aldrich immediately moved the corporation tax provision as an arendment to the Lodge measure, thus giving the corporation tax the posi; tion of a “third degree” amendment, beyond which no further amendment can be offered in the senate. The Corporation Tax Provision. Senator Flint, who will have charge of the corporation tax provision, spoke at some length in explanation of the provision and was followed by Senator Dixon, whe advocated the retention of the inheritance tax provision on the’ preference to any of the income tax measures. ‘Senator Flint expressed the opinion that at the rate of two per cent. on the net earmings of the cor- porations of the country the revenues would be augmented to the extent of $40,000,000 or $50,000,000. Senator Kean placed the figure at $100,000,000. Senator Cummins began a speech in support of an income tax, but had not com‘l\gd@d when the senate adjourned jat 6.1 SEIZED DRIVE OF SAW LOGS. Illicitly Cut in C-nlda and Towed In- to American Waters. Rainy River, Ont.. June 20.—An im- mense drive of saw logs, about fifteen thousand, which had been cut illic- itly on the Canadian side and towed into American water near Beaudette, was seized on Saturday night on be- half of the Washington government. | The logs will probably be returned to the owners of the permits upon which they were cut. They were cut by half-breeds, who had arranged to sell them on the Am- erican side. luody Outbreak of Russian Political Prisoners. eattle, Wash., June despatch from Nome Alask —A cable describes politi- cal prisoners in the Yakutsk district, Siberia, and the flight of the mutineers across the wilderness toward Bering | strait, in an' effort to reach Alaska. Four Cossacks were ambushed and killed, and twelve wounded. Timothy Gilchrist is All Right, | Timothy’ G’lchrist of Westerly, who it ‘was thought had taken paris green a few nights ago. was in town on Tuesday He has fully recovered from | his troubie, but he savs he did not| take any poison; although a doctor was called to attend him. He had had some paris green for potatoes, and be- ried, Sept. 27, 1886. Mrs. Emma Buck- man of Norwich, who died Jan. §, 1901. His third wife, who before their mar- riage, May 29, 1906. was Mrs. Lillian Clara Rigby of Middletown, survives him. He leaves two stepchildren, Fred- erick Bishel Rigby and Harriet Agnes Rigby, both of Hartford. The funeral will be held today. Fencing Breed Eim. ? The iron railing that has been around the old Breed elm on Wash- ington square has been removed and and Nont] ton nines of the Connecticut State league have been secured for a league game, which will wu ; attraction, it is expected. pton. team contains mny ol the players that| bration visitors, as it is 151 years old m:o'nn Norwieh '.c.me‘t‘we attraction with J‘l’l a wooden picket fence is being bullt fn its place. The space encloged within the fence has also been turfed. This big tree will be one of the points of historical interest for cele- and was planted in what wi d John Breed house, now the resi- dence of al—lhyflr Calvin L. ll:- cause of his actions, due to another kind of poison, is was thought he had taken the green stuff. - Ilnkfllp( Estate. Before Referee in Bankruptcy Ames A. Browning the creditors of the es- tate of Mrs. Martha J. Ruseell of New !nn‘un decided upon Charles E. Hick- of New London as trustee, and he ted, his bonds being $1.000. hours in formally coming to the ques- | | Washington. Tuan Fa Been viee ;q of m"hpmm m Yang m Hfilfi' fl!WN Dfl T\ll Give Information Concerning Move- ments of T‘r\mbc.nfi'ni». Body of Miss Sigel—No Clue to Leon. New York June 28.—Information is at hand tonight which for the first | time since the dhcuvery of the mur- der of Elsi el eleven days ago, def- initely es blllhed that Leon Ling | must have had accomplices and that, though a telegram signed with his name and in his writing was sent from ‘Washington, he could not have been there on the date on which the mes- sage was sent. The police have also accounted in detail for the movements of the body as it was hurried hither 1and thither in panic, after the crime, up to the moment of its discovery in | the bedroom of Leon Ling over an Eighth ayenue chop suey restaurant. ‘Detectives Scouring New Jersey. But though the detective force has 250th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION the Founding of Nor(m'cb,.hly 5th and 6th a dozen men in the neighboring towns of New Jersey, and Inspector McC: ferty reiterated tonight his confidence that ‘the - murderer will be caught, there is nothing known publicly from’ which it cat. be inferred that his arrest is mearer than it has been at any time during the past week. - Expressman Logan's Story. “The facts'as to the movement of the body in New York, ngw added to the details previously unearthed concern- ing the trip to Newark, N. J. came out through Arthur Logan, an express- man in the employ of the Constitution Express company of this ¢ who told this afternoon that at 12.30 p. m., on June 9, the day of the murder, a lean, light-colored Chinaman, agreeing per- fectly with the desecriptions of Leon Ling, called at his office and' told him that he wanted a trunk carted from the top floor of No. 782 Eighth avenue to the address of & Chinese laundry, hich book entry shows as' Wah Kee, 0 West 126th street. Noticed Four Chinamen About. ‘When ' Logan enteréd the Eighth avenue house shortly afterward, he found Leon Ling waiting for him at | the top of the fourth fight of stairs, he says,, The door to his room stood open, YRt it wos so dark that the plpce looked to the expressman like a cave. All the shades were drawn. In fact he'did not see the trunk uatil he stumbled on it, but he noticed that the door to the adjoining reom was jar and that four Chinamen who wore queues were moving about in the ob- scurity. This is the door that Chung Sin, Leon Ling’s intimate, who is de- tained as a witness, has sworn was closed. ‘ Harlem Celestial Waiting for Trunk. Logan lifted the trunk, with the help of his regular assistant, and. though he is strong man, found it rather heavy. He noticed that it was stout- ly roped. It iwas ome o'clock in the afternoon when he left the house and four when he got to the Harlem ad- dress. There he found Wah Kee it~ ing for him. “Tlunk?" said Wah. “All light. Fifty cents?" Fifty cents has Moving beéen the charge agreed on with Leon Ling. Wah Kee knew of it in ad- 80 the expressman thinks, and ws are shared v the police. There was no hesitancy about ac- cépting the trunk. Wah Kee ordered it carried.through the laundry to.the kitchen and 8leeping room in the rear, where Logan left it. The cxpressman does not appear in the case again. ng Hired a Taxicab to Newark. Nearly eight hours later a well- dressed Japanese, as ‘the starter of the New York Taxicab - company then thought him, called at the company's branch ” office, street and Eighth avénue, and asked how much it would cost him for a tax- icah to Newark. He was told $12 and instructed the driver, Martin Lauria, to call at Wah Kee's laundrv for “somebody. laundry at 1135 p. m., he found that the hedVier part of his fare was “something.” and not “somebody”—a stoutly corded trunk. Leon Ling for %o Lauria has subsequently ldentified him. was pacing the street nervously while the trunk was being lifted to the front seat aud insisted that it be tightly lashed. The trunk secured, he stepped pulled the shades. Not once on out of the wind: to pay the to at No. 64 Market To the ‘restaurant street, Newark. he had been told to drive and when he arrived there at two o'clock in the morning of June 10, Li Sing, the pro- prietor, met him at the door and helped him carry the trunk to a r room. He was paid and drove b to New York. Leon Ling Had Vanished. The foregoing facts accounting the removal of the body to Newark, came out for the first time toda: through the taxicab dri himself, Martin Lauria.. His narrative dove- tails with the testimony of James Hal- stead, a Newark cabman, who took tite body and Leon Ling back to Eighth avenue on the afternoon of the same day, where the body stayed until found by the police. Leon Ling van- ighed in the meantime. Chung Sin Could Tell More. It seems clear, to have been at the various places mentioned, Leon uld not have spared the time for a trip to His hosts all showed suspicious foreknowledge of his coming and Chung Sin, when he swore the trunk was in the Eighth avenue house on the night of June 9, and that the door between his room and that of Leon Ling was never open, evidently had a lapse of memory. Whether he lied to save his own skin or that of his pal, it' is clear that he knows a great deal more than he has yet told. »pom 'L‘he liabilities are $2,100 and the assets $1,800. She conducted a millinery bus- 1nn- in N“ Lnndon. Llunoh There was a dell mooniunt sail to Browning's return on Tuesday evening hy a pnny of 15 Enlfl. leaving here 0 -ld mmw ;: rty. hteal Shawmut Car Protest D Seattle, Wash., June 29, awird of the first prize in the New York Seattle automobile race, to Ford car No. 2, was disallowed today by Referee Robert Guggeénheim, who found that g‘e evidence did not sus- ::.“ of echuiulntmam Ll T BT &0 d prise d Ol.l“ to at the corner of 12th | When Lauria got to the | into the taxicab himself and | the | journey to Newark did he put his head | v, except at the ferry | k| al bicyele rider, r | RS Ry he Fort M: e T ‘ The P Ih dis- FrioAd, "wm cflg"flu P the Spcond Avanu radlway. : Association i London July ts obfects. The Cphan Hw- ed the budget without making retrenchments, and the :;nut is expected to take similar ac- The Firm of J. 8. Mw‘ & Co. is preparing to open lations with :he bankers for a share o i ehg Chinese oan, Six Thousand Miners walked out in the Pittsburg, Kan., coal fields;a strike of néll miners’in the southeast is threat- ened. A Dozen Passengers Were ln{uud when a fast train on the Erie rallroad ran into an open switch at Sterling, Ohio. An Ordinance Was Intredund in th city council to make the “daylight” movement effective in Cincinnati on Junuary 1. 1910. Two Children whose combined age: by land and sea more than 47,000 miles. Lieutenant Clark, commander of the meteéorolagical expedition in China, has demanded a consular investigation of the killing of a surweyor; the viceroy's version of the trouble i8 doubted in Pekin. Daniel Le Roy ident of the defunet Trust Company of the Republic, testified to the suit of T. 8. Cavanaugh against the former Pectors wf the company that he had refused to resign when requested to #o so, and admiged making loans without consulting the directors. ATTAWAUGAN STREET RAIL- WAY CO. INCORPORATED. Capital Stock Fixed at $50,000, May Be Incr lud to $100,000. (Special w The Bulletin.) Hartford, June 28.—K. L. Darble, J. M. Paine and M. A. Phillips were in- corporated by the house this ing as the Attawaugan Street Railway company and they and the others who are to be assoclated with them now have, as far as the house is able to | give ‘it, the right to build and operate | a street railway over routes: In the town of Killingly, be- ginning at any -convenient point in the village of Dayville, where connec- tion may be made with the tracks of the New Haven road, through Atta- waugan, . Ballouville and Pineville to Daniels Factory village; beginning at or near Wildwood park and rumming northeasterly to Attawaugan; begin- ning_at the Attawaugan station of the Connecticut company on the high- iway north of Alexander's lake i running easterly to Attawaugan. capital of the corporation i§ fixed at $50,000 and may be increased to $100,- 0000. BRANDENBURG ACQUITT!D ‘In Connection wl(h O e of Alleged Spurious Letter—Rearrested on Charge of Kidnapping Stepson. were less than four vears arrived on | the Minnetonka after having journeved | Dresser former pres- | morn- (4m the following | < b ———— GIVEN OUT BY OFFICIALS FOR BLICATION. SENTIMENTAL LANCGUAGE Mrs. Woodill's Warm Attachment for Eastman—Letter from Eastman Re- peats the Champagne Bottle Story. St. Micheels, Md., June 29.—The fes ings entertained by Mrs. Bdith May Woodill towards her slayer, ‘“Lame Bob"” Bastman, were lndle‘tea in a let- ter signed “Edith,” parts of which were found in the bungalow of the murderer Ixnd suicide last Saturday and given out for publication today. he mis- sive, which is in Mrs. Woodill's hand- writing, and couched in most senti- | mental language, was presumably sent to Eastman. It not only indicates a warm attachment for the man, but seéems to prove that she had known thm at least a year. On the same pa- r Eastman's handwriting is the l.fllm\mx “Little Dear: I cannot live after our short——of bliss. “With the coming of you and part- ing ever before me. 1f we meet in the unknown let's contifiue the bligeful times that we spent here. I am with you in_every thought.” | Passages from Letter Sinned “Edith" ‘The letter signed “Edith” contains [ the following passages: | " “Is the iron immodest when it creeps through loadstone and clings to lts | side? Is the seed immodest when It sinks into the ground with budding life? Ts the cloud boid when it softens | into rain and falls to earth because it has no other choice, or is it brazen when it ‘nestles on the bosom of heaven’s arched dome and sinking into the e-black Infinity ceases to be it- self? “I¢ the human soul immodest when, drawn by a force it cannot resist, it seeks a stronger soul which absorbs its ego as the blue sky absorbs a floating cloud and as the warm wind swells the sea, as the magnet draws.the iron” “I ‘do not feel myself to be bold or wrong or ‘in myself’ for drifting tow- ard you as I do. I would not feel yself wrong to go straight to you to- morrow. “There is ever and always some hu- man soul to love and trust us. And whose confidence we would not alter, We are not of our own making and our lives belong to another, Brahma who rules and is wise. “And the wonder comes to me that you did not, could mnot, understand. Surely a life such as yoyrs brings time understanding: you must know lewd from the modest, the untrue from the true— “Dream of you, did T say. you would be better, beat seems to cry ou Long for tor every heart against the enor- | mity of the crime that makes me no longer yours. All the best in every- | thing seems ‘only to exist because of you, and for you. “T hdte existence away from you. ‘Why do men dare to ]ift up their voices against the blesseqd art fn others, which is but a greater, strohger, ~warmer spark of God’s soul than they posseas, or can lessen the understandin | have one for the other, and no differ- | en an make us forget? “Remember me always, as you loved New - York , June Although | me best, and, though were you a—a— Broughton Brandenburg was acquitted | Dandit— a—anything—my heart would here - today of the charge of grand | beat in responsiveness to yours. larceny in connection with the sale of | “Thine but asks Instead ‘Wilt thou an alieged spurious letter of Grover | be mine? FLoved by time one has Cleveland to the New York Times, he | 8TOWD to know its significa has had only a few minutes of freedom. Before leaving the court room he was re-arrested and ‘will be taken to St. Louis next week for trial on a charge of kidnapping his ' stepson, James Shepard Cabanne 3d. The maximum penalty for kidnapping in Missourl is life imprisonment. The author was | taken back to the Tombs in defauit {of $5,000 ball to await the arrival of the Missouri officers. SEVEN YEARS FOR POLICEMAN Is Sentenced. New York, June 20.—James F. Dil- lon, police patrolman of Brooklyu, was sentenced to a maximum term of four- teen years and a miniumum term of seven years in Sing Sing prison | by -Justice Maddox of the supreme court, for manslaughter in the first degree. He shot and killed Louis Probber, aged nineteen, in the delica- tessen store of his father, Isaac Prob- 217 Myrtle avenue, Brook- ber, at No. lyn, on Ma Trust Fund fe'r Support of Poor Widows. Winsted, Conn., June 29.—Altfiough the will of the late Caleb Camp, mer president of the Central New Eng- jand railroad, will not be filed for pro- bate until Friday, several of the pr visions have been made known. One of the provisions is the establishing of a trest fund of $25,000, the income of which is to be used for t poor widows and unmarried \\nm»n in needy circymstances, Irving K. wold is marped as exetutor of the will Bicycle Rider MoFarland Seriously Tn- jured. Newark. N. J. June 29.—Floyd Mc- nd of California, the profession was seriousl work out at the Vel | near here tolay. His left arm | broken and face badly o | burstiig of a rear tire of a motc | Ing ma » caused the accident. Farland, who was going at a 1.30 clip, was carried up the bank and' pitched backward on to the track. He will not Dbe abel to ride for a month. Far | during a New Haven Black Hand Susbect Ar- reste New Haven, Conn., June police tonight arrested Guiseppi ) chino, an Italian barber, suspected of being a.member of the band of Black Handers which has been securing mon- ey from loeal Itallans for the past ar.. He is being held under $3,000 bonds. Polander Drowried in Waterbury. ‘Watérbury, Conn., June 29.—Wading ofit beyond his depth in the old Brass Mill pond off East Main street this evening, while bathing with friends, cost William Dlagkansky, aged 23, of 34 Pond street, his life. Frank Den nison, a companion, juraped in to save him. and was uu.m in the young man's frantic l? and dragged be- neath the surface twice before he freed himself. The -vi#tlm was a Polander and unmarried, ' 'He was unable to swim. X y Orville Wright Made Shert Fh.m. ‘Washington, June 29.--After making ‘three unsuccessful efforts to get hir new aeroplane into the air teday, Or- t_made a short .‘c‘n- r- Dillon, Who Killed a Boy .in Brooklyn, | e support of | | usually been made a degenerate thing. | That is hard to recognize " | This letter of Mrs. Woodill's and several written by Eastman were made public today by the state's attorney. They had been In possession of the county authorities and were read be- fore the coroners’ juries but had been withheld from the public by the off- cials, who had previou stated that they would not be given out until any | clues to the murder they might con- | tain could be run out. Letters from Eastman Also Read. The letters written by Eastman were { found on_his body. One of them was addressed te | George Taylor, station agent at Mc- Danlel, and told of the kiliing along the same lines as contained in the let- ter to his wife.. It reads |~ “Mr. Tavior: Enclosed find $10 to | cover my indebtedness to you; I be- lieve It ample. If not, will send dif- ference, | 7 “Appearances are against me, but T | had no hand in the tragedy. The poor | hile girl was practicing the art of | taking a fellow from another girl who was under the influence of wine and | hit her three times with a full bottle | of champagne. “The four immediately left and T re. moved the evidence of the crime, and | am once more making an effort to get bondsmen, for I don't want to get | locked up. “But if not successful and I cannot | persuade all parties to come up and | take their medicine, why I will blow off the top of my crazy head, and in that case I wish you would kindly see that all letters found on me are mailed. “ROBBIE." | JUMPED FROM FERRVBDAT‘ ;Unidcntifind Womnn Drowned in the | Hudson River. | i New York, June 29.—An unidentified woman jumped Into the Hudason river today from a window of the Pennsyl- vania railroad ferryboat Newark and was drowned. She had attracted the attention of passengers by her nerv- ous actions from the time the boat left its glip in this city. When midstream was reached she suddenly climbed on a seat and plunged through an open window into the river. The. woman appeared to be about 40 years old, was slenderly bullt and well dressed. Train Bandits Surrounded in Rocky Mount: . Winnipeg, Man., fine 29.—A special despatch received late this afternoon says that bandits who held up Ca- nadian Pacific railroad express train on the night of June 21-22, hawe been surrounded by mounted polke in the Rocky mountains. Steamship Arrivals: At Naples: June 24, Athinal. from New York; 26th, Florida, from New York. At Margeilles: June 25, Germania, from New York. At Genoa: June 26, Prinelpe di Piemonte, from New York. At Glasgow: June 29, Furnessia, from New Yurk Inspected lntrm Phohr Fortifications Mng June ! ~-Sec: ot ‘Vlr