Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 7, 1909, Page 1

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[ 160. L1L.—No. Second Day of Celebration of the Three Hun- dredth Annivegsary PRES. TAFT AT FORT TICONDEROGA Ambassador Bryce of Great Britain, Ambassador Jusser- and of France, Vice Admiral Uriu of Japan, and Secretary of War Dickinson Also Present—Celebrat- ion Takes onan International Scope. * 0 Bluff Point, N. Y., July 6.—With the arrival of President Taft, Ambassador Jusserand of France, Ambassador Bryce of Great Britain, Secretary ‘of War Dickinson-and Vice Adniiral Urin of -’”I.Y\, the celebration of the 300th anniversary.of the discovery of Lake Champlain, which had been cenfined during the past two days to the states of New York and Vermont, today took on an-internatiopal scepe and really,a ‘world-wide impertante. ' Expressed Hope for World-Wide Peace For' Ambassadors Jusserand and Bryce and President Taft all commit- ted their respective. countries to poli- cies,of peace and in;the shadow of the ol which had witnessed some of the ‘bloodiest battles in all history they expressed the hope that never again would the peace among the great is now in course of restoration. President's Auto Skidded on Steep In- cline. A heavy rain fell during ‘the morn- ing over Lake Champlain country, threatening a postponement of some of the outdoor features, and left the steep roads leading, up-to Fort Ticonderoga from the waler level dangerously slip.- pery. After the president had inspected the fort and had enjoyed the view of the lake from its commanding position he proceeded to the grandstand, which stood half way down the hill and' which was_surrqunded by several - thousan people. The cheering of the people as the presidents’ automobile was seen coming down the steep incline was sud- denly changéd to a tense silence when the big machine, its wheels locked by Ie the brakes, but slipping over - the natipns of ‘the world be.interrupted by | (reacherons surface, began to SKid tow. @ war. The president and the other |ard the edge of the,roadway. The distinguished guests ‘had an_ afternoon | chapffeur kuickly ‘gotfthe car under of interest frem the moment of their | contral, however, and ‘the danger was arrival at 2.30 p. m. by special train | over in an instant. The president was from Albany. the, least concerned of any, person in Historic Ruins Explored. | the large throng. Thegpresident arrived at Albany from Caught in Afternoon Shower. Nerwith, Conn., and New York, the An afternoon show® came up fol- French ambassador from Washington |lowing the ceremenies,at the stand and andithe British.ambassador from Len- | the president had to walk a/quarter of ox,sMass. The varieus cars then were | a- mile or more in the rain to the boat, 6-into onetrain for-the run te old | which after a twenty}mile sail up the Fert Biconderoge, where the principal |lake landed its. distinguished passen ol p¥ot, the day was heid. The | gers at. Port Henry, where the spe president and{the amhassadors and the | train again was boarded for the trip members of {tfibir staffs were <shown | to Bluff Point ‘and Hotel Champlain, through/the histeric ruins of “Old Ti,” | where the president and the other @s the natives'call the stronghold which | guests are quartered. WATER CARNIVAL A PRETTY PICTURE. Crowds Lined River Bank to W-(:k It —Prizes Won by Amos Whi Floyd Morgan and Charles Fost NEW YORK CITY'S ‘TOTAL ASSESSED VALUATION This Year ls $7,250,500,559—Tax Rates to Be Increased. (i New York, July 6—Andrew Carne- gles and Mrs. Russell Sage are as- sessed as posseéssing $5,000,000 worth of pereonaliprepertyseach in New. York city 4 lw Prgsented to the W ay. John D, onal propertyasses: ..xrrtfll! of seven bilt family” ag- ]! The celebration festivities closed with the water carnival Tuesday evening on the harbor, conducted under the super- vision of Commodore Herbert B. Cary of‘the Chelsea Boat/club, with Henry G. Peck, Arthur L. Peale, W. Tyler Ol- assistants. After a shower about the P, ik o6 v time for ‘the boat parade to start the weiilothovlate H. H. Rogers 4 3400.000, | night turned ot a. fine one for the liam Rockefeller are 'each, assessed | cocr, Starless and dark making the $30M,000. & v brightly decorated beats in the harbor parade an extremely pretty sight. . On shore at the Block island’s dock; |at_Dawley's yard and along the new dock, on the slopes of the West Side and Laurel Hill, big crowds were gath- The Wnergage for the year in the = ment 0f ,real: and per- 1 propefty s abelt $100,000,000. "Phis 18" $400,000,000 less than the av- etago increasevior scveral yéars past. e AREA AR valiat] ered o witness. the pretty sight when YERr s SP50.600558 of o {hi%1 the harbor was filled. with the twinkling 19974 s yin real ostate. *"U7 |Mights of the canoes; ‘pleasure . boats and power boats passing around the steamer Sight Seer. This was anchored in the harbor some dis- tance out and had the judges on board, Miss Louise Howe, Miss Mabel Webb. and'Miss Gertrude Hough, attended by, Daniel F. Haviland of the Chelsea Boat club. Tubbs' band Wwas also on board giving a concert and a good number availed themselves of the ateamer to view the parade close at hand. The canoes and’pleasure hoats, which were all manned by club _members, formed at the boatheuse. The power boats formed at the Uncas Paper com- Pany dock and proceéded upstream to pass around the Sight Seer, while the canoes' and pléasure hoats wound their way down the east-branch of the Yan- tic to encircle the judges™ beat. Be- cause of the shower the start of the tweo . divisions fro the. clubhouse was considerably delayed and all ~three classes arrived at the judges' boat al- mast together. All the participants had expended much thought and labor-in #oiilfle acting] cChiing up their bosts in atiertive pade the .most |-tgre. using lighted Japanese lanterns l&gflt in gre profusien and strung over e R bat | all availeble points’ on their craft anq L o it lon frameworks erected in various S thonend, f'forms fso that'the effect. was beautiful ed an- | cither singly or whenjall were grouped - l;around the committee boat, between 35 and 40 beats in all participating. Thomas W. Story's spe boat was the committee boa: which “Chairman_Cary gave the word e of "the small appreclation valuesfthe tax rates willyprobably | e increased from $1.61 to $1.70 on the 3100. “HIS ‘BORROWED' PLUMES.” Mrs. Cornwallis West’s New Society Comedy Liaunched™in London. n.%!‘ly 6.—M?s. George Corn- - West, o was~ formerly ‘Miss T Jegome of New York, added an- fothergto Herclaima to be' considerca thelrhost versatile woman in London By lsunching her ‘fizst play this after- oon at he Hicks'theater. The play iety comedy, entitled “His+Bor- lumeft” " The #iouse, was pac ms3promipent;in society, ajority of . ority of g’ were wo lest, . the au- , occhpied a°box Winston and and applauded ¥Cornwalljs:West hgd the ad- . fo oot Pt r A . to set the parade in motion, and led { kg A each division around Wefore the judges. The following were the entries: Canoes—Jjohn P. Huntington, Al L. Brown, Traver Briscoe, G. FI Morgan, Clarence Maynard and J. Ran- dsit Powelson. Pleasure = beats—Quinebaug, o had been | Bred A Fox; Puritan, Dr. F dyfied from | well; Luna, Themas , H. Crawford; , Charles D. Foster: Yantic. Shantok, Daniel Major Bid- Power boats—Division A, William A. Wells, Amos Wheeler, John A. Hag- the | berg, Lincoln Rogers and John Lewis Kusian. Division, B, N. A. Gibbs, H. A. Wulf, Herbert Wightman, William green.CEvk‘Lewiv% ]Yuung. Division - | Scott Conklin, William Hapkins, Ches- | e o noue to- ter W. Barnes, C. A. Lindberg and Bl Y retired. who was | mer Tubbs. Division D, Charles H. ano. was pHaskell'and George A, Richmond. D s iirils [viston B, John Sheridan, C. L. Bald- Johel T Tuckers | Win; Joseph Zubrowsky and D. J. ‘when the,col-| Brown. ‘and he was| GQemmandant Duffy of the navy yard States. «Thej flurm»fhm his steam*launch fbr the po- * Justice of]lice boat, carrying Harbor Master Wil- WY di A h J, a:“‘lhe' liam A. Norton on board, with- special home of "the Rev."W.} 5. Sayres, where | autherity . from the treasury depart- ® Blatt has beenu guest for some | Ment to Clear the waterways for this - occasion. Prizes were given for the best dec- Ywo Boys DrowHbd at Church Picnic. | orated, boats in all_classes and were “it) k_ Creek, . B maon| . For pewer boats—fitet three prizes # s ery. . The shoot- h' excitement in awardBd as follows hy,the judges: ting to save | handsome bronze cups, fourth prize a m-d’fl e frond. . Harry l{United States flag: - First, = Amos Brandt who'had ventured into water [iWheeler; second, C. W. Barnes; third, e Yeap for Bm,s and. who was also| C. L. Baldwin; fourth, John A. Hag- : The, who were 17 and'| berg. Canoes—First, G. Floyd Morgan; second, Clarence Maynard, Pleasure beats—Eirst, CHarles D. Foster: seeend, Major Fox. In these two classes the prizes for fifst were club pennants and for second flags. - 8 ol@wwere attgnding the an- R church. The hod- 1es’were i h'fl s city tonight. Member of Lenex Summer Colony Doad. ris of N«rv‘vu!(.ot, ‘@ vBeran of ‘the civ-| Amos Wheeler's winning power boat 11 war, promi clubman. and trus- | had a paddlewheel effect arranged with Yeeson the CollBge,of Ufe City of New | Japanese lanterns.” Mr. Barnes in se. o4 A t's disease, | ond: place had lanterns disposed . in racefullcurves, Mr. Baldwin had pret- York, died h e aged vha r. “Morris wasga g v e, ra:nw?y. iy arches and.a star effect,»and Mr. ey same time; | Hagberg haq an arrangement that was His' wite :gv rvive. pretty. 3 In the winning canoe Mr. Morgan rus Roisoning | and Miss Helen R§Mabrey. w'elded the Newburgh, a few. ,—Leftyalone | paddles, haxing for. sengers KEarl *ay. tyo |'Hernick_an m'\fl‘; Whitaker of | -§secured ten | New Bedford, who warefsheltered under the ends|a pretty ef in fJapanese parasols. o phos- | Mr. M: winnér of ths. second prize, ‘elaberate ¢ decorations ~ of DISCOVERY OF LAKE. GRAMPLAI] - Copenbagen, July ‘6.—Charles Rich- ardson, secretary of the American le- gation here, has resignedy He will re- turn to thé United s..R.., Lisbon, July 6.—A passenger train and a freight were in “collision today near St Eulalia. Four persons were killed and twenty-three injured, eleven fatally. St. Petersburg, July 6.—The German and Austrian railroad authorities have informed Russia that they are about to take steps to institute a quarantine on the frontier against cholera. London, July .—According to a spe- clal despatch received here from Te- heran, that city is completely invested by the Persian revolutionary forces, who are expected to attack at any moment. « Berlin, July 6.—The privy councillor, Dr. Hammann, director of the press bureau of the foreign ‘office, was today acquitted of the charges of perjury, brought against him by Professor Schmitz, the - ex-husband / of Erau Hammann. Schitz was mgde to fpay costs. It appeared, from’ the tekti- mony, that he was responsible for a system oOf persecucions against Dr. Hammann and his wife. 46 DEAD; Record of Fourth of July Casualties in United States. 1,575 INJURED. Chicago, July 6.—The Record-Her- ald’s sumigries today of the casusities in_the Unitdd States-of the three-day celebration of the Fourth of July gives 46 _dead and 1,575 injured, The deaths due to tetanus thus far are 18. Fire losses are $446,500. @ ‘OF ‘THE WHOLE. * HEPORTED TO THE SENATE The Tobacco: Tax “Was ~the Only " mittes of the Whele. ‘Washington, July. 6.—The tarift bill was completed in#he committee of the whole today and reported to the sen- ate. It is now regarded as.on the home strétch. Senators generally desired to obtain a reprint of the bill as amended be- fofe further considering it, so the sen- ate adjourned to afford such an oppor- tunity, - with the understanding that wher the hody fecanvence all sectiofis of the bnmz\ senators do not desire to reserve for further amendment shall be agreed to en I The- senate tbén will® consider the tobaceo tax, the only amendment not adopted in:the committee of the whole. When that is disposed of senators will offer and votes will be taken on nu- merous amendments they have reserv- ed untll 'the bill, in a pafliamentary sense, -shall be in the senate. |~ The proceedings jogged aloyg in un- eventfyl fashion today. ‘Among amendments to the tariff bill COMBLETION N THE COMMITTEE [ SOUTHBOUND PASSENGER RAN Amendment Not Adepted in Com-’ A_Noiseless Fourth wais obsorved mn&nlo‘}m‘{l. Y. (:glel,u_ml'ard; nance prohibit ! and explosives ‘bel.nr;‘ striotly m—d.; () Prof. Ehrhart, . a balloonist, , who made a Fourt‘;"ol July ascension at Grand Rapids, Wis.,, Monday . night, fell into mill pond and was drowned. Joseph Davol, president of the Da- vol Rubber company, and one of the ploneers in the rubber industry, died Monday night ‘at his residenice in Providence, aged 72 years. INTO TRAIN MAKING SIDING. FOUR PASSENCERS INJURED Judge Everton J. Conger, one of the Dbest:known men of Montana, and famed as the man who led the_ detail of soldiers who captured J. Wilkes Booth after the assassination of Pres ident Lincoln, was probably fatally in- jured by. being run over by an auto- moile. David Camp. of . Worcester - in - Willi- mantic Hospital—Others Sent Home After Receiving Medical Treatmerit. Willimantic, Conn,, July 6—In a wreck on the' New. London division of the Central Vermont railroad near South Windham late today four pas- sengers were Injured and several cars smashed. The Injured. . The injured were David Comp of Worcester, Mass., wounds about the head and ‘shoulders; Benjamin Pastic, Old Mystic; Frederick Royce, Leonard's Bridge, and Mrs. O. B. Clark, Willi- mantic, all bruised about the shoulders, The injured with the exception of George Conrow, the freight train conductor, was yesterday sentenced at Poughkeepsie to be electrocuted at Sing Sing prison in the week of Au- Bust 16 for the murder of John Kliff of Hopewell Junction. KIiff was a res- taugant keeper who was robbed and murdered several months ago. That Father son of Notre Dame, Tnd., will fill the important position o procurator-general at Rome is formaliy announced by the Very Rev. Gilbert Nev.v ‘Cdmmi.ssioner Advises the Force that : ‘are Being Kept On Them MUST BE 600 A TWO COMMITTEES ARE KEEPING WATCH And it is Up to the Members of the Department to Make Good—Secret Conference Held in Commissioner’s Headquarters and Instructions Given to Inspectors anid Captains—Bingham a Candidate for Mayor. New York, July 6.—"“The eyes of the committee of one hundred and of the committee of fourteen are on you, and you must see fhat the laws are en- forced. \ “Gambling houses, poolrooms, disor- derly houses must be kept closed and the excise law must aiso be enforced. “While you should interpret all laws in a Hberal sense, liberality does not mayoralty campalgn will be voted fop. The committee of fourteen is n.ZS.a by Dr. Peters, who has closed many of the Raines law dives. Bingham a Candidate for Mayor om Anti-Tammany Ticket. New York, July 6.—What Bammans Hall may expect because of the recenf§ ousting of Police Commissioner Bing Comp iwere treated at a local hospital | F'rancais, superior general of the Holy 2 vice. | ham by Mayor McClellan is Indicated i ey B i S s e B acrmc'n'e"{'fi'o?mfil"r?hi'e'gs"nf}"f’n:“",i”fif Tvery B e e ot strict ac- | in words attributed to General Bings mained at'the hospital. iR o the Apomtolle collese, Lor the Drepa- | countability for any laxity on his part; | ham, published hem (onight, saying Engineer and Fireman Jumped. dia. y o but, understand, no man must be per- | that he will be a \n|\t|Xll<I:?k{'(Ir flwy& The wreck was caused by = south- secuted. > S g s s (e S bound passenger running into {he rear| The National Woman Suffrage asso- | “These committees will be watching | people want him. This ie, the GG of a train of twenty-five empty pas-|ciation at Seattle, Wash, Monday | the police department for the next five mlem- t commitiing himesit Ui senger cars as they were going on a | elected the following officers: Presi- | months, and it is up to the members of | political eitvation StiribtiCy 19 S siding to allow the passenger train to | dent, the Rev. AMnay H. Shaw, Moy | the department to make good Where he was interviewed today: & pass. ‘The engineer and fireman of|land, Pa.; correspording Secretary,| Police Gpmmidsioner Baker'made the [ where he was 2 t, Walter M. Buckingham and other | in review] Annapo green and white fringed paper with paper roses. In the pleasure boats Mr. Foster and Major Fox had lanterns disposed in effeetive arrange- ments that caught the judges’ dec Arranging for the canoes wer Iyn L. Brown, ‘chairman, D. F. lang and John P. Huntington, w in charge of the pleasure boat division were C. D. Foster, chalrman, Noah Lu- cas and Charles Parsons. tGeorge A. Richmond was in charge of power boats belonging to club members and Major Wells of those belonging to non- members Upon the return to the boathouse, light refreshments were served by Jan. itor Geary and Mrs. Louise Benson, hi sister, the refreshments ~pem, charge of Arthur L. Peale, The club had the stream lighteq in front of the boathouse by the electric sign C. B. C. strung out over the middle of the stream and an electric sign on the roof of the clubhouse representing the club totem of a bow and arrow. s TWO WEEKS' CAMP Party of Twenty Y. M. C. A. Bo 7 Leave This Morning. This afterhoon at 4 o' more boys of the Y. M. C. A. get off for two weeks at the association's summer camp at Groton Long Point, which will be under the personal su- pervision of General/ Secretary Mer- vill, assisted by F fysical Director Peckham and Jy/.or Department Chairman Clifton Ti. Hobson. The old- er boys, those above 15, go this morn- ing for two weeks untii July 25, when AT GROTON LONG& POINT. | e ) 45 lis Cadets Go |'ing 1anor organizations, fraternal, ben- eficiary societies ‘and orgznizations ex- clusively for charitable ‘and education- al ‘purposes from the .corporation tax, Amendments .were adopted naming Canadd and the West Indies as among continguous countri included in the discriminating duty of ten per cent. ad_ valorem on Smports not manufac- tured in those countries and introduced into.the United States, and also e tending frem two to six months any | mestic-built vessels may engay | coastwise trade. Another amendment in jear the period during which do- in the agreeéd’ upon’ today was one exempt- | tite passenger train jumped just before | Miss Kate M. ing Through Franklin Square the collision and escaped injury. The engine was badly broken and the com- bination baggage and smoker smashed. Traffic was delayed for. several hours. e treasurer, Mrs. Warren, O. The question of the next «convention city wa eral officers for dec pn. Prof. 8imon Nemcomb Cri iy 1. left to the gen- 1t my police administration has nol above ch to the nineteen police in- 8 o’ g, e met the approval of New York city spectors at a secret conference Sat ay, and last night the police cap! he s quoted as saying, “and the peopl lulu;nugh‘z)ul Greater New York repeated | would liké to see that same Kind o his instructions to the outgoing and in- | administration in_ all of the depart- coming platoons, so the 10,600 members | ments carried on from the city hall in of the force would learn officially the person of the mayor, I am willing views of their new commissioner. undertake it.” Before. he left New What appeared significant to the [ York General Bingham was urged by captains, who received thelr instruc- |leaders of anti-Tammany movements tions from the inspectors, was that the | to consider accepting the mayoralty town must be “good” for the mext five | nomination, and his removal promiges months, That would extend to Novem- | to be one of the important issues of ber, when ghe candidates in the next 'the approaching municipal campaign. SILVER WEDDING OF CHARLES F. BARBER DEAD. MR. AND MRS. 8. MIKOLASI. | For Many Years the Checker Chame« pion of the World. All Day Celebration, With Many the | Guests Present—Gift of Handsame | poston, July 6.—It became known Silver Service. today that harles F. Barker, for | many years tie world's checker cham Mr. and Mrs. Saudor ~Mikolasi fit- | plon, died in this city last night. ¢ingly celebrated their silver wodding [ had been ill for some time with gas- at their hom o, 49 Franklin street, on | tritis. He was born in this city fifty Thay were married in Buda- | years ago. Before he was twenty Austria~Hungary, on July §, | old he had met the famdis first five ydars of their hap- players of the country and vied life were spent in thefr ted many of them. In 1878 native, land, but they removed io this | he won, the championship of America Priest of Philadel- er of Providence, world's champion= Ja Wyllie at ided in New York city [ by defeating M. C yearr, and then moved i have made their home country and re for about two to Norwich 7 he wo; bbo ever i { by defeat 1 Besides Mr. and Mrs. Mikolasi there | Glasgow, - Scotla Since that time are three sons in the family, Fred, who | had defended his title successfully is night manager of the Hotel Walton | year after ve ity,, Beia and Willi AN Were at-home Tues- in New Y of / thig city. K CLUE TO LEON LING ATSEA. day and ted their parents in | d - B m:a\kmxg the Jay the most memorable | Police Cable Asks That Steamship Be: one in their fives g Searched on Mediterranean. A reception was held from 10.50 a m. until 230 p. @.. and fromn seventy- b . New York, July 6~~In the Mope ef, five to one hundred relatives ‘Illll‘ turing Leon Linge sthe Chinaman friends, in addition to out of town|'sccused of killing Elsie Sigel, the police guests, ealléd 2nd tendered their hear+| have cabled to several cities. on the ty copgretulations, and Jeft many | Mediterranean coast and to points presents aprropriate to the occaslon. | through. th z canal and Indian ome ser A the e gifts was & mag- ein nificent silver . ¢ to hold up ‘the e ‘ship Hele Rjckmers rman, steam- and*search it. At the strc 3 o'clock ‘the im= | “fhe pollce be Ling shipped mediate relatives and . guests Were from Philadelphia b June 10 and ushered into the dining room, which |12 The murder. was committedsom orately orated In festive T {Fkmers * left els re, with and white ¥ hound _for inating in the color scheme, and Jap ommander, Cap igned roats at the table, ‘where g d. several Chi= I sumptuous repas s served t ng them was Among the distinguished vell dréesed man who speueE frdn out of town were Mr. and Mr glish and who professed to be am A. Les#lauer, Jersey City, N. J.: Mr.| emcient cook. 1@ three child Josephine, niff lisin Lea and Mrs, W. W P Oscar, Madeline N, Y.; Mr. and N York, Mr. 1 and two Jdaughters, the | nora ana Mudred, ‘of All of, the ab m Norwich especiaily and Mrs, Mikolasi in memoratng their silver left for their respective hom I 1fternoon train Mikolasi is on of city Auto Turned Turtle, Occupants All In= jured. . 6.—Whils lo, foduytan cison of upied by Harry deriger of Wil- tioned came unite with suitabl. jubilee s by com- and the | nscious, hauffeur, was autemohiie made dashed to pleces. s of the cir recelved Abberiger 1] s two t Al is nal organ Palmyra af tions, among wii campment, 1. O. No. 360, B. P. Pythias, and O. Mikolasi was as o ) Harriman’s Children Sail to Join Him in Paris. py as a girl about and entertained her to become a bride New . York, July’ 6—Carrying feue guests in royal style great boxes of . H. Harriman bo e vorite cigars, three of the financler's NARROW ESCAPE. Brakeman Pushed Man from Track children, Mary, ( sailed today on th pline and Raland, Kronprinz Wilhelm Vi July 6.~ L. Representative Cushman Dead. s to join him in Paris .“l,-' Harriman Neweomb. the noted. ustronomer, who, New York:duly 6—Francis W. Cush. | ~and Prevented -Him Being Ground | has been unable to procure in Eurepe is 74 vears oM, is critically-ill at his | man, representative in SUIESN Ohin | - Under Suitcher. meked for years and .accordingtulthet home in_this cily. His condition was | Taesma, Wash.. died early this morn- R cabled his children to bring & supply uncHanged tonight. Grave fears are | ing in‘Roosevelt hospital. At his bed-| At the Central Vermont station at|cabled his children 1o bOnE 4 SUPRIG ententaied for his recovery on side were” United States Senator Sam- | two o'clock Tuesday afternoon. a mid- | ¢ A uel H, Piles of Washin; count of his advanced years. drew 8. Burleigh of this cfty. on and An- several months dle-aged man w walking about t platform and happened to step upon the trfick just in front of a switche Yacht Engineers Frightfully Scalded. they will come home and their places | be taken by the younger boys, to stay | until August 7. ‘The boys and their baggage will be taken down to the camp in a launch, Charles H. Haskell having kindly of- fered the use of his for the trip, and there will also be a launch to stay at the camp while they are there and will be found of much use. Prizes for ath- letic events to be held by both divis- ions are on exhibition Davis' window op Broadw: been donat: President Browning, Vice President James L. Case, Junior Pepartment Chairman. Hobson, W Melochie, (General Seerétary and Physical Directar Peckham Joseph A. Ambler will be in charge of the associatien office while Gen- eral Secretary Merrill js at camp. Weston 244 Miles from San Francisct Reno, Nev., July 6.—Hdward Payson Weston, the pedestrian, passed Denby { having 20-miles ‘fromthis city, this afternoon. | He expects miles mi 3 to:arrivve in Reno, 244 San Francisco, tomorrow. . in George A.! Merrill, I % = v s on the cow-| Ogdensburg, N. Y. July 6.—Samuel ievés the United States from all re- | il imported into the United States o Ar ol A brikeman was riding on tho cow. | Optensburg, X X, July ¢ Samuet ciprocal objections toward foreign na- | from. countries which impose a duty " eeivaliy S2, | citohtF and ushed the.man aside snd{ Perier and Guy Zoller, shsinietoily | tions in the matter of tonnage dues. |on American ofl. The proposed duty | At Glasgow: July 5. -Numidian, | out of the way of the engine wEICh | yaEht of fBrorgr T Berl @l e WhS | -‘Sevator Curtis gave notice of an |is to be one-haif of the duty,imposed | from Boston. 4 i no doubt. saved him from bad infu- | dort-Astoria, Now Tork which has amendment. he will propose to the bill | by the other country on American ofl. | At Trieste: July 3, Ocednia, from Kles: ll)t;.ul:glqt skt Cite:oncazed Wilh &f¥sen cruising on e Bt i AR providing for a countervailing duty on | “The senate at 8.32 o'clock adjourned. | New York SO0, phioen K. Wt eectr S5 were brought here today SSlF RS i = ¥ —— yacht night. Two tubes of the James Clabby to Play. Boiler blew out ‘and both men were Jimmy Clabby, the rising young zg}:“‘fmh ded by the escaping + | western weltérweight from Milwaukee, RPN T but a native of Norwich, Is here witti| Well Known Motor Cyclist Arrested. his father for the celebration week.| "' v Jimmy is algo ball player, and will Conn July 6 —~Willlam H. fill the right garden for the C. A. C. known motor | team this afternoon when they -fset rrested here \n;!l\ charged wi | the Hospital team In the first of a se- | ing responsibility. A horse drf y ries of three games for the city chams | Willlam Stone was frightoned by pionship. Wray's machine and ran, throwing - —— e Stene out and fractpr hi skull, 0 1 Wray did not step to in the 1 loston. July, §.—~Raber SVANS, | place employment and held under the landlord of President Taft and his | $200 bons for 4 hearing {omOrrow. a xt door neighbor, in Beverly, and Qircetor In a ge nnmber of mining| 100 Shots Fired at a Platform Danoe. cemp . at the Massachusetts | "y o0 (00, Ty ¢ —News Wil Hornel hospital at 10.20 tonigh | . ceiveq tonight that during & geneval of injuries fecelved by being thrown | FCeived LORRES Ther PUTEE B ey tant from_his hors: last Wednesday. night John Justice of Ashland, Ky, \'?l : Al oI S 0t an iNed Willlam C Lightning Struck Oil Tank—$25,000 | 70¢ And WHied N aad: Los: other men were st bullets but njured. T Marlinsville, /1lL., Ju ed by lightning in on: barrel tanks of the @hio Ol company, carly today, was controlled tonight. The loss was $25,000, The tank was punctured by a cannon shot and most of the oil drained out, preventing an not seves sh because another's Mod;j fired danced . with sweeth, art a Funeral a State Affair. Angeles, Ju According o explosion. letters received from Ceunt Bomentay v gy g who is now en the way to Poland sith $70,000 Fire at Johnstown, Pi the y of his wite, Madante Modjoh~ Johtistown, Pa., July 6.~Fire today | ka,-to bury it In her native countel, destroyed the plant of the Cambrig|publié officers of Poland desire to make Forge company of this city. The losa | the Modjeska funeral a state affair is estimated at $70,000., and to lay the: body af rest in some —_— — e national buflding. The funersl will be Spirit of '76. On the G. A. R. float the “Spirit.of ‘76" was represented by Albert Zei- lemiyar, us fter, and ‘the. old man| Atisnte, Ga- c.l'n.ly 5. United, Stat rummerpby Christopher C. Ruge. The | Senafor U, S. Clay w boy drummer was Harold Young, son | meusly re-elected”by the Geongia le of John T. Young. lature. held at Cracow about Jwly 17, Re-clected to U. S. Senate. Tabs

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