Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 14, 1909, Page 1

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T R R R R LA R ST SO R EVELYN NESBIT THAW A WITNESS] (s Prssraie ISyranded Actors |Gommectiout | emst Toesmane | jgR - SAYLOR \ - ‘. fi Sans '_'xl"'rrf' g‘é s nat 2 & M hules" o e -z i 41 On Stand for More than an Hour in Suprem i i saas tr | 1 08 it 5 C RO i ; Syl £ Court at White Plains gunes ho m dowd ot < privess dn: | COULD NOT GOM 4 FRY . et e o ety Carisbet g The New York Police hear that Leon by the i Hovapn) LiDg hen o whits nette”living T Philae Name of ‘His Daughter. day the condition of the majority is e del described as serious. e 2 NO LIQUOR SALE GHRISTMAS SHOWED THE SAME GIRLISHNESS All the Senate Amendments to the Philippines ff bill were rejected by the house. Peking, July 13.—Germany has joined the United States, Great Britain and Austria-H in notifying China . : that "she doed ot the pre- * . . +_ | limin: agreement - ween issia L3 » 2 ) That Won Sympathy for Her while Testifying Before in|and China devised for the administra- | ¢ A to < My ¢ upe tion of the Russian railroad area in ’ { - ROPE WAS READY-TO HANG DR MILLER There Was an Encounter between rovalists and republicans in the town Sli.ycr of Vice President of First National Bank of Cres- TP " cent City, [ll.—New Developments in Connection with House So Votes By Decisive Majority —It Is Now Estimated That Ad- the Two Trials of Her Husband—Prosecutor Unable| Manchuria. Port—All. Practically Destitute. journment Will Be August 15. et i to Get Her to Admit that Harry Had. Threatened Her | Berin, july 13—Count Zeppelin is| 1 ' e iy L mdo'fl';:ffl}.é:r‘:&""m o, GR806. Last Sunday Nighty’s 1 ragedy—Dr. Miller Claims He % = 2 here negotlating .with the Prussian| .o oo s o £k Life During a Visit.to Matteawan. railroad administration for a working rk, July, New. York. e, Hartford, July 13.—Among otber| o _no .. Fired in Self-Defense—Another Scandal to be Bared an charge d'affaires is matters which passed the senate today | iy charge of lg.p Danish legation in the arrangement between his proposed air- | bers of a_stranded who_arrived here today on a|\ere the following: Changes in the | ' char ship passenger lines and the railroads of Count Moltke. tro e v by which railroad stations are to be | banana declared that Venezuela | siatutes concerning appeals 1 the su- / : is ‘fela for vaudeville. e . — % ‘White Plains, N. Y., July 13.—Evelyn , time, was not then acting as counsel | enlarged to serve as shelters for air- e red Castro's coun. | DLCIe COUrt of errors; concerning for Prince Von Buelow, the retiring Ger-4 wa —Idolizath '3 to play cards, they two againat Negbit Thaw, as pretty as ever, petu- [for both Mr. and Mrs. Thaw. This|ships. This Is considered less costly m‘&fiiz’.}“ hits of the v York attachments; concerning the ab- | man' thancellor, bade farewell 1o the | hin dl:::-r‘:ie{-l.l"u{)‘ll}f; B ‘y";’,';“o&'f B | Dr Miter ana Mrs. Saylor. Mr. Sa lant and school-girlish, and dressed in | Deputy Attorney General Clarke prom- | than the ereotion of special airship | RCT R L T R o) with | POtment of commissioners of the sU- | foreign ambassadors in Berlin. said to have caused J. B. Saylor, vice | lor refused, somewhat sharply. His i the famillar blue which she wore so | ised to do, and Mrs. Thaw was ex-|sheds in the princlpal cities of Ger-| JISOCM S HV SN M SOl Siague | Perloracourt; and making the witness . Dresident of the Kirst National bank | refusal, Mrs Saylor states, was due to e during the tvo triaie 'oc ner | cused after ldentitying o muber ot | many. and “the chronic excitement i B o ilies SChs 437 Froviding for The Smithsonian Institution i t0 cx- | oF Crescent City, Tl 1o buffer i cle | b bellet that aho and o docior at 3 usband, Harry K. Thaw, for the mur- | papers in her husb: hang E B 1 2 prini h each | aplish an observatory on Mount t- i that led 'to | tained success at the games by sig= der of Stanford White, was on the | Tuesday's Testimony in Thaw's Favor.| WESTON NEAR SAN FRANCISCO, | country. * | package of butter; amending the Nor- 1en9e: the domestic tragedy that.led to talned suoce! A i . at an altitude of 14,000 feet. his death Sunday night at the hands | nals, ; Helped by American’ Cousul. walk city charter in regard to the as- [ "®% s death Sunday nigl " 3 ¥ a B n A to ke Thare N tha. say day tho testimony was much liko that g xR Coracaator Slumt. menn, | Afer two Connecticut Teachers’ Amnuity guild, e e e 4he. benker's. wits, mother of Golds moment with Mr. Saylor 4t the front u i = jc by TsteraeyTaccounts iy WLIpeN, ki ic | for the si of state paupers an: - . gate just a few minutes - e e b e o R ey s e o the 1 S e g s The Whole Story Not Yet Told. | slain. He was in a good humor: He ry stand for more than an hour before Aside from Evelyn Thaw's appear- Justice Mills, inthe supreme court | A%de TEOM CHEIE O A e called by Tha counsel, all of whom the Connecticut hospital for the insane awan, plague broke out nd they were driv- y ttested to his apparent soundness of | San Francisco, Cal, July 13—Ed- “Eown uayra the |at Middletown nnect! - 1t Sayl bout three minutes Seemed a Little Mors Mature. | fmind. T'he cagernees to see My Thaw s Bl Wemumtq the transcontl- s St ‘,::,,,Id‘mf,,w Trini- e iy 0 I Connatont o N AR s o e |,.;v:}les§);-f.,f o A U i '\:‘nniu"n:oy heard the fatal shots. Ae= A ‘was just 4s inten: as when she ap- | nend e an= T o it r e, di to Ruhl, the first shot was But for the abserice of the dainty | ¥aS Just 5 intense ds when ehe ap- | SO fries g s St iioh pag|dad. There they tried to redeem their House Action Reversed. dolegate. to the Tnternational Medical | least until @ jury passes on the case, | cording to Ru o ol e o "Dheared mmuch the | building in-New York. When she left been attached to his original scheduls | fortunes by a show. under. canvas, but | The senate reversed the action of the | congress at Buda Pest. it was intimated today that Saylor had | followed by an interval and there wers, the stand saeh a corowd followed her | OF 100 days, and he will not appear in | FPOTts of the.plague drove away théir | ouse and voted to make the 5 per made 'himself something of & martyr | three other shots in rapid succession. trying to send Harry Thaw to the audience. ! . e President Thomas H. Lewis of the | o protect the name of his daughter, | Three bullets were found in the bank- clectric chair. She is a littie more | that she had to-take refuge in the dis- | this ity untll Wednesday afternoon | "0 i Dagtitute. | iana Sronnds of the Southern Nev | United Mineworkers; opposes. the ro- | and had at last, it i¥ alleged, been im- | ers body and one in the wall. A fifth® faature, perhaps, but she showed the | trict attorney's office. P ramento - valley, Weston 6id ot leave | Finally all but three decided. to m“. for savings banks. posed. strike of the 18,000 employes of [ molated! by the man who invaded his | bullet was found today embedded in same_ girlishness that won sympathy | Buzz of Excitement When Evelyn En- | {ie"Cate capiial until a lute hour yes- | home, even 1t they had fo sail Wit | - Retain Their Place on Calendar. | the Pittsburg Coal company. He) e B il o B - o o B e her while testifying heretofore, and tored. terday. Shortly after midnight ~ he | bananas 404 8 gpriniding of ATantulsS. | o ‘matters of importance on F prosident A. B. Stickney of| . Mysterious Package of Papers. oy Shell tallying with the ofbess Sl % Yumes she was petulant to the extent | ywhen she first entered the court [passed through Davis, ten ‘miles vest | They arrived here p desti- | calendar were the personal tax bill and | the Chienge Creat. Westorn declarcs| According to W. R. Knightingale, | iil the house was found on the lawn. L 3 room and made her way to the stand, | Of Sacramento, ang after walking ten | tute, 2 | the bill providing for the marking of | consolidation or federal regulation is | cashier of the bank of which Mr. Say- [ “rhe struggle in the house was Wit~ Will-Appear Again Today. there was a buzz of excitement and a | more miles’to Dixon, he rested for an cold storage and preserved eggs. These | the only sure mbthod of making freight | 17, Was vice president, the devoted | negged by John Grunden. Mns. Saylor And though called by the state in | FiPPle of comment; but she showed lit- [ hour. Later he = stopped at Elmira, | TEHERAN OCCUPIED | - were discussed somewhat, but finally | rases wniform. father determined to suffer in silence | ran from the house, she says, when an endeavor to prove Harry Thaw ir- | te Concern. O 'the stand she was | Where he will take a long rest before BY CONSTITUTIONALISTS. | passed over, retaining their place on POy = mmiter than take any sction which| G o C1e House, e e sare B rational, what Roger Clarke, the dep- | Fluctant to answer Mr. Clarke's ues- | Tésuming his journey to San Francisco. the calendar. THE BILLARD COMPANY BILL. | Would involve his child in notorlety. | endeavored to separate the two men, 5 uty ‘attorney general, drew’ from her | UOFS 4nd had to be instructed to do | FITe ls only Afty miles from thIS| \y4ory Marched In by the Western Rivers and Harbors. — 1oaitle Peomed to fear some tragic so- | hut could Yot. E « 50 a number of times by the court.|CHY: 7 i ution e situation, Mr. | "Grunden - declares that Saylor HIDe eoday; freated rather & TAYOraDIS | The tears came to her eyes once when | - Weston has lost 20 pounds on his and Northern Gates: The senate passed a resolution rais. | Connecticut Should Secure Permanent |}, ih i oo today, “Whenever he left | , Orunden = declares ' that = Savier A journey across the continent, but he ing a commission to Investigate and Control of the B. and M. T s, ShooE i last Tegm or R0 1 gxcused trom the stand shortly after | JLetc o, i and ‘said peralaat. | 100ks well, and declares he is feady for | Teheran, Persid, July 1%—Recent | regort concerning the Improvement of city during ¥ W Rim: | Mre, Bayior. says thet W d ; = wis his habit to seek privacy, after [ N Ch At o REY O med and took. Dy the state and she will probably ap | 1 “I guess I will have to obey, for | the return trip events in Turkey are being repeated in | rivers and harbors in this state. Hartford, July 13.—In the light of | which he would reappear with a bulky | the hatchet from under the porch. Persia. - The.. constitutionalist forces, | yq, ire | the recent showing of the real charac- | anvelope containing rs. ‘Should o pear again tomorrow. et o] g mtnpt Droceeding®. | BoV. ROREED, AND the advance of which on Teheran for | Women to Vete on Hunicipal Affairs | .or of the Massachusetts holding com- | SVEIOPS SOUAIINE PaRery, SIONS Bloodstained Hatchet. State's Fight Largely Rests on Hér|ing me anything now, and 1 haven't - THROWN FROM TRAIN, | & time was not considered s - e 2 pany formed to acquire the Billard|tolq me, ‘open this package and fol- | When Mrs. Saylor returned from : o now in possession of the greagter part| Senator Blakeslee succeeded in hav- | stock in the Boston and Maine road | jow to the letter the Instructions con- | the barn in which she had taken ref- Testimony. § | enough to hire counsel. PrnCA ke Who Took | of the city, which they entered tnis | ing the senate pass the bill which au- | it behooves Connecticut to take such | tained therein: After each trip but |uge during the fight, the three men - Upon the ultimate outcome of Eve- | Thaw's Actions Appeared Rational. of By . yien) ok | morning without encountering any or- | thorizes women to-vote on all munici- | steps as shall secure to this ‘state per- the last, he destroyed the papers upon | went to the home of Dr. Miller. Mrs. lyn Thaw's testimony the state's fight | On the whgle, however, she told lit- $15 from Dead Body. ganized resistance. pal affairs concerning taxation. manently the control of the Boston und | niy return. He was away a little while [ Saylor and Ira ‘Grunden (the latter largely rests. Mr. Clarke tried hard | tle if anything today fp show that While 'Sardarasad and Sipa-hadar,| ~The bill provides that all women Cit- [ Maine_and thus later control of the | azo but when he came back he failed | was asleep during the shooting), wers today to get her to admit. that Thaw | Harry Thaw is insane, while a score | Chicago, July 13.—Cecil Cuthbert, 14| the leaders in the movement, concen- | izens of the United States residing in | great New England system which will | tq' folioty this practice. That packet I | left alone in the house with the body. ) had threatened her life when she vis- | or more of lay Witnesses who had ob- YeArs old, who disappeared from home | trated the attention of the royalists by | any town, city, borough or fire district | eventually be formed of the New York, | yoifcuc s Tocked in his private box In | When the trio. returned they. found (3 ited him on one occasion after his | served Thaw at various times since |9n May 25, after he had withdrayn | demonstrations to the west, a strong | in the state owning property subject to | New Haven and Hartford and the Bos- | 1o bank's vault. Whether it will shed | the hatchet stained with blood. This, commitment to Matteawan. - But, [ his commitment to Matteawan asylum, | $15 from a savings bank, is thought t0 | body of nationalists. and. - bakhtiaris | taxation shall be entitled to admission | ton and Maine. The Billard company | any light on the tragedy which ended | it is said, was nearly three hours afte turning appealingly to tHe court, she | spoke in his favor. The witnesses con- [ Bave been robbed and thrown from & | made. their way unnoticed around to|as municipal voters of such town, city, | bill is now at the foot of the calendar | hig life I cannot say. The coroner has | er the death of Mr. Saylor. repeatedly refused to answer his ques- | sisted of citizens from Peekskill and | freight train near Elkhart, Ind. Cuth-| the north, from which point the e cap- borough or fire district under the sume | in the state senate and will shortly be | the key and will open the box later, | Mrs. Saylor is said to have betrayed tion, and after a clash between coun- | Poughkeepsle, where Thaw was in- | Dert left Chicago with Harry Brock- | ture -of -the, capital was not difficult.|conditions as to age and residence and | taken up with a view to passing it and | poceiby after the fameral”’ no concern over the disposition of her #el, Justice Mills ruled that he would | carcerated for several weeks in the jail | Dofen. Today the police were notified | The guards at northern gates were | go through the same proceedings as|paving the way for Mr. Billard to 2 f husband's body, which lay on the floor Hold the conversation in which the | pending former habeas corpus pro- | that Brockhofen had written a boy | disarmed and the invaders marched in, | to occupaton, examination and. admis- | fransfer his stock to a Conmecticut [ Dr. Miller Barely Escaped Lynching. | hisbandis bodv, which Jev on the 008 threat was supposed to have been | ceedings, attendants from the asylum, | friend a letter in which he said: the foreign ‘section leaders taking up | sion as are now provided for by law | holding company. Massachusetts can- | That Dr. Miller stood in real danger great solicitude over the doctor's made, a confidential one between hus- | and various friends of Thaw's family | , L shoved Cecil oft the train all O.| their quarters in the old Mefliss bulld- | with regard to the admissin of men. | not force Mr. Biilard to sell his stock. | of Iynching last night is asserted by | S g “afered to deess 1t Sud ta band and_wite, and ‘therefore privi- | who had visited the prisoner. They |1 and got the cash. Am with my | ing. This gives the nationalists com.- | Senator Blakesles said that e be- | but the people of Connecticut will feel [ Nr. Knightingale and many others | Nound: ofered to dress M and i leged, until the state presented proof | all testified that his conversation and | 230t DOW, but will go further from | mand of the city with the exception of | lieved that women ought to have the | safer when that stock has been trans- | More than @a hundred men thronged & . o ttend it. 10 show that Daniel O'Reilly, the New | actions appeared to them to be entire. | ChiCago. the /artillery square - and the drill| right to vote on all matters in which | ferred to the new Billard company and | the streets of the usually quiet village | * ; York lawyer, who was present at the | 1y rationdl. . Detectives of the Lake Shore and|grounds adjoining. g they Rave such a vital interest as that | is out of the range of Massachusetts' [ of Crescent City trying to organize an| Dr- Miller and Mrs. Saylor in Jail. Michigan Southern rallroad say that| ~ The royalists are badly situated to ot taxation. attack. attack on the jail at Watseka. One| Dr. Miller and ‘Mrs. Sayler are in | the body of an unidentified boy was|make further resistance -the Cos- Tt is expected that the senate will| man with a rope was forcibly taken | separate cells at the jail. The doctor 4 MINISTER OF GOSPEL . | TRIAL oF ELLA GINGLES found near Elkhart several days ago.| sacks under command of HOUSE. strike out of the Billard company bill | to his home by cooler persons, whose | is held on a charge of murder, Mrs. ' . S . cers remain outside the 1 a the house amendments on the ground | counsel finally prevailed. Among the | Saylor and her father and brother are WOULD BLOW UP COLLEGE. »LAWYERS ALMOST FIGHT | RAIIROAD TIES FROM JAPAN. cut off from their thl“' house ‘u':'x'u" had a relapse and | that they tremtoodrenrl::]h'!e{ -r;'d would | Jatter was Willis Saylor, & brother of | in_custody as alleged acc .-,...'.;‘e._ “ P Rl e oo s tillery square. 7 s morning work was accom- | not be considered at al the com- | the slain man. Dr. Miller is of medium ht, aboi - | “Weuld Place Dynamite Under Corner- { Judge Interferdd to-Provent Bloodshed | Will Cost About $2 Each, Bat Capable | man, while (h d plished. It is now estimated that ths Bapy_msre to_incorporate under thel! Dr. Miller's defense Is that he shot! 45 years old. He was a tpanrm 'l:' " - stone of Chicage University. —A for Miss Barrett of Thirty Years' Wear. known. session will not be over until Aug. 15.{general law. It is believed, too, that|only when attacked by the banker with | society. Mrs. Saylor, she pfiu‘ N Yok 1l e S e i T?. special flel;p.l:?rll to Ifln" “lll:tjm{n < Aild for Teachers. !hehhoule wlllberea?\fly concur l:l’\ tl"’lll, a ‘hatchet. through the bars of a cell, garb in ew York, July 13. ive dollars’| Chicago, Jul; —) icago, July 13.—Arrangements a) ‘eheran. says e national at- Szt . - _ ouse members have generally % negligee, looked every winter of the Worth of Gynamite placed under the | lawyers end fabthes testiment o8 | o | peing made by the Atohison, opoka & | tacked the Cossacks in the Darracks | rrhe 86t Providing’ for trained teach- | 45 FOING TCUCCTL LT BNl ceachu- | Story of the Sunday Night Tragedy. | (eEllEes. jookte cvery winter of the | ers in small towns came up before the cornerstone of the Chicago university | peach Ella Gingles' Santa Fe road for a serles’of experi- | and artillery square for two hours this | house and was debated at some length | Setts and are convinced that it is to| avlor was slain about 10 o'clock | hair is golden, as is that of her daugh= story of alleged & divinity echool would be about the best | torture in a bath room of the Well. | Ments with ties which will be watched | evening without succeeding in captur- | i T Connecticut's interest to look after her | Sunday night. Mrs. Miller, wife of the | ter' Golda. e provides for state scholarships for vi . thing that could happen to the young | ington hotel on g with interest by. al: railroads .in the | ing the position: own and to the interest of the house | doctor, had left a few days previously mep of this cowiters declares’ Hew | Ligton hotel on February 16, marked — the education of girls i the small| 0" ("tollow atter some member or | to visit her parents at Sharon, Pa. Statement by Mys. Saylor. the tlosifis Housd 't 23 | Unitea States. The railroad purchasea Jolin Lesley Hill, pastor of the Metro- | case againot the gome frih oesaies | recently in Japan a shipment of cocoa: * politan Temple, answering the stinging | for larceny of lace from Miss Agnes | DOI0 and Japanese oak, which has just A"ROTHSCHILD DEAD IN VIENNA. | oXne.. 1t was strongly opposed bY | fwo who have personal grudges which | and Dr. Miller was taking his meals at | “Dr. Miller and I h ve been much in for the last two " ‘they are trying to satisfy the Saylor table and sleeping at his| each l')vlher'l compan; magasine article of Prof. Herbert L.| Barrette, her former employos. been landed in Califorria, and is being | Youngest Son of Albert Rothschild Said | pricni™ "0, fayored by Representatives e Lien B awn home. There were also at the | years” she sald, “and my husband ‘Willett, in which he said women were b prepared for use near Great Bend, Kan. to Have Killed Himself. L WOMAN’'S BODY IN RAPIDS. Saylor home at the time of the shoot- | seemed to approve. He always knew An alibi was furnished for Miss Bar. o Have ms: Griswold. It was passed by a vote of extrayagant, socially ambitious and | rette, who is accused by Miss Gingles | T1i8 wood costs $1.15 a tie, higher than ;. = ing John 'C. Grundon, father of Mrs. [ where and when we went together and Young, Handsome and Unidentified— | Saylor, and Ira Grundon, her brother. | never objected. He and I never had & gara Falls, Goldie' Saylor was sent away by her | quarrel on the subject.” unserupulous; that the moral levels of | bt haing. th & nation can never rise higher than its | to Jead’ hee ‘Tea” Smii el Dot womanhood, and that women have not 2 % 2 112 to 50. the averaze American tie. It is said | vienna, July 13—Baron Oskar Roths- i to be capable of 25 to 30 years' wear, | child. the youngest son of Albert Roth No Liquor Sale on Christmas. Y helping to abuse and cut her in 5 bty | @ i8 0 hard an orinary spike can- | child, head of the Austrian branch of | The house this morning by a de- mother a few days ago. Dr. Miller said the whole thing was changed for 3,500 years. room of the Wellington hotel, - |DOt be driven into it. Holes will b2 | the Rothschild house, diéd suddenly in | cisive majority passed the bill prohibit- | Niagara Falls, N. Y., July 13.—Th: Sunday evening John Grandon went | somewhat hazy to him and did not So far as I can see.” added Dr. Hill, | "Misq Mary Hale, proprietor of a hair | 20red and screw spike will be used.| this.city Jast night. It is reported this | INg the sale of liquor on Christmas day. | ody of a handsome woman, apparently 0 ask Mr. Saylor, who was occupy- | care to discuss the: case further than “that institution is filled with sensa- | gressing parlor. told g’f m”t?n "M?' ‘When laid the cost of the ties will be | morning that he committed suicide | AR interesting debate was participated | apout 25 vears of age, was di ing @ rocking chair on the lawn, to' to say that he shot in self-defense. flon-seeking individuals, filled with the | Barrette the evening of Febrogry ¢ | 2b0ut $2 each. The shipment contains | by shooting in his father's palace, be- | in by several prominent members. ered lodged on a reef of rock ahout one one purpose of undermining the coun- | 414" of attending the theater i ner | 2bOut 170,000 ties. cause of an. unfortunate love affair,| When the matter came up Mr. Mars- | hundred yards above the brink of the try's'ideas of God and religion, of man- | T He was 21 vears old. He returned to | den of Madison, chairman of the excise | Canadian falls early today. It was re- | TARIFF CONFEREES DISPOSE GLIDDEN AUTO TOURISTS S o Gotast ater, ghe said, they went to Miss . committee, moved that th . . o of Ch < . . B 4 NIGHT ATTACK NOT MADE. |Vienna two days ago, after eight , move e matter be | covered by employes of the state res- ; ‘It the moral lovel of America rose ,,,“,;';:c:,,;gg'gu;;’;‘g T ik ';;fl‘-mf;‘k} gyt e months spent in_travel, during which | tabled at the foot of the calendar, but | ervation, who made a perilous trip into , OF 40 AMENDMENTS [ ~ PILOTED INTO CHICAGO. ,, - : e 521 . waists. ienjum. e e b R S it ok i oo Baron Oskar Rothschild committed sui- | Mr. Marsden stated that only two or | © The woman was dressed in a hand- Schedules, R Sandy Roads. tr“"rhc e . is sincere and | “notootive Sergt. Charles MeNulty | Provincetown, Mass,, July 13.—The | cide.” They said that his death was | three appeared in favor of the bill and | some gown of silk pongee and her lin- = 4 " T thtul ch more 80 than her hus- | yoqtified (hat ho” examiey oty | oo i eonins comprising the first | caused by apoplexy. g s it did not seem to the committee | gerie was of the finest. She wore hip. | Waghington, July 13.—By passing | Chicago, July 13.—Through the ald band, e T o s ins g Det | Son MscMEIne it pristng A af that there was any good reason why | less corsets and black shoes with cloth | over the cotton and woolen schedules | of the expert pilots of the Chicago Mo= Vomen are not extravagant by na- | WiH' duct, showing that e oo o | Salled for the target grounds vesterday, | Elested President of Chapman Vaive|any exception should be made of | tops. There were no rings or jewelry | Without taking up any of the amended | tor club, the Glidden automobile tour- ¥ i rive something - Most of el it | crawled over It, 4s alieged by Mise | were stiil in that locality today. Al Company of Springfield. Cpstmas day hey reported untavor- | of any kind to.assist In the identifica- | paragiepPs aud skipplng the disputed | ists arrived io Chicago todey uuime ir mil- tion. paints ‘connected W pes ¥ the artful speed traps on the 4 tonaires have risen through the self- G‘Kfl‘g:;vy e ;‘z‘eagggg‘; ;X’l“;‘mg{“g’e‘:‘,g:‘;;‘:;gf“"" SpripehuE i J“‘%..‘&‘.‘ex' Mr. Chandler of Rocky Hill said that AR AR el lumber in the wood schedule, the tar- [ boulevard approaches in the southern i sacrifice and encouragement of thelr |, 5 {0FpeY, ODonnell asked the wit- |at anchor In Frovincetown harhor, | | Gilbert, president of the Pratt & Cady | ne was surprised to hear anyone say| EMPLOYES BELOW STANDARD. | iff conferees were able today to dis- | side of the city. |8 wives. And they are the first to say [ poos If S 8¢ e;nh e questioner 5 hoa{l A e ke Dl ot Right clflmvnny Om lflft gfi; g:“»- “v“ T | that there was no difference between Sa—— " pose of about 400 amendments. This | The day's run was from Kalamazoo, ¥ [ Teeling for Miss Qg A lriendly | 40 P oueh a fosgy night ie desired for | ecied president of the Chapman valve | Christmas and any other holiday. “I| One-Fourth at Ellis Island to Be Dis- | number, however, includes subjects | Mich., 143 miles, and in It the enthu ¥ solite TEnorencs of (oot ines s hab | objected, faving that was a seit-secer | this movement, conditions last Right,| {icer sont 0.+ stockholders o fhe | Ieeard Clyistmas day as more sacred| missed, Reduced or Warned. | that were seitled tentatively on Mon- | jastic contestants encouniered all the = comes. They | E & g3 ot e e ey 5 4 , the mos red of al day and Saturday. scomforts which a torrid sun an {,','.g:;f:’,’&';;’:;,‘; e B 8 The dobate hat followsd the law. | unusually dense, made danger of accls Bort 0. taks e place ot Bwis & e éfi,iefi":.?“fiun&"i'y’ Sty | o Nestipaton, July_i3—qut. of 412 e g n :‘r’clhhe“alcl:;olh;:: e o A o - < = o B v , £ @ Z N i n y | employes at the immigration station | drawback feature - e only accidents of the day were connkgs’them o % certain style of Iiv- }JEZ,"&‘K’&JS‘J"“ to blows, and the gvafi[n t:"!g;:;; for it ‘::!:”b;’e“e:t"b““;!’_ ;::r::;h ,r_:m:’er:!»“'{gl: rfl:&;’; illh ‘l:-l:;'; prevail with added force on Christmas | o i lsland, N.<¥. more than one. | araph, the rates on oficloth, and the | minor ones. A motor truck carrying & APt 0re. drowves. -and ing today all trace of fog disappeared | two. companies, whose output is simi- | O, fourth, or exactly 139, have been found | various items under the head of litho- | supply of tires went into a ditch near b wutomobiles, and even when hard times and the ships made an AAMIrable Dic- | e st b combine. removing the slant | ol Fuller of Tolland said that last | 1o be below the standard of efficiency, | €raphs, were submitted to sub-confer- | Laporte, Ind., shortly after noon and J Come, fall o take their wives into their | PASSENGER BALLOON ture ‘ftont. ahore. of 'the Pratt & Cady company to this | Gir"mas he chanced to be in 2 certain | according to an announcement mads | ces. The treasury experts who helped | stopped the. entire caravan for a few £ neces- ; e and witnessed dis- v t of commerce | the finance committee in its consider- [ minutes. 2 " SAILED OVER WATERBURY city, though officials of both companies | graceful drunkenness, He resolved | il b, (¢ department of comm i ¢ : 3 i ; and labor. ation of the bill are assisting the con- [ - Acme car No. 98 skidded into a ditch : 5 - saloons on - ; X lay resumed its course. regarded as extravagant and unscrup. utes Late Last Night. Baker Pronounced Dead Was Brought | Death of Lieut. Col. Phisterer. | Christmas he should do 50 and the op- | Som Gyrcoiged: and others reprimanded | thewe Subleets. - ssion was begun, | v Suitwiress viogs. g Albany, N. Y., July 13—Lieut. Col. | portunity has now" arrived. s the conferees had reached “sundries” | ARGENTINE MINISTER work of a college professor| Waterbury, July 15—A balloon went Frederick ~Phisterer, brevet major [ Mr. Loos stated that it is a well | Shot Dead in View of Supper Going | nearly the last of the schedules. So be to build up, not to tear|over this city about 11 o'clock tonight, | Worcester, Mass., July 13—Rescued | general, dled at his home in this city | known fact that Christmas day is_the Crowd. many matters had been put over for LEAVES CITY OF LA PAZ \ down. It would be far better for Prof. | evidently carrying passengers, for | about two weeks ago from the Wor- | today after an _{llness of several | quietest-‘day of the vear in the saloon g Ch 3. | future sessions, however, that it is dif- T % Willett to instruct young men in the | there were swaying lights around the | cester hospital morgue, to which -he | months. He had been assistant ad- | business of all the 365 days, and that| Toledo, O. July 13.—Charles J.| gttt oSl nis (OR LR IOr bl io ol | Wife Takes Refuge in Barracks—Hog- # @rinciples of integrity and independ- | rim of the basket and the bag seemed | Was about to be sent apparently dead | jutant general to the national guardy many closed on that day anyway, but | Dresser, 38, a railroad detective, shot | et 00 eVl JURE AR mOote, FEOSTINS tile Demonstrations Continued. $hce and self-rellance than to regale | to be large, The balloon sailed in the | from heat prostration, Joseph Remil- | of the state since 1892. General Phis. | that he did not believe that all saloon | and instantly killed William Chatter- | ‘U8 V€O JEXCE L 0" b ravent the ad- — ? them with ancient libels upon woman- | direction of Sandy Hook, but remained | lard today started to resume his work | terer was born in Germany in 1836 and | keepers should be obliged to close on | ton. 39, a ship's carpenter, tonight, in | SRS TEECR COPTE 54 JUSICRE LI0NCR | peroe Ayres, July 13—The mi g hood.’ in sight for more than twenty min- | In a baker shop. When the man was | came to America when a boy. that day. Vview of a supper-going crowd, cross- | | Ty Gonterees, regardless of how un- | ter of foreign affairs has n_:”':}_'d" - %.L 5 ) utes. brought to the hospital, he was pro- — . Tt is clearly to public interest that | ing Cherry street xirtdge,_a main thor- important are the questions decided. telegram from Senor Fonseca, Argen- (¥ ~ SERIOUS RIOTS IN BELFAST, — nounced dead. He was put on a truck Frightened to Death. those desiring an opportunity to make | QUShfare. There was trouble of & long | "RC orridors around the conference | tine minister at La Paz. anhouncing ¢ | OUARDS STATIONED ABOUT CITY| SWAM ACROBS HULL GUT. | IS (tK(n to (e markue, but b Was |, Sturels, Mich, | July 18— Extrerme | 3 fowed to do bo'and that they pe not | savs. that Chatierton had hreatened | F00m, In the senate ofice bullding are | that he has left that city. The tel ; s — T e 9 and | inreatened | as abou y d - | gram“advises that hostile demonstra~ " Result of Confliots Between Nation- |14 Year Old Dorchester Girl Performed | Vith electricity. The treatment brought | of Miss Mamie Davey of Chicago, | 4epied this priviiege. to kill him and had made 2ispataging | jeneatives of speeial interests, and lob- | tions against Argentina and Pary co Y, N O v By o P indications that life was not extinet, | whose body wasfound floating in Kiin- | | MF: Burnes of Greenwich was heart. . byists generally, as théy were when | tinue and that Mme. Fonseca was alists an: gemen July - and after,some time the man was re- | ger lake iast night. - As to Claude | Y vor of the bill and suggested ot . d senate com- | obliged\to take refuge in th | v that wh -| Two Unsuccessful Attempts to Manoeu- | U Dill was in house and & refuge in the artillery Y Beifast, Treland, July 13.—The Na- | Boston, July 18._Rosie Plenhof, af VIVo& = Hunt,'the young farmer who took Miss | ja, (i e re e P vhe 1 Whiaht Acrbgth o o SRR N barxacks: 1 tionallst quarter of the city has been | 14 vear old Dorchester girl, succeeded Davey ml;i. e A im has | o 1S S ter was. ‘temporarily tabled & 4 4 The Bolivian minister at Buenos Ay« the scene today of serious riots, owing | sWimming across Hull Gut, from Governor of Minnesota III. been found, although the lake has been Washington, July 13. — Orville | Attempt to Break Telephone Monopoly | res has addressed a note to the mine to admit of this and later sed. a 1o the disturbed state of the distriot |Peddick’s Island to Pemberton shore,| _St. Paul, July 13.—Governor John A.| dragged for his body. A strong effort will be made to de- | LoriEnt Jaie today made two unsuc- Faile sy fon T b S reasons for refusing to participate in jon- | #nd back again, at flood tide this af- | Johnson is ill at his apartments in the cessful attempts to manocuvre his b x e hed e e een the nalion: | ferneon. To swim this narrow water- | Aberdeen hotel, and all his engag Alimony of $1,000 a Month. Test the'Sul M thy wengte. - aeroplane in the air at Fort Myer. The| New York July 13-—By a decision | the official pronouncement of the de~ ge force of police has been drafted | W2Y With its strong cross currents has | ments for the week have been can-| New - York, July 13.—Alimony of( STORMY WEATHER IN ITALY. small area of the fleld and the unfa- | of the appel xde 3 v-lr:‘n of “'-"t su- | cigion. g‘ guards are stationed in various been the ambition, of both amateurs | celled. He has undergone three opera- | $1,000 a month and $5,000 extra for - vorable direction of the light wind| preme court today another attempt to v T v res leph i N | - Bections of the auarter. Already se¥- | 304, professional swimmers, and many | tions for sppendicitis and intestinal | counsel (ses was granted today to Mvs. | Hailstorm in Rome, with Damage by | Diowins *f, (e Ume were lareely e ) brosk SOS (Gphone fengpqer [0 NG | Badly Decomposed Body of Woman - > Ve ‘way, Miss len- a g 4 - i el encounters have taxen piace be- e e e o T N e A b P s el et e T Lightning and Floods. attempted. fleld to the New York Telephone. com- Found. a ove bles. 5 Gould - Brokaw, the millionaire club- ——e pany. The court denied the appeal of | . New Haven, Conn., July 13.~The ter, attacking the guards with stones Bhe eut ts R . T & et HEE goit. sli¢ses stundunset Rm'u July n;g:l: and etp;cll'llg Attendance at Seattie Exposition Pass: | the :i.;v; ?;nrl;e{_m::f::e&l :;: ephoe | badly decomposed body of o womss Wi = el treatment. X peris nprecedentes i . o r ce tele- | was found lying beside th fit “The police made a number of charges | €L W42 In the waler twenty-tvo min- | - Five Deaths from Tussday's Heat. |and cry weather for this season of the vear. 1n | ... e oo phone wires under. the streets of the [tracks in Orange late today. Recopml. with their clubs and a Jarge number of | /25— ne, minutes or Philadelphia, July 13—Another hot Tribes: Enter F < | July it is customary to have a ‘.3 ke An Asi| city, afirming the decision of the spe- | tion was impossible and the body was rioters and officers were injured. s ning. spell such as ‘was experfonced in this| Rebellious Tribesmen Enter Fez. | 3rought with the temperature above | tendance yesterday of 24.601, the total| cig)’term of the supreme court. mediately buried, portions of the Sy R A clty a fortnight ago today caused five | Berlin, July 13—A despatch from | 100 degrees Fahrenheit In the shade, | 3itendance for the first 42 days of the e clothing being saved for identification. Mrs. Ronk Killed, in Auto Accident. | deaths here. Four of the victims were | Totuan says that Roghi, leader of the | but this year it has been raining daily | Alaska-Yukon-Pacific exposition pass- Corey Returns from E: - — Buicides Increasing in New York State ed the million mark, the grand total A S . et N Ty gy T the | Mietogn, N 3, iy 13t | SO, Moy Saieh Lion, %yt ebolcus Somemen, mide 03 aack | by sy Ind the tmpertce rigiers | 35,10 SR mee e o New orkJuly. 13- Bt Wil | New Havin Taor Becomes Doputy number of self ‘inflicted deaths is in- | Sylvester M. Ronk of this city, a Wid- | riyirations were reported. The max- | entry into the city. His followers pil- | palloares broks: ore inS Sity O nt MR B S E. Corey, president of the United Sheriff. creasing In this state is shown by the | OW, was Killed today in an automobile | B % i, 60 FORTIRk o BRE IO | TUE8 Tl HOE Y O any Of the | e e ot Auto Driver Discharged. States Steel corporation, who arrived | New Haven, Conn., July 13.—Sheritf records in the state department of :l“ccgalerm ‘:r!;]‘ch OCfumd 'lw"h?l;‘";.‘; the highest humidity 79. % merchants_fled to Mequinez. 7 rhe fate trees struck by lightning. The M:: New Haven, Conn. July 13.—H. C,|teday from Europe, and Judge Elbert|jugo tonight announced the .pnoln!-L X Beaith. There were 1,207 suicides in | Ingburg, The :flll:{‘ iy Sux 10 whe. v of Mulai H4fid is unknown. are covered with snow, the rivers have | Moran, the Yonkers automobilist whose | H. Gary 'rc?fi["-"m g “"'Dfr;'lo"_! # | ment of Thomas J. O'Brien, a tallor B S o T e et ves | atrnck the tronwork of & bridgs and| _Twe Vistims of.Fourth of July. o been turned nto terrents and are over- | automabile knocked down Mrs. Pillanu, | poatd of Svectois, wio, saved for|on Chapel streel, as a deputy sherlff to B L e er rate. the monthly aver. | overtured. All the occupants were| Detrolt, July 15—Prof, W. R, Pitkin Nine Ribs Broken. fowing thefr Samks, and sgriculture is | a1 IWilian woman, as she was {rying fo | ([ the resuits of the tariff revisers | ioo-rd the late Col J. J. Heslay, 406 Gge Deing 124. On this basis the rec- | thrown out. The others escaped - { of Alblon college died at Alblon Watertown, N. Y., July 13.—With | Suffering. - Thachine, was discharged it tie Cene | efforts. Mr. Corey said that in his be- $10,000 Fire at Bridgeport, for this year will be about 1550, | Jury, but Mrs. Ronk was fatally. hurt | of blood poisoning and Orville;Mor ne ribs broken and otherwise badly 7 e 0 e hat “ninont, arerybody s metieted A s X and ‘died shortly afterward. son, ten years old, died atiMu fned Johm Bt:-Johu: aged 75, liea| MWASKED MEN HOLD UP HOTEL. fterville court court today. Moran wan |86 tEL mamL AV E o0, St andurt]| . Bridgeport, Sonn.. "July, * 15—ty e of lockjaw, both deaths ress gnscious In a local hospital here | Manager at Utah Hot Springs Wound- | less driving. . and predicted that the result of the | $hoRcuee, OO0 BF 8 'uui—fl":."n“ At Bor@eaux: July 10, Mexico, from Boston’s Mercury Rose to 91. % l[_xgg:r;;s received. while- cels b th “!hahrel\llt nttmsx: fl:;m on a ol ‘sng Sufe- Lovted. e s bill's passage would be a speedy ac- tonight with a loas of .‘nmu ll‘uu't” Néw York. < Boston, July 13.—Boston was the | FOUrt % o gz o LA i — : Z Bteamship Arriva i celeration of prosperity and a lon Trieste: July 8, Martha Wash- | hottest ‘city in the country, with the tomouile operated by Frank Bouner of Instantly Killed by Trolley Car. . |¢ ® | Dhie fire started ut 11.30 o'clock i At e: , = % ‘from New York exception” of New Orleans, today, the U. 8. ggvairvman Drowned. men held upthe hetel at the Utah Hot | rick McCarthy, 45 years old, a resi | JU9%¢ Gary was equally o strocture, over the boiler room, i %t 'Genoa: July 9 Duca Degli | mercury risin- from 71 degrees last| Burlingtom® Vt, July, 13—Ce: Ei * | Springs, ten miles morth of Ogden, at|dent of this place, was instantly killed spread through the workrooms into the from . Regina | night to a maximum of 91, official, at 3 | James D, Cavana of Troop.. ks at Detroit in 1t 10.30 o'cloek 1ast night and after shoot- |'by a trolley car here tonight. = M 4,000 W. U. Telegraph Poles Down. | ghow department and to giles of lum- i 3 S Ellisburg. Ogden. Utah. July 15 —Three masked | . Thompsonville, Conn., July 13.—Pat- | ' 08 ¥eod timen 0 o0 Hapger floor of the two-atory Eleve; i o'clock in the afternoon. Combined’| United States cavalry, stationed at| Los.Angeles, Cal, July *i ing Richard Barnett, the manager, | Carthy was crossing the tracks and the | Des” Moines: lowa, July 13.—More |ber in the yard. Fifteen men with the heat wave was an excessive [ Fort Ethan Allen, was drowned in Lake| was selected as the meeti; pen safe | motorman did not see him until it was | than” 4:000 Western Union telegraph | employed there and this num humidity which made a sticky, swel- | Champlain today when a sudden ? toe late to prevent hitting him. His| polés in Iowa were broken by the re- | about to. be doul s the busy m tering atmosphere. One death and a|of wind upset the rowboat In W] ke 3 3 Towa, & t m‘ broken. McCarthy was un. The on dozen prostrations resulted. /| was taking an outing. : 4 9 5o 3 F i ‘ s

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