Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 30, 1909, Page 1

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/and Hidalgo plazas were | ing all morning ceased shortly after wiive with m:‘mmumut the night | 11 o'clock mgay‘ and the fear that the _.ahd & vast in_this | river would dgain rise to evem greater * 'FLOODS N NORTHERN MEXICO " Due to the Continued Fall of Rain for More Than Ninety-Six Hours - CITY OF MONTEREY PARTLY SUBMERGED Thousands of Homeless Peons Gathered on the Various 'Plaxn—Num‘-r of Dead, all from the Poorer Class- es, Variously Placed at from 400 to 1,000—Hundreds of Bodies Already Recovered—Property Loss Millions and Police Guard , Tex., Aug. 29.—With partial f-l-a;tl'_‘b’l:llamentd of . cclnl‘nunlc?):lo: City. b o podieg wpstiag; of gorther , rurales and soldiers play- Mexico " today, previous reports con- | 43 ECE THUEY B Hiah na to- cerning loss of life and property dam- | g, in guarding and caring for the agfe, 428 confirmed. city. All police reserves were called Death, Desolation, Darkness. into service. The rurales were busy mi-offici: vices state that four [and detachments of troops from the hu :r.-‘d du:‘b:gm were recovered in | headquarters of General Trevino were Monterey at noon today. Last night | utilized to secure shelter for the suf- in Monterey was one of death, desola- | ferers. on and darkness. The flood waters Fear of Shortage of Food. O O e asnont o |, Yhile yet. thers is no scarcity o food and the city is amply able to care it | akd to AOE VO RRSIITYT O the | gor -tte Gestituto, there is fear that a to fall and | gnortage will soon come. There have to the thou-|y.en washouts all along the line of the sands of homeless who had con- | Natjonal railway between Laredo and various plazas. Saltillo, Mexico, and not a train has " Flood Swept Everything Before It. |entered the city of Monterey either " The destructive flood, due to the|from the north or south for the last éontinued fail of rain for the past|seventy-two hours. Binety-six liours, swept-sysrything be. All Wires Were Prostrated. o T e o retom | All wires over the National railway eration of small huts swarming with | Were prostrated until late today, when families belonging to the poorer class- | & line was restored, and it was learned e The mumber of dead. which can- | that there is a possibility that the ot b acurately estimated for days— | track will be repaired and trafic re- perhaps weeks—is varlously placed at |Sumed on a curtailed schedule late from 400 to 1,000, The victims were [ Monday or Tuesday. from .'-‘!n“gwmt 'f-,]e't":' T;le Jgog Telegrams Ask for Friends. reach crest between b Hundreds of telegrams have been o'clodk Saturday. morning. passing through Laredo en route to Many Entire Families Perished. Monterey today requesting information Many families were swept to death |as to the fate of friends and relative with hardly a chance for their lives. | Communication has been establishe: ‘With the onrush of the waters pande- | by a circuitous route and the tele- monium . reigned and as the victims |grams are being answered as rapidly ‘were swept from their homes, on the | as possible. & ::n-n'fl 'h:c.hu:l‘p‘:t{ h‘:‘mflim sh:l- Dead Placed Along Banks of River. A% g on i e water | ywhile semi-official reports state that would reach an unprecedented height, | 1" o noon today four nundred bodics tiful’ appeals for assistance could be|y;ue heen recovered, there has thus by those on higher-ground, but | far peen no attempt to inter the dead. S of any Kind Wiyt Uspoastisle. They are being placed along the banis Private Homes Opened to Sufferers. |of the river on the higher _ground, Last night un? effort was made by | where an improvised morgue has been kind hearted people to shelter homeless | constructed, and there the bodies await women and children. Private homes | identification. ‘were thrown open to the sufferers. The | It is thought some arrangement will police station, many hotels and clubs |be made tomorrow to inter the dead. a8 well as the rooms of several organ- | Those who have been identified will izations were placed at the disposal of | be buried by friends and relatives, the authorities. Though most of the | while the unidentified will be buried by ‘women and children were thus cared | the eity. “ &iaflm ‘were compelled to sleep River Rose Sixty Feet. in the open in the various plazas. Both [ Torrential rain which had been fall- as it swept onward. It is estimated. that the river has (4. Many Bodies Recovered. ;hetn to a height of fifty to sixty ! Already many bodies have been re- | fe°t- covered, but lt’h impossible to state | Appeal to United States for Monetary zm dxact. number. “Aw ‘Semi-reliable Aid. i says the police records show that four hundred bodies had been Te. | riatns “hus acked the suthoriiics ot - eovered up to noon today, 'Scores of | Washington that a general appeal be gther bodies are believed o be still | made by the American . government Iodged st yarious points along the | through the newspapers for monetary m“’“’" it iy B¢ walks 'hetore | aasistance for the thousands who have i lost their all in the flood. According Pitiful Scenes Reported. to this information the consul has mnum uan;.m.l? reported among x::ldelthls n;;pml h: gm [name of the e women and children, Many women erican colony of Monterey. nds, motherasirom, thelr. childrer; | 3, Monterey & Progressive City. ;| Monterey is one of the most pro- = st kmowledge of the whereabouts | .. osyive citiea in the republic. . Large amounts of merchandise, machinery Hotels and Business Houses Warned. | ang food products are imported from At 11 o'clock this morning rain was | the United States. It Is estimated that ultul‘ flgl:'c:f“n“ .hd.: to t“ddll?;er 85 per cent, of the population consume na had worked out for | American goods. v;cmluk::l:.l‘ is on gln ground, to [heights was dissipated. itself & new o dividing into two i i aaw o , Jividing into two | Later—Number :v Dead Will Reach o goner that enother and modernly 200, d part of the town was| Laredo, Tex, Aug. 29.—Direct com- figflund. munication with Monterey was re- s said that warnings had been | established by the Associated Press at sent out to many of:the hotels and |10.30 tonight. The operator at that business houses throughout the center | point says that the number of dead of the city to be prepared for the | Wil reach 1,200. The Monterey News worst and to take preventive meas- [ Was compelled to suspend publication u;’. for two days owing to high water. warning would not necessarily | course. mean that there would be any loss of 5, TR but m;x'.g:‘i’."l:o::o;. of various | PROPERTY LOSS NOW ed an N firncidr g S d stall ESTIMATED AT $20,000,000. modern portion of the ci : conbidered to be Bigh snoueh 10 wetans | Danger is Now Over — Seventeen and the ravages of the flood, but in view | a Half Inches of Rain—Many Acts of the fact that the rise of the waters | of Heroism. has been unprecedented it has been considered best to fssue & general| Monterey, Mex., Aug. 20.—The num- Mrarning. 3 ber of dead in Saturday's flood will Damage Will Reach Millions., - 'rlf.]ach ltweh;’e hurm;llred and r(r]lfl_\'bol more. 1t is. thought that will be | The river has fallen considerably and . r il exoess G frst estimaies s song | While SUl Migh the danger 1 now out in last might's report. Monterey | Over. It stopped raining today. Sev- smelter, one of the largest in Mexico, | enteen and a half inches of rainfall is Suffered great loss from the deluge of | the official record during Friday, Sat- rain. This loss is variously estimated [ Urday and today. at from $1,000,000 to $2,000,000. 15,000 People Homele Other Losses. Fully 15,000 people are homeless and ol e W Hrrinan[SaidSharpThings =t s [NTTED STATES GETS LION'S SH ment of gold from South Africa was 7 ] [tained ‘a speed of over twenty landed at Southampton yesterday. It an hour. : is valued at upward of $5,716,000. ; ) By The Japanese Government hus ‘m-’ m /the Honors of Amtion Week at thm ; Paris, Aug. 29.—At the Chantilly K nounced its purpose of building three IN CONNECTION WITH HIS POLI- e which Closed Yesterday Lightning Set Fire to Three oil tanks CY OF FOREST CONSERVATION. aan(ulnl(r;gl 35,000 barrels at Bowling reen, 0. J. R. Flannery, an Official of the Dallas, Texas, postoffice, was shot by his divorced wife. & Lord Charles Beresford, former ad- As Assistant Secretary of the Depart- | miral of the British navy, arrived at ment of Commerce and Labor Will [ Montreal, Quebec. 5 Be Accepted—What McHarg Said. Bishop J. W. H-) tzell, of the Metho- dist Episcopal church, arrived in New: —_— York from Europe. MR. W'HARC'S RESIGNATION SHASHED ANOTHER RECORD SUNDAY course tod: W. K. Vanderbilt's Sea- “H sloke 11 two.n the Prix b7y aChuu:llly ot | RECEIVED “ HIS' FIRST SOCIAL 3 , two miles an hailf furlong. Mr. Vanderbilts Reinhart was second | ° VISITORS ON SUNDAY. in the Prix la Rochette, 5 1-2 furlongs. (R SHEaE " London, Aug. 29.—An order for a TATEMENT new Cunard liner has been given to Am STATE the Tyne firm which built the Maure- - 000- Eons, 400" oot ene Bk 10 fest |Frof “Arden Hevse—Positive = An “tona, cet long, an ect | Fro - ¥ A o 2 % g & beam. She will have turbine engines ; % (S Curtiss Won First Prize, Nothwithstanding His Penaliza- and is intended to be speedy enough| nouncement Which It is Hoped Will i Z » o £ F Tustiania” the Mauretania ‘and the | pyy an End to Sensational Rumors, tion, in the Prix De La Vitesse of 20,000 Francs, ! Divided Into. Four ! riz:s—Bleriot had :.arrow Es- cape irom Death—American Won lnt_grnlfionll Cup Athens, Greece, Aug. 20.—The crises - in political affairs here which reached | Arden, N. Y., Aug. 29.—“Mr. Harri-| Beverly, Mass., Aug. 29.—The resig- | George Graham, Who Escaped from its height in the mutiny of the: local [ man is better. ~You may say that Mrs. | nation of Ormsby McHarg, assistant |jail at Harrisburg, Pa. was shot and garrison and the formation of a new | Harriman and all of us are very happy | secretary of the department of com- |killed by a policeman. cabinet, has subsided A decres was |over the steady fmprovement in his|merce and . labor, will be accepted. published today granting amnedty to | health ‘since he cathe to Arden house. | Secretary Nagel, head of the depart- | The Russian War Manoeuvrés are | ethény Aviation Field, Rheims, Aug.| The tjme, but mot the amount of the troops concerned in the military | So far as I know.this is the first au- | ment, had an extended conference with | taken to emphasize the need of the [ 29— A twilight vision of Paulhan's | penalization, was posted, and there way mutiny and those who have been en- | thorized statement made by any mem- | President Taft this afternoon and dis- | Russification of Finland. graceful monoplane like a great white | excitement among the Americans, sin camped outside of the city for the past | ber of the Harriman household and I|cussed with the chief executive the o o4 bird soaring above the plain so high |the penalization, which was only one- twenty-four hours, numbering 548, re- | am most_solicitous that it should be | question of a successor to Mr: McHarg. | Mrs. John Winkleman, an Aged wo- | that it seemed to rise above the yellow | twentieth, would bring the time to turned this afternoon to their respec- | printed precisely as I present it.” Secretary Nagel received a letter from | man, clubbed to death at Fayétteville, f harvest moon just rising above the |26.33 1-5, seven seconds less than that tive barracks. The city is tranquil | geatament by Mr. Harriman’s Pastor,|the assistant secretary today saying | Ark. was robbed of $10,000. distant hills and the fleeting “golden | made by Curtiss. No official informa- It is stated that the crown prince will ont by Mr. Harriman's Pastor.{,, .. “he must adhere to his first in- & filer,” as the Curtiss machine has been | tion could be obtained beyond the fact resign as chief in command of the | The forégoing statement was made | tontion of remaining in the department | Robert Sims, a Seved-Year-Old Boy, | dubbed, smashing another world’s rec- | that the judges were awaiting reports ? army. 5 this afternoon by the Rev. J. Holmes| o1y for g period of six months. This | wos frightened to death by a police- | ord in the Prix De La Vitesse, were [from the fleld commissioner at 530, - e paier s g’{cg:m::- Efi:fl»’:‘"‘&;‘:ggf‘"‘w; term of duty will expire: Sept. 4, and | man’s playful threat at Catskigl, N. the ‘cloking glories of aviation week. |aficr which no start would be possi- T3 e 41 Y il ‘e L SIN 1) and ‘with. suthority after dining with | by tbat time Secretary Nagel hoves| o i, McHarg, Assistant sécretary | Curtiss Won. Handily on Sunday. PG . 1 ovever, who said he bad" ARRIVED SAFELY AT BERLIN |the Harriman family today and talking | o° new nesistant Mr. MeHar of “the- “igteri de & bitter at-| The victory of Glenn H. Curtiss, the | o liged thrice t Me his ac- ; : = s yterior, made a T r u en obliged thrice to muffie with its head. - s tack on the methods of the forest ser- | S0le American representative in the | cojorator on the previous flightson ac Lot Evtodeichoaton - Lust.: - Faiddy nounced some time ‘ago that he soon | tack on the methods o contests, coming on the heels of his | C6TAtOR OB TAC PROEORS e e ot To Stop Sensational Rumors. would leave the government service to | vice. great victory in the international cup | dance that he would do better in an- | orning—Delayed by Accide “My position in this matter is very | ©IS4ge In private business. In hislet-| _ 4o the Park Comtisalon’| J68tsrday, Fives the United Btates the | Sonce that b would do better {1 Eh=SY Meetis il i o ter fo Secretary Nagel today he re- s g - s TP ot ot sharply defined, said Mr. McGuinness, | ' iy of iy ntention to Jeave the | shows a Jarge increase in the number | flon's Shate of the honors of the meot. | it{in two minutes his machine was ppeliny opam Mr, Hardman's personal ehab- | service, but savs: that If a successor [of Visitors to the Gettysburs battle- | N, The Prix De La Vitesse of 30,000 | out ‘cd spoeding across the line. ~Ha francs ($4,000), divided into fouf prizes, 51 v o Berlin, Aug. 20.—The airship Zep- | when I was ouly 15—-and T feel bound | C4nnot be found by Sent. 4 he will | fleld. b was distributed to the four machines |t toaome tha thenttie wiie Do 5 2 4 continue in office until Oct. 1. - pelin III, with Count Zeppelin at the | to him.by ties of .the deepest grati- [ “Ont 1 three rounds of the course, 30 kilo- " ’ Relm, arrived safely gt Berlin shortly | tude. But I will make you & conces- | - Spoke His Mind Rather Forcibly. = | nommerie oo o o b d | metres, at the greatest speed, the first el hat ik oy of T e after noon today. e voyage from |sion. If you think an announcement| . - In Beverly today | meeting of the United Irish league in | Prize being won by Curtiss quite | forts The first round he covered in Friedrichshafen, as positive as I can_give you would | There was no one in Beverly today | Tt ily, naliza- | 749" 3-5: h i ved 15 was marked by 1 - | I will do what I €o"lielp ybu, and I | iEnation was in any. wise the result o illi . ba e i inni v 23,2 . e wmc; c:':xs:gd‘:flcd;nn;idlfr;:fi‘;; L .,ncmfx:a-: l:’t;ex;‘};m\ll.: %l| the interview with him published in William Shafer, said to hn.\‘( been | His Total Money Winnings 38,000 they were snapped at 23.20 at the fin- Tay ot Bltteriold AL that poimt Goant | that T can tell vou is that Sr. Harrl-| Washington last week- in which the | the first clown that traveled with Dan Francs. ish. With his penalization Curtiss Zeppelin met the craft and was —eet~ | man ls better niow and that we are ali | &58istant secretary s credited with | Rice’s circus, died a recluse at New- :“i‘:‘n’t;‘"‘"‘r:r:'b;_":l“m;‘. Sad i ey ed by the crown princ~ representing | very happy about 1 thaving said some rather sharp.things b N0 e gin. But when he learned that the the emperor. The emperor hlml“ No.New or Alarming Symptoms, [ 2Pout former President Roosevelt and | o4 ¢ 4pe Garrison at Athens; second round had been traversed in Curtiss missed winning the lap speed contest from Bleriot by only a small margin. He captured second place in that event, which was over the full cir- cuit of ten kilometres, or §.21 miles, raising his total money winnings for the meeting to 35,000 francs, besides the international cup, which goes to the Aero club of America, inscribed with his name, o e e In yesterday’s cup contest, an ac- | AMERICAN AVIATOR cident—the only serious one of the meeting—removed Bieriot, the Ameri- __WINS AIRSHIP CUP. can's most dangerous competitor, from | o SIS Lo 4 his policy of forest conservation. g / second g L aerival. CEP All that was heard hereabouts today | § Mr. McHarg is reputed to have said | Greece, under the leadership of their 748 2.5, less than one ‘second from S : | seemed to echo the cheerful opinion of | that the poliey of conservation out- | oMcers, mutinied and marched out to Bleriot's lap record, he Insisted upon Count Zeppelin and Orville Wright | the Rev. Dr. McGuinness. Although | lined by President Roosevelt was too | the suburbs. making another effort, but fafled to Meet. the morning was' broken with showers, | dreamifke ever to be of practical value = equal the Frenchman's time by four Two monarchs of.the air, Count Zep- | the weather was warm. ‘Mr. Harriman | and that only “the Lord himself_could ., Rev. Dr. Lewis B. Bates, a widcly- seconds. pelin and Orville Wright, the foremost not leave his room until afternoon. | have carried it out. Mr. McHarg fur- rk"uwir Methodist minister. died sud- exponents of distinct systems of aerial D he went to his accumsomed place | ther was represented as having said | denly of heart discase at his home in navigation, met at Berlin this atter- | 98 the veranda for a sun bath and to| that perhaps Mr. Roosevelt thought | Bast Boston. noon for the first time. They were in- e view. himself equal to the Worker of Mira- | - : ¢ troduced to each other by the monarch | _C: T. Ford, his superintendent. #id | cles. The Pennsylvania Railroad = Has S Al o S B B S R S No Tempest in a Teapot. O D bt that “aii | today's three lap speed contest. e pvae : o < 2d, o 5 A - o miles cas : ; : tures International Trophy at Rhe; with (neright during o conversation | ceen Mr. Harriman today, but that the| Asslstant Secretary McHare is sald | cost $2,000,000. RIS A Iatostami e RGO S st B IE " prised at His Majesty's technical | WOrd at the Hogeq was thet T, L e iter ayen (e e ot i Fire. il oo ’ vie > i spent a good night and developed no which some of e aw is ng Enforced in the Dis- Bleriot - from death was a 2 4 ks ” lr‘::'-m;diihoif‘\s‘dm!'l{?‘:ch-"r:;e::rd ::" new or alarming symptoms. The news | government officials in_Washington, | trict of Columbia which requires resi- | narrow one. He had passed {he first “‘”;'"-‘ Aviation Fleids, Rheims, Preased toamet that e wora En o nate | (fom every other available source was | Benerally known as “the Roosevelt cle- | dents to have 4 permit to keep roosters | tum in the Prix De Lo Vitesse when | AuS: 20.—Gleen H. Curties, the only to see Mr. Wright fly at Berlin owing | t© the same effect. ment" have been criticising ‘members fon their premises. the rudder suddenly failed to respond, | American aviator at Betheny, vester- of the Taft adminisiration. Conse- . o v ! to other engagements. Mrs. Harriman Attends Church. N " i - machine turned completely over | day weon the international cup of avia- g . | quently he is reported to have express- | The Delegates to the Convention o | i andi o 4 w:r“.l?l l:,l{kr:si:hd "&‘;‘,’,‘,‘;,.fi?.’,’f‘r‘" hg‘n l:n;h Harriman left her husband's|ed his own views in rather a forcivle | the Br h'Suciet,\ el ompi - e mx{:“wunx:‘at,mllu::rn‘r;(gm\l\rx”:r :::Lh :::-:}c: tion week. Ha covered the two laps of WORGEERIT: irahip ihe count BAG. cabe | aliios ghe ) T e manner and the controversy started | ment of Sclence went sight secing in | ing fire from the hot motor, enveloped | the course, twenty kilometors, or 1243 E . Ac-|by Chief Forester Pinchot with the | Winnipeg, Manitoba phe ‘ ronveloped [ imiles, in 15 minutes 503 5 secor structed. e said he would like to | companied by her younger son, Roland, | secretary of the interior. Mr. Ballinger, B e P amte niee-.1¢ e | Thia 14 at (he rate of 47.66.gniles aa experiments with smaller craft on | and his tutor, she drove this morning | is declared here to be growing to such | The, Government, -Authorities are [ (ot purned about the face and hands, | BOUF: : the same system, however, as vessels \to St. John's Epigcopal church. It progortions that the president Mill | anxious to captare Private W liiam | o fortunately not serionsly. Blerior, his most formidable com- such as those used bv the count were | was after the service that the Rev. DI. | have to take a hand In It and put the v imily Lane, who deserted and took $10,000 of 5 petitor, made the distance.in .15 Win- too expensive. McGuinness returned as the family [ government house at Washington in | sovernment funds with him. e Intensely Exciting Race, utes 561-5 seconds. Latham did not Berlin was Happy. .. | suest AL, e middhy idionera . |order. Mr. Tast has been reluctant Bostan With Bleriot_out of tie contest, La- | start From one end of Berlin {0 the other | ., MfS. Harriman was questioned after|to take official ‘cognizance of the con- |, Miss Florence Wood and Frank Wil+ remained - Curtiss’ only serious| Curtiss took advantage of favorable the shout * 1in is here” | the service concerning her husband's| troversy wiich started at fhe Irriga- | | New York wh The!fl::plagse‘:ipé:lrne 26 abe. (B ggio.l::! condition, but she replied with a smile: |'tion congress in Spokane. ontiaged in :‘.::'ic?(:c Dhet. Sre-canvalbbitht and /L 2 3" started | after a trial lap which he covered in dirigible with the renowned construc- Tha‘é is tl m_mer“ cannot speak of|through the tr#ns-Mississippi confer- | will be married in @ hospital. minutes 551-5 seconds, he made. his tor at the helm cruising over the roofs | 2L /de of my: family. ence at Denver, and since then has e e [ chase. Curtiss over- | officlal record. He did the first lap tried to die | rival. 1ce was Intensely exciting. | weather conditions this morning an That was all she would say, although - r s < b o v ol 572-5 de" and. of the capital at last was to be i " been waged with more or less inten- A Conference of All Local Appraisers | hauled him in every Lilometre, finish- | in 7 minutes 572 onds and. tho fied. Bfl'f;n was happy, as t‘,", mm she lingered after church and talked|sity at the national ~capital. The | has been summoned by ,\,5,,{’:,,[ sec- | Ing less than 400 ‘metres behind the | second In 7 minutes 53 1-5 seconds. had announced that at 12.30 he would | N (b the rector and a visiting Episco-| president had hoped that the whole |retary of the Treasury Reynolds to|Frenchman. The times: Latoam. 26.32 | Each lap measures 6 mies, atid appe v pal clergyman who assisted in the ser- | affair was a tempest in a v’ ot In New York In Novemt ; Curtiss, 24.15 1-5. The commitiee | Curtiss broke all previous records. ppear over the Tempelhof parade | o 5 P teapot which [ meet in New York In November. grqunds. < \‘w::n :;e{h ffllce(!fhnw‘;d pln{inly thde soon would simmer down without any = first posted Latham’s time with on Bleriot uu’ud \hnt‘il a Ivhln hnudr zm. i i o 0 ‘Bst few-days and seeméd | action on his part. It gee: v, twentieth penalization as 2 3 afternoon before flying, He made his The airship left Bitterfield early in | carriage again returning to her hus-|take a hand in the tangle and straight- | total estimated population In continen- | ers who had taken part in the event | which is still 2-5 of 4 second behin the morning, with the count, Is (band as fast as the two big bays could | en it out. tal United States were churchgoers, had not approached the American’s|the best time made by Curtiss. nephew, Engineer Duerer, who had | travel over the mountain road. 3 5 3 % - SOCTS: | peed. Latham, howeven, refused to| Lefebvre, flying in a Wright bi= navigated her from Friedrichshafen, | Mr. Harriman was not referred to Pinchot-Ballinger Controversy. As a Result of the Meeting of tic ept defeat and brought out “Num- | plane, also tried for this event, but and elght others aboard. ' Seme repairs during the'service, but when the Jittle ] 1n addition to the secretary of the | garrison at Athens. a new ministry has With his he flew”considerably | his time was comparatively slow, bes ad been effccted. but only three pro-{ White-clad choir of farmers'-daughters i r e Pha . ster, his time being recorded as|ing given at 20 minutes 332-5 sec- pellers were working, the one wglch led the. congregation in earer, My | interior. President Taft had with him | been formed. The mutineers are still f"vl:r‘_;l_ time being o"!fm_!! this afternoon the secretary of state, | encamped on the outskirts of the city. was lost not having been replaced. The | God, to Thee,” tears stood in Mrs. Har- | M Knox motors worked perfectly and the trip | riman’s eyes. - A and ‘the secretary of the E navy, Mr. Meyer. It is said that the | Miss Anita Stewart agreed to strin- Ricramingan gmade without mishap, | tonseiile, Mi.. whs mresher oy | Pinchot-Eallinger controversy had 'a | gent conditions prescribed by the Vat- | FAST TRAIN STRUCK AUTO. REVIVAL OF BUSINESS amid the cheering of tho e Pt ermon, said after the service that the large share in the deliberation of the | ican for the church's consent to her FOUR PERSONS WERE KILLED. 1S VERY PRONOUNCED cabinet conference. President Taft | marriage to Prince Miguel de Bra- has no engagement to see Secretary | ganza. iy T = 1 Engl " Ballinger earlier than just prior to his Party Were Speeding Homeward from | In Southeastern New England—State. arrival in Seattle Sept. 23. Mr. Bal-| United States Customs Officials a Sunday Outing. ment at New Haven Road Offices. linger has been jinvited and has Ac- i fur coat from Miss Catherine P dam, the city of palaces, was thronged | information brought down from Tower with crowds to witness the flight of | Hill today was that Mr. Harriman was the airship. For some minutes the | better. ship hovered over the gardens of Sans Sunday Vi tors at Tower Hill. Souci and then she turned in the direc- | Mr. Harriman_ received his first so- | cepted an invitation to acco y of Harrisbure, Pa. who| St Louis, Aug. 20.—Four persons.| New Haven, Aug. 29—Inquiry at tion of Berlin, siackening speed-#0 1 cial visors tofiay. Nelghbors whe | president on & JarEe Dart of th brtre rrived from Europe on the | all of them closely related. were killed | the ofices of the New York, New Ha= as not to arrive before the scheduled | live within driving -distance went up | Pacific coast itinerary. The invitation | Oceanic. today when an automobile in which|ven and Hartford Railroad company Gt the mountain by the carriage road in | was extended prior to the outbreak of % = tley were riding was struck by a fast| here as to the effect on New England The roofs of houses. church towers | the afternoon amd returned afier an|the controversy and has no especial| Brigadier General Jorsmiah M. Gil- | Pi¥f(nger train of the Rock Island |business of the passage of the new and the open spaces in the outskirts | hour's call. They refused to comment | significance. 1t will offer an oppor- | man, who fired the first shot in the de- | FAIway west of Vigus station, St. Louls | tariff bills brings out the statement of the city swarmed with people wWho | on Mr. Harriman's appearance. tunity, however, unless an earlier one | fense of the Union at the outbreak of | cOUnty. All were residents of St. Louis, | that while there was a steady Increase Cheered and waved flags and handker- | Robert L. Gerry, Mr. Harriman's|is taken, for Mr. Pallinger to lay his |the civil war, was buried in Brook- | The dead: Theodore F. Witte, Jr., aged |of business during July, it does mot chiefs as the vessel passed over. son-in-law, ‘who left the house on the | side of the controversy before the |lyn, N. Y. 30 years; Mre. Carl Klinge: Miss Hal- | seem to have been greatly affected by Bells Rang and Band Played. hill yesterday, returned today by train | president. N A ot By cyon Campbell, Frederick O. Witte. the tariff, but has been connected with William K " The two men were brothers and offi- | the general revival of Industry. The President’s Policy Has Been to Uphold | oV xam Knickerbockar of Traverse | . 1%'of the Witte Hardware company, | statement is also made that the revival Cabinet Member: b s consin asn Allen when Allen | 01e of the oldest mercantile establish- | of business s very pronounced in the ¥ = £ <o e et g e nente of the cit; Mrs. Klinge was jsoutheastern part of New England, min 2l mattefs affecting the depart. | found Knickerbocker in company with | AU (Lt ful The party had | particularly among the cotton mille: Tempelhof Field was reached just|@nd was driven up the mountain in an after the conclusion of church services, | 2utomobile. The emperor and empress had motored T T RS from the dedication services of the | PASSED WORTHLESS CHECK newly built garrison church, which : n AND SHOT HIMSELF | ™" e 2 been at Creve Coeur lake, a resort | where there are plans for the erection vy Durnsd: dowi several mentthe . aeo. A officers it has been the president’s pol- = g 2 city . They arrived at the specisl tribane . Waliie =+ fey o uphold the cabinet members an- | The New Bedford Cotton Manufac- | {Welve miles g O TR o L L constructed in the center -of the im- our\‘ ln.e Deerfield, Mas: Com- failinglg. Sccretary Nagel pecently | turers e considered the demand lrv| the day, d"l( ‘;wre speeding heme- | wit] E.UIII( lll;‘ t u-:ompe( tion of ID“(’I mense field just as the bows of tne| Mitted Suicide on Way to Hartford | had a controversy with the former|from 20,000 operatives for a 10 per | Ward when killed. or i o oty P o airship appeared over the edge of the | Police Station. director of the census, §. N. D. North, | cent_increase, but their decision has e s on the Tiae R T T parade grounds. The hundreds of There were many predictions at the [not been announced ONLY $3,000 CARS IN ALL SPAIN. [been the exceptionally Inrge shipments thousands who had gathered there Hartford, Aug. 23.—Arrested on the | time that Director North would be up- 2 S e to New Ei Ipnd int: n‘f“b:t m’lml o sighted the craft at the same moment, | charge of ‘having passed a worthless | held. President Taft, however, ap-| The Spaniards Exploded a Number | ppniorican Manufacturers of Automo- |coal during the last month, oo B T of e et P e EoTe At i o Vet fhia aautes 07 Tt b ot | of iities. Twar - Steliia.. killing W e T T eiie” [ owl during: month. pelin, Zeppelin,” was the cry from |of Deerfield, Mass., shot himself as he | ister and Mr. North's resignation was | dred Moors. Tn a_counter attagk in S it e st it P every dhroat. The church beils rang | was being faken to the police station |accepted. It dackasey throd Spasish'ofies W Bnal i \wadiipton, Aok, 20— Spaniasds | EN MILE-SWIRE out in merry peal and the military | tonight and died before he could be iends of Secretary Ballinger are | fifty men were killed e "grown enthusiastic. ove { band played the national anthem. | taken to a hospital. drawing a parallel from this episode £ ¢ O e the eetiens aeor 1 FROM'EITON TQTHE (e The airship started at 11.24 tonight | Bell hired an automobile in Boston | to fit the present controversy and say | The Contest over the Will of William | (7% TRORIIPTE VIR BEEET SRt 00 | Alois Ardele of New York the Fi on its returiu voyage to Friedrich- | last week and on his arrival in Hart- | that while Mr. Pinchot, 4 hold over | J. Kelly. past zrand master of the | 4" in Rutry B ¢ | Alois Ardele of New York the First te by the high price of gasoline and th pri i e ey shafen. 1t took a southwesterly | ford gaye-the owner, Joscph Auger, |from the Roosevelt administration, is | Masons in Pennsvivania, has been set- | 55 A0 S8 B0 08t SYCOGIE Moo n i are being cared for by the city gov- ’::{.2‘;::‘3;5 l;“:}:e g‘.'-‘“l-m‘ch"'z:‘c‘g ernment in the best way possible. Con- Qont originally $10,000.000 1;‘; g s i servative estimates of the property loss §o Teporied ty have been Sasommcn’Gy | Places the damage at $20.000,000. the extent of from 32,000,000 to $3,000,- 500 Bodies Recoversd. 000. The electric light and street rail- | All the day and up to late tonight way system of Monterey, modern in |bodies have been taken from the debris every respect, constructed about three [ and ruins in the path of the flood. years ago by a Canadian company in | More than five hundred have been fpe- which the Mackenzies of Toronto are | covered. The great loss of life occur- heavily interested, was damaged to the | red Saturday morning between the extent of approximately $1,000,000. hours of 9 and 11 o'clock, when the The Monterey water and sewerage |large buildings on the south side of system suffered a loss estimated at|the river commenced to crumble and $1,000,000 or more. fall. Many of the houses had from “$12,000,000 the Highest Estimate. | 100 to 200 people on their roofs and all disappeared In the flood. Tn one| e eony Lt sne. 1083 | school -bullding on the south side of Tnately five thousand adgbe hurs wuq | the river ninety women and children Some structures af more. pretention | Were drowned when the walls of the appearances, will bring the: financia; | bullding collapsed. This was one of Tous up to’ approximately $1.000.000. | the most pathetic incidents of the Bome estimates run as high as §1o. | ood. The women and children had 000,000, »* | run to the school for safety, but the S ving reached there, drove Both the electric light and street | yater hav P rallway systems And the water works | Lo from room to room until they and drainage system wers dominarey | were all clustered In one room. Two ®y Canadian eapitalists. A hard fight priests were with them in the room oy Made by Cavdisn sbr “m'm and while the priests were blessing-the Socure concessions £or the instalticy | Fomen and children the walls fell and oF these modern improvements & few | the Whole ninety were swallowed up in ' the flood. rs ago and thelr Joss will be keenl 1 s ¥ An American Saved Thirty Lives. Little effort to recover bodies of the | Many acts of heroism were noted drowned has vet been made, the chief | during the flood. An American, 8. N. done under the chaotic condi- | Seader, who owns a large hacienda in tlons prevailing being providing of | the siate of Temuelipas. Vera Cru shélter and food for the living. station, alone saved thirty persons. American Fami Moving to High | Others did all in their power to help and a Japanese cook employed by the Ground, chief of police saved two little. boys Many vehleles todgy were busy car- | from & tree in the middle of the river rying the effects of residents to ground | after a fight of over three hours in high enough to avoid any possibility | the water. The boys had been in the of overflow. This is especiaily true of | tree from 11 o'clock Eriday night until American families, many of whom re- |5 o'clock Saturday afternoon. exposed side at downtown hotels “alopg the | to rain and cold. and were almost ex- —— a check for $105 in payment for three|a most valued public Servant and is | tled by =iving $30.000 t& his widow. | B ; - eclons - FULLY $20,000 DAMAGE days use of (i machine. Auger |highly csteemed by President Taft, it | Friends did not know that he. was | SGneral Dawson at Barecions, = | Boston. Aus. 22.—As the lightning DONE BY MINE CAVE | {Hought the check might not be good | he has set himself unalterably against | married. more than 3.00 The | 2i82zagged around the tip of old Boston cars are in use. and made Inguiries at the police sta- | a superior officer there is little doubt o e ts bought 19 |light and the thunder rolled through 5 chere. Bell’ va of the president’s course i - | Centenary of Oliver Wondell Holmes | &¥erase brl ool i o the heavens above, Alois Aderle of New At West: Soranton—Weest” the City | o It Hee f06T0 that e ma e L eee . o heuis couris, fnthe mat % Gaiikly Obseryed O . o e en T mte | YOk city, stumbled up from the waves . Has Ever Experienced. on a charge of passing a worthlesss | The president, wiile refusing abso- | poston, Mase. Aus Scrawled in | nopdlar car being the 16 to 20 or 20 to |Upon the rocks at the foot of the Soranton, Pa., Aug. 20.—Fully $200,. | eck on H. & D. Daniels, clothiers, on | lutely to discuss the Pinchot-Ballinger | poncil i a' masty farimer's ¢imanac| 54 horse power. beacon tower late this afternoon, win- 000 dmage was done to West Soreatyn | August third. He was placed under controversy in any way. has intimated | "3z, 29 1509" was the simple inserip- | American manufacturers, the consul | Mg the honor and record of being . arrest and as he was being taken to|to friends that he hobes no drastic | (iy vt . T oNed the Spaniah | the Airst to negotiate the swim of ten Property Joday by a mine cave-—the | the police station pulled a revolver | action will be necessary. o A e A e | e ash the. opinian. prevaily | milas™ from Sostcl to_ the ligi: Sl Abandoned workings of the o Gesed: | from his potket and shot himself in — - Doet, physiclan and humorist, the cele- | there among automobile men that an [ Made the distance in five hours, &Rirty= Sl Tottle” collles ot G wui l(’“{k the right temple. He was placed in | BRONX BOROUGH PRESIDENT bration of whose centenary was ob- | excellent market could be developed. |eight minutes. Behind him were left Coal company, which cessed opem: | o3 Ambulinds .but dled. before the served quietly in this vicinity today. _—_ SePen Sxtiusted swimmers, The BRI o ey, b sed opera- | hogpital could be reached. He leaves a REMOVED BY GOV. HUGHES | The oniy public observance was a ser- Eagtt s B g o \LH.. dova: BEBIY and M‘;’;@i‘*;:“;"fll{’ ;’":lo mother, Mrs. Ella Bell, living in Deer- 3 . — : vice held in Kings chapel on Tremont | Mrs. Sutton's Application is Secretary Pnuh.b%i;hetnr;‘vvm ulre Guards, be. city blocks sunk from two fo efght | o0 Mass. Guilty of Misconduct—Commissioner’s | street, where. Dr. Holmes regularly 8 Weds Handa guaier of 'a mills Avay. by, (ne AaEE) feet, throwing houses from their foun- AR Report on Haffen's Case. attended for many years prior to his Washington, Aug. 29.—In tife matter dations, cracking walls and otherwise | RETURNS FROM &0 3 . death, Oct. 10. 1894, The address was | of the application of Mrs. Sutton [or | fimycrring "t st ot ol o Do damaging building: 1RIP TO SCOTLAND. | Albany, N. Y. Aug. 20.—Finding him | by Rev. Charles E. St. John, of Phila- | permission to exhume the body of her | (yiRIGRIE SIS, €OTF OF, U . Public school No. 16, $75.000 brick gumy -:ir ("'ha?!ef e(rmiglrc:ndu‘(;l in of- dv»l,m'h " '\n' ”", l:‘r- ton r\ubllrkllhrnr)‘ son, Liet, James N. Hunm]‘. now bur- s g s g structure, was so hadly da £ : ¥ 4 ice ani eglec of luty, Governor | an exhibition o jolmes’ works, por- rlington National cemetery, #t will have to be torn i,,,w,,.“"-‘-‘;‘i :,’(’fif John Porteous Spent. Two Delightful | 11,/0ney has ordered the removal from | traits, scenes connected with his iife, ‘1$ r::l_vA(‘;u!s;‘ for the delay in giving | WiLL TEST U. 8. SHIPPING LAWS. er propertics damaged are mostly| Month in Native Place and Other | office of Louis F. Haffen, president of | treasures and relics were shown. Mrs, Sutton the necessary permission frame residences on Fairview ani| Cit the borough of the Bronx in the city e is that her request has becn referred | Navy Opened Way for Using Foreign Chestnut avenues and Robinson street, sk of New York.' President Haffen has | Injuries Received at Brighton Beach | o the secretary of war for his decision Vessels on Coastwise Service. with a few small store buildings. John Porteous, president of The Por- | held the office since Jan. 1, 1898, and Motordrome Proved Fatal. as to details of the proposed autopsy. One ,of the biggest items of loss is|teous & Mitchell company, who has|was last re-elected in November, 1905. chiniiows 1ot vt San Francisco, Aug. 20.—Harry 8. . New York, Aug. 29.—Laurent Grosse, . the land, which, on account of being|been abroad with Peter Murray of | The governor based his findings on |, " - 2 4 Bates of a local shipping firm intends on a steep hillside, is probably mads| Springfield since the 12th of June, re- | the report of Wallace MacFariane of 2"“-‘"!" 0}“- d””_‘jf “';;'P‘ »‘t";‘-m(fl o8 Fierce Electrical Storm at Boston. | 'test the shipping Jaws of the United unmarketable. The disturbance is es. | turned to his home here on Fairmount | New York, who was appointed com- | ¥No was fatally injured in the twen-| pogion, Aug. 29.—A terrific electrical | States which- forbld chartering a for- timated to be about 130 feet below the | street Sunday evening after a delight- | missioner to take evidence inn the ‘é"r;'!“‘:":mh"s:".”,“"‘,'"",“‘,’,’,’,‘,";'m‘;,‘:fl it the | storm, accompanied by a heavy fall of | eign ship (o carry cargo between two surface, ues extending to the sur- | ful sojourn across the water. — The | matter and who after an exhaustive | B1S00n Beion motordrome on 5 yain and high wind, which lasted for ican ports, The plea. will be that face and three feet across at the top | steamer upon which the two gentle- | hearing, reported that President Haf- | 92¥ it i Hraoklen " CIPES | fhalf an hour, pussed over Boston late d_ States navy opened the show thenelves in a number of | men sailed from Glasgow, Scotland, the | fen had been guilty of misconduct | “OUNty hospital in Brooklyn. today, causing the loss of one life and ¢ for private perkons and corporas places. Columbia, reached = New York at §|which would subject Bim to removal| gicide Followed Lovers Quarrel, | OYerturning @ number of small yachis | tions when fourteen forelgn vessels A new three story tenement on the|o'clock Sunday morning, so that Mr. v i overs Quarrel. |, the harbor. Peter W. McAuliffe, [ were churtered to carry coal from Bal= brow of the hill slid down the decley- | Porteous was able to be at his home R Bridgeport, Aug. 29.—Immediately | nged 18 sears, of Dorchester, was |timore, Norfolk, and Newport News {0 | ity six or seven feet and threatens to| here by night. e e b afier a quarrel with Miss' Floreyce | ifled Dby, a4 bolt of electricity while | the Pacific coast ports and Honolala topple with further settling. Al part 6f the time abroad was igt ewelry” Stolen from | Riley, a 16 year old girl, to whom he | sitting near. a window of his home, for the use of the battleship feet. Gas and water pipes were broken in | spent’ - Scotland, - visiting Mr. Mur- ent Tuttle’s Summer Home, was enguged, George H. Harvey, 17 e P E S - — all sections of tha disturbed arca, and | ray’s. home at- Wick In the north-of| AL Mass., Aug. 29.—Jewelry | vears old, commicted suicide by drink A : § G police are keeeping. people from enfer. | Scoljand. and. the native place of Mr. | vamed at $1.500 was stolen from the | ing an ounce of carbolic acid this aft-| Disiocated His Spine in Diving. | Baseball and Religious Services Com= ing upon jt for fear of a lighted match | Portéous at’ West Lintop, as well as|summer home of Lucius M. Tuttle, | ernoon and died while the docter w Woodmont, 29.—~While in bined. starting a fire. many ather points of iutérest. London | president of the Boston and Maine rail- | at work over him. Harvey formerly-| swimming at at Merwin's | Minneapolis, Aug. 29.—Baseball and Rts’ by the thousands ran through | and other places in %flm nd were also | road, supposedly’ while the family were | lived in Springfield and had only been | Beach here today, hel, 21 |religious services were combined for the fissures and scampered over the | visited and a trip was made to Paris. | at dinner yesterday, according to a re- | engaged to the girl two weeks. The | years old, of 87 Ward street. New Ha- | the first time, it is belioved, when streets. Wispe of hay and straw that| While Dr.and Mrs. Patrick Cassidy, | port made to the police today. misunderstanding occurred at his _home | ven, dived into two and a half fee: of | Rev. G. L. Morrill delivered a have lain in the old workings for twen- | who returned from abroad early this s this afternoop and as a result the girl | water, striking the bottom with his |sermon at the American assoc P Zaragosa ‘and Hidalgo. Many | hausted when help reached them. The families havé removed {o re- | boys are 8 and 10 years 5ld. Rmouldi mote sections of ef-thq gh melumy and family were rescued from a their. hoteis If thought to tree where they had been nearly sey- enteen hours. ty years were blown through an un- | week, weré in Pidenburgh, they dined returned her 8iamond engagement ring | head and dislocating lis spine. He | ball grounds here prior to the 3:-1':& m{u&. on the ,H‘:er }.flx by -‘r‘:'m Mr. rovuoughm Ar:h(h‘;;g e Steamship :M:;I-;: " ‘ |and the ‘y:;uu nan ';l“c‘h m;l and_pur- | was ul'.c'n to a ow P;.&.n lho- ||‘ g: untrnoonmm n e force of e compression of ir re- | Mitchell. The m s still abroad 'outhampton ug 29, New York, | chased poison vl e took on | recovel s LS Kansas . The suiting from the settlmg. - will return later. i of tourieen chilaren. o from New York. hsi return to the house.

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