Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 4, 1910, Page 1

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=1 Married Nineteen Times. « - - Association. T 4 New Worried by Crowd in Court Room She Becomes Almost Hysterical NOT AFRAID OF LAWYERS OR JURY But Could Not Stand the Gaze of a Crowd of Women Curiosity Seekers—Hopes the Female Spectators will be Kept Out of Court Today—Agrees to Tell the Story of a Quarrzl Eetween Two Men for Her Love. ‘Waterbury, Conn., Feb. 3$.—The |girl has no chance to tell a story tha’ breaking down of the accused, which |appears right when a lot of women are prevented her taking the stand in her | gazing on her. I will be able to tell own behalf and the first direct men- | my story if I am not annoyed by the tion of the connection of Joseph Mitch- | glancés of curious women and all I ©ll with the shooting, were incidents | ask is a fair chance and that the court in today’s trial of Sophie Kritchman | order the curiosity seeks to keep out. for the murder of Bronislow Kulvin- | When a woman is in trouble it is her ekas. Witnesses for the: defense tes- Yfted to having Mitchell. with So- ie on oon it lvin- =kas was shot and on the following Sophie, who has been fll‘l‘-flflsh“" emorning. Mitchell 18 under arrest and | COUT In a short dress that. gave her wwill be tried at the conclusion of the | the appearance of a yeung girl in- Heritehinan casad - > stead of a woman of 24 years, wore a oy e new dress of black, at the opening - s Extremely Nervous. the afternoon session The only orna. The thought of going on the stand fn | ment was a gold chain and locket, the tier own behalf today eaused the ac- |latter containing a picture of her cused girl to spend a.restless nignt [mother. Her nervousness was shown and on her arrival in the court room | by her continual opening and shutting at the opening of the day’s proceed- | of this locket and. the taking off and ings was extremely mervous . Th: | putting on of her gloves. crowd in the room seemed to WoOrry b her and as the time approached for Not Strength Ennugl; to Pull Pistol her testifying she became almost hys- Hammer Back. s terical. When -&.‘é“‘md at the aft- | At the immediate close of the day’s ernoon session her if she was | trial, Sophie, in company with her ai- ready to go on d, she gaid “No! | torneys, .Dr. Diefendorf, and ‘a_few No! No!” and Dr. Diefendorf, on-~ |friends, retired to anothér part of the of the alienists for the defense, who | court room and there Sophie tried to was sitting beside her, said that she | use a revolver similar to the one sne was in no condition to go on the | is said to have purchased on Septem- stand and the hearing of her story was | ber 18 in a local pawnshop. She was put over until ¥riday. The presencc | unable to pull the hammer back with of allenists for both defense and pros- | one hand and could only with difficulty ecution at the trial today has led to | do it with both. Dr. Diefendorf was the belief that the defense will try | satisfied that Sophie did not have the @nd prove that the girl le mentally | strength to use the gun. In the eariy weak. Sophie was closely watched | part of the trial, witness for the pros- by the experts during the day’s pro- | ecution testified to hearing. shots on ceedings. s Friday and Saturday nights, Septem- Had Planned a Trip to Florida. der 17 and 18, and in each instance 2 said that shots were fired in rapid suc- court. house At the close. of the. ati- | Cossion. This the defense will contend could not be done by a person no nervous eaking of her | Of the accused. T re or the Nen i, Of hier | Will Undertake to Tell Her Story To- hehul,' uxd:u"l feel utlsfl;d! that 1 day. em going to, be free soon, and I am so it confident that I Have already planned | zns oibiy colnrel for Sophle sald tnat = trip to Florida. N ing and tell the same story that s All | Ask Is a Fair Chance!” fold at the {imo of her arrest; befors “1 intended to go on the stand this | the coroners jury-as: ler counse:. afternoon, but the sight of that largs Sophie, Mr..Keénnedy said, may be erowd In the court room scared me. | able to tell her story without break- I am met affaid of the jury or'of the | ing down if the peoplg "do not -crowd Jawyers, but I dom’t like to have a | into the. court. room. .. girl's story rrowd of women looking at me. I know | has been to the effect that at Mitch- ?h%oom to -u&-_ ! ot and vhn; ell's an Q?henm;om; am, m&ln{cm Then my new ) and that Mitchell was to meet them dress does not fit me as well as [ there. She says she never Dbelieved would like, and all those women notice | that Mitchell intended to kill. Kulvin- such things. I hope the judge will [ skas fhut that it would be a quarrel keep_all those women out of court | between two men who weére golng to tomorrow when I go on the stand. . A I'fight for her love: " - MAYOR GAYNOR ACTED » WELL DRESSED AND GENTEEL, AS UMPIRE IN DISPUTE HELD A8 A HOTEL “BEAT.” Between the New York Police and the | Mrs. T. L. Johnson' Tried to Walk Out United States Army. of Hotel Astor. ew York, Feb. 3.—Mayor Gaynor New York, ¥Feb. 3.—“Mrs. T. L. acted as umpire today in a dispute | Johnson,” alias Mrs. Audrey Williams, between the United States army and | well dressed and genteel, tried to walk the New Yerk police. Incidentally, he [Out of the Hotel Astor today, leaving decided for the army. The complain- |her bill behind her. When arrested ent was Lieut. Henry W. Torney, U. S. A, formerly a West Point foothall x’:emm Jmith desire to quit the hotel star. He was arrested “just for be- er bill grew larger. Question— ing one of the erowd” in company with | ed further, she said that she had just SMiss Inez Milholland, Vassar gradu- |been discharged from the workhouse ate, suffragette and champion of the |on Blackwell's Island, where as Mrs. striking girl shirtwaist operators. | Audrey Williams she served time for Though promptly discharged in police | Obtaining goods by representing her- court, Terney carried his case to the |self -: the w‘i:e ;)f -l'c‘l’;a.l wwthléhgitl’g? testing agal tion | carpet _manufacturer of Polics Captain Bm‘;’twt:: caused She was held for trial as a hotel his arrest. Reprimanding the police captain at | e 4he hearing today, the mayor said: “It is_the business of the police - to CONGRESS. %eep their hands off people. No one should be arrested unless guilty of some offense defined by the law. In the case of strikers the bufiness of the police is to preserve the peace and take no sides.” 4 Agricultural Appropriation Bill Pass- ed, Carrying $13,500,000. ‘Washington, Feb. 3.—The house to- day passed the agricultural appropria- tion bllll, carrying apprssz}élk(ons ag- gregating nearly $13,500.000, being BOSTON BOY DISAPPEARS. net ineréase’of over 3400.000 over the % by — ] appropriations for last vear. This in- ®eized With a Desire to Go West to|crease was chiefly for the forest serv- Convert Indians. ice and was made necessary by the ad- dition to the national forests of 26 - Boston, Feb. 8.—A premature desire | 528,439 acres. %0 go west to convert Indians is be- The house began comsideration of the lieved to aceount for the disappearance | diplomatic and consular appropriation since Tuesday of-Joseph F. Hubbard, |bill, adjourning after being in session = 14 year old Dorchester boy. Hub- | less than five hours. bard has been acting as a secrotary | Both houses will meet tomorrow. to Rev. Thomas J. Gasson prestdent b of Boston college, and has been study— o colERR Rt I v FILES SUIT FOR DIVORCE. ary among the Indians —The college |weaithy Manufacturer Names Salva- Mcial d i greatl F e o oD re STatlY [tion Afmy Captain as Co-Respondent. think he may have started for Mon- . New York, Feb. 3.—John C. Cogan, ¢ans by way of SUER® and Clicago. |l weatthy miinufactirer of Greenpeint. . |L. T, filed suit for absolute divorce Hope of Amicable Adjustment of Min- jagainst his wife, Mary, today, naming ers’ Differences. D. Lambrakis, a Salvation Army cap- -, tain, as co-respondent. Toledo. Onek-2—Hope of an amic- | “ay. ' Siiine worker apd Mis. Co- Able adjustment was _ expressed by k., "Cosan alleges, 400k 2. trip to Min- e e o rin® | neapolis in September last and return- i i oorany |ed to New York only recently: The o e he Joint wage scale con- | Cogans werc married sixteen vears | ference of the operators and miners of & Hhve thires: childs FINE. the Ohio, Indiana and Pennsylvania [380 an iyt district, which opened here this after- noon. He said: “I hope that we will | Plot o Liberate J. roceed calmly, . dispassionately and trated. e I e T raanie! Balleville, TNl Fel: $—A plot to - settlement of any differences existing.” | STate & score or more desperats men The miners arfived here at noon af- [Syong the 18¢ prisoners in the county S i pn iy i Hatse tha loager of the sene ta the Mot mpolis wi an n it S lon. Y was diseatisfied with the saws smug- T R gled into him. 92,034,750 Pounds of Fish for Bestan inf il B0e o L maToiade the Boston, Feb. zinv!v'uh the agitation ::t&' an East St. Lm:-l.1 ut,:r ., . S E St. ‘mof - ver the “no meat” crusade at is 2 t, special interest attaches to the{ Sherift Charles Cashel discovered the fact made public today that the pro- |plot tonight when a newsboy asked duction of one of Boston’s food staples | permission to pass to one of the pris- —fish—was greater in the year just|onersa hardware catalogue from which Prisoners Frus- he admitted that she was without | PRICE_TWO CENTS %'SJB IR IS8 D R AT s . |Had Lain Dead | Condensed Telesratis nygstigation of "o s et ¢ e vones| NN Price of Food States was 120 years old last Tues- Cabled Paragraphs Berlin, Feb, 3.—The emperor today . 2 EEMREER e Liquid Eggs|Morethan aMonth upon Tsai-Feng, the prince regent of China. * day. Paris, Feb, 3—The death of Bjorn- N n et NLY A B kel Aet it Enthusiast stjerne Bjornson, the Norwegian poct | SEIZED BY FEDERAL INSPECTORS | MAN AND WOMAN CLAD O presen e i de e i unidef | THE COUNTRY ALARMED OVER and noveli: ed entar- LA | — o iy’ this “aftarnoon. “The members o AND CONDEMNED, : IN NIGHT ROBES. aeroplane. THE SITUATION, the family were summoned early, an = remained at the bedside. Hamburg, Feb. 3.—The Swedish BEEF UP TWO CENTS steamship Annie was in collision with the German ship Susanne near Gluck- B, e Tlbe tucnty uios i les | New Yok Retailermorvous-Qver Al Annle sank immedlately. Six of her| ‘Lapge in - Wholesale Prices—Dead Give Away on “Strictly Fresh Eggs” An Exhaustive Study of the whole subject of the tariff is planned by A PHILADELPHIA SENSATION | President Tart. President Taft Was Invited to at- ‘end Grant's birthday celebration In Pittsburg on April 27, In the Senate Concerning the Elkins BITTER COMPLAINT MADE of Prosperous Lapidary and entified Woman Found in Roor Jewelry Trade Section of City. Rev. William McEwen of the Thitl| Resolution Providing for an Inquiry Presbyterian church, | Pittsburg, is to g receive a salary of $10,000 u year. ~—Charges Against Aldrich. erew were drowned. Venice, Feb. 3.—G. B. Branch and Mrs. Branch, artists, of Newark, N. ; c T g g ing ev eir gondoa Philadelphia, —What may |Teceived .!llflu from the Eh)'ckploul:( r last ning, hei ; 2y elphia, Feb. 3. t y e w e - 3 ening, when t 2 New York, Feb. 3.—The only food ; s Lfuna ot W e et um;;fz:.u‘,_ Fe y,’.“m,,.:;m“;: Eikina Fas rammed &y a "m"“fi“'fi',f ; Mr product in the New York markets to- o A o ranch leaped overbo: ut her hus Wi showed a disposition to be | Summated agreemen commi - 5 » today concern o 4 band was carried down with the.gon- | vessonabis wag eggs, and even thé best | cide, or two sudden deaths from na The Paulist Fathers' Choir of 125 | {PiM( CPICCTINE his p‘r’;:\'.!'d';:':rllfn’vr 7" dola, _ The_craft remained submerged | ones were regarded with suspicion by |Ural causes, was discovered _today, |Men and boys sang before the ROMAN | inyegtigation into the high btics - of and Braneh proke his way throush |buyers after the ~day's disclosures. | When the bodles of William Bohrer, a | Catholic laymen's meeting in New | 008" pioaioe. Tre charbry ot s the window of the hoods and rose to | Three hundred cans of liquid eggs such | DProsperous lapidary, aged 55 years, [ York. Aldrich. with a desire to shield the the surface. The two were picked up |as used by bakers were seized in a{and an unidentified woman, about 30| tarift law and the trusts in the in- mot much the worse for their experi- |cold storage warehouse by federal in- | years of age, were found in'a room in i Sgorve ‘Deummant Ar..-008 1981 giitey and: he hinted. that hereafiersne ence. spectors and condemned. * Hotel keep- | the wholesale jewelry trade seotion of |the foremost captains of Industry in | pigii ho an “insurgent: if b i, ers_complained - that some of their|the city, where they had lain probably ma!da Med: in . Montreal, s #ped SV IiA 1ot veceive more Fespest] coins® - eration. SECRET SERVICE MEN BAFFLED. | “strictly fresh” eggs, supposed to be|more than a month. NO ARRESTS YET MADE. | from suburban farms, had been found Locksmith Broke Open Door. Henry Pennington Taler, a former | o THe discussion was precipitated by pencllied with the names of girls WHO | “qpe room where the bodies were |millionaire and an insane’ patient at fz"‘,:,'e""";’;'ll’l‘fian“"]'lzvl Soon aster the . d ‘been reported, live in Ohio and farther west. found was used by Bohrer as a sleep- | Ward's-Island, N. Y., ended his life by solemnly raised the question whethe: Fresh Bluefish Dearer Than Choicest instxfip&rflt‘?fl;n:‘ nnd‘xldjolned“h‘:lu;]‘m leaping into Kast river. the committee on contin t - on e T loor a smal u C © igent expenses i Nevertheless the price of eggs did re- |lapidary, who succeeded his father in|married at Rogate, England, to Wil- o e e SSUIY | caic, whiereas. the. wholsaels pile of | business many. ytars &go, had mot been | M SaUre . ootcter ooy o Asmtel: Responding, Mr. Kean said that prol notes, to be thief proof and | 2lmost everythipg else eatable advanc- | Scen since Christmas week. It was his [can embassy in London. ably the measure would be amended > ERUDOBSE reeol ‘talk: n 4 fotosly, e, Sram souasry. | 2 KL e e | S f2, AR S SE, Wk | 1ois chitian. & Ratiisd ths | “Why Do Yeu Dedge the Tari cott had never n mentioned. 3] u! ng ps an A e an ongres: ati the ou lodge e ariff.” B e breas of printing and engrav- | Bluefish were dearer than the cholcest | rooms, had not been opened for more | protocol submitting.the Alsop ciam of | Taking the fioor s Elkins saldq ing turned 3:000,000,000 in pank | Steaks, and all other fish advanced |than a month attracted little att®n- [the United States against Chill to (he | that the fmanie o omoriter n“&u“[_‘“l”‘;‘“‘d{‘;“t' losing. one, but | sharply, owing to the increased demand | tion.. His son, after several attempt<|arbitration of King fdward. the Todge resolution aftor & dayr van on last Jan. 27th a sheet of four $10 | here and at Boston. Lamb and pork | to find his father at home, today noti- e sideration, whereas his own measurs gold notes, unnumbered and without | 2dvanced a cent a pound. Beef jump- (fled the police and a locksmith wis| Frederick Horner, a former member | had been held up by the o the seal, disappeared. ed two cents, and shipments from the |sent for and broke open the door. of parliament, was released on bail in [ committee for a month. Mr. Four days later the gm&w,,? m. :;setg were reported in diminished vol- | No Trace of Poison, No Murder Sjgns. 5‘2’:;;‘1‘2:. o l:]k:’olzm:fie “:;‘r“ forging a ::nntond:dl lnm many important fem- ered when two of the uncomplete bills - Clothell. only . in’ thelr. night ribes; o Mail, ures of his measure . were omitted turned up et a local bank. The other Retailers Nervous. the bodies of the man and woman were | 1, e from the Lodge resolution and it had two made a complete cycle and return- | Owing to the advance in wholesale | found Iying In the room. Hohrers e American Merchant Flest was|been so framed as to avold any in gd to the treasury in the course of ;rlcn.mtll‘lere w:- ;\:vou-l:ua tamo:g“.udy was stretched face downward L’;f?"‘v”é.’,.‘ih”'s‘f,‘.I";h':’,‘,’,"t,‘;.:i '.’)‘;"wg.:fx' :;‘r-"y b:u; the effect of the tariff om usiness. the retailers, who Ve no dared ; across a chalr, while that of the wom- -l od prices, The secret service men are baffled | to advance ' their figures. ¥ _of fan Jay on the bed, also face down- |8Pd eight of steel construction. “Why do you dodge the tariff” he system used in handling s o - | the_round of a chair. n ,-and I am not afraid to fa from the time the ink first touches the | sale prices kept on climbing. There was nothing to indicate thai |2Nd attempted kidnapping were pre-|the question in connection with th paper until they go into circulation has | What the Grand Jury Found in Swift | the couple mutually agreed to Ikill f""fd ";‘"7,‘, Ferdinand Cohen, the| jnvestigation.” been supposed to be figuratively “iron & Co.'s Cold Storage. themselves, no frace of poison being | Falter, who disappeared with Roberta| e then referred to the particip bound"and copper riveted,” and it has | - o = oo "Ll TG P OGE o corg [found. Neither was there any evidence ~enon; tion of Chairman Aldrich of the 1 n a that no theft could occur > Feb: 8. z rder, aside from the fact thai e nance committee In the preparation plant, it was learned tonight, the grand | 9f murder The Descendants of Michael Hillegas, | tariff Dill, and he declared that he without ection. Bohrer’s body was lying in an unusual jury Tound - stored 460,000 pounds of | Sogicion: “The apartment was In §ood | first United States treasurer, belleve| was quick to act In anything af- ABRAHAM LINCOLN SENT great quantity of lamb, ‘mutton, pork. | order and there was no evidence o Do e bAraa Qe 8 )| <esths iy child 3 + | robbery having been committed. Both |llon dollars interest on a loan made to Elkine Would Not Be Satisfied. SUBSTITUTE TO THE FRONT. | butterine, sausage meat, hearts, livers | [oR0STY baving béen committed. Both | 0 C o Ot R eis ancestor, e e Lodeo ont e o and tripe. Some of the meat, accord- | Po% s practically impossible to tell from s et o i Status to Be Erected in Memory of J.|in€ to James Brady, superintendent of | [1* Jipcrcial examination' which was | Charles R. Heike, secretary of the | iem, e mended by the finance com- Summerfield Staples. Aopril. e jury will be in session :“o:nflrem:?:dlsm whether a murder was fiu".,:g‘cgp f&‘n'*.“.fn—dc"“““." company, ac- | it proposes to Include the offect of tha : y_in the suga . e Washinston, Feb. 3._The soldier who | 282l tomorrow. Bmployes of Swift & | “'ne ‘igentity of the woman is not |weighing frands, pleaded immupiis B ey s O e Y fought through the Civil war as the | CO. 4o | K1IOWD 0. any of the cocupants of the | from prosecution on the ground that b | Fo tatd thor oy ailll dissatisfied, and personal substitute of Abraham Lin- | Would Place Cold Storage Under State | building. had incriminated himself In a previous | was “a mere method of sidetracking coln iz to have o statue erected in __and Federal Control. Woman Partially Identified. hearing. . Counsel for the government | the question, Whilo his own measure comme; .. B k Pittsburg, Feb. 3.—Legislation that Philadelphi Feb. 3.—T dead t the plea of immunity | had been so manipulated as to cause people know "that President Lincoln | i Cold storage warehouses un- | woman ,’&,",.m.u,‘ omtined %oa3 | was a contession of guilt and asked for | 1o vo sleep the sleep of death.” sent a substitute to:dthe front during |Jer federal and staté control as far as | ooires . a conviction on it. wug- . - a8 Anita Habmahile, who was At this juncture Mr. Balley sug. the war, but a bill providing for a|the "gistribution of food products is mu‘ ved- during Christmas week in a gested to Mr, Elkins that if he desired CHAIN OF EMBEZZLEMENTS to get action by the finance committe Statue and appropriating $20.000 for | soncerned is_advocated by State Sen- the purpose was presented-in the house | ator James L. Adams, rho has been 3)'-“',* eélgfi;r:::u%e"mr“g:mu:;flel’;:“i today by Representative Palmer (dem- | studying thé high prices of food AR » . O The name of this Huherto aimost | JCtS In preparing a bill to be intro- . e name s ! exialatu ‘red- snknown hero s J. Summerfield Sta | A5 "ofate liconagufor these ware | LICKET SPECULATORS IN ples of Stroudsburs, Pa. “He died there | houses is the first . Ada “""COLLUSION WITH MANAGERS fow droppings by begking for them and Some ten years ago and it is . at plan. Cincinnatl, Ohlo, Feb. 3 —That «{by voting for everything else that was mughngu‘:-tm»u 4;;&; t0 | “Veekly reports of their receipts of | How Best Seats in New York Theaters ::’I,nlln of emdbeniémenl.l, involving | suggested.” erect 0 rial | oggs, butter, meat and poul to_the Are Controlied. ree: men.and extending over many mn:d at B&:nd'bu-_' a | tablet national and dlém“fi.meu;{nn food - y.l".l::;}m'“t“ah in the aimost whole. :J::"‘: ::’B:;:;"':u:" Ineurgent, today bears simple-nse Z commissfon would ai be required.| New York Feb. 3.—A combination | Sale ng of the Big Four rallroal's 4 Here lies the body of J. Summer- | mhe commissioners would retain charts | of five uck:} speculntors In collusion | treasury, testified to by Charles [ order to become eff field Staples, representative recrult of | showing exactly the amount of food | with every Broadway manager who |L. Warriner, defaulting local treasuror ;g:::flv?::m:nmjom‘" il A\ . he should ‘get on that committe INVOLVING THREE MEN | yupnoge 5o responded Mr Hliins i never have otten anything out of And Extending Over Many Years .| [5% BAYS EOULOn WONELIRE OO om * Warriner's Testimony Continued. sideration of the tariff, when I got & Abraham Lincoln.” ucts withheld in these warehouses | produces a big success, controls the | of the road, today, in the trial of Mrs. PINK ROSES, WHITE VIOLETS - ™ _distribution, and in times of | best seats in the theaters of New York | Jeanette Stewart-Ford for blackmal, | that he might do so. g stringency would order the cold storage | city. For selits in the first five rows | WArriner represented himself mari | T :g:;g; ‘t,,dgol:_‘ Fage By b L il in—more sex DECORATED TH ABLE. | houses to place their wares on the| of the house the speculator pays $2..5 | spending money in ever-increasing 3 market. % cach, according to a satement made | amounts io keep shut the mouth of | more water to swin i to President Taft Given by|Bosto h i today Dy a speculator testifying be- | the woman who through her intatua- | Foom.” g =P 5B = s \ibeiesple. Eriche of (MNWLs | /orw tha coumities . Mww Sh0. Mais- | Lion fOr. Ooa Bt. the apcused. sibs- | Aldrivh Says Mo Has No Desire % i g crgihis Soptings: %: Hies. lation of the board of aldermen. Tiw |zlers, E. 8. Cooke, had learned the se Dodge the Inquiry. Washington, Feb. 8—A dinner to the |, D0Ston, Feb. 3.—That the district at- | gneculator, Beebe bv name, admittel |ered Frank Comstock, Warriner's ; S itnat ‘the Lades sdent 3 en tonight Post. | torney of Suffolk county may have am- | that he was “outside the ring” anid | predecessor as local treasurer was de- Mr, ' Aldrich replie, 1l R “' ,;",::t,f"GQ;"e“,;J"H"ia‘th i bost- | ple material with which to go before | that a “hoat of men" like himseif wore | clared to be the third man resolution was much broader than Mr and white violets decorated the large | '® BrAnd jury, if he so desires, Wil- | unable to buy good seats at the box | In the story of the gigantic tners |BUCng had represented. round table at which Mr. Hitchcock | L R- Scharton, secretary of the Bos- | office. Several prominent managers | there is one question which has nev: | , ‘Lets sec” responded Mr. Wikins ‘and twenty-seven guests gathered, | Lon NO Meat club, has coliected a large | were mentioned ~as being in league | been definitely answered and the at- | 7If 1t Is where is there anything i Mrs. Charles P. Anderson, sister of | 2MOunt of statistics regarding recen: | with the speculators. None of the man- | torneys for the defense made another | it @bout trusts and monopelies re Mrs. Taft accompanied the president | Shipments of cattle from this port.| agers referred to was present. futile effort to obtain its solution | they to be investigated as to thelr ef from the White House. The other | Shipments of beef here, the*amount of | ““The hearing was on & proposed or- | What became of the $643.000 whicl: | fect on food prices? Let's see who in r provisions in cold storage in the city | ginance tending to regulate or do away | Warriner has confessed wus stolen. "“;l'r"ll[“!‘"fi'c‘;‘- icatalt (ot e f guests included ‘ex-Governor Hill of | Provisions in < “Maine and ails which he will tomor- | wit;, theater ticket speculation. Bee- | The witness declared ne had paid s B e T and MI% | Tow present to District Attorney Pel- | he's' charges brought heated denials | approxtmately 3168,000 for blackmail | o desire to dodge ' full inauiry nor and Mws. ‘Albert Shaw of New ¥ork, | eter- 3 by some of the other speculators pres- | and that 332,000 was stolen by others | to protect any Intesests = = Miss Mebel Boardman, and Fred W. | , The time the foodstuffs have been in| eni. than himself. The remainder of $4 My, ‘Biiipadeciaced that the treat- 1 * | storage will be included in the report.| The speculators were referred to, bv | 00 is explained by him as having been e Bl resdlation Teosived “was di o a desire to of cre 4 Carpeater, secretary to the president. coupled with a treatise by a well ‘advi - v N T Dagy (I [ apemation. connection with the matter and pre known doctor on the effect of cold [ the ordinance, as “pests,” “public nu's. A lurid light was thrown on tae STARTLING' REPORT MADE storage on_provisions. | mirent an Sxtarionns strange narrative wien the:latters of | VBt his participation in the inquiry, TO BOSTON COMMON COUNCIL. | The wholesale prices of meats con- | "N aefinite action was taken todav | Cooke to Mre. Ford were read {0 th:| Do you think the trusts or the tari tinued to rise today, but did not affect | and the hearing was adjourned unt:l | court. ERREIe G efiiah prioeet oy v, Aldrich. In the letter Cooke wrote that "0, The City an Easy Mark for Street|the retail prices. Beef went up 75| next Thursday. An almost prohibitive e Sikine wald‘that he wanted th oty i Sty cents a hundred weight and lamb also | Jicense and a Bond of $2,000 Is the | " was threatening to expose him (f at -~ i had a sharp rise. aate of the proposd I he did mot abandon Mrs. Ford. . War. | Investigation to determine that, He rine aid that “O, H." stood for “(i1 declared the country was alarmed over the situation. Boston, ¥eb. 3.—Boston is paying | Women of Pittsburg on the Warpath. . and was the pame Cooke use i COLORADO MINE EXPLOSION. Hag, 100,000 ould for $ o : ~ e s o B e e Miing om0 S g for his wife in communications to Mis. | Elkins Reintroduces His Resolution. and has paid at least $1.300,000 mors | high prices, and: tonight they formed | Funerals of Thirty-four Victims Held | Ford. In another letter Cooke advised | Reintroducing his resolution with & than was just during the past ten|the Housekeepers' Co-operative asso- at T ad. Mrs. Ford to have nothing to do' with | request that it be referred to ths years, according to a startling report | ciation, with several hundred delegates other men unless “there is big money | anance committee, Mr. Elkins said made to the common council of Bos- | from the women’s clubs of the city.| Trinidad, Col. Feb. 3.—Thirty-four | in it “So far I have kept in the proces tor tonight by a stecial committee of | The women charged the merchants of | finerals of Primero mine victims were | During the reading of the letters | sjon and staved on the reservation. that body appointed last year to make | the city with using short weights and | held here today. The bodies of 25| Mrs. Ford endeavored to comceal her | Bue I don’t have to stay there always, an investigation. measures and raising prices unneces- | Austrian, - Hungarian, Croatian and | face, and wept bitterly. When, how- |'the tariff laws do not live forever.’ The committee finds that Boston. is | garily. talian victims were taken from the| ever, her attorney began té6 question Pho-doiue dling./ Aol paying more for its street lighting than | ~ A ‘series of general stores is to be|morge to the church and thence to the | Warriner as to the extent of her in HEIR TO $200,000,000 ESTATE, any other large city in the country. established which will purchase direct| Catholic cemetery. Bareheaded min- | timacy with him, she raised her hea - - from the farmers and other producers, | ers and women,many of the latter car- | and. gazing at the witness, smlivc | Arpested Charged With Using the TROUBLE IN LOVE AFFAIR and a scale of prices will also be es- | rying babies,trudged through the snow | slightly. Mails to Defraud. tablished which will produce a profit | at the side of the caskets. — 2 Resulted in Murder and Suicide in|oply sufficient to cover the exnense| The bodies of nine Japanese victims ICAN MINE DISASTER. New York, Feb, 8.—Syrous M. Drake, Baltimore. of the enterprise. A committee was| were buried this afternoon without re- —_— an elderly farmer of Huntersville, Tomorrow 16 more | Bodies of All Victims Brought to the o claims to be a descendant chosen to draft plans. ligious ceremony. Baltimore, Feb. 3.—Leaving behind e victims will be buried. rancis Drake and an heir to an estate of $200,000,000, was arrested to- him two rather rambling and inco- | “MAD MAGICIAN” HELD 2 herent letters, Elijah Baba Badal, a Hartferd Trolley Cars in Collision— . '3.—Word reach- | day at the Times Square postoffice by IN $10,000 BAIL Los Esperan- | Inspector Kent, on the charge of using Persian, 31 years old, a student at the i University of Matyland school of med- P M.‘:r:;""" ':',‘ P'“:,"’h'"a'"‘(“,“""; zas, Mexico, the scene of yesterduy's | the mails to defraud others who be icine, shot and instantly killed today | For Felonious Assault on John Fred- | Hartford, ~Conn., Fel nd four pas. | Mine explosion, indjcates that the res- | lieved themselves heirs of the famous Miss Marie Lewsen, 24 years old, of erick—Case Against Hi Andrews, a ";"""’"“f‘;‘- ?“h fouy m' cuers have brouglit out the bodies of | British sailor. Portland, Me., a student of dentistry at| of Two Boys Dis S e o e e, | I victime: Drake was arraigned befors Commis- the same institution, and then shot > flonn’»l‘“;;’“ _r'h“’ ‘::;:n"";o i :‘ A Seventy-five persons lost their lives, | sioner Shitlds and held in $3,000 bail himself, dying very soon afterwards.| New Yerk, Feb. 3. The case against :’;:f e e R S Tl single | ANd there may be one or two deaths | for examination. The letters, which were enclosed in an | rrerpert Dennison, the “mad magiolan e e o s 2512 | among those now in the hospitals. Al — gnvelope aadressed to the sulcide’s | sccused of the murder of little Robb:> | macting ow onecomisg oar. The vesti. | the v'ctims are Japanese or~ Aexicans. | AVIATOR HAD NARROW ESCAPE. e Touna ooel of Des Moines | Lomas and’ Arehur Shibley, was dis- | bules of both cars were smashed and | ., Vubile no offical report has been giv- ™ T avere found in a pocket of Badal's | missed tonight for lack of evidence. | Motormon Andrews eat about the heed | €7 OUL an Inquiry is said to have dem- | Louis Pauthan in Farman B clothing, One of them bore date of | Dennison was held in 3$10.000 bail for | oy pen o O he o | onstrated that the explosion was cuus- lided With a Fence. Jan. 19 and the other that of Jan. 25. | felonlous assault on John Fredericks, | mmcy mrees shalkes wo end bosieed nong | 24 by the ignition of gas by a spark They told of Badals love for Miss|who positively identifled Dennison as | gerionsiys -An investigation of the ac- | [TOI @ miner’s cigarette. | Denver, Feb. 3.—Louts Paulhan had Lewsen ang his belief that sheyrecip- | iho man who had shot him four times | Seaicu i an investigation of | Bvery effort has been made by the !, nurrol egcape from death today g?:é:‘;a na ::’2)!; ux:;fl h;r m.i: o725 | while crossing a viaduct in the Bronx, can oseymRny. tfil-ldoffl;;oi;;dmma members | when hig Farman biplane collided with B =4 ersial Y 2| early in the morning of January 8. £ Lo | OF The Tamilie a | the fences guarding the race track at i -2 > fars. Beulah S. Sunderland Files Suit — Overland Park, smashing through it lane Col- boarding house mistres Dennison’s lawyer made ~ no at Y — NEW HAVEN F tempt fo obtain‘bail He said he was for Divorce. ¢ 21 WARSHIPS, JAPANESE PLAN. | and came down in @ heap of wreckage AVEN POISONING CASE. | convinced that his = client should be| Reno, Nev. Feb. 3. Suit for divorce on the track. Paulhan was thrown Some Are Now Building—Will In- | headlong, but hevond a severe shaking kept under surveillance. gilsflle‘d here today g{ M".f B;ullch reiet = i pe 7 v, R oA T e . junderland, daughter of . . clude Four readnoughts, up escaped unhar - NEW HAVEN PRINTER CAUGHT [ Stubbs, meneral passenger agent for o A dogen or more people were knock- Arrest of Man and Four Women in Connection with the Aff: 1, the Harriman system and wife of John | Vancouver, B. C. Feb. 3.—Twenty- | €1 down by the machine when it tore 4 through the fence, but no one was se- New Haven, Feb. 3—The third ar- |In Room of Daughter of Woealthy | Sunderland, democratic national com- | one warships to be added to the Jap- rest and raid growing out of the pois- Pittsfield Manufacturer. mitteeman from Nevada. Mrs. Suth- | anese navy before 1917 are Included | Flously injured. oning of Florence Citro. inmate of a erland is at her parents’ home in Chi- | in the new Japanese naval programm~, house on Congress avenue, was made Pittsfield, Mass.,, Feb. 3.—When Miss | cago. according to advices brought hy ths Sun Changes Hands. . o Sy Ross, 203 four | Corinne Weston, "daughter of liser Awa Maru, which arrived trom —The Indianup- 3 ‘wealth:; lected H ky Stat - | the orient yesterday. Four Dread- | olis_ Sun, it was announced this after- . nonite Gifve Whinhu: It¥ed:ut . Pmld.'t.:i‘:““‘ 4 te Und noughts, Ilv)e cruisers, and two des- | noon, has been sold to Rudolph Leeds t . patch boats are nearing completion, | of Richond, Ind,. the son of the | closed than during any year since 1905. | selections of tools were to be made. total of 92,034,750 pounds of fish was | The cells were searched and four _fanaea ot T wharf during the year |band saws, a quantity of rope and sev- 1888. There were 440 vessels employed | eral clubs made from broomhandies in the trade 1the catch consisting |were found. “mainly of haddock and cbd.- e n_in Faver of Union Cemetery York, Feb. 3.—“Married?” ask-| ~New Haven. Feb: §.—Judge Burp ed the desk sergeant as he booked | in the superior court here md-y)gndef ‘Emil Von Musiler, allas Bmil Von ed down a decision which gives tha brought here today from Los|Union Cemetery association of Fa; Cal. charged with bigamy. |Haven permission to use certain land admitted Emil: - “nineteen | for burial purposes. Suit to restrain Either Emil has skipped coun: | the association from using the ground e of the | was brought by Mrs. Emma T. Brai- fi"'m h&"‘ffima read | Joy"ater she had. the matter to gue time. Ross was held in $1,000 ST R e R = bonds for trial in the city court 'n ankfort, Ky.. .—The Dboar d the other vessels will he 1aid dov . B. Leeds. e newspaper wis the morning. 3 hronss | of trustees of the Kentucky state umi- | ana, ¢ O™ " DEERAR e SR Sevipaper, wis ‘ S versity today elected Judge Henry S. George cCullough of Muncie, Ind. Actress Mae Buckley Granted an In- % 5 " eapturea Barker of Louisville president of the Yale-Harvard-Princeton Debate. and others, terlocutory . Degree ‘of Divorce. 2 2 ; ‘university, succeeding P"fi'-h“ ‘P;' Cambridge, Mass., Feb. 2. —The ques- e g _San Francisco, Feb. 3.—Mrs. Marle \ : e ar o e ot o appaaier Hans | tion to’ be debated’ in the aunual tri~ Death from Football Inju g:;—fin, known on the si .as_May tueky's highest tribunal. r contest between Harvard, Yale| Syracuse, N. Y, | ch. d—Injuries re- kley, was today gran an inter- | Ne " ‘ Princeton unlversities on March 21 | ceived in a football game at Interlaken Jooutory decree of divorce from W. S. : last fall resulted in the death here to Martin, whom she married in Denver “Resolved, ° day of Wesley H. Kellogs, 20 yeass Jan. 27 of last year. She obtained the| .. Feb, e L. 3 power to lmpose an |old, son of Rev. B. D. Kellogg, of Bur- divorce on the grounds of cruelty. The | i y Vir- - tax pot apportioned wmong the | Ungton, Pa. Death was dut to paraly- suit was not contested. nian, ‘died - ay in his home in Jan. 80, Alice, from |states according to population.’” s, % , where he owned a A Middlebury. frie i e ted in | - Jan. 31, America, from | Danbury.~The. tenth anniversary of| Winsted.—Col, §. B. Horne left Wed- Booth gave him a ‘“cigar shower” Sat- 5 ue Rod and Gun club was on _a business trip te Sonth urday night, as it was near his birth- Feb. 3. Arabic, trom at a banquet given at the . While in the south Be will

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