Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 14, 1910, Page 1

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VOL. LIL—NO. 61 - WILL NOT DEAL WITH THE UNION| Cevled Paragrapis |Qyb.Syrfage PRICEV TWO CENTSW 3 AIR-CRUISER TO CARRY 60 PERSONS Condensed Telegrams $10,000 Painting The Senate Committee Ordered a Colosnsiiteemuny, Mot 13An ok + favorable report on the bill to incor- ” = Torpedo Boa cu' 'rom Hama Dorate the Rockefeller foundation. Fi 2 1 S f About . :. 3 tual war conditions, has been arrenged . £ Rapid Transit Company Just as Determined as| et feresont M Suiinie hor P Dituburgers Are Plamming o 2 10| Five Motors will Develop a Speed o u Three Weeks 3 MAKES UNOFFICIAL TRIAL IN|“THE SHEPHERD AND FLOCK,” BY Sptpameil BU L ey Fifty Miles an Hour. A go. Christiania, March 13.—The Scandi- 3 M | Evarts Filed a Brief in th 4 They were eel ATIA N e s | Ktskoaar ok BOSTON HARBOR. JEAN FRANCOIS MILLET. supreme. court contesting the. consti tutionality of the new corporation tax w. POORLY DRESSED MAN SEEN | The Famous and oniy known - INVENTION OF A GERMAN ENGINEER inal Confederate states’ half-dollar was sold at auction in New York for $3,750. Carrying a Bundle from the Art Mu- s 4 L 3 The Far Eastern A: ai- | Is a New Departure in Flying Machine Construction, Be- seum in Golden Gate Park, San| ., o0 ri0 Ceern B oors that » 7 f 2L ing Was a Loan, | beri-beri as its origin in the polish- ing Built of Iron—Great Results Expected frem this rancisco—Painti o of rice. . 9 2 a * Machine which is Approaching Completion and will New York, is still aground off this port, but 15 not believed to be in any BREAK IN STRIKERS' RANKS PREDICTED |inecy, ™he vessensers were taien o | Ngw TYPE OF WAR VESSEL Munich, Marck 13.—The Argentine consul, A. Geiger. was killed yesterday | The Invention of a Princeton Gradu- rs in an automobile accident. His wife, Many Have Already Returned to Work, According to the| Wi accompanica “him, ana also the | ate—It is 46 Feet Long and Weighs Paraguayan consul, W. Korte, and the i i i — reds More of | ariver, were severciy injured. The au-| Only About Six Tons. Philadelphia Police Canvass—Hundreds driver, were severaly injured. The su. ly Sympathetic Strikers are Expected to Return to Work | speea. i =2 e v e & S b . Ao onet ¢ ‘ 2 o ” h epart- oston, March 13.—A new pe of San Francisco, March 13.—Having | oi producer 60 years old, roppe. be — o b Today—* There is Nothing to Arbitrate. - ure i Brtleh Dankize wil be mry. | Bovernmént war vessel for torpedo |been carerully cat Srom its frame wiis | dead 1n the 105Dy of & NOtel At Tong Launched Early this Spring—Its Make-Up. rated tomorrow with the opening of | WOrk, which may be used in coast de- Persons wandered about the | Beach, Cal, D Romarvs bank, offitered and eondgcr | fense or carried on board the larger : Iisships Sor use “sbroad. comtracted In Accordance with the dying re-| o i S A Just toet | —Attracted ; remain away from their usual voca- | gp te romen customers. The onl; ou ston shinvards, has en quest of Representative Perkins, the rier, Germany, urcl ~—An Im- jare just over 27 foet long by near 40 With hay | tions tomorrow and until the sriev. iy The ooy given its unoMeial trial in Boston har- |art museum in ‘Golden Gate park to- Lhouse continued public busincss after jmense wir-cruiser’ to ‘c;:nmrfixlnuylmln I diametor, and theylic end to ensi , a|a the striking carmen shal or and exceed: e government re- |day. No one saw the thlef remove the death was announced. 0 sixty persons, and inten rav- [end along the body of the airship. The D T s s A e ts ‘Keop other men away. Mg | ulrements by two knots, making 4 |canves, and the police 4re Withous the el at from 44 to 50 miles an hour, is |vessel dx Drovided with no fewer tharm speed of 18 knots, according to a state- |slightest clue. The painting is valued | The South Dakota Insurgent Repub- |@pproaching completion here, and will [five motors, devcloping aliosetier 450 ment given out today. Tue govern- lat $10,000. licans, in_conterence at Huron, S D, |be launched carly thiw spring by its in- |horsepower. One of tiem of 80 Tiori ment trials are expected to take place named a full state ticket headed by |Ventor, Anton Horder, an engineer, of |power, drives the propelier, which ke ey The Property of Miss Sarah Spooner. o . ¥ |this city. Tt introduces an entirly hew |ftted at the bows. “The other four dc ed exclusively by women and catering Philadel; by a > n dlway af Croma of several thousand persons col- | have been adjusted. It was also Te- | %ill‘be to keep other men away. Jected late today. Small bovs stoned |solved that uhion members withdraW | man may be a depositor or transact some of the police and later the win- | all their money from the banks. Their | pysiness” with the new institution. dows of a number of cars were broken | sympathizers, whether organized or . Tet - crowd un- | not, are also asked by the promoters late this week. R 8, Vesey, for governor. T e rite Sor this outbrask. | of the syiapathotts mirike s do Hke- [CHOSEN Tfn':'.:: ::?_?_N:;E:AME Immune from Small-Gun Fire. |g,rie ReiinE 18 the Droperty of malss et Srowralle | SERatire in, the construction of air- (velep 100. horsepower’ each, and are I A R Bin | ™ Lines to Be Cleser Drawn. Lot ¢ Nons B Dt Sunday by e S ey fia e sur |now_ tomreling: it erews | It W BRE- | ciock ea 00 8l CORSISERRLS Sx(onE Bl Great Results Expected. fean”Vertichl ~und "ol horisontai y Sunday since the strike began.| The leaders of the sympathetic strike | List of Names Given = unday BY | ture of its construction is expected to |Lafayette, Paris. The canvas is 21 Ing operations in the principal citics | The now vessel iy expected to achieve |5CrW Plancs which sicer the hi Situation Said to Be Improving. | <ay that when they endeavored to con- Chairman MacCracken. b immune Trom tho small gun e of |Inches 1 length and {1 ohes High: | Of (he United States during February. |oveiy moro cuccesstul resuits than thove 7470541 4 ards an tar lice and dust e ovem gl e Dbattleshf isers, I - |Two other paintings value , i e rigid aluminum type bul Y | tio he ship forwarc atorn, T R A et that the mits | for ‘the convonience of the _gemeral| New York March 13—Chancellor | JRICSHIPS 290 orsbors. Th Vasan wes v other, paintings of eqvel e Jlon er of Foreian | Count Zeppelin, on which it Is chiefly |1on Of the ship s s g 4 public, Director of Public Safety Clay |MacCracken, as chairman of the New | compartments packed with cellulose, | Spooner when The Shepherd and Flock Affairs Apologized to the = American | modelled. 1t Is to be named the Tricr, Average of 50 Miles an Hour. ng hourly. The rough York iversit; £2 ve out to- afte v » i Wi - |and others belittled the effect of the York univ 'y senate, gav From this is suspended below the sur- [was hung. They are Dupre’s Twilight r the town where it will be built. R I e strike. They say they are mow deter- Y T e O e e atn”t | face another hull - containing all the land a tandscape by Charies Francis the mob which attacked the legation. The seleton of the balloon is formed It is estimated that e o = m o draw es clos i en to cancles caused | machinery and torpedo armament. The | Daubigny. ed iron piping. ~ sprung is belng weeded out | fhe the present week, the second of the [the roll of the one hundred electors of | Macht "_m“‘::x‘h““ abont six toos | ped h" W Auised Aot W low fron shaft is 410 feet in length and ter class of men mow operates the Hall of Fame. An scceptance nas about 16 inches in diameter. There And we are getting the | seneral strike. been received in every case. and ls 4§ feot long. It is an inven-| Ajexander Lawson, the curator of s e othhe F olte SBiTs | AL the hese powerful motors will give the vessel a speed of at least 44 miles an hour when t are all working, and it s even thought n average of fifty miles an hour wi Thomas Thorne, an Actor, well known in Baltimore, committed sui cide in Chicago, where he was play fares, too.” declared an official. Pressure Brought to Bear. In the cas of the publicists, editors | tion of Clarence L. Burger, a Prince- | tno museum, saws that shortly before | ing the post-reporter in “The Fourth |mamemoen cornr Sde shafts in the |be attained The Company is for the “Open Shop.” | The union drivers of milk and bread (and authors, Andrew Carnegie is to| ton graduate. the theft was discovered he saw a | Estate.” feet long and elght inches in diam- Machine Waeigs 30 Tone i settlement of | Wagons were called upon 10 strike to- |sucdeed Grover Cleveland, Joseph H.|\ew vORK SITUATION poorly dressed mman lugging a bundle — eter. These are joined to the central | p 2 o most | MOrTow by the resolution adopted to-|Choate is to succeed George E. Post from the instif but a crowd was Bank Examiner Hann Reported that |shaft jattice work of iron, The entire weight of the framework, the uppermost - by lattic . The ciizens of | 0ay by the Central Labor union. The |of ‘Belrout, Syria; Jomathan P. Dolli- 1S STILL IN THE CLOUDS [visiting the hall at the time, and he at- | palpable frauds had been overlooked OF 30 Horossever motors and equipment i thirty tons, tached no importance to the incident. | by Bank Examiner Peffer in the books grocery clerks, 1,000 of whom organized [ver of Iowa to succeed Edward Es- everybody con- | ; : natural meth- | this morning, will quit work tomorrow |gleston; Cardinal Gibbons to succeed | Strong Disposition to Demand the Re- | The painting was insured against fire | of the National City bank of Cam- | The gas is contained in twelve ring|tained by the vessol when fully inflated 4 Curst; Tnder- ; alloone o same manner s In |will pormit the tran of ‘ten tom Insists there e | O or . mon emalon man” and sxpellod | San Hobert Fow T B Mo Laree, Tome and. BEoDie Were pessing | The H ¢ Al C d b i o i ered a_ mnon- er; Rober ncoln uccee New York, March 13.—After a day |lArSe Toom, e Honor of All Concerned having EARE el s & rermbans o Of o ey A | e s o Stirecs | of confurende and " compromises, the |conetantly aloug the corrider. Touaht by Eagenio Chices in Home tns | KHARTOUM AWAITS ROOSEVELT, |THREATEND WALKOUT Pressure was brought to bear on the | In the roll of university and collegs | Situation in the republican party of | o NOTHER AVALANGCHE PRsh Sy JRusenip. Chieas. (R pionre the s D . P brewery workers and their Tepresenta- | presidents, Abbott Lawrence Lowell, | New York state s still in the clouds. o rwsenents. fu e opiy IS EXPECTED TODAY. OF 25000 FIREMEN & tives voted to join in the general strike |who origihaly was chosen to succeed | Hostilities have been postponed. Both REPORTED AT WELLINGTON | Were called off. — ¥ | 5 ° - | the partisans of Senator Root, Gov~ ; wn. |The City in Gala Attire—Hotels |On Practically All the Railroads Be- N despite the orders of thelr national of- | Mr. Stedman, takes the place of Pres. 5 A Rttt Pelies st taey o | ficers. Tlefore this action was taken |ident EHot, who is transferred to the | crnoT Hughes and Senator Hinman on | Two Engines and Rotary Smow Plow Cppgradis s sadi Crowded With Visitors. tween Chicago and the Pacifi 4 | the Building trades section of the Cen- (division of publicists, editors and au- | th¢ one hand and those of Timothy L. and Crews Buried. Rt a0 PEInGRL TN DA % i .| tral Labor union had held a meeting |thors. President James of the Uni- | Woodruff, chairman of the state com- ey Ty igace, o Thcht) Khartoum, March 13.—Khartou Chicago, Mar | ana voted to expel the brewery work: |versity of Ilinois takes the place of | Mittee, on the other, preserve & glum | geaitte, Wash. March 13Tt is re- e G R e now in galé attire awaiting the | waikout of 26.0 {ers from membership and to boycott |the president of the University of Mis- | Mien. There is mo desire to duplicate | portea that an avalanche at Welling- | 11 30 death. ing of Theodore Roosevelt, who all the r a %S Rt | all_Philadeiphia. Deer. The’ brewers |sons | e opuplican party ene sicaston | onitha "scund OF e Great Norihern | The Prussian Dist Adopted tho sec- | the Othor membets ot ehi American |caigo and the Fuciic const i that | workers then held a special meeting| Chancellor McCormick of the Uni- disaster, in which more than one hun- | tion of the suffrage bill providing for |hunting and scientific expedition s |ac age, today whe and decided to join the strike. versity of Pittsburg succeeds the pres- | jatcly affected the democratic party. | dred lives were lost two weeks 880, | seoret voting at primary eloctions for | aboard the stcamer Dal on the last president R ity It is not wished in endeavoring to . R ramen & g of Leog * “out~ | The Philadelphla Rapid Transit com- |of the Unnversity of Cincinnati suc- | Conners, and Mr. Root in attempting | “"X{" c"oce of the general super. — ternoon, but an unusually strong |€ntire controversy was not submitte “diation of | PanY say that they were able to oper- |ceeds the president of the Western "‘?Dea not wish :)‘; Do a ‘1"“'9"3’- g | intendent of transportation of the| The Russian Comm n Cleaning | northern gale is blowing, which is [to arbitration a strike would be Ir Preside ast, | ate practically & normal Sunday sched- | College for Women. o e O e e Oy socr Uit | Great Northern raliway in this city it | up the corrupt and demoralized quars | Kicking up heavy waves in the river, |itable. body else will | 1le today. Seven hundred and forty| In the division of professors of his- | hangs a large measure of u“l ate of | was said that an avalanche a few | termastors department of the army re- |and it Ls posaible that the arrival of | Mr. Carters letetr of notificatfon wiy Dear ¢ = | cars were run during the day and five |tory and scientists, the places made by | the Tepublican party in the electitons | mjiee west of Wellington, Wash., at 2 | turned. 25 more indictments. of ofi- | the distingnished American will be |endorsed by the brotherhood’s commit " g " | hundred and forty tonight. Geath or by resignation are filled by | next fall. o'clock this morning buried a rotary | cials, including Major General Pil- |somewhat delayed. tee which represents the fitemen on | Big Break in Strikers’ Ranks Looked i o O ArEion. the selection of George Burton Adams | ‘Semator Root, Lloyd C. Griscom. pres | unow plow and has again blocked traf- | sudsiy. If Colonel Roosevelt arrives at the |about forty-seven rallroads = west, s Today. - e of Yale, George Lincoln Burr of Cor- | ident of the county committee. and | 5.0 g Gt is expected that the line s scheduled hour—4 o'clock in the after- [Northwest and southwest of Chicago. authorities look for a big break | Two hundred knew metormen and |nen, Dr. Henry Fairfield Osborn. presi- | the new school of Tepublican léaders | Lii) me cleared some time tomorrow. |PRESIDENT TAFT AT noon—he will go first to the vy |The letter was sent to W. C. Nixon, | be ranks of the sympathetic strik- | conduetors reached hers today, one dent of the American Museum of Nat- | at large bellove that Woodruff and his [ ™ pnetCor Tohn Annen was seriously Place and ‘then %o the rallway station [Eeneral manager of the St. Louls and ers tomorrow. M. r hundred ang twenty of wrom were |ural History, and Herbert Putnam, ll- | allies are directly responsible for the | ;njuroq ana has been taken to Seattle. BROTHER-IN-LAW'S FUNERAL. | {5 meot Mrs., Roosevelt and Miss thel :-n-‘,].';.-?m-?(-u r I]nv.ui,1 halrman of the 4 ek an tallroud gencral managers’ eommittee . - from Indianapolis and fifty from Buf- |hration of congress. Clection of Allds as president pro tem. i+ % e 1% i ibwe trlat tnousande wii | falo. About seventy of the recently | Thirty-mine mames in all may be | of the state senate TNt the frst INSIANCE | 2l ae enly cespallion oeordinn s |Mrs. Taft Unable to Make the Trip to | Sig Are how on their way from Alex . | smployed men were diecharged by the |chosen by the electors this year for [ and, when that proved a mistake of | %o rafiroad offcials. They say the tsburg. o'clock In the evening. Khartoum so- The raflroads previously announced their willingness to arbitrate the In 0 5o tomorrow. . A superintendent a: | BB = - 3 - i o e pany in its efforts to weed out the | places n the hall of fame. electing Senator Cobb to succeed him, P J e who |creased demand wages which firemen 1 Camps, shipyard declared today that|indesirable element of Ms new em-|» which infter sot ey fesl tq S nof PEISELSEIreWs Whve SO Taiel WY L L L Ll oL adident Tan | o 220 Great crowda of visltors who |CITMCG I amount. to about 18 1o Ter i : s eympathetic strike not | PIOVEE: L\ oty ooy pescetl BIDRED. RESL ESTATE MAN D e P NS ol - attended in' thiy city today the funeral (are anxlously waitlng o give the for. |cont. The other demands inyelved, the » singio one of five thousand empioyes| Al Qu - | KILLED HIMSELF AND TWO SONS | Ui SR N strons tempta- | ARMY SEEKS BETTER WORSES. lof Mre; Tarcs brother ia-iaw, Thomas | mer prosident 'of the United States & |MATAETs tif concern dinclpling an o L i 3 o Thet H tion to demand that Woodruff retire, | Government to Supervise Horse Breed- |train for Washington, where he is dus % tion. The: o with the and “auestions rau iice informetion hun- | ed today from any section of the city : = ot B Erods of the sempathetic strikers at|and Director of Public Safety Clay | Werried for Fear That He Would Lose | ang it 1s understood that it was with e for the Ncacte O ¢ 8,20 o'clock tormorrow morning. The | ONE COMPANY MILITIA promotion . b it e |eak 1 His Fortune. the express intention of demanding 5 : Foiet g Whether, when th »me enginemen e s el v | - - ryWinE was qnlet o ClrSnrwiancgy. Of trip SWreKiosh, mielt WITHDRAWIs FROM CORINTH Btill under the jurisdiction of klay- | and peaceful. his resignation that Senator Root ‘Washington, March 13.—A new plan |10 Plttsburg were perhaps the saddest oot garn to morrow, the ori oy % ~ — ars and carpenters, it 13 said, will re- | Threat to Step Every Wheel in the [ o ok ar e L e e | o b Nt Son e OB, ectly | has Deen adopted for obiaining horses [that, have ever confronted & chict S| N, Disorder Sunday Among Interna- |\ Dacs yoor leiter mean that it a sat - T . @ State, and Walter, 17 and 12 vears old, re- | today that such was his purpose, but | FPecially adapted to the mounted serv_ | 70ic® ending of Mr. Laughlin's life tional Paper Co, Strikers, Infactory reply s not received o ntrika ades will follow this exampie New Hayven, March 13.—At a mass | spectively, were found shot to death | he virtually admitted it. on Friday morning, the gloomy day, will be called | mesting of union laber here today, | fonight in their home in the Bromx | “What do you, as judges of politics, | £ils plan is stmilar to that In vogue in | e, "necal fails of rain. the silent home | Corinth, N. Y., March 13—The wnluJBN;ltnlx?rnr; pretty grave he sald. “Wa ment than w WLTIMATUM TO MILKMEN, Harry C. Parker, a member of the |It appears to be a case of double |think I came on for?’ he asked the Foodia 0ad, the| draw ot Company ¥ o BAKERS AND GROCERY CLERKS. | committee of ten having the strike in | murder and saicide. newspaper men. And when they told | Sovernment agricultural departments |O0, SORIONITe WooGnaR Toul Th0| draval Jant, mighl of Company ¥ of |FR TSV peen quring. the whole =S Philadelphia in charge, said that la- | Moritz was a retired real estate | him what the general understanding e - % g Of orses: |sion of carriages to the Allegheny | International Paper company, which jVeeks of conferences. We do not want | ¥F Any Are at Work Tuesday They Will | hor would take its demands before the | dealer, and from all appearances he | was, he added: “T seldom fai to ac- | 2nd the army makes it PUTCHases | cmetery ‘where the intcrment was | have been under military guard since |® strike. We want tho publ g to ur 4 Be Expelled from Union. g n‘xeeu‘:s.:‘fi o e g‘éfi;‘ve’rmon'fimfl?; then itaroed the e ish what I set out to accom- | frm among those so bred. = ot made, all constituted a victure of | Wednesday, did not result fn any dis- dorstand cuat. As to our suthority:tu i e P A B entlee g 2TY | mourning deeply impressive order today among the employes o ) W n of ove ‘ riiiadeiphia, Pa. March 13—In its|not eranted every wheel in the state | volver lay beside the fathers body. | ' In this spirit he talked today with | oF agriculture on the subject Secretary he ecsident reached. the. Bast B Con ey ho sre ol (o & atrike. gent. of the men in favor of it. Al of i ‘o Gemonstrate the strength of | w . £ evidently d w Mr. Gri z - nson sald ~ R S ietabrre 5 peloe o - Lty swers we have received from Gemonstrate t ngth of | would stop. Other speakers were Aot onaeney rom ol ith & | Mr. Griscom and James W. Wads. | et masks to obiain horess saiteble |SFEY section of Pitteburg at § o'clock | Companies B of Schenectady and L [the answers we have recelved from sake stronger | J. Donahue, president of the State |fit of despondency, to which negihbors | worth, speaker of the assembly, and this morning, and was driven fmmedi- | of Saratoga, which are still at the | ! A Central La- | Federation of _Labor. and William | say he was subject, killed both his | tonight with Mr. Woodruff himselr. | for remounts which have been spe- 7003 MOrl U8, B0, Wos, CUVEr ten | plant, apent’ a quiet Sunday and no|°vasive. I'hopo their next reply will d all milkmen, | Mailly of New York. Resolutions en- | boys, set a fire in the cellar, gave the | Neither he nor Mr. Griscom would djs- | clally ®red under government super-|,.onihs’ ago he was a guest of honor | trouble Is expected tomorsow w! not be ko : T e ors |and surrounded by a gay company at| two hundred additional strikcbreakers|, Jt Was learned that the managers dbor and to hetic strik today aire srocery clerks and other dis- | dorsing and approving of the Philadel- | alarm. then returned and Shot him- | cuss the ofitcome of these conferences o 3 - i 3 es of life to|phia strike were passed, self through the head. but Mr. Woodruff was more communi- | Present system of purchasing horses |gungay afternoon ta. Mr. Taft looked | will arrive from Saratoga. had agred to stand “pat” and w The Moritses were well to do and | cative. He consented to interview him. | I8 5id to be expensive and otherwise Ui CoY OmON! o ST ML ight | Wiy arTive from Saretosa. L lrefusing to make any ' concessons, —— - Mrs. Moritz is visiting in Englewood, | self for the newspapers. unsatisietny, on the train. Mrs. Louis More of Cin- | within the next forty-eight hours they | Probably would invite ' the = brother- FRENCH AVIATOR PAULHAN ARMY OFFICER KILLED N. J. According to a maid in the| “You may say this,” he said: 1t is belleved that by the new sys- | linnaei who had recently succeeded | will have all the nom-union emplo hood’s committee to another conference house the wife went to Englewood at| «‘When Mr. Woodruff was asked if | tem the department can purchase yrs Laughlin as companion to Mrs. | noeded. tomorrow. . ¥ MAKES DARING FLIGHT. HIMSELF IN MANILA.| the earnest request of her husband, | Senator Root had demanded his res- g;wg:gegf flflrf;:dfl l:f:“"f: Taft at the White House, accompanied | P “D"”"K;-'” - Naroh A8 eput —— | P who seemed desirous of having her ation, he answi “Ask Root.”* raise: a pric . Mrs, Taft was unable " o possibility of a_conflict hetwe Biglane Rolled Like Small Boat in Whether Killing Was Accidental or In-| leave the house. - e M e W aatt o ooted 1¢ | than 18 Dow paid for inferior antials, |he President. Mus Taft was unable CONCUSSION OF BRAIN. raiironds west ot Chicago and thel eavy Sea. tentional is Not Known. Shortly after the bodies had been | there was any question of retiring him family was joined by Mrs. Charles An- ien and firemen attracted moro T i - found, Borough President Cyrus Mill- | he answered with even more gmphi TO PROTECT THE UNIFORM. [GaT0Y “i5e Joned ¥ U, Gnd another attentlon Tere today because for mev- New 3 farch 13—In a cross,| Manila, March 13.—Second Licuten- | er of the Bronx, who was a friend of | sis: ~Ask RoOL" e sinter of Mrs, Taft, eral daya there have been indlcation &hoppy wind of about twenty miles an ant Clarence M. Janney, Twelfth in. | Moritz, took charge of the affairs of | ~“‘When Mr. Woodruff was asked i¢ | Hobson Introduces Bill to Compel The- |* ‘e “funeral services were held at| [ === o o lof an spproaching controversy of im Bour, which caugl s biplane at the | fantry, killed himself yesterday at Fort | the house. he intended to resign of his own voli- aters to Admit Enlisted Men. the residence at 3 o'clock this atter.| OSIDEY, COnt. Sareh 23-mUnoons |lar character affecting the same class- start and i it from side to_side | Willlam McKinley. Considerable hys- | Mrs. Moritz reached home later and | tion, he answered with an emphasis noon. Only the family and the closs | Sclous and probably =—suffering {rom |es of labor on ihe raiiroads cast o fke a boat in a lively sea, Louis Paul- | tery shrouds the case, and it is not| collapsed. Friends took her away bordering almost on belligerency: “Ask | Washington, March 13.—Aroused by |friends of the Laughlins were present. | CORCUsSIn OF OUF brafn Wrs, Berman | Missesippl vatloy. b ‘ Fan rench aviator, made a daring |known whether the kiiling was_inten- | Moritz and the present Mrs. Moritz | Senator Root”’" frequent refusais to admit enlisted men | Juage John M. Ferron of Cincinaty, | Crofat of 205 Main sticet, was taken | Represcntutives of = these railrosds Mgt at tne Jamaica tack track this |tional or by acelent Army inepec- | were married about two years ago. The| In spite of the wide diversion of |of the army and navy in uniform to|father ‘of Mrs. Laughlin and Mrs. |02 local lospital after having been | have been in Washinglon during the mitarneon. He was in the air for eight |tors are now holding an investigation. | dead man’s first wife, the mother of | opinion as to what it is proper to do |theaters and_other public places, in |Taft, was unable to be- present be- (!’-‘"X"L T e et | DB wroul; pravaved to.spein 8 vy [ minutes and ten onds and covered Lieptenant Janney, accompanied by | the murdered boys, dled a few vears | in the present crisis within the repub- | Washington, Representative Hobson of |cause of serious illness.” Irwin B. b‘rod“ 'd lhou Ll‘ll‘ lgl’l Ehe b “:n man Knapp of the in it }'_ e < “" "" .: msbout six miles. his wife, attended & dinner party at|ago. Moritz conducted a prosperous | lican party of the state and what Alabama introduced a bill yesterday | Laughlin, a brother of Thomas McK, an fl-‘“ a vevfi.h l?\re bt 28 ‘l’n.rn\‘:;:ht'r Cllmnllflflflall\ll.!l‘!‘l ’)ln-hl’)ld- :vymm, 5 :1" Wright, as he has done daily | the house of Licutenant Colonel Rob-|real estate business in Harlem up to| the proper way to do it, both sides |prohibiting such diserimination in the |Laughlin and secretary of the Ameri- | Tomonstrate with the driver of another | Charles P. Nelll, the federal medintor ded the exhibition with jert F. Ames. Janney left the party| four years ago, when he retircd with a [ are still sincerely anxious to avold any | District of Columbia and the terri-(can embassy at Berlin, cabled a mes edm wito had collided with the driver [under the Erdman sct, for the exercise seiy watched the|aiid went to his quarters. He got a| smali fortune. 'Since then, friends say, | open breach at fhe primaries, ‘The | tories. The bill provides a maximum |sage of condolence, OfS ssooud tiam, for runftEmIIOto him, fof dielr good of o avart trouble “tting evidence (revolver and returned to the house of | he has worrled considerably for fear | adherents of Woodruff sum it up in | penalty for violation of the law of a| Mrs. Taft sent a large wreath of | When the rm; nr;ge zo 8 and, go- between the roads and their fiv men 1han’s biplane is an |Lientenant Colonel Ames, on the way | that he would lose his money. one word—hysteria, §1,000 fine and two years' imprison- |flowers from the White House conger- | g down @ ffteen-foot embankment, | and engineers ; ugh, im- of the ight patents.|to which he fired one shot, presumably : ment. vatories. Representativep and - Mrs. | threy the carriage upon Mrs. Crofut, |portant officiais of bor orennis culd attend all the ex- |into the He entered the house and [ BOSTON MERCHANTS’ LINE HISTORIAL GRIST MILL GONE. 3ir. Hobsow's bill deciares that the |Nicholas Longworth and fricnds from | rendering her =unconsclous injuring |tions also have been in Washington, ibition fight: flourished the revolver. There was an “honor attached to the uniform is a |verious sections of the country sent) her head a: h" c‘lnflg D;!‘!h e hlerv- although they have ot th far shown Clrence J. Shearn, Paulhan's coun- | €Xplosion, and Jenney fell with a bul- TO GO OUT OF BUSINESS.| poune Holly, N, J, Loses Famous | national asset im defense of the nation, |flowers and messages of sympathy. nal injurfes, the extent of which have | themselves to the mediator wh s present, said lel‘ inl the h?;‘_d—l He d:eg ‘{r‘.fiffily‘: Three Stenmboats to Be Laid OF Next Landmark in Dest-octive Blase and any act reflecting upon the dig-| The Rev. Maitland Alexander, pas- | not been ascertained. m—rzxsrm-nu-umxh;m.~:|'.]u;. mu;:‘v:« s d a £ opers t was at first reported that Lieuten- x - e - at Of wages, cations seem to be QR Sk S of opeix st nity and honor of the uniform strikes |tor of the First Presbyterian church, TR TATR IR 1e: {bacior wages. miloations sesm ¢0 be conducted_the brief ceremonies at the s was not an|6nt Colonel Ames had shot Janney, and Saturday. at the service for which it stands and P S ¥ Mount Holly, N. J., March 18.—O: R s Iro ngement, a. Frights contend, | 21ards placed him under arrest, but he = S BB i o rense of t! i and at the grave, where the| will lead to concessions, the railroad T o b o ‘Stosone: | vas subsequently released. New York, March 13 —Three steam. | of the landmaiks of New Jersey. the Clrie gl e mted e g party was shictered from (he | Chicago Proposes That They Must Not | will maice such Goncessions only und I tomorar mction obtained | Lieutenant Janney was born in Vir- | boats, the Massachusstts, Bunker Hill | historic old Mount Holly grist “mill, e eves of curfous onlookers by a white Protrude Beyond Half an Inch. pressure of formal arbitration and wily by the W the meantime |ginia in 1851 He was first a private | ang Old Colony, which since 1908 have | Was destroyed by fire early vesterday | pAUPERS HAD BANK ROLLS. |tent stretched above the family burial then put forwara the udded expense as i - 1ed to deposit a|in the Tweifth infantry, but was ap- | been in service between New York and | TIOTRIDE, and several bulldings in the place. March 13.—The draft of [the basis of a demand for highes weekly boud of $8.000 to sive exhibi- [Pointed second lieutenant February 11,1 Boston as the Boston Merchants' line, | Reishiborhood were damaged by roof | cio qlanils Bank Run Revealed the | After the funeral the president, ac- nce limiting the length of | frelg ht and passenger rates. Fie mas atiempt o flght to New | 1907, provisionally, and accepted a few | will be laid off on Saturday mext and | Aires from l{“’! g sparks. The damage City’s “Poor” as Depositors. companied by Captain Archibald W.| hatpins has been completed by Assist- — = ’ S some day this week if the weath. | A8vs Iater, the line will go out of business. to the mill, including the destruction » Butt, his military aide, went for a long [ ant Corporation Counsel Hayes, and| TO LEAVE CARP FACTORY. 5 e SaE The Boston Merchants' line was or- | 9f & large quantity of grain, will automobile ride through the will be introduced to the council on = o RO SUNDAY WORK IN ganized by the New England Naviga- | 370unt to $25.000. Cleveland, March 13—The recent run | ;0 " Monday. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., Will Take Po- SUNDAY CLOSING LAW tion company, which is the marine de. | The old mill was erected in 1728, | on the hask of the Soclety for Sev. e —— The ordinance mukes the person an sition in the Wi PAPER MILLS DISCONTINUED | partment of the New Yok New Tiaves|2nd was occupied by British troops | ings developed the aturday tha B o o g | s usnse. makes tie/ Garson, he during the revolution. It was built | some of the bank’s depositors are sup- a Hart ; e 1 Strikebreakers for Bellows Falls— | the Yoin cad ton viarviod r0ete Wi | Critirely of hand-hewn timbers, and | ported by the city as paupers 11.—It becama relt trudes more than half an inch from | New York, Airiest Approach to Nothing Set in| either the side, top, back or front of | known today that Theodore Roc ENFORCED IN MIDDLETOWN. S or Ordered All Places Closed But| Maine Mills Not Affected by Strike. i v, Avas the object of much interest by | Standing m the long line of fright- e vhethes e s work at th o Bl Sthies Y S | e “contrellca br iy . | Historical ‘and pairiotic . secieties of | cned peoble and heir hands cluiching | - the Midst of Naught, Saya Lowell | the AL reurdiess of wheter the pin | Jr. wil ifkely fnish N homporovilte: Bellows Falls, Vt, March 13.—Sus- | Morse. Thus the abandonment of the | New Jersey. their paks books wite seven of theso hat. Conn,, where he Is employed, in June, o R, s B tho: Interiational” Paver Comiis | o T e et hear o3t & revort | ill for the Publie & woman Who investigations show had | promeh £ nothing set in the midst of | o The maximum penalty for vielating | and will become manager of one of rd & Fisher, all = brousht a dcad calm over the strike | ed control of the new Metropolitan line Contributions. i Ties L e M ] e e e o e s - While no date has been set for hi 3 city_for & ton’ of cgal had an t | the Flagstaft observatory, Arizona. in | yyounds H aling Rapidly—He and | that Colonel Roosevelt may reach New start the miils will be mede tomorrow. | The railroad company has denicd | of campaign contributions and expen- | or “sace, Rumford Falls, Me. March 13—Al- | that it owns the Metropolitan line. An | ditures has been Teported out of the | “‘piather assistance from the city will | *Co5co%ing an audience here Cudahy Resign from Exclusive Club. | York late in May or early in June, s SO0 sefcoonut - of Jtw ymovicy J1t £opIA taken by some to indicate th the forced nounce st week that 1w . | though a secret meeting of the paper | officer of the railroad company said to- | hous ecti £ - s Tinder=t OF it | makers “was heid, today, & 1s “tuougit | night: S the persistnt ofores of the democratiy | N0 be dispensed by the police. Iy no Injuiou efthet on Nl | Mo IMatoh, 10 ahhac] Teatiie will taxe plnce fu. that montl that the mills e’ Internation: “The Boston Merchants’ line is go- be: e e TP s of ending nearly a W " Ame o throngs Ir wvenum d his intention of res affected by a strike, as are some of | money. Three boats will probably be | have yvet to demonstrate that they do to a Cider Mill. ERhary. Sunr dapger. to the eabth 8 0 Y @ictad mpan bl by T 2. Bodaty thy nother, Mrs. H. A. Alex+ the company’s plants in New York and | lald up at Newport.” not intend to prevent the enactment of | Suffield, Conn., March beditants from the comet I8 pos | Cmtieecs to) hénl, - Jere Hilly, frestc e, elsewhere. The paper makers refused a campaign publicity law as they did | from a New York state 3 dent of the Western change bank T OBITUARY, to _discuss their intentions tonight. TEN YEAR OLD BOY in the last congress” Perry Beimont(few days, Angelo Petre was arrested | Had Her Blue-Ribbon Coach Horses | {555 % 0" il illoved to Tiis home | Monument Unveiled to Memory of Po b The mills were closed today in ac- KILLED BY AUTOMOBILE. of New York, president of the national | here early today for attempting to set All Shot. ¥ri night, The fact was not dis- ice Lieutenant Petrosino Sames Alldis. cordance with the notice posted ves- ~ | publicity law organization, today sent|file to a cider mill owned by H. D.| painfield, N. J., Marc —Rather until Saturday morning. Hos- Naw. Yoric. Masoli 18.—A. monumend n allow another person 1o use her | pital attendants stated that the bank- - ce Lieut, Jo Binc_sibbon ‘ctach Borees. Méa. M. B, | ora wounds Wwere healtny capidly: aud o, oL Dolice Kdeut, Josephy Edgerton. a resident of the million- | that whon he left he was very cheer- | palaymo. Italy, & year ago, while on aire colony here, recently had a veter- | ful. a secret mission to that country to mary surgeon shoot them. Mrs. Ed- trace members of the Black Hand, was gerton became devoted to the automo- $2,500 Fire at Bristol. unvelled to Calvary cemetery ‘ile and stocked her large bamns with| Bristol, Conn,, March 13—Fire of un- | Laurel Hill, Long Island. Several hun new cars. She decided to dispose of | known origin gutted the two upper| dred members police departe her horses, but had become so attach- | fioors of a three-story tenement block | ment atte-ded the ceremony. ed to them. that she could not bear|on Main street late today, Inflicting — v to sell them a loss estimated at $2,500. The house Steamship Arrival E was owned by Jomsph H. Ward: Aa Madeira: March 13, Carmeste, 18 terday to the effect that Sunday work N - a_telegram to Governor Hastings. Petre had staked up a pile ¢ . Conn.. March 15.—James | will be discontinucd. American Wool Co. Assistant Treasurer | Snio thanking the overnor and sther | of wood. to the helght of elht feet Anidis. a native of England, but for Charged With Manslaughter. prominent men for their assistance. | in the middle of the mill and had set e hs Dt 201" | Memory of Nathaniel Hawthorne Hon- it on fire when discovered by the own- i3 at his home here toduy. ared Cambridge, Mass, March 13— | Body of Miss Richter Found in Hol- | e Who, with assistance, put out the dis was prominent in the democrat - George Stmpson of Andover, assistant g blaze. In Petre’s possession were party, £ peen an alternate to the | Salem, Mass., March 1—The mem- |traesurer of the Amerlean Wool com. yoke Canal found papers relative to his release jomvention Ju. 1382 and alory of Nathanlel Hawthorme. whose |pany, was arrested today charged with | Holyoke, Mass., March 13.—The body | from the New York prison. e i arEe 1o e convention in | writings aroused much antagonism to- | mansiaughter in causing the death of ['of Miss Emma Richter. age 17 years, 188 e was a member of the state | war him here Tations ® to la 10 year old boy who was struck b was found floating in one of Holyoke's legistature in 18 be honored by citizens of Salem, the [his automobile, - The boy, Timothy | canals foday. clearing up a mysters | Boston Asked to Furnish Funds to oueh for = Ciyic Jeague having planned to erect |Lane of 16 Leonard strest, Carmirid that has puzzled the residents and au- Philadelphia Strikers. meveral te @ bronze memorfal. A statue of the |was returning home from Sunday | thorities of this city since last De- | Boston, March 13.—An effort to ob- *%er of the author. designed by Bela L. Pratt, the |scheol when, at the corner of Eroad- | cember. The girl disappeared from | tain aid for the striking -street cue | No Hope for J. J. Hogan's Recovery. from New Yol ras superizteadent of the Excelsior | sculptor, of Boston. will probably be |way ana Prospect streets, in Cam- | the home of her father, Julius Richter, | men in was Torrington, Conn.. March 13.—The Body of Missing Man Found. At Southampion: March 18, Phble- needle mill for many years. and a for- | accepted by the committce. It will [bridgeport, he was seruck by the car, | an iron worker, December 30, Iast. Tt | in this city ‘when a committes | condition of James J. Hogan, a mem- | Platts Mills, Conn., March 14—The | delphia. from ~New Yok % ner president of the ington & | cost about $20,000, which is to be sub- |his skull Leing fractured. is thought she committed suicide while | representing Iphia conduc- | ber of Bill Edwards' strect’ cleaning | body of Albert Pakul, who was drown- | At New York, March 13: Wierlde, 4 Winsted street railway o scribed for publicly. Bail In $2,500 was_ furnished for | despondent. tors and motormen addressed several | department, and a former Yaie foot- | ed in the Naugatuck river at Water- | from Havre. An effort will also be madé by the |Stmpson by William M. Wood. presi- labor meetings. The union men were | ball captain, ill at his home here with | bury on_January 22, was found here Lre Civie league o purchase the pirth- fdent of the American Wool compan, One hundred and sixty-one varieties | asked to make some financial contri- | nephritis. remains unchanged. with no | today. The drowning took place dur- Germany Imports afi to the nnusy aise prominent in supposed paupers. One of them wu‘ ‘Boston, March 13.—“The airiest ap- He wos 70 yrars ol plage of the noted writes P i 2 ysars old, &f rice are hnowd i Ching aud Japan, Mg % Good in ihe rives . Average value of

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