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FOUR PERSONS KILLED ; IN FUNERAL COACH. Carriage Returning from Cemetery was Struck by Train. flaverstraw, N. Y., June 5.—Four people were killed and one seriously injured here this afternocon when a locomative struck & coach returning from a funeral. The victims are: Williain Beebe of Haverstraw. The Rev. A. Romath, pastor of the Methodist church of New City. Mr. and Mrs, E. V, Siefred of New capital stock i $9,000, divided into 90 shapes each of tho.par value of $100. The corporation shall commence busi- ness on §1,000. Uhe incorporators a: Mrs, Anna L. Lilley, John L. Lilley, ;‘ry-dmak, Pi Lijley. and Theodore Lil- : 3 2 ° 0o Lilley Company Incorporated I Country o st George Cooney’s Left Hand Crushed— stiste at Hartford, Monday, there was Has to Be Amputated—Methodist familiarity with firearms. filed a certificate of the incorporation Episcopal Society Serves Supper— | pe as common as they were 50 years|of the L. Lilley company. The First Communion Class. Certainly there are more in use | certiicate states that the purpose is than there ought to be. But shotguns “to tmke over all the real and personal the 16 vear old son | and rifies, especially shotguns, were | propewty of the estate of George I once found in nearly every farmhouse | Lilley, late of sald Waterbury, de- and in such homes the great major- | ceased, to acquire any and all other ity of Americans were then born and | real ard personal property deemed de- raised.” A generation of city-bred | sirable, to hold, manage, invest, re- boys cannot be expected to know guns | invest, loan, sell, exchange, donate in the old way, and now there is @0 |and encumbér such property in the 1:*:19 use of shotguns on farms that|same manner and to' the same extent MAYOR GAYNOR IN NEW GRAFT FIELD Rribes Extorted from Aliens who Desire to Eecome Na- turalized—Jacob Goldstein Arrested Strictly a Bryan M ? Mr, Bryan seems to' havi lost faiih In the walting game., Hisx paper makes it_clear that he is not « Harmon mu —8t. Louls Globe Dymocrat, & George Cooney, e of Mr, and Mrs. Johnr Cooney of High street, met with a painful accident Thursday noon at the Shetucket wors- ted mill, where he was employed. While at work on the extractor his left hand was caught between the friction pulleys and was terribly crushed. The cries of the boy brought emploves to his aid and the speed was stopped at making out the papers. The favored positions in the line were said to be for those who paid. The detective says he paid $14 to New York, June 8. —Mayor Gaynor has beem hunting graft in _another ficid. He says that he has found it and that It was flourishing openly in Didn’t Make Him Jealou Emperor William kissed King George ey are by no means as common as | as a natural person lawfully may, they used to be even in the open|and to enyage in any and all kinds of | the federal building here. He has | Goldstein, who was then arrested. Oth- | CIty. = -1 PRaAy: . howe ' b 3 s iy : 3 g Mrs. Perry Keeseler was critically [ once. It was found necessary to take | country. lawful business, excepting such as is | good-by. Teddy, however, was muc e It hritae ase aiore| Ciivaseed toa eiohY e e mgurea the ‘machine apart to extricate the | Yet we are still a nation of marks- | or may hereafter be prohibited by the | obliged for the slight, it it was one canvassed the line daily, seeking mon- ey, and in a book found on him were what appeared to be records of 130 ham,_ saying that bribes are extorted m aliens who desire to become nat- the | Dotraft) Vree Pvoss. Dr. P. Cassidy { men, in an altogether unusual degree. | Jaws of the stat The amount of badly mangled hand. taken to | The number of Americans who can was called and the boy 1 uralized. from the funeral, where the burial Begins Investigation, Soon after the mayor took office he eceived complaints which led him to legin an investigation. Applicants for naturaligation papers are lined up in ihe federal building and stand there day after day, awaiting attention. Detective Catches Jacob Goldstein the Act. City detectives were stationed in the line #nd one of them reported that Jasob GoMstein approsched him and demanded $25 as the price of having his case attended, to. Geldstein told Him, he said, that if #o @fd not pay he micht stand in line 100 days without geiting any nearer to the roem in which the clerks were in payments ranging from $5 to $15 each. Government to Goldstein was held under bail and Attorney General Wickersham today replied to the mayor that he would investigate the matter. Prisoner Discharged. Goldstein was arraigned be- Investigate. When fore a United States district attorney | for naturalization, Assistant United States District Attorney Walton, the complainant in the case, said that he was not prepared to proceed and the prisoner was discharged, The ey- idence in Mayor Gaynor's possession will be submifted to the federal grand jury. MRS. FORD RUINED IN FORTUNE. LEPROSY IS SPREADING | | Al five were in the coach returning | i service had been in charge of Mr. Ro- math. The accident occurred at thy West Shore railroad crosing on We: Sic ue this afternoon. The loco= motive, in chage of Engineer John- son, struck the vehicle squarely, kill- ing the two horses and strewing the occupants and pieces of the wreck tong the track fo'a distance of 150 eet. Witneses differ as to whether the down. After the accident it was found tha the zate on one side of the track was broken on the inside, indicating that it had been struck by the team or by a piece of fiying debris. Engineer Johnson and several witnesses were held pending an investigation by Cor- oner Dutcher. William Beebe, one of the killed, was a son of Richard Beebe, one of Hav- erstraw’s most prominent citizens. He gates which guard the crossing were | { the Backus hospital, where the hand was amputated about 4 inches below the cibow. The lad hore up bravely through the trying ordeal. He is a bright, ambitious boyv. well liked b: acquaintances, who deeply sympathize with him and his parents, who have six other children to care for. Many Attend Supper. The Ladies’ Aid society of the M. F. church held a bean supper in Sprague | hall Wednesday evening, which was well attended. About the Village. Peter Brown of Worcester is the guest of local relatives. A beautiful new green velvet car- pet has been laid in the sanctuary of the Immaculate Conception church through_the generosity of the acting pastor, Rev. M. J. Lynch, and a num- ber of the parishioners. shoot well is immense, taking the country as a whole. It is an accom- plishment which “comes easy,” as the saying is, to American men and boys. They are descended, in large measure, from generations of experts with fire- arms. The habit of marksmanship Is ingrained. It is not a light matfer. Thé life of a nation has more than once de- pended upon the ability of its sons fo hold a rifie barrel level and aim it steadily at the mark, living or in- animate. Soldicrs must have more now, as it has been for centuries, that straight shooting is vital. poleon knew, and he said that “Fire Is every- thing"—Cleveland Leader. “What Happened to Alice. “What became of Alice Green who than skill with firearms; but it is true | The Edges Do Not Separate on an L. & H. Panama. The weaving leaves no ragged ends to unravel Light Further Presecution Would Put Her | To Nearly Every State in the Union, | ;‘;;i{}fnnnx the coach. The others were D e Pl s ‘pamitog | e from Pottstown, P-; u]» P“P‘; in weight, it fits so comfortably you forget you have it on. Like all styles of I FRR D e e B Maw Duriede Buvions: | s S L L two weeks in North Adams. | Tork o MK her ki at an | L& H: Straws, the Panama has exquisite linings and trimmings. A hat tb Le Cincinnati, June 9.—The three in- | St. Louls, June 9.—Officers were elect- Composite llliteracy. i };-Fn‘dg:: T e rplties :';" .ébo‘;s °_,Sl;:m:_: siing Tl proud of and.one that gives many seasons’ wear. L. & H. Straw Hats are dictments against Mrs, Jeanette Stew- | ed at the 6lst annual session of the | extent of the neglect has been | rojovives in Montreal. 4 2 Sk T made in “every style for every man.” The customer’s satisfaction is the art Ford, charging her with black- | American Medical assocfation today, | ingeniously demonstrated by a profes— | 4 cisss will receive first Holy Com- | ®ich Wwonders in New York. keynote of L. & H. Hat Repntation. . hafling Charles L. Warriner, convict- (and the standing committees, wh sor in Cornell university, who di . think,” answered a pupil, who had e@ former treasurer of the Big Four railroad another charging ‘her with were announced by President William H. Welch, were confirmed by the house | ered one hundred and sixty mistakes | in fifty-eight papers submiited by his munion at the Immaculate Conception church next Sunday. | known Alice Green, “that she walked in\front of a surface car she thought receiving stoien money and a third | of delegates. | students. ~ To 'illustrate the ortho- - charging her with sendgng threatening | In the section on dermatology a pa- | graphical skill of his class the pro- ¥ : was going the other way. jetters, were nolled this afternoon by | per by Drs. Isadore Dyer and Halph | fessor composed a fictitious letter A Noble Rule of Life. —_— Judge Caldwell of the common pleas | Hopkins of New Orleans announced | “from a student to a relative” em-; To live content with small means; | In the month of May there were 30 Court. This ends her comnection with | that . leprosy is spreading to nearly | bodying the actual errors found by | to seek elegance rather than luxury: | suicides in Philadelphia. the sensational Warriner case, The statement said that Mre. Ford is rained in fortune and health and that further prosecution would put her in a madhouse, Steamship Arrivals, At Havre: June 9, La Lorraine, |tion on preventive medicine and pub- ey my carere. from New York lic health. Seven other sectional meet- | fnaly earn my livelihood by going into | casions, hurry never; In a word, to Plymouth: 9, Adriatie, fro: in, were held. e solici L3 iy - T e o e S Rae | pardoner will dipind on his preferences. Li‘nsg‘:u:l’:l‘:"‘;p“::’:ggzgi z:zdc:; 1 . 5 Bt = t any rate, laborous and humuliating 7 At Gepoa: June G, Sannio, from | MOTHER BAILEY'S DESCENDANT. (ool Dursuits are furtherest from | mon—that is my symphony—W. H. e 7 Ger: f = v inte ons, as 1 am confclous all- Jéples: June 7, Germania, from | Beath of John Philip Henriques at | inay that the university invironment | CBARBIRE. Edgewood, R. I. has prooved particulary valuable lo me : 3 in evry way. My intellegual squippe- 9 i g Dr. John Philip Henrigues, 52, a | ment has been advansed harmoniously: CariyoissEpptassion Bt FROM AN OPERATION ByLydiaE.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound De Forest, Wis.— SRR “After an opera- tion four years ago 1 had pains down- {4 ward in both sides, fibackache, and a weakness. The doc- ftor wanted me to i bave another c:fiera‘ % tion. Iteok Lydia E. Pinkham’s egeta- every ' state in the Union, and that no concerted method of caring for lep- rosy, is practived. Officers were a gused of neglecting the quarantine s. The importance of the prevention of infant mortality was urged at the sec- prominent physician formerly living in New Haven, died Monday at his home in Edgewood, R. L, of Bright's dis- ease. Dr. Henriques was graduated from both the academic and medical schools at Yale. From there he went to Hei- delburg. where he received a degree. He was the son of Eillen Stoddard Henriques of New London, a direct descendant of Old Mother Bailey of revolutionary fame and Capt. J. A Henriques of the United States army, who died in Providence four vears ago. He is survived by his wife, Bertha Sherman White, and an infant son. He was a member of the Yale ciub, the University club, the Rhode Island Yacht club, and the Rhode Island Med- icaal societ; Preachers’ Pay. A census report published only a few days ago shows that the average salary paid to clergymen in this couniry i about $600. Two vears ago the aver- age income of Presbyterian preachers | was only $600, so that the pay of the clergy seems to have increased at the rate of $30 per year since 1908, a week- Iy raise of about 58 cents each year. Wonder is often expressed that in these days so fe ung men are going into ministry. Union Theological Semi nary notes the falling away of students. So do the Episcopalian institutions. him. It is a remarkable specimen of | composite illiteracy. Here T8 a pas- | sage that serves to show the extent of the evil: “Dear Aunt:—Today I recieved my diploma, and now, thank fortun, I am educated. I have not yvet intirely detir- mined Wheather I shall by immetation of the best sholars my vocabular been strenghthened; suberstitions allmost as bad @s those of the heathern have been analised and preoved incorect to me; my inaetiative have been arroused and _intencified; | socially T am well acquiped and inci- { dentily the rough eges I used to show | have been eleminated; again, the dis- cipline I have recieved from the pratice < in the labatories of physsics and v, where persistance, courtsy, couragiousness and similar quallities are definitely emphasized, and the knowledge I have recived from the lecturs and disscussions of my prof- fessors in bonay, rhitorie, mathmatics, phisiclogy, ect, should be a sourse of inestimatible benifit to me from what— ever angel it is regarded.” Perhaps if the early teachers of these boys had aroused thelr interest in the alphabet instead of in dandelions | ana pink worsteds and green cardboard they would today know more abut the construction of their native language which is the root of all education and | culture Good Roads and Sound Health. There is nothing dry or uninterest- ing about the good roads movement. | Its appeal is to everyome. Its call is | received alike by the pedestrian, the | farmer whe carts truck to the railway | station, the driver of a good road horse, { and by those who ride in automobiles. and refinement rather than fashion; to be worthy, Dot respectable; and wealthy, not rich; to listen to stars and birds, babes and sages, with open heart; to study hard, to think quiet- ly, act frankly, talk gently; await oc- The pleasure of satisfying you is respectfully requested by H P. J. MORLEY, Franklin Square, Norwich | The phrase “unspeakable Turk” came inte use in England during the Bulgarian insurrection of 1876. It originated with Thomas Carlyle and made its appearance in a published letter of his, in which occurred the following sentence: “The umspeakable Turk should be immediately struck out of the question and the country left to honest European guidance.” Putting Expression Into It. The teacher of elocution was near- ly discouraged, says a writer in the Boston Transcript. He urged his pu- pils, in some excitement, to put more expression into their recitations. “Too flat. bhe exclaimed. “Teo colorless! You can do better tham that. Try gain. Now! Opem your mouth and throw yourself into it!” Hedged Abput with Loving Care. Mote—*I heard that old Goldie wi going to marry again.” Beam—“Noth- ing in it. His children are too smart for that. They mever let him go behind the scenes. They keep him well so that he can't fall in love with a nurse. And for fear that he might marry the i ~ HY, experimentiwith"g: inger ales which are made of red pepper‘—‘and often of sacchar-" ine;{brown? sugar,‘ molasses{ ‘coal| _Ia_fj coloring matter, acid flavors and hydrant water=when you can get a pure ginger ale made from fresh ginger,” e | onfectioner’s A g sugar and pure_flavor= A Ginger Ale J:‘:Clicquot Club”’ is the one ginger ale which; {does not have that biting, burning after-taste 1 The large universities have very few | There is as much poetry in the good y g ra"y’dcu“r‘;g prospective ministers on their lists, the | road across country as in the bypaths | cook they make him live at a hotel” caused by the abundance of red pepper.3 The y of Dy troubles s | ETet proportion of theological students | through the woods or the steep path | _Cleveland Plain Dealer. bk ot sed’ in ‘Cli : - - To coming from the little colleges in the | that leads to grazing uplands. pure, iresh ginger used 1n icquot Mrs. AUGUSTE VESPERMANN, De FOI- | west—colleges whose names are rarely | Road improvement has also its "z Club gives it a delici tifyi est, Wisconsin. mentioned. ! economic side through its appeal to gr 1t a delicious, gratirying Another Operation Avoided. Almost any trade offers larger in-|summer tourists. Governor Quinby, of The Gourmet’s Philosephy. i . New Orleans, La.—‘For years I guf. | ducements, in the way of earnings, | New Hampshire, estimates that sum- Eat, drink :nd <iphoati h’;ry'&mm lflStC_, pleasing t(f every one; th.e fine fered from severe femalé troubles. |than the ministry, and, besides the|mer visitors last vear expended $14.- ball diet—Life. quality Confectioner’s sugar gives it Finally I was confined te my bed and | C/eTEyman has te go through long years | 000,000 in that state, and bases his | FOW Y€ S| al et.—Life. the doctor said an operation was neces- Bary. lgave Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- etable Compound a trial first, and was sayed from an operation. Mrs. 61).? PEYROUX, 1111 Kerlerec St., New rleans, La. Thirty {hsaru of unparalleled success nfirms the %uwer of Lydia E. Pink- ;;m’s Vegetal of preparatory education. If there were no other incentive than money for men | very few would to o into the ministry ion.—N take up this pro: wark News. Adjustable Ailments. Compassionate Lady—Boer man. Last week you were omly blind, now confidence that they will leave a larger mount behind them during the com- '3 mmer upon the improvement at has been made upon the high- | ways. For example, in 1908 it was | necessary to haul automobiles through a steep portion of the famous Craw- ford Notch, whereas now these wa- nes can make the ascent under their There have been develop- A Pure Sweet Token of love’s unselfish thought. A Dainty Box filled with % “body and food value; and the pure citric fruit flavors add zest. ¢, There’s no gin- ger ale so good as Clicquot Club, or so delicious. { - 3 OTHER CLICQUOT BEVERAGES | getable Compound to cure | you are both blind and lame. How did | og i ihat st | S J = ed in that state three trunk roads at e teetimory eotaneqime Of | it happen? Beggar—Well, you see, | cost of more than $1500,000. They with the **Clicquot " flavor and purity | i 768 BOVoa oshaltdvaly that f i ma’am, times is hard and competition wve been laid out with an eye both . b g ir conclu: at” Lydia 5 ; = for the convenience of local commun Birch Beer Root Beer Pinbham's Vegetabls Compound iy | close and I found I ceuldn't make a —l g e oot Deer E s Vege! mpound is | ©l°S¢ _ ties and for the gratification of the NEW YORK h - { ® remarkable remedy for those dis | Livin' just bein’ biind tourist. Along these roads are many i - "|Blood Orange Sarsaparilla tressing feminine ills from which so = | piaces of vantage, where the passing | | P)alj Cand 1 550d 4 many women suffer. | visitor may halt to look back upon the €iiClous andics ™ e wharepiciut i When Some Peopie Use It. [ “steenness overcome” and the Wonder- Carsimale, s (12 Harom) ‘Lemon Seda you want special adviceabout | A iittie boy vas asked by his teach- | ful panorama beyond.—Washington " ¥ — Mass. Her advice is Eu{ca&e write to Mrs. Pinkham, ¢ always helpful, ee, an eV BER you want to put your busi- | comes dark whem you wash your e A Mtunping 1of 'Us 133 MAIN ST.. NORWICH, CT. dium b zi PR R, 2 B2 43" | hands in it."—Lippincott's. vs that California wines seem ing celu s of The Bulletin. utely v n 1 ible and nouri er to define t:- fiuid kmown to chem- ists as H20. Aimost without hesita- tion, the bright little chap answered: “Water is a colorless liquid which be- Calitornia fruits canned asparasus, to Iy met v in Jtalian Nut Chocolates and every- thing pure and wholesome known to the Confectioner’s Art. Fresh shipment just received Ly THE L & 0SGOOD. Club is a confession good grocers never like to make J. C. WORTH & (0., Wholesale Distributors seed oil—it is Made only by THE N. K. FAIRBANK C odors. ting : , and a friend to delicate stomachs. Shortens your food—Lengthens your li Cottolene is far superior to lard in cleanliness and healthfulness. - made from pure, health-giving cotton exposed to store dirt, dust and con Cottolene is a tissue builder To not have Clicquot e Cottolene comtains no hog fat—it is packed only in air-tight:tin pails—it is never It makes food) palatable, digest-