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VOL. LIL—NO. 217 NORWICH, CONN., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1910 PRICE_TWO CENTS WATCHING MAINE BALLOTS TODAY,| Cabled Four Parties Have Tickets in the Field For the Biennial Election MUCH DEPENDING ON RURAL VOTE Republicans Expect to Elect Governor Fernald for Second Term—Democrats Counting on Republican Extrava- gance to Swing Votes Their Way—Socialists and Pro- hibitionists have Tickets—628 Districts. rtiand, Me. Sept ¥ d rats o e+ 1 satisfied th ndertand the i e f kets In Fernald kW t, Robert V prohibitioni oinbam the of the in t reports ta M Plai The nigh ballots tion finds both re pfident the 150, ues. the fie st Cities, Towns and Plantations. n t | that there will be no change in the i complexion of the legislature chosen to Select a successor of United States Sepator Fugene Hale. | Former Governor's Son a Candidate. | On the other hand, the democrats { declare that while there are no na- tional issues at stake, the republican administration has been so extravagant that Mayor Frederick W, Plaisted of Augusta will be placed in the seat once | occupied by his father. | Democratic Vote Has Shown Gains. Much will depend tomorrow on the e of the rural vote, governed largely mmuni. | bY the weather and the interest in the i the | party candidates. The totai vote in o hachs | Maine for twenty years has averaged Have'he. | 126,000, amounting to 147,802 in_the | fusion year of 1880 and falling to 85,720 L 1890, when Governor Powers was the states is be- cted for a second term. It is also interesting to note that there has been | a gradual increase in the democratic pal national partise vote within the past ten years and cor- Party Loyalty Watchword. Tesponding falithg off in ihe republican The r ans helieve that there is | piuralities. The plurality of 7,263 giv- e Aty to seat Gover- | en Governor Fernald in 1908 was the ; f. Ferna a second term. | smallest in twenty years, although . t © party candidates | Governor Cobb in 1906 had only 8,084 gressional districts, and | for a margin TCHFIELD WOMAN WILLS | HONORARY BEARERS AT $23,000 TO CHARITY | SOLICITOR GENERAL'S FUNERAL. emembers Fresh Air Fund, Hospital, Episcopal Mission and Library. Among Them is President Taft—Burial to Be at Westfield, Conn. Sept by Boston, Sept. 11.—Announcement was M riotte y made today of the list of honorary obated s bearers who will be present at the p enefactions subject to two | funeral of Lioyd Wheaton Bower: - nd contingent future tor general of the United t A hildren The sum s | Who died at the Hotel Touraine in this $3,000 endowment for a | ity last Friday. The funeral servic the ns ward of St. | which will be held at the Touraine to- spita “w York city: | MOrrow morning at 11 o'clock, will be 2 perpe fund for The | conducted by Rev. A. E. Dunning, and oth g 1 of New York; | the pallbearers will be President Wil- r the New York Protestant | liam Howard Taft, Justice Oliver Wen- wsion of New York: | dell Holmes of the United States su- b perpetual fund for the | Preme court, E. D. Hurlburt, Chicago t 8 o city of | Otis H. Walde, Chicago, Thomas B. . $5.000 for the Wolcott | Marston, Chicago, John Hays Ham- & library as- | mond, Washington, James Byrne, New md to be | York, and Robert G. Monros, New a ¥ fund. Henry W. | York vt of New Tore brother of Presi- | The services will be private and in- Iont Tari, = one of the trustees under | terment will be at Westfleld, Conn. NEW WATERBURY RECTOR SERIOUSLY ILL IN NEW YORK merly of Westerly—Has Been in Hospital Several Weeks. igh he has been e - eral wecks only » to parish have gnown tha His assistant, . n the nature of the fliness ; srmingham is one of the best ' riests of the Hartford dio- was transferred to St. Thom- » 1. last July. Two . ng here he had to g0 AUSSIAN GOVERNMENT DRIVING JEWS OUT Over Eirht Thousand Expel or Ordersd to Leave K . stish a legal right non s oo 1 - o me were 8 etie notice ¢ - oo in t were expelled P RECEIVES APPOINTMENT TO VIEW FEDERAL am D. Windon the Man to New England Sept. 1L—Act es has the treasury depar for which new g fdings sass e provided at ¢ congress and ch have heen offere to advertisements. W 11l visit Pennsylv New FEngland sta W ¥ led from car finally district Jews a depart ly left 1 and the emieffka SITES. Detailed g Sec- detail tment the nt st the in re- liam D. New INSURANCE CONGRESS IN U. §. International Conference to Bs Held in This Country in 1913. "he Hague Sept. 11 ation of the American se ernational permaner social and industrial insura ference of which has just f the United States ries R Henderson of the u Chicago wa. te vice r the United States of the committec Extending Boston Aviation ston, Sept A o million people having passed the turnstiles the Harvard I sarter Tpon the in- tion of the committee of nce, the closed, it voted to hold the next congress in Prof. niversity ident interna- Meet. of a through aviation Seld at Atlantic during the past week, the management has declded to extend the: meet two days and bring it to a alose T stead of Tues- du siher incentive to the exte & ax he late offer of two cups Bnr features ot i the reguldr programime o the city of Boston and an B Hass Hammond of 1li be offered for the . wying a battieshiy fcom an eleviti Lson feei or great Death in Auto Accidert. N . 1L Miss dest danghter of g (* Pardse. of Cali 0 today In an automs Bile accident at Corte Madera, M AR S A W B R P I CRY FOR WATER BETRAYED SMUGGLED CHINESE Four Weak With Thrist Freight Car Near Spri Found gfield. South Springfield, Mass., Sept. 11.— A lean yellow hand prortuding from a freight ‘car door in the yard of the Boston & Maine railroad and a faint voice pleading in broken English for a drink of water led to the discovery today of four Chinamen curled up on some baled hay and their prompt ar- rest on the charge of attempting to evade the immigration laws. The hay |in the car was consigned from Burke, up near the Canadian line in New York state on the Rutiand raiiroad to New Haven, Conn. All four travelers were in a 'weakened condition from lack of water. U. S. Commissioner John L. Rice fook charge of the case {end notified Assistant U. S. District | Attorney William H. Lewis in Bos- APPEAL TO COURTS TO having obtained forgiveness from the Rev. Herman Dubbolstein of Deerfield, Kan,, her former fiancee, for the mid- night elopement of her “subconscious 1f,” she is preparing to ask the couris to dissolve her “psychic” mar- riage. Mrs. | Char ! the Arat Drummeond. e J law who was Miss firm which represented the Mrs. Drummond in her divorce met Drummond and was o un- nnily affected, he savs, that she rried him on January 26, They sep- after two weeks and a half, he says, her real self resumed of her personality TWO CONNECTICUT MEN WINNERS AT SEA GIRT y Took Three Prizes, J. arated wher control W. Hessian One. Sea Girt, N. J, Sept. 11.—The win- ners of the ' principal individual matches at the tri-state tournament |of the New York. New Jersey and Pennsylvania state rifle associations, which ended yesterday. were an- | nounced today by Lieut.-Col. D, M. Fiynn, statistical officer. Among them were G. W. Chesley of Connecticut, who took third in the Rogers trophy match with a score of 145: fourth in the Wingate trophy match with 136; first in the Roe long range individual match with 146, with J. W. Hessian of Connecticut fourth with 142 Prof. Boyd Dies of Cerebral Hemor- rhage. Chicago, Sept. 11.—Prof. A. C. Boyd of Boston University Law school, a legal authority, died today while in an ambulance on 'the way to a hospital. Three hours hefore death he had suf- fered an attack of cerebral hemor- rhage at the home of his sister-in-law, Mrs. George Blackburn, whom he was visiting. An inquest will be held to- morrow and the body taken to Calais, Me., his old home. Elections in Arkansa Little Rock, Ark. Sept. 11— Ele Uons for state and county offices will be held throughout Arkansas tomor 10w and a4 vote on an initiative and referendum amendment to the consti- tution will be taken at the same time. William Stykes of New Haven, Iy- comotive fireman. was killed near Crescent beach on the Shore lne Sat- urday afternoon. Fle was leaning out af the window of his engine cah and 1ag struck in the head by a train go- ing in the opposite direction, 1 END PSYCHIC ROMANCE | Woman Wants to Cut Tie Made by | “Subconscious Self.” St. Touis. Sept. 11.—The second Nirs. ( rles R. Drummend’s real self | Bente, a stenographer for | | | | Paragraphs 11.—Two near Dresden, Saxony, cases of cholera at Pirna, were reported. Sept. Heidenau, Paris. Sept. 11.—The pope has tele- graphed his best wishes and apostol- ic blessing to Frederick Mistral on the occasion of the poet's 50th birth- ay. Madrid. Sept. 11.—The Spanish gov- ernment has authorized the holding of “atholic Gemonstrations in the princ pal cities of Spain on October against “the prevailing impiety.” Rome, Sept. 11.—During the past 24 hours four new cases and five deaths have been reported from Barletta, Trinitapoli and San Ferdinando, towns in the cholera Infested district in southeastern Ital; London, Sept. 11.—The body of William ffolman Hunt, the painter and one of the founders of the pre-Ra- phaelite movement will be buried on September 12 in the artists’ corner of St. Paul's cathedral Vichy, Sept, 11.—A dinner was giv- en Friday evening by the Maharanee of Baroda in honor of Mrs. Flkins and her daughter, Miss Katherine EI- kins. The Maharanee met the Elkins family in India and Fngland. Paris, Sept. 11.—Emanuel Framist, the noted French sculptor. died Sat- urday, He was born Oecember 1 1824 M. Kramiet was a grand offi- cer of the Legion of Honor and a member of the Institute of France. Mexico City, Sept. 11.—The eleventh annual convention of Suncay schools and affiliated young people’s societies held its first ~session Friday night, with more than five hundred delegates, representing Mexico and the United States. London, Sept. Charles P. Taft of Cincinnati, brother of Presi- dent Taft. who with his wife and daughter has been making a_tour of the continent. arrived in london Sat- urday. He will sail for home on Sep- tember 24, Manila, Sept. 11.—The inter-island transport Warden is ashore on the coast of Batangas province in south- ern Luzon. It is reported that her position is mot a dangerous one, hut the United States transport Sheridan and the mine planters Hunt and Knox have been rushed to her assistance. SUBSTITUTED LEAD FOR GOLD BULLION $37,500 Disappears from Seattle Steamsr in Transit. Seittle, Wash.. Sept. 11.—It is an- nounced here that gold builion valued at_ $57,500, part of a consignment of 170,000 from the -Washington-Alaska bank of FFairbanAs, to the Dexter-Hor” ton National Bank of Seattle, on ti steamship Humboldt, was stolen in transit. Lead was substituted in the strong box that contained it Discovery of the theft was announced toda, The stolen gold weighed 250 pounds. When it left Fairbanks on a Yukon river steamer for Dawson the 8old was contained in three wooden boxes and was in the care of the Alas- Ka-Pacific Express company. When the boxes were opened by Canadian customs officers at Dawson the gold of the bars were found to be as stated in_the express company papers. The boxes were opened again at the United States assay office in Seatt on Friday and the theft was discov ered. Ons box contained bars of lead instead of gold. The seals of the box- es were intact when they reached the assay office. The gold was insured against 1oss by the express compan The boxes were recelved at the as- say office Thursday morning and re- mained there until the agents of the consignes arrived next day to check up the ingots. It is supposed the gold was stolen on the Yukon steamer be- tween Dawson and White Horse, or on the steamer Humbdoldt between Skagway and S2attle. The gold was in the purser’s cabin. Detectives working on the case say they have no clue. DOGGED BY BLACK HAND, SHOT HIS PURSUER. Philadelphia Italian Says He Failed to Obey Secret Society’s Order. Philadelphia, Sept. 11.—Claiming ths his vietim v member of the Blac Hand, who had been following him around this country for two years seeking revenge. Francesco Scastio, aged 21 vears, today shot and fatally wounded Guiseppe Ceraclo, The shoot- ing occurréd in the heart of the Italian section and was witnessed by many persons. Scagtio was arrested. Cera- clo was taken to a hospital and died shortly afterwards. Scaktio told the police that Ceraclo and he had been members of the same society in Ttaly. He falled to obey a command of the order and came to this country to escape punish- ment. He was followed by Ceraclo, ho, he savs, dogged him through sev eral towns and finally followed him to this cit Determined t to_end ispense DID HELL GATE SWIM IN NEW RECORD TIME. \Beat Previous Time by Two Minutes— Twenty-seven Finished. New York, Sept. 11.—Frank Murphy of Ridgefield Park, N. J., won the eight mile endurance swim through Hell sate, held today under the auspices of the YorkVille station of the United States valunteer life saving corps. H time was 1 hour 35 minutes, two min- utes better than the record made last vear for the same course. Carl Engelke of Higgs Beach division was second, and S. A. Severino of the Hell Gate station third. Engelke was two min- utes behind the leader, and Severino two minutes and a fifth of a second. Of the 34 who started, 27 finished. Escaped from Connecticut Sanitorium. New York., Sept. 11.—Police head- quarters here was asked today to look for John Hill, described as a Maxflow- er desecndant, and a member of one of the richest families in Meriden, Conn., but an escaped lunatic, danger- ous to be at large. Acute religious mania is said to be his obsession. No- tice was given to the police by Charles 1. Rockwell, president of the Meriden Trust company, trustee for Hill's es- tate. He ig 33 vears old and has been for several years in a Connect, itarium. Denying Story of Chanler's Troubles. New York, Sept. 11 The New York tmes will print tomorrow a cable message from Paris saying that Lina Cavalleri exhibited today & tele gram signed by her hushand, Robert ‘Winthrop Chanler, and reading as fol- lows t true. 1 have seen mo one. Work begun. Devetedly, Robert. “T hepe. ®aid La Cavalieri, “the wild stories about Mr. Chanler and myself will now be estt at rest.” which he said he labored under, Scag- o today sought Ceraclo and saving, 'Il get you first.” shot him | special | New York Fight Looms Up Large STRUGGLE TO GET CONTROL REPUBLICAN RANKS. IN PRIMARIES THURSDAY Will Have Important Bearing—Return of Roosevelt Stirs Up the Old Guard and the Progressives After Delogates New York, Sept. 11.—With the re- turn of Theodore Rooseveli from his western trip, the struggle between the old guard and the progressives for control of the republican state con- vention looms larger upon the politi- cal horizon. Both sides have been con- ducting a quiet but effective campaign to capture delegates during the col- { onel’s absence and the result of Thursday’s primaries in New York, Buffalo and Rochester will in large | measure determine whether the selec- tion by the state committee of Vice President Sherman as temporary hairman shall be ratified or rejected in favor of Colonel Roosevelt. Both Factions Confident. Leaders of both factions profess confidence in their ability to win the support of a majority of the 1,015 del- egates to the convention. Of the | twenty-odd counties in which dele- zates have already been cposen, 132 are said to favor Sherman, while 109 are credited to Roosevelit. The smaller cities will hold their primaries on September 20. Two Questions to Deci There will be two questions before the comvention: Tirst, whether the delegates shall seat \Vice President Sherman as temporary chairman or reverse the action of the state commit- tee and seat Theodore Roosevelt in- steud; and, second, what shall be done "about ' direct primaries. Both factions of the party admit that the line up or delegates will differ on ‘the two questions. So keen has the fight over them now grown that it has al- most drowned out all the talk of can- didates for the state ticket. Roosevelt at Oyster Bay. Oyster Bay, N. Y. Sept. 1lL—After an absence of three weeks, Colonel Roosevelt is home again, weary from his western trip, but well satisfied with the result. He enjoved every minute of it he savs The colonel reached New York at ten o'clock this morning from Pitts- burg. His first orders on reaching Oyster Bay were that no one should be permitted to invade the privacy of Sagamore Hill and he immediately relapsed into the comforts and seclu- sion of family life. Tomorrow he will plunge into an ac- cumulated mass of correspondence. It is likely that this will occupy his ens- tire day and that whatever consuita- tions are to come with those who have in hand the fight to force his elec- tion as temporary chairman of the coming republican state convention will be postponed until Tuesday when he will visit his office again. PASTOR LOCKED OUT OF EPISCOPAL CHURCH Rev. William Ackley Conducted Serv- ice on Steps of St. Andrew's. New York, Sept. 11.—Locked out of Andrew’s Protestant Episcopal Erooklyn, of which he had r for sixteen vears. the Rev. William N. Ackley conducted the reg- ular services today from the front steps. Gathered around him, their heads uncovered, and kneeling, wero | 200 members of the congregation who {do not agree with the parish vestry that their pastor should be retired “because of his age and feeble con- gition, mental and physical” Order was perfect throughout the services, but when the strains of the last hymn ! died_away it was noticed that many in the congregation were weeping. | | CASHIER’S SHORTAGE CAUSES DEATH OF BANK PRESIDENT Collapsed Friday Night — Pledged Property to Make Shortage Good. St chureh, been rec | i | | | s | 11.—I. S. Hal- | Abllene State Abilene, Kan., Sept. lam, president of the | bink, died tonight, following a col- |lapse Friday afternoon. He died in the home built by John A. Flack. the nissing cashier of the bank, who is | said to be over $25.000 short in his accounts. The discovery of the al- lleged shortage is bélieved to have caused Hallam's collapse and death. Before going to the ilack home he signed & contract pledging all of his | property to make Flac shortage g00d. | AMATEUR AVIATOR INJURED IN 60-FOOT FALL. Machine Struck Telegraph Pole as He Was Trying to Alight. | New 11.—Frederick aviator, who lives York, Sept Quinby. an amateu at Babylon, L. L, took out his biplane | at sunset today for a flizht across country to the home of a friend who had invited him over to take tea. The trip was without incident, but in attempting 1o alight on the lawn in | front of his friend’s house he fouled a { telegraph pole and dropped sixty feet | to the ground, dislocating his left | shoulder and suffering internal in- juries. New York Banker a Suicide. |, New York. Sept. 1l.—Walter Scott| Jenks, formerly a banker and more re cently in the real estate business, com mitted suicide in his apartments today by shooting himself in the head. No reason is assigned for his act. He was about 56 years old, and was born in Florence, Mass., but bad lived in New York for 18 years. Jealousy Causes Murder and Suicide Aberdeen, S. D. Sept. 11.—Jealous of the attention of his rival, Jay Har- bison. aged 26, tonight shof Dr. Boyd Clinite, a young dentist, and murdered his 19 year old fiancee, Adele Kizer. in Redfield. He then killed himself. The | girl's death followed in twenty min- utes, but Clinite probably will recover. $20,000 Prize for Paris-Brussels Flight Paris, Sept. 11—The municipality of Paris will offer a prize of $20,000 10 the French aviator making a flight Wi passeuger from Purls to Pros- scls and ‘retuin, on the occasion of the visit 6f the city fathers to. Brus- sels on September 26 $200,000 Fire Loss at Newark. Newark, N. J., Sept. 11.—The plant of the Rubber amd Celluioid Hurness Trimming company, with which is also associated the Rubbersst Rrush com pany, was swept by fire tonight. with a loss estimated at between §200,000 and $250,000 | sea. Crushed Under Tnn_s_nf Rock TEN LABORERS KILLED AND TEN INJURED. WHEN MASS OF ROCK FELL Steam Drill Tore Off Big Slab Forty Feet Wide and Twenty Feet High— Caught Laborers Working Below. New York, Sept. 1L.—At least nine laborers were killed outright today and ten others injured, one of the critically and all of them seriously, in the col- lapse of an overhanging shoulder of rock from above the western mouth of the old Erie tunnel under Bergen Hill, connecting the Erie terminal in Jersey City with its westward divisions. Thousands Watched Bodies Removed. The collapse was directly beneath the edge of the Hudson boulevard, which at that point runs along the in- ner line of Bergen Hill, and though the actual slip was out of silght of the holiday crowds, thousands lined the boulevard all afternoon peering down at the removal. Of the known dead, four were Amar- icans, three were unidentified and two were foreigners. Cut Flesh from Thigh. Of the known injured, John James. an American, 30 vears old. died in hospital Sunday night. Before he could be released o be taken to the hospital surgeons had to cut the flesh from hi: right thigh to free him from the grip of the weight above. For several years the Erie has been working at the gigantic task of carv ing an open cut for its passenger trains through the solid rock of Bergen Hill which in some spots is three hundre feet high. This cut was apened for travel not long ago, but there still re- mains the task of hewing a common portal for the old tunnel and thz new cut out of the ledge where th will meet west of the boulevard. It was there that the fall came today Drills Loosened Rock. A wall of rock from four to ten feet ck still separates the two sets of racks and eight sets of drills were pounding away at it today. Their ja loosened a thick strip of rock forty feet wide and twenty feet high. It peeled off like wall paper and toppiad, crasl ing into the spot where the gang was tearing down brickwork at the mouth cf the old tunnel. Instantly they wer buried under a mass of dekris and hid- den in clouds of dusi. Stzam Shoval to Help. Fifty policemen and all the city am- bulances couid Alo* little ts help them until the railroad with 100 men and a steam shovel got om the joh. It is known :lat there were mcre men i the gang tham have vet been taken ou or accounted for, hut many nf t rem werz sean running into. the.mouth of the tunnel and it is supposed they es caped. A huege muss of debris must still be sifted before the full truth is krown. Work will be kept up all night Passenger traffic was not affect>d, but the old tunnel was blocked for freight. BOSTON HOLDS PLACE » AS FIFTH CITY Gain Was Nearly 20 Per Cent.—| to Pass St. Louis. led Washington, tion of Boston of 108,693 or 19.6 pared with 5§9.892 nouncement leayes city in size in the United States. A decade ago St. Louis outranked Boston by only 14,348 and the present census leaves St. Louis ahead by 16.444. There was but ight change in the rate of progress in the two cities, St. Louls’ increase from 1900 to 1910 being 19.4, and Bos ton beating that by 2-10ths of 1 per cent. Boston's population 20 years ago was 448,477. The increase from 1590 to_1900 from 112,415 or 25.1 per cent. While Boston’s rate of growth has "he popul an increase cent.. as com- 1900. © This an- the fifth per in Boston voint of population in fallen below the rate attained in the preceding decade, it is better th: Pittsburg’s rate, 18.2, or Cincinnat 11.8. But it is a rate that compares somewhat unfavorably with the 27.8 scod by Providence. the second eity in New England. It is evident that Providence continues to grow more rapldly dence ‘also lost in rate of growth com- pared with the preceding decade. when it was 32.9 New England cities, according to the census of 1910, shows the percentage of increase that New York does, al- though Boston and Providence both equal or surpass Philadelphia respect. The sensational percentages of Detroit, Atlanta, Denver and Kan- has City, all being over 50, are of course in_a class entirely different from the Boston rate. LORAIN, THE ACTOR, NEARLY FLEW IRISH CHANNEL Aeroplane Balked When Within Two Miles of Coast—Aviater Swan Ashore. Tondon, Sept. 11.—Robert Lorai the actor, who during the last f months has developed into, a daring aviator, all but accomplished an aero- plane flight across the Irish channel today. Starting from Holyhead. Lo- rain directed his course to Dublin. Although he had trouble with his en- gine he got within two miles of the Irish coast. The breaking of a wire then forced him to descend to the He swam ashore and his machine was picked up by a steamer. The disiance across the channel is about 55 miles. Killed Supposed Detective. Boston, Sept. 11.—Because he be- lieved Salvatore Rizzo of Revere, to whom he had sold a bottle of win was a detective who was buying e dence against him. Carmino Sarni, proprietor of a galoon in the basement of 191-2 Fleet street, North End, is alleged to have shot and killed Rizzo tonight, Sarni was arrested. Prominent Woman Philantheopist Dead Richmond, Va., Sept. 11.—Mrs. Isabel Stewart Bryan, widow of Joseph Bry- an, who was proprietor of The Times- Despatch, died at her home, Laburn- um, near here todiy. She was 64 yeara of mge. Mris. Bryan was promi- neit’ In Philantirepic and patriotic work. Went to Sleep on Railroad. Bingbamton, N. Y., Sept. 11.—Frank logan of Newburgh lay’ down beside the lLackawanna railread track near hege last night and went to sleep with his arm across the rail A pasging train severad the arm gnd the man bled to deats than Boston. although Provi- | Neither of the two largest | in this | Condensed Telegrams The New Directory Gives Hartford an estimated population of 113944, This is a net gain of 4,892. The Popuiation of Kingston, N. Y. is 25,908, an increase of 1373 or 5.6 per cent., as compared with 24,535 In 1900. C. J. Innes, a well known shoe mer- chant of Charleston, S. .. shot and killed_himself Saturday in his room in a New York hotel E. S. Cole and H. E. Honeywell, of Topeka, Kan, traveled in a balloon 375 miles to Tangier, Okla., at the rate of 27 miles an hou Capt. Thomas S. Baldwin Made a fourteen mile flight in his acroplane over the Mississippi river at St. Louis on Saturday afternoon, in 19 minutes. Miss Annie Bauman, 19 Years Old, dadughter of Mr, and Mrs. Bdward Bauman, died of infantile paralysis at her home in Cromwell Saturday morn- ing. Labor Day Traffic on New York City railroads broke all ré four days ending Thursday New York Central and New Haven roads hand- led 325,000 passengers. In the First Twenty-four Hours the Long Island road operated 196 trains in and out of the new Pennsylvania station, and it was estimated that about 35,000 passengers had been car- ried. W. A. Tewes, div Lieut.-Col. staff, New Jerscy, won the Sea Gir championship match Saturday with 2l score of 184 points out of a pos sible 200, at 200, 600. 900 and 1,000 yards. Goaded to Fury by Jealousy and al- leged ill treatment on the part of her husband. Tobias Hudsoi an expert locksmith, Mrs. Annie Elizabeth Hud- son of Cambridge, Md., shot him dead in a lawyer's office. W. W. Ludlow, chief clerk of thé treasury department since 1905, when he was appointed creta haw, {resigned ~that place Saturday. and was transferred to a vacant position in ome of the divisions. A Large Barn Owned Parsons and rented to Dr. Kiernan, was burned early Saturday lin Newtown, entailing a loss of about $1,200. Two automo; ed ville, Ky., Saturday. for of | Axiom "Cooper at Lemasco about a month ago. Mr. Cooper was a tenant on the farm of Milton Oliver and was a witness in the coming night rider trials. What It Is Said Will Be the larzest cheese in the world is to be made in Appleton next week for the National Dairy show at Chicago. October 20. It will weizh pounds, wiil be fif- teen feet in dimmeter, and about four feet high. Little Michael Scimeca, the 3 year jold son of Dr. Michael Scimeca. a prominent New York Italian physicia was mysteriously returned to his pa ents Saturday after having been held for nearly three months a captive by kidnappers. Prompt Action by Three New Yo policemen Saturday resulte ing the life of an ased falien into the water. The three p licemen formed a human chain and succeeded in getting the man just as he was slipping from a pile to gwhich he was clinging. in sav- man who had TENNESSEE DEMOCRATS ARE ALL AT SEA. Effect of Governor Patterson’s With- drawal—independents Have Conven- tion Wednesday. | CALIFORNIA REPRESENTATIVE IS. GUEST OF PRESIDENT. | ShE | Predicts Maine Will Go Republican by a Small Majority. Beverly, Mass. Sept. 11.—The only arrival at the summer White House on Burgess Point today was Duncan E. McKinley of California, who has just finished a_speaking tour of Maine in the interests of the republican candi- dates. The California congressman ex- | pressed the opinion that Maine would be saved to the rapublican party, but by a small plurality | President Taft. accompanied by | Taft and Miss Helen Tait. atte | services at the Unitarian church, wher | Rev. Ulysses G. B. Pierce. chaplain of Mrs. { the ‘senate .and the president's Wash- | ington pasior, preached ihe sermon. | After church’' the president motored over to Nahant, where he had luncheon with Judge Robert Grant of the Suf- folk county probate court. Later he called on Senator Lodge. FOREIGN AVIATORS IN FEAR OF LAWSUIT Entrants for Belmont Park Afraid of the Wrights. Meet Paris, Sept. 11.—Cortlandt TField Bishop. the president of the Aero club of America, telegraphs that ail foreign aviators who are to part pate in the international aviation meeting at Belmont park next month, have renounced all claims to a share in the profits. The foreign aviators are now asking whether the for flights offered by ne include a guarantee against s possible damages by the W thers for infringement of patents. Great Rush of Returning Tourists. Louadon, Sept 11—The several steamers which left British ports for the United States on Saturday car- rled belween 6000 and 1000 passen- gers. The rush was o sreat that many well to do Americans were obliged to content themselves with third class or even steorage berths, and gladly paid emigrants handsome premiums te surrender their accommodations. Durinz | { Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 11. —Governor Patterson’s” withdrawal from the gu- bernatorial race in Tennessce has cre- ated a condition that has the wisest politician guessing at ihe effect his action will have. Will the democratic factions that have been o bitterly ar- rayed against each other bury the hatchet, as the governor urges them to do with him eliminated, and agree on a candidate whom ail can sup- port? Will the convention of independents called to meet here Wednesday with a majority of its delegates instructed to endorse B. W. Hooper. thie republi- | can nominee governor, carry out these instructions as opposed to any democrat_who may be placed in the | field in_Patterson’s stead? Are instructions binding on these delegates in view of these conditions? These a few of the questions | confronting the leaders tonight. 171t is all problematical and hurried calls for conferences and meetings have been issued THOUSANDS IN RELIGIOUS PAGEA Monster Gathering and Parade to Close‘ Eucharistic Congress ; PAPAL LEGATE BEARS THE HOST . Procession of 100,000 Conducts the Monstrance from Notre Dame to Repository at Foot of Mount Royal —Montreal Crowded with Visitors—200,000 Sleeping on the Slopes of the Mountain. as in sacred imagery 4 < diverse in nationalicy the Bucharistic Montreal, Sept. 11—A pageant as rich in devot and as orde behavior as it w and huge in size, closed today, twenty-first international congress, held this year for the fir: time in_the dominion of Canada. Visito especiaily impre: tude, splendor procession, through the city head, to Mount A 100.000 in line and that sed and W rly religious nal_emotioa in t from the United States were ith the magni- reverence of the which marched four miles treets, the host at its 2oyal, above the city. modest estimate is that there were 500,000 viewed The it from where best they could. city is so crowded tonight that 200,000 are sleeping on the slopes of Mount Royal, in Dominion square and in othier city parks. From Noon to 7 P. M. 1t took th= long and bril nd & half hours to pass City hough it be; Notre Dame it was paral legate, Cardinal placed the host, housed monstrance, on the altar pository built for it at the mountain. v in a nt file four hall, and 1 to move at noon from o'clock when the nnatelli, golden of the foot of the re- Choirs in Latin, French and English. he_cardinal legate mar hed at the head of the procession himself carry- ing the host, the entire distance. Slow- and majéstically hymning its prog- . like pilgrims of the crusades, th pageant followed after. Organ- ized choirs sang in Latin, French and English. Banas scattered here and there "ed dsvotional music. When the crowd knew the air it joined in swelling tones and mingled languages. Universality of the Catholic Church. The procession had been arranged to -sal demonstrate the unity and universality of the Catholic church. It started from Notre Dame with a preliminary de tachment of mounted officers, firemen and papal zouav. followed by a choir of 200 male voices. The state, the cimrel and the army were represented; evel rite had its delegation and there were envoys fram the various mission- ary activities in foreign lands. Sixty-Fifth Regiment as Escort. A profound silence stole over the spectators when the Sixty-fifth regi- ment, recriited from French-Canadians of Quebec provincs, were seen ap- proaching in full dress uniforms. The government had wished to give the iment an opporiunity to act as guard of honor to the host, which it does at each recurrencg of the fete dieu, but a technical ‘diffic had arisen by reason of the presence of a mission from the papal see. The city was surprised that it had been smooth ed over at the last moment. The offi- cial order of the colc was for the regiment to attend “a church celebra- tion.” Multitude is Hushed. As the procession drew noar, the ! humeral multitude grew suddenly hushed, for they knew that tie sacrament was ROt far behind. A moment later the pon- Gerous bell on the east towar of Notre Dame, known for its volume as tho “Great Bourbon,” began to thunder ou its message that the papal legate was leaying the cathedral bearing the mun- strance Cardinal Vannutelli Bearing the Host. Compauies of the Sixty-fifth regiment marched to the front and to the rear of a huge canopy which moved slowly on rollers. Holding the monstrance in both hands, which were hidden in a veil, walked. Cardinal Van- nutelli under the canopy. His head was bared and as the host passed the crowds fell upon their knees. Behind him. in scarlet robes, walked Cardinal Gibbons and Cardinal Logue, primate of Ireland, both attended by bishops, the archbishop of Montreal, the monsignori, the papal chamberlains and lay members of the Catholio church who hold pontifical decorations. Con- spicuous among them were Governor Pothier of Rhode Island and his staff, as well as a numerous train of Cana- dian dignitaries and officials. Great Electric Cross. So long had it taken the cumbrous procession to unfold its length that it was dusk when the legate reacl Fletoher's field, at the foot of Mount Royal. As he approached the repos! tory suddenly myriad lights broke out upon the face of the mountain and over the repository itself a great cross, cisible for miles ‘around, flashed Into brilliance. Tt had been requested that no attempt should be made by the pro- cession to kneel when the benediction of the Eucharist was to be given, but with one motion the immense assem- blage fell to its'knees as the bearer of the host, standing on the mountain sanctuary, held aloft the golden mon- strance. 1 Te Deum Terminates the Conference. At the tor innt!ol‘:hufrthe“hlfllnx the multitude sa; ‘e Deum_ the twenty-first ;gimuqnfl lw‘5 istic congress was terminated. 200,000 Sleeping Under the' Skiss. Tonight 200,000 people ars sleeping under the skies. The rush out of the city started at 7 o'clock and by 9 the railroad _stations were jammed. The companies had not foreseen such a crush and they had not cars enough. The hotels were already packed to the roofs and although drawing rooms, reception rooms and concert halls ars now turned into dormitories and 10dg- ing houses and private houses alike thrown open for the night, a vast over- flow remains. Preference to Amerioans. Visitors from American citles will be given preference tomorrow in obtain- ing train reservations. The police have orders to make it as comfortabls as possible for those who must slesp out doors. GRAVE SITUATION ENGLISH IN INDUSTRIAL WORLD. Cotton Mill Operatives Face Lockout— Boilermakers Request Conference. London, Sept. 11. ises to be a g ¢> one in the industrl This week prom- world unlese the operatives in the cot- ton mills agree row, and they thus defiant. The employ a to arbitration tomor- | r have remained ociation will recommend a lockout of the men from the mills, which would affect several hundred {housand cotton operatives. The shipyard lockout has taken a more favorable turn, the boilermakers having requested a confaremce with the employers, while the Great North- ern railway employes, who voted todav on the question of striking on the ground that the company had not com- Plied with the decision of the arbitrator who recently adjusted the differences between the men and the company, have decided again to submit the m tar to arbitrati NO EXCITEMENT OVER FOREIGN MILITARY SPIES Recent Arrests land Taken Very Mildly. London, Sept/ 11. Germany and Eng- ‘The present silly season has been enlivened by military discussions with regard to the pres- ence of a Canadian contingent at the English manoeuv and the arrest of the German spy. who probably was sent by the kaiser to Portsmouth with instruction to let himself be captured in the act of sketching some obsolete forts, and thus wive the kaiser an excuse for releasing in_his cutody the English spies Had Germany been serious, she would not have sent on such a mis- slon an officer ignorant of English and anxiously courting arrest gratifying calmness both and England over the in arrests. man create failed paper to utterly FINISHES MOTOR CYCLE TR There is a rmany The efforts of a London paper and one Ger- P excitement have ACROSS THE CONTINENT From San Francisco to New York 28 Days 3 1-2 Hours. New York, Sept. 11 in —Bearing a let- ter of greeting from Mayor McCarthy of San Francisco William __ Streiff reached New Mayor San to of Gaynor, Francisco, York today on the motof eyele with which he has made a trans® continental trip. eight days. three and to complete the journey cific to the Atlantic coast. Streiff will deliver Mayor thy's leiter to dames, L. L, to orrow. It took him twenty- one-half hours from the Pa- McCar- Mayor Gaynor at St. Lorimes Resigns from Hamilton Club. Chicago, Sept 11 Ll A terse uote of resignation trom tne Hamilton club, of which he bad been a member many the answer duy by K Nexte cago made at Puited States Sen- ator William Lorimer to the actipn of o Ti- the club president, John H. Batten, in withdrawing his invitation - to the Roogevelt banquet Thursday night. It is said by the senator's friends that the resignation will not be accepted. = wfi&w i | BOTH TIRES BURST, AUTO CRASHED INTO POLE Two Killed and One Injured in Sunm- day Accident at Nahant. Nahant, Mass. Sept. 11.—Albert Hanna, aged 38 vears, of Lowell, and Mrs. Fannie Reed, wife of Charles B. Reed of Colby ' Hill, Nahant, we killed, and Herman Stegsman of Ja- maica Plain’ was slightly injured when an automobile in which they were rid- ing erashed into an electric light pole on the Nahant road opposite the Unit- ed_States life saving station earby today, Charles B. Reed and his son Dan, ‘aged 14, who were also in the car. ' escaped uninjured. Hanna was the chauffeur of the ma- chine, which is owned by John D. Pilling, a well known shoe manufa turer of Lowell and Boston. The tires on Dboth rear wheels burst and Hnna. lost control of the machine while it was traveling at high speed. It crashed with such foree against the pole by the roadside that Mrs. Reed, who was in the back seat, Wi thrown out. Her skull was fraotured and she died almost instantly. Hanna was pinned beneath the wheels of the car and his life crushed out. Mr. Reed is a heel manufacturer. DUG UP SKELETONS IN BED OF RIVER Workmen Find Bones of Victims Lest in Johnstown Disaster. Johnstown, Pa., Sept, 114—The bones of eight disjointed skelatons, vietims of the flood of twenty-one years ago, were dug from the bed of the Cone- maugh river vesterday at the foot ef the famous old stone bridge against which thousands of tons of water hurled human lives, houses and ev- erything movable, Besides the bomes. coins, kitchen utensils, sewing machines and many other relics were found. The relics were appropriated by the workmen, but the bones have been gathered in bags and will be buried in Grand V' Chinaman Shot Through the Heart. New York, Sept. 11.—Chinatown cel- ebrated Sunday by another murder. The dead man; said by the police to be Lee Yee, was shot through the heart by an assassin who escaped. Les was about 50 vears old und Americanized. The only thing unusual about the, case is that ha was not known to be a member of any of the warring tongs. Vanderbilt Colts Win at Pa Paris, Sept. 11.—W. K. Vanderbilt was successful- in two events at the Chantilly course today. His Brume won the Prix/la Lachotte (triennial stakes), for *vo vear old fillies, while his Manfred captured the Prix la Ro- chetle for two year colts. Each prize amounted to $4.008. The distance Wwar five aud a hal? furlones. .Convicts Start Fire to Escape. Jolist, 1N, Swsut. 1L—In a futile at tempt to escape, conviots today in the Illinvis state prison here fired a warehouse filled with excelsior. and [the building was dastroved. The cendiaries. it is belleved, i destrov the entire prisen total damage is sbput §408 BN J