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VOL. LI—NO. 231 CONN., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1910 OLD GUARD BEATEN TO A FRAZLLE| In the First Engagement of a Series of Con- flicts that are to Follow ROOSEVELT TEMPORARY CHAIRMAN Of New York Republican State Convention_,—l,fill Votes Cast of Which Roosevelt Received 568 and Vice President Sherman 443, a Majority of 125 for the Leader of the Progressives—Day of Bitter Speech. toga, N. Y. edere Rovsevelt Sept. 27.—Col. The- fe today on the top wave of victory, defeating Vice Pres- fdent Sherman for temporary chair wman of the republican state conven- tion_and bowling over the Old Guard first engagement of a series of that are to com r the confl Adjourned to Teday. Roosevelt was in his ele- had named the mem- the important commit- and the convention had adjourned rrow, the colonel turned ihree e newspaper men and remarked: ec zzle, you may recall. You ne on that' sterday, the former pres- ild beat his oppon- The Voting for Temporary Chairman. ; I votes cast in the wia of whic Colonel Roos-vell received 368, and Vice Pres- Sherman 443, thus electing the the progressives by a ma- Roosevelt did not vote, Mr. Sher ted for John Doe. and ' ounty delegates . no s their names b T p- . e _convention gave Roose i Sherman 445, but - A ¢ 0t s discovered h by Colonel Roosevelt. v ent Tsa had accomplish- $ stration in his speech - airman, saying that n their present shape upon the & they represent an earn- ¥ ement which is yet to and the beneficence and fa eople measure the cred- h Is rie to the congress ipright and distin- o William Howard . at and many of the del- [ s A auded the declara- ot o foosevelt for a direct Escorted to Speaker's Stand by Vice President Sherman. T s of ause greeted the ok as he was escorted to the epeaker's stand by Vice President and Cornel V. Collins. tendent of prisons, and it me before proceed h. Tha the dele- i R - r that they had - - n bim, the colonel caused e greatest enthusiasm when he said: p not have cause now or i % egret what you have A Day of Bitter Speech. e and acrimonious speech. of the convention, & « man Woodruff defined the Old_Guard and an- 3 ed that Vice President Sherman i selected for temporary chair- > state chairman. And then e ght was on Pandemonium Reigned. sber of New York eity ) ted to fire the verba . the former president CONNECTICUT STATE POLICE DEPARTMENT REPORT g sl Year Ending June 30, [was often broken and drowned by | hisses and jeers. Once the pandemonium became so great that Colonel Roosevelt leaped to his feet and asked for a full hear- ing for the speaker. Comptroller Prendergast of New York city was the champion of the progressive fight and made a warm and spirited reply to tde Old Guard onslaught. The convention had been well pre- pared for the outcome of the contest [for temporary chairman, ~William Barnes, Jr.. leader of the Old Guard forces, having early in the day con- ded the election of Theodore Roose- velt. Old Guard Not Disheartened. The victory of Colonel Roosevelt in the first counting of noses did not ap- pear to dishearten tbe Old Guard, for they continued their fight on the con- vention floor when the progressives submitted resolutions whereby the commitiee should be made by repre- sentatives from each congressional district, the members to be named by the temporary chairman. Progressive Resolutions Carried. Seeing that this gave absolute pow- er to Colonel Roosevelt, Speaker Wadsworth of the assembly strongly opposed the amendments. He took the position that each congressional dis- trict should name its own member, as had been done in the case of previous republican conventions for many yea: he progressives, however, were in the | ascendancy and the _resolutions as drafted by friends of Mr. Roosevelt were carried. Committees Announced. There being no contents before the convention, the makeup of the com- mittee on credentials was without significance and it was quickly named and announced by Colonel Roosevelt, as was the committee on permanent The makeup of the organization g committee on resolutions, which was to thresh over the important direct primary plank caused Colonel Roose- velt to hold up the convention until he could go over the names before him. He called Representative Herbert Par- sons of New York to the speaker's stand, and after striking out three of the names submitted, announced the resolutions committee, among_whom were Willlam Barnes, Jr, Speaker James Wadsworth of the assembly George W. Allridge, Senator Cobb. au- | thor of the recently defeated direct primary Dbill, former Mayor Seth Low | of New York, Jacob Gould Schurman, president of Cornell unliversity, Sena- tor Brackelt, Representative Sereno E. Payne and Representative J. Sloat Fassett Considering the Available Candidates | for Governor. Saratoga, Sept. 27.—Colonel Roose- velt held an_extended conference to- night with U. S. Senator Root, Lioyd C. Griscom, Charles 8. Francis of Troy, former ambassador to Austria, to consider the available candidates for governor. Lloyd C. Griscom said at 1130 o'clock that no decision had been reached and that it was the sense of the conferees that nothing could be said at this time. The conference was expected to con- tinue weil into Wednesday morning. It was reported late tonight that Mr._Griscom would succeed Timothy | L. Woodruff as chairman of the new republican state committee. SULTAN OF SULU ENJOYS STREET CAR RIDE | Distinguished Visitor at the Nationai Cabled Paragraphs Paris, Sept. 27.—The mother of Pre- mier Briand die¢ suddenly today, Lisbon, Portugal, Sept. 27.—King Manuel has accepted the invitation of Emperor William to visit Berlin in December. Odessa, Sept. 27.—An autopsy today established a case of pulmonary plague here. The prefect of police has of- fered $7.50 for the destruction of any rat an examination of which proves that it was plague stricken. Paris, Sept. 27.—The government has issued an order that all railroad cars entering Paris from Austria and Ttaly shall be isolated in Bercy depot for medical inspection. Bercy forms a quarter in the southeast of Paris. wmarket, England, Sept. 27.—%he trial selling plate of 300 sovereigns, for all ages, distance the Bretby stakes course, six furlongs, was won today by H. P." Whitney’s Top-of-the-Morning. Gallest was second and Paddington third. There were eleven starters. Rome, Sept. 27.—Ex-Premier Pel- loux has given notice that he will in- terpellate the government on the sub- ject of the guarantees against insults t the pope, which guarantees, he charges, were violated by Mayor Na- than in his recent speech and subse- quent anti-Vatican communications. MASSACHUSETTS PRIMARIES HELD BY BOTH PARTIES. Defeat of Two Democratic Congress- men for Renomination—Senator Lodge’s Chances. Boston, Sept. 27.—The notable fea- tures of the democratic primaries held throughout the state today were the defeat of two congressmen for renomi- nation, John A. Keliher in the Ninth district and Joseph F. O’Connell in the Tenth, and also the fact that a large majority of tha delegates to the state convention will go to Faneuil hall on Oct. 6th without pledges for any one of the three candidates for the guber- natorial nomination, Charles S. Ham- lin, James H. Vahey and Congressman Eugene Foss. Republican primaries were al5o-held jointly with the democrats in eleven cities. including Boston, Lowell and Lawrance, but it was only ifi Lowell that there was any noticeable opposi- tion to the candidacy of Senator Hens ry Cabot Lodge for re-election. Tn Lowell, the home of Congressman But- ler Ames, the only avowed republican candidate against Senator Lodge, threa of the candidates nominated by the re- publicans for the two branches of the legislature are outspoken for Ames. WISCONSIN REPUBLICAN STATE PLTFORM CONVENTION. | el inues H Speeches by Insurgent Congressmen— Senator LaFollette’s Prophesy. Madison, Wis., Sept. 27.—The re- publican state ~platform convention spent today in listening to insurgent | congressmen make speeches. The au- dience included the cormittee on res olutions, which did not retire to its dea liberations until dark, when the con- vention took a recess. Congressmen Cooper, Lenritt Esch rehearsed phases of the insprgent fight against the rules in the house of representatives at Washington and ex- tolled Senator Lalollette as the fath- er of the progressive ideas called the Roosevelt policics. ! “The old line senators left thefr| chairs with smiles of derision when | Senator LaFollette began to speak. He | turned, to them and said with a prph- esy which has come true: ‘Those sen- ators who leave their seats vacant temporarily will find them made per- manently So by the people.” ‘Where are former senators from North and South Dakota, from Kansas and Towa? Their seats are occupied by Cummins, by Borah, by Bristow, by progressive republicans “Yes, and Hale is sick and Aldrich| not feéling well,” said Congressman | Cooper, adding a postscript to his speech, delivered previously. and | Donald P. Stubbs Died from Bullet Wounds. Cleveland, O. Sept. 27.—Donald P. Stubbs, son of John C. Stubbs, vice president and traffic manager of the Harriman lines, who was found in the offices of the Union Pacific railroad here at midnight on Saturday with a revolver wound over his heart, died this evening. According to the story told by young Stubbs before his death the shooting was accidental, occurring while he was examining a new revol- ver. Hanged Himself in Hotel Room. | statistics JAME:! Among the Rochester—I Rochester, inch shell there could sternation am, the floor when the first them. Face of Pol The mayor's be a candidate able that they misinterpreted, of the political of an eye. been hesitant wary dates and no Charles F. Murj Hall; “Gaynor vention will hy to a candidate he became con' ing but this ac Gaynor's nomin ination for gov come such. I ments which I circulated. said to me th nominate me, candidate. It might appear me to assume that happen, plemental lette vent my nemin: nominated I w 1 could not ab: York after so may make this of going to Ro it. mecessar: understand me. “Since “James Creel: ‘Washington, census bureau cities: 1900. of 1900. Oshkosh, Wi 4, 1900. ARIZONA Final Word From Gaynor MADE PUBLIC IN LETTER TO Democ N. had come through the roof of the Hotel Seneca not have been more con- of the ‘lobby doubt on the subject w arisen by reason of irresponsible state- put the matter to be imminent. S CREELMAN. "FELL LIKE 12 INCH SHELL s Gathered f Nominated for Gov- at ernor He Would Decline to Accept. Y., Sept, 27.—If a 12- crashing down the democrats on tonight than news of Mayor Gaynor's ong. letter to James Creelman burst among litical Map Changed. final word, declining to in terms so unmistake- were no longer to be changed the whole face 1 map in the twinkling Hesitant and Cautious Tone. Previously the tone of the town had and cautious. Uncom- mitted delesates and leaders had been of putting themselves down black and white. in “L have no candi- opinions,” had said phy, leader of Tammany is strong, but the con- esitate to commit itself who refuses to declare himself,” had been the substance of an interview with State Chairman John A. Dix. Mayor Gaynor's Letter. New York, Sept. 27.—James Creel- man of New York made public today a letter from Mayor Gaynor. Mr. Creelman decided on this step because vinced today that noth- ction would prevent Mr. j nation by the democratic state convention. The letter foliows “St. James, L. I, Sept. 26, 1910. “Dear Mr. Creelman: 1 am this day Wwriting a letter to Chairman Dix, stat- ing that I am not a candidate for nom- ernor and refuse to be- do this to remove all ich may have am inform d are being No utterance of mine has in doubt, Some have at the convention may although I am not a seems to me that it ain or egotistical for in my letter to Mr. Dix that extraordinary thing might 1 therefore write this sup- r to you to take to Ro- chester and show there So as to pre- ation if it should appear Make it plain that if ould decline to accept. andon fo their fate tht splendid men whom I have appointed to office, and who are working so hard for good government, abandon the people of the cii nor «coud v of New short a service. You letter public in advance chester if in your jude- ment you think the situation calis for But do not do unless it be plai Every homest man will rely yours, . “W. J. GAYNOR. iman, Esq.” LATEST RETURNS FROM CENSUS Increased Populations of Pennsylvania and Massachusetts Sept. 27.—Population were made public by the today of the following York, Pa., 44,750, an increase of 11,- 042, or 32.8 per over 33,708 in 1900; Eastos, 28, an_increase of 825, or 13.0 per cent., over 25,238 in 1900 Newcastle, 36,280, an increase of 941, or 28.0 per vent., over 26,339 in Somerville, Mass., 77,236, an increase 3, or 25.3 per cent., over 61,643 in 1900; Newton, 39,806, an increase of 8.219, or 18.5 per cent., over 33,587 in 3.062, an increase of 76, or 16,9 per cent, over 28284 in TOWN BURNING. Earthquakes In Arizona VOLCANIC STONES WEIGHING TONS DISLODGED. INDIANS FLEE IN TERROR Territory Fifty Miles Square Practical- ly Depopulated—Whole District is of Volcanic Origin—Earth’s Crust Sli; Flagstaff, Arizona, Sept. ritory fifty miles square and extend- ing from here to the Grand Canyon of the Colorado river, tonight stands practically —depopulated because of earthquakes and rumblings, which, be- ginning Saturday, are steadily increas- ing in magnitude and violence. Population Flees. Indians, of whom there were many in the region, fied when the quakes began, terrified by the cracking of the ground. Tribal tales of the an- cient activities of new burned-out cra- ters, of which there are more than fifty in the region, hastened their flight. The whites remained until their houses fell about them. Whole District in State of Unrest. J. B. Chaves, the first of the refu- gees to reach Flagstafr, reported that his house had cracked open. Others who arrived later reported that vol- canic stones weighing many tons had been torn from their beds and sent crashing down the mountain sides and that the whole district was in a state of unrest. They refused flatly to go bank for any reason. The whose district is of velcanic origin. Present phenomena are at- tributed to the slioping of the earth’s crust. CABINET SESSIONS AND POSTMASTERS. President to Issue Order Placing 8,000 Assistant Postmasters Under Protec- tion of Civil Service Law. Washington, Sept. 27.—As a first re- sult of the cabinet sessions which are in progress at the White House it was announced today that President Taft would jssue, probably tomorrow, an order placing approximately 8,000 as- sistant postmasters in the United States under the protection of the civil service law and taking them entirely out of politics. It was also said that the president would recommend to con- gress this fall that all second and third class postmasters, aggregating approximately 7,193, be placed under civil service rules. Postmaster General Hitchcock made the recommendations to President Taft both as to the assistant postmasters and to the officials of the second and third class. It is a part of the post- masfer general's scheme to put the postal _establichment on a business basis and to make it self supporting. Mr. Hitchcock already, has reduced the expenditures in his devartment to a minimum and he hopes to make the establishment a paying proposition be- fore he goes out of office. TAXICAB STRUCK BY RAILROAD TRAIN. Two Prominent Men of Poughkeepsie Frightfully Injured. Poughkeepsie.. N. Y., Sept. taxicab containing Edward S. ter and George Cornwall, two prom- inent residents of this city, was struck by a train on the Hudson River state hospital branch of the Central New England railroad at a provate cross- ing near here late today, and the two passengers and the chauffeur, George | Key, were frightfully injured.” One of Mr. Cornwall's arms was almost torn off and he died shortly afterwards. M. Atwater has a fractured skull and a broken leg. He has been unconscious since the accident. The chauffeur re- ceived serlous injuries to his bgeast, and his condition also is grave, The chauffeur did not see the approaching train until he was almost upon the track. Mr. Cornwall was a vice president and trustee of the Poughkeepsie Sav- ings bank. Mr. Atwater is a wealthy banker and president of the Farmers and Manufacturers’ bank of this city. ONE DAY’S TRAGEDIES | | | | | | 27.—A Atwa- [ | ing out in such Condensed Telegrams There Were 631 Attempts at suicide Russia in one month. in , Sy Miss Elizabeth Harris of Chicago died after dancing four hours, o John Cheshire, considered the great- est_exponent of the in N et harp, died in’ New Firewood to the Value of $230,000.- 000 is used every year in the United States. Assistant Secretary of the Winthrop returned from an outi Canada. Navy ng in The New United States court of cus- toms appeals is in full swing of its first sesslon. J A Farewell Reception Was Given in Peking to Secretary of War Dickinson and his party. Prof. Raymond McFarland penetrat- ed 900 miles into Labrador to lands hitherto untrod by explorers. Eugene H. Plumacher, sol- sailor, consul and philanthropist, at the home of his son. Colonel dier, died A Brigadier General will be assigned to take command of the military forces in Hawaii by the war department. Fifty-two Earthquake Shocks from an extinct voleano near Flagstaff, Ariz., :I}!E:d a construction gang to flee to afety. . Machieu and Loredon, who started in aeroplanes for a trip from Paris to| Brussels, both met with ‘mishaps and gave up. A Company of Militia will attend the trial of Shay Pelilman, colored, at Stanford, Ky., accused of assault on a white girt. All is Ready for the Drydocking of the 16 battleships of the Ablantic feot, vhich has just completed target pr: tice on the southern drill grounds. Figures at the Census Bureau show there were 2,814 homicides and 8,402 suicides in 1900 in that portion of the United States covered by registry laws. Brigadier General A. L. Mills in his annual report makes a plea for the elimination of = politics, now. more o less influential in the national guard in each state. John Mozinek, a Polish Child, of Chi- cago was burned todeath in a fire ow- ing to the inability of his mother to speak English and tell firemep where the child siept. | Allegations that the Railroads of the west are still ng rebates and charging them to damage accounts Clifford Thame before were made by the interstate commerce commission. Lieut. J. P. Pringle, who has heen n duty with the battieship Masachi- | etts, h's been assiz to duty in| command of the torpedo boat Per- %ins, now being fitted out at Quiney, Mast o Lieutenant Commander.J. T. Tomp- Kin: who has been on duty on the; battleship Iowa. has heen assigned to | the command of t do hoat de- stroyer McCall, when that vessel is! put in commission. g State Representative Charles A.| White of Tilinois testified that he got $1.000 to vote to send William Lorimer to the United States senate and $800 from a “jackpo: posed to be a leg- isiative corruption PUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION. Platform Constructed by Progressives is Unanimously Adopted. Concord, N. H. form constructed by progressive me bers of the party was adopted unan- mously at the reput te con- ! vention held here today. Under thef new primary law this was the only | work which the convention had to do. The administration of President Taft was endorsed to the extent of a com- mendation of “the republican achieve- E sress under the larg a policies inaugurated by Roosevelt.” The party nominee for governor, Robert P. Bass, addressed the conven- tion, which was presided over by Dr. John M. Gile of Hanover. ed in Swarms Last Night. OVER ONE HUNDRED CASUALTIES " PRICE_TWO “POLICE GHARGE RIC Police Obeyed Orders to Use Severe Repressive Measmr - —Guns and Swords Played a Part—Scores of A.rrhl; Made—Police Commissioner and His Men Assailed by Sympathizers—Women Among the Furious Mob. Berlin, Sept, 27.—The rioting by coal strikers in the Moabit precinct that began I@st night was continued at_an carly hour today. Since the fighting began 138 policé and civilians have been wounded and four of these are likely to die. A regiment is held in readiness to be used against the mob, if necessary tonight. ‘Women took an active part against the police, throwing all sorts of m siles down upon them from windows and roofs. At daylight a police ser- geant was found in an alley where he had been beaten into insensibility. Violence Increases. Berlin, Sept. 27.—Even greater vio- lence than that of last night charac- terized 'the collisions between police and rioters in the Moabit precinct this evening. Many persons on both sides were injured. The district presents the aspect of a besieged city Streets Filled with Excited Men and Women. Thousands of strikers sympathizers gathered in the streets as soon as darkness fell A strong force of police. numbering 100 mount- ed and 300 afoot, armed with revol- vers and swords, were stationed at va- and their rious quarters. They were under or- ders from the commissioner to exer- cise severe repressive measures and to-use the sharp edges of their swords instead of striking with the flat. The rioters about nine o'clock began the trouble, which increased as night ad- vanced. Ixcited men and women dashed from place to place, smashing street lamps and the windows of stores. veral of the stores were sacked of valuable contents, hut the tradesmen for the most had taken the precaution of low the fron_shutters. and thus prevented cessive camage. The polico charged | time after time. woundinz many. | Men and women stafioned at open windows of houses hurled bottles, Dbricks, coal and stones at the pol who replied with revolver shots. Sho about at its ers a dow Ligl confli and S saloo! ed th tive to m At been casio hund preci Th teen polic were The police entered several flats in . Turm-strasse Many shots were fired from the crowd swords, leaving many injured on the ground. Scores o‘clock and cordons of police prevent- other quarters. | effective in bringing ers were prowling in the vicinity up corded tion there were hundreds of persons % s from Windows. wers of Missil Commissioner Von Jagow drove in an automobile through the precinct ten o'clock when the riot was height. Crowds of furious strik- nd their sympathizers, among whom were many women, howled im precations upon the police commis sioner and his men, while flower pots, various household articles and other missiles fell in showers from the win- hted Lamp Thrown by Woman. Wald-strasse, from one of which a maddened woman threw a lighted Jamp against an advancing squad, burning several of the men. Sharp in Biessel-strasse, Zwingli-strasse. cts occurred and the police charged with drawn ullen Strikers Prowl Abeut, of arrests were made. The ns were ordered closed at eleven of thousands from This measure was about compara- calm, but groups of sullen strik- he approach idnight. that time the riots had virtually suppressed, but there were oc- nal minor disturbances. Twelve red police are now occupying the net. Over a Hundred Casualti o total number of casualties re- is 100 strikers injured, thir- of them dangerously, and two emen, so severely hurt that they removed to the hospital. In ad- . BODY WILL BE SENT TO HIS NATIVE LAND Dying Wish of Hero of the Ten-Year War ia Cuba. Sent In fulfilment | h. expressed more than New York, of his dying w thirty ve: 0, the hody of Lieut. Rrancisco Vicenio Axuilera, hero of the Ten-Year war in Cuba. will be di interred from its resting place in Cal vary cemetery here tomorrow and sent to his native jand. “When my count s free and takes her place among the nations of the earth, then. and not till then, let my body be taken to Cuba for burial” was the prayer of Aguilera on_the day of his death, February 22, 1877. The body will be shipped to Tampa and there transferred to the gunboat | bointed to examine Andrew Fitzgerald Yara, The Cuban gunboat Yara will convey the body to Havana. CHOLERA EPIDEMIC IN ITALY. Sicilian Peasants Oopose Work of Sanitary Officials. Rome, Sept. 2 Notwithstanding the fact that the widespread nature of | the cholera infection at Naples known to the public, the official re- port announces oniy five cases and three deaths in the province of Napies in the past twentv-four hours, three cases and one death in the district of Apulia and one death from the dis in the province of Foggia. Xo cases are reported in the city Despatches from Sicily scenes there, the peas: new of Rome. report violent ts everywhere Mi | guilt i sty crear by h ing o dzy that days. A as to wrot wort! not board Thy form, gatio Agai that James Beaval superior court here ‘today the case of James | store, was nolied | character of a restaurant by the sell- | the finding and the nolle followed to- place $2,000 in a cannon on the Green, threaten propriating funds of the church. was ‘Washington, who received minor injuries. These proceeded to their homes or sought some handy refuge in order to avoid arrest. SUPERIOR COURT CASES, - AT MIDDLETOWN. Will Close His Candy Store Sundays Hereafter. Sept. 2 ddletown, Conn., In the keeper of a candy Beavakis was found in the lower court of keeping his open Sundays and selling ice: m,after an attempt had been made im to have the store assume the Beavakis, of sandwiches. He appealed from the condition, it is understood, not open his store Sun- on he will hoard of insanity experts was ap- » his mental condition. Fitzgerald e letters to Mrs. Clarence Words- I of this place demanding that she ng to take her life if she @id comply with his request. ‘The d will report in the morning. e case of Rev. Chester H. Sweet, er pastor of the Durham Congre- nal church, charged with misap- adjourned until the December term. MRS, . LAURA CRAMER FILES SUIT FOR $10,000 DAMAGES nst Dr. Lee M. Hurd of Green- wich, Conn. Sept. 27.—Charging sicked by the defend- she was at 1910—879 Investigations. Capital Shown About Town. | Sibiand i pen e - B — | valtham, Mass. Sept —Making : ¥ IN CITY OF PI B 5 BERLIN FAIR OPENS. opposing the work of the sanitary of- |ant, Mrs, Laura R. Cramer today filed he report of | Washingten, Sept. 27.—The sultan of {a noose in a rope placed in his room | N2°% With Population of 300, on In € CF/EITISBURG o ficials suif in the supreme court of the Dis- . rtment suomitted | Sulu piaved second fiddle to Prince | for use as a fire escape, John Edwards, ternational Boundary Line. Rather Exceptional Record Compiled | Attendance of 8,000—Pickpockets Ar- aples, Sept. 27.—The Duchess of | trict of Columbia for $10,000 damages - : rr Covering the | Tsai Suun of China among the capi- | aged 60, of Bloomfield, N. J., hanged LEEs & p d—The R Aosta today paid a visit to the cholera |against Dr. Lee M. Hurd of Greenwich, f : g June 410, Shows | tal’s distinguished guests today. *But | himeelf ‘in o hotel here todav. d- | Bisbeo Arim, Sept 27 -Naco a town bt Ehe Ehee. resten= e Haoes Datients at the hospital and spoke | Conn, conservator of the estate Of t ‘durt that period | While the latter was being received hy | wards came here five weeks ago as a | With a populati 300, & 5 = 1 ” g words of encouragement to each suf- | Fenton J. Hurd, Lis grandfather, whem $ s, which ix the tar- | the president and members of the |salesman for Stembridge Brothers of | the international boundary line nine| [Pittsbure, Sept. 27—This rather ex-| Berlin Conn. Sept 7.—The Berlin| fo. . Mrs, Cramer is alleged to have vietim- T e et | cabinet, the sultan, was o ® [ Paterson, N. J. The medical examiner | Miles from Bisbee, is burning, accord- | Cptional record of a duy’s tragedies|fair opened today with a gathering SRR DR = 5 3 r the ¢ ment | ca the sultan was content to en on, 3 edical examiner 8/ ros 18, s SOl 6 G o s placed at about £,000. The — exhibits | ized for $40.000. Mrs. Cramer alleges ar, while smber of [ joy bimself under the guidance of Col. | after viewing the body said that the | IN& to word received at midnight by 2 peoe ealle =il e it INQUIRY AT WEST POINT. that the assault occurred at Whallens- 7 3 e Caatams Giioss Mrs. Sarah Welsh was found fatally | uncovered were large and more varied ey 5 ros ne 345, were greater by 21| Hugh Scott, U. 8. A, and to bide his | man had been in ill health for some b Sk burned in her aparyments and died af- | than in previous years —_— burg, N. Y. when depositions of the than any previous year. Of the |time until he meets President Taft to- | time. ter ‘saying that her burns were re.| George Shapire of Lowell, Mass, was| Testimony Taken in the Recent “Si- |elder were ‘taken at the home of his secuted the number of cons } morrow. f — Chauffeur Charged with Manslaughter: | (51 o5 in the explosion of & gus range, | arrested on the charse of “short lencing” Incident. son, Byron Hurd, last August. She 1 'was about 84 per| The sultan visited the Washington Southern Pacific Strike Ended, lem. Mass., Sept. 27.—Edward | The range, however, was found intact, | changing” a customer, and two New chapges (it De HIICa/sxucELe S Sy During the department | monument and marvelled at its height: | Houston, Texas, Sept. 27.—After chauffeur for Gen, Frederick R. | and the police ars investigating. " | York men were arrested on the charge| West Point, N. Y. Sept. 27.—The | Inflicted injuries from which she did thon ed to it in | took a sireet car ride, it being his spe- | conferences extending over severa of New York, was arrested | George Steward was found dead on | of picking pockets testimony of several first class men at | ROt Tecover for four weeks. She says - - enforcement of | clal desire to ride on a “street train,” | weeks, officers of the Southern Pa- |here tonight by Chlet of Police Fer- | the steps of the Herron Hill Methodist| The 2.4 trot or pace, purse $200,| the military academy was taken foday | DY: Furd selzed her as she approached p < e law, and ulso in {and visited many public buildings. in- | cific railroad and representatives of | guson of Beverly on a warrant charg- | Episcopal church. He had taken car- |Was won by Hal Direct. owned by|by the board of Inquiry. headed by |the bedside of his gramdfather and ng ‘n ampfroiier and the | cluding the capitol and congressional | the dissatisfied employes of the car- | ing him with mansiaughter in caus- | bolic acid. William Crogier of Hartford, with|Colonel Bethel. which is investigating | threw her againet the footboard, caus- . y iatior | ibrary ©, Suitan greatly enjoved | repairing department of the road an- | ing the death of Conductor Samuel | = George Logden fell from a hotel|2.141-4 as the best time. This time | the recent “silencing” of Capt. Rufus | i€ a serious Injurv. Counsel for Dr. or shows that the |the street car ride and said he pre- |nounced an agreement last night pro- | Hollingshead, who was knocked from | window and was instantly killed. | equals the track record for that event.|E. Longan by the cadet corps Indi- | Hurd admit removing Mrs. Cramer cepartines from the state |ferred the street cars to automobiles. | viding for an increase in wages of two | the running board of a car by an au- | W. H. Herizberger was killed by| The Meriden race for a purse of $200 | cations are that several days will be | from the bedside, but deny that he t arer and that the ex- R 5 5 cents and hour and certain shop rules | tomobile at North Beverly yesterday. | electricity while repatring lights. was won by Jim Corbett, owned by D.|required to complete the inquiry. struck her. 3 re follows SENATOR LORIMER’S ELECTION. |demanded by the carmen. Dupie was released under $5,090 bonds John Ross fatally shot himself. Higgins, with 2.271-4 as best time. Gen. Thomas H. Barry. superinten. = s $13621, traveling expenses | G ek s = £ and will appear in the local ‘court to 589 K < The fair will be continued tomor-|dent of the academy, returned toda CHAVEZ, ALPS AVIATOR, DEAD. $9.84 to deputy sheriffs an rogress of e Investigation ore ristian Endeavorers Assemble. answer to the charge in the morning. row. from Washington, but declined to dis- d s e16esT, omcer o Bl M e e 65 MILES IN TWO HOURS. o cuss the incident. The order confn. | Fatal Ending to Sensational Fliaht P amount paid to ; - than 3,000 Christian Endeavorers gatii- | Latham Flies Sixty Miles an Hour. | German Aviator Makes Aeroplane BOSTON LUMBER BLAZE. ing cadets to barracks during recrea- O L Aat e Sros 010.50; amount paid or | Chicago, Sept. 27.—The examination | ered in this city today for the opening Parish & " - [t tion hours continues in effect. One i - all court cases $5,980 of State Representative Charles A. | of the three days’ annual convention of | gan bisas s oy piubert Latham to- ElISnES Wi hE sensiner. Loss of $125000 in Yard of Parker & |Tesult of this has been to put an end [ Milan, Italy, Sept 27.—A message e report, It is pointed out, White, the principal witness in sup- | the Massachusetts Christian Endeavor | 105-hocecr BBl Te WIS oy 21, Pal [ to- football practice and the coming[from Domodossola says that George ® ase in the expenses of the de- | port of the charges that the election | urion. -horsepower monoplane, which has | Metz, Germany. Sept. 27.—Accompa- almer Company. Fame with the University of Vermont|Chavez, the Peruvian aviator, died p over the previous vear. of Senator Willlam Lorimer was pro- — been constructed for use at the inter- | nied by a Rumanian officer as a pas- g P will be cancelled = there at 2.25 o'clock this afternoon. cured by corrupt methods, was com- | Lieut. Governor of Nova Scotia Dead nmmn;fl avl‘at‘mn meet at Belmont | sanger, Jeanin, the ‘German aviator, 20510;'-1 ‘\'c'?(:‘]“ ":‘mfl' '”lvlvh;r \"Hl- e iiatlire’, pleted today yn&tc 1 = i | park, Long Island. The machine de- | today made an aeroplane flight, with- | ued af 25, was destroved by fire . o & MARCONI SERIOUSLY ILL. Dleted nany before the senatorial In- | Halifax, N. §. Sept. 27.—Duncan | veloped & speed of from sinty fo sev | Ut stoD, of sixty-Ave miles in tws| carly today in the vard of the Parker CATHOLIC CHARITIES. Open-Air Schoolroom for Pupils with - | ieacion, Senntor Julies C Borran he | Cameron Frazier, lieutenant governor | enty miles per hour without the full | hours and eighteen minutes. He made|& Palmer Lumber company, in e 2 Incipient Tuberculosi fnventor is Returning to Italy from | §iiemioan oraiman of e itteo. | O Nova Scotia, died today at his resi- | power of the motor having been util- | the journey from Treves, Rhenish| Charlestown. The loss is covered by | Broad General Question of Social Re-| New York, Sept. 27.—Those pupils South Americi | made “a ‘ruling barring hearsay aer: | dence in Gugsboro, aged 65 years. Ho | ized. i Prussia. to Metz, passing over Sierok | insurance. form Discussed. of public school No. 33 in the heart G made Pror /g barring hearsay evi- | had been ill for several monthe. RS Eare and Diedenhofen, and won a prize of| The blaze was discovered in the : = of one of the congested districts on Par B telentam fom | s ihe sens Al ks and later — No German Torpede Boat Disaster. | $7.500. Jeanin flew at an average|drsing room. and when the fire appa- | Washington, Sept. 2 the West Side, who are afflicted with Puer states that . Guslielmo | uscript story. of Whites. sllogad sme Dreadnoughts in Action. Kid Garang Sars v o | helght OECLG0D fect | ratus arrived on the sceme the mill | cifically discussed charities from prac- | incipient tubereulosis, will be provided -+ x iil on board the steamer | beriences in the Forty-stath sonecsl| A Dreadnought squadron of the|wiesiae comony, Sept. 27— Yesterday's —— was a mass of bames. After a half|tically every angle the first national | this winter with an open air school ¥ Natate and ia returning 1o | besembie, detaling his acsertions ot | Britsh et practicne off Bor | Jrclgss report on an accident among | Female Life Prisonor Pardoned by [hours hard work the fire was under | conference of Catholic charities (o= | room in Chelsea park, if plans outilhed I His state is said to be serious. mouth, with big guns while steaming . L L Governor of Kansas. Sontzst night considered the broad general | today by the school and park authori- the bribery of himself and other legis- lators in the Lorimer election, is manoeuvring off here, originated in of question of social reform. The prob- | ties are carried out. 0 An open build- lems in this ing. protected with awnings on stormy 16 knots an hour, at a distance of —Miss Jessie ol e the grounding the small Topeka, Kas., Sept. | torpedo nnection which face ” - " Attorney Austrian today finished | five miles, demolished in three min- | poat ~S 66" - o1 Morrison, who had served nearl: | x d $I00000 More Paid o St Patrick's | op i oSC ot testithony with leave (o | Utes & target, belng towed by another | boot st nir the! O [ eara e = Dty re vy oatanadtnss | | Aadison.'}Con e et | both the clerzy and the laity were out- | days, Is designed for the. school. . A% Cathedral Mortgage | recall. The cross examination by At- | ship. The experiment was one of &2 in o dariger apoa and the crew | B rieon for killing Mrs. Olin_ Castie | dition of John G. Parker, sectetary of | lned by experienced charity work least forty children in the school are York Sept. 27.--Archbishop |torney Hanecy dealt primarily with | eral, carried out with practically sim- at Eldorado, Kas., in June, 1900, was|the New York, New Haven an The 1day meeting of the Sonference | considered in need of_ theliopuie ¥ gned yesterday afternoon a |letters and messages and eonversations | lar resuits in each case. The mext T paroled . today by Governor Stubbs | ford Railroad company, who is ill at|¥as devoted to the consideratio accommodations. P 3400.000, In pavment of the | of White. naval battle of modern ships is not| . |° Hear Missionary Address. Fessie Morrison and Miss Glara Wiley | his summer home here from intestinai | the dependent family, and out of this - i gy B G R MO o Toaen [ Tiely to last long ama 1t HKele to cost| The annual meeting of societies in | had both Tecarmed mttenione fram G | trouble, was said fonigni to ba. verw| ETew a general discussion of the caus- | Shot Himself Through the Head. ©f $830.000 with which St. Patrick's SINGER ESCAPES ROBBERS. a gerat price in human life—slontreal | NeW Haven county connected with the | Castl> and a jealous rivairy grew up|favorable. the attending physician | ©3 of Poverty and of the most practical | pempstead, L. L. Sept. 27.—Whether eathedral has been burdened for many 2 Gazette. New Haven branch of the Woman's| petween them. stating that in forty-eight hours he|and efficacious means of rais by accident or deslgn, J. Frank Bauk. years Up to tlie present the payments | They Enter Her Swiss Villa and At- ot St o ad i Board of Missions will be held Frida £ G e expected is patient (o be oul of all [P > e [ ney, deputy county treasurer of Nas- made total $600.000, leaving a | tack and Rob Her Companion. Literary Gattling Gune. Sept. 30, the First Congregational Brothers Died at Same Hour. danger. Parl was tuken i)l a | Speakers strongly urged on Catholies [ g4y county, soctaily and politicall; of $550.000:which, the archbiahop B EY, @ church in Milford. ~The morning ses- f =y, o =5y B bp Sn 7 n U0 | few days ago on returning from a teip 2-0beration with all charitable or- | prominent. shot. himself through. the will be pald by noon Saturday Berlin, Sept. 27.—Mme, ~Semprich | Senator T Follette uses all the | sion will open et 10 o'clock and hunch-| oo™ Srmouncing. the death of 4 | 10 the Springs at Carlsbad, Germany. | $aniation Gead at his home tonight. His ace - has had & NarTow edcape from a mur- gec ome extras in | eon will be served at ncos. Among the ; ) 7 : | —— o counts with the county ai derous sttack ¢ denouncing the things which he Is|sSpeakere will be Mrs. Matrer brother were fled on Sunday at four | 3 % 3 ounty are correct, N . ul villa at Lausanie. & b o8 : ¥ Irs. J to David Smith at Watson, Mo/ an- | Southport, Conn., Sept. 2 on Hand the case. It is believed he will die. Rotterdum: Sept Russia, | * The prims donna had just left La of India. Ladies from the Congreza- . ; s BRIt Con Beve. 2 5 i ) wohie pritia domn had Just left 1o T o flonn ciurches ot Meriaenare Comial-| BuncilE e, death of nix brother | Edmund Guiffrt for nienty” veirs) | Washington, Sept Thare Will be | o e i A Aativsiants, |1 B : ? st 2 5 oy s : ; . Smith; other wus | rector of Trinity Episcopal churclidied | no Suppiv of bright, new quarters and | Couldnt Re ild West Shew. t. 26 Mauretania, | for the United States. At night armed | President Estrada of Nicaragua | ed _to attend this meeting. from Watson to the Aurora brother, |at his home here today f half-dollars for shopkeepers to hand wants to postpone thz election for a burglars forced an entrance into the year.—St. Louis Post-Dispateh. villa and attacked and robbed Mme. Sembrich's companion, a lady who has been with the singer for many years. The companion physically resembles Mme, Sembrich, and apparently the burgiars mistook her for the latter, over their counters v time Terre Haute, Ind., Sept. 27.—A vest show was the " this vear. cight coal mines in the Lin It is because the (reasury has a { vesterday ~Two thousand stock of 20.000.000 in quarters and half | ploved in’ the mines i1 dollars on hand in the vaults that it | ing the show, and has been decided not to coin any new | to el down, - ones- this year. weeks telling of the death of David. Each telegram said that the death had oc. curred at 330 o'clock. Mistaking a Marriage License for a government edict, a pretty Russian girl fled from Chicago. Dr. Guilbert was promi fairs of the town and was brought in- to especial prominence by founding and supporting of the Hollingswood Inn for Boys. He was 73 years oll and ‘leaves a widow and two daugh- ters. holiday Kroontand, Unwise Friends. Those Seattle jolliers who declare that Ballinger ie all right are real doing him a great wrong. Ther've got] Teddy Knows How It Foels. And on the other hand Mayor Se del was the first one to start picking his cempany.—Detroit Frze Press, Kronprinz- m New York Copenhagen: ~ Sept. 27, Hellig At ik Eomenagen. B him so he almost believes it.—Kansas City Star. g b S