Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 10, 1911, Page 1

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[ Cabld Pasgraphs |1 iltary Wall |Conden HecicgransYilage Ruined th case of cholera, the first outside | : ! = r : =3 3 | provisio of guarantine since last Sunday, was ; Dteddznt e Mrs. Cora Wood of Branford Then Attempts |5 it S| NIONG M0 OF m-».e.,,,,-wsg.--«;;m - By Explosion have been twenty-four Hawaiians and to Efld Her OWll Llfe by Shootmg on;‘::m:;::aw Maren 5._an| PURPOSE © OF DESPATCHING avalanche swept down upon and crush- TROOPS TO MEXICAN- BORDER: ed a workingmen’s tenement near here while the occupants were still asleep, L R HORRIBLE FIND BY SON LAST NIGHT | it Sr S5t t"s | T0 STOP FILIBUSTERING |nalS, Xooser,sf Lmisiarn Neztz | DYNAMITE CARS BLEW.-UP ceived injuries that probably will aminer for that state. " prove fatal G 2 Z Th - $ London, March 9.—H. A. Franklin, | Government No Longer Seeks to Con- mem. ‘:l"gs:: ;:: };fi;;“'zf D.’.;]:, Varying Reports as to Number of < i -5 the -male ~ suffragette wh o Pt : Had Not Seen His Father Since Wednesday Forenoon tenced toe.flfl! Tor bix weeks Yor 322- ceal Its Motive—Preservation of | S been tentatively abandoned. Dead—Concussion Shatters Win- 2 whipping Winston Churchill on No- s < o 2 3 -—Found House Locked When He Returned From |vember 23 last, was arrested yneswg_ Monroe Doctrine Demands Action. H(?l::: ::t. t&"‘:&‘;fig"&zuwo‘t"{;g dows in Chicago 60 Miles Away. PROPERTY LOSS OF $1,500,000 AT PLEASANT PRAIRIE, WIS, John A, S. . .Verdier, a well. known er of Grand Rapids, Mich., dled of heart disease. day for hurling a stone through one g United States ob: ° 4 2 o] served his 70th birth- Work Last Night—Motive Not Known, But Couple|gf he windows of Mr. Churchills{ Afiday. ys_ufhxagmnfia_\m‘;-chms.d—:l'}aé' the a.lfi- Th. Pepe R f—d~_ Brivats K Chi-!agu, March 9—An explosion that ministration 8 decide: issemble e Received in rivate udi=- recked th lant of th Dupont- - Had Had Trouble Over Money Matters. Dublin,* March - —A Jury to|no longer its reasons for the sudden ¥, Kemnedy, who prosented the | mours Bowder co. in. Bleasans Brattie which was submitted the question of|ang un precedented movement of P. R. Heffron, bishop of{ Wis, a village of about 150 Inhabit- fl“ ed“i,n“{u.“ E‘“";‘; Corcoran, al- | troops to the Mexican border, is indi- | Winona, Minn. ants, wnight‘ caused the loss of at P iR m‘ = l‘:“ to have surrendered | cated by the following despatch, re- S least one life, destroyed the town in not i is - fa TR e e o'clock . American lawyers much; of an es- | cejved fonight from the staff corre-| Frank Gall Was Sentenced to five | which it was situated and created a Wednesday morning and that’)u was s “tlon inherited from his cousin, Joh~ | g ondent of the Assoclated Press, who | years in prison and fined $5.000 for | vibration that was felt for a radius of. not sean"br thouxlx;j‘hberbs., the“time of lvan of Seame% ‘Wash., disagreed| jsaccompanying President Taft on’ his oleomargarine “moonshining” by Judge | fifty miles. The property loss is esti- his B&"’ i d““dia‘;‘mmmmfld amd was dis journey to Atlanta. The despatch, | Landis at Chicago. mated at, $1,500,000, and the "°"°u‘“ \.fl:.ldm examiner Lisbo: dated Charlottesville, Va., _through RS ' would not talk. lemond, the young sbon, March 9.—Two priests who which place the president'’s train | The Wabach Railroad Granted an boy, was seen about the yard this|were ordered-prosecuted for reading passed tonight at 7.10 o’clock,” is as | increase of 1u per cent. to its engineers, afternoon, and Mrs. Wood was also | the pastoral letter, which had been | foiows: z firemen, -trainmen and conductors in a seen about the place as late as three | forbidden by the mlni!ter of justice, Milit Wall Al “th Rio G o settiement at Chicago. Father Last Seen Wednesday Fore- @'clock. Dresented themselves before the locai; Military Wall Along the Rio Grande. = s Had Trouble Over Maoney Matters, | 2uthorities, - They were accompanied "All doubt as to the purpose of thel . Five Witnesses frem Alaska in the by a mob armed with clubs. A troop | government in sending 20,000 troops | government's suit the Alaska coal Branford, Conn., Mareh 9.—For n, The exact time. of the shooting .t! While no specifio ‘cause had been | of cavalry dispersed the mob, 2nd one | to the . Mexican border has at last | jands frauds reached S cause &s yet not fully determined, Mrs. Cora Wood today shot and killed her husband, Christepher G., her eleven- Yyear-old son Valdemond, &4nd then at- tempted her own life by shooting her- self in the left side, inflicting a wound that might cause her death within a few hours. Chicago Thoroughly Shaken Up. Chicago was shaken from its most western suburbs to the shore of Lake Erie/and from north end to south end. Belief that an earthquake had been experienced was almost universal for a time. Windows were shattered and hat led up to the shdot- v i houses shaken throughout the thirty any of the victins has not been ac- given to wl of the priests was arrested. been swept away. The United States | jstered a = i . ez ¢ curately placed. The last seen of the ln‘, Walter said tonight that his fa- Bask dateeiitaed thiltine rivoliton Bt o S over aseumied nar miles of Chicago’s length. father was when he left the factory [ ther and mother-had had some slight { WANTED CONNECTICUT the republic to the south must end.| Frank Coffin, in a Wright Biplane,| Concussion Felt for Over 60 Miles. of the Malleable Iron works at ten | trouble over money matters and that { The American troops have been sent{made the trip from Augusta, Ga. to o'clock :’;e?nisdny“mmlntwwxlv!ng one of his father's errands in New SENATORS CONDEMNED. | ¢, form a solid military wall along the | Alken, S. C.. & distance of 28 miles, in | mite augn P ’i’(ti,‘o';im”‘;?}{,‘&. = .1;3 s son a e Wi going ow Rio Grande to stop tilibustering and |31 minutes y rda ternoon. Haven on business. on to Rebuke Them for| ;" oo that there is no further smug- 7 g:,%iigggfi V:g;fi;m:%manshihos‘:;ihgf e e R o ol loss of mind. gling of arms and men across the| President Taft Will Attend the an-|tions were felt not only in all parts came home from work that night, his Hartf P internationaal boundary.” nual “dinner of the Associated Press| of the city, but at Indiana Harbor and nmotu;::li;.:‘wlg;lnlm‘ivv:‘:'i:‘ s:' n:::x Mo ok e Chance of Badowery. sion w?sdt p:::i:imag }:efi;em}.}fig:; May End the Insurrection. and .American :\uwspa.ner Publishers’ | gther pofn’ts twenty miles south -and aslecp. Walter went to & lodge meet- today by the endeavor of democratic| It is believed that with this source | 3ssociation in New York on April 27.| southwest of here. Two shocks were felt, one extremely severe at 838 :;;zgtllllh;l: night, not returning home o'clock, and a slighter one three min- Father Missed at Breakfast Yesterday utes later. o 410 ok Sppear and M mother s e o et ther did not appear an mother Boy:Undressed Before Being Shot, e suburbs o cago along . said that he was not feeling well ‘The republican members, irrespective 3\ Lake shore all felt the quaking and “nough to come down. At noon when | 4, ohe oY when found was ;‘,’3";:;‘3 of the recent party division in Tefer- | soee tisn. ortics for . Desisive Aoti Countess Louise-Alexander vory Bern- | to the north of Chicago many windows he oame to dinner his father did mot|2nd in bed fully covered w ence to Senators Bulkeley and McLean, | Situation Called for Decisive Action. | storff, daughter of the German ambas- | and store fronts were shattered. appear and was supposed to be up in | Clothing and ;‘ 10:“;1 A °“fg beg | relied unanimously against the resolu- | There is no -longer any reason to|sador, will marry Count Raymond| Direct communication with Pleasant his room. mowerdh?;ll ol AL e tion. They first endeavored to prevent | doubt that the sudden action on the | Pourfales, attache of the embassy, on| Prairie was cut off by the explosion Tonight after five o'clock when ml‘} ha df"( 7 04 m';"‘u:_ ds° g her- | its being md and it was in the effort | part of the American government was |‘March 27. and no particulars were available Walter returned home frem work he | S¢lf immediately - to have it ruled out without reading | the Tesult either of unofficial repre- from there by wire. Y was unable to gain entrance to the Woed Was About 50 Years Old. that the most interesting remarks were | Sentations by foreign governments re- President Taft Left for Atlanta at Only S Work in Plant. house, all doers and windows being made. garding the situation in Mexico, or | 4.20 p. m. yesterday in the new steel nly Seventeen at Work in Plai Jocked. He broke into a cellar Win-|anq was a lifelong resident of thig Murphy of Danbury Offered It. the intimation that several of the Eu- | private car Ideal, which was attached It is known, however, that the town dow, but was unable to get on to the | ,jace is wife was 47 years old and @ resolution was offered by Rep- | JOPSan. Powers were sounding each | to the first section of the Birmingham | was almost demolished. There were first floor, the cellar door being lock- | hefore her marriage was a Miss Cora tive Murphy of Davoucy. abe. | other as to the desirability of making | special of the Southern Railway. alarming reports that the number of ed, Smith and while not born here had immediatel; headed off reading L R e T i Boy’s Body Found in Bed, RO AL her home okt -of hae T ‘I'.T olaim of Ypeaded o feading|at any early date. At any rate the| Mayer Gaynor of New York, in a|ported from Kendsha that only seven- e then secured & ladder and climb- | She leaves a sister, Mrs. Mary Bliss, Scott so ruled and said th matter reached the administration ‘in{characteristis letter, rebukes T. M.|teen men were at work in the plant #d into & second-story window, step- | livi: T Now Haven. could not b tdered b. such a way as to call for the most de- { Hall, a prominent Brooklyn socialist, | at the time of the explosion and twelve (g ADto & HORNT whcn e fotna e R g & twethirds vote. . o ored save by | cisive mort of action. for “trying to force -things down the|of them had been accounted for. E,,‘”un.,, brother lying dead in bed A 22-Calibre Revolver. “Theme The necessity for this swift mobiliz- | mental throats of othors,” and advises | poii.¢ Trains Sent frem Chicago. With & bullet Bols in Sack 'of one ‘car The revolver with which the shoot- Insists Upon Its Being Read. | ation was seized upon by the war de- | him to “cool off.” 8 and his mother on the floor beside the | N8, Was done was a 22-calibre affair Representative Thoms of Waterbury | partment as a Heaven-sent opportun- 3 - ¥ Racine received intelligencé that the bed, . unconscious, with the - blood | 30 belonged to Walter Wood. Four | insisted that the resolution be read be- | ity to answer critics both in and out According to Advices Which Reached | number of dead wuulld run as high as flowing from a wound in her left of the five chambers had been @is- | fore the point could be made. He did | Of .congress. and that _interpretation | the Brooklyn navy yard, the govern- | forty, bu‘t this could nlot iI:e kdauf- pide. 'The revolver with which the | Charsed. When the body of the elder | not think that the republican leaders | was put upon the movement. ment has captured the thief who stole glined. W 3: tacel;lmcy. B t lt ¥ nnom #hooting had been done was lying on Wood was discovered, it. was lying | had eny system of telepathy whereby | Means -Preservation of Monroe Dec- | $45,000 from .the strong box of the bat- | however, that t ? nuim er of inju ghe floor near her hand. with his head in-a- cleset,’ the lower | he could determine the character of the i tleshijp Georgia. at Guantanamo bay |is large and relief trains were at once v Fl:;l.l"l Body Lying on Fioor. ":n o the‘ pely: extend‘;ngno’r tete ;:o lutiiton ?‘fi{'?fl"‘:gm? Fort g e - It was rewuenT:d at the state de: seferal woekn D, S e Ry l§enosha. b e room. It was covered with a bed | knew, it might be in the form of a pe- - k P l ‘Summer Tourist Rates from Chicage Nearly Every House Damaged Haven was to pay a bill at a store N = there and he also said that his moth- | House Resolut er was subject at times to a slight Vote in Lorimer Case. Coroner Mix was summoned from New Haven, and it is uudersi:‘ood that oy e e aci late tonight Mrs. Wood regained con- | ,¢ion condemning th = & & e Imperilie rew o e strande e vote of Sena- | surrectionary movement, which has o e 2 sciousness long enough to answer | q.o Bulkeley ang Brandegee in sus- | disturbed conditions generally _for st er Manchuria, at _Llnle Island, questions and that there is a chauce | taining Senator Lorimer in ear wil com; fig] Y<- SEie boen mved SN ue eubers of Hlinois. nearly a yvear thout aci plishing mem 108 Jiqe xpcovery. Republican Members Fight Resolution, | 30Ything like the formation of a re- gfmfl}e St R sponsible independent government will s members to secure action on a reso-{ ©f contraband supplies cut off, the in- Mr. Weod was about 50 years old representations to the United States Al these di i tition, which any citizen i titled to | partment that the United States must -rmadby e::t &c::lfl:i;]nm: covering that had been ‘taken rrom m, ny n is entitled to o Atlantic coast points will be in- Three carloads of dynamite exploded. other - bedroom. present at any time. act and act -quickly if the Monroe doc-. ..PMr-. Wood. Makes No Confession. Banks Calls It “Fool” Resolution. 1';1: e;::sigoub:mw:nmme%y f:or:‘g uu tonight Mrs. Wood is in & semi | Mr. Banks retortea that he did not| the United:States for protection under state and it is wnderstood | need telepathy to inform him that it|that doectrine. = The forelgn interests ['association meeting.’ - which contadins 700 residents, has been mado no confessions what- | Was_‘new business.” That is enoushl|in the republic are not. however, to —_— . padly damaged, and some of them have “the goroner or medical exam- | for him. ‘It is merely one of these | e compared with the American caple| 'The Tentative Outline of a Contract | been utterly demolished. . |matters of fool business that crep out|tal invested there, so_that after all | which the Panama railroad will offer | Reports from the country ten miee from tims to time on that side of the | the step to. bring about more tranquil | ite co-carriers between Pacific and At- | distant are to the effect that houses house,” he said. conditions in Mexico has to do prin- | lantic ports was_determined upon -by | even that far from the explosion were creased this.year, according to an an- | It Will be impossible for many hours to ni,g:cem-em %ouow‘lng a co‘n!erence of | tell accurately the number the dead. eagtern lines at the Central Passenger | Nearly every house in the village Owing te the fact that Walhrfl @ECRETARY FISHER TO !ovsn $12,000,000 FOR Thoms Comes Back With Heated Re- | cipally with Americans and American | Secretary Dickinson after a hearing of | thrown down. TAKE OATH MONDAY. TRAVELING EXPENSES. tort. intekegta. _ |the intereats involved. Only One Known to Be Killed. s comieuiind Representative Thoms in answer de- | Protests of Neutrality Law Violations o i It is believed inevitable that manmy nt Calls for a Test of Economy | clared that his side of the house did | Just what part the Diaz government | n oo THarc wera it e mery oame; 15,00 | people have been killed or injur in Federal Departments. not have any monopoly in the matter | has played in recent events has not wife’ of Guarpare Alnor, one of the throughout the surrounding counts otT“hfl:ol rss;ll‘uuonné' S = yet be:: );i;scloled. From time to time'| rincipal, tenors of the Transcontinen- | SO, far as knowFr‘l a%t ?I‘Tent' how!eve ‘Washington, March 9—Walt, : Washin, March 9. — Tepublican side o e house protes ve been made to Washing- > i but one man, E. S. ompson, fore Tithors e mawly Appointed seretary | Tatt nAVIE laren From the maaent|a fow to its credit. He would cite the | ton regarding the violation of the net: | Gibes P secoliPany, which recently | oy Gi°the Giaze mill, was killsd out- of the interior, eucceeding Secretary | the board which has been investigat- | Fesolution passed a few days prior and | trality laws along the border. Such|ih. world when its chief woman singer | [ight. Charles Brady, superintenden Ballinger, who resigned, will m'ohfily ing the question of economy in the ad- | Which hld its origin on the republican | protests, however, would not ordinari- {3 am i and Joseph Flint, the . engineer, are take the oath of office Monday morn- | ministration of tha-. govermment de- 'm’ that allowed the state to venture | Iy call out such a force as has been badly injured and may die. E ing. Mr. Fisher will spend tomerrow | partments that more than $12,000,000 |23 expenditure of $20,000 for an inves- | rushed toward Texas and the Mexican | Migs Gertrude Pesler is a good school | The cause of the explosion is met with Mr. Balliuger, acquainting him- | was expeunded in 1910 for traveling ex- unfifll such as the state of Massachu- | frontier during the past 48 hours. It|ieacher and resourceful. She teaches | KROWN at present. self with the affairs penses, has informed Secretary of the | 6Lt had held and which had produced | is considered probable that the Mexi- | a¢ Prospect, near Battle Falls, southern The Plant a Wreck. of the t and its bureaus and m— Treasury MacVeagh that he would like can government may have indicated to nothing. - 0| Oregon, where children of scheol age The lant hich ed 199 acres ey als. to miake his “Initial test of economy O ‘The speaker finally declared the res- | European powers its inability.to put east T e After Mr. Fisher takes the oath he|the question of traveling: expenn-.! "™ | slution out of order. an end to the disorders so long as suc- :;2 3?:!::& ‘rs lwlntetx,-ve \’w“n‘ll:cte(}l:xeanl:l: e R e e cor was- given the revolutionist forces Will Have Assisance of Judge Ballin- ger for a Few Days. Pre: will have the services of Judge Bal-| He has asked Mr. MacV. t ¥ Jinger for a few days until he becomes | the travel vouchers for his dopartmons | WOMEN SOB AT TRIAL in the United States. Tot i oty hrce oniiren and 3| AMOS WAS GENERAL OF fully familiar with his new duties. for the fiscal year 1910 analyzed in ac- OF MRS. EDITH MELBER. No Longer Any Mystery. make the required five she borrowed THE “NIGHT RIDERS’” CLAN. Assistant Secretary Piérce to Resign.| cordance with a plan suggested by the | - Whatever the inner and diplomatic | tW0 of her nieces for the winter. t S - | economy beard. He expressed his de- . moves ay have been, there is Witnesses Testify as to His Leadership I ohr‘fifif"g‘:ree““wm’ m sire to have this analysis ready for him P";”“‘"°" Opens in Case of Woman [ 10788 Ay D poge on tiie part of the| . Thursday Was the Wedding Day .of of Lawle: today that as a matter of courtesy to| DY the time he returns from his south- | Chaarged With Murder of Her Boy. | . gministration to cloak the movement | Marion Dow and James G. Blaine, 3, Mr. Fisher he would tender his resig- 0’;’:“9 on which he started today. ATha: N. Y. March' 9.—S of troops with mystery. 5 the ceremony being performed at the Hopkinsville, Ky., March 9.—Sanford nation soon after the latter assumes 2 economy board was formally. or- ny, cores of Troops Begin to Arrive, Dow residence, 77 Marlboro street, |'Hall, the second of the confessed charge of the department. *“Whether | 5ahized at the White House.today by | Woman who packed the court room to- s 3 Boston. William T. Bull, who on Wed- | “night riders” to testify in the trial 1 shall remain in my present position,” the selection of Dr. F. E. Cleveland as | 48y at the trial of Mrs. Edith Melber, The first detachment of troops from | nesday closed his homs at Newport, | here of men alleged to have been lea. said Mr, Plerce, “is a matter for the president and M. O. Chance, auditor of | ®obbed audibly a&s Assistant District | outside of the department of Texas | was present. There were no guests|ers in the raid on this city in 1907, new Secretiry 1o dscidar the postoffice department, as secretary: | Attorney Alexander, sketching the life| to respond to the orders for the mobi- | outside the family, owing to the recent | gwore today that he knew Dr. David Mr. Fisher arrived im Washington| W- F- Willoughby, assistant director of { history of the frail little woman, told | lization of the army division at San | death of the groom’s mother, Mrs. Wil- A. Amos, defendant in the current early today. Later he went to the| the c2nsus. was made a member of the | Of her marriage, the birth of her boy| Antonio have begun. to arrive there|liam T. Bull. The young couple will | cage, was “general” of the “night rid- White House, whers hé conferred with [ COmmission, and three vacancies re- |2 Short time after the death of her|and ‘it is estimated that tomorrow at|sail Saturday for a honeymoon tour in Band. presi Secretary Bal main to be filled. husband, her several love affairs and | the latest all of the soldlers, even |, a. ers' 7 clan. 'n—?: did r?:: “;ffdn the offices .‘3;" '::,rg _— finally of the alleged incidents leading | those from far-off Wyoming and Mon- L i =% % Arthul;v ggove:: a 2;03;“ olf“Aflx;g interior department. VACANT COMMISSIONS up to the murder of little Georgia, with | tana, will have pitched their tents on|{ - Robert C. Buttolph, son of James D. m°ggeo"n Taat aui m“e’“r' o"*‘n hé SR Evidence for Suits Against “Conspir: IN THE U. S. ARMY, | "2i¢h 8he is charged. the military reservation at Fort Sam | Buttolph, who lives in the Annette| today and swore that he was employed - i - Prosecutor’s Opening Address. Houston. apartments near Riverside Drive, New | by Dr. Amos and Guy Dunning to or- i Over 200 of Rank of Second Lieutenant | _“On the afterngon of January 9. he | Three Armored Cruisers Sail. York, was to have been married 10| ganize night rider lodges. Secretary Ballinger spent most of . said, “she came to Albany. When the| New York, March 9.—The three ar-| Miss Leona Bennell. Ten o'clock ar- |~ He testified that he was in the Hop- the day in discussing public land mat- to<Be Filled. Doy ‘waa refused admision to the orphe | moroq m,;;e,s Which for the past]rived. and then 10.15 a. m. ‘but no | kinsville raid and was near Amos ters with senators and representa- ‘Washington, March 9.—There will be | 22 35ylum hie was heard to say as they | three days have been loading coal, bridegroom. Mr. Buttolph, who =0t | when the “general” was wounded. tives. more than two hundred vacancies in | 9¢Sceaded the steps: ‘Mother, mother, | stores and ammunition for a rapid trip | 270und at 4 p. m., eaid that he stopped | Cooper, near the close of his testi- ‘r‘:‘l':‘;u::;t’gti:h:?fi’é?u mt-b:g: the grade of second lieutenant in the | YOU Must take me now; nobody w. ill| o the gulf of Mexico, weighed anchor | 2t the cafe to bid a brief and happy | mony, sald that John Kelly, one of ths i by xS g ieu to some of his bachelor friends. he defense, led the Cadiz United States army to be filled b: > ke_"’l’ me. at the naval station off Tompkinsville, ad: attorneys for the defense, collected. :mnvm be used &igugi pointment between now and the fast oz | _ “That night the mother returned tol S T, shortly after four o'elock this| He 4id not wake up in time to keep his | squad to Gracey the night of the Hop- “arch umsivlml.l it 'could Tot be|July. The war. department was 'n- is:t:::w};na;fig;e h’;{:;‘?‘?{n:‘fd oS afterngon, ~and - soon steamed out g v v klgs;i]leTmlg. S e £ day i i v: 3 2 y lad'lay § ¢ 1l vS. SR e ohn Tucker o G learned when he would begin action or | {0eq 1oday that, in conformity with | 5¢ "5, "he * open field, on the cold| 1 amy e JTATTOws SWINDLED FRENCH-CANADIANS | ncd that he saw Cooper hers the night Boudreau Uud the M-nh to Inform Them of Bogus Legacies. who would be the first one prosecuted. | % orders, promotion boards have as- | Sut W €10 OPER BEC O LIS GO0 Cruisers Leave Puget Sound. A personal reception Will be ten-|Soibled af all of the larger posts to fhrough five cold winter mights and| Seattle, Wash., March 9—The cruis- or hibaen fonatode: Pallinger upon his return (0 |51y number of officers below the rank | toward the brilliant suniight through | et West Virginia and Maryland, in COLOR LINE DRAWN BY [ ¢ i ari ve cold winter 8. C fu‘.f&’ifi'{fle in the various branches of Tolls of wcm‘:,. Coutassion Sou‘;herl.adnd. ilel!t. the féuze: sound navy | Bostom, March 9.—The postoffice au- LOCOMOTIVE FIREMEN. i 3 3 " Mrs, | Y2rd at daylight for San Diego. thorities received word today of t = o 'R'TMJNU:::D THE TR ACK th?ntt li!fiyac:x::xemt}::nl;:g;h;s:r&zlrce: Méfiéfififii‘zeio "ifiiuigfieffof ‘\{;:i News of Ingurgent Defeat. arrest in Manchester, N. H.,yqf J. 1’}2 Go On Strike Because Negroes Ar.t Not vacancies in the grade of second lieu- | arrest and subsequent confession, al-| Salt Lake City, Utah, March 9.—The | Boudreau on a charge of using the| Confined to Slow and Local Trains. tenant. leged to have been made to:the author- | Mormon church authorities are in re- | Mails in a scheme to defraud many Hartionk Patsior Uit Up Soul. All B Theseé places will be filled, first, by | ities of that city. The defense object- | ceipt of a telegram from the Mormon | French-Canadians in New England, to| = Cincinnati, March roh 9—White firemen sepgers Given' a Shaking Up. | the appointment of the graduates of | ed to the admission of the confession, | colony of Dublan, Mexico, giving par- | Whom it is said he - wrote regarding|of the Cincinnati, New Orleans and . this year's first class at the West Point | but the court decided to admit it. ticulars of the insurgent defeat near | 3lle8ed legacies due them. Texas railroad struck tonight because New Britain. Conn., March 9.—or- | Military academy cond, by the | Six witnesses ail from Sehenectady, | Casas Grandes, It says: The mam.| He was held by the United States|of a controversy over negro firemen. rie Dunn of Hartford, a peddler, was|award of commissions to non-commis- | testified today. ber of federal troops engaged was|COmmMissioner in Manchester in $1,000 | The strike was in response to an order bedly cut about the face and body: and | sioned officers and privates of the rei When Howard Kirk told the story of | 1,500 and the insurrecto force 1,000, |for the May term of the federal grand | by a committee of the Brotherheod of the remaining passengers of a trolley | ylar army who have successfully pass- | his relations with Mrs. Melber, - he| while the rebel loss was two hun- | Jury at Portsmouth. Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen. car meverely shaken up tonight wien |oq competitive examinations, and, last. | said he had called on her from {wo to! dred and the federal one hundred.” L s wl ot the forward trucks of the car jumped | |y there will be still room for the ap- | four times a week, ant she told him| Federals Drive Rebels from Pass. | SEYEN KILLED BY A the status of negro firemen, . The union the tracks and the car was zun into Y | pointment of a number of civilians to | the child was that of her husband's @Gy & CALIFORNIA SNOWSLIDE | 2sserts that the working agreement a work car which was following close | the army. brother’s wife, but later he admitted Mexicali, Mexico, March Rebel with the road provides that negroes heh! e — that she told him the boy was her own. | S¢OUts sent out from Mexicali to Pica- | H. of H H_yér_—El ctric C: are ineligible to any work except en The accidsnt happened on Jubilee| NEw YORK DRUGGISTS Kirk related the circumstances lead- | CR0S Dass rushed into camp °today | "oWwer House of o Electric Lom-{,ca]l and slow freight traing and on street and Dunn was on the rear plat- in; up to her departure for Rochester,| 2Rd reported a skirmish with federal pany Also Destroyed. yard engines. The raflroad disputes of the passenger car, inbound SOLD SMUGGLED GOODS. saying she wanted him to go with her, { Soldiers last night.~ Two insurrectos this and asserts that their nesro em Hartford, when it 'was struck by # e but he @id mot want to £0. ’l were wounded. The rebels withdrew Carson, Nev., March 9.—Seven men | ployes are entitled to- promotion the he work car. Flying glass from the | Rind, After Sentence, Confides Names 80- from the pass. The skirmish is sup- | and women were killed, several per-|same way as the white men. About vestibule was responsible for his cuts. to District Attorney. posed to presage- the federal advance | sons were hurt, and the power-house | 229 firemen are on the roster of the His condition is net serious. NEW YORK APARTMENT on Mexicali from Ensenada. - of the Hydro Electric company at | road. New York, March 9.—William Rind, HOUSE PILE OF RUINS Jordan, Cal., was destroyed yesterday CALUMET ABSORBS OSCEOLA. | first oficer of the American lner St » $115000 Blaze at Enfield. s t::g;g:gdu- according to a mes- | goLDIERS KILLED sl = e Beent] 4 Roof Collapsed, Carrying Eight Floors| Enfield, Conn., March 9.—A large Steckholders of Latter Cempany Faver {l::;e“:vl:gv {:ngfigtlap?éfi'iggne%ynpfi: 'Wi!h It fobacco warehouse owned by Thomp- .lr)‘:;&:sldu du:r:z;ngma t:; fll‘)ll:lx;:, 3:3 ON WAY TO TEXAS. Merger on Ballets. wrongdoing. ¢ i s0s Grand and occupied by Starr{ gitches connected with it. The new | Car of Horses Perish in Fire on Troop He gave the United States district | New York, March 9.—The roof of an | Brothers, was destroyed by fire to-| power plant was intended to furnish Train. Boston, March 9.—The proposed ab- | attorney’s office informationi which he | ¢ight-story apartment house in course night with a loss estimated at $15,000 electricity to central Nevada miging ' ° 2 100,000 on the declared involved several large drug |Of comstruction at Nos. 12 and 14 East|on the building and § CRMPS. 7 g ; firme in this city In alleged :t::"g.flickin: 87th street, collapsed late today, and | Stock. Seventy hands were employed. 4 hoge;h‘znh;l;;x; mlvl.’ M—Slng ;e:::o::! 7 Heola M in smuggled opium and cocaine. The in falling carried with it all of the| The fire is thought to have’ aurted in President Diax ip Good Heaith, b i arat ara sobh ¥ 2.8 . tion confession will be investigated by gov- eight floors jmmediately below it and | the boiler room. ; do, T h 9. —Miguel h&vemhe‘n e e whlchmnflgi— 4 ernment detectives. some thirty ef more.tons of concrete = ml"e e 'exas, Mar “1“ in’ this ‘eity, | nated In the s ol 724 3 R PR S e and twisted dronwork. Nuuvm Wiakes 64 Miles an Hour. m'mm dm”' d the ”tn“flowlng iy Fd S nere i ’Mm “‘“‘P,m s / Crisp to Be Champ Clark’s Cleri. Twehty gen were working ‘on the| Mourmelon, France, March 9.—In a | from Mexico City, dated today: - iy At ey el Oita. tomight. second floor at the time. Four of them Americus, Ga., March 9—Charles | are umaoeoudted for and it is be. ] LiEbt in a monoplane today with twol| “President Diaz is enjoving the best mn. train was the first section of an ; ert. f health. 'gwh-l en route from Fort Leav- Crisp, son of former Speaker Crisp | Jieved t they perished in the 1- g of : w L, |arm of the national house of representa- | lap Al ufe Tealiams o o0 record. - for- i :’l‘ 7 ‘ENRI C. CREEL. enworth to San Antonio, i a § Xkilometres . -at. a ’ P 3 m"..p c;:,k ,,:‘k; tte;e:;:n;rl the speed of ‘103 wl'fl (64) miles an Ssumas MasManus a Benedict. Steamship Arrivals. : J New York, m’—aumu At Newcastle: ‘March 9, Kursk, uto «9- house, offerine him the place of house | Montgomery Wins Wesleyan Debate. 2 a par value ot tarlinmentarian and clerk to the Middletown. Conn.. March 9:—The ""—_“""‘_‘ Manus, well known as a writer of m.h from New York. stories, and Miss Catalina Violante | At Naples: March §, Amerika, from L haa f the mine ‘st spealier. Judge Crisp immediately ac- | annual debate at Wesle;1n university W, s of the . g d | cepted th intment and was in- | was won tonight by Montgom- i hnt ter of ‘the first. ’:‘- New York, structed. to" Tep 193 o iden m ‘were msnhd t Genoa: March 9, Cedrie, from structed to report in ery, 1911, of Stnm!or@ 'he prize is 31 for.duty, valued at $6i

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