Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 24, 1911, Page 1

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'URGES THE CAPTURE OF CHIHUAHUA Tells Maders There Must jo, Tex:, March 23.—With or seven thousand re- of an order San Xy 5 General Carter making & sudden move, and a stat cristl of the u re is a definite show of uility by May 1, the recently ed war cloud. loomed larger today. 3 Madere Warned to Get Busy. Dr. Caricristi felt sure enough of|. his facts to to Francisco I ary leader, who, it, was within of Chihuahua. DFr, insurrecto leader to them 'in a l‘?ort , tha revolution- latest report had urged the ‘a decisive 8 May 1, for, he 3 3 not wait ionger than that for. gquiet to be re- stored, business . ed and traffic over the to secure.” The couriler d d from hera to-}: day with Dr. Cea 's Jetter. It is not an order, for eto iz the .su- ‘preme leader, but .is in the nature of a report on the meaning of the mobili- zation of Amsrican troops in Texas. Caricristi Has Been Investigating. | Most of Dr. Caricristi’s inves i was done at Washington, visited Fl1 Paso and’ Laredo " coming to San Antonio. An inkling| 259 that something unusnal was afoot reached him some time before the fa- mous Paris interview with Jose Yves Limantour, = MexXican ~ minigter -of finance, and he proceeded at onge to ;vuhgngtun. In an interview today e sa Knows Taft is Determined. “Of course, ar _federal tri- umph in Chihushua, & » ot| communications and . ; m e 8 Hnow “absotately that - Brémdsat know absolutely t - by is determined that order shall be ra- stored and quickly, by one side or the other, in Mexico, with the alternativ. of intervention. : ~Yesterday ‘bullets, said to come fro; | Mexican federsl - ars | detachment of United States soldiers. Sovernment oMcar. todey raportioe i Py T4 alleged occurrence and adding that m 1 Amc‘l:ufl’ were . compelled to seek General Duncan Deubts Story, el had report. Madero Issues Another Deoree. e e y conni % # mulgation or enfercement of mmt smuspension of e¢onstitutional guoran- teds by the Mexican government will | - h‘gyvg:fllllrt-gn‘ble ag ?m- cording to e decree of 'mduo.»l. LEAPED FROM HOTEL = > BALCONY'AT NAPLES. New ¥ork Girj Sustained Fatal Injuri by Her Mad Act, ¢ aples, March "23—Miss ~ Cornelia Mezrvle of New Work, who arrived here a month ago with her parents, in' the hope that the climate would be bemnefi-. cial to her health, threw herself from the baloony of the: Grand hotel: today and was fatally injured, dying without Mezrole and Ci Tosether todny; S SIS the oot together y, e ug the course of the meal the daughter, saying t she winted to go to Toom, left 'her:fi. ents. was nothing to entered her room, on the third floor. She went at once to the balcony and vast herzelf over, falling with great force. Employes of -the otel and passersby rushed to hetassistance and “ative. BOSTON WOMAN KILLED' . WITH A COAL SHOVEL Avoid Intervention—Has Been Investigating at Wash- by | here, Dr. 5 &po 4n which human life is at stake. constitutional guarantees which assure| 8o Thoroughly Riddled S7e Can Be y. miles of the city | I8 t] UrEd .| crude fortress. ireated. = . Alse Against the Surgeon General of | 0f 325,000 each, one providing for an- i ;qr“dw‘from Brazilian ports via Trini- | wl - sailed for. Nln‘ London, March 23.—King George to- .day. created ‘War Secretary Haldane a viscount, “ The elevation of the secre- pt:zd t: ‘the peerage had m antiei- S a move W len the government in the house of lords. workmen er Sew- ing Machine works near Kiibowie, about eight miles from' this city, are on strike. The trouble arese over a dispute in regard to the wages paid in -| the cabinet polishing department. Madero, the provisional president, is- Paris, March 23.—While an unisually sued today-through his representative | briliant micareme procession was tra- asquer Gomez. - versing ;tlhe e:‘treet:h todag’ok with tihu(: 3 queens showering the onlookers W' Suspension of Guarantees Unlawful.|flowers, a monoplane piloted by M. The decree sets forth that the sus-| Vedrine and the new dirigible Torres, fon of constitutional guarantees as | built for the Spanish government, ex- affecting the safety of human life is{ecuted evolutions above the boule- not ‘lawful according to article 29 of | vards. The airmen in turn pelted the the Mexican constitution, which pro-{ queens with violets. 'All Paris par- m for thetsnux‘):malfin of constitu- |'ticipated in the spectacle. mal guarantee - cases except o e s 3 THE OLD TEXAS NOW décree contends that “no author- ST T wer i MgRico i Hiland el - OUT OF COMMISSION ‘Be .a Decisive Victory to ‘the lives of men, -natives or foreigners, whatever be their nationality.” . ‘Nervousnees at Juarez. Juarez, ‘Mexico, March 23.—The peo- Used No More for Naval Purposes. ‘Washingtoy, Marcn 23.—Tw> broad- sides from the battleship New Flamp- ‘ple of Ji % were kept at a high ner- | Shire were all that was n:icessary to vous tension today by knowledge that | Put the old battlesaip n Marcos insurréctos had been seen near the city | formerly the Texas, of Spanish war in large numbers and by reports that| fame, out of commission. Had the an attack on the place was.to be made | San Marcos been an enemy, th: bat- -of a general revolutionary move- | tle probably would have endel almost . h included an attack on Chi- | before it began, accurate was the . City, 2256 miles south of here. -ll:iz:_ ofithe ,mS 1:: tbll‘eXEh\? Hamy Insurrecto Ban. ppea shire in peake y is weel i s This is the consensus of opinio: A band af insurrectos appearéd along | the naval and ordnance officers the Rio Gr: returned to Washington today. « ‘ande opposite Soccorro, mmm miles east of Juarez, Intention Was to Refloat Her. Anchored on a flat which zllywed As soon as he h ‘her only two feet in which 10 setils, it is conceded to be 2n open question “whether the damage would ha.e sent caused anxiety in Juarez, where armed | the ship to the bottom had she been gsentincls were kept on the roofs. The| In deep water., The intention of the oldlglnhn church, with rifle loopholes | havy department was to refloat the knocked in the walls, looked like a}San 0s, patch her up and use er in the fleet practice to be heid off Virginia capes early next month. ‘The board in a preliminary and un- Bicial report, however, has lared mmé effects of the Nem D- / ¥ 3 s fire was so astound as to a_scouting "’“""Le‘:‘??ddfifl Unit- | jegve the San Marcos merely g:n mase ed: W%m has been ‘reported 10| of metal and as such as of no further W'fii ms - of d'rrno» H, Third | naval use. Th hulk probably will be 5. i, commanm left where it is, to be hauled away of the United by some dealer in junk. tes troops statiomed at Presidio. Captain 'Williams is investigating the g MAMMOTH FUNERAL o WITHOUT A CORPSE It was reported th 03 were in the band. - The movement of the federal troo; Rurales Invade United States. Presidip, Texas, March 23.—That a m of Mexican rurales from the | garrison at Ofinga, while on to a dozen or more in- 0 rurales, bearing arms, dust Novel Ceremonies. -New York,. Marcl 23—A faneral.pas rade of 10,000 person out a was sanctioned today by Mayor Gay- nor upon application of orthodox Jew- ish worshippers at ‘the Old ~Christie Street synagogue, recently destroyed by ‘fire, ‘The ceremonial will mark g rne‘lei bufl:l ogr Sunday next of sacred R . cs taken from the ruins and is said < ‘Relations” between Americ:: Mexican customs officers are daily be- coming leas harmonious. America. Ancient books of the Hebraic law and gold and silver ornaments from fell among a | Jerusalem will be conveyed in coffins in ‘the vanguard of the processfon, Two hundred carriages, it was an- nounced, will follow the hearses, while an army of the orthodox believers will 5 - oeed trudge on foot. A religious ceremony 5 3 will be held over.the relics in a syn- es, Mexico, March 20.— | agogue and the marchers will then Texas, March 23.—sSome | wend their way to Bayside cemetery, % ion by state department at| Brooklyn, where the coffins will be ashington towards the protection of | interred. A white marble shaft is to Americans- in jail here is eagerly | be reared amove-the mounds. awaited by the prisoners. Of the 17 S it o e g g prisoniers classed as insurrectos, two | WOMAN. LEFT $75,000 TO mfldi'mnnl. one is an Italian, and fourteen say they are citizens of the PROYIDE FUN FOR POSR. Money to Be Devoted to Summer Ex- Dnited States. The men are appre- hensive that they will be kept lupja.il cursions, Christmas Difiners and Presents. rifles, ‘Whether the firing was intentional has not been detérmined. American Prisoners Not Dis- indefinitely and will not havi until’ after the war. s Are Being Well Treated. Judrez, Mexico, 'March 23.—United States Consul Edwards said tonight - Brockton, Mass., March 23.—Seventy- five ithousanghdollars for summer ex- he had recelved no r cursions, ristmas dinners = andé@ names of the Americ:prr;ri‘;lov:]’.‘jstg: Christmas presents for the poor was Casa; randes. His only instructions formally given to the city of Brockton from ‘ashington, he saj were to tonight by the executors of the will of investigate whether the men had been | t2€ }ate Mrs. Clara B. Snow, widow of :l)::t. He had received assurances that Gfewrtg-e = hsnow, Zataiecly o shie misn- men * were aliv ufacturer here. S s il The announcement of the bequest was made at_the city council meeting by the executors of the Snow estate, and the gift was accepted. The money, which is to be held .in trust by the city UNITED STATES CONSUL. | treasurer and the sinking fund ecom- missioner, is divided into three funds COMPLAINT AGAINST Trinidad. nual summer excursions-for the peor children of the city, another %rovidlng New York, March 23.—Thi; . | for Christmas dinners for the city's sehgers from the British m:,:;;‘ rff:;_ poor, and tha third for Christmas gifts nyson,- whieh reached New York yes- |10 the poer children. $5,000 SHORTAGE IN NAVAL PAY OFFICE Chief Commissary in Solitary Con- the Barbados, announced today that they had prepared protests to, be forwarded to Secrétary Knx and to the Earl of Crewe, secretary of state for ‘the ‘colonies, in London, against and | to be the first of its kind ever held inf aileged inhuman action of the surgeon menl of Trinidad and indifference of nklin D. Hale, United States consul there. é ", Smalipox Patients Rejected. The surgecn general is charged with 10 _permit - the Tennyson to place two smallpox patients from the ship's steerage in quarantine at Port Au Spain, His answer to the captain’s requést, the passengers assert, was that there was bubonic plague in the ¢ity -and titat the authorities did not want the added danger of smallpox. Consul Hale, when appealed to by American passengers, it is alleged, sent word that he could do nothing The Aniericans ‘feel that Be should have vieited the vessel or sent his represent- .. The Tennyson, barred from Port”Au Spain, placed its two infecteg ‘passengers in quarantine at Barbados, making the vovage, it is charged, at great risk to infection to the passen- -Signers of the protests include , Spanish minister to CARNEGIE READY. TO GO BEFORE GRAND JURY ; finement and Others Under Restraint. ST L ~ Vallejo, Cal., March 23.—Owing to the alleged discovery of a shortage of $5,000 in the accounts of the pay of- fice on the United States receiving gnip Independence, no-omne connected with that office is permitted to leave the vessel without the consent of the executive officer, it was learned to- day. The shortage is said to include money.-and stores. Chief Commissary Steward-Heilpren is in'solitary confinement in the brig, pending an investigation. The pay: office has been in charge of Paymaster Arthur Pilpin .'for fifteen months. o FOR MANUFACTURE: OF X . COUNTERFEIT DIMES Man . angd® Wife 'Arrested by Secret - “in-large gquantities. mo-tdeomp!m -outfits .. and : stamping ma- ,was found: with-the ~Arrivals. - £ - Havre: March 23, L Prov >, " March ' 23, Franconia, 5 mfin&h 28, Celtic, from |1 “ MURDER LIST. £ ;e‘ James F_< Civanaugh, -Acsused of Crime, - Also Has Two ‘Wounds— Police Doubt Man’s Story. ord, Conn., March 23.—One more murder was added to. the list committed in the state in the past few wesks tonight when Mrs. Lillian Burns died in the Hartford hospital from the effects of two bullet wounds in the head.. James F. Cavanaugh, who the police say did the shooting, but who denies.it, is in the same hcspital with a superfictal wound in the scalp and a ‘bullet hole in the left hand. - d by Her Husband. Mrs. Burns, who is said to be the wife of a railroad man, has been liv- ing at :d, ‘boarding house on Ruangg street ai it is-afleged, was desert by her husband three weeks ago. Her age is given as 21 years. Cavanaugh is an employe of the New York, New Haven and :Ifa.rt.rqrd railroad, and for a ‘year has been boarding at 90 Ann street. Ha is 31 years old.. Where he came from to this city is mot known. % 8hooting in Cavanaugh’s Rooms. Cavanaugh met Mrs. Burns, the po- .lice say, about two months ago, and tonight he took her to his boarding house and told his landlady that he wished to take her to his room for a few minutes, as he was going to leave the city and wished Mrs. Burns to have some of his belongings. They went up stairs ahd a few minutes later re- volver shots were heard. Several roomers in the house rushed up to Cavanaugh’s room, which is on the third floor, but found the door locked. “Jealousy Did This,” Said Cavanaugh. 1t was broken in and the.two were found lyisg on the floor. Mrs. Burns was. -unconscious, but Cavanaugh was caressing her, and when the door was broken in said: “Jealousy did this.” ‘The revolver with which the shooting was done was lying at their feet. - ‘Man’s Injuries Not Serious. The two wens taken immediately to the Hartford “hospital,” where it was found that Mrs. Burns had been shot twice, one of the’ bullets entering the back of her head and the other ' the front. - She died a few minutes after she was carried intp- the operating room. ‘An examination of Cavanaugh’s wounds showed them to be only; slight and he was placed under a guard and will be taken later to"the jail n his condition will permit. / Cavanaugh’s Version aof the Affair. :According to tha story which Cava- naugh told the pg d which they say they do not believ th;l}looutgt was,.done . or the room Cayvanaugh says she went to his buregu gnd-took a revolver which was there and said: “It is either one or the other.” He grabbed her, he said, and’in the struggle which fol- lowed he receivied his wounds and then she shot herself. - 5 Bullets. in Ceiling of Room. Thig, the police say, cannot be so, drawing attention to the wound in the back ‘of the weman's head. The bul- lets which the “police Say he intended for himself were found in the ceiling of the room. ° ‘hen the police made a search of Cavanaugh’s effects they found a note in a drawer of 4 bureau which was unsigned but which those who have seen ‘it 'say was in'his handwriting. The note read'as follows: Note in Cavanaugh's Pocket. “Van, Dear Old Pal:- You and Charlie Baker, goodbye. Wish you both knew, but ‘neéver mind. Please see that my gister gets the insurapce and instruct her to pay Mrs. Ahearn $10.” The Mrs. Ahearn mentioned in the note - was the woman with whom Cav- anaugh had been taking his meals. Cavanaugh will probably be given an- other questioning by the police in the morning. ACCEPTS DIRECTORSHIP OF YALE DIVINITY SCHOOL Rev. Charles Reynolds Brown Comes from Oakland, Cal. New, Haven, March 23.—Announce- ment was made tonight that Rey. Charles Reynolds Brown of Oaklan Cal., and for the past year substitute pastor of the Old South church, Bos- tom, had accepted ‘the position of df- rector of the Yale divinity school. The new director is a native of Bethany, ‘W. Va., a gradnate of the University of - Jowa, in the class of 1883, and took his theological degree from Boston university, of which he recently declined the presidency. He is 49 years old. For the past fourteen years he has been. pastor of the First Congregational church, Oakland, Cal, and was active in the relief work aft- er the San Francisco earthquake. OBITUARY. Miss Maria Brooks Poole. Boston, March 23.—The death -of Miss Maria Brooks Poole, a ¥Young missionary at Harpoot, Edstern Tur- wey, on Feb, 2, was announced at the office”.of ‘the - American board of com- missionpers for foreign missions today. Miss Poole died of heart failure fol- lowing an attack of pneumonia. She was a native of New York city, where her father was for thirty years libra- rian of the Twenty-third street branch of the Y. M. C. A Mrs. Austin M. Knight. napolis, Md.,/ March' 23.—Mrs. Austin ‘M. Knight. wife of Capt. Austin M. Knight, U. S. N., died today follow- ing an operation for internal compli- cations. + Her husband, Captain'Knight, was -recently courtmartialed - for the sinking of the monitor Puritan, used by the ‘navy department for = target practiee in°' Hampton Roads. The find- ing aofithe court has not~been.made public. Senator Tillman Feeling Better. " ° Columbia, S. C., March:23.—Unitéd States ‘Senator B. R. Tillman, in re- ‘sponse to an Inquiry - Unio. 7 " The State Department Has Receiv WOrd tuat ail 1s now guiet in son- auras. Hol % ) Sir Hirdm’ Maxim HAs Gone intG the business ~or buliving miitary aero- | planes. TMEmyrn; of Germany was spon- sor at tne iaunching o1 the iaiser, Ger- many’'s nrst turoine pattiesnip. Charles Etienno Lutaud, prefect of the Rnone deparumenti, 0as peen ap- pointed governor general of Algeria. The: Dramatic Production of a Ring as evidence caused a sensation during tne trial of tne Camorrisws in Viterdbo, 1taly. v ' The Will of Charles F. Hoffman of New York shows tnat $200,00v invested .in stocks and bonds in tne panic of 1907 realized $2,225,000. . ~ Robert Bacon, the American ambas- sador to France, conterred with Presi- dent Taft and later was a luncheon guest at the White House. organization to entertain the twelfth “international navigation congress to be held in that city next year. Rear Admiral W. H. Brownson, U. S N., retired, who recently avas seriously ill at Coronado Beach, Cal, has return 2d to Washington much improved in health. ‘Miss dJulia- R. Rogers of Maryland has been appointed a delegate to the international woman suffrage alliance convention to be held in Stockhoim, Sweden. Mrs. F. G. Clemens of Pottsville, Pa., as the result of mistaken identity at Santa Barbara, Cal., received atten- tions intended for Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt. A Troop -of «Cavairy Was Sent on a hurry order to head off a band of Mex- ican cattle rustlers and starved insur- rectos who threatened to make raids on the American side. - Booker T. Washington’s Lawyer de- elares the negro educator was assault- ed becanse he was mistaken for a col- ored man who had attempted to kid- nap the child of Mrs. Albert Ulrich. The Interstate Commerce Commis- sion will begin an investigation on April 19 of rates on import traffic west bounklrom the ports of Baltimore, New York, Boston and Philadelphia. Rear Admiral Charles E. Vreeland has been detailed to represent the nevy at the coronation of King George V. Admiral Dewey declined the appoint- ment because of the length of the jour- ney. W. R. Fuller, Former -President of the Tampa Board of Trade and of the ‘board of public works, has been arrest- ed on a charge of embezzling from the Tampa Fuel company, of which he was president. lsaac 8. Dixom, Who as a fair- headed boy of 15, a bugler of Troop [o7% Seventeenth - lancers, ‘sounded - the charge at Balaklava made immortal by Tennyson, died suddenly at his home, North Everett, Mass. — After a Separation of nearly fifty years, the Rey. George W. Peterson, 66 years old, of Bridgeport, will be mar- ried on next Tuesday evening to the sweetheart of his bovhood days, Mrs. Adelaide P. Beardsley, also 66 years old, of New York. The Finance Committes of the Daughters of the Americdn Revolution has withdrawn. from consideration by the continental congress the proposed amendments to the by-laws including that to take the power away from the national toord and put it in the hands of the executive committee. New England Hardware Daalers. Boston, March 23.—The New Eng- land hardware dealers at their eighteenth convention today -elected Frank BE. Stacy of Springfield presi- dent. Secretary Charles L. Underhill of Somerville and Treasurer Henry M. Sanders wera re-elected. FIVE CONNECTICUT OFFICERS TO GO TO SAN ANTONIO First Group to Be Sent.by War De- partment Will Start April 5. ‘Washington, March 23.—Apportion- ed among the states and territories according to their militia strength, two hundred national guard officers will be sent by the war department to San Antonio, Texas., and 35 to San Diego, Cal., “on April 5, for two weeks’ in- structional service with the mobilized regulars. The department expeets to senda total of 1,000 militia officers to the manoenvres at. federal expense. The number of militia officers from each state in New England authorized by -the department to join the regular troops ‘on April 5, follows: At San Antonio: Connecticut Maine 3; Massachusetts < 11; . Ni Hampshire 2; Rhode Island mont 2. 3 No New England officers are detailed to join the ‘troops at®San :Diego. WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY SUCCESSFUL UNDERGROUND. 5; & e ;- Ver- potash. mines in the North H: mountains, a distance of nearly a mil and a half, at a level of 1,600 feet be. low the surface. 3 The ‘messages were so clearly deliv- ered that the scientists conclude much greater: distances are feasible. The discovery is regarded as ljighly impor- tant in case of mine disasters. m? REVENUE“FROM * . s . STATE’S CONVICT LABOR Director of Wethersfield Prison Op- poses Proposition to‘erk'Good' L5 Hartford, March 23.—Edward_ A. Fauller,;a director of the ~Connecticut son/a ethersfield, -told ‘the ' labor prison bi OV for, the marking of .con-: o ax ds 'in penal institutions 't Grueso ‘entered the’ .. © $5,000° More for: Wright Memorial. |WAR DEPARTMENT UNUSUALLY " EAGER FOR ENLISTMENTS, 'ACCEPTED. UNDER WEIGHT One Fell Four Pounds Short of the Minimum—Another Was an Inch Short, but Both Wers Enlisted. Chicago, March 23.—The war de< partment is so eager to enlist men that in several cases today recruits, who did not come up to the regular physical requirements, were admitted on waivers signed by Adjutant Gen- eral Ainsworth of Washington. Enlisted Mostly for Infantry. Lieut. ¥. R. Kenney, in charge of a recruiting station, said that the waiv- ing of qualifications was unususgl, and an indication that the men were much wanted. Nearly all are enlist~ ed in the infantry. One Four Pounds Under Weight. One of the men admitted today was four pounds below the ‘minimum weight of 128 pounds, and another was five feet three inches tall, an inch shorter than the minimum height. Will Be Sent to Texas. Twenty of the latest recruits tonight Wwere sent to Jefferson barracks, near St. Louis. After a week’s drill, it ix said, they will be sent to Texas. Officers Consider it Significant. Galveston, Tex., March 23.—A flurry of excitement was created at For! Crockett today by the news that the war department had passed the to recruiting officers throughout country to make special effort to more men for the infantry. Many the officers thought the action hat( some significance beyond the mere de< sire of department officers to bri standing infantry regiments up to ful strength. Soldiers Eager for Service. The soldiers are eager for acti: service and would welcome the wol from Washington to embark on th( three transports now here, fully pro visioned and coaled. Four Armored Cruisers Expected. It is reported that the four armore{ cruisers in “Rear Admiral Staunton’ division of the Atlantic fleet are ex« pected to arrive within a few dayi from Guantanamo, Mail for the ves¢ sels continues to accumulate at t! postoffice and the commission hou: are receiving orders for supplies fof them. The impression prevails the cruisers are intended as a convey for the transports. ROOSEVELT DISCUSSES s THE PANAMA CANAL. Says He is Interested in It Bocause He Starged It Berkeley, Cal, March 23.—Speaking at the an; 1 charter day exercisas 1 the Greek theater at the University California ' today, Theodore Roosevel made a plea for higher e@ucation an told how he started the Panama canal. : “I am interested in the Panama canal” he said, “bécause I started it If I had followed traditional, conserva tive methods, I would have submittel a dignified state paper of probably 204 pages to congress, and the debate on it would have been going on yet; buf I took the canal zone and let congresf debate, and while the debate goes on the canal does also.” After speaking at a student rally in Harmon gymnasium tonight and at- tending a smoker given by the Fac- ulty club, Colonel Roosevelt crossed the bay to San Francisco to spend the night at the home of his son, Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. $10,000 FOR LOSS OF ' WIFE’S” AFFECTIONS, -Publisher Harden Receives Verdiet Against William T. Hoops. New York, ~March 23.—A " verict of $10,0090 in favor of Percival L. Harden, a magazine publisher, formerly of Chi- cago, was returned today against Wil- liam T. Hoops for the alienation-of the affections of ‘the now. Mrs. Hoops, who before she obtained a divorce was Mrs. Harden. ] Hoops rose and-shouted “Youre a liar!” during the summing up of Har- den’s lawyer,;.-and .was abaShed when the - court remarked:: “If ‘you say an- other word I'll commit you for con~ tempt ” ' “COTTON POOLERS” WILL ) .HAVE.TQ STAND TRIAL. Judge Noyea v to Quash Second - ConspiracyIndictment. * New.York, March-23.—Judge Noyes of the United ‘ States ciren court handed down a decision today refusing to quash' the second‘“cotton.pool” in- dictment against James A. Patten, Bu. gene G. Ssales,”Frank B. Hayes, Wil- liam P.. Brown and:Coélonel Robert M. “Thompson: He sustained certain tech- nical; contentions “and" dismissed oth- ers. X 5 o R The" indictment charges: conspiracy in restraint-of"interstate ‘trade in cot- ton on 'which the ~defendants must stand trial 3 DANBURY. MAN:FOUND HANGING IN .A BARN me - Discovery” of Employes of Standard Oil Company. Danbury, - Conn.,. . March 23—When employes: of the Standard Ofl company rn occupied by the ns ‘bury* branch of the company tonight, ey found.a fellow employe, Jed G. ilins, hanging: by a s4rope.from a ‘Collins was. 33 ‘years old and mar~ tied, his wife'and two children resid< Ang in Lobdelle, N. Y.~ No: reason for his takipng hisilife:is known. Funeral of David H.'Moffat. ‘Denver, -March ' 28.—Funeral serv- ices for David H. Moffat were -held today at the family home‘after a gen- “tribute™ to *the “ memory: of *the r and railroad builder at the . ‘atate - house, Wl <the 'body lay in state nearly three hours. After serv- ices the body was placed in the fam- ‘ily vault “to await - the - arrival Europe - of - Mr. - Moffat's’ Ne: ven,: March:23.—The gradu- S ities. the Wright memorial

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