Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 31, 1911, Page 1

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'.l\ro OthmfldlfmmGennny—Tvoofthe Prison ers are frpm-New York——md -for Arms and Am- munition at m Paso: active, dealers Federals Take. Woman Prisoner. ‘With the receipt of R. Jacoby, 2016 North Central Minneapolis, Minn. Frankc, 904 Stll!ord street, | Duluth, 0. M-"r::.;u, 950 Nnfih -treet.‘ 1 ' zficrlum, Williams, Ariz. Fowler, 2815 Scflmz Jennings |- Fort Worth, Tex. S. GARCIA CUHLIAR. } Negotiations Will Slow. gton, March 30.—Peace. ne- ons calculated to end the Mexi- Cuellar came official conflmg:oi .of |'can revolution will not take place for veral the report that a-woman fought with the insurgents at Casas Grandes. She was Mrs. Patrocind Vasquez, and she is amim‘ the prisorers held by the fed- erals. Col. Samuel Cueliar has ‘given ‘the names of fo captured in the battle of Casas es. % Th: message was as tollowr The Associated” Press: The names and addresses of the forckn prisoners who were captured by the federal troops in the fl‘ht of rhe 6th of- March are as follows: List of Amnelnl Captured. ‘care of B. E. Se\un, ‘Engleswirieher, Germany. Jos Murny, care Thomas Tiowery, 341 East 4 New York. : J. G Oklahoma City, rural R. P, L“, McKlttflck Cal, - John ‘H.nm, eare ‘of' Rielnrd Pat- \E‘l‘c. D:'l Rio, T Wlllmm Current, Elick, ‘Okla., box Republicans May Vote for Conserva- tive mm. electing a senater a OrTow's sion seemed to' debend entirely upon how many ln-urnnu would enter to- TMorrow’s cau illiam Barnes, Jr., chairman of thu ‘républicah state com- mittee, made public a Tetter advising ders in the htllhtnze to “to e independent -democratic members tihe opportunity to fill New York's vacancy in the semate, by ten- dering its unanimous suwort to a con- servative democrat.” The next democratic eaucus will be held tomerrow morning-and will be.be- hind eclosed doors. . night before the Barnes letter appear~ ed was that at least fifteen of the in- surgents would ‘enter this meeting.: The only condition was that the names of neither Willlam ¥. Sheehan nor Daniel T. Cohalan would be presented and thig condition, it was. said, . the regulars accepted. COX WILL NOT BE TRIED FOR PERJURY. Mandamus Proceedings Against Judge Hunt.Sustained. on'a chavge of pefjury By Frank M. German of the common pleas court. This became certain muy whn Judge T. A. Jones of Jac ©., and Judge Featus Walters of Cirelewille, O, .in a |- majority decision sustained the man- damus preceedings against Judg Charles: J. Hunt of the elrcuit court, eordering him to rulz on the affidavit filed by Cox's attorneys, charging “bias and prejud against Judge Gorman. ‘While the result reached by Judges Jones and Waiters was_ the samie, ‘the _judges arrived at their conclusions throush different routes and each flled statements en which they based their findings. Judge E. D. Sayre of Athens, O., the other member of the, court henrmg, the mandamus proceedings, dissented. PREPARE FOR MILK STRIKE IN'A MONTH Word Sent to Milk Producers by Co- operative Unign, Boston, March. 30.—That a strike is not advised at this time, but that the ¢ milk producers of New England -are urged to hold themselves in régdiness te act concertedly a month hence, is the word sent out tonight by the di- rectors eof t ‘Bosten Co-operative Milk Producers’ union as a result’ of the decision of the principdl milk con- tractors to cut the price paid to farm- :r- rlori milk seven cents per cam on pri OBITUARY, Mrs. Ellep H. hards. Boston, March 30.—Mrs. Kien H. Richards, profesgor of sanitary cliem- | istry at _the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and with,a wide rep- utatien for her scientific kncwhdle d wrmnn on' air and water analy- ties of ofls, and other sub- t Her heme Xn Jamaica n mnixht a.ad 8 ¥ ill several wn!. of “}m?fllexe thonz n-u, 142 ‘Bush street, San he__outlook -to- | | religious- days yet, in the opinion of Dr. Gomez, hzad of the confiden- W ncy of the revolutionists here. “Dr. Gomez explained tonight various gircumstances upon which -a final de- termination to treat for peace is de- pendent. Maders Must Be Consulted. He said that the tentative proposals | for & eace which were suggested at the renpce between him lenumr in New York ; hands of Francisco tyln! chief. He said that#¥t would take 1. days to obtain an er: Then necessary, he a to com- ate the wishes of Francisco L to the Mexican government, all [ch will occupy at least ten days. 5 Franke’s Father Not Sorry. Santa Ana, Cal, March 30.—“I am pot at all sorry for my son,” said Fred tonight when informed that his- ¥y 'gon, -Alfred Franke, was one Americans captured with thes X at Casas Grandes. had been flgh:lnl for his ’it would e different, but: usiness fl‘htinc» in Mexico.’ m Y, $165,000 3 than the lowest b!d On the Dbids for sevarate dams the McClintic-Marshall firm was the low- est, but' it made no reduetion m_its flat rate.in the evant of receiving the entirs. con Two of the emergencidams will be at the Mirafiores locks, iwo_at Gatun anG two “at Pedro Miguel. They are for vse only in casz of freshet or very “high -water, and.may not be needed more. than once or twice a year. The dams are to check the flaw of weter through the locks in case of damage or in case it should be neces- sary to make repairs or to do any work in the locks which would neces- sitate the shutting off of all water from the lake levels. The dams at Gaiun and Pedro Miguel are to be i completed Jan. 1, 1913; those at Mira- flores’ are to be finished by Sept. 1 of the same year. The Dids were for- warded to Panama for decision. TO DIE IN THE CHAIR WEEK OF MAY 15. Date of Execution of La Jama Madas Set by Court of Appeals. Alban: Y., March 30.—The court of, apfi: qday set the week begin- ning y 16 for the execution of La Jama Madas, alias Michas] Lantas, whose ‘conviction for the killing of Selig Kolin at Brooklyn on Jan. 6, 1910, Was affirmed last_Tuesday. Crime fer-Which He Will Die. New. York, March 30.—Two men are now serving twenty year terms at Sing Sing for-cemplication in slaying Selig Kohn, for killing whom La Jama Ma- das will be executed. They-are John Fisher and Ivan Wasylow. The three men entered the steamship agency con- { ducted by Kohn and attempted a hold- up. Kohn resisted and Madas shot him while one of the trio held Kohn’s arms, . The police caught Madas and Fisher after. a long chase. Wasylow ‘was captured later. Madas is sai@ by the pelice to have participated in robbing the paymaster ‘of a chocolate factory and officers of a building and loan association in New- ark, March;, 1909, and shortly’ after- wards. the mirder of anether priest in Passaic, N. J. TO DISTRIBUTE $300,000 ON HIS 91ST BIRTHDAY. Hinsdale Man to Favor Schoo nné _ Religisus Organizations. Chhhco March 30.—Dr. D. K. Pear- n-of - a suburb, will cele- nnte his $1st 'W April 14, by the Qutflbudon of $300, to schools and organizat! . This will make his total distributions of recent ;:ua nearly’ $5,000,000, most of which gifts are termed by Dr. Pearson “debts” and in most cases are ful- flllnh;h of his pledges teo different bodies: of = certain sums when they should havé collected other stipulated “had mum~ m tobesivsnAwfl Board of Foreln Missions, , Kentucky, $180,000.. 19,- | W«, Kansas, $10,000. Gack M L college, lmnoln, $10,008. ;v Ol o i Share. Calais, France. channel ‘steamer Pas de cnm;, hich rammed and: 'rench’ sub- marine Pluviose a west of here. fihemmthiflym aged and was refloated this London, March 30.—An American woman, Mrs. Lewis* Harcourt, wife ‘of the colonial secretary : wh her marriage TOLD-STORY OF PRISON' : LABOR IN NORW!G New York Attorn-y Said Masons Hud to Work for 50 Cents a Day. © (Special 'to’ The Bulletin.) ' Hartford, March 30.—In arguing A System of furs from &fim lflfl by Chiet '8 rench Court g Apphh flrmed n:: m!:‘nlee : “}i‘l’. &mflm‘ e rOy St assailant of M. Neari, marc! Thm Thousand ~ Pupils ‘out of public sehool ‘No. 48, New York, in’two minutes' when fire| hrnke out. B : h laschang, former uquor tax collector of ~ Cincinnati, d| ce gullty of accepting bribes from a brew- hope mlh!# against the use of convict and prison | P! labor befcre the committee on labor a: the cap‘iol Thursday afterngon W. (. Wisner ¢f New York, representing the Garment Makers’ union, told this s2ory ‘ip illusirate a..point: “i was tcid this on a recent visit 1o Norwich. A mason and a mason’s heiper were evployed by the owner of a greeniouse to do some work: Noth- iag was gaid at the time of their baing employed as to how mueh they were to raceive. They worked a part of two days before they took the matter up with the employer. He told them that ‘he would not pay them within about 25 cents a day,of the union rate. A .discussion ensued, the. men-wers paid ‘off, but when they were go! the employer teid them he. !' them back soon . to finish the -at the rate flol&m&s asy. men went to <lty, drunk, were 'sent to jail, from where the employer secured them to continue on his work t 50 cents a day. “In’ that town,” continued Mr. Wis-{ ner, “were masons and masons’ helpers, kmm lilile . families and homes, spending their money with the people and striving to make ltm 3 -eity to'live in. ~If New London county needed monzy so badly as to feel obliged to let out prisoners tp work, or if no:other. workers- d be-found to do the task required, it was Véy well to have let the prisoners; but the county should havé raceived $3.25 to $3.50 a day for their servites, mot 50 cents a day. bntdemm ‘ph.ctiee," ew York, March 30 Irn. Al Mm mn, young ‘lawyer, former member of Lhe Pennsylvania legislature and a son of a-clergyman at Franklin, was locked up by federal nuflwfluel ?ere tonight in def: u.\tTot $2,! mt:urety ‘Oor appearance ‘uesday an- swer a charge that he used the mafls to swindle :chool teachers. Milliren was arrested - where it is alleged he fled when sus- picion - attached to the ‘New York Novelty Publishing company.” under which name he is alleged to have ad- vertised a list of a bhundred books which would be sent to school teach- ers for “two cents each.” Herbert W. Lull, superintendent of schools at New- port, R. L, and-nearly five hundred other persons are alleged to have been defrauded of a total amount of about $6,000 which was sent for the books without retu:m WOMAN TURNS up AFTER HER FUNERAL. Mrs. Mary Mueller Gives Fficnd: and Relatives Great Surprise. New York, March 30.—Mrs. Mary Mueller, mourned as dead, appeared in the flesh today to relatives and ends who had a.ttend;d her supposed uneral two weeks ago. ©One of her first acts was to instruct an attorney to have her will, to have been offered for probate tomorrow, siricken from the surrogatie’s - calendar. Investigation at the Kings county hospital, where Mrs. Mueller was a patient until today, showed that Mrs. Margaret Mueller, anether patient, died there March 14. A mistake in recording her first name led to the er- ror of netifying Mrs. Mary Mueller's friends of her - supposed death. - A woman friend, named as -axecutrix in the will, viewed the remains and com- mented on Mrs. Mueller's.changed ap- pix::tnce, but gave orders for the fu- ‘neral. 5 SUNDAY CONTRACT WAS NOT LEGAL. Vaudeville Manager Beats a Singer on a Technicality. New York, March 30.—Contracts for theatrical performances on: Sunday in this state ars illegal, according to a decision rendered by Justice, Bischoff in the supreme court today, on the ground -that such agreements are in violation of thé Sunday laws. The de- cision was in the suit brought by a German singer to racover $2,600 from & vaudeville manager for alieged breach of a contract-to sing on Sundays. Notwthstanding - vaudeville: house proprietors have be. active protest- ants agajnst the ol lue laws,” those! statutes were rese to by the mana- ger’s- counsel in. pleading. that the singer’s contract was void because it called for unmecessary work on the Sabbath. . s 4 cb*um‘:mznrr $10 NOTE. One. in C-nuw s. N6t _Very Clev- wly (xccu ed. Wuhmgmn, uach 0.—A new coun- tarqut ten dollar United tes xmto, a.photographic -preduction falo note, not vcry/ cleve: was annoimced by today. It is of tha uu es, bearing of noteis rem Wrown in. ive | staté W isinica the 'workmen Have ‘an immense’ task betore them in° remwimg the. de- ‘bris. S‘IM to Clear Aw-y Ruins.” The $180,000 which the Iégislature was asked to appropriate by & bill }n- expect: 5 trodyced is-not finance: the work of reconstrueti 'r ‘appropriation is asked.to pay for clear- ing- away the ruins-and restoring:the watersogked and. “smelke-stained walls and {furnishings of .rooms which u- d the flames. - ursts’.of Flame Now and ’rhcn.. naily. the debris: in the ruined ‘library bursts into flames as the . admit-the air to smouldering ad special: orders ito make “of Safm- night -watch- Tbhha.dlngm\wand‘ ‘ABBAT EMG:‘; STILL - TME STAR WITNESS ——— Tells of Camorrist Subdivisions and Implicates Priest Vitozzi. Vlterbo ¥taly, March 30 ~—According to ‘the mveh.thnfi of in “Chicago, |- ice of order among these affiliated with the Camorra. His powers and influence are great- er than those of the police or cara- bineers, because he is expected to de- nounce those who commit disorders and thus cempromise the existence of the asseciatign, which is destined fer more impertant entersrises, Witness Avoide Snares Set for Him. The ~entire affernoon was taken up with the evidence submitted by Ab- batemaggio at the various investiga- tions. - The counsel for the defence endeavored to trap him in contradic- tions, but.the witness maintained his composure and gave a good account of -himself and energetically refuted their accusations, implicates Prisst Vitozzi. Abbatemaggio said that shertly aft< er the murder of Cueccolo, when he was in the company of Glovanni Rapi, the ‘alleged treasurver of the Camorra, he met the priest .Vitozzi, Who sug- gested that Krricone, so that he might not be suspected, should go frequent- ly the Mimi a Mare cafe te give the poliee the impression that he was a frequenter of the place. If was . in this: inn’ that the ‘report of the mur- der- af Cuocedlo: is alleged to -have been communicated -to Erricone. Vitozzi's Dramatic Denial. Vitezzi, on -heaming this statement by the witness, raised his hands and ‘e¥es, and with % Rorrified expression exclaimed, turning ‘towards the pris- oners’. cage: “If 1 had ever suspected that Ei ricone was stained with such a mon- strous crime, I should have delivered him myself to justice, saying to him, ‘Bear the burden o6f your sins.’” Laughter from Prisoners. His tone: was so meledramatic that the prisonurs burst into laughter. Rapi appeared ‘more amused than the oth- ers. - Abbatemagsio swore that Vitozzi ‘was an active member of the Camer- rd, that he: frequentéd the -meetings of the organfzation dressed as a lay- man - and- was icularly aggressive in helping to 'y out the Camerrist sehemes. FOGHORN' B TER FIGHTS - THE.NEW YORK TEAM. ) Armed With K’tlanta., G&, ’Mm'ch W—Mn Da oo '“:}u”"“"i‘&“‘“‘» "‘(3;‘:..' it par) ay- by g 8sev- ork Nationals a “foghorn | - el’y to refund taxes on saloons. stion Sy _Hot ‘and Medicina g8 in. Alaska ‘which, are beuev-d to ‘be .r Dbenefit to public, especially the natives of that territory, are to be preserved. i Italians § Handers, ha\‘;pbeon“mh e with* the assassination of Pollce- mfloseph Raimo of Kansas City. The Entire Train of Seven Cars, com- r.itmurx and New York ex- " the Penusylvania’ railroad, ;mmped the track near A]tonn-,, Pa Tho Ohm House _Yesterday Passed ‘by a vote of 39 to 13 the Wiman bill providing for the electlion of United ‘States senators by popullr vote on the Oregon n. Men' Raided the of- icago Manuscript com- pany on allegations that the .firm em- ployx eight girls in pirating copyright theatrical productians. H. H. K®hisast, proprietor of . the st 2 Rdacm;if‘t e vaatn s n for 0 reveal a profes- sional -confidence having to do with the Lorimer investigation. . Rev. E. B. Suttah, a Minister, who served as a ragmmtion clerk at Seat-, tle for the.fall election last fall, was found - guilty of emerm: names on the. relhtn lon bo'ks “ Mrs. Crissania Baile Balie itin, les Sy e 0! ar U 0 - of Bellows Palls, Vi, ..:33'1? her children and mt.mm dren. pe-ibing - Dickinson MeAllistsr, former presi- dent of the Metro)ohun Bl over the of ths tlmng'u aldfhomtu.d, was %1 from a train-at-Piétaberg Bound chines, of C for manufab sale such Another Substance from Wuch Pcur | may be manufactured has been aiscov of @ sugar estate at ng to Censul Franklin Ao at.r:h. ra i Lyl vyl 11 B s U S aaded bom luu una 0 which ..____..~_.._. AVIATION SCHOOL. IN . NAVY DEPARTMENT. Plan to !‘Moh One at: Annapolis -This Summer. ‘Washington, Mareh 30.—In erder to form a corps of competent aviators for the: navy, thus recognizing that the fiying machine will be a factor in fu- ture warfare, an aviation sehool prob- ably will*Pe estdblished at Annapelis by, the navy department this summer. Lieut. T. G. Ellyson, an expert who for several months past has been re- ceiving instruction in the operation of aercplanes at San Diego, Cal, will be one eof the instructers at thke school, according to present plans. Teday Lizutenant Eilysen was .ordered from San Diego-to Washi for canfer- ehc2. Omne or mere ae ably will be purchased fe! lnstrm:ting the navy personnel TAUGHT BOYS ToO BECOME BURGLARS. Twenty Thousand Doliars eof Leet Found n Schuitz’s Home. New York, March 30.—Herman Schyltz, whose vecation was being a janiteor and +whose avoestion was teaching small boys to steal, was con- victed “of burglary and larceny teday and remanded for sentence. Nine boys confessed to being his pupils and are now in the house of refuge. Twenty thousand dollars’ worth of loot was recovered in Schutz’s home. ‘One boy, confessed te 26 burglaries, another said he stéle 305 bicveles: Beoth worked under Schuite’s direction. SYRACUSE BREWERS - PREPARE FOR STRIKE Arram for the pertation of 250 smk- Breakers. ‘Syracuse, pating & walkout ofi Iy bréwery the memberu of flo exchange {:eltlht: iti‘{y ‘flmvenzhwafles &um‘ The em; loyes made a demand for an incren.np of two dollara’' a week, which was refused. CONNECTIGUT STATE BONDS. . o Advertised for Last Tuesday to Tav e H'u"i"r. : Gonel i wul;fiw that = the fcut three: and ene-haif per atate. advertised: for. ‘reh mwm«h ‘were net nld:t(hn Will be_given by the ~muuv' was - found | T :ccuuilfumdvfi‘ii $36000 IN RELIEF rfit Woman: cl-.m fl,flo is Missing: from DII.M‘I’. Skirt—One Girl lm by Her Shoe. Buttons, %urch 30.—The death to upla, a 16 year old ‘fl. mped from the old:kh floor- ol the Asch hulldlng dufln‘ \ew York, “fire - horror, - ‘br | tims up to ;‘'was broken and conscious ever since the fatalleap. Girl Identified by Shoe Buttons. The . identificatis of mother T's body by a stran, o e unnamed to.« fourteen. g seems little likelihood of :m;unr filul tfllcnflon, and m:f:hrlflu made arrangemes to: bury. the m- identified in the Cemetery of the Ever- greens. in a ‘plot owned. by, the city. More. Survivors Ex-mlnd k& Assistants of ‘the district-attorney’s office and Fire Marshal Beers, who. are conducting lnvutlufim into: the disaster, besides’ visiting the Asch building today further. examlnad sur- vivors. . Relief Fund Totals $56,000.! Contributions to the relief fund to- tal more than $58,000 tonight. $1,600 Gone from Girl’s 8kirt. An old woman who said she was the mother of ‘Annie_Colletti, one of .the fire victims, called at the ‘coroner’s of- ce tonight “j‘:l:t“d that h: aughter's returned from the morgue, $1,600 which iained t her daughter ::s afum to trust 1:‘:“ Only Few Trinkets Found. " The coroner’s offi¢e has record of as- ly ‘a ‘few trinkets found on-the- yousg woman's body. o Vidahom of Building Codes. ounqgment was made tonight counsel’s office - ;| tons: on: her lllo‘eeg ‘brought fllo u-l'f":r OEEN‘ FROM "Mfl‘. Would- B, An-unn Shoots a Blonde assassin paid no heed to ltn unexpected witness to his deed,and took delfberdte aim at the women as she started to run from him. One shot entered her mouth, and another in her breast. After a momentary con- templation of the crlme. he placed the weapon at his own temple, fired and sang to the stréet by the 's side. Passengers who had looked on pow- erless to interfere, were horrified, and as soon as the engineer saw that warning was n_:tt heeded he pulled his ‘train into the “Station, The man was dead’when the police arrived, and the weman has little chance of recovery, lt was said ct the hospital tonight. A ecapd Ca.!n-teru umion was foun 1n the man's pockets .Inar!nt the name of Ja- cob Shontz. The man was further identified as the son of Rudolph Stupmictay, a mll- lionaire lumberman of Austria, who ‘died several years ago, leaving the son Jacoh, $100,080. Aceording to a fellow member in the Carpenter® union, whe said he had kmown him frem child- hood, Jacob came to America, changed his pame to Bhontz and seon dildpct- ed his fertune. The case ‘was further cm)lioctnd to- night by the arrfval of a weman gho claimed the man's body as that of ‘her husband. A man called at the hos- pital and jdentified the woman Wietim, still hovering between lif as Mrs. Mary Krupiewiz of AMERICAN MUST PAY TAX IN ENGLAND' Ordered by Court to Pay an Inceme Tax of $50,000. London, March 30.—M. Ba Brown, partner in ih:: lu«nll.i;lg i -4 of Brown, Shipley W e retirement on Mis yacht at: &&h‘ sea, was teda X r’:nod by the ‘courts to & $50,00 came Bg:zm ch..fi’med n from the qunra‘tioni -t.n:l.xe hw r:: t.h';. that hig inci came m : od . S:t:, but m:«mw&d thousg! e was an Ame he was a resident the Um Kingdom. AVIATOR'S WIFE M E A PERILOUS FLIGHT. Accempanied Hu:aj-fl Miles Buring with - No weman in America, m er conditions of. any made a Might of m- 1

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