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B e Cabled Paragraphs RAILROADS ESCAPED PAYING DUTY Retramen o 22.—A locktout in the textile manu- T 2 Dutiable Creosote Admitted Free at New ’ Dijon, France, May 22—Mgr. Da- «Due to Lord i dolle, bishop of Dijon. died today, Mgr. il - Daddlie was closels identified with the [BELIEVED HE WILL QUIT WED.|ONE OF THE “HERESIES” rleans as Creosote Oil gt : Orleans a Separation Taw. = o 7 e Krenen NESDAY OR THURSDAY. PREACHED BY REV. DR. GRANT. Munster, Westphalia, Prussia, May Paris, May 22.—The union of taxi- AN r cab chauffeurs, comprising ninety per 1 H cent. of the taxican drivers in baris, | REBELS WILL NOT DISBAND [CASE IS NOW BEING HEARD MILLIONS LOST BY THE GOVERNMENT | cireof i thicas”drivees sty » , for a #4-Bour general strike. besin- ——— ning tomorrow. ~This action i in pro- . . test against the recent increase in the | Will Be Kept Mobilized Until Complete | Contends Eve ‘Was Not Tempted by Former Collector of Customs Testifies Before House/| jciro auties on benzol sopr et mal s s B SRS i e Committee—States That Secretary McVeagh Told |, Vienna, Aay a2 -Notwithstanding | ent Expected to Make Troub the reassuring OMcIAL reports concern , nah—No Personal Devil, He Says. 3 % \ ing the emperor's hearch, there . is a I ks Him Railroads Could Not Afford to Pay It, Henee| widespreaa recling thac his condition > 3 Is less satisfactory than reported The | Juarez, Mexico, May 22—Peace| Atlantic Cits, N. J, May 22.—Consic- e o ik Wi news that Professor Neusser had paid | reigns supreme in northern Mexico to- | €ration of reports was the princival Ruling Was Reversed—Another Witness Heard. a professional visit to the emperor re- | night wherever news of the signing of | Pusiness called for at today’s sessions e sulted today in a weakening of the |2 peace agreement last night has pen- | Of the Presbyterian general assembly. . Bturse. etrated. The only disquteting reports | Among these reports were those of the Were private advices from Mex. | committee on ministerial relief and the v that members of the “centi- { COmmiitie on education. L party, deposed beca@ise of the Dr. Grant Once Acquitted. ! Maderistz movement, were thinking| mhe judicial commission expected of customs at Newport News, said that | {hat Secretary MacVeagh is alleged 55igegfigfi;{"f‘:gnsfief‘;‘“fi:r:egg?»- Wwas| of starting a revolution against the|ioday to hear arsument in the heresy Washington, May 22.—Testifying be- | MacVeagh Influsnced by His Instinct.| p .. . oo 0w -in- 3 ngland, M fore the house committee on expendi- | Ajlan L. Benson hald tola the com- | 52 Great Brithine. firet: macal sip. tures in_the treasury department to- | mittee already in executive session, | ship the construction of which has day. 4. E_ B. Stuart, fermer collector | that Stuart told him of the remark ay ¢ and Secretary of the Treasury MacVeagh | (o have made. Benson also visited the v i ° ¥ and | jatter, case against_the Rev. Dr. Wiiliam D. told him that the department reversed | secretary of the {reasury to inquire | secetod in. the. haspin “iie SiestS| “Centifico” Element May Make Trou- |Grant of Northumberland Pa. Dr. a ruling calling d(«r_ mngu(m; 05 A | about the creosote ruling. He told the? was christened the Mayfly. The air- ble. B Grant was acquitted by the Northum- e e e Taiironta Sanid | comnittee that Mr. MacVeagh inform- | ship, which is §02 feet in length. is of | *Trouble from the “certifico” element, | PeFland. presbytery of = ‘unorthodox portations because the rallroads could | ed him that his “Instinct told me my | the'rigid tyne. with « blunt nose taper- | it s admitied here, 18 exbected: bui | a°NInEs. but the prosecution took Dot aford to pay duty on that com- | assistant, Mr. Curtis, had done rizht| ing to a pointed stern. whethier 1t will takethe Torms of atm. | L5 case on “uppeal to the suprems e D] v, B sy cert uleapd S RS ed revolt after Madero assumes power RS b L o 2 MacVeagh's Brother Interested. | the railroads. 1 4 Paris, May 22.—Private letters receiv- | is not yet clear. It is mnot thought The Appeal Entertained. \nother witness testified that Sec-| Creosote Preserves Railrdad Ties. |ed in Paris from Lisbon contain the! that the Mexican people will rally. to| The metter was raferred to the ju relury MacVeagh's brother interested | When the committes asked if Mr. |Prediction that an attempt to restore!any revolutionary movement for dicial comrmission, which entertained himself in the mattei. MacVeagh gave any reamon, Mr. Ben- | the monarchy willsoon be made in Por- | time and the opposition from the the appeal, and counsel will be heard Son ieplha: tugal, probably before the elections are | tificos,” it is believed, really will be|to permit the commissicn to determine “Mr. MacVeagh said that timber |held. It is claimed that the movement | in the nature of vigorows political ac- | what further action, if any, shall pe Mr. Stuart, who instigated an in: was becoming very scarce in this | Will be started at Oporto, the second | tivity. taken. tization Inte creosote imports '.’.: ew | country and that everyone should do ;‘é;x;&g’“‘r\‘:‘ifl: gfl;gg;lai:gr: fn;:‘\:;" Rebels Will Be Kept Mobilized. Said Moses Had the Blues. Orleans last fall charging that the | what he could to preserve and con- |Portance, where s 2 o e e . There is much interest in the heresy government was losing millions in rev- | serve what timber we have. He stated | Still as a result of the dockmen’s Allie sfusbiEegto] STOOPS S RO kant S v : b I s it at the varions SATrisons in Mevico for | trial. Some of the remarkable stat enues Dbecause creosote, dutiable at| that this creosote is a preservative and | Strike. A secret directory, composed of Taonths Sn readiness for trou. | ments credited to D-. Grant follow Stuart Goes Before Committee. teant it. ad valorem, was be- | increas life of ties and | three men. it is declared, is engaged in " “Moses, hed the o e wte e ittied: s crepote oll. Mren of | R e e O e o aeeaun, | arming the monarchist recruits bla Lutine defjitespiansalong that o aephed o e WE BE Wrots Gummoned hefore the com- 8y e 1t o gt — s "6 have heen formed by Semor Ma- 2 LIRS en previously in executive session by | with the railroads whether they paid A BEREAVED WOMAN. | Jiiocs; STe cattied onf by, tie nstalia- Exie, Not Tenpiad by Satan. Allan 1. Bensor he a . tion of good sovernors and his inten-| “Eve found sin in her own heart and S e e o Lhe SN agE Dot " b= . y.. | tion at present is tg keep the troobs fempled By Suton” No Duty Collected at New Orleans, | Said Railroads Ought to Be Encour- | Killed Herself and Children to'Join | mobiiizeq mercly unmiil compleie order oL ot e neted Stuart related that he found no aged. Her Dead Husband. be restored. % naturzl manner by a mob of fanatic duty was being collected at New Or-| “I tried to get him, to repeat the Makeup of the Cabinet. Jews and did not plan his own cruci- Jesns from foreign ships whose man- | statement that Mr. Stuart had made | . New York, 1 —Mrs. Gesene fests od thelr taduoes to bl cre- & Schroeder, a widow, and her childre g E = z o eaty abowed iheir carwoes fo'be ere- | to methat Secrstary Macveagh had | FUTSECT: Seay: awed 15 and 10 years, | soday-discy ed the makeup of the new | Does Not Believe in Divine Inspiration ceived as creosote oil, which is on the | afford fo pay.duty on creosote. L did |joined their husband and father in| gePimet, WHCh 18 1o strround Senot| Such remarks as these are against free list ROt want to ask him outright whether | d€ath today after mourning him for | D¢ L:a Barra, the incoming provisional | cvery basic doctrine of the church ani ;s eighteen months. A policeman and a | President. e most gratifying news | ingicate, say his pros:cutors, that Dr. he made that statemens, so I asked to them was the receipt of a message Senor Madero and his present chiefs | fixion.” g Curtis Stopped the Collection. o e him an op. | neighbor to whom Mrs. Séhroeder had s Grant does not b:lisve in the divine Fo said last September Assistant | SaceUoES thAl RO B Bt it he | penned last night hor pian to die found from Brnesto Madero ar Monterey. an- | inspiration of the scriptures. / Secretary of the Treasury A. Platt| fosired. He did not say it to me in |them in their rooms in Brooklyn with | DORREIRS SRt be Denies Existence of Jonah. Andrew ordered that duty be collect- | g5 many words, but he did broach | €3S pouring from half a dozen jets. Blia Moy TRetie. Triv Wealk Tiese statements, alleged to have ed on such imports_and that subse- ( thai question by saying that the rail- | The children lny as if in slecp in thes iaz May Retire This Week. hae Thade Sy eDe GrABt i sersians quently Assistant Secretary of the | roads ought to be encouraged to use | Deds. The mother, fully dressed, was| The news that President Diaz might | gnd writings, are contained in the tes- Treasury Curtia reversed the order on | tya¢ preservative. stretched beside them, and on chairs|retire on Wednesday or Thursday of | timony against him. This testimény the ground that the goods were not near by were neatly folded garments | this week increased the activity of Se- | alls % beotk of more than 300 pages. subject to revenue because they did MacVeagh's Brother Pleased. for their burial nor Madero in preparing for depart- | Among other startling theories sald to ot contain as much as two per cent.| “Hg also said his bretner Wayne had | There was a nots in German on the | ure fc the Mexican capital. Shonld | nase bern nasanceds by the. aceused ehlorine gas and coule not be classed | called on him one day to inquire what | dresser, saving: 3 the Mexican railway line from herel clargyman is a positive denial _that # refined creosote. FHe satd that he| the department was going to do in| “I am almost out of my mind. My| southward be out of commission bY! there ever was such a man as Jonah called on Mr. Curtis and was inform- | the creosote matter and he said he | little girl is not feeling well, eita. the end of the week, it is likely that|zna 5 g ti f ‘the decision ane then visited | fold him that they were going o ad: | She Is ckving all the time and would | Semor Madero will go throngh Sab | Ao, that melther Christ ror anvone eive Sicretary MacVeagh, who explained | mit it free': and that his brother said | rather die with mamma than stay here.| Antonio and Laredo, Texas, : o] : man. the decision. ‘that was right.” Henry feals the same. I have always| Madero Can Pass Through Texas. i i i 3 ey s £ That i . | Died from Heart Failure, Not Act of Railroads Could Not Afferd to Pay It. Curtis to Testify Later. T e O T iaias | Warrants held by American officers faes Did Mr. MacVeagh give any rea-| Assistant Secretary of the Treasury | God's care, for we have ail been in for Violating the neutraiity Jaws when 2 ARG #on for the order?” Chairman Cox of | Cuctis was present at the hearing to- | agony as long as we can stand it. It]he Was in American territory have[ 1In the hearing of Dr. Grants case raive b today it was brought out by the cross the committes Askad dey-and turned w!m‘l“r’. erriole torn from th nd | been waived and he has been assured D s You Stnart -epiied. “he said that | some correspondence relating o (he | on tver T the hasband | of unmolcsted pascage Mivbush Texas. | SXamination of 3 witnoes that the ac- the raiiroads could not afford to pay | creosote controversy. He will be call- | * Ienry Schrosder, the husband and Cakanitin,: of Baitle. df Juarer. e e duty om it gd as a witness before the commitiee | father. left $2,000 when he died. Of| Revised estimates today of the cas- | failure and not from the act of God. Was thut the only reason he gave?” | later in the wosk, Chairman Cox said | this his widow saved $1,700 which she | uaities (af the battle of Teares: Diace i = asked the chairman. that the inquiry into tne creosote im- | directed should be sent to her mother | the tntal number killed at 130, twith Death Due to Natural Causes. That is the only one T recall” was | port question would be prolonged for | {n Germany. about 350 younded. Of these the fed | "Did he say that the Lord had noth- the reply some time. orals are belioved to have lost 150|in€ to do with the death of these two GREENWICH CASE AGAINST Biiled and 100; CotniAcd. liafs?” the witness was agked. o said their death w ¢ CLUBS CANNOT SELL LAKE MOHONK CONFERENCE A D S U s O et natural causes and that the Lord had LIQUOR ON SUNDAY. TO BE HELD THIS WEEK | Engineer Informs Board of Trade He nething whatseever io;do; with it o'l IS RECOVERED.| Miracles Dus to Natural Causes. Judge Foster Hands Out the Law in| Proposed Anglo-American Treaty to e Handkerchiof of His Swastheart Comes | . Vhat else did he say sbout mira- Bridgeport Court. Be a Leading Topic. Greenwich, Conn.. May 22.—at a ‘ cles? e 3 Sieeitie” oF NI ia Eoai or trels to Surfacs of River. “Hs said all_miracles were dus to May 22—Judge| Mohonk Lake, N. ¥. May 21.—Ar- | tonizht, at wh'ch it was expected that| ., = LAy natural causes.” urt todiy sounded | rangements are practically completed | charges of incompetency against High- | Thompsonville, Conn, May 22.—Af- Did he admit that any were due to What i& believed to be the death knell| for the annual meeting of the Lake|way Commissioner Macdonaid would D;“,,“ Lo i R f the, the Lord not only for the so-called Sunday clubs [ Mohork conference on international | be drawn up, to be presented to the | of FIN¥a Mecum. who was drowned Wanted the Lord Left Out. wut alsy for the selling of liguor on|arbitration which at its three qavs failed in its intention. Tie 1 think?” said the witness, “that he is Not to Blame. Fridgeport, Conn. Foster in the city er here Sunday while canoeins, Sunday by clubs or organizations of | sessions beginning Wednesday, will cd to-a report by an en- | ¥o8 found late today. Shortly before| . ,n..q the Lora left out of it.” any kind in this city, and perhaps 5 the post road betw hig | INAME is body the grappling irons is naiv v Theoughout the state. Gres prerminent persont s MUB- | BIoC" AR Stadford. and to. (he. con: | DFOURDE to the surface a handkerchiet |, T1I% Daive Teply diew a lsugh oven ing t 5 = wl £from the most bitter opponents of Dr. This conditicn came about through | President Nicholas Murrey Butler | tractor having the work on the road in | DSIONgIng to Miss Annie Rooney, who |Gl " 2 a decision by Judge Foster in the cases [ of Columbia university will preside, | charge. These reports seemed to show | WS 2150 drowned. and a search for g of five “proprietors” amd forty-eight | and it is expected that in his r‘;pa:fl?.eg' that the commissioner was not respon- | Whose body will be continued toms:- Pinnacle too Small to Stand On. equenitcrs” that were taken in address he will say much of interest | sibla for the poor condition of things, | IOW; Mecum's bady was faken to| That it was & physical #mposstbility raiGs Saturday night and concerning the Carncsio. cndomerest | but. that the town and the trolics | SPringfield in 2 Jaunch tonight. He|for “Chrisi to have sivog on the pin- fiva of the smaller clubs. for international peace. of which he | conipany- were the ones causing the | WAS 22 vears old and was to have| nacle of the temple of Jerusalem and | five principals was fined $100 and cosis | is a trustee. James Brown Scott, sec- | delsy. The matter was placed in the | 28eN imarried to s Reoney in a| been tempted by Satan,” as related | an i each of the forty-eight others was | retary of the endowment, will also be | hands of a committee \for furthsr in. | SHOTt time. in the New Testament, was another of fined $1 and costs. among the spectators. “Baron DiEs. | vestigation. e me s the stariling statements attributed to Tadge Foster in deciding the cases | fonrnclles do Constant of Eeoris ey et SNAKES TO CATCH RATS. the Rev. William D. Grant at the declared that clubs had no mora right | ¥. W. Simeleit of Berlin, and the dean | ASPIRED TO BE THE ——— heresy triai before the permanent ju- to sell liquor on Sunday than had an|of Worcester and Dr. John Clifford of « o ., | Reptiles May Replace Cats in the| dicial committee. Dr. Grant is charg- individual, no matter how they might| Eingland, will be among the foreizm. WHITE MAN'S HOPE. Boisatot: Kansss: ed with having said the topmost pin- be ergenized or whether they confined | ers to deliver addresses. e 3 P A o o nacle was entirely too small for any- their mulling to members in good stand- | * The - Anglo-American | arbitration | GTeOMWich Youth Sent to a Sanitarium | ool i N aein orack o] 050 (0 stand upon it | fng and exclnded non-members. Non:|treaty now being negotidted will be for Treatment. test the willingness of Kansas City| God Did Not Strike Uzzah Dead. of the “regular” clubs was included in leadi E—— i the ratde, but this dectsion, the mirst|> ‘=478 toPle Greenwich, Conn., May evar given on this subject in this cliy, . . Brundage, a mechanic 21 vears old, is taken to apply to all organizations | OrOWth in Exportation in 1911. | a5 committed to a sanitarium tods St T S o and the police declare that all clubs (Special to The Bulletin.) for treatment as to his'mental condi- | 700 pull snakes with & reptile will b made 1o obey it. Washirgton, May 19.—BExports from | tion. He left his place of employment | Supn Antonio, Texas. His statement Appeals were taken in ail the cases.|the United States in the fiscal year |a month ago and started training with! tFat snakes are great ratters had been the principals giving $200 bonds each | 1911 wil' probably exceed by about | the avowed intention, he said, of fight- | Jayghed at by doubters, 2nd he wants and the fsequenters 350 each. It is now | 300 million dollars the figures of last|ing Jack Johnson. On being piac:d| 1o prove that he is right. z helieved that a test case will be taksn|ysar and cross the two billion dollar | in confinement he stated that “wi:' the snakes arrive they in commenting upon the death of| Uzzah, who, as told in the Ola Test- | ament, was struck dead for daring to | put his hang on the ark of ihe cov- | enant, while that precrous relic was | being taken from the threshing floor of Hebron to the temple at Jerusa- | lexn, Dr. Grant is allegeC: 1o have said: | This man Uzzah must have had an | irism of the heart or have burst a | residents to supstitute tame snakes fo cats in the extermination of rats an Edwards of the a to the state supreme court, which has |line. his father's strength and his mothe: fributed free of chavse iy | Dlood vessel in his hese. It is not Mever ruled on the question. Tho fiures of exports of the burean | £004 nature, there was no duubt but| those appiving for tre strange pels, | Leasonable to suppose that God struc of statistics, department of commerce | that h could lick Johnsor | who. will agres to report the result of | Nim dea¢ under such circumstancee. | LOVERS DROWNED IN and labor. for the ten months ending | w01 & FAMILY KILLED the snake-instead-o-a-cat substitution | Al L Trasiiying foido was () CONNECTICUT RIVER | [Fiih April. show an excess of 268 mit- in their home: prevent tne sacrsd ark from slipping lion dollars over those in the corre- BY A TROLLEY- GAR from the wagon or swdge on which | e sponding months of last year, and for difad it was being carried. Evidently the| Cane in Which Springfleld Party Was | the single month of Apl an_ excess | Their Horse Becams Frightend and GBIFBARY. weight of the ark. was too much of a | Boating, Capsized. of 25 milliow dollars over April of last 4 s e i Year, thus indicating that the growtn Plunged Across the Track. - |’ _ WhitesRioslo. Powdll, Intended to Cast Devii Out of Bible | Thempsonville, Conn., May 21.—EI- |in exports will approximate 300 mil- = |2 Sk Toeepin Ato, R VowerAn-| Dr Grant was also accused of hav- wyn Mecum, 22 years old, and Miss [llon dollars, and the total exports of The family of | gelo Powell, aged 83 years, died at his| ing fold a member of his church tI finis Rooner. 23 vears oid, both of " bly ” D W, son of Hebron, was wiped | 1161 here Sunday. He with Robert| he intended “to cast the devil out of | oringfield, were drowned 19’ the Con | dallare PTOPPlY exceed two billion | ot ‘today when an interurbam car on|Mils desizned the. cxtension to the| the Binies by preaching a cortain sor. | foecticut river & mile north of here| The cause of so large s growth in|tie Newark division of the Ohio elec_ | cupliolt at Washington during Presi-| mou. rajlwav- struck thejr buggy' and |dent Fillmore's- admimistration. = He| The unanimous adoption of the re- thev, Farl Warner, and Miss Ruth Me- | in certain other articles and still eps led Dodson, aged 30. Mrs. Dodson, | served throughout the civil war under | port favoring a union with the reform- cum, alsn of Sprinefleld, capsized, The | ate a gain of 263 million doilars ciop | O the same age and their two litde | Fremont and Rosecranz, built the forti- | ed church: a protest against the ac- | had come down the river from | the fgures of last yenr is ohiony ils | Zirls, aged 7 and 4. The Dodsons were jons at Winchester, Harper's Fer- nce by the government of the | Springfleld. about seven mifles. when | high price of cotton and the increased [ Fiding alonc . the highway which |1y and other places. ervice for the battleship/Utah | it is thought in changing seats the|outward movement of manufactures. | JADKS fhe electric line a mile east of Prof. Sidney G. Ashmore. ch appears ‘an ‘engraving of | cande overturned. The cries of the | Exports of cotton for the tan months | FePron. and were passing 2 car when fa‘e today when the canoe in which | cartain articles as to overcome the los Sahiengataly N Y E Young and the Morron iab- provie in the ‘Swater ‘were heard by | ending with ADril show alone mn fn:| (el Morse became frightencd and | it oSG N 0N L B, for thiny | orRAcle: the besinming of an cffort to three men who ware passing in a|crease of 143 million dollars over the | Piunged acros sthe track in front of | vears® professor of the Latin language | eStablish a fund. of $6,000.000 to per-| Inunch, and they went to their rescus, | correaponding months of lust vear, the thn; Cat. % £ and Mitspdsurs at Unlon college,” dled [ 2 _FeZoipn, nCiese ol Tabid! > valus of cotton esported in th < today. sters and widows of ministers, and | Warner and Miss Mecum struggling in | tan -months ending Aps) being 59| A CANAAN CARPENTER Editor Louis E. Parkhurst. i the taking of testimony in the heresy | fthe water. the other two having gone | miilion dollars, against 405 million in tn_the bottom the same months of last Copper r Fffords to find the hodies of the vie- | for the nine months snding mith Mave i ok s T anding with M of /d Times, die tims were keot up until atler 10 o'clock | shaws an increase of apot six mils | b ckon at Work, He Crawled to a R ;“‘ it of fonight without result, and the search | lion dolli rs; automobiles, an Meroise Brook to Bathe His Head. BEmeEFE el oty Ay e was &topped to be continued tomorrow | from 6 1-3 million.dollars to 9 3-4 mil e e a0 ! May 16. morning. lon: machinery. 13 9o4 miition dolors | Canaan. Conn.. Ma Mr. Parkhurst was born at Gardne The Arowned couple were engaged |agains: 57 1-4 million in the same | S25¢ reported of sunstr Me., 61 years ago, and leaves a wi and were to bave heen married soon.|months of the prior year: while 'n trial of the Rev, Willlam D. Grant of | Yorthumberland, Pa. were among the important happenings at today's ses- sion. VICTIM OF SUNSTROKE. | Hartford, Conn., May 22.—Louis STATE POLICE. ocotrrad in this place today. when|ard threz children, He had bsen con- | Summary of Work During Years of i 5 +OWas foun | vected with the Tim>s as reporter an 1909-1910. THE WEATHER BUREAU Bctirs & Tadred ticrene o i R‘:fi? ;’Y::" s ;‘_?rga;w;::%?\: d,',‘*f":‘ i | eitor e e j Following is a_summary of state po- TO BE INVESTIGATED, |}'2; and @ marked percentage in sain | Hition 1s not fatal, Weaver sufiared a REV. 0. H. RAFTERY oo, workifor MVEHIUE. < o8 Bh ] Woestern Farmers Complain of ad- ;':;,’:,“';oc,f”:,’,"’fi,::":{ofiflf:““ni“mz’;l’:; = {%‘;i"ir‘?_“fif‘h‘fl‘:kfi;m‘&.,‘; BUPROSed HAt| Colebrates Close of 25 Years as Rector | of thess for violations of Heense law | ing Predictions. months ending with March, 1910, to 225 | 4%, Stricken, and that he cragled ‘o Lo e 0T 1010, number of prosceutions, 546: | million in the.corresponding months of 2 violati i | Washington, May 21--Complaints by | 1911, and manuractures ready for con | 118 héad with the water, when he was of these for violations of license law, ! v 3 5 - | 200. | ers and fr in the wes: | sumption. from ‘361 million dollars’ in e ity oopmareed” B 10 the | o B o Poriang. i emoes, 7oz | Number of different towna fn which | sather ‘orecasts | the nin» months of 1910 to 431 million ¢ B her husband, John . Hall, president | Prosecutions were made, 61 eannot be depended on and that disas- | in the correspending months of 1911, Z 3 of the Colt's Arms company at the time | there were no» : license, trous results 1o crops often have fol- | Manufacturss read: for consumpti Steamship Arrivals. e ot s | Of the total prosecutions for the two lowed erroneous prediciions form the | show #n increase of nearly 70 million | At Naples: May 22, Regina D'ltalia, | oyening ot 4 Teasption. siven b vears there swere in no-license towns, basis of the decision reached by the |'dollars in the nine months ending with | from New York. Parish o Dr. and Mrs. O. 1. Raftery in| 295 In license towms, 268. house committee on expendituees in [ March, and manufactures for further| At Christ aid: May 21, Hellig | gpservance of the 25th anmiversary of | Jail sentences imposed (in 1909), 2; ! tha wgricultural department to investi- | use in manuficturing, an increase of | Olav, from New Y e racto sl : 3 acquitted, 2; nolled without costs, 4: gate the weatner burean. 25 million during the same period. At Plymouth: May 22, Kaiser Wil- | "'Bighor o Mrs. Brewster were pres- | nolled with costs, 1 The commiitee’ also will look Into| The chiel causes of the large in-|helm IL, from New York. ent and recetved with the rector amd} Convictions 344 out of total 367 gharges persisiently made by James |crease In 1911 over 1910 are found in S his wife, also the wardens of the par- | Cases. - Seal Hivimon oot Of ihe climatolog: | the large exportatin and high price of | Notices Were Posted by the Amos- |ish, Oliver Gildersiceve and John H.| Fiues imposed 1903, $9,109; in 1910, foal Gvision. aginat the mu"&mav cotton ard the large exportation of | keag Manufacturing company at Man- | Sage, and their wives. : 13,967; total, $23,076 Buresn. manufactures. chester, N. H. vesterday, announcing |STATE v122-.1,3Hing3 LR E a suspension of worx on all of its President Porfirio Diaz of Mexico is _Demgcrats in the House hava prac-| manufacturing departments. heginning| A German inventor has succeeded | three-fourths Spanish and one-fourth tically ‘agrecd on a reduced duty on | at noon of May 27 and continuing until | in making an excellent substitule for | Indian biood, He was educated for ‘wool. the of June & whalebone. It is composed of leather.' the priesthood. The splendid parish house recently | when penniless, | order was adopted hy the senate ves- | matter to he discussed. The Epidemic of Scarlet Fever ‘Waterbury is abating. eutenant Franklin H. Drees of the marina corps committed suicide The Naval Station at San Juan, P. R., has been ordered closed June 30. The Knickerbocker Savings and Loan company of New York closed its doors, An Electrical Storm that broke the hot wave in the west {s moving east- ward. . 7: Germany Has Been Approached re- garding . the American arbitration scheme. An Aeroplane Fell Among a Crowd of sightseers at Kursk, Russia, in- juring 100 persons. - Lieutenant Colonel Beverly W. Dunn of the ordnance department of the army has resigned. A Ban Was Piaced on Tipping at a mass meetisg or bos: and journeymen barbers at St. Loui: Charles P. Taft, Brother of President Taft, hints that the president may again be a candidate. Emperer William Proposes to modi- fy ths present severity of the army of- ficers' code of honor. The Bursting of a Dam at White Ouk _creels, near Scranton, Pa., flooded the Lackawanna valley. The Providence Central Labor Union has contributed $2 stowards the de- fense of John J. McNamara, _President Taft Accepted ‘the Invita- tion to attend the Cardinal Gibbous Jubilee ceremonies in Baltimore. The Pope’s More Frequent Attacks of gout cause him much suffering, but his vitality is strong for his 76 years. Thomas O'Connor, Chief of the Fire department of New Orieans, committed suicide by shooting himself in the head. / A Report of the State Department shows how American interests abroad heve been advanced by the state de- rartment. The French Are Gratified that Fran -e i placed on the same basis as Great Britain in the®United States arbiira- tion proposals. Henry L. Stimson of New York ves- terday ‘was sworn in as secretary of war, succeeding Jacob M. Dickinson, resigned. irs. William M. Clark, one of the society heauties of New Rochelle, N Y., was scalded by the explosion of a fireless cooker. National -Committeeman Clayton of Tennessee announced that the south would be for Taft in the rapublican ni- tional convention. A Case of Suspected Smallpox on the steamer Gothland, from German ports for Montreal, caused the deten- tion of the steamer. Moorish Tribesmen Attacked 2 French camp in Moroceo, but, were re- pulsed after herd fighting, in whieh 2 French officer was killed. Alderman Frederick Britten of Chi- cage is opposed to female ushers in theaters on the ground that they are liable to become panic-strickan. Emperer Williams and the Empre: Auguste and Princess Victoria Louise bade farewell to King George and Queen Mery and sailed for Gérmany. That Other Cities in the State are better than Waterbury was the gen- eral tenor of the sermon of Rev. Albert G. Lawson, D.D., at Waterbury, Sunday. . Willian1 L. Ralston, Once a Vaga- bond, who has inherited $300,000, has given $56,000 to the Rescue Mission of Pittsburg, where he was given shelter The $30.500,000 Loan for the con- structlon of railroads in China was signed at Pelsing by representatives of the American, British, French and Ger- man groups of bankers. A Quarrel at Quincy, Mass, over a 15-year-old American girl resulted in the fatal stabbing of Joseph Mlier, a Spaniard, 24 years old, by Vincenzo Fagarozzo, 22, an Italian; for a Mateh with which to a cigarette, Salvatore f£risuolo, npset 4 canoe in which he was paddling with a companion on Lake Quinsigamond and was drowned. Harvey Phillips, formsr Government secret service detective, preaded guilty to shipping ammunition tc El Paso, Texas, as “furniture, fittings and fix- tures.” He was fined $100 and paid. Thomas Kearns, 2 Street Sweeper, 65 vears old, father of Rev. Hugh Kearns, O.P, of New York was nocked down and fatally injured by an automobile at Providence yester- day. A Resolution Amending he interstate comnierce law to permit the granting of passes to members of the G. A. R. when att z encampments of the terday. “Chesterville,” at Hampton, Va., the original home of George Wythe, sign- er of the Declaration of Independence, and said to he the oldest residence in America, was totally destroyed by fire vesterday. The National Association of Hosiery and Underwear - Manufacturers will bold its annual meeting i Philadel- phia this week. The question of cur- tailing the production is the principal The First Capital Case in Hamp- den County, Mass., for several vears, began at Springfield, vesterday. with the trial of Edwin F. Cook, charged with the murder of H. . White on the latter's farm February 13, 1910. Discovering a Cat in His Hen Yard at Cranston, R, I. Owen McElroy, 55 years old, was pursuing the feline chicken thief with a shotgun when he tripped and fell, receiving the charge of shot in his abdomen. - He died al- most instantly. A Report Denouncing Sunday dinner parties and zolf games at Chevy Chase, the desecration of the Sabbath by so- clal functions, open theaters and sa- loons. etc. at Washingion, D. C., was adopted by the general assembly of the Presbyterian church in session at At- lantic City. When Samuel Sharp of Mount Holly, N. J. gets home from the Burlington counfy hospital, where ‘e has begn since he started for a siroll in s Boston, May 22. high humidity. Died at Open Some Relief Washington, May the next 4§ hours. wave situation tonight. entire country. of 101. Washington ord of 102. glons and the eastern heat prostration. baseball game teday. heat. Death Claims Six at I ~ ton and Two at STRICKEN WHILE WATCHING CIRCUS Troy ‘Man Expired Before Aid Could Reach Him—Mer« * cury Climbed Up to 101 at Lewiston, Me.—Prostra- tions Reported in all Sections of New England— Cooler in Central States—Lower Temperature Today, A Died from Heat at Ball Gam: New York, May 22—t was a hot.day | here today while witnessing . cioss and in New York ,with at least one death | exciting game of basebail between two A man whose | state league teams. It is thought that cards bore the name of Edmund F.|the excessive heat and the exciiement Bierbaum dro; dead in his'seat al | caused by the game, whish had gome the American league park just befere | twelvc innings with the scors a tie, the New York and Pittsburg National | brought an am acuie afzack of heari credited ti thé weather. = t u’;g‘, Two at Bos- Doctor Collapses in Subway. ot fe. 3 Dr. ‘Albert H. Hayes, 74 years old, | the local weather bureau was estad- of the Back Bay district. collapsed in | lished. in 1385, has such exereme heat the Scollay square subway station and | Peen experienced in this cfty as wms died a few minutes later. Window. Today. 0 , The heat blanket, | mercury registering from 93 to 98 dee which oppressed Boston and all New | grees, northern Vermon: today sxpesi- England today smothered life out Of |enced unusually high temperature few two persons in this city and more | this tine of year, It has besn unosm< than a score of others were prostrat- | fortably warm here for the pas fous ed by the sun's powerrat rays and a |days. 101 at Lewiston, Me. Lewiston, Me.,, May 22— Not sines recorded today when the official tiese mometer registered 101 Unofflefal ine struments in the street, partly touched Seated in the chair which she had | by the sun, showed the mercury cfime placed near an open window for re- |ing to 120, lief, Mrs. Elizabeth Hanley, aged 60 90 in Shade in Berkshires, vears, wis found dead in her home In | Great . the South End, late today. ey, sartiogten, Mass. S S This section of the Berkshizes enced the hottest and most 23 omewhat | IR the memory of its cidest infabitante lower temperature in Neéw England Tuesday; it will change where throughout the country during today. Thermometers in the shade B~ Tittle Cotse- | dicated & temperaiure sxceeding 96 Ao« grees. ‘This ‘was_the Showers Caol Of Pittsburg. weather bureat’s epitome of the hot- | Pittsbure, Pa, May 22 Central States More Comfortable. The central states along the Missis- i " sippi_river are about the omly terri- Six Deathe from H tories that are not sweltering. Showers te. It offered lit- | night and g Hght easterly hroszs e Rove for xelief to practically the |what lesseasd the excesstve neat W which Pittspurg and vicinity has sige zled for a week. The official temperss ture today again scored 92. Mod- | Six deaths were recorded today; erate temperatures prevail there, ac- prostrat’ons were numerous. Neo cording to weather advices. Yuma Hottest Place in Country. Lewiston, Mé, was the hottest city N in the east today with a temperatura | Cleveland, O. May 22 —Fot wentiar in temperature is expected for days by weather offici 28 at Cleveland. registered 84, | Was still with Cleveland today, the of« Showers in Lake Regions. or Showers and thunder storms have | Were brokem . mitigated conditions in the lake re- oared steadily until gulf states. Prostration at Waterbury. ‘Waterbury, Conn.,, May 22.—Charles | ed during the day. No prostrations Sidwick, employed at the Chase roll- | were reported. ing mills, was removed to St. Mary's ;. o . HOLsitaE (lis, atfermoon; sUNOVIng T | oleer Snd Excitement Killed Shes S But Yuma, Arizona, was the hottest |ficial temperature being #5. place in the United States, with a rec- May Heat Records Broken. Ibany, ords for . Y., May 22 —All heat res- reached 96 degrees tn the United States weather bureau. The hnmidity was $3 per cent. this merning, but it decrens« Troy, N. Y., May 22.—Charles R, H3il, paying teller of the Seourity Trust company of this efty, dropped dema It was a case |failure. Mr. Hill was about 50 years Five Suicides Due to Heat. There were a number of prostrations % and five suicides which may have been hottest May 32 in fiftesn years, ind weather. The temperature reached 83 and the percentage of humidity 38. Hot in Vermont. St. Abans, Vt, May 22.—With the result of the heat. due to the uncomfortable of heart failure superinduced by the|old and unmarried. Overcome Watching Circus Parade. Troy, N. Y., May 22—Today was the there were many heat prostrations. An unknown man while watching & cireus parade was overcome by the heat asd died befora medical aid reached hime. Seve others are serfousiy fil a8 & New York, May 22. a permanent injunct brought suit. be_made. appeals. slept_with a revolver dream. Another Georgia Crawfardsville, Ga. by a mob and hanged was greatly needed. Justice Kelly decided that the ped and shot himeelf dur Googher, 2 wealthr farmer, GREEN LOSES HIS SUIT AGAINST ROYAL ARCANUM. HIGH PRICE OF BEEF fon Shot Himself While Dreaming. New York, May 22.—The danger of | piaced in Corner Stoms of Stamferd sleepiriz with a pistol under one's pil- 5 low was illustratad today when John | Congregational Church 64 Years Age. McAleenan cied from a self-inflicted e . bullet wound through the head. Mem.- _ The leaden casiet containing ne bers of the family said McAleenan Dapers and periodicals which was 2L the head o Lyne at the own work, and thers time Green joined the order he signed| though the most nutritious, the lowers what was practically a contract. appellate division holds that when | this Green became an Arcanumite heagreed | on e 6 abifle by the rules and regulations | gre just that much higher and all changes that might hereafter “In my judgment it will require five The | priced meats ca. WOMEN BLAMED FOR Will Be Taken to Highest New York| Livestock Man Lays Price Incraase to Court for Settlement. The appellate New York, May 22—The growth of aivision has reversed a judgment of | women's clubs has contrt s Supreme Justice Kelly, which granted | toward increasing the price of beef, in Testraining | the opinlon of Wiiliam Skinn the supreme council of the Royal Ar- | ident of the International Liv canum from suspending Samuel Green | assoclation, who is in this efty for non-payment of dues. Green, a member of De Witt Clin-| ing of her club in the afterneon” Mr. ton chapter, joined the order n 1883,| Skinner said today, “the when the dues were $1.81 each quar-| that she will not ter. Later they were increased to $3.04 | much befofe 3.30. |a quarter, and then to $6.87, the pres-| dinner fo be ready in short ordar, 8o | ent rate. He paid under protest and| she selects the meat of least resistancs. Growth of Their Clubs. “When a woman goss to the mest- chances are s on her way home She wishes her This applies to women who do fhetr « plemty. -Al< ot be considerad by Be wp pries household bills 80 she pay: ays an vears to readjust ths price of beef 44 The case will go to the court of| g lower lavel” LEAD CASKET OPENED. f|scaled up in the cormer stonw of the Stamford Congregational church, ra< cently razed, was opened at a meeting last week. Teh *hall was filled with church mesi< May 22.—Joe ['bers. who had come to see the opeming to a tree. = Rain in Wheat Belt. Topeka, Kas., May 22.—Rain today is generai over the wnaeat belt, where it Moore. the nesto who vesterday con- |Of the casket, which was sealed and fessed to having murdered Henry | embedded in the swne work of ths Saturdey | church 54 vears ago, by Thomas H. night, was taken from. the fafl today | Brown, master mason. Mr. Pross's two daughiters, Mrs. Isracl Prior and Mrs. H: W. Thomas, were prasent. but Mrs. Holley Scofield and Mrs. Jufia H. Powell and Mrs. Julia B. St. John, ths only other living persons who wers | members of the church at the tims of its erection, were not there. The opening of the lead box was cons bed every night. iniscences, which will early next fall. Following the Sui bank of Paris, Ky., counts of the suicide. " Sixty or More of i $50,000. sleep Thursday night and ‘toppled. out of the second-story wrmaow, his wife X % 2 £3.% 5 GEi chusetts legislative co; tropolitan affairs, A surapee companies or v ducted by the pastor of the churehy announced she is going to tie him in | Rev. L. F. Berry, after a short dewe< tional sarvice. it was accomplished with some difficulty, the box being Senator Cullom Has Been Devoting [made of heavy lead, which required the leisure moments of his 32d year to | 8reat force to eut. the preparation of a volume of rem- | The box beforc opening welzhed be published |5 1-2 pounds and measured eight by Myall, assistant cashier of the Citizens an examinatior disclosed a large shortage in the ac- he Ca: alty in. mmittes on me. five by two inches. It contained two copies of the Weekly Advocate, ;,e of Edward J, | June 23, 1857; coples of the New York Herald, Tribune, and Times of June 29, the New York Independent for the week, the Messenger, a monthly publi- cation of iWe American Tract soclety, a grand list of the stato of Connecticut, a church manual -giving a list of the - | church members for the year 1357, and 2 United letter, written by States and similar forelgn concerns | H5: Holty, then edvior of che Advocate doing business in this country, have |giving the details in regard to the combined to raise rates. building of the church. Thers were also' found fn the box three £ The Store and Generds Stock of the | large copper one of 1556, and two of the Frankfort Supply company and the | BYINg eagle desin of 157411 of courus residence and law office of E. Parker |in excellent shape The m Treat at Frankfort, Me., were- totally ; B2 destoryed by fire, causing a loss of | Py, the action of tie air 3 Were fresh and had not bes The box and its contents are in hands of Charles A..Berry, clerk of church, who will guard them until An Expenditure of $5,000 on Docks, [new church is ready for its e termmals and other waterfront im- |stone laying. The old stone. provements is provided in a bill wrich her baten face, will be set fm obtained the approval of the Massa- £ 1 that it