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VOL. LIL—NO. 165 Bt : 1911 m : = ~ 7 PRICE Two : = == = = 7 TR 7 =E A% ,,'.y‘ o B Z The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other- Paper, and Its Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proporsion to the City’s Population . EIGHT MORE DEATHS IN CONNECTIGUT| Cabled Paragraphs |Gofts’ Romance Taft Letter is-. | Condensed Telegrams| JROUGHT PLAYS HAVOC WITH CROPS 11, Paris, July 10._Twenty-five thou-| - Sering Curkens At a Seafow Attiole sand union building ~workers struck e e T today to enforce a temand that the plece work system be abolished and Second Heat Wave Causes 31 Prostrations and Much Suffering Throughout State SEVERAL MADE INSANE BY THE HEAT Storms Which Visited Some Localities Last Night, Fail- ed to Bring Relief—Apprehensions of a Scarcity of Milk as Many Cows Are Being Given Winter Feed —Connecticut’s Deathroll Now Numbers 52. their daily wages increased. Kiev, Russia, July 10.—Prikhodko, stepfather of Yushchinsky, the boy whose body, horribly mutilated, was found in a cave near here on Febru- ary 28, was arrested today. St. Pete-sburg, July 10.—The Polta- va. the second of the four battleships of the Dreadnought type, laid down in June, 1909, was launched at the Admi- ralty dockyard today, the anniversary of the battle of Poltava. The vessel is of 23,000 tons. Willemstad, Curaco, July 10.—A wireless despatch from Buen Ayre Is- land announces that General Jose An- tonio Davila landed on the island se- cretly Saturday night, having come from Venezuela. He is considered to be a very brave man and Castro’s friend, S Is Shattered ETHEL BARRYMORE SEEKS SlNy' GLE BLESSEDNESS AGAIN, MARRIED TWO YEARS AGO™ Name of Co-respondent Not Disclosed —No Papers Yet Served, But Col Counsel is Preparing for Them. New York, July 10 —Confirmation of the repori that Miss Ethel Barry more, the actress, is to sue Russell Griswold Colt, her husband of two : Not Recalled WITNESSES SHED NO LIGHT RE- GARDING IT. COMMITTEE INVESTIGATES Newspaper Woman Claims to Have Copied It from Files, But Nobody Else Seems to Have Knowledge of It. Washington, July 10.—The story of a vanishing letter, both addressed and signed “Dick,” from Richard_S. Ryan of New York to Richard A. Ballinger, Gregory Phelan, United States Vice consul at Brussels, died in that city. The Population of Boston is 707,000, according to the mew edition of the city directory. A Revolutionary Movement Against the Maderist government has _been started in Chiapas, Mexico. As a Result of the Present Scarcity of milk, experiments,in freezing that | fluid are being tried in New Haven. Edward Cole Howland, Well Known in newspaper circles in New_York ara ‘Washington, died in New York ves- terday. Rev. William H. Ketcham, director of the bureau of Catholic Indian mis- sions, has submitted his annual report, just issued. Crop Reporting Board Reports Short Yield on Several Commodities POTATO CROP WILL BE VERY SHORT Acreage Fell Off This Year and Crop Condition is Lowest in 22 Years—Hay Crop Less Than Two« ; Thirds Normal—Oats and Corn Also Below Average —Wheat will Hold Up to Average of Past Five Yflu‘ years, for Givorce and material from | then secretary of the interior, pur-| p,. § P, Beebe of New York Has v 6 ; e e vhicA Miss Barrymore's lawy - | porti how that Charles B. Taft | qoe. o P . ¥ Washington, July 10.—“Hot, _dry | off, probab) New Haven, Conn, July 10.—With SHOWERS IN NEW YORK. Berlin, July 10.—Prtliminary nego-| Which Miss vinore's lawyers ex~ | Porting to sho discovered that the thyroid gland se-| v 2 4 v oy unabated vigor the heat wave con- e tiaticns ' regardig Morocco are being| PECt to prepare and file initial papers | influenced his brother, President | crotes jodine for removing impuritics | Weather—drought—have plaved some :nhl;)c:m tinued through today., and though Mercury Made Slight Drop, But Mu- conducted confidential but nothing tomorrow in the action reached New Taft, to forward the alleged effort by in the blood. thing akin to havoc with crop condi- tion of t g ¥ < 5 : ¢ Yor today on a train from Los An- | the Cusgenheim interests to acquire tions during the last month,” was the | than at any time Setit, the s citaf R oaes T ot s Iiciy, Remaingd. Aiout ; Samis. §Zm“z‘“§2u“;‘£;‘§»fi§?’§§.’é ex:lfi.::gs the| geles, Cal. i Controller bay, the only outlet for| Wi\ .0 Now in Full Contrd jn | Afitement made today by Frof. ‘\‘r“‘]” - = 10 be great. Ofcially Hartford led in| New York, July 10.—Electricity this|on a friendly footing, that it is ex- Suit Will Be Contested. Hmced n o Congremsioomsiorn Mlasks, | sew ' Vork state ang’ will control the | porlISY’ boatd: of the dcpartment. of | woid ncroase in Price of Spuds. £ temperature. the thermometer in that! evening slightly mitigated the oppres- | Pected that they will be prolonged,| The suit will be formally contested. | togay. 5 i delegation to the democratic national| agriculture, after the announcement of Almost a sensationai a .- city officialiy registering 100.5. Sive heat which has weighed upon the | and are without sensational develop: | It will be flled in New York county. | my Ligh > convention. 5 B Tt fonots o chata and reduse | Price of potato ) 2] Hartford Has Thunder Shower. city for nine days, but the 20-minute | ments. The summons and a copy of the com- o Light Afforded by Testimony. 3 St ing the last | ave Tomight there was a slizht thunder | Shower and southwesterly breezes ap- plaint are awaited by Colt and his | The testimony before the house| New Haven Women Have Sent a pe- Yield Below Average. througho States on June 2 ehower and a fall of 14 degrees was | P2ared to be but temporary relief. The | THREE DETECTIVES lawver, who expect to receive them on | Committce on expenditures in the in- | tition to the governor general of Can.| “The reporty said Professor Mur- | 1 Was 62.3 cc bushel. On July &, = < the result, but the humidity is greater | thermometer record for the day was TO FACE CHARGES | \Vednesday at the latest, possibly to- | ferior department and statements by | ada protestjng against the execution of | ray, ‘Teflects the rather serious ef- |1t was 853 cor bust rainarity v the rain. In New Haven 95 was| 98 dggrees at 3 p. m. After the storm, merrow. the White house and by Charles e, S&Wmn“ feots of the drought Guring June, most | the variation niy a few & he official mark of the day, with a| Which broke at 6.30 p. m. the mereury | L. oo o S - Jacle Barrymare, Tntevested Taft's offices failed to lift the mys- 3 of the important crops showing a con- | ¢énts a bus 8 g! 2 still_stood at 36 and the humidity, | Missing Stokes Letter Causing a Dea o i 5 tery shrouding the alleged ietter. _ | dition at present which indicates, a Balkiced Produc of Tok drop to %6 tonight. which was above S0 per cent. a portion of Trouble. Frank M. Patterson, Colt’s attorney, D i Charles Mattfeld Was Held Up by a - Te- ed Production of Tobacce. i Ak e i ennett Knows Nothing of It. = i & | yield below that of last vear, and Be- | .ot o0 > ke 127 in Tobacco Field: of the DRy ey NEILL \caaaribn by fue so declared today. Mr. Patterson was | _Donne woman rabber in his store and handed | yield below that of 1ast vea®, S00 00 Swing t the set- In other parts of the state where | showers. Local weather bureau offi-| New York, July 10.—The mystery of | closeted morz than an hour with Colt | Commissioner Dennctt of the gen-|over $106.10 in cash. The woman was| &% ' it oat of to there is no official record the ther-| cials declined to make any promises | the eight or more missing letters writ- | today, wiile Jack Barrymore, the the- | g;“‘ {ax:gnodmC;. tl;le only witness to- |afterwards arrested. 2 ks ot s Ml it of tobacco 1 § mometers in the sun registered over | for the morrow, but hoped for more|ten by W. E. D. Stokes, the millicn- | atrical star's brother, spent almost as | Ja¥, testified that he knew nothing of g 2 s a y E . [cent. from t % The Hesaleed mark and 5t §6 fofkitco| sibwess Guring the nisht: | aire, %o Lilliaz Graham, the show =i, | 1ong 2 time with Dittenhoefer, Gerper | It ana that he would not necessarily | ‘A Victim of the Hot Wave, John T.| “Feedstufi—oats and hay—seems o | condition - ogether fields of Suffield 127 was recorded. Just what last week’s heat meant | must be solved by the police and | & James, the law firm which Miss | know of its existence. Meehan, aged 38 years, of Waltham. | have been hardest hit. Less than two- | the shortage o nave combined Eight Deaths in State. | was shown by the report of the board | James Cummings, Stokes' private de- | BarTymore nas retained. Neither Colt Nobody Recalls Such a Letter. |Mass, was found dead in a house | thirds of a normal crop of hay is ex-|io reduce inc i7 ns to a_total S At 2 | of health, made public today. It reads: | tective, to the satisfaction of is- [ nor Parrymore was in talkative vein | Such a letter was mot recalled in|Where he lived alone. pected, and the oats crop probably production of 23 ent. of iast As @ result of vesterday's and to.| Deaths from sunstroke, 200. Deaths | trate Freschi and Police CommMeion- | When they left the lawyer's office, but | any other qusrter and 1t o ot 1o will be more than 25 per cent, jess than | vear's crop. o 7 nt. of the P etions . The ba. | from the same cause during corre- | er Waldo. Tonight three contral office | the defendant’s lawyer was, the less | be found in the files, though Miss M.| All of the Large Department Stores | last year's crop, and about 12 per cent. | average for the . . Tomter in the afternoon indicated that | SPonding week in 1910, 33. The total |detectives and a lieutenant of police ySecretive. =~ = F. Abbott, a newspaper writer who | at Providence closed at 4 o'clock ves- | 1ess than the average for the last five Wheat Crop Will Average Well. T e Tt eiiet ‘in stgnt | deaths for the week were 1,754, against | face serious charges as the outsrowth Won’t Dodge Service. will testify later, says she copied such | terday, two hours earlier than usual, | Years. “Notwithstar arought, the for tomerrow but the chances are| 1:472 for the corresponding week of jof the investigation begun 24 hours ‘No papers have been served upon | 2 document from the official files, on account of the heat. Corn 7 Per Cent. Below Average. JEE aroh b < ant s oo hones for cooting breesos| 1910. Today a dozen vitims were | ago. Meanwhile Cummings is under | us vet,” sald Mr. Patterson, -but we | Taft Dossn't Believe It Was Written. “The corn acreage is the largest | Uil he well are held out by the weather bureau. Wind and Electrical Storms. 1 X dodge service. At present, we are sim- n : W v ive | erage. That indicates a production of | L 00" ereat 4 m the veral sections of the state were | victims on it. The count took in the | in removing the letters from the girls' | Div waiting for the siher side 1o movs, | Tunicated with him on the subject, [ Fl, was overcome by the oppressive| erage. That IndiCates % Nees than last | yos? &% visited by wind and electrical storms |entire metropolitan district. Prostra- | room. 2nd until they act, we cannot of courss | €ither orally or in writing. s g year's crop, but nearly 5 per cent 3 carly in the evening, but in each case | tions numbered about two hundred.| The detectives who face charges are | go ahead with the eases Miss Abbott to Testify. The Béttleshin Dilawaresthe Biggest | miave. i the +erage production. aur- Territory Hard ii seemed to be wirme¢ after tne|With no further relief from showers, | the three mes who, AcCORding 10 Cum- | Name of Co-Respondent Not Divulged. |, MISF Abbott probably will appear | warship at the coronation rewew in | ing the last five vears, The condition | «on general croo a ss 3 e v e mings, were In Miss Graham's apart. | = The material from which Miss Har. | PofoT the committee Wednesday. English waters, has returned (o[ of the corn crop on July 1, however | 4o "o (1 Damage in South Windsor and South- ington. In South Windsor and Southington the storms took the form of small tor- tados uprooting trees, blowing down added to the list and scores of pros- trations were reported. The death list at 11 o'clock had 18 ‘WINDMILL BLOWN DOWN. South Windsor Has Mi ature Cyclone summens to testify before the magis- trate tomorrow and to shed further light upon the part he says he took Stokes, when Cummings says be found the letters. The charges will be neg- lect of duty. failure to make a proper report concerning the finding of the letters and allowing a citizen to re- are prepared to receive the summons tomorrow on Wednesday. We will not rymore’s lawyers will draw the com- plaint, it is Teported, is in the from of one or more affidavits signed by Miss Barrymore at Los Angeles. There is but one ground upon which a decree President Taft has expressed con- fidence that his brother never com- General Bingham Resigns. New York, July 10.—Gen. Theodore . Bingham, the former police com- missioner, who recently accepted the | office of chief engineer of the bureau While Hurrying to Catch a Train, Rufus H. Wentworth of Franklin, N. Charlestown navy yard. The Boston Rubber Shoe Company factories at Edgeworth and Fells wiil be shut down for a month, beginning ever recordad, but the condition of the | crop is about 7 per cent. below the av- was critical. Potato Crop Will Be Short. “The potato crop promises to be un- usually short. The acreage has fallen production the amount ¢ havs been hit weather and t states comp briska, K ® barn in the former place. Lightning but Little Rain. main in the room when they were in | Of divorce may be procured in New | of highways with the announcement | JULY 15, on account of a shortage ;: strnck in five places in Soutfimmon charge. Deputy Police Commissioner | YOTK, but the name of the alleged co- | that he proposed to reorganize the | °T0€Ts: PRIEST DENOUNCES SENATE CHAMBER LOOKED and once in South Windsor. Trolley | Siuth Windsor, Conn, July 10.—9 | Dillon so announced foday and added | Tespondent in the suit has been with- | bureau and to improve New York 3 LIKE A BEER GARDEN, trafic was interrupted in Southington miniature cyclone, attended by a little that the charges would be made at held by counsel. streets, resigned the post today. He the Steame: Every Passenger Santa Rosa, wrecked near Point Ar- A MOVING PICTURE. by trees Dhlowing over on the feed |Tain, passed over here shortly before | once. He said he had not Gecided Colt at Yale Club, * |said that his way of doing things did =3 £ “ ” as! Iving Electric Fans | Wires and in South Windsor telephone | 7_oclock tonight, doing considerable | whether he would suspend the detec- | Afr. Patierson left tomight for Al. |10l 8t in with the methods of the gz:;lroéinial-io h:s 5‘:;::m:;;°';il“_:g :::ri Shocked at “Story of glhc Nun” as| Four R.vo;hm:‘ :!,_.._M"». nstalled wires were put out of commission. | damage. A windmill owned by O. N. | tives until trial or not o mterson, left tonight for Al |present city administration. Sccosting. Told by the Film. ere Yesterday. Secarcity of Milk and Water. Sad e acre to- | Acting District Attorney Buckner | put Golt remained in fown at the ¥alé e 3 . 7 15" 1o-Nepen | sWeshiugton. Jaiy 10—With Shaeatl bacco shed owned by Clarence Fair- | appiied for the summons for Cum- " . Huntington. L. L, Ju If the present hot wave continues | panil Tufe blown: over and trees up- | Ahbucd for the sur b club, where he may easily be reached | FANTASTIC DECORATIONS g Snatches from His Own |, Funtmston Lol JO8 o [ i tane vyt thele B dhere WilI Probably tollow much suf-l'rooted ‘The-wind was but & Yew min- | Miss Ethel Gonrad, whese preliminary | °° > SUI0DS in’the case. FOR VISITING SHRINERS, | Somposition. John P.. Jones, noted | rector of St. Patrick's Roman Catholic | the senate cnicred today on fhe fift< @ome places water, In Hartford milk- | Bics duration, but the loss will be | examination on a Charze of attempt- Couple Married in 1909. e o o o1 it boma Ju | clnitalicand dean of Nassao-Saflolk | teenth week of the specisl Sssubst men report that there has been a | heavy. igttal ing to kill Stokes is to be continued Bthel Barrymors and Russell Gris- | Rochester Ablaze With Electrical Dis- | chicazo, arose at a motion picture ‘nh?‘\'\d p;\r: ;.a,“q ’:rv\mr“' ht | compasure. FRe T iniaepuf from 23 0 30 per cont. in | pUTIng the storm lightning struck a | {omorrow, Insist that the absence of | Wold Colt were married after their plays—Real Camels There. = ‘and denounced the film which had just | fans are o ‘s % blade” vari- the suppl¥ in the past (wo weeks, and | Louse owmed by Bdwin Curtain, knock- | the letters in question greatly handi- | encagement had been' announced but Capt. ©. C. Fogors Mas Beor De.|Deen shown, the audience gasped its |ety, and their instaliatitn w M”:i: stmilar conditions are reported in oth- | N5 _Plastering from the walls and|caps their case because they relied|a few days, on March 10, 1909, in| Rochester, N, Y., July 10.—With the | tachin” feom dute oy eaptain of the | Surprise. iut | Ewo minu ore the - e Hg g o d stirring things up Eemerally. . T4ei|upon the missives to justify their| Hyde Park, Mass. Colt is fhe son of | streets of the city Alled with thousands | Nqrfolk navy vard and ordered to duiy | , 4 consider it my duty to protestiSaf . . o o beer zarden” sug- e N et Tt Phone wires are down and the full | Jooting Stokes. Samuel Pomeroy Colt, president of | of spectators and other thousands of | as commandant of the Portsmouth, N, | 28ainst that series of pictures.’ <aid | CHt I0gi8 U082 e of Oregon, e 9 4 . ?w’l::;l of damage cannot be ascer-| —Mr. Buckner caused a subpoena to| the United States Rubber company. |Shriners, Rochester has the appes:- | i, navy yard. 4 Fr. York. “Both as man 4("’““;‘2'“;& iy ot ™ ome of the & il whol ey 476 Batul 148 Ny and| - ra s be issued tonight for John Bloom, Couple Have a Son. ance of ‘being wholly given up to an - e inmiay of pletures that are unrep- | eirealators s tonder axim K ing from lack of rain and fruits are in = . s n to the Coits. A year later re- gy 83 - . > o in their teachings. /Such pic- | he added, watching th P hen - said to be a small supply of Water in > € ranged were circulated. Mr. and Mrs, | 5. K - | road races scheduled for Aug. 2 ity “If not good z they are lom the reservoir. g | Dy It Westiior: TR e S Colt “were theri in New Orleans and | (i% [He sessions of the Imperial coun- | 26 at Elgin, Iil LY ¢ the Num" was_the |for svod " retoricd Hepator Curtin New Haven Department Stores Close. | Southington, Conn., July 10.—An both were emphaticin” their denfals. | S subject of the film. to which Fr. York | whoss remark red to ot As was the occasion during the heat electrical storm accompanied by a CUTS HIS THRAT. _Mrs, Coit Niece of John Drew. never has Rochester welcomed a fra- ternal order as it is welcoming this. Three Lives Were Lost Yesterday when thz steamer John Mitchell of took exception. It showzd a youns gaspipes by pended fro last week, factories were ohliged to|downpour of rain and a violent wind = Miss Barrvmore is the daughter of | Main street is a blaze of light with | Chicago w: in "collision with the | 8Tl Who had been forced against h:r A0, from responsibia shut dawn soon after noon toduy, and | struck this town tonight, uproating | Lyman D. Smith Was Suffering from | the late Maurice and Georgie Drew | a score of electric canopies flung over | cioemmo yas Sk I oo o e | will to e Y B s oty discarded in New Haven the department Stores | trees and turning the main street into Impaired Health. Barrymore. She scored her first the- (it; other electric displavs have been | Pointe, Lake Superior. e L I Driost, whose attentions | his hand fan and red supsriatively Closed at 5 o lock. There was a gen.|a small. river. Lightning struck in — atrical success in 1895 in a company | made by private enterprise, and flags PR Smelaeris pricat, W el (it Mo | cotiltoktadle, Her [ieriativety eral getting out of the cities by those | five places, one the flagpole of the Ox- | Bucksport, Me. July 10.—Lyman | headed by John Drew, her uncle. She |and bunting have been used with a| Walter E. Sutton, General Manager | tHTew her into such a frenzy that ehs | S OVAPIC | echarieal (ARG, ley department store, knocking it to is 33 years old. cast the crucifix to the floor. smashing * who could, and tonight the beaches are envered with the sleeping forms of those driven from their hot and stuffy pieces, the ball of fire going to the ground, narrowly missing several peo- Dudley Smith, a teacher of Hartford, Conn., committed suicide today by cut- ting his throat with nis pocket knife. Colt an Heir to $15,000,000. Colt is 28 vears old. At the time of | lavishness not before equalled here. Tens of thousands of electric buibs also brighten the chief streets leading of the Providence Tow and Steamboat company, widely shipping circles, died at his home at known in coastwise it ' The priest called the mother s perior and the young girl nun was Th vroke the lee ng a fan plaes Vice President several day ed on his de - ed alive. homes. ple passing at the thme. He was at the summer cottage of his = from Main street. = = G ,V sentenced to be entombed alive. The ooy Besane Becidor The storm covered an area about | brother, Freeman W. Smith, at Verona | 1S Marriage it was said that he would | “Scores of marching Arab drill patrols st Providence yesterday Walls were ‘belng_ camented about her | oozl o o Many of those prosirated by the heat | {0 miles wide, and on the farms on | Park, a’summer resort two miles below | SYERORANY become helr to a fortune of | in their Zouave-like uniforms kept the | While Attempting to Swim Across | When rescuers saved her. =~ = . S T SUN, today became temporarily deranged | the outskirts the corn, which had | this village, where. with Mrs. Smith, gy & crowds on the alert tonight, and scores | the millpond and back at Bath, Me., (. The S ntiatied to a.in: 116 shbwW HIKE UNDER HOT SUN. and zave much trouble. At Greenwich | Feached any considerable height, was [ he arrived from Hartford Saturday to of bands are marching hither and|Edwin E. Wilson, 14 son of John E.| YOrk, w s hadegons thérs torses tHEl Vestdrday Was the Hottest of O K. €. Yegiaian, a Greek, from New |Plown to the ground, and in many in- | spend his vacation. His health was| RECEPTION TO ELKS thither. Wilson, sank when half way on the | Decause ek “I‘K"'!n B i el Ty, Was ! - York, flourished an axe and attempted | Stances the crop will have to be re- | impaired by a recent attack of grippe AT ATLANTIC CI The assembling of the Shriners is | return trip and was drowned. R amint. N ikt hik Year at Niantic. life of a constable who attempted | Planted. No relief from the heat was|and it is thought that he was affected IC CITY.| marked by no end of novelty. For ex- s e aatllv leti the siare, 3 i restrain him. In Willimantic a man | iven by the storm, it seemingly be- | by the heat on his wayv to Maine. Sl Rule. ot Rtentie. i ample, Lulu temple of Philadelphia | For Bringing a 17 Year Old Spanish | Protest e hastie 'orr 0% RECe., ™ thought to he John Moran of New |iNg hotter after it had passed than| He was the originator of a system | EX uler o lantic City Lodge | came to town “with bells on” It had | girl to New York from the Panama ,-"’l Tiich Zalt, rasn ibiity . fors the o g Tonudon fan theough the streets to sa. | Petore. of penmanship, has been teacher of Delivers Address. { with it a papier mache replica of the | canal zone for immoral purposes Sam | disclaimed all responsipliy, 7or, ated b cape imaginary pursues Farmhand in Cri Condition. penmanship in Hartford schools for 45 et | Liberty Bell of 1776. with its world- | Kirber was sentenced to two and a I”Quedeb_ymp— nf‘mm, board of con. | opments. Wor Salisbury Masin: Sad, Shape. Salisbury, Conn; July 10.—Frank | Years and was a student and linguist.| Atlantic City, J. July 10.—Al-|famed crack and all, and tiny bells | haif vears-in the Atlanta prison. Ps A ihAe 15 A1 nob aven Kaby | L8 noor #vack Andersdh 2 Womd at| Anderson, a farm hand, was overcome | DoSides his wife, he leaves two daush- | though they had already taken the | jingled merrily at the bottoms of the | i Tt s viotutes would be until they | Igurs bike, 'S tere were no soranie Anderson. a farm hang atl o (he heat while working in the fcids | tore; the Misses Marion G. and Martha | town by storm. the thousands of Eiks| trousers of the Shriners. (»An Explosion in a Building Used for | WhaL the DIEties v o0l o en. affected by | . there weve Be i A b G s oy e e mlc. ford. al and burial 1} nual reunion gathered | There are real camels here—three of | the manufacture of chlorine at the Ed- o s o prostrations. e uy became deranged and gave consider- | Irve tofa¥ and rendefed unconselous:| will be in Camden, Me. where he was [in the marine ballroom at the ocean | them—brought by Moila temple of St. | ison electrical works in West Orange. URGES BLOUSES FOR first hike, ur's Fests ahle trouble hefore put under restraint. | TTHER TomoTed, o om0 L e Reicy | POrn and spent his earlier vears. end of the steel pier tonight and per- | Joseph, Mo. Khartoum temple of |N. 1. started a fire that for a_time when the first n was Taken ot s T X Lol o b Bl s mitteq the people of Atlantic City to| Winnipe brought Highland bagpipars. | seemied to threaten the whole plant. THE LETTER CARRIERS. from Yesterday’s Death Roll. His condition tonight is critical. FINANCIAL LOSSES i S Soi el (hoSrcedomiBe the B Lo Kertiger Pasina Told s ad By B &5 Al o t n Niantie . 3 24 . A. ri , in, w da as e 348t the deaths, John ¥. Brouthérs ot 104 at Woodbury. CAUSE SUICIDE. | The principal address of welcome, in| HUMIDITY STOPS Exchange Natlonal Dane at Birtsburs, | 1 oo Mo §o Dissard Goater an he state orercome. eatly in the afternoon and| Woodbury, Conn. July 10.—The ther- ——— the absence of Gov. Woodrow Wilson, ATWOOD’S FLIGHT | was arrested yvesterday by the federai { it camps e e ad. oy s dled tonigne. T He whs 76 vears old | mometer reached 104 here today, [ George T. Horn of Southport Slashe: who had expected to be present, was - authorities, charged with misappropri- | waghington, July 10.—Following a | 100ked as the s e n Derby Charles Siattery, 46 years | e1ualling the highest record made last Throat from Ear to Ear. mde Vo Harry Bacharach, exalted|He and Hamilton Will Make Another | ating more than, 35,000 of the bank's | gpecific appeal on behalf of the letier | 10 & s it Bt the. cots old, suciimbed to alcohol and heat at| Week. which was on Thursda: S e :ul:lr!;f the Atlantic City lodge. Au Try at\Baltimore. funds. carriers of Milwaukee that they be 2 bed na. 1t his ing house. Frank Chesna Heat and Alcoholism Fatal. Fairfield, Conn., July 10—Despond- | Sust Herrmann of Cincinnati, the grand | 2 S _V Dermitted to wear blue blouses instead | Anslly e g died at bis home in Waterbury this| Bethlehem, Conn, July 10.—Philip | St because of financial losses, George | SXa1tod ruler. responded in a half hour's | Bajtimore, July 10.—Being unable to | Paul = Tissandier and the Marquis|of the usual uniform coats during the | WAS # B otis e morning. He was 35 vears old. At/ Fitzpatrick, who said his home was n | T: Horn, living on_Sasco Hill, South- E - resume their aeroplane flight to Wash- yarion, aviation race commlssionsrs | neated term, Victor A Berger, socialist ;- s = 2 kv S| [5rt, committed suicide today by cut-| The first business session of the|]. . of France, fought a duel over a dis yisconsty, h - | 800d 1 Norwleh Max Silva was overcome | Waterbury, when he applied for work | ROrb ¢ ; A e N i *| ingtop. this evening, because of un- | 0f France fought a duel 1o 85 | congressman from Wisconsin, has r e while at work in a factory and died | here vesterday, was found dead be- | lng his throat with a razor. The first | BONG Jode! e TMOITOW | favorable weather conditions. Harry | PUte as fo their vight to order the|quested Postmaster General Hitchcock i two hours later at a hospital. Philip | side the road mear the home of David | intimation that the family had that|mgrning = . o IN. Atwood said that he and his com- | 2Viaters fo fly regardless of weather|(o make a general order permitting | RECIPROCITY BILL Fitzpatrick, suposed to live in Water- | Thompson, late today. The medical | e had taken his life was the finding | he election of DL _EX; but | Panion, Charles K. Hamilton. would s carriers everywhere to discard their NEARING FINAL PASSAGE, bury, died beside a roadway in Beth- | examiner. who viewed the remains,|Of & mote written by Horn, by his| ruler has develoned into a spirited but | Ito get away at 4 a. m. TOMOFTOY. | \yiliam S. D E 5 coats during the summer months. —_— Jehem from a combination of alcohol | said death was due to alcoholism and | Prother Henry. which read: “I am sor- | Zodl Batyred confest. Arthur C. More- | fre added that they would stop at Col- | y William S Devery, a Former New | 1t has been the custom of the post- [ All Amendments V Down by Large and heat. He was 50 vears old. Taere| the heat. He was about 50 years old. | I}; DUt T have got to do it 1 haven't | Ane of Rew Vor eiaonds 523 | lege Pari, Md.. where the army avia- | GOTK chief of police. called on Mavor | office department to leave the ques- Majorities in Senate. were two deaths In Willimantic, those s slépt for six months. You will find me | he had a good chance of heing elected | 1ion school of instruction is situated. | Gaynor Yesterday to ask him to sign | tion of dress during the hot months to k. of Mrs. Cecelia Frederick and her ten| KOINING WINNER OF i .the Darr-——George. o e oot e o o pecaus®| _ Atwood announced his decision about | 2nabling Devery to draw pen- | the. discretion of the postmasters of | waghington, Ju The Canadian months old child, and in Higganum Two physicians were summoned, and | ¢f the, _gmfim,- or deadlock between ;3o this evening after two futile at- Sion mopeysal/toa rats of one-half his | ths various offices concerned. 1f the [, cimro {177 ged unscathed tos Roto Giovanni, a woodchopper, died CIRCUIT AVIATION RACE. |on the arrival of the firsta search of | John P. Sullivan of New Orleans and | timpts had been made to fly from the | former salary. department refuses to issue the general | peERrGUT © yus ordeal 3§ five hours after having been stricken. 3 the bamn was made and ‘Horf's body | D02 8, Seeoiny of “hallas, Tex. IS field whera the machine descended:this| g oA Pty order, Mr. Berger declared he would | p St (00 O n the senate. The 52 Deaths During Heat Wavi Buechner First to Reach Berlin, But Euggngmfiis'"ufifizh{};g covered with e D. Louk'S: Arkansas is op. | MOFRinf after a remarkable and nerve | Soceyse fov. Aram J. Pothier Oedars mtroduce a bl in congress permitting | seriey of am tered by Semse . Koining Covered Greater Mileage. - roat w ear | G D= i > £S5 - | racking aerial journey. This journey | ooF. selling fon /(he Jor 2s at | a) carriers to wear the light blouses. |ger ¢ o ind the tWo of= % r v i avia- 3 - o vas 52 years old, sin- " T minutes fter 5 a. m. and ended at 9.23 ] 2 » “arc ’ 1 rease Boston's Hottest Evening. Berlin, July 10.—The national avia- | il 350 o8 wealthy family. Robinson, the present secretary D e i e e Pemnes1. | five days’ meet scheduled to start yes- Safolina, e tion circuit race which started trom is a candidate for re-electio 2 is | terday had been called off. ACQUIRES FRANCHISE. | number of ar Boston, July 10.—Boston was not|the aerodrome at Johannisthal on AT IR T W ortland: oo e the ;,mg'gm con- | yania railroad station at Stemmers | o3 R g * | ticles, which nitted to the only the hottest city in the country | June 11 ended at the same place today. | FOUR MORE SUBWAYS tender for the next convention, for | RUN; APproximately 148 miles from the | A Now Swimming Record Was Madé | Becomes Owner of Proposed Trolley | United States voted today, but set a new mark tonight| Buechner was the first of the aviators FOR CITY OF BOSTON. | which there has b 1ittl > starting point. at Brid £ wher Nathasiel SaPho Line fi c down by large ma . when the official report from the | to arrive, but Koining, who reached 1 to now. ¢ e Peen little seeking up | The fiight had to be discontinued on | T * g;fii“:"m;;:gxb;‘h‘:';‘;‘m;ngg g b e L The vote in of the amendments weather bureau at § o'clock gave a|the aerodrome at 838 o'clock tonight, it The 3 account of the intense heat and high oo i b 3 Fale 1 . va 0 small t Senator Cumming temperature reading of 91. which, sald | proved the winner of the contest on | FrCPOsition Started Through Massa- == humidity, which made it almost if not | the city, who is boxing instrictor in| Canan, Conn. July 10-—Papers were | J00 P9 2"\niy ‘five rolicalls, although Forecaster Smith, was hevond doubt a | account of the greater mileage com.| Cchusetts Legielature Yesterday. | PITTSBURG SUICIDE quite impossible for seroplanes to at- | {18 T, A% C- A, eympasium, swam frow | passed today whereby the Berkshire |y, had annount e tion et S racord figure for that hour in Boston. | pleted. Vollmueller, who landed two = 5% DUG HIS OWN GRAVE. | t2in_a sufficient altitude. The same 2 se Island 't0. Scaside; Fari. i ElaE e bec e ‘l e l'ing for at le maXnunE The highest mark of the day was 98 at [ minutes after Koining, was officially | , Boston, July 10.—The proposition to - | atmospheric conditions prevailed this | youo | u TNC= L Wedell, 1 e O nefranchise for 2 wiolles | vote for his tariff amendments was 18 noon. recorded as second, and Buschner as | Puild four more subways and tummels| o\ o (ST L 4| ovening and forced the postponement | oY 208 B denct R T, to Gloics| chuseiis siate line fo conhect with a | compared with a maximum vote of 83 i Mavadd Overdoima. 4 in Boston and to consolidate the prop- arm Clock and Got Up and | SR R0 nine® O o e L oot W L ol thom Suffieid, Conn., July 10.—Today was e i S o s Hanoed Himeslts SoEa heat while the ‘train was appcosching | Mags . The sorinal holdere of the | ., The defeat of the amendments clegrs the hottest in the history of this town, OBITUARY. Streetatimar was starieg themieh o | pittsburg, July 10—After digging a| WOMAN DROWNED WHILE North Bay, Ont, and was in & serious | franchise previous to its transter were | the situation 'n e sentie Aid 1sasey . and 11 prostrations were reported of - % legislature this afternoon. Two bills|grave in the cellar of his home in BATHING IN THE SOUND | condition for some time at a hospital. | Henry J. Roraback and S. F. Eddy. | the reciprocity men working in the tobacco flelds. On Mrs. Henrietta M. Brechlin. to this effect passed their first read- | Freeland street, Joseph Armatage, a Work on the construction of the line, | PAssage. P, the Hinsdale-Smith plantation 30 Meriden, Conn., July 10.—Mrs. Hen- | ing in the senate. retired business man, stood on a bar- | Little Daughter Attempted to Save it is understood, will be pushed as |, 5ite RUN oURt horses were overcome and rendered | rietta M. ‘Brechlin, widow of Gottlieb | The bills provide for the sale of the | rel, adjustzd a clothes line noose about but in Vai tives Clayton of Alabama and Adam- | Tapidly as possible. HOODLUW unfit for work. The thermometer in| Brechlin, died in this city this eve- | West End to the Flevated, with a 7 |his neck, and then jumped off into his Eare butiinVein: son of Georgia to direct the sarving ELECTIONS,” SAYS CHAMP the sun on the fields registered 120. | ning at ihe age of 9 years. She was |per cent. interest rate to West Bnd|grave His neck was broken and he| ilford, Conn, July 10.—Mrs, J. B | of 20 dave' army rations to the sut. Steamship Arrivals. fils i f @ of Meriden's oldest women and a |shareholders until 1922, when a board | was dead when his wife found him i L wne Grown. | ferers from the severe storm of July At Liverpool: Jul, ctter Th, ¢ Seipped :,’;n:"',:"""”;"_r;“’r'l‘:! .| Well known German. She is survived | of arbitration BT} et mehieis bates ohon 1aior Tucker of Glebraole £ L s (roWh- {1l Toeiconnty e, sl i laiety Raw Ton: vin. Gusenstimn | 5 i o - T o s e Rty sChattes M. by five children, 19 srandchildren | the rates shall be raised. The tunnels| Armatage had beenghauntzd for the | €5, 13" NITO¥ mcim “Who was the | cOUnty, Georgia. At Southampton: July 9, St. Paul Al ‘Brandon . N2W | an great-grandchildren. She was |are to be leased to the Elevated for 25 | last few weeks with a premonition that 7 s BB, 2t — from New York via Plymouth and o Suly York, is & vietim of heat prostratios | an invalid for six years. Death D T e 1a . |:Suest o her sister. 3 . B. Major, : » Charbon e, Atlantic in this city. Overcome by the heat, ne | gue to age. TS "as Eoing to die. e told his fam | went in bathing this afternoon with | The 8 Wire Manufacturers Indicted | Chierboure. = = the _big audience 4 by dropped to—the sidewalk and was tak- 5 e R Tk % °%| several children, among them her lit- | under the anti-trust law on charges of | At Naples: y 7, Madonna. from | o¢" pixje, Speaker CbBamp I Thw Seerigen Roapiial by Do, 2 = 3 getting up early for the purpose of | i “Goushter, and the two were <o | restraining trade in wire products be- [ New York. fatroduced to a record throng on Ahe Srien. His condition. aithowgh baa, Dr. Butler Resigns as Director. First Defeat for Plant’s Elena. slsiting the sraves of some of his D~ | sether when they stepped into a deep | £an their fight against the government | At Palermo: July 7 Principe Li Ple- | yijiiion Toliar pier tonight as te peifi- is not considered serious. Brandon is| San Francisco, July 10.—The accept- | Camden, Me., July 10.—There was » | [e3100S 1 & cemetery near Ty Then|pole. yesterday by entering pleas of not | monte. from Genoa for New YorK. cipnil speaker before the Christian B- & salesman for the American Biokraph | ance of the resignation of Dr. Nicholae | jollification meeting on_the after deci | & WEAL i When h Sroused |, The little girl could swim and when | suilty and securing a delay until Sept. : deavor convention, His speech was company and came to this city a few | Murray Butler, president of Columbia | of the big schooner Irolita as she | QR I0% 0o ™ WEED fh‘g‘::ed weot | they came {o the surface toli her |1 to enable them to file demurrers, Piper Has Nervous Prostration. striking throughon!t days ago from Boston. university, from the board of directors | crossed the finish line in the Eastern |f, Sl o mother, who could not swim, to take Atlanta, Ga.. July 10.—C. E. Plper of | _“There isx no room n the United of the National Education association [ Yacht club’s race in the western Pe- | © ;?;‘:; T A ey e oxten- | h0ld of her, but_the tide ‘'was too| Mrs. J. B. Baldwin, Wife of Coiner | Atlanta, Ga., who walked into the New | States for a pessimist or an idler,” he Stricken While Chopping Wood. and the formal opening of the annual | nobscot today, for astern was the new | Armaage never believer 'n sxten”| strong and Mrs. Tucker was carried | Baldwin of the Denver mint, had a re. | York héadquarters of the United States | sald at the outsel. “Any man whe . Higganum, Conn., July 10.—Ovarcome | convention of the association at the | Plant schoonér Elena, beaten for the [5\Ve Preparations ©or a funeral. =1 out into deeper water. When help | markable escape from deaih Sunday-| Steel corporation today and declared | misses two general clections should be. p ®y the heat While chopping in the | Greek theater at the University of Cal. | first time in her month's career. o .a’,’ " e - auiek | arrived Mrs. Tucker was brought to | when her automobile plunged over a | he came to assume charge of the cor- | disfranchiseil. woods here this afternoon, Roto Gio- | ifornia in Berkeley occupled tha dele- | The other winners of the day were | PUial the shore, where physicians attempted | precipice 100 feet high, rolled 300 feet | poration's affairs in comnection with | “Hoodlums run nine-tenths of our vanni, 42 years old. died five hours | gates today. Dr. Butler's resignation | the schooners Taormina and Vagrant to restore life, without avail. She was | further down the mountain and landed, | the National Tube company, is said to | elections and the hoodlum who Jater. was received and accepted at the an- | and the sloop Adventuress. It was al On a steady consumption of 400,000, | 35 years old and leaves a husband |a mass of wreckage, in a creek in the | have been Detter man anni was unmarried and relatives ia thia countrs. £ nual meeting of the board of directors, day of light airs 000 feet a year it is estimated that New and one daughter Colorado canyon suffering from nervi - tration since 111:8 O out ard votes is & citizen who fals to cast