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VOL. LIL—NO. 209 The -Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and Its REVENUE FROM FRANGHISE GRANT Senators Contend For Income to the State From River Privilege FROM CONNECTICUT POWER COMPANY This Fight Brought Out First Real Filibuster, on Thurs- day—Three Hour Debate—The House Favors County Lines in Redistricting—No Oppositionv to $2,402,- 000 For State Highway Commissioner’s Office. Hartford, Conn., Aufi. 31 worthy of ” tie general s afternoon in over the bil Power compan < the con- u Con: five millions in bonds, ba: 1 ¥ rights Windsor Locks. The e vesterday afternoon were t the situation oon from noon, gain taken up. was extremely Ready to Stay-All Winter, very order to pass a re o the charter of n would e giv wble franchise g away o of control er was developed by the senate, who had in obtaining of con 1pany in the wa; B of hise tax. Thirtsen Amendments Rejected. To the bill allowins the company 5.000,000 in bonds, only $203,000, and rably reported from #incorporations _committee, ed_the hou without an amend- fifteen amendments were offered call votes were taken on g disposed of without these amendments all ¥ senators who want the to pay something to the state, were rejected The Dramatic Paint. t nt of the debate was sodruff, who nad been rose to say that the g the interests ne to an agree- perfectly willing that through the senate house. Denounced “Lobby Message.” rax of e . the s paseed iu Sena a rpse to denounce message’ as the rawest on he had ever known of in e experie senaie recessed fn order that ors coul more light on the —The only the name during assembly o al.ow the |adding them to ths Fifth district was to issue d upon its n the Connecticut river arguments throughout | when the [in opposition. until just | intense. | | report, the house receded in amending ound Senator Peck | the appropriation bill for the support he was ready | senate there all winter if | the senate in passing the measure. ution ( the | bring to the [ T £ T n exmange rap Which made the open season on Hun the the | the new law. taxes or | the to | fice, carrying $8,402,000. though the had | state was passed. {utions on the eight hour basis. will sion simply the inquiry into hours of the size of New Haven city, would have to be cut up in any event. Mr. Stevens argued that the setoff of cer- tain New Haven county towns and in a natural way. Mr. Belcher of New London favored the Barnum plan be- cause it provides am equal division of population. After further debate the Stevens plan went through with hardly a voice Concurred on Naval Militia Bill. Accepting the conference committee of the naval militia and concurred with Law on Hungarian Partridges. To correct an error in'the game law garian partridges from Oct. 1, a biil was passed to heal this and to make the season on this bird to conform with $3,402,000 for State Highway Office. The bill making an appropriz.on of $164.500 for completion of the Connec- ticut reformatory was passed in con- currence. The appropriation bill for state highway commissioner's of- the biggest single bill in the budget, was passed without opposition. The chief items are: Commissioner’s salary for tw years, $10,000; traveling expenses, $2 000: clerical and office expenses. $35, 000; for Tepairs, $200,000; for deputy, inspectors and_engineers. $150,000; for maintenance of automobile, $5,000. All Bills in Effect Sept. 15. A resolution making all acts to go into effact Sept. 15 was passed. A bill placing the cost of maintain- ing trunk lines of highways upon the Bills Affecting Labor. Mr. Chandler called up labor bills, one relating to prison made goods be- ing passed in concurrence. On the bill to investigate hours of labor at state institutions he had the matter referred to the new indus@rial commis- sion which is to be appointed by Gov. ernor Baldwin, The house then pass- ed the bill to place painters, carpen- ters, maeons, electricians, machinists, engineers, firemen and plumbers in the mechanical departments of state insti- Th's leave for the industrial commis- Cabled Paragraphs Warsaw, Aug, 3L—During artillery mapeuvers today a shrapnel shell ex- ploded in a crowd of peasants. Three persons were killed and sixteen wound- ed. Chiasso, Switzerland, Aug. 31.—Ac- cording to an official statement issued today by thé Italian government there were 1,635 cases of cholera and 393 deaths from the disease throughout Italy” between August 20 and August 26, inclusive. Viterbo, Italy, Aug. 31.—Enrice C: ruso, the opera singer, was an inter- ested spectator of the proceedings of the Camorrist trial. When the tenor was leaving the court room, one of the prisoners in the steel cage, Corrado Sortino, who at one time kept a fash- ionable barber siop and who had oft- en shaved Caruso, made a low bow. The singer acknowledged the saiute Dy taking off his hat. Paris, Aug. 31.—Theophjle Homolle, director of the National museums, was suspended by the French cabinet today in consequence of the disappearance of Leonardo DaVinci's painting, “Mona Lisa,” from the Louvre. It was the opinion of the members of the minis- try that M. Homolle took insufficient precautions’ to guard the treasures of the museums. RAILROAD COMMISSIONERS INVESTIGATING WRECK. Road Officials ley Divi ive Testimony on Val ion Catastrophe. Hartford, Conn, Aug. 31.—Officials of the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad were called before the railroad commissioners _ today, probably for the first time in the his- tory of the state, to explain the cause of a wreck. The matter discussed was the recent wreck below Middletown, in which Abram P. Brown of Hartford his life and fifty or sixty more e injured. Clayton L. Woodward, superintend- ent of the Shore Line division, ti- fied that his examination of the wreek showed that the _inside rail had been tampered with. Tt was the end of this rail that the engineeers of the train said the forward part of his ensine it after which he knew nothing until tak- en out of the cab of his engine. Super- intendent Woodward said the angle bar had becn taken off, ihat the bolts had been unscrewed, and wee found near the end of the rail. There were no marks on the rail, according to his testimony, except on the end which had been 'hit by the enginc. An inmer plate, he said, had been placed under the end of this rail, jacking it up so that the wheel of the engine would hit without running over it. John D. Reilly, a_track repairer. said that the DPlace 'where the accident _occurred could be seen from nearby houses in winte= time, but in the summer trees and foliage out off the view, He said he walked over the tracks two houds before the time of the accident, and that the track was in proper condi- ton at that time. F. J. Ellsworth, a division engineer, and George DeMarc « rohdmaster, corroborated the testi= mony of the two witnesses. SENATOR LODGE'S SON MARRIES HIS NURSE Wedding in Boston—Attachment Be- gan in Hospital. Night of Peril - “In Small Yawi L 1911 Out All Nigh ELEVEN RESCUED BY LITTLE|WERE GIVEN THE CASE AT 3 P. M. EGG HARBOR LIFE SAVERS. SCHOONER FOUNDERED Captain Sampson of the. Jessie B. o Burt, His Wife, Children and the, Crew Were All Saved. Atlantic City, N. J., August 31— Capt. H. S. Simpson,” his wife, two children, and a crew of seven men of the ‘schooner Jessie B. Burt were res- cued today by the crew of the Little Egg Harbor life saving station, after having spent a perilous night in yawl boat at the mercy of the mountainous seas, Stripped of Every Sail. The schooner was caught in the wild northeast storm which has been rag- ing on this coast for the last forty- eight hours and was stripped of every sail from stem to stern. Crowded Into the Yawl. With all sails gone, the vessel was completely at the mercy of the heavy sea and after weathering the storm for a brief time the schooner foundered. In the meantime the captain and his crew had made ready the yawl boat and after Mrs. Sampson and the two children had been placed in the little craft, the captain and seven men ‘also crowded in. In Sight of Barnegat Light. The schooner foundered shortly aft- er midnight about seven miles off Ba: negat. The Barnegat light could be seen by the shipwrecked crew, but they could make but little headway in the wicked sea that was running. Car- ried on the top of the huge combers like a cockleshell, the occupants ex- pected to be thrown into the wild. surf any moment. During the entire night the drenching rain and cold wind beat upon the helpless crew and the women and. children. Life Savers Sighted the Helpless Boat When day broke, the helpiess yawl was seen off Bards Station by. the life savers, After several attempts the power boat was finally pushed into the raging surf and quick time was made on_the run for the yawl. The life savers expected any moment to see the yawl go down with its load of human freight. Rescue Was Perilous Task. ‘When the power hoat reached the frail craft it was almost impossible to bring the two together, but*finally, after careful maneuvering, the yawl was brought alongside and the' women and children first taken off. A line was then made fast to the yawl and all were brought to the-shore in safety. f Had Given Up Hope. "~ Captain Sampson said that all hope had been abandoned when ‘the dleven persons crowded into the vawl and left the stranded schooner He said it was almost a miracle how the vawl sur- vived the wild night. THURSDAY. REPORT THIS MORNING Came Back Once to Ask Instructions Abeut Different Degrees of ‘Murder— Locked Up at Midnight. New York, Aug. 31.—The life of Paul Geidel, the 17 year old bellboy, hangs in the balance fonight. The twelve men who have been trying him on a charge of murdering William H. Jack- son, the aged Wall street broker, a month ago, were still deliberating their verdict at a late hour, after having been closeted since three o’clock this afternoon. i Asked for Instructions. The difficulty of the problem which confronted the jury was made plain at nine o'clock tonight when, after six hours’ deliberation, = they asked the court for further instructions regard- the different degrees of murder. le Judge Crain was instructing relative to murder in the second ., two of the jurymen nodded heads as if that had been the tion which had been puzzling Held Till Morning. - As the jurymen filed back to their room, Judge Crain said that if a ver- dict was not reached by .11.45 o'clock he would order the jurymen held until tomorrow morning when court would réconvene. ‘At midnight the jury had reached no verdict_and was locked up for the night with instructions to report to the court at ten o'clock tomorrow morning. WILL TREAT ONLY WITH UNIONS INVOLVED. lllinois Central Officials Adhere to Their Original Position. Chicago, Aug. 31—C. H. Markham, president ‘of the Iliinois Central rail- Toad, today took a hand in the co: ferences with union representatives, in which the men seek to induce the road to recognize the newly organized fed- eration. He apparently was unwilling to Tecede from the road’s previous sttand of treating only with the Tep- Tesentatives of the unions involved. At the conclusion of the conference he Izsued the following statement: Weo the representatives of the Internation- al Brotherhoods with which,we have contracts, and they told us taat the officers of the Illinois Central railroad Wwould not.and could not discuss anew- agreement ‘while such contracts are in existence, and that if might be done in the usual formal manner that has heretofore prevailed, and for which the contracts provide, and which also stipulate tha tthirty days’ notice shall be given by either Fad & conference with three of cancelled it Condensed Telegrams A Tong War Has Broken Out in Chicago’s Chinatown. Forest Fires in California and Mon- tana have gotten beyond control. The National Independent Political :usm: league is in session in Bos- on. : Samuel Harris, 16 Years Old, of Philadelphia, committed suicide by in- haling gas. The Olynipic Sailed from Southarnp- ton for New York with a record num- ber of first class passengers. A Dynamite Bomb Was Exploded in the southern section of Philadelphia, causing considerable damage. Marquis Saronji Submitted to the emperor of Japan the names of the men, composing the new cabinzt. The British Steamer Knight of St. George was. wrecked on ome or the Fiji Islands. No lives were lost. Ensign W. Smith of Massachusetts and Midshipman A. L. Pendleton, Jr., of North Carolina have resigned. Frank J. Dorlan, cashier of the Ho- tel Mgnhattan, was arrested Wednes- day on & charge of embezzlement, The First Methodist = Episcopal Church in Akron, O. was burned to ‘c)l;: ground. ~The building cost $230,- A Coal Shipment of 8,000,000 Bushels —the largest in the history of Pitts- burg—is under way for Mississippi river cities. ¥ Secretary of the Navy Winthrop re- ceived a wireless from Admir# Togo thanking him for the escort when he left Seattle. _ Black Handers Exploded Two Bombs in New York within an_hour._ A gro- cery store was demolished and a bal ery damaged. Army Surgeons Are Urging the war department to dismiss -soldiers for physical disability rather than try to patch, them up. A Coach of a Hocking Valley Train jumped a switch near Columbus, O. No one was killed, although many were slightly injured. The Cruiser Hai Chi, which repre- sented the Chinese navy at the corona —Henry Clay Beattie, Jr., indicted for | }Ml Gfroulg-tibn is \f,he; Largeét in _’Connectiéut in Pr(;porti;in to the Gity's Po (Beidel Jury BEATTIE'S STOICAL CALM 1S B Prisoner Shaken With Sobs When His Describes Their Happy Home Life ACCUSED ON THE STAND TO Defense Will Then Rest—Paul Beattie’s Veracity —Known As Biggest Liar In Town One Wi' . —The Slain Woman Had a Daughter’s Place it Home—Grief At Her Death. Chesterfield Courthouse, Va., Aug. 31. the murder of his wife, sobbed like a child when his gray haired father, in a low, tremulous voice, told of ‘the do- mestic felicity of his son and-the slain woman, Louise Owen Beattie. It was the first time that the stoical calm of the prisoner’s countenance had given way during the trial. The testimony of the father in behalf of his son came as the dramatic close of a long day’'s battle by the defense against the evi- dence heaped by ihe prosecution. To- morrow the accused himself will go on the stand and the defense will Test its case. Told of His Grandson’s Shortcomings. Battering constantly against the tes- timony of Paul Beattie, cousin of the | prisoner, as to the purchase of the gun, his delivery of it to Henry and his subsequent conversations with the ac- cused, the defense introduced several witnesses to cast doubt upon the Wi racity of Paul. It emphasized _that point when it produced David D. Beat- ) tie, Paul's grandfather, and the uncle of Henry, who testified that Paul's character Wwas not good. It was anoth- er tense period in thet rial, for with apparent refret the aged man told ot his grandson’s shortcomings. Reiuting Paul’s Testimony. The most surprising refutation of the day against Paul’s testimony came when Ernest H. Neblitt said that on Sunday, July 16, he saw Paul Beattie on the bridge, where he stood handling a single barraled shotgun. Paul had maintained ever since the coroner’s in- tion ceremonies, will reach New Yorkd quest that he disposed of the shotgun about September 10. Alexander Suliman, a Miner, and Anthony Longvigh, a laborer, both of Freeland, Pa., are entombed in the Oakdale mine at that place. Despatches from Copenhagen and Stockholm tell of several mutinies in the Norwegian army as the result of the socialistic propaganda. The Derelict Destroyer Seneca has been orgered from her home station at New York to cruise off Charleston, §..C., and aid vessels in distress. New York Grocery Circles are show - ing concern over the high prices now prevailing in the sugar market. Gran- ulate is at the highest level in many 4he same da he bought it, Saturday, July 15, by giving it to Henry E. H. Lewis, an employe of the Beat- tie store in South Richmond, declared cke of Paul Beattie “as Testified With Great Effort. Henry Clay Beattic, Sr., father of maintain, court adjourned until. the accused, was-interr hour just before court a he stepped to the witness prisoner’s face flushed. ! haired man, his facely deepl and pale, spoke in a voice above a whisper. effort, saddenc children, how Henry in his Dbeen neglected because.: to the family during his bo described how on account the death of his £ grown closely attached to described_the strong between Henry and the il testifying that he himself his daughter-in-law as one. children. Talkin e told of how his life by the death of son own wif ove The Baby Drew Them “When her baby was Beattie, speaking of the d “it was like starting life to see the grandchild. It together very much,’ - Henry's Grief' Over th The father spoke highly charaster and controverted mony of many witnesses foi cution, that Henry showed grief after his wife'’s mul clared that he sobbed and most all night after the Waived Cross-Examil ready for prosecution, Mr. the opportunity. It was the first during the trial that his had oc After a few minutes’ testin Mary Jackson, a colored wom effect that she saw a de the vicinity of the murder on U day before it~ happened, crdss-examination seh was un cross-e: inati ‘Wendenburs TOW: WILD DISORDER IN MEXICAN CONVENTION. Telegram Claimed to Be a Forgery Started the Disorder. . Mexico City, Aug, 31.—At the end of & most impressive day in the first con- vention of the new progressive party w. har with a statutory offense following alle; FROM ENRAGED.F Dentist Had Held High School G Prisoner Ten Months. San Bernardino, Cal, Aug. 31 A. McDavitt, a dentist, ch ed .imprisonment for 15 n effort was made it f: ¥ 1 £ e hich ancisch I M e o et 2% made | Jabor for nurses, attendants and a very The Jessie B, Burt was from Balti- | party of a desire to. change the torms | Vears. of Mexico, in whicl @ n Rl i1l coold yassed in | TeW other classes o elp in the insti- oston, Aug. 3l.—John Ellerton | more for Belfast, Me, loaded with fer- | of the same. Their at = 2T0 s speec :: s 2 = 0 5 - i) cooid be passed in her c * help in the insti- | B nore for Belfast, Me, loaded with aitontion was cails : dero i 113 spoccis accepting the nomi. |18 B8, ofiCes herS O Sehera to e concurrence. Senators enough chang- ) tutions. Lodge, son of Senator Henry Cabot | tilizer, 2d to the fact that the Nlinois Central | Frank Finnerty, one of the men ar-|nation. for the presidency gave his|a Blgh school SR VoS B€ 000 SHE 4 their position to secure reconsidera. Lodge, was married late today at the = had always lived up to both the letter | Tested at the state capitol, in Hartford, | Views of the platform and how the | before tie SUECRTT GIoE roidd g Cion. Several senators made piea for | SERVIAN PRINCESS TO rectory of the cathedral of the Holy | RAIN APPROACHING RECORD and spirit of these contracts and that | in connection with ihe soliciting of |country should be soverned, (NS, 5087 | o riers D" McDavitt was broughtd fis ropassage on ground that the WED RUSSIAN PRINGCE | Cross to Miss Mary Catherine Connol- it expected its employes, as parties to | SUDsCriptions for a labor publication,, sion came to a close in Wi FOFCen, | 8 ooirt from the, jall at Riven siate’s interests should be protected | Iy by’ Rev. Pather Iinnigan. The wed- IN PHILADELPHIA | the same, to do likewise” fapfbeen reledsad, St o T e o than that | 12 miles from here, where e g end that investors should have their | $20,000 Necklace Is Gift of the King |ding, the culmination if an attachment | e : e tarted a ult greater, than _that o2 oS Ot for twe weehsti (N nterests safeguarde bt h > v ree States Gettig a Flood from the Mrs. Anna Pfeiffer, a cook in Keans- | Which characterized last night's ses b A toterests safeguarded. of Montenegro. g Bl ot ot gt e Shive, FRANCE TO GIVE CUR burg, X, 3., found & peatl of perfect |slon. 'This threat was supplemented by |an = expected _ demonstration ags nurse for the senator's son during his iliness in a Boston hospital, was wit- another to adjourn and close the doors T The row sub- e Against Senator Judson. shape, worth about $100, in_an oyster # z ¢ CAVALRY RIDING LESSONS R Miss McDonald testified that for tomorrow to the public. With the tide against him, Senator| St Petersburg, Ausust $1.—Xmg | [lese In‘a Boston hospital waswlt-f “ . o 0 o Stew Boling the eues . . : . Aug. 31.—One of the it she ha & g ; ; *nt | months, while immured in a. little T00 sdson had the auendment fabied eo | Peier of Servia. Wis daughter, Brincess | gressman’ A. P. Gardiner, his son-in- | hetviest rain storms ever experienced | United States Officers fo Take Year's 5em spolled its value. $ided only when the turbulent element | EORRD fie dentist's office, sire did i , od draw = general blll to meet | Helona, and the it B 8 S orive |12, and their families. Rev. Father |in this section _swept over: eastern Course in School at Saumur. Hot Solder Spiiled by Ti ¢ | Following discussion of the four can- | get a glimpse of daylight. The after which he claimed : A " Connolly of New Glasgow, N. S., a | Pennsylvania, Delaware and New Jer- A °m nfe ;gat g! :he E};rstlt\‘;‘g)‘:‘]dfi;zt didates for the vice presidency the |of her windows always were di at Peterhof tomorrow for the marriage on September 3 of Princess Helena to Prince John Constantinoviich, son of of the new Judson bill, | Grand Duke Constantine Constantino- an amendment. | vitch. They will be the guests of the Senator Hooker's Amendment Lost. | SMPefor and empress at the small Al- eppator Hooker put in an amend-| Crown Prince Danilo Alexander of > give mauufacturers the right| yroptenegro will attend the wedding. For days at a time, she said, she without food. 3 When court adjourned today the fs ther of the girl rushed at the prisomer; In an instant the courtroom was in an uproar, but the deputies hurried Mea Davitt out of the room and away be- fore the demonstration took serious brother of the bride, and Congress- man Gardner were the legal witnesses. The couple will make their home in Boston. sey today. Creeks overflowed their banks, cellars were flooded_mills and factories were obliged to close down, and train and trolley service was seri- ously interfered with. The Baltimore & Ohio railroad company between this city and Baltimore suffered so severely from washouts that it was obliged to ‘Washington, August 31L.—The war urned, leaving the vote department desires that the American cavalry soldier shall be as perfect a horseman as the cavalryman was in the days of the Indlan campaigns. With_this object in view, Capts. Con- rad S. Babcock and Henry R. Rich- mond and Lieut. Adna R. Chaifee, all Episcopal church in_Akron, Ohio, and in_an hour the building, which cost 250,000, was destroyed. > An American in Paris is Being Watched in connection with the disap- pearance of Mona Lisa, announced ‘William Loeb, Jr., collector of customs ould be passed.and the acceptance of | bil! would be contingent upon the | for_tomorrow. The trouble {onight was precipitated in the same munmer as that of last night. A delegate speaking azainst tha candidacy of Jose Pino Suarez pre duced a telegram favoring the cand dacy of the Yucatan man and signed #iould the bill pass, the original bill | - t . “HANDSOME JACK” GERAGHTY GOING BACK TO NEWPORT. to get power from the company by | King N 5 o Toute its trains via the tracks of the - . J: x B sned Irorm. smount to be in all half the total de- | 59,090, Thére. rallroad company. The latter road Was | army riding school at Saumaur, Norfolk Naval Circles Hear that the |t0 appear to implicate that body in| MADERO GIVES HIS Yeloped by the company. This was| ' The Russian newspapers publish fa- CRLS = i PRk si\t:ou:ck!; ampered by washouts along The advance of civilization, the bi- | captain of the battleship Delatware will | partisan action. Madero, from _the vorable comments on the members of L e SR S s U - cycle and the automobile, are ' the [e asked to explain why shells in- |Stage, denouncad it as forgery. Dele- Edward P. Geraghty and his bride, who was Julia French, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Amos Tuck French of Tux- edo and Newport, whose elopement a August, 1867, is the only month in the 92 years covered in the annals possessed by the local weather bu- reau in which a rainfall greater than gates in all parts of the house for and against Pino Suarez shouted their ap- proval or disapproval, and the row was taken up by @ group of students causes of dterioration in American horsemanship, in the opinion of army officers. In the early days, when the west was a wilderness, the United © began on the passage of s general amendment, and nator Mahan, who yester- : t plea for obtaining of the tended for the target ship San Marc struck near the repair ship Panther, with 500 men aboard. the Servian royal family. Affirms Allegiance to Which He Was SHUTTING JEWS OUT OF riats a franchise tax, took the opposite COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY |short time ago stirred society circles, | that of the present month is recorded. | fiotes possessed plenty. of matural & | Mi . . N i ¥ i r 3 n s et A ss Eunice Murphy of Indepe in_the gallery. Mexico City, August 31. fids to Mr. Judson and was against ) e i retumn to Newport within two of | Tonight o precipitation of 1210 has | ders, who lived in the saddle. Under |aiess afrived At Valontine Ny 14| Chairman Azcona had littie difficulty | ter noop today Francisco I. Madero aps. tie resolution he senators who | Campaign Is On in Russia According oy “;]‘5 ety b.;’-”“fi, N ,{Ie' ‘*%“.";Ct”he .°"i eAfi“;‘“! and at|new’ conditions, this has changed, and | stand trial on the charge of having |in calling the delegates to order, but| peared before the progressive conven~ ant h.m ;umnln'\' to say the state| to London Report. f,“efll': h‘t}_ auto;go ‘1 e uusul"ess{ [ x-E midnight the rain is still falling. today & perfect rider is a rarity. incitea the murder of her lover |the irnepressible voungsters were deaf|tion to openly pledge himself to the ";"_'; ‘n‘;‘" "'S“' gy <2 then began | 5 hofm L Sg’.’; il 'f‘S )‘,7 Upon the return of the officers from | Charles T. Sellers, wHo was hanged by |t0 his appeals. When he threatened |platform upon which he was nominated s Bt aors ooker. Fenn. | 1.n30n Sept. 1.—A Russian, corres o ey iy P enue ‘:1 "s.; CITY MAY ACQUIRE France they will be appointed instruc- | four men who are in jail. “ |to clear the galleries or to close the | for the presidency of Mexico last. 3 udson, Spellucy and Peck taking the| . o030 Sept 1—A Russian, corre- |ionable part of —Newport, and wil HISTORIC "RACE TRACK | oS in the American mounted service | SR House to the public the jeering of | He pledged himself to retire at the Higor W0 argue for :he Judson resolu.l .oipes an alleged campaign by -ths | To<o 1is Homs thielie with his wife. ACK | schools. Wireless Calls by Jak Scheetz, a|the students was very vicious and for|end of his presidential term, Vi m. For three hours the excitement | > Philadelphia_schoolboy, while T sas |@ time it anpeared not improbable that |~ In the balconies of the convention: 68 intense. government to drive the Jews out of “UNCLE BEN” GONE. Old Brighton Beach Course Offered to the services of the police would be re- | hall sat Senora Madero and the other AMERICAN CITIZENS lashed to the rigging of the steamer commerce and indnstry. He asserts i 4 $15,300 Spent Last Session. that , government - @gents 'everywhero 5 5 - " : New York for $2,250,000. Lexington as she went ashore on the |Quired. When he could make himself | members of his family. In tribute to Guce Wit on s feet Semator Hook | Are Actve In thelr endeavors to kill oft | Orief Stricken Children of New Yoris| = FOR CONSULAR POSTS |South Carolina coast, brought about |heard, the chairman-declared that in|Senora Madero, who has aceom s er t0ld Mr. Fenn that Mr. Freeman,| (rading by the Jews. In one case, he | East Side Hear of Friend's Death. |, New York Aug. 31—The final pass- the rescue of her passengers. his opinion fthe action of the sroud i [hiershusband (ites S AENs counsel o e : i | save. a Jewish firm gave the lowest ng of one of New York's famous race | State Department Wants Them to Re- e the gallery had been instigated either | prison in June, 1910, the audience twice Sl 90/ 28t 4 the corr) hai last| tender for a large contract. One of.] New York, Aug_31—“Uncle Ben|ifacks was made known today when place Foreigners. The Buffalo Gnat has been fixed up- | PY Clentificos or Revestas in an effort | made her the object of applause. At easion 315,000 wan Spent an Ghis bl | Premier Stolypin's agents immediate- | the Triend of East Side boys and girls, | the Brighton Beach Racing assoclation on by Henry Garman, a_ government |to disrupt the convention. times _the hero of the revolution aps Yt nothing wus said about the cost s |1 steped In and offered to do the |is dead. The aged man who had de-|offered fo sell to the city its track, | Washington, August 31—The ques- | bacterioluzist and ertomologist, as the e i peared to be neglected on account of Sar Chily Sienich, work at a considerable loss. He let |yoted his life to making more happy | 1otels, bathing houses and beach front. | tion of supplantting with American cit. | cause of the mysetrious disease, pella- | THOMPSONVILLE SCHOLARS the ovation accorded to his wife. B An adjournment was finally taken | the contract to a competitor and the |ihe voungsters of Now York's poor|The brice asked for this track. upon |izens the great number of forcigners | &ra, Which has been spreading in the | OUT IN THE COLD. - with Mr. Peck having the floor | loss was made up out of government | With marvelous fairy tales died today| WhICh history has been made, and for 0 hold positions in the consular ser- | mountain regions of Kentucky. { MIDDLETOWN INQUEST. bivs: | funds in a hospital. Starvation, say the | the other holdings, is said.to be $2,- | vice of the United States will be tak- S % Confirmed Park Commission. KU ttin iydberavaent: Ohitrant ys |doctors, killed “Uncle Ben.” who had | 230,000. The offer was made in con- | en up with congress at the next ses- The Body of Simeon E Coffin of | High School Building Unsafe—Walls iz o n Coroner Begins Investigation of Valley nection with the city’s proposal to buy no money. home or friends, excepting Marblehead, Mass., wa The senate in executive session con- | the correspondent, find their way sole- sidn, when the state department wili s washed ashore Have Bulged Badly. frined the governmors appointment of | v into the hands of the Black Hun- |the children of the poor. Ocean Tront park. The proposi ask for an additional number of ci near the Newport naval training sta- Division Wreck Today. Messrs. Goodwin, Plant and Bradley | dred supporters of Stolypin. ews of Uncle Ben's passing spread | Was taken under consideration, assistants, to replace men owixf;"i‘l‘.l tion WednEsdsr;? He disappeared :\'Al-! Thompsonville, Conn., Aug. 31—The i A @s a state park commission —— —— quickly. Silently weeping, a group of legiance to other countries. These for- | 8ust 23 and is supposcd to have rolled | 1ocal high school building was con- |, Middletown, Conn., Aug. 31.—Stephen H A Redi AMERICAN PEOPLE MOST ragged voungsters turned away from ACQUITTED OF MURDER. eigners are emploved as clerks and [overboard while asleep on the deck of | qamned as unsafe today, and other|D: Davi§ coroner of Middlesex coun- _ House Acts on Redistricting. the entrance to the hospital, where . e sometimes occupy the relation of vice | @ vacht. e A P o Y yowieq. fon | ¥, annotnced this afternoon that the - The house this aftérnoon refused to CONSERVATIVE ON EARTH [they had daily congregated. when a|Found Not Guilty of Killing” the Man | consul. The custom of bringing for- ==tk the 300 br more pupils who would have [inauest which will begin tomorrow - postpone the task of redisiricting the — _ |nurse told them that their friend had Whose Widow He Married, cigners into thé service has grown up, | Twe Hundred Boys, members of the{commenced the fall term on September [190rning into the wreck on ths Valley ate into fve congressional disiricts | Senator LaFollette Declares They Wil | sone. 3 it is said, because of the impossibility | volunicer fire department of Randall's | 705 erack in the walls of the build. |Pranch will be held befor ea coromers. n the motion mads by Re ntitive Only Enlist for the Right. A Jveek ago. while he sat on a bench| Covington, Ky, Aug. 31.—Milford |to secure Americans for this clerical | Island where New York city has a re- | {1 “\Jfien is a two story brick siruc.|Jury of six men. The place of holding: Fvarts of Milford and with practically In Seward park telling a_wonderful | Readnower, who was charged with | force far away from home with a max- | formatory school, successtully fought | {uro ‘buily in 1873, was found by an|ihe hearing has been changed from 30 opposition substituted the report of | Williams Grove. Pa. Aug., 31.—Sen- |Story of the wooing of a fairy prin- | having caused the death of Arthur An- |imum salary limitation of $1,000. a fire that imperilled the lives of 125 | ajectrician and today experts from |L1e, state attorney’s office to the su- e minerity of the committee pro- | ator Robert M. LaFollette of Wiscon- |CeSS. the aged man was suddenly|nis on June 26, 1910, was acquitted ‘ women employed in the big laundry | Springfield and Hartford carefully in-|Perior court in the municipal bm EEE B B S iacens ok | ain, Syekhes/of Whe GAY-at. the mase [CWERCR ABD taked fo the hospiial Npjakier 5 Eiolimynery hearing In the cir-|' PEANUT ROASTER EXPLODED, |Pulldine. spected the building, finding that the | Thomas Corcoran, who gave Forlin for the majority report made | meeting held at this place under the V] e he came or who he|cuit court here late last night. Annis’ et ool > et val ged to p <tent | UP to the police in New ven t. Senator Bamum. and then pagsed | auspices of the state grange. today, | V25 == |body was found in the rear of his|Scattered Fragments for Two Bfocks— | Mrs. Henry Fields, wife of a New | iyais, lad bulsed to such an extent|icrday, was closeted with railroad ihe bill as amended. On the part of | only casually mentioned the présideny — — home. 1t was beliaved at the time . York stock broker, No. 410 Riverside * SEilen 22 | tectives for an hour or more to the house, therefore, the state is di- | and did mot discuss reciprocity and MORMONS CHASED OUT. that he had accidentally fallen from a Twe Persons Fatally Injured. | drive, is under the’care of & phySIcian pyvite will b required Yo, rapair ho |[887d to the wreck of the train. A - wided into districte as follows it T e i window. Later the father of the dead |' nouaie onio, Aug. 3L—Tw as the result of an allesed attempt at gurooe suspicion had been directed to: . The Proposed District: The speaker said that the people |lowa Women Drum the Elders Out of |man caused an investigation which re- 3 » Aug. 31—Two Der- assault made upon her by a neero wo- 3 him, but the detectives say they are. £ n P icts. i R ! Sulted in the arrest of Readnower. |SOns were fatally injured and the lives man who has been in her employ as satisfied that he had absolutely nof Eiest gistrict: Harttord counte | Gim or recall They need fent RO own. NS, Readnower: who was the. wits of dosens of others were put in pertl majd servant. NAKED IN NEVADA DESERT. [{ng to do with it. %.,d'fi gmc Qiatrict: Tolland ndham. | yitra or radical legislation.” said he,| Kamrar, To = SIS Al thee e of Diskdesty and K Throu I\A:'y;“rl;\n:‘ 'x‘rif:d 3 "n:.»? 1"‘1:u"y::§f' “becausé-.you. can't -enliat u-majority |of the ok zifigiglief?Xfl!:lz?{; ;ulbg?qugnuyhmgxrdeds I:endrlnoweg wili mgai‘:f flp:glt:ge:t a.gaomi::y&:e;g& h °rg|t'|ifixad ns ;hrgughctu( the Coun- | Former New York Policeman Suddenly SHOWS MARTIAN CANALS. eride - ord Bt s EShIre. | of 90,000,000 of people in anvthing un- |afoot today, with the din of v |Pe glven a hearing Saturday. She is > ry notified the headquarters at Kan- Went ~Insane. : A Heriden, Wallingford, Bethany, Ham- | loss it is right. The American people | dishpans echoing In their ears, . | CBarged with being an accessory to the | fagments of the machine over 1 short| sas City of the national conservation s Gets One’ o i rgrth Haven, Sorth .Jranford.| gre the most conservative on earth.” | The elders were maks lying | llesed crime. istance of two city blocks. Edward | congress of the naming of delegates fo| Reno, Nev, Ang 31— Suddenly he. |F1agstaff Observatory Gets One of Gulitord, Madison, Woodbridge, * Or- i & o P B B L B Grady, @ machinist, who was walking | the third annual meeting next month. | coming crazcd, apparently by the heat, Best Photographs Ever Taken. o e 3 Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 31.—With its| {I1Vare, created such pandemoinium| New Haven. Conn. Aug. 31—Six as- | was struck by the flying eylinder head, B policeman, said ta he a relative of W. [ 055 oo 2o SRt SRR th district: County of Litchfild | standing “at attention” - the battleship | ;' 3 = maye Ne ven file eir | night. (Gus Prittio, a Greek, who own- 5 % s e B N A sors a oW r here.- with towns of Southbury. Middichure | Utahs one of (he most powerful mare | the 2ssault of noise by throwing wa- i primary nomination papers tonight as|ed the machine, was alwo badly man. |, 2OSton. Aug. 31—All future vonven- | ert. 50 miles cast of Reno. e P“:”-:cbfi::.;::{» \ght R Wolct Chne e e Jon ter on the women, but at this point|follows: Former Mayor James B. Mar- | gled. Uons of the Metal Polishers, Duffers | . Mahoney left Reno th 1 0" ha o ? tack, Prospect ails, et oca, in commis- | husbands and broibers took = hand|tin, Benjamin F. Alilner, David I B dug Klaters and. iBilas sdid. Silver i cceplia, position withea gup e et 1 Lo oo A I nlita navy vard to- lana after lively fisticuffs the meeting | Fitzgerald, Capt. Edgar 8. Dowe, Petar AllLR W z Weérkers' International union will ba | DATiy. Yes y he appeared al the | €VCT S s day. After * storés dud other subblies | was hroken up, T Tonlin and Jamek N, Status, Dhe s urt Were Trainmen. held in Cincinnali, as a result of a gle salt works, siripped himself of honke accepted this hecuuf| 25 1ced on board the battieship Wil <ok S party primaries wil be held Sept. 15, Kineston, N. Y., Auz. 31—TLewis I} vote taken «t the ‘close of the quad-|clothing and ran madiy across the R = ocoiiea s, hecullly) mait tor New [Xof mter i A B Bhiaad s Dk when one of the Six will be Selected ag | SIMMONS, & trainman, was killed and | rénnial convention herd tonizht. The|larren sands. Members: of ihe sure| Chicago, Aug, 3l—Evelyn: Apg et I ! pres r lantic flect, e ¥ <o\ L tha sparty candtas four men were injured in a head-on{ union keeps its records and files in spent all the. a1t¢ n | See, convicted hsad of thé “Absolul b L — x ‘rg)_s“ Aug. 31.—A hobble skirt 4 collision between the Rip Van Winkle | that city. Tollowing resolutions con- | ves N il last Aight searching for| Life” cult, appeared In Jug Wdosshied by Mr. 8 Stidmship- Arrivale, which she was wearing this afternoon R S S fiver and a paymaster's train on the | demning the officials of ihe states of [ him, buf withoui success, branch of the criminal cour The matter was called up by Mr At Rotterdam: August 30, Urantum, | Jua éesvon!l'h‘e for the death of Miss o0ss in Dayton. Ulster and Delaware railroad near| Indiana and Culifornia for the alleged | = The search was resumed today, but | prepared to make a. t for a rafs T e il B i P+ 33 3 . pyenek,‘ ‘n vears of age. While| Dayton, O., Aus. 31.—Fire complete- | Halcottville tonight. The injured are | kidnapping of International Secretary- | it is feared the man has perished in | Presentation of a motion % o g e L st Srossing a bridge over the Erie canal|lv destroved the tobacco warehouse |Engineer Sherman, badly —scalded: | Treasurer J. J. MeNamara and the vor- | the desert. | trial, however, o P i Freterved and | Ruffles hecame fashignable in mascu- | b, mnd - ahe: by Sorte fo stum- | and all its contents belonging to Jul- |Brakeman Harringion; Edward Van|ing of $50) o the defense fund, the| Mahoney was emploved ai the West SRR s couity wRich has to b | Hie aitire. 1o e S i asa aliing She” tyimed over the low|lu Marquesee in Fast Davion todas, | Elten, a trainman, and Paymaster Ed- | new officers were ingtalied, among | (23th strect and Fighth avenus sta- 20, ! e water be-| with a loss of $200,000. ward D. er. ‘No passengers were | them Vice President E. tion in New York city and . Coyle, Mer- An explésion New Haven, which, owinz (o out of style in 1700, - low and ‘Q:i g cut -. s drowned, preceded the fire.. : hurt, but all were badly skgken up. |iden, Conn. transferred to the Bronx.