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VOL. LII—NO. 245 . NORWICH, "CONN.,_FRIDAY, 1911 _PRICE _ TWO0 _ CI T0 FORCE FIGHTING WITH THE TURKS Italian Commander - in - chief to March Against Positions They Occupy ITALIANS 22,000 STRONG AT TRIPOLI Arabs Show Friendly Spirit Toward Italians But Warships are Ready for Emergencies—Cholera Breaks Out and Causes Four Deaths—A Holy War Proclaimed— Friction Among Turks Presages Fall of Cabinet. neral eCancva, | Fall of Cabinet Presaged. er in chisf of the Italian ex A preiiminary meeting. of the twa has decided to act quickly, | parties i the chamber of deputies to- eved that the troops une | day indicated a probability of the early i march immediately | fail of the cabinet. The ministerialists = positions occupied by the | iried to arrange a joint meeting in or- A reconnoissince of the des- |der to present a united front in the oday disclosed the central hody | time of a national erisis, but the op- Turkish troops with field guns | positionists declined, and in a separate from the city. meeting adopted a resolution that they 22000 Italians at Tripoli. would refuse to vote confidence in the teen more ltallan _transports | OV ministry. cocoried by warthips and corrying the | To Resist ltaly to Bitter End. Second division of the troops, arrived | The ministerialis é1 & this morning. The men hastity/| G s | resolution in favor of resisting Italy to the end, with reprisals, and by ev- | ery means in the country’s power. It {is” doubtful if the grand vizier will onform to this policy, in which”case :nded. This divisi and there are' now rs on the coast nse. Not only safeg n is 15 100 siron, alian sol Tripoli for it is the Italian posi carded against SUrprise | {he cabinet's fate is sealed. There is flective occupation of the in- jan uiconfirmed report tonight, how- rior can begi that (he committee of union and Arabs Appear to Be Friendly. is now willing to negotiate = reported that Arabs have ac- o¥fully, in in | The press censorship and the at- g o for e tempts of the authorities to keep the - oy today also at | procesdings of parliament secret are erna, obruk and Bomba. |jeadins to @ deal of unpleasantness, Cholera Breaks Out. and there a strong feeling against g & P tions | Shefket Pasha, the minister, who is aid to be responsible for the sagging ¢ the press. Twa deputies who were ordered to appear before a courtmar- to the per- arrngements, en lookin: s broken out, and it is re- | - four deaths have,occurred. | tial on 3 (‘harg:’ o’f Yriting articles ekl Caabon i ! against the grand vizier have refused General Caneva’s Proclamation. to apve They protest that the: « has addressed @ |ought to be tried before the ordins T ' inhabitants, courts. surine them that they have not been Italy. On the contrary, LACKS LEADERSHIP. wen liberated from the yvoke Jihe have been laboring | Turkey Floundering Hopelessly for ndar thié SRrE - oo Want of a Binding Force. The religious and civil | yondon, Oct. 12—The Daily T v sspected ant w Lodon, Oct. 12. ¥ Tele- e e oand taxes Will | graph's Constantinople correspondent, in reviewing the situation, says that Turkey lacks a government, practical leaders or a policy; that she is floun- dering hopelessly and crumbling away for want of a binding force to keep her constituent elements together. “The problem of reconciling Islam- ism and wepnstitutionalism,” says ihe correspondent, “has proved insoluble, and the Young Turkish regime is sick unto death. It is not impossible that Under Italy’s Protection. umation concludes by an- t Italy desires that Tripoli and of Islam under 1 A HOLY_vhR. bt | Reports from Yemen State That One Has Been Proclaimed. present events may lead to the deposi- tion of the sultan, the military sec- Constantinopie, Ocs. 12—The govern- {tion of the committee of tmion and ment h e ist of contraband | progress being in favor of placing the In ad heir apparent, Prince Yussof, on the throne. Yussof is credited with an ron will and great political sagacity.” tion to t alrea list includes cereals, a s not mentioned. andsall se bank- | The same correspondent deciares ge and | that Turkey will refuse to sign a ernment aiso | peace treaty unless the sultan's suz- 1 to conform | erainty in Tripoli is and o on. although | will simply “fold her wait, rereto. Re- | confident of her ability to endure the ports from Yemen sav that Tmam |economical and financial consequences Yah Proclaimed a holy war. better tham can Italy.” CORNERSTONE LAID FOR GIBBONS MEMORIAL HALL PRESIDENT'S TRAIN LOADED WITH FLOWERS Handsome Monument to Venerable | Many Fragrant Souvenirs of His Trip Cardinal at Washington. Across Oregon. Wasaingion. Oct. 12.—In_ honor of | Ashland, Oregon, Oct. 12.—His voice the fiftieth - of the en-!a bit husky from ‘constant use, strons, President Taft “spoke” his way | down the Willamette valley and across the state or Oregon today. For hours the corner- | his irai: traveled a land that blos- a1 hall, which |somed in flowers and fruit and the tholic univer- | folk who vame to the little towns | where it pansed for a minute or two, hons was nter of | brought tributes of all sorts to the with archbishops, | chief executive, urch dignitaries th’ the California iine only country participat- away, the presidential through Ashland. The 1id the cornerstone of ‘president’s car was loaded with flowers ch is to be mi- |and the steward has accumulated jinal ed to < for the uit to furnish the president’s days to come. aft spoke on many subjects. e building | He declared several times that the old hope that | battleship Oregon should be the first itributed in the | vessel through the Panama canal, an compic ure. | annoancement that always brought of the rth cheers. He spoke on peace and . rhitration and half a dozen other 5. The strain told @ little on his in | to the univer- | voice, but indications are that by the 3 rk of Cardi- | n Frai ico is reached tomor- nal Gibhons anh'r(v\\ the president will be speaking and in particular % in- | again with his full power. board of trustees and chancellor he !z.ooo MEN IN LINE has been since its founding twenty IN N years ago. Very Rev Charles F. | NS Y oRIc EARADE, Aiken, professor of zetics, and | 8ix Th Dr. Daniel W. Shea, dean of the col- | w‘:"d e et Car it lege of sciences, accepted the building rmy ‘and Navy. rashi an Baitinore ~ |cial hservance o “olumbus day in T e atimore VA | this city was marked this afternoon by P et which Branehi shout the one of the most.brilliant parades here Temoriai by the Catholics of the coun- | Vears when 27.000 men passed in #13to the only prince of the church In gl g B o AR L the United States. ‘(_ Included in the marching organiza- » g ions were six thousand regulars of the TWO MORE BODIES army and navy, six thousand Knights FOUND AT AUSTIN | °f Columbus, iwelve thousand Italians the imiforms. of patriotic societi Only Four of the Flood Victims Are |70 (hice thousand members of civil and religious Dodies, including boy Now Missing. adets and_ hoy scouts. S The offfaial part of the celebration {of [ended tonieht with a dinner at' the : O~ | Hotel Astor, where Mayor Gaynor and hem was that of Adam |giher men of local prominence made Uniir the dam Which was | “I0reseel Sther bodv. that of & woman. was se |ELEVATOR CRUSHES ‘:3:;";:“,_1‘"‘“ ‘wn:»:‘:vr v“ “.‘,,,? f Unfmumz':wrm;:d -.n HA.gIt;‘fly for an P "ie. Dosae o foumd thTee | New “York, Oet! 15.—While au am- con stood beside him, ad- | ministering morphine at ten-minute intervels to dull his agony, and a com- Life Sentence for Kidnapping. Chirago, Oct. 12— iusseppe Nicolosi | nany of firemen chopoed desperatel brotlgr armello were today | in an effor. to free hith, Samuel 5 sentenced to life imprisonient zfter ly window cicaner, today. lay wedge they Bad becn found guilty by a jury {ror an hour and a half between of Lidnapoing five vea's old Angelo lelevator patform and the .sidewalk, Marino, Aust Mrs, Cologe: Thousands of persons watched tne olosi, wife of Carmello, wis sent strugsle his relea for Swift wa ears in pri o cungh® across the abdo- men and hips and was So tightly crusiied sgainst the snaft that the ele- vator had to be taken apart befora he could be, fre Tt is believed he is fataily injurea, ther Biagia Cutr Major Wheeler Il from Overwork. i annington. Oct, 12 -Major eler. Jr. son of the A S Shoral Josiph Vihesier the .Confou- | Columbus Day at Chicago. erate icader. has been ordered to the Chiwago, ( 12—With elaborate WHiter Reed hospital in Washington ' pageants on land ‘nnd water Chicago for ohservation and ireatment on wc- | toda: - celebraied ® Columbus day in- overwork. b in the l'ountlhslmr of the 419th-anniversary of the 3. | discovery of America > Fi Cabled Paragraphs | Liverpool, Oct. 12.—Andrew Carnegie and Mrs, Carnegie sailed for New York today on the steamer Celtic. Santiago, Chile, Oct: 12.—The gov- ernment has contracted for a series of Marconi wireless stations along the cost from Arica to Sandy Point. London, Oct. 12.—Sir William John Crossely, formerly liberal member of parliament for the Altrincham division today. He was born in 1844 at Dun- murry, Ireland. $107,000 NOT CONSIDERED EXCESSIVE EXPENDITURE. Expert Politicians Say Stephenson Might Have Spent $200,000. Milwaukee, Wis., Oct. 12.—-Argument as to whether an’ extraordinary large expenditure or tie part of a candi- date was to be taken as a presumption that the money was used wrongfully occupied a great portion of the sena- torial investigation of United States Senator Isaac Stephenson’s election ) today. “Congress may say a senatorial can- aidate’s expenses shall not exceed $10,- | 000, but_there is no logic in the world which will show that just because he spent more than $10,000 the money wa uvsed corruntly.” said Charles E. Littl field, counsel for Stephenson. “If this committee in_its report is to base a | presumption of suilt on the size of the scnator's expense, then we ask the right to inquire of witnesses what is their opinion of the cost of properly conducting a campaign in Wiscon- sin.” Senator Heyburn, the chairman, an- nounced that “the committee would in- quire into' the facts of the expenditures regardless of what they asgregate. am not convineed that congress was justified in limiting a senatorial candi- Qate's expenditures to 510,000, he adde: nator George Sutherland said he thought the amount spent by Senator Stephenson warranted an inquiry along the line that 1t was unreasonably large. Mr, Littlefield then asked D. F. Riordan of Ashland, Wis, whether Senaior Stephenson was justified in spending $107,793. “He could have spent a oreat desl more_to advantage—berhaps $200,000,” said Riordan. George Gordon, a United States at- torney for the western Wisconsin dis- triet, previousiy had testified that $100 for each of the 2.200 precincts of the state would have been a fair expendi- ture. Members of the two committees of the Wisconsin legislature, one of which sustained the charges against Senator Stephenson and the other exonerated him, have been called to appear before the present committee. BANKER FORCED TO - ADMIT HIS SHAME. Told of Registering at Hotel With Woman Under Fictitious Name. Chicago, Oct. 12.—The committee of | United States sengtors investigating | Senator Lorimer's election brought ot at least one sedulously concealed cir- cumstance today, when Henry A. Shephard of Jerseyville, TIL, banker and former state representative despito protests, was forced to strip bare ccapades which he had managed to Kkeep secet through two grand jury inquiries and a previous senatorial in- vestigation of the Lorimer election. Shephard admitted under examina- tion by United States Senator ILuke Lea that he used a fictitious name in registeving at a Chicago hotel in April, | 1910, because he was accompanied by | a woman who was not his wife. Un- til this time Shephard had insisted that his object in using the fictitious name Was to avoid newspaper reporters. The Jes le banker will be placed on the itness stand again tomor- Tow. ’ Membe s of the senatortal commit- tee indicated their purpose to get at the: exact facts in the tangled history of the Illinois senatorship with great- er emphasis today than that at any time since the inquiry was resumed in Chicago. Shephard admitted that on his ar- rival in_Chicago he registered at a hotel under fictitious game, He said he wanted to avoid reporters and oth- ers who might seek him. Kern asked Shephard di- A1y if his vote for Lorimer. cast eturn for Lorimer's promise to.ap- postmaster of Shephard’s at Jerseyville. I voted for Mr. Lorimer for replied Shephard. you registered at the Hotel on the occasion of your visit 20. when you met Browne and what name did you use?” ask- Lea. . I think, of St. Lou all you wrote on the in point .a choi that purpos. “When LaSal “Was tha; register “Well, T don't remember exactly “You are sure that was all that was on the register?” “Well, I guess I registered Shafer and wife, St. Louls, Mo. “Were you accompanied by I was not.” “Wasn't ibat the registered under un “Well, partly, ves Shephard protes saving Ne Cic not { of questioning fai “T merely wanted real reason wl {name at that Leca real reason you assumed name?” :d to Senator Lea, zonsider this line to “discover the used a_fictitions replied Senator time,” torney Marble then produced a | register of the Hotel LaSalle for Sat- urday. Ap , 1910, and Shepard identified the signature, “A J. Shafer |and wife, St. Louis, Mo,” as that written by the witness. GARFIELD CONFERS WITH ROOSEVELT. Non-Committal Regarding Coming La- Follette Meeting. Cleveland, Oct. 1 field, secretary, of Prestdent Roosevelt, returned here to- day from New York, where he had a meeting with Mr. Roosevelt. Asked if the visit had anything to do with the LaFolllette _progressive republican meeting at Chicago on October 16, he replied that he never gave out any. | thing regarding his conferences with | Mr. Roosevelt. He added, however, that he would attend the Chicago meet- ing. . S Large Limousine Wrecked. Milford, Conn., Oct. 12—A large | 1imousine’ touring car bearing the Teg. istry number 4839 Mass, was wrecked here iate today when a pin came out of the steering gear and the machine ran into a lamp post. The lamps were smashed and the front of the body smashed to pleces, ' No one B'HS in- jured. . Mail Boxes at Depots. Washington, Oct. 12.—In order that the traveling public may enjoy the conveniences of the postal service, Postmaster General Hitchoock has di rected that all postmasters in cities | operating free ivery be instructed to place A street lettek box wt all rail- of Cheshire and a philanthropist, dled |* Women Win In California W\NOMAN SUFFRAGE TRIUMPHS ON LATEST FIGURES. - 404 PRECINCTS MISSING Practically All These Have Previously Given Suffrage Majorities—Latest Returns Show Majority of 1,678, San Francisco, ‘Oct. 12—Woman suf- frage has triumphed in California. Re. turns late today wiped out the ma- Jjority previously recorded against the amendment and since this turn the margin in favor of the amendment hes increased steadily. Majority of 1,678. Totals early tonight were: For suf- frage 119,086: against 117,408. Ma- jority for the amendment 1,678, Remaining Precincis Favor Suffrage. These_fgures represent the returns from 2,717 precints out of a total of 2,121 in the state. Virtually all of the remaining_ precincts are in coun- iies which have given suffrage ma- Jorities. So overwhelming was the vote in favor of the other important amend- ments—the initiative_and referendum, and the recall—including the judiciary —that tahbulation oi the returns was suspended with nearly a third of the precincts remaining unreported. The Final Count. The final count taken showed the following result. For the initiative and referendum 138,151; against, 44,850, : For the recall, 148,572; against 46,- 290. ALLEGED ATTEMPTS AT BRIBING OF JURORS. Dr. Hyde Accuses Sheriff of Volun- teering to Fix Jurymen. Oct. 12.-+"There's jury that can be to me and T'll fix Kansas City, Mo. a fellow on that bought. Leave it 1e” Tn the foregoing words, according to an affidavit made by Dr. B. Clarke Hyde, a_deputy county marshall named arry Hoffman sought a bribe from the physician May 6, 1910, during his first trial for the alleged murder of Colonel Thomas H. Swope. The affidavit was introduced in the criminal court here today, quring a hearing on the application of Dr. Hyde's attorney for the appointment of elisors to take charge of the jury at the physician's second trial. Counter charges of attempts of jury bribing | by the friends of Dr. Hyde were made in afiiavits presented by the prosecu- tion. The second trial’'of Dr. Hyvde will begin October 23. Dr. Hyde in his petition said the at- temppt to solicit a bribe from him was made while he was being taken from the eriminal court rocm to his cell Hoffman, according to the affidavit, sald to Hyde: “There’s a follow on that jury that can be bought. If you will give me $1.500 for him You will have a hung jury. This fellow says, however, that if there is an acquittal he must have $3.000.” Later Virgil Conkling, county prose- cutor, offered an affidavit by Mrs, Clare Wilson, who at the time of the Hyvde trial was employed at the hotel where the jury boarded. She said that she was " approached by Thomas McAn- nany, who asked her if there was not some way to get to the juryvmen in the hotel, saying: “You are getting alona in years and there is $5,000 here for somebody, and you might as well get it as some one else.” Mrs. Wilson said she refused to have anything to do with such an attempt. PATHETIC STORY OF AGED MURDERER Said Victim Wronged Both His Wife and Daughter. Carlinville. T, Oct. 12.—A story of his agreement fo surrender his wife and his fourteen year old daughter to a man who had wronged both, was told today on the witness stand by John W. Wash, a merchant of Pal- myra, Til, on trial here for the mur- of George Clarence Mw®tin, his ash, a stooped old man, shot Martin to death after had confessed to him. Wash was greatly ted when he testified of hearing that Martin had improper. re- lations with Mrs. Wash and also with his daughter. His testimony followed that of his daughter Izetta, a bride of said he s. Wash two weeks. She was married Sep- tember 29 to a moving picture show man, who disregarded the about her and Martin. Wash told of an agreement he made with Martin after Mrs. Wash had con- fessed to him. When I had loved my cused him, he said he wife ev since the first night he saw her at a protracted meeting,” sald Wash. "I told him { would get a divorce, since my wife had said she loved him, too, and that 1 would give him half my property and Pe could take my wife and Izetta and go his way and leave the other two children with me.” He said it was Martin's refusal fi- nally to stand by this agreement which drove him to kill him. BRUTAL ATTACK ON A BROOKLYN GiRL. Miss Agnes Waugh Hevering Between Life and Death. New York, Oct. 12—While scores ot civilians and a posse of policemen de- tectives, United States soldiers and po- lice dogs are still hunting tonight for the man who brutally attacked Miss Agnes Waugh in a field near her home, in the Fort Hamitton secticn of Brook- ivn, last evening, the 19 year old victim is hovering between life and death at the Norwegian hospital. The girl's injuries include a. fraetur- ed skull, more than a hundred bruises and contusions and an injury to her eves that may cause a loss of sight. She was delirious most of today, and has been continually crying: “That club! Take away that club! Police Commissioner Waldo has tak- en personal charge of the case. The description Miss Waugh could give of her assailant was very vagne. One the- is that the man was a lunatic, 1 . supposed to be harmless, who is Teported to have attempted an assault on a young woman in the same section on May 15. An effort is being made to locate him. Mexican Troops in United States. Bl Paso, Texas, Oct. 12.—Permission to send several aundred troops througi nitcd States teryitory to Sinaioa, Mexico, to suppress outlawry. h heen asked by the Mexican Zovern- ment.. The troops will be nnder com. ~ Care of Jury - Big Problem ONE TALESMAN IN CASE ALREADY M'NAMARA L. SLEPT IN A CLOSE ROOM Others Complaining of lliness—Sher- iff. Seeking Bétter Quarters—Res. taurant Meals to Be Avoided. Los Angeles, Cal, Oct. 12.—The se- {@uring ‘of suitable dccommbodations for ‘the jurors who are to try James B. McNamara in the Times building dy- namiting case developed into a serious problem today. fined for six months, and following sickness last night among the eleven talesmen so far set aside, the authori- ties today prepared to take unusual steps for their physical welfate. One Juryman 1l Already. One of the men, Zimri T. Hiatt, re- quired medical assistance last night. as a result of sleeping in a ciose room, the air of which was vitiated vith the fumes of fresh paint. Others com- plained of illness, and tonight the men were given an airy vacant court room in the hall of records. Restaurant Meals Unhealthy. This accommodation, although con- sidered healthful for the present, is not to the satisfaction of Sheriff Ham- mel, and steps wvill be taken for per- manent quarters at once. Physicians have advised that a long course of res- taurant meals may develop sickness among the men accustomed to home fare, and Sheriff Hammel is looking for a private house where the jurors may have their meals and perhaps sleep. Some Change Necessary. Some such preparation seems nece: sary even for the eleven talesmen now locked up, since, although it is agreed that probably not more than one and perhaps none of the trial jurors will be selected from this number. their examination may drag over a week. Defense Counsel Confer. A state holiday—Discove which interrupted court today, gave a brief lull Dbefore the opening of court tomorrow. District Attorney Frederick: and Aftorney Clarence S. Darrow, chief coursel for the defense, conferred with their as- sistants_{oday, and Judge Bordwell visited his chainbers and disposed of some routine matters, in order to have a clear field when court opens. Preparations to Sound Veniremen. All preparations centered in the in- tention of the defense to ascertain the rea] feelings tof the talesmen toward labor organizations. Judge Bordwall already has ruled favorably on certain auestions along this line, but the ex- tent to which the interrogation may be carried remains to be determined. | Nelson to Be Further Questioned. Z. T, Nelson, the talesman under ex- amination when court adjourned ves- terday, is scheduled for further exam- ination tomorrow. vy day— proceedings SHORT CIRCUIT CAUSED SCARE AT WASHINGTON. Guards Rush to Repel Attack of Sup- posed Robbers. Washington, Oct. 12.—The burslar alarm of the United Staies treasury plaved a prapk today and the armed guards of Uncle Sam's millions were convulsed in fear that the govern- | ment's vaults were about to be sack- jed. With startling suddenness the quiet of the treasury building was truken by the signal which is intend- ed to announce. robbers. Officials, clerks and watchmen by the thousands poured into the corri- organized sortie upon the supposed miscreants. The guards grabbed their rifles and pistols to shoot to kill, but no robbers were visible. Finally_when affairs had reached a climax bacause the burglar or burglars apparently had succeeded in concealment, it was dis- covered that the delicate electric mechanism which is attached to every opening to a vault had become disar- ranged, possibly through a short cir- cuit of the wires, and put the danger gong into active service. CONFERENCE ON SCIENTIFIC BUSINESS MANAGEMENT. Business and Professional Men As- semble at Dartmouth. Hanover, N. H, Oct. 12—A confer- elce for the consideration of the men- eral princivles of scientific manage- ment, with its applicability to various classes of business for the benefit ot the manufacturers and business men of New England, was opened at Dart- mouth college tonight under the aus- pices of the Amos Tuck school of ad- | ministration and finance, and will be continued through tomorrow and Sat- urday. ness and professional men fromy England and more distant point tended the opening session. The address tonight was by Fred- erick W. Layior of Philadelphia, who originated and developed a “scientific management” system. ey at- MAN DIES LAUGHING AT JOKE. Apoplexy Attacks Him as Tells Funny Story. Daughter New York, Oct. 12.—Alice Trac | vears, returned home to No. 113 Eliéry Streef, Williamsburg. “Papa,” she said to her father, Den- nis Tracey, janitor of the row of build- ings there, who stood at the top of a flight of stairs, “I heard a very funny joke at school today She rapeated it. Her father laushed until he cried. As he wiped his eyes he fell downstairs. “Apoplexy was fatal to him,” said | the ambulancs surgeon, who was call- ed. “He laugheG so hard that a blood vessel in his brain burst.” % | Colorado River Overflows Banks. H San Dernardino, Cal., Oct: | cording to special despatches received { here from Needles, the Colorado river | has risen to its highest pomt of (he | vear and Has cut its way ilig dvke on the Arizona Thou- sands ot acres of reclaimed lands are flopled and the settlers are said to be ‘ahundonhlg their homes. | Did't Wait for Car to Stop. Hartford. Oct. Mes. M., V. { Caulkins of Park sireet was thrown to | the ground snd her skull fractured to- pight whet she stteraptad to get ofi & trolley car hefore it stopped She was taken to a‘local hospital and her con- dition is sericus.. ; hundred - hunting ued {rom the of- The men may be con- | dors and scurried pell mell in.an un- | More than two hundred busi- | ihroigh the | Condense_d_ Telegrams The Fortuguese Government has re- called all the warships that have been crerating on the northern coast. Herbert Jones Was Arrested in Birmingham, England, on the charge of conducting bucket shop operations. It is Reported Unofffcially in Berlin “hat an armistice has practicall- been agreed upon between Italy and Turkey. Struck by a Biplane during a trial flight at Joplu, Mo, James Kinney, 50 yg“s old, a miner, was instantly kill- ed. W. S. Gabel, a Farmer of Beloit, Kansas, converted standing srain in= to bread In 20 minutes, establishing a world's_record. ~ Delayed Advices Report That 18 persons were killed by the storm which swept the western coast of Sonora, Mexico, & week ago. Another Death of Typhoid Fever oc- curred at Torrington vesterday. The victim, was Sianey P. Smith, aged 23, Who is survived by his wife. The Public Is Warned by the secret service against a nmew counterfeit $10 bill on the Crocker bamk of San Francisco, series of 1902-130S. Senator Jonathan Bourne, Jr., of Oregon, president of the National Re- publican Progressive league, is in fa- vor of a presidential primar At the Annual Election of the So- ciety ‘of the Tennessee yesterday the old” officers wers re-clécted. Peoria, I, was selected as the next meeting place, In the First List of Paroles granied by the federal board of pardons at its last meeting, the name of John R. Walsh, - ex-Chicago banker, does not appear. A Raid Made by Chicago Police un- carthed a|Black Hand clearing house, where a layge amount of bombs, dy namite fuses and other explosives were { capturec. The Estate of Rear Admiral W fleld S. Schley, according to a petition filed by his widow =nd children for- the probate of his will, does not ex- ceed $26,000. Ten\ Days Should Determine whelher Francisco de la Barra, Pino Suarez, or Francisco Vasquez Gomez has been elected vice president of Mexico by popular vote. During the Aviation Meet from Sept. 23 to Oct. 1 on Long Island, 43,247 pleces of nail were despatched from the Nassau Boulevard to Mineola, a distance of 15 miles. Gertrude Keane, Five Years Old, dieG last night at a Stamford hi pital from = fractured skull received in the afternoon by falling from u porca at hor home. Mrs. Margaret Frieser, Aced 87, one of the pioneer residents of Cincinnati, has registered for the first time, in order to vote for a woman candidate for the school board. E. W. Carroll Was Shot five times and instantly killed at Nashville, Tenn., by Weaver Smith, who charges that the dead man had wronged his 13 year old sister, Caroline Smith. A’ General Inquiry Into the Control by railway companies of the docking. wharfage and pler facilities at various ports has been instituted by the inter- state commerce commission. Thomas Kallum, Lawyer and Editor, shot and killed Henry Whitaker, a brother attorney, on the main street of . N. C., vesterday. Until a Permanent Dean of Weiles: ley college is elected to succeed Miss | Ellen F. Pendleton, who was elected president of the college, Prof. Angie C. Chapia will serve as acting dean. The Strong Winds That Cause Chi- cago to be known as “The Windy City,” also make it the healthiest large ci in the country, according to the commissioner of hea'th, G. B. Young. During a Football Game at New Haven vesterday between (he New Haven High school eleven and the Hu- rekas, Frank Dooley, left tackle on the kigh school team, had his collarbone Eroken. 4 United States Senator Jeff Davis of Little Rock and Miss Leila Carter, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Wallace Carter of Ozark, Ar re married at the Carter residence yesterday aft- ernoon. Canned Gcods Will Follow the so ing prices of other foods in the’mear j future, and honsekeepers soon wili be comyelled to pay 15 and 20 cents a can for gocds they have been buying for 10 and ib cents. Most of ‘the Captains of the Ve---is composing the Atlantic fleet have been ordered to appear in Washington on Oct. 17 next for the purpose of takin« the examination for promotion to the grade of rear admiral. In the Football Game at Stamford vestorday between the Stamford hizh school and the Mijddletown high eieyv- ens, Charles Grogan, left tackle of the home team, d one of his legs broken while attempting a tackle. A Witness Before the Senatorial Committee investigating bribery charges against United States Senator Stey m_testified th® political evil i consin was not known before the advent of the direct primary. law. “The United States Circuit Court of arpeals. dismissed four suits brought by the Krupp company of Germany to restrain_the Midvale. Steel comnany from infrineine on patents for a pro- cess of manufacturing armor plate. | F. DeWitt Fisher, clerk in the Tole- | do postoffice, has received word from | the postoffice department that he has | been proclaimed the champion mail | aistributor in_the United States post- | al service. Fisher's record was 71 pieces of mail in 11 minutes. The Duke of Connaught, the new governor general of Canada, arrived in Quebec harbor last night aboard the steamer Empress of Ireland. There was a crowd at the dock, but his royal highness and the duchmess remained {in the seclusion of their suite. : The Balloon Boston Made a 60-Mile {trip from Pittsfleld, Mass. to | Hartford, vesterday. carrying as p. | sengers 11, Helm Clayton of Canion, }Joy B. Renton and Frank C. Becker of Boston. Scme of the distance the bai- loon traveled at a rate of 70 miles an while an elevgtion of $,000 feet was reached. 3,000 in Baltimore Parade. Baitimore Get. 12.—Columbus.~day was celebrated in this city today with { financially { den, Edward D. Eaton, D. D. T0 ESTABLISH A REPUBLIC IN Pi;pdge of Revolutionist Movement Wh Has Become Formidable E EXILED LEADER TO BE PRESID s NT Py Money—Many Manchus Slain—Missionaries Se Refuge at Hankow—Government Dispatches Two Divisions of Troops to the Disaffected Provinces. Hankow, Oct. The revolution yed and the criminals liberated. Thers which has been hanging over China [has been fighting on the streets, § for monchs past, und of which the |the most stringent orders have beai Tising in the province of Sic-Chuen |issued that the lives of forelgners | was only a small part, has begun in |their property shall be respeoted. Sisters Decline to Leave. earnest. It is a concer(gd lmm'emenr to tale thy ire and declare a re- ¢ AU aAn American expedition which wad b 5 espatched om Henkow to Wu Dr. Sun Yat Sen for President. Chang for the purpose of alding the The note¢ exiled revolutionist, Dr.|missionaries there, returned here to: Sun Yat Sen. leader of the enti-Man- |day with all the missionaries, with chu party, if the plans do not mis-|the exception of Miss R. A. Kemp of carry, is fo be elected president. He | the Episcopal society, the members of was the delegate of the revolutionary |the Roman Catholic mission, inclad- party to the United States in 1910, |ing the Sisters, and the London mis< and is believed, during Ih:t\I lul\.:r, filD sion, who declined to depart. have made arrangements for the fi- . nancing of the movement. Foreign Ogneessions Endangered. 3 There was a brief exchange of shots Provincial Assembly Secedes. today Detwesn: the Wu- Chang S Sun Yu, a brother of Dr. Sun Yat |and 2 loyal Chinese eruiser. fir- Sen, who is now in Hankow, has been |ing ceased after the British and. Fap- clected president of the provincial as- anesc officlels hed protested that 1% | endangered foreign coneessions. S | semb d 'Take Hua lLung, the re- GOVERNMENT AROUSED. tiring” president of the assembly and a nol=d scholar, has been elected gov- Two Divisions of Troops Ordered td the Disaffected Provinces. ernor of Hu-Peh. The whole assen- bly ha seceded from the imperial government. Pekin, Oct. 13.—The Chinese govern ment has awakened to the danger of the revolution in Hu-Peh provines, | Rebels Financially Strong. rebels are well organized and strong. They have confis- cated the local treasuries and banks, The and are issuing their own paper mon- |&en, Yen Tchang, the minister of wer, ° ey, redeeming the government notes (left hurriedly this evening for Pao- With this, as the foreign banks are | Ting-Fu, one hundred miles to tha south of Peking, where the sixth di~ vision of the army is making hasty preparations to leave tomorfow Hankow. An imperial edict issued to- day ordered the immediate despatch of two divisions of troops to. the disaf- fected provinces. About twenty thou- . sand of the troops are Manchus. It refusing the government notes. Wu Chang Captured. The revolutionaries have captured Wu Chang, the native section of Han- kow, and Han-Yang. all adjoiifing cit- ies in Hu-Peh province. Chang-Sha, capital of Hunan, is reported to have risen n revolt, and Nanking, capital |is against the Manchus that the reve of the provine: of ng-Sun, is_on |lutionists have risen. the verge of ing, several public Warships to Be Assembled. buildings baving been destroyed. At the she: tharest codire Faniil Criminals Freed from Prison issued for the assembling of a fleet Thousands of soldiers have joined |of warships in the Yang-tse-Kiang, the mutiny in Hu-Peh. Many Man-{which are to unite with the land forces against the rebels. Aocording to the official report at least 10,000 and pon= sibly 15000 troops have mutinied 44 the provijce of Hu-Peh, chus have heen Kkilled and the terri- fied people are fleeing from the ci into the country, carrying their longings. The prisons have been open- GIRL’S PLEA AVERTS LYNCHING OF NEGRO. Victim of Coatesville Assailant Asked Mob ‘to Let Law Take Its Course. RELIGIOUS CELEBRATION OF CARDINAL'S JUBILERE, Prominent Catholic Ecclesiasts to Gather at Baltimore. . Baltimore, Oct.. 12.—Archbishops, bishops, priests and laymen of nation- al prominence who are members of tha Catholic church will gather in Baltl~ more next Sunday to attend the elab~ orate religious celebration of the dual jubilee of Cardinal Gibbons, marking the 50th anniversary of his ordination to the priesthood and the 36th year of hig_cardinalate. Monsignor Falconio, papal delegate, will represent the pope and bestow the pontiff’s blessing. Many of the visiting churchmen willl remain and participate in the firat na- tional congress of the Holy Name mo- - cetles of the United States, and Mexico, which will be hel em Monday and Tuesday. The ecclésiastical celebration in hom+ or of the cardinal will begin at 10.38 a. m. Sunday with a high mess at tha - cathedral, at which the cardinal wiff Dpontificate. BACKBONE BROKEN OF THE ELECTRICAL TRUST: Sweeping Decree of United States Cire cuit Court at Toledo. ‘Washington, Oct. 12.—By the sweep- ing decree entered in the United Statem Tcuit court today at Toledo the back- bone of the so-called electrical trust was broken and in the judgment of Attorney Genera! Wiekersham tha government was equipped with prece- dents of genuine value in its prosecu- tions of commercial combinations for- . bidden by the Sherman law. Meeoting the governmeat's charges that the trust controlled the electria lamp business of the country, regulat- ing by agreement that prices at which all lamps were sold, the decree severs all relationship between the General Blectric company and the National Electric Lamp company. The latter - Coatesville, Pa., Oc most noteworthy efforts ever made to protect a' negro from mob venzeance was made yesterday by Miss Amy Me- Tihaney, 15 vears old, after identif; Thomas Harmon as the negro who on Monday attempted to assault her. She pleaded with a mob of more than 700 men that the man's life be spared to answer for his attempted crime through the regular channels of the law. When hier voice was dr the cries of the mob, cries of * we must get him now!” she wrote out her appeal. and it was read by a stwong voiced man. Here is what she wrote: People of Coatesville, do not darken the fair name of your fown by another such occurrence as that of Aug 13. There is no need of mob violence against the negro, who 1 am given to balieve will be punished by law with the greatest possible despatch. To do so would be to ruin forever the repu- tatio your city 1 must urge you again to follow out mv wishes and the wishes of my father, who a,though even more aroused Ov this affeir than you are, is anxious that the law shall be allowed to take its course and that citizens refrain from taking Harmon’ hmeqt into their hands. My father at first was willing to pay a thousand dollars to have the man delivered into the farm- ers' hands. 1 have shown him the ut; ter futillty and lawless of such ai act, and he has promised me he will try'to nip in_the bud any attempt on the part of the people i0 wreak ven- geance on the man. BRIDGEPORT COUPLE PINNED UNDER AUTO Machine Crashed Into a Telegraph Pole and Turned Turtle. Milford, Conn, Oct. 12.—Sigmund Loewith, president of the Hartman m Brewing company of Bridgsport. and | concern ;‘r;dnlgéld ts subsidlaries are Mrs, Loewith were seriously injured |crdere S 3 late today when the automobile in FOR THE MURDER OF HIS EMPLOYER Harry W. Philbrook Held for Death of Aged Maryland Farmer. which they were riding to New Haven overtvrned, pinning them underneath. The wceident took place on the Milford turnpike hetween this place and Strat- ford. The machine was going at a not excessive speed when the steering gear refused to work and the machine swerved to one side of the road, hit- ting a telearaph pole a glancing blow which turned the automobile com- fletely around and upset it, pinning ccupants underneath. ng automobilists took Mr. and Loewith out from under the car and carried them to their home in Bridgeport, The Loewiths were on their way’ to visit relatives in New Haven and in an automobile ppeced- ing them was one in which a 'son was riding who knew nothing of the acci- dent until his arrival in that city. BOYS’' RAFT TIPPED, TWO OF THEM DROWN Third Member of Party Rescued with Difficutty. New York Oct. 12—A raft to build which three small boys had toiled for hours, took two of them to their death late today, while the third was resus- citated with difficulty. Albert Lang and Ired Gaffman, both aged 9 years, had pushed the raft out on a deep pond in Jamaica, when Charles McFall, aged S. 'the third builder, leaped aboard Tis weignt tilted the Tloat and plunged Al three into the pond, where (hey were held fast by the muddy bofton. ashington, Oct. 12—Harry W. Philbrooks was indioted by the grand jury at Upper Marlboro, Md., today for ihe murder of his employer, Frederiok Springmann, the aged farmer and for- mer mail delivery contractor, who disd suddenly in his barn yesterday in the midst of a struggle with Philbrooks. The wife and daughter of the dead man testified that Philrooks teld them he had choked Springmann to jdeath, The prisoner insists that he {had no_intention of imjuring the old man. Philbrooks was formerly a sail- or and has brothers and sisters living at Newport, and Bangor, Me. A NEW WRIGHT FLYING MACHINE To Be Tested by the Inventor South Carolina Coast. Monteo, N. C., Oct. 12.—Orville Wrigat and his party are at Kill Devil Hill camp tonight awaiting the - rival tomorrow of the new Wi flying machine whica will be tes by the inventor in the seclusion of the Cerolina. const. With Jight breezes blowing off the water, condiitons are ideal¥for soaring. Theso has been s disagreement be- {ween Wright and Bob Weacott, own< er of the land from whioh flights werd imade In previous tests, and it Is pose sible thei this may inierfere with the inventor's pians. Steamship Arrivals. At Havre: Oct, 12, La Saveie, fron] corres- | New York. BTN ponding secretaries, James T. Barton,| At Marseilles:” Oct. 11, ay D. D, Cornelins . Pation. - D. D.: | from New < e Mrs. American Board of Foreign Mission: Milwaukee, Wis, Oct. 12.—At the annual business meeting of the Amer- ican board of forelgn missions at Mil- waukee the following officers ~wera elected for th ensuing vear: President, Samuel B. Kapen, LL.D.: vice presi- schools and a rade of about Itallape. . Todah was %\e!y patriotic. exerciser in thel public treasurer. Franks H.. d g tary, Henry' .