Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 16, 1911, Page 1

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Cabled Paragraphs Genoa, Italy, Oct. 15.—Ttaly’s third super-dreadnought, the Leonardo da SUPPRESSION OF NEWS AT PEKING - Chinese Press and Public Being Kept in|*== |Condensed Telegrams Because of the Desert and the scarcity of water the campaign in Tripoli will be extremely hazardous. Catholics Pay Seven Killed High Tribute In Collision Many ltalians . Are Destitute TURKISH BOYCOTT BEGINNING TO BE FELT, \ s Leaders in the Ranks of the pro- Stockholm, Oct, 15.—It is probable gressive element of the republicar. par- that the Nobel literary prize will be ty will meet in conference in Chicago Dark Regardmg Revolution awarded Maurice Maetrelinck, the Bel- { DO HONOR TO CARDINAL GIB- [ PASSENGER AND FREIGHT CRASH | today. Elarautior g AUETREEIE _ BONS AT BALTIMORE. ; ON MISSOURI PACIFIC. Oichates Wil e Rheims, France, Oct. 15.—Aviator A eritus of Harvard, is to make a_tour of A CENSORSHIP OF TELEGRAPH LINES| ifiitirei wien'i it il o ™0™\ oy THRONE OF THE VATICAN | THE ORDERS MISUNDERSTOOD | 7 o o e X COLONY OF 10,000 SUFFERS chine here last Thursday terday. By the Will of Cornelius N. Bliss, probated in New York, nearly the en- N e le etl o Ol S Turkish Infantry Attacks Italian Out- children. . s P <7 Chiasso, Switzer!and, Oct. 15.—Chol- % . . Hankow, Where Revolution is Now at its Height, Cut/|cra conditions in Italy show a notable | Archbishop Farley Hopes to Sée Him |Trains Met Near Omaha, Neb.— decrease in every section of the king- Off From Rest of the Empire—Corr:spondents Re- dom, according to an official bulletin | Eventually Seated—Archbishop lIre- | Twenty-two Injured, Four of Them posts at Tripoli—Turkish Soldiers 7 issued Dby the Italian government. land Expresses Gratitude to Taft. | Seriously—One Likely to Die. Ao B o P a2t | Complain of Munhir Pasha. {fused Permission to Accompany the Army—Great| avana, Oct. 15.—A committee of dissolve, wiil split into three separate leading Zayistas, composed of two sen- and un2llied concerns. Secrecy With Reference to Movements of Troops. |25,214 nine representatives, called| Balimore, Oct. 15—In the cathedral | Omaha, Neb, Oct. 15—Seven per- o Rome, via the frontier, Oct. 15— on Presidenc Gomez and officially no- | here, where fifty years ago he was|sons were killtd and twenty-two in-| A Campaign in the Interest of the | News of the attack by the Turkish in- tified him that -they possessed infor-|ordained a priest, and then successive- { jured, four of them seriously, in a |DPresent protective tariff law will be be- | fantry upon the Italian outposts at citement here. An edict issued today | Etna, Macchie, Guardia, Roudinella, | The ecclestrial celebration of thejat once carrying rallway surgeons. | Dani ordered the transfer of General Chao|and Santa Venerina. At Guardia and | cardinal's jubilee began this morning|The slightly injured were sent on their | DeRitentia Hankow Cut Off. Erh-Feng to his old post as imperial | Santa Venerina several houses col- | With pontifical high mass, celebrated | way. “The more seriously injured are | 3 P& On this account Hankow, where the | resident at Lhassa, Thibet. General|lapsel and two persons were kiiled.|DY the cardinal, with Rev. Eh “{}1‘"- at the army hospital at Fort Crook. revolution is at its height; is cut off.| Chao was superseded vesterday by |At Macchia a church was demolished, }idm A. Fletcher, rector of the cathe-| Governor Gilchrist of Florida was a was released from the federal | ficers, however, feared a trap in the at Leavenworth, Kansas, | darkness and would ole,” sbortly after noon Satur- | suit, i e nan. e mation of a conspiracy to assassinate |ly consecrated a bishop and twenty | collision hetween Missouri Pacific pas- | 8un Tuesday by the Textile Manufac- | Tripoll yesterday has been received ekl e MG Al s ek B Eaa Vice President Zayas, Gen. Pino Guer- | years after his ordination, received the | senger train No. 105 northbound, and | turers of Rhode Island. with great interest here because it R har clih aer ) iy b s e ra and Congressman Campos Mar- |red biretta of a cardinal, James Card-!a fast freight at Fort Crook, ten miles was the Italian soldlers’ first baptism ernment has placed severe restrictions| The Chinese press and public are|quetti. The last named is the most |inal Gibbons, archbishop of Baltimore,|from here, this morning. 5 The Chinese Rebel, Viceroy Tang, |Of fite after fifteen years of peace on the telegraph lines, evidently for| without any Information regarding the | prominent colored Zayist. received homage today from illustri- E : says the object of the revolt is to Beh i % the purpose of preventing communica- | situation in the disaffected areas, ow- pecion ous prelates and laymen from ‘all MisdoSsNap i iy Qudovs, make the® Chinese goverament like | omer ved Like Veterans. tion between the rebels. The . tele- | ing to the censorship. The constant| Catania, Oct. 16.—An earthquake of | parts. of This countiy and foreign| ~The accident is believed to have Te- | that of the Tty Boaed fMclal advices say that the young sraph -lmInIstrs‘tti‘c‘m n;tuses 13 tmr;g— | movement of troops, however, and the | brief duration occurred in" Sicily to- | lands. ;ultefl from a misunderstanding of or- fggifirs behaved like veterans and mit messages either to or from the| suspension of passenger traffic on the|day. The strongest shocks were felt i N ers by the freight crew. A relief train : ~hi hey were with difficulty prevent- provinces of Hu Peh Human, Kiank=| railwave is caaitng: conalfmeahle ox- | o Giarre ot he oot hise of Memnt A Pontifical High Mass. was sent to the scene of the accident |, JoMn R. Walsh, the former Chicago |ed from pursuing the enemy. The of- Sze Chuan, Kwei-Chow and Yu- | ponne | Turkish - Soldiers Dissatisfied. Wounded Turks, who are being cared - . % 4 2 A : 4 4 v. P. C. Gar- i To Study M to Regulate tI i It is not considered possible that the | Tsen Chun Suan as commander of| Considerable damage was also done at [dral, as deacon, and Rev. F. passenger on the northbound train To y Means to Regulate the|for in the Italian hospital tents, wires have been cut throughout these | the military forces in Sze Chuan. | Roudinella. E2n, oHancellor of O Lol ea [ DUt was uningdrod. gpium traffic, the international con- | the conditions under. Munhir Pasha six provinces. Until lately the revo- | Peking Theaters Closed. i — e List of the Dead. o i el 4t Suppression of the lare the cause of much dissatisfaction. ren e ceiven a6y Hicsematoy 12| All the theaters are closed, and the|JUSTICE HARLAN'S FUNERAL | i) wis in Cloquent tribute to the | MMiss Frances Lillian Kanka, Wash- | comber 1. S R R s e o {8 ; s 'op | entire imperial guagds' division has TO BE HELD TOMORROW |head of the American church. ington, Kan. R S formation concerning the progress of | Soo o JMPeTIAl SINK railways are 'W. Petring, merchant, Nebraska Turkish encampment. their plans in all quarters, Music Chiefly Gregorian. = Al e e S ] s : : The music was chiefly Gregorian, | 'O W. Kecler, passenger brakeman, |9f the cupreme court of the United | 1¢ 15 ex ::t"'d’ l'l:"""‘ Saiiers; though there were intervals of figured | Atcohison. Kon. © 3 g died at his home in Washing- | a4 exbected that at least twenty 4 music, and orchestral instruments|” i< Fred W. Rowttmann, Nebraska aturday of acute bronchitis. He | oo 8POT'S —WiLD e expeditionary Washington, Oct. 15.—The funeral of | werg ‘employed in the choir, relieving ! City. - £ b : orce aboard will reach’ Tripoli lais T ioni the late Justice John Marshall Har-| 55 certain extent the sombre color of | tonight. This expedition inciudes 15,000 a single first | Revolutionists so Style Themselves—|jan of the wnited States supreme nen. menibens of tha senenl i oy working at high pressure, for the|Intcresting Anecdote of Oldest Member troops are being rapidly entrained. of Supreme Bench. “CONSTITUTIONAL PARTY.” Secrecy About Movement of Troops. The government refuses to reveal the number or the destination of the ops who are being eginning tomorrow on sterian Rowttman, eight Yyears : > H 5 the Palestrina harmonies. old, daughter of Mrs. Rowtt Mrs. Andrew Paine was seriously i .t ST Yo | g S il i . , daughter of Mrs. Rowttmann, ! ¢ i carabineers to reinforce the gendar- TR A TR I G T Are Well Organized. B L e e s Altar Ablaze With Candles. X W."Spragie, elecirician, St. Jo- | injured and her home in_Marblehead | inerie, seven aeroptanes, ehaciias, miles to the southeast of the capital, I.ondon, Oct. .——A Shanghai de-| Presbyterian church, with which the The decorations were confined to the Segh. \lu._fi £ 2 xt\haes bll;;.;.;red tby {&c.(a SA([u;day by | automebile vans constructed for work This is due to the heavy troop traffic | SPatch to a London news agency savs|late jurist was long and prominently | sanctuary, The main altar was ablaze Jnidentified colored woman. e rgu? at 'lge on the oppo-|in the desert, and a large sum of mon- and for the purpose of preventing any | that Yuan Shi Kai, who has been re- fjdentified. The family so_announced | with hundreds of candles and radiant The Seriously Injured. el BOREEREL: ev. A hospital ship is with the trans- great number of rebels from coming | called by the government and appoint- | tonight. The pastor, Rev. Dr. Wallace | with thousands of Bermuda lilies. Over! The seriously injured include Fred ports. It is capable of accommodat- into Peking. Passenger and freight | ed viceroy of Hu-Peh and Huan prov- | Radcliffe, will officiafe at the services | the altar'were the arms of the church, | W. Rowttmann, bankor, Nebraska City, | AN Indictment Charging Murder was | ing 250 patfents and is under ° the traffic has been entirely pended be- | inces, has declined to accept the ap-|and the pallbearers will be the eight [ with the dates of the jubilee, 1861} whosc wife is among the Killed; and by the grand jury against|charge of Frince Collonna, ex-mayor tween Peking and Hankow. | pointment unless it accompanted | mempers of the United States supreme | 1886 and 1911, Under them was the|John Scott, the passenger train engi- | 98 an Italian fruic dealer of | of Rcme. Corrsspondents. Barred. | by imperial guarantees of immediate| court. The interment, which will be|Latin motto, “Jubilimus Dieo Gsaéu',arx Lot They miay die. {\\-\i?:fzradu;all]:he?l’?xi fle Js charged} | Turkish Boycott Hurts. So far the government has refused | SISCHIYe Teforms and the Eriiigemany pityale, ‘il be infndce Creek ceme- | Nostror——“Let us rejoics unto God; our‘ Thai: Efbloyes: Insured: > g Killed 2 fpé?au(s’:;iatherx]z(ge;s are bogining te tu permit correspondents to accon thelleadord of . o at = R % . . The less seriously injured include Dr. Lafayette I. Woolf, the first man | ;. e 0y CO againsi pény the army. *Both gidés-are anx: | Setaten Tl e i e prosanl | Aot Imimerable ore ama auecs Nine Archbishops in Brocession. |y, iailway mail clerks and the pas- | to enter Fort Sumter affer its evacua- | 1talizn products. Grain merchants, jous to favor forelgners, and it is be- | character of revoationaries. They | timates The Jurlst had a keen semse| In the procession, which for impres- | senger train fireman. Most of themy| tion by the federal forces under Coi- |$0tton and silk exporters and manu- lieved that the government will recon- | have styled themselves the “constitue}of numor. e was very fond of the | Siveness probably mever has been sur-|are from citles in IKansas znd XNe- [onel Anderson, died at Atlanta, Ga., |facturers of wax matches are partic- sider this refusal should the imperi- | nova) torio - : o : passed in this country, were nine of | praska. Saturday at the age of eighty. ularly affected. The boycott also is RSt meet Bt Tt e part; Atnsrica’s: Helve. ‘archbishopst - ann 2 s causing the suspension of considerable i contending tigat the con- | jate Justice Peckham. The ]flt;el‘ stitution granted by th 13te eror V. i hi a t his Presbyterian R & T T STy et % vork s Red Cross Society Formed. | has. been violated wunder The eainting | progfietions and in turn, was twitted | about thirty bishops. Included among | SUGAR INTERESTS Suits Claiming a total of $70,000 on | WOrk and labor troubles are fearad. The last despatch recelved from |regime. about being a democrat. the archbishops were Diomede Ival; TO WAR AGAJN |2 contract calling for the building of Italians Made Destitute by Boycott. Hankow said that the revolutionaries Insurgents Well Organized. On one occasion Justice Harlan was | £onlo, the apostolic delegate, and Pau a cathed e filed in_the Baltimore | Rome, Oct. 15.—A despatch from Bruchesi, of Montreal. Among theé had organized a Red Cross socief court against the Rt. Rev, John [ Smyr:a to the Corriere d'Italia: says had invited the co-operation™ of . Carroll, bishop of Montana. that the colony of 10,000 Itailians thers The insurgents, the despatch says,|cxplaining to his brethren on the |, tp.0 o yrioh MacSherry of South | Beet and Cane Men to Battle for Su- P, are well d, and the leaders | bench that he would be obliged to ab- et 3 3 ; § £ + o | Africa. premacy. Wi it meri Episcopal mission. This 3 e i . | sent himself from court on the follow- Sty s : e .. |is in a precarious position. All Ital- invitation was aceepted proviesionils | All Jooting and tamloaney are mersi: | ing day to attend a Presbyterfan as- ANneeOIGIET s W0 L% Coiorado Springs, Col, Oct Suit for $25000 Was Filed in the fir- | ian railroad employes have been dis- iy. lessly repressed. _There were three civilians in the Rt ST IEERE s Tohn AR aY cuit court at Chicago Saturday against|charged and the Italian pert workers ¥ are such a good Presbyterian, {line. They were W, E. Mankins of| That ihe statement ohn Arbuckle, | Clarence S. Funk by John Henning, | are being boycotted. Neapolitan fish- an, said Justice- Peckham, “that | New York, who received the decora-[-XeW York sugar refiner and coffec|who charged that Funk had alienated |ing Dboats in the harbor have been TWO KILLED IN A RECALL ELECTION t'see why vou are afraid to die.” | tion of knighthood in the Order of St.|mMagnate, that he will go before con-|the affections of Henning's wife. ed and numerous families are des- T would not be afraid,” responded | Gregory at the hands of the pope. He|8ress next winter, to fight for free _ —— titute. A worse fate is feared for large SRASH AT BERLIN. NOT MOB ACTION. | justice Harlan, “if I were sure that|wore a scarlet waitcoast, on ihich | SUgar, Is the beginning of the first real| Martin V. Walls, aged 86, for many | numbers of Italian workmen in the —_—— g | AbE e sl in the next world I would not turn |sleamed a number of jewelled decora-{ fight between the beet sugar manu-|years a uotchle figure on the trotting | interior of Amatolia. Cars Break Loose From Freight awf|Senator Bourne Replies to Cardinal |up at demecratic headquarters.” tions which he had recei "Fhe ginc | Tacturers, and ihe cans sugap fefners. lirdcks, Qe 9% hlS homie o Sl S Collide With Engine. i : jce Harlan chewed tobacco all | er two civilians were Aritides Leonar-{iS the dec] 1ce C. Ham-1 0., Saturday. For 21 years Mr. Walls e Sibtnta Aoy drstand.. higulsi‘f‘:.o g::i:g the hearing by the|di of Rome and Edward Du Mee of|lin, chalrman cf the executive commit- | was one of the judges on the Grand | EINE ASPHYX'ATE'? e erlin, Conn., Oct. 15—At a con- | Washinzton, Oct. 15—Senator Jona-{supreme court of the Tobacco trust| Philadelphia, both of whom wore the ;eg OF OSBRI Sfate i Bhet Su;la_r Circuit. i Ao ~ S fNC TORONTO HOTEL | nce today. over the wreck at Ber- | thH#n Bourne, Jr., president of ihe Na.|case last spring, Justice Harlan told | scarlet coats ‘of chancellors | INAUSTS, 1N -4 statementismadg.oublic z 2 3 e tion last night, in which Frank mal Progressive Republican league,|one of the Tobacco trust lawyers who and marched beside the apostolic dele- “3:;‘,' l‘]{;a&- i R R A Nine Years Old Boy named Thom- | All of Victims Were Laborers and But an engineer, and Frank Dehm, |in a statement today tock to task |was addressing the court that all the | sate. r. Hamlin savs while the con- |as I°. Rurke was struck and fatally Ons Was Undressed. , lost their liv were injured, b an automobile driven by Flannagan, the son of a| moronto, Ont. , Oot. 15, injured b Edward and | Cardinal Gibbons and Archbishop Ire- [ tobacco he bhough: th »tween | landfor their critcisms of the initia- | either spoiled or adulte v P 2 dition of the sugar market this 3 se Jdavs was|. Hopes He May Live at Vatican. | "0 51 316 T ould have been * Five men bt s etween | landfor il tei e i 5 e ou In praising the cardinal for what he| finitei . worse but for the 500,000 tons 1ot Bos o Broker, at’ New- | Loron — i\‘;:.‘i\)\n)l‘ddd:(a!( ;‘]:; \‘ (EA‘;G m(f:_m_nuum and recajl as praclic-1 The stol was fl‘gnubll zhc‘o(lr t‘?\ng\gs had_accomplished for the Catholic|of beet sagar America produtes.” fgixn ;r;‘;ufwsna&[ro;aky.bm el ge;iedl(.ltle? ;:gtglns asphgxmdt:n Int the sccident Jidable and that no | The senator sald that ‘both r sk i " | faith in America, Archbishop John M.| “It is this great industry, the one early today, The men came. In afest e S g B o e | o S0s dEEilior salu e uehot S sson Farley of New York expressed the|which Senator Bristow said was the| In its Dilemma the Chinese govern- midKight Bl Hone of Tha R oL i o e R O et et mered mnored Sy E05 hope that eventually he would be seat- | hest justification for a protective tar- | ment has had to recall to power Yuan | [UCMERS And, Tour of hem, hal not removal of the bodies of the victims |“mob law” and -giobocracy” in. de. = Sasupon iCos thrane o NS i If, that the cane sugar refiners are|Shi-Kai. formerly commander in chief | oy wrere found this morning gas was to their-homes, | Scatbing tie ‘Qrekon. ssetom TO TELEPHONE POLE A Tribute to Taft. seeking to_destroy,” he sald. 2 of the army and navy, who was ban- | eecaning from the jet and from a ailroad men concerned in the| “Mobs act under the sudden impul d Subsequently Committed | . I1 response to the toast to the pres- ,B{yf"‘l“ T{-'h‘;'“,}“;"“f— i H?”:’fie_ ished three years ago. He is resard-|oma)] heater as well, The vietims called Superintendent fear or hatr says the | Arrested and Sulisequently ident of tMe United States, Archbishop | 1Ancolt, Hev. Oct 1o.—n @ oo ed as the strongest man in China. are: Samuel Read, $2; George H. office in Waterbury toda . **Mob action is absolute- to Insane Asylum. John Ireland of St. Paul said that ?"a“‘,se’é‘ o e g = Vreoland | KEOWIes, 45; George Willlams, 45; oy were examined as lo its Iy impossible under the initiative or — ., | President Taft had not discriminatea |1am J. Bryan last evening paid 1fe| Representative Edward B. Vreeland | yijliam Downs, 41, William Allen, 60. As near as could be cferendum beca e is mo less| Patchogue, N. Y. Oct. 15.—Dr. Will- | against Catholics, and that while he | following tribute to Justice John M.|op New announced last night that | " mpa ™6 00 Fot S e oo el day between fourtéen and |than four month s broke loose from the |a vote can be take of the national monetary ch _he is vice chai of disucssion befors | iam C. Willis of this place was com- | had given them noe more than their | Harian: : . t [ the hearinss of room, where the open gas jet was T s It is also impos- | mitted to the state asylum for the |due, they Were grateful to him. Justice Harlan was one of the best | commission, of w T na Al s T an lorne ght train and ran a distance of a |sible under the recsil because the re- |insane at Central Islip today. He was Prbjudices Extariniontir durists, of MCna generndon o end . BiS intan; v b LI room.” He was undressed and in bed le and a quarter down an eighty ;call cannot be invoked until petitions | discovered carly this morning on the . SERACIcon ERseInates- name wiil be more and more revered | New York at 11 o'clock this morning. | 290%™ Gq TET “Pag e coal-eil ‘lamp, of to ihe mile grade, smashing into | have been circulated and signed by at | outskirts of Bayport, near here, tving { Rising at the end of the dinner, the|as the people learn of the Afidelity he : < e L e the engine of the passenger train, | least 35 por cont af tha. smea Pt | his sixtesn-vear-old’ wile to a fele: | cardinal sald the prejudices which for- | has shown to their rights and inter- rtie E. McManigal, alleged dyna-|Which was still burning = The men, public utilities colamission s | takes weeks and gives the widest pub. | phone pole. She had apparently been | merly existed against Catholicism in |ests. His death was a great loss to er, on whose confession the prose-|yyiqay afternoon and had not been king a hand in the investigation of |icity. Then the recall election can-|dragged to the roadside from an au- | this country were almost exterminat- |this count fon in the McNamara trials expects | [0 %% &0 ORC, 3% o the wreck and Engineer C, C. Eiwell |not be heid within dess than twenty | tomabite which stood mearby. . She | ed. He charged archbishops and bish- * ions, was sued for divorce at|® 2 was prese the hearing in Super- | Gays after filing the petition. Voting|was rescued and taken to a hotel, | OPS-With the command to garner by | DIES CF FRIGHT Chicago. Saturday. His wife, Bmma | o o) 0 eore top ke's office in Waterbury | under such cireumstances eannot he|where it was discovered that she was | the end of another' fifty years 100,000, IN DENTIST'S CHAIR | McManizal, charged extreme and re- | LA b b suficring from the effects of drugs and 000 souls for the church in this coun- peazed cruel THE PRESIDENCY ne vears experience in Oregon|is in a serious condition. vial o 2 h . ? 3 3 g demonstrates that the initiative, refer- | morphine was found upon her. Dr. Evening Vespers. Young Woman Collapses Whon She| ,, ... Morning Service of the Bris- Pragressive Lbagus, o Mest\ Tadsy to : understood that the railroad orities” have not yet determined i 3 W the cars managea to break |endum and recall are not injurious to| Willis was arrested and later, after| Archbishop Falconio presided at the T U e tol Baptist church vesterday a deficit Lavachs Eie Baorm. from the rest of the train. Nei | any personal right or legitimate prop- | two physicians had examined into his|vespers in the cathedral tonight. and | Philadelphia, Oct. 15.—Miss Laura | 9% $2:200 in the church’s finances was er do they knew for certain wheth mental condition, sent to the asylum. |the sermon was delivered by Arch- hiladelphia, Oct. 15 —Miss Laura|wipes out in twenty-five minutes. The not there was a brakeman on. the | A yvear ago Dr. Willis was indicted { bishop James H. Blenk of New oOr.| aoinsend, 23 vears old, of No. 1928 on that crashed into the passenger 1 harge of abducting Jennie | leans. South Sixtcenth street, died from . There is alho a difference of | S--/NGTON' MAN Bvion the it whe Ig aow bis Wie| w &l fright. vesterday afternoon in a_den- nion 2s to whether or not the cars | KILLED BY TROLLEY.| But thé case against him was dropped | GLIDDEN TOURISTS tist's chair at the office of Dr. Walter sube | Chicago, Oct. 15—Friends of Sena- tor LaFollette became active toda: with_ the arrival in this city of dele- gates to attend the conference of the debt was cleared by voluntary scription to shares of the value of one dollar each. 4 H iy s ¢ e National Republican Progressive onld have beemn opped if there had | when he and the young woman ap- Paul. She had been troubled greatly After Drifting More Than Twenty s wcen a brakeman on them and wheth- | Wagon in Which He Was Riding Run | peared in court with a marriage cer- REACH GETTYSBURG. | With a molar and suffered severe pain. |, jio5 in a disabled and unmanageable lu}fi"?,‘g";‘g'{g"g thes Srbald Rl er not he could have set brakes Down at Somers. tificate. After an examination Dr. Paul de-|;,,¢ on Lake Champlain, W. H. Wi S A e e o to. chedk thets ir | i ook e e Presented Souvenirs and Hear Lec-|clded te inject a small quantity of loon of Holyoice, Mass., and C. B, Walk- | ETessive steps at the opening of the "be wrecked passenger coaches were | Somers, Conn. Oct. 15—Alexander | IMPRISONED FOUR ture on Bloody Battle. gocalrie Into the gam at the base Stler of Burungion, Vi, - wers -blown | Saeriice e binE ShR e goniam to New Haven today, it being | Ramsey of Eilington, was instantly - g ol 2 h shove in their craft on the New York W to his onihabion impossible to pull them apart | “tonight 5 ¢ jom, DAYS IN FOLDING BED R E | picked up his forceps. and approached | 20 100¢ 2 G RS had yet appeared to his nation, s St St L L T — % amafter Bav_ | the patient, who gazed atthe gleam- IS““ e e they sald, and if any of the delegates e |jured when the team in which they Elderly Woman Dying When Her Pre- people all alonz the way from Phila- | 'S ipstrument with open-eyed horror. Fire Capt. Timothy J. Brown of h“sd "f‘_’l‘g“ lgn o;c;zoli‘olleue's tnen;s M'NAMARA JURORS Were riding was struck by a trolley dicament Is Discovered. delphia to Getivsburs, the Glidden|AS D¢ was about to request ber to|wwashington was instantly killed and |Bose The P 0“8 0 J HAVE AN AUTO RIDE. | 2T and smashed. The accident hap- b tourists arrived here this afternoon,| PSh Der mouth she gave a slight gasD | pyreman Michael Downes -mortally in- y 3 pened about & mile west of this place| Wilmington, Del, Oct. 15.—Miss|qhe first car checked in agiSwooned. ; jured in a fire which swept the ware- - A v ) 2500, } " at three dentist decided to |jured in a fire whic ORTUGUESE ROYALISTS ’ e & and according to the motorman of the | Mary Elizabeth Graham, seventy | g'clock and the others fol B Alarmed, the den Peid house of the American Tobacco com- | POR A Silent Barber Their Only Visitor on | irolioy he saw the approaching team | years old, of Kenton, Del, will die as | rapig succession. offowed in|summon dssistance. He called in Dr | i1y Sixih street and Pennsylvania INCREASE ACTIVITY Sunday. and shut off the searchlight on the car | the result of a queer accident. She| “Upon the arrival of the party in| S Lowenburg of No. 1838 South |, cepye, Saturda and when he thought the team had | was found vesterday caught in a fold- teenth street. Dr. Lowenburg pro- Gettysburg the automobile club of the 5 = ’ X : 3 i x . _..|Bandg of Them Marching West Te- Lon Angel Cal, Oct. 15.—Judge | passed switched it on again. In- | ing bed at her home. She had been S s nounced the woman dead, and said Judge Vandenventer in St. Louis set Waiter Bordwell, hefore whom James | ftead of having passed the tar the|a prisoner four davs and nights and ‘szz‘.en’,’;*‘“;‘:;;dt;gcgndtz‘;ggmw;“;e; that her heart had stopped when she | , 4988 Vandenventer 1o . Sobtained ward the Sea. B. McNamara is being tried on indict- | motorman saw that the team was on s in a dying condition. Tonight her | ture on the battla of Gettysburg |2V the forceps. by <Charles A, Stevenson, actor-hus- e Oct. 15.—While official ad- ments charging murder in the explo- | ihe tracks and as the brakes did not is unlikely. was delivered to the tourists in the| ST s e e band of Kate Claxton, the actress who | Lisbon, et 5. —While vement sion of the Times building, occupied |hold the car hecause of leaves on the| Although well to do. she lived alone. | apera house. The fourists will leave]| A BUSY SUNDAY FOR DN o e o ane. declur- | vices sav that the rovalist mov B it e Geciin rough crim- | has been broken, news from other PRESIDENT TAFT | Ih (1ot 1 oas oo perdury. | sources indicaies that the rovalists ars ¥ e e s displayinz increasing activity. Cap- Attends Church Service and Visits | ¢ ;e Trial of the Suit of Elizabeth | tain Couceire, the rovalist leader, was 3 gt 2 s Numercus Places. corth, stage name Ro: Lemoine, | Seen on boih sides of the fromtizr. himself today with the study of th answers made by Talesman Z T. Nel son when examined on the subject of | labor warfare. { ‘The principal figures in the case rest it crashed into the team, wrecli- | While sitting on the edge of. the col- | htre. tomorrow morming tor o8 |- ng it. Ramsey's jaw was broken and | lapsible bed it gave way under her & Staunton, ath caused by internal injuries, | weight. She became entangled in_ the Baxtor was cut about the head and | bed clothing and could nct free her- ' ruised. | Ramsey was 63 years old|<elf. Finally the bed closed. She was| TWO MORE VICTIMS ed today and there were no develop leaves a widow 4n f chil- | too weak to_extricate herself or to cry. OF TYPHOID EP! 2 ag s stock broker in Paris, who Rovalist - bands £ are mow adV’PnClnfi ments, yJudx! Tebwell rend axnd vo n. st for help. Yesterday. neighbors who g i G e e S e ey GO et 5y atag: his wife's | WeBk apparently %:ms the gbm;gn gf read today the transcript of Nelson's | —_— had njissed her, broke into the house | Total Number of Deaths at Torring- | davs of strenuous Vi 2 name, demanding 100,000 francs for | Feacning the -fta-a le Pf;‘:n‘l &‘;u:fl; examination, and when Mr. Scott con- | AUTOMOBILE WENT and discovered her a captive. She ton Reaches Nincteen: Taft left San Francisco tonight fot | jefamation of character. the attorney | ities have sent cavauy cludes the arguments of the defense | Ve M AN e had been liuralyzed by her strange im- Lo\s{ Anrgefltes. = n ¢ | gemer: 1 recommendad that the actress’ | to protect the frontier. in opposition to Nelson, it is generally | . | prisonment. Torringto ¥ St -] _Br. Taft was the guest today of [ gemand be rejected expected that the court wili fmmedi- — ; Dhota. fee At e ¥~ | the officials of the 1915 exposition. o CLOTHING CAUGHT ately be able to announce ifs ruling. |Vermont Woman Killed ard Her( MADERO CHOSEN AS in existence here since September 4th | He Visited the Y. M. C. A, this morn- | At Last Week's Session of the Pres- FROM A BONFiRE Both James B. McNamara and his Daughter Seriously Injured. 7 claimed two mo <. | ing and attended services at the First | phyterian Syrod of Michigan, held at Eab it i o e i e S ,f.;’nxi'i“.';}'a':flt’? ’,?i‘;‘.t. Unitarian church. After luncheon he | Botroit, a sesclution was tnanimously Mother of Several Small Children Fas Woodsville, N, H., Oct. Mrs. R. s . teen: . ‘Fhose who' died today was driven to the site of the exposi- [ gdopted, protesting against the action . SO 1 - R.| Received the Unanimous Vote of the 5 oday were f ; t Rt = Trine tally Burned. MecIntyre, or Randolf, Vt, was in- Helen Loomis, five years old, and|tion, inspected several regiments of | of the federal government requiring ly ntly killed today when an automo- Electoral College. Weston D. Miner, 38 years old. The |infantry and companies of coast artll- | that school {eachers in the Philippines " in whica she was riding went 5 4 = fittle girl had been ill. three weeks | lery at the Presidio and wound up the | maintain silence in and outside of the| Hartford, Oct. 15 was stated at foot embankment near | Mexico City, Oct. 15.—Lacking only | ang Mr. Miner two, On, new case|day With a call on Rear Admiral |schoolroom on all matters concerning | St. Francis' hospital = tonight that iss Alice MclIntyre, | the ceremonies of the inauguration |;igo geveloped today. \ Thomas on the cruiser California, flag | protestantism and its principles. there was no chance for the recovery wrother, John J., spent the day almost | In solitide in their cells in the county | Jail. They had no visitors except a Priest. John J. whose trial is expected to follow that of James B, is applying himself to the proceedings of the pres- | ent case, and tod. he read in detail | daughter of s. Mclntyre, was se- | Fra o I. Madero is president of. ship of the Pacific fleet, now assem- IS of Mrs. Nellie Heywood, who was the transcript of Nelson's examina- |verely injured but the other members | the. republic of Mexico. S HE Arkansas T in Fl bled in San Francisco ba; ACADEMY PRINCIPAL burned late Saturday. Mrs. Heywood tion. Though unable to witness his|o0f the company, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest a_vote of the electoral College, Ancas . oW bR amely —_— HAD BEEN IMBIBING | &ttempted to stir up a bonfire in her brother's trial, he intends to keep in|A. Sargent and their three children, | Which was practically unanimous, he | Tort Smith, Ark, Oct. 15.—A tele- | yo1 +o Head New York Democracy. back yard with her feet and her cloth- close touch with it. The twelve tales- | escaped with minor hurts. was officially nominated today. phens message shortly before midnight y ¢, Y. O 15.—The E- - = £ T 2 ing caught fire. Before the flames men were shut up in a room in the| Sargent, who is a son-in-law of Mrs.| Jose Pino Suarez, without doubt, | tonight said that Bonanza, a town of Bulfalo, N. ot ,\P— e X{’lfics}f Given a Free Ride Out of Town in an | (otid be extinguished the clothing hall of records most of the day. They | McIntyre, was driving his machine at|will be the vice president, if not al- | two hundred inhabitants, fifteen miles | tomorrow will say: Norman E. Mac Automobile. was burned from her body. She has had an automobile spin in {he after. |2 moderate speed when he lost control | ready such. Even if he has failed to | east of this city. was afire. The tel- | is scheduled tg ‘su,ceed fW;]'nfleld A A Bushand and evardl chiliren. noon through the parks. The silent | and it went over the embankment.|2et a majority, there is now no reason- | ephone operator there telephoned to|Huppuch as cl . the ‘?.e{“"‘ Raston, Conn., Oct. 15.—The sudden barber was the only witness, Sargent and Mrs. Mcintyre were pin- | able doubt that the chamber of depu- | the local exchange that she was forced cratic state committee. 'There will be i g ncalonco of W, J. Martin, prin- A REAL DAUGHTER. —_— ned beneath the car, which turned up. | ties will name him as Madero's lieu- | to flee because the fire was threaten- (a mecting of the commitice on Wed: | ;jpi] of the Easton academy, Friday, . OBITUARY. side down. He had little. difficuity | tenant over Francisco Ld de la Barra, |ing the exchange. The cause of the|nesday to act upon the resignation of | )as Leen explaineds On that day he | Mrs. Baldwin’s Father Fought in Reve i 5 ir. extricating himself, but when the|who obtained second place in the vote | fire is not known. Z Mr. Huppuch, and it is understood ibat | {ojohkoned the school committee that abaliier War. Henry P. Markham. wreckage was lifted from the body of | of the electoral college. Communication - with Bonanza was|Mr. Mack will then be elected the neating apparatus of the school Cobalt, Conn., Oct. 15.—Henry P, |the woman, life was extinct. R T B cut off at midnight. A T was not working properly and that he | Sarah Ludlow chapter, D. A. R., of o Fatal Fight Over a Woman. Rev. H. A. Jump Resigns. wished school called off for the day.| Ansonia, at its meeting at the home of g‘?srkrl)ll:':" ‘Tjigldllnkan ".{"z.aa'flifii’-’r‘.‘ nfioof SUICIDES AFTER WEEK Greenwich, Conn., Oct. 15—James| Bristol Red Men Lay Cornerstone. New Britain, Oct. 15.—At the morn- | Members of the committee made an | \rs. S. P, Sanford in Oxford, Thurs- pital today from pneumonta. Mr. Krupeski, died in a local hospital to-| Bristol, Conn., Oct 15.—Uhder aus- | ng services of the South Congrega- i investization the outcome of whicl| day afterncon. was informed of the Markham ‘was ‘& proffinent democrat OF MARRIED BLISS. |day from lockjaw and his brother-in- | picious weather conditions the corner- | tional chuvch, the resignation of its | was that Martin was given a free ride | fact that it has residing within its and represented his town in the gen- l2w, Joseph Bumbruski, is held with- { stone of the first Red Men’s wigwam | Pastor, Rev. Herbert A. Jjump, was|out of town in an automobile. It is{ jyrisdiction a real Daughter of the eral assembly. He was 65 years old | New Britain Dry Goods Clerk Cut|out bail, charged with having caused |in the state was laid here today be- | ead by Rev. A. J. Lord of Meriden. |alleged that the committee found he | American Revolution. She is Mrs and leaves a widow. Throat With a Razor, his death. A week ago the two men| fore two thousand members of the | The resignation takes efiect in Novem- | had heen using intoxicants. His suc- | George Baldwin, whose home is on the pidiecl enzgaged li’n :}‘flfilln ovar the dea;-r man's order .. The building is to be con- berbwl?:nd‘Reculll:, Jtl;emp will rimn\'; { cessor will be appointed tomorrow, Great Hill road, )Yherga??l:u!n“d » K N it bl ¥z sister, who e prisoner’s wife, an tructed of brick it | to Oaklan al., to come pastor of | = PO T for many years. s, lwin's father o e ot A ey Bt o | presonh. F 135’:: ozoftwelesféto‘r:: Bumbruski is alleged to have hit Kru-| o $0,00 5y ba:i?i:s‘rth‘:‘me‘rocgil the First Congregational church of | Dry Sunday in Atlantic City. was Moses Sperry, a soldler in the nd leading families, Is to become an | Powers, 25° vears old, a dry goods |Deski on the head with a dull knofe of | and auditorium will have quarters for | that City. Atlantic City, N. J., Oct. 15—For the | war for American independence. She i Five years ugo she | clerk. made an unsuccessful -attempt | Stone, inflicting a wound which caused | Company D, C. N. G. first time in four years Atlantic City | is eighty-scven years of age. ertered an Episcopalian convent and | torisht in a local hotel to take his life | his death toda; = It has heen predicted that at least|observed the Sunday liagor laws to- 2 | now her probatiopary period is ended. | b cutting his throat with a razor. s " Z The Formosa Oplong tea production |if not more than 200,000 motor cars |day. Unprecedented dryness prevailed Prince Rupert, the Pacific coast ‘- She is to take the num's veil. Miss| His wife's cries summoned help und teamship Arrivals. for 1911 will probably reach 24,000,000 | wiil be made and sold in this country | from midnizht last night. Indictments | minal of the Grand Trunk Pacific rail- . parker Wgs formerly teacher in draw- | prompt medical attention saved his|Y At Southampton: Oct. 15, Majestic, | pounds, an increase of over 1,000,000 during 1911. Their value will be over|asainst iocal saloon meen caused the | road, lies 500 miles morth of Vancou= ing in ut.' normal schoo’ ife £ - !from New York : > - *pounds - A 1 4 $225,000,000. - 2 K “dry” order to be issued ver -

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