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~ RICHESON'S TRIAL SET FOR JAN, [5| Cabied Court Turns Down Request,di ‘Defense for Six Months Continuance. BELIEVES TWO MONTHS AMPLE TIME Endorses District Attorney’s Sentiment That American Justice Should Procesd More Quickly —Clergyman Pleads Without Any Show of Emotion—Throng of Curious People in Court Room—Proceedings Brief. Boston, Nov. 13.—Rev. Clarence V. 7. Richeson, the Baptist clergyman in- dicted for ‘the murder of Miss Avis Linnell, will be placed on trial for his 1ife in ‘the Suffolk _county _superior «<riminal court Jan. 15, 1812. This date ¥as set late today, when the pastor of the Immanuel Baptist chureh of Cam- bridre was arraigned in the first ses- ®ion of that court. Pleaded Without Emotion. Without emotion, and in a _clear voice, Rev. Mr. Richeson pleaded “not "~ to the charge of muraering his former sweetheart by cyanide of potas- After sitting in the priseners m the crowded courtroom less f an Bour. the pastor returned harles street jail. where he i unt faces the twelve il decide his confer before the date of the trial was set. District Attorney’s Statement. District Atterney Pelletier empba- sized the fact that he had notified the lawyers who had previously represent- |ed Rev. Mr. Richeson that he would ask to have the date set at today’'s ar- raignment and that he had already once deferred such a motion upon the request of the defense. Judge Considers Two Months Ample o When Mr. Morse protested that so learly a date was unprecedented, Mr. | Pelletier admitted the peint, but de- clared that the popular judgment was | that American procedure should pro- ceed more quickly, along the lines of | English practice. Judge Sanderson, | who presided, agreed with the district Wanted Six Months’ Centinuance. attorney’s point of view and in fixing te of Faa. 15 tor irial, [Jan. 15 as the datg said that two months was ample time for the de- | fense to prepare its case. i Large Crowd in Courtroom. ‘When the announcement was made this morning that the clergyman would rot be arraigned until 4 o'clock this afternoon a disappointed crowd that had gathered in the criminal court dispersed. ‘But long before the time t fat the orse de- possible for to hold a single a continuance st for a fur- me as a surprise S Mhasein courtroom. as it had {get the courtroom was filled with both < that inc defense Was |inen and women, and a curious crowd, S e unable to secure admission, waited in Counsel Want Time to Confer. the corridors. he L. Lee, the No Signs of Nervousness. m Virginic, | Bscorted by a court officer, the ac- | cused minister walked calmly to the | prisoners' cags. His month in jail had affected him but little. He showed no signs of unusual pallor or mervousness ana his plea of “nmot guilty” could be heard distinctly in all parts of the room. Mr. Morse s2id tha meet the iefendant until pta at the onsidering e felt that t YOUNG BEATTIE IN SHADOW OF GALLOWS | eEAN PLEADS GuUILTY TO DOUBLE MURDER Virginia Supreme Court Declines to Entertain Appeal. Richmend. e today to case of Hen Ticted In Cheste: $er & of the mur Yirginia supreme court takes away maemned man Nis last hope | November 24 Guildhall, gn of cmotjon, Arthur Bean, a 19- year-old Maidstone lad, stood up iw the prisoncr’s cage at the Essex coun- ty courthouse this afternoon, and in unwavering toncs pleaded guilty to the charge of murderinz his mother and his 15 years old sister, Nina. The crime was committed in the Bean home last March with no witnesses present. The indictment to which - the lad pleaded guilty today did not fix the | decree of mirder and tomorrow Judge Fred M. Butler of Rutiand, who is presiding. will hear the evidence of the prosecution and dscide upon the degree befere imposing sentence. Tith a rifle slung oven his shoulder Arthur Bean entered the home of a | neighbor in Maidstone late on the afternoon of March 9 and calmly an- nounced that his mother and sister had Dbeen shot and killed. He said that he was hunting the murders. | “When nefghbors reached the Bean | home thev found the two women deac cn the floor and Mrs, Bean’s father, John Sweat, 103 vears old, in a closet. The old man's story was to the effect that his grandson had ordered him into a closet under penalty of getting hurt and that later he had heard shots fired. The boy was placed under ar- rest Tut stolidly maintained his inno- | ence, 1. was said at the time that Vt, Nov. 13.—Without a in the | con- tem- wife, the ~dined tonight to ourt’'s ruling, Gov- that he would issue possibility t governor w1 nt a brief respite. | Comtrar: ° > 1 of law. suprome : written opinion giving ofusing to appeal. In th the entire court, Keith maac the clerk “in the Beattie fng of opinion that the lower coart is Fefuse the petition ror Seventeen fled with t ties counse Earty & went ecrorted to n a fal of the c perve d desert intm. @ravorsd marfelly fo comfor Man, whose zrief weos pathe GOMPERS SAYS HE'S READY TO GO TO JAIL reason for sence of e James nse. ainly for a the court be- judsment of- right, doth writ of e bills of exceptions higher court by were Beat- s :fterncen 1. C. Beatti to the pententiary and was jeath chamber, where is sc amount_of property. left Bean's father. by younz en- the old STRIKE BREAKERS CLEAN UP NEW YORK STREETS Man Garbage Carts if Necessary. New York, Noy. 13.—The backbone of the streel cleaners’ strike appeared to have been broken today when a force of 1,500 strike breukers under heavy police guard made substantial progress in ridding the streets of a five days' accumulation of health-en- dangering refuse. Awed, apparently, by the vigorous stand taken by the clty authorities and the large number of police on guard, the suikers and their sympa- thizers ceased théir riatous tactics today and tolsy’s work was attended | Ci ens Wi Address at American Federaticn of Labor Convention. Wi prefaced addre Weicome to the 400 dele @penirg session of the cr the American Federation of @ay. President Gompers read report. T=e most significant b of the @a3’s uvtterance was by Mr. Gomper: n responding to the adiresses of wel- his annual <ame by Governor Smith. Maver Winn Sne others. He said that Secre- | Dy practically no violence. Police Morrisor .~ amd Viee President | masistrates helped in the repressive S{CEN were reads 1o go to | Weasures by heavily fining prisoners in defense of labor's rights in the | Who participated in the riots yester- o ence for conte aay. O S e e or S OPiemPt | “fenry R Towne, president of the | of the supreme court of th- District | Merchants' association, calied upon | the mayor today and said that if it | was necessary to call for citizens to | volunteer to man the carts he could of Columbia was sustained “Justice Wright either intended to M@me from the seitlément of an es- t there had been trouble over a smali | Paragraphs Santiago, Cile, Nov. 13.—The Vari- ety theater was burned last night Fortunately the flames ‘oke out be- fore the house had been filled for the evening performance. Berlin, Nov. 13.—The long continued potash controversy ended today when the German syndicate, non-syndicate interests and the American dealers ratified the agreement. Rome, Nov. 13.—Thomas J. O'Brien, who succeeds John G. Leishman as American ambassador to Italy, was received today by King Victor Eman uel, to whom he presented his cre- dentials. Lisbon, via Frontler, Nov. 13.—Ac- cording to the newspapers, the roval- ists are again preparing for an in. vasion which wvill be begun as scon as the weather clears. Just now the whole of North Portugal is being flooded with torrential rains. Berlin, Nov. 13.—Prof. Bernhard| Fraenkel, the noted throat specialist, dled here today. For many years he has been prominent in the ~crusade against tuberculosis. He was the laryngolodist who was consulted by Colonel Rooseveit in May, 1910, regard- ing a persistent throat affection. Colon, Panama, Nov. 13.—Generoso Obaldia, who resigned from the gov- ernorship of Colon province on No- vember 2 because of friction with the | governor of the Panama canal zome, | Maurice H. Thatcher, has addressed an | open letter to President Taft attack- ing Mr. Thatcher. Obaldia accuses Governor Thatcher of having threat- | ened to take charge of the affairs of the province, thereby demonstrating tence of Panaman sover- STRUNG BOY UP BY THE THUMBS. | Case | in the Lorimer an Admission. Star Witness Make Chicago, Nov. 13.—D. W. Holstlaw, a former state senator, who confessed some time ago to having taken bribes for his vote in the election of Unit- ed States Senator William Lorimer, | testified before the senatorial investi- gating committee today in response to questions intended to show his stand- ing in the state. He was asked con- cerning $700 “jackpot” money which he said he received in June, 1909, from | John .Broderick, the state senato | Previously Holstlaw testified that after receiving the money in_ Chicago he put it into his pocket and kept it there until he deposited it in his bank | at Juka, Ills. Today he testified he was mistaken in that detail and that he deposited it in a bank in Chicago before going to Iuka. Holstlaw also admitted he had been indicted for “stringing a boy up by the thumbs in a woodshed,” as pun- ishment for allesed theft of money. | _James J. Gray testified he was with | . J. C. Beckemeyer, another confess- ed bribe taker, when the latter depos- ited five $100 Dills in_a bank in St Louis in August, 1909. Beckemeyer said then, the witness said, that the money CINGINNATI COREMAKER MYSTERIOUSLY DISAPPEARS Believed to Have Been Spirited Away for McNamara Trial. No; Cincinnati, 3 13.—A legal effort to fiud Frank Eckhoff, a coremaker, of this city, ¥aid to be an_importani witness in the trial of the McNamara | brothers in Los Angeles, was mada toduy by his wife, Mrs. Anna Eckhoff, She filed an application for a writ of habeas corpus before Judge A. M. Warner in insolvency court against the Cincinnati rolice department, the William J. Buins detective agency and William J. Furn Judge Warner granted the _writ sought, ordering Chief of Police Jack-.| | son-t6 produce ckhoft tomorrow or lo show cause why he should not produce him. Airs.” Eckhoff chargec that her hushand was taken away last Monday by men who first sald they Were city detectives, but later saiu they were Burns men. PRISONERS PLOTTED A JAIL DELIVERY n Jail Where Confine: t Attempt Discovered 5 | McNamaras Ar | Los Angeles, Cal, Nov. 13.—Several prisoners, one ‘of whom, C. L. Plerson, is accused of having helped to rob & Los Angeles jeweler, were implicated in a plot for a wholesale delivery at the county jail where the McNamaras are conflned, according to a statement today by Jailer Gallagher. The jailer is searching the cells to discover the leader in the plot. Since Plerson's return from Chicago, where he was | caught, he has received frequent vi: itors. 'Partly burned candles were found in his cell. The attempted out- break was brought to light when an assistant Jailer smelled sulphuric acid t other cell in ihe basement SNOW IN MONTANA. Twenty-four Inches of the “Beautiful” at Helena and Blosburg. P t It | —A heavy | crush the federatlon or break our ®pirit” said Mr. Gompers. “He has Gome neither. The federation wil ccn- get all the men needed. | SCHENK’S CASE SLEEP IN CHICKEN COOP Six-Foot Wiltcn Woman Under Bonds to Keep the Peace. i After Divorce Suit. Wheeling, W. Va., Nov. 13.—The case of Mrs. La: Farnsworth Schenk, whose trial on the charge of admin- ticue to grow and aid in the uplifting | MRS. o s CONTINUED AGAIN.;’ MADE LITTLE HUSBAND | Will Probably Not Be Called Until| | Wilton, Conn. Nev. 3. Mrs. Gus- |istering poison to her millionaire hus- tive Frederichson of Georgetown was | band, John O. Schenk, resulted in a Piaced under 500 bonds br @ justice | disegreement, was called in court t day and continued for the third time. Absence of the public prosecutor was the cause of the postponement. It Is reported that the “case will again be called within a few weeks and the in- dictinent will be nolled or continued until the divorce suit by Mr., Schenk has been settled. today mplained in the drove of the peac 3¥er FRusband made him siec w0 keep the peace. that she chicken coop A irem the <on a small six feet | i is ove: portion. Six Venires for McNamara Trial. Tos Angeles, Cal, Nov. 13.—Six men accepted as to cause and three sworn jurors wera m the box at the close of todns’s session of the trial of James McNameia for the murder of one 5f the twenty-one men killed in the explosion at ihe plant of the Los An- zeles Times. Five venires have been exhuasted and another of forty men was crawn today to report tomorrow. Philadelphia Nationals Beaten. Hava Washington, Nov. 13.—Moving ple- ture show promoters received . blow foay when tue supreme court df the Tgited Siatse declded that moving | wictiroe scenes of a | wops o censtitute an | Infrinzerac ht on the | to drama- | i had about five inches of snow and east of here it is heavier. Twenty-four inches of snow covers | the ground at Blosburg and Helena, while in_the Bitter Root Mountains it is even deeper. 1 Wickersham Doesn’t Understand. |2 pressing the price of cotton to the financial detriment of the southern producer, Attorney General Wicker- sham frankly admits he does mct um- derstand the workings of a “hear” pool or how stch a combination could operate in cestraint of commerce. E: Would Spoil Creases in Trousers. Boston, Nov. 13.—"“Harvard men should get down on their knees when they pray,” said President A. P. Fiteh of Andover theoclogical seminary recently moved te Cambridge, in an addreas before the Evangelial Alliance today. “This sitting up in prayer time is an antiquated custom,” he contin- ned, “and! when you get Harvard men kneeling at - heir prayers you are ac. complishing good results.” Boy Kills Sister With Rifle. Cutler, Me., Nov. 18.—Whil today Jefton' Publicouver, an 3 Tesr 014 lad, accidentaly discharxed s Tifio Whic - 7 had in his hands, and the bullet struck and instantl T2 Vear ol sister. Mare > ‘iied his elected a member of the cli. becoming a member of the board of aldermen the following year. state. ezate to the national Ameriean conven- tion which met in Philadelphia to for- mulate He Decame a staunch repudlican and in the 5#h congress and was re-elected for /each succeeding term, finishing his “Advantages of Protection, circulation. frst street rallway in this city and for many years a contractor and builder. He was a 334 degree Mason and a member of the Odd Fellows. from and, until reapportionment by the last legislature, the largest district in the state. Reilly, successor. widow and one deughter who resided with him at his Orange street home. YUAN SHI KAl WARMLY Apoointed Commander in Chief of All last prop of the throne, has reached Peking at last. Three years ago he was driven from the city in disgrace. He came today accompanied by 2,000 troops and was warmly greeted by the administration. an edict was issued appointing him commander of all the troops in the vicinity of the capital. are being made to induce him to ac- cept_the premiership, but he has given no_cefinite answer as yet. store for China and greater suffermgs The pro Dects of foreten intervention by other | Dowers than Russia and Japan are b ginning to be discussed. Bect men! Treater deal rolls from famine, even T Chi-Li province. The people in the central section menting thelr food with the bark of’ trees. WOMEN "AND GIRLS IN Protest Against Delay in Prosecuting caiing fron and found that the b: = ; vhich of Pierson's ceil had nearly been B ne Tves of 145 cmpioves, o 8 ered. Pierson was transferred to an- | ghirtwaist wctory on- Washington minds of the survivors and_the reia- are pursuing relentlessly the campaign ngainst the fire hazard which jeopard- Missoula, Mont., Nov. 1 whom were affected by the Triangle snow is still failing here, and the | Walst company fire, paraded through temperature is rising. The valley has | the East Side today as a_demonstra- Hundreds of spectators along the line of march joined the procession, at the head of \which a band played a dirce | wept as they marched. | (,Washington, Nov. 13— Responding | o a Teques presentative. Alken of South Carolina, that the fede-al S(?aml'flp Amhale. | government undertake thé prosecution | vAl Grenoey .Nflv‘ A% foonnlc, homi of “bears” who, it is alleged, are de- | NS YOrk. ‘Wilhelm, from New York. New York. New York. New York. schooner Eastern Light is ashore on Prmpkin Rock, near probably be a total loss. route to Bengos with 100 barrel hailed from Machias, Me., and was of Maurice “usiness agent of the United Associa- tion of Plumbers, recently convicted ot the murder of Vincent today sentenced to_life br Judge Wiliia—= X. MeSurley. Hon. N.D. Sperry EX-CONGRESSMAN PASSES AWAY AT NEW HAVEN. LONG IN PUBLIC SERVICE Was Secretary of State in 1855 and Member of Congress Fiftesn Years— Presided Over Lincoln Conventions, New Haven, Conn., Nov. 13.—Nehe- miah Day Sperry, who represented the Second Connecticut congressional dis- trict in congress from 1§95 until his retirement because of old age a year 2go, died at his home on Orange street tcnight from hardening of the arteries and infirmities incident to advanced years. ¥ 54 Began Life on a Farm. Mr. Sperry was born in Woodbridge July 10, 1827, and spent his life up to his 14th yvear on his father's farm, when he moved to this city, where he has since made his home. After at- tending school in this city, he took up teaching and was credited with being the highest paid teacher, for several terms, of any district school in the state.’ He early took an active in- terest in politics and in 1853 was on coun- Secretars of State in 1855. In 1855 he was elected mecretarv of Tn the same vear he was a del- plans of the American party. was chairman of the state central com- mittee prior and during the Civil war. Presided at Lincoln Conventions. He was chairman of the republican national conventions which nominated and renominated Abraham Lincoln for the in t] hondsmen for the builders of the Mon- itor. master by President Lincoln and held jresidency. He took srest intersst e Civil war and was ome of the Tn 1861 he was appointed post- tho office continually until 1885 and was reappointed by President Harri- son in 1889 and served until 1893. Went to Congress in 1895. He was nominated for congress in 1886 but declined the’ nomination, and 1294 was nominated and elected to ce in the Glst congress. He was a aunch protectionist and his article, ‘had a wide He was organizer of the Represented State’s Largest District. Congvessman Sperry was elected hat is nominaily a democratic, retirement Thomas was elected his Leaves Widow and Daughter. He was twice married and leaves his On _ his a democrat, GREETED BY GOVERNMENT. Troops About Peking. Peking, Nov. 13.—Yuan Shi Kai, the In proof of his arrival Great efforts "The opinion is held at the legations hat there are serious complications in han she has vet endured. ‘Winter is ex. to terminate the massed move- of the troops. but thers will be are already supple- STREET DEMONSTRATION. Harris and Blank. New York, Nov. 18.—However short he memory of the general reading Place last March is still fresh in the es and friends of the victims who factory workers. men and girls, ze_the lives of Nearly 300 w " of ion, they said, in favor of a specdier rosecution of Harris and Blank, pro- ors_of the factory, who are now nder indictment for’ manslaughter. nd draped banners were carried. Many At Plymouth: Nov. 13, Kronprinz At Naples: Nov. At Glasgow: No. 12, Caledonia, from At Londo 13, Minnetonka, rom New York. At Trieste: Nov. 13, Pannonia, from 11, Roma, from | Nov. il Schooner Ashore. Boothbay Harbor, Me., Nov. 12.—The here, and will She was en from Beverly, Mas: of lubricating ofl. The rew escaped. The Eastern Light 1 tons net burden. Life Imprisonment for Siugger. Chicago. Nov. 13.—] Enright, ana s Total The Social Evil In Connecticut NEARLY 800 CONVICTIONS DUR- ING PAST YEAR. TEN UNDER 15 YEARS OLD - [ Statistics Given at Annual Meeting of ‘Connecticut Society of Social Hy- giene—Better Wages Recommended. Hartford, Conn,, Nov. 13.—The first annual mceting 'of the Connecticut Society of Social Hyglene was heid Lere tonight and listened to an ad- dress by the president, Dr. Phineas H. Ingalls, and the reborts of the secre- tary and treasurer and of five commit- tees. Prof. Willlam B. Bailey of Yale university, chairman of the social evil committee, said in his report that ac- cordine to the constitution of the so- ciety the principal Guty of the com- mittee seemed to be gathering of Sta- tics relating to the social evil. 107 Cases in Superior Court. The city court records of 15 cities of the state and of the superior court were gome over. “There were during the calendar vear 1810, he said, persons sentenced to the siate nrison for offenses connmected with the social evil. Of these, 43 were males and two females. Twenty-four were born in this country and 19 were of Torelgn birth Of the foreign born, 13 rnwme from Italy and six from other Euro- pean countries. The number of per- scns convicted before the superior courts of the state in 1910 of offenses connected with the social evil was 107 O these, 83 were males and 18 femaies. Italy Leads Foreign Races. “Of the 107 persons _convicied, 49 were born in the United States, 49 were foreign born, while the nativity of nine was unknown. Of the foreign born, 31 were born in Ttaly. In fact, Italy fur- rished nearly twice as many criminals convicted before these courts during 1510 as all the other foreign coun- tries. Among those convicted before the superior courts, the males out- numbered the females more than 1 to 1, while in the city courts the females outnumbered the male: 501 Cages in City Courts. “There were convicted of offenses connected with the soclal evil before the city courts of 15 cities In the state during the calendar year 1910, 501 per- s0ns, of whom 205 were males and 296 females. These cities contain about 80 per cent. of the population of the state. There were probably about 250 convictions In the rest of the state. 1 consider that the minimum estimate of the total convictions in the entire state may have been nearly 300. Ten Under 15 Years of Age. “Ot the 501 cases concerning which statistics were collected, 208 of the persons convicted were of mative birth, 145 of foreign birth, while the nativity of 148 was unknown. Of those of for- clgn birth, 74, or almost exactly 50 cent. were born In Italy. Of those convicted in the city courts, 10 wer: under 15 years of age. 47 between 15 and 19, 105 between 20 and 24, S4 be- tween 25 and 29, 112 between 30 and 39, 36 between 40 and 49, 23 50 or over, and 74 ages unknown. Very Little Organized Vice. “Of the males convicted in the city courts in 1910, about 35 ner cent. had heen before the same court previous of the females this was at least the second time they had been found guilty before the same court. If the opinion of well known citizens and so- cial workers in the different cities in this state is to be accepted, there is very little organized vice In the state. and conditions are much more hopeful than in some large cities in this eoun- try. Reduce Use of Intoxicants. “Any means,” Professor Bailey said. “which can be devised to reduce the drinking of intoxicants in this state will serve the ends of this soclety. We should further the efforts of those who are striving to obtain larger pla grounds in our cities or better pro- vision for proper amusement among the young. It is a shame that where- ever we turn for recreation in this state we find that the means of enjoy- ment have been to such a large extent commercialized. Pay Girls Decent Wages. “Employers of labor should endeavor to pay a rate of wages sufficient to support a working girl without making it necessary for her to increase her income by immoral practices. The wages paid to youns girls in some lines of work in this state are pitifully low, and while they may suffice for one who lives at home, are too small for the girl who is entirely dependent upon her own resources. Suitable provision for vocational training in this state would assist the girl who must earn her own living. Education of the Youth. “Valuable as are these prevent've lies in education. The youth of b sexes must be taught the sanctity of the human body. The necessity for personal purity should be brought kome to male and female alike. The mistakes of the one sex are no more tc be excused or condoned than those of the other. ‘Educatlon may be the slowest but it is the most successful method of dealing with social abuses.’ RED, WHITE AND BLUE HENS IN CALIFORNIA. Dr. Royte Names Breed of Tri-Colored Poultry “Patriot.” Mountain View. Cal., Nov. 13.—Patri- otism to the uitimate degree is exem- plified in a -flew breed of hens now flaunting the national colors at the poultry farm of Dr. I G. Royte here. | Pright red of head, pure white of bod¥ and indigo blue of tail, the fowls came into the world a short ‘time ago. There are several of the vari-hued birds and Dr. Royte asserts that the extraordinary plumage is the result of lons experimental observation. nomed the new breed the “Patriot.” Railroad Fireman's Skull Fractured. Stamford. Conn., Nov. 13.—Samuel King of New Haven, a firemen on the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad, i8 In the Stamford hospital with a fractured skull and other in- juries suffered this morning at Roway- ton. He was leaning out of the engine cab window and was struck by a pro- jection beside the railroad tracks. Bridgeport’s New Mayor. Bridgeport, Conn., Nov. 13.—Dr, Clif- ford B. Wilson, who is county coroner, was inaugurated as mayor of Bridge- cort today, succeeding Edward T. Huckingham. The ceremons was heid in chambers of the common councii and . s | o that vear, and for over 28 per cent. | measures, the main hope for the fature | th | He has | icut in Cpndensgd Telezrams Fire Destroyed the Huntsville Hotel block in Huntsville, Ala. T. F. Harrison, Savannah Cotton ex- porfer, was killed when,his auto turned turtle. All Grades of Refined Sugar were reduced 10 cents a hundred pounds yesterday. | William Wigginston, on_ T killing three men, was acquitted Decatur, Ala. Dayton, Near Harrisonburg, had a $30,000 fire, a number of bulldings be- ing destroyed. A Huge Boulder Was Dedicated at Chevy Chase, Md., as a memorlal to Col. Joseph Beit. | *Albert Packer, 21 Years Old, acci- dentally killed himself while \hunting near Hackensack, N. J. _The Public Health and M. vice reports that a le from quarantine in St. for in $ix Steel and One Hundred and Two | | woogen vessels wwere completed by | | American shipbuilders during Octo- | ber. | Conditions Are Normal as Regards the dispute beiween Peru and Colom- bia, although the drilling of voluntee continues. The Navv Department Will Use two torpedo boat destroyers for wireless | tests in Chesapeake Bay in the hext few weeks. | The Residence of Oliver J. Thrall in Windsor, Conn., was entered by bur lars Sunday night and jewelry valued | at $200 taken. “Generals in Commanc in Our Army are not well enough acquamted with their men,” says Henry l, Stimson, secretpry of war. Senator Smoot of Utah makes the prediction that there will be tarifr legislation during the approaching ses sfon of congre: ) Preliminary Plans for the Men and Religion forward movement convention to be held at Washington in January have been made. Rev. Dr. J. A. Carmichael, superintendent of tiic miss of the Presbyterian churc died in Winnies. West Point Officials Declare that Cadet Joseph Leon Israel was dis- miissed, not on account of religion, but on account of demerits. The Supreme Court of the United | Sta will take a recess after an- rouncing opinions next Monday, Nov. 20, until Mon Dec. 4. The Large Barn of G. Bayson Wal at South Norwalk was destroyed by Sunday with a loss estimated at §6,000 | on th- building and contents. Ruth Shea, Aged Eight Years, fell down stairs in the Northwest school |at Hartford at noon yesterday and sustained a fracture of the skull. | More Than 3,000 Samples of fmport- |ea fooa and drugs analyzed at entry | ports during the past year were found | to be misbranded or adultcrated. | Governor Glasscock Has Named the delegates from West Virginia to the | national rivers and harbors congress which meets in Washington Dec. & | _Fifteen Young Men of Shady Bend, part of the police service of that city Mrs. Rosetta Fulton of Bevier, Mo., was acquitted by a jury for killing her husband. He had declared he would kill her before the sun rose next morn- ing. | Five Thousand Italians in New York | city held a meeting to protest against | the charges of cruelty by Itallan sc diers in Tripoll and to raise funds to ald the war. —— | The Final Hearincs on the Dissolu- | tion ~f the m>-called Sugar and Stear ship trusts, before the full United | States_circuit court, were postponed | | until December 4 | Charles A, Reed, of the Firm of Reed | | & Stem, architects in charge of the New York Central terminal, died of heart failure at his home in New York late Sunday night. i - Leonard Lottridge, Pioneer News- paper publisher of Salem, Wis., an in- fluential politiclan of Wisconfin and a friend of President Taft,” died West Salem, Wis., aged 85, | John L. Cerncross. Pioneer Minstrel |and far years famous throughout the | country as n minstrel tenor, died sud- { denly at his home in Philadelphia on | Sunday night of heart discase Recent Attempts to Disarm the Moros in the Philippines have resulted in | several thousand of them d. ing war and General Pershing, with sev- eral troops of cavalry, will go after them. It is Reported That a Scheme- for | the repartition of Africa is under con- | sideration, and that it provides for the | T | withdrawal of Belgium from the Congo, Great I be apportioned to France and Germany. which w Britain, Newton C. Dougherty, who wx to the Jolist penitentiary for e aling a_million dollars of the Peoria chool board funds, has been paroled, erving six years of an indeter- sentence, after mina e A Plea of Not G 2 ter was entered by James H. Horstall, a Lowell automobilist, who Is charged | with causing the dcath of Mrs. Mar: Kittredge at Wilmington, Mags., on Saturday night. | One Gun Carriage Foundation is all the United States government has to show for nearly a quarter of a million dollars paid during the past elghteen years to A. P. Emery, invertor of a Asappearing gun Carriage. U. S. District Attorney James T. |t Nickerson and his assistants Mave practically completed plans for thi trial of individual meat packers under the Sherman anti-trust act, which will oren at Chicago on Monday, November 20, John T. Shaw, 56, president of the First National bank of Detroit, is in a dying condition at a Paineviile, O., hospital, from a fractured skull and concussion of the brain sustained when his automobile was struck by % i e | fund; on onl {and swim to the breakwater and that make overboard Johnson sald he had much that back just as he was about to climb up. and siznal as agreed. able to stay where the waves alternately threw him back a sank. BOYS HAD TO EAT Cornel Cornell students who, In working thair way through the university, are ers on Sage dormitory, o there among them, but they either bad to get_their own food or go hungry. they were obiiged to eat butter whic, come ‘back to the kitchen trom wirls' mittee strikers to walt upon ment to see if have them served with as good a bill of fare as the girls have, the Central Trust company of Iinois and the Metropolitan Trust and Sav- | Trust company will take over the af- {fairs of the savings bank 4 s / PRICE _TWO CENTS Proportion to thr .cy’s Population PUBLIC BEQUESTS OF MR. PULITZER $1,000,000 for School of Journalism, $1,- 000,000 More if a Success. FOR STATUE TO THOMAS JEFFERSON $25,000 Bequeathed For That Purpose and $50,000 For Fountain at Central Park—Annual Distribution of Prizes to Newspapers, Reporters, Authors, Play- wrights and Historians—Newspaper Stock to Sons. New York, Nov he terms of he Will take Mr. Shaw's place. Tha the will of Joseph Pulitzer, which will [ trustees act as executors with the be filed for probate tomorrow, were |ion Trust company of this made public tonight, Its consplcuous | Oldest Son Not Named features are the ratiflcation of the EIft | my o e or the test to B of *$1,000,000 to Columbia university | g Duliter e olden . for the estavlishment of a sehool of [ o' yroeel (00 €00 lianiruna. the ratification Of an | CO% LraMees, was made the ditional $1,000,000 for the same D) IR it WD Do satd th i subject certain conditic B taria o8 5. the oonviction th nich, If not compiied with by Bo had designated him ! lumbid before the amount is pald ovor, | executors and: trustees ill result in the sum going to Ha st ard university, one-hall of it for Ersvioln tew Wife and Daughte schoo! of journalism and one-half fc The will to be filed tomorrow executed Ap! later terms in ¢ the provisions Pulitzer (3 many unusual prizes and sch as set forth in the will Valet Receives $100,000. ships tiining at length the plan | fund of $2,500,000 ol of journ the doc- | are provided for hy the income frof forth’ a large number of | fund of $1,500,000 hequests not previously | million dollars Is sof a nown, Amorg these are 10 Columbia universiry for a $500,000 m of Art; Rociety ; 000 to Mr. Pulft thiul Tabez Dunningham; $100,000 to be tributed by his exccutors, readers and companions and certain_editorial writ- ers emploved on The World; $50,000 for the erection of a fountain in Cen tral 326,000 for the erection of Thomas Jefferson in New y, and some minor bequests. Newspaper Stock to Sons. e capital stock cf his two gr spapers, the New York World and 250,000 scholarship Metr of New scholarshi Mr petuation of college which rome time ago daughter Lucille Novel Prizes at_any time wi after the death of M cxecutors shall be A that school of journal Columbia I8 a succe r that Mr. Pulitzer's a & million dollars be nection the w of novel prize including: One t the development Ie ark nd improve St. Louls Post-Despatch, are left | School of journal v in trust foi his sons and their male [costing 3580 for the " issuey Guring lives of the (wo |and meritorious s e T Younge A, sodicil attached in |any American newapar rests as follows: | vear; one thousand doliars f fee history of the ser public by the Amer the preceding year; f ing seholarships of To tenths, 1 one-tenth, iweid for st son, SIx ths, to Joseph remajader 1o be of the prineipal the benefit i managers of the news- | thousand dollars for the he whom the trustees may regard |of & reporter's worl during moct deserving and valuable | the test being strict noy, t from time to time and upon the ex- |ness the accomplishment Jiration of the trust estate that one- |16 €ood commanding | tenth of ihe stock of each of the com- |And rewpeat: onc thouss i panies shall to be %0ld o0 one or more of the principal editors or managers of each of said newspapers whom the trustees may consider most deserving in point of abllity and integriLy the year which shall best pr wholesome atmosnhere o 1ife; two thousand dollar hook_of the year upon t The trustees of the stock of the two | I8 57 L€ BEGL L B T renre REPOpe e ommended &8 | i1," paucationnl value and #ity; Charles E. Hughes, justice of the | §080 aTe ty, Joe i e hast Ama United States supreme court, who has | (ERERE0 T CEE L0 e natriot expressed his intention not to accept, owing his public dutics; Harring- unselfish service to the ne o ton Putnam, justice of the supreme May Revert to Harvard court of New York state, to take the | Tf by reason of Satorminat Kan,, will be tried st Lincoln today for | Piace of ustice Hughes in case the lat- [ the executors of tha estats or of tarring and feathering Miss Mary | tor resigns; Frederick N. Judson of St. | faflure of the advisory board of | Chamberlain, a young school teach Louls and J. Angus Shaw of New |school of fournalism to agres it York. Mr, Judson is to serve only un- [plan of prizes. the million 4 Mayor Shank of Indi olis has | ti: Joseph Pulitzer arrives at the age to revert to the trustess of 17 taken strons sround in favor of the |30, when he is to take Mr. Judson's | untversity for the estahlishme ¢ employment of women detectives as |place, and Mr, Shaw is to serve only | school of journalism and half oum s to be used f ' echolarships as describe TEACHERS BLAMED FOR BPREAD OF SMALLPOX Herbert Pulitzer, now 15 has reached the age of 21, wh years en until old, A THRILLING ESCAPE FROM WRECKED SCHOONER. Ole Johnson Reached New Haven Ereakwater in Exhausted Condition. 13.—T the coal h sank oft Haven , in- Did Not Enferce Law Requiring Va cination of Scheel Children w 1 one D Copn., Nov. the crew of Warwick, R. I, N schools in Coventry wick were closed toda in both towns vaceinafed persons In an effort check crease of smallpox which has 1 epidemic In the Pawt more cases wers reporte board of health tod of 59 ofcially reported, an Hoved that this number ly agumented during days. Dr, Gardner T the state board of heal of the epldemic, tod great spread of the disease in the ley district is attributable ung ably to the negleot o school authorities 1o enfor he requiring that no child shnll att public school who does not frst gent a certificats stating over o p clan's signature that (he been properly vaceinated.” SOLDIERS WRAP DOG'S BODY IN AMERICAN FL New Haven, only three of schooner Witch Hazel, whi the breakwater of the New harbor last night, were drowne stead of four, as first reported, was riade known late today when Ole Johnson, the mate, wes brought ashore from Sperry light. Johnson spent the night_on the breakwater and was In an exhausted condition when he reach- ed the light in mid-forenoon, and was cared for until able to come to shore late this afternoon. In telling his exp said that whe deck with 19 years oid, who could not sw He said he told Masters he would try 11 sta tota making a Bwarts h, ir John: when he landed Masters was to throw him a rope one end of which he wis to fast to himself. After jumping pre ohild has in_reaching the rocks and difficulty after time he was washed time to get a firm on to foothold ooner 1o the rope he managed » rocks and secure looked toward the sel to Masters to throw Masters, however, was un- fina r was afrafd to on boar and jumped over- soard and was washed up 1o the rocks, Finally Womans' Relief Corps Leader d “to War Department soldiers Washington, United States the aeronautical corps Md., are report to I burfed & dog wrapped fiag, Mrs. Isabel Worrall man of the natlenal Woman's Rellef cor tion of the desecration of the written a vigorous protest to e of ,War Stimson. The dog, Which the aviation schoel funeral with full military ciuding sounding of “t ter to the mecretar #he demands that the s reprimanded, Mrx, Ball action as “repugnant,” s #ymbol of the great powor ity of the United " A thing to be used dog.” SEEKS and forward. Several times, Johnson sald, he was able to tou sters on the shoulder, but was e to get hold of him and finally he g, haw THE GIRLS’ LEAVINGS Student-Waiters Object Using Butter on Girls' Plates. ¥ t of war a adde and N Tthaca, ov. 13 —Fifty male - wait- the tubles of the. co-eds in struck today. As i 400 girls were o led to walt 3 themselves. jetion was not to their lking and was considerable grumbling the sequence 1h a8 4 DIVORCE AFTER 40 YEARS OF WEDDED BLISS The boys struck, they may, because Woman Comes Betwesn Coc Dye and His Wi Another the tables and drink milk which hey “belleve was watered. A com- has been appointed by the the munage- It i= not possible to 12, —After Flnor divorce today New York, than forty 1 _happines 5l Dye beg agains ( 70 years old, ol member Preme’ court her Joseph Frnest Dy, War veteran and York's old guard. Mre, Dye ulleges that her hus “fell under the charms of anothe man” and in Yer behalf & West Bourding house keeper testified todn th Colonel Dye and a woman he in ll'!\| “tcl.fl? nl his ‘I'l‘l:.‘fi;’.u net tha plaint ! Im Aurin, the intor ot 139 g Chica, Chicago, Nov. Banks Consolidate. 13,~The directors of ngs Lank, voted today to consolidate he two institutfons. -~ The Central