Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 27, 1911, Page 1

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DECAPITATED W ‘ - Kenosha Italian, Frenzied by ' \ Uses an Axe With Terrible Effect AFTERWARDS CONFESSED TO PRIEST Haunt:d by Spectre of Headless Bodies, He Sought Re- lief by Unburdening Himss:If of His Awful Secret —Wiie Offered Resistance and Was Struck Down While on Her Kness Praying For Forgiveness. His Discovery, Kenosha, Wis., Nov. 26.—Tortured by the mental pictire of his headless wife 25a her lover, whom he slew last night, Fasquale Marchesi, a merchant, today confessed to a priest. <rime had not been chesi was turried over to the police, him for fear | he distinguished the words “Vengeance iz mine. I will repay, saith the Lord. Had No Suspici Then he rushed to the priest and in_confession. Tei "t rotmene he told the pence. cted to E e police. 1 _had no suspicion of my wife's un- raithrulness, but just for fun I peeped in at her bedroom window. discovered. Mar- | SCusht rell who are cly guarding of possible mob violence tonight. Chopped OFf Their Heads. According to Marchesi, he went home | griven to senselt des; ition by the last night and found his wife, Roxsa- Fo o g 4 via, and his cousin and namesake Wichout ‘allowing his | Jresence to become known, he went to | « woddshed, got a hand axe, crept into lumberman’s hand axe. ihe house and chopped off the heads of Taised the window and entered. | arm strengthened ! ped off my cousin’s head at the first | blow. He did not move, but the sound of the blow aroused my wife. started up and fought savagely. forgiveness, her knees. That wi Her defense had prevented the | fagal blow, but her prayine posture allowed the axe to swing freely. was mad, but I had mense enough left to avoid striking the baby which my wife had seized as she sought to de- fend herself.” Took Care Not to Harm Children. Marchesi =aid he struck at his wife epeatedly, almost severing her head, but always taking care not to harm He said he struck at the headless body of his ceusin after he | was satisfied that his wife was dead. | Reputed to Be Wealthy. Marches! has lived in Kenosha ten considerable e was a leader among Ital- sight that met my eyes. Wife Prayed for Forgiveness. maki e o vl “T ran to & woodsfed and seized a the sight, I chop- Baby’s Face Blood Covered. Taking his baby, ‘tom the arms of his slain wife, “washed the blood from its fac t to the home af his brother and said t his ywife wak ill. © house, dressed his daughter Jose. ears old. and took her to two months old, carried | pegged throwing herself the end of He returned to 3 Bis brothers. Spectres Forced Him to Confess. Marchesi then returned to the house, the batchet and wa - As morning began to awn the spectres so haunted Marchesi, was forced to eon- | bout the ci Saw Forms of Headless Persons. Ir the darkness of a church basement | where he Spent part heard the death cries of his wife and he saw horrid forms of headless per- rushing at As the music of the morn- ears from the ihe children. the night he ing mass came to hi wuditorium above, he said he thought SMOKING OF OPIUM IS WIDESPREAD HERE. m _Joints Said to Exist in Every City of Considerable Si RICHESON CLAIMS HIS Tells Visitor at Jail That This Was | Done by Mutual Consent. | the defense sioner of internal trial of Rev. here today. Al records were broken i th3 past fiscal year in the production .of alco- Foiic liquor. The smoking of opium is a wide- spread vice in this country and opium ry city of consider- o e the Idsho state prison commis | cell. Dr. Connor went | street jail in the course of a series of! visits which he is making to prisons The double system of taxing ‘oleo- margarine is corrupting Eross frauds are being perpetrated on | the butter buying public. The internal revenue receipts vear were $322,526,299, the greatest in ihe history of the government. Corporations making returns under i1he mew corporation tax law numbered an_aggregate capital of The aggregate net in- come to the stockholders was $3.360.. The year's production of dis iifled apirits amounted to 1 =allons, nearly 7,000.000 gallons more | “han in the previous banner year, 19 The production of _beer, mmounted to §2,216.851 barrels. near] 4.090.000 barrels more than in the pre- vious record vear, 1910. ©f Nguor heid in bonded warehouses | R for ripening now reaches the enormous | Was Very of 249,279,246 gallons. grocers and ¢ auoted the accused minister as saying | in_substance: engagement to Avis Linnell was by mutual consent, owing to Miss Linnell, who was a | e New England Conser | atory of Music, intended to pursue a | professional career. responsible for Avis' physical condi- tion and only learned of it to my.sor row and surprise when she unbosomed herself to me | and friend, seeking the sympaihy and relief which I found m: As to the manner in which &h, procured the cyanide I have no idea. Connor said that Mr. calm and appeared to him g o gover sa the fact thi 270.363, wit! $67.886.430.5 1 was in no way | as her for The amount | like a prison chaplain than a SENATOR STEPHENSON WILL BE EXONERATED. Senate Committes Failed To Any Evidence of Vote Buying. Washington. Nov. | WHOLESALE PRICE OF BEER MAY ADVANCE. Find | Brewers Forced to Do It Because of | Scarsity of Hops and Barley. ed his bare cell at the federal prison here for a more commodious ward in the army hospltal at Fort McPherson | The man had apparently been dead for today. The change was ordered by | a week. New Haven, Conn, Nov. 26.—An in- declaration that no Instances of vote crease In the wholesale price of beer |is forecasted by Hugh F. ¥ox, the United Brewers' associa- buying were discovered words of censure of the use of large | isry o sume of money in his campaign. the | tion, who on Friday attended a confer- semste committes which investigated the election of United States Senator irade conditions were under discussio Fox says that while brewers, reason of the increasing price of hops and barley, and the lessening produc- . will be obliged to increase the | of their product, the gonsumer.” it 1s not expeeted, will have to pay any higher price for beer which ver the counter. althouzh - be some slight increase in per came fm bottisd beers. Air. Fox sald that droughts in Eng- land and northern Wurope has com- English brewers to crop of our own Pacific coast,’and the ity of the barley malt market has driven the price from an average of 70 to about $1.40. while ave gone from 15 and 20 cents The labor scale has also | enie here of brewers of the state whe: Stephenson is expected shortly after the opening of congress. | According to_a well founded report here today Senator Stephenson will be declared fully entitled to his PARK KEEPER GORED BY A BULL BUFFALD.; Attacked by the Animal After He Had Given It-Its Supper. ‘Washington, Dean, a keeper at the Zoological park s in_a_critical r been gored by a bull buffalo. is at the emergency with a_ compound fracture Dean, who i3 one of the old- employes of the zoo. in point of | mercioe. was attacked Iast nizht after | A $100.000 BUILDING FOR he had given the animal and while he was cleaning it= pen. assintancs of J. J = watchman at saved Dean from being kiliad by Frank Baker, =00, sald the at- tack was the first of its kind since HOLY CROSS COLLEGE. | the Diocess Asked to Make Contributiens of $100, Claraymen of a6t = candldate, nor has he been at | any. time.” Cross colloge is to be presented witl 2 fund of $100,000 for the erection of & {new building to accommodate the in (rensing number of students, ing to a circular sent 'to - GREENWICH RESIDENCE, Lirs of the alumni teday by the col- Bame Men Believed to Have Made| Break Thers Six Years Ago. @reenwich, Conm, Nov. ago the home of J. F. Studwell at Grand Vie wwas entered by burg- tured and given turday two description f those tcal examinor who viewed the body of Malon Simpson, found in an open field on the outskirts of the town, mave the cause of ATTEMPT TO BURGLARIZE lege president, E - Joseph P. Dinand, S. J., suj T by the priests Springfield diocese, Bishop Beaven of that ement which is said to f its kind in the history of the Catirolic chureh in America. The plan for_every lc clergyman in the diocese to contribute $100 & vear lfcr three vears to make up the total Thomas D. 26.—Six | l;:ldinx a m fed deer plaved by a joker in the ‘woods in South Amherst led to 2 waste of ammuniti on the part of sports- men yeslerd: eight humters mistak- ing it for the real thing. One hunter shot at 1t four tlmes before he d covered It had been dwad Twenty years | ‘or more. Robbers Kill Oonstal Chikcothe, Texas, es. Holloway was killed aud Constuble J. A, Doyie seriously wounded in a battle with two i gonnmection wilh the recen robbers of e state bank of Ddell, at sses are purmuing wien, who sre Sald to be afoot. pried open thouxh nothink the house. Jleved thai the men were by Studwell's dog before noen {oday e Joachin were Jun This Snormeg w1 r being iruns- whim to the shooner i \'er‘kgl:"z’, b,.umi ‘h-::- © Nova Scotia,’ which w fh-osku Isiand last nlm,'- iteq . Harriet. ol mut | will neors wire Cabled Paragraphs » Berlin, Nov. 26.—Lieut, Baron Von | Frevtag-Loringhoven, a military, avi- ator. fell ‘at the military aviation ground in Doeleritsyesierday and was ed. Rome, Nov. 26—Pope Pius gave a | private " audience yesierday to Arch- bishop Farley of New York. The re- ception was attended with considerable ceremcny. |, St. Petersburg, Nov. 26.—The suffer- ings experienced 1n the famine of 1891 are being repeated In the province of Orenburg and the Turgal territory in | Asiatic Russia. Paris, Nov. 26.—Russia has in- | | formed’ Frgnce that with other pow- | ers she ifsists upon the neutrality | | of the Dardanelles-as provided in the | treaty of London in 1871 WAGONLOAD Mc:csb:n BEATTIE FUNERAL TO CEMETERY. BOYHOOD FRIENDS BEARERS Remains of Misguided Youth Borne to Last Resting Place Shortly After Sunrise—Grave Surrounded by Police Berlin, Nov. 26.—A boldly executed | on used to collect the money ship- . ments of various Berlin sub-stations. magne Tower, who was the American | ambasgador to Germany in 1902-08, | has artjved here on his way to join a | hunting party invited to shaot on the | estate of Count Tiele-Winckler in Si- | lesta during the first part of next | week. | OOM PAUL BELIEVED THE EARTH WAS FLAT Jchn Hays Hammond Says Boer Pres- ident Was Opposed to Progress. Roston, Nov. 26.—Released by lapse of time from an oath not to talk on South African affairs or reveal any of the “inside” events leading up to_the Boer war for a period of years, John Tlays Hammond, the American mining engineer and multimiilionaire, who was conspicuous in_that war, broke his si- lence for the first time, last night at + dinner of the Clover club. Mr, Hammond said the Jameson raid was the result of the activities of a reform association formed at Jo- hannesburg and consisting largely of Americans. I want, especially,” said Mr.| Hammond, “to ‘correct & misun- acting under the British flag. That | 1s false. “Much sympathy has been wasted on ‘Oom’ Paul Kruger: He was op- tall. His impositions were such as no man of the Anglo-Saxon race would | havo tolerated. The Americans voted to take up arms against him. There ericans were made to enlist. “The reform movement against Kru- | orders. | ger- was not an English movement. | take away fne flowers. | Jameson came into the fight agains: Boston, Nov. 26.—Lines upon wh'ch | our wishes and against the wishes of base its case In the | Clarence V. T. i‘;ord to him to go lh)er and when )‘Ie . former pastor. of Immanuei | persisted (he only thing 1o do was to | . - Baptist church, Cambridge, charged e . T & Db Jnurder of his one-time sweet. heart, ‘Avis W. Linnell, are possibly Indicated in statements which Dr, Her- | to Johannesburg. 'hey agreed to ail i bert O. Comnor, a former member of | but two things, and that s that no ng\ trrct should be acceried with a |3 says the rainister made to him In his | CAtholle or a Jew. This we flatly re- | wedged in a wine cask along what is | 3 known as the Hook road, near Nor- “Kruger pia false with the re- | wood, Delaware county, a fow miles South of this elty. The man had been FA1d, broks all his promises, and after | strangled to death and the rope used for the purpose had been drawn the meck that It cut he Arrested-the entire committee. Ho | throuzh the skin. The legs of the vic- ‘e the men to undersiand that if tim were drawn up and bound tigh © plealed Euilty they would Te lct | to the upper portion Of his body. but | o with a fine. Instead they were sen- | thie murderer, or murderers, wore coi- fonced to be hanged within 24 hours. nelled to break the legs at the ankies it was possible to nail the head gor and the Boer | in_ the easkc : _ The victim was five feet six inches night sessior sumcil voted (o com- | in height and weighed 160 pounds. Hao i to 1ife smprison. | had black curly hair and s small black The body was fully cloth- ed in cloth of black texture, but the: were no*marks on the clothing or any thing in the pockets by which identif cation could be made. The spot where the cask was found | road which is infr qf iy , and 1t ’." the belief | of ‘the Delaware county police offieis Atiants, Ga, Nov. 36.—Charles W. | that the min was mucdoed tn orie the many Itallan settlements in taat country and the body hauled to the spot where it was found late at nigh:. ho British high commissioner. I sent | | blufe* Kruger into belleving we w bave mors arms than we did have. a'd so and Kruger sent an clive branch form committee after the Jameson he had secured the arms in Johannes- burg throuzh Sir Hercules Robinson th An emphatic despatch from Secratary | it s and after an all- moustache. MORSE REMOVED FROM PRISON TO HOSPITAL to Be Suffering from Kidney Trouble. Morse, the New York Lanker, exchang- Attorney General Wickersham, who He stood the trip well, bnt it was the rTepublican nomipation ign for the presidency = jen §n 1813, neither Mr. Taft | SIOWly and under G TAUST SEEKS T A!om PROSECUTION clution to De- ¥ie never gave M. s Sdge or offer of support, PLUMBI nor dld Mr. ‘Taft ever have such an impresston. As to himself, Colonel Roosevelt is Died of Exposure and Alcoholism. Pcrtland Conn., Nov. 26.—Tha med- Stuffed Deer Fools Hunters. RUSSIA MIFFED AT TREASURER-GENERAL May Demand Di American Fin; St. Pet=reburg, Nov. 28.—It s sem!- | officially manounoel that i | satisfied with - Peraia’ doty. compelled T statement Belchertown, Mass., Nov. 26—A stuf- ‘Fatal Toss from Garr: Hot Springs, Va., Nov. 26.—Jirs. K. A, Thayer of New York, sister of Hen- Cherles Mallory of the Mal- line, died todey as the | lory. result of being thrown from a cur- | will demand the. -e. Miss Wlorewee F. Flynu of | ter, and Miss Katherine Mc- > were rding with | time, but were onlzf Richmond, Va., grave of the wife whom he murdered July 15, Henry Clay Beattie, Jr., was buried in Maury cemetery shortly after | sunrise tocay. “There was a brief serv- gy - |1ice at the restdence, attended only b: Dresden, Saxony, Nov. 16— Charle- | 10¢ &{ L1e Teside s g P Nov. 26—By family . and elght friends, who served as pall bearers, and the processton moved through the silent streets of South Richmond. Presbyterian Service Used. John J. Pix, who ed with Beattie just before he 'Wl:'l‘yh:d into the death ‘chamber at the penitentiary iTriday morning, read the service of th Presbyterian chureh. Seven Carriages in Cortege. To guard against possible annoyance the funeral was kept secret unmtil midnight last night, and consequently there were no crowds around the Beattie home or cemetery. Police were on duty, but the hearse and seven carriages had reached the srave before the City was astir. When the burial service was over, Beattie, Sr., left with Douglas, his son, and “Hazel, his daughter, austs of the murderer. The old ther's grief was intense. Boyhood Friends as Pallbearers. The pallbearers, boyhood friends of Beattle, were asked by him to serve. of them had testified in his defense at the trial and one was his est man when he an uise Well- derstanding. It has been sald we were | pong GO8, WOSE T8 SHE u":“y S year from the date he pleaded not uilty of her murder, in court. \-agon completely filled with flow . ed to progress, believed the world | ST8 entered the cemetery Lvas fiat ana Ehat the devil had a |2fter daylight and today - i of earth was hidden beneath chrysan- themums and immortelles. Mounted Police Guard Grave. r it became known today the | was a spy in our camp and for his |funeral had already been leld, a tre- | | benefit we voted that if we were com- | mandeers1 we would, upon the first | Double | orders ta fire, shoot down our com- ENGAGEMENT WAS BROKEN |inanding ofiers. As a result no Am- | policemen. besides officers afoot, kept the crowds back. There were no dls. and no attempt the exact hour | Several mendous crowd visited the cometery. ropes wera stretched around | the Beattie section, and two mounted | | ITALIAN’S BODY FOUND WEDGED IN WINE CABK.‘ by Rope Around His Neck. Philadelphia, Nov. 26.—The body of unknown Itallan, apparently about | years of age, was found today | tightly ‘about bofor is along a lonel how I wish she would only act square- ly and leave you entirely and not be 3 snake in tha grass,’ you said 4 whole recently made a special visit {0 At- | POLICEMAN SHOT BY A lanta to investigate the condition of Mr, Morse. The transfer was made at 8 a. m, this morning. Morse made the trip of several miles in an ambulance, accompanied by Major Baker, chief surgeon at the fort GANG OF STRIKE RIOTERS 9 Garbage Pelted With | Bricks and Bottles. | any of the money given ner by a « | cazo millionaire, Patterson’s diary New York, Nov. 26.—The city is not | “Ontinues: sald at the fort that hIs physical con- | yet rid of tlie gerbage which collected aitlon will not permit of an examina- | during the strike by the street clean- tion today. The banker convict is ex- | ers, or of trouble with the strikers and pected to go through this ordeal to- | their sympathizers. | morrow. According to_a statement oceurred on the East Side today be- iven out vesterday. by Warden Mey- | tween er at the penitentiary, Morse Is suf- Wwhick: fering from kidney troubie. A pitched battle and the police, during n was shot in the hand, and strikebreakers were pelted = with bricks and bottles. Nobody to Have Teddy's Support. |were painfully hurt, and it required a Philadelphia, Nov. 27-—The North | large force of police reserves to re- American today publishes what it |Store order, terms “an authoritative statement” of |ATresiéd mem was drivem to the sta o itn rac- | tion house. 1 Roosevelt’s positior. with 1 e e e e i Il heaped in unsightly and ill smell- 2, as the large foice of strike time she was seeking a divorce, and God knows she made It a living hell for me at that time; me, a sick man | and barely able to walk. She jabbed |and me with 2 long pin one day, foreing me to wince with pain because I bhad | convention of the American Banker discovered hid away in her stocking a rze ruby ring.” Several men A whole patrol wagon of | Chankagiving dinner this vear = 11 cost the housewiie a little more than iast vear, despite the somewhat lower price of turkeve and chickens. Tho aroutl — AR of the last summer has caused some o vhich government officlais | the *fixings” .to advance sharply in GELDINGS WORTH $45,000 the ‘sale of sixty-nine | nrice. Northern turkevs at 25 and 28 the | ccnts a pound sre from 1 to & cents Cfeaper than last meason, and western | “Governor Gray To Present Ideas of Di partment of Justice. | Ivashington, Nov. 26—“The plumb- ing trugt,” supplies in _most Tocky mountains and Pacific coast re- zions, has capltulated o the depart- | Lurkeys at 25 to 2§ cents are from 3 tice and is seeking to avoid | (o Representatives of it became known here to- 4 mem! eath as exposure and alco- | jnent holism. _Simpson was found lying on & pile of corn husks Saturday and the anthorities of this place notifled pail no atiention to the matter late in the avening, when a physician found that he had Adfed. Cranberries at 15 cents a quart are 2 1-2 cents higher. white potatoes at | will ‘present their ideas of is- | 40 cents are 15 cents a peck more, oe the | ery averages 5 cents a -hunch more, Sherman law at & conference to be £00d pumpkins cost 20 cents more, spinach is 10 cents a peck higher, or- | anges, both Fiorids. and California, average from 10 tu 15 cents a dozen more, and nuts at 20 cents show an advance of 2 cents a pound. but | dav. ntl solution and compHance with He was 47 nl the department later In the | eelc. apparently ‘an “infernal machine” serit chrough the malls to Gev.. Jobn K, Tener, proved today 1o be o harmless 1s nat aevice of ‘Wire s | inas. | sawiabe: Sifcim who hed b hand |y i owner and Coundy Tax at § 600, Waterbury.—Theodore Lilley, sbn of (he late Governor_ George L. Lilley, has purchased from Theodors F. Nuhn « | canvon. Sever hundred persors wro ‘was | makirg thai= way out over almost Im. 06, for gm-lblo tralla and are muff “Ereat The Vatican ARCHBISHOP CORDIALLY w. EET. ED BY POPE PIUS. NOT PERMITTED TO KNEEL Pontiff Addresses Cardinal-Designate from Boston as “My Brother”—Party of 40 Presented in Small Threne Room Rome, Nov. 26—The Most Rev. Wijliam H. O'Connell, archbishop of Boston and cardinal-designate, was Received with Military Honors. They drove from the Quirinal hotel to thé Vatican. The archbishop was received with military honors by the Swiss suards and gendarmes and Iy by the noble guard in the papal ante-chamber, Pops Meets Him With Open Arms. Mgr. Bisleti, the master of ceremo- | nies, and the private chamberlins Srested him in the name of the pope | and escorted him to the door of the ‘pflv:tla library, where Pope Plus met him with open arms Addressed as “My Dear Brother.” His holiness prevented the archbish- [op from kncsiing snd adiressed hin: ATy dear brotl They then re- tired 10 the library, where they en- | Eaged in conversation for nearly an our. Boston’s Loyalty Impresses Ponti - The pontlfs was extremely warm in his_greetings and would hardly. aliov: Archbishop O’Connell to thank him as | he wished, suying that America’s en- thusiastic responso to the recogmition which he had been pleascd to bestow and the fervor of Catnolicism in that country were the manifest signs that gave the greatest satisfaction. He added that the loyalty of the people of Boston would never be forgotten. | Archdishap Held Pope’'s Arm. On the conclusion of the private au- nce. the pope appeared at the door of the library, wita the srchbishop a the left, holding the pope’s arm. They proceeded to the small throne room, which was the chamber in which Pope Leo cied. There the members of the pilgrimage f-om Boston were gathered, all kneellng, 'The archbishop said that here were gome of his clargy and pe nle who asied the honor of being ad- initted to the pope's presence. Visitors Introduced to Pore. The pontif’ passed around the room and the archbishop introduced each of ‘he visitors. The pope gave his hand to each to kiss, saying a kind woyd. PATTERSON COMPLAINED OF HIS WIFE'S ABUSE Prosecution in Murder Case May In- troduce Some of His Letters. Denver, Col., Noc. —The second week of the trial of Mrs, Gertrude G Patterson for the murder of her his- band, Charlas A. Pattorson. will be- £in ‘tomorrow with the prosecution hiaving closed its: direct casa and the defense having placed on the stund fts most material witness, Mrs. Pat- terson. The prosecution” wili endeavor to in- troduce nurierous letfers written bv Pattersoy to his brother, a Chicago attorney.! In those he frecly disc nais private affairs. Probably 2lso the | Prusecution will attempt to Introduc | what purports be the dead man’s diary. written in the form of day notes or letters to nis mother. In writing to his mother July 21, last, Patterson said: “When von say in your letter: ‘Oh, It ever there was a woman who a demon 5n earth in her home and then makes outsiders helieve she was terribly mistreated, it is her; the iies she tells ard the way £he can purr and work on people’s feelings makes | outsiders believe me a devil After ‘denying that he ever wanted hi- “Oh, mother, I did not get T. B. (tuberculosis) ~from inheritance or | bringing up. Ah, no, 1 was tortured and worried to death.” Referring to the time when he Tan to. Celorado for his healith, the diary s “Weil, it seems {hat just about that PRICE OF “FIXINGS” HIGHER. Boston, Nov rounded | qple Ly (he interstate commerce com | mission and reductions averaging 20 | A per cent. were ordered by January 2, |force the iron mate to avold auch an [STOLE HORSE AND accident, were not in place, They have bexun an investigation. Bfforts had late tonlght to recover ths body of the PERISH_IN STABLE FIRE | A19 toRIERE To (o for Triple Cffense. 5 cents lower. | estigation of the “dastardly out- inning while tical Bad | on Willow street. The price Condensed Senator LaFollette’s Western Speech. making trip will not begin until after ccngress convene Aldrich currency plan. | torelgn countries has grown consider- | ably this year compared with that of a year ago. Mass., First F st, Me. | _To Save the Name of Kansas, J. Fiske of Springhili, that sta | vented the Ixaching of a negro who had attacked his daughter. Ste Burgla | Safe in th | Millin and robbed it of $25 stamps. Harry Wilson of Digby, N. victed of murder in the first degre and sentenced to be h a new trial, by a ruling of the supreme | court. ing to a decision of the interstate com- merce comm.ission. - An Eleven-Car Train, known as the “western governors' special, will leave St. Paul tonight for a twenty-day trip to twenty-one cities of the east and Imidate west. Nearly four thousand miles wilt be covered by the special. | AUTO PLUNGES FROM Miss Mildred Sherman, dau | Mr. ana Mrs. Willilam Watts Sherman | of Camoys of ( ternoon by th: but without faith. Valuable Coal Lands in the Evans- ton (W soldjers’ hy the commissioner of the gemeral land office, i William J Bryan at Nassau, com- menting upon ihe stranding of the steamship Prinz Joachim, on which he two wireless operators on every ocean steamer, so that there would always be |one on duty. Thres Hundred and Fifty Bankers have been in New Orleans during th arsociation sailed Saturday aboard foux amers for & crulse in the Carribbean o tea and on to Panama. at | James Williams at Spring station, | Versailles, Ky., today, Governor | : | Anchor, = rancher. his wife and four Ao L | children, arc bolleved to. have per- ished and miany sammer homes de- | stroved in ‘Telegrams | ADD BRIEFS 5T lwaswn 2ilerskSsa The National Grange Denounced the The P..Lorillard and Liggett & Mey- | ers Tobacco companies were incorpo- | rated at Trenton, Beginning Saturday, Decemier 2, the | monetary commission will_enter upon its final serles of meetings. The Funeral of Former United Sta | Senator John F, Drygen will be held at forenoon. Richard Croker Regards Mayor Gay- nor of New York as the logical demo- cratie candidate for president. Frof. Taomas Arkle Clark of the | University of Ilinots, a champlon of the college athlete as a student. recelved by Pope FPius today. The | weether was glorious and Archbishop O'Connelt’s reception at the Vatican was most cordial. About forty per- | sors, half of the number being cc- clesiastics, accompanied him, forming a little pllgrimage, which included rep- resentatives of the Bost)n newspapers. The Trade of the United States wiih Rev. Charle: of Hingham, s been tendered a call to the ish Unitarian chureh at Hel- A Cleveland-Built Aeroplane was sold by iis owner and builder, Edward t, to Moy Poy, an emissary of | tpa 1y the Chinese revolutionists. Moo e S : sma Congressman J. Frederick C. Talbott | [\ | nas been appointed a member of the e committes tc arrange for the Jackson Gpy celebration in vashington, D. C.* Saturday Blew Open the office of the Narragansett company at Pawtucket, R, I. in cash and con Charles L. Berger, Vice President of the Naugatuck Malleable Iron works, has been arrested c lation of the insus state. urged with a vio- nce Jaws of tii The Little Principality of Reuss | rmany, which has a population of has passed a law to tax 1 maiden ladies. The tax begins, with the 30th year. A Bronze Tablet in Memory of John Marshall, first_chief justice of thic su- oreme court of the United States, was upvelled in the United States cireuit eourt of appeals at Philadelphia Sat- wday. James B. Gay, 65, Grand Master of Tasons in RBode Islind and assistant treasurer of the Providence Journal . ‘died_at his home at Provi 1, Saturday from Bright's ulation is the Largest in Connecticut inpomon to the City’s Population e T B e S BOMBARDMENT OF NANKING BEGINS eral ‘hours Sunday morning big guns | 'Hforming spoke rep along the north m killed. | perfalists attempted a 5 the attac walls with considerable losses. d, 15 to have | Tiger Hill batte pounding shells succeeded In silencing the b | there, little value, N Tiger Hill waw shown by the early [ pearance of four cruisers, and later in | the day by that of other warships. In | the evening a dozen torpedo boat de- | stroyers and crufsers were lying men- | | acingly near the eity. Th Well | declaration mean . s o g A S el il B o g e munition, Doubtless they will quick'y | &re mot impressed. They i Teduce the lower section and drive tha | Yuan hi Kal s 50 embare | detenders 1o the south. The vicersy |hie would return homs, bt of Nanking and the rtar gene | that his departure would be in fear of General-Chang, the imyo- |for a panic and & Manchu oul rialist commander, have taken refisa Rf 1w e tntig T the Japanese bonwvlate Wt which | Tabgle Steed Up Un only the consul rem: omcial exis now n Naniing. | s well guarded by marines. A Possible Strike of 6,000 Men was averted the urday when executives of pternational unions of shopmen | schedules Lady Constance Lytton and Ledy Sybil Smith, convicted of smashing windows in he suffrs in London, w-re sentenced to sev weeks in jail in default of of fine. tte disturbance yment Undue Prejudice and Disadvantage I upon tae Buffalo Uni mpany by the of Buffalo, N. er of Vew York, was married to Lord Britain Saturday af Roman Catholic ritual nouncing her Protestant ominz) lard disirict. aggregat- 0 mcres, are involved in a de- ‘ancelling patents issueé on 24 wdd’itonal entrics, announced a passenger, says there should be | ing the car prepartory to starting as | Third, taking v | s0on as the boat tied up to her New [protect (he York sl Barry and others assert that » which the boat made against the piles | Turks. caused the ear to xhoot of members of their families who 1912, Was Winner of the Stockwood” the farm of both gelcings, were burned Lo ; ning | 0oL, ¢ The fire, which was of-unc | Eer he tiied 10f s pille mornink known origin, destroyed the stables in ment was at first sharp, but later it three columns, ope winas the rallway a second bebind Purple Hill, and the | o el e, third along the river, The Imperial- | ; ints fired upam & Red Cross traim com- | S aK0, When Chief, OMcor ing on the railway: Lish, % ; PRICE TWO CENTS General W(l);lg, Second in Command of Im perial Forces, Among Those Killed PREMIER DESERTED BY HIS CABINE] Yuan Shi Kaijis Military Activity Now Considere Forlorn Hope—Dragon Flags Flying to Celebr _ Foundation of New Constitution—Legation Guar Being Depended Upon to Prevent Massacres. -~ Nanking, 27.—1, a, m.—After DESERTING YUAN | more than: half acentury’ of “silence | the hills overlooking the walled ity | New Chine: of Nanking, the ancient na, mwarm with rebllious forces, for its occupation and_determin take the stronghold where t) Premier Left F of. GRl Without & Cabinet. wer L 10| Peking, Nov. 20.—f Man e apita Trom the Tiger Hill fort for sev- | Yice minis 1 1e Pk did not intend Lo actlvity on the pa ated), while ' further up stern range from the top of Purple Mountain, ove » conaidered a forl smbs, for n fifle Legation Guards May Pre semi-circle westward the Yang-ise, sagre ler forts scattered shells int foralgners ery mection of the city. Mo far arri nown the casualty list is Tai YuancFu. They we Jeneral ‘Wong, Becond In -com- | S s GanF . encort both b perialints T ploma through the dean of i | Jordan, has represer Im- | ter the necessity of o Ing forces view 1o | the legation guards will be able ta capturing their positioms und guns, | vent a maswacre, unless it in thoros ut they were driven back fnside the |1y organized and suddenly precipitat Regent Takes the Oath fy#ig throughout P of the peo; of @ new constit | Fent today with elabovate cerem Consulate Well Guarded. took the oath, us he promi A RESe" holnire some days ago. He sw o L € ifhe, NEve _— Lefore tho emperors’ table central temple to t tutional articles Educated Classes Not Entl The lower waen belie?® d of the defenders, Is among those Imperialists Silence Batteri In the e art of the day th es meanwhilo to Lion Hill ch It Is suspected we The latest consular re Nanking say that the re forces have suffered enorm but that they pressed irresis ward and finally routed th : Rebel Shells Do Little Damage. |iots, who fled into (ho ity for rhe 2 . e bombard pe Nanking batteries then opene S B B the ombard: (o deafening cani . ume feeble, A number of rebei 0% When the desp: llg fell in the settlement near tna River Swarming With > but did little damage. Duris Hong K N 5 ved by the Rock Island railroad | the évening there was —some sharp (river (s swarming with piraie ccepted the road’s wage and labor | fghting at the eastern and southern | traffic to Wu Chow, in Kwang gates, due to the outposts pf the revo- |ince, 1n seriously imper! lutionaries’ endeavor to approach |steamship companies nre them. larmed and are considering Red Cross Train Fired On. jipstmton of thate services, t The revolutionaries _advanced in | L UINE y . crews. Great indignatior | aroused the nttack h [ days ngo, when Chief O 4,000 Raw Recruits Outside City. |®ome kind (o put dowr About 4,000 of General Chang’s ra Rebels Kill 1,000 Robbers. est recruits are now outside the city | Shanghal, N¢ 6.1 ~n with machine guns, but w number | that desperate fighting has tak have surrendered. It fs expected that|between the revolutionists ar the telegraph service will be re-estal- | In Hwal Yuan, Onhwel - 1 on Monday, Jthat & th \ robhers were Carr Bott ‘The accident occurred on the West | Arabs | starting lever. “Barry shouted a warn- | Turii#h regulars. The new ing to several persons standing in | extend from Mesr! to Henni As | front of (he ear and an they dodeed [as the Ttallans are estahils the machine Anshed through the iron | forcements will be roshed ip | Bite of the boat to the bottom of the [ tions strongly entrench t river, de New Milford Man Went to Sleep with |nixht (hat the WhaTa. (na hCraca wore Qiarired bes | BRene e s du i ot ihsd tation fore any attempt could be made 1o |with his t Toot resting On one of |Curtiss wus cap tescue them. Both horses were win- | the rafls. He slept an hour, or morw, |00 and bound over by a & mers of blg mone: 'ur‘(‘.:t.-‘ln Will- | when he was jakened Jams on vari>us tracks in this countr: o Seallias Caneds. Y | nis right and on reachiug down The semi-harbaraus 1 of “Aus-| Thera are new 14,000 scres unds ; u BATTLE AT TRIPOL! A FERRY INTO RIVER. F. LASTED ALL D an Unknown Ferry Passenger | Italians Extend Their Front Afte to Death Ahead of It, Fierce Engagement New York, Nov, 26.—An attomobile | ' Tripol, Nov. #6.-Ar rlunged from & ferryboat into the | movement with (lie object o 1 Hudgon river today and bowled an | the Arabs out of the oasls and ex unknown ferry passenger over the side [ ing the ITtallan front bega his death in the waters. Henry | break., The action opened w . | Hellman, a 17 year old lad of Union |tack on Fort Mesrl by the & { B, N7, was also run down by ihe | gade from Boumellan! on th car and his log was broken. The ma- | front chine, valued at $3,600, sank to the | After meveral hours' Aght m of the river. Italians succeeded in todgtng and General Frog railroad ferryboat Oswego and [mander of the Itallan forces witnessed by many passengers. | the Third division on the e ward Barry of New York, owner of |advance toward Hennl. P : car, and a companion were crank- | Sixth brigade joined the mer n position so diviston from from the direction of Ain vent a junction of the Some sald [~ At 216 p. m. the Ttalian bump accldentally released the [right was hotly enrmged againe JMa frantic “efforts of sev- |neers. | eral men to hoid it L I P Rates from Tacoma | “"m, " itiown man earried with it [nounced. wan » comrie roens sh., and Portland, Ore. | w5y well dressad and of miadle age. |every potnt. The fighting ¥ ngton, Oregon, 1daho | 1in was not seen after beink knoclked ed all Aay, terminated at nightra and Montana were declared unreason- | inlo the foaming waters, The polies | the Turks re(iring from ail the Gasert that the hesvy irom chains at | tions. head of the terry, designed to rein- MADE TWO BREAK Do anancoesaful up 10 | Bristol Man Arrested by Btats P i Brister, Conn., Nov . American Derby Last Year. | BT FOOTOWE Were here Loda o OFF BY A TRAIN |stealing of & saddie hors Lexington, ¥y., Nov. 26.—In Deming of Newlngt His Foet en the Rall. Chorles Curtiex of this place . —_— §s in 8] pending tria winner of the American Derby ai | New Milford, Conm, Nov. 26 yerlor court for ente Jacksonville. last winter and thix | jam Seymour of this place attent {lg the Casino at 1 | year's Latonis Derby, and County | housewarniing Saturday night, remain- || 7144 T ® wtole th for his boarding place Mason and remai ured Saturd by & pain ju |JuMee Attractive Windew Display ing tralu. He crawled to his Yourding |Secorative deslgn o vindoy - Vi pisce. & hundred® fest or mors from I aphon e _ | | the station, ‘2or hielp, O son, atiracted mach iTing v Forest Fire Wipes Out Family. ' | boarders, " Bia criee, went |on Bundey. Thers are N ored fruif, {rom home snd abroa i 2 S s R N %.2'»'-" ‘hospital, . ean s ‘e | boxbs and’ decorative bamksts wiflé loss of a great Sombite, e | the center In harmony with the sea 18 Believen he ‘will recover iic iy s |Was the turkey tamily, the old Tou nd the mother turkey, with » flock forest fire at Topango | Years old, 2 smalier ones. . se of telep) Aqnal-d- n rull.i.nlhp in ‘Treland s Inrge

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