Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 1, 1911, Page 1

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_VOL. LIn—No. 292 “PRICE TWO CENTS The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and Its Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the City’s Population 'HORRIBLE CR RECORD BROKEN BY BRUGE-BROWN Young American Millionai Automobile re Establishes New Mark In Road Racing WINNER OF THE SECOND GRAND PRIZE RACE Travelled at Average Speed of 74.65 Miles an Hour, Leading Eddie Hearne by About Two Minutes—Fastest Lap Made by Hemery at 82 Mile Rate—Hearne to Quit Rac- ing Because of Promise to Wife on the Birth of a Son. Ga., Nov. 30.—F aire, tod record for automobile read races in as man: 7465 miles an hour. s an Italian Fiat instead of a Ger- n Benz that Firuce-Brown to victory. His time today for the 411.36 miles v and 29 13-100 seconds. Eddie Hearne Second. wn_captured the only tru; ariving minutes strain and were elin to time by the breaking apparently endurance from time vital parts Foreign cars surpassed the American, as not one ot the latter finished one, two, t ce. On the otber hand, American drivers dem onstrated their superiority over the foreign pilots. Result a Big Surprise. The outcome of the race w to _automobile enthusiast r of the two favorites of ye: re in the running at smery, the Benz driver, iy _piayed, he honors after the lap. Louis Waener, e, retired Lis Fiat fro 5th lap. The oments of the spectacular s a sur- v was s _slowing o Scarcely had dics mznifest Hear o v - A cheer went , the third of at the Lozier three cars ean mechani Simulta; the da to complete m a half after halted the Lozier, throbbing :d thumping, darted away amid & ing fast- iting wind which swept race course,David L. Bruce- voung American million- established a new world’s in winning his second Grand Prize Race years at an average speed His average year over the same course wes miles an hour. The supreme hon- | or again went to &n American driver nz a forelgn car, but this vear It carried the dauntiess as the finish. who s not a con- ud of smoke. The crowd velled it- self hoarse, urging on the remaining drivers and expressing approval of the lightning work of the Lozier team. Tiwenty seconds after Mulford started Bruce Brown and his mechanicia: sprang into thefr Fiat and were gone. The Benz team was off ten seconds be - unmuffied exhaust popping like & atling sun, the machines spurted for ward and soon were lost to sight in the wake of the leaders. Mulford Forced to Retire. While other passing cars were cheer- ed, the interest of the spectators in hé leaders was so intemse that the | minutes necessary to complete thz 230 lap dragged like hours. Bruce- rown was the first to appear. His car whirled Into sight, flew around the grandstand curve and again out of sight. Eddie Hearne flashed by ihe judze's stand onme minute and thi afterward. In vain the sj houted and walted_for ford, but the winner of the Vande ce was out of the race in the balance, Mulford's on with i ng gear trouble, and the plucl was forced to retire. De Palm umped to third place with the e n of Mulford, and the hard contest for the Grand Prize v was ended, after the next lap, the cars in this position Fastest Lap at 82 Mile Rat imated that the Grand Pri v was witnessed by more ever attended a | vent in this city. The weath- | tremely cold for the sow tting north wind rendered t: ill more unpleasant. The fastest | 3,17 mile course was nego- Victor- Hemery, drivinz a the fifth lap hé made t and 46 second miles an hour. Bruce-Brown Made Nine Changes. After the race was over and the win- ner had been showercd with laurels and pra e-Brown made the followin; ent “T won ay's race by driving like devil toward the early part of the 1 had to make nine changes and | to put a new bolt in the front axie. here Was no consistency ln the race ve. 1 did it by driving furiously | in the beginning and then easing down | toward the latter part until I saw | earne was soing like mad, running | 8 so I just drop- | w | econd tators It is es rs tod persons r er was and or 82 the | Cabled Paragraphs London, Nov, 30.—Sir William Gran- tham, judge of the king's bench di- Vision of the hish Gourt of justice, died today of pneumonia. He was born in Invested With The Red Hats FINAL CEREMONY IN CREATION OF NEW CARDINALS. uthampton, Nov. 30.—Tho fog lift- ed in the night and the White Star liner Olymple, which had been detain- able to sall this morning for Berlin, Nov. 30.—3rs. Charlemagne Tower took lunch with the empress at Fotsdam today. Mr. Tower arrived in Berlin this evening to renew ac- quaintances made while he was Amer- ican ambassador here. A THRONG AT VATICAN American Prelates Attract Particular Attention—Gift of Cardinal’s Robes to Cardinal Farley by Americans. London, Nov. 30.—Herbert Cooper, who murdered “Lord” George Sanger, the well known circus owner, on Tues- day last at East Finchley, a'suburb of PROSECUTION CASE USES STRATEGY. Detective on Lower A Dictaphone Used at IN Floor Keep in Touch With What is piring in the Room Above Los Angeles, Nov. 30.—A M'NAMARA CONVERSATIONS HEARD Able to Jail Trans- | Him. lot of |Condensed Telegrams tated body was found this morning. cccurred jLondon, committed suicile yesterday on the railroad two miles from the| oo oo g0 8, o 33 ome, = o scene of ihe crlme. Coopers decapl-|yost impressive ceremony connected with the creation of the new cardinals this morning at the great twisted wire dangling from an upper window today led to an investigation by counsel defending James B. Mc- hind the Fiat. With reports from the | | more than | terprises, $ment of 30.—A lockout of 70,000 wor in the metal trades will De- come effective tonight, ensuing on their | refusal to accept an agreement drawn | up by a joint committee of employers and trades unionists. The lockout is come of ‘the faflure to settle a last by public consistory at the vatican, when fourteen princes of the church, includ- ing the three American prelates, Car- dinals Faiconio, Farley and O'Connell, were Invested with the red hat Indi- cating their rank. Thousands of peo- ple gathered along the streets to wit- ness the passing of the cardinals, the gieat clerical nobles, the ambassadors and the guests invited to attend the, ceremony within the walls of the vati- can. Excitement at the Vatican. Inside the vatican unusual excite- ment was evident, as for four years no consistory had been held, and for centuries not so many creations had occurred at one time. Every available spece in _all the rooms and corridors along which the papal procession was to pass and in the hall of beatification, where the consistory was to take place, was oc- cupled at an early hour. The hall of beatification, an immense chamber, had been speclally prepared for the occa- s t one end stood the throne, flanked by the cardinals’ stail and the jlaces for high ecclesiastics, and the Sistine choir, while facing these were il tribunes for the diplomatic Jody accredited to the holy see amd for tho Roman aristocracy. Beneath these latter had been arranged standing room for ticket holders, among whom were nearly 1000 Americans. Imposing Papal Procession. After all had taken their allotted piaces, distant strains of vocal music were heard and the low approaching murmur of many voices announced the | arrival of the papal procession. The | picture which then unrolled itself was | magnificent. First came a jeweled cross held by a white—clad figure. Follow- ing came a group of Swiss guards in their old world uniforms of red, black and yellow designed by Michael Angelo, the men carrying halberds. Then came the Sistine chofr, led by Abbe Perosl, | nging as they marched, and after them ecclesiastics of all orders, priests in black, monks in brown and white, heads of religious congregations and members of the papal court dressed in quaint Eiizabethian costumes. Pope Pius In Full Robes. Behind were the cardinals of Curia, about twenty in number. Then fol iowed a detachment of noble guards. Directly afterward came the venerable figure of Pius X in full pontifical robes, blessing the kneeling multitude as he rassed. The procession closed with an other detachment of guards. When all were seated, silence fell upon the assembly, broken by the ris ing to their feet of the cardinals of | the ou strike metal wo» London ne Gecrge and Queen Indian_curbar, indi | tingvished passense | temely roush passage | Bay of Biscay. A port apartment flooded. was forced to vacate hastily up ber quarters in the spec cavin with a swinging cot, r, who is & sailor, his usual cabin < the queen’ Queen Mary nd take 1 storm but the continued f 1. to otcupy. OIL TRUST DISSOLVES, OIL MAY BE CHEAPER. Compstition is Expected to From Dissolution. Incréased tareer rd Oil com- sometimes call- and perhaps in trusts . orporation no longer control the olding company of thirty corporations in va- anches of the oil business. morrow _these subsi- der the deoree of tes supreme court must conduct independently the various en- will assume entire manage- their own affairs. The ofl trust theoretically passed out of ex- istence on August 31, when the books containing the records of the com- stockholders were closed for pution of the stock of the sub- ries, but during the intervening of re-adjustment it was & to preserve the old form to a Now the w ot dis- been completed. effecting dissol was made difficult by the that the subsidiary companies had lost their identity. hey retained their separ officers hoards of directors and to a large tent have conducted thefr own falrs from their home office ever states they were. Th panies, however, have had tation at 26 Broadway, the New Jersey corporation exercised general direction world, s, as t rious b Beginning whi a sid period essary large extent. integration hz The t | se tion fact never have e e h which him and beat him.” ssed by His Mother. | & which greeted the vie- | no one happier than his | R. ruce-Brown «f | who was an anxious spec- | { the wonderful race. | nis side | tor there v ¥ irs e, rushed to him ng both arms around his him several times, Hearne to Quit Racing. Fearne, the young millionaire, was keenly disappointed :.i ictory so nearly within his his was his last Since entered for the Gra: was born to him a son, °d_his wife that he wc the racing game after this and never again would take of leaving his boy fatherless. ce. EESSION OF CONGRESS TO 5 BE GAME OF POLITICS. Are Berator Smoot Says Insurgents Only Jockeying for Power Franciseo, of 1 San fhe activity h politics n for x for om candidates to r than to p: “whred & Senator tin statement { Washington correspondent vening Post of this city eSS Comine e P “We oot $rz made b pics, Fitical’ powe Toe statement in part 7ol “What is congress goinz 1o Leamine 1 ‘answ Pray peiltics Weo must ren «1 fight now hein ~ 1s ot for princi Cffice and politi ier that these may lished, the geepel of di ent must -~ yreacted, form of wove mees, the copstitution amended .o Taws jropesed for the purposc of an eatins tc the particular cia and pecial recilcns of the coungy with w to securipg the vote f@ico hes will be mace and *r ne other purpces than to n party and President T ki a hole “The business interests of the c have been In an unsettled for two and one-half vears, and are on with no thought of antici- the fus “This condition of affairs wi until_the muckraker. the and the polit This day of Nobody and $10.00€000 in the Has ~ Nearly ov. 28—New Jerser owes e state @easurer, Daniel . today made the siatement ie end of the fiscal vear, 31, Jersey was without and had beiances in banks and in vanits amounting to near- #00.000. In 175 berks in th 377, CURIE CASE MAY NO' DEVELOP - INTO SCANDAL | | Claim That Powerful Influences Are Tiying te Stifle It. Curie | Although the he irs. It is this h will be severed. The diaries which have not al rendered their offices at 2 will do’ so, and henceforth e af- | iy % S " con- | American Prelates Attract Attention. fairs of each company will be con- s The Stand- | The venerable group which now en- tered drew the gaze of all present. ria, who advanced to do homage to {the pope, and then to introduce into a the papal presence the new princes of Broadway | the church. Jersey will persons Clarence S. Darrow, for: the defense, to come to see him. | It is the theory of counsel for the de- that bis interview was tran- NMeMani- gal a short time later repudiated the request. McManigal’s Uncle Gets a Shock. After McManigal's uncle, a railroad visited him the uncle was srand jury., He fense taken Namara, and the attorneys became convinced that the walls of the Los Angeles county jail have ears which had heard many confidential speeches. Room Where McManigal Received Vis- | itors, The wire runs from a window in an | unoccupied cell room on the third floor | of the jail to another unoccupied room | on the second floor. E. McManigal, one of the state’s main witnesses in the trial of McNamara. for the death of Charles J. Haggerty, one of the 21 men killed in the explosion at the Los Angeles Times bullding, saw McManigal in the upper rom which the wire dangles. Detective Overheard Conversations. A detective and perhaps a stenog- rapher were in the lower room, but | it is said, | the wire placed them in hearing of | 3cManigal while the jury was in session. This | is the declaration of the defense,which has no documentary evidenco on the subject, excevt a picture of the wire. or all practical purposes, who talked to District Attorney Admits “I should not wonder a_bit true,” sald District Attorney Fredericks when asked if a dictaphone had been used in this manner. be nothing unusual about that. There’s Jjust a round disc-attached to the win- dow shade or against the pane so that no one would notice it, and leading to some other place. ® Record of Mrs. McManigal’s Call. “There What this device has meant state became manifest on inspection of the list of names of those who have visited McManigal It includes Mrs. McManigal, who, according to her hus- band, coerced him by threats of sep- ration into _signing a note cribed on the floor below. ngineer, before the merged greatly astonished. “They asked about things I Ortie that T never spoke in my life” e declared to his friends. I s | in_that room and nowhere else.” How much more evidence the state gathered In this manner its counsel | will not say. KIERNAN DISLIKES TO LEAVE SING SING. Cidest Conwict Him to Lose a Home. That Says Caus Ossining, N. Y, Nov. Visitors to Ortle the wire chief of counsel 30.—Patrick room It t if it's | should to the asking sald to atd "em Pardon ow veral be for- sortionate The American bishop of te at Washington, 2 formerly elates, John N, Farley, New York, Willlam O'Connell, archbishop of Boston, end Diomede "Falconio, apostolic were _eagerly ted out. They with the other car- just created approacted the pa- throne and one by one knelt be- Pius X, , kissing his hand and foot recelving the papal embrace. They 2 the led to the places met anart for them to the accompaniment of mu or offi comp! suburbs, ers will go as ted mu company who for a home in_tk Tk sic by the Sistine cholr. Red Hats Bestowed. new cardinals then again ad- Kiernan, oldest eonvict In Sing Sing prison, likes his prison quarters so | well that he fafled to enthuse today when Warden Kennedy handed him a pardon from Governor Dix. “I don’t know what I'm going to do with it” he said. “T haven't any rel- atives, 'and T've no friends outside | these ‘walls. "They've all died or scat- tered. This pardon means that I'll lose my home.” Kiernan was sentenced to death for murder committed in Brooklyn more | than a quarter of a century ago, but his sentence was commuted to life im- prisonment. Never, during all his con- | is'able to forecast th ore of | in this | way offic way. The put Standard Ol ed vancted separately to the foot of the throne to receive thelr red hats, which | were held over the head of each recip- | tent the master of ceremon: while the pontiff repeated in his melo- ous voice the usual Latin formu for such occasions, after which ha em braced the supplicant kneeling before him. the p of the dis have any or upon tk in _the St on_retail lation of the cor rd Oil group with price Papal Benediction Bestowed. . the ject of _comsiderable | indeper producers. When the lox e | showing 1 extraordinary juterest | lic will obliged to bide dictfon on all present, and withdrew | ¢ Itherein and there are no present indi- | fore finding out whether it Is to bave | with all the inals and the others | t it will develop intn what call a “celebrated affair papers have as vet mac cations tha Fren: | Do mention of any letters suppos by ve writtes Professor Lan. gevin, who has omnection with the | husband and Mme, a stout defender in Lox Angeles, Cal, | bis apartments, the new cardinals *r¥, wno publishes a week- | gixt hampion 1i formed a little procession of their own, | ioleni anti-Semitic pamphlet en- | & underwent an oper. Dioceeding to the Sistine chapel, to | ) re Louvre: | day for sppendicitis, was res return thanks for the honor accorded A new statement issued today, | it and was pronount them re the pontifical singers In- rery insists again that an attempt | physiclans to be In o satists on- | toned tire Ambroslan hymn, after which ng made :’4. stifle the Curie case n. [ the dean of the cardinals recited the and charges that "powerful and re- | Woigast showed much interest prayec of thenkseiving for the new |3 doubtable cncmies grouped about the | outcome of the Welsh-Ritchie creations and on leaving the chapel all Sorbonne stand guard over the courts to prevent justice. TEACHER DIES FROM COLD. 17 Year Old Girl Reaches Boarding House, But Falls Lifeless. | J ov. 30.—After bat- through snowdrifts in for a distance of Spoone he iin old reached the home of near Barronett, yves- terday but fell dead from exhaustion soon after she entered the door. The zirl had started to walk from her boarding house to the school- house. Torrington's 33d Typhoid Death. rorrington, Conn., Nov. 30.—Joseph years oid, dled at o Water- i today from typhoid fever contracted during the epidemic of the alsease in this place. His death makes the 33d since the outhreak of the dis. ense in Septsmber. Sericusly Injured in Football Gam, Baltimore, Md., Nov.. 30—Suffering from conchasion . theiRekin, Tecetred in & footcall game here . Robert Afarmion of Weshington, D, C., son Rear Admiral Robert A Marralon, T. S N s in & serious condition at & nospital here. Duck Hunter Drowned. Oberlin, 0., Nov. 30.—Willis Ray Miller of Corning, N. Y. a senior in | { | He made no chieaper oil | formed the procession, the | ging as they went, while halls | and corridors echoed with acclamations | which could no lomger be restrained In a medley of English, Italign, French, German, Spanish and other tongues. Prooession of Cardinala. Afier accompanying the pontift to CHAMPION WOLGAST WILL RE-ENTER RING. a cnies Report That He Will Have to Quit Pugilisim. smiled when told that W comment. Manager Jomes denied reperts Wolgas to fight after he the operation. ne cardinals were again embraced colleagues. | Rings Presented to Cardinals, After ' the public had dispersed all 3 4 a) o “Wolgast is : said | rdinals, both old and new. join- Jones, “and will in the hall of the con- It may be some time, upplementary secret con- the ring. TAFTS ATT enter presided over by tha head of urch, when he granted the new cardinals the privilege of participating d spealing at meettngs of the gations, placed the cardinal's g on their fingers and assigned to T of them the charge of a titular i in Rome. e K nbers of Cabinet and Supreme Court Justices Also in Party. Me: ring Nov. 30, of’ “the United States and members of the dip- | oo’ 2% to allaw the papal cost of £rms to be engraved on the back. It can Thanksgiving mass at St. Patrick's | sorarnisted by the coneregation of of the ians w shoulders and a missi gave out his report of the taxation of | treasury fight | finement, has he broken a rule. BURIED TO SHOULDERS AND LEFT TO STARVE. | Italian Members of Red Cross Tortured | by Turk Paris, Nov. iety. They o death in declares that Turkish Wwomen_ were present. re buried alive nd ath. Public Service Corporation Taxes. rax Hartiord, Conn., Nov ner William . Corbin 1,795,840.14 was paid Into th 19,404.82: the telephone 0.562.20; the telegraph 6.608.35; the street raflways, 18.23; the New York, New nd 76,251 Stabbed During Game of P Derby, Conn., Nov. by Donalo Guardana, was tuken to where Lis recovery Steamship Arrivais. Washington, Beneath the i shington, en | " The ring given by the pope to each| At Ge Nov. 29, Hambu: gntwined aus of the republics of the | or ihe new Earflualerie mianey shasle | No: o o g od ae: one. consisting of a sapphire without At Havre: Nov. 30, La Provene, from other stones set solidly in gold in such | New York. At Plymouth: Nov. 30, George Wash- ington, from New Yori. Tive Ttai- up o their | allowed to starve to riford Railroad company, 9, and the raflroads $51,394.55. The British Governor Has Proclaim- ed martial law at Hong Kong. New York City Was Short of tur- keys and eranberries for Thaunksgiv All Grades of Refined Sugar ha: gel'l‘l reduced ten cents more a hun red. | Mrs, Elizabeth Weyerh o? the millionaire lumbe nesota, 1s dead. wife user, David Russell, the Montreal Capital t, lost his suit for $350,000 damag ainst the Pinkertons. Seven Thousand Dollars Were Found | ¢n a one-armed Slav peddier found | drowned in the Krie canal, The Sum of $211,000 Was Distributed | among the widows and orphans of the | firemen who lost thetr lives in the Chi- cago stockyards. Great Britain Supports Ru: "€ OTHERS CRUCIFIED AND THE UELTIES OF THE TUE! - Seven ltalians Buried Alive in Cemetery With Heads Above the Earth BODIES MUTILATED Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs Writes of Almost Incredi- ble Barbarities—Women Participate in the Atrocities Turks Also Pollute Wells at Henni From Which the Italian Soldiers Drank, and Force Troops to Withdraw mand for the resignation of Washington, Nov. 30.—Stories of al- el out and threndsd an Shuster, the American . financial most Incredibie barbaritics practiced | gown to the ‘brows. This | viser to the government of Persia. by Arabs and Turks are contained in | terrible spasmodi ont i e 7 despatches received at the Italian em- |other or d one arm _Attorney Louis D. Brandeis has ad- | tassy here, In a despatch received |flom which the hand had |« ised the house commitfee on interior | todey from Rome the Itallan minister [ The body of a Der ler department expenditures that further action in Investigaling Controller Bay | affairs is unnecessary. | The Commerce of Porto Rico under American rule 18 growing by leaps and atrocities practiced wounded which Include crucifixion and burial alive. | Part in the perpetration of these cruel- ties. tcrn to ploce, Women Among the Barbarian “A captain's cap has L owner was identified: by t Pasqul, who escaped mirucul remaining over four alleged Ttalian of foreign affairs — describes on the it is said, take Women, :’;m:l;‘l: :xA-i;:fll;v'au:oa?\;fififirly::;.:h.,.d» Bodies Mutilated and Crucified. He testified that amongst (L « collector of customs of the island. | . TBe despatch, which is signed by hordes were Turks and wou Signor San Ginilano, minister of for- | milltary engineer h ion | €8N affairs, follows e lhTe.L:ms:g;i‘v:-‘fl%:’:l:u:n.é::lu.rflip‘{,?:‘ Near the mosque of Hanl, where Murdered by Pollceman 15, has passed. into Bistory and nothing medical post of the 27th battalion | “I; ig reported that tonis more will be heard of it. None of the |0 Hersaglierl had been located, and (29) in the Arab comel the A n its vicinity, odies of our mol- | terior of the oily (he he an It4 students arrested are to be Prosecuied. | jigrs were found. They were HOTTIDIY | for quamer Was Zound wiih oimy aay With a View to Obta ng Data as mautilated, crucified, cut with their throats impaled, torn to pleces and The murderer ger wounds. v t ther o and amongst ope to the action of salt o Gality. 56 o, “aetemp( are hetny | dismembered. Amonkat them there | Folromman (sapte who 1t o uid made by the navy denartment to sne | %48 the body of & surgeon leutenant. | sriest. From other sources 1t s re tain from the wreck of the battleship Seven Buried Alive. ported that the murder was committe Maine a 50-ton sample of the fuel. “In tho Atab cemetory, near the | Y the eforesaid maptie with the pes n 4 T, Besr the ] ance of othor zapties, W Upon the Refurn to Washington | Bl el ®wis located, seven bodies | ORC0aled tho crime exico City of Assistant Secre- | o¢ Bersuglier were. discovercd. They Turks Pollute Wel rml Thompson of the Interior | pug been Interred alive with the heads | The despatch aluo confirms the w artment, announcement was made | out of the earth. The body of one of | drawal of the Itullan trooy m I that the Mexican government had 1V- | theso showws that he had been terribly | ni. This, is said, was nece i ¢n permission to the United States to | tortured. It showed many shots and [cause the Turks had pelluted improve the levees along the Colorade | gagger wounds, the eyes had been pull- | wells, Y river in Mexico. FEAR ASSASSINATION OF PREMIER YUAN SHI KAl GRANDSTAND COLLAPSES INDEPENDENTS TO START TOBACCO FIGHT AT A FOOTBALL GAME TODAY. s F,';'"d’ Ask Legations to Take | cic. borgons Injured at Jackson, Miss. | Will Take Trust Reorganization Befors et e, Eopteot_Hiew Some of Them Fatally. United States Suprems Court el . 30— 3 G e semy o omod o pae SRt 887 | suckson, Mise: Nov, 30—wirty yer- | New York Nov.i0eix 3. L y at e res sons wero injured, several atally, | attorne ndependent toba 1 Y remier. Cinest of Yuan Shi Kal | when u temporary grandstand at the | terests, anmouncod tonight that h present has not been asecrtained. but | State fair grounds collapsed just be- | @k ”"’u United Btatos wuprome it I belleved (o have been wmail, Mont | fore piay was staried toly [ {0 | (hGRTor s Writ ‘ot mandaius ire hanone In attendance were imperial- | {l Creiy of Mississippl and Minssia- | Ing the judges of te ciroult cour he T -Belgian loa _ | #ippl agricultural and mechanical col- v vacate ir docreo a 000 was approved as Alse wes the oou_ | 1ee: ‘A thoussnd or more spectators | proving the = reorganization — of tract in Sonsanction. with the loun for | tumbled to the ground with the wreck- | American Tobicco compsny it a bridge across the Yang-tse river be- | 2&9 of tho i opinion” of the supreme court “The wounded were hurried to hos- N hare. has Does a Han Ao move- | Pitals and private houses for surgical | Tho petitivn, w} aiready bes ment of troops In and out of Peking, | attention as quickly ay possible, First |seived upon meys o ¢ Manchus departing and Chinese taiing | 414 Was glven at a bullding at the | American Tobacco oompuny. furtl their places, It is rellably reported | STounds by physiclans. tion for e mandamus permitting (hat the garsison now is almost sgual: | , Thomas A, Spsnglor of Jackson, J. |Uon for e mandemnus, permiitng iy balanced i Manchu and Chinose €, Gathias of Byairie, Mise, and ns|Board. of ‘trade of the city . of troops. The action of the regent in | We HEO Jousty hurt, Both of Spen- | York” to intervene in the case with : the decres; sl permitting the departure of the Man- chus is belleved to indicate his reli- ance in the loyalty of Yuan Shi Kal but it is said to be likely that the real reason for it was that Yuan Shi Kal feared an outbreak among the troops which would augment his dif- ficulties and possibly result in anti- forelgn dlsorders. Prominent Manchus, however, distrust Yuan Shi Kal, and belleve that his object was solely to obtaln complete power. Reports are seriously circulated here that Yuan Shi Kai intends to assume right’ of appeal from gler's logs were broken. Gathins and | FRIL 2 Drohibiting the execut T e R 4 the Teorginization plan, and ordert the production by the ute . udgen of “all documents and evid Sibp ‘were among those in ‘the stand | Judges of "wll documents and evidon: at the time It collapeed. They eacaped | €n which they may have acted | with slight brulses. MOTORMAN KILILED BY SPLITTING SWITCH. Crushed and Body Torn to Pieces in Hartford Accident. WEDDING FOOLISHNESS RESULTS IN TWO DEATHS Skull Auto Which Was Chasing Brida! the regency If not the throne, Friends | R Tom of the premier, fearing for his assas- | yyariford, Conm, Nov. 30.—Albion Couple Skidded at T sination, recently Solicited several of | prisbois, & motorman on the Bouth | ' po oo\ Tl asng an the foreign legations to take measures | \ur choster trolley line, was almost in- | Boston, Nov. 30.4While cuasing an to protect him. The legations indi- | siancly killed tonight when his car apiit | other automobile In which & now! cated thelr willingness to acquiesce. |y gwitch and left the tracks at a point | BETFIAA COURS WO SIOEHIATIEE, where the bridge over the Connecticut 1 plhn pursuing automoblle sicdded FOUR AMERICAN VESSELS river runs into the boulevard. When .r:‘:"h"”’[h”‘" In the Roxbury distri IN HARBOR AT NANKING, [the car left the "',”“' p_tan. & d"‘_ today, causing the death of two per shaszididel tanco of 70 feat over the stract to the | 1308Y, UUin the, S86Ch OF (O b To Affard Refuge for Forsigners in | cUrb, where it stcpped, Whother Brec | The dead are: Julla Galvin, 20 years bols jumped or was thrown from the | The dea o Galvig, 97 yee S ol ouw'ts not lmown, but whan it ‘stop | 18, ML AT Gla and unmar 2 ped he was under the wheels of the ‘."'y r“ Rosdur - Ixu;‘ . Jonn | Washington, Nov. 8t Faar truck with his skull crushed and [Fled, of Joxb B g g (i Gosls AOROERTIOE C0S. his body torn to pieces. He lived but | Gaffey, 48 veary old and marricd, {ron, 'nas sent the collier Pompey &nd | ,'fow mainutes after being taken to u Jemalca Plain, brother of Mury O the’ gunboat Quiros, up the Yang-tse- | hospital. Conductor Willlam Metcalf [ fov, contusions and abrasons o Kiang from Shanghal to Nanking, | wag thrown from the car, but escaped |8nd ifln.fll; 3 Catl u‘vr by lyl:‘ ol l"h! where General Chang, with the TIOWer | 4,5,y as did the seven passensgers old HI;A unnrnu"l o % n'. amaier N, of the imperial Chinese army, is be- | ghoard. Brisbois Hves in Buckiand contustons of the Body. sieged by the xevo\ulionmeflt. — ""‘ll‘:nj"li’h;:’;xl]';n\uu- » . A rl |-‘ y v - u! = J . i o amaicn e mral recasis Tying 15 the Hiver | WO ACOIDENTALLY whose brother, James A., had just beey 80,—Special desuatches from Tripoll give a harrowing account finding of mutilated bodies of Italian members of the Red Cross so- were apparently tortured varfous revolting w An Italian who had escaped by hiding for three days in a ditch, pretending he was dead, and witnessed the mutil- ations, vs. officers | | | " today | the public service corporations of the | state, which shows that the sum of e state The express companies paid companies, companies, s Hayen $1, ool 80.—During a over a game of pool here to- night James Calnist was cut in the ab domen wounded man hospital, Th: a local is sald | propaganda, which has had this privi- lego since the time of Pius VIL Crowds Kiss Hands of Cardinale. | Mftar the consiatory Cardinals Far- 3 7 ; ey an were mocorded over. P rdine Gibiions “asciied uo g | fheming Tocepons “onre-sntoring polemn’ high mass which was cele- | BRG] ang the Hotel Qairias lacus Catholic church here today. The 20 rations of Latin-America Joined with United Staies In giving thanks for yrovidential favors during the past year and in beseeching permanent ican priests Ferley to function ahd acclaimed the new cardi- nals. Robes Presented Cardinal This ey Farley. the delegation of Amer- 0 accompenied Cardinal e gave a dinner in his honor at which covers were laid for | bombardment of the city camnot be brated by Rev. Franmcis P. Doos Esltimore. The Donahue of Wheeling, W. V&, ered the sermon dedicated of Bishop | deliv- to ‘peace Right Rev. crowas, ncstelries, had kissed the han esked thelr blessings. and including the guests of the kmelt and of the cardinals and forty. During the dinner they pre- sented his eminence with his first set of cardinai’s robes. The ball in which the banquet was held was decorated within and among nations, including 2 plea for ratification of pending arbi- tration treatles. ‘The ceremony was a blend of the re- Baious end tio. The colors of 21 republics gracetully foll from tha cor Held Thankegiving Reception. n Fariey, QConnell and Faiconio went to the fo ollege, where = Gy, thie rscror. held & Thankeateing < Oberlin colivge, was drowned today in Lake Erie while duck shooting.| e of i nices aud draped the plilars reception in their honor. Several vis- cdifice. tended - the “iting Americans also at ThanKagiving dinn of the arnations and pot of Boston with American and papal flugs and red nfiuD’Cuml-ll. gave a in the dining hail Quirinal hotel in honor of Car- erican paval vessels lying in the river off Nanking, with &8 many more war- ships of other nationalities. If the prevented, the few remalning foreign- ers there can find refuge on the war- ships during the fighting. Millionaire Stokes Iil. w York, Nov. 30.—W. B. D. Stokes, the millionalre sportsmae and former Lotel proprietor, was taken ill with un acute attacl of indigestion and will not be able to Appear tomorrow at the trial of Lillian Graham and Ethel Conrad, | tho show girls charged with attempt ing his life by shooting. Mr. Stokes was said, was confined to his bed nd would not be able to appear im court until Monday &t the earliest, 8pine Broken Playing Football. Washington, Nov. 30.—John MoMor- ris, & member of the football team of Mount__ St. Ma collerw, Emmitts- was seriously infured here His spine when he was Te- ity infirmary, cred consciousness ard was expected 1o recove: Two Boy Skaters Drowne 30.—Jour hile skat- iile this aft- were drown- d Theodors old, were ing on a pond ernoon and two of the ed. TFugene Sherwood Kilgore, both the victim a Died During Football Game. Pomeroy, O. Nov. 30.—Cline Watso; , left end on the Middleport Hig! school eleven, died during a football game there today. He fell on the field and died from orain hemorrhage. Trolley Fatality at Putnam, Puinam, Conn, Nov. 30—A trolley car tonight struck and instantly kill- ed an unknown man who was walking on the tracks about & mile south of tis city. The man was evidently a tramp, and there was nothing by waich he could be identifed. Price of Beer Goes Up Today. Chicago, Nov. 30.—For the second time within six months the price of teer will be raised tomorrow. Beer that Oct. 1 sold for §4 a barrel will sell for $4.50, all of the malt product being. affected, . cheer asylums, Thenks, s, rocms in the SHOOTS HIS FATHER. | married. Gormley wns thrown elear of the automoblle and was unhurt, M inn Five Year Old Was Handing the Gun | Galvin and Miss Gaffey wers plone! beneath the car. The. former wag In When It Discharged. Southbridge; Mass, Now 30.—Siduey Clarke, a lad of 5 years, accidentally shot and killed his father, John Clarke, today. The elder Clarke, Who was o wealthy and prominent business man, was preparing to go on a short hunt' ing expedition with some of his nel bors, and the boy was handing him th gun when in some manner it was fired and the bullet entered the man's necl, causing instant death, A widow and four children survive. Miss Gaftey e the city howpita to g0 to h stantly killed. eral hours later at Mise Miley was ablo home. INOFFENDING WOMAN SHOT BY STRIKER Policeman Stoned and Negro Striles broaker Attacked by Mob, Now York, Nov. 30~ Thankestving day was marked by a revival of th riots which charaoterized the strik the street cleanerw, today’s Mworder resulting in the shooting of a wom and the stoning of a policeman. Tho trouble started when Willlmm Barnett, & negro strilebrenior, was at tacked by @ mob, The negro drow revolver and commenced firing in_th. air. One shote etruck Francss Young in the ri heok 500,000 TURKEYS SERVED, Thanksgiving Observed by Both Rich and Poor, in New York. vew York, Nov. 30~Thanksgivin was_Widespread in New Yorl today. Aore than 590,000 turkeys wero served on metropolitan T tables, it is estimated, and & e of the right feurt-making rend wes enjoyed | as she t her head out of & windo antital Deovison as | 1o Ace What the trouble was. Bhe w the ¥ uag weriousiy njured,’ * " charituble inmitutiors and tiens of all cineses and in Heen m by & mounted p to the stat were sho missllen fr the policeman him off his Lorse the hospital witl of the siull, T in @ doorway by reserves from lence of a newly o Red Cross Seals on Sale Tou New York, No nual gale of th: seals begins In this te with the seals all ready ¢ on sale in narly 800 cities on outside of New York V ued at 38,000 have been donaic offered for the best males In and The procesds of sale ted to anti-tuberci in the Tombs prisom, a conoert, the yrisoners were a_speclai SeE e e 1ok tl n - his where Gaynor eomplp ! oz purohan. e, -~ e Febels Capture Parple Hill. rxt'ufl":i-ml l:un- o been captured by

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