Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
VOL. LIV.—NO. 5 NORWIGH, CONN. FRIDAY. JANUARY 5, 1912 FEAR THE VENGEANCE OF SLUGGERS Detectives Escorting Ortie McManigal to Indian- apolis Travelling With Great Secrecy PRISONER SECURELY LOCKED IN A STATEROOM Party Reached El Paso Last Night and Immediately Started Northward—Evidence of Nearly 100 Explosions to be Laid Before Grand Jury—Grand Jury Investigation of Jury Bribery Begins at Los Angeles With Six Witnesses. laid, and within two or three from the office of District At John D. Fredericks of Los An county, California, = will be ght evidence concerning nearly oxplosions charged to the iron workers’ union. Controversy Over Reward. Fredericks will not testify be the g the work to some of his assist- Mr. Fredericks telegraphed | beer | day torney | | | re n Removal of McMani- Secrecy A | L, Browne, chief detective at ! gal to Indianapolis. 1os Angeles, today, that he would not take any part in his controversy with » Willlam J. Burns o ds in the MeNamara case. BRIBING OF JURORS. the Witnesses Questioned by Grand | Jury at Les Angeles. 4.—T - jury’s in- ear ce on = ms that the Me- e tried to hribe jurors saw speedy examination itne « ‘mmw I were 1. H. Russell, y in the off attorney; ‘W, H. Lu n e Firet N al bar MeNamaras O-'r’flxw (umv Ann Hart s nographer to lu- W B, Coliter d by the defer Muns d \lirw\ and stepson of the official who was | 1 grand jury last all the witnes: before the fed r 10 the indictment of Tveit- hanuson, M se; and Clance be summoned before grand jurr, Clarence Job Harriman, attorne by ras, said they | id not he bpoenaed and did not | expect to be The. arratgnment of Detective ¥ 1. Franklib, charged with hav brived one juror in the M case and having. tried to bribe scheduled in the euperic - morrc The federal grand jury took | « recess unti oW, W Evidence of 100 Explosions. | o o' s prabubly muy vepor e govern bl return more Indictments cnse today, has t «r | Atsmissed, OPENED FOR TWO NEW DREADNOUGHTS SEEKING TO LOCATE MISS VIOLET EDMANDS. District Attorney Desires to Ask Her a Few Questions. Make Proposals De- Eight-Hour Law. +—Pro Boston, Jan, 4.—It is understood. that | nz District _Attorney Pelletier desides to locate Miss Violet Edmands, in order ¢|to question her, especially as to her ledge of ‘the whereabouts o som, her flancee, on the days im- preceding the death of Avis Edmands did not ify before 1 » defense in bringing Miss ands forward at the last moment | witness to establish_an alibi for | heson s not known, but it is be- d that the district attorney is s 10 learn just how much of the s time on the days in ques- Edmands i able to account ause the la to adopt & - i t M id today that Miss from her rk 8 r some weeks, while he is con- ! 1 the she will b he said, | o had gone adjoining state exiradition proceedings will nstituted to obtain her presence as witnes: a He wood dence ses not believe she is in Lake- J., but he has some she Is in or near New.. OMOTIVE THIEF HELD FOR GRAND JURY. o 3 conditien of the priscner was rcester Cigarmaker Who Ran Down | supposed tonight to be somew tm- | Best Train Given 2 Hearing. proved. Attorneys Lee and Morse, s counsel for the defense. had a confer- R ¢ with him in his cell at the Char! » strect jail. The attorneys said that while he seemed better, he i from being in conditfon phy: stand the strain of a trial Qe RUSSIANS CONTINUE HANGING OF FIDAIS, Iy to g Parsian Prisonsrs Marched to Camp Worcester. With Chains About Necks. ars stan “Tabri Fidais Three of the night and their bodies were displaved or. the gallows today. Many Jan hanging th contin » Worcester. : Wobater station | are being made and several houses of Jardine's borrowed | Fdais and nationalists have been | hoat train bound | 1 un. The prisoners who were € %o engines were | breueht fn by Shua-ed-Dowieh, brother of the ex-shah, when he arrived here to assume the governorship, ed over to tho Russians, who them to camp with chain; yund their necke. All the houses i1 Sterk Pays Visit to Jail Cleselan. O._Jan. 4.-The stork to- #ay brought a T1-2 pound boy to Mrs. Rose Dworkin, the Iawrence Masa woman who is in jall here charged sheoting and Wlling Jacob Hor- witz, a Cleveland cemtractor, on No- vember 2 She claimed Hovwitz cauwad the legal separation of b band and herself. the neighborhood of the Ruesian camp ed. have been wre: No Agrum-nt on Direct Elections. Washington, Jan. 4-—All hope of agreersent hy the conferees represent- Ing the two houses of congress on the resolution providing for the eiaction of United Stites senators by direct vite of the people has vauished. The con ferees on the resolution providing for the constitutional amendment have reached the conclusion that an agree- ment would be impossible, and a report to that effect Ik axpacted next week, ‘nu.-r.n Fares at Toledu Toledo, O., Jan. 4—Teledo w! three-cent fares for two hou have in the morning and two hours in the after- noon, six tickets for & quarter and universal transfers the rest of the duy Unienvills Weman Iurnol by Lunp. = the result of 8 temporary tinguiphed, nd jury himself, but will | | the md jury which indicte Richeson, as 8ho was prostrated by ines; the time, and it is believed | that her story is known only to cou sel for defenso. Whether it i3 th. York | idais were hanged last | arrests | The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and lts Total Circulation is the largest in Connecticut in Proportlon to the City’s Population Cabled Paragraphs of eartia- de Cuba Havana, Jan, 4—A shock | quake was felt at Santiago carly this morning. No damasge js re- perted. o Porto Cabeilo, fourth and 1s steel 1 Venezuela, T ection of t struction for the 'Venezuelan i { ment by an American gontractor was | Al Grades of Refined Sugar were launched here successfully today. | reduced 10 cents a hundred pounds e | yesterday. ana, Jan. ~The secretary of { the treasury, R, Martinez-Ortlz, re- | The Wil of Lee Nom Yet, written in | igned from office today. He gave a Chinese on re was admitted for | his reason dissatisfaction with the | prebate in It rresent trend of affairs and the im- | 1ossibility of continuing to serve the | | Prof. Felix S. Dahu, the Historical acministration under existing condi- | Writer, novell poet, died in tions, | Preslau at the | | | > | | B 4, Germany, Jan. 4.—Dr. Hor- | The Democrats of EI Paso County, | nung, tne president of the Solingen | | Col., yesterday organized a Champ | Manufacturers' association, has ac- Clark club, the first in Colorado. | cepted the of the United | States government to go to America in | T. L. Weod, Chief Aid to Postmaster | T o give lanations to the cus- | General Hitchcock, was appointed di- tom authorities there of the cost of rector of the postal bank system. | production of cutlery in Germany, the 1 rate of wages paid, etc. Guayaquil, Ecuador, change has taker Jan. cal_situation in Bcuador. Gen. Leon- | idas Pl heen appointed com | “Nothing But Death Can Keep Me | where con & wade this statement to White House | rumors of a battle ha\‘ing taken place | callers. | achala in the province of El Oro | - false, The J. & P. Coats Thread Mills ! 5 Pawtucket, R. 1, which closed on London, Jan. 4—Many powerful in- Dec. resumed operations yesterday s, an Odessa despatch to the ar | increasing bers ¢ are forma eifort to pa protest'ng _Bru tie Louvre gallery in Paris n brought to hen a retired 1ght before the fined $10 for refusin; he in rega ublicly declarad he 1 to the robbery. |LA FOLLETTE SUFFER!NG Still effects a half | ur here today in a e turned away. r arrived here i He was taken at 1 and given treatment, fo he suffered from ptomaine a hot sald ing. At Streator, Il sLitl wealk fre onfined hich heard hi on the present tai present rallroad rate regulath congressman who., he said, cial interests. La Salle, Ill, Jan, 4.—“We c the old machine,” said Senator M “We don't want any more of time method of selection at a ing of political bosses in of candidates to represent us. I | done. It | we h'm no tools like the referendum, De recall, direct election of United Stutes senatol nd popular nomina- | tion of all candidates; efther. Had Bad Fall at Morris. Morris, lette his 1., J showed Senator esc iry when he arrived here | fre the car stopped, the - leaped from th i was muing along the platform hen pved and fell with considerable srce. He was helped to his Lit dazed by the shock, but d ‘1 im, uninjured, and spoke statipn waiting room to Jan, nator La_Follette in a speech here tos recovered Ten Minutes at Ottawa. e f the big sating dock which is under con- govern- LN o lace in the politi- | working to avert a with the T'nited States. number of Russian cham- commerce and merchant guilds | agalnst e 2 bill in the duma rais- | ing the customs duties on American | An the The theft | Lisa from | army offiecr | police couri | g to di- | is of tie information which | FROM PTOMAINE POISONING. Arrived at Joliet in Care of Physician, | But Spoke Half an Hour. sufiering of indisposition, S M. La_Follette spoke for | crowded | eral hundred persons were care of once to r it was poison- Robert heze im Tiff, the on, and ved spe- Can Beat Old Machine. can beat Robert the old gather- a hotel room t can be was done in Wisconsin, and Li a sma n, H)., < were Less to speec Jan. devote ilette system was FUNERAL SATURDAY be!To Be Meld at Trinity Church—Di party here, sketc n ten h mak- The hed OF ALFRED T. DICKENS.! tinguished List of Pallbearers. y Jan, the fun, of ens, son of C} ¥ rles Dickens, th th occurred practically announced held in were and it w: would be on Saturday noon. iam T. Manning, , will officiate. The list Arrangements for Aflred Tennyson Dick- e novel- | here on completed t The Rev. rector of of pall | bearers, so far as determined upon and of United States jam A. Clark, Dr. John H. president of the City college; . Morris, former president of publican club; Andrew Carn. tt, the British consul ments in charge, made i in_this cf The co-o) f a number of wealthy men, had resulted in arrangements bur i | ington Heights maintained by parish, Mr. Dickens' relatives con: this arrangement, Mr. Clews s: TEN JURORS TO TRY were obtained today to try Conners, one of three union dicted on the charge of havis spired to dynamite the county records on Sept. 9, 1910, lexander, Lee Keedick and W. ¢ Clews, who has the funeral o quichiy o emy gy of-3 buitiing. ven out tom[:h‘ contains the names | Senator | Finley, Robert the Re. egic, C. gener: t kno evening that Mr. Dickens will be | peration he said, for the rinity cemetery on Wash- Trinity nted to to this effect having been received from Mr. Dickens' sister, Mrs, Kate Perugui ‘London. LABOR DYNAMITER, Detoctive Who Assumed Role of Union Man te Furnish Evidence. Los Angeles, Cal, Jan. 4.—Ten jurors Bert H. men in- ng con- v hail of The jury panel was exhausted and the panel in another department of the superior cort was drawn upen, not- ety hed_Detween withi the objections of Le- of (e compady and ;.n"n "1 Unionville, Conn;, Jan. A—Mre; Dan- | compte- m.,‘m.,_ - il iel Mascn, 76, yeats cld, was ely | Aluch of the egeinst Con- TR YR it Bet. burned =t her home late | uers Will 0e furnished by J. Mansell Steamshiy Arrivals. (98sy whet & kerosens ofl fell , once to be & unlon AL : Jexn, 8, Camperis | froin o shelf on to & stove. ofl | but actually e, embloved by troin New York from ihe broken laing caught fire and | the district attorney. A Sidelass Jan. 3 Bive from | cemmuniented with Mre. Meson's | bhine, ignited them d burning An attzchment for ard@inasy clevators | Jen. & Lu dyiol, from cntire budy, Lefore they were ex- | has been -paismied (o raise fire hose 'Norw ch Men Representing Finance, the Law, Commerce, C()naensed leleflrams Manufacturing, and Other Interests. N S AT e i Shropshire, England, struck. Chinese Pirates Looted a Spanish Steamer alcng the Chinese coast Thirty Warships of the United States Navy are putting to for manoeuy- res. | One of the Best en ever developed. terday, aged Charles H- Lewi New ‘England oars died in Worcester vy vears. 56 | m fuil time. President Taft Accepted an Invitation vesterday to attend a banquet of th: York State association York city Jan. Ne New in The La Follette National Headquar- tors at Chicage has iesued a statement denying that La Follette had any intentiop of wit awi: C. H. PR ESTON, The Popular Norwich Architect: Judge Seth M. Tucker, 82 Years Old, who i Wichita, Kas., vesterday, was a pioneer ansas and one of the last of the old Indian ters. Broke Om Yesterday Forennan ationery store in the Aliyn house at Hart to the Believed Him To be Christ WOMAN IMPRESSED BY LEADER| OF MAZDAZNANS. HANISH AN EX-MCRMON H, Calef, Urited States X 1o first shot e of Gettysburg, died in 1y of pneumonia. He was Law in Court ARGUMENTS MADE AS TO CONSTITUTIONALITY. ITs | George W. Smith, Born a Nearo | Svfl/e i Tenne left | worth $116,000 ’lu‘onlmg to I which was filed for probate at gn, NL CALLS IT “MERE GIFT” Dr. Algernon_Coolidge, One of the o ding physicians and surgeons in Boston a great-grandson of Attorney General Dectares That it is | Denies on Witness Stand All Knowledge | ‘Thomas Jefferson, died there yesterday in his 82d year. Therefore Word Was Sent Broadcast Yesterday supporters of President Taft that r no_circumstances would the pres- Hlegal—Judge. Henney Contends That It is Perfectly Valid. of ‘Whereabouts of Young Philadel- phia Heir Who Has Disappeared. I f i \r" nt countenance attacl on Colonel Hariford, Conn,, Jan. 4-~M hicago, Jan, 4—3 second B e b e "»le.r“..‘,“f"“ Lindsay. ! About 2000 Children Have Besn Ex- | state this atternon:to hear srzments | fortunie, the appearas cluded from_the pudlic - echivols’ -of IO i e B B B R N e > | Olean, N. Y., because of faflure to com- orought by Harry and the introduction o imony con- | PV, With an-order of the board of edu- requiring vaccination. A White Marble Bust of Vice Presi- cent James S. Sherman reached the pitol yesterday and will be immedi- ately put in place in a niche close to the main entrance of the senate. e Comptroller Br: tion the state went to t Ligher court for the purpose of asc 2 whether the act passed by the ral asscmbly giving veterans of the Civil w in state, in lieu of the exemptior. of $1,000 werth of property from taxation, we onal troverting the buy latter's n and his mother heid places in different from o Jast gen te involy Ardush an cult Governor-elect George W. Hunt of | The court pro re the oui- na wants no clanking of swords, Attorney General Makes Argument. | ort to remove 1 braid or the blare of trumpets at Attorney Generai Light, who in his | cult’s temple, where and 50 wrote »vinicn a morth vas unconstitutio claimed the ct whe an hi; - MeClintock of Phoenix. made a length A, | motner, he receivin treatment” regument, the substance of which v | in accordance h the M he- President and Mrs. Taft, Mr. and his claim'that the pension was a mere | lief. Mrs. John Hays Hammond 'and other gift and therefore illegal. The plain- | Hanish of Royal Descent. preminent pesple have purchased boxes tiff. through Judge William F. Henne: Hanieh” dented. knawiea of e annual charity ball of the gontended that the aim of the act was reabouts of the boy or mother thern Relief society, to be held on encourage patriotism; that it rec: e Y TR iy B ent, that | Feb. 5 d meritorious service: that it v b £e tarin Nllstir™ s a ation for public use b setor | The Latest Theory of the Police as v ofore constitutional. Tt wa seh is | to the murder of Antonio Petrolino in fler 4 o'clock befcre the arsuments | | South Manchest last Sunday is that were concluded. was playing tie part of a detective he The Plaintiff's Brief. 'about the country with the the two men with him killed him TThe plaintiff’s brief in attacking the | the moth nse, and ab of revenge. te's set up that the vet- | Mrs. Lindsay at her New York | e cran soldier never was a soldier or em- | nts. Ie denied that : in- | President Taft May Ask the Assist- ye of the state, that he w es took place at the temple. | ance of Congress in tho effort to solve 3 e rloyed by United States in t v in which Connecticut vital interest, litical future ic Rites of Adoration. a Reak of New S related problem of the high cost of living tive authorization of the | rticipating in a world- e on the subject. had a in which the state's s at stake, i er gave her To .Recoanize ‘Indirect Benefit of His | Hanish was considered the re Service. | tion of Chri: She also Represontative dndarwoo:{ of Ala- “It is net proposed by the act to|M¥stic rites of adoration before | bama will not participate in the Jack- | arant Win et compeisation i of Christ and Hanish by Mrs. | son day banquet to bo held next Mon- | Servantiioe Righeli ity 1y and _the boy. Mrs. Lindsay, | day night. He canceled his engage- office or otherwise. It is simuly pro- | She/said, told her Hanish said she | ment to speak by order of his ph: Daiea 1 FerabiiEe th i vt > | 2 princess of France and that t an because of his recent illness. vears the indireet benefit derived by s the “lost n of Louis | T the state fro vice in, the a Believed Hanish to Be Ch The Failire of Mn:slc::”n: to | | of the d States and to encoura, 2 Asenath Cc adopt the income tax amendment to | his fellow, citizens to a Mie servicc|q friend of Mrs | the national constitution both in 1710 shen the occasion arisce latter had tdld her of &nd 1911 has not discouraged its advo- In conclusion, the brief sail Christ in Hanish ae proof | cotes, and vesterday a petition for iis Transcends Constitutional Limitations. | the stateraent that ult leader { filed to come before the The right to grant pemskns being | her ali about i | wledged as a proper exercise of | the legislative powers comfided in t HANISH 'S CAREER. general assembly in interpreting U S rivate secretary every mayor of t in q)flstl'm)h is to be as:umcu | Once a Mormon and Worked as News- | 1 during :o past ~0"jfi’r§ died that the legis'ature has found upon paper Printer. Jthere eat et m:“p:ém.;; Gue examination that the grant pro- | i gravated b, '“" o vided for in the result in &| Sait Lake, Utah, Jan. 4—Otton wlich was abolished, if s | corresponding public it. This act | Zar Adusht Har vis plain Otto | caused deeth. trensends 20 consiitutional 'imitation | Hanish 15 years ien he came to g R 15 in harmony with o scund and en- | Uien from Bwedes os & convert to the | The Four Story Brioks: Building 1t lightened public poli:y, and is valid | Mormon church. He worked | Detroit_occupied by the Chamberlain | hould stz . compositor for the I News | Metal Weather Strip company, the | then tried to form nting | United States Cap company and one or CRUSADE AGAINST THE TURKEY TROT. The Grizzly Bear Dance Also Regarded as Demoralizing. anch of the Mormon ch Hanish was one of the original ex- ponents of the “hunger cure” for dis- ease. T A Large Farmhouse on lIves Hill, "$25000 to Defend Labor Leader. | Meriden, owned Ly Linus Morton, was Muscatine, Towa, Jan, An_effort | ed yeste will be made to raise a $25,000 defence fund for Emmet Fiood of Chicago, na- tional organizer for the American Fed- eration of Labor, and O. C. Wilson, business agent of the Button Worker: nunion and socialist member of the city ecounci’, according to an announcement two smaller concerns was destroyed by resjerday morning with an esti- foss of $200,000. ew York, Jan, 4—Society must not | cance the “turkey trot” and the “griz- 7y bear,” no maiter in how modified 2 rm. They sot a bad example for the working girl and contribute to delin- quency. Announcement, or, rather, an appeal e e e e e atig | by labor officials here tonight. Both | on| were indicted by the srand jury | rezources of working girls in the form | y th | of a circular sent out with the idea of charged with conspiracy to .dt-.-trr)\‘ enlightening the public on the “real | Property during the Button Werke: nature and origin” of thess dances. | =irike. And when the public knows, explained Mrs. Charlos Henry Jsraels, chajrman of the committee, she feels sure thal the dances will be tabooed. Of cne of the dances the circular says: “This darce has soread so that it ie now danced at all but the most select Gances, although of course in its-more o1 less modified form. But is does not in the prograss of modification lose one whit of its disreputable identity and demorallzing influence.” Trwpu: Monastery Burns. Wiani Mas, Jeo. 4—The Trap- Pist” mer St N Man. = AT ©1d building went dovn tn half an hoi. | e e { e Mme, Curie, the French Scientist. 15 |~ oy reported (o be serivusly il was saved arough the ef the new South Meriden voiunteer® departrasnt, The bss is placed at $4,000. d Upon a Sub-Com- ! agreement 1o sustain without severs crit- icism of Secretary of Agriculturs Wik gon, will be zoeedily whipped into shipe by the house committee which mvestigated the Wilsy case. mittee’ Dr. H. W. Attorney Holden in Washington. (8peeial to The Bulletin.) ‘Washington, Jan. 4—Attorney Ben- edict M. Holden, and wife of Hart- ford are at the New Willard hotel for a few days. Yesterday afternoon he | called on the Connecticut delegation at | the capitol and accompanied by Ben- | ator McLean called on Senetor Bur- ton of Ohlo and fvited him to at- | tend and address the McKiuley ban- | et to ‘bé held this year a2t the Hotel | ton, Waterbury, on some day |ing the momth ~Sematop Burton has | Ge | the matter under advisetbent and. will | give an answer in a few days | | | { The Philadelphia and Reading Col and Tron company announces an In- crense in the price of steam mize conl Rive coal is advanced from 65 to 85 nis a ton and barlev’eoal from 35 to 50 cents. Tuckwyheat coal, the size above rice, remains unchanged, as do also the domestic sizes. An Elsctric \kmt}: :"'f,’, Expl;du‘_;i | yesterday fu- ihe hands Alfre chauffeur, aofl flew -inté a. oily waste, Starting & fire which | the el the stable o€ 3" Murtey Key Brookline, Mass, together with an tomobile and six carriages The loss | 1< placed &t $§,008 An “automobile windshield ljusted as to anzle and worh and pinion e Las been brought oul in Englend, and overfiow Ig ol o8 azgresutes 4,741,000 t can hunmb rhng HAS NO DESIRE FOR THE PRESIDENGY Roosevelt's Employer Says He is Discouraging in Every Possible Way Talk of His Candidacy 'WILL TAKE NO ACTIVE PART IN ANY OF CONTESTS o 2 3 ¢ If He is Ever Elected Again,” Declares President Abbott, “It Will be Because People Want Him to Perform Certain . 4 = Job”—Says Taft Sought the Meeting With Roosevelt at New Haven—Roosevelt's Acts Misinterpreted by Critics. , Cornwall-on-Hudson, N. Y., Jan, 4.— | pressed by Mz. Taft for his compang, Col. Theodore Roosevelt is not a can- | or his views, and he instances. the dicate for the presidency, according | private interview at New Haven dur ) Lawrence F. Abbott, president of | ing the autumn of 1910 between Mr. Outlook_company of New York, | Taft and Mr. Roosevelt. That meet- with which Mr. Roosevelt Is actively | Ing, he says, it has been unfortunately AS/SOC IN‘(L’ his statement is made | reported, was sought by Mr. Roosevelt today in The Local Press, a weekly | to get some help in his contest with newspaper published bere, the home of | the “old guard” in the state. Mr. Abboti, Taft Sought the Meeting. Has Not Consulted Roosevelt. | Mr. Abbott adds: “The facts are— The statement is a lengthy one and |4nd I have learned them, not from reviews Mr. Roosevelunr ommeotnd/| Mr. Roowsvait, but. from & faend, of with national politics during the last | Mr. Taft who knew all the ciroum- three vears, It was forthcoming, so | Vtances—that Mr. Taft send word to the edlior of the Local Press says, | MI: Roosevelt asking him to come in when he asked Mr. Abbott whether | OFder that he (Mr, Taft) might get Mr. Roosevel; was a candidate for the | the Denefit of Mr. Roosevelt's ad- : vice regarding the serious split in the it understand to -begin | N&tiOnAl affairs of the republioan parc ‘Abbott save in what ia | Which resulted from the fight of a dictated statement, “that ua m"»-..‘v" asninst, w-wb" whatever 1 say in answer to your ‘Cunnontsm.’ question I say solely on my own re- Roosevelt Often Misjudged. sponsibility and without any consul- Mr. Abbott says that whatever Mr, tation with Mr. Roosevelt. Rooscvelt does or says will be intee-: N B o 1 idate. | BFeted by some of his critics to hiw N My Ry Condius éisadvantage and he instances an ar~ You ask me whether Mr.-Roosevelt | tiglo by Mr. Roosevalt on. the et a candidate for the presidenc lished "‘1 reoks wer nb. Hge is not a candidat \“““Nm'm:‘“lb bttty n't desire to be | A ae o hat discouraged and is discouraging | An g et . every possible way all talk fiy"}u’g!(‘mmflam‘ g e p-."m diGney: and e will take no ac- | Tne ety wes bt e K| share of any kind in the con o 14 i gl - o 515 | paychological moment t produce the contensis Which | greatast cffect. 1 thero was any po ; hree months preceding any national | { TSN outentee 1o s " appearance, ac: | cording to Mr. Abbott, it should ‘m the editor of his p iy |rusgested the articlo and fixed the ' f cate for its publication, convention.” Responds Quickly to Taft's Wishes. He next tells how Mr, Roosevelt de- lined the republican nomination in Does Not Seok the Office. 1908, which “very ea: could have| If Mr. Roosevelt is ever w' had,” and Wow Mr. Taft's nomination | president again, according to Mr, Abe and election were brought about. [ Dott, it will not be because he wants | Mr. Roosevelt has never fafled, Mr.|or seeks the office, but because the i Abbott declares, to respond quickly | public wants him to perform a eer= and cordlally to the slightest wish ex- | tain job. MRS. MORROW’S PARAMOUR BARES HER INFIDELITY Says That He Umrpad the Place .f Woman's Husband. VERY LITTLE PROFIT ON DRESSED MEAT Witness Says Packers' Profits Come from By-Products. Chicago, Jan. —By-products yield | Chiczgo, Jan. 4—In a preliminary 97 per cént. of the profits In the pack- | hearing today, Mre. Rene B. Morrow ing business, according to figures giv- | heard har as icns that there was en by Willlam D. Miles, formerly the | no “cther man” in the case to furnish general menager of the Armour Pack- | a motive for the murder of her hus- ing company in Kansas Oity, who | band, fiatly denled by a witness whom finished his testimony today in the the Lolice insist is the “other man" trial of ten Chicago packers, charged with criminal violation of the Sherma: law. He gave the company’s net prof- its for 1899 as $20: in the dressed beef department, based on the slaugh- ter of 204,820 animals, An analysis of these figures showed that the company made but three cents profit on the dressed meat of each steer killed, but the fat of each animal ylelded a profit of 42 cents, The profit on hides was 37 cents a head and on the glue manufactured from hoots it was 1§ cents. he profit from the fat was 14 times that yielded by the dressed meat and the profit from the hides was nearly as much, The money made from glue was six times as much as that made from the sale of the fresh meat, according to Mr. Miles, Special Counsel Sheean spent sov- eral hours in an effort to compel the witness to admit that these figures were obtained by bookiesping methods devised by the packers, but was unsuc- oessful. himself. Harry Gilmore, an automobile sales- man wko roomed at the Morrow home, conflimed Rtestimony previously of- fered that Morrow did not enjoy equal rights with his wife in the hame and added that Le usurped the decedent's rights as a husband. Mrs, Morrow, who is being held without bail, 8 charged with murdering her busband. | Morrow, &n inventor, was twenty years older than his 32-year-old wife. He was found shot through the brain ) and the heart, on the rear porch of the - home., Witnesses testified that Mrm, ' Morrow and her husband were quar- ' reling in their apertments and that two shots were heard. The next mormn« ing the frozen body was found by the . maid. Mry, Morrow, who is a writer, disclalmed knowledge of Morrow's death, and said he had threatened sui: cide, and asserted she bad been a loyed and faithful wife. Today’s testimony was the first . Tect accusation of infidelity by the police. A maid accused Mrw: Arthur Colby, director and assist- | Morrow of unfaithfulness, just prior ta. ant secretary of the National Pack- |Gilmore's admission. Other testimeny ' ing company, will be called as the |was that Morrow was compelled ta government's fourth witness when | keep within one small reom and do court reconvenes £o0mMorTow. his own washing, and was often with- SRR PR T 38 out funds. The hearing will be coms« ' t'zued tomorrow. PREMIER YUAN ACCUSED OF DOUBLE om( Claimed That He ls Attempting *2 Break the Manchu Bank. Peking, Jan, 4—The court's pre ration for residence in Mongolia s lieved to be only against an emer- gency. A report has been current ! that a residence for the emperor and the members of the royal family is . being put in order at Zekhe, Mon- golla. Additional treasure to that con- tributed to the government by the empress has been forthcoming at tha palace. empress dowager has issued an edict to the princes, commanding a loan from each of them for the im- perial cause, This has resulted in further contri- butions of a few hundred thousand The foreign banks are experi- encing difficulty in converting the bhars of gold into silver. Foreign bank nctes are no longer current, silver coin be- ing sacceptable. emier Yuan Shi Kai is accused. of double deeling. 1t It alleged that! he is attempting the destruction of the Manchus financially before con- COAL PASSER KILLED ON BATTLESHIP James Kelsey Buried Beneath Coal on the Michigan. New York, Jan. 4—The battieship $' Michigan, which put to sea. this morn- ing to take part in the coming naval manenvers off the Atlantio coast, re- turned to port late today to bring back the hody of a coal passer, James Kel- sey, 20 years old, of Sea Brook, N. ", who was killed shortly after the ship salled by falling down a coal chute. Kelsoy was buried beneath tons of coal which followed him down the chute and was suffocated before his shipmates could get him out, The dy was taken from ngchun‘ln by @ navy yerd at msville 2nd thence thhxrwm navy vard hospital. The battleship then put to rea again —— MAYOR AND ALDERMEN ACCUSED OF CORRUPTION Six Citizens of Portiand, Fite Complaint with Court., Portland, Me, Jan. 4.—A complaint allegeging corrupt election praetices | niving in their dethronement, but it against the present democratic mayor | is thought the revolutionaries, whose. of Portland, Oakley C, Curtiss, and the | agents employ every trick, are ciren- five democratic aldermen wus flled to- doy with Judge Leslie G. Cornish of the supreme conrt, br six citizens of this city, representing an association of business men who have conduoted an Investigation of the eity elaction of December 4, which wae tha first held since the passage of the corrupt ss act. The court ordered a hearing for Tuesday, January 0. ELROY KENT TO GO TO GALLOWS TODAY e ey lating reports that Ypan is secretly republican, in order to discredit him Drnamite discovered along the rafl« way line have been brought to Pe King Dy a womun, This (s the firat evidence that the long standing revs olutionary threats are serious, ‘ehe revolutionaries, months ago, declared that they would employ dynamite to accomplish their purpose of driving the Manchus out of the government. New Cambridge Tunnel Tested. Boston, Jan. 4.—The first throueh Young Vermonter Who Killed Yeung |train was run from the Tark sivert terminal fn Boston to Eliot Squire sta- Weoman, Net Much Concerned- |iion in Cambridge, by way of tha new Cambridge tunnel today, The new subway Will not De (LrOWn upen i | Bemara) travel for severall weeks. V200,000 for - Corbeil’ Uiiiveraity. Iibacs, N, ¥, Jan s—t mmm to Cornell u r cob H. ‘Sohiff, the New was annouoed Schurman, Windsar, Vt, .lu. L-She gallows on whieh Ilr" Kent will pay the iy . tometrow- for the gturder.of. B.-Congdon Was- in-Tesdimess in mmum- u.umw- In the esst wing of the in- umwcn some dietanos from the in- strument of death, Kent was in cus tody of his guards, who reported him to be.in good physieal condition and apparenily not wuch concerned orar | Jacah - his fate. Most of the witnessss s | prem of the exertion were In town tomight.'iure If b