Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 7, 1912, Page 1

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e — VOL. LIV..—NO. 59 NORWICH, CONN., THURSDAY, MARCH 7, .1912 "PRICE TWO CENTS The Bulletin’s Circufation in Norwich is Doubie That of Any Other Paper, and Its Total Circulation is the L;i'gest in Connecticut in Pr LAWRENCE CITY MARSHAL TESTIFIES States That Children Were Taken to Police Station Because He Regarded Them as Neglected HE CONSIDERED IT HIS DUTY UNDER THE LAW Asserts That He Knows Who Killed the Woman Striker and Declares “We Will Get Him—Says Strike Leaders Kept Out of Riots But Incited Women and Children at the Meetings—Mrs. Taft Again an Interested Spectator. Washington, March §.—Dudley L Holman, seeretary to Governor Foss f Massachusetts, testifying betore the ouse rules committee today, regarding he Lawrence mill strike, had explained the failure of the authorities to settle wherein people paraded the sireets singing “La Marseillaige” and other songs in foreign tongues. “Could you locate the leaders, men or women, who led the assaults? asked Representative Wilson of 1lli- | the strike when he was confronted | nol withs a question he objected to “Thero were no leaders in the streets,” sald the captain. “The in- Asked if Wood Was to Blame, structions and Inferences of leaders Did you eay in Lawrence that Wil- llam Wood was the one man to blame 2" Acting Chalrman Hardwick. tion had been submitted to Representative Viotor Eerger, were made in meetings. Mobs Led by Women and Children. “The crowds were usually led by women and children. They were al- ways in the front rank, and sometimes o is pleading the strikers' cause. Mr. i X : Wood 2o president of the American | Women had children 'in their arme. Woolen company. Other women carried flags. On the “I would prefer not to answer that | fir'st morning Ettor, the strike leader, was about the mills giving orders, but r. Holman replied, “but 1| : My ey when the demonstrations took place he mittee, after conferring, de- | 81ways disappeare Describing the wounding of Officer Benoit and a woman, Captain Sullivan said Know Whe Killed Woman. “I want to eay that the man who killed the woman was the man wounded Officer Benoft. We know that man and we will get him. It has been testifled here that Officer Benolt killed the woman. Officer Benoit carried a .32 calibre revolver and she was killed with & .98 calibre revolver.” ‘Who was the man you mind 7" ‘I shouldn't tell you that defeat the end of justice.” “Was he a striker?” pdraw the question. Mrs. Taft Present All Day. | Mrs. ft, fe f the president, | spent mo of the day at the hearing, emaining througho the morning ses and returning for two hours a afterr.ool e exhibited inter at, t made ymment to members of smmit Mr. Holman followed Capt. J. J. livan, acting cf marshal of Law- ence, who ga a detailed account of he police operations, and finished af- » e examination by Represent- ative Stanley of Kentucky. Incidents at Lawrence Depot. have in It would Concerning the incidents at the Police Did Not Shoot. Lawrence depot, when the children | « e think he-was, and the woman were arrested, Mr. Stanley questioned | yyjjeq was also a strilbr. I think that the marshal at length. shooting started as pure deviiment to “When you iined your police up on | raise trouble and that there was e station platform,” he asked, “and | intention to kill anybody. ' The police ed the children from the train to ur automobile truck, what was your purpose?” To keep them from leaving Law- | did not shoot.” Captain Sullivan aiso told of an- other officer who was stabbed during the same outbreak. Another method < ciag hout any expiapation of i\'btl‘eyot the strikers to arouse trouble, he hey were eoing, or whether their par- | 314 was the concerted plan of the L o Strikers in flocking through the stores, S L ot pessing in and out without buying T, the police station. anything. = { i “They had our storekespers in e opinion, | wate of terror, and for some time viglated the laws of Massachusetts” | pysiness was practically at a stand- rebe law providing the care of k- | gty though the stores were not lected children Closed,” he sald. “How did you know they were neg- lected ™" POLICE KEPT BUSY. ‘The situation was extraordinary— | these people would not tell us' who e > they were, and for that reason they | Lawrence Bluecoats Called Out Twice ware detained.” to Quell Riots. “Well, if some of these women were | ——— mothers of these ch what right | TLawrence, Mass, March 6.—Another 41d_you have to arrest them?" aftempt t8 bring about an agreement “The right, as I have told you, that | patween the officials of the American T thought it was my duty under the Woolen company, which controls four 12w Consulted Others Before Acting. When did you discover that any of y were mothers?” or they were taken to ions where they were hat day. That night | tage of the children. They | bring them in court on | vere allowed to take | of the largest mills in the city, and their striking operatives will be made tomorrow. A comimittes representing the emploves of the Wood, Ayer,Wash- ington and Prospect mills gill go to the statehouse in Boston to meet rep- resentatives of the company, the con- ference to be held in the presence of the members of the legislative com- mittes on conciliation. Twice tonight the police were called the fathers came and acknow- h romise 1esday found a crowd off strikers to dispers There were several other small out- ks us & result of the activity of sympathizers who squght to on with workers as they were re- turning from the mills just after dark. any written authority men and children?" Regarding Consumption of Meat. eat As t testimony that the ok ol So active did the pollce find the n y foky Captain Sult | pickets this morning that proparations -~ 3 {here are scores ol |yave been made for more effective fan and Jew meat and fish peddlers | yory against them tomorrow. Two - i e P oing | Automobiles have been secured and priiris g el paniizedon 8 | Will be stationed at different points in the mill district ready to respond to s any section. Seven- sed by some of emergenc. calls the = b rence was exhibit- teen arrests were made in the morning. . ness, and ha identified it s it i - i ing Away. -~ Stick tar. . i g P°"“f,'" 2 Fifty children of the strikers will & a5 en 1 ." start for Philadelphia tomorrow morn % ; o ing. The party will leave Lawrence Koo' T bt the only thing | €000 after 7 o'clock effective in Lawre sald — e p snorir <enta- | GOVERNOR’S COUNCIL VISITS RICHESON. Find Him in Normal State of Mind, But Thin and Pale. Boston, March everal members of the executive council visited Clar- ence V. T. Richeson, condemned mu derer of Avis Linnell, in his cell at the Suffolk county jail today. The visit was made in the course of an inspec- tion of the jail by the governor and council.' Governor Fose, however, did not see Richeson, as the governor was clogeted with Sheriff Quinn when the wom I Leaders Incited Women to Violenc : L Aromn | 1est of the party went to the former 5 a N clergyman’s cell n ad no con- who asked for ment, said_that he had no compium to make. Members of the council re- marked later that the prisoner sald little and that he appeared in a nor- to #o with him to throw them- liers E i g mal state of mind and health, although s one and rather pale. Only the gov- } and councll can save \ he electric chalr el ics ever om Goin, » soner once a week, has ira . the governor for . wonld file submit i ? the couneil « ent m | cas the pardon commiittee h | eouncil will hold hearings and make Thraw Stones and | recommendations to the council, which R o will then vote whether it shall recom- : mend to the governor that the sen- tence be commuted. the " sple @riven ont ¢ con- g duictora frightened off. 1 man TO DISCUSS SMALLPOX. S . - pur b o them. 1t 11 wes | Special Meeting of Willimantic School i Committes Called. S uh an pa A threatened any man who fame near.| willimantic, March 6—A special T e e n_ ihe | meeting of the school committee has o T A struite. Nim ‘ue | been called for Thursday night, when the smallpox situation will be discuss- #d and it 1s thought that an order will be 1sgued calling for the vaccination of all publie school scholars. . The mat- ter will aleo be brought up for dis- cussion at the next meeting of the board of aldermen hard as I could. I saw there also a rarpenter wounded, assaulted by strik~ ers, after they had dragged him from the car. o Leaders Kept Out of Riots. lescribed other demonstration |out to quell minor disturbances. In | B an sald he had con- |one case two women were Aarrested Justice bandler, Colonel | and in the other tnres men were taken d others who advised him [into custody. FEach time the police Richeson, when asked as to his treat- | oportion to . City’é f;t;pulatiun Cabled Paragraphs _London, March 6.—A rumor is pub- | lished in'an evening paper that Capt. | Rovert F. Scott, the Eritish Antarctic | explorer, has reached the south pole. Paris, March 6—The attitude of Spain in connection with the Franco- Spanish negotiations on the subject of Morocco fs causing muech concern in France, March 6.—Owing to the | Pritish coal strike the steamsnip ser- | vice fom Christiania, Bergen and Tromso has been partially suspended. | Freight rates have been increased. Christiania, | { Guayaquil, Ecuador, March 6.—Gen- | eral Julie Andrade, the military com- mander at Guayaquil, was assassinated | at Quito last night by some of his sol- | aters. | Marseilles, March 6.—The French line | announces that its steamships will be | placed under reduced speed until fur- ther notice. The British coal strike bliges the company to economize in al. Serlin, March 6.—The Prussian gov- crnment has ordered a detachment of 400 armed rural police to the Kssen coal district as the first measure of precaution in the event of a strike, accercing to the newspapers. | | Managua, Nicaragua, March 6.—An extraordinary outburst of enti-Ameri- can feeling led to the arrest last night | of 50 of the more prominent ringlead- ers, who are being held in detention until Secretary of State Knox has de- parted. San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua, Ma: 6.—Secretary of State Philander C. Knox was present at a special ses- | sfon of the congress this morning at | eleven o'clock when the chairman, Se- | now Snarez, delivered an eulogistic | | speech. | Quito, cuador, March §.—Gen, Ju- | | lio Andrade, one of the noted men of | | Ecuador, ~ military ~commander at | suayaquil, and former minister to | Colomnia, was killed hera last night | in what is belleved to have been an attempt to gain control in the repub- | Ite. REPUBLICANS WON'T VOTE FOR BALDWIN Comptroller Bradstreet Discusses Po- litical Situation in Connecticut. (Special to The Bulletin.) | his long illness wlen he appeared be- fore the flnance committee of the senate yesterday. He was accompa- nied to Washington by his wife and a nurse. He will 5o from here to At- lantic City for a few days before re- turning to his home. hen seen after the hearing he said, | in answer to questions, that he did not | | | | think tliere was any Roosevel: senti- | | ment in Connecticut, He said he had talked with wpany persons durizg the last steek and had found mone favor- ing the momination of the ex-presi- dent. He said that President Taft was much stronger in the state than he was even a vear ago, and ho was of the opinion that he would be Te- nominated and elected. Ho said he expected that Governor | Baldwir. would be renominated, but | he did not think he could be re-elected. | “I personally know of severai repub- leans who voted for him in 1910 who will not do it agaln.~He will get no Grand Army votes neither will he get many, votes in the vicinity of Tor- rington, | COMMITTED SUICIDE TO { ESCAPE PENITENTIARY. | Alabama Postmaster Admitted Short- | age in His Account | | - | Abbeville, Ala., March 6—After | writing a letter to his wife ti ng her | he was short in his accounts and de- | claring “It is this or go to the peni- | tentiary,” Postmaster H. L, Marsh committed suicide today by firing a | bullet inte his brain. In his letter | | Marsh said | Dear Mandy: I am going out of thls | | world. My life has been a failure all | the way through. 1 am short in my | accounts, and it is elther this or go to | the pen.’ God bless you and the chil- | dren. I hate to leave, Keep what you € got, for you are not responsi- | ble fc my shortage. 1 have taken | enough strychnine to kill me if this { bulleC does not. Bury me just as I| am, | | He also instructed her to notify his brother, Fred Marsh, living in Boston. | arsh ‘was 71 years of age, a union | | veteran, and had been postmaster here | twelve years. His widow and five chil- | dren survive. THE DAY IN CONGRESS. | Liquor Interests Charged With Fraud | | and Misrepresentation. | hington, March 6.—The day W cong | French arbitration treaties. Game preservation societies advocat- ed federal protection of migratory game birds before forest reservations | | committee. Finance committee concluded ts | hearings on steel tariff revision bill. House:— Governor Gilchrist of Tlorida at Everglades investigation told commit- tee ho desired Representative Clark's | position in controversy brought out. Boston and San Francisco chamber of commerce delegations urged govern- mental recognition and $50,000 appro- priation for international congress of | ambers of commerce In Boston next { had been Norwich Men Representing Finance, the Law, Manufacturing, and Other Interests, ommere| Condensed Telegrams PERKING PAYS VISIT TO ROOSEVELT There Are Now 5700 foreign trovis | | Former Partner of J. Pierpont Morgan Makes a Wysterious Trip to Oyster Bay, in China, the Amecricans beiag (he smallest contingent, Secretary Meyer Has Officially com- mended the sallors of the cruis Waslington for bravery. Jacob Whalen Killed His Brother | and then commitied suicide on theit farm near New Albany, Ind. The Admi L | REAL ESTAYL istration, It Was Learned — s st Mes et “BROUGHT A MESSAGE,” SAYS_EX-PRESIDENT a will should to Juntr: return need h to Mexico i Did an Errand For Colonel Roosevelt’s Campaign Mmqa-.—- Colonel Excited Over Speech of Secretary Stimson and Charges That His Opponents Are Acting in a Way to Wreck the Republican Party—That Test Challenge. The Two-Year Coal Strike in (¢ orado came to an end, the | officialy reaching an agre et ent, Ths Cut of Sawiogs on the branches Penobscot riv rious this T winter is estimated at 90,000,000 feet. | | Mrs, Josefa Middocke, formerly an k3 | operatic soprano, killed herseif while sy X e " | Iying in hed in her apartments. in | OYSter Ba, N. Y, March 6. —George y his ire. It was evident from Colonel NEw Yorl W. Perkins, former party 1 Roosevelt's manner that he believed M Morgan, paid a mysterious vigit (o | Secretary Stimson 14 have adopt- PSRy S Theodore Roosevelt here today. Mr.|ed a different attitude, in view of the that fpera e e o lfi:l{?}’ffi riing’ sui 4 activity in belialf of | close relations In the past between the of furty Christian conver d>than RIS BORINETy and Db COnupelon NS | beheaded them. i SN I ceae o Will Wreck Republican Party. Coloners opponents since | | 1N 8 statement written in the court L Serator Rayner of Maryland has ol Chhonents Sl | rouse at Mineols while he was waiting een invited to speak at exercises in | & 5 viling 10 acCebt ] 1) be calledgfor jury duty, the colonel New York on Mareh 17 in memory of | 3 Sentidl namnatio said that th jers of the campaign Crover Cleveland. | Remained But Short Time. against him were acting in such & way | L Mr. Peckins slipped inconspicuously | that “if they were deliberately trying - _As the Result of the Mistrial, is af | to wreck the republican party they \ famous Kimmel identity and insurance was e th 15 world follow precisely the same tactics . case will be presented in the courts | h powered Imousine which that they have been following.” \ = [ for the fourth time in M ugh 1 ‘? o el ‘J‘t Serving as a Juror. S \ i With 500,000 Workers in other in- York fin remuined e i S U dustries in England thrown out of | short time at mor 1 befora | .0 Boned. whils attting th the & work, there are now 1,500,000 men idle | starting back to New York gt Mooy BT NICHOLAS TARRANT, as a result of the miners’ strike Brought Message from Dixon. i h Puinam of the supreme court, the pre . All that Colonel Roc elt would s: siding judge, GULEL til tomorr Of the Firm of N. Tarrant & Co, Real Estate and Insurance Agents. | William E. Whittlesey, of New Ha- | > : : N I L e A n, cne of he best-known Grand front | Colone! oosevelt wtrode out of 5 | ATy veterane, @iod Mom paralysis e ] B S g e i . | vesteraay tohowios & saliges: i ¢ ampaign | cotirtroom, entered his automobile and H | . wing a su fet le was seen- in the | returned at once to Uyster Bay, twenty | ternoo e colo 1ad re- | miles awa lishan ot onot BIGNDOE | ,romt oo st mow vmmpurc | e i iy 5 1| e ! | narrow escaped sinking 4t {aGctatary I Ket r ; | : | g | Brookivn mavy yard on Monday has | Senstar pn, Nov bk o Bt THRT ORA . [ | dust leaked out from unofficial sources. | Nen Yorn batwecn 8 and 12 Dixon Says It Was Authorized by the I e e e n e ree b i Burke, a Prominent Attorney | tn)° CYeTLE, and would like (o s 1he Seven Governors. | | and banker of Lowell, Mass., and for- | § 3 Iv ‘thide Bours s " el =45 | merly one of the leaders of the demo- | B ! S LA s s Washington, March More corres 7 | cratic party in Vermont, died vester- | (% = Colon osevel 's | spondence on the presidential primary by “y d a 58, K . Duld.- be b s hallenge episod, paseed today WAS AWAKENED BY A “BURNING | LYNN WOMAN SAYS “SHE RU-|dav aged 58 | seo the senator. I o | cwoen the Tafl hosdquarters and tR8 N e | - 1% sonesict tey of the I, N, | 5aid, that Senato 1 | Roosevelt headquarters SENSATION, INED MY LIFE. ‘ el \mun:r:sn:; Fgr{{srun cy manufac. | & message to Oyster Da, the col-] Senator Joseph M. Dizon, chatrmas fas, = i vesterday, | 0l did not say whether W WHO o the Roosevelt executive committs | s of ! | the message bearc ] L who issued the “challenge” answet WIFE HELD FOR CRIME | HUSBAND NOT BLAMED | Westerners Deser Director McKinley of ths Taft burean, & 15 ton Aianaty 8 Aespat {lie | Who haq asked if Senator Dizon pro= { b | Statistics Read by Jean P. Mueller, | west appearcd in the n 1l- | posed a. primary by authority of Cele expert accountant for the govern- |leging that supporters of Senator Lo [onel flunse\l;“l( I ¢ Victim First Accused Her and Later | Murderess and Her Victim Had Been | Ment, show that 70 vounds of beef are | Follette in North Dakoti were turning flrv_mln(r ey e acted as thy | consumed per capita a year in this | from Colonel Roc It and supporting ry{vr'l;‘ldd! ‘x‘rnn - [-”l:lv-n :-v-z Said He Did Not Know Who Did It| Friends for Years—Former Is Be- | country b e Sind e e be acandidate, and “that me. clearer —Se " Stories Signi i i e, pre: Sormic v the Inte - | anthority could be had*™ | Servants' ies Significant. lieved to Be Mentally Unbalanced. s 'wa‘a‘haq B. Bunce, president k(”rx:w K o a e ~} Director McKinley received Senstor Hartford Society for Savings, th tlonal H P i est institute of its kind in t Cormick 1 1 one o caders in | Dixon's reply late today fust as he died suddenly yesterday from | the Rovsevelt movement and managed | Was going to some conferences at the Atlanta, Ga., March 6.—"God knows | Lynn, Mass, March 6.—Walk roubie Readtat . the Roosevelt busedn at \Washinegton | capitol. He said he would reply prob. I am innocenti” exclaimed Mrs. Daisy | to her friend and neghbor, Mrs 5 i before Senator Dixc Charge. Mr, | ably tomorro Jirich Ople Grace today after her re- | ence Ingalls, on the strect, tonight, ; {Ferkinia s clintrian e financo | s . leas on bail pending a hearing on the | Mrs. Jessio Chapman pulled & revolver | ,ons, EicaPind from a Partly Open|Perkins i chajmnan of e " | STRONG FOR ROOSEVELT. charge of assault with attempt to|from a handbag and killed Mrs. In- | fass. lodging house resuited in. the | vester company, and reg: as | rvoed murder her young husband, Eugene H. | galls almost Instantly, six bullets en- | aepnyxistion of a man believed to be | one of the most impor tors in | Sixtesn of 31 Counties Favor Mim— Grace, a prominent building contractor | tering her body. Mrs. Chapman was |y elch 0f Newburyport ; the affairs of that cerporat He 13 Ten for Taft, who was mysteriously shot at thelr |arrested and admitted the shooting. | - g ek S 186 a director of the United States handsome home at Eleventh home yesterday. Has Slim Chance for Recovery. street klahoma Clity, Okia., March 6— of the 31 'Okishoma count The 150th Anniversary of poration of At teel corpor Roosevelt Laughs Over It. Had Been Friends for Years. Mrs. Chapman, who is the wife of t Out 3 s K ik ch » of b Charles §, Chapman, a shos worker, | VAS Observed yvesterday oy _exercises | ywon Colonel Roose which had reported th-fl results o Tonight physicians said that Grace | lives on Fair Oaks avere, while net | (OT, Scool children in tho choolhouses | ,0" W0 (orh " deayatch: T30 cictoch tomight, 15 had metracten )'};s but siiEht chance for \recovery.vicim, the wife of Spacial Officer A 0 I U ol laughed, as b thetr Qetogates to cait the 150 Setiol e bullet penetrated the left side, | Charles Ingalls, resided almost directly ; 5 not worthy of comme i . o conve went through the lung and lodged near | ucross the stréet. The twe. had veen | 1 Alienists Have Pronounced would he sa ; prrog gt o LT the spinal cord. Pneumonia already | friends for several years and had nev- | enefick incurably : onel has been qu oo Mg M L | has set in, they say. Developments |er had any serfous quarrels so far as| Ot De tried for as: h intent 10 | gaving that ove Roosevelt as PRSI Sew— have followed fast since Grace tele- |is known. frmunder s e Sl per father's | done In his beha ek sty # , 1+ phoned the police to rush e doctor to 4 home in Collinsville, Comn, January | GRe. veason thas I R e e MR S Pt Victim Taken by Surprise. i sonal friendship for hix e i R TS PRy 2 ot g five remafning counties d "split® Achused Lis Wite, witnessed the shacting mre aari®| Announcement of the Incorporation | Ex-President in Fighting Mood. | (il cntions, s that the 53 delegates “Did your wife shoot you?" asked & |y, G oncing along the street and aas | Of the Catholic Press association, to Colonel Roosevelt was ir Biing | aecredited to them are in the doubtful policeman_ after breaking down the|gpparently unconscious of the presence | iclude all the Catholic papers in'the | mood today and s . ot column. Forty-five counties were #tity door of Grace's room and finding Grace F ) & ed States, made yesterday by | his opponents. He not 0 con- | to he heard from, rGr of Mrs, Chapman until the latter step- | UDit 5 N s * v O e to Took that way,” the |Ped UD behind her and, fouching her | ETesident Edward J. Cooney of Provi- | ceal the fact th i il Taft Delegates from Tennessss. wotnded man: rephied e .l.n “,'f arm, exclaimed “Are you Mrs, dence. g e = the Nashville, Te 6 —The 2 E ngalls 7" 3 ; B I t [ Pifth and €ixth Tenness ro. Mrs. Grace was found at Newnan, | " ¥ 3 A Slight Loss in Membership during | belfef that sid T not | Fifth and Sixth Tencas _-mr‘:‘T; Ga., at the home of her mother-in- Six Shots Fired. the past year was reported by Grand | Colonel Roosevelt should EILNGRE o dbo road g bogongor s law, who accompanted her back to the | Turning quickly, Mrs. Ingalls recog- | Patriarch Joseph M. Metealf of the In- | ineo of the republican 1 \ronscd delegates to the Chicago convention. city. On her arrival she was arrested | nized her neighbor in the dim light, | dependent Order of Odd Fellows at the N g FeREe % — and taken at once, on her own request, | but before she could speak Mrs. Chap- | annual convention of the Rhode Island | = e to the hospital to which her removed. Seeing usband her, he m n drew a revolver from her hand- bag and fired six shots. Every one of branch yesterda TWENTY FIREMEN LEG BURNED OFF BY : IC CURRENT, e s no.shot | 1O took effcct In tha body of Mrs.| Five Steerage Passengers on the BURIEDIN RUINS, ool meDaiey, -you-2re the one who-sho ‘:ng;ll, and sho fell dead on the side- | Ttalian steamsaip Duca d X:::_""'L Wall of a Brick Building at Providence | John Hill so Badly Shocked That Life Rhpakbs’ Phes Aoonaation. “She Ruined My Life.” oken legs or broken arms as Collapses. is Despaired of. ~Why, how can you?” she protested. | Without turning to 100k at the body, | Jurime o S By e e 92K | providence, B L. March 6.—Twenty| New York, March 6—An = slectrie “You are m-ingh to make me out a {Mrs, Chapman fled to the home of an- | 0T /I8 & Storm at sea or 3 S B % i s when | current of 11,000 volts coursed through murdarer, and they will take me to | othe et rs. Kate Fi She - SEoR e ‘ 3 Widing | 4 il toda 11is right 1 You are the one who tried to Kill (and confessed to the shooting. When | sy, waich has housed thousands of | in South Water stret collapted G0 poupica)” onight several hours afim me” he repeated. “If you persist in|aeked for an explanation of her act, o ounent v to B LaRerEon L vl lnspital, two | the shock, Hill grasped a live wire is that I will take the power of attorney | Mrs. Chapman at first, aecording to | GULIRE the I years, 1§ to B tprn il et ek atal | the power house of the New York Cen- i a3 from Fou. | Hio,napman af first, uccording 10| down on account of the falling off in | With infuries which ove LA, | Patirdad 1 iying, fo sl Bl aid Mrs. Grace, who was formerly the | \hen pressed for further details she nce horse racing was abolished. | ~The men %l hen it fell, | eIt on lndder. Instantly he fell from wife of a wealthy Philadelphta DUID | repiied: “My husband was not to biame » KIALS Cus o icers in | the ladder, but could not loosen his manuicturer. Graco then ~relented. P Fellowing Statement! wketian | Citingun jolosge the) D0lice SIS CUINE (RNENE NS S the wire sugged i 't know did it,” he said. 3 vesterday by the anthraclie | the rescue work and s e * ot touched | o E s R T Knew Wife Had Revolver. operators: “In T the revort- | ting all the firemen out al O | e aasiss e At Mrs. Grace's Story. Then she collapsed and became hys- | @ advances in prices of anthracite, it | those t to the h the MOST) Sther man seized o billet of wood and Herz is tho story told by Mrs. Grace: | terical, precluding further questioning. | Should be stated that these are not | seriously injured are: knocked Hill's hand loose, but as Hi{ “I left the house at 1 o'clock !‘J]){ar husband and intimate friends be- | M&de by the operators, but by retall William Kelly, epin tured. . fell to the floor his right leg dropped go to Newnan, where I was to stay | lieve that she was mentally unbalanc- | dealers. | Clarence Horton ek tisht|Off; @ charred mase. Hill was sti while Mr. Grace was in Philadelphia, | cd, X |, Captatn Frank Chsrlesworth, right | S0 S NCECCl ool for & piient, Wik for which place he planned on an af- | Chapman told the officers tonight| A Petition Was Placed in the Hands |leg fractured in two places. was summoned to administer the lnsi ternoon train. When I left him my | that he knew his wife had « revolver | Of the secretary of siate of Oregon| Oharles T. Wood, left leg broken, | Was suminoned fo ndriinister f8 o husband was about ready to get up.|and that she had displayed it several | Yesterday asking that the name of | scalp wound and serious cuts on right n could not live through thy I knew that he was not feeling wi times, but that he did not know where | The0dore Roosevelt be placed on the | hand. . il | but did not think he was very sick.|ane got it. The police say that the re- 'vr‘«lh!‘(.xu state primary ticket as| Others sustained cuts, h:"f":“;:"' g ot s He said he would meet me at the de- | olver has been idenfified as one which | (2ndidate for the presidential nomina- | minor injuries, broken bones, | pot, but when he failed to do 0 T Went | was Jost nearly two vears ago by | tion Some wers able o resume Work at the Used Hatchet on Her SM:.M. on to Newnan. thinking he had been | yrank A. Purrell, then a member of 2y e fch’ HIChE | ol ans had hurriedly| New March §lens Stock. detained on business. The next thing |{ne police force. William K. Vanderbilt. Jr., s | dressed_their wounds [nat, 22 tiréw herser: fromthe tof I heard was when I reached the home | i now 34 years was eleclo The n_a building occupied | of ‘an rtment hoase tod w {'of his mother. They said thcre that| Dead Woman Leaves Blind Child. | prosidént cf the New & | by M. 8. Alper & So i storeh she had quarreled with and serousiy Gene had been shot. My arrest and | The dead woman was 5§ vears of Hudson River and the & | fop ‘old paper and rags. The loss on | infured her sweetheart, Flenrz Hor- the accusation of my husband is all a [and the mother of three hoys, one of | Michigan Southern Railroad eompan building and its conienls was|wege, with a hatchet. ~Balleving she horrible mistake.” whom {8 blind. Mrs. Chapman is 48 at meetings of {he directors of tilo | nad iilled him, #ha M4 in the hows . and has no children. Medical Exam- | two corporations | o R and later climbed to the roof an Discovered Wound When He Awoke. |iner Dr. Joseph G. Pinkham perform- chine. FOR MORE jumped. She was Instantly kiled, Grace told the police when they first reached him that he first discovered he wag shot at 6 o'clock in the morn- ing, when he awoke with a burning ed an autopsy on the body of Mrs. In- galls tonight. Chapman Stands by His Wife. Mr. Chapman made preparations to- John Mitchell, Vice President of the American Federation of Labor, yester- day declined to give to Judze Wright | of the district supreme court any a: Horwege will recover. AMERICAN TROOPS. | Hanish Lauded as Greatest Prophet. B! Chinese | Minister Calhoun ves Vion (5 B T tola Y st ol et e | | Chicago, March §.—Federal grand . aeo Lk | DIETE to do all in his power to heip his | jang sdhereacs (o ne aecrorc b 0 | Troops Are Not Reliable. | jurors here heard Dr. O. C. Phillipe, 8 come | Jwife. At the police station, pending | jugicial tribunals of the land g | follower of “Dr.” Ottoman Zan Adusht | the arrival of an attorney for whom he i Peking, Mareh 6—Comparative gul- | Hanish, head of the Masdasnan sur e {bad telephoned, he would say. little| Mps, Jennie Cellard. aged 45, the | et has been o ';kx."f%m:: worshippers’ calt, laué the “little mas- A | in regard to the matter. He has lived | wite of a glove manufacturer of Phil. |action of the Uniied Statcs minister | jor" today as the greatest proph commerce com when be became | 10 LYnn for many years, having been | adelvhia, was shot and killed in her | Mr. Calhoun, in q]‘:‘p‘f‘ir‘;l‘,,“:f'f:fl i0r|the world, and indorse his teachi I ompleted its bill proy IS arter of a century. 1o iy | home, vesterday by John Leich 0 | Turther troaps for Ller eas of a con- | 5 Meeal &nd highly beneficlal bt achinery for Panama c : i i : o B S years\old, who was deserted by her | ed, was not hecause Ot SB0F CC 5 oy B T e Sto Dt At tanee MY net Damaging Testimony of Servants.‘ s s:\(ld to have lived in Haverhill at| eight years ago at (ross Keys, N, J, | certed at smpt & .u‘\;.i;”r‘zx e Steamship Arrivale, | Secretary Ndgel urged enactn M lch: T ‘;"‘_“‘_f:;.““‘:h(?g VAL i Leichtle then ended nis own life. !;nha: e P roope cannot he depend. | (At Genoa: March ¢, Adriatie, from ns committee. e e o T heto | To Withdraw Approval of Income Tax| Proposing to Rename the demoorat- | o1 upon. Disorders fe SREOnTe V8| At Naples: March §, Calabria, fron e fervants. . The Woman savs sne mAC®] Albany, N. Y. March 6.—The Hin./|free sugar bill “zn act_to_surrender | north, v o snt control, and | New York; March 6, Caronia, from 2 fire in Grace's room about 7 o'clock, | any, N. Y., March 6. e Hin- venue, destroy o stition ore- | restoration of government control, ai 0 L OBITUARY. e o A iile she oca | man restlution “rescinding New Yopk | Fevenue, destroy competition and cre- | restoration of goverminent COniy SRCH New York, e 2L M Graccs Jequest I e e e er: | the republicans of the | it was considc g At London: March §, Minmebaha in the room she says Grace groaned |State’s approval of the federal income | 5 Hton of thy | chances. fhom Nowr Yoek. Rev. John W. Lindsay. eral times and Mrs. Grace sald: | &x resolution was reported favorably | Vo¥s and means committes of the A A - Clifton §; N. Y., March 6.—Th 4 ick. .G " cep- | tonicht by the assembly judiclas & z 3 5 seid? = P . v RV Eiatiar T Troa| St e ot S13k B ene T L e an e ? Y| yesterday on the¥nderwood bill. | Acid Explosion K.;‘u V{:rkmnn; Coal Gese Up in Providensa dent of (iencsce Wesleyan universtty Ruffin sald Mrs. Grace told him as . | Passaic, N. J., March 6.—The explog- | Providencs, R. 1. March 6.—The price St oyt N ¥ and for 8 nranber.of Lahe e he house that her arOne Hundred and Forty Warrants |, “Gt"y ‘siviy_gallon tank of an acid | of coal in this cily and Paweuekiet b + years professor of Latin at Wesieyan | hushand was sick and that he d | police are said to have disco o for 2%nd YESLOTAAY | plant at the Anderson (hemical com- | heen advanced (0 oents & tom. To.a g | 3 e o have discovered to- | for. judividuals™and corporations in | T university idletown, Conn., Is dead | wanted a doctor, but had changed his | day that Grace recently had his life | New York ity who are aharged with: PANY foday, blew fo pieces Andrew | dealers attribute the inereass to - here, today, aged 92 years. . and if the doctor came he was |insured for $25,000, n wife as|| employing childn. under 16 Eiears offPolack, who was standing on the | general shortage in the retail ani Dr. Alverd E. Winchell, to be sent away. Mrs. Grace denies |the beneficiar other hand, | age from § 1-2 fo 14 hours a-day, in | &K, severely fnjured another work- | wholesale merkets, dne to &2 unprecs - w Haven, March 6—Dr. Alvera|giVing any such instructions. friends of the accused woman point out | yiolation of the ehild 1abor law. . | MAN. and started a fire which destroy- | dented demand as a result of the fear T s s Rt s yend Grace Insured for $25,000. fihat Mrs. Grace s very wealthy by a i saies 3 ‘ s the building, causing & lose of | of a roiners’ strike. Cornectleut State Medical association,| A revolver was found on a window | [OrMer marriage and such g I Two THousand Sahosl Chiliken £rom. —_— — died at his home here today from | siil in the hall on the foor below | OUId be no Incentive. New Rochelle, N. Y.. have enlisted as | ks § Syeubal 77 Miss Pankhurst Eludes Pofios. pneumonia. Dr. Winchell graduated | Grace's room. It had one empty Married Less Than Year. Volunteer detéciives in the sear | _Former Judge Chester A. Stanton ot from Wesleyan university in 1857 and | chamber. The key to the door of the| The Graces had heen married less 's smootl oung man Wwio | Wurtshoro, No V., was held vesterday | from the College of Physicians and |room which the police found locked | than a year and apparently thev were chock th s week bedr for the graud jurv on a charge of ar~ | Sargeons in 1865. He was S1 years|was in a receptacle in the hall where | living happily. Mrs. Grace's heating | forged signaiatc of Miss | {8on n_the second de in setiing old and practiced medicine in New | Mrs. Grace said it usually was kept. Was set for next Wednesday after- [ Bipomfield, principal of the Union ave- | fire to his home in seversl places last Haven 47 years As furnighing o posiple motive, the nogn. Her bond was fixed at $7,500 | nue schoal Monday

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