Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
VOL. LIV—NO. 120 NORWICH, CONN., FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1912 The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and lts Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the 5 Population & e bled Paragraphs | 543 DELEGATES CLAIMED FOR TAFT| Cebled Parasrashs 'Pyrpog London, May 16.—The Welsh di . establishment bill passed its second A A f s 4 + | reading in the house of commons fo- Figures of President’s Bureau Give Him Three in|=isnira voie of'os o 260 Buenos Aires, Argentina, May 16— f the N Maj it The ted States rifle team, WhoSe | GENERAL EFFECT WAS TO MAIN- XCess 0 e INecessary iiajority. members are to take part in the Pan- American tournament here arrived to- TAIN STEEL PRICES. day on board the Verdi and were ac- corded a hearty welcome. THREE STATES ADDED SIXTEEN YESTERDAY | rome wayio—mne iiatian aestrov- | TOPPING'S TESTIMONY g ers Nembo and Aquilono today cap tured a vessel laden with arms and ammunition fn tho- vicinity of Porty | Secres on the Turkish Island of LipsO | ooy of Independent Concern Admits intai | r the Smyrna coast. legates—Asserts | near the Smyrna co § Roosevelt Maintains That He Has 501 Deleg { g oy 1| Orgsnisstion of Indopendents, But . . Kingston, St. Vincent, May 16— : : That Action of Taft Supporters at Washington State | .iero arouth prevalls throughout the | They Continued to Be Competitors. West Indies, particularly in Trinidad, . “ »” 9, 0 ro in the country dis Convention Was “Scandalous”—Declares Taft’s Father | wocre conditions in the country dis- | P gors ‘are obliged to| New York, May 14.—While no agree- . 2 | ter famine. KEZp aue der | ments or rstandings to mainta Favored Third Term For Grant—Ilowa For Clark. | waix in some places five miles in order menta of Tndebuaiius Totiintein [0 OB IRIL CEI g ST famous Gary dinners of steel manufac- 5 turers, ihe general effect of them was g i ..., | THE SUBMARINE TUNA to maintain prices, according to the eveland, 0, May 16—President | third consecutive term, he said | RUNS HARD AGROUND. | testimony of John A. Topping, chafr- ft tonigh ved telograms from | Judge Tafts name headed the list of | Shin il AL e | man of the Republic Tron & Steel Co., secr C. D. Hilles, and Direc- | members of a Grant third term ). from Newport News | today, at the hearing of the federal tor William B. McKinley of the Taft | “Down among the list of members,” he | Was on Her W’By 4 e B suit to dissolve the United States Steat N uiming 43 delegates to the | said, “comes the name of a brigat| to Bridgeport. corporatio Practically the whole er Five hundred | young representative of - City, N. J, May 16—The 's session was devoted to the sub- and 1 ty in the conven- | Charles P, Taft. The whc Atla O, h'grounded about | ject of “price understandings? and [lly waa in thatimovement. 1 willap-|eubmarioe SR I L €0 avbor | in this:connackiort: the Hitesl Rrust eonn: Four from Idaho Included, Beal froui Nor, 4o Fe futher and Bel | T TIC 8 Ot 4 o s inE. 1a | 9al’ brought-ont frant Gus of Ahe Gov= The telegrams said the president had | ¥OU to accept the sound common sense | life saving SwaLon “dis OIS B enment witnesses that there had been 543 delegates, counting four from 1da- | Which tho father spoke as to the ridic- | still hard aground and appears t formed an organization of independent g 4 ulous folly of raising wiy talk about a | drl ser dn shore. @ @ Dleotsi. | bridge and straotural steel memufac- Sixteen Gained Yesterday. | third term when the terms are not| Captain Dunnehauer, and Wil- | turers with objects which appeared to N t A el | COBNSCUL e il thD Jac ot OF oW ! 2nd Hand. a sailor, are still on |Dbe in some respects similar to those e bt Ml | bas no earthly means of influencing a | son B e gL ke °" | which the trust claims for the Gary S o for | Single offics holder, a single privileged | board the | dinner gatherings and other meetings & e nventi presentative of the privileged class,” | 'The re pounding almost | & IS EaLeriEn snd OLIRL meets President Taft was issued by Dir e s directly at the stern and are driving | iD Which representatives of its subsid- 1 &l it the officials the m the position where she | lary concerns participated. 1 were counting SIX FOR ROOSEVELT, struck Bridge Builders’ Society. i s ning e | Those of the crew who were brought | It was made known that this organ- or Taft up to today, | West Virginia Convention Endorses | ,shore are E. D. Baker, J. Payne, H. | iyation, known as the Bridge Build- 7 nt ! ansas 4, the ex-President. C. J. Haffner, J. R. Miller, | erg' goclety, was investigated by tha Montana 8, 1 1: to | % : wart, J. J. Mc- | government recently at the soclety's — Huntington, W. Va., May 15.—Af T oayenport, 5 | invitation and given, it was intimated, N FIRS hours of delay brought about by a Kroburgh, E. a clean bill of health. o ol BALLDT coplication of strictly state affairs, the | R, all of Newport News, an John ing Dea head of the Roosevelt Still Persists That He Is| West Virginla re an voncention | L. Horion epori, Comn., the | ppoenixville Bridge company, an inde- g hose six delegates at large to th last named s pilot. g pendent concern, testified that the so- Going to Bs Nominated. ago convention, gave Theodore Roose- | According ory, the TUNA | ciety was formed about a year ago by —tOf SEIL sty Un I h",‘ AsmIen, AAIeE f strande tais "”,’"v ing, bu 25 independent manufacturers and that b0ttt tion President Tatt or his ad- | no ala ecause the one of the articles of its constitution | it He by | Cunistracion, and maiarially chdxged hey could flo blish perfect frankness as | b z e the system -”“‘r[ ‘:““ i"1~L e Soa. g such information as to| s y pation in state affairs is gover B o hntege an ia Former Governor William O. Dawsor hard on a sandbar. 158 2d fontlege. as may. ot & was made chairman of the convention Tuna was on her w | 5 T SE1¥ 1 Ehe ey, and 18 was ADT News to Bridgeport, | Held Monthly Meetings. 4 , m th riends to have been turned over to o secretary, the witness sald, re- | 1 t'8 | Colonel F ntrol m ported at monthly meetings the | ok hix e pede = — amount of tonnage sold byeach mem- | N " COPENHAGEN PREPARES | ber during the month and received ¢ bk W- TUBNED. DOWN. TO RECEIVE KING'S BODY | [FO™ the members their bids submit- ; t BB Badel E G Y | ted on competitive combinatio : i _In|National:Soolalier Gonvention Refusss > | “And vou are all competitors?” ask- = addresge throng | to Recognize Organization. Members of Royal Families to Meet It | eq the attorney for the defense. | Terminal Convention | = il at Landing Plac | replied the witn | Indianapolis, 1nd §~The In- el | you are exchan, s | Tt strial Workers orld vost May 16.—Preparations ng each other your | FROM SENSE OF DUTY. thelr fizht for recogniation befor pleied for an impres- | prices, bids and tonmase, your compe- | resident Taft Tel . nhtions S Sodnty Ags of the body tition still goes on?" President Taft Tells Auditors Why He | an overwhelming vo The meeting Frederick VIIL | " “It does,” replied Mz, Deans, | Has Taken Stump. | adopted the report of the committee on | g, | 1abor organizations advising a,neutral No Understandings Reached. 2 fay 1 I would not | attitude regarding labor ns and vhen you left your meetings her { it did | endorsement of neither the American ou had no understanding that you 1 the American we wie T cre| Federation of Labor n n al | were to sell at common prices and than me to defeat Theadore| Workers. S | that vou were to give notification if ; r ency.” Soclalist delegates in symy with e s | you intended to change them, dld e w esident Taft in-| the Industrial Workers had been plan- T e you?" put in Judge Dickinson, for the t s criticism _of Colonel | ning since the convention opened to o L aen nent. Roose ere tonight. “If it were a|obtain recognition of the orsanization il s fars here was no such understanding,” | ¥ personal matter with me,” he| When the maj report was read £aid the witness continued, “1 w be content to abide | advising a neutral position friends of “State whether the chairman ad- t i would remain | the Industr nent were sur- e e Dl monished you that you were usder e sile inder his| prised to thelr three advo- | Wiich have beer ‘:;‘“‘Nd it moral obligations not to get the bus s and pon me. | cates on t mmittee, instead i L iness of your competitors,” pressed the r n m 1 ings in the| making a minority re had affixed he body will remuia there | federal attorney mat t e s of supreme| tieir names to the port #ubs | o and night by detchments | He dld not” eaid Deans. r nee t Amert people. ritted. With the ommittes in g Rt Mol e P 5 ded In the Central| favor, argument was curtailed and the ko Sy e Pf”p"se o Sey D'“""s, Armory t reat crowd. onvention adopted the report without ken away for the funeral at Topping, Who preceded Mr, | The ca n ot to spare his| division. cathedral on Mey 24, he stand, was questioned at roat and kee quiet showed in g el L T T A S | the purpose of the Gary din- | s B Abd it Wik & V- JOWA FOR CLARK. | STRONG ARGUMENTS ticularly as to a dinner he pr-s 5o t who faced the audi- kot TO THE COAL MINERS|! York in January of last year, ence i . He was more | Wils@) Supporters Make Futile Fight sk MNERS | four months. before Mr. i Smphat and more incisive | R TR e s s company gave Judge Ga % o9 " had been for the Yo SRt R s jLaaders Usge Them, to Retify Agrie n of the steel corporation, | lagt two d: Though his voice Was| Byriington, Ta, May 16-—The Towa | ment w Ogerators. n that he intended to c . e sirons b o R Yo B b Ml T the price of bars, As far as he was | most netantly, but I} giriioteq the 26 delegates to the ma- A CORCERSE, Topping said, P m R M | a1 v R 8 Tots. TaE ChsriD ‘W never felt honor bound” to the presid 1 ask jus- i tifar the ynit rals - THE Clde | incert | . but did so as a mat- The crowd st d and cheered and | pporters by a vote of 638 1-2 to 387 L- - DEmpeey, prosi- gave Judge Ga ap: ¢ m with vigor. ' e gl S 1, and Jor - is Intention The pr seme sort of | business cou P ne sor son adherents made a fight tifl | Bpeec throughou s tour, but at| ¢y prevent the appleation of the unit | |B ays expected similar notification | times varied the arguments for sub-|ruid to ghe ¢ i L g from the corporation and other manu- port o s administration. aking and supported by many | i SHCL U of the Payne bill and the need and friends of Har- | 3 e gxisting rthe n, Mr. | | THREE LAWRENCE STRIKE | aft raised a laug 1a er by re- N . marking No G. O. P. in Louisiana. ly, president of the | LEADERS PLEAD NOT GUILTY 1f the democrats w the Rouge, La, May 16.—As an|o strict, tonight told 3 T . it I : hten ) siicn, s regublicsd party no ie agreed with Pres- | All Committed to Jail Without Bail | are to 1 revie exists_in Loul Its fran- | and Fahey that | Until May 27. Amother remark whic 8t today n official re- | working arrange- | & ter was mad > Al the April election were read In | X as the very best proposal thet| Salem, Mass. ay 16.—'Before God, he ) session of the from the employers with- | T know nothing about 1t,” sald Joseph 2re ¥y and the result f a s which might | Caruso, arraigned . in superior court | ) . Only 4,961 vo | v, but he did not spe- | here today on an indictment charging m ¥ epublican andida ! the miners to cepl | the urder of Anna Lo 0 during a ins s than the 10 per cent. required b: e four men composed the sub- | riot at Lawrence on January 29 state law, the organization no longer | committee which negotlated the tenta- | aruso’s reply was entered on | n “progres- | exists. tive een | ord A of not guilty. | sives” mar When he came to Pledged to Champ Clark. T gy I. Industrial Work- | B pe Baltimore, Md,, May 16.—Eig ELEVEN INJURED IN ers of the World leader, and Arturo | t wever, he gates at large and 24 district dele ; A RIOT OF STRIKERS. | Glovannitt, his aide, indicted as e was opposed by n each with half a vote, were elected to — | cessorles before the fact, also pleaded | you see T call them insurgents the democ wational convention by | Not Until Polics Opened Fire Wers | 10 EUIlty. Ettor was smiling through- the Maryland democrats in convention | Rictors ‘But #5 EHaHE _the proc gs, but Caruso and | SCANDALOUS! SCANDALOUS!” | here tod: pledged to supp. g | Hazaimicticaupeared fo foetrapressad presidential candidacy of Speaker | Baltime May 16. —Eley men iy S R S Roosevelt Shocked by Actions of the | Champ Clark “as long as there is ere injured, two of them seriol 1““” semarged 1o s iall Jithout | Taft Supporters chance for his nomination. |in a clash tonight between 500 str | P s e e came WIT . — Minnesota Endorses Rooseyelt. | from the Cipper we e e . Breen, who was convicted in efiance, Ohio, 15 Mol A 16 tn | timore county, and four policemen. 5 o : . | Minneapolis, Minn, May 16.—With y , or court yesterday on one o "¢ | more than $00 delegates of the rox- | SR ROCSIPE Rdenaed a8 D concealing dynamite dur- o sta nvention in | imptely 1,080 delegates to the state re- Kot o . wrence labor troubles, was gton ye ay, as | ¥ were awaiting : publican convention supporters or g by Judge Brown today. i N d mer President Rooseve onven- | émploves on ay_home, and S BT e na n today endorsed Roosevelt and his | tacked the p ; | STAMFORD BOY ADMITS enou: inciples and instructed the Minne- | oP€ ¢ e i s | Presiden ta delegation of 24 to vote for h hrough his. left e 4 STARTING TWO FIRES Irst, last and all the time.” sarted. to run. Insa toshiand | 5 SN perey - : fight many of the attacking party were [ Fired a Tenement Block to Get porhe must scandalous thing qur ab- | NEW HAVEN YOUTH 18 lunbed vy the policemen and two of “Square With His Employer. oy from the pe Wash. | CRIMINALLY RESPONSIBLE | o Stamford, Conm., ) May' 16 Hark Wherever we held primaries in that | Shot lce Cream Vendor Which Result- | Two Years For Robber, Bt il el R R slate we be; hem ' hey were | ed in Latter's Death, Bri port, Conn,, May 16.-—In the | gchool for incorrigibility today, con- rongest, we beat them o one 3 superior court this afterncon Judge | fessed to starting two fires in the | Whor ey were not s etrong, we| New Haven Mas 16.—Coroner Mix | Bennett sentenced John J. Schroiber | Stelke Block, corner of Pacific. and | eat them about elght to one. They | tonight handed down a finding in|to states prison for not more than | Chapel Strects on November 28 and | ad no chance of any kind and so they | which he declares Raymond Hill, age | five years or less than two for holding | May 4 last. The latter. fire caused | ave endeavored to steal what they |18, criminally responsible for the death | up the watchman of the Hawthorn | $3,000 damage and caused a near ranic 4 mot earn, to try by theft to get|of Benjamin Frankel in this city last| factory of this city on February 4 |among the 24 families housed there | what they could not gqt from the peo- | Saturday. Frankel was delivering ice He was also charged with the Greenberg had been employed by the ple {eream on Dixwell avenue, and young ler of Martin Snovah, watchman | Barrisch Pharmacy in the same builde Large crowds met Colonel Roosevelt | Hill and other boys in the nelghbor- | at the Tait Paper Mills, and of rob- | ing and after a quarrel with the pro- during the day. At Lima the streets|hood commenced to torment him be- | bing the Henchel Lace factory. Ihese | pristor, determined to “get even with re flled for several blocks With peo- | cause of his nationality. This angered | latter charges were nolled on the | him, by setting fire. to the buildmng, ple who were unable to gain entrance | Frankel, who struck the bo grounds of insufficient evidence. | according to the alleged confession. into Memorial hall Hill therenpon fired a revolver, the — | The boys father made application While Colonel Roosevelt was speak- | bullet striking Frankel in the face, §400 Burglary at Waterbury. | to have him sent to the reform school ing a man called out 2 causing injuries which resulted in ‘Waterbury, May 16.—Dr. J. Josa | until he shall have reached his ma- What about the third term?” death at a local hospital later. Hill | reported to the police shortly befors | Jority so it is probable that mno Colonel Roosevelt whirled about and | after the shooting went to his home, | midnight tonight that burglar had | charges of incendiartsm will be made pointed his finger In the direction of | where ho was arrested. He has been | broken Into his house at 1068 Fani | against him. the questiomer. hysterical ever since, and on®the yerge | Street and robbed him of §400 in | Y G an't usk me any q n | of a breakdown. money, considerable jewelry and | Deorease of Tuberculosis Deaths. foolish creature, that | can't answer,” e clothing York, May 16,—In-the dec: hie said. I will answer you by quoi-| Seattle Pastor Elected Moderator., 3 3 foom LI Lo, 110, the Aot o bt % words of President Taft's fa-| Loutsville, Ky, May 16.—~The moder Steamship Sailings. tuberculosis in the United States de ther sbout the third term atorship, the Lighest honor in the gift | Queenstown, May 16: Sailed, stoam- | clued from 1969 for each 100,000 per- . He en read the letter writtdn by | of the 124th general assembly of the |er Olymple, f New York | sons living, to 160.3, a decrease of 18.7 g Alphonsa Tafy, the presidencs terfan church in the (’nited w York, May 16: Salled, steamers | per Cent., while the general death rate ier, (o the Clnetnnali Euquirer of America, in session e, | Amerika, for Hamburg; lLa Savole, for uding all canses of death, declined e read in his apeech in Duston | went on the first hailot lato today to | Havre; Cedric, for Tdverpool; Jvernid, one-half us fast, or at’ the rate 1 After quoting Judge Tutt's | the Rey. Dr, Murk A, Matthews, pastor | for Naples. | of 9.7 per cent. from 1855.0 to 1499.8. | pinion in referring to Grants cun-|of the First Presbyterian church,Seat. —— These figures were given out in a ddacy for a third term that the oniy | tls, Wash Out of a tota}-of 803 votes danger lay In the uke of federal pat- Matthews Tomage for the purpose of procurlng a cast, being necessary to elect. Dr, recelyed 418—403 The Early Home of Mark Twain was formally presented to the city of Hannibal, Mo, by George A. Mahan. statement issued today by the National Assoclation for the Study and Preven- tion of Tuberculosis, | gFument and the state of San | uwp? | Avout_a To Help Boost Price of Coffee g AMERICAN MONEY TRUST LENT FINANCIAL AID. PATRIOTIC FINANCIERS Coffee Dealer, Testifying at Investiga- tion, Says That They Wanted to See Ourt Flag in Brazil—Excitable Witness ‘Washington, May 16—The first il- lustration of the activities of the so- called money trust given to the house investigating , committee today was testimony that three New York bank- ing institutions, the National City Bank, J. Plerpont Morgan and Com- pany and the First National Bank, lent financial assistance to the gov- ernment of Brazil to limit the output of coffee and maintain prices of coffee at a profitable figure for the benefit of Brazilian planters and American and European coffee dealers. Testimony of Coffes Dealer. This testimony came from Herman Sielcken of, the New York firm of Crossman dnd Sielicken, large dealers in green coffee. Mr, Sielcken was on the stand more than three hours and his testimony was the first oral in- formation given the committee. Mr. Slelcken attributed to the Na- tional City Bank a patriotic motiv for the Brazilian investment. He re- garded the loan by the bank as of great benefit to the United States and said the bank made the loan reluct- antly to exploit American trade with South America. Witness Gets Excited. Mr. Sielcken was mildly excited at several points of his testimony. He questioned the propriety of the com- mittee going into Brazil's affairs and challenged the Attorney-General of the United States and all the attorn of the country to discover any illega ity in his actions as a coffee mer- chamt. “My business has been pried into by the attorney-gemeral and by grand jurfes and my connection with this valorization plan has been criticized directly and indirectly by the counsel for this committee,” said Sielcken with some heat. Price of Coffee Too Low. The witness said that unless some- thing had been done to help the planters of Brazil there might have been a revolution. The price of coffee had become so low from over production that the Brazilian govern- | ment exercised its right to encourage | planters to diversify their crops. Fle said that while a tax was put on the planting of coffes the Brazilian gov- id not try to prohibit the planting. Paulo | Coffee Would Have Been Higher Anyway. “Which would have been worst, | revolution in _San Paulo or for the consumers of this country to pay much more for all their coffee?’ asked Samuel Untermayer, counsel for | the committe “You would have had to pay that | anyhow” safd Mr. Sielcken. He argued that coffee would be still higher if the valorization seheme had not been put into operation. Attributes It to Patriotisr. Mr. Sielcken made a statement to the committee attributing to ths Na- tional City Bank a display of patriot- ism and an earnest desire to encour- age the commerce of the United States | With South America. ST wanted to see our flag there,” None of Our Business. “Did Schroeder of London have the ame patriotic motive to place the American flag in South American waters?” asked Mr. Untermayer, “1id the French, the German and the Eei- gium bankers have the same motive? “Of course not,” answered Alr. Siel. cken, “but it 18 none of the business of the United States to pry into these matters, What if England sonie other country would come uver to us and go Into the South and try to find out how the price of cotton is kept We would throw them sut.” ‘A SMASH IN GRAIN AND PROVISION PRICES A 2 James Patten Responsible for | Semi-Panic on Chicage Board of Trade Chicago, May received credit tonight reporters for making Chicago board of trade prices take one of the most remarkable somersaults on record. ( reals fell nearly five cents a bushel and packing house products almost dollar a barrel. That Mrs, Patten designed uch upset of quotations as took place h. today for all kinds of grain and pro- visions no person asserts. It was said, however, that a gigantic selling move- ment which got beyond all control to- day had its beginning in his judgment and action regarding the wheat mar- The firm with which Mr. Patten 's connected was estimated th 16.—James fr A. Patten m markst an e evening to have sold upwards of 5,000,000 bush- els of wheat within the last 48 ho quarter of th have been for Mr. Patten's personal account, with some portion of the total | at a loss. tee of that to ing mandamus proceedings against Pr uting At- torney Edwin C. Dickinson to compel | him to enforce the Su laws.” The Victory of the Goulin zovern- | ment in the provincial elections of | Wednesday has been made complete. | 3 latest figures ar Lib als 62, servatives 17, elections to be held | to th One of the consequences of the smash | was the free calling of margins to- night, but there was a disposition ‘o assume that the worst of the semi- panic had gone by. FOREIGNERS MERIT KINDLY TREATMENT Governor Baldwin Says They Bring Us More Than They Take Away. Plainville, Conn, May 16.—Gov. S. E. Baldwin was the guest of honor at | the annual banquet of the Plainville business men's association tonight. He made the principal address, speaking particularly upon the influence of for- eign immigrants on -this country, “These people bring us more than they take away,” said the governor. “They merit kindly treatment and a good deal of forbearance on our part. We must make allowance for their ig- norance of our ways, our language and our laws. If we do, we shall 1 them a good deal ltke ourselves w do by them as we aliould be doue by if we had to work for our lving Poland or Sietly.” Women Elect a Woman Mayor, Sheridan, Wyo., May 16.—Mre. § Wissler, a_widow, has been ele mayor of Dayton, Wyo., on the inde pendent ticket. were cast by womep must | Job in | 186 | ineluding women znd children, d | county court A majorkty of votes | has six saloons and six whele sale 1q- | mally dropped from the Condensgd Telegrams Huger Elliott, Director of the Rhode Island School of Design, has resigned 'to become director of the School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Boston. The Cotton Belt Railread has re- sumed traffic into Cairo, IIl, after having been shut out for more than seven weeks by floods, An Amendment to ths Electoral Bill which granted partial female suffrage was rejected by the Iialian chamber by & vote of 218 to 47, Byla Vote of 110 to 108 the Massa- chusetts house refused to reject a providing for a statue to the memory of General Benjamin Butler, The General Conference of the Meth- odist Bpiscopal church in Minneapolis voted to retire Bishops H. W. Warren, D. S. Moore and T. B. Neeley Political Leaders of All Parties Panama were officiaily notified that the Unlted States would supervise the next elections held in that country. Professor Benner of the University of Plitsburg exhibits a quart of soot ]\akcn from the lung had of ane ived in Pittsburg 50 ye m The Name of Major Archibald W.| Butt, President Taft's , who went down with the Titanic, has been for- United States army roll. C. M. Derrickson, a Member of the bodyguard of President Lincoln, who is said to have carried the first word of | the assassination to the White House, is dead in Mone The House Com: tures in the agric departmert yesierday postponed indefinitely wcti-n on the Nelson resolution to invest the meat inspection ser on expendi- The Greenfield, Mass., Savings Bank, which was closed three years ago cause of RICHESON § LAST HOPE VANISHES Governor Foss Announces That Executive Clemency Will Not Be Extended Condemned Man, =~ THE CASE WILL NOT GO BEFORE THE COUNCIL Alienists Report The Clergyman Sane, Though Subject to Fits of Hysterical Insanity—Richeson a Neurotic, Som« nambulist and Neurasthenic, But Accountable For His Crime—News Not Yet Broken to Him. Peston, May 16.—Clarence V. T.|accountable for his crime, and that Richeson's last hope of escaping the | the exercise of executive clemency in death cha next week for the murder | this instance would be contrary to of Avis Linnell of Hyannis, expir the public good tonight when Governor Foss anno: i that he would not refer Richeson’s nced | petition for commutation of sentence | Affidavits Not Suitable For Publication “The affidavits and medical evidence | el el as to Richeson's unfavorable heredity, his lapse of consclousness and his Experts Find Richeson Sane. attacks of delirfum, are too volumi= The statement from the governor | nous to include in this statement sad followed closely the filing of the re- | are not suited to publication. ports of the special insanity commis- | “The alienists referred to are: D slon which declared the condemned | Edward B. Lane and Dr. Isidor . man sane although subject to fits of | Coriat, acting for the defense: Dr. L hysterical inganity. The commission [ Vernon Briggs, acting at the personal found that Richeson was sane at the | request of the governor; and Doctors time of the murder and that he is | Henry R n, George T. Tuttle sane at the present time. and Henry P. Frost, acting as a come Insenity in Richeson 'Family: misslon for the commonwealth.” In the death chamber at Charles- | Nows Not Yet Broken to Richesoms town the prisoner has borne himself Richeson was not informed of the calmly since he was transferred fr uukfuv‘”‘ or's decislon tonight. His the Charles Street | Tuesda it | Spiritual adviser, I H. 8, Johnsom, was apparent that he still had hopes | and the pri hapiain, Rev. . W. that clemency would be extended h Stebbins, visited the prisoner at eight it was believed today that this| o id remained with him for am _poor investments, will be jre- was keeping up his spirits hour. At the time they entered the opened this year, an announcemenf to | statement issued by Governor | death chamber they were not sware, thig effect being made yesterda | Foss shows ‘that the Aitetists’ fokt lvw‘\\tu‘: of the governors fiading. st e t Richenonts Srnity Wl SIMAEE pon leaving the death house itev Dr. Harvey W. Wilsy, former chiot | ot ooy e e ndt | Mr Jolinson was istusiet T2 B 7ohemis of the United & the condemmed man is himself s |first time of the decision. *I am very day Dbecame the father | neurotic, a =omnambulist and a|8orry, I had held hopes that it might first born. Dr. Wiley, v | neurasthenic and subject to hysterical | be different” he sald. “Howewer, [ married to Miss Anna [ heanity { think the governor has acted very year ago. {5 Yha statetnatit Salows: lw‘vn&.mri\( ,uurb;;vihlknm justion u‘l —iin p =2 wisdom in submitting the matter to Unseasonable Weather Prevai Gov. Foss' Statement. gen- erally throughout the cou ept In the extreme northwest, with tem- | peratures from 10 to 15 degres below | what they ordinarily are at this time of | On Night Schools in the Rural d tricts of Kentucky, members of the| State Association of Country School | Superintendents base hopes of elim- | ating a large propo adult illieracy. )n of the state’s Peter Classer, an Aviator, njured n an ae | leath of Rayr Wheeler, died g an amputation of his left leg the knee, | who wa evenin, ollowir above After Having Been lanta s mc “Out” last Saturday of that paper vesterday morning, the resuming n the At- ned to work y member of former place. eve his Power Has Been Given by the Hart- ford Central Labor union to a commit- body al majority 45.> cations Are That All of the in-| ternatianal officers h e been ed ) larg: majorit than twc ears | James M. Lynch esident of the In- ternational aphical union of the Corr Manufacturing company, at Taunton, Mass., manufacturers of print cloth, was amicanly settled ves- | terday and the 500 operatives returned r work. The Reliable Manufacturing com- pany, a thread mill in tral F rupt y day on The & sle showed a of and liabilities of $27,935. “Qught Not to Pass” was the unani- mous report the house commitce on ways and means on a l\“fl;\"‘ T an investigation and regulation of tele- phone rates and in Massact Selina Smith, the Gypsy, who has ved in a caravar her life, died in England at the ag 101. '8 has earned her mean most entirely by fortune teiling was an inveter- | ate pipe smoker Pleasant View the late Mrs. F of the Chris nce chureh, not be sold paid taxes, as under protest It was Discovered That Six of men w the cave-in Ironwood, Mich,, were s othe even who were buried were dead | when the rescuers dug down tolthem Tradesmen and Modistes in London will be hit fipancially by the death of the at e-in_of ine King Frederick of Denmark, as the Fnglish court will go into mourning untl June 5 and into half mourning for a short time v that Mrs. Adelaide Redding, mot George Redding, Jr. now under tence of death for the murder of ris Greenberg, wus vesterday insane by Judge Studley of the bate court at New Haven An Investigation Into the Milk by ness in Massachusetts and other New England states was ted vesterday by New England farmers, through the Boston Co-operative Milk Producers’ company, with a hearing at the Bos- ton (huriber of commerce. Former Justice Henry Gildersleeve was appointed guardian for Mrs. Mad- eline Torce Asitor, and Langdon P, farvin was appointed guardien for illiam Vincent Astor until the will of is admitted to pro- rday Jucol Winthrop, Mo., Said to be the “wet test” town of its slze In the courrtry, is to be lmited in the number of sa- loons. The town has $3 Inhabitants, nd the licenses has just issued for four additional saloons. | jury early this afternoon, when Com- {ed [ the | Staples decided to adjourn court, pre- | France, whence their mother hurMed It now uor houses. < allenists &s he has.” utive clemency will not be ex- May Be Told Today. tended in the case of Clarence V. T, a Richeson. The prisoner was sentenced | When asked if he would notity {he upon hig own confession and without | Prisoner of his fate in the mornin trial for a crime which it appears| Mr. Johnson eaild he could not tell impossible that any normal man| Deputy Warden Allen said tooight | could commit that the prison officials would not give “After his confession and sentence | the prisoner the news. He expected a plea of insanity wa t up by his| it would be nveyed to him some counsel and strongly supported by | time tomorrow either through the Affidavits extending over his life. The | condemned man's counsel, Mr. Worse, character of these afidavits leit no|OF ome of the clergymen, Rev. Mry | other course for the governor than to | Stebbins or Rev. Mr. Johnson. | submit these and the prisoner him- Crank Near Death House. self to an examination by our leadix Richeson's dy passed very quiagiyl alienists in order protect the com- | e wrote no letters but received threq mo b from the charges that the | gromVic B8 FEErE o0 ity man was ac ally insane when the | he only unusual event ahout the deed was committed as well as at the | nrigon was the appearance this morme g Ing of a supposed crank near the “oor Victim of Hysterical Insanity. to the death house. H ried W The evidence shows that Riche- | revolver and when discovered ran oat son’ £ ly is heavily ed w of the prison yard and escaped. In insanity, that he himself is neurotic, a | his flight he a number of somnambulist and a neurasthenic; | loose cartridges. that he is subject to extreme emotional | Willam A, M counsel for Riche. disturbances marked by loss of mem- | Son, felt ver keenly the governor'd ry, which two alienists has g- | decislon. He sal nosed as hysterical insanity, or < Lawyer Morss Feels Very Sad. adding the alternative te of “Though 1 feel that the al delirium, and the majority opinion_indicating 'that these attacks | Submitted warranted a ¢iffersnt cone were hysterical attacks marked by | foRit S8 GO0 O 8 Po emotional disturbances of brief dura- | 1 Wish to thank Governor Foss for Hia tion, With loss of memory during the | Boushtful cousideration of the petition % e for commutation of Richeson's sen- sttack and for a varying period fol- | {005 e vay' just and courageons i o enough in the midst of a bitter ery Is Accountable For His Crime. |for vemgeance to pause and look “The evidence however, which|around him. I who have been so clearly revealing these attacks, indi- | near Richeson ing all these months cated tha this crime was not commit- | feel very sad that it must finally end ted by him during such an attack. |in his being killed by the method s Therefore, while there is some diverg- | present aproved by the law. Fe now ence of opinfon among the alienists as | must look for merciful judgment to to whether these attacks indicate | his God to whose service in the ine actual insanity, there is sufficient | nocence of his boyhood had conses ground for the conclusion that he is | crated himselt.” JURY IS OUT IN THE CASE OF FLOYD ALLEN. Had Failed to Reach Verdict After Six and a Half Hours. BOLAND'S STATEMENTS “UNQUALIFIEDLY FALSE" Vice President Brownell Witness at Archbald Hearing, Wythevillé, Va., May 16—The jury delfberating the fate of Floyd Allen of the mountain clan who shot up the court of Carroll county, was locked up at 9 o'clock tonight, after six and a half hours’ deltberation of the case. If a verdict is reached during the night it will not be reported until-court con- venes tomorrow. The case went to the Washington, May 16.—A flat dental of the statements by W. P. Boland, on which the charges against Judge Robert W. Archbald of the commerce court were based, was entered before the house judiciary committes today by G. F. Brownell, vice president and general counsel for the Erie raflroad, Brownell declared emphatically thet the statements made by Boland to At« torney General Wickersham regarding Brownell's connection with the pro- posed sale of the Katydid culm du to Judge Archbald and Edward J, Willlams were “unqualifiedly false.” “I want this committee to ask Mr, Boland specifically about every states ment W. P. Boland made in the ste torney general's office regarding connection with this transaction,” Mr., Brownell, “I_pronounced unqualifiedly false, It Eoland will make | the statements under oath that he gave to the attorney general, I want tg say that he will be liable for perjury.” Mr., Brownell said that the charges made by Boland that Brownell urged the sale of the culm banks to Archbald, after the latter had on the rallroad official, was “grotesque« ly and absurdly false.” C. C. Boland, brother of W. P. Be= monwealth’s Attorney Wysor conclud- his argument. After three hours’ deliberation the jury returned to the court room. The foreman announced that no verdict had been reached, but that Juror W, T. Williams wanted fur- ther instructions regarding the possi- bility of a verdict for a lesser crime than murder in the first degree. The court outlined the law and the jury again retired. After a two the court was convened. Jury h: hour recess for dinner At 9 o'clock ng faled to agree, Judge cluding the announcement of a verdict until tomorrow. TITANIC'S WAIFS CLAIMED, Young French Mother Gets Her Two Small Boys. —_ land, will be called when the come New York, May 16—Two little French | mittee meets tomorrow, and an boys, known the world over as the [ will be made to reach W. P, “Titanic walfs,” were claimed by their [ himself before adjournmeng. mother, Mmme. Marcelle Nayratil, to- prroesdeicoaty v - day. The meeting took place in the | A NATIONAL MOVEMENT dren's society rooms at Twenty- third street and Kourth avenue, a AGAINST “THIRD TERM" short time after Madame Navratil hed landed from the White Star liner Oce- anic. No one was permitted to enter the room where the wailfs greetad their young mother, who is only twen- ty-one. It was six weeks since their father, who went down on the Titanie, had spirited them away from .Nics, Being Organized in St. Louis by Res publicans Who Opposed Grant in 1880, St. Louis, May 16.—Several hundred of the most prominent republicans im 8t. Louts, headed by Judge R. E. Ram bauer, have signed a pledge that they will not support Theodore Roosevelt 1§ he should be nominated in As soon as the petition has names it is the intention of, Judge Rom~ bauer to start to work In’ other citied and make the organization a Detiome wide affair. The organization of the term plodg: as the petition imown, has been under way for a few days. The petitfon in its statement that the based ugainst the third teswm, Favorable Report on Trolley Boston, May 16,—A troltey bl wthon pizing the New TYerk, Haven wnd Harttord Radl control of all of the Mnes in Massachusetts to claim the boys, after deciding that they were really her own. Found His Family Asphyxiated. Bligabeth, N. J, May 16.—Returnin to his home from werk today, Michael Minalicska, a mechanic, found his home flooded with gas and his wife, Anna, ars old, and his two chil- dron, Amelta, 4, and Theodore, 3, dead. A board had been torn fram the ceils ing of tho kitchen and the gaspipe had been broken. Medals for Red Cross Nurses. Washington, May 16--Red Cross nurses who perform exceptionally praiseworthy gervice probably will be rewarded in future by a decoration to bo known as the “IMlorence Nightingale * in homor of the famous BEng- cester will be he G, ‘rm lish nurse, ] rows i ovidence