Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 22, 1912, Page 1

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I P VOL. LIV—NO. 124 NORWICH, CONN., WEDNESDAY, MAY 22, 1912 A RICHESON'S BRAIN FOUND NORMAL Autopsy Performed on the Bc;dy of the Executed DISPOSITION OF THE REMAINS IS UNCERTAIN Circumstances Arise to Prevent Their Removal to Virginia— Matter Will Probably Be Settled Today—Rev. Mi. John- son Says Questions Were Asked Richeson While Oc- cupying Chair to Relieve Suspense of Waiting for Death. # Boston, May 21—The body of Clarence | nesses who might not be 1| Berlin, May 21.—The reichstag to- V. T. Hicheson, who was executed in | men, Warden Bridges sald that e | day third reading of the the electric chair at the state prison | would give the signal to | el=c- | pills increasing the Germany army and in Charlestown early foday for the | trician while Richeson was making his | navy; the navy bill provides for an murder of Avis Linnell, lay- at the | reply. extra battle squadron for which three North Grove street morgue tonight.| Questions Were Extemporaneous, | additional battleships and two cruisers ‘)_\rl‘xl»r in :i?' day Dr. u,.mz'e I: x}hlk “We thought that probably he would | 8¢ to be constructed before 1920. irath, medical examiner of Suffolk |, —¢° O ? S0 quickly B e Praars b county, performed the autopsy re- | b¢ ¢ t;‘l’mh:\]'uif:r :‘:innl;fiisnmn ouia Toulor, Fiante, May 4 The Eoise quired by law in the case of executed |y S0 L N Y Gugh the work of | Of Wales arrived here today from Paris murderers son’s brain w and declared The Bulletin's Girculation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and Its Total Girculation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to e City's Population Murderér by the Medical Examiner that Rich s normal. Disposition of Body Uncertain. D ¥ er of the de & matte e settl omor- v g to v e for Jesus'| o b v s~ B S0 RS IR S Mg Gilor. | N e T T renaon al of Mrs. | that the company now only owned Tow, it is expected, at conference in | sake, and his answer, L am willing to | LONCO . gt about 29 plants against 375 indepen- Mere e e rmey o iam A | that he Spoke, as the signal was eiv- | militant suffragettes, and Mr. and Mrs, | dent plants. Though admitting that Morse, who was Richeson's counsel. [ e n]‘ Tife Hassed Gut. { Pethick Lawrence, joint editors of |some of the original constituents of It was the understanding, previous | en and his life pas B Votes Women, on the charge of | the company were competitors, they R O Mo oty of the Went to Death as a Christian. conspiracy and of inciting their fol- |were combined, he said, solely for the Sheie g 5 ey “”\‘_’}‘! e tak- | wwhy did I put that particular | lowers to the malicious damaging of | purposé of doing a larger business, o mh'f‘,;ut]}?-‘f.‘:mf:‘.“".jl‘ s Loy | anist xrosn"l It :\;e#ulufi\llly ?}‘li‘“,fu‘n“n" roperty, will be concluded tomorrow. A Contradiction of Statements. o stances arose today | oonyersation with him that afternoon. = 3 which prevented the plan from being | fo'a conversation with him 48 hours | GENERAL RICHARDSON THE The stecl corporation in its answer carried out before his death I sought in vain to A the government's suit says of the R , bring him to a point where he would NEW PRESIDENT GENERAL | organization of the bridge company ev. Mr, Johnson's Statement. Sl lat “the size and character of the R Sasbert 5 0 rather die than spend a lifetime con- | . . s e . tey. Herbert §. Johnson, pastor of | (qot 250 G P01 ours and = | Ohio Man Selected as Head of Sons |structures built required larger capital n.; W Arren }‘-‘vm;- Baptist "“_”'":'- half before his execution he saw our | of American Revolution. | and greater skill than could be com- ¥ho was spiritual advisor accompanied | JOU%, PTRe NS SROCRlion be Saw out| | manded by small concerns: Richeson to the electric ch issued | 1 hi; 5 R s fainine 10 a brave Christlan gentleman.” | . Boston, May 2L—Gen. James M.| Dr. Roberts failed to support this Eertain questions were soied the con. | Advised Relatives Not to Visit Him, |Richardson of ~Cleveland, 0. was |argument when question by R, V. Lin- S atioun ars SIS fib con- |, OIS 3 . unanimously elected president general | dabury, counsel for the corporation, demned man us he was being strap. | No relative had seen the condemn- | of tne National Soclety of the Sons of | stating that several of the constiuent 3 n the chair he purpose of | ed man after he entered the state | tno American Revolution at the clos- | concerns were entirely capable of han- taking Richesor's mind off the ordeal | pr ison, but Richeson bore them no ill | jng pusiness session of the twenty- | dling contracts for structures built at and to meet Richeson's wish to leave | will for he himself, while anxions to | (b5 DUS s e all | that time. some religious testimony for the wit- | see his brother and sister, who were | .il0, annual consress in Faneuil ha nesses. Mr. Johnson's stat #s follows: death chair thoughts off himself and could occur w tressing suspe plained 1o me signal for the application of the cur- rent when the man's breath was ex- He also requested me, 8o far before haled. @s possible keep Richeson ena to keep other things. Wanted to do Some Good Before He cheson of Chicago, broth- d man, was undecided re- ‘The warden said that he wished I could make the the execution talking mind engaged from his with Died. ement in part was to about it placing the man in the cha. more questions. Were extemporaneous. in Boston during the week, one bearing the word asked by the governor to ch.'sse, would take the one with death writ- Stebbins, according to what the chap- lain told Attorney Morse shorily aft- er the execution this morning. Wanted_a Pardon at First. In discussing the closing scenes in was_done E yet it took longer than I had estimated and consequently 1 had to s These questions advised | ainst thelr visiting the death house. am afraid the shock would be too “ommutation’ | and the other ‘Death,’ and . “ad been | ! ten on it,” said Richeson to Chaplain times. Derlin, May 21 day passed the fi ings of a pen: —The fon bill = for war. secretary Germany stated of state for war, tonight. tonight that Secretary for his heaith,™™ London, May 21.—The attack commons this_afternoon, when very severely handled. and embarked on board the Admiral Boue de will spend seve manoeuvres in 1 | the French fleet. days ® | this forenoon. Greeley Parker president of Lowell. The general has been a president several times. other positions. | of the bat presidents, had been a candi for the office of president general, Richardson be made unanimous, The vice presidents elected are win Sanford reichstag st and second read- military | aviators which ranks accidents ocour- ring to them while flying on the same level as casualties incurred in time of He succeeds Dr, Mo Cabled Paragraphs Paris, May 21.—The issue of city of aris bends to the total of $41,000,000 or the extension of the municipal gas system has been oversubscribed eighty London, May 21.—Viscount Haldane, left for It was officially Hal- dane’s visit to Germany was purely of a private nature and was undertaken on Sydney Buxton, president of the board of trade, in connection with the Titanic disaster was renewed in the house of | the | slackness of the board of trade was French battleship Danton, the flggship of Vice la Peyrere, where he witnessing the Mediterranean of new vice » 4 v omid s He is a prom- | 210 & o nle man Ik fromfhe | ways’ linger with {heme o ol the | nent manufacturer of his home eity | G o er knowleags. ot o as that would take 3 o y before the | 204 is & lea 9 2 -am- | bridge company’s r ials, as that would take his Mr. Johnson the day before the | {10\ 05 8 A0 1 RTS8 IV IR | bridse company's directors or offcials, his passing ution, ern' Reserve chapter: A. R, presi he declared, ‘as an interesting |§Ed vithout a period of - i i . b e o5 G o™ e Wity 58’ 7. There B et a Was Anxious to Die. dent of the Presbyterian union, was | thre of the Wit vee' testimany. “here how he would give ine | ‘If tWo cards were presented to me, | chairman of the McKinley memorial : commission, and has served in various Commander John H. Moore, U. S. N. tleship Wyoming, one of the idate but he moved that the election of General Bd- Crandon of Cambridge, At e pisptins and I then agreed | the dedth house Mr, Morse. maid to-|acer nonry - A dosiyn of Provi- hat we 1d induce Richeson to | day: “I firmly belteve that had a par- | Jcnce Neweil B. s e leave Some kind of a religious testi- | don been handed to Richeson he would | 554 N, Yy Hon Amedes B. Cole of oy, for, the, withisaes! (o the exs- | have tefuved it, so anxious was he 10| o o erssy g O D. Baldwin of aon o th Dian appeaied to Rfch. | @fe. He told Chaplati Stebbins that | Son Francisco, ' Their elections were exc He had wished that he might | he had wanted a pardon at the outset, | LIARImOUS. Ao e ik A B fojjeome good before he died. e had | but as he looked back he felt that i | t1¢¥ et and chose by g T e fulled in his ministry and he thougbt | all for the best and had been | o6, pragident, . Mee Haitiwin that his testi i might lead to mony At his a religious life any it execution shaped by the Almighty God and he was prepared to die, GENTLEMAN BURGLAR DILLON KILLS A WOMAN RESULT IN RECONCILIATION DISGORGES $20,000. AND A T| sl v A TRAINKILLS HIM. | ofiogr. of Germany Army' Now. Ba- Dewelry and Diamonds Located in a|Chicago Police Solve a Los Angeles comes Heir to Claim to Throne. Safety Deposit Vault. | —The Murder Mystery. Berlin, May 21.—The death of Prince New York. May 21.—Jewelry and| Chicago, May Z1—The Chicago po. | Ge0rsc William, the eldest son of the @iamonds valued at $20,000 were found |lice tonlght have no doubt that C. ¢, | Duke of Cumberland, which occurred * the police in a safe deposit [ Dillon, who was killed by = train in a |} @0 automobi B TicatSmrie- e Harlem brance of the | Chicago suburb last Saturday, was tha | 53¢k last even: it cdip b Colonial Trust company which was |slayer of the Los Angeles murder vic. | SUccession to the throne of Hanover : fented by B urtis, the alleged |tim, and that Miss Minnie Quinn I Jornxee thothier, ”“"”‘l ‘“‘fg‘ purglar of the “Feau Brummel' ’type, |former Chicago domestic, was the sl Aug who is a lieutenant in the } Who has refused to make a statement, | Developments & po R tion sconciliation between th @ccompanied the police to the Colonial | were: R the case today | pry, and the Hanoverian house Jrust compans. where scores of men | A trunk which rélatives of Miss|2n® the abandonment of the latter's Pand won homes have been | Quinn told the police belonged to her | CliM o the throne. This has neve Tobbed w last vear had gath- [ was found in Dillow's home, *The jroc. | been renouncéd. The situation will be izl hidden plunder. Yhs bag he earrled back fighy Tog |indloated DY ihe now neirs retention i at k from another | Angeles also was identifie 1og | OF Tesignation of his commission as ' a rtis said as the detectives re. | Quinn ntifled as. Miss | o German officer, which also will dem- the five packages from the | Railroad employes told detectives | ONStrate whether the Duke of Cum- { 1 paid $500 for the whole | that Miss Quinn and Dillon lefr cpy. | Perland ik B o ke { ot cago for Los Angeles the withCfi: |sions to the throne and his self-im- § the police searched the flat|Apell 1 s &7t o1 posed exile at Gmunden, in upper by Curtis under the name of | Mrs. Dillon admitted that her hus. | AUStTIa. 2 woman gave them the key to |band on his. return from = Calitoress | Ss e fhe sate deposit vauit. 1y (]hn apart- gave her a diamond ring, a_woman's | HAD NIGHTMARE OVER 3 diamonds and jewelry wort watch and a gold bracelet, S Tn- " | fuore than §5.000 were found packed in | ed them over to John Adeock of Hien: RGBS EXECUTION. runks and suit cases mond, Va., a cous i ho ia| ERERAPPY [ In investigating the career of Cur- |now faking Dilions tade 1 et 'S, 12 | Coniemned Colorado Murderer Unable fais, detectives found he had visited the | Miss Quinn is known fo have had 4 to: Slesp Thinking. of It. Metropolitan opera house cast one | diamond ring and a watch, § % % Pisht & week and had spent most of | Mrs. Joseph Barclay reported that| Denver, Col, May 21.—Oscar Cook, Sin the expensive restau- | Dillon and Miss Quinn lived at her | murderer, condemned to die in Novem- ant Broadway and in the most [hiome from Jan. 20 to March 30 1913 | PEF, rose from bis cot in the condemn- Rxclusive hotels. Saveral wealthy mes | a8 s ot e, 2, | ed cell in the county jail at midnight &nd %omen, including J. P. Morgan, g | and hoarsely called to his guard: Jr reported losses by robbery | Has that preacher Richeson been geeently. and they have been asied by | CRANE NOT CANDIDATE | electrocuted yet? I can't sleep think- jthe police to assist in the identification FOR A RE-ELECTION | & 0f him.” welry found in the strong box : i ON | “Through the night as ‘the guard t apartment occupied by T e | the corridor the condemned Massachusetts Senator Contemplates | man oling to the bats of his col Wha turned: svst 1 tiis Retirement from Politics. | “Can’t you telephone the news- lerk at police headquactors ; == papers and find out if he died like a the detectives Washington, May 21.—Senatc man or a cur? See if he ha be ¢ - it e Murray Crane of Massachusetts an” | ried” he asked. -Is it easier than to hich put him down as having | N0U2Ced today that he would not be a | be hanged? Do you think there is any pl erms nr‘ imprisonment candidate for re-election to the United | chance of the state putting in a chair nz Sing and the other in B 8 _— GREEK ARRESTED FOR DESECRATING THE FLAG [Clinton Striker ner witl “lipton. Mas Carried American Ban- h Letters on It. . 21 —During a parade f strike the Lancaster today, Stan hiavarus, a , who was bearing an American flag. was taken out of the Iine by two | policemen and denecrating the placed under arrest for fiag, which bore the dotters: I W, W." The Greek, who made no resistance, was taken o the police station, A fully lodded revolver was removed Jfrom his hip pocket. An additional @barge of carrying concealed weapons Fae lodged against him and he was ed up, BRIDGEPORT TROLLEYMEN TURN DOWN INCREASE. Mesting at Ha Trolleym & Pl froliesmen at o moeing (hut Jased | ¢ morning decldsd Lo tirn down | qnie the o Tor an in. A meeing in Hertfard tadey, at which | 9 i o xpdeied th Meial » offer, rtford Today for All on of the Stat: onn, May 22—The lo Conneatigil compuny In wages, There will bo i state trofidymen will on regurding tle com- ates senate before the primaries in his stats next autumn, He states me months ago I definitely decid- ed not to hecome a candidate for re- election as United States sen: tor, but 1intended to defer making a statement 1o that effect until after the r epublican national convention. There is, howev- a propodition pending in the Mas- chusetts legislature for the nomina- tion of United States senators suh- isting relating to the nominations of enacted a much earlier campaign for this lv?('p will Be necessary, and I therefofe make known my position at this tite in order that those who may be Interested in becoming candidates may have the fullest opportunity to have their candidacies considered.” ITALIAN INDICTED FOR WILTON MURDER No Bill Found Against Alleged Sound Beach Murderer, Bridgeport, May 21—The grand jury |oday returned a true bill of murder in the first degree against Guiseppe | Malvuses for sh ng Herry Maudiin at Wilten last fall, He will prohably be tried ut the Septamber term of su- perigr court heve, The jury lailed to James L. Stewart at Sound Beach on April 1. He will probanly be iried for imansluughlor wi this term of courl, stantially eimilar to the law now ex- | candidates for the presidency, repre- sentatives In congress and state elec- tive offices. If this proposed law is | find ‘g trde bill against Roland Hedges, | wha was gharged with the murder of | iajor Joslyn third, Mr, W surth and Mr DEATH OF PRINCE MAY before November?” Cook refused to return to bed, his dreams. ARMED NEGROES BEGIN OPERATIONS IN CU Have Scized Large Number of Ho; and Quantity of Explosives. Santiago, Cuba. May 21. armed negroes, headed by { Estenoz_and Ivonet, are reported Cobre and San Luie, and also at v ous points close to this city. band led by Ivonet passed through company The authorities consi tion OBITUARY. Sir Julius Charles Wernher. lime and gambling erating in the vicinity of El Caney, E 00d- Crandon fifth, de- claring that horrible nightmares filled BA. rses Parties of Generals op- ari- The the Firmeza property of the Juraga Iron seizing a large number of harses and a quantity of explosives. er the situa- serious, but refuse to give out to- % S | How Morgan Gobbled Bridge Company °| Russia to Connect Tiflis and Vladikav- Morgan Got The Bridge Company GOBBLED UP WITH OFFICIALS ASLEEP AT SWITCH. TESTIMONY OF ROBERTS Financier Exchanged Steel Stock for Bridge Stock Without Knowledge or Consent of Company’s Directors. New York, May 21—Percival Rob- erts, Jr., director of the United States Steel corporation, a member of its finance committee and a defendant 1 the government suit to dissolve the corporation under the Sherman anti- trust act, testified concerning the or- ganization of the American Bridge Co. at the continuation of the hearings to- day. § No Intent to. Monopolize Industry. Dr. Roberts, who was president of the bridge company when it was taken over by the United States Steel cor- poration in 1901, denied that the com- pany was originally organized with the object of monopolizing the {idustrs He said that at that time (1960) the company’s output amounted to only 38 per cent. of the entire output of How Co. secured control of the bridge company on be- J. P. Morgan & the price at whic, be sold, he said, 4, P. Morgan & Co. merely -issued a circular offering to exchange Steel corporation - stock for stock of the bridge company at 110, Steel preferred at 150, Steel common | par, for the preferred and common stocks of the bridge company. Stockholders Accepted Offer. This offer was accepted by _ths stockholders and that was all, there was to ii, Mr. Roberts said, explain- | ing, however, that as an individual he knew that the offer was to be made, shortly before it became public, and that as far as his own holdings’ were concerned had told Charles Steele of P. Morgan & Co, that the offer as satisfactory, Subsequently Robert Bacon, then a Morgan partner, offered | him a directorship in the Steel cor- the stock was to he sold his stock under the terms of offer, | WAITER ARRESTED AS A MURDER SUSPECT. Lot Known to Have Been Friendly With Widow Who Was Strangled. Boston, May 1—at vestig: | Jewar, v —After six hours' in- ion of the death of Mrs. Lillian ho was found strangled in he apartments in the South Bnd, the po- lice took into custody today a sus picious character, Charles W. Hop- DPing, a waiter and formerly of Law- rence, Mass. Chief Inspector Dugan stated that Hopping had known the woman for some months, that he was with her in | New York last winter and was with | her in a West End palm garden on Friday night. Medical Examiner Leary who performed an autopsy on the body of the woman this morning, notified the police that the -voman | probably died early Saturday morn- ing. The body of the woman was found ' early today. by R. A. Bassett a milk- | man. The police were notified nd the medical examiner after a hasty ex- | amination stated that death was due to strangulation from a towel knotted about the neck. In their invéstigation, the police Gis- covered that Miss Pearl Charette of the city knew the woman, and from her it was learned that Mrs. Jewar came here from Montrea Miss Charette also stated that the cead wo- man had an eight year old daughter in_Connecticut. The trail soon led to a small eating saloon on Bromfield street, and there during the forencon, Hopping was ta en into custody. At noon Hopping was still at police headquarters under examination, | STONE RE-ELECTED BY ENGINEERS' BROTHERHOOD Showed Up So Strong the Election Was Made Unanimoiis, Harrisburg, Pa., May 21.—Warren S. Stone of Cleveland, d chief of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engi- neers since 1903, was re-elected today for a term of six fears, but one ballot being taken. Stone had so many of the 791 votes cast that the election was made unanimous, The convention then proceeded to the election of assistant engineers, of whom four are to be chosen, and th elections will be concluded as rapidly as possible. In addition to balloting, the convention heard appeals of lodges and discussed features of the brother- hood constitution and fixed Thursday as the time for acting on the insurance features of the order, which are to be | considerably changed, according to present plan ok PLANS LONGEST TUNNEL. poration, he said, and that after that Averted Clash U. 8. CAVALRY TROOP CHASES * MEXICANS DEFY THEM Line Up in Battle Array and Shout “Death!”—Claim They Failed Fabens, Texas, May 21—Troop B f the Fourth United States Cavalry to- day chased a band of three hundred death, and formed in battle array. 200 feet, wishing to avoid conflict, but Texas Rangers, C. H. Webster and C. H. Moore went into the road and manded that the Liberal leaders en- ter into a parley. Did Not Recognize American Soldiers. Four captains including Jose Cor- dova explained to the rangers that they had not recognized can_soldiers, their way to meet yesterday recaptured Guadaloupe. Advance Guard of Two Armies in Com- five miies north main body of Huerta's army is being | pushed to the front. | Escalon was occupied by the federals at 3.15 p. m. yesterday without resist- The dynamite trains sent against the federals by Orozco were stopped by federal cannon. Concerning the situation President Madero said tonigh: “Taking advantage of a halt of the present column, the Tebels turned loose one after another three engines with trajlers be resumed.” CONGRESSMAN HIGGINS | (democrat) and Higgins of Connecti- cut (republican) proposed prohibition would apply only to the canal, but would affect all vessels owned by railroads and work passenger and freight steamers plying the sound between New York, Provi- | dence and Fall River, which vessels are owned and operated the Hartford railroad as a part of its sy and Hudson, and bald will take the stand fomorrow, | CONDITION OF MAINE ORCHARDS. | States senator to succeed W. Murray Crane. ment declared the withdrawal of Sen- ator Crane to foreshadow the passage of the senatorial primary preference bill now before the Massachusetts leg- islature, Rockland, Me,, May boat destroyer Jenkins, hondon, May 21—Sir Julins Charles kaz by 18-Mile Bore. ernher, head of the De Beers dla-| . mond syndicate and of the firm of New York, May A Bt. Peters- | Wernher, Beit & company, died to despateh (o the Sun says: The | ey government |y planning the longest | Rt I tunnel in ifle world, 1t Is to be 13| : & miles long and with other facilitien _ Athletics a Waste of Time. Will eonnect Tifijs and Viadikavkaz, | Warrensburg, Mo, May 21.—The | the latter place being & town in Cls- national assembly of the Cumberland | caucasia. The twe plases are only 15 Prosbyterian chureh today voted | miles apart, and at the prasent time A | azainst all athletics In its church | roundabout journey of 040 mil is | schaols, deelaring them a waste of [ necessary in Placy 1o the gther, - Vivoiw J8 now $130,845 The Total Ameunt of Mayor Gaynor’s order o go” from ons | Fund for the relief-of the Tilanic sur-|nes and several members of the, cuble cut in With Mexicans 300 REVOLUTIONISTS, L litia, is mont. W. H to e selling Liberals across 3 wagohntroad “‘fl‘ of New Britain. . marks the boundary between the Lk i g United States and Mexico, The revo- The WL ahd’ Warehouses of the Columbus, Ohie, May 22.—With litile | speaks for the convention to by i lutionaries shouted “Wuera,” meaning 6 S [Port, Wash, were destroyed by fire | of the state counted at 1 o'clock this| ¥ics 80d With the cause for which they S P.‘;o?r:e':‘i’::crv::: Laicw-wmm with a loss of $125,000. morning, Colone] Roosevelt's delegates| “The temporary chairman has for Dougherty withdrew Ais troops 200 on the republican ticket and Governor | almost his sole function the delivery of o violating Finch, a the Ameri- | The Liberals were on | 300 Federals who | A BATTLE ON. is 3 i Harmon's home city. Here the Ohio —— o promis he ambassadorsl kZ th 4 " P2 Hmainy B Anu o Court ot St Jumes st SRimseveit s | Eovernor, who had been well in the | Was Showed Returns on His Train but Mexico City, May 21.—The cavalry | clected. 3 lead in the early r&lul‘ni\ . sl\';'v\n to Nede Mo Commast. and vanguard of General Huerta's di- have 1954 votes and Wilson Fcin il vision was on the heights of Asunsolo, | Plans for a Big Demonstration at | 120 Precincts out of a total of 361. of Escalon, today, fighting the advance guard of Orozco’s | dustrial Workers of the World have | A peculiar situation developed in the [ route to Washington, shortly befors army, according to information obtain- | been made quietly by many citizens of | compilation of results. This sh midnight. He did not appear, and Sec. ed from President Madero. The rebels, | the city. that while Colonel Roosevelt retary Hilles sald returns from the he said, were being dislodged. lead of 15,000 in the total number of | Ohio primaries were too indefinite for The railroad has been repaired be- | Fred J. Southard of Minneapolis, | votes cast for delegates pledged to|any sort of a statement, tween Escalon and Asunsolo and the | Minn., an amateur aviator, fell 100 feet [ pim, the vote by districts would be| When the president's traln arrived stantly. They found the town sacked. tle at weight. loaded with dynamite. The fleldl battery, which with a heavy gun | they are on duty How Districts Lined Up. i Ly B U Kol was in the advance, opened fire, com- — : Of the congressional districts, Col-| ™6, 50 these Taft received 95 votes pletely destroying the engines and ex. Arthur Stringer, the Novelist, was| onel Roosevelt apparently has won the | o a%e S0 Ul e 0 B e one of plading. the-dynamite. The road had | Killed and his wifc and 2 months old | delegates in_the 6th, 9th, 10th, Jith, | £nd Boesevert G Tall mecs one ¢ ¢“be cleared before the march could | ¢hild were fatally injured when an oil| 13th, 14th, 15th, 17th, 1Sth, 18th, 20th PROTESTED AGAINST BILL. | of the or the past two | the poll was considerably under regis- e will enter the New Jersey House Refuses to Impose Tolls on |yweeks, showed very slight sins of ime | seetin faures e AR T (Vssaslsin: Punsma Gunal, DOyt TR aAYs Stats Convention Claimed for Taft. | “'In’ Washington {omorrow President hington, May 21—By the close | Colonel Roosevelt in Answer to an| President Tafts manager, L. C|Taft probably will h;‘:g’:l;u(r‘:ey:r‘-‘:;: vote of 100 to 90 the house today re- | inquiry stated that he never drank |Laylin, was bitter in his summary of lge“lf" ‘b'e" expected that Brig.-Gen. fused to permit the imposition of tolls | Whiskey, cocktails or h alls in his | the primary result. fd: i .C‘m::“'fl"‘ Edwards will get one of on coastwise American vessels which ‘e and that he doesn’t average a doz- | “Misrepresentation and prejudice Yot nmm.an:! uso the Panama canal. An ineffectual | cn tablespoonfule of brandy a year. | against President Taft ook early root | the pr i attack was made on the provision In | —— g [in Ohio. The results in Illinois ane bill prohibiting rallroad-owned | Burglars Yesterday Morning blew | Pennsylvania encouraged the opposi- DIXON'S BIG CLAIMS. vessels from using the canal. Repre- | open the safe in the postoffi but a great change and trend fo sentative Peters of Massachusetts | Clairsville, O,, and, securing §12 ft have occurred in the last ten mai that the not protested Symp havoc to a great business built up |liery at along the Atlantic coast. | The me; Both cited as an illustration the | the mu Mass., jall of | turned New York, New Haven and |recting streets c i i o | Clared his bellef that Colonel Roose- | preference for Theodore Roosevelt COAL OFFICIAL | arVaiters in New York Hotels who|Celt had swept eversthing bul the | Fepublican nomines for ~ president. oy 2 JEShEY ik are receiving their reward in | Cincinnall districts and possibly & | Roosevelt, will have 44 of the 48 dele- AT ARCHBALD HEARING. | jpor tips. The averag ~ome in | Mere handful of country districts. gates in Taft's own state. e e e eat hovia e mmeome In | ™ Gn the democratic side, Governot [ “Theodore Roosevelt will be nomi- Judge Himself Will Go on the Witness | 59 » day S X 39 %) Harmon declined to make any state- | mated as the republican candidate for Stand Today. i ¢ 3 7 3 s | He dqua . ity ever given a pres- ‘Washington, May 21.—Officials of | der of I Warden Edward Davis | Harmon campaign headquarters. the biggest major! coal mmpfxtmes affiliated with railroads | of the Neb state penitentiary, at rm',:ES{;'Fmr:;Zrn‘twr»‘h“f]l"'“n’m”:m‘ e :%:ntclx‘::;d;\dw- This is the end of testifled before the house judi- | the close of chapel exercises on Feb. 1, daylisd Lepras oo < B il it wiihh 1n i aetleating| wae Sealesney sentenced to be hanged | Bryan and Woodrow Wilson. They| No statement was issued ely“t:o"l:.n. charges against Judge Robert W.|on Aug. 20. clafmed that Governor Harmon had | managers tonight. It was stated Archbald of the commerce court re- % s A | deteated Wilson by a vote of 1t . | president’s ,..,.,q.,.";,: that_more | lating to Interviews the jurist had ob- | The Execution of Richeson was de- | Thev also insisted that h(-\:frfi'uon §n complete rem:n: m)‘x’i"be a ‘1 tained with them about coal deals. |clared by witnesses to have been the | before the “"““r( y: gt tid fore comment woul (A mdw M. George F. Baer and W. A. Richards | most successful of any of the fourteen | the forefront for the presidential nom- heudqflfll‘ufl weremd -~ mem: of the Philadelphia and Reading Coal | that have been held at the Massachu- | ination, "‘"";’ 55 Tk &¢ the DS Iron company; Frederick W. |setts state prison since the electric | LaFollette Runs Well in Two C tonight for news of fight. Jones, connected with the Delaware | chair was adopted. . D. Wariner of the Lehigh' Valley Coal company wer Caruso Has Been ARected by {he|d0UPt, although both :4I|(Ies’r-llnlnlu‘d it. THE CONTEST PROBLEM, Ay i A0 g ere 2 2 | velt supporters also claim two or among thy witne: All but Mr. | high cost of living and has raised hls‘&nrr:im:[[1|‘1||§p\]\rs:rrri-x; *listed tor Mr. Delegates With Fractional Votes & Baer told of interviews with the jurist. | prices a bit. He has peen content to | fhree OF LIe GEEE Ch (o ot Hard Nut to Crack. W. P. Boland of Scranton, Pa., was one | sing for $2,000 a night. After this he | p&Tt HOMEUL, SO AC T8 GO srces leading witnesses. Judge Arch- | wants more money and a guarantee of g PR ed to Captain Rostron of the steamer| (30" pa was credited with several | states the members will be contromted General Lack of Cultivation Reported | Carpathie, in recosnition of his ser- | Where e We8 CiGuet, Vo SNECH | Cri he. problem of what to de in by State Horticulturist. vices in connection the Titanic| 1 oj0q0, Senator LaFollette ran second | districts where more than the speei- dishster. Th presented by | 15 Colonel Roosevelt. fled number of delegates have been Augus State Horti- | one of the sur Mr. Bryan and Speaker Champ Clark | chosen with fractional votes Fous culturist Gardner and his Ve .1 | although their names were not on the | vears ago there wero several cases assistant, H. P. tser, last night | On the Eve of Her Wedding to Fd-| gomooratic ballot, received a scatter- | this kind in Louisiana and the national d @ series of 32 orchard spray- | Win G. Gilbert, AMiss Clara Parker, | 5 o"00te through many precincts in | committes seated the double delega- ing demonstrations and conferer | dau r of" & ll""'”“”‘ s ; inesville, | 11 0 ctate, tions neh allowed :::n balf a vote the farmers of the state. The | G# ,» and noted her h'».\ ity, H each in e convent] ftinerary Included every gounts in the | eloped with and was married to'N. W Rural Vote Was Light. This year haif a dozen of these cases nd every section where orchards | Sullivan of Atlanta. Cleveland, Cincinnati, Toledo, C"; already have been reported and Secre- constitute a considerable indust i B 1« | lumbus, Dafton and a dozen more of | tary Heyward has clamsed sach aa & The orchards throughout the s The Small Salary of Ministers was | the larger clties in the state furnished | contest and referred them to the na~ ivation and general up-to deplored by D e oL |/the. greater (pOTticn Ut lonight's T¢-| tional committes for settiement, taking ard manag . s Mr. Gard- ’F.‘;r‘"‘”_ -:} o N'I\I; o m:;“j“'n";l"‘"* o :vr:(r‘xv;m’!‘«x:;‘gufi:”gl( llll:e“:mlr’\!“illt" H(:e ;,:. posluonh;:tl the l;:l conventions thusiastic orchardist who is willing to | Pawtucket yesterday |is d‘nuhhf\llrlf‘(h\)m';vllr-‘(: :i;x}rn\;& !ri(‘lml?‘lsl ‘,Mflm" call having ,D.m_“,m.-: take up modern methods is increasin, 2 A | sections o D St L, the number of delegates to be numerically, however, and. every one o Bl Feoniting ol e Lamslng o hands of the clection officials by nooh | Amone the instances where d et ey T 4 e Boston and Maine railroad to the | today. ¢ 6 oW, Pl l)lfwli:‘\\m unci”zl:;"}n.:.—:-’:.’.w\-nrr:;::n'rgz New York, New Haven and Hartford reno:m indicate that the rural vote Sfi‘;f,‘,"";,'."‘;:{‘ :;‘”,Emw': the ost serious pest Maine orchardists |railroad was ordered to a hird read- | wag comparatively small. Because of | Fyfth distriot of Keptucky and the have to contend with at the present |Ing in the Massachuscits senate ves- | pad weather almost up to this time, | Thirteenth dlatriot of Missouri. time is the apple tree canker, which is | terday by a vote of 20 to 1. the farmers were loath to leave their | ~ Notiee of contests between Taft and causing great havoc. B L <D bRt oF Dontab ik, lfle](xln nl:mgndm“everzul{ulr:l';:x-eoc‘::lc: Roo.:,rv.n ‘nfl“‘ in ‘m- First, l-:‘ it r. L. D. Cl ent , | leaders fo irt ond, Third, and Sixth districts FitsgiealdiHor: UL, Blotin. R. I, was adjudged probably guilty of | jarge vote. Viteiaia e reosiveld -y the i % performing an illegal operation upon ' o S, 3 Doston, May 2L—Mayor John T.|\rs Bertha Richards of _Attleboro, iee this afternoon. It is expected Fitzgerald tonight announced his can- | ynes. and was Bound over ROOSEVELT RETICENT. Mamuvflt foroes will dm_ml 15 gpm~ didacy for the nomination for United | 40 tha grand jury in bonds of $4,000. and the Taft leaders 75. 1 Mayor Fitzgerald in a state- Pothier lever of Destroyer Makes 33 Knots. eslogs The torpedo | Ne on the first of el ¢ kit Condensg‘g Telegrams A Terrapin Which Was Caught near Lynchburg, Va., bears two girls' names, For the 15th Consecutive Week the death rate in New below that of the same périod in 1911, Frank 8. Cornwall, former president yesterday Association of America. | The Large Country Residence of Gil- Recognize American Soldiers. ‘?g:tcg;:‘gsuck. in Tolland, was burned about $4,000. No More Stot Machines and no more an order by Chief of Police Rawlings Bridgeport Milling company in Bridge- Officials of the American Federation of Labor will make an effort to union- | ize baseball as a result of the prese strike of the Detroit team. Following Her Arrest on u charge of cide yesterday by taking poison. Wisconsin Paper Manufacturers are sending out notices of an advance in the price withdrawing all Frank A. Munsey Declares that there | no truth in the report San Diego, Ca., today ai at the Wright aviation field, near Os- borne, O., yesterday and was kil The Highest Price Ever Paid for ¢ yards was given yesterday for two cars of Missouri steers, $9.15 per hundred- The privilege of naming the six dele-| Mr. Taft got his first news at Den The Fancy Red Waistcoat, red neck- | satag” at large of the state, however, | nison, -Ohio, the Iast stop his traim tles and all other duter garments Of | ig carried by the winner of the presi- | made before reaching this city. A scarlet hue have been forbidden to all e employes of one western railroad while stove exploded in their home agara Falls, N. Y. has been critically ill matter and money, es buggy stolen from a nearby caused T Mayor Harrison of Chicago has t heir order pas Albert Prince, Convicted of the mur- 40 nights a s A Silver Loving Cup will he present- Ascending a Platform surrounded by ponderous railroad building machiner; and abont old_Sidney sockel, R today aboard the British steamer Re- from the secre ROOSEVELT AND HARMON IN Incomplete Returns From Ohio Primaries Give Ex- ?' President an Advantage of 15,000 Votes MAY HAVE 26 OF THE 42 DISTRICT DELEGATES its back with the dute 182: York has remained com- of the Connecticut naval mi- ill of typhoid fever at Wood- | , Daniels of Buffalo was clecled of the National Piano Merchants of Governor Wilson Gives Governor Harmon a Close Run at the Latter’s Home—La Follette Ran Well in Cleveland and Toledo—Little Over Third of Returns in and Complete Returns May Upset Present Situation—Both Claim' State 3 The loss is estimated at liquor in dance halls—that is more than one-third of the total vote| thorough sympathy with thelr prinei- a speech which is supposed to strike the ke¥note of the situation, or at least to #ive forcetul expression to the convictlons and purposes of a majority of the convention. Unless the nationad committee name & man whom the vone vention s wiling %o accept as it4 spokesman, the convention will, I ase sume, substitute its own choice. ‘This was done in the convention of 1884, of which I was & member, whes the muorl‘u: co‘mm\l;u-e named (‘j:._. porary chairman Mr, quenb“m and we of the convention s TAFT NOT WORRIED. Harmon on the democratic preference ballot led Ohio's first presidential pref- erence primary. The fight on both £ tickets was so close, however, that complete returns may change final re- sults. Roosevelt Has Lead of 15,000. Complete returns from slightly less than 2,000 precincts of 5,192 in the state showed that Colonel Roosevelt's delegates had a lead of more than 15,- 000 votes. Governor Harmon's lead over Woodrow Wilson was consider- ably less than this. The closeness of his race with Wilson was indicated by late reports from Cincinnati, Governor nt g the liquor laws, Mrs. Mar: a Boston widow, committed sui- immediate of paper and revious quotations. for hive ‘Ur. Lynch.” that he is| Pittsburgh, May 21.—President Taft st the In- stopped over here twenty minutes em May Have But 26 District Delegates. such that he probably would here Ohio returms up to -thirty, ed in- | more than 22 of the 42 district dele- | showing Roosevelt leads in 195 precinta gates to the national convention at|out of over 5100 were in hand. Thess Chicago. But yhile the democratic|were turned over to the Associated presidential vote was so close, the re- sult could not be foretold, the indica- tions were that Governor Harmon would have at least 22 or 24 of the del- egates to the Baltimore convention. Press representatives with Mr. Taft, who in turn handed them to Secretary Hilles. The latter immediately wen! to the president, but nothing In the way of comment was forthcoming. the St, Louis national stoc! dential preference vote. citizen of that place handed aboard & . n there and Roosevelt the last. in Ni- | and ‘21st distric e : tly was mot | “President Tatt practically has been| The president appatently was met Golden, Editor and ror | ETanted the ist. 2d, 3d, probably thel Jiept on his car much of the way from olden, Editor and proprietor | athy 1th, §th, 13th. 2 58 (o SER P ‘South Norwaik Sentinel, who | = Horof i citice also reported that | Cincinnati to Dennison, an as L. Rhoades, his physician, was con- Declares Roosevelt Has Won 44 of the 48 Ohio Delegates. deliberations Another would have meant a sweeping victory aped in a stable. wes for the president. athy for the Mine Mules has| “Meagre returns indicate that i q";'/;‘zl:‘ng}::a My At flfl;fi:‘i 75 men of the Morgan run col- | Taft will have the state convention | S 3 Coshocton, O. to 0 on sirike. | and the delegates at large. Probably | statement from the Roosevelt head n stated that they did not think | Mr, Roosevelt will have a majority of - 4 o + les received proper treatment. |the district delegates. It is simply im- | “There is mo furtier room for ar gument, On last Thursdsy at Colum-~ bus, Mf. Taft in his speech said: possible tonight to make an accurate - | statement or summary of the results. th i " ““The vote in Ohlo, my home state, unsigned to the city council | Claims Roosevelt Swept Everything. | i he’the decisive one, and will set- der passed two weeks ago di-| Walter Brown, chairman of the|fle tne question of nomination: d manager mpaign, de- state central committee of Mr. Roosevelt's state ¢ TR A “Ohio has spoken. By a majority of B sae s o probably 50,000 she has declared her However, staignents were fs- in charge of the ment, president on the first ballot at Chicagn sued by the manager! and_will be elected in November by The Sixteenth district remained in | on the Republican ticket, United States | Senator LaFollette of Wiseonsin re- | ceived considerable support, particu- | larly in Cleveland and Toledo precincts Chicago, May 21.—When the republi- can national committee meets June § to consider the contests flled by Taft and Roosevelt delegates in a number of ason. Declined to Discuss Returns Until Re- sult is Known. New Methodist Bishops Chosen. Minneapolis, Minn., May ™ T, Henderson of Brooklyn m 0, Shepard of Chicago are the new bish- ops of the Methodist Fplscapal con- ference, elected on Lhe eleventh bal- lot, the result of which was announced ¥ H 1 582 wad Dr, ‘ 500 peovle, Gov, Aram J. of Rhode Island pulled the a glant "steam shovel on the Whittaker farm at Woon- L, vesterday, and the actual constructing the Southern giand rallway began Oyster D: Y., May 21.—Colonel Roosevelt was advised of the returns in the Ohio primary contest up until 11 o'clock, showing at that hour a lead in his faver, but he declined to com- ment on the returns until the result was definitely known. In regard to the selection of n tem- Dr. Henderson re HShepard 532, Rt yrar Neceasary to elect §24, her bullders’ acceptance irfals today, | Captain Amundsen at Montevideo. pornry presiding officer of the republi- i covered the government measuged-mils | Montevideo, Uraguay, Msay 21 |can natlonal convention, for which po- A course at the rate of 19 knots per | Captain Ronald Amundsen, the dis- | sition Blihu Root was named yvester- Steamship Arrivals. hour, the contrdct calling for a speeld | coverer of the south pole, arrived here | day, Colonsl Roosevelt issued the fol- Snas,, of 30 knots, lowing statement; “If the prozressives, as now seems probable, have a subsiantial majority at the Chicago eonvention, | assume He received a_warm weleome of President Ordo-

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