Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 28, 1912, Page 1

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VOL. LIV.—NO. 129 e g = ¥ The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and lis Total Circulation is the Largest in Connectiout in Propartion to {b ity's Population Lockwood Tells 0f the Bribi ACTED AS DECOY FOR DISTRICT TAFT WON'T CONSIDER THIRD TERM President Assures New Jersey Audiences That He Will Not Attempt to Break the Precedent GIVEN A ROUSING WELCOME AT ATLANTIC CITY Explains to Negroes How Recall of Judicial Decisions Might Be Made to Operate Against Them—Roosevelt Declares That His Success Will Be Means of Saving the Party— New Jersey to Elect 24 Delegates in Primaries Today. Atlantic City, N, J, May 27.—Witi a gpeech tonight to a crowd which filled Young's pier back to the board walk Bnd an overflow on the walk itself, Presidens Taft practically closed his campaign for New Jersey's 28 delegates to the republican national convention. ¥or four hours tomorrow he will cam- ;a'zn on his way from the coast to the »elaware river. He will not make his last speech until one hour before the permits the voters to express a per- sonal choice for a presidential candi- date, but thig preference vote has no direct bearing upon the division of delegates. The delegates to be voted for are pledged fo Taft, Roosevelt or La Follette on republican ballots and on the democratic ballots for Governor Woodrow Wilson or marked ‘“unin- structed.” The democratic canvass has been between only Governor Wilson @olls open, and his opponents inside the state. " " Governor Vilson's friends s: 0= Atlantic City Enthusiastic. Bikht that he wonld win the ‘full state _Atlantic City was the last stop Mr. | delegation with the possible eyception fraft made on a day which began for [of the members from Newark, the him at eight o'clock and was crowded | stronghold of ex-United States Sena- With speeches at seaside and winter | tor James Smith, whose re-election to e night. Most of the president’s | the senate the governor opposed. adiences were demonstrative, At At- lantic City he received a roaring wel- come from the throngs of persons on Although the democratic rush of the republican workers, the re- the streets and on the bbard walk as |sult of the democratic primaries is he was driven to his hotel, and later | considered of unusual - importance, while he was being taken to the pier since it is acknowledged that Gover- nor Wilson's chance at Baltimore would receive a severe blow if he fail ed to get at least a good majority of Where he will spoke, Not Consider Third Term. e preside rgd $he £ i "~ | the policy of the United States should PR 8 ) oy o S the delegaten from his own state Governor Foss to Refer Mrs. Cusuma- | ticipants in the prosecution of the |pq ettt ona e e, of the speecties he has the The polle open at 1 p..m. tomorro: I | Darrow case. - ) bther New Jersey towns, except in a | ang slase at s b m. . A B faond The Tepudiation followed the submis- | &1d that notwithstanding the present R s i E ey AL Boston, May 27.—The petition of Mrs. | 5190 by atorneys for the defense of | 31 iic®™q e S™5hould take positively smary defense of his administration O, My e e murtion of | eMdavits in support of a petition that e ittacked Colonel Roosev: Te | Lena Cusumano for commutation of | &fldavils in o 7 . |no step ‘toward Intervention except :,. kv ‘l i .‘l‘“n J“.Rh::‘\‘\r:t’: ”5.“ SEAT_S(F(?RJLIM. | sentence to death by electrocution ‘:y‘f‘;fiu;“[‘ Foster be cited for contempt | o7 far as the protection of the lives $ie would not consider a'third term. He | Room for 6,700 Spectators at Co - { Wil be referred fo the .executlye} = and property of American citizens ren- Bro@it up ife qUM@ion of Cunalas Abdrd kAt council for a hearing by Governor | Foster Talked Too Much. iy s ey peciprocity and explained that M. & oss. The governor made that an-| A morning newspaper printed an in- Roosevelt, who now opposes it “for the | Chicago, May 27.—A large force of | IUncement tonight after consulting | terview today with Foster, giving what OBITUARY. Bake of getting votes” was once its | workmen today began preparing. the|late today with the attorneys for the [ purported to be the facts concerning RanY strongest advocate. Coliseum for the use of the republican | cOndemned and the council will glve & | the alleged trapping of Darrow in a Madsi:Myroa We Feblnson: Spoke from Atlantic City Pier. national convention on Juno 18. The |learing on the matter at 2 oelock |hotel room by means of a telephone 2 S : 4 4 ¢ | sub-committee in charge of the ar- | Wednesdey afiernoon. Mrs, Cusumano | device. Foater was quoted as gaying (Special to The Bulletin.) here Jvas o serious congestion of | rangements took formal possession of | and Enrico Jiascioli were sentenced 10| the instrument would bring ' about | oy taii 3, My- Fhv-BIONS. 38, Lhe EUL o the | {ho"big bailding eary. todav. Tt i | death for the murder of Mrs. Cusuma- | Darrows convietion, S e e e poard walk to reach the pler where | (ke nearly three weeks to prepare the | 10’8 husband at Hull In September. | ‘Thne defence contended that thie in- | 190 ' ‘resident physician of the Sol- | Thougands crowded wround | sirctur {1810, ana their executions were set {0F | serview was printed with a view of in. | ears resident phvsiclan of the Sol. him and 1t was with difficulyy that the " Th'firgt work undertaken was tho | (e Week of June fluencing the jury and the prosecution | sy Hom Bt OO e marning. Bolee prevented o panic. “when 3. constructiun of the speakers’ platform, | waTERING OF CANNED ™ foined In the Fequest for Foster's clia- | Death ‘ocpurred some time after one BALt reachel stand in the center |at the south end of the building. Aft- | E tion tomorrow. The ruling by Judge | ortack ug a resident of the Home talked B o “‘”;”d h;""“'“‘['"‘ i |er this has been built the will GOODS IS ADULTERATION, | Hutton on the issue raised by the de-| Ly him at that time. Death was R Boas A s audiende ihe placed in position and arrange- fence on Saturday will enable the | gue to heart trouble. He was 73 years :'”P'“ bave a ¢ "}{""\‘r‘:rl";jf\-;; 19;4:1 ments completed for the seating of | Pure Food Decision by the Depart- | prosecution to introduce all of the|of age Wit his daughter, Dr, Robin- pler he spoke to a large crowd of ne. | Lo t, iong. The decorations v ment of Agriculture. evidence In their possession tending | son visited friends at his old home in . = Y Jl1ef 0 e last, - - The hall will contatn 11188 seats, Judicial Recalé Menaces Negroes. |'There will be 1,932 seats on the plat- At several places where there were | fOTm, 400 for working newspaper men, 1,078 for delegates, 1,078 for alternates, 3500 for visitors on the main floor and 200 for visitors in the balcony. F road shops Mr, Taft pointed to the egislat ted during his adminls- id * protection and better- He sald several gro has much to fear WILL SAVE THE PARTY. the proposal to recall judicial de- i T cisions shou ome law. Roosevelt Says That is What His Vic- is connection he said at Lake- tory Will Mean. A Concrete Example. Hoboken, N. J, May 27.—The cam- W f this principle is to be ex- | paign into which Theodore Roosevelt al courts, and thers | plunged three months ago, when he should not if It |announced his willingness to accept s, what Is going |the republican presidential nomination, gislature were | virtually came to and end tonight. It oducing peonage, a | ended with a booming welcome to the P ry that they still con- | colonel in Hoboken, with the gl of n the south in some |redfire and the call of bugles, as ho ere we have to prosecute it, |made his way through streefs linc with thousands who cheered him. I was the final rally of the New Jerse campalgn. From now ' on Colonel Roosevelt will direct his attention to | the marshalling of his forces for the battle to be waged in the Chicago con- gro of some ecivil ntitled to under the iment, or depriving ral ri or political court ‘decides and agrees it that law 1S invalid be- | vention. He said that he would not go caus s the constitutional |into the states which are yet to elect e s t 1s turned over | their delegates. und ) be voted upon as to [ “This is the most remarkable ending e 1t decision is right, at the |to the most remarkable campaign I've Bext national election ever taken part in” said Colonel Poor Security for Negro. Roosevelt tonight, after he had wit | nessed the de; in Hoboken. onstration in his hon 1 have been in politics publican vear and the ‘\’w? -»nyNL it m "““M'nr 23 years, and I never before have ¢ vear and the amendments | gej¢ such unadulterated satisfaction as sk you, my friends, | in this one” vas the kind of security | " Colonel Roosevelt's final appeal be campaign | has been mild In comparison with the | | | 2 8 u were getting when | fore the primany elcetion in this state - is fought, when hundreds | (omorrow was in reply to the assertion : s of lives were lost, and | (nat he was disloyal to the republican | bl vas spilled so generously and |party and wes attempting to work its i amounting to milllons was | ryjn. He said he would appeal, if nec- ments arovr to establish, those amend- | essay, from the-republican jonal 2 ow ave you golng (o make | committee to the people. “The repub- e ight and their sanction de-|jican party would have died of dry rot " RUSE. PRV Risesian if we had not made tis fight,” he e said, STAND AND DELIVER.” In speaking at Lambertville, Colonel — Roosevelt took up at some lensth the McKinley Says Roosevelt is Trying to | charge that he was attempting to Held Up the Party. | wreck his party. “Our opponents have | sald that we are breaking up the re- { publican party,” he said; b o AT 5 ‘that is the ve ot Tilinets, 'd of | direct reverse of the truth. We are esident Taft's campaign commijttee, | PUilding up the republican party. The & SMBtement today declared that it | Only, chance for the republican party Waa Colonel Ransevelt's apparent “in- | 1ie8 in our success. The success of our tor o bolt” if he is mot nominated | OPponents would mean the absolute uin of the party. And they know it. as he did, a mere re- | They are willing to ruin the party it sald Mr. McKinlev | they ean keep their hands on the ma- s made rapid mentai | chinery. I ask you to compare in this pust three months o | the attitude of myself and of Mr. Taf: ri re he feels |in your own state. Just the other on himself 1 attempt | 44Y, here in New Jersey, ho said he ex- b which has twice | Pected to win because the national made him presiden gommittec s with him. I have told The republican p has heen fn | ¥ou that I expect to win because the n the past of making delip- | People are with me. The national com- erate choice of its | ential candi- | Mittee was chosen by the politicians dates, and it is not used 1o the process | fOUr years ago, and forty or fifty men ©of having it poked under its nose ac- | répresented the choice of the politi- companied by a demand from any one | ¢lans in 1908 are to be used, forsooth, candidate to ‘stand and dell {to_overthrow the wishes of the re- 1 am firmly convinced that the re- |Publican party when I say that we ican national convention this year |Fepresent the rank and file of today will make its choice deliberately and |2nd not the politicians of four years that President Taft, with his majority | 280, of the convention already in hand, wiil | “Many of those national committee- be the nominee on the first ballot.” men of whom Mr. Taft speaks as the | friends of constituaional government THE JERSEY PRIMARIES. as the men who are to save the part are to save it from whom? From you. It is to save the party from the repub | licans of Illinois and Pennsylvania who Twenty-four Delegates to Be Elected by Republicans Today. {repudiate Lorimer and Penrose. That lav 97 The New |18 the proposal of Mr. Taft on behalf Getdhy Staba m:'“‘,mff’p!m.m fomon. | of the national committee. row will bring practically to a close W g PR the spectacular —campaigns for the| Wilbur Wright at Point of Death. presidential nomination which have | Dayton, O, May 27—Late tonight resulted this year from the adoption | Physicians reported that Wilbur by seve states of presidential pref- | Wright, the ‘inventor of airships, who ercnce laws. The South Dalkota pri- [ has typhoid fever, was lying uncon- sclous and apparently growing much worse, It was sald that bis death iy expectad al any thne. IUs temps | ture had risen steadily and his condi- tlon was of almost complots collupse All of the lmmediate Zarily are st his bedside, muries are still in the future, but it 1s Delleved that the opening of the polls In New Jersey tomorrow will end of ihe personal uppeal fo es thai President dore Roosevell have parts of the country This state will choose 23 each national convention, delegates 1o tour at large nd two each from the 12 congresaion- Stoamship Roeported. Bable Island, N, §, May 27.—Steamer 4] distric Each diatrict gelects its | Hellig Olav, from Copenhagen for New own delegates. but the delegates at | York, reported £50 miles east of Randy large are elected by the vote of the | Hook at 130 p, o bngk 1130 a, m, whole siate The jrimawy law also MWedneeday, | | | chang, in the province of Hu-peh. proper preparation or for the steriliza- tion of the product, accordi culture. | Summer creel Cabled Paragraphs Lima, Peru, May 27.—Alejandro Lo- pez d¢ Romana, who was president of Peru from 1899 to 1903, died today. London, May 27.—Reports have reached Tien-tsin, China, that the re- actionary movement is gaining consid- erable strength in the vicinity of Wu- Fez, by Wireless to Tangier, May 27, ~A strong body of Moeors made an- other fierce attack on this city this morning. Some penctrated inside the walls, but were dispersed or killed. The French lost one officer killed and 30 soldiers killed or wounded. The Moorish casualties were heavy, ONLY EIGHT HOUR COAL TO BE USED IN THE NAVY, Hodise Orators Pay Tribute to Horny- Handed Sons of Toil. Washington, May 27.—Labor was extolled and the workingman was crowned by more than twenty orators during the house debate on the naval appropriation bill today. The sum to- tal of the oratory was the adoption of an amendment providing that here- after all coal purchased for the navy must be mined under the eight hour rkday law. A proposed amendment requiring the miners to be paid not less than the union scale of Wwages was voted down. Representative Foight of Pennsylva- nia (republican) resented an allusion to labor conditions in Pennsylvania by Representative Heflin of Alabama (democrat). He assailed the conditions in turpentine camps of Alabama and Georgia, where, he said, “were scenes more barbarous and inhuman than could be witnessed In the mines of Si- beria. m to name of tioned by George the prosecution’s chief witnesses, for the first time today in_the trial of the former chief counsel of the Mc brothers for alleged jury bribery. Lockwood said Darrow toward Bert }H. Franklin when the lat- ter was arrested for bribery a few mo- Lockwood installment_of the pay his vote In the trial of J. B. McNamata, A Day of Ex: The day in court was one of excite- ment from the time of convening until adjournment. Clashes between attor- neys, the exchange of charges of trying important ruling for the prosecution on the ad- missibility of evidence objected to by the defense and the reappearance of Lockwood on the stand for the resump- tion of his story of the alleged trap- of Bert Franklin kept up the first ATTORNEY, DEAL WITH FRANKLIN Los Angeles, ents after influence the ju Cal, Ty, Detective Told Juror That He Would Talk Matter Over With Darrow and “He’ll Fix It"—An Exciting Day. May received yment ement. an Detective Foster Repudiated. Representative Heflin and Repre- | i sentative Bartlett and lowa of New:|interact. York replied in speeches. Adjournment ended the confusion. L it The eve a repudi TO SAVE WOMAN FROM THE ELECTRIC CHAIR. » 27.—The additlon | & of water to canned products will be |TO! considered adulteration in future, ex cept in those cases where a certain amount of water is required for the ng to a pure food decision signed today by Secre tary Wilson of the department of agri sa THE DAY IN CONGRESS. Sy it the deal went through. “I told |tice of medicipe in Hebron and then House Passes Naval Bill to Create |him,” sald Lockwood, “that my wife |at the call fol volunteers enlisted in Dental Corpsiin Navy would be the last person I would want | Company C, Capt. Isaac Bromley, to know about it ~ Eighteenth Connecticut infantry. Un- Washington, May 27. — The day in Said He'd Talk with Darrow. til April 11, 1883, he was detailed to congres Feigning to accept the proposition, | 10SPital work and at this time re- Senate: Considered Hitchcock resolution re- ;‘;;‘yl ’ly‘i‘\]y)‘::uu ity of corporation tax testified, daclare Cuban relations committee directed | “Well, I'll talk the matter over with Chuirman. Page to confer with Presi- | Clarence Darrow, and he'll fix it.” dent Taft regarding necessary recom- | ¥ranklin then agreed to come the mendations for legislation in connec- | BeXt day and talk it over. tion with Confere tion bi amendments nator Hitchcock spoke on his reso- Platt amendment. reported army appropria- with anti-administration lutlon requesting president to supply | Attempted to Remove Looss Rail in | fonty Yeers Ro Was Jefith ofcer, of senate with full information relative Front of an Express. In’ 1857 he was appointd pension ex- to corporations as showd by corpora- 5 i Judiciary committee reported ad- | Donatto, a track laborer employed bY | pyaminer for the county coroner. He versely Curtls resolution to make |the New Haven road probably saved | Zuc"sor g long time previous to his | number of presidential electors equal | the Boston express from being wreck- | to n ber of senators and representa- ciation wh ney. lin's _office, would rs. h employ to prove the contention that Darrow Js { 'y of attempting to bribe other ju- How Franklin Was Decoyed. Lockwood testified he was acting un- der instructions by the district attor- in decoying Franklin, said, negotiated with Rim for his vote on the McNamara’ jury Lockwood, id who w: who, an old soldler, that at his first visit to Frank- Frankiin told him to be careful how his wife spent the money though with reluctance, Lockwood said | that he expressed fear that the money not' be pald and Franklin, he TRACK LABORER SAVES TRAIN BUT LOSES LIFE. ed this afternoon but he lost his life 8 27.—The Clarence Darrow was men- . Lockwood, one of mara was walking v also included y District Attorney Fredericks of Detective Robert J. Fgs- ter and the National Erectors’ asso- Foster, as par- 7 “INORWICH, CONN, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1912 PRICE_TWO Secretary Knox AMERICAN SOCIETY, Representatives of 16 Central quet here tonight. Knox Guest of Honor. The society had the the for countries, were present. tary's review of his “most tion for relations between and her sister republics, Assurance from Mexioo. that ment of Pan-American and helpfulness. Policy of United States. time apparently in good health. rect descendant he den, Holland. ington high school, school in Pittsfleld in 1861. geon of the Sixth regiment, C. V. geon of the regiment. college, New York city, years spent in Colorado. Guest of Honor ANNUAL BANQUET OF THE PAN- FRATERNAL GREETINGS and South American Countriss Applaud Sentiments of Our Secretary of State New York, May 27.—The recent visit by Secretary of State Knox to ten of the Cafbbean republics on a mission of fraternal greetings from this country, was pleasantly recognized by the Pan- American soclety at its annual ban- secretary as guest of honor, and to greet him more than six hundred members of the so- clety and others, among them the dip- lomatic representatives of no less than sixteen Central and South American They listened attentively and applauded thé secre- gratifying mission,” his reiteration of the policy of the United States and his sugges- improvement in the mutual the United States Ambassador Calero told the saclety it could count upon Mexico as standing shoulder to shoulder with the Latin-American countries in the move- friendliness Congressman Snlzer declared that Lebanon on Satufday and was at that He was born in Lebanon May 4, 1839, and was the son of Willlam and So- phia Robbins Robinson. He was a di- of John Robinson, pastor of the Pilerim church at Ley- He attended the Kill- began the stury of medicine in 1858 at Hebron, and graduated from the Berkshire medical For a year he engaged in the prac- ceived his commission as assistant s n December, 1864, he was appointed sur- He was & mem- ber of Buckingham post, No. 13, G. A. R. At the close of the war he took a course in lectures at Bellevue Medical He then went to Colchester, where he engaged in the practice of medicine up to the time of his removal to Noro- ton fourteen years ago, excepting two For nearly death medical director, department of | | Connecticut, G, A. R. He belonged to Condensed Telegrams The New Brunswick Elections have been cailed for June 30 and nommna- tions will be made on June 13, While Milking a Cow in a Barn near Blairs town, N. J, Miss C. M. Curlis, 54 years old, was killed by lightning. The Pennant of the Battleship Mainas | has a permanent home in Memorial | hall, at Chicago. | The Campaign for a Safe and Sane Fourth of July is to be tuken up throughout the country this year by the Boy Scouts organization, Thirteen Hundred Dollars was stol- en Sunday from a trunk at the hom of Charles Konski in West Granvillc Mass, The Aviators at Berlin have threat- ened to strike unless they receive §75 a week, Some of them are receiving 37, _C. LeRoy Grinnell, an Organist of Newport, R. 1, has begun suit for $500 against Mrs, 'French Vanderbilt ror breach of contract. In the Opinion of Teholia, chiefiof the Quinault tripe of Indians in Wash- ington, Champ Clark will be the next Great White Fathe: The City Power House of Moosejaw, | Saskatchewan, was destroyed by which disabled machinery valued $50,000. at| The Will of Abner Mondou, wholesale grain merchant of New ven, dispos: jate Ha- The National Anti-Tipping assocla tion was Incorporated in Albany with headquarters.in New York. The aim of the soclety is to abolish the practice of tipping In hotels and restaurants. Mrs. Mary Holzman was dragged from her home in Ocean City, Md., by a dozen neighbors, who, after kicking and beating her, threw her in & vat ot tar. The Directors of the Great Northern rallway yesterday appointed Carl R. Gray of Portland president of the road and retired L. W. Hill from that posi- tion. Governor Goldsborough Yesterday ordered an investigation of charges of at the Maryland penitentiary at Balti- definite understanding regarding the ' General Estenoz and Ivonet to sbout attitude of the United States toward | 5,000 regulars well armed and drifled. i 3 ¢| The naval station at Guantanamo re= o resident Gomez's m ot | zl!ff"-_d R 8 e t the transport Prairie with B0 o tomonic Lelny 20 (b pile | marines aboard, has not arrived dehe. ot ”““l i A Er i " | and is not expected until tomorrow. Skrancis Wire SN okt (BE AU Gomez Confident of Outcome. of the American governm was | President Gomez asserts in & state~ merely a measure of precaution and | ment today that all traces of the Fe= entirely disassociated f ny ques- | bellion have been extingulshed, ex- tion of intervention. To this President | cept in nine townships of Orlente, in of an estate belleved to Gomez Exp# 3 d two_or th day il armed o esses Gratitude, {in two or three days a wel exceed $500,000. . 54 | foree of nine thousand, including vel- Toam exceedingly grateful for YOUr | ypigers, many of whom are skilled i Roland Hedges of Sound Beach, who | CAbICETAI Lwhiclh ix wypeasing to CU- | gyerilla warfare. ~ He exprosses full pleaded guilty to manslaughter yester- | PAn patriotism, bec: = © 28| contidence the government from one to five years ernment under your worthy presid ‘the rebels to t ds and mountaing 5 DY 1 e jolhenRiEY without requiring American assistance. lives during his two vears’ service, wis | Y 0f American nd morelly Lo| “The settlement of the longshore- himself drowned Sunday in the Hud- Subpord ,' “.. ' :n, Bty | TeuR Biihe A o excalises S son. out having to land A rican forces of removing the danger of possible 3 { our territory, uniess both g T ts | disorders in the city ng the Arthur Sohllhorn, 11 Years Old, of | ®87¢¢ uPon such an extigme necessity. | government of a consia of re- Missoula, Mont., committed suicide be- | Shows Our Sincersity. s o e e cause he did not wish to be a wltness . ows the sineerit e | o o D against his father, who is accused of | government and the people the | S8 B "o . e burglary. | United States I as noble ,,‘;!wr;lnm . Y . 4 e friendly sentTments tow ds thi - | any xpressions of Loyalty, ‘é”?:." She "jflas}Eurnmg Rubbish ernment and people of Cuba, who are | From all parts of the Island come ex= a ficl near her home vesterday B determined to re-establish as soon 3 | pressions of loyalty to the Overn - Barrington, R. L, the clothing of Mrs. | possible pubi peace for which pur fnom from all political partie t‘muvx‘ Emma F. Campbell caught fire and she | pose they will 1 sitate, no matier | ing many of the better element ne- was burned to death. { what sacrifices circumstances may im- | groes. Congress today unanimensly | pose upon them.” adopted a resolution of confidence in cruelty in the punishrment of prisoners | GOMEL GRATEFUL TO UNITED STATES Cuban President Responds to Taft's Assurance That Intervention is Not Contemplated “SHOWS THE SINCERITY OF THE GOVERNMENT” Also “Noble and Friendly Sentiments Toward the People of Cuba,” Says Gomez—Taft's Message Likely to Strength~ en Cause of Cuban Government—More Troops Sent to Disturbed Province—Gomez Will Have Force of 9000, ry, who was detailed by the war @@= partment as cavalry instructor to the Cuban forces. These reinforcements l will bring up the national troops facing Havana, May cablegrams between and P Ta Presid has led to a more ident Gomez replied tonight us follows: which the government will have with. Cuban Government G | the governmen The receipt of P message declaring th NO MORE TROOPS, centration &t Key West and ihe ¢is- | Government Won't Order Out Amy J S mre. Sesckatioh agpd| Others for Cuban Servica, way indicative of Int Inter- | o ston, M o state de- more. Thirty Brides to Be from Scotland | and Ireland reached New York yester- day on the steamer Caledonia, from Glasgow. Most of the young women were bound for points west of the Mis- sissipp! and In southwestern Canada. What is Believed to Be a new world's record for rifle shooting at 300, 500 and 800 vards was scored by Lieut W. IL. Semple of the 76th regiment, of Truro, N. S. He scored a grand total of 104 points out of a possible 1 in the Methodist Episcopal c | the hop Maker,” and for | editor of one-of the strongest chur | papers,yesterday withdrew from service, h A Decided Step Toward Senatorial preference primarfes was taken by the Massachusetts senate yesterday when |a bill which provides for party pr maries for candidates for States senators was ordered to a third reading by a vote of 23 to 11 hite in 50 doing. Donatto and other labor- | 4 New TLondon County Medical sov | 1 ) N NEFG 26 WOTE Topatem the A -| In the Massachusetts Primaries of House:— | ers wera at work repalring the (racks | iiety and the American Medical asso- | st month - Charies S. Buster, who Passed naval bill ameniment to | fhe erirone hound fron aon WomDeh | ciation. | headed the Roosevelt ticket, defeated create a dental corps in navy Hobton ‘Canlicants, m‘gm 'i‘r:e wo‘r’kmeg He was also a member of the Ma- | Senator W. Murray Crane, the leac e stepped aside, but as they did so, Don- | SORIC fraternity, the Ancient Order of | of the Taft ticket, by 9,551 votes, ac- Dr, Wiley Seriously Ill. otice at " loge | United Workmen, Fraternal Benefit | cording to the official figures published . Wiley y atto noticed a rail that had been left | hiied FOETnOn, R Al Bernoftt day, New York, May 27.—Dr. Harvey W.|on the tracks. Calling to a fellow | ot Saverion Stha srance bag the poers | vesterday, Wiley is seriously ill at his home in [ Worker, they lifted the rail from the legion. £ g sritvsichy A Bill C lidating the Wi t Washington, according fo a telegram | tracks without a moment to spare. | “HI"pipincon was married In 1367 | Speingholo ey Berkehire strect rail recelved tonight by the-secretary of | Donatto's companion stepped back in | 1, Franen T Stowart. daushtar - of | Spnefleld and Herkshire strect ra tho New York Pharmaceutical soclety, | time but Donatto was struck in the | o) i Stewart, of Portland. Gorn. She | o o e Yalrond which which was to h:\‘e!hfler{‘afldressml to- | ht:u‘lml the onggn?. m; head was | gicd"\nreo years o R T Tl | e P s © bt morrow night by Dr. Wiley. In the | completely severed from the body and | | v o b e e Abivales Takat felogram Mr. Wiley's secretary. M, |ho was otherwise badly mangleq in Colchester. He is survlved by two |grossed in the Massachusefts senat 1d: “Mr. Wiley is seriously | temperature tonight is 102 | has an attack of grippe. The Deadly Female Hatpin. | Perth Amboy, N. J., May “While trying to keep back the people who | crowded about President Taft when he spoke here today, Policeman T. J. Quinlan was pierced through the right | cheek a woman’s hatpin The | i aid, and in | | wound called for surgic E many friends in Norwich and vicinity. the opinion of the physteian Wil leavs | no0mton: May_ 2i—Harry ‘H. Butts, | ™1The old place In Colchester o whicn . bad Scar dn ineh in length as & life | Lo NeEro Who shot and killed Robert | pr, Robinson formerly resided was a L e asidents visit, | \vAlson in this city last June, was sen- | noted landmark, being an exampie of et il e i tenced to mot less than 12'nor more | ola colonial architectnre The honse Connecticut Naturalists Meet. | ¢ Haven, Conn., May 27—Mem bers from naturalits clubs in this city, | second degree, but was allowed fo SBtaainahip: Afrhiale. South Norwalk, Waterbury and Hart- | plead guilty o manslughion utey Lo Al ford met tonight at the state normal | claimed that Wilson had ruined his | New Sores Amerti. foom moey from school to consider the advisability of | home. | New York; Amerika, from New York. forming a federation of state clubs of | The negro was the companion of | fret e Brok: ooy 2% Carmania, a similar nature. H. K, Job, a state | CI ornithologist, was named chairman of | ter was a committee to make plans and report at a future meeting, Greenwich After Open Mufflers. | Greenwich, Conn., May 27.—The | enwich town authorities are mak- ing a vigorous crusade to enforca the mufiler law, and 11 autoists were haled | into court this morning, charged with violating the law. Ten-were fined §1 and costs, and one who refused to stop when ordered to was fined $15 costs. and | Father of Seven Drowns, Middletown, Conn., May 27.—George D. Lazinisliki, aged 35, wading in back of his home, this alternoon, stepped into a deep hole, and, heing unable to gwim, was drown.- | & ed. His hody was found an honr later | iptined, in seven feat of water. He leaves a | Several widow and seven small children { Ten Residents Were in the Eridge- | port city court yesterday on warrants obtatned by the personal tax collect- ®onal tax for 1810, were continued for 4 week, The seven others were each fined $2 and costs, » total of $6.87 in each case, Donatto was 57 years old and leaves a widow and six children. been in the employ of the road for | many yeas He RICHESON’S CELLMATE GETS TWELVE YEARS. Butts, the Negro, Pleads Charge of Manslaughter. Tosby in the larence V. Imprisone: d street jal before his ex | than 14 years in state prison by Judge superior court today. Butts was indicted for murder in the T. Richeson while the lat- | arl n the Ch ution. FACULTY FROWN’S ON “BEER KEG PARTY." | Forty-nine Rutgers Students Suspend- | ed for Attending It. New Prunswick, N. T.4May ollege, Chicago Garment "W, Chicago, May |tv-nine of the 65 seniors at Rutgers college were indefinitely suspended to- day for alleged attendance at a “beer keg party” at Raritan Landing, after the class banquet last night. dent hody 4s indignant that the fac- ulty should have taken the action, and | declare that similar postprandial rev- | elry has been the custom set by other aduating classes without being dis- Among ihe suspended of tiue baseball team and an | officer of the Prohibition league at the The Guilty to | | | ‘orkers Strike, -About 2,000 gar- org alleging failure to pay the per- |ment workers employed by a Chicage Threo of the cases | tailoring coneern walked They complained of tlon, out today. | working condi- The wage question does Dot | Annie ' H. Robinson’ of had | chester, and a ‘brother, Rharles, children. at Colchester. ence in Colchester as a ph was buflt over 100 years ago, treal. hguard trom New York proceeded). |~ At Plymouth Ma; Liverpool May Wilhelm, Now Yor i}nnm#n (and proceeded) | Strike in Brickyards, | Haverstraw, N. Y. May 27.—Hvery For- | brickyar1 along the riverfront here, | day. stu- Eighty Killed in Theater Fire. Castleton, are | 0gTODh. New Haven—Saturday, June 2 day after the clostng-of the 4 party B, Morrill, Miss Myra Morrill, | They intend to visit England, Scotia, France, Switzerland, Eeigium, Hol aad lialy. children, Ralph S, of New Haven and Noroton Heights, a sister, Mrs. Abell, of Col- Bast Hampton, There are three grand- Dr. Robinson was weil and favorably known and often visited his 0ld home During his long resi- became well known in this part of th state, and his’' death is mourned by 3 Corsican, from Mon- | , Mauretania, | (and | Kronprinz for Cherbourg and where two thousand men are employed, is affected by a strike which began to- Spain, May 27.—Eighty persons were killed tonight in a fire | in a theater at Villarreal, which was caused by the explosion of a cinemat- | ools, including Supt and Mrs. A Miss | Mabel 8. Robbins, Miss Jessie Fowler and Miss Mary Van Doorn, all of New Haven, will leave for a tour of Furope. yesterday. That the Churches of Today are hin | dered hy Ittle narrow-minded Chris tlans more than by open wickedne | was the deciaration of Rev. Dr | Whitcomb Brougher of Los A Cal., before the Northern Baptist con- vention yesterday. Jake Samuels, a Negro, charge | with criminally assaulting Mrs, Wal- ter Ran wife of a Robertson cour tv farmer Saturday nizht, was taken from officers at Nashville, Tenn., yes terday by a mob and riddied with bul- h of | _As a Result of the Bricklaysrs Butte, Mont., refusing fo work | hod carriers who receive mao than a day, hod carriers will now receive $5 when 'w g with bri hose working with plaster eive $5.50. A Report Made to Police Commis- York har- joner Waldo by bor squad shows that two trical storms which occ the past month brought to the surface of the North and East rivers a total of 28 bodies. The States Supreme Court of the United vesterday declined to grant < new trial to Chester S. Jordan, the actor, who was convicted of having murdered his wife near Boston. Her dissected body was found stuffed in a trunk. State Pilots Won a Victory over the steamship companies yesterday when | the supreme court of the United States | decided that coastwise steam vessels under resister g a tederal pilot abard sre still subje | To ltepflits for state pllotage fees upon entering or leaving poris The Twin Daughters of Mrs. J Grigss of Holyoke, Mass,who are join- ed together at the hips, are doing well and are independent of each ofher. One will cry for food while the athe | 18 sleeping. Dactors will determin a few days whether it will be possible operaie. ..Dr. J. M. Buckley, New York, know n‘ N under arrest, vene was a cause:of much gr: tion m, M - to the Cuban governme President | PAMment emphaticaliy declared tombght Gomez summonnd the members of his | that the present Cuban situation in po | text the -messaze, immediately | American troops, other than the | drafting a reply istic of the atti- | rines already on their way 1 | tude of the American preside and | 1and, were expected to srder, | people. it was sald. It w oW a Will Strengthen Government. | fund availadle tran that {he | °f troops has r v o antion wilt | Proach of the e of the | Ereatls strontien poputar support of | 214, a8y eflort o move | press extreme gratification at the at- “I s s th B 2 4 {itudo of the Washington government, | | In addition to e department | More Troops to Disturbed Frcvin:c.‘;l,m,,,. o terme of N | _ The Cuban government continued to | Platt amendment under which the | be unaparing in its efforts to rush re- | United States Intervened in Cube & | inforcements to Oriente province, The |er the collapse of the Estrada Paima new cruiser Cuba_sailed antiago | admini in- 1906. The law this afternoon with the commander- | Interpreted th. advocate, in-chief of the ar gudo, the general s Montea and 600 soldie 1y General Farmy, proy | ed States may in t the Unit- “for the of all arms abo The chartered | proservation Cuban_independence, } st r a iled with 600 | the maintenance of a 3 nment ade- troops, including several companies of | quate to the pr fon of property coast artillery and a contingent from | and Individual berty an for dis- | the Cuban Red Cross. charging obligatie th respeet | Force of 5000 at Front. to Cuba imposed by the treaty of Par. There also entrained for the front |18 upon the United S now to be 500 mounted men of the rural guard, |undertaken by the government of Cue who probably are e most uscful | ba” troops in pursuing the r They | Even with these ments ful- are excellently armed and 1 nd | filled, the od would first | have been thorous t in | endeavor by d atic negotiations | American « tacti Captain | and_pacific means to sett i Paricer eventh United States Caval- | of Cuba, RECKLESS AUTOIST GETS FIVE YEARS For Running Down and Killing Besten Street Repairman. | TAFT AND ROOSEVELT | “THE KILKENNY CATS” | Will Be No G. O. P. Left When They Get Through, Sdys Senator. Washington, M Kilkenny | Boston, May 27.—The heaviest sen- cats, the uneven distribution of wealtl, | tence ever impc the Masmachu- as represented by Carne nd Col- [#etts courts in an automobile case | onel Roosevelt's prospects of nomina- | Was pronounced by Judse Chase in the tion were mingled in a lively superioy court today when he sent in the senate today over Mr. Hitch- [John A. Maloy to state prison for a cock’s resolution cailing for all Infor- | term of from five to seven years upon nation of corporatior dis 1 In | the man's plea of guilty 10 mansiaugh- n rns. re- | ter. turns, he said, encouraged a disposition | Maloy was operating an automobile toward imperialism. made more evident | on Boylston street on April 27 when e the disparity of wealth, increased the |ran down and killed two men, Thomas list of millionaires, and showed that | Donahue and John Connolly, who were DProtected interests had a revenua of | repairing street car tracks | a billion dollars a year over legitimate | It was shown in court thet six dif- pro ferent complaints for violation of e ron and steel manufacturers alone, | Automobile Jaws had besm Sue enator Hitcieock said, were colleci- | against Maloy. ing $300,000,000 more than their due, e = | He referred to Andrew Carnegle as | WAITERS SAID TO PLAW an example of an uneven distribv wealth, enator John Sharp Willlams Inter- o cted that it was essary for the |Chlcago Restaurant Manager Thinks demoeratic party repare lo take It Will Affect Only Smaller Places. charge of pub! = CONVENTION WEEK STRIKE ne “After the two kenny cats get| Chicago, May -Rumare are in through,” he sald, “there won't be any | circulation among various branches f republican party left and the demo- |the waiters’ union here that a dsmand cratic party will go in hy default will be made for an Increase in wages He predicted the nomination of (‘ol- | before the republican national comven Yonel Roosevelt, who, he said, was dis- | tion hers and that if it is not forth- satisfled “because he conidn't he both | coming a strike will be called during former president and president at the | convention week. same time. “We have heard rumors thet the “The democrats are trembling in |union waiters in some of the Aown- | thetr very boots for fear the former |town cafes would demand a higher president will be nominated,” retorted | scale during convention week,” sabd Senator Gallinger, who added that he|the manager of one of the leading would do all he could to prevent Mr. | restaurants. Roosevelt's nomination, “This may mean a general stefks, | but I don't believe it will affect the | higher class establishments, for the | waiters in these will profit by the increase in tips.” | CONFESSED PLACING | OXALIC ACID IN MILK | BEEF AT— HIGHEST PRICE SINCE 1882, | Brings 131-2 Cents Pound in Bulk at Winifred Anke on Trial Poisoning Nine Babies. Mi; for New York, May 27.—That hie client, Miss Winifred Ankers, on trial in the Wholesale in New York. supreme court, Beooklyn, accused of — poisoning nine hables fn the Brooklyn New York, May 27.—The and infants’ hospital, confess- e o nder the hypnotic inflaenge | the wholesale market here toduy, when was charged toduy Gy |1t 8010 at 1314 cents a pound b bulks Helly, counsel for the |1t 6 said to mean from 1 i-2 to % cenis While listening Lo the | & pound increase for prime mests at witnesses, 3liss Alkers | the retadl butchers’ shops, baby boy in her arme, | e AT A e Plumbers Bteike for $5 Per Day, Aukers closing the door of the | Cloveland, Mas feebox where the milk bLottles were kept, and Policeman Relily testifiod | that Miss Ankers confessed that she purchased the oxaiie ncid and placed it in the milk betiles, She repudinted the confecwion, he sald, when p | | nursery ed while of the p Bdward J homeless girl | testimony ot | held Ler own | Ewmma Ivauy | Miss sald 6 g Ty

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