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VOL. LIV.—NO. 209 The HEAVY GRAFT FROM DENS OF VICE About a Dozen New York Bagnios Paid Police In: spectors From $1,500 to $2,000~a Month DISTRICT ATTORNEY UNCOVERS THE SYSTEM Result of His Investigation to Prove Sensational—Four Police Inspectors and a Civilian Employe of Police Department Slated For Inquiry at John Doe Proceedings—Whitman Preparing to Summon Over 100 Witnesses. ue. 2% Tour policesn- slstant Distrigt Attornes Rubin of New g " York in a i&ter which Mr. Rubin SR T “"“" Of ! probably recefved today. ey? Whitn havinz | BECKER ABUSES PRISONER. r A wderly pabsids Denounces in Tombs the Lawyer Who will be | 1 practically in Gave Story to Whitman, ase ir ourse of the | Noyw york, Aug. 28—Lieut. Charles before Justice | y cker, now under indictment for the ] murder of Herman Rosenthal, had an encounter i the corridor of the Tom » today with James 1\ Hallen, the law- Expected to Furnish Sensation. utenant | § nof the | ver and fellow prisoner, who o Jifas & (e an. | district attorney that he had ove d v I'e officials | an incriminating conversation between e i cemsation of | Becker and one of the patrolmen in- e tited | dicted for perjury, lodged tn an adjoin- re of 1 orruption, | Ing cell : e il "permit | According to the story told by friends i) ted offi- | of Becker, he approached Hallen in tho por- g o | Suspected O | corridar and was inclined to be abusive ¢ : ' A ot | He asked Hallen why he had told such s jon on the Part Of| 4 story to the district attorney. Hal- . B e len made no reply, and escaped to his To Summon Over 100 Witnesses. ¢ 3 yared to sub-| Becker has been much annoyed by vitnesses, and it | people who have been writing letters ] {estimony of | to him. Scores of ministers, he says, i v lleged | have written to him urging him to t men in graft. | “purge his soul” In a statement < will be called | Becker accuses these men of being g : scted | stool pigeons for the district attorney i ; " The | and adds that “when a minister of th g v Wh will hear the | Sospel descends to the level of being grice. ¥ ermine whether | a stool pigeon then it is time to call 4 Sistrict A Whitman went to —————— : mmer home | PROBING THE LAWRENCE Millbro : 4 A g DYNAMITE CONSPIRACY. } . Opinions Differ as to Whether Inquiry History of Becker's Conduct. Chussd Buisde oston, Aug. 28.—Opinions differ r the inquiry into the conspira- 2 = for the o secrete dynamite in Lawrence . . is un- | Gurlg the mill strike last winter inftu- i { the al-|enced Ernest W. Pitman of Andover, a dom { nt ‘¥er in|Prominent comiractor, to commit sai- st g n of gam-|clde vesterday. Pitman, who erected g fl ¢ in which, | two of the large mil in Lawrence, £ s of his al- | WaAs questioned recemtly by Distriel & Rosenthal | Aliorney Pelletier regarding any « of black- | knowledge he might have had of the distribution_of dynamite in that city. He was to have been a witness before Civ the grand jury. Charles . Litflefic1d, a close friend - itman, who saw the contractor transferr ¥ | shortly before his death, expressed the - n ft point of| lowing opinion s report- | Vhile 1 am not surprised by Mr. mer ‘s act, 1 wish to state emph: ns, | it was not brought about 3 xints e operatic the serving of the summons to ap- > rir £ thr ar before the Suffolk grand jury. Mre 1 f recomr ns for| Pitman was hard hit by the failure of ¥ e b a eompar last March, a he has Whitsnal Skoptioa often comfided to me that he meant to T A Investigation by the grand jury was 1 based on allezations that dynamite - was purchased in or near Boston and » sent » Lawrence for distribution In < riain places, to lead the public to IS elieve that the explosive was to be | o u; by the strikers to damage mili > property and thus cast odium upon the ° unions.” The Suffolk county grand jury is expected to report to the superior 2 hich 1 Be court within a short time, if indl he gt -3 will re- | ments agalnst mill officials are found. 4 § how mon! District Attorney Pelletier question- e flliam J. Flynn,| ed witnesses in the drnamite case this | 34 ¢ ommis- | forenoom, but 1t was understood that | the grand jury heard all the important evidence yesterday. Among those who | appeared before that body were John | J. Breen, a former Lawrence politictan, Wwho was fined $500 last spring for di posing of dynamite to certain person. Louls S. Cox, attorney, and postmaster DY | of Lawrence; George E. Kunhardt of T that ¥ i Andover, treasurer of the Kun- for \h"" m. Iver I ostrom of North b ) a month | er, vice president of the United N s $800 a| States Worsted compa: Fred C. Me- ate 1 treasurer of the Everett mills t ] thr arles Walcott, treasurer of the . ) a month. > mil | %0 $2.000 a Month,| AR eflort was made to secure the | of police | Presence of surers of other mills, | ier of | Put they were cither on vacation or | 3 th could not be located. ! ‘i LT G| PROTEST REAFFIRMED AGAINST CANAL LAW. British Government Sends Notice of Purpose to Appeal to Hague Court. Washington, Aug. 28,—Great Britain has reaffirmed its Protest against the . 45| Panama canal Jaw. In a note filed to- day with the state department by A. Mitehel]l Tnnes, charge of the British embassy here, it was stated that if a watisfactory agreement could not be reached Great Britain would appeal to The Hague tribunal for arbitration. | The note submitted today says| Great Britain will give eareful con- sideration to the bill and note sub- nitted to congress by President Taft, relative o discrimination in favor of American coastwise shipping in the Panama canal, If, after due consid- wration, it is found that no satisfac- tory agreement can be reached in the matter, Great Beitain declares it will be necessary to appeal to arbitration, Mr. Innes was instrueted by his gov- ernment late yesterdey to file the protest and sent it to the state depart- from 15 Sensation, mebod; ation te Produce meni shortly before noon today, It| ; Js a brief nete, stating merely that| - - g | Great Britain siill stands in her pre-| ¥ ” o . 1| Viousty explained attitude in regard | b to the Panama bill, Phe tone of the ks, A Hbgagih e WESHER- | note makes it appesy that Greak Brit- ainbeiicves it will be neeessary to sub- mit the question te arbitration, Mr, Innes who has heen aeting as charge of the embassy during the ab- gence of Ambassador Bryee, came to Washington recently from the summer NO SUSPECTS HELD. Postmaster Johnson of Hot Springs Explaine Circumstances. A nas. | headquarters of the British embassy Meuivhis, ToOR, L Tustmas- | 4¢ Kineo, Maine, to remain during the e s b o Spiings | discussion in congress of the bill and Ak, tatidng Wortree. Ak file for his government (he Pro- & Hlood? ol Lafts Louje| Oue siate depastmens pllelal feday e tis 3 e Eoger- | fleclaved that he did net hslieve cgat b oyt e aptied in u @espate, | Beitain had 4 sase fo carry before The o i Hague tribunal, Messms, Rom, Lodge | " \r Sotmson ex. | and piher senstors ave on record as jwined, be questionid two men who | declaring that the Tinied Stat: plained. he ould cetainly lose should the case sred generally the description sent | Would cé | Jos AUETof the New York gunmen, but he | be referred to ¥he Hague, A e et nz| Miss Susan H. Wixon, an author and | actorily establishee | his recent indisposition well known educator, died al e bume teaveling salesmen. This information | well kanie auesiih, o6 My Johwses declazed, was given As: Cabled Paragraphs Aviator Burned to Death. Doua, France, Aug. 28.—Lieut. Louic Felix M. Chandenier of the aviation corps was burned to death while flying in his aeroplane today. New American Cardinal Paris, Aug. 28.—The pope is about to create a new American cardinal who is to reside in Rome, according to a special despatch received hera. Italian Squardon Off Beirut. Reirut, Syria, Aug. 28.—A squadron of Italian warships, comprising six vessels, anchored off this port this morning. Their object is unknown, To Open Welsh Festival. Fishguard, Wale, Aug. 28—David Lioyd George, British chancallor of the exchequer, is to be invited to open tho Welsh festival at Pittsburgh next summer by a Welsh American dolega- tlon which arrived here today, No Loans from the Powers. Tondon, Aug. 28.—Dr. Sun Yat Seu proposed ‘today that Crina borrow nothing from the six powers group of bankers, according to a news agency despatch from Tien Tsin. He declared it possible for China to obtain funds from other sources. Notice Served on Cretans. Canea, Crete, Aug. 28.—The foreign consuls have {nformed the Cretan gov- ernment that the powers intend to pre- vent any armed expedition to the isl- and of Samos and that British and French cruisers have been despatched there for that purpose. Borden and Suffragettes. London. Aug. 28.—The Canadian pre- mier, Robert L. Borden, when he faced the suffragettes for the first time today took a firm stand. He told them very emphatically he had no power to in- troduce a general measure of suffrage for women in the Dominion of Canada and that no threats of the employment of militant methods would have any influence on him. MORRISON DENIES ALL KNOWLEDGE OF BOYCOTT Secretary of A. F. of L. Testifies in the Danbury Hatters' Case. o | Hartford, Conp., Aug. 23.—Frank | Morrison, secrefary of the American Federation of Labor, was on the stand the greater part of the afternoon in the Danbury haiters' trial now being | heard in the United States district court, and he denied any knowledge of | the alieged boycott of the hatters’ firm | Loewe & company of Dan- hed Teports of the n Federation of Labor and also a number of volumes of the American Federationist. He said that while the latter publication wag the official publication of the fed- eration, many of the articles of a new nature were mnot official He stated however, that he regarded as official | the printed lists of “unfair” shovs. | Mr, Morrison stated that at the con- vention of the American Federation of Labor in 1901 a resolution offered that members should not patronize manufacturers that did not unfon label. He did not consider as a boyeott for the reason that resolution was not adopted by the fod- eratfon, but referred to the executive couneil He testifie Americ: 1 use that when the case now being re-tried was hefore the supren ‘ court he and President Gompers aske to be permitted to Interveme, as the “offieers hud certain rights that were being attacked.” Mr. Mgrrison will go on the stand | Py morning, and expected tonight that he would he im mediately followed b Mr. Gompers. | t s tonight agreed to let both | Mr. Gompers and Mr. Morrison go on | the SITOW as witnesses f the de although they .’\;\v‘i been subvoaened by the plaintiffs. Thi is to allow them to return to Was ington instead in_the rebuttal Tonight Mr. Gompers, Mr. Morrison and other labor leaders were enter- tained at a banquet given by the Hart. ford Central Labor union. At the ba tonight Samuel Gompers, president of the American | Federation of Labor, was the principal speaker, and he took occasion to make | an at upon Detective William J. | M. | of waiting to be call Burns, Gompers referrgd to the detectlve at various times as’a 3o £ “falsi- | fler” “Jefamer,” “miscreant” and “pol. troon.” Mr. Gompers said that if Mr. Burns had any accusations to make against either him or the Federation of Labor he should make them in court, and then they would be answered. Other- wise he “would not take vour time and mine tor consider the talk of this falsl. fier Talking of political itions, | Sl al conditions, Mr. ¥ id he saw no rea. Conmecticnt should men to congress their pockets. EMPEROR WILLIAM PRACTICALLY WELL. Walks About Grounds and Attends to State Business. , Cassel, Hesse-Nassau. Germany, Ang. 8~—Anxiety concerning the heaith of fmperor _“'HHam has disappeared. Wi majeaty i now practically as wejl as | ever. Only a slight hoarseness hefrayg son why d not send several “with union cards in During a long walk and valmvg the promenade of Wilhelm- shoehs castla early in the day the am peror set his companions a lively pace Ha afterward ate a hearty luncheon 1n1 which he was joined hy gome membearg of the imperial family and suits, Then he attended to a quantity of state busi- ness that had aceumulated during his liness, but during he afternoon took e relaxation on the advie court physiclans, ¢ “0vice of the The changed weather, which today Was warm and sunny here, seemed to Pa the principal medioine required b pis majesty, who is looking forward ty hig approaching visit fo Switzerland ul:r“w keen interest 2 & programme of the para 8 maneeuvres in Saxony has not under. BOne any material change, In the grounds oot Known at New Haven New Haven, Conn., Aug, 35.—Nothing is known here of George fi:;ssN:'b}mZ under arvest in Camden, N, 7, ehargaq with enticing 17 year old Annie Wiilis of this placo e Allantie City, N, J. fo alleged immoral piir velthor 1s anything known of the Willis girl. phe olice suy that the ease has neyer veporiad to them, ksl Stsamship Arsivals, Al Liserposl: Au, Boaton. 5 At Gueenstown; from Philadeiphia, Aty London: Aug. 28, Ansenia, from Cape Race, Aug. 28.—Steamer Teu- tonic Liverpool for Moutreal, 315 wiles wul-nortbeast al 16 a m, ¥, Lacenla, from Aug. 88, Haverford, | for the | knees and buried his face 34,000 Atiend Booth Funeral SIMPLE SERVICES ATTENDED BY MANY NOTABLES. A PLAIN, PINE COFFIN Cap and Bible of Dead General Rest Upon [t—A Regulation Army Revival Service Held, Salvation London, Ausg. ineral services over the founder of the Salvaiion Ar- my, Gen. William Booth, were held at the Olympia_tonight in accordance with the traditions of that organiza- tion without pomp or symbole or mourning but with a most moving fer- vor and impressiveness. Thirty-four thousand people partic- ipated in the service, Nearly haif of them wore the blue coats and red jer- seys or bennets with red ribbon so familiar on the Streets of citles in sev- eral nations Body In Plain Pine Coffin. The body of the late general in a plain pine coffin rested high upon a white catafaique before the big plat- form across the end of the hall, where all the chief officers of the organiza- tion were seated and where forty bands were massed. The crimson flag of the army of “fire and blood,” which the general unfurled on Mount Calvary, planted above the coffin. A bank of flowers, composed of the tributes sent Dy members of royalty and many so- cloties, was behind it. Flags of vari- ous nations in which the commander in chief had waged campaigns and the standards of the older divisions of the army were arrayed before the platform. Notable Personages Present. These and more Salvation Army flags in the galieries, each tipped with white ribbons, and twenty portraits of the evangelist, surmovnted with green laurel wreaths, with a broad organge ribbon connecting them, was the only decorative effects. The front rows of chairs before the | coffin were filled with representatives | of various bodies, with the equerry king, several mayors in their robes and chains of office, a delega- tion from the stoek exchange, minis- ters and clergymen of all the Protest- ant churches and Jewish rabbis, and | many notable personages were seated | throughout the house, but the rank and fils of the great gathering was com- posed of the plain people for whom the army works. 8mall Procession of Salvationists, The service itself was not omly a| material but also a mammoth mee ing of prayer and praise. No other congregation eomparable with it ever gathered in London, if in save the funeral of the beld in the same hall this coming The the world, | general's wife, | years ago Ociober solemn 51 moments of the | long meeting were when the coffin was | borne along the center of the hall to the music of the Dead March in Saul A small proeession representing ma wehies of the army’s activity, in- | cluding men and women and a detach- ment of officers from foreign hranches, ng the flags of their respective countr preceded it. Immediately | before the body a brigadier bore aloft the crimson flag which the gemeral rai at he died Jerusalem and under which at Hadleywood. Foilowing it marched the officeys from Sweden, Germany, America, Switz n- France, Denmark, N India, Australasia. Coffin Covered with Flag. en came the new gencral, ooth, with his wife, ing the uniform of a Mrs. Booth-Hellberg children of the late Salvationist, Adjt. Catherine Booth, Capt. Mary Booth, Capt. Miriam Booth, (‘adet Sergt. Ber. nard Booth and Cadet M. Booth Tuck- er, | The coffin was covered 3 flag and on it rested the genera 3ible and cap. The slow pro along the cen- ter aisle occupied more than_ten min- | utes, during which time the” immense audience remained standing All the Sal jonists stood at salut More than one-half of the 33 number re familiar Salvation Army songs, which the many thousand present sang with a mighty volume. way Bram- each wear- commissioner; and the grand- well Bramwell Booth Overcome, | As Bramwell Booth reached for a chair to take his seat he fell to his in his hand: alternating | hymns and prayers, following' which | there was a regulai alvation Army | revival gervice, with the usual ®all for Dacksliders, | When the call for backsliders was made, soveral in Salvation Army uni- forms went forward. Soldiers Renew Pledge. The revival service was concluded with the singing of the refrain heard at every meeting which General Booth | conducted, “Hiz Blood Can Make the| The service consisted of Vilest Clean; His Blood Avails for| Me.” | The most impressive feature of the| solemnities fololwed. All the soldiers of the Army rose and recited the cov- | enant of fidelity, pledging themselves to be faithful soldiers of the Lord. Body Removed to Headquarters. Mhe catafalqus was then wheelsd slowly down tha aisle while the gread | gathering sang “When the Rell is Call. | ed Up Yender I'll Be There.” The cof- | fin was placed in a hearse and eon- veyed te the Salvation Army head- | 1 | quarters, where it will rest until taken | te Abney Park eemetery tomorrow. | As the deors closed behind the cask- et Commissioner McKie pronounced | the benediction, FOR LURING GIRL INTO | LIFE OF WHITE SLAVERY. Ress Held in $5,000 Bortds for Entici Annie Willis Away. €amden, N Aug, 3! eorge Ross, 80 vears old, was held in $5,600 | bail here today by a United Staies commissienes charged with entieing 17 year old Annie Willis from her home in New Haven, Genn., te Atlantic City, N, J. Special agenls of fhe depari ment of justive allege that Ress in dused the giFl {n leave heme pnder promise pi mursiage and then forced her fn hecesie o Cwhile slave” 4t fhs shots sesori. Pateclives Believe thas the prisenct, whe says hi e ig in | New Haven, was eugaged with ethers | in bringing girls from the New Bng- and il Tewns to seaside resarts for immoral purposes Water Dripping Threugh the Geilin g from a breken Wwater pipe drewne thrag vear old Willie Barber in his orib in Breoklym yesterday, \ | Responsible for | tion NORWICH, CONN., THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 1912 i PRICE TWO CENTS Bulletin’s Circulation In Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and its Total Circulation is the Largest in ' Connecticut in Proportion to the Gity's Population But Half Dozen States For Taft ROOSEVELT'S IDEA OF PRESI- DENT’S PROSPECTS, HE CONCEDES VERMONT Colonel Virtually Admits That He Ex- pects to Receive But Little Encour- ment in Green Mountain Stats Oyster Bay, N. Y., Aug. 38.—There are only a half dozen states, Colonsl Roosevelt said tonight, which he be- lieved President Taft has a chance of carrying. One of these, he said, is Vermont, in which he is to spend the remaining haif of the week in a speak- ing tour. The colonel left Oyster Bay tonight by automobile for New York, intending to take a midnight train for the north. He is to open his Vermont campegn at Bennington at 9.30 o'clock tomorrow, and during the day will speak also at Rutland, Middibury and Burlington. Says Money is Against Him. Colonel Roosevelt said that in Ver- mont all the power of organization of money was agminst him In such a state, he sald, he always estimated that two-thirds of the people must be for him to win an election in the face of this opposition. In Vermont. as al over the coun- try,” he continued, “my support is coming from the plain people. Wher- ever we win. it wil be due to them, largely to the farmer and the wage worker." “Big Business” Still. Against Him. The ex-president said he expected the representatives of “big business” to be against him, and that, aithough cer- tain of his leaders belleved this hos- tility might disappear as the position of the progressive party was under- stood, he had seen no signs of such a change. But he felt that he was e tled to the support, he sald, of the business mon of smaller means, Wwhom the new party proposed to protect from aggressions on the part of great cor- porations. He was finding, bowever, ho continued, that many of these men also were against him, apparently be- cause they took their cue from the men of larger affairs.” BLAMES THE TARIFF. Campaign Contribu- tions, Says Marshall. Bangor, Me, Aug. 28—The declarn- that the protective tariff was diredily responsible for cam condributions from ¢ srporations was | made at a_democratic rally here te night by Governor omas R. Mar shall of Indiama, the demecratic can- didate for vice president. “Bad as have been the contributions.” said he, “and vicious as have been the expeditures of money, worse than all has been the system of protection which has compelled (he (rust n nates to keep lobbies at Washington hire lawyers and finance legislators. Is | it much wonder when these aceessories | are necessary for legislation that men who have been held up by public should in turn hold up the nor Marshall and Govern Plaisted, the Maine executive who saeking re-election, spoke from me platform at tonight's meeiing NOROTON MAN DROWNED WHILE CN FISHING TRIP Companion States That Victim Fell Overboard. Noroton, Conn., Aug. 28.—It became known today that Willlam McLough- in of this place was probably drowned In Long Island sound off Collander Point some time Monday Henry | Scherer and McLoughlin started on a fishing trip and, according to Sc er's story, McLoughlin fell overb: and did not come to the surface Schérer says e called for help, and although several persons responded, no trace of McLoughlin could be seen. A number of persons were dragging the Sound today, but with no avail. T said that both men were under the influence of liquor at the time of the accident. her- ard, MAN OF 108 TAKES A Condensed Telegrams | Millions of Army Worms have ap- | peared on the outskirts of Ballimore. | Samusl K. Worthington, formerly a leading grain merchant of Buffalo, died in that city.” Secretary Meyer Is at His Home in Hamilton, Mass., recovering from a slight attack of indigestion, Alderman John A. Richert of ('hic- cago was beaten and robbed of money and jewelry valued at $30 in the streets. Four Thousand Persons participated | yesterday in the celebration of ihe 100th anniversary of the Incorgoration of Berlin, Mass The Btriking Waiters of the Hotcl Touraine at Boston voted to accept the propesition agreed to at the sonferenc yvesterday and will return to work (o OVER 2006 MARINES IN NICARAGUA President Taft Believes American Forces Will Ag- _gregate That Number by Next Tuesday COUNTERMANDS ORDER FOR TENTH INFANTRY Regiment Had Made All Preparations to Sail For Panama Today—Reassuring Message From Commander of the Denver Causes President to Rescind Order Issued Earlier day. an estate valued at $800,000, equally Two Boys Were Caught at Loriliard, | N. J., placing iron bara on the tracks in the Day—American Marines Now on Guard at Corinto of the New Jersey Central. They said| On Board President Taft's Train, h\\ the dead of mght massacred the they wanted to see what a wreck 100k- | Rochester, N. Y, A 8. President | $leeping garrison . od lke. Sechentar, . The American forces found ASINe s Taft tonight rescinded his twelve | erals hostile to their advance mad it Raymond Miller, Aged 16, and Eddie | hours old order directing tne immedi- [ became necessar for Commander McEwan, aged 17, both of Chenon, Iil, | ate despatch from Panama fo Nica- | Lerhune to threaten to attack Leon were killed vesterday when their au- s < before the Insurgents would allow the tomobile was struck by - train-at |Tagua of the Tenth Infantry train bearing the American detachment Weston, Il From his private car in the Roches- |to enter the town. oting had sub- el vt the hrbuAiT Wiked 6 -0E sided and Americans found the eity Notices Were Posted in the TN 2 : ) resuming its norn ppearance. cofton Ml A Bt el ects acting secretary of war to recall the | After conferriag with the liberal announcing a shutdown from Aug. 3 |order. A sufficient force of marines, |} -dr':» Commander Terhune withdrew to Sept. 16 as part of a plan to curtail | the president sald tonig wo! e | 18 force from_ th 100 marines production. in Managus, the Nicara Capital, | Proceeding to Managua, the capital, and Corinto, its principal seaport, early | @0d the remainder of the detachment The Late Thomas L. Chadbourne, | next week, 'to insure the safety of [Felurning o Corinto. who died in New York recently, left | American ifves and propert orinto ignated a8 & Dlace of ref foreigners re- | divided among his three sons and two 2000 Marines in Nicaragua. | siding in the surrounding country, An |y The president’s action tonight, came | &rmed fo) landed from the gunboat | i at the close of a day spent largely in | Annapolis is constantly patroling the N T T in com- | considering telegrams from the state, |#treets and a number six-pound 8 e SR S L S war and navy depariment leaders in | Euns have been taken from the wer- exposition in San Francisco in 1913, | Washington Tonigt i t | ship and mounted on flat cars for the was approved yesterday by Postmastcr | expressed the belief that & Wl | T, S & General Hitcheock p | be more than 2,000 Unt ma- | I e United ites gunboat Denver, = | rines in Nicaragua by ‘r:nf'c"m;l,-’cm" ats of marines and = o J s numbering about 550, has In an Automobile Accident vesterd: Message from the Denver. artived herd. The crulser California x;;;\r r’:,\_«-.”r‘,.lm on ll,nn: Island w\:n\!. with a further detachment of marines. iss Liille Lette of Cape City, Va A lengthy telegram received A acter etels tHis Boit " | who has been visiting Miss Dolling of | from the commander of the |‘r”vj'xm' d to reach this port tomer~ | New York, was killed. | Denver, now in Nie | The revolutionaries control Chinan | - — | declared that the ins: - Y With & populat 2 haid | A Mechanical Appliance which will | have given assurance that B0 ey, mith & bopulation of sbowt | render areroplanes so stable that they | promptly open the lines of 11~ | of the tats et 08 & S nes P T of the same name, and It is one of the cannot upart or plunge t nd | cation at Corinto and Manag he | chief destres of the rebels & | while flying is. claime 3 en | Nicaraguan governmen elf r | Corint ol 1\ 0 Sabture invented by a Relgian engin | the assistance of nited %, | and with which it et & L ~ | and stands read ) 2 the | AN attempts ."“'(r;.m‘);r.(:rt:'un:" || ihctoromy iGansiml il iaht has notifled| catiway: in i f capture this seaport o far have besn B i f AR S the message to the president | provented by the armed force from the o make lat orts to the sec- R i ; | Annapolis, ‘the officers of wirieh arm [ty :;\j state, as required by law, Ten Locomotives Availa | determined to protect the lves of the | will result in prose ns. The rebals pos: « | women residents. ; i i e 1 : i Managua ia the only largs ef | Mi'\:’enH:l:!dred P;‘fin v‘,,",.ch,f”“’? *holare at the b ed | northern department. . | bilo on Labor day by | patel of the Tenth mtaniey b | ALL PREPARATIONS MADE | the mission. { sued upon receipt of the message from | S Saclalist Gatharings Were Callad at | 0 Denver. | Tonth Infantry Was Ready to Saff ety important Gen ety to de- | President Shows Anxisty From Panama Today. ek he president did not concesl his| ashington, Aug. $5—Thé telegrant reichst provide relief | anxiety over the situation. | of President Taft revoking the order | for the high ¢ ving | R R | sending the Tenth infantry from Pan- 1 ; | ama, to Nicaragua, was recel | Brother Liberator Rena, of the Holy | MARINES GUARD CITY war department iate tontghe '\:,:,',': st order, at South Norwalk, who - .| Gemeral Wood, chief of staff, was in endeavored to learn to swim by tying | Armed Force from Gunboat Annapolls | his office when the telegrapile. arden {a rope to a tree and about his waist, on Duty at Corinto. | arrived, and he at once transmitted it broke his neck trying te dive | to Colonel Greens in command of the ’ — ” Corlnta, Nicaragua, T | Tenth at Panamn Mrs, Elizabeth Fauntherps, widow | o7 "Commander W g |, All day the department officials had of a Titanic victim and herseif a |, : ors | been at work pianning the transporta survivor, sued the White Star Steam- | s from (he Annep- [tion of the Tenth to the Aisaftected ship company for $10,000 in Philadel- i the ool ng | Central American republia, and to- phia for loss of her husband rinte harhe eded in | night they had succesded in seeuring — | forcing t b orv | a liner due to leave Panama tomorrow | James Gordod“Stell, known as @ | controlled by t maries ) | with the troops, All orders wers im- son poet of the lowa state peniten- [Leon, the town m! tween the | mediately eountermanded and the of- tlary, is dead negro convicl is | Pacific coast 4 ke ) whera | ficlals turned ont at the Mghts at the aying, as th of Jrinking wood | the liberals rose in arms Aug. 19 and - department and went home to bed. | alcohol, which they d stolen Ernest J. Lés, one af the most prom - | T0 RAISE THE SALARIES CUBAN REPORTER 19 inent lumbermen in _eastern Maine was killed yesterday when struck by OF FEDERAL JUDGES RELEASED BY COURT, plece of iron thrown from & machiy — - n his block mill at Bancroft, Me }Mnfion Tabled at Session of American The Three-Masted Schooner Edwin | Vigorows Protest Against It Made by Bar Association. Charge Gibson. G. Farrar, built at an expense of ak Milwaukee, Wis, Havana, Aug. 28—Release has been $84,000 for the lumber trade and hav- | criticlsm of those who eranted to Eurique Maza, the Cwban | ing a carr ity of 600,000 feet, | ndequacy of the feder | revorter who assaulted the United | was launck hippsburg, es- [and of “those who ] ates charge d'affaires lnst night | terday | with polictes dic This was done in spite of the offiofal | — 1 | whims and fleet request that he should be held handed | Atkinson Academy at Atkinson, N.|mada by United in by Charge Hugh S. Gibson to See- | H., one of the oldest coeducational in- | Sutherland of 1 retary of State Manuel Bangully, A stitutions in the country, was 125 ye fore the Ameri i vigorous protest has been m old yesterday, and an elaborate RN | Cuban government by Mr. Gibson. | gramme was arranged to commemorate |~ Saintatning that the chief value of | The prisoner was taken befors the | the occaston. education is “In its operation to pre. ‘n-uzfuuulo sltting in the night court, | e vantil conatded mpulsive ac- | Where he admitted the assault, de- | After Hearing a Song to the Mot Fanater Futn lounced | ¢1aring that he was overwhelmed by that cvery race has a flag but the col- | gro P er, B decis- | Patriotic fury in consequence of the ored man, Rev. J. Lennox of Cleveland, | jong “which, he said, in effect would | i0sult hicaped on him by Gibson's in- bishop of the Zion African Evangeli- | yo s render a judicial by a | S18ting on the paymerft of the clatm of c reh, designed an official emblem | O 2 which he said show of hands $667,000 by Hugh Rel at the pol the Amerfean | which t s church has decided | "5 §o hogoming unfashionable to | cOBttractor. "Ho was then reiassed. BRIDE OF SWEET 73.| ' #1%V! g spealc wall of the constitution,” de- | , On learning of the rel - ey = » Mias Adels Buck em. | ¢lared Senator Suthe It s no| g & 1 T Drota . | ey cient faith in t ear in - 0 secure Maza's Jumping Over Bromstick. ing and R or s s, e fatiics | appearan 2 —_— at Oakland, Cal Monday af IR S CORRN: R e s Secreta y » Menocal lat Paterson, N. J., Aug. 28.—All known | eration for ar is, wa the people themselves in seek informed 1 2 that he had Inter : trores | . radical changes is not to be g : eon. marriage records for age were broken | as the daughter of e sulted the president of the court and here today when Timothy Griffin, 108 | Brooklyn newspaper editor. 22,‘" \”:‘h!:l;\« J'i:’:;\"“”:'_\‘ 1had also t 3 s to have the years old and Lucy Woody, 73, were — o charges against M laid before thy | weaded bya minister. Griffin and his| That There is a Plant in New YoM |{he demagogue whose strident voice | prosacuting attorne bride have nominally been marTied for | manufacturing spurious half dollars | has filled the land w msid- | 1t is expected that Maza witl present more than fifty years, having been|Which arc sent to varfous agencies | ®red and impractical ot ragt and | HimSelt today before the polfce judss, slaves on the same plantation in North | ghuot the United States is the | A motion to urge Prosident Taft and | wnen he will be held to await farthes Carolina before the war, and, accord- | confession made by lgnacin Mon | congress to Increase the iries of | procaedings. ing to the aged negro's story, having | 2n Italfan arrested at Sopris, neur |federal judges provoked heated debate | “pp 45 vamar hero that the case entered into the connubial state by the | Trinldad, charged with counterfaiting, (8R4 Tesulted in tabling the question. | recatis the unp assault by Ale old siave custom of jumping over a i g R e R I tog | Derto, Yarini on’ Cornell Tarler when broomstick. Recently they decided on | £ & s congres o 03 the bo was charge a'affaires of the fegatin ISORDERS OVER PRI aged farm erty 1o a « extent, | the common law side of the fagderal | o i M“TC:ONTIN ¢ | Iepiden demoraiix clephone and | aourts as 18 now belug done foi- the | WOMAN DESERTED UE | telegraph servic « large terri- | equity side.” AT THE AGE OF 11 st tory | “The purpose is to provide for uni- e % i | Twa Arrests Made at New Haven Last — form wystem of ploading in (he slalo | Fopmer Besutiful Wife of Gederal Night, | Michael Kosachiah, 15 Yeare of Age, | federal courts Houllehi - OISR - whe sald his me {5 in Philade!phia, New Haven, Aug, 38.—The seenas of | was arrested ai Hammond, Ind., y | ¥ I P | 9 exaltament 1n the Hebrew mection of | terday, churged with having robbel | TO WORK FOR REMOVAL OF P, ok W M the eity aver the high prices of kosher | John Lyt ghland station agent | an outcast from her tribe, Melissa | meat ihat were emaoted (oday were |for the Frie railroad, of $100. 1wnch| NEW LONDON GRADE CROSSING | Houstonfi a full-blos Klowa, once repeatod tonight, and two arrests re- | said that the boy pointed two revoi- | i | the Deautital wite of Gen. Sam Houe: sulted. Two men, Who would not mevs | vers at him. Action Taken by Directors of Connec- | ton, first president of the republic of » | when erdered to by the police, were —— ticut Auto Association. Texas, has been loft alome to die of locked up, While the sireets were| Capt. lsaas E. Emerson, millionaire hunger and neglect in her weather- crowded with a shouting mass of we- | drug manufacturer of Baltimore, whoss Bridgeport, Conn., Aug. 28 The a1- | Deaten tepee thres mfles from Ana- men up to late tonight, there was no | divorced wife married C. Hazeltine | rectors of the Connecticit Automobile | d87Ko. 3 i actual disturbanee, Basshor, also of Baliimore. a few days | association met here (his afternnon | Mrs. Houston is years old and - age, has filed a petition fn court re- [and named Frank L, Staples of this | bind It has 500 <ho SO WOMAN GROWS DESPERATE quifing e Tasshor 0 how causs | city as delogate to ‘the Good Rogds | #he Hlowa and Comanche Indiane te why the $38.806 a vear alimeny allowed | congress to be held next week at At. | @bandon their old people to " AFTER FAMILY QUARREL-| jig; by the caurt in the decree of i~ |lanto City, He was given authority | alowing them to die by defress; and Attempts to Asphyxiate Herself and | Vo7°¢ Should nol he discontin to name other delegates if he thought ;\,'.fim:?ml:;:m So :\x.‘;‘é:a:;hg- M : necessary, The directors voted to use ¥, hag nc €Children—Three Dead. { Wen River Subsidi their infiuence teward securing, if pus- | Of the average squa Mo ot A b Hasak Ty i - _b";"‘ 'f'A e "?r;l gay | DI, the elimivation of the grade i EP;RT wvnKMfinn , Aug, 38.—afss. Sa y-| Norwich. England, Aug. he day 4 ate street, New London, A ; oher quarzeled with her husband in | passed with almost no rain and the < At g s B S e Brooklyn {his abternoon, and in his|fiods caused by (he rising of (he s vated to Join the (oad Roads KILLED IN SAWMILL. abseace lay down Tn bed With her four | Wonsam . are slowly subsiding. The | gssociation of Clommeationt perentls —— Joung UBl/1son and tisied gu thi Su%:| cuorimi Ay was Teared would | pomme e yot, mnecticul, | recen(lY | plank Rebounded from Saw and Struck When e reiusied tiwee of the childeen | go pnt, is sii " Sut Biagias: Atlanived 1t Ny aeeidiag Him at Base of Skull, »:mvl;l‘ b years ~l§l. u:w‘t‘d 4 sud | Popditiens are gmpreving, but the | ln raver of Joining 4 Bdward, §—were dead, wnd The wiother | vity fs without light Bridgepart, Conn, Auf. 26—Joseph wus Uneonscieus. A faurth child was | Ducke, aged M, an em of the A, sevived. The wwiher wys laken (o 4 i Brank Bstile of Carbollc W, Burritt compeny, death this Lospital sud has litle chance of re Governor Bleace Renominated. sfternovn et the campany's mdll in & covery., She is oaly 28 years old, | Bolumbia, 8. 6. Aug. 28.—Practeally | Haven 28— Michasl ¥, Ip:::;\mnx' mataer, He was - Ll - complete returns from the wcratic uun, aged 8, o ngle, ended | furge plank to s olrogiar .0 Benjamin E. Faylor of Boston, who | primaries which toko place vesierduy this evoning firinking s | he Bl AuSARenely n Las served 38 yeafs of a ife sentence | in South Carolina, indicate that Hov of earbolic acid, Mis friends | hatt he wpaped ¥o for shooling Wilder Hutchins, a Hoston | Cole 1. Biease has a majority of more 52y he had been suffering from halli- | anether wenk, m stable keeper, was pazdoned yesterday | tham 1,100 voles in the race for gov- | cinations, and that three monihs ago | robeunded from Ing him by Governer Foss and the encculive | ernor. Repe © not been received | he made @ umsuccessful atempt (o | af the hase el v | ed cougeil, | from 79 previacts, | end his life almost instanc death, 5