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NORWICH, CONN., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1912 PRICE__TWO CENTS -?SUlZER NUMINATED.-FUR BOVERNOR| New York Democrats Flock to His Standard Fourth Ballot This Morning ~ GLYNN IS NAMED FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR ilSeveutll Time Congressman Has Sought Gubernatorial Nom- and Motion te Make Sulzer's Nomination Unanimous Oct. 3.—William | part in that contest which would pre- vent the people of the United States from uniting tative in congress nominated ernor early this morning by the| whifhever one of them should be the ccratic state convention. "It waz | nominee of seventh time he had heen a can- _ 'didate for this nomination. | Nominated at-1.05 This Morning. . Mr. Sulzer was formally declared the oice of the party at 1.05 a..m., ‘4 hours in balloting. immediately proceeded to the 3 a candidate for lieutenant govern- Dix's Name Withdrawn, v When che of fiufil:flalw just started when Dep: oseph TAFT GREETS MARSHALL. President and Candidate for Vice President Clasp Hands. Boston, Oct. 2.—Governor Marshall of Indiana, the democratic vice president, shook nds with President Taft tonight just before the banquet of council, Scottish Rite which both were guests. oOccurredgat the hotel in which Gover- nor Wilson of New Jersey greeted the president last Thursday night. ;i President Taft joked with Governor | Marshall for a few moments on the wear and tear of campaigning and then bpoth passed into the banquet hall, where they stood side by ‘side in the receiving line and shook hands The president spent an-active day Boston. - After motoring into the city from Beverly, he laid the corner- stons of the new Young Men's Chris- tlan association building in the Back Bay and attended the Cambridge car- nival across the Charles river. At the fim olk Lhto cornex;-t;)]ne nomination | President Taft spoke of many similar events he had attended in all parts of . a | the world and of the work the Young Men’s Christian association is doing in the far east. In Cambridge be examined the ex- . | hibits and was presented with a broom made in a manual training school for spent wu,-‘efi the supreme f"rhe meeting scattered, cast their: for Sulzer, and his assured. The motion to make his B8 Giomn for: Lioutenant Governgs | 81ynn wes nondingted, farilen- s “T hope,” said the donor, “that this will make @ clean sweep for vou.” The president smiled broadly. J In his remarks at the Masonic ban- quet, where were seated Masons of high degree from all over the world, President Taft referred to himself as ‘‘humble, master Mason in t.” He discussed world peace also_took occasion to pass a Governor Marshall. at my friend, Governor " said the president. hy for him as to what he We exchanged announcement of | orators d that he w 8 h to ‘Marshall, ‘while respond- | toast, “Freemasonry,” said the president’s inded of an old Presbyterian : “We are commended evil of our rulers.” ds,” said Governor Marsh- all, “for two consecutive terms, but Continuing, he said: Jjust the furniture of our national life. There is the good, old-fashioned fur- niture of Taft, the bizarre furniture of Roosevelt,*and the good old hickory furniture of Wilson and myself, but when it comes out from the wash, it ‘|18 ‘all the same sacred furniture of the hearth.” presence he “Politics are After Horace A. Irvin of Dayton, Ohlo, had responded to the toast to the ladies, Jose Castellot, sovereign grand commander of Mexico, brought “Peace greetings to the great Amer- fcan people across the border.” Glovanni Camera of Rome, minister of war to Italy, spoke in Italian for the Latin freemasonry in Eugope. John Valentine Ellis of St. John, N. B., represented the M <tion of Canada, and th English Speaking Brethren,” was re- sponded to by Sir John M. Gibson, leutenant governor of Ontario. George . Moore James 1. Buchanan of Pittsburg and Leon M. Abbott of Boston also re- sponded to toasts. Sovereign Grand 8mith of Toledo, Ohio, presided at the James W, G . George W. Batten. Four Nominations. tion to Governor Dix and Mr. B. Burd of Buffalo and . Martin H. Glynn of Albany were for- mally placed in nomination. Compli- mentary votes were received also by Justice Victor J. Dowling of New York, United States Senator James - O'Gorman, State Senator Robert F. ‘Wagner, William B. Ellison, former corporation counsel of New York eity: Justice James W. Gerard of New York city and George Gordon Battle of New . York, none of whose names Were for- mally placed before the convention. \ To Complete Ticket Today. After nominating ‘Mr. Glynn, the o ed_until 10 a. m, e onic jurisdic- toast to “Our ROOSEVELT AT HOME. Expects to Start on Tour of Middle West Monday. ‘when the candidates will be selected Tor the other places on the ticket, A Progressive Platform. The platform adopted was character- jzed by framers as o progressive upon which ‘the New York made a campaign. Some of its more radical planks de- elare for the popular election of Unit- ed States senators, for a state-wide system of direct primaries, for simpler election laws, particularly designed to / facilitate in political nominations, and for submission to the voters “as soon as possible, of a constitutional amend- ment providing for woman suffrage.” Praise for Dix. i The platform calls the administra- tlon of Governor Dix “efficient, clean | he Will leave for Washington to give and economical,” it declares that the | Nis testimony before the senate com- ee investigating campaign contri- of the most X0 Sagamore Hill after his long western and southern trip, Theodore Roosevelt will spend a few hours with his fami before resuming campaign activitie The colonel reached Oyster Bay short- Iy after 6 o’clock tonight. traveling hy automobile, from New York, where he left the train that had brought him He was in good splrits ani said he was feeling well. himseif to visitors and planned to re- main quiet until tomorrow night, when he will return to New York for a campaign conference. ~democracy ever I Late Thursday ty has fulfilled its pl tate and nation. Parker Answers His Critics. ~Alton B. Parker took the opportunity afforded by his speech as permanent chalrman to answer his critics at the { William H. Hotchki: Baltimore convention. It was his first | sive party, Frank political speech made since he was the | George W. Perkins. #torm center of the battle waged at Baltimore by Willlams Jennings Bry- an against his selection as temporary chairman of that gathefing. In de- fending himself he also defended the ! Naw York state delegation, which with mit edges, both Buti At tomorrbw night's conference Col- onel Roosevelt expects to meet at din- ner Comptroller William A. Prender- gast of New York cit. tate Chairmaa f the progres- The colonel will probably leave on Monday next on his projected trip to the middle west. REPUBLICANS ELECTED. Entire State Ticket Chosen by Ver- mont Legislature, Motitpelier, Vt, Oct. 2.—The entire republican state ticket, headed by Ai- . Fletcher of Cavendish for gov- ernor, was elected by state legislature today. The ticket had falled to get a majority vote in the state election last month and for the second time in Vermont's history the election was thrown into the legisla- ture. The choice was made on the first ballot. Mr. Fletcher received 169 votes, Harlan B. Howe, Rev. Trazer Metzger, progressive, 32. bim was the object of Mr. Bryan's most fervid attacks. Would Not Argue With Bryan. Judge Parker told the state conven- tion today that the action of the New York delegates was dictated by the desire to promote harmony. “You may ask me,” he sald, “why did the New York delegation with 98 men, at least 25 of whom were capable of entering on that platform, fail to discuss the attack which was made indirectly and n the delegates and -upon myself—why did they keep silent? I will give you the answer, because we believed it was better that 'we should suffer a little indignity than by enter- ing into a dispute with the gentleman upon the platform (Mr. Bryan) we should divide the convention in two, and we held our peace. “We Held Our Peace.” “We held our peace for the good of we held our peace be- Ueving that either Clark or Wilson would be nominated, and we demanded | tors and representatives for u that New Tork state should take no |ber of districts in the siate, the Vermont BULL MOOSE PLANS To Ndme Senators ln&_F!cprllcntqtivnu in Several States. Hartford, Oct, 2—The progressive state ceptral commiitee met here to- day, and outlined plans for the cam- paign and determined to*name sena- mors of Turco-ltalian Peace. Paris, Oct. 2.—Persistent reports that Deace is about to be concluded between Turkey and Italy were current in ! ' Paris this afternoon. France Horlors American Sculpture: Paris, Oct.2.—The French govern- ment honored American sculpture to- day by purchasing the marble bust of the New Englander, Edward Tuck, by Andrew O'Connor of Massachusetts, The bust is to be placed in the Lux- emburg gallery in Pari: HAD NEVER HEARD OF DYNAMITE CONSPIRACY. A Rare Specimen Among the Venire- men at Indianapolis. Indianapolis, Oect. 2. —Thirty-four veniremen had been excused and twelve remained in the box still under consideration at the conclusion of to- dey’s examination for the selection of a jury to try' the 46 men accused by the government of complicity in the dynamite plots. It was thought the jury might be completed tomorrow or day. Friday. ke | District Attorney Charles W. Miller will open the case for the government. His opening statement, already pre- pared, contains 800 typewritten pages and will cover the ground upon which the prosecution intends by testimony to sustain its charges: That the dy- namite conspiracy continued for five that Ortie .E. McMani- or_six years; gal's confession of working in a “dy- namiting crew” is corroborated by persons from many sections of the country; that the McNamaras were not alone in financing and arranging |respite will be utilized by the powers for a widespread system of blowing up the worke of employers of non-union labor. today because they asserted they had convictions that the defendants were guilty which it would take evidence to remove. Frank Sutton, a farmer, said he nev- er had heard of the dynamiting case or of the trial of the McNamaras at Los Angeles. 3 "But since I came heve and listened to what has been said, I may say, while I have no prejudice against la- bor unions, I am opposed to violence.” “But you don't think labor unions are organized to promote violence, do you?” asked Senator John K. Kern for ‘the defense. Sutton answered he did not. FOUR JURORS CHOSEN FOR TRIAL OF ETTOR. List of Talesmen Exhausted and Court Adjourns to Oct. 14. Salem, Mass, Oect. 2.—Four jurors had been chosen for the trial of Jo- seph J. Ettor, Arturo Glovanmitti and Joseph Caruso, charged with being re- sponsible for the allerfd murder of Anna Lipizzo during the Lawrence textile strike of last winter, when the venire of 350 talesmen became ex- hausted late today and Judge Quinn ordered an adjournment to Oct. 14. On that day a new panel of 350 men eligi- ble for jury duty will report and the efforts to fill 'the jury box will con- tinue. Next Monday morning Judge Quinn will hear arguments on a motion to be filed by counsel for the defense in which they are expected to ask for the releasc of the prisoners on suitable bail. The court declined to allow tha ‘matter to be argued this afternoon, as the motios had not previously been filed with the clerk. TALESMEN DRAWN' FOR BECKER TRIAL. Defense Attorneys Threaten to Give Them Severe Examination. New York, Oct.- 2.—Panels of 25) talesmen were drawn today in prepa- ration for the trial of Police Lieuten- ant Charles Becker, charged with the murder of Herman Rosenthal, the gambler, on July 16. The trial is set for next Monday. i District Attorney Charles S. Whit- man expects that the work of drawing a jury will proceed rapidly and will b2 completed within two days, Attorneys for the defemse have been quoted, however, to the effect that each tales- man will be put through a severe ex- amination and that it will be two weeks before the first witness is called. L Supreme Court Justice Goff will pre- side at the trial, by designation by Governor Dix. COMMISSIONER MACDONALD ONE OF THE SPEAKERS. Addrssses Américan Road Congress at £ Atlantic City. Atlantic City, Oct. 2—The motor truck traffic, now in its infancy, wiil soon become a menace to good roads, declared Col, W. D. Schier of Boston, chairman of the Massachusetts high- way commission, addressing the Amer- ican d congress this afternoon. He advocated taxaticn of antomobiles ac- cording to hotse power and of othei vehicles with reference to weight and tire width by state law “Money used for the ntenance of construction of highwavs is an invest- ment, not an expenditure,” declaration of James M. MacDonald of Connecticut. AMERICAN MARINES TO DRIVE REBELS OFF. Result of Proh;;o( E;{tish Minister in Nicaragua. ‘Washington. Oct. 2—Determined to prevent foreign interference in Centrai America by extending protection foreigners as well as Americans n Nicaragua, and at the suggestion of the Nicaraguan government, Rear Ad- | miral Southerland proneses to use his ! marines tomorrow to drive the rebels out of their fortified p. fon on Bar- ran¢a Hill, if they persist in obstruct- ing free communication between the towns of Barranca and Managua. This step has been decided upon as a result of the protest of the Rritich minister at Managua that his family, now in Barranca, be escorted to the capital through the rebel lines. e Steamers Reported by Wireless. Siasconset, Oct. 2.—Steamer Majes- tle, Southampton for New York, 205 miles east of Sandv Hook at 6 p. m. Dock 1.30 p. m. Thursday. Caue Race, Oct. 2.—Steamer Victo- ria Luise, p. m. Dock 830 a. m. Saturday. _— Twelfth district it is planned to nom- inate a senator and four or five rep- resentatives. In the Fourteenth dis- trict a senator and five representatives will be named; in the Seventeenth dis- trict, in addition to the senator, repre- sentatives will be named in the towns of Ansonia, Derby and Seymour, In the Twenty-fourth district, representa- tives will be named in Danbury, Brookfleld and Ridgefield, In the Twenty-sixth district, representatives will be named in all the townse In additlon to a eenator vl il was the | Cabled Paragraphs |y [ ltimatym TO BE DELIVERED TODAY BY BALKAN STATES. TO AVERT BLOODSHED| Compromise Will Be Sought Before | Hostilities Are Begun—Albanians Declare Readiness to Fight. London, Oct. 2—No ultimatum has yet been delivered to Turkey from the four Balkan states, but, according to the most rellable news, such an ulti- matum will be presented at Constanti- nople tomorrow. 1t will demand au- tonomy for Macedonia, Albania, oid Servia and Crete within three days. Collective Note to Powers. In the event of failure to comply with this demand, the Balkan coalition will repeat it, and at the same time address a collective note to the great powers notifying them:that after the expiration of another three days the Balkan states will enforce the demand by recourse to arms. Will Seek a Compromise. Thus there will be a respite of a Week Dbefore hostilities open. This to seek to arrange & compromise with Turkey acceptable to the four statés Which, it is believed, would prefer a Most of the veniremen were excused | Way out without bloodshed, Emperor Hoves to Avoid War. At a conference at Vienna with the king of Greece yesterday, Emperor Franeis Josepn, according to a des- patch to the Daily Telegraph, said: “I hope and believe that despite the difficult situation it will be possible to avaid war. Hope must not be aban- doned, notwithstanding the military preparations.” SEMESE T ALBANIANS PATRIOTIC. Declare Their Readiness to Defend the Fatherland. Constantinople, Oct. 2.—after the is- suance of orders by the Murkish war ministry today for the mobilization the Turkish army, the committee union and progress proclaimed its whole-hearted support of the govern- ment in defense of the empire. Thirty thousand Albanians, = through their chiefs, informed the goyernment of their readiness to undertake any ser- vice in <efense of the fatherland. Similar patriotic devotion has been displayed by all classes. ESCAPED PRISONERS GOT SEVERE SENTENCE Made Getaway from New Haven Coun- ty Jail Sept. 11. New Haven, Oct. state’s prison for from one to ten years and Otto Schliter, El Kasimer Chadzynsky were given sen- tences from one to four years, in su- perior court this afternoon for es- caping from the New Haven county Jail on September 11 last. On that date, Collins, who was the ringleader, and the five other prison- ers, knocked Joseph Schraff, a guard, insensible, and made a clean getaway. The alarm soon spread, however, and the local police recaptured all the men in a sensational automobile chase. A STRAY BULLET ) WOUNDS A GIRL Fourteen Year Old New Haven Lad | Under Arrest. New Haven, Oct. 2.—Miss Mildred Griffith, aged 18, a business college student, is in the New Haven hospital | Condensed Telegrams |~ Rumors Are _to_t_llq Turks! o —Frank Collins, | brought in 17. allas Edqward King, was sentenced to & er Clifford, An- | & Rife in London that the queen is expecting the stork. | Miss Helen Gould Donated $10,000 ! towards a new Y, M, C, A, at Ports- mouth, Va. Abram J, Pothier, unanimously nominated for a fifth term as governor of Rhode Island. [ At a Dinner Given by Chicago doc- tors to 200 physicians, from Germany nearly all the wives of the visitors smoked clgarettes. Licenses to Hunt Deer in Colorado were issued to 40 women and to 1750 men. The open season is from Octo- ber 1 to October 6. G. Frank Smith of Milford was nom-, inated for the state senate yesterday at the Fourteenth district republican convention at Cheshire. Michael Dimo, a Deaf Mute, was sent to state prison for from one t.o{ four years yesterday, on a charge of burglary -committed in New Haven. | Sir_William Garstin, a director' of | the Suez Canal company, announced Vesterday that that waterway would i, }Je deepened immediately trom 33 to 36 eet. Stephen R. Dow of the firm of Stephen R. Dow & company, brokers, Which failed last week, was exgelled vesterday from the Boston stock ex- change. Horace Mann of Matonca, Ga., sent a watermeion to Governor Wilson, on the rind of which was carved a good likeness of the governor with a don- key in his buttonhole, [ James Short of Derby Pleaded Guilty to a charge of criminal assault upon a ten years old girl of that city and was sent to state prison for from five to ten years yesterday. ° Presidential Electors Elected at the South Dakota republican primary in a signed statement declare they will casc their votes for Theodore Roosevelt if chosen at tle November election, The Trial of Julian Hawthorne, son of Nathaniel Hawiherne, on a charge of using the mails to defraud in con- nection with the sale of mining stock, was postponed until next month. W. O, Divine, State Agent for the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad at Cin- cinnati, pleaded guiity in the federas of court at New York yesterday to grant- ing and giving rebates, and was fined $15,000. The Directors of the Canadian Pa- cific Railway company at their annua: meeting yesterday asked for author- 1zation to increase the ordihary capital stouclz by an amount not exceeding $60,- 000,000, The Deer Season Opened in New York stale with the biggest day's kill- ing in years, due to a light snowfall that helped to track the animals. Hunters from Saranac Lake alone ' 8o Many Boys With the Baseball nu.el{\"y' T ) Commisioner Waldo will have a spe- cial squad at tne Polo grounds to round them up. : All National _-anks in the United States, reporting their condition on Sept. 4, as compared with June 14, show a gain of $37,000,000 in loans and discounts; losses of $50,000,000 in cash and gains of $66,000,000 in individual deposits, The Entire Police and detective forces of Detroit and neighboring cities are searching for the murderer of 12 year old Mathilda Reis, whose ubudy, mistreated and brutally slashed with a knife, was found in an alley near her ‘home, Rameon Bongoecye, Jr., 20 years old, son of the Guatemalan minister to the United States, pleaded guilty in the with a bullet wound in her body that | court of special sesgions in New York may cause death, as the result, it ls alleged, of a stray bullet, fired fre a 22-calibre rifle by Edward V. Woo aged 14, tonight. Miss Griffith was on her way home from college tonight and when near her home on Harriet street, the bullet struck her in the back. arrest. It is thought the bullet pierced her lung. GIRL GIVES SKIN Grafting Operation at Bellevue Hos- pital Reported Successful. New York, Oect. brother Winfred, in might recover from bonfire. pital, where the operation was per- days. GEN. MASIS KILLED Nicaraguan Government Forces Lose One of Their Chiefs. San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua, Oct. 2—Gen. Asuncio Masis, one of chiefs of the government forces oper- ating against the insurgents, was kill- ed vesterday in an engagement near ve. This town is within 16 s of Granada and has been in the of the revolutionists. Advices tellinz of the death of General Masis Eive no delails of the battle. TEN CHILDREN DIE IN FIRE. Hamburg for New York, 1,000 miles east of Sandy Hook at 3 Returning Parents Helplessly Watch Home Consumed. St. Bernard, Que., Oct. 2.—Ten chil- dren were burned to death here toda' They were the sons and daughters, ranging in age from 18 months to 16 years, of Alexander Gravel. Gravel and his wife left their home last even- it in flames. They were unable to aid the children whose deaths they wit- nessed. It is thought thai an over- turned lamp started the fire. Lumber $3.92 Higher at the Mills. mill price of lumber has advanced $3.92 a thousand feet over the low price of last December, acording figures compiled by the West Coast Lumber Manufacturers’ association. Dec. 28, 1911, the average was $9.9), and for the first three weeks of Sep- tember, 1912, §$13.91. . New Danigh Minis Tondo: Oct. 2.—C the newly 4 minister ui Washingion, don today for Southampton te embark on the Kron- prinz Wilhelm for New York ming. Brun, A policeman heard the shot and placed Wood under TO' SAVE BROTHER. 2.—Five square inches of skin were grafted from the back of 12 year old Alice Schulhoff to- day on the legs of her four year old order that he serious burns which he received when he fell into a hysiclans at ‘Bellevue hos- formed, saild that both children would be able to leave the hospital in a efw IN ENGAGEMENT the ' ! the Uniteq Textile Workers of Ameri- ing, and, returning early today, found. Seatile, Wash.,, Oct. 2.—The average ! to to having smoked a cigarette in a garage. He was discharged with a reprimand. Miss Mar Chamberlain, the school teacher who last fall was the victim ot the Shady Bend “tar party” in connec- tion with which a half dozen promi- nent Lincola county men were prose- cuted, was marrle(f at Lincoln, Kas., yesterday to Homer J, Helfferich, a carpenter, Judge Whedbe of Burlington, N. C., refused to grant an injunction to J. G. Waller, a stockholder in the Bur- lington State Despatch, restraining it from supporting the progressive party. ‘Waller claimed he invested money in the paper on the understanding that it was to he republican, WILL PROTEST TO GOVERNOR BALDWIN Hartford Labor Men Claim Right of Fres Speech Was Denied. Hartford, Oct, 2.—Claiming that the constitutional right of free speech had been withheld, the Hartford Central TLabor union at its meeting tonight named a committee of two to protest to Governor Baldwin, hecause of the | alleged denial of this right to Charles | A. Miles, by the Hartford Carpet com- | pany, and the selectmen and police officers of Thompsonville at the labor troubles there recently. Charles A. Miles is an organizer of ca, with headquarters at Springfleld, Mass. It Is alleged that when the! labor troubles arose in that town em- ploves of the Hariford carpet com- pany requested Mr. Miles to come to the town and organize a union, CONNECTICUT MAN -MADE Supreme Council, 3:’4d Degree, Masons, Elects Officers. Boston, Oct. 2.—Barton Smith of To- ledo, Ohlo, was re-elected sovereign grand master of the supreme council, 384 degree, Anclent Accepted Scottish rite, northern Masonic jurisdiction, at a business session of that body today. Other officers chosen were the follow- ing: iieutenant commander, Leon M. Ab- bott, Boston; minister of state, Amos Pettibone, Chicago; treasurer general, Leroy Goddard, Chicago; secretary general, James Codding, New York; keeper of the archives, Leon M. Ab- bott, Boston; A. Shirrefs, Providence, R. L; stand- ard bearer, Willlam Geake, Fort Wayne, Ind.; captaln of the guard, C. Conclude Not 'tollowlng statement was "mill agents intended to take on the 1 e left home and gone to New ‘John of the drew McManus, Isodore Chasmuck and | York for the worid's series that Police | the World at master general, Robert|Ing for more than thirty years. E. Gerdenier, Connecticut. Assaulted with Pitchfork. New Haven, Oct. 2.—Lucien Barot, aged 42, is In a local hospital with injurles that may capse death as the resull of un alleged attack by his bro- ther Joseph at Woodbridge tonight. Tt 1s said that Joseph struck his bro- ther with & pitchfork. A posse af citizens 1s searching for Joseph o Strike Ve ublican was | ACTION DEFERRED BY LAW- RENCE TEXTILE WORKERS. | ADVISED TO PREPARE Committes of Industrial Workers In- " timates That It Will Come Later— Conspiracy Against Haywood. Lawrence, Mass,, Oct: 2.—Action re- garding another strike of textile «miil operatives was deferred tonight at meeting of the central committee the Industrial Workers of the Wor The committee considered the case of operatives \alleged to have been dis- charged fr\om the mills because of p{u;tklcipa!lon in last Monday's “protest strike,” At the conclusion of the meeting the out: Advised to Prepare for Action. ‘“The central committee concluded that those at work shall remain there and those that have been - ed against shall stay out quietly. the meantime the committee those at work to prepare for action whu{ such \action Is deemed neces- sary.” Sub-Committee Reports. The meeting considered the report a sub-committee which had visited textile mills" to see what action -39 5 ot 44 al- leged discharge of certain operatives who took part in the “protest strile” of last Monday. f the agents of the Everett and Wood mills; that they had no against the Ayer mill, and that they were told by the agent of the Arling- ton mill that he had discharged oneand would give the operatives who were still out employment as soon as conditions permitted. “Mill Owners on Strike.” here tonight from the trial of - cannitti and Caruso, at § other now on strike against the a strike. 1 shall prol ‘be Witliam D. Haywood, the Industrial after a conference with his organization: whom they have refused to fi into the mills. The I W. W. -this vielnity for two weeks 1 shal much of my personal to Workers’ organizer, who “The mill owners in will have to discuss means to \ matter.” TO PROTECT HAYWOOD. Salem Police Warned of a m ass., PatHn 3. Lohan alleged that a made against the Haywood, who is sald that a gang some r::v Y?:k ~ ed in New b commit the 'munder. the sherlff to prot to Judge Quinn, Sherift and Haywood, The latter said that be knew nothing matter that St. John, who is gemeral secretary of the Industria] Workers of the was tofl bfi depended % assure aywood accorded the same protection would be given to any other He conferred with the Lawrence lice and took steps to whole matter. WATERBURY FIREMAN SMOKED IN HAYLOFT Also Charged with Entertaining We- men at Engine House. Waterbury, Oct. 2.—Two firemen, Jo- geph L. Cosgriff and George F. Fina, were dismissed from the fire depart- ment by the board of public to- night, and a third, Ju:yO’ o& was fined two weeks’ S was found gullty of smoking in the hayloft of one of the engine houses, where Lieutenant Squires was burned to death September 14, and with en- tertalning women there, while and O'Donnell pleaded guilty to the charge of drinking while on duty and in uniform. SUFFIELD HOUSE ROBBED OF $800 IN JEWELRY. Burglars Worked While Family At- tended Fair. Suffield, Conn., Oct. 2.—While Ed- ward A. Perkins, a retired merchant, 4nd his family were in attendance ot the Suffield fair this aftermoom, bur- glars entered their house on North Maln street and stole jewelry valwad at $800. The robbery was about 9 o'clock, when a window found to have been pried 091 dently with a jimmy. Deputy ‘Woodruff is inv ing. OBITUARY. Admiral Lucien Young. New York, Oct. 2—Rear Admitral Lu- clen Young, formerly captain of the £ V' Mare lsland navy yard, San Francisco, died here late today, afler a brief 1ll- ness. A deflciency of blood brought en by a ruptured blood vessel of the stomach, was given as the cause of { death, CAPTAIN OF THE GUARD | Cardinal Farley, who was a close friend of the rear admiral, arrived at the hotel where the admiral diled. shortly after the announcement was made of hie death. Rear Admiral Young was born in Lexington, Ky., was graduated from the naval academy in | 1873, and was 3uccessively promoted until he reached the rank of rear ad- miral in 1910. He did conspicuous service as commander of the guaboat Hist during the Spanish war. Conductor Jeremiah Wall. New Haven, Oct. 2.—Jeremiah Wal!, chairman of the Order of Raflroad Conductors in’ this state, dled tonigh: in a local hospital, following an opers tion for ulcer of the stomach. He w - 55 years old and had been in railro was grand secretary of the New 10 land Order of Protection for riun years, holding the office at the tim. ¢ his death. He is survived by a wid ow and three sons. Wilson Leaves for West. Harrisburg Pa., Oct. 2.—Gov. Wood- row Wilson left here tonight for the west, after watching with Interes! early returns from the New York state convenéion at Syracuse. The governor declined to comment on the cenven- tior