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Bullety /; ~ V0L LIV.—NO. 267 The Bulletin’s Circulation In Norwich is Double NORWICH, CONN., TUES That of Any Other Pager, and Its Total Girculation is the Larg DAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1912 est in Connecticut in Pfobbrfiuh to che City’é 7P00"131i°fl ———— ey PRICE TWO CENTS DEMOCRATS ALREADY CLAIM SENATE Party Leaders Say They Control Enough State Leg- islatures to Give Them a Majority REPUBLICAN ACTIVITY IN DOUBTFUL STATES Strong Efforts Made to Keep State Legislatures in Republican | ‘Column—Women to Vote in Six States—Woman Suf- | frage an Issue in Five Other States—Governor Hadley Favorite Candidate For Vice Presidential Nomination. vigor- | eity, where tomorrow he will cast T to an |ballot. Leaders of each of the three leading candi- | parties are making claims of victory flice con- | tonight 7 ) voters | Almost equal to the interest in the yment. President | presidential election here is the contest train in Ohio | for congress in the First di o Colonel | prising the city of Cincinnat Long | Nicholas Longwortd, epublis ind son-in-law of and_the democratic anley E. Bowdle, an attorney member of the rTecent constitut convention. M. F. Andrews is th didate on the progressive ticket. TWENTY?(;R HADLEY. {.—The most years came nal chief \ppeal m his between A can- Demogratic Effort to Capture Senate. | elr an ns or & Nearly Half of National Committee 5 Favor Missouri Governor. New York, —Twenty mem- the republican national com- including the 18 reported last night, have thus far in an informal poll, experssed their intention to ve for 't ection of Governor Hadley of Missourf to fill the vacancy on the republican_ticket caused by the death of V President Sherr Chair- man Hilles received today mess from two additional members of 1 ommittee—Messrs, Murphy of > and Hart of Idaho—both | whom said they would vote for Gov- ernor Hadley. There are 45 member of the national committee. bers of mittee, organ- senate lican % of Jersey Campaign on Since February. n for a Sulzer in Railroad Accident. York, Nov. 4.—William onight concluded his the governorship of the democratic ticket, wa road crash during a_speaking | Long Tsland today. The not injured nor was he was riding damas v resi- Tu- Ne who nat | f nom- hree three solicit the n Six States. Women to Vote Maine Expects Record Vote. Portland, Me., Nov. 4.—' this state tomorrow is ex the largest ever known tial election In this Looks Close in New Hampshire. Concord, N. H., Now. “The closest ote for president in e history of the state is expected to tomorrow. Un- usual interest centers in the represen tative contests, because of the p¢ | bility that the legislature will elect t | governor. national rganized vomen workers, men well known n the six h e Weather Predicted Eleventh-Hour Interest in Vermont. Montpelier, Vt, Nov. tivity was shown in political circles today, the final day of the national campaign, than at any time since the | state election in September. 4—More a Over 500,000 Voters in Massachusetts. Boston, Nov. 4 million voters are expected the polls in Massachusetts Ballots furnished by the s ary te were In the hands of the clerks of the 333 cities and towns today. to go to LOSE IN NNE! . s, 5 cLo CONNECTICUT. Utter’s Death Cancels Rallies. Providence, R. I, Nov. 4—The death of Congressman George H. Utter yes- terday resulted in the cancelling of most of the republican rallies planned for today Election rded as in This eg Uncertain, Colorado’s Returns to Be Slow. Denver, Nov. 4—With initiated and referred bills and constitutional amendments to be voted upon in adai- tion to eight state and congressional tickets, it is expected that voting and ounting returns in Colorado will be sl One of the initiated ms ures provides for state-wide prohibition. Wilson at Passaic and Paterson. Paterson, N. J, Nov. 4.—Governor Wilkon spent the night before election addressing democratic rallies in Pat- erson and Passaie, industrial cities of his own state. He was greeted with | great enthusiasm as he appeared at {the High school auditorium here, Churches to Receive Returns, | ,Chicago, Nov. 4—A number of churches will remain open tomorrow night to receive the election returns. | Many of them have leased wires from the telegraph and telephone compan- UTTER’S SUCCESSOR. Governor May Call Special Election to Fill Unexpired Term. regarding election to fill the | the death of Hallots with tho Zenas W. Bliss, | date for congress ngressman re-election, Torchlight Parade %or Wilson. )'n»\v York, Nov. 4.—A feature of “night before” ip New York Wilsop and Marshall parade of thousand men and bo; and torches along 25 bands. arranged by College parade was Wilson's Men's KS TIE e " DEATH BREA Jersey Citizens Disfranchised. Jersey City, Nov. 4—Thousands of | Hudson county citizens are said to b= Might Affect Choice of President by the House. . 4 George arentl The ¢ p H T bre ath of the | repre- a general misunderstanding of the election laws. There had been a mis { taken belief that in voting at the Sep if it were | tember primaries voters automatically SN AL | registered for the fall election. ath the | Represent- yno the delegations of f Iy divi iemocrats of the states was equally find s Mr. ided Johnson Finishes at Springfield. ringfield, Mass.,, Nov. 4. Tohnson,pre | president, finished his campaign here | tonight with an address before an au- dience that filled Springfield's largest g theater. The speech, largely a repeti- Bould his | tion of an address at Providence early ¢an 10 |in the day, marked the completion of o i 'I"”“v sixty continuous days of campaigning Island to the dem- | which took the California executive through 24 states and a distance of more than 20,000 miles. 5 Governor ans and as one on Ultters death, filled by a remainder of Rhode e Tsland to the demo- | Fowever, would not per- mn the house becau. n requires a majority This would be 25. Mr. Ut- er. does break the on between republicans and Mahan Speaks at Middletown. Middletown, Conn., Nov. 4.—The dem- | ocrats ended their campaign tonight with an_enthusiastic_rally, at which | Governor Simeon E. Baldwin was the | principal speaker. Other speakers | were Lyman T. Tingler, candidate for | lleutenant governor, and Mayor Bryan Claim It—Nick | F. Mahan of New London, candidats A A | for congress from this district. of OHIO DISPUTED GROUND. All Three Parties Longworth H: nati, Nov. 4—President Taft Debs Closes His Campaign. last day before election in Terre Haute, Ind., 4.—Eugene @ leisurely trip across his home state, | V. Debs, te for pres ad rowds in more than a doz- | dent, who will celebrate his 57th birth- e cities, and Lonigat reached his home | day 'anniversary election day, closed spent t { Man Loses More than half a | | son and Henry C. Bunn, | night fav the | | disfranchised so far as participation | | in tomorrow’s election goes hecause of | essive candidate for vice | Cabled Paragraphs London Bets on Wilson. London, Nov. 4—The betting in financial circles of this cit were heavily in Wilson's favor. today Princess Wants Marriage Annulled. enna, Austria, Nov. 4.—Princess George of Bavaria today filed a peti- tion for the annulment of her .mar- riage, according to the Fremdenblat. Rebels Attack Haytian Town. Cape Haytien, 1 i, Nov. 4.—Mon- Christi, a seaport town on the north of ‘the Domix public, has ttacked by revolutionists. The s made a stout resistan was de rate More Rowdyism by Suffragettes. Nov. 4, he hom 1 McKenna, was pre | town hail ated by suifrageties, o tonigh wife thr: Life Sentence Commuted. Manila, Nov. 4. e sentence of life mprison Mike has t cham te en con comr: th crime was unf The polls in all districts | six o'cock this morning open in all districts of til five o'clock and remain town un- SUPREME COLRT MODIFIES INJUNCTION PROCEDURE Places Restrictions on lssuance of Temporary Restraining Orders. TWO WOUNDED WITH THEIR OWN SHOTGUNS. Two Fingers—Boy May Lose an Arm. Conn., Nov. huniing acci local fio t, a 1 of Plymouti, terbury hospit » wo fingers ndition is nof i imself in the ar that amput He was stanl m too weak f operati om loss of bl m tonight SURVIVING AUTOMOBILE BANDIT UNDER ARREST. His Companion Shot to Death by Ruth- | erford B. Cook. Nov. 4—The sug atomobile bandits fw tempted to hold up and rob Ruther- ford B. Cook, eassistant the Chicago Natiol cluh confe Chicago, the two Edwar ers wa arly Sunday morning Co shot him dead when Meyers leaped from an automobile and dered Cook to give up his he young man arrested 4 Fall, remained in the car caped, though Cook fir tives. at him. Lawyer Killed in Auto Accident. " Philadelphia, Nov. 4—Peter A. Vandorf, a lawyer of Princeton and a classmaie of Governor Woodrow Wil- former cur tor of Princeton unmiversity, was s ously injured in an automobile accide ! near Bristol, Pa., late tonight. his campaign in this city tonight with | one of the largest tions held in Terre blitica Haut demonstra- in years Chicago Betting Favors Wilson. Chicago, Noy. 4—Betting odds to- the democratic national and the democratic ticket to carry the state, with progressiv national ticket a close second to th democratic ticket. Precautions Against Fraud. New York, 4—Activ detective ang . politi quarte to prevent fr to disbar illegal voters from the polls tomorrow, lent excitement to the con- ticket y among head- cluding day of the campaign in New | Everybody Claiming New ¥ork. New York, Nov. 4—The democratic state headquarters and Tamman confidently claimed victory ton: Representative W cratic candidate for g Barnes, Jr, chairman can state committ overnor. William of the republi- e, declared the re- publican ticket with Job E. Hedgew, as the gubernatorial candidate, would win by 40,000 majority, and the pro- gressive le be a landslide in the state velt and the headed by for Ro: progressive state ticket Oscar S. Straus. EVERYBODY FOR SHERMAN. Voters in His District to Pay a Unique | Compliment, Utjca, N. Y., Nov. 4—On the eve of | election a political truce has been de- nlared in one of the polling districts of this city as a mark of respect to late Vife President Sherman. Mr. Sh man resided in the Third district of the Seventh ward, and there has al- ways been a spirited contest betwees the independent and regular republi- cans as well as the democratic Today a meeting of resident: district, irrespetive of party, was held, with a'view of prometing 2’ truce, s an agreement was reached that a com- plimentary vote would be given Mr. Sherman,” although a vote thus cast must also favor the head of the ticket. will open at | 1 and | ders declared there would | Cold Water on Col. Roosevelt PITCHER TOPPLED OVER ON CAN- | DIDATE’S KNEES, PLATFORM COLLAPSED | | Hundred Persons Go Down in the Crash, But Nobody Seriously Injured | —Roosevelt Day in Nassau County. Bay campeiz when it had he probably a new g with the : campaign become apparen Colonel to a clo g rty, stand for the at Armageddon and we | he said to his old | rs of Oyster | battle friends ered in the Bay, pl before house for th rally Collapse of Earlier in the day b mist Platform. on damage el being s s of a pi was injured The Piatform Overloaded. en o of water. No one on_a vacan. lot ia 1 wd which | Oyster 1 min- platform a| been unable | 0 See or hear him Min flowed ove near enoug the str save way. Knees. and Water Pitcher on Colonel's His ch: others on a mass. min- Lost orm of them refus and clung to the i s0- Several men rush- nce of the colonel Platform Won't Give Way.” | “Progressive a out W and t e had removed the drops spectacles, 5 Th rushed from his elothes, which d was ready 1 assure gressive platform won't glve way.” The colonel was compelled to stand a best he could on the planks at the edge of the platform, h were tlited at such an agle as to make it difficult to obtain a f hold. He clung to the rall before him, but it was so shaky that e him lit port. In spite c diffi ¥ of his position, however, he spoke ior an_hour. assau county made “Roosevelt da a time of celebration. Before the meet- | ing at Mine fternoon 100 a1- tomobiles paraded through the adjoin- ing towns. In the first car was a leader who stood up in his seat and t time as the men and women in following waved banda and sang “Onward, Christian Soldie and “Teddy, Teddy Roosevelt,” wh dashed’ from village to village. Oyster Bay Band Out. illage band was o Bay tonight and there noise unlimited. All th could be jammed into th b They gave Colonel Roosevelt an enthusiastic welcome. It was the first e that most of his townsmen had seen him since he was shot, and those o could not get into the theater wafted outside to see him. In his Mineola speech Colonel Roosevelt devoted much of his time to a defense of his proposal for the re- | call of judicial decisions. Colonel Was Tired The ride to and from Mineola and hour’s speech had their effect on Roosevelt, who Il far from recovered his usual strength, ! and he was tired when he came to village tonight. He spoke here for " right at his side, or was in his and he employed his left gestures. yo @ this at in ¢ 1s redfire and who hi hung Hmp coat pock arm for his LAWYERS ATTACKED. Colonel Roosevelt Accues Them of De- fending Perversion of Law. Oyster Bay, Root, John G. Milburn, William Guthrie and Louis Marshall, the best known law i were assailed here Roosevelt as cou | Ple of the United were defendin: w, for w responsible. marks were made today joinder- to Square Gar D. t the peo- who, he said, | rsion of the | y elves were Colonel Roosevelt’s re- | in reply to a statement by these four men in re- his speech in Madison | Friday night. Colonel Roosevel speech was made | in Oyster Bay tonight at the closing| rally of the campaign. “I want to relieve some nervous peo? ple who don't live in Oyster Bay of | the belief that [ will not vote tomor- | i row,” he said by way of preface. “ | see ‘that some of the not always ac- curate papers of New York announce that I am not istered and won't | vote. I am registered and I shall | | vote: Shot Himself After Lovers' Quarrel. Waterbury, Gonh., Nov. 4.—Augusto | Macreili, 22, 'shot himself in the head | this eveMing following a quarrel with | | his sweetheart. He went to a friend's | { home and after a short visit sent a | | bullet crashing through his skull. The | puzzling, as the man is still ious and it is not known just | how badly he was injured | Bars Dancing in Séhools. The Cleveland voted down a proposition to permit dancing in the public school buildings. e is { unco would take the lead | in | Mrs. Lesh Declared Sane by a Phy- | what T did Condensed Telegrams _The Hardware Stors of T. B. Rayl Co. in Detroit was damaged to th tent of about $300,000 by fire. Found Guilty of Poisoning Son A Frenchman, Poulyuen, broke all records by remaining under water six and one-half minutes at Paris. About 100 Strikebreakers arrived in Buffalo, N . to take the places of the waiters, cooks and kitchen work- ers. SENTENCE OF 25 YEARS FOR MRS. LINDLOFF. DECLARES INNOCENCE Aunt Delia Torrey, aged relative of e president, predicts that the people | will re-elect Mr. Taft by a good ma- Calls Upon the Creator as Her Wit- - g in California yesterday was i in some cases 2 to 1, that velt and Johnson would carry the ness—Seeress Suspected of Poison- ing Husband and Children. e has developed in Ariz Lind- | which fs an issue in the election there gazer, was | todav. er by & jury tonight and Chicago, Nov. 4.—Mrs. Louisa ., spiritualist and ¢ nd guilty of mansia Judge Windes 0 punishment fixed rs in penitentiary. She was charged h poisoning her 15 year old son Ar- thu 1g rt “President Taft Will Not Receive ingle electoral vote tomo; " de- red Governor Johnson at Providence esterday. Pay of All Laborers employed e United States armory at Sprin Mass., increased Seeress Laughs Hysterically. The The + seeress, ained who b 2 eld has been America Won Third Place in the in- ternational balloon r for the Ben- | nett trophy which started from Stutt- | gart, Germany, Oct. 27. hen her friends s revived and back to her c e county Declares Her Innocence. e con- flty Assistant Engineer Christian ehn of the Niagara | ment commit the American Kled- Falls fire depari- are ed suicide by goin- over | = | Supreme Court Justice Newburger cided in New York tha in regular army can alimony B by of his $15 a month. Wor for hearinz Pub Idings at half essman George nday Suspected of Poisoning Five. R il : bt Mrs. Anna Scroggin ngd in Fort ifter d s 14 on suspicior o hushands a he bodies of \ 1 | nd ¥ Mar Assy, 1 struck ed A Strike Which PAINTING AND SCULPTURE | Mass,, Man Wins Goid Medal in and $1.000 in Cash. That the Pro an_ Ar x Frank W. Benson painting, “My Norman Wait and prize of $ Ameri Alden being in Daughter.” committee Harris, Generai National that he the night from . close Adjutant < The Plaza of $300 or Verbeck of guard Dix ports from Various Campaign the southern atied solid demo- W atic majority mar oday. £ ‘100 | = Ir-| A Probable Murder w findir Wilson mention for paintings an 3 Ehe s awarded Emil R. Zet Fra eyraud of 00ds near the Receive the N Governor Wilson B Prin HELD FOR POISONING TWO MISSOURI he same WOMEN in Mexican Secret Ser : ice Men are band sician at Los Angeles. = untains me est Hastings Lesh who ng removal t celebrat and he him rnor Foss was birt vesterday ast speeches of reached grandson, i While Gove: H. Kyler of De gram to President of threa Ky- and re mad; War- | e woman's husband, be- hip for ano man, ce to have in- surrender her- a announcing rih named William Howard Ta Theodore Roosevelt Kyler Woodrow Wilson Kyler. husband and T never agreed,” she ; Five Hundred and Seventy-five Men, vs in canvassing New 0,000 ave found ses of apparent irregularily not more than 150 merit issuance of warrans kind to n ever was. 1t ried me if I had Perhaps he would added naively, “now m er he divore na . not that woul now,” he knows she Tuberculosis Commission at sion yesterday arranged f e of rintendents of t to discuss matt hasing of tions. Steamship Arrivals. 1p elati 1‘ uffs inst rk and Pi enc 5 to: Fc 3.—Arrived: Steamer Prinzess Irene, New Yo Plymouth, Nov. 4.—Arrived: Steamer ielm der Grosse, New York for Bremen. Glasgow, Nov. 2 er Parisian, Boston Montreal. Gibraltar, Nov. 4 er_Carpathia, Nex Ha Nov La Touraine, Moville, Nov Columbia, New Y NG 1aszow At New York: Nov. 4Minnetonka from London; Noordam, from. Rotter- dam Former State Senator Franklin Homan, his wife and four daug { New Haven, Frank Williams, and a maid il of y by eatin All will e —Arrived 3d, Steam- Hesperian, amb for Arrived over. York Steam- for Ger Steamer N. Kramer, alias clown and circus acrobat n Beatrice mer, Were 1 jury without bail by |2 coroner’s jury at Chicago yesterday for the murder of Gertrude Singer, the Baltimore heiress. WEALTHY SEPTENARIAN LOVED HIS LANDLADY. Te, Charles the wife | held to the gr: Conway, and his Li Sophia Steamers Reported by Wireless. Browhead, Nov. 4.—Steamer Presi- | dent Grant, New York for Plymouth | and Hamburs, 100 miles west ‘at 10.42 | Beji a. m. Due Plymouth 10 a. m. Wednes- | B day | _Steamer Bremen, Bremen for | York, 580 miles east ¢ at noon. Dock 8.30 able Island, 2 , Piraeus for New York with Marconi when miles ecast Hook at 5 p. k at Wednesday. _The polls in all districts will open at six o'clock this morning and remain open in ali districts of the town un- til five o'clock. His Case Hopeless, So He Took Dese of Poison. ancouver. ., Nov. 4.—Robert Robson, aged 70, ended his life with poison here last night. He was a man of wealth and a_member of a prom- nent family in England. In a letter left for his landlad. Blenman, Robson said 1 I could see any possibility of taking you out to the ranch and Keep- ing vou above suspicion, I would be | g1ad to do it. I have loved you ever since I came into the house. But all |is blurred in the future. God bless you. Be good. I will meet you bye and bye.” New f Sandy Hook station D. New Comet Discovered. Cambridge, Mass., Nov. 4.—The (llsv‘ covery of a new comet by Astronomer | Borrelly of Marseilles, France, is an- | nounced in a telegram received todav by the Harvard college observatory from Professor Kobold of Kiel, Ger- many. Turkish Steamer Founders. Constantinople, Nov. 4.—The Turk- ish steamer Chanlee has foundered in the Blaci” Sea It is reported that the ew and 42 passengers ware drowned The steamer was supposed to have | touched a mine. All Officers Re-elected. | Houston, Tex., Nov. 4—All officers | were re-elected at the annual meeting | of the International and Great North- ern Railway, a Gould property, here|when a party of more than a dozen 1oday. A 4 per cent. semi-annual d attacked a car with bricks, bottles and idend was declared on preferred stock. other missiles and made thejr escape. Women Engage in Rowdyism. cksonville, Fla., Nov. 4—Women joined in the violence in conmection with the street car strike here today telegraph ir- | been making | food- | T HALF OF TURKISH ARTILLERY LOST The Army in Too Crippled a Condition to Enable It to Make Prolonged Stand at Tchatalja | FORTIFICATIONS ARE NEAR CONSTANTINOPLE | Bulgarians Are Advancing Toward It—No Replies From Powers to Porte’s Appeal For Mediation—Government Seizing Food For Army at Constantinople and Fears of Famine Prices Are Already Entertained by People, London. Nov. {.—The onsiderable portion of the defeated ish army will able to reform | behind the lines of Tchatalja, the la fortifications before Constantinople, not altogether excluded vhether the Turks will be able to vin there any serious resistance he Bulgarian advance is a question which permite of doubt Turks Lose Half Their Artillery. In the struggle with the allies Turks lost more than half their ar lery. In fact, the Servians alone | 00" claim to have captured no less than | yors 0 gun.s This will certainly militate ' against prolonged stand at Tch: talfa. The Turkish government ma tains that, although embarrassing position of affairs is not desperate, and declares that when the allies had com- | b, 20 | pleted their mobilization T ad | o barely begun hers. The e | Tarkish Dawers fuatste that Tiirke I able | Foharkess to maintain prolonged warfa Tor | portar It cien x| sponsi prospect that | expected tc nelles tomor inlikely breaks in ( ence the pov sure to bring est moment TROOPS WITHOUT FOOD. | Constantinople’s Explanation of Turkish Reverses be ~ | nand he Powers Move Slowly. Up to sign ha appeal to e mediation. No i ] celved at Con b g | ittle_doubt ¢ right wing eived they n | concent ) consider n | asainat armistice. no mood present lime A Rear Guard Although the Tek ondents garian and s0d, dhxibsaal sasam on u endin nnour that t t~ Tchatalja oubted, Ar fighting is 1 r r the movement stantinopie L Famine Prices of Food Likely. | Comparative _orde g maintained in Constan nd Sa- loniki, but apparently ousness | felt in Europe over tbreaks | and disorders is eq a by the authorities in tanti- nople alres seiz- ing great supplic he likelihood of famine prices for food %Il add to the government's difficul- ties. The anxiety h n partly re- lieved by the arrival of Eurc ar- | asked ships. Others are on the way and are | ships | tar Pa | to_the It | as istic report true situatic brought the smbtssador, T The_diffic Is increasing mob went to bhoul an ke which to this nople the ner ally shar In government i for the arm: friter Turke Ce Ity h at ha CLAIMED A BOY WAS STABBED BY SOLDIER | | LETTERS REGARDING EXPLOSIONS AT BOSTOM More Correspondence = Trial of Presentsd Dynamiters. Lawrence Striker Testifies at Trial at of Ettor and Associates. 1 o Salem, Mass., Nov. 4 men and policemen made prevent the attacks upon in Lawrence on the morain; iary 29, and tha cars sieged by an org: ar twenty men was of Leo Ready, Indianag ‘.—Le governm That milit no effort stre - ors whici ere to" blow the “d; mony the trial of Ettor, Giovannitti and Caruso for the murder of Anna Lop zo. Ready declared that he was near the scene of the riot that morning and that the strikers were peaceful “I saw this gang of twenty men go up and down the st said Ready They were armed with clubs with which they smashed the windows of the cars, Some of them threw chunks 1of ice. The policemen on_the made no attempt to stop them. ther did the soldiers, “Did vou see the police when the windows were being smashed?” asked Attorney George Roewer, Jr. Yes, several times,” said Ready. I saw one of this gang come up toward the curb and stoop to pick up a chunk of ice. One of his pals said to him, “There's a cop, and he said ‘To hell with the cop’ and let the chunk of ice drive at the car window. The police- man made no effort to arrest him.” Several Lawrence women and chil- dren workers testified that police and | | militiamen clubbed the strikers. One | told of the stabbing of a 14 year old boy by a soidier. in Boston reply MeN don't street Nei- | ters were re vice presiden: union, and He to Chicago the eastern trij that an opera h tion in_Boston boken, N. J., were 1909, vlown up ia OBITUARY. Prof. John Monroe Van Vieck of Wete leyan University. Middletown, Conn., i.—Prof, John Monroe Van e taculty of Wesleyan universit ntinuousty from 1853 until his home in Chur illness. He was N. Y, in 183 Wasieyan In the class of he was appointed adfun mathematics, In 1558 he ed profegsor of mathematics tronomy, holding the pos that year until 1904, when professor emeritus He was acting president of Weste at three different periods and president of the col om 1903, He was a delegate 0 conferences of the Methodist church and belonged to a number of scientific associations. He is survived by three daughters and one som, Prof. Edward B. Van Vieck, now of the University of Wisconsin. Dr. Arthur Tracey Cabot of Bestom. Boston, Nov. 4.—Arthur Cae bot, one of the leading surgeons off New Engiand, fellow of Harvard unis versity, trustee of the Museum of Fing Arts and prominent in many fratergie tles, died at his home here tonigh.t D, Cabot was born in Boston 60 yesss ago. “Father” John Russell of Prohibition Party. Detroit, Nov. 4—“Father” John Rus« sell, founder of the prohibition party and the oldest Methodist preacher im the Detroft conference, is dead at the home of his daughter in this city, He was born in Livingston county, New York, in 1822. ONLY $852 FOUND IN VAULTS OF BANK. President Discovered to Have Been | Insane for Some Time. . 4.—Vaults of the Kir- by Savings bank, which was taken charge of by receivers yesterday on the | discovery that William T. Kirby, pre: |1dent of the institution, had been in- | sanne for some time, were today found | to contaln but $852. A mob of sev- eral hundred persons, representing about $50,000 in deposits, it is said, waited outside the bank doors and shouted in rage when the informa- tion as to the amount of funds was | given them. Police were summoned to disperse the crowd. The total liabili- | ties of the bank are unknown. The $852 was made up partly of small change and stamps. was vice 530 te rarious Epincopal Tracey Will Hear Shippers’ Complaints. Washington, Nov. 4.—Rates, classi- fications, regulations and practices of the New York, New Haven & Hart- ford, Boston & Maine and the Maine Central rafiroads, which have been at- tacked as unjust and discriminatory in complaints by shippers, will be di cussed at a hearing at Bostpn Novem- ber 18. Vice Chairman Weod Surrenders. New York, Nov. 4—James T. Wood, vice chairman of the executive com- mittee of the defunct Northern bank, surrendered himself yesterday and pleaded not gullty to an indictment charging him with having made a false report regarding a Northern bank credit of $208,000. He was held in $2,000 bail. Students Want Election Holiday. Grand Forks, N. D, Nov. 4—Twi hundred students of the University o North Dakota declared a strike today because President McVey ordered t the regular classes should be held election day. Mother and Two Children Incinerated. Ossawatomie, Kan,, Nov. 4.—Mrs. C. Nashville Reservoir Burets, G. Perdue, her § months old daughter | Nashville, Tenn., Nov. 5.—Thes Nashy and 5 yvear old son were burned to | ville reservoir broke shortly after death today in a shed in the rear of night. Details of the damage their home x _ . @re mot yet obtainabie