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VOL. LV.—NO. MONDAY, APRIL 28, 1913 The Bulletin’s Circulation In Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and lts Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the City’s Population i THE WINDHAM HIGH SCHOOL BURNED| (Cebled Parasrests | War Training |The Coergion | Condensed Teieorams [oAf IEORNIA WILL WELCOME BRYAN Scotch Emigrants Coming Here. The British Postmaster-General Glasgow, Scotland, April 37—Over Samuei has declared himself In favor 4,200 emlg}'ae;?,na record of dep:rtung Mu of a universal penny postage. Complete Destruction of Building and Contents in “:W F57 Roled Sated and Can- For the Army uf menegm NG iaser, Genaes win se 1uca | Wishes of Secretary of State Regarding Confer- present there are 35 saloens in the | | e " | _Pope’s Brother Leaves Vatican. SECRETARY GARRISON THINKS -] Sene. { Early Sunday Morning Blaze | , Dome April $7The. eparture ot FONENS RN CENERE RVACUA TS e oo ence to be Cheerfully Observed Angelo Sarto, brother of the from IT NECESSARY TION OF SCUTARI epresentative Bartholdt’sf Missouri | ihe vatican vestorday morning s Te- F u oxpressed his doubts of the merils of > Seeretary Bryan's “grapejuice diplo- garded as condirmation of the contin- FIRE FIRST DISCOVERED IN EAST CORRIDOR i siia ™= ™ e ondien»tl AN ANNUAL ASSEMBLY | A DEMAND PRESENTED :i“";,m., Sy o oo, |GOVERNOR JOHNSON TO MEET HIM AT TRAIN Suffragettes Set Fire to Train. B London, April 27.—A militant suffra- et o, AT AT S Nt SUMIS- | At Least One: Divisien Sheuld. be | Ambassaderial:Conferonce to_ Deoids = “.s D ” = - - | empty train s s ue to Arrive at Sacramento at 6 o’Clock This Morning— Firemen Greatly Handicapped in Work by Low Water Pres- | qnyy wroin standing on o slding ot (he | Brought Together Each Vear .For| Whother The Powers Shall Enforce ,M“:-".i':i:,‘,zf.:.v:.::s“ff:',;?:;2;‘,:x A : T Just outside of London. early yester- . discovered, to be addicted to the use ecretary Wil Convert Majority of Legislature sure—Loss Estimated From $125,000 to $150,000, | i3 morning. Litie damage was done | Scheol Purposes, He Says. 1t or Allow Austria to Do It Alone. | GIE{PUereds 19 be, addicted to the use | Seme WllEE T s ¥ and no arrests were made. . . . . . - Thestios of Tncandiars d plias il S Desnile Bain and 6w sratioinecs to Have Objectionable Bill Killed—Possibility suggested ,000 Insurance—Theories of Incendiarism an: ! d MISS ZELIE EMERSON Wasninston April 27—In a_state- | London, April 28.—This is considere1 | 811 are raging fercely 'in southern by Lawyers of a New Interpretation of State’s Rights - . . ment tonight Secretary Garrison, | the fatal day in the history ef the o o e e a lew Interpr: - Cross Wires Advanced—School Sessions to Continue. A POPULAR YOUNG WOMAN. | ,ointing to the American army scat- | Balkans, though in the efforts at sel. | 28° to settlers' farms. y tered in small units throughout the | tlement difficuities and complications N, | o —— y 1i i K : e | Miss Troy of San Franoisco has Also | country tmpossible of coalescence for | have arisen. The ambassadorial con The Honor Legion of the police de- W v Made Many Friends In London. practical instruction in the larger tec- | ference has to decide whether the Eu- | Partment of New York city will be | Sacramento. Calif, April 2 not to waste time will be heeded, (Special to The Bulletin.) | Northwestern National . .. — tical measures, of battle, urged the im- | ropean concert shall coerce Monetnc- | Presented with the stand of colors | geference to Secretars of State Bryan, | #0d if necessary he will be able to ‘Willimantic, April 27—Fire was dis- [ A J. Bowen agency London, April28§—If all the English | portance of assembling brigades and | 810, or whether Austria shall be left | £iVen by Vincent Astor on May . hoLE e Sacr: t present his views before noon tomer overed at about 2.30. o'clock Sunday | National, Hartford ........... ifrageties had the charm of Miss | divisions periodically and temporarily | to act alone in compelling Lhe evacua- % 2 {Who is due in Sacramento tomorrow |row, Jf they concern the legisiature SEen it aro o o0t the. east | Fidelity-Phentx, N. Y. Emerson the American girl, who |in times of peace for war training, | tion of Scutari. e, Atlantic Mills at Providence, | morning to confer with Governor (,memm- Johnson will send offical s D N tha co Sl e v Fitio duthis et mil : 3 > ufacturers of worsteds, went on 4 | Johnson ang legislature upon the immediately. Thomas Grady, the blaze having been | Continenta! ... . e opinion of the prison authorities | tribution of the army. Epitomizing The ambassadors of the powers pre- y. They employ about 00 opera- | been decided to make no plans for the | est delay, said Senator Thompson, ons discovered by W. D. Grant, who < at the Holloway jail where Miss Em- | his idea the secretary said: ?em?nalnote a Cettinje _'esterdai\c tives. f‘l_l;l(?lr@n(v until Mr. Bryan has sig- | of the leading advocates of alien lands s acros: street from the | er son was confined. Even the doe- 2 . ‘ormally demanding evacuations of the o= ; nified the purpose of his visit legislation, tonight. “Secretary Bryan e e e | 3 | o ne were required o feed her| ,Annual Assembling of Divisions. city, but the Monenegrin ministers ex | _Stung by a Bumble Bee a week ago | Governor Johnson met this after- | undoubtedly understands our posti: e Sty hearins o | 11 30000 s o OiEs I sk e T hope that war may never come, | cused themselves from consideration of | Clarence, four years old, son of Thom- | noon with Aitorney General Webb and | thoroughly, and we are fully prepared Chking sound ¥ found the main .23 10000 | for her pluck and cheerfulness. | Put in the present stage of civillza- | the note until after the Easter festiv- | as Montgomery. of Fairview, Penu. is {a dozen of the ration leaders | to listen fo him. All fartber action hall of the High School building all = = Miss Emerson's good nature and wit | 0D We must recognize the possibil- | ities. It is understood that the reply|iR a critical condition and will prob- |in the legislatu a general dis-|in the matter depends entire Tpon oy Higl ! $51,000 o fiaits amons the prison :;)s': z;nga;x r‘!h:;;?exfimw‘::fii l:pn‘x‘[zfl ‘:‘lhen given will be an emphatic nega- | ably die./ cussion A‘\r’ lhc;{ situation W,mh regard | what he has to teil us. origin_ of | id. | and it is doubtless true t g ve. s g iSecretery, Bryagie svisit, _but - mo i o Convert ajor- (pilerent theories of fhe origin of | State :n;‘z:?:;]:g“mdh % and it is doubtless true that tor ene” Country 1F Moo feeliistora A g L Charles 8. Lawrence of Nashville, | coursc of action was proposed. Gove HeyantWilliHevs, = Conueet x Mujar: . EROLE. 43 1ot sel 2 ee held P s e vould make provision for the annual S 2 = enn, has been selected®as assist- | ernor Johns afterwards t . that it caugh: from defective electric | cating at the call of Chairman D: her English- sisters. Ome of| Juyopling of ‘at least one division, as In the meantime King Nicholas has | ant aktorney in the Gepartment of jns- | everyth o A It was stated b: of s ght wh Anoth that it was the | 5 SGui e o hes of the American consu- | issued lamati Scutari fe i erything hinged upon the desires of 3s stated by a number of ad- e e o e {1 E (;m.‘d.! m]m: ]E:Fm.x_l ](\{..;.;_1, Visited Miss Emerson at|2 school, wherein our officers might | SSURC gk‘;";‘: ;{."sf; °’;D:to} '('fi:fm:n tice to specialize largely in lund title | the state's visitor. minigtration leaders that the - el b St 1S y a 'clock. inci T. e N S g e ¥ e . esti i " - s 5 land law work ary, Sunday at 11 o'cloc as one of the | be &lven that practical training which | AllY taking possession of e drtian | auestions. Will Defer to Bryan's Wishes. tion to pass an alien land law re: Sons is Teporied as saying that either |y, on behalf of the State of Con- it |is so necessary to develop educated — ing fo aliens who are “eligible to ci A3wmnr bay ar an aduli person was |yectiout, stated that he had communi- | most charming he had cver met | gonarals and. Staff officers. We mag | 1oft Trieste has not vet heen officially | Donald Ball, 19 Years Old, a Flor- | “T cannot tell when our conference | 12 o SHGE who e o e o S N o | cated with Becretary C. D. Hine pt the [iexby o e e e peat | MOt meed a large army, but it should | Onfirmed, but there is great warlike | ence, Kan., high school student, was | Will be held with Secretary Bryvan. or { pe necessary for Mr. Bryanm fo change Toom, and if it was a Doy, ¢ had 2 |State Board of Education who had | 1 % be one which In organization and |@ctvity in Austria. and Archduke | xijlled after being struck by a twelve- | What their nature will be, whether|ihe present views of the majori lghted cigarette in his mouth at the | (oi4 him to offer the town every ac- [ the visit = = Miss Zelie's | (Taining is as nearly perfect as it is | Franz, heir to the throme, who is re- | pound hammer, while watching prac-g Piblic or private.” saig the’ governor. | the 'bill s to be killed Sen gmelar entering aad the fire could | cimmodation within his power. Vrs I I Emerson, Miss Zelie's | possible to malke it. | Otherwise what- | 8arded as the leader of ‘the military | tice throwing. In the matter ‘of arrangements of | Thompson has completed the s have easily canght Ly his throwins the | sl oG ot On- mother, is desply interested by a state- | Juay spent is not bringing lts fuil | Party, has returned unexpectedly to that kind we are asreed that Mr. Bry- | graft of his mew bill, wirich 1s ta & cigarette down §n the boiler Toom ment made by Mrs. Emeline Pank-|cgicient return: and fhis applies fo | Vienna from a holiday.” He had a 1ong | Charles A. Winch, gener = iknhgcr ran will be serupulously and | orece 06,"% Kooretary Br an as the Chief Foley of the fire department | This generous offer was accepied | hursi some time ago at a public | gpoo it TROATR: and s appies Gnfies Mt Heriny “with Woswor | of T ALe | ] €T | cheert oheTrEd. Sharecsr m(\. te > was urable to be present to direct the by committee on behalf of the | meeting. Previously, in the House of | o momay o | 2nd training as well as | (o o ceph. = et amnoan e for many | & = slozxtx;lr.et;ade;&x::m?lnx;.cmty Sentiment Commons, reference had been mad X - : e e There is much speculation as to the 9 ot ane WAk e by'a Spedker o & militant suffragette| Too Many Military Posts. PrecisimmEmesit King of Albanis. | i ot 5500000~ [ form " the " official ‘visit will take’ and | S0 2SEIS SR8 75 PO AL 1= in the Holloway jail who had sought| Dis the question of a future xL ‘xd f"«;hu,}t:-e hero u:] Saman, %mp manner in which Secretary Brvan | ““Gnder {ts Iy of the Jap e to give herself pneumonia by lying|miliiary policy for the United States, | Who has had a picturesque and adven:- | agter An All Night i the | Will choose to impart his message from 5 Den o slien Wi ls uncovered on her cot after sponging | Secretary Garrison said it seemed there | urous career, made a dramatic move in | piucieh B8 AN Tight Sesslon Uhelpresiaant Wilson. It is . generally | pheide to become a citizen may hold her body with warm water. Mrs. { Were eniirely foo many military posts | Proclaiming ‘himself king of Albanmia. | qjourncd sine die Saturday morn. | agTeed that if the secrefary Of Slate | Fatr penmrin of posine Ths o Pankhurst said that this suffragette (8t the present fime and that many | and is said to be marching into the|jne” unning only three days over the | iS Do d_of information of a Dri- | cachent to the state I easts mreriie was Miss Emerson. Mrs. Emerson |of them were not useful or desirable | Interior of Albania with 40,000 men. He | (80 505" 0¥ (00 (o | vate or diplomatic character he will | ftaq to three yeaes o008 @ - and her friends consider that Mrs. ) under existing conditien: i received with enthusiasm at Ale: o disclose it only to the governor or to FE an e e meeting of the two houses | Fraught with Significance. ecut Panthurst displaved bad taste in|Has Formed No Definite Conclusion. . and is Proceeding to Tiranza to be | Emil Sparrey, a Professional wres mmaking ihe incldent public and the re- | “Whether. this. sttantion sheals ne | Proclaimed and to take possession. Her. ot itian Suleite St Thriat e legislature sitting together. That | Anofher cause of much speculation lations between them sre said to have | remedied.” he continued, “by concen- | Surrender of Scutari Prearranged? |IIL.’Saturday afier he had shot and |such a Joint meeting would be called | today. aside from the probable con e e atcn e The e e D teoNCeh | mend Pasha 1o an Albanien ehief- | Killed Grace Campbell. The (ragedy | at his réquest is indicated by the state- | tents~ of Secretary Bryan's message, Ome of the 0dd features of the situ- | posts or inte saly as many a5 Words | tain ot the thme whish eooma roriors |15 supposed to have been caused Dby | ment of Governor Johnson and others. | was the ultimate offcct his vigit mist ation 15, the change in fecling sxperi. | Dormit s rebiment ot lesst Yo e Homs | Sriar o Eepatin S Sator e | Sealousy: {777 Witl B¢ Governors Guest. have won the relationship ‘of the in enced by American mothers who 5o to | tered in each, I have not as vet form- | simplicity pproaching savagery. He| = e There are many, however, who be- | Sruaaay States With the national gov the American embassy to ask 2id In |ed any definite conclusion in my own | was alyays opposed to the young | Miss Alice Meyer, Daughter of lieve the secretary comes only to pro- | ““Aitogmeys in the legista: having their suffragetie daughters re- | mind. Much may be said effactiveiy | Turls" tepressive measures in Albaniz | former secretary of (he nav test openly in the name of the federal | ttomneys In the legislature who leased from jail The mother usually | upon each side of this question. T|In Vienna and Paris his surrender of | lieutenant Christopher R. P. Ros government st g violation of any | et o e osason e pionnl law arrives in London. alone and un- | hope, when I get the time, to give this | S ia i ded as having | U- S. N were married at Washington | freaties of the United States and thay | acoiars, the occasion is franght with ] . to g 5 | Scutaria is now regarded as having | . ireaties of the United States and that | Jocy sigmificance. and. that o michs at noon Saturday. Aiss Taft was a bridesm: heralded, in a state of humiliation or | matter my most earnest consideration | ben an arranged matter with Kinz mortification over her daughters | with a desire to reach a conclusion | Nicholas, who approved his plan to plight. Such a one stepped into the | that is beSt for the army which, of | prociaim himself in dependent prince | cmbassy recently, having arrived in | course, will be that which is best for | of Albania. i Ihe will be content with the formal jimecw mal | give rise to an entirely now Interpre- | presentation of such protest. 1n cith- | Eion o the”ancient theory of states er case, he woulg address the house | rights. Several Amherst College Students | caparately or in joi t sess ign. One Argument Advanced. blaze in the city since the big Burn- (were appointed by Chairmen Dean a [ States, arrived in New York today on | J2UDE woman who dleappeared on bam wagon shop dire, about a year |committee to have power to go ahead | board the steamer Carmania. The new | oo = - | Portland, Oregon, April 27.—In a m». | amination on their knowledge of the |ed to death in a fire that destroyed | Mississippi river levee along the west ago. > and procure immediately all things | ambassador was met at the pier by |torium. Today father and daughter|ment of emotional insanity, Mrs. Lil- | English tongue. | two frame barracks occupied by non- | bank in upper Louisiana came Water Pressure Weak. necessary to Keep the school in ses- | Courtenay Walter Bennett, British | Were with friends in a small town |lian Strang, aged 26, administered poi- - commissioned officers of the Sixth in- | this morning when the Lake St. ork: 1. M. |Scmiething over a score of miles from | gon to two of her children and herself, | A Settlement of the Wage Contro- | fantry and their families at the Pre- | levee, 12 miles north of Ferriday, La. t once | consul general in New London but an bour before. She im- | the country. 4 - {and a number of other tenants. were | Afr. Frvam will arrive ot el o' plored the staff to use their best ef- = > .. Sterming? of Scutari a BIuff. - | ariven from their lodgings in HUNUS | and win re s ot e o o G0 | In the present situation it is arsue forts to conceal news of her daughters he whole scheme of the alleged | block at Amherst, Mass, Saturd VT eRaor ol = that the -federal government bas no f £ & MISS BORDEN WILL ; k T [‘efnor Johnson e invitation to he & as imprisonment. Were it made public, storming of Scutari and the marching |a fire which caused damage amount- |5 guest at the excoutive mangion he | POWer to deny the state of Califor: Hiie' sald; - weepling \ith, Shismc;’ b RETURN WITH FATHER. | out of Essad Pasha’s army with their!ing to about $20,000. has: acoepted 75 ® | the right to exclude the Japanese fr could never again face her neighbors 2 —_— & arms is now regarded as coup de the- | = | No T larid ownership and then refuse > &t. home. Will Be No Prosecutions in Conse- | ater ti decelve Europe. Fssad is said| Joseph E. Davies, of Madison, Wis. | _ o Time to Be Wasted. relieve conditions in California Sl e o Pl B iy s to have joined Djavid Pasha's army of | secretary of the democratic nat | Secretary Bryan's expressed desire ! through its own powers : < : THE NEW BRITISH | 8,000 men. and if he has the support f | commitiee. has declined to be govern- | - : Fork, ot Servie and Montenegro it would be a | or-general of the Philippines, and has | WINDHAM HIGH SCHOOL BURNED EARLY SUNDAY MORNING- AMBASSADOR HERE wififim‘rg“;-o Q};z"} fl',fi?gm ’;‘;figfi severe blow for Austria. V,pm elected for commissionér of cor- | FIVE PERISH IN A BREAK IN LEVEE IN P 2 2 porations to succeed Luther Conant, | s ir Cecil Arthar Spring-Rice Reaches | loMorTow evening with his 17 year old R g 9 man | FIRE IN BARRACKS UPPER LOUISIANA = < P! 9 . daughter, Romona, according to word REASON RESTORED | H s e Aepartment’s work because of an ac- [town, and the committee appointed New York on Carmania. S aUutA accordliE 1o won | 1 T | Wife, Mother and Three Child: f | Valuable Farming Land. 1 cident Saturday and First Assistant | Thomas J. Kelly and Louis D. Lincoln Sl AEoraLt horojloley by folands of the BY BULLET WOUND | Chinese Candidates for Entrance to | 3 roan ree Children of | Valuable Farming Land Inundated and Engineer John O'Rourke Was in|a commities to draft suitable resolu- | New York, April 27.—Sir Cecil Ar- | amily from the Massachusetts ity h smpted ivesi] s coneEs hexeati be filowed St Schnil the Viccnk EDS00 Homalses. Gharge ot the. fire fighters Who have | tons of thanke ‘Curtls Dean, DrW. | thur Spring iog I ¢, 3. Gy the now | WHSTe the weallhy condenced milk | Mother Then Attempted to Save Lives | to uubtiaie chome i LS e e cd on to conquer a large | P. S. Keating and Mrs. Spaulding | Brit 3 Tnited o Had Jeopardized. erary language of China for Latin.| San Francisco, Calif.. April 27.—Two atehez, Miss., April 27.—A long mot been called on t nquer e S. Keating an rs. Spaulding | British ambassador to the United| ,ung woman who disappeared on e | They must, however, T oral exv | women and three children were burn- | threatemed breals in' the iom e 3 - sion. Principal C. C. Case When the firemen arrived, within Ip versy between the members of the |Sidio here last night went out, turming the fiood waters | Beston, 1t was, revealed and then shot them. a third child and e L ituatior an Robinson, vice consul, and l. David | B < ES . ten minutes following the first alarm O O O o o avd Clak B e n it ccording to O. C. Kyle, Mr. Bor- | herself. The shooting, which occurred{ Brotherhood of Railway Telegraphers | The victims were members of tha | loose upon fine farming lands and v the blaze had assumed considerable |dosks chalrs from the town hall aund | Cempbell and ootk Rer o owton. O | den's advisor, during the = quest of | Saturday might in the OutsKirts of|and the New York, ~ew Haven and |family of Serseant Schall his wife | lages of lower Tensas. and Comeordia proportions and was spreading with |0 inatalled at the Normal school | Through the courtesy of the customs | Miss Borden's, there will be no prose- | Portland, did not become known to the | Hartford ‘railroad has been reached. | her mother and his three children, aged | parishes. Approximately 30,000 persoim Breat Tapidit e fremen foughl Al | orCe o hat seasions of the High | officiuls, Sir Cecil's barsaze was pass- | Cution in comnection with her disap- | police until today. Mrs. Strang prob- | The men will have (heir wages In- | Ve, seven and nine years. Schall | will bo ariven from their hemes in & a great disadvantage because of the ) 0 FAS OO0 0 continued this (Mon- | ed, ar'd he went from the*pier to the | Pearance. He added that the girl had | gbly will die. | creaseq about 7 per cent made a frantic effort to save his fam- | region of about 900 sguare miles. The Jack of water pressure, a stream being {10000 B O h as little interrup. | home of Lawrence Godkin, where he |talked frankly with her father about | Edwin Strang, aged 7, poisoned and | - | 1ly ana when at lensth he was drag- | property damage will total several kardly swons emough to tip overan | 333 S T R R L e bty | her flight and declared she did not | slightly injured, will probably recover.| Attorney General Barker of Missouri | &ed from the burning butlding he loat | hundred thousand dollars, abie bodied man ¥our streams from e e o e Commlt 1 VS 86ail saia that he would meet |KnOW she was doing wrong to leave | Marcia Strang, aged 5, poisonsd, !s | filed in the supreme court | control of himself and was taken to| The break developed at 3.20 o'clock e B pressure | at Windham is fe be congratulated | [ormer Ambassador Bryce tomorrow | the samitarium. in a critical condition. Oakley Strang, | quo Warranto proceedings against a | the hospital under guard this morning. People living near by St S R o A m Eaden N ewwe in this cifals | Drinei. | before the. Iatter’s departure for San - e | aged 2, shot in the head, will recover. | number of fire insurance companies | A Sentry discovered the blaze short- | were fully warned two hours before M and 3t was see that the Hre Was | oo has boen retained as the heaq | Francisco. The ambassador plans to | OBITUARY. The shock of the self-inflicted wound | on a charge of violat the anti-t | k& before midnight. The barracks, lo- | the cvash came. Most of the Hvestock e A Cmuthcfomen | ey of the Hizh mchool, which is|icave for Wasbinston on Tuesday. : | apparently restored Mrs. Strang to her | law in combining to withdraw |Cated In the west Cantonment, were | had been moved to the hills on the 1 Mhey deserve great credit for their |WOSeR OF 08 A R tate. Not only | Lady Spring-Rice will come to Ameri- | Eugens B. | senses, for she immediately set about | the state. occupied by four familles. The flames | Missigsippi side of the river. grovk, Bowever. putting up a losing |ome of the best W the state Not onlv| oo ithin the mext few wecks, he - SimEat=teningtian wmetic o) the Cisl- == | swept the structure rapldly and the| 8ix river eteamers and a score of Satit st o gred: disadvantage ~They |Das hls eplenfid dexeomclve sbiMY |saia | dren and binding up their wounds. | An Amendment to the Constitution | Sentry was able to warn only three of | motofhoats were despatched the worked from under wet blankets and | been demons o cuicuine fien) oo e Bridgeport, Conn., x | Beveral hours later Earl O. Stranz, | which, when ratified by two-thirds of | the families. When he reached | scene of the crevasse from in close quarters in order to get the |schoo! accommodations that have| ppipe COLLAPSED ney Fugene B. Peck, former ! nited |the husband, returned home. He had | the states. would give cor s the | Schalls quarters they were a mass of | and Vicksburg early this mofning to water on the building. Severul fire- H States commissioner and a candidate ‘ the suffere removed to a hospital. | power to make uniform the hous of | flames. rescue people from the flooded disw IN THE 203D DANCE The great Tapidity with which the | trict. ‘men had fheir hands blistered by the |but his services in an adyisory « ik, labor throughout the United States is | for state comptroller on the demo- heat. Reter Xramer, forcman for the | Pacity regarding the exection of a| 7 cratic ticket In 1306 dled here (his | SCHOONER ON ROCKS proposed in a resolution introduced in | fire spread was caused by the explo- i = Bxeesior Fook und Ladder company, |Bew High school building will bo in- | Young Woeman May Not Recover | morning of appendiciiis, He was oper- | the house by Representative Curley |Sion of gasoline in one of the bar- o Taa. | valuablé ua no one T the = e, || Etaesiot e pot s e as vt | AT GULL ISLAND, | (e house by F : WOMEN SAVED FROM canght R3S bands in an exten te 1s more from Her Wedding Fest | Sarand pots wete. “badly woanded, | conversant with the present and fu- DUCKING BY POLICE - |inent in legal an ocial circles in . { 1 =T e Thees was no wind blowine und (nis | {cre meeds of the Windham =~ High| Deaver Falls, Pa. April 27—Mrs. | Fairheld county i | Went Ashore Near Fort Michie—Prob- | The Special House Committee which | NOT ENOUGH HEARSES | \ Forvanatety confincd the blaze to the |School 8o far s a mow building and | Jonn Koslum o bride of Whree daym i : | ably a Total Loss. | investigated the Assault by Charles C. | s | Youths Planned to Immerse Suffragetts | Bchosl buiidire. equipment are concerned than s |in a critical condition and may die Dr. Andrew Sloan Draper. | o e e el S FOR MINERS' FUNERALS. | RIRAged to fmmatne o ! No Fire in Heater. Ercneh ey | 25 8 result of dancing too muen dur- | Albany, N. Y., April Dr Andrew | 1 seew Londen, Apeil 27— | resentative Sims of Tennessee. TeDort- | gome Coffina Gomveyed to Cometory in rators at Hyde Park. Prin B a e bunlding | A e cs. | Ing her wedding festivities. e Pol- | Sloan Draper, state commissioner of | The small schooner Pell S. C. Vo ed Saturday it had found Glover in onve: o i 2 clpsl Case was in the building | r A aable Sdupment des- | ish oustom of dancing with the bride | cduication. ied at his home here to- | of Cold Spring, N. Y. weni athore on ‘ contempi of ihe house and recom- Ordinary Wagons. London, April 27.—Hyde Park was A i wnin 2 few Cmomments | sonted to the school by Huber 3| for $1 a dance is responsible. Durlng | day, aged 64 vears. Brights disease | the rocks off Fort Michie, Gull Island. | mended that the speaker 1&sue & war- agaln turned into a bedlam by the ter, leaving within o fow moments | Senicd b0 N arty OF W iliimunti | the 293rd dance, with 203 silver dol- | and a recently developed weakness of | Sunday morning and ix probably | rant for his aircst to amswer haf| Pittsburs, April 2T.—Several score |Suffragettes and their opponents thls B o oo Svldmnes OF [ SAED, O Fockmen of Vindham. | Jars “constituting the bride’s dowry, | the heart muscles caused death. | total loss. She was.loaded with lum- | charge. | funerals of miners who met death last | afternoon. The women, declining te B e e T ere W T | o iret Sclectman R. . Mitchell mad | M. Kuzlus collapsed and may not| Dr. Draper’s ill health dated from | ber and was bound to Greenport. The & - | Weanesday by an explosion in the Cin- | Tecognize the police order that no suf-—. fosed since Iriday, and the omly ex. | the sugzestion Sunday that the state | TCOVeT: stnce the capitol fire of March, 1911 | captain and crew of (wo men were| Edmund E. C. Von Kléfn, frrested | Cinnati mine of the Monongahels River fragette meetings were to bo held Iz plamation other than imcendistism ia | fire marahal be requested to visit Wil | e Which ‘destroved the stafSlibrary and | taken off Dy (e keeper of GUIl Island | at Chighgo, Feccniiv, on SomBIAmE of | Consolidated Coul and Coke company | the park. appeared with a wagonette e o b acfantive cleotrie wiss | mantic and make a searching investi. | _Steamers Reported by Wireless. otier divisions of the education de- | lighthouse. ‘The cargo may be saved, | Miss Ethel Nowcomb, who charged | Were held today at Monongahels, near |and proceeded to address & sma B | o dctectiveiefectric Wir- | iation of the flames, "t Siasconset, Mass., April 27,—Steamer | partment. | the ‘Scott Wrecking company” having | he induced her (o marty him and fhen | this city From ‘dawn undl dudk fo- | crowd, Immediately youths commenced 2 Mendoza, Genoa for New York, sig- id- | sent tugs an ighters to the wreck | disappeared wit e it night there was almost a steady stream | to gather and an attempt was made JERns oF $125.000 ox $150,000 ‘Total. Called a Fire Trap. Dallen 450 iiles eant of Sandy Hack | Arthur B. Calef, Postmaster at Mid- | *%py U0 50 2 tonded with Tumber | ot 35500, 1as havr heaninen oy vonied | O ¥the sad processions. Burial facill- | to drag the wagonette to the Serpens i distown. | an satled from Dawlev's here onjSat-|ond woman, who' savs she ‘was “his | ties - were inadeggnte and in some in- |tine, #ir the purpose of ducking 'the DF o wines and & main Boriion, and |reony Jahe Tolom I o speoch At o | AL Moo Do R TS New | Middistown, Conn.. April 27—Arthur | Grday; bound for GrOGADORt, @ boilerhouse on the south, The west {\yingham High school building was | YOrk, signalled 193 miles east of Sandy | B. Calef, postmaster of this city for the | The boat is an old one, built at|y, wing was the original high school {very poorly constructed and referred | 1100k at 3 p. m. Dock 8.30 a. m. Mon- | last four years and a prominent cit!- | Nyack, N. Y, fn 1862. It is thought AT building and was built in 1896 at a|yy it as @ “fire trap,” The silyer lin- | 42¥ | zen, dled suddenly at his home in Wil | that the cargo can be saved. DEBATERS COACHED ~ | recovered from the mine today, bring- | fragettes were escorted from the park cost OF $35.000. It was_ furnished at|ing to the cloud is, as the sequel in Sable Island, N. S., April 27.—Steam- i llam street, late tonight. He had been By ERDErSSOR S ArT zrég o‘fh;;‘z}:x '._;n:‘)\'\‘xn) ‘rx:: ‘x‘,‘er:m:nx‘;"oég ziugrg‘ hv};\}\h].l.::":;qgn;dn\\;é;(u ho pelt- Mrs. C. A, Tem stances two or {hree coffins were con- | womea. Ble, of | 0 ed o the cemetery .in & wagon.| Mounted and foot p Two additional bodies of victims were | Just in time to save them and the lce interwened @n additional cost of $10,000. The | s, % t0% Clovdl 18, as the sequel in| BGscar IL, ' Copenhagen for New |ill for somo time of diabetes. Mr. | BEQUESTS TO PUTNAM i Central portion, the east wing and | ne e = | Sork, signaiicd 736 miles east of Sandy | Calef was about 53 vears old, a grad- 5 : a rescuer who succumbed while {rying | after they entered a cab. Boller-house were ndded three veurs { free” frbm oo oabooremis oad incerie | e et T i St Sany uate of Wesieyan university and was AND WEBSTER CHURCHES. | YVale Tefln;s to Advooste fs.c.thm Con- | to"ala other: Men supporters of the cause wers Bgo at & cost of $65,000, and furnished | feqtyres « ” ro- b ot | Tuesday. a lawyer by profession, Before being ! ST gress for Members of Cabinet. — — similarly treated, the crowd refusing atures of the strueture burned, that In Will of Rosetta Holmes of Oxford, N SUNG WoMAN KNOCKED: o T AL at an additional cost of $5,000. The | i W nearer firo.proof in fact and | Fastnet, April 27.—Steamer Maure- Dointed postmaster, he had bsen as- i oss, estimated ut from $13.000 te | iai i will bo more Substantial and | tania, New York for Liverpool, sig- litant judke of the city onstNa s Mas: | New Haven, Conn., April 27—For- DOWN BY A MOTORCYCLE, | 1t2at ot otherwise. o sls 069, is total. None of the eon-|gjequate in jts Architeeture and | Piled 400 miles west at 2 p, m, Due |fore thai assistant clerk of = - ——— mer President Taft is coaching the The Perthshire cricket pavilion at . tents of the building was saved. =, 7% at Fishguard at 4 p, m, Monday. diesex county superior court. (Special to The Bulletin.) | Yale freshmen debating teams for Perth, together with a collection of —— e B ’;;“um A R R g President Taft appointed him pest- Worcester, Mass., April 2§ Be- | their annual triangular debate with | Cyclist Was Without License and Was valuable photographs, records and Frened Baw Y ase Hours, e catiod, pronabty meat St one® | The Eskimes’ Dance of the Dead, |master in 1309 and his term expired | quests to the Methodist churches in |Harvard and Princeton. which occurs Placed Under Arrest. . ics, was destroved by fire today. Suf- When the firemen saw that the en- o e e o fos Loatiins e ik hota | o8 April 11, but no spneintment hes | Butnam, Ct.. and Webster aro made in | i the near futire. The subject for —— fragettes are suspeoted, atthoush noth tire structure was doomed they turn- 118 1o take act e it | O Lnown an “the damees ¢Pohe | Yot been made, He was prominent in | {1e wily of {he late Rosetta Holmes of | dobate Is: “Resolved, that cabinet of- | Waterbury, Conn.. April Miss {4ng of an incriminating nature has ed their attention 1o surrounding | ToUen of & new building. | et e gants e i a of4Uia | fraternal organizations mnd Was & | Oxford, filed in the probat court te- | Acers should be given seat and a | Rose Girard of 602 South Main sircet | been found. property and water was plaved on | FhS Bistery of the Windham Hich | (o807 Wheh ERosis CNS 0ROt he | chaster member of Middistown ledge | quy, The Wabster Mothodist church | Yolce In congress” One Yala teum | was struck and serlously injured at S many of the fine residences on Wind- | ScBool, by Alien Hiams 1 C s i s of Biks, Hse was alse prominent in = % = ,. | debates the affirmative with Harvard | the corner of South Main and Liberty - ~ g Sterry, was the heRer of the | “Kes-ga,” where they are given a (0f KiIK& 2 Pt 4o | 1 to receive 3160 and the Iirst Moth- | debates the affirmativ SHas | 3 1 and Liberty | govg sTRUCK IN B e from 230 u. . wntil 530 a |Junicr elass of 1912; : feasi aha rotire weli-filed for an- | M8 NONCS CORERem L e e sons, | cdlst church of Puthnam §36 Ore-| U NoN o e e Princeton. | py a matoreyele opevated by Anthong| - FACE BY A BAT . Defors the recail was sounded, ins Windham High School, e e ot i, ampaas | Hits brothar, B, 3. 4 Calef, is medical | oY Sit & 'S Fhoman 1 Hotmes <t | —— "| G Cavallaro of 205 Sherman avenue, £ - : dicating the fire was under —control | gince 1528 the tewn has heen divid- | times the food is taken to the burying | examiner for this eity, Trenton, N, J, & nephew. The estate “1 > Foundry Fire at Waterbury. ew Haven. Ehe was hadl_\‘; shaken | Willow Slipped from Hands of Bats D S v v | ed into two school distriols, the first, | Etound io save ihe spirits tho treubis Professor Von Bramann, valued at 38,000, Patons Sons dvy s i AT rulacd egl DorEician ter at Waterbury. O i hundreas of Shuctators | 1OW knews a5 the Windham Sereel, | of moving, Bertin, April 27—The death is an- Bliry Chatings company. inte. the fire | arrested for violation of the motorevcle = ST e and the second the Natchaus. 1Ia 1865 | When o child is born among the is- | nounced of Professor Von Bramass, | The Bulgars’ Fondness for Peppers. | JLIV, CLoines Company (nio, the SUe | Too® M0y 3 00 Gperator's lcense, ‘Waterbury, Conn., April 2T.—Joseph = S ' David €orbia, who had conducted a|landers jt takes the pams of the last | ine noted surgesn, who perfermed tha | Pepper in some form or another | 1hii“morning showed that the loss will = Linahan and Joseph Carlin, twelve How the lnsurance Was Placed. private school in Wiliimantic, was Wgfl,gmbm ';f the family, and| operation of trashsatomy on theerown | constitutes the basis of the menu of | umount fo about $5,000. The damagze | PRISONER CAUGHT vear-old boyvs, were severely injured Town officials gave the following [Made principal of the second district | on It develops the duty of feading US| unes, afterwards Emperor Froderick | the average Bulgarian. What rico s | {o'the bullding was not as great as at it v ataniny Sal bam® geate ar = ihe achedule as REEERatoks SapmEect; “wfi;‘fl"wfi‘&:‘smf&‘fi‘.‘;“;fi o8 | have & hormes f;'l”;emg cmmm. gty Qb Chinote ’;"d“"_fi“r}"’e irri- | flat feared, and the more valuavle | SCALING THE WALL | goif lots this atternoon ‘when a ba sters_being alate- G tant pepper e Bulgarian, ac- atte: tly dam- chEE | slipped from the hands of James T T aotiRes e et aonte e coms | the third T OECE R S S e "*f?""‘ and | Gen, “';;'z Clay C:“‘_"“;-'U; M-‘Gv cording to_the Now_ York Press. e R e s | Burglar Sucranders "After Two Shoteilot of the. Comipaty & basebail s % TE Tk {ing as a hig wol, and in it em- |4 - they Phai iphia, April —Brigadier | Long, pointed, flery-red pep- St o T AT i o and struck both bovs in the fa i "'"" gl | pibyed the methiads which he had used | “Spese na milka nina (ehiidreny, 1 Homry 'Clay Coshrans, Unitad | pers are tho ones that'bum the palate Steamship Arrivals. HmdABeen AEed. b Him: | inahan received = deep scalp wo nsurance. |in his pwn academy. He also intro- | BBA: 8T ine , retired, who | of the Bulgarian. If you want to do : stidl 2y | fdzes o 0 2 chael | 2nd concussion of tha brain, while the B s 5 Bussasencr— | duced pigher studies, both Engiish | Offen an fsgi:st T p with distinetion in the Spanish. | as the Bulgars do pluck your peppers. | - Diomllie Apell o7 CSEyen, Snteamer T e oy wulferad = lirgicen none. e e scid 2 R mest primcipal, Fhomas Hart | his ilustrious ancestor, but he waing e patane and tn the Ban, | set fovatain spiSe. Eot & 1ot of aye| Liverpool April 27 Arrived, steam. | has done time in Sing Sing tried to R S Amer 2 3 > 'ho came five' greal remown thereby, and plases ail | DRilippiRe 2 > ers Canads, Portland; Corsican. St | eScape from the county jail here this | Ofdfield Lowers Another Record. B Amcricar, . o Fulles, who came five years later, gave | ETC8L ronown thereby, and plases all | " mpaign in China in 1900, died | bread and a platter of salt before you L b M L Rl s Bhaiand 11 1409 |mo atiention to the high school | HS, - ifelong obligations | o qdeniy at his home in Chester, near | Put it into your mouth. John, N. B. 2 ing the wall by Assistant Jailer Den- | . Bakersfleld, Calif. April 27.—Barne Glens [Fails, N. ¥, I 1409 | courses because he did not fhink the | o HiM: here teday Tho result is highly satisfactory—it| Southampton, ~April 27.—Arrived, |TRE e VL PY ARSERt Ja it ey | Oldfleld lowered the worid's one miia = 3 : pupils prepared for them, byt John An Imitation of Nil, . i iy you are a Bulgarian and are seated ;fi;éfl;r sl Ea e surrendered after two shots had been | 3iTt track sutomobile record today act 2,800 | B; Welch who followed him, pelieved it : ot knal ok} near a spring. The s is essen- = B o e e wae semtenceato jan | the new 3100,000 race track here. Ha 2800 | neartily fn the work and was a greaf | Now comes a contsmpprapy aseua- An [nteqnatiopal s tial beeause the thiret ted by a At o Tor o for & vear from Danbury for statu- | Circled the course from a flying starg 1000 | o 1o seorganizing. fhe courses, and | 188 Bughish journalism with being e The speetacle of messurial Franes |long, thin, pointed, fiery-red pepper nti-Election Information. P aeaiary hat oo in 48 2-5 seconds, \qd So improved them that Hhe fepari- | glectful because theve has been Rp ex- | pensuring phlegmatic Germany for |is great. “All tarift legisiatfon Is compro- 5 5 - The ‘former record was establisheq mise,” & Chairman Underwood. e AR at Brighton Beach Sept. 1912, whew & ad ot a high school. | Pianation by the London press as te | nerveusmess and exeitability is ensugh ment was recognized as a high school. | &0 O X e Mr, Pankhurst—Gais | to make the world baicker with nh- | A sentimental girl is lost at & wed- | The “com’ was tacked on after eice- | Last Friday Was the Warmest April | Oldfeid mads the mile In’ 47 4-5 seay (Coatinued gn™ Page Fwe) ! vesion Noywm Rely glee,~New York Tribune, ding without a dainty handkerchief. | tion—Kansas City Journal, 25 in 18 years. g Mhoudes s