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VOL. LV—NO. 215 The Bulietin’s Circulation In Norwich is Double That oi Any Uther Paper, and s Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion o the City's P JAPS CLAMOR FOR WAR WITH CHINA Fifteen Thousand Hold M Make Demand for Military Action RESIGNATION OF MINISTER THE ALTERNATIVE | Japanese Diplomacy in Connection with Its Relation to the California and Chinese Questions Denounced—Speakers Declare That Insult to Flag at Nanking Should be Wiped Out—A Stampede to the Sept. 7.—The assassination o arc Abe, director of the po- 1 eau of the Japanese foreign niamed fhe masses and dramatic_chapter in the his- he new Japan was written. Demand Action Against China. n thousand persons gathered « in Hibiva park, call- tnz for action against China. A majority of these marched to the forelgn office and clamered for ad- They demanded the ded- to take such as were necessary to obtain atisfaction for the killing of Japan- | ese at Nanking, or, failing this, the | Tesignation of the minister of foreign falrs, Baron Nobuaki Makino. The speakers denounced the empti- ness of Japanese dipiomacy in connec- jon with California and China, and insisted tha ult to the Japan- 2t Nanking shouid be wiped ese fag out The manifestation was clearly &n explosion of popular resentment against the minisiry in its treatment ef the Caiifornia and Chinese ques- tions Japanese Diplomacy Decried. Profit v the lesson of the riots which followed the conciusion of peace between Russia and Japan, the gov- ernment reduced the risk of violence foday by refusing to aliow a single er or policeman at the sceme. The many of whom were orderly during the early A score of ol fmanifestants, #udents, were of the proceedings. tators including a g diplomacy and_deciared that it never contributed to the upbuild- f the empire and had always end- n failure. The incidents in China inbearable. Stampede to Foreign Office. ddenly the cry march on the fice was raised and there was I, decried Jap- | Cabled Paragraphs Funeral of Major Wigmore. Tokio, Japan, Sept. 7.—An impres- sive funeral service for the late Major Hybert L. Wigmore, military attache the United States embassy, who to 3 was held here yesterday. died Sept. ass Meeting at Tokio and Workmen aris, Sep n to piecas n at a f rs, a northern suburb of Paris. weats of their bodies were blown {a distance of 600 feet. own to plosi Wholesale Drowning in India. Simla, Britlsh India, Sept. 7.—One hundred and fifty native men, women and children were drowned vesterday while fording the river Beas In the Hoshiarpur district of the Punjab on their way to attend a fair. ° Death of Prof. Orr. Foreign Office Glasgow, Scotland, Sept, Pro- fessor James Orr, who had occupled the chair of apologetics and theology i _|at the Theological coliege of the 14 general stampede, mMany DEr=ons | United Free Church of Scotland here | barely escaping being crushed. since 1901, died yesterday, aged 69. crowds surged througR the ¥ | headed by leaders, and = | the foréign office to find that the high Abe’s Wounds Prove Fatal. | iron gates were locked. Tokio, Sept. 7.—Mortiaro Abe, di- Scores of the demonstrators pound- | rector of the political bureau of the ed on the sates and called for them | Japanese foreign office, died yesterday, to be opened, but in vain. The under |ihe victom of unknown assassins, who officials refused. A delegation was |attacked him the evening of Sept. 4. appointed, the members of which | His assailants, who believed to | climbed the gates and then ensued a |have been students, long parley Stoned 4 Photographer. RETIREMENT 'OF HUERTA | Meanwhile the crowd was cheerful but_determined.. It showered compli- MEEL NOW HRING BEACE R Deautiful oisha £l 1 Opinion of One of Leaders of Mexican | grily stoned a_photographer seeking | Constitutionalists. to_take snapshots of the chief delegate, M Dia who, having returned, mounted the enor uel portals to report progress. Perched ropean representativs of unsteadily on the pickets he made a der of the Mexi- | fantastic picture and in a harsh han- |can ‘Constitutional , directs the work angue declared that the committee de. | of from the luxurious | manded either the dispatch of troops |apariment looking over the Avenue | | or the retirement of the foreign min- | Bois de Boulogne, which he first oc- | ister. cupied as President Madero’s minis ‘We told the officials,” he shouted, |to France. Ready to his hand he keeps | “that the voice of the people speaks, |a map of Moxico, upon which he marks that the agitation will never end un- [out in black each part of territory | { til our demands are granted wrung from the forces of President Another Meeting Galled. ‘ulmw‘ reported by cable or letter. e on | Senor Diaz-Lombardo is a quiet, ¢ibe oxtraordinary situation con- |earnest man, neither given to invectiv b - dolosales lagainst his adversaries mor to exag- emerging_periodically to pacify ~ the | SERIISL TR adversan of his friends. Te does not believe that General Hy and his par are going to be over- | come with ease, but he full of con- {fidence that Senor Carranza will tri- \umph eventually, thoush the maement of his triumph may be a long way of. ‘While expressing the t admir- ation for Pr a man of uprightne: iend of peace and crowd. Finally, when the discussion | ended, they reported {hat Baron M kiho had promised to receive them on September 15. This was greeted with | howls of derision and a _thousand | marched to the foreign minister's res- idence, three miles distant. A cordon of police, however, prevented their near approach. Another mass meeting was called for | Sunday night at the ~Young Men's Christiag association hall resignation of Provisional President Huerta, and a clean-slate eleation, ANOTHER SECTION OF TORSO FOUND. | L.smembered Body of Young Weman n Hudson River. iew York, Sept. 7.—Ancther part of | the dismembered body of the young | woman that was found in the Hudson river near Cliffside, N. J. last Fri- 1p today by two fish- miles below Cliffside. forso found today was brown paper, tied 2d about it was a sver f the same »und with the part dis- To the bundle was o weishing about i £ a New York ring date of Aug. 31 was he bundle. Physicians he two parts thus far d tonight that they me body, that of a than 20 years of nation rapped in hea of pillow m > the er c exam o the where the received to- oherent. On s written the the back ap- ~ssed The a to me. embered. Dr. The letter and but in mes, an DER TO BE ENTY-FIVE FOOTER | Vanderbilt at Head of the Building Commodore Sy It | Se The cand efense Lipton's Her would statement surprise in Eng shoff explain- RESULT. Venucchio Under N. Y. Antenio t at Roc SRIDGEPORT CONDUCTOR KNOCKED OFF HIS CAR. Struck by Another Car—Dies of In- juries in Hospital. i idzeport, Comn, Sept 38 hau: + conductor on North eet lpe, for some unknown wson swung him: om the i ut midnight tonight an anotier car and knock- receiving injuries from in a few minutes. The ened near St. Vincent's medical aid wae ai_once m there. but Johnson « the street a red died while being placed on a stretcher. | quenchers. Bis skull was frastured } W e e i | wreck of the Bar Harbor express at |alists nor by the followers of Za; | sons who may be in the cit would not have the effect of pacifying | rHREE wRECK VicTIMS Mexico oven assuming (hat - General Huerta would consent to it. The elec- IN CRITICAL CONUDITION. tions would be carried out under the Inmates of Various | present government and it was hardly {to-be expected that they would allow themselves to be turned out if they New Haven, Conn., Sept. 7.—Coroner |could help it. In other words, the Hii Mix of New Haven county will re- |election would bring about no change ume his private inquest tomorrow | whatever in the situation. and would morning at 10 o'clock into the ratal |not be accepted by the Constitution- a, actually co-operating Sixteon Are Stifl i New Haven Hospitals. | North Haven last Tuesday. The cor-|who though not oner said tonight the ingnest would |with the Constitutfonalists, b: the probably be concluded Friday and that |same social, political and economic his finding would be ready two or three | program. days later. | Senor Diaz-Lombardo points out that Sixtgen of those injured in the wreck | many of the customs ports are in the are still in_the various hospitals here, |hands of his party, and that most of but only three are in critical condi- |the other sources of revenue available tion, it is said. These are Misses | to General Huerta are crippled by the Edna and Jane Annett of Bayonne, N.|destruction of means of communication. J. and Mrs. Carl Rose Zimmerman of |The total income of the Husrts gov- New York city. | ernment is now about $2,400,000 per i —_— | month, most of which is wanted for the BhatiEeile NiAGARA |army, ’ whereas “at least 35,000,000 is nocessary to carry on the work of ad- ON WAY TO SANDUSKY |ministration. If the troops are no for. e {paid they will desert, an eventuality of { which cannot be staved off indefinitely, Ohio City to Begin Celebration Perry’s Victory Today. {in view of the prohibition of the % Fremsh loans to Mexico, upon which Sandusky, Ohio, 7.—With the [the Huerta government had been business section 'a mass of decora- | counting. tions, Sandusky tonight awaits the S et coming of the regurrected battleship [ CATHOLIC ATHLETES Niagara into Sandusky bay tomorrow | forenoon to inaugurate officially a cel- | ebration of Perry’s victory in the battle | of Lake Erie, plans for which bave | been in the making for five year | Tomorrow morning the steamer Ol- | cott, chartered for the trip, will go | forth to meet the Niagara on har way ere from Buffalo. The Olcott will | police, have aboard ome thousand represen- tative citizens and distinguist.ad per- former dent Taft, among others, provid- he arrives in time. RECEIVED BY POPE, Few Claskes on Streets of Rome With the Anti-Clericals. Rome, S were gua pt. 7—The streets of Rome rded today by large forces of carabineers and troops, from the church of St. John Lateran, where the Catholic athletes heard mass, to St.+ Peter’s, to which edifice they marched to Le received by the pope. A great parade that had been plan- ned was prohibited by the police on account of threatened reprisals by the anti-clericals. Notwithstanding the strictest measures to ensure order, a few scuffies occurred amid cries from the Catholics of “Long live the pope!” Pres ing LIGHTNING STRIKES A WATERBURY RESIDENCE. Home of Thomas P. Forman Damaged | $2,500—Ocupants Unharmed. | to which the anti-clericals responded bsca | by shouting “Leng live free think- Waterbury. Conn., Sept. 7.—During | ing!” a“thunder storm which struck the city | Four hours were occupied by the at 10 o'clock tonight a bolt of light- | athletes in reaching St. Peter’s, where ning struck the home of —homas P.|they unfurled flags and passed into the | court of San wamaso. They knelt when | the pope appeared on the nalcony, sur- $2,500 damage before it was extin- | rounded by the pontifical court. The guished. Forman and his wife were | POpe’s sister Maria, his~niece Gilda not shocked in the least by the bolt. and his brother Angelo were present in Much damage was done about the | the special tribune. city by lightning and by the heavy | The athletes, pilgrims and others in downpour. Streets were washed jout, | the assembly numbered $,000, and af- tclophones put out of commissiorf and | ter the apustolic benediction had been the trolley system tied up for half an |imparted they arose and gave a triple hour. Hundreds of people who got out | hurrah. The pontiff inquired regard- of the theatres just before the storm | ing the obstacles which had been broke were drenched. | Forman, a real estate man, on Circuit avenue, set fire to the house and did and urged extreme prudence. The Osservatore Romano publishes an article inspired by the vatican pro- testing against the prohibition of the parade, which it considers an offense to the liberty of Catholics, and urges the athletes, especially “the sons of free America,” to describe at home ‘“the species of liberty and which the Italian laws give the holy see.” BROKE HIS BACK BY JUMP FROM WINDOW | New Haven Waiter Took This Means to Escape Arrest. New Haven, Conn., Sept. 7.—In en- deavoring to escape the clutches of the w today. Llysses C. Webb, a colored s o waiter jumped out the fourth story | ARCHBISHOP OF VIENNA ‘indow of a house at 28 Dow street, < now at the New Haven Hospital ON MOMENSCEASHHONS, et 4T Pifrobman _ SeManus was | They Strike at Self-respect of Christian en he heard a ! Women and Girls. i door | 4 o against him, the officer promptly | London, Sept. 7—Dr. Piffl, the Arch- d it in, as Webb took his fiving | bishop of Vienna, sp: Hetors leap. MeManus said -that Webh was [large assembly. at Linz, recently, vehe- beating the woman. mently attacked the present fashion £ S = of women's dress. He sald he spoke RAIDED THE HOUSES OF at the special request of an exalted | persousge, which was construed to {mean that he voicing the senti | ments of the Emperor | Present day fashions are exercising a most pernicious and ruffious infinence | apon the social and financial condi- 28 BRISTOL ITALIANS. was Chief of Police Succeeds in Filling Barn with Seized Liguors. Bristol, Conn., Sept. 7.—Chief | tions of many femiiles, he declared. He Police Belden, assisted by local officers, | pegged his hearers to reject the pre- nade a raid on the homes of twen vailing indecent and disgracetul fash- eight Italians in the early hours of 'jons, which have nothing in common morning today, and made as many ar- | with Christian character and which rests for alle illegal sale of liquor. | strike at the self-respect of Christian The chiet confiscated all the liquor he could find. and now has a barn in the | Teur of the police station comfortably filled with various kinds of thirs ,The cases come up for & hearing tomorrow morning. | women and girls like blows in the face. Dr. Piffl was only recently raised to the Archbishopric. He has never been onsidered at all sensational, but is esteemed a folerant mam, with kindly Eoctal aymeathiss. of Mexico, Senior Diaz-Lombardo con- | siders that the step he advocated, the | placed in the way of the demonstration | I 1 | | Trevino would be made minister of war soon, to succeed General Blanquet. It hal been generally supposed here i independence | Havemey | | plemented the argument of the second | trom” Rome. | ént position at the Vatican after the Bitter Feeling Rmong Soldiers ANTI-AMERICAN SENTIMENT AT JUAREZ A’ LIEUTENANT SHOT Was Found to Have Been Aggressor in Outrage at American Consulate— Official Warning to Juarez Citizens, El Paso, Texas, Sept. 7.—Official Jua- rez subsided today in outward feeling against Americans Decause of the shooting of Lieut. Francisco Acosta by government officers here Saturday, fol- Towi gation conducted by an Consulates M. E. Diebold of Inspector Diebold blames Acosta as the aggressor in the affair. No Anti-American Demonstrations. The officials of Juarez gave citizens of the Mexican town to understand that they would not countenance any public anti-American demonstrations. As a result when a few Americans vis- ited Juarez during the day no one was molested or threatened. Feeling Intense 2t Garrison. The feeling among the rank and file of the garrison and the citizens still is intense, but because of the stand tak- en by the officials of the town they dar- ed not display it. O'SHAUGHNESSY'S DISCLAIMER. Has No - Assurance Huerta Won't Be Candidate at Election. ‘Washington, Sept. 7.—While no an- nouncements were made at any of the government departments today of any change in the diplomatic side of the Mexican controversy, iwo phases of the situation attracted much attention in official circles. One was the pub- lished disclaimer on the part of Nelson O'Shaughnessy, American charge Qaffaires at Mexico City, that any positive assurance had been given him not to be 2 candidate in the approach- fo the intention of Victoriano Huerta not to be a candidate in the approach- ing elections. The other was the re- ceipt of private telegrams from sources close to the administration in Mexico ty that General Geronimo stating ihat Trevino was ordercd back to Mex- co City by Huerta to be given (he cins of the government as provisional president while Huerta entered the | presidential campaign. Mr. O'Saughnessy’s statement was not surprising here, as it had been | pointed out from. time to tme by | Washinston officials that they had - | lied only on the repeatcd emphasis by Frederico Gamboa, the Mexican minis- ter of foreign affairs, of the statement that Fuerta was ineligible by the con- stitution to succeed himseif. Mr. O'Saughnessy incidentally disclosed the fact that the Mexican officials had sup- Gamboa note calling attention to Hu- erta’s ineligibility by verbal referances to that part of the note. This further encourages Washington officials to be- jeve that the Huerta candidacy will| not materialize. "OBITUARY. Cardinal Joseph C. Vives y Tuto. Rome, Sept. T.—Cardinal Joseph Celasanctius Vives y Tuto, prefect of the Congregation for Religious Affairs, died today. Recently he had under- gone an operation for appendicitis. Cardinal Vives vy Tuto was born at | San Andrea de Llevaneras, dic of Barcelona, February 15, 1854. He “vas | created and proclaimed cerdinal June 19, 1899. Early in the summer it was reported that he had become insane but later physicians diagnosed his case a neurasthenia and he retired to a mon- astery at Frascati, a short distance The cardinal acquired a very promin- election of Pope Pius X and had even been considered as a probable candi- date for the succession. | The pope was deeply affected by the | death of Cardinal Vives y Tuto and ! exclaimed: “I have lost one of my best friend: the church ome of its greatest sup- ports.” | John P. Archibald. | New York, Sept. 7.—John P, Archi- | bald, one of the most widely known | democrats and labor leaders in New | York city, died today at his home in | | the Bronx, where he was a Tammany leader. He was born in Dublin, Ire- land, sixty vears ago and came to New York thirty years ago, engaging | in the painting and decorating busi- ness. He was formerly president of the Brotherhood of Decorators and Painters of America and at one time a vice president of the New York state federation of labor. He was grand marshal of the first Labor day parade ever held in this city, in 1888 William F. Havemeyer, New York, Sept. 7.—William F. Havemeyer, one of the organizers of the American Sugar Refining company that absorbed the business of the Havemeyer Brothers' refinery and founded by his father, died suddenly today at the home of his son-in-law, Williem R. Willcox, former chairman of the New York Public Utilities com- mission. He was 63 years old. Heart disease was given as the cause of death. Mr. York Havemeyer was bhorn in New city. His father, William F. r, was once mayor of N York and died while holding that of- fice. Ralph Blackstone. Branford, Conn., Sept. 7.—Ralph Blackstone, the oldest resident of this town, died today, aged 91. He was the | last of ten children of the old Black- stone family. Boy Falls from Roof. New Haven, Sept. 7—While playing | on the roof of his home this afternoon, | nine years old Edward Keegan lost his balance and tumbled to the ground, | three storles below. e is in St | Ruphacl's Hospital but his injuries are | not sertous, physicians say Fell From a Hayloft New Haven, Sept. 7—Henry Delaney | a hostler, employed at & Chapel Street livery stable, went to sleep in the hay- floor loft today, and rolled onto the Physicians say his neck is br hold out no hope for recovery in Grace Hospital. Steamship Arrivals. New York, Sept. 7,—Arrived, steam- ers Columbia, Glasgow, Grosser Kur- furst, Bremen, . New York, Sept. 7.—Arrived, steamer Rotterdam, Rotterdam S | the state of Washington. The state of | Monson, Mass.,, was found this morn- | has more faith | was made half a century “Pork Barrel” Dishursements CONNECTICUT NOT GETTING A SQUARE DEAL DONOVAN’S COMPLAINT Congressman Declares that Washing- ton, Gets $500,000 for Four Towns. a State of Equal Popuiation, (Special to The Bulletin.) ‘Washington, Sept. 7.—Whil the house was discussing the deficiency appro- priation bill the other day and Repre- sentative Gillett of Massachusetts was berating the democratic majority for increasing the salary of the president's secretary, while they had opposed a like increase for the saary of President Taft, Representative Jeremiah Dono- van asked it he would yield for a mo- ment. Mr. Gillett replicd that the gen- tleman from Connecticut could get time from his own side. when Mr. Don- ovan said: “‘Perhaps I am on the gen- tleman’s side.” Mr. Donovan said he only wanted about eight seconds or a mianute, and Mr. Gilictt yielded the fioor {0 him for that length of timre, and Mr, Donovan said: Present Secretary’s Large Family. “If the gentleman will stop to think he will see that the occasion of it was to reward virtue; that in giving the in- creased salary the gentleman mentions they were following the dictates of na- ture, because the present secretary has six or seven children and the other one nonme. It was really an honorable act to do—to reward nature, to virtue, to reward humanity—and I am surprised that the distiuguished gentle- man from Massachuseits should find error in it.” Mr. Gillett said he was not finding fault’ with the increase of salary, but was only calling attention to the fact that the party now in the majority op- posed a similar increace a few months back. Want Our Share of “Pork Barrel.” While the provision of the bill that provides for an increase in the office of the supervising architect was un- der comsideration and Representative Humphries of Washington was plead- ing for an increased amount for a city in his distriot, Mpn Donovan said that he wished to call the attention of the gentleman from Washington to the fact that some of the members of the house were very careiess when they talked about money. “If there is any one state in the Union that has had its share out of the ‘pork barrel it is Washington and the state of Connecti- cut, from which I hail, are about equal in population and wealth, according to the books. The last congress gave the state of Washington 33,836,000, and it gave the state of Conmecticut a beg- zarly $400,000 The people of the north- west were very eager when\ they put their hands on the public treasury, get- ting nearly haif a million dollars for public buildings in four towns with population of less than 10,000. Now they are growling because they did not get more.” Washington Gets It All. Mr. Humphries asked how much the state of Comnecticlit had recelved be- fore the state of Washington was ad- mitted into the Union. Mr. Domovan #aid he did not know, neither did he ow how many citics there were in Connectiout baving a population of e than 10,000, but he did know that moment your people got into the ugh the question of the ‘pork barrel’ was over, for you took it all. Again I repeat that in that part of the United half a miliion dellars was Q to four towns for public ngs with & total population of an 10,000 peoste.” The incease for the force in the arch- ifect’s office was al'owed COMMITTED SUICIDE AT QUAKER HILL. Man Who Was “Down and Out” Left | Note for His Mother. New London, Sept. 7.—With a bullet wound in the right temple, the body of Jerome H. Cady, 35 years old, of ing near the home of Ezra J. Hemp- stead at Quaker Hill. Beside the body Was & note written in pencil on ordi- nary writing paper. It was addressed to “Mother s far as decipherable the note read: “Don’t look for me; not resporsible for myself.” The right hand of the dead man tightly grasped a .32 calibre revoiver, oreontiy hew Onb; ode suot nad been fired and the othef chambers were full In the man’s right hand pocket was full box of cartridges. The shot had been well directed and | evidently death had been instantane- | ous. | The man was shabbily dressed. TIn | his pocket were a pipe. some tobacce, cigarettes and a lone nickel, telling the | tale—evidently he was down and out and, fundless and friendless, had de- cided to end it all Coroner Franklin H. Brown of Nor- wich pronounced it suicide and gave permission for the removal of the body. = A ‘telegram was gent to Monson in an effort to establish the identity of the man. The identification was con- firmed by his mother, a widow, LOAN RETURNED AFTER FIFTY YEARS, Norwalk Jeweler Receives $5 that was | Owed His Dead Brother, T Norwalk, Conn., Sept. 7.—Le Grande Jackson, a well known local jeweler, in human nature now than he ever did before, as the result of the return today of a loan of $5 that ago. Ac- cording to Mr. Jackson, the loan was made by his brother .lfred Jackson to Samuel Hitcock of California. Alfred Jackson has been dead twenty-five years, and Mr. Hitehcock, w had heen i searching for him fo years, upon learniug that fact, denis to pay the loan back to Mr. v here. To Present Terms tc China. London, Sept. 8—A Tokio despatch to the Mail says: “The government au- nounces that it is formulating terms for presentation to China regarding the Nanking murders and insults of- fered to two Japanese military Offi- cers.” Trees Struck at Southington. Southington, Conn., Sept. T.—This town was in the throes of {wo severs | electrical storms which met near hera. reward | Condensed Jeicurams Kansas City, Mo., will have police- women too. “Drinks on the house” are banned by :1 new ordinance, just effective in Bos- one The Boston & Maine Railroad has let contracts for 1,000 new steel freight cars. paid $806.25 to get ake him from Kan- sas City, Mo, to Chicago. . Inspection of a site for a navy yard in lower New York bay will be made this month by Secretary Daniels. Individual deposits in national banks of the United States decreased $190,- 000, bétween June 4 and August 9. It is reported that the New York Central will construct a freight trans- fer station at Chicago at a cost of $1,500,000. President Wilson Saturday nomi- nated Irving Shuman of Iilinois for assistant treasurer of the United States at Chicago. Locomotive engineers and firemen on the railroads west of Chicago soon will ask the railroad companies to revise their schedule of wages. Emmeline Pankhurst, the militant suffragette, will sail from Paris for i e United States on Oct. 4. She will speak in New York city Oect. 21. Scientists excavating for the sciioe of American Archeaology at Albuqeue- rque, N. M., unearthed 50 skeletons of the extinct Tigua Indians. There were listed in Missouri the first seven months of 1913, 35,987 au- tomobiles, an fncrease of 11,603 cars over the whole of last year. The price of fruit in the Gallup, N markets dropped from 121-2 cents a pound to 5 cents when a parcel post shipment came in from Colorado. Miss Lillian Thomas of Washington sewed $1,000 in an old skirt and left it in her apartment. During her ab- sence a servant stole the garment. A company of soldiers will go south on the army transport Buford when it sails from San. Francisco today to rescue Americans stranded in Miexican ports. - The Delatare Cor Growere’ Associ- | ation will hold the state corn show at Georgetown on De. 11-12. The state has offered $500 additfonal prefum money. T. C. Wilson, socretary of the state board of agriculture Saturday roported that as a result of drought the condi- tion of corn in Missouri fell 29 points in August. J. 8. Noyes, superior court judge of Riverside “county, Cal. dled at Los Angeles, from drinking poison. Grief over the recent death of his wife, made him déspondent. It will cost $25676 to make the changes in the N. Y. Senate Chamber necessary to accomodate the high court of impeachment for the trial of Governor Sulzer. Head, arms and lags missing, the nude body of a womsn found near Cliffside, N. J., half burfed in the sands of the iiudson, has proved an enigma to detectives. . The countervailing duty on wood pulp proposed by the teriff bill was stricken out by the senate Saturday and all retaliatory features against Canada were removed. Wright Keeble, a visitor at San Jose, Cal, from Tenneses has been asleep for thirty-five days at the home of his un- cle. R. P. Keeble and many doctors have tried to awaken him. The steamship Penn, of the Ericson line which operated between Philadel- phia and Baltimore, was Saturday des- troyed by fire while tied up at one of the Delaware River wharves, Hannibal Taggart, of Yashville, Ind., charged with the murder of his 16- year-old daughter, Norma, was ac- quitted Saturday. It was contended the child died of fright because of con- stant cruel treatment. . Dr. Jacob Hall of Kansas City, was bound over Saturday to the criminal court for trial on a charge of man- siaughter in connection with the death of Meta Zook, a high school girl last August, after a criminal operation. Led by S. H. Cole of Rutland, Vt., ten_members of the Appalachian club of Boston left Rutland Saturday for a hundred mile hike over the Long Trail from Killington Park to the Winooski Valley in the northern part of Vermont. A Greystone R. I, elactric car collid- ed with a motor grocery iruck at North Providence ~Raturday, causing the | death of Stanton Perry, 14 vears old, | serfously. injuring Andrew Eryson, both | of whom were | ding in the auto-truck. | William Travers Jerome, arrested in Coaticook on a charge of gambling and held for nearly an hour in a cell, failed to appear before Magistrate James McKee for a preliminary hearing at Coaticook Saturday, and the case was put over until Sept. 11. Although she was picked up and thrown into a watering trough to ex- tinguish the flames in which she was enveloped, Bertha Saunders, aged 11, was so badly burned at Winslow, Me., Saturday that her recovery was not | expected. She poured kerosene into a | stove. Enginesr August- B. Miller of the | New York, New Haven and Hartford | railroad had been doing two men's work when he ran his train by a signal | at North Haven last Tuesday morning | and wrecked the Bar Harhor express | at a cost of 21 lives. He so testified Saturday. A boy claiming to he Harold Dicker- son, son of Col. R. P. Dickerson of Springfield, Mo., was shot and seriously | wounded by James Gray of St. Louis, | during a scuffle in a rowboat on Reed's Lalke, Mich. Gray after the shooting. leaped in the lake and is belleved to have been drowned. inhabitants of the section of Maine along the Fort Fairfield and Limestone branches of the Bangor and Arogstook rafircad are appatently cut off from the outside world’so far as mail ser- vice is concerned, owing to & mis understanding between the railroad and the government. Harry Orchard, self-confessed as. sassin _of Former Governor Fran Steunenberg of Idaho, and at one time sentenced to be hanged, has published The lightning was incessant and many trees were struck. As far as could be | were | learned late tenight no houses struck. the required notice in A Caldwell paper that he will apply to the board of pardons at the October meeting for a full and absolute pardon. JEROME'S CAS: TO GOME UP TOI den which we propuse to assume need- 1o the only witness, a boy, who saw {lessly. Why should we not profit by |them from the other side of the pond, their experfence? Great Britain coins | Miss Feingold leaped into the waters gold as full legal tender, silver Miss Crummell, although unable to subsidiary coin and stops there, The |swim, jumped in after her patient and « bank of England iss s notes and | 5as dragged bp the beitosm. The bodies is bound by redemptlon In gold (0 |ere recovfi‘t Announced by Telephone That He Would Surely h Hand to Face the Charge of Gambling tion Officials to Remove Thaw as Quietly as Possible io Avoid “Any Fuss”—Two Girls Stand Beneath Window of Thaw’s Cell and Beg for a Glimpse of His Face Coaticook, Que, Sept. 7.—Unless a|moved it will be as quietly as possible; hitch occurs, Willlam Travers Jerome, | We don't Wwent any fuss.” especially retained by New York state| _ Thaw Declines to Take Walk. to secure the return of Harry K. Thaw | Thaw's Sunday was perhaps the to Matteawan, will appear before Dis. | TOSt uneventful day since his arrivad triet Magistrate Mulvena here tomor- | g cinedi. He had ‘nly two callers, e Mulvena here tomor- | his stenographer and his local counsel Tow afternoon to‘answer to a charge of | Dr. W. L. Shurtleff. Most of the day gambling. His case had been set for H:fi RoMoNNT AN N h_,rghaboran him- hearing on Thursday, Sept. 11, bUh| Sharge velisteorar rn taune Officers in ] S = i . PUb | charg teered to tal both sides agreed tonight to advance | walle in ‘the open air I he fels in ohen it, and Jerome announced over long | 3 distance telephone from Montreal that l:’,‘:&f}’f:;“"“‘ but Thaw:: dhlueuiN he would be here without fail. He was | ‘HaBKS : ondlh». point of leaving for New York | Girls Beg Thaw to Show His Face. under the impression that ' the case| Two hero-wershipping girls stood ‘would not be called tomorrow. | beneath the barred windows of his room for half an hour this afternoon, Another Justice to Hear ‘Case. holding aloft bouquets and begging Magistrate Mulvena of Sherbrooke | Pim to show his face. ~“We want to agreed to hear the case, displacing |SaY Weve seen you once, Harry," they Justice of the Peace James McKee, | CTied. 'Just come to the window for & Wwho signed the warrant for Jerome's | Second arrest and subsequently denvunced him | A guatd turned and spoke to Thaw, - in court when Jerome I wn after | but, the fugitive refused to show him Deing admitted to $300 ;‘selfl Jerome was arresicd hursday | g ’ after playing poxer dew York | No Move by Thaw’s Counsel. newspapermen « <5 coiciced under | Montreal, Sept. 7.—Ne move-in the $600 bail. Iia io tlonaeal to| maiter of sseking the liberation' of prepare for the when | Harr: naw on bail will be made Thaw is arraigned on a writ of habeas | before the local courts, acording to corpus on Sept. 15. | well informed sources here tonight, His counsel, now that they have Thaw to Be Movad Quistly. | brought the whole case to the atten- | tia No word had come to Costicook to- | Uon of the eourt of the king's beneh, Lk MR b e gontent ticmaelves with awalting B e Thi o LrRortment of | Gevelopmonts in the ordinary cours ferige ut Otiadre as to when Harry | 00w may be hrought besethis sethe preparatory to his hesring there on | Part of this week or he may be dstain- Sept. 15 before the king’s bench on the | 80 at Coaticook until the 15th, as the Writ of habeas corpus obained by his | Domomion immisration authorities des - | cige. coun The quarters here are com- fortable and the immigration agents | S left in charge said again today that | Mrs. Thaw Leaves Home. Thdw might be held until the last mo- | Pittsburgh, Sept. 7.-—According to ment. “The department ved from Cresson, ’ messages re: Copley Thaw, mother does not desire to | Mrs. Mary stir up any more excitement about the | Herry K, Thaw, laft her home in that Thaw case than is absolutely neces-|city late folay. The train on whieh sary,” sald T. B. Williams, one of the | she departed was due to arrive immigration officers. “There has been | 6.25 p. m. Efforts to locate Mrs.- in Pittsburgh tonight have failed, . PEEN UNCOVER PLOT TO SIHUGGLE CHINESE enough already, and when Thaw is re- THEY ARE ROBBERY, SAYS EX-CONGRESSMAN HILL Opinion Expressed on Irredoemable | “Undergrbund Railway” Permitting Government Demand Notes. Secret Entrance to United States. (Special to The Bulletin.) Chicago, Tll, Sept. 7.—Discovery of Waehtugion, Sept. 7.--Former Con- [an “undersround railway” to aid em- gressman B. J. 1illl appeared before | trance of Chinese into this country Wps reported yesterday by detecitwes \ at work on {he murder of Charles Bing, a Cbinese merchant. The al- leged conspiracy extends from Pitish Columbta to Fong ong snd has braack- the menate cumm'itee on banking and g currency and spoke in favor of the proposition advecated by the bankers' commlttes. Ho cald “Mr. Chairman, wh should the be ixsued by snd be in fect the obli- |es in meny citles of this country aad gations of the federal reserve banks [at least ome in Mexico. instead of the government. In my | Becrets of the “underground” were Ju@ement the governnient has no right | discovered in a raid on rooms at the to jame them in the form and man- |rear of & chop suey restauraat im ner whish the bili [roposes. |'nder | North Clark street. The police found. ita movereisn pawer, it can, (nrough | thé “black book,” from which the al- - loged scheme in ald of Chinese was It contzins names of the agents of the organization in various cities and of some of the most notori- ous Chinese criminals in the 4 the police say. 7The poiice believe the motey on congress, Lorrow 3 | of the United States, coin mon - ulate the value thercof und of jorencn coln, and provide for the punichment of counterfeiting the securi and coin of the United te These new notes are, not monev, | muzéerer of Sing escaped by the “um- not legal tender, they ai# to be loans | derground.” 2 of the credit of the whole people, for | Among the cities listed in the “black a a usage charge pald by twelve or more | book” 24 statfons on the “u; und” specific_banks which are to be cic- |are San Francisco, Seattle, Wash.; ated. They are the dircct obligations | Vaneouver, B. C.; Ann Arbor, and De- | trott, Mieh. Athens, Obio; Boston and Cambridge, Mass. Columbla, Miss.; 16n b r ich the for of the nation, for w received nothing and of which at any time, sumes (he raizo, Ind, and Ensenada, Mexs responsibility, looking to, the federal o reserve banks to recoup’itself. fhe | notes under the terms of the bill would | PATIENT AND NURSE ; be unquestionably good, if issued by the benks alone. Why should the bur- DROWN TOGETHER. den of current redemption be placed 4 S on the government and LI s also | Latter Lost Her Life in Effort to Sawve and the cost to the peopie greatly n- Fer Charge. creased for both the loan and its re- it sponsibilities. Stoneham, Mass., Sept. 7.—Miss Ada * “Irredeemable government demand Feingold, aged 26, of Wercester, a pa- notes are robbery, and redeemable ones | tiont at ‘a sanitarium, and her.nurtie, are dangerou and expensive The | Miss Hazel Crummeil, 21, of nations with which we will have 10 | Akron, O, were drowned In Quarter have long compete in the stripped themselves o ture, Mile pond today. The young women were cut for a stroll when, according maintain their parity. UNDER KNIFE 24 TIMES, ' Fred Maybury is Now Known as thd “Artificial Man.” PROVISION MADE FOR HOT SPRINGS VICTIMS, 1 Homeless Temporarily Housed—Bread and Other Necessities Arrive. Yuma, Mich, Sept, 7. Fred Mays S 7, bury, 25 vears old, has gone on the Hot Springs, Ark, Sept. 7. With/|perating table for the 24th time initen two companies of militia policing the | years. A portion of his liver has just burned district, the citizen's commit- | heen removed, and physicians say, he tee devoted itself today to systemat will live. ing rellef measures and planning for | He made his surgical debut when his the rehabilitation of the fre-swept|right hand was cut off in a mill ma. eastern section of Hot Springs. To-|chine, A portion of the arm bones was night's checking up shows that 2ll of | taken out and an artificial hand pro- thoge made homeless by the fire of | yided. In a few weeks Maybury was Friday night have been housed tem-|at work. Then he lost hie left le~ in porarily and their immediate needs|the same machine. It was taken off provided for. Special offers of bread |just above the knee and an artificial and other necessities have arrived from | jeg provided. Little Rock and offers of financial d ‘When he was ready 1 ervice ) have been received from a number of | e was taken with -};»pm %:e: cities. a stray shot hit him in the right eye Against the monetary loss. estimated | 3 5 glass eye replaced it. Necrosis at $5,000,000, it is authoritatively stat- | of the hone developed In his ieft srm ed that approximately $2.000,000 in in- | and several bomes were removed at surance carried. different times, ARGENTINE BEEF Maybury had just recovered and was able to greet his friends on the strcot when his physiclan told him that he must have a portion of his liver re- moved. Through this region Maybury is known as the “artificial man.” ARRIVES HERE. New York Produce Exchange Gets Cargo of 1,000 Quarters. Child Found Under Brushpile. . Hrskine, Minn, Sept. T.—Boulah Hanzhorn, the 10 year old daughter of William Haazhorn, who has been lost for the last four days, wes found lyle today under a plle @f in woods far from ber “he Posses hawe been child, the belief bad been carrded by & that escaped frem a cirous ago. The . place by bl still was ¢ ly for her Neyw: York, Sept. 7.—The first cargo of Argentine meat ever brought to this country is due here shortly on _the TLamport and Hoit liner Van Dyck from South American ports it became known tonight. The vessel has 1,000 qumrters of beef in her cold storage ocompartment, consigned by an Argen- time house to a produce exchange firm. The shipment is an experimental ones and the beef may be sold at once, as estimates are that even after ftariff chargee are paid it can be sold here at 2 profit under ruling prices for western 1