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LV.—NO. VOL. 216 NORWICH, CONN.. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1913 " PRICE TWO_CENTS The Bulietin’s Circulation In Norwich is Double That oi Any Other Paper, and Its Total Circulauon is the Largest in Connecticut ip Jporuon to the C;ty’s Population . R JEROME 1S HONORABLY DISCHARGED Magistrate at Coaticook Apologizes for Humiliation to Which He was Subjected NITNESSES TELL OF GAME OF DRAW POKER Game was Played in an Automobile—Court Finds That dence Does Not Sustain the Charge—Jerome Does v Not Attribute His Arrest to Thinking People 1 You ndly cot duty a nking peo; sir, honorably Jerome Responds. the - L public officer to y discharged arge o ad silence rt's greeted remarks, 1 said ghly t Since 1 rd- understand assured, yo that 1 ircumstances of this have been in Canada I en received with uniform cour- n Sherbrooke, in Montreal, and, I say, in Coaticook, by the thinking e. T am sure those who have been ntemperate have misled rather by ignorance of the facts than by real malice. shall o Canada always with g remen great piea as been somethiug of or but I do n pumiliated before my a humilia have 1 thoughtful Hisses and Catcalls. but and ed by his: ena called red out Jerom Pond, Vt., where he po Mr. me bought general " A Thaw Expresses Pleasure. w York | Harry Thaw in tention room | "“That's good.” he said. “It saves me ded tonight when Thaw would be removed to Montrea FREEDOM FOR THAW. Says His Charces Are Better Than They Ever Were. The Complaint Read Gre d: ne of . o read- | from the fight against the immigration A r s to immigra- gt 18 ers. It is contended that they 2 ave a formal order from the | sface to Canada™ ESCHEW TOBACCO TO BE A GENTLE Methodist Bishop Uraes Ministers to Abstain from the Weed. Mo., Sent the Method urged ministers conference of here today to refrain from to characterized total abstine: the weed as one of'the dist | marks of a gentleman. While Charles, chureh, Missor A F P epeaking several preachers were < sugr P Fhepoae o ing on the lawn in front of the chur ng up_the prosecution point The bishop asked those who attend 3 out that a Dominion 7 beew | the general conference in Oklalioma ~nacted protect from | City next vear especlally tn refrain ard sharps on tratns, s and | from smoking, He then asked f, other publ at ac- |vote indorsing bis views ax 1o ording to the e Trav. | general conference, but severa erm Jerome, late district atiorney of | jaters voted “no.” Now Yo ad violated this law The bishop then told a =t ' Thouet: he continued. the stat- | lustrate how some people smoke te una ¥ applied to rafiroad | the aly, Afiter he had toid this sto P ns and he asked for | he got unanimous vote endorsing | & conviction b viain g | Loans tncresee, Deposits Bocroass s’ Bhes : U1 Washington, Hept, 8—Proparations Rt g s tor 1hel moyerents of crops were 1 it Aputtgizss o Jorome | Mectod in n Aciaited summary road Magistrate Mty er o wnd | publie Lodgy on The cond o o ered for nof more ihas fiily s ha on Aug, § Bs compar rendering Judgmeni, b p iy Inmvensed $25, shiabl be very while inidividual deposits desrins minded ma 1175689 wed cash Ascredsed $14 the hu, 339, The government had nof b = excueable ne [ | When this call for condition was iss The evidence sdduced st this | Sued Shves mo rewsons Steamers Reportad hy W flenge effered jeu whi 50 miles east at Cabied Paragraphs German Aviator Killed. irevenbroich, Rhenish Prussla, Sept. $—The German aviator Senge fell to- | day while making a flight and was | killea. Earthshock in West Indies. Kingstown, Island of St. Vincent, W, Sept! S.—An earthshock was felt here vesterday morning, and sub- sequently a severe thunder storm, ac- companied by a heavy fall of rain, | broke over the island Duchess Becomes a Mother. London, Sept, 8.—The Duchess of Roxburghe, formerly Miss May Goelet of Newport, R. I, gave birth to a son ast night at Chesterfield house. The duke and duchess, a daughter of the late Ogden Goelet, were married in 1903, Decision Against Christian Science. London, Sept. 8.—The point whether the father is guilty of manslaughter following the death of his child <f he relies solely on the services of a istlan Science practitioner during a ious illness was decided in the firmative by Justice Rowlatt in entral criminal court today the American Cyclist Kil gne, Germany, Sept. 8 awson, an erican cyclist, and heuermann, German rider, are d, and the German is dying, as the re- sult n accident today in the hun- dred kilometre paced bicycle pionship race he d. Meinhold, racer’s pacemalker, to the suppr Shimbun, an ind on today of the Niroku pendent newspaper TO INGREASE FREIGHT RATES FIVE PER CENT. Fifty-two Railroads Seek Sanction of Comnasrce Commission. | Washington | Sept. 8.—Proposed ad- | vances of five per cent. in freight rates on all commoditios except grain and | coal will be sybmitied to the Interstate | Commerce Commission about the mid- dle of next month by the 52 railroads operating in the easl. There will be |a carload or more of the tarifts sold | by all rairoads in eastern classifica- | tion territor he proposed changes will be based upon t esent first class rate be | tween New York and Chicago, the in- crease being five per cent. flat. It | understood no determination has bee | reached as to new rat on coal and | grain. Upon request of the commiu- sion ihe railroads elves will up the changes unt he commission shall have riunity thoroughy [t and pass upon | until tarin saily were before | sission. In (helr opinion the | the rate fixed would be a minimum rate, below which the railroads could not go legally even if they so desired he aggregats expense to the rail- | r0ads of compiling and printing the new tariffs, it is said, will be close to $1,000,000, « TIVERTON METEOR Two Young Men Admit Trying to Create a- Sensation. I, Sept. 8—The Tiver- e Seacor er h. A da twve piece ¢ which was de ermer nd on exhibition o onounced the “meteor s to nd in quantities in the 2 a neardy manufacturing plant T solice cl exhibition and hega nves »n_which resuited ? onfess f two voung men s ey and some companions had taker amite and exploded it Tsiand in order tn cre CRIPPLED YOUTH TO RETURN TO WARSAW on a Stretcher. Sept. 8. —In h riand, Mike Wa Polish boy, suf roken back and limbs Saturday for Wa will make (he long trip by Miss rintendent of a hos- t en months he Doctors are doubt- stand the trip. 912, the boy was local railway vard, when imber toppled upon him. t for damages he received $13,- which he still possesses about 1panied here pless. August can 14, red HURRY ORDERS TO AMERICAN CRUISER, | The Des Moines to Sail Immediataly for Banto Dominge. Washington, Sept, 8-~News that Domoinlcan gunbonts wera sheiling the rebol ctly of Puerto Platn, endanger- ing American lives nnd property caus- od hurry ovdors to zo from here to- day 1o the crulser Des Moines, which had hesn prepering to sall from Guaan wamo, Cuba, for Banto Dominge, sines reners of the latost tevelutinn there received rui duyy ngo, The was evpacted (o 2ald tonight so ortiiser vetl <radived, 8 Want Brita Ex papers from Me Femoval af fepmer | Campechs, ta fhat eousiry tn I ges pf Fphhers and purder, | rived here today and are ip the hand. of the United Btates commissioner. Bent Faevadition secking the Governor Britg pf No Gounsel for Porter Gharlten, Sept. &—Porter Chari he American wha is seon ta stand for fag murder pf his wife, has | a5 vet pos sususeded in sscuring the sevices of counsel (o conduct Ris ease. amn, 1t cham- | Japanese Newspaper Suppressed. Tokio, Anarchistic expres- sions ap e Japanese press | in conne the tation over | the Killl ese at Nanking | | and by assassination of the direc- | | tor of volitical bureau of the Jap- | anese foreign office, Mortiaro Abe, led TURNS OUT A HOAX | Have to Make the Long Journey | | afternoon Railroad Men Asked to Help AN APPEAL TO EMPLOYES OF THE NEW HAVEN TO RUN ROAD SAFELY Officials Declare There Must be Mutual Assistance to Accomplish It—En- gineers Urged to Study Rules of Road New York, Sept. $. ter addresséd to the and other employes of New Haven and Howard Elliott_and speotivdly pre of the company In an open let- 2,000 engineer the New York, Hartford railroad J. H. Hustis, re- dent and vice president appeal to the em- ployes for help. “We need your help. and we wish to help you. Kach must nelp the other if this road is to be run safely,” the letter says. vending as possible and then to ad- e e e e |Journ until § o'clock tomorrow morn- | The bones of a mastodon which are The officials urge upon the éngineers | ing. being cieavated at the estate of the cspecially the need of studying th Democrats Close Ranks. late Alfred A. Pope in Farmiat . will ules for the operation of trains, de- | - Democratic lines in the senate stood |€omie to Peibody Museum, Yale Uri- claring that .the Bar Harbor express |solidly tonight against ihe final ono | ersity. wreck “would not have occurred had i slaught of the tarift fght With pars the rules of the railroad been observed | ty leaders urging their cgllcagues on | Secretary Daniels has authorized strictly and good judgment, born of | to approval of the bill, the ranks closed | about sixty enlisted men of the nav experlence, been digplayed.” The let- [up against the anti-free wool and anti. |to take an examination for appoint- ter add at the edgineers of the col- | fr sugar forces and defeated all |ment as assistant paymaster of the liding trains were men of g0od habits: | amendments o the bill as fast as they | HVY that they had proper rest or had been | came to vote = iven opportunity for taking it: that | . 3 Mbnicipal’ ‘dud e g the brakes and signals performed their | '; &% Stand by Louisiana Senators. |ipioni S0 sentancaa B ot functions; ~ thai conditions on ‘the| Attempts to restore a duty on raw |3 labor agent, to remain in jail untit he morning of the wreck had been dupli- | Wool and to raise the duty on woolen | had committed to memory the Twenty- cated many times and the operating | Manufactured goods, made in succes- | (hird Deaim: 3 officors had been on duty the greatet |siVe amendments by Senators La Fol- part of the night and were relieved to | think that morning had come without serious trouble when “news of this |laststand by the anti-free sugar forces | Carnegie Pa., causing theatres to close awful accident came shortly after 7|leéd by Senator Ransdell of Louisiana, |and crippling the street car service and orlbek | democrat, held the attention of “thd | raiiroad trafiic Mo Rufes to.Be Put I Force. Senate throughout the evening, but the = otes o enators ans a " X inaticns for vision, color sense, hearing | the republicans on the sugar issue, “Pfifn"d in the Rochester, N. Y., post- and other physical tests will be put in | . office yesterday was found to contain force, with the view, the letter says, of | Brandegee Against Amendment. |under the mail matter a cat and four protecting the public and the em-| Among the amendments defeated | iy born Kitte: ployes of the system. It adds that no | that of Senator Norris for a heavy | RIS innecessary. hardships will be entailed eritances. - This was beaten, | Action was taken by the Hartford by the examinations and that the road Frathe oollowing republicans |pigh school committes at a meeting desires to retain all its employes who | Joining the democrats in vVoting against | taterday calling for the immedint are physically competent to perform |1l Senators Brandegee, Catron. Clark | Jholishment of ail secret socicties and | HUSBAND AND WIFE Rogyi-snerman :ignd | LA verdict of suicide was returned in INSTANTLY KILLED | = | ronn: sk antontiats aad. Hu — | WOOL AMENDMENTS. dresser, who was found dead in her Automobile Struck by Train at South | b Bty S, Norwalk Grade Crossing. South Norwalk, Conn, Sept, §.—Mr. and Mrs. Addisor Millar of Mine, a suburb, were instant] this afternoon when their auto mobile was struc the southbound sfield express on the New Haven road at the New Canaan avenue grade crossing. Their daughter, Miss Dor- othy, aged 15, and a friend, Miss Jes sie, Guthrie, aged 18. who were 3 in the automobile, are in the Norwallk hospital in a serious condition A number of serious accidents have occurred at the crossing within Jast few vears, and recently, by orde of the public utilities commission, a flagman was placed on duty there. Charles Williams was on duty this when he saw the Millar au- tomobile ‘and the fast speeding train approaching at about the same time. According to eye witnesses, Willlams picked up a_white flag and waved a frantic warning to the automobile. Mr. | Millar, who was driving the machine, apparently did not see the flag. or else paid no attention to it. The automobile was squarely on the track when the train struck it. The machine was crushed by train and Mr. Millar thrown to one side of the tracks Condensed Teiearams Will Vote on Tariff Today SENATE TO PASS MEASURE AT FOUR O'CLOCK g struck the home of D. L. , a fow miles west of Danbury, Sunday. Snow fell at Holt, Ariz., Sunday. This is the earliest snowfall recorded in Arizona. _A. R. Rahlin, a sailor on the U States cruiser Denver, was stabbed in a row at Panama. ted fatally Ceneral ra throughout n rihicast | AGREEMENT REACHED (oS358 0'nn throughout aovthieast| excessive heat of the past few ua Congressman Wilder of Massachu- setts, seriously ill at Washington, was reported slightly improved yesterday | Democrats Line Up Solidly Against All Amendments—A Heavy Tax on In- heritances is Defeated, 58 to 12. The plant of the Greenway Brewing racuse, N. Y, was destroyed loss is estimated at Washingion, Sept. 3—The senate % e will_vote finally on the democratic| Rey. Dr. George F. Spiek : v f y 4 C . Dr. ge F. Spieker, professor Lorimr Dbill tomorrow afternoon at 4|of church history at the Lutheran The- o'clpck. This agreement was reached | olocioa) Seminary Mount Airy, delphia, died Sunday night Phila- at 11.45 o'clock, when i ent it would be became appar- impossibie to carry the | plan to pass the measure before ad- | : [Journment. The party leaders agreed Sarah Rector, 10 years old, of Musko- |to keep the senate In session until|8ee, OKla, a negro girl, pays the largest | income tax in Oklahoma 000 a yea Her income well into the morning to dispose of as many of the reserved amendments still | amounts to §1 | lette Catron and Pe ed without the los: irose, were defeat- of a party vote. A Millions of white bugs. of a small cricket, about the size swarmed down on PETERSON WINS THE MAINE FIGHT Republican Vote Doubled and Progressive Strength Cut In Two at Special Election A REPUDIATION OF WILSON ADMINISTRATION Interpretation Placed Upon the Result by Maine National Committeeman—Defeated Candidate Attributes Hig Downfall to “Party Treachery”—The District Sl._umpe‘ in Interests of Democrats by Bryan and Champ Clark Portland, Me., 8, paker John as a signal triumph not only for t A. Peters, republican, of Ellsworth. was | republican principles of protection bi chosen to fill the vacancy in the Third | also for the new liberal republicani: congressional district today by a 1- | T believe it » be entirel possible t4 rality of 553 over Mayor W n A. | harmonize and unite the anti-demo< attangall, democrat. of | Waterville, | cratlc strength, The differences bsw with Edward M. Lawrence of Lubec, | tween tt ressives and regula® progressive, a poor third in the race. | republicans are not fundamental, but Brodtseiive Vote CUETETHE more a differcnce of opinion as how 3 he same principles should ba SHEHN The returns in this special election | (o <41 trom all but & small island planiation Tariff Bill Repudiated. gave Peters 15,105 Pattangall 14,65 : : e | Col Frederick Hale, republican na T e o otealden wember | tlonal * comniticeman from Main | was: Wilson, democra sald el that It fx winning back iis own. ‘The Heavier Vote Than in National Elec- | YP'grs of (he Third Maine congvession tiog. lave repudiated the tarift bill now be- The elec n, madel necessary fore congress and the administration e o madekay . of President Wilson. I believe the re= can representative from tha It will have a marked effect on the was fought out on national Country at large.” isstios of the momen, “Treachery,” Gries Pattangall. M Drominence it vy and Spsaier Champ Claos Pattangall attributed his defeat stumping the district for the republi- | to “party treachery” and denied that can, progressive and democ candi- | the result was a rebuke to the mas date. tional administration. Two Offered by Senator LaFollette | Promptly' Voted Down. | When arrested at Tuscon, Ariz.. for ‘onn. st was struck by lightning while Democats Taken by Surprise. nding in the middie of her bedroom e La Follette wool plan came as a |her left leg being fractured. A ®child surprise to the demccratic side. In-|the woman held in her arms was un- stead of the expected 15 per cent. duty | injured raw wool after January 1 next, his bstitute proposed a general cut of To satisfy a judgment for ar | He was dead w hen picked up. MIS. | the wool rates, based on a 30 per cent. | p; cheese bill against John Kir llax's body was Causht in {he coW-| raw wool‘duy f0r 191418 28 Der cent | man, & Newaic grocer two pews it & | cateher and carried along to . the | quty for 1915, and a 15 per cent duty|synagogue valued at $500 have been Coibarine sireet Grcasing before Hicd sfver 4 1, 1916 {levied upon by the Columbia Cheese aln could be brought to a stop. Pa Senator La Follette concluded, | Co,, of Newark J ngoms Of tho erbress o it A ator Stone, in charge of the wool | Tnis scare Jonn B, Stevens of thia | Sections 'of the bill, urged democrats| The conservation .of calves 2 D aise e I Sterens to refrain from debate. He said the|means of lowering the high cost of ty, s e L subject had been thoroughly covered |living is a plan formulated by Repre Sleteajne Sieenanling oile n ¢ | before: that Senator La Follette had |sentative Britten of Iliinois, who yes Deds s Yelcai n offering his amendment | terday introduced a bill designed to ss Millar and Miss t when the wc Tanewas '*;‘_":DH\» | prevent the killing of ' od thtecy ould not be delayed by the re- Greed of coal well as At the Norwali | opening of the woo the miners, Bishe e of the o i said that P~ | Discrimination Against Wool Raisers. | Catholic chureh told ‘the Semate in- sicians_er but small hepes for { vestigating committee vesterday was siclans entertain but s o1 While the high woolen fariff rates|the fundamental cause of the West Mr. Millar was a landscape artist | ot DRI e ek asapal B and was well known in this vicinity eties, crilis e T e 1 it temoc not | The body of Ida Lee, aged 18, a hizh = | ¢ raisin stry fairly. | school girl, was foun 1 grove north DECISION RESERVED S o o Whs ahonE LR Bele DRl e Tty ON ROBIN PARPON. | the onl tx which the | hole through her head. Saturday, sha Bt \rmer and Jemanded an ex- [went mushroom hunting with Oscar Only Two Questions Prescfd Bearing | Planation for the democratic plan of | Gray, also 18. Gray was later found on Sulzer's Authory RO ia e ilstss el DA aeed S o Shicbiity s in which to| A burglar, who opened ecvers door Kingstc pt. Iy two {and window and cut the telephone and auestions were presented into the ha electric Jight wires in the house of beas corpus proceeding resulti 1 | George W. Miller, in Fayville, Mass the refusal of Warder s | early yvesterday morning, succeeded in Blackwell's Island peaiientiary ec- | o getting away with 3995 in cash, which gsnize the pardan granted by Govern o Bxt'a 5 per cent, dutv on |he took from a desk Sulzer to Joseph G. Robin, when the| ool, and this was promptly voted BAE was BE el betar IPreme | i %n. 29 to 20. The Penrose wool sub- | The little blind daughter of Rural Court Justice Flasbrouck today. = | stitule was defeated viva voce | Maii Carrier Sherry at Mandale Ohin, he questions were, first, whether{ may ride with her father over his routs, the assembely as one of the two Suqar Schedule Stands. e by Teher DyenEis ruly) branches of the legislature had a righbt | \washington, Sept. 9.—The sugar | pressly forbids it, because Aliss Jessin to act an impeaching body during| cchedule without amendment and in- | Wilron the president’s gecond daugh-er, the extraordinary session called by the | cluding the provision for free sugar |interceded for the little tot governor for another purpose, andsec- | in 1916, was finally asreed to at one | il ond. whether the flling of articles of | g'clock this morning. Senator Bris- | Aroused by the suffocation of eight | impeachment by the assembly acts as a check upon the governor's exercise of executive functions. After listening to arguments Justice Hasbrouck resery. ed decision and requested that briefs be submitted in two day: Japs Have China Worried. Peking, Sept. 8—The Chinese gov- ernment is much concernsd over the egitation in Japan in connection with | the Kkilling-of several Japanese during fhe fighting at Nanking, and. desir ing to make reparation, has instru the Chinese charge d-affaires at Tol 10 exnrows regrets to the Japanese for- 4 olgn office, The Chinese foreign of- flee has aiready expressed regrets to the Japanese legation. Will Never Recognize Unlon. Calumet, Mich, Sept, §.-In gn ad dross today to coppor mine siriwers i (he Haltic mins, (leperal Manager ¥. W, Deiton of the Baltlc, Champlon apd ri-dpuniain minss, compristng the popper runge consolldated, Inform od the men (hat his eompany, ltke all othors In the district, was firin in 1L {ntention neyer to treat with or re pgnige the Western Federation Miners, To Prevent Sulzer Impeachment, Wrey, N, ¥.. Sept. 8.—An effer; ta prevenl the imReachment preceedings Biaissi Movosnor SBulser was mafe teday when twg Trey lawsers, Alie BeY James Parrell and Fredepick F Praper, Ir n::ul‘s‘i a writ of Rilign frem Supreme ¢ rt fam B Rudd tow vigided in his former demand for | another roil call because Senator Rans- | Gell's amendment had been decisivels defeated earlier. | = | SOCIETY WOMAN JUMPS | INTO LAKE MICHIGAN | Ties Heavy Waight About Her Neck and Leaps from Pier, | negro convicts in an underground cell at the state prison farm Saturday night the governor of Texas, the attor- ney general's department, the prison commission and local police authorities vesterday began an investigation. Before Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, |leader of the British militant suffra- | ists, can be admitted to the United | Btates in October, the immigration au. | thoritias will declde whether any of the | Crtnmnitin “Mrs, o B, T R Y Aralten (B acts for which she has been imprigouad in lL.ake Forest, a suburb, committed |in England constitute moral turpitude sulelde in Lake Michigan today by ty. e The @ heavy welght around her necl | Walter Poarson rescued a small dog and ‘then Jamping from & plee. Just |frem the abuse of o truckman, at New- before ending hor 1ifa she mude two | Wark, N, L, five weeks ago, and the | little graves in the sandy lake shore |40 bit him, The man was taken to und decorated each with sprigs of |the hespital last Saturday suffering | fower An hour laler the bedy was | from rables and vesterday, in his agony wushed ashore, the stone having be- he plunged out of u third story window come looscned from the rope, to death, untl] o fow" minutes before vistiing | Fredorick 8. Smith of Newasl, N, 1, ed un ally chesry mad happy end | CCRilBuouL daily iravel back and ferih Bad sment mush of the merning singing |te werk, Per 63 years, or since 1451 and playing the plane, Mrs, Smith |twice a day, barring Sundays, holidays was wealihy in her own name and was |and yveeations, Mr. Smith has mede the ono of the leading seciety women of |irip between Newark aud New York, Lake Porest She was a daughter ef | Buie miles, Hiram R, MeGulisugh, vice presiden | of the Ehicage and Northwe: Mrs. Eva Ginsberg, a New Buitain mpany, Mrs, Smith midwife, has been mude the defendant law is Byrem L. Smith, president f{in an actien fer $3,000 breught by the Nerthern Trust cam ¥ and | €harles and PFlerence ndea, whe | vleselv related te many large Anancial | aliege malpractice. A child was wern | interests [ta Mre. Parandea en August, and hi S L |3 tbroken left arm and beth legs broken Lightning struck the steeple of the | The plaintiffs -allege that thg midwife Preshylerian Ehurch at Goshem, N, Y, was respemsible. {wearing a diaphanous gown of the X 1gton, Sept. 5.—With the hope [ray variety Miss Claire Simmons de he [nderwood-Simmons | manded a trial by a jury of women before another sunrise, the |Her request was granied settled down o a night session — working away upon the measure| Thomas Gavigan, of Philadelphia, h {he day. Democratic leaders |turned a dancing party into a riot when ne {heir aimost to suppress gen- |he placed his 18-year-old daughter | | ‘hes and force progress, and |across his knee and guve her a spunk- | evenix sion was well | ing for dancing the tango. | ments had begun k Because he desired to leave the navy | e 2 Leonard B. McMillen of Sherburne, La Follette's Wood Substitute. iT»( a landsman under instruction af | _The first hint of the final fight over | the naval training station at Newport, free raw wool came late this afte . |R. L, has cut off his left thumb. | general substitute for the wool tariff| Governor George W. Hays of Ark, | sections of the Underwood-Simmons | has been authorized by the national bill Red Cross soclety to draw on that | An inheritance tax amendment offer- | organization for $1,000 for the benefit | ed by Senator Norris was pending at|of the fire sufferers at Hot Springs. the time, and debate alternated be- — tween the subjects for several hours. Mrs. John Bouger of Green Farms, The voters responded to the appeal | _ The defeated progressive candidate. in larger numbers than voted at the | Mr, Lawrence, declined to comment on last presidential election, with fair | the result, but Halbert P Gardner, | weather and the fact that the fall har- | member of the progressive national vest has not vet begun helping the | committee from Maine, said | party managers in getting out “Lack of funds hampered the pro= vote. gressive working organization and pre- Triumph for Protection. vented proper publicity. | Additional interest in the ontest Disappointment at Washington. Devaura of ihe fact (hat the distMct, | Washinston, Sept. 8-—Returns from with the exception of Washington | the aine con ssional election wers ounty, added by las r's 1 Iature, d with extraordinary interest by was the same as represented f many ders of political parties. The | years by James G. Blaine, or d ats .who had sent Secretary secretary of der Speaker Champ Clark, and sarfield Rej other motable campaizners into Maine leaders jubs er thei to aid Pattangall, were keenly disap- ess in view o ¢ fig god | pointed when news came that_thefe by the natior atian 1 man probably was defeated. Presi- 1\ ire the distric ers said Wilgon waited for the returns i T regard the il e el late in the night | BODY DISMEMBERED | Accuses HusBaND OF . WHILE VICTIM LIVED. | BEING SPENDTHRIFT, ched in the Hudson | Mrs, Lillian Bell Bogue, the Novelist, One Conclusion R ; RIVeR VR 1 Secking a Divorce. [ g b 8T - ' Delaware, 0, Sept. 8—Charging Sie TOu Sent 8 he torso of a4 her husband, Arthur Hoyt Bogue, | young woman, one purt of which Was|,a, yot only failed to support her, but RCqdang Jnat S ANOEr | 4hat he has spent a considerable por- JeaiErdagy abwicely coc ed places on of her earnings from books of [on the New Jersey he Hud-| whien she he author, Mrs. Lilllan e ide i hile the | yo)) Bogue, novelist, filed suit for di- B W Lued raccorting st (28 yorce today. The Bogues were married port of the autops i 1 Chicago in 1900 and separated in |35 OXEE WY, eling colr pril, 1912, since which Mrs. Bogue | Hudson county, New . \as made her home in Delaware. As EEngS atels heid o : Miss Lillian Bell she worked on sev- Dr. King said, Lo determine whether lorq] New York papers previous to her | the murderer or murd had stunned | marriage to Bogue, who is known as a | the victim with . 1 an/hn- | Ghicase, prommoter | aesthetic The Hudsc Ta 4 3 ition for orce also alleges | New Jersey ir for | that the husband is a spendthrift and the head and limb hat he is not sui emperament e Hud T Authc vho | g sposit to be the husband of | being aided by New York d the plaintiff nd memt )] il tr rr o : e ELLIOTT SEES FOSS. n which both c ! Proposed lssue of $67,000,000 Deben- B N A e ture Bonds Discussed. Yorks to. whiom 1! - ™| the New Haven Hart- Mere mald wae alen | fora rg had a today to stand | it was annc ed ‘ ¥ neent nd Howar Elliott, the new presi- | ahle, to recall . dent, i s pre mme of improve= [ E——. f the 4 ment he roa President Elliott | slips becaus t ) nt to the statehouse and discussed | tectives w gned ook up th with v he situation con- | purchaser nting the company in rd to its ! | propose issue of $67,000,000 debenture | CORPORATION COUNSEL wl‘,m 3 s TO BE INVESTIGATED | to ti . attitudé on the | subject ernor himself Hartford Common Council Acts in the | SUoJect, o e of Ed L. Steele. |~ Preside t said that he had as- g |sured Governor Foss that he wished Hartford, Conn S.—At a me | “to co-operate w public authori- !ing tonighi of > ) all reasons efforts for build | has neglected to hide ¥ de 1s of the road and mmittee had requested him to smmit tee appear before the | certain orainances from time to tima | Massachusetts public service commis 1t he had not don€ so. One o c | sion rahle action on tha | ordinances would have made road's petit sue the $67,000,000 | tory for all o bonds | dents of the city at the time ¢ elv The officers of the eompany will appolntment present #ll the facts and will endeave | — - - {fo answer any and ail questions that | e a bearin on the situation,’ i Albany Times-Union Sued for Libel. |have a e e b il Albany, e e A e expected to appear in opposition will o' Al _aver the governo be Lou D. Brandeis and former Gov tween William Sulzer and Mariin e o e o Bulkaiay of Conticil | Glynn, summonses in two libel ot » | one brought by the Press company ' OBITUARY. publishers of the Knickerbocker Press. led by Lynn J. Arnold, its president, were served today on James T. Glynn, | vice president of the Albany Union company, publishers | Times-Union, James Marshall. Minneapolis, Sept. 8.—James Mare . aged 78, known as the father of cash wheat buying and former presi- dent of the local chamber of coms merce, died at his home at Lake Min- Drought Broken by Rain Kaneas City, Mo, Sept Hea - o Sept. S H€aYY netonke, near here, today. When em. P e e B e aeiri 1o, | Ploved by a grain company here-in | o e varnment fore: | 1863 Mr. Marshall made the first cash wheat purchase in the northwest. caster to express th long drought which has oppressed three states has been broker Expert Engineers at Wreck Inquest. Now Haven, Sept. 8.—Coroner Mix at bis private probe into the wreck of tha Bar Harbor express at North Haven on Steamship Arrivals. Christiansand Sept 7. Arrived, | Sept 2d tonight heard expert testi- steamer Hellig Olav, New York for [mony from four ‘engineers, including Copenhagen. F. 8. Adams, chairman of the local Glasgow, Sept. 7. Arrived, steamer | brotherhood. After the inquest the four Calffornin, New York engineers Issued a statement, in which Fishguard, Sept. S Arrived, stoams | they commend the coroner's course im er Lusltantd, New York for Liverpool. | conducting the inquest privately, Brow llead, Sept. S -Signalled, e steamers \aniton, Philadelphin for Killed by Live Wire. Antwerp; Scotlan, Montreal for Havre : Hartford, Conn. ept, S.—~Willlam Sgus Yeondon, hatcher of New York, 2 master me- spondon, Sept S yenrived. steamer | oygpic employed In the construction of neton s, e o vedl, steamer | the' West ~ Hartford tunnel. was:ins o > a live wire In the tunnel, New York, Sept. §.—Arrived: Steam- o ers Zeeland, Antwerp: Verona, Genoa. | Family Troubles Cause Despandency. Livernaol, Sept. X Arrived: Steam_ | New Haven, Gonn, Seft. 8—Deapon= er Lusitanis, New Yerk. dant because of family traubles, James | Cherbaurg. Sept 8 Aivived: Sieam- {€ox, a blacksmith, attemptsd suleide | er Kronprinz Wilhelm, Nen Vark [today by drinking the contents of & Bremen, =ept. § - Arrived: Steamer fbottle of Jvsel. He i8 in alocal hose Prince Frederieh Wilheim, New York, 'pital in & eritical condition.