Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 27, 1913, Page 1

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VOL. LV—NO. 232 The Bu letin's Circulation in Norwic NORWICH, CONN., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2~ TWO CENTS ey PRICE h is Double That of Any Other Paper, and Its Total- Circulation is the Laréest in 7('2unnecvtic'utkirn Proportion to the City’s Population FOSS SUSPICIOUS OF LEGISLATURE Wants Motives of Members Who Voted Favorably to New Haven Road Fully Determined IMPROPER DEMANDS ON THE RAILROADS Governor of Massachusetts Intimates That Members of Bay State Legislatures Have Sought Favors in Consideration of Their Attitude on Railroad Legislation—Asks Public - S u B Gotieeal Elogion in Ban Domitngo. Panama, Sept, 26—The most fmport- | Tuscaloosa, Ala., Sept. 26.—Deputy | Mass, vosterd Service Commission to Uncover Such Relationship. San Domingo, Deminican Tepabiic, | 20t Step thus far foward the operation | sheriffs from Tirmingham and Mont- | : 7 Sept. 26—A general election will snl)r; of the Panama canal took place today | gomery and armed farmers of | Mrs. George F. Rooke of Iast Provi- be held in the Dominican repabiic s‘:xen_ the sloagomg tughoat Catun, | loosa ~ count e abandoned nm},‘.,,,m was elected president of the s of the Jate | lesislature had mo right to aulborize | L€ Suspension of hostilities agreed to A : 5 Alabama Great So | convention yesterday. : " York. New |the public service commission to ap- | Y _the rebels at Puerto Plata after a . —_ = - | AR - ord rafiroad -io the | prove the acts of corporations in other | CODference between the leaders and [\ iCaptan cJoseph E. Bacnier; s tho e Te | Btkbes: James M. Sullivan, the American min- | Arctic_explorer who ISt e Cupner @ 0 Foss The atiorney maintained that the | ISter . ::”'“ Seaptue “"“;'! i ercay it n addressed to Frederick | convertibility feature of the proposed F ll 5 there was no gold there. Tman of the Massa- | iSsue was sanctioned by Massachusetts Killed by Wasp’s Stin ) o ow e uc Ein e n 9 | he H t of living n- service commission. In | laws. He cited a decision of the Mas- | _Trewarthentic, Cornwall, England, Add to the High Cost of living an in n governor called upon | sachu preme court In a tele- [ Sept. 26—The sting of a wasp today frereate in the price bf salsmzant. Yos Malcod to invesugate an | phone case to SUDPOrt his argument. killed Lady Molesworth formerly Miss |'terany krailt cabbages reached, thio un- expen - @ reported by Commissioner George W. Anderson | Jane G. Frost, second daughter of Brig. There are those who look at advertis e wbhEfena i RLocachiadapEice of 317 K etan. o the public s asked: “Why do you ask the commis- | Gen. D. M. Frost, U. S. A., of St. Loui: of the telescope. They squi nd wigsl nden i P 73 - 1d he period sub- | sion to approve these expenditures and | She was married in 1875 to Sir Louis S i g gt | R L S e he last session | at the same time tell it that the matter | William Molesworth, whe dled in 1015 Duen e ookt fut theyibll (gl troger t to the retu jiclHlest fon b b rence Hlentn 95 LA is none of fts business? The wasp stung Lady Molesworth on which it brings. Those who look upon it i incurred debis amounting to 3100000 Mr. Palmer replied that it was prob- | the jugular vein and she passed away those who are least qualified to express an o reir verdict is et G Lol b e able that the New Haven company | within twenty minutes. i v | . 1 : Baahiih v, el BT A1 it of the 2 5. directly opposite to that of the business men who have ¢ | Edward F. Dahill, Chief of the ir¢ Inguiry as to Mellens Services. | Dew law and secure the Massachusetts | GAYNOR'S SECRETARY Zglimeg pCIMIEe SAlimhigg Cirough o~ judicious use'of the ers o T r Foss wrote ~that | PADIC service commission’s approval of Advertising is as much a necessary expense ny o on. president of the Ma prote, hat| the issue. | MITCHEL'S MANAGER. P 9 3 Firemen's association of a al of Opposition to the issue was voiced nected with business operations. To do witho it is to skir where Lo huve been by Hdward F. Cole of Waterbury, | Fusion Candidate Accepts Independence it can be afforded the least. Eight Children of Ulric Trudal, all g o A% | Conn. a smail stockholder. He be- | League Endorsement. The best evidence of the paying results connected with advert under 16 years of B onnd hishel e . licved that the Tatiroud should earn : 15 the list *of 'those Who. have brofited therehy and contin s §| meme burned to death early yesterday A 4 the money to pay its indebtedness and | New York, Sept. 26.—John Purroy e e e : e A 2 407 g g theviRlept in/ thelr-home (s Quebec, wroe SUERtIon | not add to its funded debt by further | Mitchel, fusion candidate for mayor Il ST S RS0 I SupPosa el ey Y oab | Shief ou to ask borrowing. | accepted the Independence league en- sist in maintaining an expense which does not p The v . | John F. Ensign, Chief ¢ division Ciare ‘of the | e frst part of this afternoon's | dorsement today, after selecting Rob- || because it is what it is, goes to the D whom the merchant §i 9% locomotive boiler I g o Dbosioks ession was occupied by Edward | ert Adamson, who was the secretary of st o o sell 3 1 5 , Anier states Comnioe L SEPAY 19 the | Counsel for the railroad company, Who | paign manager. Sevmay weskh Sgcany, || S in touch with the most people w v e m 1 ration in | completed the areument begun Wed- | Mitchel declined the leag: Eapport |] profitable as an advertising medium. S en v | T e '™ | nesday. Mr. Robbins said that unless | because two of his fusion associntes advertisers get who use The Bulletin. The best is Edwa Eomian D e President Howard Elliott and Vice | William A, Prendergast for contrellor gt s s o T eape York street cleaning ‘department, sac- President J. H. Hustis were provided | anq Georse McAncns. for preseident of | In the past week the following matter has a red ir . rified his life yesterday te save a crowd with ihe funis necossary 1o make | tne boaea of sscmenc Prgdent,of () letin, Bastern Connecticats home payer of school children 1 @ runaway safer the transportation of mearly §7.- | pecn endorsed, Mr, = Mitchel today | Bulletin Tel b Local Tota! : 000,000 persons annually others mUSt | wrote to James A allen e lencod elegraph Local Ganera Tota = divide the responsibility for the result. | mavoraity nomines, whe' withd | s 2 e oy March and May Cotton Opticns The Desring wilt be contimued toc | Mavoraity nominee, “who' withdrew in || Saturday, 121 142 1239 broke the fourtecn cent level at morrow. It 15 hoped by the commis-| (he fhuion somicce TALORE oUt that | , = e £ New ‘Orleans yesterday. At the hish | Sion that fnal adjournmedt muy be |t fUSIOR committee has since declar- |} Monday, 2855433 131 541 entire market Was. up. 25/c SNREEG. by Menti are free to acceut other nomination: Tuesday 121 132 0 : T wixd thus hanging the principle hich ey % = & # % | us_changing the principle which g { Plot of G i BRIbow part DUBLIN STRIKERS felt bound to pursue at that time. 1 Wednesday, . 116 146 18( P [P Sl B e o . | now that your league stands for un- 3 e E b d At e T ' » i NEARLY FAMISHED | compromising opposition to Tammans 1 Thursday, Sept.25.. 120 126 311 | S 15 the memory. 0f Vanea M 2= be 8 Eagerly Awaiting The Arrival of Relief | Fioi:, 1S representatives and the pred. - & 3 E Balix o rativos . paatti - | atory interests that stand behi , ont. 2 124 553 e T o B Ship With Supplies. { both.” A7 wentid 13- SEriday, Sept. 26.. 104 124 2 LR S0 : | SN sisiature i o In secepting the managership of the | i | e St R L S T 4 Dutiin, Sept. 26—The famished | fusion campaign, Mr. Adamson said: | g s 4 R 4 e oL A SR U et ublic ght to Know. strikers are awaiting the arrival here | Mayor Gaynor stated before is Tatals ... .ok 5a 0N 8 2199 735k TREMEX dear et MRt Nk T . k what sort of |of the relief ship Hare like the in- | death-thet-he-would not say a word | § n from the town prison by a mob e servie rendered by these {habitans of @ long “beleagTered Town. | T Mifonel doras ne ot ranged 4 gentiemen, who | The vessel left Manchester Thursday | paign. The mavor would not. nave R 3 ted 1o have said | tomorrow evening. Supplies will be | engaged in fighting a common enemy, | cne Gatun locks and tonight floats in ‘ 1 Sid- TouEnt Bome by niL r what pur- | passed out to those persons named by | Tammany Hall” ¥ | Gatun ¢ T L L shm. If |a committee as being entitled to re- | ’ = Ve s omt . e n r cht o Ll s méhory | Bt e viA WAENEDIBY |ate the locks and the road s . 1. Mic The Board of trade strike Inquiry will |1y pieasing to Colone SN begin Monday, but the employes ap AUSTRIA AND RUSSSIA. [ man of the canal comu X Co. rat 1 R Tyl el o oo ona e | Thousands Join in Cheering. ¢ t c - Frenon possiblity for a conference by inform- | Must Confine Her Operations Within| Hyundreds of persons withstood thes evep, " o AL rights. | ing the lord mayor that the terms men- Her Own Border. | burning rays of the tropic sun to se D9 0 year sxcioh : oy s tioned in his letter proposing a settle - | the et of passing the first vessel | ol : e : ment of the strike do not form the | London, Sept. 27.—The anian army |from sea level to the level of Gatun | . £ ! basis for suitable negotiations. The in- | said to be under the command of Essad | lake. B ¥ 1 t 5 quiry also may be boycotted by the | Pasfia continues its vi/jtorious march.| At 4.43 p. o passed | S strikers. | The Servians are ma g desperate ef- | insid. the chambe g 3 James Comnolly, one of the strike | forts to reinforce Mol fstir, which is | mighty che the assem. | & caders, in speech tonight declared that | threater The k ‘authorities are | bled tho the lock . if the board of trac inquiry was a | expediting the movement of the Serbs | walls, the t s blown loud | ¢ 0, government concession to investigate | over the Greek railway and expect a|and long b s in the < i L ! Figures f f what every one knew the strikers for the pi of an_entire | neighbornood chorus cy fron Orie Ll A would not waste their time in attend- division through Salonki. | Baiarlkar Party. : o 8! S Eehioal ki nn, should be cle ng it. The employers in an official erc fiighting near Ochrida, in Al- | 140 o A e v ¢ ? a2 Statement say they are not making », is sald {0 have resulted In suc- | 5 L08 GAtUD was in charge of Captain Mail Cler tor e the | WAE OF Sib@ #hivns aa mich but ars|cess: for the A s, wio captured | Sowart T : S Sl oo o 3 ‘ thetic strikes. In spife of the confidence expressed | yision enginecr of the atlantlc Givision ¢ : L R miscion sum » pose in . i t Belgrade, the Servians probably have | f1."Gatun locks were built: (oio : ¢ i i condn . s which 1 now | BEARS A STRIKING 1 long and arduous campaizn before | {e G40 1078 ot RS Vi e « . i i o them. .The Belgrade newspapers urge | LarLy dges, % r d e . - e RESEMBLANCE TO SCHMIDT. | ine complete extermination of the Al | S'hogn2nd designe g ! " pei ‘ oD e s banians. It is regorted that both Rus= | sor > s S . s o~ . . Portrait of Impostor Who Masqueraded | Sis snd Ausirin have warned Somvia 1o | 05 i B Jersey. o | i ; s ge 5y Supoly ders as defined by the abassadorial | it q BN G Bt 1 e Cath ] ; L ozl Lock Gates Worked Perfectly b bre f o G . . nembers of | olic authorities believe that Hans AR e | gai - | S 1of t of agr N " d Voted 10| Schmidt, ulleged murdcrer o Auna |UNABLE TO AGREE ON room ¥ i wordine al conces- | Awmuller in New York, ma & mas 0 a 4 s | - . e governor | queraded eveland in 1908 under COTTON FUTURE TAX'!{aised to the middle 1 o A Attempt will be ma re the - t name of wi Metseider S and passed into t * K 1t ¢ speciq 8 f ~ & - The theory ©tesented ireels foliowing | Democrats Complete Tariff Bill in All g5 ' m. T 1 > vat on he ac- | the reproduction in the Catnollc Uni Other Respects. | gate was swung and & Shy members se mat- | verse today of biished in | tropic night had fallen Waitinz v etoed 1 onse the Univer 908, warn- Se 26.—The tariff |crowd remained and w len £t e late against b4 rosh completed document. | safl out into Gatun lake. The ro « 4 _ a 5y s of | picture which 1s aleo repr % other differences and reached the final | and nicefy of a well oiled doos = X & ' = wilroud 1B the legislature in voting | This picture bears a striking resem- decision that they could not agree on | — ~ — | 3 ey did {blance to those of Hans Schmidt the cotton future tax CORONER SHOCKED BY o 1 No. G of any Sort | Improper Bemands Upon Railreads. = The six republican. members of the e 5 i o <o e ENGINEERS AGAIN ‘ nce commitice were summoned DESTI OE DOHER W men o 3 1 railvoad THREATEN A STRIKE. | ey el o o (%55 | Regarded Fermer Engincer as a Con- | 7, S 203 srms roduced by R - " i = lie i the report ill be presented to scentious Young Man. 12 1l v oliat F M‘ ' e penal pK d sta Ohject to New Rules Promulgated by | (1a nevee Momdas afternoon by Rep % i ; - New Havea Road. rese e Underwood g Rridgeport, Conn., Sept. 26 Coron ‘ 3 New Haven, Conn, Bept. 25 A poi SN hVals Eohalarabins [inquest’ into (he Stamfora wréck and | or i € of the engineers of the New York S Ll e b by whom Engineer Charles J. Doher- | (he b % nt | Degun tonight, it is learned, as a Te- | Yale's awards of free scholarship to | New Haven carly loday, ws + = §sult of the failure of the enginee GohRpaliaue gkt achool. skiflents. & ined at great length, said tom s i ek oo thus far to sccure desired modifica- | e g A e oo, | when ihe’former engineer’s death was axur | tions of the new rules for engineers | 1y willias. Waterbury: A. H. Biliard, | PTOught to his notice: STATION £ the executive com- % o g | recently issued by General Manager 5 P s *9. |« am exceedingly serry te iear of w Yd New Haven THAT BOND ISSUE C. L. Bardo >f the company. it is ex ]\,':\) ! \m\m.‘l”,«\ J.u;,m(:i' and _M«xr Poherty’s death. 1 teck him to a Ta Iroad DI ves- O pected that the poil will be comploted | Horman: New Haven, for the class of . cxccedingly sincere voung man an oward FIlot agn T Dottt Massachusetts Public S ce Commis- very quickly, probably by tomorrow e omants s jleason Hartlords |as soon as the effect of the ek wa = W ¢ 1 £ th sion May Lack Jurisdiction, night, and it'ts understood will, if af- | 1 B. Ripley, Unionville; 1. ) 1e0X, | over. told him, and his friends ex- | Chicago, S ¥ R % Mctall Crhramen - firmed, give the pfficers of the ensi. | Winsted: R. Korfs, Bridgeport; B. J.| J0%0q "hat he would make £00d in | Commiobe con e n and Ledyard : Sept o neers’ ‘brotherhood authority to call a | Fisher, G. P. Lee and F. C. Hesselmey- | some other position in life. 1 said this | maintained for testir i - strike if further negotiations are with. | % all of New Haven, for the class of | pecause 1 believed him to be a con- | geroplane constru exten: ta Which wircless tele- B s T out result 1916, S. S, | scientious voung man and it is a closed. Some of S o which | graphy ha 5 n up by amateurs g AT e S e shock to me to hear that he died 0| can be used for hydro-ac is discloged in a list of rddio stations Saeuine ik s o ibia ANNUAL MEETING OF Steamship_Arrivals, ISl e T A 1N et oa| Sy pe teed for " es> | in the United States, just jasued by the " ted tods | Rotterdam, Sept. —Arrived, steam- | pect anyvthing of this kind Piate at Ll ommerce meni bureau of navi- : - THE NEW HAVEN ROAB. | o Volut Voiturno, New York. “I rather thought that there wWas ' sold and it i n. Alm thirteen hundred - B, | Plymouth, Sept. 36.—Arrived, stcam- | something delicate in’his mould; but ! {he efforts made I¢Cormick | amateurs had been granted licenses up : - Call to Stockholders lssued at New | rmperator, New York for Hamburg. |1 really did not think that there was | foy the list two vears (o produce an | (o June 2 5 Haven Last Night. Queenstown, _ Sept. 26.—Arrived, | any such trouble that would take him | gerial machine thai would 2 7o 3 —— steamer Celti¢, New ¥ork for Liver- from his family and I wish you | and more efficiént than any mod R a5 s New Haven, Conn, Sept. 26.—The | pool Sl tiet T cuvess hy Bl s Tt . A s T e call for the ancual fheeting of the| Niples, Sept. 23.—Arrived, steamer,|syvmpathy with his wife and children. | Anmoumcement 6f Mr. McCormick's L T : 2 FUon |3javen and Hertford railroad in this ibraltar, Sept. 26 —Arrived, steam- |a good deal of Worryving over the ac- |at a Inncheon of the Aero club today A e hafuson: & =eso. - S neiti. | Iy on Oct. 23 was Issued er Hamburg, New York for Naples. |cident. Fhere was always a hoarse- | Failure of models nuch b e b s : Samsed 1o "t~ | Amons the matters of chief business — ness in bis throal when giving his | had be Sl e o BB S L sl i P ¥ o come np is wfroval of the proposed Steamers Reported by Wireless. | testimony which might have been ally responsivle S Mo b real ik s aulting e Goff = X - e ¢ in the by -laws under which (be | Siasconset, Mass, Sepl. 26.—Sleamer | premonition of a disorder of some kind. | Jitely coine enthsinst A g ] S e e O of the dircctorate will be reduced, | fuiterin Aiguste Viet Mamburg | “Several weeks after his acquiltal’hc | Loats and this also is believed to lmve 5 : sident Kot Wi become chaleman | 1 W York, signailed 25% miles egat | sent'me & nice letter, in which he gaid | infuenced him in quitiing the Cicero Bianci, One of lhe proprictors dacleod's ¢ « Uis peSand 3 I Fuer o Hook at noon. Dock 3 a. m. | that he was gathering Limself together | geld Trichizle Shirt Waist com ¢ yresident of the New York, New | i : and that he hoped (g make good in 4| 8 & New Vork, Which was swept § 5 Naven and Hartford railroad, wil be- | Race, 2 —Steamer La |new position. THe also expressed bLis| | in Merch, 1911, with (he less Doid > mruitice fayored | (e president of the road Tonraine, Hiuvre New Vork, sig- | gratefulness ‘to me for the manued Faital Fall of Fire €hief I thaa 140 1i was yesterday t i issue. Mr. Palmer clatm- | go o franchester G 7 | naled 1,030 mile: of Sandy Tiook | which he sald T Lad recognized his New Xprk, Sept. 26—RBattalion Fire liy of havius (he doors of the o ssotmae icainn | South Manchester Garage Burns. |at 3.10 4. m Do m. Sunday. | position. | Eniet John 3. Shannon, leading the | factory fastened on sugust 5 of this Pout resirictions .on - the South Manchester, Conn., Sept. 26— | fape Race, Sept. Steamer Nu- — Sty fight on a $20.000 blaze hear the Kast | Year. He was fined $20 3 would pair the | Fire tonizht destroyed the garuge and | midian, Glasgow for Ecston, signalled Electrical” Workers’ Officers. | ¥iver waterfront tonight, slipped from | = 3 ¢ the mmission | three second-hand autvmobiies of Har- | 150 miles east at 9.40 a. m. Denver, Colo.. Sept. 26—The result | a-ladder and fell three stories into an| Gol. Everett C. Benton, who was de- 1 same e sup- [IY Madden, entailing an estimated loss | : e of the referendum vote for officers was | areaway. receiving injurics which | feated for the republican nomination I tior wied from |of $2500. Mr. Madden was working | Taft Leaves Washington. announced today at the apnual com- | probably will result in his death. An|for sovernor in Massachuseit on H 1 rr jout one of the machines with a| Washington, Sept. 26.—Former Pres- | vention of the Internations! Brother- | entire crew of firemen was overcome | Tuesday by Congressman August P. I p mer Pres- | . < now of Mas ried langeen when there was an ex- | fdent Taft left for his home in New |hood of Electrical Workers. as follows: | by_smoke and ohers received miner | Gardner. by 6300 votr announced . . . a <ion. He © was hitned ahout_ the | Haven late today after spending three | President, J. J. Reid, Erie, Pa.; stc- | injuries. Fireboats aided in pnlling | yesterday that he would support the & 1 over expenditures made | hands and arms in r¥ing to extinguish |guis here attendimg sessions of the |retary, J. W. Murphy, Springfields IL; | out the fames. Metal and lnfoil mak- | winner of {he primaries. ui saw o I g p B a corporados in another state. He | the flames Cabled Paragraphs German Probe of Tobacco Trust. Berlin, Sept. 26—Preliminary steps for an investigation of the operations of the “Tobbacco trust” in connection With the German cigarette Industry have been taken by the government. Composer Pelissier Dead. Loudon, Sept. 26—The death oc- curred today of Harry Gabriel Pelissier the well known composer and enter- tainer and founder of the “The Fol- lies” troupe. He was born in London in 1874, German Aviator Killed. Johannisthal, Germany, Sept. 26— Lieutenant Schulz, a German military aviator, was killed today when his monoplane capsized and fell with him to the ground from a height of 150 feet while he was flying over the aero- dome here. Lincoin- Memorial“commi Train Robbers Make Big Haul =o1IMATED AT $50,000 TO $100,000 Tughoat Passes Thrqggfi Locks STEP TOWARD OPERATION OF PANAMA CANAL LooT FROM NOW IN GATUN LAKE|A FUSILADE OF SHOTS 1 | Enthusiastic Cheers as Vessel Passed | One of Trio of Bandits Used Revolver Inside Lower Lock Chamber—All Lock Gates Worked Perfectly. | Freely—Ten Suspects Under Arrest But All Deny Knowledge of Holdup. treasurer, L. W, E. Kimball, Boston, | ers occupicd the building, Condensed Telegrams Cornell_University opened with 173 more students registered than ever be- fore. Lord Chief Justice Alverstone, of London, who has been ill for some time will resume his post October 12. The New York Board of Estimate voted to have a portrait of Mayor Gay- nor painted and hung in the City hall. Approximately One in every four hundred inhabitants of _the ~ United States is employed by the postal ser- vice. Four Boys Wers Born yesterday to Mr. and Mrs, Pearl Yates, who live at Centralia, 11l Physicians believe all will live, a Turfman of C: tck and seriously obile at Reading, rank Bennett, cord, N. H., was st injured by an autor occasion to offer his congratulations, et e il ASKED PECK TG PERJURE HIMSELF Superintendent of Public Works Testifies That Sul- zer Told Him to Forget He Was Under Oath -~ ~ WANTED HiM TO DENY MAKING CONTRIBUTION N Ambassador Mogrenthau Declares That Governor Asked Him to be “Easy on Him” if He Was Called as Witness—Son of Dick Croker Testifies to Making $2000 Contribution to Sulzer Campaign— T'estimony as to Stock Dealings. | Albany, N. Y.. Sept. 26.—Governor on all questions. And:in making this Willilam Sulzer iried to persuade con- |request I am mindful af the words of tributors to his campaign fund not to | counsel that such proceedings @s this fostify agamst him, according to cvi- | may be the result of a conspiracy of dence adduced at hi$ impeachment trial | crooks and criminals to save - today. | selves from prosecution' as the result He asked Duncan W. Peck, state su- | of chicanery, or of parties prompted by perintendent of public works, who gave | other ulterior motives.” 3500 to the fund to violate his oath on His remark, the first of its kind to New Haven, onn., Sept Charles $he witness stand in the event that hio'| come from any of those' sitting: in Should be called to testity before the | judgment on the Eovernof, caused & rawiey investigating committee. Peck | stir among the spectators wore. . The gevernor, Peck ussericd, | e Rueet = Tad told him that he, foo, would deny | ENGINEER DOHERTY having received contributions. This | i 3 conversation, he said, occurred in the | DIES VERY SUDDENLY governor's office at tho capltol THO |Hag Grieved Constantly Over Rail- anchfield as o the pr i road Wreck at Stamford, ised by the governor. | A i “Forget Being Under Oath. 3." Doherty, engineer of the second What did he say?” ’ section of the Springfield express on ~ “He said: ‘Do as I shall do; deny |the New York, New Haven and Hart- it. .. |ford railroad which ran into the first What else was said, if anything pection &t BAmford st Junati shall be under xt suppose 1 ‘That is nothing “f said: ‘1 died sudde ing six deaths, Iy, had told them rring to k | say, and many time ie time-of the contribution, | thore was constantly re i oath. " He said For- | fallure at his home here early today Beap "o | o had grieved constantly over the Attorney Hineman, cross examining | wreck, his relatives say and this is the defense, asked Peck if it Were | beljeved to have contributed to his | possible that he could” be mistaken | death. . He i sy | u single word that passed be- |jeaves a wife and two small chilldren. | tween him and vernor. | " Ever since the accident Doherty has | “Not a word: replicd emphat- | gyffered from nervousness, his relatives | | held his present position, but, he testi- | the proture of & wreck victim, 4 woman Toid the. governor. there, wers | wmoas oray. hatr was. saatted with rings” on e gift nd that he | 1564 He wa g0 averse 1o beingz did not need to feel he was obli- | 2)one that he frequently kept his young Ak point hin sons, four and five ears old, respec- Peck was réappointed {ively, up until midnight, for company. | Croker, dr., Contributed $2,000. |He had been working in this city for The governor a d- Henry W. Mor- | Some time past a stational ngl- | genthau ambassador to Turkey, who |neer for a local contractor, but had ontributed $1.000, easy on him" | had to oft for hours at a time, and tc treat the atfair ween us as | because of his ne ndition. affirs, i the event that he s 1d g s . et 'to testife. "Tuiy Mr. Morgen- | PARDONS DELAYED BY | thau swore t when rec led as w { PRESIDENT WILSON, ! ness toc Tie said that th est | Py was ‘made by the governo er the | No Action Taken in Cases of Mem flong gnce, telephone, ol SRpE-L2 Convicted of Coal Frauds. foRae BONE rashington, Se 26. — President | gtien.0n th E son toda de to act at this | e ths, teht 198 SeKe me on the applications for pardon of s chibiem hatit John H. Bullack and C. I. Houston, | inkling, it was learned. th convicted at Seattle Nov, 20, 1912, of i Cldiiban o Rt onspiring to defraud the government L el e S s | by con on coal. Follow- e ing n of Attorney Richard Crokes, Jr.. son ¢ o 1 of Attomey Bl have been ap- ke Zlerwas tences of one year o Yol )f $2,000 cach have e goverfor's ager 3 0 cach have 2 sl Al said th h formed the Il with the governor In that ca- | miss c kot iy | w i e president Cotwell a Sunday School Teac v that ) cash it imn because he was | hands t&, whero the defends hroush t \e. This was o i 1 way developed that Colwell | PROTESTS ARE MADE BY RN NEW ENGLAND BANKERS. um 1. Houghton, paving telel oF | wide Range of Disagreement Over York, t Colw the Currency Bill. Suné ] er. Demand for Mwell's a Lior hroug W gton, S With enough i { 1 requests norrow. 1 cen ¥ s " : the sen- wee ¢ ned un kS ) hec o Mor 1 en spent. Al nnreported cam I New | England i ere b j t ny n s of the bill, oddv. Jonn \ ! Thor T y ume on Mon- ady, J 1 Dyc i wiation of the exs i i Mendelbaum n Intel Untermyer, who i 1 i 1 o New N days before the ted cheeks or « from he & \ve developed a wide T rom 100 ) $1.00 T © f inge A g 1 among mems= it : oned > 7S of the e If the disagree Norn statemient of campaisn coniri- im ihle that atter nd business men have heen i1l be made No Restrictions on t selislouiibe: defs % » repo ) the senate with O bicaa teol P Eatad Prof. John Robie Eastman. of lienca tending io show the |ohn Robie Bisiman, o well Knowisss hientions of the donors of the gifts. |tronomer, die ate_ hospl ons previously rendered Sing the staff of the naval obServAOTNEE Tudee Cullen, - Croker J2h Washington, Since his retirememm Conlan and Erady all monv 1892 with the rank of rear admiral to the that thelr contribut he had lived at Andover, N. H., his ot jees than campalgn Otis K. Dimock. penses if he wished so to us : New York, S 6.—Ots K. Dima Brad ed th. i dze sek t s mer resident of Conlan and roc ors a [ lied suddenfysii discussed the uestion of the gove a traln nor's condition at the Man . With Mes. hattan club of New York ¥ on > Way o urchase of Big Four Steck. k er n N . ¢ something to help him be " nlght sald that heart trouble was the R o AT Canaition Canse of death, The body was: taken Herrick of Sulzer's coun e tratn =t Mo said Brad | e v did. there. Mr. Dimaek | awaibmey, on the other hand. pre- |burial thero. e B el e | duced a lotdor which he ha e for thirty years in tho pidi the governar, which read ux follGns! || ply husiness in the Harles wiEh you weuld hand to the people (this clty. He was SEig Geerge W. Holt of | Putmam, Cenn., Sept, | Fratt, for ‘53 years ident colion manufacturing whe are eonducting your per wish this monc ne.” | paign, as 1 | The prosecusion brong the fiest time evidence (o support well known in that fn charges thal (he governot some | gt sonthern New Ongls te in tonight, { 4 his campaign iy (> homs liero | Wall street. Philip bBe for abeut three yemws, [ e ok aohange firm of Bey- | sears old and (StMNEEEN ot Griowold & company, and twe of and a daughten CAREORS | hib employes, testified to the purchase | death he wap president 06 werlh of Big Four | Sgvings baw B ald for by seven lis own persenal e by | af Colwell of 51 | stack which wa checks given Sul 1 | check for $860 and §7.1 | independence Leaguer Causes a Stir. | Basten general Senator Buhamel of Broeklyn, elect- n Indcpendence league ticket, | for iu ed on asked in the course Tiberal ruling by the wrgument presidi | om technical legal questions. = © | feemman, el “On behialf of the laymen of this | gerintendent: lwurt," e said, “1 ask a Hberal roling | aga. y ~

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