Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 29, 1913, Page 1

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The B ulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and lts Total Circu NORWICH, CONN., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1913 PRICE TWO _ lation is the Largest in Connecticut in 'Prbpo&ion to the City's Population . PORFIRIO DIAZ RECALLED TO MEXICO Report in Mexico City That Ex-President Has Been Invited by Hierta to Return GEN. DIAZ DENIES RECEIVING SUCH A MESSAGE Now at Biarritz, France, and Intends to Remain There Until Middle of October—Liberal Republicans Name Col. de la Fuente For the Presidency—Gen. Felix Diaz to be Can- didate But Praises Gamboa—Huerta Supports Gamboa. = 28.—C nel David lrm'ulnuon is under control is justitied. PR < DIAZ NOT RECALLED. . fuerta’s inet, has been put for Ex-President Has Received No Com- sidential candidate by | munication from Mexico. > ""' €an DAY | pioritz, France. Sept. 25—General - . ERtioa “‘r‘\PmfiHn Diaz, the ex-president of declared today that he had re- ed ‘'no communication from the department recalling him service. He expressed the opt ny report regarding his recall have axisen through confusing "ot | him with General Felix Diaz. The ex-president said he would re- main here until the middle of October. 3000 REFUGEES FLEE. Reported to Be Leaving Disturbed Dis- trict for Texas. ed by Blanquet. put was de | | _ Piedras Nej Mexico, Sept. 28— Reports from Sabinas and Barroteran a a | indicate that the constitutionalist army 1 neither | has met defeat and is in full retreat i The | thward the border with 1800 federals fon. |in pursuit Americans who last week were or- dered to leave the disturbed district of Ex-President Diaz's Recall. | 3 ir at- | arrived from the front today and as- t > internal situa- | gerted that the great mining properties ill to | at Menor, Aguajita, Rosita a i~ eral | bly Esperanza, as well as neral rroteran, had been destroyed to pre- xican | vent their capture by the federals. n| At least 3,000 refugees from the - | turbed district are reported fleeing . . he | towards Pledras Negras with the in- e effect that | fenifon of crossing the border into sked to re- | Texas. b his siedih. o the war DIAZ A CANDIDATE. Will Stand for Nomination, but Speaks 8 | » e R Highly of Gemboa. 5 = = : Paris. Sept, 28— General Felix Diaz ' s Candidacy of the Cath- | sent a cable message to Senator Gam. olic Party | boa today expressing his felicitations hat General | of Senor Gamboa to the presidency of a n will sup- [ Mexico by the Catholic party. aboa, candidate of ededico Gamboa. is an honest and t esidency. | sincere man,” said General Diaz, “and should he be elecetd will bring to the office the right spirit Nevertheless General Diaz will also a candidate for the presidency My friends,” he said, “have brought me forward, but I have not asked them chosen I will do all that T can to bring | about order and justice in the country. | My candidac | freedom of convictions in all relig- ion General Diaz will sail on the steamer Corcovado from Havre for Mexico on Tuesda. { Gomez Won't Go Back. | _Washington. Sept. 25— Fran | vasquez (lomez, mentioned as a po | ble candidate in the coming Mextean | elections, told friends here today he would not return to Mexico to become a candidate. Gomez s making his home here INJURED IN A COLLISION OF AUTOS. REV. C. E. EWING STRICKEN AFTER BATH Hockanum Machine Run Down by | Is Brother of Norwich Pastor—Fully Hartford Touring Car. Recovers Afterwards at New Haven. w Haven, Conn.. Sept. 28 Charles 1. Bwing, a mission: to tsin, China, for many years, and now in New Hayven on a vacation s $ < | terday afte n. Soon after he came m | out of wajer he was stricken il e | ana onscious. Irank Crad- Mr. and | dock and George Van Nest, business ma- | men at the Point, saw Mr. Ewing swhen | : e auto was|he fell and they cared for him Dr. and all four | Paul of Grace hospital was called and awled ad- | went to the lighthouse to treat him - | He finally recovered amd his relatives w . m- | were nofified. The missionary was = = y 10 | taken to his home at 596 Georse stree wer ken to as reported last night that Mr eatment | Ewing had fully recovered = severely from | “Rav. Mr. Ewing was graduated from k frs. Smith has 1893, Mrs. Ewinz was® Miss ® broken wrist and Mr. Smith a broken | fia. Smith, a niece of Andrew (3 nose s oft | Smith of the New Haven Window hade company | Rev. Mr. Bwing is a brother of Re | George H. BEwing of Norwich Town, THREE CHILDREN BURNED TO DEATH = == LATEST ORDERS TO Mother Parhaps Fatally Burned Whils o B NATIONAL GUARDSMEN g 6 Bave Thew. [ FINAL etlington. Kan Seni -t These | Retiement of Capt. E. O. Cunningham T . Sept. a6 Thie Leave of Absence Granted. their mother perhaps fatally burned | et Ea R while trying to save th fire that destroyed the home of Jesse Alumbaugh on a farm near here early tod on _of Capt. Edward G. Cunning- m. Coast artillery corps, to be re- red. is aprroved, and he ie reifeved ren s e e wrer per M1 | from’ active duty In the military ser Claud a 7, M .t oricy e of this state, and placad upen 2L e = gt retired list, C. N. G, to daie Oct, aged 4 were asleep upstairs when tha fire broke out. Those downsiairs got out in safety © rescue the three vounger children Mrs. Alumbaugh ascended a ladder attempted to reach them thro al G - T tended for 15 days, ¥indow. The flames enwrapped her.| “{7pon recommendation of the com- however and ehe was forced to re- | in omcer, the-appointments. of eat after receiving hurns that may | Corp, Frank D. Cheney to be sergeant cause her death. Mr. Alumbaugh w1s]l“d Lance Corp. Morgan G. Bulkeley. 15. He has been granted a leave of absence until such date. | Leave of absence granted Capt. Al- belt Mossman, Coast artiilery corps, in 74 | gpacial C. N. G, orders has been ex- ST e, . to be corporal are made In Troop e C. N, G, by the adjutant MAN WITH KNIFE 8TOOD OVER HER. . cavalry general, Examination for Postmaster, Newington Woman Awakened from | (8pecial to The Bulletin.) | Wasningt Hept. 28.:-On acconnt N S P, | of the death of the postmaster at East | Killingly {he civil service commission and compliments upon the nomination |- to work hard for me. Should I be| is that of a liberal, with | In special C. N. G. orders the appli- | Cabled Paragraphs Death of Deputy Dujardin-Beaumetz. Limoux, France, Sept. 2§.—Deputy Henri Charles Ftienne ~Dujardin- Beaumetz, for many years under sec: retary of statd for fine arts in theé Prench cabinet, died here yesterddy at the age of 61. London Strike Settled. London, Sept. 25.—A settlement of threatened strike of the 15,000 em- ploves of the parcels express compa- nies of Londox was reached yesterday Wwhen the companies declared _their Willingness to recognize transport un- fon workers, Churecl to Join Conference. - London, Sept. 28.—Another membsr of the British cabinet, Winstod Spen- cer Churchill, first lord of the admiral- ty, left for Scotland vesterday to join in the ministerialist conferenec at Bro- dick, where it is understood Premier Asquith and Chancelllor of the Ex- chequer Lloyd George have been dis- cussing the Ulster situation. CITY GIRL DID NOT LIKE LIFE ON FARM. Now She’s Dead and Husband is Ac- cused of Murder. Chicago, Sept. 28—Tverett Rex- roat, son of a Macomb, L, farmer, was named in a warrant issued today the murderer of his wife, . Mildred Allison Rexroat, a Chic dancing teacher, who yesterday was shot to death near Wheaton, 1. Her body was found between the tracks of the Elgin, Joliet and Eastern railroad. warrant was sworn to by W. W. Wolf, constable at Wheaton. Sheriff A. A Kuhn and two deputies left ton for Macomb, where Rexroat is el to be at the home of his father y intended to placehim under arrest and cturn with him to Wheaton. Bighty photozraphs of finger prints were taken today, many of them bloody, found on a score or more mail- ing cards found scatiered along the ok for a\distance of fifty feet from the place the body was found. The re looking for a rattan suit case ining a pink silk dancing dress and pink pumps, which was carried by Mrs. Rexcoat when she left Chicago. Rexcoat's parents and _friend Macomb decl they will have no trouble establishing a_complete ali- bi for him. “He has not been in Chica- go for two months.” said his father. “He brought his bride here six months ago, but she was a city girl and would not’adopt farm life. She left August 26 They were still good friends.” Rexroat was at his father’s home on the evening of the murder, according to statements by two friends and neighbors of the young man who say they visited him ‘about the hour the murder was committed. George and Albert Barclay, brothers, asserted that they spent Friday evening between 7 and 10.30 with Everett Rexroat at the Rexroat farmhouse. OBITUARY. John 8. Lane of Meriden. Meriden, Conn., Sept. 28.—John Lane, one 'of Mcriden's wealthiest cit zens ‘and the pioneer trap rock manu- facturer in New Bngland, died this morning. M. Lane started in the quarry business in Meriden in 1890 and since then has built quarries in Hing- ham, Westfield and Amherst, Mass. He | was ‘president ot all the Lane corpora- | tions operating in_those towns and a director of the Connecticut Quarrles company, now cwners of the Meriden plant. The Jane corporations have built 500 miles of roads in New Eng- land and New York. Lane was born in Kent Nov. 1839. Before the Civil war he was employed by the New York and New Haven railroad. He served through- out the war with the Eighth Connecti- cut volunteers. He resigned and was discharged from the service Oct. 14, 1864, with the rank of first lieutenant. He became supervisor of the Housa- tonic | the New Haven road on the division between New Haven and _Springfield. The opportunities for selling stone ballast to ailroads caused him to start in the quarry business, and he made a marked success of it, his per- sonal fortune being estimated at over a million doliars, He was a liberal contributor to Meriden institutions After the “bix fre in Forida in 1399 Mr. Lane purchased a hotel in | Bustis, where hie has spent his winters | ever since. Ncarly ten vears ago Mr. | Lane sufféred a shock and since then | be has lived a lite of retirement, his | sons carrying on the business. He was + republican and a Mason of high de zree. He leaves a widow, three son Arthur c of Meriden, B. Lero; Lave of Hingham, Mass, and Harr: Lane of Westfield, and two daughter Mrs. W. R. Smith of Meriden and Ar. Oliver Yale. The funeral will be held Tuesday afternoon. La; School Whipping. T knowed they'd come to it. School | They're askin® for he paddie ag'in When 1 was a Kid it was s as mach part o vour learnin’ ua ‘thmeti. or spell rn they wa a lot o' softies g an’ made rules all over the | country tha teachers couldn’t lick [ boys like they used to. Thats whats the matter with vour jails an’ your reform school: If a4 big mule a,| kid gets zay with his teacher nowa days they give him a pink ticket with a bad mark on it. If he spits in th® teacher’s face he gets two pink tickets, | an’ when th’ inspector visits th’ school |he says to the big mule “Shame on you!' Back in my day th' teacher give and set him down so hard his hink he had humped into a comet. If he gave any more back talk th’ boss teacher of th' whole school run at him and set him down os hard his | back bone near went into his hat. I never would've learned how to spell if o' Doc Baldwin that learned us hadu't broke his cane on my bean one Friday. Somehow it raised a weit big An’ when 1 got one lickin’ at school I | got another onme when I got home. | That's what learned me so well. Kids | B0 to school for th' same reason you | send soldiers to th’' army. If you let | them soldlers do as they please an” | talk back to them captains an’ colonels | your old army ain't fit to fight hoboes. | An’ you don’t learn them soldiers to walk stralght, shoot straight an’ win shoulder straps by talkin' sugar noth- [ingn to 'em. Them soldiers get th' hook 1f they ain’t watchin'. That's | what kids need. Th' men that's run- ewingion, Conn., Ser Misa nin’ this country now s the men that Mar . an 1845, who | Bu& been requcsted o hold an exami Frareia e R + alone nad & ihriliing cxperionce | hotion of applicants for apoolhtments | foachers wher they was Kids. When with a burglar last nighi. According | '© this office, . - e th' moftly Iind get to runnin’ It, me story told the police, sho was SR for Bulgaria. awakened from her sleep late Jast| The “lurner” soclsties which cul- | “Walt tlll they get off! nig nd found m men. armed with o | tvate an all round love of walking | "Both doors, both doors! Livaly, kuile Lending over her. The iniruder | Symnastics, and health giving exer. | please, wh » mmasked, demanacd moncs, | clees, have cxerted m powerfil influ. | ~Wateh your stepi” Misn Ul grappled with ihe|Snee upon natlve Americans whe, in - — stranger, but noally gave him 320, U'n. | their struggle for intelloctual achliéve- | New Havem——Prof, and Mrs, Robert der pretexi of showing Bim whera yai. | Ment, are ton apt to forget that mental | N, Corwin and Migs Margaret Corwin ihies wers concenled she showea him | development usually 18 founded on | of 8t, Ronan gtrast have returned from ahout bouse, Noping to summen | Physieal heslth and rebusiness.—New | o summer al Greenbore, p ~ironiger Bnally ran ont of | EritainHerald, | = the v Midw CRarehifl b nesgl 7 R TR | It 1w proseed fo harness Ohtn Preicn - esull of her =xpecience | Thiers sre 4,358 mulss And 20, e LA a0d le being caced for by Melghbors. | horass in the United Bidles, 7,000 i River near Loulsvlile to generate elect- tie power, frequently pur roops bodyguard of fifty cavalry, went to the Japanese consulate thi apolog] ilroad and later supe . s Dt suneri e "“'axr. according to the Japanese officials | was made in | from Watch Hill to Mo Zunner and cel enough to let some more brains in, | granted no audienc _according to a despatch recelved here. On Saturday he kept to his bed the greater part of the day. e is suffer- ing from great weakness. ple, Eouthamnton for nalled 1175 miles east of Sand: &t 10 3, m. Dock Charged With Boy's Murder LABORER ACCUSED OF MOST FIENDISH CRIME. BODY ON GOLF - LINKS Showed Indications of Having Been Dashed Against a Tree—Accused Was Often in Company of Children. Philadelphia, Sept. 2¢.—A strong web of circumstantial evidence was today woven around Joseph O'Brien, the 37 vear old laborer under arrest as a sus- pect in the murder of seven year old Israel Goldman, according to the po- lice. The boy's nude body was found vesterday on the links of the White Marsh Country club, several miles from his home in the center of this city. In O'Brien’s room, a few doors from the home of the murdered ba detectives found a blue knit jacket, bloodstained and with the inside pock- ets torn away. The knit pockets found near the body of the child are of sim- ilar texture to this jacket, the police say, Other Boys Identify O'Brien. O'Brien, who was taken into custody late last night, was identified today by a Conshohocten manufacturer as the man he had seen enter a_car with a boy on Friday night and ride in the direction of the golf links. A number of boys living in the same nefghborhood as the dead child told detectives of tripi the park and ‘h they had been other places on Whi taken by O'Brien. He seemed unus- ly fond of children, they sald, and sed them fce cream soda and other delicacies. Murder Was Fiendish. The prisoner continued to protest his innocence of the crime and de- ug clared that he had spént the evening s committed | on which the murder wi sleeping in the park. The murder was one of the most fiendish ever brought to the attention of the local police. The child’s skull was crushed and his arms and back were badly bruised, the result, those who found the body, believe, of being repeatedly dashed against the trunk of a tree under which the body was found. A string was drawn tightly around the boy’s neck and his cloth- ing, badly torn, was found in a pile some distance from the body. CHINA APOLOGIZES FOR THE NANKING OUTRAGES. Chinese Commander Visits Japanese Consulate for That Purpose, Nanking, Sept. 28.—General Chang Hsun, the commander of the Chinese 4t Nanking, accompanied by a morning - and zed, in accordance with the Japanese demands, in connection with the killing of several Japanese and an insult offered io the Japanese flag. The consul expressed his satisfaction at the action of the Chinese commander. No Ultimatum to China. Peking, Sept. 28—The Japanese le- gation emphatically denied today that an ultimatum had been sent by the Japanese government to China. The legation stated that the Chinese au- thorities at Hankow and Shantung had fully complied with the Japanese de- mands. Apology Clears the Air. Tokio, Sept. 28—The apolog: General Chang Hsun to the Japanese consulate at Nanking has cleared the here, and removes the danger of com- plications for the present. THAW AND MAC GORDON MAKE A LONG *FLIGHT. Make Aeroplane Trip from Newport to Point Near New Haven. New Haven, Conn., liam Thaw and Stephen MacGordon of | Pittsburg, Pa., who left Newport, R. | I at 10 o'click this morning in an aeroplane, en route T New Yo alighted at Morris Cove, near here, at | 7.30 o'clock tonight They had ex- pected to Teach this city about noon, | but were yed at Watch Hill for | several hours by engine trouble. The | flight from Newport to Watch Hill minutes. The trip | made without incident in about one hour. It ‘engine 1epairs can be made in time, the flight to New York will b resumed tomorrow. GERMANS TO WORK FOR MORE LIBERAL SUNDAY. | Committee Named for That Purpoce at State Convention. Hartford, Conn., Sept. 28— The | convention of the German Alliance Lclosed its three daye’ session this af [ ternoon with the election of the ol lowing officers: President, Louis F. Deppensborn; vice presidents, George fred Kaufmann: secre- tary, Pal E. Tieffer; treasurer, H. C. Clf me, all of Hartford onven- 04 ( will be heia in Hariford again next ‘éar, as will also the “German day’ ration in 1915 A committee was named 1o urge leg- islation for a muore iiberal Sunday. Song Concern Raided. Washington, Sept. 28.—Postoffice in- spectors ralded the H. Kirkus Dugdale Music Publishing company here tod | and arrested H. K. Dugdale, George | Dugdale and Mrs. M. E. Duvoll, officers of the company, on charge of using the mails to defraud. adyertised widely for efforts of ama- teur song writers. War Department Silent. Many appear to see a connee: tween the recall of General elix Di- az, the recent Visit (o the capital of General Geronomin Treino and the in- vitation to the aged ex-president to re- turn, _Meanwhile the war department is stlent as to its intentions. No Audiences for Three Days. London, Sept: 25.—The pope has three days, Steamers Reperted by Wi Cape Race, Sept. 38 Steamar Olym- Naw York. sig- - Hook . m, Tues Legislators to TO ACCUSE SULZER OF BARTER- ING INFLUENCE. WALL STREET DEALS Further Testimony Regarding Them to Be Offered Today—Colwell, Rated as Star Witnass, is Still Missing. N. Y, Sept. 28 the counsel for the board of managers impeachment trial will lature to Test will members of the leg- Islature who arealleged to have made | nivine Right Baer,” h the governor, but also some to have been threatened L not vote for cer- Harvard University received administration measures and ,a | amounting to $161.687 political leade witne: be cailed Tuesday. More About Wall of New York, will be calied to testify the gover; the examination these two witnesses would be conclud- | partment. ed in the short afternoon held, tomerrow afternoon and | Herman Simon, ould be | individual manufacturer of silks in the aturday in_the office called Tuesday. passing from the | world,“died is no indication | his Kaston mills. His. home was that the case insofar closed, however. 1t 8 returned to later,| After a Fight with Deputy Sheriffs John Hurzan, a miner, j at Benton, Il Saturday with the murder of two musi Colwell Still Missing. The star witness on the stock deal, | & i will be welcomed Sundos Mle i counsel for the board The Eyes of Benjamin Wood, 13 But | vears old of Grand Rapids, Mich., have wag as much of a|jeen turned to stone through petrifi- cation. The doctors were unable to Frederick L, of managers whereabouts vhenever he appear: disappeared several weess ago, he mysterious woman for whom de- the employ of the bo carching and who deals, is b Colwell is. She has been in communication with him ever d, it is thought | The Grand Old Woman of Sunbury, is called she will | p3 ~“Mrs. Amelia C. Fisher, celebrated than Mrs. | hor' 100th birthday at her home last s been mention- | week. She took part in a family re- union held in her honor. disappeared, Incidentally, othe: Sulzer whose name h: in connection with the case. Gbvernor Summons Witnesses. as were filled out today House under the pe sonal direction of Governor Sulzer and from 1 BY FALLING FROM BOAT. Poles Asked to Assist Make a Hasty Exit. resen Towboat this afternoon ,Alfred An- of | I his balance, tumbled ' into the nd was drowned. A companion John Anderson, of Hartford, no rela- desperate attempt to s Anderson ca fishermer. to aid him, but the became frightened, rowed to shore and then ran away z a great effort finally reached the body and brought i Although nearly ex ed himself, he tried to bring back life, The nearest doctor miles away pt. 28 Wil | gurvived by TWO OFFICERS STABBED | ton, Saturds ON AN ELEVATED TRAIN. | Had Remonstrated With Foreigners Who Annsyed Young Woman. | day against the BritishAmerican of which unidentified McEanery and Patrol- | T Dennan and. drawing | Arctic Centre pleaded hoth e Deenen v and was able fo grap- until hielp ar- | Declaring That the Bible should he wis made a pris- | excluded from the mails on the gre cone PROVES AN ALIBI | Mmaster General Bu tion they desire Murdering Christian Scientist. s, Gay's pat and the police said every U name on it would be investigated. BOY KILLED WHILE HOPPING” A FREIGHT. Fell Between Cars and His Body is Badly Crushed. found today The concern | than Erley, 13, ‘who 6 evad, who had been sent to break up a dis- between the cars this | Lle debenture bonds. the West Haven rail and ‘was instantly killed. | crushed. A vru\m’ Harttora, 1 His body was ladl of young boys caused so much trouble that the Howard avenue police were ordered to the police coming and many of them jumped on the freight train which was slowly passing at the Lime. Frley lost his bilance while trving to cro: the top of one car fo anothe from Havre son. it Major General eoa;g. L. Gille: U. 8."A,, retired, of Washington, N, years ago, is dead. The fire of the governor's operation is necessary. be | mencement 1n this feature® of i i witnesse B. Gray ssion which tor s the stock deal | Easton, Pa. any time since diagnose his case. thousand dollars. enjed that he w Fire Which e of sleep. | of incendiary origin swept the prin- — e cipal business block at New FiSHERMAN DROWNED ville, 0., Saturday morning. Rescus Work b While | port on the tariff bill what is | BOrt pond, near Po- | NOV- 10- e o street, Hartford, dred miles from Nome. | wrecked. led to some stantly killed at Peori: Tohn ginderson | ind William Schuster, aust- | the United States district court at Bos $61 | stores company When warned | Murphy, Jr. annoying a_voung | many Hall, is vice president and treas- him in a Second | urer road train tonight | == oreizner hecame in- | Accused of Killing Christopher Ken- ference ‘of Ser-|yon of Arctic Centre Apponaugh, officers in _the | charge of murder at a anery prob- | of the less seri- | held without bail that it contains ¢ maltter, a certain | citizens has sent | take the a Suspected of | liquor Sept. 28.—An consider un- Rev. Fr. Po p: enian Greek Cath ministrator of the estat ki, a widow own the S0l the mxusperad Jated body of his wife was found cornfield on = farm where ents was their two sons. | | | Conn., Sept ice are searching for The boys ss.wl rrost| bank today and bare feet marks in the mud pointed to the water's edge i o i where they disappe: Seariy A A said to have beew drinking heavily At New York Sept. 28 T.a Touraine, | 5 Ao St George Washington. from | Simsbury.—Miss \larguerite McLeun | from (Glaagow: has gone to Asheville, N Larland, from Antwerp; Czanfrom Li- 1.-“ culture teacher in #chool for girls. Condensed Telegrams Princeton University opened with a record freshman class numbering 430. Take the Stand .. SRRSO Two Young Mulattoes Kill Eight Persons and Wound The United States Mint at San Fran- cisco has been robbed, although it is believed the amount is small, Public Bequests Amounting to $325,- are contained in the will late Miss Harriet O. Cruft of Boston. died at his summer home at Saratoga, John William McKnight, of Borden- town, N. J., Who erected a tombstone to himself ‘on his cemetery A Monument Has Been Dedicated = Washington's Crossing, N. J., to mark the spot where Washington crossed the alleged bartering of political influence, | Delaware in 1776, was announced today by Attor- J. Kresel, who-has been in command of ‘the squad of de- Representative Jemes E. Curley was hurried to his home in Boston Satur- are subpoenaeing wit- | dey stricken with appendicitis. nesses for the board. Members of Lei a reign of murder here this mo had been killed, = £ George |. Baer, president of the Phil- adelphia & Reading railway, known as 71st birthday at Philadelphia. between com- 3 June and the beginning whose tes- | of the new academic year last week. At the Rate.of More Than $1,000,000 Street Deals. every business day in the past fiscal Mel- | year have been the exports from the both | United States to Latin-America. s Wail | A Gold Medal and a Cash Prize will the legislators are | be awarded in December to the mount- Kresel sald today | ed policemtn having the best for horse in the New York Pollce de- aid to be the largest was arrested in connection 10| The Barking of a Dog saved the life of Mrs. Prof. A. H. Mueller, when her regarding the gov- | pome at Egg Harbor, N. J., was des- lleved | iroyed by fire at a loss The Body of Mrs. Rebecca P. Gay, a religious health practitioner was found in her office at Los Angeles Saturday ocess servers will begin calling wit- | morning where she had been murdered his behalf tomorrow. The | with a piece of gas pipe. Rovernor took an automobile ride this afternoon and again nervous wreck ved to have been is estimated at $150,000. By a Vote of 112 to 52 the Saturday defeated a resolution by Rep- ive Austin proposing that when congress agreed to the conference re- it recess until A. N. Evans, Commissioner of Edu- cation, for Alaska, and the ‘Wasp, lost for days in the Bering sea, | are safe at St. Michaels, The Wasp was ndidate for sheriff on the democratic ticket, was shot and in- , 1Il, Saturday, proprietor of the Savoy 'hotel, was arrested charged with the killing. Joseph Fox, Manufacturer of cloaks | at Fall River and New Bedford, filed a g el i e 4 | Walter then went to the home of hi 9 and assets of §$12,650 | An Involuntary Petition in { ruptey was filed by creditors Sat Charles F. son of the leader of Tam- jay nizht John Maloney special session Fourth District court petition urging him to REIGN OF TERROR CAUSED BY B Several Others in Mississippi Town VICTIMS SHOT DOWN WITHOUT PROVOCATION Youths Under Influence of Drugs—One Desperado Killed by a Citizen’s Bullet and the Other Strung up to a Coal Chute—One Had Told His Mother He Intended to Shoot Up the Town But She Thought Him Joking. Harriston, Miss,, Sept. 28.—Two drug | eral fusillade of shots was directed at crazed mulatto boys, brothers, bezan |the seed house. A call was sent to ning | Governor Brewer for troops, that ended only after three white mer, | Finding his hiding place too pre- four negro men and a negro woman |carious; Will Jones started to rem veral persons wor towards a coal chute nearby, but had ed and the two bo; lynched. A gone only a few steps when a bullet jous clash between the races was | ended his life. A rope was placed vented by the arrival, on a spectal |around the body, it was strung up to a train, of a company of national gua:ds- | telegraph pole near the station and men from Natchez became a target for everyone not shooting at the seed house. 5 Elder Youth Lynched. The trouble started at two o'clo a | 14 o i 1 <} Soon after Will Jones was killed,— his morning and continued intermit 3 T o o e Wailer | Walter Jones ploked Tom Weeks, i Jones, the elder of the two boys who |negro, off the coal chute by his dead- started the firing, W lynched just 1y aim. Weeks f"“vmk"“ ground dead, after the soldiers arrived. His broth- | Not long after Weeks was killed the er, Will Jones, had beeh shot an. |Special bearing the Natchez guards- killed by citizens earlier in the day.|men arrived. ~While the soldlers wera Citizens of the town who had barri- | detralning the crowd rushed the seed caded themselves in their homes be- ase. gan cautlously to emerge at 10 o'cloc Not a shot greeted them and as the from their hiding places and by noon [leaders went into the place, with the town was quiet. No more troubie | dfawn weapons they found Walter is feared. Jones completely unnerved, but not injured. They quickly placed a rope Body of Negro Found in Hut. around his neck and rushed him to Later the body of Teller Waren, a | the coal chute. As the negro was negro, was found in a hut in the negro | drawn up the rope broke and he fell qGuarter where Walter Jones first began | heavily to the ground. Not a word firing. Gvidently Warren was one of [or act of protest came from Jones the first victims but just when he was | when a larger rope was drawn around shot is not known. his neck and again he was pulled up, Twenty persons were injured, sixteen Further Lynchings Prevented. of them negroes. None of the negroes | A large crowd looked on as the drug. was dangerously hurt. zaturated body writhed until lifs was extinet Bodies Still Hanging. The crowd then went to the home There was no indication of further | of the Jones negroes where they found trouble after Walter Jones s lynched | two more negro men whom they wers and the Natehez guardsmen returned | about to lynch when officers per- home. suaded hlhllm k(i) de’z"x‘f\ ; The negro population appeared to be It is belleved tha: e Jones negroes as much incenatd 5t (he Jones brothers | had planned detafls of thelr murder- as were the whites. The negroes ex- | ous night, as they were well armed and pressed no intimation at (he lynching. | had a plentiful supply of ammunition. Tonirht the bodies of the Jones | Thelr mother said one of them had broth# still were hanging to the coal | remarked T that he was golng to chute. The authorities have decided | “shoot up” the town, but she thought not to hold a coroner’s inquest. he was joking. Whether the two ne- § groes found at the Jones house knew s norDead. of any plans’he Jones negrocs might Sheriff G. B. Hammett of Jefferson | Have had, Is not known. sl - county” white, shot while leading a posse to the pluce where lhe Jones | pROMINENT MEN ON ¢ , A s Consthite THE AUMULLER JURY, Former Constable Frank Keinsticy, white, shot at his home after being = S Coroner’s Inquest Over Schmidt’s Vice tim to be Held This Week. called to the door, New York, Sept. 25—Considerable Town Quiet by Noon. Claude ¥reeman, white, of Fayette, Miss., shot at the railway station while awaifing a train. Jobanna Aiken, Tom Weeks, Jesse | importance is attached by the authori- Thompson and Thead Grayson, ne- |{jab”(o" the mquest into the death of &roes, killed during promiscuous shoot- [ 43na Aumulles on Friday next, chief- g it I expected that counsel Teller Warren, negro, body found in | 1Y BECaUSe It W expected At o | s confessed to murdering the girl, will | Walter and Wil Jones, negroes, | question the establishment of a cor- L TN pus dellecti. Coroner Feinberg has Eist SR Wolining. taken steps to secure a highly capable The wounded: ° jury to sit in the case. In addition Orrin Gillis, former sheriff, white, |to Theodore P. Shonts, president of shot in shoulder and may die. the Interborough Rapid Transit com- E._B. Appleby, white, conductor of | pany, who has consented to serve as the Yazoo and Mississippi Valley rzil- | foreman of the jury, Coroner Felnberg road, shot in breast, leg and arm, dan- | has subpoenaed two score or more men gerous. of prominence from among whom the William MeCalléb, white, shot in | other jurymen'will be selected. Among | thigh. these ,the coroner anunounced tonight, ) William Keinstley, white, sfn of |are John D. Rockefeller, Jr, Vincent Frank Keinstley, shot in hand.’ Astor, Corneltus Vanderbilt, George Gould, August Belmont, George W. Fairchild, Henry Siegel, George F. Baker, Robert L, Garry, Harry Payne ‘Whitney and Lewis Cass Ledyard. The William Dennis, white, shot in le; W. C. Bond, white, shot in leg. Two Negroes Were First Victims. The shooting was started by Wal- | ibeeY A et LS e ter Jones, aged 20, in the negro quak- | g0} gt gpent a quiet Sunday in the ter, where the negro woman andJ mombe' his only caller being his at- Thead Grayson were shot and killad. | Fomp® RIS oy caler Delng ent at- titude of late and refusses to talk of his crime. mother and aroused his 18 I brother. car Together they proceeded ihroush | yEa) TH OF POPE PIUS the main str of the little town, fic ing at evervone in sight. Citier IS UNSATISFACTORY, aronsed their slumber by — shots, peered out of the windows and | Attending Physicians Discourage Re then hastened to cover, believing, they ceptions of All Kinds. sald today, that riots of more serious — proportions had broken out. Rome, Sept. 28—The condition of Other Unprovoked Murders. Pope Pius X, is giving rise to some The two boys, soon after leayinz |anxiety. Although not suffering from their home, went to the home of for. | any specific malfdy, the state of his mer Const Frank Keinstley nd | health 18 unsatisfactory. It is b_q‘la‘- when he responded to their call o | €d, however, that rest ond care will re« store him, unless some unforeseon - In the Eyes of the Law a clergy- | man is managing two of New Haven's loons. This has come about by the prohate court appointment or af the Luth son, 34 wh he had lived near Peru, Ind. was arrested gansport. Ind., Saturday, and accord EeE | ing to the police he confessed that he had killed his wife in the presence of The Protests of Connecticut stock- holders of the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad made through counsel were heard Saturday Sept, 28—Na- | Massachusetts Public Service Commis- “hopped” a | sfon, in considering the policemen | approving the proposed issuance by the company of 367,000,000 in conver Search for Hartford Teamster, 28 —The po- Michaet Sullivan, o teamster, who is Lelieved to have committed suicide by drowning in the Connecticut river. His clothes were found along come out he was shot through the he e e v Walter Jones. Keinstiev's son-Wil- | complications arise. ¥ Tam, S e Either Tl and”veached | Audiences have not been ofMeialty for & zun, bui before he covld fire o | suspended, but the attending physi- received a bullei in one of his hands. | cians have agreed to discourage - The Yazoo and Mississippi Valle | tions of any kind until the pontiff has depot is near the Keinstley home ani | entirely recovered his strength, — In the two nezroes walked in that direc- | view of his present weaknees, it is not tion. A train had arrived from Nai- | considered probable thai the pops will chez just a fow momients hefoye and | parade, as originally planned, at the | Conductor "E. B. Appleby was stuwd- | greaf function at the closing of the ing at the station talking to Fluzmun | Constantinian jubllee on December §— W. ¢ Bond. Without warning (h- ' the feast of the Immaculate Concep= two negroes fired on themi and holl | tion. fell. Then the negroes directed th —— A CHALLENGE FROM THAW TO JEROME. fire'at Claude Freeman, who was walt ing for a train to take him to his h. VA e e SR T g el erhe nekroes then fived Mo (4® || 4yyer Asked to Make Good on His Osen Fire on Sleeping Car, Indictment Allegation: g et LR MR Poughkeepsie, N. Y., Sept. 28—John every night at 1 n unt F. Ringwood, of counsel for Harry K. hroug Memph » “" | Thaw, upon his return to this city to- { Qrleans arrives. After the tral night from Concord, N. H., L SHhcas o statement authorized by the fire of the two negroc'. | which he sald: py windows were hroken no | “Thaw will consent to waive extra= HesapAnTial the cariwashart: | gition trom New Hampshire and dis- With blood Inst at the highest pitch | gontinue all the proceedings now pend= | the two nesroes made their way to & |jng and will voluntarily come to cottonseed house nearby. 1t is be- | Duthess county and answer the ale | lieved they then realized that this ijeged indiotment, if thers be one in exe wholesale killing could not long con- : r finue without obposition and they de- | acenc If M. Jerome will make good termined to make their last stand at | jefore Governor Felker that ‘an ine. the sced house. | dictment was found and signed by’ by Sheriff Shot Dead, producing said indictment or a certi- Frightened citizens by this time had | fied copy and forwarding the same to gathered their wits and telephoned for | Governor Felker.” Sheriff Hammett at Fayette. Summon- x former sherifr Gillis to accompuny | Condemn Sex Hygiens As Study. Hammell started for Harriston | Boston, Sept. 28.—The proposals to' on horseback, arriving aboul five | introduce the study of sex hyglene in @clock, A small crowd of mien were | the public schools were condemned firing into the seed house, but no oue | “mischievous and immoral” by th had Yentured to lead it pusse (o the | semi-annual convention of the Cath= place. Taking a few men with hun |olic Federation of the Archdiocese in Sheriff Hammelt, heavily armed, start- | Boston today. ed towards the seed hol whereupon ‘Walter Jones went to the tall grass nearby and as Hammett approached, the nesro fired, killing him instandly” |, Hartford, c°“':".f’,{3" 28.—As A shot from the seed house brought i icd n down Gillis. :fllo‘:‘mfl ‘:"':ml’d‘ lmml_flmmw Bullet Kills Younger Desperado. o tan S L anaa By this time the countryside had | the Azheville | heen aroused and farmers came pour- | been arrestad charged ig§ {p from every direction. A gem-!with intent:to kil

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