Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 1, 1913, Page 1

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PRICE TWO CENTS The Bullctin’s Circulation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and Its Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to”the City’s Population ELLIDTT APPEALS FOR COOPERATION Only _:lution of Transportation Problem, Says New President of New Haven Railroad ADDRESSES BOSTON CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Pleads For Protection to Owners of Railroad Securities—Fed- | eral and State Commissions Could Inspire Confidence by Permitting Such Advance in Rates as to Enable Roads toi . . 2 rora, a light « iser of an entirely new Meet Obligations and to Provide For Improvements. | v “Vi" e ek sy and he Dritish navy. She was | descrit by Winston Spencer Churc Arst lord of tl alt. duction of diferent pllances - and | ~HINCAt. JTSE b2 facilities more rapidly than the roads | S @ “destrover of destroy can obiain money then there is DUl| Another Protest to United States. of the United States—and that Sept. Another note of B e 1 belee the -commi otest in the Californian anti-alien sioners—who have such great powers | controversy h |.Pl‘)y despatched to the realize their responsibility to the own- | 1 The text has not been ers of the properties as well as to the | lished, but ic is understood that if s oo T e aamedatiy that they | It is acceptsd, on which point the Jap- will give practical evidence of their | #nese authorities are very optimistic, by permitting. some ad- | it Will necessitate a new treaty between g g A | the two cour.tric Should the commissioners—federal | s ——— and state—make a positiva declara- | MISSIONARIES IN HANDS tlon that ra:es may be advanced so as | R e e to permit the properties to meet-all of | % CHINE thelr obligations, pay a fair return (0| Five Are Americans—One of Them Be- stockholders and leave a balance for | . : improvements they will at once in- | ng Held for a Ransom spire confidence and give to existing [ py....o o e R securities a better standing than they | , Hankow, Eent et now have both here and in Europe and | ety mu “Ttorg ceian s will help to market new secur Ll S W e BT on an interest basis more Fbeon o georlih than s now possible, be O e ek unea: in the minds of investors| Rart of the province o ot about the future not earnings of the | ACTICAN priconers are Etto g e Mr. and Mrs Fauske Magnitude of Transportation Machine. Let us look for a minute at a few | facts about the great transportation machine made up of the New Haven WARD ELLIOTT. | and ngland lines and associated 2 properties. There are 7,976 miles of - Sep e Boston cham- | railroad and 14,175 miles of track. ( oz a dinner at the | the track 29 per cent is in M < honor of | setts, 20 per cent in Connect president of the New | per cent in Maine, 13 per ce York, New Haven and Hartford Rail- York, 12 per cent in New H road company and soon to become the | § per cent in Rhode Island, 4 . 3 | in Vermont and 2 per cent else > There are 3.197 loco es, 8 otirr fr r > ) Jand_ an o the marine equipment of 240 stea 1 e ma ers, tugs, barges, etc this rol o ock is not. standing and e locomotives run about 80,000.000 000,000 miies, and the freight cars move 624.000,000 Th ir. Toasts mileage of t units of equipme 0,000 miles per das more 000 miles every ho: | . Revenues, Payrolig and Taxes. © 100 | £56,000,000 oF \ i an o pavment to r a proper . Employees and Investors. . s in {urn depend on the r e > one, make 640,000 people, or s | New Should nat M- Prouty on June a1, n zrave fmpertance of {he sus and orough study, Al ;' of nin . as 1o have clcier supervision of the =} . . . be made to build up a Continued on Page Six.) KIN CHOLAS' PLAY THE CAUSE OF A RIOT Actors Who Pertrayed Turks Narrow- y Escape Lynching B prii, 3 Tiiks, marked the first g 2L nieht of King Nichol of Scutarl.” = of Egsad ame on the stage tha | e gy i i afeninz, A voung | 5 n r an s he platform. revol- r d by E r in with difficulty was | s s estrained from shooting the\ actor. 1 fon W « member of the cast, before the seult on several veterans | a the o wrese and denounced | t b | showed full retreat, the | 3 s t| - intention of _lynching ihe v gen- | wearers he fez, The police wers - - compelled to vwse foree to restrain the - teebergs in Path of Liners, ner oston, Sept, 90— lcchergs again . caten trans-Atlantic shipping, Cap- . be | tain Rebere McKillop of the steamer . i users | Numidian reported on his arvival here ates and |today from Ginsgew, A tawering berg = But if the rates (and several growiers appeared off the | - i - nd limers, when the Numidian - er passed lasi Friday. It was the first v ul ¥ e sighted this fall | Cabled Paragraphs Pig Iron Prices Reduced. Berlin, The German Pig Iron association today decided to re- duce its prices for the first half of 1814 by from 50 cents to $1 per ton. ent. 3 | Women Fighting in Albania. Vienn Austria ept. 30.—Women | are taking urn active part in the fight- ing in Albania according to despatch- | es received here from Avlona, the Al- banian capital Another Mansion Burned. | _Dover, Eng, Sept. 30.—Another of { England’s famous old historic homes of 10bility was destroyed by fire last = night when Waldershare Park mansion, | | the reside; the Barl of Guilford, | between ¢ and Dover, was burned to * Devony Sept. 30.—The Au- »ps surro district te nce Yang and ex- te the I of the Paul Jame. nd TARIFF BILL'S LAST | TRIP TO THE SENATE. Effort to GCarry Cotton Futurss Tax Over to Next Congress. rg in the measure except the cotton d re T sortion of the demio 8 es q ion now entir with the senate. FARMER KILLED WHILE HE SLEPT. | . Wife States That Crime Was Commit- ted by Masked Burglars. 0. win A 1 s nd dead d, who rer 1 and then ren- he slep! ikercl with chloro- nated ROAD OFFICIALS | ARE INCOMPETENT Few Have Construction Saye Very Knowledas of Road | Secretary Deyle. Detrolt, Mich e vocate of go he an | advocate of 1 as the v means to declared Tohn T. Doyle, secretary of the United state or county road officials, under edga of road n or mainten Steamers Reported by Wireless. Head. Sept. 30 Steamer York for Havre, nalled southwest at_ 6.2 m. Dua Hivre 630 a. m. Wednesday Steamer An.erika, New York for Cherbours, Southampton and Ham- | burg, signalled 210 miles southwest at | rovence, New La 654 'a. m. Due Cherbourg 2 a. m. Wednesday. Fastnet, Sept. 30.—Steamer Arable, Boston for Queenstown and Liverpool, slgnalled 173 miles west at *.0% a. m. Due Queenstcwn 9 p, m, New Yorlk, Sept. 3 pathia, Trioste for New 764 miles eamer Car- York, signalied | aast of Sandy Hook at 11 a m, Dock § a. m. Friday. Stsamehip Arrival At Havre; Bept, 29, sleamer Rocham- beau, New Yorlk, At' Liverpool; Bept, 30, steamer Bo- hemian, Boston, At Naples: Bept. 27, steamer Cala. | bria, New Verk Al Liverpsol; Sept tania, New York, At 29, steamer Lusi- | Antwerp: = Sept, 30, steamer | Kroenland, New York At Genea: Sept. 30, steamer Ham. | burg, New Yerk The Jewish New Year, 5674, will begin lenight | can The End of the Barbary Coast SERVE WOMEN NO LONGER LIQUOR IN FRISCO |{A NIGHT OF REVELRY | Resorts Packed to Suffocation—Several Will Close Up and 500 to 800 Girls Will Lose Their Employment. | { | san bary | to | Francisco, Sept. 30.—The Bar- | Coast of San IFrancisco, known | tourists tae world over, celebrated | its final passing tonight with a revel | that packed its resorts to suffocation and throngel the with thou- | sands of iookers-on. Many Places Wi sireets | Close Up. | the police com- | | | Prompily at midnisht { mission’s ruling preventing the further ale of liquor by women went into | effect, and 1r a last effort to prolong the night life that has made the “coust” notorious since the pioneer | duys there was a sudden switch from { cocktails to grape juice e police | | permitted this subterfuge tonisht, but | the word went forth that hereafter | onl. aight’ saloons. from which | women will Le harred, cither as enter- tainers or as visi re to be per- | | mitted, regaidless of the nature of the | drinks’ servad. Resort owners them- ! | selves admit that few of the thirty | more pretentious places will survive | | this onslau | 500 to 800 Women Lose Employment. | | Darween five and eight hundred | women ar 5, suddenly thrown up- lem that the m forces that foreed e closing of Barbary Coast are | | striving to meet. Club women today | petitioned the police commission ta was denied. Homes have been pro- must solve e problem of maintenanc themselves FIVE MEXICAN STATES | DECIDE TO SECEDE ve Planned to Organize the Confs States of Mexico. in Herm ora. Dur Sinalo: 1 me oined it th movement. Venustiano ( nza is to the v ot MILLS MAY 8 Their Hich Efficiency a Point in Their Favor. Atlantic ( T 0.—Mor ion under the v cond . said that while the I LAKE CHARLES. LA, MAY BE SUBMERGED Rive na Last Night at Rats of Half Inch An Hour fake C La., Sa Thunda Ity fearec sidents Lak river conti onghout the night and it rosa today distri be submerged and the fiooding of t city might follow in avunitin wind srrings up from the direction of WOMAN COMPLETES A 1,500 MILE WALK. Business Men of Middletown, N. Y., Will Now Rebuild Her Burned Home. | Minneapolis, Minn., Sept Irs Maria Chester of Middletown, R mother of ten children, three of whom accompanied her, today finished ir Minneapolis a 1,500 mile walk, She left New York eity July 81 and spent 58 days on the road. A number of business men of Middietown agreed to | rebulld Mrs, Chestersburned home at | an expense 07 $4,000 phovided she mude the trip in 65 da Mrs. Chestor and | the thres children, i girl and twe boys, carrled knapsacks with food and blan kets To Elsct Chinese President. | Washingtan, Sept, 30.—The Ameri- | legation at Peldng cabled the state department foday that tlhe gov- ernment and opbesition parties of the new Chinese republic, which have been deadlocked for a long time over the questions of the presidential sucees. | sion, have praetieally agreed to the immediate lection of a president with- out awaiting the adoplion of w naw censtitution, | Rebel Gapital is Terrified FEDERAL ARMY ADVANCING ON PIEDAS NEGRAS FOREIGNERS LEAVING Act Upon Advice of United States Consul—Retreating Rebels Set Fire to Villages in Their Flight. Picdras Near Terror has gripped visional capital stitutionalists Mexico, this city the Sept. 30.— the pro- Mexican con- with the victorious northward march the federals and the arrival hundreds of refugees from the surrounding devastated coun- Obeying the instructions of United Consul Blocker, American Tes- of Piedras Negras joined the exodus and hundreds of persons cross- ed the international bridse into Eagle Pass this afternoon, many carrying such of their possessions as they could assemble on their backs. Rioting Anticipated. to quit Pledras Neras immed- s in anticipation of rioting on their provisional capita rebel army is being driven northward by the government troops nder General Muas, the retreating in eports from the front tonight indicate that the federals are closin on the town of Sabinas from which the con- titutionalists are expected to fall back from Brownsville, Texas, or on Pi ras Negras U. S. Troops Rushed to Eagle Pass. United States troops are hurrying to Eagic Pass from San Antonio to rein- | the nd it is arstood that wiih the first attempt W srm its enforcement will take has ne n made known No Quarters for Refugees. Fagle Pass, Texds, Sept. 30.—Abont \fford them shelter FORCED INTO ARMY. an Was A Approp! rrested on Charge of ting Money. FOURTEEN PERSCNS KILLED DUPING THUNDERSTORM. tning Ca Explosion Which injur it there are man hol and r inflimmables LODGE'S CONMDITION SHOWS IMPROVEMENT. Encouraging Statement Given Out Senator’s Wife by free from ‘eve o axtending physi- clans pror his condition entire ly satisfactory on their visit late this FINANCIAL EXPERT TALKS SEVEN HOURS. Discusses Currency Bill Before the Senate Committee. shington Sept. 30.—The senate Jabored throug: cal discussion currency bill another day of techni- of the administration while the White House ider means for hastening progress of the measure toward the te books For en hours the committee heard a discussion of BiL by Charles A. Conant, a fina expert of Naw York OBITUARY. Dr. Reginald H. Fitz Sept. 80.—Dr, Reginald ife ber emeritus professor of theory and practice of physic &t Harvard Medlcal school died at his home here tonfght, Professer Ifitz was 70 vears old. Woodruff Restlng Comfortably. b Sept, 30.The attending fams <dld fonighi that Hen. Tim- dAruH was resting more o forfably than at any time collapse, | i | out of danger, attending physicians announced yesterds Secretary Daniels plans to have youthful naval deserters sent to the isciplinary rracks at Port Roval, {N. C., instead of prison. After good conduct they will be released With the Return to the Nav Condensed Telegrams The United States has expended more than §3,000,000 on fortifications of the Panama canal. Governor Hooper of Tenessess has signed the bill substituting the gallows for the electric chair in that state. Furniture Valued at $250,000, was burned at Los Angeles in a fire which destroved the Barker Brothers ware- hous It is Reported that Governor Foss of Massachusetts, has decided to be- come an independent candidate for re-election for a fourth term. Edward McDonald, who was taken seriously ill in a cheap lodging house in San Ifrancisco ,had securitles valued at $1,270,000 sewed in his pockets. The Latest Effort of the government to check the present sc consists in enlisting the a redmen to raise cattie for the market As a Result of a Fall from a third- story window at his home, William Phaneuf, five year old son of Francois Phaneuf of Central Falls, R. I, died yesterday. Major Alexander McDowell, for 15 years clerk of the house of represen- tatives at Washington died yesterday at his home at Sharon, Pa. He was §2 years old. Dr. James B. Angell, president emer itus of the University of Michigan, was much improved yesterday, though not erday of the 556 membe: nd and Third classes. total academy of the Iirst, Sec the academic year opens with a enroliment of 860 midshipmen A Deep Gash Over the Eye led the police to believe that Mrs. Inez Foste whose body was found in her apart- ment at New York vesterday, was murdered. Mrs. Foster lived alone, Cornelius Bresnahan, aged 51, a brother of Roger Bres of the Chi- cago Baseball club, sterday as | the result of the skull, sustained in a quarre a Toledo saloon. Charles Gilbert, the Oldest Inmate of the Connecticut State prison at Weth- erstield, died there yesterday. He was 74 years old, and had been confined s, four months and days der An Increase From Only 90,000 Tens for in 1880 to more than 2,500,000 tons last year in thé United States has taken Place in the production of gypsum, a mineral principally used in manu- facturing plaster. 2 Twenty-Five American Winners of Rhodes' scholarships at Oxford uni- ersity sailed for Liverpool vester- day st of the students came from North Dakota, [ibeis, Sol « fina und Mississippi An Explosion and Fire in a small paint room on board the new Argen- tine battleship Rivad Quincy, Mass., vesterday re e de James S. Laidlaw, a ghtsm 16 battleship was not damaged. Two Masked and Armed Men | | i GOVERNOR ACTED FOR MRS. SULZER Stock Broker Fuller Testifies Regarding Statement Made to Him by Sulzer Last July CLAIMED SECURITIES BELONGED TO HIS WIFE Borrowed Money, He Stated, to Take Up Mrs. Sulzer’s Loan From Carnegie Trust Company—Broker’s Account Shows Payment of $16,000 to Cover Margins—Books of Brokerage Firm Changed Two Days Before Inauguration Albany, N. Y., Sept. 30.—Evidenco it not made wa on the date upon that Governor Sulzer’s stock transac- | which it purported (o be.” tions with the New York brokerage| It was also brought out that in June, firm of Harris & Iuller were for the | 1913, after former Governor A. I account of Mrs. Sulzer was today dis- | Spriggs of. Montana, an old time closed at the trial of his impeachment. | friend of Mr. Sulzer, had contributed The articles of impeachment charge |a check for $5,000 to the sccount, there that the governor made use of some|was another “cross entry” transuction, of his unreported campaign contribu- | by which it appeared that the firm tions in these transactions. | Melville B. Fuller, head of the firm, said that the governor had told him that Mrs. Sulzer had a loan with th now defunct Carnegic st company of New York, and that in order to take up the loan, for which he had given his loaned the governor $35,000. “It was all simply a bookkeeping en- try, wasn't it?” asked Attorney Kres- el ‘It was a cross entry paying off one | loan and making ancther,” explained the witness. note, he had deposited securities be < longing to Mrs, Sulzer with Harris & | To Influence Prices of Securities. Fuller and borrowed thereon with ‘With Fuller on the stand, counsel for which to pay the note. the assembly managers began today Sulzer's Statement to Fuller. l(l) lay the {nsu)(lulll;h’km proof of the s overnor had told him | CBerges in the eighth article of im- i -l»::; B arnor hid told hilh | peachment, that the governor had used bany on July 30 last, when he had |li5,CHclal position to affect the cur- called there at Mr. Sulzer's request| oy wrics 0f seucurities listed on the after receiving a subpoena to appear | new ponk Stock exchange, in which he was speculating.” The article charges that he first urged the passage of cer- tain legislation and then withdrew or attempted to withdraw It. “Did you appear before hefore the Frawley mitiee. “Mr. Fuller, you know that these se- curities were Mrs, Sulzer's dgon't you?” investigating com- Governor the Eovernor asked him, according 1o suizer carly in this year with reference i R to certain legislation which was pend- negntive Oker sald he replied in the| g affecting the New York stock ex- S Well, aata by 5 o change?” asked Attorney Kresel S bera e s Sovernor, these se- i eTidia,» was theibroker's reply: D hronant tonged to Mrs, Sulzer when| «At that time Governor Sulzers ao- ’u\l\ ht them to you,' Fuller testified. unt was still in your office?” he had a loan with he Carnegie " ” 2 g PiRiAE & % = g B! It was, Trust company. They required me Fuller was not cross-examined on Eive a note every (hrec monthe, and it | g1t nern was very annoying, so I took the se- %: curities down to you and borrowed the Stock Exchange Reform Bills. money from you. A complete record of all the “stock Was a Marginal Account. exchange reform bill?" introduced at “I said to Governor Sulzer: “That |the Tegular session of the legislature | may all be true. There is no evidence | & the recommendation of Govesnor | | of anything of the kind on my hooks | Sulzer was thus placed in evidence | and cannot he proven by me. If it is | BSpecial emphasis was placed on the !mm, yow'll have no trouble in proving | €Xecutive’s special message urging tha lit, as the books of the Carnegie Trust | Passage of the bill designed to double ‘w..w,m must be & matter of rec. | the tax on transfers of stock. It was {ord.”” shown that the’measure was introduc- | The governors account with Harris|€d on Fezruary 4 by former Semator | & IPuler, which the impeachment man- | Stillwell, now a prisoner in Sing Stne, | ngers charge was a marginal or specu- | a0d that it was not reported oat of lative acconnt mot a lonn meconnt was | the committee on taxation snd re- openei in 1910, \according to the books | trenchment. | of the firm upon which Fuller was The managers' counsel stated thev {amined today. The ( negie would show that the reasom the bill | company, it was recalied tonight, was not repovied was because the gov- |in financial difficulties that year ernor had withdrawn his advocacy of | subsequently it failed. 3 it. They amnounced that in this con- | Bl st nection they would inquire closely into | nr— WOK: 98 Penurity. the public statement made by the ex- | The account showed not oniy a lon | ecutive on Mazch 10 In announcing series of Dborrowing on securities | that he “had withdrawn the stock brought to the firm Hy » but also | transfer tax bil” at that time the gov- the purchase and sale of ¢ ri- | ernor said: employes of the Yukon Gold company | into submission on Lovett Hill, three from Dawson, 1. T.. and robbed ompany's siuice boxes of ted gravel valued at $20,000. Three Employes of the Worcester Water department were seriously i ured yesterday by an unexpected ex plesion of a stick of dynamite in a elay bank on which they were working in ew Kendall reservoir in Holden ng From the Breakfast Table T the door bell. Frank Ivy, a ngeles real est dealer, was shot and probably fatally wounded yester- day by his first wife in the presence of his second wife and her two babies. When United States Marshal Sidney B. Hawley took Joseph Kiyoukas. old. to union railroad at Hartford for the purpose of | eving him to the state reformatory in Cheshire, the boy made his Francisco Batazzi, 25, Was Killed, A M. McFarland is dying and (wo Ttalian masons are seriously injured as the of the collapse of a staging on the fourth story of the new General Electric Company building at Pitts- Mass An Executive Order just issued pro- es- | e s e Another Witness Barred. to these calls. The account began in “It has aroused considerable opposi June, 1910, when the zovernor depusii- | tion from sagacious business peopls ed 100 shares of “Big Four,” worth at|throughout the state, and I think the then market price $8,200, and ob- | much of this opposition is well founded tained thereon a $6,000 lean he next | and the bill goes too far in placing too day, however, he bought throug the | great a burden of taxation on a single firm 100 shares of the same stock, | industry.™ against which he gave Securily ex-| The following day former Senmator cept the equity in 100 shares. Stilwell declared that Governor Sul- Then Big Four began to tumble in | zer, in announcing that the bill would tite market, and the f the ac-|be withdrawn, without consnlting the as a record of effor by Mr. | introducers, had treated the legislators to keep up the “ma | “like rubber stamps. closed in letters Harris & Attorney Stanchfleld made an unsuc to.him, us at’ torm constul attempt to introduce testimony that the deficit in the account be re- | of John C. Birdseye, secretary of the stored. civil service commissicn, regarding the $16,000 to Meet Margins. installation of Louis A. Sarecky into Sixteen thousand dollars in cash. | the immigration service after his res- whion e et s aon: | ignation as campaign secretary to the Slaim formed a pari of (he governors | overnor. Judge Culien held that the testimony at present was not compe- campaign conrtibutions were used in cording fo the books. Finaliy in July, | More Campaign Contributions. 1913, Tieut. 1. M. Josephthal, a New | Mr. Stanchfield said he expected to York banker and mber of the gov- | prove by Birdseve that the governor ernor's staff, came to the rescue Ly |induced the clvil service commission paying off a debit balance azainst the | to give Sarecky without examination a account of $26,739 and takln {he | position as an examiner of the alien rities. At his time the governor | insane at $4,000 a vear. had put into the account, according to| More unreported campaign transac- the books. $73.439 either in stock or|tions were placed In evidence during cash, and his net excluding the | the day. Cornelius S. Pinkey, a Netw amount paid in by Josephthal, was| York lawyer, testified to having con- 88414 | tributed a check for $200: Frank M. The gavernor authorized Josephihal| Patterson, also a New York lawver, to close the aceount in a note to liar- | to $500 in cash, and former Congress his & Fuller, produced in evidence, as | man Harvey C. Garber of Ohio to a follows checlk: for $100. Pinkey sald the gov- Pleaze deliver tn Lisntenant Com-|ernor had told him that ha intended to mander L. M. Josephthal the sacurities | make no account “for these kind of | mow held as callaterai in my loan up- | contributions” and had asked him to on the pavment of the dshit halancetreat the check as a ‘personal matter thereon | Detween nimsei and mycelt” Patter (Signe - M SULZ | son said that he had placed in restric. Bt A& | Ton pon the tisa of his contribition the punishment hy imprison ment of from ix months 1o two vears of ns who return to the canal ne after they have served a sen nee of imprisonment there and have been deported. An Express Box containing $7.000 | consigned by several Minneapalis bhanks to hanks at Thief River Falls, Minn. was robbed of its contents af the Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Ma depot here by three masked bandits vesterday. Daughters of the American Revolu tion vepresenting the thirteen origing tomb of Washington, areund Le thirteen marble columns supporting h tico of the memorial con iner at Washington Antohio Bio Who Was arrested at Springfield, August 5. charged with ating the Manun act, was acquitied esterday by a jury in the United States district court at Boston. It was alleged that Biondo took a woman from Enfield, Conn., moral purposes. to Springfield for im- Former Assistant Paymaster Arthur Middleton, United States navy, who has been reported as declaring that “snobbery” and “caste” are rampant in the United States navy, will be called upon by Secretary Daniels, to give specific instance of the evil which the former pay officer nlleges exists, Judge Cade vesterday passed an order o the effect that (he voling ma chines owned and used by the City of Bristel be epened and reset for use on October 6. The machiney were used at the primarics a few daye ago and under the law cannot be opened again under 20 days withoul a court erder, The Bravery of William J. Ci | pisz, seaman en the batileship Kansas, in rescuing a drowning shipmate, and the | promptness of Gustav Amiing, master | At arms on the receiving ship ¢ York. in saving a mess atten | suicide. have prompted & | Daniels o write each a letter of com- mendation. Garber £aid that he had sent his checle “within ten minutes after I had read Account Entered as a Loan. | | Filller denfed today that to his knowl- | trer the sovernor was nominsted. edge Mrs, Sulzer ever had anvthing to st o Colmith he mocount. A ma Y A ENTOMBED: MINER'S Baen whawn to him when MESSAGE TO FAMILY n New York eit Y g o hiad bee Not to Werry Tee Much delivered to his ined As He s in Fair Cendition. aractarizalion Gentralls, P, Sept, 30—As Axrks proximately $10.000 Tuller admitied | hole hored throngh a wall of coal from that 1t was purely a bookkeeoing | an: adjolning b transaction and that no note had heen | el my family net to werey tos glven by the governor as evidence of | much,” he said, “as I am in fairly the Indebtedness oo condition. Since 1 Eot several bettles of milk and whipped eggs I Stocks Not Available as Collateral. | JJi"0l 0 sironger and more content. . This transaction, descrived as a | {05, 20 BTORERr B0 SOl AR e crose entry.” prevented use of the|pupger and thirst and feel certain that stocks as coilateral -in the firm's t T will be rescued befere anether fall transactiens, the broker explained of top roek and eeal can oceur. “Tlow did you ceme o do 1t2" he was | ' O coly” gaid he was very nerveus askead. beeause of the long confinement and “Prebably.” he replied, “Lecause MY | apgointe quiet, The imprisoned man partner theught it was not wise 10| wag told te keep up courage and get have seenrities going around the street | Jot o ‘oo s sleeps as It probably weuld in William Sulze's naine be twelve hours before a big pile of “Den’t you remember having a lalk coal lying 1in the race of the gangway with Mr, Bulzer about December 20, | conld be removed sufficiently to per- 1813, In ‘Which he tola you, io sub- | mit of his rescue, stance, that ewing to the change in his [ echtm49ftUneht frome GSSHRDOA sitnation by reason of his election he sheuld prefer that the accounts which | he was earrving with yeur firm should | Auto Speeders Come to Grief. Baltimere, Sept, 30. d into an alleged | Lottia Thern, TR atuned (into o 19 years old, was instantly killed and “T dp met.” replicd the witness | Mazie Krousa probably fatally injured and fwo men and a woman wers slightly injured today when an aute- “Phiz cross entry Fuller w4l | mobile, said to have been drivem at Was made by his cashier showed up- | terrific speed, turned turtle on Basterm on its face," Attorney Kresel said, “that | avenue road, Was a Cross Entry. > which

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