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VOL. LV.—NO. 246 NORWICH, CONN., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1913 PRICE TWO CENTS The Bulletin'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 e e— s Population : BUHNEI] T0 DEATH IN FORECASTLE The “Watch Below” on the Volturno Was Entirely Cut 0 by Flames, Reports Captain Inch g SENDS MESSAGE TO OFFICE OF URANIUM LINE Fire Discovered at 6.50 A. M. on Thursday But All Passengers Had Not Been Taken Off Until 8 A. M on Friday—Two Lifeboats Smashed and a Third Capsized—Another Boat Away But Has Not Been Heard From Got and America of the betrothal of the | posed issue of $67,552,000 of six per- | reaching a verdict as to the guilt or [ o ; g s 7,552, z : citizen of France and would make his P FPrincess Flizabeth of Rumania to|cent convertible debenture bonds by | innocence of Governor William Sulzer |y 708, %o ——— e rown Prince George of Greece. The {he New York, New Haven and Hart- | loomed up at his trial today. , k e ® \ ; k. bridge | doWager duchess says the prince and | ford Railroad company. This was suggested when ' counse c. Willimantic w: ;i o i ‘rancis | house were flaming. The deck, bridge | 5% DcLgs mays v - y % J. C. Tracy of Willimantic was| Washington, Oct. 14—The United|given out at the state department, The 1o, was | and all before the funnel were blaz- | PFiicess have'never seen eath other. The @ oommission’s order, = which | for the lmpeachment managers asked | olected a member of the _executive | States government today informed Pro- | documents were read At todass” cape 1 ss 136 | ing fiercely. Pumps and dynamo granted the petition of the company In | that the court recommend fo the as- | committee of the Comnecticut Optical | visional President Victorlano Huerta | inet meeting, and members of ths cone “aster to- | stopped for want of steam. Marconi | SHOT AT AUTO LOAD SESl DRxtics ey oMt slgued sby fopry stably (hefDringing of aimew ariicle | ogcistyivesionday. that it looked with abhorrence and |inet expressed themselves as astonishe 1 fut | operators working with the accunu- OF FELLOW-WORKMEN, | Bembers, Frederick J. MacLeod, f of impeachment in the event that the R amazement upon his assumption of | ed at the audacity of General Huerta. = eI & SR . b e, b o e o E - | chairman; Bverett E. Stone, Clifton | testimony of Duncan W. Peck, super- S v i s v ; o wit e % i - s O (6] Iat v',’,"‘l‘;\ol]x)rli'ég':"bfi&vp o P SRR White and Georgs H. Bishop. = Onef meenden: of public works, and Henr sc;';::d""fi"y e Tt st | = T A ieBlelative DOWeTs| Cabinet Approves Communications. v o aalel ATe | tHE aiminln was A eter Von Angelo Jealous Because He | member, George W. Anderson, dissent- | L. Morgenthau, ambassador to Tur- | commission will become effective on | bouee could mnot regard as constitu- | TDEY Were apprised by President Wil- s S Several boats by this time were Was Not Allowed to Ride. ed. and filed a lengthy minority re- | key, should be found not to be rel- | December 1 Instead of faday. tional the lections planned for Octo- | S0 Of the nature of the two communi- ¢ 7 g e e 3 port, saying: evant to any charge contained in the = : 5 cations sent to General Huerta through i airectness | layine ’l“ i »‘"‘Kng“'l‘h.g"““‘;w“{ PaSo | Creenwich, Conn., Oct. 14—Jealous,| “I' am unable to convince myself | present articles. George Wheeler Hinman, former h"‘-',-‘fso' notes, the one strongly phrased | CBar8e O’'Shaughnessy, and all voiced PR L0 | ot a1 e ey (midnighy) | Pecause he could not ride to and from | that the order voted by sthe majority sputed ' Point Undecided: editor of the Chicago Inter-Ocean Was | o1q" written’ by Serreinne Frsan. i | 8PProval of the vigorous representa- sed by boats. A . (mid ) [his work in an automobile, like other [of the commissioners is not, on at = inaugurated vesterday as the seventh i O EhE t, tions, The cabinet meeting was e 4 v U ¥ 2 9 g about se of Fire Not Stated the weather was overcast and squally. | workmen, Peter Von Angelo tonight | least three grounds, illegal and voidss | Whether this testimony was rel- | MAuEMFRted Jestongay as the, aqlaing ahout the safety of tha dmpris-| ¢, g dodrn -when press despatoi Operations were suspended, it being opened fire with a revolver upon an B 2 - evant to article 1V, which charges the e e oned members of the Mexican congres: d th: patchas: g z too dark for boats to see. The fire | guenth, foe WUIH @ ROvotver UPCR an | Prerequisite to Improved Transporta- | oilirnor with suppression of evidence At least a dozen women wearing | R0 the other drawn in forceful lan e ;"Z“S"fi_“f:_ ;:;_fx"’:"‘x“lwi‘::m b t worked through the women's steerage | workmen, three miles from the town. P tion Conditions. : before the Frawley Investigaling| ,icrettes were unmolested by cus- | SuaBe by President Wilson himself, are | 0o cvonizoq the American communi- * P to the after end of the ship, but We|One shot struck Jjohn Maroney in the | By its approval, the commission | committee, was the subject of debate | A1Srettel v ‘wpon their arrival at |58id to constitute practically the last | CHEASeTRed, e Americ x kept knowledge of this from the pas-|neck and another just missed the | makes it possible for the New Ha- | today in e3 m of the court | 0/ w0 on the steamship Rotter- | efforts of the Washington government | “S680% Washington tonight awaited . sengers, who were quiet throughout|chauffeur. Maroney is in a_hospital | ven road to fund its floating debt | and remainea urdecided ~when ad- | oW to deal with the Huerta authorities by [ , 0B8] Washington tonight awaite | the rest of the night. here in a serious condition. Von A amounting to $40,023,750, to pay $6.- | jorrnment was taken until tomorrow : glpl_%mnti;; mean;, unless 1‘r||.~r.- i al uerts pe ot Bk, e 4"1‘1;.3: 5 [ . gelo was arrested after a long chase. | 000,000 of the funded debt, and to pro- | mcrning. » i cami- | decided change of spirit on the part of 'Sha ess: Dortad - = s ,Vs‘""" vagm_ M o R’f::' ;| e tola _the autnorities that workmen | vide money for new equipment and for | At that time the executive session | The Dutch standard in the exami- | ihe omcials in Mexico City et v ool et - v»y; g el ;nl:eeli 1:;::: Do Dimew renidence refused: o 1ol e CRYEASSmun: 5 L Stntintd Andl i thiatreldls °f ished yesterday by a treasury depart- | Hope of Constitutional Election Aban-| naq heen assured with respect to the : the ‘nikht makine small afts i Case | LS (ar ho ad Heciien (5. mer ras | foct that Saverse. action on the mec | the. question ‘whathes T will preseed | ment order, in accordance with the doned. imprisoned deputics that o, violonte t I the fire burned through the deck be- | $o7 g2t he had 2 tition might have had on the company | to determine the fate of the governor | €W tarifl law. The negotiations through John Lind | would be done them, but that they 1 s he- | fore daylight. The shooting occurred near FEly [ by forcing it “to the hazard. of ne- |now or await the action of the as- When told that her dog “Poodles | 12d Prosress=d to the. point where the [ Would be tried for sedition. off s ng of Oct. | At 5:15 a. m. the first boat arrived. | court, a seminery, some distance | gotiating within the next few weeks bsembly in the matlter of voting ths Bl Dol e o o8 roodles | state department accepted the endorse- Huerta Regime Undeserving. fore e | Weather ‘and sea having moderated, | from 'here. Von Angelo laid in wait | short-time notes for forty or sixty | suggested new article of‘impeachment. | Mould have to ride in a baggage car| ment of Frederico Gambom for the| 1t js the second note of, the Ameri- a = rst | boats were enabled to come alongside | for the automobile truck which was | millions of dollars,” and then said: D. Politi C. . e Sx 3 ' | presidency as meaning the elimination | san’ government, which Is' said to be 1 e B i anger of injecting Politics Into Case | yhandoned her proposed trip to south- vhere i vas Ci s es and were | the ship which enabled passengers to taking the men back to town from The placing of the company's fl- 4 s W% hia aonted: P Californi L of Huerta, and where it \\d'&'\mhdf\!n- only words in length, practically ¢ = iy embark quickly. All the &teamers | their gay's work. He stood in the |nances upon a stable basis is, in our h”‘{‘"“d SH e R e g ly hoped that a fair and free election | hreaking off negotiations with Huerta, rapid g aving around the ship sent boats. | center of the road, brandished his re- | judgment, an esential prerequisite to | the future prosress o et Ralph R e tch ion shot | Would be held on October 26. Now.|which is believed to have prompted Watch B Now we were enabled to load three | volver and opened fire. William Mil- | the improvements in transportation | & Matter of mere speculation. P R orids champien shot | however, President Wilson has made it | Roreign Minister Moheno's deseription boats with passengers at once The|jer the chauffeur, stopped his ma- | conditions which are so urgently de- The.question would at once arise | putter, is fighting ff,", il fe I @l clear that the Washington government | winsemperate.” Administration officials a | passengers left in a very orderly way | chine as soon as possible, and the men | manded by the public, and for which | Whether the necessary majority of the | hospital at San ’f‘f“lifl“Oh“!’a“f,"‘ had with the events of the last few |y o O G members ot = nd- there was no panic, women |gwarmed after Von Angelo, who after [ we are disposed to look hopefully toizote the mew article could [ Grehaldt | fevar, Wilh, | Whioh e iwas fauvd— the Minbrisonment: ot dthe depn= Loy stseetiois o orerats: tn jail, a prom- : | breaking down and crying when help | fring two shots fled through the | towards the new management of the | De obtalned. This question, It was|stricken a few days ago. ties and the establishment of & dicta- | ;e MEECRD, CORSTOSS 1n Jatl, 4 prom ship at 8 a. m. about 400 passengers. | brush. Maroney, who was sitting with | company if it is given a reasonable | Pointed out tonight, would be likely to s & B low wf bone aidl e L S the e w Y ik 2t 5 v 2 e h ok £ Sl a constructive | be affected by that many of President Wilson purchased a new A attoual wlost 1d b ey i erta, k- . 1 ship at 8a. m, aboat 400 passengers. |the chauffeur, was struck in the meck | opportunity to work out a constructive | be affected by the fact N C seeink a constitutional election held by | minictration still mysterfously conceal s I searched the ship myselt and found | near the collar hone. He was rushed | plan for the renabilitation of the rail- | the assembly who voted for the pres- | bicyclo for Robert Crawford, the | Seeink a constitutio mfriatition ntlll mystsciously oot Ino one eise on baard, so decided to|to the Greenwich hospltal in another | road properties.” crt impeachment articles would be [ messenger boy who ran Into the Pres- 2 e e o g > d e 1 . Dbt e o tue Gree 3 b candidates at the coming election and | ident’s automobile and ruined his own | All Foreign Governments Notified. |impossible for the eivilizod world to ¥ ¢ andon. her as the. number, ;thrde automoblle. £ Its Lesson Will be Heeded. ('l‘m )I'A)I uul ty that politics might b= | newly bought machine. The steps taken by the United States | believe that the Huerta group was cap- Aaieh TAs moll alent by nom ot |- Deouwy, Shem Flinesan, captaed lil L otine From: el pecent 18 e nte the amsirbiy’s aotion: & B e were Tommally communicated to all for- | able of establishing and _maintaining remainder of crew embarked on the{Von Angelo in the woods near North | i~ 2 (e Injed b e el i i 5 *governments. No further negotia- | constitutional authority In the south- Kroonland, Cos Col two miles a ¢ from the | Port of the Interstate Commerce com in acute degree. The door would then Fenwick Umpleby, principal of the | eign governments. No 2 - reptbIic: [Thay alsc, fear that Tk SR e shooting. He was nearly exhausted | Mission to the effect that the New |he opened, it was asserted, to unforce- | Bradford Durfee Textile School in | tions are planned through diplomatic e{x repu m‘ ey Hfifl): f dn_ ki Nothing Heard of Missing Boats. from his run. A revolver with three [ England Railroad situation needs able eventualities that might affect | Fall River for the last three years, | channels. and it would not be surpri Huerta o Ldl‘\ are 10 ewer S “Nothing at all has been heard of | chambers loaded and a box of cart- | an opportunity for instructive work | ihe present status of the case. died suddenly at his home following | ing if John Lind, who has been waiting | ing of such diplomatic relations as have shou ome. e two missing boats. Passing ve: idges were f on his person. He |and public support, the public service E a shock of paralysis. at Vera Cruz to observe the manner in erto ted. Sy 5 B8 Ao, |Rata ware asked to Wesp a Tookent €or | 10xe8 were found on hia petson Hed Semmisslon's: Fenoit. continues RoyornglSyss Lave. Twemty Dave Which the Huerta officials carried out | As yet there is no concrete evidenca Thétn DebaThe: the: ohtbeme of Marensyre g The sins and shortcomings of the To Answer. Petitions were filed with the city | their promises, shouid return to the|that the Washinston administration ’ ‘ 1o Steamer | @ wish to express my heartiest | jury. - ; T8 company In the past have brought | Fven sHould it be possible to muster | clerk of Oklahoma City, Okla. Mon. | Grilled States at once. ; intonds to use drastic measures. Tha seas were running | thanks and gratitude to the captains | about their own .retribution. = The | enough votes in the assembly 10 |day asking for the recall of the city | Huerta's decree proclaiming e et i Ml e T B tutno rolling | of ships who stood by; also to the| NEARLY 400 MINERS company has received a stern admoni- | adopt the new article at an early date, | commissioners and for the comis- |as in charge of the depariments of in- | heads of the wrmy o e otath o- | officers and_crews who came to our tion that it cannot proceed in defiance | the-constitution requires that the gov-| sion form of government. - terfor, administration, finance and w ne_any steps - tha Rion. | assistance, for their bravery and en- PERISH IN WALES. | of law and public policy without the | ernor be ziven twenty days notice be- — O el here today and the text alarmist impression. i the simple | durance in their endeavor to come e risk of disaster. We believe that this | fore heing called upon to answer. The | William H. Hill, a member of the _— e an e e Akt | nlongside the ship: also to the pas- | Probably Greatest Mine Disaster in|lesson will be heeded and that further | trial would then re-open on this new | irm of Richardson, Hill & Co., one of g s sunch the life | sengers of the Kroonland for their History of South Wales. St R Dy el (T LA e o Dk i Bos- | THE NEW HAVEN FIRE WILD GALE SWEEP! Miller's boat. | kindness to the rescued p: ngers, —_— = = = 5 ony of 'eck A e] t on, led af is home in ‘ookline E. NEW ENGLAND COAST. Abin | engineers ana crew and myself in| Cardiff, Wales, Oct. 14 Alsaster, fiflgx?"ifiafipre\:;pn?mmf C:fl":lrr\r;m‘ the rvc]orr’ would .3 ve no legal stand- | yesterday after a brief illness. EsoAfEs INSREQUAT e — . o ting us out and doing evervhing for | possibly the greatest in the history of : t osses, already | ing unless repeatec < ¥ i tuati i any Vessels Wrecked and Several = us. Following are the names of the | the South Wales coal fields, ocourred sufidently heavy, sustained by inno- | "Should the court, however, decids| The home of Rev. John F. Nichols, | Startling Situation Disclosed as Result sy Hacolc - Roacae - g Mille mers that came to our assistance: | yesterday through an explosion in the | cent stock N;‘d"‘ a;'d 4 e SHITY tomorrow to inciude the offenses al- |an Episcopal clergyman of Portland, of Investigation. i S5 the cr > tain Inch | Seyadlitz, Minneapoli Devonian, | Universal colliery near here further the transportation facllities 50 |leged in the Peck and Morgenthau | Conn, was burned vesterday with G > 5 Boston.: OotTAGi nerthasst aui & he passensews, and | Czar, Rappahannock, also one other hortly after the day shift of 931|vital to the business prosperlty of the | testimony, in article 1V, the case | practically all of its coptents. The| New Haven, Oct, 14—That New Ha- e o QR rished p | vessel which had no wiréless appa- | men entered the mine a great explosion | State. > would proceed at once, it was believed | loss is estimated at about $25,000. ven presents a startiing situation in | eluding t s o s~ ed as No. ratus The steamer was abandoned in | shattered the works. During the day Anderson’s Dissenting Report. tonleht to its final determination. the matter of inadequate fire escapes | burean, swooped down u‘p:?r;[h;&:;;u‘:'i & - r Langsell, | latitude 48.80 north, longitude 34.57 |&nd the early part of the night about | After expressing doubt as to the| The specific issue placed before tha| Alden N. Reynolds, a merchant of | in the tenement section, is charged in P o g e pevres B away erage pas- | west.” 500 mincre were brought o the surface | jegality of the order, Commissioner | court in all day argument of counscl | Bssex, Conn. ~Whose _automobile | the report of the civic federation o | coast today, ng de and 9 new not | alive, After midnight the rescuing | pngerson says in his gninority report: [ Was whether the ~Peck-Morgenthau | struck and killed Jacob N. Miller in | housing conditions in the city, jus v Fent ihh e o a when he | LA TOURAINE'S CAPTAIN parties began to get the fire undef |’ uyf the order is illegal, dire con- | testin.ony constituted a new charge | Clinton last August, was vesterday [ made public. The D A O e e o 1 . B B e | control- and at 2.80 this morning 20 | fusion, grest injury to the corporation | against the governor sentenced to Jall for three months. | many wooden fire escapes are o 1 e 3 s 2 wide- i = e it. | more men were found.alive at the bot- | anq sh loss to innocapt investors - m: e = gt ” - o5 - 2 for them | Deseribes s“d e on Molturno as Wit | o mof the pit. This gave hope that | il pe the propable resnity Apart from | JURY COMPLETED FOR Charles Floane, committed suicide |~ Out of a total of 77 buildings aid | ished in {he wreck of his large selne : . | e O e O D: | others may be found, but there is still | jt5 jllegality, the order seems to. me TRIAL OF MRS. EATON. | 2t Limestone, Me., yesterday by shoot- | the report in which fire escapes were | boat on Scorto g " b t d, anc t s = . | & probability tha tnearly 400 men per- | jnconsistent with the public interest : *| ing himself through the heart with a | provided, 22 were found to be seriousl The barge Sumner M. Mead, one of 2 e trace of Havre, France, Oct. 14.—The steam- | jsneq. TIncluding the bodies recovered | j 5 ita o reachite - cali i % | Geficient. “The prevailing ‘acrobatic | the tow of the tug Paoll from New w i T e of the Fre o in matters of vital and far-reaching | A, f the Twel M. R. i 38-calibre revolver. Domestic trou eficient. ‘ v 3 3 b siip ks Touisine of the, French and those killed at the pit head. the | citance ges of the Twelve Men Range from | s are sald to be the cause of the | fire escape,” the report continues, | York for Boston, plled up on the tip ¥ d + | second of the rescue ships which | known death roll numbers 16. Doctor “The deplorable condition of this = : act. o A ich onsists of a ladder running |of Cape Cod and her three men were et o oy Giseater ox with oxygen and medicaments de- | rajiroad at the present time is due to e e vertically from the top of the, building | taken off through boiling seas by the port, arrived at Havre this morning. scended the shaft at an early hour thi persistent violatlons of the wholesome Plymouth, pss., Oct. 14, — The| giy persons were injured, two of | with bars by which persons’ in c skillful seamanship and the bravery et amne had 42 survivers of the | morning A crowd of 40,000 distracted | proUiSions of our Massachusetts laws, | LWelve jurors before whom Mrs. Jen- | X Bersons were injured, two of | WitH BETS MYy woing hand over hand |of those on Paeil The Oakland, an- axe | disaster on board | persons surrounded - the " pithead all | TRe " enormous losses already suffered | Mie May Eaton will be tried on_the | (e diite badiy Tuesday whena heavy | 96 Bre, Ta¥ % £9.7e so preposterous- | other of the Pacil's string, was in a 1 n f followed after the a 4l of | night and another 5,000 waited for | ' Vestors would mever have oceur- | Charse of murdering her husband, Rear Lewis block at Meriden in course of | ly inadequate as to be a real menace | precarfous position near Highland 1 iraine In the vicinity of the Vol- | news at the Cardiff station. red had the law of Massachusetts been | Admiral Joseph Giles Baton, at Assi- | (RO PO G GrlCl! oo J900NE T in case of fire where older persons, or | Light tonight with her crew signalling At 6 m. ¢ er is related in a detailed report | fsingistatin - observed.” e igpt last. March by giving hi mpdison, | 200 S persons with children or luzgage in | for help. & 2 ngitud west by Captain Caussin to the Incendiarism at Myrtle Beach. were chosen today In the superior [ Wind. their arms might attempt to use them. Six men were taken off the British 3 : Traupauantic ‘company. He | Mutera, Coni, Obt: 14=—The Gottage Fhe Legal Objections. | court. BT RS Cemes n one case in a building of three | schooner Georgio Pearl, Elizabethpart 1 A j 1ot a Mr Bio S Brideeror The opinion then deals with the | The \dant showed the liveliest =4 Herbeyt it Suwyer,. inventor 00 o s ot only are there no fire es- | for Liverpool, N. S.by the surt side - i " | ' Cries of Terr [of a Mr. Pickett of, Bridgeport, at o A1 obiaotiones to, the daste erest in the procecdings as . she | Spindle which played an important | Stories not o < S e Aivers o 1 R e 2 B i ncessant Cries of Terror. | Myrtle Beach, was destroyed by fire | Purely legal objections to the . issuq in the pr eding: as she art in the development of the cutton | CApes but no means of ingress or exit | life savers on Nantucket. e 3 hatches g fire tc | “Lientenant Izenic - | tonight, making the third cottage | Which Mr. Anderson states to b | wazched the rapid examination of more | PATt in il o i, Goivon | Cxeept by @ bridge leading into an- | vessel was in a bad position and was r w Hik abrival Gt the Z| humed’ there in the last three months, | “1 The company has not sufficient | than 100 falesmen. Just before the | Manufacturing industry in this co other tenement on the same lot. In |fexpected to £o to pleces befors morn- p ot B rno trat vessel presented a frightful | The origin of the fire is mot kmown, | #mount of outstanding capital stoak, | hour of adjournment Fugene L. Dun- | try, died at his home at Boston Mon- | other terement off [U¢ SONE ) Uiqing e ; ¥ acle, ' She was bla. rom her | but there are suspicious elrcurastances | 10gally pald in ‘under Mas sachusciis | ham, ‘a shoe worker, ‘of Middieboro, | S Shioh 1s looated on a corner, the fire | On the extreme northeast of the ‘ ) ) Iships and plunging wildly | indicating incendiari The cottage | 1aw, to authorize the proposed ijssue. ! was chosen as juror No. 12 | " B f 3 o | escapes which are econstructed of iren, | New Ensland const another daring 1 saining 'S | driven by the flames and smoke to the | fure was saved pawer to authorize the lssue of deben- | Tames A. Thomas a millwright, of | ) aad the hotse and store of ii| jteresting condition. The platforms | small boat from a Canadian stea the foremas eme after part, where they still e tures convertible into stock In the | Middieboro, aged 64, as foreman, ‘and | Hall aad the house and store of H.|IMetSiRg MU0l by ‘poses and the | braved the brekers near Grahd e w ed incessantly eries of terror. The | Foss Dedides to Run. 1 future | $he court adjourned until half past § | G BN 2" demaging nearby’ prop. | Wood of which they are composed ow- | Manan, N. B, where the British fish- « to the passengers to jump into the sea | Fose. three: times elocted as a- deme- | Dolders of outsta debentures in g 5 a8 follows b ecome so_decayed as to make | ing to pleces. . Launching the Lifeboats When they would be taken on hoard, | [OSS three’ times elected as a demo- [ o{lotion of the statutes of this com- | J. Bilsworth Dunham, shoe worker, | R bgcome B T heunt Grhihe aorth ” e 4 s - crat, flled ‘nomination papers as an vealth. | Abington. | Charles Peter Clark, son of former e e the conges- t fel he long - ot N exy . None, however, would jump until the | injependent candidate for re-election | MODWealth. L hat th Henry C. Chandler, labor Dux- | president Charles P, Clark of the New | The report says that 3 SRNterAwas | T6lE on thel MRS Sty & 3 nz oo os- | Touriine's whaleboat was thrown hy | inpe rora 4 It is impossible to find that the | Hen andler, laborer, Dux- | B k. New Faven & Hartford rallroad | ion in the tenement district 1s found | Cape Cod, A large coustwise floet of e hiy ’ . nd | a zizantic wave against the Volturno's 3 floating debt sought to be funded was | bury. =~ worieht. Mid. | waut New Haven € qlartford rallroad [t be extreme and figures out that | schoomers, tugs and barges, relewsed Blsering: guar belk ), de. Instantly a number jumped ¢ properly incurred for lawful pur ames A. Thomas, millwright, Mid- | W gaged by _ Massachus were 234 persons for every 100 | yesterday from a two-weeks' fog do0 g zet A down ropes into the hoat. Two poses’ without absolutely disregarding | dleboro. 2 { Public Service Commission” yesterday embargo, was rounding the caph u”n.\.h“ ofious 1 i 0.4 8 B o ths Dot ey ‘ru»\\,\v‘»m the water “‘nfl]‘w»vh ropes. | the material facts.” = | Seneca T. Weston. farmer, Middle- | as its railroad expert e S e thom wotked b0 WinE awbtoES el e e e BE T aian hen no more ople were on | Mr Anderson also attacked the con- | boro. | arndon 2§ Yo sy nd deck : ing? ng imp ihe tonied " me man Tanded an 5 | Poard the Volturno, our hoats were | tract’ for underwriting tha lssue | Chavies S Tinkham, shoe worker, | Mary Palsch, 20 years old, dis- | BANBURY STABLE KEEPER A8 with the o ¢ xails and d : : 1 b or in the whaleboat and injured | t2ken in The dissenting opinion closed with | Middlesoro | appeared Saturday from her homa at HAS TWO FIRES IN A DAY.|MHBEH. o Tenrietta A, Whitney -8 him If there had been less panic at the | rwo suggestions: | " Georee © swit, farmer, Plymouth. | Bridgeport. and hor mother assorts T e e SHO S uns TR Y I e Einning nyl‘v:u»\fivn‘ many more could Anderson's Suggestions. whlfed H: "Henshaw, ' conductor | mavried min, has lceol :‘wfl\‘:v'd er | Loss of $7000 in Livery Stable and | W4T PURNL (IR, (0T eape an Tuek- 3 a sar atithe Volturno With five | 1 ots lagnchad . from. ihe. Volitao | . Hitat—That Sppliogtion shofita ne | RBURI, S0 € SRl e L Ol oBE i Comi: witl delib s ats 3 Soveral Small Buildings. | ernuck Shoaly She sighted the rev- o . esened passengers, or hix hoat would | U & ext legAglature fo vali- | . 5 == anue cnttar Cresham strasgiing to ‘ ;s ! & were broken up by the seas, and it is | made to the next | x a Brockto | . . and wardess i © beent overloaded and sunk, as It | SO, 2N 0oy ROy 08 BIRs 800 furs | datn ' the outstapdingcapital stock | *morets wr Hoimes peddler. Carver.| Former personal tax collactor Jng.| Danbury, Conn., Oct. 14— Iire of un- | save a two master fram the chatel or H Mil . able to_lake only a féw | ing_the night. “Tf the crew and pas- \and premium account, thereby furnish- | john G Milner, farmer, Marshfield. | eph Gainty of the town of Branford, | ¢ertain origin late this afternoon des: | of Cross Rip Shoa h psiz W Passengers Would Not Jump. | sengers had kept calm everybody |ng a clear legal sl for e ssnancs | Tiarry W. Ball, shoe worker, Whit- | was yesterddy sentenced by Judge s e smstle SUlIAIIES St St Lol be w ather Awhalehoat, commanded | might have been saved. | of debentures needed for steel cars| .. | L. ¥. Burpee of the superfor court to | PY/John T. Dann. liverman, and ow - | s by Second CAptain Rousselet of the | ‘The doctor, the parser and several|and other necessary additions to the | ™o . 1 Dunham, shoe worker, | bae yero het o e SupStor court to| {2 %o a gale that was hlowing | FIRE AT EAST NORWALK e ot Touraine, whe near the stern of the of the Volturno were among | railroad equipment | Midateboro. 356 of the funds of the town on May | threatened to spread to the business | CAUSES $75,000 LOSS, er * arno. and its crew were calling to'| the last to get into the boats, and | “Second—The present floating debt | mrs Eaton watched the talesmen )% 1018.% @ 74 | sectlon, - The firemen, by hard work, | & - six boat was W e passengers to jump, but none | Captain Inch was the very last to leave { should be paid fromMhe proceeds of | closely and s consulted by her | however, succeeded in cenfining the | Six Dwellings, Three Stores and Oth« 3 away safely filled with | would do so. No other boat was seen passengers in that time near the burning ship. »Micer Langsell “Ticutenant Izenic waited to put off | boat on being e again from the Touraine, but 1 sent der the stern he nd mate with a frosh crew. & completely wre sclet returned later with three Arviva)soF Cariinia rescued persons. All three who were e 2 i g two | Prousht in both boats were in a state teanwhi chiet en 'WO | of great exhaustion. peamen seif fought i re Rousselet was allaaved to make an- B spperently slidhes ames. T oiper trip in his whaleboat with a gave orders to send mo more boats!fic cilw and b now lowered a life- cefved word from boat, thinking It might bring back a Cabled Paragraphs Crew of Volturno “Cowardly.” London, Oct. 14—"The crew of the Volturno,” most of whom were Dutch. behaved in a cowardly manner and were brutal to the passengers,” is the verdict of mpst of the 30 survivors of the Volturno who arrived at Gravesend on board the Minneapolis this evening. May Insist on Wireless. London, Oct. 14.—The executive council of the National Sailors’ and Firemen's union, at an emergency meeting today, decided to take a ballot of the members of the union on the question whether they were prepared to refuse, after May 1, 1914, to ship on board gny ocean-going craft not equipped with wireless telegraphy. Royal Betrothal Denied. Coburg, Germany, Ocf 14—The ¢ Dowager Duchess Marie of Saxe- Coburg Gotha today authorized a de- nial of the reports published in Europe | his ship.” ) CONSUL FULLER’S STORY First Boat, Dashed to Pieces, Con- tained Women and Children, | Oct. 14—Stuart J. Fuller, Durban, who er on the Minneapolis, inguistic equipment suffi- enable him to talk in thelr ondon Unlted States consul at wae a passen possessed 2 | etent to Issue of Bonds Meets Approval PETITION OF NEW HAVEN ROAD 18 GRANTED Further Delay in Sulzer Case - ‘NEW ARTICLE OF IMPEACHMENT SUGGESTED A DISSENTING REPCRT| MANAGERS DESIRE IT Want To Make Relevant That Testi- mony Whose Status Is Doubtful— Would Require Action By Assembly. One Member of Massachusetts Public 1t Illegal and Void and States Reasons. Service Commission Considers . Boston, Albany, N. Y, Oct. 14.—The poss Oct. 14—The public_service i bility of 'an indefinitely long delay in commissfon \today approved the pro- Condensed Telegrams now fell at Portland, Me, yester- day. William Riley, 18 years old, is dead from injuries received in a football same at Wilmington, Del. H. W. Allison, twice mayor of Allentown, Pa., and a noted iron man- ufacturer, is dead, aged 67 years. Snow fell in Boston for the first time this season, yesterday. Rain, hail and wind were also in evidence. It is reported by a lawyer in St. Louis that the estate of Adolphus Busch, the brewer, is more than $75,. 000,000. A corner-stone brought from. Ire- land was laid for the new Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart at Yon- kers, N. Y. Word has been re that “Jack” Johnson has become a ved at Chicago VIGOROUS MESSAGE SENTTO HUERTA Informed That United States Looks With Amazemeht and Abhorrence Upon His Course HAS ASSUMED LEGISLATIVE POWERS IN MEXICO Communications From President Wilson and Secretary Bryan Delivered by Charge O’Shaughnessy—Foreign Govern- ments Notified of Action Taken—Last Diplomatic Effort of Administration—Deputies to be Tried for Sedition securities which should be sold from counsel on every point before they an- time to time. { nounced any decision. When the jury Sy o was finally made up she sat back in BRAKEMAN O'BRIEN her ef and nodded her approval IS UNDER ARREST. | The speed with which the jury w Charged With Responsibility for the | state and the defense. The twelve Wreck at Canaan. men, whose ages range from 28 to 70 SN will be allowed to communicate with Oet. members of their families by mall or Uanbury, Conr 14.—Patrick O’'Brien, a New Haven road brakeman, who figured in the wreck at Canaan on | by telephone. provided only personal matters are touched upon. she was~hoping to be | bont think own language with gome of those res- o BT Deits wers | 28 T lond. 4 mate returned with | Cued from the Volturno by the crew 1 Dt on each PAsenEer. | saven ‘persons he had picked up ‘and | Of he Minncapolis. > ecame calmer. Food Roussclet brought back seven others, | 075 Srviver told Congul Fuller that to them. ' ? | the first boat lowered from the Vol- S . ~ bunker was found to | Ficked Up Women and Children from | turno which was dashed to pleces be ablaze being impossible to stop Sea, against the steamers side and all its ¥he fire in the bumker on account of | “Rousselet reported (hat he had | 0ccupunts drowned, was loaded main- gases. watertight doors were | found ropes, pulley tackie and fmpro- | 1y with women and ehildren whioh e e o down | (he | vised 1aAdaii RIong’ tha after wate of | Indlcatad that the men han acquisadet Bimber tch onto the « Volturne, dangling from the sides, | it glving them precedence, The fact @he fire wos guining all the 11 r cosel liad u strong st to star- | thal all those rescued by the Minme- I r 2 et board, her nose was low in the waves, | tpolls were men afforded further evi- pnd lowered i bul could not [und the waler was breaking over her. | dence that this was true, They were feach th P f Phe_flames lighted hp the scens as | nearly the last load taken off, Many $es Asked Carmania fo look for (Le | Roufkelet's wheleboat ran in close and | had seen their wives and children de- mber two boat, The steamer Seyd | lall of humah beings fell upon it [ Part in the sarlier hoat !. rived A dowered boats which | &nd its cresw, Feurteen people were | Several of the survivers agreed 1a not T i=. About @ p. m. the | picked up, of whom seven were trans- | When talking to Mr, Fuller (hat the armanin recurned and tried 1 | ferred o (he other whaleboat, as Rous- | fire originated in an explosion of we ship with life . bt all drifted | Selet’s craft was in danger of belng | reuse in a galley as a result of which e Bow, tabs aw | ewamped from overlonding, several cooks and their assistants > A | By this time it was 6 o'cleck on | were killed, Later a number of the i, | ¥riday morning and mumersus beats | erow and geveral passengers lost their “Geveral sicamers had arrive |from (ne giher ships alongside had |lives fighting the flames, gusk, The Kroonland put awiy Deen Iowergd snd were areund the| Nene of the survivers en the Minne- eh made four attempts o | Votiurie, Lother one of our hoats | apolis saved anything with the ex- Sicnesid . swepl awin ! 1o wolN and twe children from | caption of a cheerful and elerical Polo, ime. liis sei, whicly had becoma calmer, | whe breught off a huge hible and & “At 9,30 p. m. the saloon and chart | The women amil children wers let | green bag filled with hocks. une 23, was arrested tonight on a | e ien:h warrant issued by Judgge Curtis Steamship Arrivals. of_the superior court. | Hamburg, Oct. 11—Arrived, steamer The bench warrant is the outcome of | Kalserin Auguste Victeria, New York. the finding of the Litchfield county | Liverpool, Oct. 13—Arrived, steamer coroner, who held O'Brien responsible | Carmania, New Yor! for the mmash, In this ‘Wreck Mrs, | Naples, Oct. 9—Arrived, —steamer Frank Olin of Falls Village recelved | Taomins, New York injuries which later eaused death, A | Havre, Oct 14-Arrlved, stesmers number of other hersons were injured. | Scotian, Monireal: La Toiraine, New Barge Springs a Leak, | | Gibraltar, Oct. 14— Arrived, steam Vineyard Haven, Oct, 14—The | Pannon ew Y for = Naples, arge Sumner R, Mead. which lerc | Trieste, et barge Oakland in tow of the (ug|evs Kaiser Wilhelm II, Bremen; Car Paoll, sprang aleak off Welldeet last | 90i%, Liverpool night and after her crew had been T taf;en off by .the tug was threwn Scurrilous Postals Mailed. ashore early today on the outside (Speelal to The Bulletin.) beach of Cape Ced, where she lies a| Washington, Oct, 14—Complaints total wreck, have been reccived at the pestoffice - ‘| department from the Hastern section F. B. Ellis of Cripple Creel, Colo, | of Conneeticut that scurrilous postal arrived in Juarez yesterday from | éards were being received through the Terreon, He said his brother, Joseph, | mails. Yesterday samples of the cards was killed by Mexieans lasi Tuesday | complained of were filed and an in- while a party of Americans were | vestigation will be made by the in- ing Terrcen fr the harder, B, | speciien. division, to learn 4f possible was ghot in the arm who mailed them, Blue's declaration that more leprosy exists in the United States than is generally known. Childs Frick, son of Henry C. Frick, of Pittsburgh, and New York, and Miss Frances Shoemaker Dixon, daughter of the late Isaac H. Dixon, of Baltimore, were mavried at Old St Paul's Protestant Episcopal church af Baltimere, yesterday Mrs. Rebecca Strauss, & widow, and Miss lda Yearly, both of Baltimore and patients af Bdgemer= sanitarium al Govans, a Baltimere suburb, were burned to death in a fire of uRknown origin which destroyed the interier of the building yesterday James Thorpe, the Sac and Pox indian from Oklahoma, world’s great- est athlete and a member of the New York National League baseball team, was married at Carlisle, Pa., yester day in St. Patrick’s church to Mar- garet Jva Mueller, 4 native of Doma and a former student at the Carlisle Indian School, which Thorpe altended y, Okla- | stables blaze to the lvery The loss High school fraternities In Tilinois 3.000. Nearly er Buildings Burned. | were glven a ddhith blow by a decision | 15 estimated at S50 early afl o . in the appellate court vesterday up- | (90968 WOre O, OF (08 B0 SR ® one | Squth Norwalk, Cann, Oct, H—Stix holding the right of school beards 10| veyities were also saved dwellings, threo stoves, a eaal yard, expel all puplls refusing to obey rules | VOIS Wore M50 Sovele Sl e buldings and a number prohibiting them from joining fra- | oo oni8nt &6 8€¥00 BEPREL — Bd did | of sai nd motor craft were des- e | about $2,000 damage before it was cx- | royed by fire in Eas: Norwalk this — tinguished. The loss Is partly coverc | afternoon. The total lass is estimated A newly discovered case of leprosy | fnEiished. 1 g {at $75,000. The fire out from ot Low Angelex, Cala, reported lo' the & d lan " undetermined cause in the public healt ¢ yesterday is | chandlery shop of Captain Joseph . taken to confirm Surgeon General GRERURIYE | Fowler on Bast avenue and spread rapidly to the other buildings grouped Mrs. Harriet T. Ford. nearhy along that avenue and Wash- Milford, Conn., Oct, 14—Mrs. Harriet | ington street. It was necessary to Timbals Ford, one of the oldest resi- | call on the fire departments of Nor- dents of the town and a lineal descen- | walk and South Norwalk to aid the dant of the Fords who heln.d settle | Bast Norwalk force before the flames Milford in 1639, died at her home to- | conld be brought under central. night, aged 89, A son, General Georze | No one was hurt so far as Known. Hare Ford, of New Haven. survives. | Phe bulldings burned ineluded: - . - Dwellings, Mrs. Abraham Schowell, Mellen’s Trial in February. Frederick Green, Frederick Anderson, Bridgeport, Conn., Oct. 14 1i was | Mrs. Joseph Hubbard, Bennett A, stated tonight by ~Statés Altorney | Jackson and another the owner of Stiles Judson that the triul of former | which has not been learned. President Charles Mellen of tho New Chaddiery shop of Joseph Haven road and Vice President Mc- [E. Fowler, where the fire started: Henry in connection with the West- | stationers’ store, 4. ‘H, Hafner; port wreck would go on (rial at the | gFocery stare, Bemneit A. Jackson. TFebruary term of the superior court | Other bulldings: Coal yard, B, Har- before Judge Tuttie. ald Coxj several small structuves o R nearby, \© A $5,000 Biaze at Derby. Derby, Conn, Oct. 14.—Fire. water g 2 4 and smoke did about 35,600 damage to- | Night Sessions For Currency Bill, | might to the dry goods store of John | Washington, Oct. 14—H uegessary { §. Brewstor in Main str ind the | the senaie bauking and curreRcy eam- adieining clothing siore of Allis & Co. | miifes will haid nigit sessians ta bear | The ire staried in a paper vaull in (he | all witnesses Usted to dlscuss admin- hasement of the Brewsler store, [rom isization owrrenby bill By L wnknown cause €iose Lhe- heavinga Octehss A\ { i {