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DCTOBER 20, 1913 PRICE_TWO CENTS. VOL. LV.—NO. 250 NORWICH, CONN., MONDAY, ‘The Bulleun’s Circulation in Norwich is Double e Any Other Paper, and lts Total Circulation is the Largést in Connecticut in Proportion to the Jity’s Population : HINTS AT ANOTHER HUNGER STRIKE Former Ambassador Wilson Says That Will be Ef- fect in Latin-America of Present Policy HIS RASPY LETTER TO BRYAN IS MADE PUBLIC Her Stomach in Weakened Condition as Result of Six Such Strikes—Application For Release Pending Decision on Her Appeal is Denied by Commissioner of Immigration — President Calls a Conference Today on Case. | . 19—*1f 1 am de- been more scientifically studied here s I? me back | than in England. During the afternoon - aking me Dack will | Jjan 15 TG eranted the reporters CEE T o iy Saaee an_audience. S The words, carrying a veiled threat | “If the immigrant authorities at + hunger strike, were uttered to- | Washington decide your case against » Higad jetention sta- | You, will you enter upon a hunger e e strike?” she was asked. by Mrs. Emmelins | . cannot talk about that now,” re- lish militant suf- | plied Mrs. Pankhurst. 'As yet I am > v ere yesterday | unwilling to make public my plans or aE hoe, and was | to say, definitely, what action I will ihdesirable | take. Geportation | “If you are taken back and impris- Commission- | oned, will you go upon another hunger strike? Certainly,” was the emphatic reply. “As far as any action which the au thorities at Washington may take is -oncerned, I will only say that if such iction upholds the declsion of the spe- cial board of inguiry which ordered my deportation, I will go to any ex- treme to secure my entrance to the United Stat It is _my purpose to remain here only until December, when will sail away By ‘any exireme’ strike?” was asked I have said that 1 cannot that now.” sald Mrs. Pankhurst That there will be no forcible feed- ing of Mrs, Pankhurst on Eliis Island was made plain by Houlder Hudgins, do vou imply a talk who has the contract for feeding the e tour or W ~ must go back | immigrants at the station. he came here.| “The duty of my department will oy . spatches from | end.” said Mr. Hudgin Washi : i he fre- | er moes to the room occupied b word liy | Pankhurst and asked for her Jissioper Cam- | If Mrs. Pankhurst will not eat, it will > to admit her | Dot be because she will not have the + prepared again | OPPOrtunity to order and receive food.” ation ion hat her case | vor by tomor- A, ble to speak | Commissioner Caminetti Declines to iowed ia lama | Grant Request of Mrs. Pankhurst. \gagement to IS NOT RELEASED. Oct. 19.—TImmigration Washington, - decision | Commissioner Caminetti today declined besin a hunger |10 release Mrs. Bmmeline Pankhurst. ™ i o ihe prespects seemed fa. | British militant suffragist, on bond - T P Gecision of her |from the Eilis Island immigration sta- Thetite, in fact, was good | Hon. New York, pending final adjudi- T8 Reeniy to relish each | cation of her appeal from the order e ole semt 1o her Toom. | Of deportation issued vesterday by a 2 E o o “ihe ate | SPecial board of inquiry. Her cam Rl ast and cofies Wor|Will be taken up formally tomorrow A s Taerved with two |Morning at 9 o'clock by Commission- er Caminetti and it is_expected that od ops, French fried pota- ina steamg | & dofinite decision on her release or A, A o5 repast | deportation may be reached during the & < < given up tea f d 5 : e Ege b Thar cptfe 15 the | Positive Action Today. more strenzt Commissioner Caminetti said today ) o ST that his desire was “not to be rushed |into a decision of a case nationally » burst rose at 8 o'clock this | and internationally important; but = be feit refresh- | that he had done and would continue - of a good nights|to do all in his power to_ facllitate - Donnin kimono | its determination. Unprecedented ef- oo e r0of of | forts to finally, dispose of the case were < for a | made by the immigration officials and aking be | they _succeeded practically in ‘clear- r a r | ing the decks” for positive action to- , s hung | morrow morning. ay a atue of Liberty | Counsel for Mrs. Pankhurst were ac? > - fiice buildings in | corded a_formal hearing of several he be- | hours today by Commissioner Cam- . he morning | inetti and Dr. A. W. Parker, chief of attir ily in & | the law division of the bureau of im- - a e arrival of suf- [ migration. The commissioner, m ac- . had obtained spe- | counting for a hearing held on Sun- to the station |day, said that his omly reason was from Con Immigration | o facilitate as much as possible this proceeding and that he would not vio- % Mre. Biatch, Mre John | late the spirit of the day. Alice Perkins nancial Argument Advanced, | Pankhurst’s | ader was reclin- | The question of whether Mrs. Pank- ropped up with | hurst should besadmitted or deported he _visitors was a subject of absorbing interest X am a pris- | to many in government circ 1t be- | Won't Survive Seventh Hunger Strike. | ""17." Jtforneys for Mrs : | directed. thelr efforts | toward obtaining her n 4 ot Pankhurst today chiefly temporary re- . e s tted st submit to a weakened B Won't Be Rushed Into Decision. o g Hor and 1 have heen on | Commissioner Caminetti promptly : wae dnring 1he trip over The | ot be rushed into a decision because \ibration of the ship affected me be. | Of the money involved in Mrs. Pank canse. 1 suppose. my stomach was in | NUrst's engagements. Thai, he said, a weakened condition was entirely aside from the real is 1 do mot fu nderstand my de. | Sue in the proceeding, i. e. whether tention. This moral furpiinde clauee | the British militant was entitled un- e A Al to wnderstans 7 | der the law to enter the United States, he “meaming | He refused, for this reason, to hear e ta e | Frank S, O'Neil as counsel for the management of Madison Squere Gar- den, ‘New York, where Mrs. Pankhurst is advertised to speak tomorrow night Mr. O'Nell then entered an apg 2 representative of hurst. * she safd sefore the hearing began the em and re- | commissioner received this spectal de- here are peo- | livery mail the officlal record of the Die in America who are looking at my | proceedings before the board of spe. case from the standpoint of a sym- |clal inguiry at New York. He and Ppathizer.” | Parker studied the record carefully be- One of the telegrams embraced a | fore the arrival of Herbert R. Reeves, esolution passed by a woman's organ- | engaged by Mrs, O. H. P. Belmont of “hicago and was signed by | New York, to represent Mrs. Pank- Hull house, and oth. | hurst, and F. S. O'Nefl. tion protested against Will Respect Our Hospitality, opolation of our AW a™d| i, O'Nell yrged that as Mrs, Pank- ! hursf was “in custody and deprived and asked that the decision | e e e 2o leton | o fer Tiherty,” the case ought, on its cons and “this distingniched | Very nature, to be expedited as much = ax possible, _— - wo- | _“Mrs. Panihurat” he satd, “visited R orpaa s | the United Brates prior to this time, | She came, too, after she had besn ar- roated In her own country, but never- | ilciess, she was permiftad to land the suf secaire ragette's . ing the disgrece | Snt has not come here now to preach e g daet bring o the { the dpetrine of mnarchy or to inflame | the popuisce of our country., She has Godo Il Extranis, & message and o mission, If she bo | given the freedom of our shores she leltors had lef will respect our hospliality,” ask justice for Mrs, Pankhurst, who nspection “In mmy judgment, Mrs. Pankhurst | comes not to essay the hopeless task Wos snown | has committed no crime Invelving any | of Inefting American women to mil- where the | element of ‘moral turpltude, “said |itaney, but te seek sympathy and heir meals, Several | Mr, Reeves, “She has not and could | finaneial suppert for her eauss. Let enderly patted 1ite Im- | not praperly he held to-he responsible | It not bs written In the pages of his- dren om (he hesd Afier for (he aciions of nthers based upon | tory that Amaricn has cloged Its doors the inspeciion she declared ihai (he | awnieconstruetisn of her addresses, Sha | to ona who 18 Struggling for the caue guestion of caring for immigranis had | had no intent to do a wrong. In fact, | of ifberty’ '} = ar > lease from custody at Ellis Island, pend- he steamer Provence | ing consideration of the case, in or- v York next Thurs- | der that she might fulfil lectire con- of srder issued | fracts. They contended that not only | n authorities .in | Mrs, Pankhurst’s personal rights were mer will-carry me | being invaded by her detention longe t 1 cannot last | than was absolutely necessary, but kes—not | that important substantial proper »urs—if | rights of the alien and of citizens of his country were being placed in jeop trikes | ardy Cabled Paragraphs Last Zulu King De: Cape Town, Oct. 19.—Dinizulu, the last of the warrior kings of the former Zulu nation of South Africa, died yes- terday. New Lord Chief Justice. London, Oct. 19.—The appointment of Sir Rufus Isaacs, the attorney gen- eral, as lord chief justice, was officially announced today. = He succeeds Baron Alverstone, who recently resigned. Chili Won't Go to the Fair. Santiago, Oct, 19.—The Chilian gov- ernment definitely decided vesterday not to take part officially in the Pan- ama-Pacific exposition at San Francis- €0 owing to the financial situation of the republic, Party for 500 Chii@ren. London, Oct. 19.—M.. and Mrs. Brad- ley Martin's annual children’s party at Balmaccan was quieter than usual this year, owing fo mourning. Five hun- dred children from the four schools at Balmaccan were entertained with game: Luncheon to Robert Bacon. Buenos Ayres, Oct. 19.—A luncheon was given vesterday in honor of Rob- ert Bacon, former American ambassa- dor in Paris, by Dr. Victorino de la Plaza, acting president of Argentina, and John W. Garrett, the American minister. Mr. Bacon intends to,leave today for Montevideo. Ambaseador Has Conference. Rome, Oc.t 19.—The new Americ ambassador to Italy, Thomas Page, was received in audience v day by Giovanni Gioiitti, the premier, and the two statesmen had a most cordial interview, during which they discussed the points of interest common to both countries. CHURCH DIGNITARIES AT CATHOLIC CONGRESS. Cardinal and Six Archbishops Attend Boston Meeting. Italian Boston, Oct. 19.—Preiates, priests and other disnitaries from nearly every Cath diocese on the conlinent at- tended the solemn pontifical mass this morning, which opened the second mis- sionary congress of the Catholic ension society of America. The cong: be in session for the next three which_all phases of the wo country will | be discussed. The foreign mission field will also be cor Cardinal O'Connell welcomed the iting archbishops, bishops, monsignori, priests and lay delezales in an elo- quent sermon at the mass, at which Arcibishop John Bonzano of Wash- ington, the papal delegates to the Unit- ed States, pontificated. It was one of the most brilliant ecclesiastical func- tions ever held in an American city will Six archbishops and nearly three- score mitred abbots and bishops from all parts of the United States and Can- ada participated, and there were a score or more of monsicnori. fore than 200 priests of the Boston cese and visiting clergy took part in the procession the | mass, In his sermon Cardinal O'Connell re- viewed briefly the work of the Exten- sion society in spreading the doctrines of Catholicism through remote parts of which preceded the country. During the conerese there will be two ons daily, at which clersy and | laymen will speak on foreign and home missions, Immigration and colonial work and suggest solutions of many missionary problems. Brief lectures will be given in the interval between the regular sessions. On Tuesday there vill be a meeting of the Women’s Aux- | iliary Over two thousand members of the| organization registered today. A cable- gram from Cardinal Merry dei Val con- veving the papal blessing to the con- ‘was received by Cardinal 0’Con. | nen. fer mission was to do o and to uplift womankind. PRESIDENT WILSON ACTS, the right | | Calls Conference Today to Consider | peated the Holy Name rally ple Sulzer to Run For Assembly LIKELY TO ACCEPT THE BULL MOOSE OFFER. IS PREPARING TO MOVE Busy Yesterday in Packing Up Belong- ings at Albany—Belief That He May Go Upon the Lecture Platform. Albany, N. Y, Oct. 19.—Indications tonight are that Wiiliam Sulzer will make the race for assemblyman from the Sixth district, New York city. Friends ‘said at midnight that unless he changed his mind before tomorrow he would dccept the progressive nomi- nation which has been tentatively of- fered to him. To Have Conference in New York. Sulzer's plans, according to his friends, now are to leave here tomor- row for New York, where he will hold a conference with Sixth district lead- ers. He is said to have reached this decision late tonight. He has secluded himself from newspapermen. Sulzer, assisted by several men. was busy throughout the day collecting his belongings at the executive A force of men removed property from the executive of his chamber and shipped it to a storeho: in New York. May Go on Lecture Platform. Several of Sulzer's personal friends today expressed the opinion that he would soon go on the lecture plat- forms. He regards the offers he ha received in a favorable light, they said, and he realizes there is no time like the present for him to enter the field. Practically His Old District. New York, Oct. 19.—The Sixth d trict, in which William Suizer may stand for the assembly, is close to his old home locality on the Bast Side and is essentially the same that he repre- sented whep an assemblyman in the early 90's. \It is included within the boundaries of the congressional district from which Mr. Sulzer afterw was repeatedly elected a represe: OVER 7,500 IN LINE IN HARTFORD PARADE. Big Demonstration of Holy Socicties Yesterday. Name Hartferd, Conn., Oc 7,500 19.—More than young and old—marched streets of the Capitol City men in honor of the represented the y Name societies from practical all the towns in- the northern part of ate. The parade was made up’ of eight divisions and took one hour and a quarter to pass the reviewin stand. Here were gathered Governor Baldwin. Lieutenant Governor Tin- gier, other state officials, Mayor Louis R. Cheney and the Righi Rev. John Nilan, bishop of the diocese of Hart- ford, together with other high digni- taries of the Roman Catholic church, The parade was an impressive one and the marching was excellent. State Comptroller Daniel P. Dunn of Willi- mantic headed one of the divisions of the procession. After the review the marchers assembled in St. Joseph’s cathedral, where Bishop Nilan deliv- ered a special address and pronounced benediction. An impressive scene oc- curred when the society members re- MRS. EATON MIRTHFUL AT STORY OF JEALOUSY Laughs When Girls Testify She Asked the Pankhurst Case. Washington, Oc | of the Uni: in deciding | Mrs. Emmeline F agette of, England, to take a hand of whether militant suf- ali be admitted | 1. 19.—The president | | the question to this cotntry. | “President Wilson called a conference for early tomorrow w retary Wil- | son of the department labor and | | Commissioner General Caminetti of | ;!hr‘ immigration bureau. High gov- | ernment officials who are believed 1o | know the attitude of the president pre- | { dicted that Mrs. Pankhurst would be admitted. | Bariier in {he day Commissioner aminetti after an informal hearing nsel had declined to release Mrs. on bond from the Ellis Is. land immigration station where she is ‘hr)m: confined pendinz final action on her appeal from the order of depor | tation issued in New York vesterday. | Mr. Caminetii informaily sought the | advice of his superiors on thg question at i e and applied to fhe White House for a conference. The president had been taking a keen interest in the | case, realizing the important interna- | tional phases of the cas: PROTEST FROM NEW HAVEN. | Women's Political Union Sends Tele- gram to Wilson. New Haven, Conn, Oct. 19.—The women's political union of New Haven, { throush its president, Olive M. Eirich, | tonight sent the following telegram tq | | President Wilson at the White House: | | _“The Women's Uolitical Union of | New Haven protests againet the de- | portation of Mrs. Pankhurst and asks | | for her the same justice which Amer |ica has ever accorded to male po- Iitical offender; America opened her | | doors and gave richly of her sym- pathy and support to the leaders who sought home rule for oppressed Ire- land. These men were rebels against the English goyernment, but they were not stopped at FEllis Island. “Mrs. Pankhurst is the most re- markable rebel known in the history of the human race, She is leading a bloodless revolution which will be more far-reaching In its effects on Bnglish history than was our revolutien of 1776, Bhe and her followers have been tortired well nigh unto death, yet with dauntless wplril, they stand by their flag. Some of thelr number have given thefr lives for the causs, but in re- tarn they have not shed ome drop of human blood, “Our hearts go out in plty and sym- pathy to English women because we bolleve that only fearful oppression could bring worth such endarance, We | coaches left the track and rolled dow: Them to Say Admiral Flirted. Plymouth, Mass., Oct. 19.—Medical testimony intended to establ that Rear Admiral Joseph G, Eaton was murdered by poisoning and evidence of his wife's jealousy were int by the state in the trial of nie May Eaton yesterday. o'clock court adjourned until Monda Dr. Joseph P. Frame, the family physician, told of attending the ad miral the day before he died. The pa- | tient's condition was not considercd critical by him, and the news of hi death a few hours 1 aroused his suspicions. On cross-examination the witness did not add materially to the explanation of his suspicions. Miss Grace Byram Howard and Miss Bessie R. Collamore testified that Mrs, aton had asked them to accuse th admiral_of having tried to flirt with them. Neither had been annoved by attentions from the admiral, they said ised at Mrs. Katon appeared much an the testimony of the young women and at times laughed aloud RAILROAD WRECK DUE. TO SPREADING OF RAILS Three Fatally Injured on Road in Ohio. Big Four injured, scores Tiffin, Ohio, Oct. 19, persons were probably fatally were seriously hurt and cut and bruised when a Rig Four passenger train ed today three miles south The engine, baggage car were southbound was_wreck of this city and tw |an enmankment. Those believed to | be fatally injured are Harry Day, Bellefontaine, Ohi man, scalded and injured inter a.'W. Shraggings, Tiffin vut about _head. spine injure James O'Brien, Tiffin, Ohio, injured Internally Spreading of the been the cause of the 1d to ha wreck. Dropped Dead in Church. Meriden, Conn, Oct. 13.—While at- tending 10 o'clock mass with his fam ily at St. Stanislaus’ Roman Catholic church_this morning, Morris Bryda, aged 40, dropped dead without giving the slightest warning to those In close roximity that he even felt indisposed. Peath was due to heart failure. He hed his fatal attack while Father John | L. Cepa was asking the benediction. Fe is survived by a widow and five children. A $10,000° Fire at Wethersfield. ‘Wethersfleld, Conn, Oct, 19.—Fire connected barris and three small sheds on the estate of Charles Wolcott were Purned tonlght. The fire, which started | spread to | from an unknown cause, Credit-One For Huerta. Soldiers Meet - Death on Rail TWENTY KILLED IN MISSISSIPPI TRAIN WRECK. TENDER LEAVES RAILS Three Coaches Then Crashed Through N t3 the Grounid—Victims Had No Chance. Trestle, Plunging 25 Feet Meridian, M Oct, 19.—Twenty soldiers of Comp: and 170, Unlted States coast artillery, were killed. and about one hundred otbers injured this afternoon when a special troop train on the Mobile and Ohio railroad crashed through a trestle near State Line, Miss. Division Superin- tendent Pigford of the Mobile and Ohio in a report sent to headguarters of the road at Mobile, gives this num- ber as the extent of the casualties. Engine Tender Left Iron. The wreck was caused by the en- gine tender jumping the track when about 200 feet from a trestle. The engine was not derailed and passed over the tres! The tender broke { loose from t with the baggage car enzine, however, and nd three coach- es plunged 25 feet to the ground. At 9 o'clock tonight sixteen bodies {had been taken from the wreckage and Superintendent Pigford said b w s sure four more bodies were in the de- oris, which will not be cleared away for 24 hours. List of Dead. According to an unofficial report | Clvde Teele | 2 B Bisnop G. C. Burleson | W. H. Brim. { Goodes. { ——Remsen. | — Grucke. All were privates and mer of except Remsen \’ Captain Johnson, of the Eighth reg. nd | Corporal Konier. Van Stevvins. private, One body unideniified, with initials “H. on cap. # 179 Soldiers on Train. age received at the head- re of the railroad company arvey . Jomes, general pas- r azent of the railroad, Conductor Pruitt of Mervin, Miss, are ‘he missing injured. hundred and seventy-nine sol- were on the special tr: The: from Fort Morgan and Fort Rar- A me: | quarte: state: gD | among | One Condensed Telegran{; The Stork is expected to visit the Czarina again. A Woman has been elected mayor of Oldham, England. The New American Tariff Law very pleasing to Austria. The secretary of the Treasury has no intention of resigning, he says. is King Alfonso of Spain underwent a successful operation at Madrid for catarrhal troubles. Germany is Now the richest country in Europe, with an aggregate wealth of about $74,000,000 000. The Congregational Union of Lon- don voted down a proposition to allow women to occupy the pulpit. John Hays Hammond, Jr., is report- ed to have perfected a means of ste ing a motorboat by means of wireless. S Paderewski Lost $20,000 because his physician forbade him to play any more for at least ten days. He ha an attack of grip. Mrs. Annie Hamilton Pitzer, sister- in-law of Speaker Champ Clark, has announced her candidacy for the post- mastership of Colorado Springs. In Recognition of Their Rescue wc at_the Volturno disaster, the Cunari officials have given the crew of th> Carmania an extra week’s R Professor Le Coultre, the noted as- tronomer. reported after extended ob. that the Martians a communicate with the The First This Year's Spanish Pea nuts raised in Prince George county Va., were sold in Petersburgh, at $1.5 a bushel. Last year they sold for $1 a bushel. \ Sir George Orby Wombwell the 3 survivor of the Charse of the Light Brigade at Balaklava October, 1854, died at London, ased 81 yea Charles A. Clement disbursing of- ficer of the patent office of Washing- ton, was robbed of $1,000 while on h'. way from the treasury to the Interic department. The Wadsworth Anthenasum of Hartford, has received a life size por- trait of the late J. P. Morgan, painted by the Peruvian artist Mr. Carlos Baca-Flor. No Information Regarding the de- tails of the wedding of Miss Jessie Wilson and Francis B. Sayre is (o be expected until shortly before the time of the wedding. Professor J. H. Shrader of the de- partment of physics at Williams col- lege announced Saturday that he had found traces of radium in a spring near Williamstown. ancas and were on their way t rticipate in Miss A Young Women’s Class in carpen- | A joint state fair. tering, with eighteen enrolled the first _The men had gone to Mobile early | duy has been organized in the manual | Sunday and_at noon their ill-fated | training department of the public | special left Mobile. As meagre news [ schools of Toledo, O. {of the wreck filtered Into Meridian a | special relief train hearing physicians | Her Mind Affected by the breaking | and nurses left for the scene. Other | of her engagement Dora Smith, twen- | trains left from Mobile and Whistler, | ty vears old of New York, was taken 5 ; Saturday to the insane asylum at ! Had Little Chance to Escape, Kings Park, Long Island. | The coaches were filled \and when | e | the three cars plunged throfigh the | William Dwyer, one of the best | trestle the men had little chance fo | known Adirondack guides, died Sat- pe. The dead and injured were | urday at Shattuck Clearing having in a twisted mass of wreck- | been accidentally shot by onme of a age, making it difficult to remove dead | bodies or rescue injured Eccause of the confusion, due large- Iy to poor wire communication, it was | impossible to ascertain how many of | the may die or their names. port of the wreck sent the i artment stated that twelve lled, but soon a bodies were found. er it was sent other SWINDLED A MERIDEN MAN OUT OF $25,000 Who Sold Worthless Mining Stock Under Arrest. Crook | party of New York hunters whom he was guiding. Six Convicts among them former Senator Stilwell were sent ungarded to pick apples from the farm of C. J Post near Ossining. As a reward for their good behavior the men will be allowed to go again. An_ Automobile Occupied by anklin J. Burnham, of Colorado, and Mrs. Charles J. Gidde nwife of the founder of the Glidden Cup Automo- bile tours, knocked down and fatally ed William Boyle, seven yvears old Cambridgeport Mass,, Saturday Mrs. $10,000, Samuel B EGirouaiel ut | cation of St. Mary's Roman Catholic | Samuel P, Groves, deciared by Depucy | Church took place at Meriden vester | Commirsianer Dotohosty tPuly | day morning at the solemn high mass e eyt noougherty to Dl celebrated by Rev. A. Van Oppen of this country, was brought ';sg Lawrcnce church of that city. i S R Bishop John J. Nilan of Hartford ad- | auarters.ite s “alieged (o has Gressed the congregation. | tained 325,000 from George W. T childs of Meriden, Conn., in 1911, CELEUARY less. and to have defrauded William| New Haven, Conn. Oct. 19—Louls {of $13,000 in_ another deal in alleged | Lhroughout the country as the proprie- | worthless stock tor of “Mory’s.” a celelrated Yale stu | he 1ocal police have been loking for | dent club house, died early today in his ‘(hrmv\ for two vears, and ot their | Slcep. aged 47. He had been In ill St trace of him when the Toronto au- | health for a vear | thorities sent a picture of = man ar-| “Loule” and” “Mory's” have been a e there on a_.charge of obtaining |Part of Yale life for many vears. He money under fa tenses | had an intimate acquaintance with Commissioner herty recognized | leaders in Yale activities for nearly a ehe photograph of Giroux, and Foronto police turned him over to e local authorities. MERIDEN MAN TRICKED. Spent $30,000 of Father's and His Own Money on Fake Gold Mine. Meriden, Conn.,, Oct. 19.—George W. | F31a 1asE 06 to New York | appers abont a vea One of rooks posing as an investment creste rchild in' & Sup- | sured him that after purchasing could sell it again to another br at a clean profit of $20.000. Fairchild office here for many vears and who is | the confidential agent of several large private fortunes, seized the opportu- nity. With his own money and money belonging to his father, Henry E. Fair- child, vice president of the building firm of H. Wales Lines Co., he went | to New York city and bought the fake | mine, paying cash. He was directed across the sieet | to the prampective purchaser, a broker who was willing to pay a handsome price, $50,000 for the mine. The latter could not think of buying the mine be- cause he had tied up his money in other ventures. [fere is where the Meriden man scented something wrong. e went back to the office where he had just contracted the puy chase and paid over $20,000 snd the place was closed. The New York po lice were notified &nd they told Mr. located almost directly opposite pany John Connors’ barn, adjoining, and | Fairchild that he had been the victim dameged it considerably. The total | of several of the slickest bunco men loss 18 estimated at $10,000. Mr, Wol- | In the country cott was hurt when a water bucket | — fell from the roof, striking him on the | $4,000 Fire at New Haven. head. | _New Haven, Conn, Oct. 19.—The — | Buckingham-Routh Plumbing com- | | What ever elss President Huerfa may have deme to the Mexican Con- gress, he didn’'t read his speeches to it.—New York damaged by fire to t 4,000 early this morning of the blaze s not known The origin fira headquarters in Court streat, was | extent of about | He was born in quarter of a_century. Oehringen, Wurtemburg. Germany, but at an early age van away from home | and came to New York. He came to New Haven abou vears ago,and aft- er beinz employed in well known ho- tels, purchased Mory's, which had then been closed for about a year. His genial spirit at once made him a | favorite, and under his regime Mory's had became even more famous than it been before. Or round table ich are still carefuliy preserved, are carved the initials of famous Yale men e resort has been visited by some of the best known men and women In the | country. At commencement time and on the night be celebrations of big games Mory was always with old graduates. back to r respects to Loule. Two yes ago the Yale club of New York pre- | sented him with a loving cup at a din- ner given in his honor, a gift which | was highly appreciated. Louie was one of thebest informed men in the country on recent Yale men and affairs. * The story of Mory’s and Loule was recently printd in book form, The stulent orzanizations known as the Hogans and Whiffenpoofs were driginated by Louie, and he was al- s the umpire at the annual base- wa; ball game between the two on the campus. Joseph W. Kilbrid Eridgeport, C‘onn., Oct. 19.—Joseph W. Kilbride, a druggist residing at 3¢ West Clay street, Waterbury, dled st St. Vincent's hospital this atternoon Where he had been taken im the emer- gency nospilal ambulance by Dr. Fin- negan, Saturday afternoon. Medical Examiner Garlick gave the cause of Qeath as semi-acute nephritls and or- dered the body turned over to the family. Steamship Arriva New York, Oct. 10 Steamers Cali- fornia, from Glasgow, Athenia, from Firaeur | | T0 INCREASE HATRED OF AMERIGANS Mrs. Pankhurst Says That if She is Deported Ship Will Carry Her to Her Death MIGHT NOT LAST OVER 24 HOURS, SHE SAYS Characterizes Administration’s Policy in Mexigo as “Indif- ferent nd Drifting,” and Predicts It will Lead to Inter- 'vention—Accuses Secretary of State of Acting in Par- tisar Zeal—Has a Diplomatic Record of 17 Years. [ Spokane, Wash,, Oct.\19.—The letter to Secretary of State Bryan in which Henry Lane Wilson tendered his res- ignation as American ambassador to Mexico was made public here today by istration, he sa; “until finding that no intention existed of righting Amer- ican wrongs, I ceased to make repre- sentations to it except in urgent cases Involving the loss of life and property. Mr. Wilson. The letter was written [ Yet I never gave g gave an expression to m; in Indianapolis. Ind. Aug. In-pewt | lack of faith in the Sovernmmnt. ks Mr. Wilson wrote {cept to the state department, and nev- \ have the honed to acknowledge | er abated in the le d e least my frl - the recelpt of your note of Aug. 14, [ lation with that Beaermens o oY * transmitting a copy of a telegraphic 3 struction of the department of state | Dealt With Huerta and Diaz to Save i the American ambassador in lon- | Life. ment for an interview attributed 10 | iirers of clrenmetancon” ha oeia aiug me. The closing par: ph of the in- A e e | o striction referred to stafes 'thit th | Pasis s dealings with Hueria and president regrets exceedingly that a [c1% Didz were sol Aol diplomatic official of this government w!f"fl i exico City. His course, he should have been guilty of such an im- | °Clares, “vasily mitigated the hor- rors and sufferings of that terrtble sit- ropriety ast paragraph of ¥ e oo me ot Raragraph of yweee | ustion, Bnel. was: endarsed by (all A does not go farther # this time he- | l0Mats, foreign colonies and religious cause he takes it for granted that the | 9TSanizations in Mexico. gction which he has been obliged to | . The assumption that he was at that take in thiz matter will be » you a |time intruding into the politics of Mex~ sutticient reminder of your official obli- | 1¢0, Writes Mr. Wilson, “are at variance AR yifh the belief gnd ‘testimony of all iy ving eye witnesses and a 3 _ A Limit to Patient Silence. record on fila at the state depariments Mr. Wilson calls attention to a mem- | His formal resignation on March 4 was orandum of his dated Aug. 18, agree- [ not accepted, but subsequently, he re- ing to refrain from public comment on | marks, “public statements that the ada the instru ons to the ambassador in | ministration was investigating the sit« London, or the note to himse but | uation through unofficial sources, re- adds that “must respectfully décline | peated with disagrecable frequency, af- to accept as definite or just the action | fected my official usefulness. He of the president or the department |asked Mr. Bryan for a denial, “and rew over which you preside,” in this mat- ter. “There is” he writes, “a_just to patient silence, and 1 shull not mit myself to be made the victim of a hasty and unmerited rebuke without placing on record with you my earnest | and solemn protest” Mr. Wilson then reviews the ¢ stances leading up to the instr ceiving none, I asain requested you to urge the acceptance of my resignation. In reply you clearly indicated your de- re that I should remain at my pos President's Policy Startling. Meanwhile, he says, the attitude of the Mexican government toward recog- limit cum- ction information regarding this country's to the ambassador in London. A Lon- “After a long delay,” he com- don despatch was published in this | , “you telegraphed me, in the country on Aug. 11 stating that one | president’s name, announcing a poli of the factors determining British | oy so startling in character and so at recognition of the Mexican provisional | varlance with the established tradi- government was the “congratulatory | tions and policy of this government for speech of the American ambassador | 130 years, that I abandoned an further on the occasion of Huerta's reception | hope of bringing about a restoration of to the diplomatic cory Mr. Wilson | amicable relations.” says he did not believe that me | Mr, Wilson take takes up next the cir- | cumstances of his sudden Washington, July 22, from an official British source and had decided to maintain an attitude of re- Zsoaty and the chain of serve until, the next two days, he|avents in Washif 4 : t two days, he | avents gton centering about jead i the press articles -evidently | his return.. He complains that he was sultation, and that he left without tima to adjust his personal affairs, at con- siderable expense to himself. He cama | to the conclusion that he was going to be removed from office, he says, be- over the supposed propitiatory legis- | lation” of the British government | Great Britain Did Not Know It Was il ;fv‘.'.e,:‘ifd[ e that thic | cAuse of Mr. Brvan’s attitude toward was the first evidence of your i mtion nm T Talifec be./sam, e L had been called home, not for orders, official to publicly question my ac- | congultation or instructl o 3 consultation_of on, but for tions,” heg continuc nd 1 acce sentence and humiliation ingly zave to the press the interview referred to.” Greater Hatred of Americans. The interview, he declared, could | Tn conclusion Mr, Wilson observes not possibly be ‘construed as 'an ex- | that he feels his removal “might at pression of the views of this govern- | jeast have been kindlier in spirit, more ment, as Mr. Bryan already had an- | generous and more considerate” The nounced Mr. Wilfon's voluntary resig- | present polley toward Mexico he nation. He continues brands as “indifferent and drifting,’ “Thereupon, with tempestuous haste | PTaas &8 mEEerent o ae- and apparently prompted by partisan ! Gy FRCRCT patieq” of Amerloans in the chmerican ambaseador in London | jead to intervention. In having spoken s ated by the public good and the inter- in the least degree offensive, and sts of justice, and not through bit- which was based entirely sumption that 3 of the British government was a ma- licious fabrication. Y hastily upon the the supposed expressi terness or any desire to “embarrass the president’s policy in Mexico." | PROPOSE INTERVENTION. 1 thus proceeded wi scertaining |, e Whether cither the supnosed exires- | Mexican Statesmen Approach French comment_thereon was veritabie: and and British Governments. s has since be v ped, vour ac- i 57 tion caused the greatest possible s v-{ P Oct. 19.—The TFigaro, accord- prise to the government of Great|ing to an article published this morn- ain, which did not knmow it had | in& has recelved information that a been offended and had no official | 8Toup of Mexican statesmen, whose Knowledse of the views attributed to it. | names are not disclosed, have ap- el il ittis | proached the French and British gov- Discredited Through Pique. ernments, calling attention to the re- “Thus through pique you have spon- | gulting advantages if the United States taneously and unjustly discredited a|were not the sole power directly In- diplomatic officer of this government | terested In Mexican affalrs. and at the same lime have exposed to | The Figaro saye: “The group sug- the British foreign office the spirit "1!u:- ted particularty that prudently di- hazardous adveniure which presides | rected action would increase French over the department of state and the | and English prestige in Mexico and es- possibility of errors at any moment in | tablish a precedent in conformity with future diplomatic exchanges. | justice and international law. Inf “That the ovresider of the United | vention” continues the paper, States, whom | know fo possess high | be justfied because of France's and and patriotic rals, and wise lofty | Great Pritatn's large Mexican inter« purpose ought mever = to be|estsr questioned by any American citizen a1 should lend himself to the hasty crit Japanese Cruiser to Mexice. :;(!m of an old and tried official of| paris, Oct. 19.—The Tokio corres e Bovernment, upon tefally Unwar. | epondent of the Matin says that the e o [floce alscrad it o0 ”,y'"_”‘;f‘ Japanese government has decided to been badly advised: and that vou, Mr )senfl & orisanito) Moxico: Secretary, who have dentified | issi Mexi: <with the movement for and het. | 1, Jap on Mission to Mexlco City. e thbies 1 (hTs conntrs e | Mexico City, Oct. 19.—The military cept as the res f investigation and che of the Japanese embassy at L g | "1 | Washington has arrived here. He is calm considera find;reason for the [ (TEBNNECOR Me8 BTN At ofiahy ment of facts which had to rvati 5 department of stats an on || INCENDIARY; BLAZE the records of all foreign CAUSES $8,000 LOSS. representatives acered , _ | by assuming an attitude which invoives | Woodworking Factory of Gilbert the correctness of the official procedure Biothers at Bethel Burned, of a diplomatic er under ¢ - trol, inspires me with serious d < as | Bethel, Conn,, Oct. 19.—Fire, thought "o your future state in dealings with to be of incendiary origin, early delicate international offairs morning destroyed the woodworking factory of Gilbert Brothers, entailing 5 ext reviews his seven. | AN estimated loss of $3.000. There was toensyonts oF aiplomatic service, caying | ho_insurance. “The bullding, a Targs an investigation of his work will show | fame structure, was not being operat- that it ““was in the highest degree use- | % although Joseph Vaghl had a - | smiall shop there. The fire started in Seventeen Years of Diplomatic Service. ful in humanitarian, commercial and | anitarian, comm and| 2 shed adjoining and the authorities B W e re e S |are investigating suspicious ctrcum- stances. The factory was located di- dence to the general satistaction which | ERCES JCUR TR, R TORTIe his efforts won. FHe refused the am- bassadorship to Russia, Austria and IFaEiby, ho wmays, becanse. of lack of | CNDERED,TO EVACUATE finances, and went to Mexico, apprect ALBANIAN TERRITORY, atiug that he had a hard lask before d him, | Austria’s Ultimatum to Servia—Given “I gave my whole time and m Eight Days to Comply. health,” he adds, "and denicd myseif the privilege which all men consider | Belgrade, Oct. 19.—The Austrian sacred, of performing (he last office at the bedside of my beloved mother and my only brother” He worked daily from 6 a. m. to midnight or later, and note glves Servia elght days in which to evacuate Albanian territory. The note, which Austrla sent to Servia vesterday, is looked upin the light ef & | nition became such that he wired for often on Sunday, he save but “never | an ultimitum and demends the com= mixed in the slightest decree in the | plete avacuation of the points in Al plane of Mexieo” bania ocoupted by Servian treops He malintained a policy of friendiy sinoe the recent snzagements between banians. eo-speration with the Madero admin- | them and the All LSRG S