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VOL. LV—NO. 251 NORWICH, CONN., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1913 PRICE TWO CENTS The Bulletin’é 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 SULZER NOMINATED FOR ASSEMBLY Progressives of Sixth District in New York Make Ex-Govérnor Their Standard Bearer - OVER MAJORITY OF VOTERS PLEDGED Ti] HIM Of the 5700 Voters in District, 3800 Sign Petition Urging Him to Stand—Rabbis of Every Synagogue in District Also Make Appeal—His Wife Finally Won Over to Ad- vise Him to Accept—To Make Active Campaign. A N. ¥ A few min- [ There are said to be only votes gres L onvention | in the entire district. X striet met in | Told by Wife to Accept, For a time the former governor ominate i refused to give his callers an affirma- |tive answer. He told them that his | wife had urged that he get out of pol- |itics. Then the rabbis told her it was the duty of the impeached execu- A statement it telling i to come back er of the as- & Tha n tained | tive to make the race. A state e said, contained | {176 10 TS B0 Uoted her as. say- o him to | P8 - 3 g 2sd | “FAccept. The people call you. Fight : e - | for_the cause—win or lose.” ? 0 fve lemders in|, The statement also said that Wil- liam Blair, a republican of the dis- Cabled Paragraphs Emperor William Sends Regrets. Berlin, Oct. 20.—Emperor Willlam today instructed the German foreign office to convey through the German embassy at Washington His Majesty's | regrets at the death of the late Adol- phus- Busch; of St Louls, at whose funeral he will be represented. Roosevelt at Rio Janeiro. Rio Janeiro, Oct. 20.—The steamer Van Dyck, with Colonel Theodore Roosevelt aboard arrived off Rio Ja- neiro tonight, but owing to tempest uous weather, according to a wireles: despatch, he will not enter port until midnight. Colonel Roosevelt and his party will come ashore at 8 o'clock to- morrow morning. Suffragette Appears on Stretcher. London, Oct. 20.—A dramatic ap- pearance 'at the weekly suffragette meeting was made today by Miss An- nie Kenney, organizer of the militant sufragette association. Suffering from the effects of a “"hunger strike” in Holloway jail, looking extremely feeble, she was borne into the hall on a stretcher and given a memorable reception by the women who stood on chairs and cheered: Five Lions-koose in Streets. Leipsic, Germany, Oct. 20.—Five lions belonging to an American cir- cus obtained their freedom in the streets of Leipsic last night owing to a collision between a street car and their cage while it was on the way to the railroad station after a perform- ance. One of the lions entered a ho- tel, rushed upstairs and proceeded along the corridors, driving the vis- itors before it into their rooms, It Often Wished Husband Dead WITNESS TELLS OF REMARKS OF MRS. EATON. WHITE ARSENIC FOUND Medical Experts Testify Regarding Ex- of Admiral’s Organs— iven Shortly/ Before Death, amination Dose Plymouth, Mass, Oct 20.—Rear Admiral Joseph G. Eaton died from poison at least one dose of which was administered within six or eight hours of his death, during which time, tes- timony showed, he was unconscious. This, the statement of medical ex- perts, was the principal evidence in- troduced by the government in its ef- forts to support its charge that the admiral came to his death at the hands of his widow, Mrs. Jennie May Faton, now on trial for her life. Wished Her Husband Dead. That Mrs. Eaton had many times said that she wished that her husband was dead, was the statement made the witness stand today by Henry M Cates of Rockland, who knew the fam. fiy_in Thes ality, her expressed fears that she and 1910. threats, Mrs. Eaton's person- . | o was some time before policemen ar- 2 | trict, had assured Sulzer that the bulk | 08, SOme time be “\‘n‘;,v The four | other members of the family would Aspires Again to Governorship. | of the republican vote in the district | Tyed and shot the anpgnal, Tobe Kot | o O by the Admiral, n Scate. e ,ubt but that | Would be with him. 5208 various parts of the city. ment that he had actually tried to simination if he | A Blessing in Disguise. Doison her on several occasions and Nor does he | Obviously Sulzer was well pleased | BOAT CAPSIZED other utterances by the accused widow ¢ 5 January will { with his nomination. He walked up ¢ Teenn allvds el ditin festhntngsd S gan his po- [and down his office in the mansion DURING A SQUALL. | the day He and | smoking a_cigar, smiling and telling e 9 Mrs, Eaton Laughs. - t e | how he intended to fight his enemjes | Ten-Year-Old Boy Drowned Despite The court house was crowded dur- s hip | to the last ditch Efforts of His Father. ing the afternoon, mostly by wome People’s [ The room was almost barren. A few A score or more were turned awa chairs were left, but all of the”eNtly [ New Haven, Comn, Oct. 20.—The | Mrs. Baton still maintained, to a large S v Sulzer w | rugs and decorations which beldhged | high wind storm that swept iihe city | extent, the composure which has so + £ c | to Sulzer personally were removed, as |late this afternoon was responsible for | far been manifested by her during the » . ately | also were heavy draperies the loss of one life and did damage to | proceedings. Occasionally during the i ction | But he did not notice this. He waved | small craft in the harbor. Russell B.|medical testimony, she bit her lps ’ ome | his callers to a chair and began to | Young, aged 10, with his father, G. D. |and again broke out in laughter during rst of | tell how he regarded his removal as |®oung, a civil engineer, were rowing | the testimony of acquaintance ssary for |a possible real blessing in disguise. to Kelsey's Island, off the east shore,| Testimony as to the finding of peison Ve | To Carry Out Reforms in Assembly. |when the blow struck them. Their boat | in_the admiral's body and indications | | bhe Indians declare he said, “that | Was cApsized and both were precipiiat- | 3#°to the time and manner of lts ad- | opom D e e Best. Im pretty |ed into the water. The heavy sea | ministration, was given by Professor v & A | ' = gy t een | 5Wept them apart, but the father made | W. F. Whitney and Professor William | & - fur | much of an Indian myself. I've been t £ Baloh, bothtae the arcard 'ediiat | - [ out west fourteen times. Sometimes | heroic effort fo save his son. He| Balch, both of the Harvard'Medical p an. Uk that's where I belons. Peo- |E€rasped him by the head once, but a|8school. These experts, retained by the To 1t Warm for His Enemies. | n1a out there have written me since | €lant wave swept the boy from his [ government, had analyzed the contents t warmg I started this fight against Tammany |&rasp. He did not reappear, and after | of the organs removed from the body P Ceembiy hed that If T were among them they would |a time the grief-stricken father swam | of the admiral. Sixteen grains of pure | - ke notice | sertd me to the United States senate. | ashore. He was exhausted, and had a [ White arsenic was found and a great- | « | g me o e P okan T ‘helong | marrow escape from meeting a watery | €r_amount was probably thrown of out fthere. I don't seem to get on [grave himseif from the admirals system before . m very well in this effete east. Two smaligyichts anchored at Morris | death, according fo the testimony. | a in| “But I started to that I thought | Cove were flown from their moorings | Could Have Been Concealed in Tea. E { the | mavbe my removal was for the best. |and hag thfir sides siove in. Several| Both professors _admitted under » s [ What could I do in the governor's [ motor Boat: were washed up on the | cross examination by Attorney Wil 4 . #5, | chair now? Nothing. but I can do a |shore by the high sea. The veloclty of | iam A Morse that. the presence. of begzing fot in the asgembly and other places. | the wind was about forty miles an|a large quantity,of arsenic hes heen | b - I can carry out my reforms there. I[hour. % attepicd by experts as an indioafion th | tried *cv ca them ofit in the gov- [* One of the Starin line steamers ran | that the poison was self-administorod, | e n ernor’s chalr. [ aground during the blow, but later was | District Attorney Albert Barker in > -~ floated and continued on her voyage 10 | re-direct evamination brought out SULZER NOMINATED New York. It is not believed the boat | testimony to show that the poison was damage | might equally well have been admin- . & EYSEHOGRESSIVES — istered by some other person. The . . s Candidate for Assembly from Sixth | SCHOONER FLYING poison could have been taken in tea o i | District of New York. DISTRESS SIGNALS. [ tens Thel oo o araration, thamy] < s New York, Oct. 20.—William Sulzer, | Efforts to Gain Further Information at | (*8ified, e added that its presence | - impeached as governor of the state, New Haven Unavailing. ture_of saleratus and water. It is | ~ was nominated for the gasembly to = [Fthe Womtention of the government that | | night by the progressives of the sixth ew Haven, Conn, Oct. 21.—An un- | pojeon was given the admiral in tea | n to Camfaign for.Him. |assembly district. Mr. Sulzer in 1889 | known vessel, thought to be a schoon- | and sther R uten e fils —idow | Platt | began his public career as a member | or, is flying distress signals off the Fai - | - | of this branch of the state legislature. | Jocal harbor. A strong sea is running aileco Showr Uss: of iDruge; | " Mr. Sulzer has agreed to accept the | on account of the wind storm. | The defense failed today to secure b nomination, it was announced at the | Ffforts to obtain further information | any confirmation of their conten sulk | meeting where he was chosen as the | concerning the vessel ve so far |that the admiral used intoxicants free- : | candidate. Max Steindler, progfessive | proved pnavailing. The signals have |1y and then resorted to drugs to over- | leader in the sixth assembly district, | heen seen at points along the shore. It | come the after-effects. who placed m»’ Im'vnl‘:l governor's possible that the light keepers at | Mrs. Driscoll’s Testimony. - name in nomination, said Mr. Sulzer | Southwest ledge and Sperry light may 2 % L . Temihion .him by -telonlions: trom: Al- | aosraet noone And Bperey UEt moy s, Annie Driscoll, ot Rockland, a | : bany, inquiring if he had been des chard Peck, for New York, whose | frieng o the Hafons testified to ha : & . f i L 2 5 ing stayed at the Baton home f A g ignated. Mr. Stei replied in the | sailing was delayed on account of the | (1€ Staved at the Haton =—hom s 2 | to get his money.” She\ said Mrs = — i Steamers Reported by Wireless. Eaton expressed the opinion that the | BoDY TO BE REMOVED FROM POTTERS FIELD Finding of Bank Book to Be Followed SAILOR KILLED BY A DANGLING WIRE | Wire Torn Down by Storm and Victim Grasped It by Disinterment. 2 20.—S Pe New Haven, Conn., Oct. 20.—After s killed | having been burled In the Potters field y: »in | for rly ten years, the body of W > 1 Kinley, will be disinterred and ght A res > in the Grove Street ceme y Tive wn by a e discovery of a bank book e in the local probate office today start- d rew re | ed the inquiry that will resuli in the removal of the body. The shelves in 3 = the probate office were being cleaned < from ana old records transferred, when ihe - S Ganie w bank hook was brought to light. A S € ate. | Mrs. Sarah Amesbury—no one seems A or, | to Know her now—had left ‘on deposit rom |in a local bank a sum providing for : i ja place of burial for Willlam Kinle - . nd 1 Investigation showed that Willlam | - = > Kinley had died ten vears aso wit oy e out means, and he was burled - o tw . Springsidethe “Potters field. I and_se 1 | bank searched its records and fo < ai res- |the sum on deposit for the purpose chs . D r amed. Permission for the removal e U . rned. [ 8f the body will probably be granted @ brother . | GIRLS' INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL PRESIDENT WILSON | IS A COMMON NUISANCE. CONSENTS TO RECESS | pinisters and Others Connected With Willing That House Should Have a It Indicted. | g Richmond, Va, Oct 20.—The grand | PP = i of Chestegfleld county today in- | & w5l ldiciea the VirSinia Home and Indus- e e School for Girls on tHe b N 5% [that it is a common nuisance. ezl nbsue | same (ime an indictment was returned = = Hers | against Rev. George W. Mel | . 2 o b | Rev. 1. D. Machlan, prominent minis- | T For the pas. fters of Richmond; Samuel P. Waddill, | S ot fore the end |clerk of Henri county circuit court, and | of the exira session of congress. letter, to d executive committee under which the home is conducted It was stated by the committee to- the The president himself in a cader Underw willingness to co; an- | ider a recess of t ho . | night that at a meeting tomorrow said, conferences with | institution would be closed, and 39 in- ? the senate committes led | mates returned to the custody of the | e the bill would be re- |courts in various cities _from which he senate the first week in | they were committed. Witmesses who 4 passed during the pres- | appeared before the grand jury testi- fied that the reformatory was a nuis- Ty jance and a detriment to the communi- rison to Inspect Cana |ty i g il A5 wrl- | SOCIALISTS FINED FOR A W Bief of the coast artillery, | CARRYING A RED FLAG. will i« shington 1omorrow r — — noin « Yark, ta sail Wedr Wll Test Constitutionality of New o THE O { Law in Massachusetts. nspedting the canal In —_— ith Colonel Goethals and | Roston, Oct. 20.—An appeal was tak- cmbers of the canal com- | en afgér Wiliam R. Henry and Jo- seph Meirowliz had heen fined $25 each in police court today for carrylng red Winsted Boy Drowned. | flages in a socialist parade jast Satur- ¥ sied. Conn.. Oct. 20.—While play- | day night. Counsel for the men sald | ins on 2 Lridge at Bovd strest. § vear- | that the case would be carrled to the | el3 Charies Pisterolia fall intn a fac. | higher courts in order to determine tory dam and was Arowned. The wa- | whether the new state law forbldding the display of such flags in parades is comstitutional, ter was drawn from the dam and tl ®ody recovered half an hour Jater, Robert Leskin, Jr., as members. of the | New York, Oct. 20.—Steamer Sant | ‘Anna, Marseilles for New York, siz- | nalled 680 mile: of Sandy Hook | at noon. Dock a. m. Wednes- day. | Glasgow, Oct. 18.—Arrived, steamers | Carthaginian, Philadelphia’ via St | hns, Columbia, New York Sable Isiand, Oct. = 20.—St Olym outhampton for New 0 miles east of Sand m. Dock late Tuesday or | Wednesday | | —— —— I Mysterious Shooting of Woman. ‘ Bedford, Pa. Oct District At- Reilly, Sherift Dodson and a | coronier’s jurv returned here tonizht from New Buena Vista, where | investigated the shooting of May ner, who was Jkilled mysteriously in the home of a farmer early today oroner's verdict wili be presented District At- | torney Reilly the only possible verdi of mur- | der with the | | | torn they Tur Howard Corley Th tomorrow stated t would b murderer tonight u Naturalization—Act Upheld, Washington, Oct. @.—The supreme court today Upheld the constitution ality of the 1906 naturalization act in so far as dt drected district at- tornevs to bring suits for cancella- | tion of certificates of naturalization | when procured by fraud and made | the refurn of the,alien to his native | or another foreisn country within five of the date of the certificate ie evidence of fraud years prim Wreck Victim Leaves Hospital. Middletown, Conn., Oct. 20 Anna Dutting of this ¢ity, who wi Verely injured in the recent We: wreck, was able tosleave the Middlesex hospital this afternoon. There are now seven wreck victims at the hospital, all of whom are doing well, including Otto St. Arnauld of Merlden, who at one time was not expected to livs i Diphtheria at Saugatuok, Saugatuck, Conn., Oct. 20.—Fearing & possible epidemic _of diphtheria, Health Officer S. M. Powers of West- port today ordered the East Sauga- tuck grammar school closed. Four school chiliren have been fll with diphtheria within the last few da; There are about 500 children in at- tendance at the school, Effort to Release Sulzer’s Friend. Albany, N, Y., Oct, 20—Another at- tempt will_be made tomorrow betore Bupreme Court Justice Cochrane in Hudson to bring about the reisase of James C. Garrison, friend of former Governor Sulzer, from the Albany pen. itentlary, It will be argued that the warrant of commitment lu vold, - Wind Storm Stops Traffic, neering, S. S. S Leave | structor in_ mathematics, Weodward lecturers, Rev Rashdall, canon of Herefor Hon. Bertrand Russell, a Fellow the Royal society, and Profes: Admiral was insane and that h always flirting with girls and women Mrs. Driscoll said that while she was at the Eaton home, the Admirals habits were regular and orderly thought the Admiral was a per: fect gentleman,” Mrs. Driscoll testil fled Showed No Sians of Grief. Early this year, Mrs. Eaton askef the witness to go Caton homy again for a time, she wanted t go away for a few days at a tima “Conditions at the house are worse, and something will have to Ly done soon,” Mrs. Baton said geeord ing to the witness Y Mrs. Baton showed no signs of grief the witness ‘said, during a visit by Mrs. Driscoll to the Eaton home f lowing the Admiral's death RECENT GIFTS TO YALE REACH TOTAL OF $89,000 Several Appointments Made at Meet: ing of the Corporation, New Haven. Conn., Oct. 20.° The| Dbusiness \of the regular meeting of the Yale corporation this aftermoon wat largely taken up with a discussion of the budget for the year for an expenditure of $1,769,210.13. bulk of the expense will come in academic department, $547,000. | These appointments were thur D. Dewing corporation economics Sicelton, instruct Ditkson Etinne Boutroux of the University Paris. i Gifts aggregating $89,000 since the| commencement meeting of the cor poration wers reported. The preliminary list of students Il departments shows a total resi tration of 3,268. This is the same num: ber as last year. Thero Is a_gain ig the college, but a 1085 in the Law ang Medical schools. MIDDLE WEST HAS | VISITATION OF SNOW 8oon Disappeared at Chicago, Bul Meroury Dropped 35 Degrees | Chicago, Oct, 20—Winter, attende by a snowfall, visited Chlcsgo to some weeks shead of the ealoulations| The snow covered the ground only fo & few minutes, but it was followed b; a drop in temperature to 34 degrees, Fnow also was reported In man eltfes In the middle weat and as fa: | construed Great Britain Unsympathetic NOT IN ACCORD WITH OUR MEXI- CAN POLICY. WASHINGTON OPINION Bri to Huerta After He Had Proclaimed sh Minister Presented Credentials Himself Dictator—Inquiry at London Washington, Oct. 20.—While there was no change in either the status o affajrs at Mexico City or the Ameri- can/ policy, an international phase of the Mexican situation that_attracted wide attention tonight was the formal inquiry made early today by Ambs sador Page at London as to what was here as an unsympathetic attitude toward the United States by Sir Lionel Carden, the British minister to Mexico. Untimely Presentation of Credentials. It is understood that the of the inquiry was a confidential report to the state department. the contents of which were not divulged here. It is known, however, that what particular. Iy displeased President Wilson basis both d Secretary Bryan was the presenta- tion by Sir Lionel of his credentials to Provisional President Huerta the very day after the latter had proclaimed himself dictator. The American gov- ernment felt that Huerta’s nullifica- tion of the Mexican constitution, not only by his arrest of the deputies, but by his assumptiom of legislative pow- ers, had so altered affairs in the Mex icgn capital that the British minister mfsht well have withheld his presen- tation of credentials. Inquiry at British Foreign Office. Inquiry was directed to determine whether the British foreign office had instructed Sir LiSnel to present his credentials, notwithstanding Huerta's assumption of power The explanation of the British for- eign office nofed in press despatches that the presentation of the credential was merely a coincidence and not.an tagonistic view ficipls o the American poi commented upon b onight Diplofatic ' circles interpreted the new development as strongly intimat- 1g 10 lurope the desire of the United States to have a free hand in dealing with the Mexican problem. GERMANY’S IRE AROUSED. Forty-three Germans Held As Hos- tages at Torreon. Mexico City, Oct. 20.—The holding of forty-three Germans at Torreon by Gene. neisco Ville as hostages against an attack by the federal forces has_aroused the German government to make stringent demands on the Mexican: foreign office to insure their General Villa permitted the Amer- icans to depart from Torreon, but held the Germans, about the same number of French residents, ten or twelve Britishers and several Span claring that his purpose was to use them as a foil to deter the federa from attacking the city. He also let it be known, according to advices re- ceived here, that they would be sac- rificed unless the effort to re-take Tor- reon was abandoned What action the forelgn office pro- poses to take has not yet been deter- PUBLISHED ATTACKS ON ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH. Thomas E. Watson on Trial for Send- ing Obscene Matter Through Mails. G Oct. on of the n o quash 1 indictment against Thomas | 2 editor, publicist and politi- cian, charged (with sending obscene | matter thro the mails, today was continued morrow by United States Rufus oster in or- der to give the court opportunity to study the langusge of the publications alleged to be objectionable Attorneys for Watson, prior opening of cq predicted tha ang directed that a Upon request of S of the jury was that two mt b ing the\ issue of Watson izine tain attacks upon the Roman Catholi church in which the passages referred to indictments returned against him May 1912, appeared. Two of these passuges were in n and Steamship Arrivals, Plymouth, Oct Andania, Ment adiz, O 8 nos Alres v Naples, O N Perugia, New York: 19th York Hamburg, Oc er Impera New ¥ er Lusitania, New Y pool Piymouth, Oct. 20.—Arrive Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, steamer ew York | for Bremen. Gibraltar, Oct. 20.—Arrived, steam- er Carpathia, New York for Naples, ete. - Arrived, steam- Montreal, Oct. 20.- er Saturnia, Glasgow. Quebec, Oct, 20.—Arrived, steamer Tonian, London. Duke Held for Manslaughter. Seattle, Wash, Ocl. 20.—Lawrence Duke, w son of Bodla Duke, the tobuc co manufacturer, was formally chure ed with manslaughter today In an fn- formation filed by the prosecuting at- torney, An automobile driven by Duke struck and killed Henry N. Farr and H Thomas G, Stmmens last week, Duke will be arraigned Wednesday, I. 0. O. F, Delegates Gather. New Haven, Conn. Oot. 10, gates to the unnual convention of the grand eneampment, 1, O, O, F., which Dele- | pleted today Condensed Telegrams The First Snow of the Season be- gan falling at Peoria, Iil, at noon yes- terday, William Loomis, of La Crosse, Wis, caught a catfish weighing 80 poundf in the Black river. Out of 600 Hunting Licenses issued at New Haven to-date\ six were on application made by women. Ja§eph Weeks 21 years old ,is dead at ablyon, L. after living 15 months with a brocken neck. Gen. Daniel E. Sickles, the only corps commander of the battle of Gettysburg alive, was 88 years old yesterday With an Estimated Loss of half a million dollars in_grain, the Advance Elevator in East|St. Louis, 11, burned early yesterday Adrian Coatamaglia, was badly bitten and leopard while posing for tures at Rome. Earnings Topeka and Santa pany for the fiscal 30 -were $22 152,734. A Snow Storm Welcomed the New York Giants and“Phe Chicago White Sox teams when they arrived yester- day at Springfield, Iil. There Was a Big Advance in the coffee market yesterday on rumors of cold weather in Brazil and unfavor- able private mrop advices. Herbert Samuels, Postmaster gen- Actual of year the Railw Atchison, ¥ com- ending June eral of Great Britain, was received by President Wilson yesterday and later ed Vice President Marshall A Sweet Potats Weighing Six and three-quarter pounds was presented to. President Wilson Charles Robinson of Lincolnton, N. C. The Crow Has Been Found, as the result of first hand study by experts of the Biological Survey, to be a friend of the farmer and a champion of the corn crop. - A. J. Kramer, 21 Years Old, died at Kankakee, Ill., vesteyday as the re { game between Grant Park and Kan- | Kakee teams. Freezing Temperatures, the first of the season, prevailed over Missouri, Kansas and Northern Oklahoma. yes- t nd a light frost extended into Northern Te. Through Counsel, Hans Schmidt, self-confessed murderer of Anna Au- muller, pleaded not guilty yesterday to a charge of homicide and was sent back to prison. The Interstate Commerce Commis- ion terday ordered that for two 's” the railroad rates on imports Westbound from New York and Boston | shall ne the same. » | _Eva Esmond, an Eighty-Three-Year | Old Actress, has earned $14,000 during | her short career on the stage. She has | t purchased a summér home at Long Branch, N. J. Rev. James Haslop a Holy Roller | preacher, of Gadsden Ala., allowed a | rattlesnake to bite him five times to how he was immune from harm. He was burled two days later. The Supreme Court Held vesterday that the Pueblo Indians were under the guardianship of the government and liquor could not be taken into | their country without violating the federal law, President and Mrs. their first public since last spring. | hundred delegates Home Missionary society { odist Episcopal church Wilson Held reception yesterdas They received five of the Women's of the Meth- Rock Ts- increasc The Annual Report of th land Railway lines, shows an in operating revenues, a gain ting income, enlarged balance ends and the pavment of with a $300 000 surplus .fur d five per Morris McDonald was Re-elected president and Howard Elliott w chosen chairman of the tive of the first meeting board of directors of the Maine Railroad yesterday mittes Hew of the Boston Agent Alexander Newell of the Con- necticut Humane society announced that he intends enforcing “blue laws” concerning the working of . horses on work teams” unless a special permit is re eived from the mayor or superintend- ent of police. A New Method of Typhoid Vaccina- tion is announced in a report by Dr Frede Par iay, professor ¢ pathe 1t fornia State ur Dr Gay's vaccine eliminate e fever and nausea which have here marked other nes used typhoid fever Charles F. Murphy. Leader of Tan min sterday des grand ju vestigation | alleged to have been | Purroy Mitchel, | mayor, to the effect that the demo- | cratic " organization leaders were col | onizing voters for use on election day. The Finding in the Second Trial of nded a charges by John of made fusionist candidate for dhe Russell will case at Cambridge, in which a claimant from North Dako- representing hims Dar $500,000 estate of his father the late Da Russel was reported to counsel yester Gll- bert A. A. Pevey, the master who con a ¢ the hearing he finding will not be made public until the text of | the decision is filled in court next | week. Democrat Chosen to Supreme Bench. | Peorla, IN, Oct. 20.—In the most | flercely contested judicial election in | the history of Tilinois, Charles C. Craig, democrat, of Galesburg was elected to the supreme bench to Jobn P. Hand, by a majority over Jidge Leslie D. publican, of Peorla, tho progressive and elements in the oumpalgn. 1p to ten | days befora the campaisn clos; d there was little Interest fgken In tha strug. &lo, succeed Judge of 3,646 Puterbaugh, re- Arthur H, Shay, weman suffragist Pier for Longest Telescope. Los Angeles, Cal, Oct 20—The con | erete pler which, will subport the long- In the world was oom- on the erest of Mount | Wilson, The telescope, which will have | 2 100 ineh lens, will improve the Car- | st toloscope Baltimore, Md., Oct, 30.—One of the south as Atlents and Birmingham, Ala} negle molar observatory, which at pres- worst wind'and rain’storms ever ax- It fallowed in the trail of n wind storm| mests here tomarrow, gathered at an | periencad on tha eastern shora of | Maryland is reging tonlght, Tha storm | began early thig afternson and by nightfall lower Chesapeake bay trafiic wag gled upe whieh, according te the weather by reay, erogeed over the K. Lawrence, valley® Emew was reperind at S Leuls, Ms, Terve Haute, Ind, and Houghsen, informal recepiion haid (enight at the Hetel Taft, High dignharies of this hraneh A fdd Fellowspip wers ot tha banauet, There are & number of vis- Mors fom other elaies ent ix supplied with a sixty Ineh in- | strument means of the new glass {e predicted phetazraphe of stare will ba made which (ofore have been .impoesibis. her Commissioner Caminetti After Conference With Wil- -. son Reverses Order of Deportation WILL NOT BE LESS LENIENT THAN ENGLAND In Public Statement He Declares That There is an Element of Doubt Whether Her Acts Constitute “Moral Turpitude” or Are Merely Political—Militant Leader Not Obliged to furnish Bond—Will Return to England November 28. Washington, Oct. 20 America’s | States twice before, once in the au= doors were opened {oday to Mrs. Em- | tumn of 1909, and again from October, meline Pankhurst, and during the few | 1911, to January, 1912; going to friend weeks covered by her lecture engage- | Mrs. O. H. P. Lelmont, Madison ave- ments the British militant suffragist | nue, New York has $2,000. The leader is free to go where she will in | board excluded alien, by unanimous the United States. An order releasing | vote, as a ‘pers ho has been con- the much-discussed visitor from de- | victed of a felony, or other crime, or tention at Ellis Istand. New York, and | misdemeanor, which in the opinion ‘of revoking the deportation order of the | the board involves moral turpitude. ™ specfal inquiry | | | after President Wilson had conferred 4 N with Secretary Wilson of the depart- MESHEAVKHURST . DINGS, ment of labor and a formal hearing = before Immigration Commissioner |-Guest of Women's Political Union Last Caminetti on Mrs. Pankhurst's appeal Night. had been concluded. 31 Doubt Regarding Her Acts. JJ"\i‘fi York, Oct, 20.-Mrs. Emmeline and the president had agreed that | faSISC leader, landed on Manhattan surs. Pankhurst should be admitted | [5a0d at 1 o'clock today from Eilia “on her own recognizance,” with the | i RC, WACTe, 876 had beem 5 understanding thai she should depart | Since last Saturday by the immigra gagements. Foth the presiden but President Wilson and Secrotary of le secretary agreed with Commis- [abor Wilson intervened on her ap- sioner Caminetti in the opinion ghat | e, i*rom this decision, and today ihe there ovas an clement of doubt as 10| structed Anthony Caminetti, commis- hether the acts for which Mrs. Pank | Gioner_general of immigration, to re- | lease her on her own recognizance and constituted moral turpitude or Were | without bond. Mrs. Pankhurst now )Jfl‘fn\r.x n character i s ;“m be able to carry out her contem- ommissioner €Caminetti tonight | plated lecture tour in this country. She English Govern slightly-bullt. gray-haired little wom- “There is nothing in the an who stepped ashore from the ferry- before me,” said the siate boat at the E v was the same per- indicate that the British son that for several years had caused desires that Mrs. P: the British government so much trou- returned to Englar ble by reason of her militant tactics in dence of record indicates that behalf of woman suffrage or her inc she was placed under a sentence of | tdtions to militancy for “the cause three years' pemal servitude, she has | Also her tranquil countenance and served only a small part of the sen- | brightness of eye gave no indication tence, and apparently no effort has | that she had gone through the ordeals been made to compel her to serve the | of six prolonged hunger strikes to obtain her release from prison sen- tences imposed for illegal acts commit- ted in England in her endeavors to balance;, but as a matter of fact marked*feniency has been shown tow- ards militants by the English authori tles. Shall this government deny even | gain votes for women. - temporary asylum whengby so doing | Shortly after she landed Mrs. Pank- less consideration would® be hurst was taken in an automobile to | the residence of Mrs. O. H. P. Bel- mont, where she had luncheon, end to- night she was dined at the Aldine club Mrs. Pankhurst than England played? Best Disposition of Matter. | & : AR R | by the Woman's Political union. She that she is cominz here only for a | ,Lhe American people did it—it is et Yo the Specifc murposa of | their Will” she sald, her face beaming fulfilling engagements to deliver lec- | With smiles. “What will the English engagements. G a, the British home “Upon carefully considering the en- | Becretary, characterizing him as “the i i a1 GO e the cum. | Chief torfurer for England.” She said stances of the case, T conclude that the | it Was not her purpose to preach mill- beat disposition to make of-the mat- | tancy in this country, but that she tor il be to accept the assurances of | Would confine herself to an exposition all parties concerned and admit Mrs o T N Pa n er OWn rec ee, | T e S e R e Pankhurst was the reciplent of tormination of ber ensagements, and | ® demonstration unique in the annals e of Ellis Island as she was leaving the - £ | immigration station. Men and women Has $2000 With Her. employes ran hither and thither to he secretary | galn points of vantage from which to view the militant lealler, and the board the commissioner described the cu hand ; of special Inquiry adjourned W= eases | ‘l Tn his memorandum to | as follows “Alien is a native of M ster. | that the members of the board and the England, aged 51, travelin is | immigrants. might see her as she | a widow. witt o n in Bu- | trudged with stea ep and head { rope; paid her own passage; h srect toward tho ferryboat and the occupation; has been in the United | freedom of the co THE TRADERS' NATIONAL BANK AT LOWELL CLOSED. 1 | NINETY SOLDIERS IN THE HOSPITALS. Number of Kilied in Railroad Wreek Now Stands at 17, | National Bank Examiner Reported In- 1 stitution Insolvent. | Washington, Oc . Mobile, A Oct Uniess others ! National bank of Lov losed | of the ninety soldiers in local hospitals today on a report from Nafl lie of injuries suffered in the wreck of Examiner Norwin S. Bean tha Mobile and Ohio troop train near | stitution is i Iven Harold G. s e L Miss nday afternoon, ray has been appointed receiver the list of d will stand at 17, ac A close relationship existed cording t the railroad undertakers’ tween the Traders’ and the Atlantic |report fonmight. Officials of the road National bank of, Pro G R. T say there are no other bodies in the which was closed L 14 Three | wreckage. Physicians do not believe months ago the capital of the Traders' | there will be more than one death was shown to be badly impaired and | gmong the njured. The most serious- a formal notice of impairment was |jy hurt ix Private Ostrander of the ferved ‘on its directors. This directed | {atn " qompany. The reyised lat of them to make good the impairment by | gead foiows an sssessment on the stockholders, or | “AOISIOE L g on mienin to place the bank in Voluntary lGuida- | reciemont bands tion. Under the law the bank hud | “Corporal A. T. Klavinskl, 170th Ca. three months in which to do either of | corporal Frank Chelevakie, 170th Co. these things. The three months ex Corporal Fritz Kohler, 17Qth Co. pired Oct. 17 and the bank examiner ! prigate Virgll Remsen, 39th Co. reported that the capital had net been The following privates of the 170th restored and that the bank was in- | aomiie | solvent, o eat. Pasrustte: | —_— | Joe Leban | OBITUARY. | W. H. Brin | G C. Gruelks. ; Polk Miller. | E. W, Panek | Richmond, Va., Oct. 20.—Polk Miller, | Joseph Provance. | a Richmond business man, known | H. Bishop. throughout th outh for his plantation G. C. Burleson. stories of war time and his perform- | Claude Teel. ances on the banjo at many confeder- V. Van Stebbins, nions, died suddenly st his home | G. W. Goodes. G President W. W. Pinley of the Mo= & ) helleves*the front wheels Engagement. tender left the track be- | . Washington, Oct. 0. 3 where the wreck oceur- :“"’"’:“l‘"'””‘ ok ;” S had ement issued tonight, | the Southern <'c cial Congrcss, a ) § o “Dhese wheels broke practically ev- Mobile, October 1. Mr in : . center (of the | said he thoushe 1t unwise to fuifil | Ue in the center (of jhe trestle). an engagement which would necessi b s b S i <rel tate his absence from the city fo spread, resuiting in the trafn’ Gl long & period, immediately after the |OVer and carrving the trestle~with it : | eful e 5 does not_indi- Mexican elections to be held October |4 careful examination ar | cate that the track was in any way 5 N | defective prior to the sccident.” P | Had Unlicensed Wireless. | T i New York, Oct. 20.—FElmer B. Myers | 1,200-at'K. of P. Recepition. ® Brooklyn youth who set up a wire Hartford, Conn, Oct. 20.—Prelimin- less plant on the roof of hi hom ary to the annual convention of the | withent first securing federal li- | grand lodge, Enights of Pythlas, and "can:«« to do so, was fined $50 by United | grand temple, Pythlan Sisters, here to- States Judge Mayer today for viola- | morrow, a reception was held tonight ilon of the radio act passed la June | in Foot Guard hall, which was attend- by congress. [fa ¢ sald (0 be (he frst [ed by 1.900, Following an able address defendant under this I by Dr, John J. Galley of Waterbury, s A. srand chancellar of the Knights of | ) Pythlas, there was a soclal session and ftsegiloipe 0. M. 0.4 l ball, The reception was under m: Washington, Oct, £0.—President Wil- | yuepices of the eight local lodges of son today joimed the looal branch of the order, the Yaung Men's Christian associatlon, s bepoming a regular mem \Lun“ W other presidentd have hoen members of | Suit Agaimst Fraternal Ordey the erganizatien during their Wa -| Hartford, Comn, Oct, 20.—Mrs, Sal- ington residence, _ | ma Wunder rought suit sgatmst 3 e the Pratarnal Order of Connesticut for | Cattan seed off fmpsrted b Jtale | 33,000 death banedt, which she alleges apseunted (0 7,000 pounds 0 1910, 71| was Aue upan the death of her hus: £60.980 pounds in 1311, and 43,000,000 | band, Heil’ L. Wunder, & well knews pouads in 1212, local baker, last August, DECIDED TO ADMIT MRS. PANKHURST