Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 1, 1913, Page 1

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VOL. LV.—NO. 262 “NORWICH, CONN., SATU RDAY, NOVEWBER 1, 1913 Mrs. John Lind Gave Fleeing Deputies Key to Her Statercom on the Morro Castle REASON OF BOAT'S DETENTION AT VERA CRUZ Mexican Soldiers Search the Vessel For Anti-Huerta Legis- lators——Six Arrested But Two Arrive in New York With Wife of President Wilson’s Special Envoy—Wilson’ Policy Meets With Disfavor Among Americz.as in Mexico steamer | bring about a fair and free election, It from Vera Cruz efforts to be made by the American w wife of sident | government to use its good offices to w ht also | secure the participation of the consti- T we their tutionalists. 3 } : * quick In some quarters the suggestion was » re he two | advanced that the Washington govern- - o et i Vera Cruz | ment contemplated assisting materially 3 Do e A - sisteroom | in the conduct of the proposed elec- 2 2l uight on & til the tons to ensure certain safeguards. b ot st e lihacs b tie | Dis n of the suggestion in diplo- - e Tk Fans e circles, citing as a precedent . A D the United States had supervised O o e ok atlo Traq | elections in Cuba, brought out many - urro Castle had | expressions of opinion to the effect A while 13U | 4t none of the Mexican factions probably would consent to such an ar- rangement. MEXICAN FUNDS LOW. Considerable Difficulty Experienced in Meeting Payrolls. Mesico City, Oct. 31.—The 1 ment foday encountered some govern- aifficulty in meeting its payrolls for the ten i the Gays ending today. In some of the ,me | departments only partial payment w “he | made. with the promise to the men that the halance would be fortheoming tomerrow. In other departments Highlands, N. C., who e | ment had to o entirely defe Jith, Witliam L. Ditlard, & 1iversman, e | Later, however, the government se- |33 Years old, of the same place: help- TUOON | Cired funds and tonight began Eiving | €0 16 save R, Augustus Baty, o Ghre in Hiaff was | fhe men in all departments their mon- | benter, 26 vears old, from a fall down : ey. The paymasters had instructions | & Drecipice at that place May 14, 1911, to continue at work through the night rd receives Iver medal and if_necessary | Rumors of the tna of the ad-| Baiy had fallen from the summit | | mis ration ‘to meet its financial en- | 0f Whiteside mtain at Fool's Rock gagements spread over the city, to-|and rolied 150 feet an almost | 3 gether with another persistently circu- | Vertical cliff, and lodged against a | | fated rumor that President Huerta pro- | Small bush, 2 inches from the brink | posed to levy a tax of 15 per cent, on |Of a precipice 2,000 feet deep, part | all bank deposits. The latter report | of his hody d: over the cdge. | ‘ B¢ spread to such an extent that many | Wri rd_descended ‘the | that ' | persons withdrew their funds from only handholes or | > nie with FloNe: DRI, footholes bein, dges and hollows not | - 1o help PGP Tore than ai {nch 11 height or depth. | o right's wife saw him and began 0 | | italy Takes Friendly Stand. scream. He was nearly unnerved, but | ; Rome, Oct. 311t is understood hete | pushiod on. Stopbing At a tiny bueh | Gave Key to Her Stateroom. that Italy will not adopt any DIro- | feet above Baty. he let his feet rluu‘;‘ Bt oas necded. 1 spent mme concerning Mexico Without | to o ledge 2 faet above the brmi apd | e nizht on deck tnd the two men 1id | first having entered in a friendly ex- | thon arasped Datos coar comin pand | & citves Zave | change of tdens on- the Bublect With| gave & onihes febc Nor peonal Baty | - ore. Then | the United States government {When Wright ithreatened him, | o o we sailed at | = . | [ Plnning his legs around the bush, | . - 1« o | HENNESSY TELLS OF Wright drew Baty un to a place of | + envoy is a | | comparative safety, where Dillard, who | B w aqujet BARGE CANAL GRAFT.|{had lost his nerve in the fnal stages | o e; but her eves| SRS of the rescue, was waiting. The two | : . . 1_couldn’t | Claims Contractor Paid $25,000 on Re- | men now took Baty; who was derirlone, s t ren heing | quest of “Boss” Murphy. 15 feet across the bare face of the oliff taken ash 4. I just had within 18 inches of the brink. They * g for the ew York. O 3 Hen | then moved Baly o the foot of t St Tlisain ne ormer Governor < graft | vertical ledge at the summit o investigator, who has aign- | which point he was hoisted by means £ ing against Tammany Hall, testificd on | of a line. He recovered. The resciie > the witness stand today and declarcd | took two hours ang” 30 minutes. i ¥ that William J. Connors of Buffalo Four of ‘the awards were made to | Ben had told him of having collecied $25,- | Connecticut residents as follows b: 000 from James Stewart, & siate barge | _Horace W. Beebe, Box 459, New 7_[\!1—‘ Cor canal contractor, at the request of | don, Conn--Bronze medal and $1000 . Charles F. Murphy., Honnessy .was | Aas needed. Saved E B. Wi 1 [ called as the sirst witness it the John |and Lillian I, and Myra R | o i Doe proceedings instituted by Distriet | from drowning, Fast Ly ., Au- | ¥ ) Attorney Whitman to investizate the |gust 4, 1912. The omen got Bains charges made by Hennsesy against | into deep water in fe Tiver. Bee- | gelting Marphy, Edward E. McCall, the demo- | be only swimmer near ey . cratic candidate for mayor, and oth- | C. Frederick We Main street, | E N e Winsted, Conn.—Bror medal and | &= - Hennessy said that ke had seen | $1,000, needed. Saved Edward C. | g ¥ e~ connors in Buffalo this fall during his | Birks : shock, Waterbury, | 3 nves ons into graft in the state | Conn, April iz, 1912 highway department, and that HMenry | Valentine rederick (deceased) | B ! argard of Buffalo and “a big con- | (Widow), 187 Sou Colony _street, | " ed to my staleroom.” | {rastor named McDonough” of Niag- | Meriden. Conn—Bronze medal 1o s nd Dominguer | gra. were present. widow and 40 2 month, |1 S barricade | e onnors told me” said the witness, | with $5 a 1 1 additional for her | The “thai Murphy had asked him to gef | daushter until she reaches aze of six. | a good contribution from Jim Stewart|teen. Died atiempting (o suve Liore tract. Connore said he got the $25,000 | Meriden, Conn., February 25, 191 ¥ i from Stewart in Dunkirk, 1 think it |* Nelson A, Andrews (deceased) e . was, in October, 1910." « er), Middlefield, Conn.—Bronze =5 Joes . FOUR REGIONAL juave Valentine . Frederick from e memi he s RESERVE BANKS. s 1915 S tor . { - e = 8eut e i Vera | Tentative Agreement in Senate Com- : { g e e Lo 0 mittee on Currency Bill. S PCS:SRg:EA . e ; o N BANKER ba s g e be in. | Washington, Oct. 31.—The senate | Sor T guez and Cordern, and by in- |, A0 L "5 A rrency commitics Arrested at Chicaao for Alleged For- = heir rie] Y Sained nigh vely agreed upon four re gery at Baltimore. t v i gional banks for the proposed : Thes m insistes that while con- | RS, (Sl o er M etth & proviso | Chie o, Captain Cornelius f gy Ay e o after two years the federal re- Gienn Coilin: for two davs at- e T rd may add as many ter 10 me of the Tnvesthmant | . it deems nece: Bankets' assoct here and gave his " i = hhe: peniin nE, s; Yepresentine the. thoushe e num t 12, and vitish bankers, was arrested derstood that the admir 1t on a charge of forgery | a0t consent to have it reduced below iest of the Baltimore, Md. police nine At the meetings Coiling said he rap President Wilson, it became known | resented a large Turopean bhanking tonight, looks with disfavor on the act- | house and his expreesions mat respeets | jon f the committee today. He be- |ful attention from the American bank faves there should be at least ten re A cablegram to the London house gional reserve banks, and he has bee issured by adéministration supporters in the committee that today's series of Cabled Paragraphs Porfirlo Diaz Starts for Pari: Biarritz, France, Oct, 31.—General Porfirio Diaz, who has been staying here since early in August, left today for Paris, Germah Aviator Has Fall, Versailles, France, Oct. 31—Victor Stoeffier, the well known German av- iator, was seyerely bruised and his miechanic sustained a broken lez when their aeroplane capsized and fell from a helght of 400 feet while they were flying over the Versallles park at 8 o'clock this morning. French Bark Burns at Sea. Hamburg, Germany, Oct, 31.—T'wen- ty-two out of the %5 ‘men forming the crew of thie French bark Patrie, were vesterday rescued hy the Hamburg- American liner Kronprinzessin Cecilie from the Patrie, the vessel which was found burning and disabled in mid- Atlantic. Auto Speeder Killed. London, Oct. 31.—Percy Lambert, the holder of many world’s automa- bile speed records, was killed on the Brooklands Motor Car racetrack to- day while he was trying to break the | hour record. Lambert was traveling 114 miles an hour, CARNEGIE MEDAL FOR NEW LONDON MAN Saved Three Persons from Drowning in Niantic River. Pittsburgh, Pa, Oct. 31.—Nearly $100,000 is disbursed to Heroes or their relatives by the Carnegie Hero Fund commission in its report made pub- lic today. The commission distr immediately $91,000 in awards of and $1,000. There are 16 award 000 and 39 of $1,000. The remain- der are in awards consisting of, pen. sic anging from $20 to $65 a month and in cash sums under $1,000. In every award a medal s given,“either bronze, gold or silv In a few in- ces only a medal was- awarded, highest award, consisting of a gold goes to Charles N. Wright, a_merchant, medal and $2,000 in cash money, 38 ears old, of | however, brought the response that | Colling was unknown and the creden- | tials which had been given him by the | Buried Victim's Body in Swamp FARMER CONFESSES MURDER OF NEIGHBOR. SHOT HIM FROM REAR Follownd Him Into the Woods and Dropped Him in His Tracks—Denies | That Jealousy Was Motive of Crime. Milford, Mass., Oct, 31.—By the flick- ering ligkt of lanterns, Daniel J. Coop- er, a farmer, led a party of officers to- night into the depths of a swamp in West Upton, nine miles from.heré, and pointed out the grave he said he had, dug to hide the body of his neighbor, Alfred Bradish, whom he confessed he had killed with a revolver bullet on the morning of October 4. In his con- fession, which came after an ull da examination by the police, Cooper said he shadowed Bradish from his farm- house and without a word came up be- hind him and fired. Then he hid “he Investigation of Westerly Wreck TESTIMONY GIVEN éV TWENTY WITNESSES. B FLAWS IN THE RAILS Foreman Anderson Says They Are Not Infrequent—Has Found a Break in Rail Two Days After Being Laid. Provigence, R. I, Oct. 31—The joint Investightion by the Interstate Com- | merce commission and the Public Util- | ities commission into the wreck of the | Gilt Idge express at Westerly last Saturday night was emdeq late this afternoon, after twenty witnesses had been examined. In the testimony of New York, New Haven and.Hartford Railroad officials and the train crew it appeared that the New Haven.road used a rail of a different standard from that recom- mended by the American Association of Rallway Engineers, and that it was Sound and Beneficial Policy Little is licity. With the well given adv business man can profitablys link sound and beneficial policy. That to be gained in a business way without - the aid of pub- ice “Honesty is the best policy” the the statement that adveértising is a the advertise: superior ser over all other methods of publicity, through newspaper advertising, is demonstrated in the facility offered for immediate action. It is the ready market in which merchandise can be presented at the smallest cost. The fewspaper is valuable beca it circulates and the adver- tiser knows the value of thorough circulation, one which goep into the homes of the people who read and depend upon the adver- . tising columms for their buying tir The public which is made ac- i quainted with the day ufte ds me age of the pe ent adverti: H knows that'it can depend upon his goods and they know where to In closing up the distance between merchant and buyer and vice { sa there is no medium E rn Connecticut which affords the advantages of the Bulletin. It goes into the homes and it brings results. Make it do business for you. | In the past week the following matter was carried in the Bulletin § | for the benefit of its readers ‘] Bullatin Telegraph Local Genera/ Total | Saturday, Qcki 25,7 755 137 963 1175 _§] Monday, O¢ti:2%. 1. 10% 132 955 487 || Tuesday, Oect: 28, =91 126 236 453 i Wednesday, Oct. 29.. 101 96 235 422 ]| Thursday,” Oct.30.. 84 126 296 506 |} ) 2 y 2 z | Friday, @ct. 315110 118 228 456 H Fobalsni i . 804 735 2200 3499 i body in the woods until the next morn- ing—which was Sunday—when he gged it an eighth of a mile to the amp where it was found tonight. Clairvoyant Gave Tip. arching several occas her three. chi the woodland in the vicinity Bradish farm during the last weeks, but have found no trace of missing ma Acting, clairvoyant, who that her t buried. Mrs police tc part n: accompar Br 1 on and all the the b, is said, on the told her a nd ha rad e of a killed d the he stery with the Mil- ie police had Coope: ciop had fastened. ford town house to- there the alleg nfession W azo and Workin ford autho; m as made Denies Jealousy Was Motive. afterward office in an automobile for immediately left West Upton he had no reason ibors had ciréulated the motiv The police say that Cooper watche Bradish leave his farmhouse Sat day morning, October 4; that Bradish | went down the road “ooper fol lowed in the woods, out of the sight of the man he was shadowins ¢ point in_the road where ilic E dense, Cooper came out behind Brs volver and fired, Dradish dropping in his t Both Men About 40. Conper fired two more the police. to make sure h wa dead. and then he hid the in the woods and went about his work on his farm. going bagk to the spot Sunday morning, the next day, to c the body to the swamp, where he buried 1. State Officer Murray, Chief O'Neill of the Milford police, and Medical Ex ible ed the urs, r the defective rail which wreck to have been broken | or possibly days, before it caus- | ed the derailment of the Gilt Edge. | Flaw Developed Since Rail Was Laid. | The Merchants’ Limited went | i rail an hour and a quart “tive miles an_hou | J. Backus of New Haven engineer maintenance and ways, testified | | that the rail used by the New Haven | road contained a greater percentage of | carbon than the standard recommend- | ed by the railway engine He said that the flaw in the rail had probably | developed since it was laid and had | not occurred in the manufacture. En- | neers of both the Gilt Edge and Mer- | p Limiteq said they had ridden | over broken rails before, without real- | | teine sc | | Seven Broken Rails Removed. | | Charles Anderson of Westerly, sec- | { tion foreman in charge of the streteh | of road where the wreck occurred said that seven s had been taken miles s 1910. In ome in- rail two after it haq been laid He st men working to maintain g of six miles. cial A. Howard of the | state ymmission, who 1 the most of the questioning of wit- said during the inquir. Other Witnesses. . duty at the time, Newton New London, fireman on th head brakeman were also examined. | UNABLE TO LOCATE | CHARLES §. MELLEN | Wanted as Witness in Suit of Cherles | * kers' i W. Morse’s Sister. r. Flandrau and his wife arc bo votes were only of a tentative charac- | bankers' committee were returned, e BE W T Clasks ware dn the 3 rse’s Siste for their home in St. Pa Mrs. Lind | ter, designed chiefiy to sound out the| After his o Rad been re- |t which ascompanied it AR ent spend the wit n at attitude of the members toward funda. | (Ueste oliins disappeared f N : 3 & hoel here. and Will ac em | mental features of the bill. hotel, it was sald, leavi unpaid | Caoper is ahout Eaes fomorrow as far as her hom L Pii and an elaborate suil case, con- | iafi was about the same e 4 i o $ i HYMN ‘BOOKS SCARCE AT Caplatn Colling: once was the Nis. | sl e T timor courteous threatme WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY, | band of Natalie Schencle, heilo of New. | DYNAMITERS’ CASES : ios Wik Broke. int iy S et R UNDER ADVISEMENT. | Steamship X : Y the: Chapeh e roatary. Jiis Wife obinined | Freedom of Convicted Men One of lis u stocknol o Mot oronien bt Huf! s which included o vears trip around | Three Possibilities. A s e rechiver be ab, g e i Middletown, Conn, Oct. $1—There | ino world = | ointed ana e Sompariy'a Tuses’ ot > as.a déarth of bymn books In the ‘' cory as_fol ; Chicago, Oct. 81—Arguments on |the steamships Harvard a ale to ained. “We \wore Chapel when the Wesleyan University | oo Cameron Hisniandors of o GrC” | the appeal of thirty of the labor union | the Pacific Navigation company be an- g ¢ students assembled for prayers today, |igh army, He came to the United | OMiclals convicted at Indianapolis last | nulled : ! t consequently no singing. as an at- | giates in 1903 and was made much of | December of conspiracy and complici- | Charles S. Mellen, former president 3 pt to sing Rock uf‘Agles without :::e by American soclety. A vear later hiy |ty in the M Nar?a;a d)n;‘vmurv‘ pl[o : r;;‘ ‘l:g«:”.\ew \”I,—L, 13.“’- Haven ‘mld | ¥ ks fallelh© A liteslater in b agement to Miss Schenck o completed before the United | Hartford railroad, whe it was expect- | SILENCE AT WASHINGTON. | iaof of prayers by Prof. Karl P. Har- | So8agement to Miss Schenck was an- | FieRe OB 7 0% ppeals today. | °d ' wonld be an Important witness, has | bicp P 38 i rington, who was conducting services, | S e QAT The court took the petition under ad- | ot appeared at the hearings. —Pro- | Ba e T e Eretian, Ot Fan alarin clock began a strident Jang_ | i visement ,and will render a_deoision s reperted (hey had been | Supervise Mexican Election. e “As it would mot be found, it had Steamship Arrivals, MR T e R it e e s ol 4 — to e allowed to ring itself out. Copenhagen, . Oot .——Arrived, | may remder one of three decisions; |her complaint alleged o New | t n Some iime during the night, it de- | steamer . F. Tietgen, New York, | It may affirm the verdicts of guilty. | Haven was behind the which e h eloped, stud had gotten into the | Cherbourg, Oct. 31 —Awived, sicim- | It may set aside the verdicts and |00k the Yale and Harvard out of the wshingi draigistrat e chapel, hi : hooks, about 400 in cr ‘Amerika, New York for Hamburg. |order o new trial, New York und Boston, service. Blaxicen poobden Ior the last 1. . iumber, and secreted the elocl | . London, Oct. 31.—Afrived, steamer| It may decide that the sovernmesnt o St Sy B ST e ko I asspandihiiLy | Bioiian, Mantreal | had no case, setting the convicted men Garrison at Pacific Terminal .l 3 for the disturbance is being made by | Plymouth, Oct. 81 —Arrived, steamer | at liberty. Panama, Oct, 81.—Liddley AL Garri- | e v uainied the college authorities. | St. Louis, New York for Southampton, Yo son, the American secretary of war, to- | g e i gy R — < = ) Income Tax Causes Confusion. dss;wasfzaxm?wu the Pacific oo nE 3 “but Newington Man in Collision Steamers Roported by Wirsless, | New York, Oct 8L—That part of | Soction Of the Panama cenal, the ter- Ring ew Britain, Conn, Oct. 31—Wil-| Queenstown, Oct. 31. — Arrived, | New York which 13 referred fo vague- gnap{a‘:ft;:ts a1 Baoos, gnd ihe clule @cfinite proposals liam Siiolds ‘of Newingion was serl- | stesmers Marion, Philadelphia for |1y s Wil sirect was in s stats of | ) dnill | - © ame source it was learned | ously injured tonight when his auto- |Liverpool; Cedric, New York for Tiv- | confusio g e — R gty Bis | Saobhie oax i Holiimlen. Withsa. trolley.; sEbooL 2 g Wal street did ot know which way to| _ Newfoundiand Election. | considerat o | car at wington. He was brought| Bable Island, Oct, 31.—Steamer De- | turn. The new income taxlaw becomes | ~St. John's, N. F., Ocf —A gain ot | an to the New Britain general hospital, | vonian, Liverpool for Boston, signalled | effective tomorvow, and some of the [two scats in the house of assembly for | thon woul where it was said late tonight that his ) miles east of Boston at highest priced !lWy_ers, bankers and | the obpositieon was shown ‘]n 7(-‘[(\|'|N; ma-y quariers condition was critical. Shields was | Cape Race, Oct. 31 corporation officials in the world con- | from yesterday's general clection re- (ure of Ui admiBisiraii blan | tossed from the machine, siriking on | London and Havre for Mont fossed that they were completely at|ceived WH 1o a late hour ionight. Twen- Wil be a ceomjrcbensive heme o | his head ~ nalled 270 miles east mt 10.30 a. m. sea as lo ite meaning, bty-five districis have net yet repurted, The Bulletin'$ Circulation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and lis Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the City's Population AICED IN ESGAPE OF TWD MEXICANS| Condensed Telegrams Mrs. Pankhurst, English Militant, has declined an invitation to address Colorado suffragist Dorothy Eisley, five ycars old, choked to death on a plece of apple iy the yard of her home at Newark. Cleveland Laundrymen announce that the price for laundering a collar has advanced from 2 1-2 to 3 cente. A Holstein Cow Owned by F. L. Sweet a farmer of North Adams, Mase, gave birth to a calf without & tail. icading suffragist of isconsin and New York, was added to the staff of the new federal industrial commis- sion Abraham Lewis, a Tailor of Boston was locked up in the tombs at New York yeésterday in default of $2.680 bail for examination tomorrow on the charge ving abducted 14 vear old Jennie erg from her home in Malden, Mass, laxt Monday. GUILTY OF FIRST DEGREE MURDER Verdict Carrying the Death Penalty Returned Agains’ Mrs. Wakefield of Bristol {ACCUSED OF PLOTTING HER HUSBAND’S DEATH { nesota will be held at Chicago Nov. 10 | | 50 comsider tne financial condition of | the Independent Order of Foresters, agcording to a statement given out to- night by J. A. O. Preus, insurance com- missioner of Minnescti | the regular democratic organization, for mayor of New York, A $2000 Fire at Suffield, Suffield, Camd,, Oct, 31—Fire of he | AlMred McDonald, hizh sceretary of | kmoww origin taday destray | Minnesota, said tonight that the hizh | dwelling house accupied court of Minnesota is advising iis | Koskle, jusk eutside of the fire members not to pay ssments at | trict. The fire was hlazing in_an | this time, but to await the action of | upstaies coam, wien disovered. The ! the imsurance commissiwiers loss is 42,008 s | Clarence Altes and Charies Johnson | Male Accomplice Has Pleaded Guilty to Actual Commission & Olh:\((il'uol’\, TIL, were burned to death when fire destroyed , their boarding .3 1 3 House. ¥ Lt of Crime—Sentence Not Yet Imposed in Either Case— Sex Hygiene, Sanitation and other No Woman Hanged in Connecticut Since 1786—Con- ¢ matters 0f health will be taught tl o ST Totie s coublic victed Woman Mother of Three Small Children. ] A Proposition to Eliminate bache lors as legislators receiveq thn{nh'l'rms New Haven, Conn, ( 31 Mrs. | prison previously, for at that time a applause at the Pennsylvania ui- | Bessie Wakefield of Bristol, mother of | student of criminology was tracing out frage convention at Pittsburgh. three little children, was found guilty | the Jukes progeny. Plew when ar- e of murder in the first degree for her | raigned for murder pleaded guilty to A fl=v/‘zrd of $500 for the return of | part In the kliling of her husband, | homicide under the statute of 1642, his missing daughter, Elizabeth-aged { William, at Cheshire, last Jun by a | which dispenses with a jury and pe 29, was offered yesterday by Arthur|jury this afternoon. Sentence will be! mits the court to determine the degree L. Walker of Brookline, Mass. pronounced late ise Jumes Plew, | of guilt. Just before his plea was i her self-confessed accompilce and | made, Joseph Bergeron, charged with The Threatened Strike of telegraph | Who did the actual drugging, shooting | killing Mrs. Dowsett, with whom he operators employed by the and knifing of the husband, before | was infatuated, made a plea under the Kensas and Texas railroad the court on the qu: same statute, the first on record in e L guil, Plew was in court | more than 200 years. The cqurt has the woman. with whom he had lived | heard Bergeron's case and decision is i s 4sident | i0 Middlebury, declare upon oath that | pending. Plew's case will probably be Grafton Stevens, a wealthy résident| 3 Va1 Got conspire to Kill her hus- | snded by Tucaday. when Ars Wake: of the Chicago suburb of Wilmette, b 1 14 el & for and his wite: wors hurned 1o Heay | band, although she said she did when | fleld will be presented for sentance. Festerday secking to Save n pot dee | examined by the coroner. After the|Plew may stand beside her -then. = s & | Wakefield jury went out, Judge Burpee | Neither has shown much emotion since S opened the Plew hearing, and suspend- | arrest. Plew was stolld during his juUnited States Ambaseador Renti IL1ZRO3 v reckive. the iurr's yernge nearing, _Mrs Wakefleld occasionaily 288 heen avalancliod: with begging e 1 . s { wept. When the jury came in she was ters since the Austrian newspapers, on | No Woman Hanged Since 1786. n‘cmyflpoaeu. 1 tie Beortag g rers arrival printed stories about his AL Wakefield is not irst womi= | giot she aply rested her head on her ate fortune. ;A‘y v‘\' be wn]\‘\].nnv\ o rder mi the | hang and quietly wept Ignace Paderewski, winning hanged in the sta ince about 1786 Third Woman Tried for Homicide in suit against a L lon jmpres kefleld ¢ showed | Week, I biiled another pianist as “one man wanted 1o zet| Mrs, Wakefield is the third woman classed with Paderewski 1 The family lived in | before the state courts this week on accept money damages. | was a farmband 1t | homicide charges. Mrs. Lilian Pers o i kins of Allyn's Point was acquitted of Frank |. ‘Cohen, former ayor | " The Iatter ed the husband while | manslaughter in killing her son-in-law, Glasgow, was robbed of a wallet, con- | the wife took her children out fo walk. | Thomas Coatchelly, at Norwich, on the taining $150 and valuable pupers | husband wos liced hy Plew ground of self defense. Coatchelly tried while on the platform at a Fusion | the o, o Knife driven [ to get Into Mrs, Perkins' house to see meeting i New York ! and o rope placed about | his baby, and the womsn shot him, ve the appearance of sui- | fearing he would harm her. William Bramwell Booth, who = The nexi day Plew t | "At Putnam a grand jury falled to ceeded his late father as head of tie kefield and he hildren nd hisfindict Mrs, Amanda Lawson, charged Salvation Army, arrived n New York | n child by a wife from v 1! with clubbing her husband, Jonas, to on the steamship Lusitania yesterday | goparated, Middiebur death at Woodstock in June, and the on his first visit to America. bodly Was ¥ ch i | complaint was dismissed, leaving the e tuted by atiached to Mrs. | murder unsolved When Charles Nickols of Detroit | {yjcnclas statenent (o the pollce t) Among: other murder trials ‘undess was arrested for intoxication he Was | gne feared her husband had killed b way in the state courts is that of Jo- clud in pajumas seven shirts, two s An upstairs neighbor. however | Soph Buonomo, charged with Killing uffiers and a sweater jacket besides | p3q geen Plew lead Wakefleld out of | Jennie Cavagliére at Stratford a year an ordinary suit of clothes. the house in the direcfion.of @ MOUR- | ago. This s & re-trial after an appeal 3 | tain. to the supreme court. The case at- ‘vfilsnfiu;:lcy‘?;sh "j'“‘"“"i"‘ A{mfl\':'rk Plew Pleaded Guilty. tracted attention becanse of white - hospital, who physicians sald Friday is | famous Jukes Bami o St o is| from Chicago, and then snticed to the suffering from u broken back. | relationship was detérmtved in' adjoining town aud kilich. The Bringing of a Suit against Gov- |\ = — g v S o crnor Foss fdr $100,000 for alleged : Shandor was announced Fridey oy |A PATIENT WITHOUT {icoNE Tat cAvoss James T. Moriarty, former president FOOD FOR FIVE DAYS. MANY COMPLICATIONS. of the Boston Central Labor union. —_ . K Mis. Rose (MGUE, wite” ot* etirins| One: Mathiod “of. Punishmentiat_State Many Inquiries About Law Which i o Brovilionte ct entes halod ‘;’.;; Insane Hospital. Takes Effect Today. a lodging house there yesterday under - F t ‘Washington, Oct 31—The income 3 3 Worcester, Mass., Oct. 31—Rum hot- " t circumstances which = prompted a.| e ances in the corridor be- | tax the most revolutionary revenus search by the police for the hushand. | tles, disturbances in the Coriaie BOC | teing power conferred on the Amerl- The A | Persi Al oie |and the presence of (he police who | can government since ifs foundation. saa S, Anpual Bensioh of halt pay and | were called In by Dr. Seribner, super- | starts tomorrow upon the paththat is $400 additional will be awarded anv | [eh dent, were some of the things thai | to bring millions into the public treas- | "I'mf i v‘" ‘”“)“ x x_*: PR | added to the recit al of alleged cruelty } ar: Although an m:vrr_m tax the faculty who has held his position | 2dqed 1o the P o B €T G0 ces” | been agitated for many years, and its for 25 years and Is eligible for retire- | 41d mlsconduct O BT J0 ring be- | existence was assured by an amend- ment. | er S o pard of insanily this | ment to the constitution sgreed to by A ehe ¢ Food a e | afternoon. 4 | the necessary number of states early ge of Food and fuel with | S5giNOIT 4 fiaen, representing the | last spring, its collection by & govern- its accompanying privations for . the | riilis hurses in the absence of | ment which has not tried it will strain poorer classes is commencing to ve feit | DEHTOMSE TREE T TG, B crhoon | the resources of the fertile minds tn throughout New Zealand as a result | DI O Voo Gain Gt S8 JHIEH0 | the treasury department and will be eral strike of coal miners and | pERETE, DUT L0 Totties on his walk | accompanied, it is not doubted here, dogiess {up the work without any i | with a thousand complications not now The Fort Dodge, Des Moines and|Showed five or six in = o e ot 1ot d tek 9 il e 4 . charges of drinking made Thousands of ers and telegrams Southern Interurban rai was sold ¢ CREEeS ok llivan, 4 witness | bringing up for settlement points in i rodivenaly sldnyests Rol- | e falled some newspaper men | the new law, have poured into the de- lin B, Fisher, representing ( Ol | T e “out nedr the raen's quart- | partment. They have come from every b Colony Trust company of Boston for | {ioh Sheq up numerous bottles and | concefvable source and added to the $3,500,000, ousht them into. the near | labor of making regulations, have % S A where the hearing was ss. 1i¢ | made the task of the experts ome not 3o3e0e Rose of Kittanning, Pa. | aimed attendants cursed him at the | to be envied. et B kit quarters. 0 one in the treasury department e e mioyed on 4 eand digger | “'Some of them followed him into believes that the regulations so far mep dealhs sosferday when the Bolh| 0| ad ihe srgument whity “ormulated are absolutely perfect, but ey the Monongahela river near | O a % roke up the hearing tempora- | they will stand until some ome proves Speer rily. Dr. Scribner rushed out and | that they should be changed, and of- 4 TN | found one ‘ttenda ho denied ficfals are not inclined to believe the [ The Will of Georgo E. Marsh, of | found one WLeniiy ert lnwyors employed by big cor- synn, s, the murdered soap man- | Bad Pech TeSi0 porations particularly concerned with EoefRulisen thoteatate valutd tmOn | idR boid o .. bonds.. ioctwages,. ;saiaries 900. The castern heirs get about $130.- | (o5 & oS 20 ete, have failed to understand them. A A { from taking pict | B For the First Time in the history of | Slalmed that U, 0 VERMONT AHEAD e e o e s £ | OF CONNECTICUT, president of that organinstion. Tho ofc tuo sl li%e Nara Sulliv At Prospeots of Good Teachers 24 Times SR G 7L o ling. without food flve (dayss becauss | as Good in Former State. £ Grand Raplc she had trofible with nurses. Anothe , nie e to hang | RUrse, cthel Richa % Cambridge, M 5., Oot. 31.—The nead £ Legi M. eans, Senteniced, fo MRl new oo ion e L of Dbetter preparation for teachers & T oy Dhaan, Yolod pitlants peal but th secondary schools was ursed by Chen- 1 Roan at Atlanta Ga, who pre. | 728 subjectyo nose p ilor B. E. Brown of New York uni B Roan A ANt G ImD OS] (B eiteing) the t at the meeting of the Associa s il 3 3 " | Amelia Stewart e Colleges and Preparatory was convicted. helped_ drag, pat’ elf ha of New England today. Chan $ T et them into bed ar B | cellor Brown said that the professionai o e e jo. of | EESdusles nEteel- o ol training of teachers for these schools n told delegates at the fall con- | Paokward by her T Yo mony must be taken more seriously. “While society, Daughters of the American | TRAINMEN TO BE TRIED for the botter within the past few years Revolution at Boston vesterday FOR NORTH HAVEN WREGK, 'Te lmpr t must, be e, be ac- Myt ing 1 B ¢ ducationa e ’}‘,‘??,,"f, L Cases to Come at Present Term o Rayinond 1 of Did- probably guilt , o asen it r e e sttarney Alling ur y iha 1,500 studen now DU he trials of F f n- . » i W lng Bias tha Fairbanks |ductor Ada gmar \ There is one student 74 v atale | Charged with mans n edieat r ary i ittty X Octoher 1 | New Haven and Har 1 v ALk ne student to 46,407 pe with Miss N hle, was found | North Haven, e b r of huy x vesterday in Lake Quinsigamor persons wer v fcFarland & “No Business in America today is (n | Miller was of the Whita | B0 Gonneotient S Al o'y tho | Mlountein o5 pne 3 eriff as the Methodist church for | through ihe Bar il T FEREY S B el e e T e ound : Traction Strike at | dan.?oll; : H. Clay Bebel, an eMclency &xpert of{SSSE had run by DI slenals aty 4| . Mdianapeiis, fud., Oct, $L—NOpioReN Buffalo, N, Y., at the Methodist con- | ¥ ckless speed and that b ~ oy 08 SLTQOR T o s = vention' at’ Indianapolis. Murray of the Bar Harbor tr panies of Indianapolis Went on a strfke b n negligent jn not properly at 11 o'clock tonizht, Twenty min The Sale of Inter-Changeable mileage | /& their expréss e Lo g Mol (i D e i e TE CAOVISEDENDT 1O | €d by the sirikers. * Whether the com- e s T s van hetd by | panies will attempt to operate the cars the intediinte. Smnmiroh coramimon] _PAY ASSESSMENTS. | 2o n tonight officials would not say, | vesterday to be neither discrimlaators | Financial Condition of & Foresters! Or- |~ 0 = m n i o) i ner in vielation, of the law: |~ der to Be Investigated | | . ! s | Washington, Oct. $L—Rolitical olrs ‘ G sapi o onight Women In Governmentat- Affairs | St Paul, Minn, Oct. 91—A mecting | ¢les in the eapital were stirred t scored another viclory vesterday when | of state insurance commissioners of | by an sunouncement (rom hf'v"‘:“l‘l"'\ Mre Orystal Bastman Benedict a | Wisgenain, Hlinois, Nebraske and Min. | O Gormen of New Yotk thal BS WO 9

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