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VOL. LVI—NO. 1 NORWICH, BON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 1914 PRICE TWO The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Double That of Any‘ 'CHANGES WROUGHT IN PAST YEAR Innovations of United States Government Most Radical in Quarter of Century INCOME TAX---DIRECT SENATORIAL ELECTIONS These Changes Brought About by the Perfection of the First Constitutional Amendments Since 1870—Physical Val- uation of Railways Begun—Tariff and Currency Law— Supreme Court Decisions of Deep-Rooted Importance. ‘Washington, ~ Dec.” 31 — Twelve decisions of deep-rooted importance. Cabled Paragraphs Forsign Naphtna on Free Li St. Petersburg, Dec. 31.—The em. naphtha duty free, Army Officers’ Pay Raised. London, 31.—With malking sert more attractive, issued an order increas; & the pay o commissioned officers. Atlantic Rate War, London, Dec, an Atlantic rate war has been in: creased by the report that the Ham burg-American company _intends t place some of its biggest ships, includ. ing the Cincinnati a_service making Queenstown of call during the summer season. New Year’s Greetings to Royalty. Rome, Dec. ereigns here, peror confirmed today the ministerial decree permitting the import of forelgn a view to n the regular army the war office today commissioned officers and facilitating the promotion of non-commissioned to ~—The possibility of and Cleveland, in a port A Part for All to Do in Test own workingmen’s perity of the commonwealth. £ o people of Norwicl k forward to A New Year’s Message No state\of the union has shown itself more fully in sympal the best public thought of the day than has the Land of Steady The New Year brings to the test of actual trial four great laws: the banking and currency, and the income tax acts of congress, and our compensation and civil service examination acts. Let us all do our part in helping to meke them work for the pros- UNITED SUPPORT FOR A PROSPEROUS YEAR. s ~—Mayor Murphy. The past year, year of trying circumstances to the of Four New Great Laws. —Governor Baldwin. with [abits. SIMEON E. BALDWIN, Governor of Connectfrut. 1913, has been a h and vicinity, ow- ing to the financial losses sustained by many, but with the united sup- port of all the people we shall all 31.—New Year's day is b chosen for the greetings to the sov- the year 1914 as 5 as prosperous a year as Nor- i has ever seen. “We should all 1 Other Paper, and lts Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the City’é Population = Condensed Telegrams More Than 20,000 building mechanics in New York %’m start the New Year with increases, in wages. At Last the Long Threatened cut in the price of golf balls has became a reality on this side of the water. To Play Fifty Games of checkers simultancously “is the task set for Willlam Bowles of Farmington, Ta. Colorado Suffragists, declared they will refuse to pay an income tax, be- cause the law is “man-made and un- fair. The Canadian Government has de- cided to take drastic measure to stamp out the potato disease in the Mari- time Provinces. Books on Civies and social problems are taking the place of love stories and other fiction on the reading lists of the club women of Chicago. Twe Men and Two Women arrived in New York after hiking 4,057 miles from San Francisco to prove they had been cured of tuberculosis. HUERTA REGIME 0 Belief That This Accqunts For Lind’s Desire a Conference With President Washington, Dec. 31.—With John EXPECTED TO BREAKFAST WITH WILSON TODA! N ITS LAST LE Continue Operations Against Nuevo Laredo. = army Wwas making its final stand : B T uld al Lind aboard, the scout cruiser Chester | against the swarms of in 3 months of 1913 wrought. éhanges in | It declded that owners of copyrights | peotRS 0te B8, CHESIMAS I8 for the vk together with one object in iile'0.: Gidh American song | WAS SPeeding across the Gulf of Mex- | ing in upon them from T Saath. Fhe the “American government—political, | and patents may not control the price | [ORE T FATS TNONRAS Lag QUi +—Boost Norwich! Melville J." Gidaon; an"Axex ¢t in | ico_tonight, Que to drop anchor about | American gar: at Presidio, o R economic and financial — probably | at which retall dealers resell their| o 4gresses and petitions to the my sincere wish that every writer, was adjudged a bangru;:n }n{ midnight. off Ship Island on the coast | site. the bmég;gnmg ;oresidio, ; oPPDOSEE. more far-reaching than any other year | products to the consumer. It sus- |t T RRECE SO0 BOUE ORS 10 G | , iizen shall enjoy a happy and London. His liabilities are §12,380. He | o¢ Ajpgissippi, Mr. Lind, President | Ofinags, is comparadvels saall aratah of the last quarter century. This was | tained the valialty of the Sherman Jaw | flons for the new year from Iialy fnd S OSDerONAINGw: Voar: has lost $50,000 by gambling. Wilsow's Dersunal | Teprasentatve S Hn| I Siaen o Te B apparent today in a backward glance | as abroad, especially from Italian centers : Mexico, expects to br: president at Pass Chr morning and make TIMOTHY C. MURPHY, Mayor of Norwich. kfast with the n tomorrow full report of time in the turpentine trust case. In the cotton corner case it laid down the principle that & “corner” in any com- over the memorable events of the past year in all branches of governmental activity. i nate Pro- the a ta during of the officer in command in drivi back into Mexico the federal soidiers Who are trying to flee across the Ine. An Alleged Plot to as visional President Hues New Year's reception was frustrated in Europe tinents, and the American con- what has happened in Mexico during et B the past few months. A v L e jonai affairs came o Dower : N ; past o’ e e vo Larsdo Contituedt S i months Wit I Gemocratic | declded that states {hrough thelr rail- | [y | COOPERATIVE EFFORT FULL SWAY FOR to Ship Toaed oy mlomams Vot (oua? | ment told 'df continued rehol mitnu S esldent and ‘a democratic congress | road commissions have control over || ENTERING NEW Sh - Diacslely c gl LT ke for the first time since | the rates of lines within their borders e TO BE THE SLOGAN | | HEALTH, WEALTH, HAPPINESs | | A BANNER YEAR ter will be obliged to maintain a speed ico upon the town of 23 ki e it e % | of Neuvo Laredo, indicating a e Grover Cleveland occupied the White | irrespeotive of the interstate com- GROWTH AND PROSPERITY. — Mayor Macdonald of 23 knots an hour for more than 24 ting a purpose iouse. Two Constitutional Amendments. merce commission. Our Fore n Relations. —Mayor Mahan. a very pros- —Warden Bullard IN THE COMING ONE —Mayor Dunn hours, but her commander, Captain | Moffett, says this can be done. Such a feat would sct a new naval recor to occupy that place at the earliest possible moment and establish an un- broken line of constitutional authority Th constitut e a perous Ne: Year to all of Put- At the beginning of a new year, L V. elong the whole northern border after + = e A e . e o 2 5 nam's people and to all of those of | | with ‘all its opporcunities for im. Willimantic wishes the people of St C ol e ol st Ojnase, 2 S e R e e L s i ] T it wieh he pea Eastern Connecticut, which in its | lproving on past methods, past ooy GO eetIoE Gap and el Speculation is rife as to the exact| The big armored cruiser South vo Ta g 1 . s c tern 5 ple-of the cities and towns of east- , industrial, business and so- achievements and the beacon light lagt a “xew || object of Mr. Lind's journey. He kota has been placed in reserve at tals of government—an income tax and | peace was accepted in principle by |§ ern Connecticut th S et S i ! e 2 a bright, prosperous and happy New : a 5 4 . the direet election of United States | more than thirty nations, and treaties | Connecticut the most prosper clal activities is constantly becom- | lof its possibilities showing clear g We bive mn st angtly coming, officlals say, to make a ver- | Puget sound, in order to utllize her e direct t i | more than thirty nations, and treaties || ous year they have ever known. In ing more united and more acutely | |and bright, it is my pleasure on be- e Vit A0 b dho Tlirend bal report to the president and in some | personxel to man the smaller gunboats senators. B AU | wit n alls entering the new year I firmly be- allve to its opportunities, half of the people of Danfelson to e et quarters it has been suggested that, | required on the west coast of Mexicos The national bank and currency sy igned by Netherlands and Nicaragu: lieve that we are entering upon a and all cities and towns of to float the deb! bich has op- s devise and v tem which w of the Civil war, The most important promounc ments of the administration’s foreicn new epoch for the towns and cities reach their greatest possi development through the wish to all an exceedingly happy New Year, a bountiful one, a wholly ern Connecticut grow and prosper, also to see the star of happiness convinced that th “crumbling” of Huerta regime is nearly finished, INTERNECINE WAR. i ; z of New and Windham coun- | fof the co-operative func: : no— e F sires to confer wi pesident — erated ever since, was reorganized into | policy were made by President Wil fes im an era of growth. 1a_popala: | | Secoming. shanitent - the acunns | | o iR eertmtneen® eswtn s | | 2na prosperity shining or ail. both || SHLAHESS L2, Soprer, Uh FIRASD, | pogoraly at Guaymas Fighting Amend et s federal reserve system in which the | when he Withdrew the support of the i tion and indusiry hitherto between the people and the organ- | |friendships and all peaceful rela- rich and poor. For the mear fu-§| ,,;; ueq when the end comes. m th Th ! central bank plan, the dominant sys- | United States from the bankers in the || cqualled, making Jan. 1st. 1014 4 Rations’ af tkx fowne and. Ciies o P 1 e o ture we want to see a canal con- || PUISUed when the end co s emselves. 5 3 Burope, was rejected and a |so-called six power German loan; in |l date of singular significance for ue [y 1914 Ho inarbed by Jong sirida o cammercial _snd b recting, us with our aistexc atlanFIESTIEGHCn the DElIST g been exprriy 5 ¢ scheme of financial reorsanization | his Latin-American statement, in || A4 this is my fervent wish for the ard in' this eo oporative moves | 1 i o o e o ey ] | near the ‘Tiver- Thames, “sud thatif|ofs Moke tist the adoinimtration’s obf( ‘Hermoeillo, Sqnors,iatesi SR perfected. which he proclaimed the intention of |} communities of this district Tent - Gt e Sk Toves to the enfillt»:]rgrngung 1914 a year 1914 will be a bamner vear for a ||Jsction to the provisional officials in| —The federals of the Guaymas garri- E A democratic tariff law became ef- | the United States to recognize on the | ¢ 10 A1) ShpE el b ol to, s aoar] Foiet we will alweSs remtmber with §o} wetrer snd! grohteas i Willimsntic: Jexico, City does not extend io all of | son began fighting today among them= & ‘ fective, the first since the Wilson bill | western hemisphere only those gov- | BRYAN F. MAHAN, give aid to this end. | |great happiness. DANIEL P. DUNK, uerta’s adherents and that in the | selves, according to a report sent tor ‘ of 1893, and one. of the most ‘compre- | ernments “founded on law and orders % ARCHIBALD MACDONALD, W. IRVING BULLARD, ENIDE Rt creation of new_provisional ri- | military headquarters here by General hensive tariff measures ever enacted. Physical Valuation of Railways. A parcel post system was brought into successful operation and some of | while | its rates were later reduced, cortain limitations were extended. and in his now noted Mobile speech, in which he pointed out the menace of foreign concessions to the peace and security of Central and South America. Relations with Mexico, the American government's refusal to recognize | Huerta and a spirited exchange of Mayor of ew London. ——— Mayor of Putnam. Warden of Danielson. Mayor of Willimantic. VERY DULL YEAR IN WALL STREET. Cry Was Raised An Eight Hour by the arrest yvesterday of two Mexi- cans. ment some of the capable men novw soclated with Huerta b in way responsible for the overthrow or death of Madero, might take a leading part { with the approval of the United States. | Awaiting News from Border. | as- Alvarado, in charge of the insurgent outpost above Empalme. A heavy fire was heard from the out- skirts of the California gulf cif late this morning, it was rgorted. bad been no insurgent attack NOT any 5 3 i = 1 =) The state and war departments to- | insurgent forces within range of the : Jn;emzersmlm S Sommercs rortrlmlg- no!e‘s on the su})jel:;‘ were the diplo- | Big Decreass in Volume of Stock and The Number of S: loides n. the United | night were anxiously awaifing news | federal positions. S sion began a physical valuation of rail- | matic event of the year. Great States in 1913 showed an increase over | from the border, w! et reme. |~ Desettions to. the rebel LR ue Ways—a project which will cost mil- | Britain's protest againet the exemption Bond Sales. 5 last year, the number being 13,106, as|pant of General Huerta’s northern been occurring for several days. : lions and take vears to complete, but | of American shipping from tolls in the | New York, Dee. 31.—The year 1013 | I ln e a a ur a Ur compared with 12,981 fn 1912. which iz expected to ultimalely pro- | Panama canal and Japan's protest | will ba long remerabered in Wall stroct | . | : \de @ basie of rate-making. Mean- |against the antl-alien land lesislation | as one of the dullest in almost & de- The Army Got Through the year|CONVICTS ORGANIZE A WALDO IS REMOVED AS renewed upplication for a Ave Al AT TR IR Tooh e Dk with . RV e | San B T A e GOOD CONDUCT LEAGUE POLICE COMMISSIONER N o gepe i i Cols e ot sl discnssion change agereguied 130735700 shares, DICT OF CORONER'S JURY |ADVOCATED BY THE SECRETARY | then 50,000 officers and men. Toaton oA abare Prieh Mk e Tt e i TS 8 mimis ab ew Portfolio in Cabinet. and $672,000,000, respectively, this year ' S Teductions in cxbress Taies which 80 | piane e sn sxtnston of Augerican | Show & dgoreier b stoce” seine’ "ok | REGARDING Pt OF COMMERGCE. Because of llisgible or incorrect ad Year's Resolution. barrassed Department, mately 380,000 a year, IEde Anrosi ny the creation of comz i S0II000 Shatel sAd in: bonds (of 5 1‘ e o ara pilar vp o tHe CHes |+ S A b N - Ded ¥1—The, nievkits |1 e, Fork D 1 Skt st steps in building the Panama |Mercial agents of the department of [ 170,000,000 e raiting delive of Auburh prison have adopted o New | Mitchel, elected ma¥or on the fuston In ballaing 't B | rarce wert ot b e ook | & The racent spurt " of ity ol Fa cago post office awaiting delivery. uburn prison have adopted a Ne 3 3 n > rose taken, with the prowablllcy | stmmerce were launched, Important| o0 TSty SPUE of activiey at HEARD 65 WITNESSES | BENEFIT TO EMPLOYER : | ¥ears rosolution pledsing themselves | ticket, Will take offico at noon tomers age wili be in operation in the | tion in relations between capital and | Increased demand for bonds and other | o 9 A Sign, Reading, “This Bank Will [to good conduct. To make the res- |row, succeeding Adolp Klne, wl Native Control in Philippines. The practical control of the Philip- Pine government was delivered to the labor were the creation of a new port- folio in the cabinet for a secretary of labor, to which Willlam B, Wilson of Pennsylvania, a prominent labor lead- er, was appointed, and the creation by banker is under rise to a hope among brokers that a recover Of the ay. investment issues, has, however, given and | 1,100 members of the stock | | exchange it is estimated that less than | E idence Shows That Only Persons Holding Union Cards or Vouched for Cannot Afford to Employ Men Pois- oned by Fatigue—Long Hours of Close Its Doors January 1,” and placed on the Ridgeway (Pa.) National bank by a practical joker caused a run. olution effective they have orsanized & Good Conduct league which they will have a share in main- taining prison discipline. 1 lic opinion is the weapon i assumed the mayoralty when William J. Geynor died on shipboard last Sep- tember. On the eve of his city hall tenaney Mr. Mitchel tonizht announced some of his apy v b : 5 : : Year’s Day in the capital will : ill | ent his a ives of the islands President | congress of a federal commission on |DAlf now are actively engaged in the| by Union Member: i il - et o £ SeEneotact /that So0d 2o et i =il Nl ison's ‘appointment of a native ma- | industrial relations which has begun | Warket and probably one fith of the| o5 e oo eaieed Evmlores, Alen: Disatsseds e e T oy sk | D9, €nforced. The organizacion of the | incomplete: retal gority on the Philippine commission. |a study of the entire subject. Whole may be classed as “traders”— | S R & oy oF Deiiant mmial oveme. | SUNRe mew pealeoled At wishuTatn 0 o The Mgt What_promised a new era in rela- | Commanding features fn the inter- | Prokers who buy or sell almost exclu- | (. ¥ 4 Pt cx T | SOMERL LS. comuitise pEAfbenjeon. f My, Ceantn. | % . tions of the government with great | nal affairs of the nation were the an- | SiVely for their own account, vordint cioary Des. 31—An epen| Washington, Dec. 31 — Seerotary p)i..peth Hilloary, 22, employed as a | Hoth elected by ballot whieh met 1a A police upheaval matiessEuiEENEI €orporations, Iu . the enforcement of | nouncement of & Bhore Detiy tov hg | . The year has witaessed many wi!h~“-7rq’f t. Including = finding that the | Redfield of the department of com- | Elizabeth Hilleary, 25 <o 4 as a| Sunday in the prison chapel and adopt- | ing hours of the present adminlstras the Sherman anti-rust law, ' was | development of Alaska with the pro- | drawals from the strect by individu. | GITSURSs eve panic ch cost 72| merce today expressed the belief that| SlEarmaker at Newaxl OBlG, & T |ed the resolution. The schem tion. Mayor Klime removed Rhine- brought about by the “bloodless” dis- | posed building of a government rail- | 818 and firms, although these have been | V68 I Ttalian hall was caused by an | it would be “far better for the pockets | 5nEer of death as the FeSuls oF S0 lander Waldo, mollce oo solution of the "American Telephone | Toad, a policy of conservation for the | 1SS numerous than was expected a|Zarm of fire raised within the hall | as well as the peace of mind of em- |alleged atfack by a b : ; s Mptber oo . and Telegraph company's relations | immense properties of the Indian | [®W Weeks ago, Was returned tonight by the corener’s| ployers” if they would work their men | Worker at her home. lo ommission for prizon re- (ing after accepting Y\ps‘xvf.!znauo‘s I With the Western Tnion. President | tribes and proposed federal control Of the so-called market leaders er|JUrY Which for three days had been | only elght hours a day. He was speak- | form, who was recently a voluntary |all his deputies. Waldo's action, 1t Wilson's open declaration that the ad- | all depoesits of radium, lately become | SPeculative favorites, which number | ReATIDE the evidence of participants in | ing before the American Association| Eggs at $1 a Dozen within two years | inmate of Auburn, and was instituted | was polnted ouf, would bave left the | ministration desired to co-operate witn | so valuable in medlcine. 2 5 1y more than a half dozen, only | g disaster. | for Labor Legislation, which is mect- | was the prediction made yesterday by | by John B Riley, state superintendent | police without a civilian head on New big business” in a peaceful adminis- Year of Agricultural Prosperity. | [°ading was today on a parity with | (o ivery allegation that énemies of the | ing here with the American Political | W. Theodore Whittman, state lecturer | of prisons. | Year's eve, when the closest supessii tration of the law was received in e trals. © _|its price of a vear ago. ‘The others| ' estern Kederation of Miners were re- | Science association. | on poultry, in addressing a sathering | All convicts will be admitted to the |vision of the department was required | business and financlal circles with | | Asriculturally, the year was one of | were from 5 to 20 points under, while | 5Ponsible for starting the panic was '~ “1 believe,” said the secretary, “that | of farmers at Franklin, Fa. {league, but under its rules bad con- ) to prevent disorder in the streets and evidences of optimism, | unprecedented prosperity, While the | Canadian Pacific and New Haven were | Fejected by the jury. when our factories are run o that the duct will forfeit membership and cer- | public places. The mayor al;pohhd Supreme Court Decisions. | yolume of crops was below the aver- | lower by mere than b0 points each. | Text of Jury's Finding, workmen go home without being fa-: T war vet- | tain_privileges. The aim of the or- | First Deput; ¢ commissioner to age, their value totalled nearl i | P aki 9, M s & | Col. Henry T. Bevans, civil ] P a r . % | v 1 t 1 selects a fr R s Sl L : ea en | ke The taking of testimony coneluded | tigued from overlong hours, and Dot ! grom and momber of the secret service | Banization as set forth in the resolu- |serve unti s 2 per- n several | billion dollars. | NEW YEAR WELCOMED BY shortly after midday and it was well | till then, will we be able to compete | quni \which guarded President Lin- | Hon is “mental, moral and civic bet- | manent police head, B along in the afterncen before censid- | Suecessfully against all comers in the | o) on the night of his assassination, | terment for those who fo many —— A NEW INDUSTRY FOR WILLIMANTIC !VEAR END RUSH FOR MARRIAGE LICENSES REVELRY AND WORSHIP. | dence at Chicago. Both Varieties of Celebration in Evi- eration of the testimony was begun. The jurymen wrestied with their prob- lems’ for six hours, “By the evidemce of the witnesses markets of the world, ford to employ in a factory men who are haif sick, who come to work after having had bad breakfasts, who are T could not af- | d at his home at St. Paul. Moses Barella, 11 years old of Plain- years have been comsidered w the pale of human kinshiy PLEADS AGAINST THE FAIREST AND FREEST ELECTION EVER HELD Board of Trade Prepares to Provide | Applicant | 2 | we find that the cause of the deaths| partly peisened; they would be eco- ' field. N. J., submitted to a skin graft- | Report of American Observers on Re- Suitable Building. 7 of'M::’l?::l'dE::miE:::i:: Rl Dee, 31_¥With a “sane| W28 Suffocation, the same being caused | Romically unprofitable. And vet fa- | iNg operation in a probable successful RESORT TO STRIKES, | " " ont Contest in Santo Dominge. | d by the poli B - ! ad be ntly | ch a Spesial! o 21— _(Spectal to The Bulletin.y e e R £ m;‘a:“f‘}m‘)‘:de-"i ing to ‘the entrance of the Italian hall Mot Mitnamatloal ‘Question. [¥hoy iad beert Shifmel secaiiy [ n—— "':"' VB“:," h‘;’““ Spe: "': Washington, Dec. 31._Amerlean fcothiy Bt e SW N ':,’,1,':\,?; ’:rmflw?: fine‘ct{\vp _tomorrow, made tod the | DiEht service in almost every chur women’s auxiliary of the Western Fed- | Study should be made of the condi- | day requested the public service com-} Boston, Dec. 31.—In the hope of. ma- | the face of considerable oppesition, Tooms (his evening Winien 4. aoc |Dustest day on reeord for the Milwau- | Chicagoans had thelr cholce of cele-| cration of Miners,” said the tions under which men work best. This -mission to favor the application of the | toriglly reducing strikes In Massachil- | haye reported to the same department i = & gy ilam A Ar-lkee county marriage license clerks. At fons. Confetti and ticklers were o stampede was caused by s subject of the human element in man- | ministers of Pennsylvania for their | getts in 1914, the state board of con- | that the new Dominican constitutional In attendance to hear the plan of the | had eoa ioerag 0, fime 84 lice forbidden by Mayor Harrison, but the | person or persons unknown to the jury | Ufacturing, he added, could not be C half fare rates on railroads. | cijfation and arbitration issued a spe- | assemdly was chosen in the “fairest st Lo Y | had been issued and the office was so | Sircet crowds had plenty of noise pro- | it this time raising an alarm of fire | treated from the mathematical stand- 5 3 . | cial message today fo employers and | and freest” elections ever held o the nich “in eemtemmit iy X, ¥ |erowded with applicants that it was | ducers and wero not noticeably sub- | within the hail | point. i After Spending the forenoon at his | cmpioves urging ihem to exhamst all | oland In o siatement today maling Srice ectd o issue licenses until mid- | dued by the regulations { B Wit i | "Austin B. Garretson, president of the | desk, as usual, George F. Hunter, ed- | pOR IS CEERS o K0 Tt o e Seport public, the department sald: e : t nearly every corner in the down- | o 65 Witnesses Heard. =~ = | orider of Railway Conductors, told the nd publisher of the News Adver- | Tolorting to & breach of industrial| It is feit that the holding of fair Imbstie by B FLiharmes; (hots sos P o Niew law requires s thor town dlsurict the rescue missions and | . oweq that only those possessin ¢ ! association that in 1913 there had been | tiser of Chillicothe, Ohio, fell dead | pogce and free elections with our encourage- eial representative. Mr. Sherman | for a Heenee th wed. Tt ey Tipics e Deld services Up to midnight | 1o; cards or vouchad for: by soms 261,000 violations of the law prohibi- | yesterday while on the way to lunch-| ®Iiic ihoara nolds that the public is | ment and assistance is a causs for stated that the company would require | that only $3 shall he e s | ey i ad tHergvelion €| member of the union were allowed to | \RE the working of a trainman more = an innocent third part all labor | gratification and a distinet acnieve. @t the start about 5,000 square feet Of | ouns. for making © o ooy, The restanrmn: samsona exborlations. | enter the place. Rejection of .-n:(x‘g:.""\’“" 1 hours in one day. The law of | = Mrs. Rachel A Walters T1 years ok | controversies and is _entitled to the |ment for the president’s LatiAmers Moor space with the privilege of in- Many doctors have declare fluence of t s & o 12 | that deputy sheriffs, mine guards and | "¢ 0 e ',“0“_ b 5 5 Rk R Sha ¥ same protection which should be ac- |ican policy. . creasing at the end of one year to | not malke th emBaTry e Oiino: tange. gud-ofher. e | o5iipavy dodtors hud Beldback worldz ] s, Ror. e -sualloproportion of fthe | on the ground thal her NuSPA G Wes ol daraed 1o €he atheritwo partion. WEH00, suvare feet > The accommmodis | oy Toke phe necessasy. dances. There was les and less | b 0 e was contained in & oere- | number of men employed. “And Vet |grouch and deserted her eight days i i GLOVER RELEASED #lons must be furnished at once a8 the | " Clerks in many counties have askeq | TChRAEe It was said, £- | sTaph commending the work of men | Hig,loW Of averages” he declared, |after marriage. They were mawried In| oy sppyvICE MEDALS ON BAIL OF $15000 Hompeny's lease in BretEln eae | € ‘many counties have askec g and than_ever (Bl : sl Men | “Goes not give any rest to these men, | 1911. Fan. 1, 1914; William A Vandecmen | o ®itorney general for an fnterpreta- | ery hotel downtown had tables Set.in | ot gocn o fjaregi WAy Of its mass orcan it restore the lives lost| GIVEN 160 EMPLOYES - % Wolunteered to furnish ‘the space re- | cated they will {ssue no leensee maay | Lie halls and lobbies, and there was|® Some €5 witnesses told their versions | IATOUER accldents due to fatigue, Dur-| George Montgomery, 17 Year Oid| - Accused of Killing Former Husband of Gitred by the company, niterioy tho | Sated they will issue no licenses until | no cessation of the UDroar WAL early | of Lo oo, T LLReS $ions | ing the past vear an army of -men|son of the chief of the North Adams. | Long Service Recognized by Winches- His Wife. ; A portion of the foundry on Mansfield | Copl™ ° as passed on the | houre. | : | running into the millions have worked | Ma: Fire department, is dead, and | e A wvenue until a new building can be | oo An army of 250 church workers was | | in’excess of 10 hours on a stretch. Miss ‘Grace Shaw is believed to be s Company. ®rected. George F. Taylor, a member s order enlisted by one law enforcement gue by belng jammed on the stairway lead- | tigue is part poison.” effort to save his si ter, aged eight, | dying of injuries received in a coast- Los Angeles, Cal, Dee. 3t—Rey Yu Glover, a land agent of San Antonle, ; ed by e | Death Rate Among Trainmen. New Haven, Comn, Dec. 31— The | 1 3 SFta8 teades jocniiitiee Trovoged (hAY | BoSTON ENDS THE YEAR 20 vca @ Reone of hel Prof. Seth C. Chandier. “While I have been standing ' here | % 2°cident i Winchester Repeating Arms company, | Texes, charged with e e Pamed of Cemde srect thia puildiiig | WITH “AULD LANG SYNE” | ficq of this, did net make any chamse| o Wellesle Gess. Dec. 31—FProf.|talking to you,” sald Mr. Garretson.| F. A, Fowler, Night Manager of ~a | RS Of the largest concerns in the stato | Dentel De VUVOrs O 0% 4'te batl eny at a net Tontal of 6 1-2 per coniy | in their arrangements. V5% | Seth C. Chandler, an astronomer of in- | “four railway trainmen have heen !ianin room m the Seattls bamking | S2ve foday to 160 employes who haye | Seldler of Toriene UG Yoqay he box company to pay all expenses | Greets 1914 with the Strains of “Lead e e it R ternational reputation, died today, aged | carried away on stretchers, killed o | gistrict, was stabbed to death in th een in the company’s employ for | "Glover, sccording to the r maintaining the mame. The mat. | indl i o 67 years. He served on the govern-|injured; and during,the two days We | jitchen of the establishment yester- | JCArS OF more, handsome solid gold S tomt him, IMilled ‘I Villiers SEE ML Ua bame | The mat Kindly Light. }11,000000 for New Subways. | ment cosst survey and for ten years| have been in sessian here 250 of them | qu"lopably by a rohher. The cash | Jor oo, medals. The medals are of | S5alnst T (O/S) (frican foreed his pommittec for raising funds for {ha = New York Dee. 31 Seven addi-|was edito r of the Astronom- | have been carried off. We are killing | icgister was empty 14 karat gold and sultably engraved |21 WHSE G0 "3 cver housemold: ta:see struction of the huflding and (hey | Hoston, Dec. 31— This clty’s welcome | {10nal contracts for sections of the new | jcal Journal. He received numerous | and Injuring them at the rate of 125 a ot S with "c‘;‘ e nane the whole be- | Lo ‘ormerly. was Mrs, M report at the regular meeting of | to 1914 was its second community ob- | SUDWay system being constructed were | honors for his research work, including | 9ay. How much of this Is due to 1ong ggficials of the Boston Elevated Rail- | ing enclosed in a Jroece cane. Tyen ¥ e board next Tuesday evenin; he | Bervance of New Years, While the | eXecuted today by the public service | a gold medal from the Roval Astro: | hours? 2 | way company have just discovered | fur the medale tetmres will be e B o erectlon of a suitable structure wiil |more festively inclined made merry | S0mmission. These cont acts call for | nomical society. That the popularity of compulsery | yoX U ene thousand pusteboard | conpige monriy. @000 o e Prisoners Guarded by Nilitla. uire an expenditure of about $10,- | at lotels and cafes and others attend- | :giae‘pe;nd_nuret;f Dime e 311‘.03'1.— kit S e insurance agnlncrl accidents has hlr- Hexots a1 Tori b siibweay | oaploys uenrly 6,000, hands. | 2 a4, Ded. S1—Cusrief , which is practically assurcd, Af-|ed watch services In the churches, 000, bringing the total appropriation Pardon for a Murderer. | oreased rapidiy during the past three | ey been deposited in the MEXICAN SENORI and a e . Er a very thorough discussion of the | thousands gathered on the common for |fOf new subways up to '$81,000.000. 1 . #TOR 0 8 TACERET | vears, and is bound to be followed | HKeth have Poon B e ASREGORN SENDRETA. e e gatter the meeting adjourned the municipal celebration around the Most of the new work will be carried kg . pardon for JoEs | gy ickly hy other forms of social in- P o S o neh e HYDE REINSTATED BY BAR ASSOCIATION illuminated tree which figured Christmas festivities, Religlous, patriotic and pepular alrs ‘were sung by the crowd and played by in the out in Brook nine contrac sions are 2nd the Bronx, Thirty- covering other exten- 1 to be 1 | ¢ Mollo, a Portuguese farmhand who | has served twenty years of a life sen- | tence for the murder of Mrs. Bertha surance, was the declaration of Joseph | P. Chamberlain of New York. The | present insurance of the poor, he said, | Manchester at Fall River, was recom- is hopelessiy expensiv A Third | fraudulent Indictment the m: by th uinst Ch American Who Brought Her Here Fac- ing Prosecution. h Chicago. Dee, 31. at m Blake, thé negroes who 2ped lvnching after the ¢ James Coleman, a white Chestertown,were brenght narrowly murder farmer, vear e ek ot S n ded by the executive council to- ! jury es A. E form. 1 & . - | ¥ nore on the state steamér —— a band, and moving pictures were Burial of Gen. Torney. S t i 3 authorities here are facing a dilemma | o il Hi e a 3 - | day, Mello killed Mrs. Manchester dur- erly president of the Los Angeies In- il Governcr MecLape late today, They B e oo Ao o e yenr” et o SLVeON | Weat Point, N, Y. Dee. il—The | ing a quarrel over wages. The Porty_ | SCHMIDT TO AGAIN Vestment company, and ten Others. | Feon e was® escartes T Menit | ware. to the central police sta~ S kPes tune of Auld Lang Syne and the new | reaheof corigadier General George II| guese consul will return him to his) FACE ELECTRIC CHAIR T by Denald Seott, an American, with | tion, where they will be held uatil New Yerk, Deo, 4. Charles T, |ene came in fo the strains of Lead AT etan i tho ear, came| Toanenuisme 1o el ANore TRIALHI TN A | = A Find of $25000, the income of | mines in Duranme, Mexic Deopiss of commitment to Jail are Te- yde, former city chamberiain under o late Mayor Gaynor, was today re- in Kindly Light after a short interval of quiet, A flash of rockets and other fireworks followed, army tery here this afternoen with full mil- Officers of the post, the itary honors. pardon Is granted. Farm Laborers Fil ger-Printed. | Second Trial of 8elf-Confessed Mur- derer Set for Jan. 12, which be used | clergymen of the Prot o assist needy | tant Episcopal is to it wa. arrested Saturday In. consequence, charged with violatien of the.Mann act. celved from Chestertown, 757 Banks in New System. tated to membership the New | battalion of cadets and various detach- & — church In Connecticut is provided hy | Senorita Leon has said she was willing | X Work Bar associatisn by action of the = | ments of troops stationed hers formed | , tica, N. ¥. Dee. 3i—In an inquest| . york pec. 81.—Hans Schmidt, | the will of Afrs. Mary . Sherman, wife | to be deported to Mexico, where i s Dol g e ®ppellate division of the state supreme the escort, he cadets fired three | Reld at Fonda today, neighbors ef John | 1 for Ah e A { of Rev. Henry AL Sherman of Bridge- | declared her father was killed han- | and sixty-seven banking tions, ot | Smith Assumes Presidency. Yolleys over the grave and a field bai | Barrett, the murdered Palatine farm- |10 whose tnal for the muster of Sama | oo dits, but she stuted her life would be | geastered over 45 states snd Bawing an Hyde was convieted of bribery in | New York, Dec. 31.—With the com- | {o™cr Grtillery saluted with twenty. | €% Were questioned regarding their | St X O aagne =1 in danger were she returned during |aggresate capital, exclusive of sarplus, ponnection pompany funds, with _the Carnegie Trugt His_conviction ing of the new year, Alfred H. Smith, formally assumed the office of presi- one gune, whereahouts on the night of Dec. 21, when Barrett was killed and his { day, will be tried for the second time | peginning January 12, before the crim- | Automobile Owners and Operators | the progress of the revolution. i of approximately 0 00,006, have fn- farmed the federal at orities of their 4 n e Y ork ilre e ] § inal branch of the state supreme court | ip Connecticut were warned by Secre- | Lie Traffic A 5 Heally disbaired him, bui «n appeal | dent of the New York Central raflroad | |, &= § daughter beaten into insensibility. 3 = tilpC Jers warn 3 quor Traffic Among Indians. | intention to enter the new ocurremcy B et efors e “Court ot |lines,” William O, Brown retirad at the | “Number, Please,” New Salutation. | Fagm labarers were interrogated close- | here This decision was reached to- Y R A e onoiaht | Denver, Col, Dec. 31.—Tho suppres- | system. This Was snnounged by the ®pcals. | Undet today's aciion of the | Same {ime from ‘this positien A few | New Haven, Conn, Dee. 31.—Hun- | ly by the coroner and District Attorney | 42y 8t a co and Bupreme Court | vty it They attempted to' operate | Sion of the liquor traffic among the | treasury department to one 3 @ppellaic divicion, Hyde will be per- | hours hefore stepping down, Mr. Brown | dreds of “helle girls” in all the ex- | flardies of Amsterdam and their fin- HtCoF YD‘ far e Kis RBAL At Ry ooy, = v D | Indlans was discussed hero today at g | since the curremcy reform law was itted to practice uniil the high court | Sént a New Year’s greeting to fhe offi- | changes in the state commenced the | gerprints. were taken by the uhuru!‘n“ huf;'“ “‘_"a = ‘p'edhlm bapordered ne EESenrs ol Eevermant At e | nacted, % les on (he appeal from cenviction Shelton Strikers Sentenced. Bheiton, Conm, Dee. 81 —Three disorderly strikers were tried be- of onight and mo - disturbance is cers and employes thanking them for | their co-operation and suppert while | same aid for his successor, | new year, at midnight tenight, by add- |ing ihe 'word “please” fo the time ago and it _was decided to en- usual ihe was in offles and bespeaking the | request of “number” frem subscribers. | The new regulition was adopted seme department. $1,000 Gift to Montpelier Hospital. Montpelier, Vt., Dec. 31.—The trus- tees of the Heaton hospital ef this eity 1 To Test Tax en Yachts. ‘Weshington, Dee, $1—Assistant At- terney General 1914 markers, their machines without displaying thI\ i 4 | _An Injunction Restraining _ Mayor | ©'Donnell and members of the eity | | government of Lowell Mass,, from pur- court by conference was attended by Cato | United States commissioner of Indian affairs, who in a formal state- ment outlined the work of this branch ot the bureau. i 3 AtEins filed in_the su- . He expressed a_desire o Judge Dillon, One was sentenced | Conspirators Executed. force it on the first day of the neW | were motified today of a gift ef $10,000 prsme court today the gevernments chasing a parcel of land in the resi- | to co-operate with state and local au- il for 60 days, another had judg- | Tokio, Jan. 31.—Thirteen Formosan | ¥ by Harry O. Cales of Washington, D.! brief supporting the constitutionality | dential section of that city for the | therities. ; nt suspended. and another had his | conspirators were publicly executed | C. Mr. Cales also sent word to 'the of the section of the Payme-Aldrich | Purpose of establishing a tuberculosis = B nolled. All js ¢miet in the strike | today at Taihoku, Formosa, accord- Steamship Arrivals. trustees of Geddard Academy of his tariff law imposing an ammual tax of | hospital sought in the superio Rev. Dr. Washington Gladden re- ! hours. The op ing 1o despatches received by the zov- ernment here, Liverpoel, Dee, 81.—Steamer Cymri New Yerk, » willingness to assist in the building ef lan alummi hait. $7 per ton on foreign_built yachis | awned by citizens of the United Ftatos, JUL 18 fifteen prominent l taxpayers of Lowell. 1914 - s signed yesterday as pastor of the First | Congregational church at Columbus, ¢ vecetve the ©hia, after a ¥ N