Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 8, 1914, Page 1

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VoL LViho. 7 e : The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and lts Total {Union Officers WILSON MET TWO MEXICANS AT SEA| Sabied Parsasis Ay Obstagle 1o ‘ dmertoe i An Agreement| Opposed Strike Disqualify Mayor of Cork. Prominent Representatives of Southern Republicmen'Csnts trom scting os e coun Condensed Telegrams Speaker Clark Is ill with the grip. The New Chapel erected at Bates college at a cost of $65,000 was dedi- cated yesterday. Imperative Need eilman, on the ound that he is an allen and a na.(ugrrallzed Ameriean eit- The Estate of George Burnham, who Said to Héve Accompanied Lind 1zen, NEW HAVEN LOATH TO GIVE UP|ACCUSED BY THE MINERS OF | was head of the Baldwin Locomotive | UNITED STATES WHOLLY UN- S ks is valued at $5,173,716. Joseph Chamberiain to Retire. TROLLEY LINES “SELLING OUuT” it & sl PREPARED FOR WAR ked Birml, ., 7.—Joseph Cham- Secretary McAdoo Yesterday as! beriath, the Venceablc Dritien states- e ShTiGy Tixa CHURCH DIGNITARIES PLEADING WITH HUERTA |2 fesiteciiss o et icifonsceer | AND- A STEAMSHIP LINE (AN INOPPORTUNE TIME |P¢/™® Rospite! at Sevannsh, G serving as a member of the house of roT R e it AT e s G daglrn‘:‘ Haven, goes to states pfl:‘mla‘ for one resente - ’ A ml::mfime he has rep: Chairman Elliott Argues for Retention | For This Reason They Sought to Stave to two years for stealing chic] Miss Eliza Andrews of Baltimore of Fall River Boats—Questions Pow- Off Strike in Copper District—Testi- | jort an estate valued at $600,000, of $6,000,000 IS REQUIRED Gen. Wood Asks Congress to Appre- priate That Sum for Guns and Am- Urge Him to Make Whatever Concessions Are Necessary to e e “Fighti g i L T il court today i which Cardinal Gibbons receives $200,- id A Sla Restore Peace—One of Huerta’s ¢ Flg'htmg Generals' di::}-;:,e gn:. ’A““Trl;: zélzvn ,o:‘} 3"’;;‘“ er of Government Under the Law. mony at Governor’s Hearing. 000. ~% ‘munition to Avol bsotute Slaughter inst the Journal by Mme. A Deserts and Crosses the Border—Ammunition Smuggled | Sietuneir Swhose triai in 1009 for_the Edward L. Fino, aged shout. 4, of murder of her mother and her hus-| Washington, Jan. 7—The destiny of| Houghton, Mich, Jan, 7.—That the | Torrington, committed suicide yester- | yaenington, Jan. 7—Explaining that % ith o - - band caused a world-wide sensation.|the New York, New Haven and Hart- | strike of copper miners which was call. | 48y morning by cutting his throat W' his judgment was not influenced by From United States—Rebels Reject Offer of Cossacks. | [3nd caused & oo e publishing | ford raiiroad probably will be settled |ed here July 13 e e e ol | a Sact zmre. the Mexican situation, Major General of alleged defamatory comment in the | tomorrow, so as it is likely to be | Officlals of the Western Federation of ‘Wood, chief of staff of the army, has text of her memolrs. influenced or controlled by Attorney | Miners was emphasized to Governor | _Burglars Entered the dental offices of | J5.1.09 committees of congress that it % i k — — % General McReynolds and the daputy Woodbridge N. Ferris today by repre- | Philip H. Brown and Philip vZ'mPflo; hould appropriste $3,000,000 for field Mexico City, Jan. 7.—The Am.m:fl.‘h‘un‘ s looked . Spon: de hhanies Brigand Holds Missionaries. ment of justice. Although no agree- | Sentatives of the union. In further- | At Stamford and stole $50 wo of | 2 Gna aminunition for the regular charge d'affaires, Nelson O'Shaughnes- |liminary of a conflict to determine| . W85 7700 livang Hwang- | ment nas been reached vt between the | ance of this idea the Eovernor was | £0l4 fllings. and $8,000,000 for the militia. £y, left for Vera Cruz tonight fn re-|w e‘ her le"x:fle s aoce federals or|Liang, who during the anti-Manchu |department and.the railroad, officials | 2sked to listen to miners and tram- ' Bost: & f you send our troops into war as e 0 et romn T T A hother the Huaria government Is to | Fevolt proclaimed himself Idng em- | were still hopeful tonight that the New | Mers who had worked undersround for | The Stockholders of Rhe Boston 5 are now, without guns or amm siden - pero! defles the authorities and | Haven systam would agree to a com- | Years, and half a score of these men | Lowell railroad at their annual meet- | 70, "¢ would be absolute slaughter, r&lu:’exnég permit the American mis- | plete reorganization such as the de- |Telated the conditions ander which they | ing yesterday, reelected the old board the general told the house military sionaries who have been for months at | partment believes will lead to a res- | had labored and the pay they had re- | of directors. commiittes, “If called into the fleld ative, to call on him there. The |retain a foothold. charge was accompanied by Mrs. O'Shaughnessy, but their little son was Offer of Cossacks Rejected. P Chow to return to their missions | toration of competition in New Eng. | ceived. Eviction cases were called to L suddenly we should have to go with a feft behind in the capital. This fact| Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico, Jan. B ior ailitough he Las allows | lanti trnsvorielion ¥ | his attention and he was informed of | William Livingston, a Civil war vet- | S2a2eRly we SRotid Bave 0 0 T on, Was cited by the charge as indicating | The services of 4,000 Cossacks were of- | o4 all other foreigners to do so. Reluctant to Give Up Trolleys and | 1€ experiences of some of the men |eran, 82 years old, was sentenced to | (U2 775 *iils"in the hands of the his early return and to allay any un-|fared today to General Carranza for STy e it 4 with sPacial police and other officers. _ | six mionths’ imprisonment in New York | {01." 013 we should have neither easiness that his trip might cause. |his campaign against the Huerta gov- | [LLICIT ALLIANCE Steamships. As was expected the union men stood | for shoplifting. uns nor ammunition encugh for our Tt requested the publication of the |arnment. The offer was rejected. as T HIM HIS LIFE It became clear today that on the|on thelr proposition to Sohn B. Dens- TE——— fela artillery forces.” substance, of Mr. Lind's telegram, | have been all propositions to bring cos’ *| main points involved the department|mors of the department of abor, so | Theodore A. Blake, member of an old R & which merely stated thai he desired | foreign fighting men into the consti- 5 4 T Murdered by | 27d the New Haven have been able to|Mmore of the department of labor, so |Revolutionary family of New Haven, Situation Event of War. Mr. O'Shaughnessy to come at his|tutionalist army. A Canadian pro- | Los Angeles Attorney Murde Y | agree, though on at least two questions | concerned, dled at his home in Hamden Tues-| General Wood in a written statement, convenience, so that he might present|moter proposed engaging the Russians. Supposed Paramour. there has been a disagreement. Attor- The Poduathan b A day In his T6th year. said: to the charge personally the president’s | Letters from various promoters have e ney General McReynolds and T. W. eration’s Proposals. 2 “We have neither guns nor ammuai- compliments. been keeping two translators busy. Los Angeles, Cal, Jan. 7—The Wife | Gregory and Jesie C. Adkins, the as-| It was revealed at the hearing that Invitations Are Being Sent out from | 100 sufficient to give any genersl com- Lind A nied by Mexicans. - of W. M. Melton, the attorney and|sjstants who have had the New Ha- | the federation had proposed that the | the White House for the reception to | manding an army in the field any as- ol i Y Battle Near Torreon. realty agent killed last night in the|ven case in charge, have insisted that |hours of labor and rates of pay posted | the diplomatic corps by the president | gt B8 5% 0O B 0= i ckod by an Tt Is reported here that two Mexi-| g Pago, Texas, Jan. 7.—One hun- [ tragedy which brought death also 10| the railroad agree to give up.its trolley | by the mining companies December 1 |and Mrs. Wilson Tuesday night, Jan. | zrme of equal size, which is supplisd cans accompanied Mr, Lind on his re-| grod and thirty soldiers, of whom §7|Mrs. Mary Graves Cox, and her|ines both interstate and intrastate, | Would be allowed to stand: that the | 13. with its proper quota of ficdd artillery. cent trip on the scout cruiser Chester | were federals, were killed in a battle | daughter, Ilorence, was located c'ore | and that it agree also to a divorce from | Ohe man drill grievance was not men- 3 “It is my belief that no modern war to Pass Christian These men are said | lust Saturday and Sunday between | BY the police today, A history of the|iis so-called Sound steamship lines. | tioned, and that the question of rec- | Negotiations Are Understood to be | huciisan frat class. somern wifl 1ot to bave been Sebastian Camacho, 22 | federal and constitutionalist forces | mans life led officers to conclude that| “Ghairman Howard Elliott, represent- | OERIton was to be obviated by & non. | in proxress for an operating agree- | po ane yers and anloss Fevare Mot old conservative of the Porfirio Dias | eight miles northwest of Torreon, ac- | the double murder and suicide were the | ;" t} o 1004 has held, on the other | discrimination clause. ment between the Boston and Maine | o0, nnd TN SR E o B v man- _ = 2 ’s inability to meet 5 In addi Railroad regime, and Antonio Paredes, attorney | cording to belated advices reaching | outcome of Melton’s inal = hand, that it is doubtful if the federal n addition the union delegation em- | raiiroad and the Hamden ailro ufacturs ammunition for us, after war, of the Caiholio church in ths capital General Benavides at Jusrez today, B et o Ty T o~ (o- | Eovernment can require the New Ha- | Phasized that, since the strike was | corporation. ie daclered they will not be in a con- he reported presence 'wenty-eight prisoners were reporte 2 ®; L] 4 S ven to part with trolley lines which are | ¢alled only after a referendum vote dition to Go =0 uxtil after the war is has been taken to indicate the active |captured by the federals. day and identified the body of her| o o 4" Yitragiate traMe, and has|had shown a big majority of the rank | Charles C. Barter, aged 70, was finfehod; and the supply of ammuni- i by Arehbishop Mora husband. Police officers said she told g v | and file insistent on it, any proposition | found with a fractured skull in a box : e setbmant of the Texioan S| American Battloships at Vera Gruz. | (NS that Meiton nad livedsat, nome | 500" Sel'Y T IS ARKRETARY | for settiement st o assad on by | miil at Portiand, Maine, vesterday, and | 107 SUnE o var T, bo Mevied fo o - 3 ‘eneral e) el ip. ), N - e T. u) fi;’;x‘;: m;‘xeun"::hx?a‘fiogo:: ‘;xaau:; Vera Cruz Jan. 7.—The American | neighbors as a model husband. His |Of steamships. fon, Shief Of Counach of the foderatiom, | during the night: D e o) DR S With those close to Huerta to obtain | battleships returned to their anchorage | frequent absences from home, she said, Provision of Panama Canal Act. told the governor that neither he mor div.l{:’n - ‘:r:un Battia) con- from the president whatever concession | outside the port tonight, after two|she belleved were due to business. According to the department there is | President Charles H, Moyer, nor any | Republi will hold | O o be fired by elght guns in might be mecessary to bring about |days manoeuvres and baftle practice| The police theory is that Mre. Ct;x Do queston that the government can | other official of the federation had any | a harmony meeting in Columbus on | 3¢ P O battie. I8 bt are mbt peace. Independent of these efforts it | at sea. learned only vesterday of the fi’ifl a|force the New Haven to parc ever|authority to stop the strike. He in- | February 26 with United States Sen- | 97 €2¥ o0 PREC. Ol SEne 08 SO i known that others, including high e e T ence of a Mrs. Melton ha“d tl ;‘ a[ with its intrastate trolleys, and ths|dicated, however, that the officers of | ator W. E. Borah of Idaho as the | Wmm T 1t il o TR military officers, have attempted to | SUFFRAGISTS RECEIVED paroxysm of anger led ber fo shoot|attorney gemeral intends to insist upon | the union were willing to recommend | principal speaker. R e b ortal te - tine. Tty e ot o persuade the president of the necessity BY NEW YORK GOVERNOR, | M¢lton and her daughter and kill her- | 5yoh g ‘condition becoming part of any | to the men any basis of settlement that —_— el gy “"’h e Al il of reRtritia self. agreement which It provides. o far|would carry with it an affirmation of | Applications From 178 Banks scat- | fcent and when gu Biles iy are b SUFFRAGISTS as the Fall River lines is concarned, | some kind of the right of the men to | tered throughout the country to enter e g gy i A Ay MARYLAND S department officials pointed today tc |Jjoin any society, union, church or other | the new currency system have been | WOTSe g MR Exeoutive Fails to Commit Himself on Ax Now Dot oo the Question. The report that Huerta is inclined to ARRIVE AT THE CAPITAL. | that provision of the Panama canal act | organization that suited their fancy. |received at the treasury department |Protected by other troops. take steps that will leave the present| Alpany, e I e which requires a railroad to part with Union Officials Opposed Strike. up to the present time. Army of 500,000 Needed. minister of justice, Senor Gerostieta, | the New York suffragettes ended here | OPponent of Their Cause Presents | steamship lines which enter int> com- Throughout the hearing the part that g “The war department believes after aa honacaring the part that | The Third Death from smallpox among men exposed on the battleship | Tics g firat e o his successor, has gained impetus. An- | today. They obtained their andiences Their Petition to Legislature. petition with it. Although some offi- |, ;" b = cials feel that action In accord with kept well to the front. The men de- will be proposed to General Huerts by | tive assem Avnapolis, Md, Jan. T—The little | this provision may be expected from | koD L " | Ohio was recorded at Charleston, 5.| 350605 man will be needed to zive this another group, which "fla‘}u grcn- their cllueb:’nd tonight all were bap- | band °§1 womenhs¥flrzsi}l3t;uiwho began :gitc?m;-l% i!‘ e’; “‘.‘h‘{,m;""""" kicn';xe;:’ all rflmfl"}‘uvmgm:&nwfo g;u’;";:‘g:é :‘ck"x:; ;‘j“ of a coal | country any chance of success against eral Vi TOW. comman ar- , though footsore. a 28-mile march from imore yes- torn. eneral make P invasion, d that this force will be o < Lo | Pirnree of the hikers, General Rosalie | terdsy morning arrived here today. | certain that such & result be aimed at | 1i00r When less than 15 years old and ot i oy: Gemeral : ving be A fit : eeded at once. To make it efficient o Villar, another officer of the Dias | Jones, .Colonel Ida Craft and Corporal | Delegate Cyrus Cummings, who is re- | by Insisting that it be made a par: of | o rue Poon WACETEvo! “'-}%etymfla Sheen | Miss Terence McCormiok, assistant | [\*Saust “po given its proper quota of resime. in the ministry of war, and | Martha Klatschken, walked the entire | garded as an opponent of woman suf- | any agreement. arill boys, trammers, miners and tim- | PoStmistress and Anna Glynn, a clerk | gy grtijjery. To do this the artillery Franciseo De la Barra in the minis- | 168 miles by road in the six days and | frage made good his promise to the | Suit Would Affect New England Busi- | ber men, and their pay had ranged | at Chatham, N. J. were dismissed for | No1q Sritiery. o S0 the 110 Sllery affairs. a half. try of ‘They covered about 25 miles | “pilgrims” by presenting the suffrage 0 ess. from $18 to $40 a month for boys and | destroying refused coples of “The | )jeq after war is started. A mun- » 5 3 4 hich they had b Mo ” an anti-Catholic . making the notes of state banks legal | though the roads were rough and at| house of delegates. two points, it was understood tomight DAL Mayor Murphy of Lowell, Mass., who '8 were few and contract work had flagration has started. A fire depart- bat is pointed that times bitter wind assailed the little Onl; four women walked ail the | that Mr. McReynolds was still Lopeful was inaugurated last Monday has as- B o cloiod by the Ascres | army, Tha women fniehed i~ fairly | way from Balioore. Refntorcements | hat an agreement can be reached | PIOUEhE them generally lower returns | Fas [IAUEUIeled last Mondey has as- | ;one without its proper equipment, until sufficient time elapsed to learn | good condition. met the “urmy” just outside of Annap. | Which will be satisfactory and which | (a2 the day rates. Ban St es. ident of the dis. | Pressing the “tango” “bunnyhug” and is worthless, irrespective of the num- ber of men it has; and so would your whai nom’ f state banks would be Miss Jones suffered perhaps most of | olis. at the same time will work ro undue : r 2 other questionable dances at all dance enarantee Tedemption fond. Decessary for her to Iest Lot 22 | CLERGYMAN INELIGIBLE sy William Rickard and John Anttala, | Two Hartford Druggists, J. Drobegg | tive in war. e s~ WEAK SPOT IN PATROL. D e e s woe e. Giynn received the suffra- ident and secretary of the Calumet The ral s ested that the TO FILL SENATORSHIP.| The department officials have been | P o J and A. N. Davis, were fined $50 each | gene: UEE! S ¢ | £014 that @ suit against the New Haven | o0 F°7 9p,"aeord % baying been | yesterday for violation of the liquor | United States regular mobile army = Governor Senator-elect Not Allowed to Qualify | would be a serious matter to all buel- | Wngaie eotd his positgion was due tg | 18W, belng convicted of selling whiskey | Shoul¢ be organiz v;nw lm:hmf‘nfl" Bellef That Ammunition s Being | gectes late in (he afterncom. in Maryland. noss in New England, and while it 18| {ic feeling that When the companies | 00 Christmas day and the Sunday fol- | and two cavalry divisions with ez ag’ Smuggled Across Border. The governor did not commit himself not expected that this conslderaicn | pealized the strensth of the union, they | ICWiNE- m'u'm,,g 54 batteries or 216 guns. on the snffrage question. He asked | Amnnapolis, Md, Jan. T.—The right|would have much weight, 1.0 one in| ywa 3 - — Washi Jan. T—Word has | the suffragsttes what ihey were advo- | of a clergyman fo hold o state sena- | anthority In the department is anxicus | Friavances wad o Srrion oy o beains | Thousands of Dollars are said to A Militia Strength of 202,000, reached Washington that when Pres- | cating. They repiied they wanted a|torship was questioned in the upper | to bring about unncessary trouble. Call- | Ful sattisiment have been garnered from persons of | <oy 4o co operation of the stats ident Wilson and John Lind held their | bill passed giving women the right to | branch of the general assembly today. | ers who have discussed the New Haven s foreign birth living iIn New Haven the militia he said, v confersnce on board the cruiser Ches- | watch at the polls throughout New | Frank F. Willams, elected from |case with Mr. McReynolds, however, Accused of “Selling Out.” through lotteries patterned after the | SOVOInOrS, Teod b IRy ter, Mr. Lind expreased the bellef that | York state on election day. Previously | Cecil county a6 s republican, was not | are convinced that he means business,| He said the labor market here had | municipal lotteries of Italy, in the past :" e ania ‘;"!"“; ""m odivhion. tth the waiting policy of the United Staies | the hikers had sent to the executive a | allowed to qualify pending the result | and that the future course of his de- | been understocked for several years | few 1Zonths. et tevew strength of 292,000 govermmen: toward Mexico was cer- | messuge which they carried from the | of an nquiry into his right to the of- | partment rests largely with the New | previous to the strike and (hat there == e 174 Dattories oo o9 oo Zain to be rewarded With success. The | metropolis. He told the women he “ferc | fles becatise of the constitutional Dro- | Haven 1eaolr Was more Teason for increasing wages | Seven Cottages on a hill in the mis- | T, nieeding 17¢ batteries or 899 guna president iz said to have been well | honored by their visit” vision that “no minister or preacher of Cae Giaatit Complicated than lowering them. slon district at San Francisco are be- [T B BST000 o e e matisfied with the report of his personal | Miss Jones, in reply to a query re- | the gospel shall be sligible as sena- y P! . All four said that when they tried | ing slowly carried down a steep siope | WOUId be 367,000 men, or approximately = o garding the long march, said her fol- | tor.” It was still undecided today whether | (,"siave off the strike they had been | On the crest of a great V-shaped land- | tWO fleld armies short of the force of Much imterest will attach to M. |fowers camo 'to Albany “to see the| Mr. Willams said that he was mo|a Settlement of the New Haven would | o Mave off fhe strike thes had been | op the qrest of 2 great V-shaved land | 30000 men. These two field armies Lind's proceedings now that he is again | farmers along the way.” longer a minister, having resigned and | take the form of an “agreed decree” in | pyerala said that “a lot of fellows’ | have started the slide. will require 168 guns apiece or 336 on_Mexican sofl “ATe you sure it wasn't to lst the | his resignation having been accepted. |a United States courl, or merely an guns. The United States garrisons ; . ; had so accused him and Anttala said S The severity and long continuance | farmers see you?” inquired the gover- agreement by the railr to 1aeet the | that one hundred union members had | ..The Strike of 35,000 South African |2Droad have 68 gune. Noting that the of the batiies in the neighborhood of | nor. POURED ALCOHOL ON WIFE, department’s demands. Thcre are ol lerated him for his attitude. - | state railway employes is fixed fop 7| mMilitia has in its hands about 34 per Ofinaga with the g sreat e e fmany complications in the case Hietala. told the governor that the | o’clock this morning, and the situation | CeBt- of the gums it should have, the expenditure of ammunition, has led | CHARLES W. MORSE | THEN SET HER ON FIRE. | this point hasbeen left for futurc com- | hallot boxes had beon suen fan fone | has saused n fecine o mamiuaton | general added, to summarize, for the e e W W oan ON THE WARPATH ey sideration. days for a vote on the strike ques- | country s faced with the possible sus. | FoSUlar army and volunteers we would sion that thers must be a weak spot " | Peter Rooney of Jersey City Charged tion and that a count on July 6 showed | pension of all industries. need 596 guns, for the militia @9 in the American border patol. through With a Flondleh Murder. 3 which ammunition s being smuggled | Wants Cangress to Investigate Circum- AVIATOR VEDRINES approximately 7.880 votes for the strike guns. | | 25 i Referring to the United Statas being b ! and about 125 against the propesition, William T. Hawtrey, the English & = ey e i ot Paote A Hig Oass | ey Clty, N ¥, Jan. TThat her | WA FIOUT A DU EL | meisharhioof e varicus T AN mte Siter. Sad R e o of Charles | & .'.h*"’e“:'r‘:’fihz;;’n'd e stitn‘ionalisis weee securing ihalr am- Washington, Jan. 7. Charles w".m:;hfl:; = F}\;: "?;n‘nfi;n l:" hf.’;»’uf:: | President of French Aerial League Ac- locals was then sbout nina thousand, | Hawtrey, the comedian. died of would be more temptation for a coun try to strike us and If it makes up s mind to do so it can strike us at any time.” o approximately 1,200 having falled fo | bright's disease in & New York hos- cepts His Seconds. vote becaunse absence or indifferenc pital vesterday, a few bours after he | - i had collapsed in a street car. ki hea A\ duel is in pros. | Regarded Time Inopportune for Strike. o a S a1 aee. thol e These fizures led the governor to momition by capturing federal supplies. | Morse. the former “ice king” one of | firo with a toh” ot But the federals in the north of Mex- | the most spoctacular Agures in modern | o iR % mateh’ was the antes ica, wifh few exceptioms, for _man~ | American finance and the principal ac- | Roo, o S CTENE age by Are. Mary weeks have beem completely out off | tor in a drama ihat lasted for a half| "yoerdial hore tonight as the resuif od ;. pect between J 3 £ These fleld guns wanted for a forcs from communication by rail of 79ad |dofen years and carried him {rom the | of burne roceived jasi night. Rooney | ator, and Rene Quinton. president of | inguire about the present strengtn. Ha | An Operation Declared by surgeons | .;"50600 men, the goperal declared. ¥ith auy base to ihe southward from | banking regions of New York to the iz now in detention on the charge of | the French Aerial league. M. Quinton | Was Siven figures taken from the dis- A : 5 Of BUrEerY | would be used for defemse purposeS, which they themselves could secnre | Atlanta peniteniiary, is abont to wrife | i ioer s sa0a tonight: *" | trict council records, showins a total | 1B this country, was performed at Phil- | S0, Country would not start te g0 tion and therefore it is believed | another chapter io his story. Morse | = “T am accepting M. Vedrines' sec- | of 9,815 men now in the district. of adelphia when the aorta of a woman abrosd with sn army of that sive. the eonstitutionalists must have |is tryinz to lannch an investigation by | s Ao R 7 whom 7,710 were on the relief rolls. | W28 opened and a clot of blood which 2 o Bard b = supplied from the Americen side,a oongressional committes of all the | teamers Reported by Wireless. According to the announcement yes- | Fletala ‘estimated that some 3,000 | had been impeding circulation was re- | coOMDUCTED A FAKE of the line. Hvery effort will be made | circumstances which led up to his con- | Lizard, Jan. 7.— jestic, | terday Vedrines, who recently made a | union men had left the district. He | moved. . to ascertain the and stop viola- | viction six years ago of violation of | New York for Plymouth, Cherbourg | fiight from Paris to (airo, was or. plained the difference between ths | MATRIMONIAL BUREAN. tions of the president’s neutrality proc- | the national banking laws. Althoush | and Southampton, signalled 313 miles | dered by M. Quinton to give satisfac. | total m and the rellef roll | The Chatuagua Salute is the latest = on. his plans have not been announced, it | west at 3.30 p. m. Due Plymouth 1.20 | {ien immediately to Henrl Roux hi & reprs » who had been {tution to come under the ban as | Couple Exploited Their Daughter ae a became known hers today that he also | p. m. Thursday. { who had made a similar fiight, | able to suppor: without aid | @ distributor of colds, influensza and tu- Young Heiroes. NEW YEAR'S GREETINGS. | contemplates suit for damages agalust | Cape Race Steamer Haver- v enged Vedrines to a duel | from the unio berculosis solutions condemning e | prominent New York oankers and ford, L. after Vedri had struck him In the men who he said b the fax flutter of handkerchiefs| Ingranapolis, Jan. 1.—Pmma o " ther persons connected with his trial | nalled 285 miles south o 3} 4 day to the pub- d Martin Furris, each near T0 years n Repliss to Those From the | ° J _south ce. = e an. n s, it "M-fiean Republic. Almuofi:v:::l?ix Washington yesterday | Ia‘ flrp:n]::“' I\IA - A telegram was received today by M e it ! old, of Princeton, Ind, Indicted on the Quinton from Vedrines, reading as fol- | lows “T will not fight the anti-Frenchman 2ht you as soon as I | Extermination of the Once famous | St utes chanped theis ploas tode ¥ indi of Iowa, unless | ong confessed their guilt. Jovernment to check dis- |~ Loutse Farris, their daughter and the them proves s . principal figure in the matrimontal Dr AT‘:AAIUQ.H bureau, pleaded gulity about a month thnology ¢ ° { ago. e girl played the part of a - | for a few hours. He talked with Sen- | siznalled Mexico City, Jan. 7—The president | gior Boran of Idaho and suggested o ! Hook of the United States, through Charse | him the need for an investigation of & Saturda O’'Shaughnessy, replied today 10 the | hig case by a senate committee, Al- Sable Tsiand, Jan. 7 New Year's greetings of the Mexican | hough the lduiio senator refused to | dent Tineoln, T , sent to him through Presi- | pres< the matter, the ex-bauker is un- | siznalied 910 miie dent Huerta, but did_so indirectly, | Gerstood to have left Washington s 1 n a8 that he did not send cdrines to fight or re- 5 for New York, | t of Sandy Hook | an order to V s | e Dock at 9.30 a. m. Sunday. |turn to Paris. He merely telegraphed | i e young helress in the scheme and, the avolding t;ahule of E::::L:‘lt:am;nem-mxma to force an investigation. York, Jan Steamer Pan-|a friend at Cairo, asking him o sug- authorities asserted, her photographs To mh :‘:fl:i- m'hl"a !u"f““‘ K s = = fum fo N York, siznalled ! gest to Ved es that it would be well dent of the|and letters led to her engagement to sffairs, !’e BTy oy aetitont | HULK OF OKLAHOMA 470 miles eaxt of Fock at 7 p. | to accord the reparation demanded by 22l union, | more than fifty men. Five sultors ap- w“'lx:.!‘;nlmt fl:f&'mt{n‘-yo‘lmemm‘_ SENT TO THE BOTTOM. | m. Dock 10 a. m | Roux. e appointment of chaMh at one :.K.I::e in Princeton to it S { P ¥ k m her as a wife. :ieut of n:: -U.nl;:‘lll: ‘:'.:r;*;““il Peppered With Six-Pound Shells by Steamship Arrivals. { The governo ;‘v'd o "22‘.‘?2:} :"dl York Legisiature Organtzss. for the prosperify of the Mex- Derelict Destroyer, Bremen, Jan, 6.-—Steamer RBremen,| Concord, D o 5 | |al tranater of the union offee n:; ocdide 0l slele Qb wishes i2 X fcan republic.” New York ase of Harr: ‘Washington, Jan, 7.—The hulk of the Rotterdam, Okiahoma wus the first steel derelict New York for FEDERAL GENERAL DESERTS, ever attacked by the Seneca, built as rat vie > ADeny, N. Y., Jan. 7—Bevond ef- Arst vice president. | fecting ~an = organisstion, not mueh | work of importance was accomplish, at the opening today of the 1914 legis- ca | James M. D “Steamer Cear, | was the opinion express A Noto Direct Liverpool. _J: ea _ | cial commission which is investigating e comp e onds a derelict destroyer. A wireloss re- | pania: Nowr York Steamer Cam- | o Question at & public hearing 1 | they will do ton | lntive session. Adjournment was taken Commander of Regulars Crosses Over | Dort tonight said the wreck was Jo- New York, Jan. 7.—Steamer St Pauj, | this city {oday by Holman A, Drew of | gested Claude O. 7 P, u.wt to Jan. 18. Thaddeus C. Sweet. to American Side, cated 1l ng bottem upward 15 miles Southampton, % "1 Berlln, glhariff of Coos couniy, and ! +he Michigan State “]'"""' With heri| republican, was elected speaker of the gouth-southwest of Fenwick Island | Plymouth, Jan, 7.—Steamer Rotter. | Clark D. Stevens, member of the Con- | bor. 28 home of BMirs. | assembly. t Portland, Ms., yes- Vs e woman had been Smelter Strike Broken, overcome by chloro- Texas, Jan, 7, —Gensral|light .Mr"m to the bottom in 18 dam, New York, cord police force, (:o orhtha tha l;non‘ “It the companies havs any offer to | one of the most prominent of water. Havre, Jan, 7.—Steam. in whose charge Thaw has been since ' male vou surely will hear of it,” seld R 2 R Drony, ta- | When the outter's officers recognized | Ner York, = XL L M s o o e e o BT g R e ¥ fo fia | the mprustioubility of using mine ex- Lot 10th. If there ts nothing of that sort in o T %’;ufimm s Tkt e losives, ;" brou oir six- —— air, i todiny: : Amarican sids from Potnder ints aciien, seading n siai| To Declde Anna Gould's Appeal. Woeeaked Bohgoner. Sights ssden Key of Efkdom, jusicated tHa stnixe ‘ot T e e iure ot | Ite the Maker cviry Hiae & eecl|. Reme. Jas, 7—Cerdinal Vimcsase » . 7—The United|" More Polioy Players Arrested. paico ven sccompanied | I ber { a convemient position, | VAnnutSlll as prefact of the Segnatura | gyetas sy (esnMDOEt General Hooe | New Haven, Comn. Tam . TooTwo | w03, A:::f tril l:m_-l, hstfl (.;l ed & mesting of the QJ‘,. which arrived here today fromimore arrests were made by the police | Steam Vessel Threugh the Canmal, lgg a““::l i m““g"ig "“»}J Loleclde | Tmpa, Fla., reported passing the’late today for alleged policy plaving. .. W, Va., Eiks. it i s prReg pelolon. Jan, T —tfhe fitat stesm ves: | rung. Jormerly Auna Goud, from he Towsk,of av unknown seiocner ebout|One of thoss arrested was o former | [oiiae aisappeared mystoriously fro | _No Parols for Brutal Clergymen. ough ‘anama canal Hhe i 4 les eas Cape Ban as, on & | supernumerar; liceman and the oth- o ¢ Trent: b 7.—The teday, It was the Alexander Levalley, | JSXCt of the Hota iribunal annulling ot line with Tampa, Two miste of | oren o wamas. ol ke b tatal | Tre (han u dozen Eiks lodges since S ey e ey 1i: - " | the vardmen was broken. The plant Nimber 1 jn New Tory, | ¥As running Sl biast, with 400 men ago, has disappesed | &° WOTK. About 115 men have replaced dze rocm of the Clarks- | 'N® 150 strikers. Fpon e el Ly {:esfii:-;a.rnue to Count Boni de Cas- | tne" wrecked vessel wWsre Drojecting | of 18 atrests. made since. the polies | Ieft New York, % m‘ 1;“" "r“."d.,gw m{;“‘:‘w 3 It had been operating om the i above the surfags of the sea. | erusade began in the forelgn section P o serving a term of five to ffteen years e side and sradually mads its e - it o of the ety _ Mere Typhus at Previdence. | in the state prisen for assaulting Vieis way theough during the cousse of its | ather” Clark Qelng te ltaly. Panama Canal Zone Gevernment. — Providence, R. L. Jan. 7.—The fourth | Fellia, a 14 year old ward of the New dredging operations. | Bosten, Jan. T—Hev, Francis M| Washingten, Jan, 7—One of Presi- Cushing Re-cleBled Speake case of typhus fever diseo in this | Jersey children's heme society. . . als — Clark, president of the World's Chris- | dent Wilson's first aots upen returning | Beston, Jan, 7—Grafton D, Cushing, since the steamer Roma eame e — in tie ggrojgon Generdt Car- | For the nine months ended March | ian Kndeaver uniom, will sail tomer- ‘*L‘I“hmflm will be to determine (hs | the republican candidate, was eleeted | here with & passengep suffering frem To Consider Racial Betterment. aveo was permitted to cross several | 31, the merchant vessels built in the | rew for taly on his 17th foreign jour- | pl of government for the Panama | gpeaker for a fourth term at the open- | the disease was found today. hys!- Battle Creek, :g':;.‘: on account ef having been hfi‘l;zl} ;(al.::s M;zmp, ?:d 1,114, o‘{ mah);clmhte .ram.‘::g::e(sbof Lk‘;x flw\'&(fieut eanal zoms. Sée‘rohr)' Garrison said | ing of the legislature today, but it was | cians of the eity health department | nemt educatiomal an 265 LEE s. & compares which L. . an rs. Clark y: the su v v was | interested improvement rare Skirmish fighting by the outposts of | with 1,051 vessels, of 151,341 tong, for | will attend Christian Endeavor conven- o e Bsion e oy stier & TR coqtest i e e ke o8 oral Villw's rebel forces amd fthe | the _previous corresponding mine Sodaraie bogan nods Diiiag mouihs e ol were given te the president before the | four ballots were taken, a casli taken from a boarding house to the | condltlons arrived tions in Spain, France and Engla~d | lati ent te Pass Christian for the | d crat 2 1 ity hespi centl, i UG BeiE ¥iES AbraAd oF emocrats and progress Tl‘l ospital recent! tne g

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