Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 26, 1914, Page 1

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VOL. LVI—NOG. 22 PRICE MANY OBSTAGLES CONFRONT REBELS Conditions in Central . M exico Less Favorable to Success Than They Arein Border States WATER WILL IiAVE TO BE CARRIED 100 MILES .Federal Strongholds in Much Better Position to Reinforce One Another Than in the North—Villa, However, De- termined to Fight His Way to Mexico City—Appeals For Peace Pour in on: Carranza'From European Countries. | em———— Chinuahua, Mexico; Jan. 5.—Rebel leaders today zave serious considera- tion to_the s.l%i:n which will ‘con- o1 front General cisco Villa's -army ! of 15,000 or more- rebels when they | piss south of Torreon into, the ‘central | ates of Mexico. - The rebels are con- | ent that they “will take Torreon, al- | hough General Refugio Velasco,. the federal commander at that point, is believed to be” acting on orders from Mexico City to check the revolutionists there if possible. - But what will-hap- en after the ‘defeat of the 'Torreon federal garrison, should they be defeat- . is not so clearly defined in the mind_of General: Villa. Heretofore the activities of General Villa's army have been confined chief- Iy to_the border states, which were regarded as tebel territors, and the rebel victories have. been achieved against federal garrisons which were cut off from communication and from hases of supply. Unlimited supplies of cattle also were at the service of the rebels in the north. Radically Different Conditions. Southward the_conditions are some- what changed. Important cities such 25 Zacatecas, Aguas Calientes and San Luis Potosi have federal garrisons which are supplied with rations and ammunition direet from Mexico’ City. Moreover, communication and railroad facilities for the shifting of federal troops are available. The federal strongholds thus are more closely knit and can reinforce each other more readily than they could in the north, Another consideration before General Villa concerns the possible aititude of the peopie of the central states tow- ard an invading rebel army. In the north General Villa has had little @if- ficulty in rallying thq non-combatants to his side, In the central states and cities where the federals have domi- nated and where the rebels will have F miles until they ®ach the vicinity of Mexico City. ‘The route directly south from Tor- reon, and along which General Villa propeses to lead the bulk of his army toward the capital of the reBublic, runs through Zatecas and Agua Calientes. The route south of ~ Saltillo. runs through San Luis Potosi. To Fight Way to Mexico City. GeMeral Villa proposes to leave the eastern route to the rebels in that territory. Another rebel force is work- ing southward along the Pacific coast #and, according to General Villa, is to mareh toward Guadalajara. tever the obstacles, we intend to t our way to Mexico City, un- less the usurper Huerta is driven out before we get there” said General Villa. General Villa since the Ofinaga battle. sulted in a delay in against Torreon. has been indisposed This has re- the campaign APPEALS FOR PEACE. Messages Pour Into Rebel Chief From European Countries. Culiancan, Sinaloa. Mexico, \Jan. 24, Via Ariz, Jan. 25—“At the triumph of the cause of the constitutionalist order which we ippresent, peace will e established in my country.” “With this brief statement to news. papers, General Venustiano Carranza today replied to a flood of messages from . peace eocieties in Europe, who asked for peace in'Mexico.” "The messages were sent by socleties in England, Russia, Belgium, Portu- gal, Switzerland, Holland and Spain. This’ simultaneous action gave riso to much_speculation among General Carranza’s advisers, and the opinion was expressed freely that it had, been ‘o find sourees of food, the attitnde of non-combatants remains to be shown. South of Torreon are great deserts, ‘where water will have to be carried in some instances for & hundred miles. These are also deyoid of catile, So that the rebels will have to depend for relief on such towns as they leave in the rear. Rebel Armiss Might Be Widsly Sep- | arated. The raiiroad systerus and the natural routes which the rebels would havé to follow in an invasiop of jthe central mund southern states form a triangle. Torreon, 585 miles south of the United States bhorder, with ‘a populatign of 25,000, forms the northwest ansle of the triangle. Saltille and Monterey wre on the northeast angle, while the two routes southward, running jhrough important cifies, converze at Mexico City. Two rebel armies thus gight start, one each from Torreon gnd Saltillo, and while marching youthward, be separated by about 200 brought about by the Huerta govern- ment -at Mexico City through it: agents in Turope. General ‘Carranza personally answer ed a number of messages from promin- ent Spanisi. publicists and politicians. Al his answers contained some refer- ence to the MeXico City uprising of ¥ebruary, 1813, in which I'resident Ma- dero was killed, It was pointed out that the Spanish residents of Mexico had been bafted in some districts for assisting in the Huerta movement. The system of giving company cur- rency good only for merchandisc at camp stores, as a method of paying la_ borers is being investigated by the constitutionalist chief during his stay in Sinafoa. The system is said to have flourished under the Diaz resime and to have constituted virtual peonage. Carranza, it is said, has taken a firm . stand against it and warned all employers that they must pay their workmen in state currency issued by the insurgent government. WETHERSFIELD CONVICT CAUGHT AT COLUMBUS. Escaped from Prison by Hiding in a Packing. Caes. New Haven, Conn.,, .Jan. 25.—Charles Déwey of Hamden, Who made a sensa- tional escape from the state prison a!’ Wethersfleld April ‘3, 1913, by hiding | himself in a packing box, and was shipped away boxes of shirts, has been located fn Columbus, O., ac- eording to a telegram received tonight by the Journal-Courjer from Consta- | ble Frederick . Sturtze of Hamden. It appears that Dewey was arrested by the Columbus authorities a few days ago and was being held pending the arrival of officials from this state. It is not known what crime Dewey is charged with in Ohio. Dewey, with & man named Munson, held up A. T, Hayward in Hamden in November, ‘1910, knocked him un- conscious and ‘stole $150 from him. Both men were sentenced to state's prison, Dewey’s term being from four 10 nine’ years. He had only served a short time when he made his escape, which created a gensation at the time. | Dewoy ‘wag employed in packing irts made at the prison. -He secrated 1f In @ bom-fllled with shirts and the boards of the cover into by means of wires which he had fixed for the occasion, He had also made several holeg in the box to allow uir'to get in, This box, with others, was placed in_the -prison truck and carted to the railroad depot. Event- ually the box was shipped away freight and Dewey later made a com- lete getaway. ~Nothing had been sard from him until hig recent arrest, Fatal Electrical Massage. Chicago, Jan. 25—Lazarus I Silver- man, president of & manufacturing concern, was electrocuted. today whils using 2 small electrical massage ma- chine in his bath. Mr. Silverman was dead when his son found him.On his| chest, with the motor running at top speed, law the massage apparatus, the casing so hot that it had burned the flesh. The machine was connecied with an ordinary eleectric light socket. Two Injured in Coasting Accident. Troy, N. Y., Jan. 25.—Georze Bass, 16 years old, Albert George, 14, and Richard Jones, 16, were seriously.in- | jred this afternoon when a large bob | ¥led on which they-were coasting down 2 steep and lcy hill in Waterford dash- ed into a telegraph pple. Jones suf- fered concussion of the brain . and probably will die; Bass and George each sustained two broken legs and other injuries. ‘Haiti’s Revolution Grewing. Port an Prince, Jan. 25.—The revo- lutionary ~movement in grows stronger day by day. Al e towns in the morth are in apms against the government, and several of the- most Important places have . been: captured by the revolutionists, . “Redmond Confident of Home Rule, Watertord, Irclond, Jan. 25.Every aane: s Kuows. Chit bar abeidents, | the hothe rule bill will be_the law of MOYER IS READY TO STAND TRIAL. Will Voluntarily Return to Michigan, He Says. Houghfon, Mich, Jan. H. Moyer, president of the Western Federation of Miners, and six ‘othe: mine leaders under indictment here conspiracy will return voluntarily to the state and stand trial with the 3 strikers who were indicted with them. A telearam to this effect was reeeived today by George E. Nichols, the spe- cial prosecutor, from O. N. Hilton of Denver, generai counsel for the federa- ion, Mr. Nichols replied that the indicted men must come at once, as those who have been arrested under the charge are to be arraigned tomorrow, when ~—Charles the Januafy term of the Houghton county ofrcuit court opens. TUnless they do return Mr. Nichols said he would institute extradition against them. It is dongtful whether the trial this case will be reached during this term of the court, as ' are 50 many other cases that take precedence. proceedings DREW SALARY OF $5 FOR SIX YEARS' WORK. Kind Hearted Farmer Allowed Youth a Hair Cut Once a Year. Mason, Mich., Jan. 25.—A story of six vears' tofl,with a stable for his bed- Topm and $5 his salary for the eniire period, was related today by Arthur Pomeroy, who has returned to his fath- re, a-Gladwin county farmer. Pomeroy said that for six years the only time he had a hair cut and shave was at sheep shearing time ®nce a veas Pomeroy disappeared six years ago on leaving his father's farm to visit their former home in Ohio. He said today he had gone to worik for an Ing- ham county farmer who had paid him only $5 and had held him there. Chance Remark Leads to Arrest. New Haven, Conn., Jan. 25.—Whe: Pasquale Buccine was sentenced to jail last week for five months for assault with intent to kill he passed the re- mark to the effect that he didn’t see why he was jailed when others who did the same tiing he did escaped without being arrested. The ‘matter came to the attention of State’'s Aitor. mey Arnon A. Alling, who questioned the man, and later investigated, and tonight Guiseppa Mosca was arrested, | charged with assault with intent to kill Catella Raffone last Thanksgiving in a saloon fight. Masca is a real estate, dealer.. It is allegéd: that he shot at Raffone but missed him. Farmer Shot by Game Warden. Glen Head, N. Y., Jan. 5.—With & wound in liis neck ihat may prgve fa- vears old,. was taken: to the Nassaw - Cabled Paragraphs Death of Sir Daniel Gill. London, Jan. 25—Sir David Gill, the sreat Scottish astronomer, died herg vesterday in his seventy-first year. Suffragettes Blow Up Conservatory. Glasgow, Scotland, Jan. 25—A bomb outrage, believed by the police to have been carrled out by militant suffra- settes, yesterday destroyed the exten- sive conservatory in the Glasgow bo- tanic gardens - know <i Crystal Palace. SR s 5 British Aviator Killed. London, Jan. 25.—George Lee Tem- ple, a British aviator, was killed today While fiying at Hendon. He was mak- ing an' especially difficult dive when a strong gust-of wind caught the tail of his monoplane and the machine érash- ed to the ground. The aviator's neck was broken. Metbodist College at Rome. Rome, Jan. 25.—The Rev. Bertrand D. Tipple, pastor of the American Methodist church in Rome, has pur- chased about six acres at the southern ¢nd of the historic Hill of Monte. Mario, one of the most beautiful locations near Rome. He announces that he intends to erect a great modern eslege, em- bodylng the highest intellectual, patri- otic, moral and physical “ideals. SAFETY URGED UPON RAILROAD EMPLOYES Timely Addresses by Chairman El- liott and President Hustis. Boston, Jan. 25.—“Safety first” was the topic of a meeting today of over two thousand New England railroad men who werc addressed by Howard Elliott, chairman of the board of di- Tectors of the New York, New Haven and Hartford raiiroad, James M. Hus- tis, president of that road, and other officials./ In the language of a railroad man who reported an accident to-me,” said Chairman Elliott, ‘A baftleship_has hit-us in the slais and we are busy picking up the pieces’ We have got to pull this ‘safety first’ thing through and we will.” Negligence and recklessness were among the chief causes of accidents, said Mr. Elliott. “The public, as well as the railroads, have got to be care- ful,” he added, after quoting figures showing that 51,000 persons have been killed in the past ten years while walking on the tracks. “You have been accustomed to work- {ing with a list of ‘dont's’ ” continued Mr. Elliott, “and I shall now give you st of ‘do’s’: Do be careful. Do be alert and eflicient. Keep always in_sood men- tal and physical health. Do be loval. and stand up for the railroad manly fashion. Be ready alw direct answers to Show the public that it good_working | conditions and good wages. The pub- lic wants good service, buf we cannot | give these things unless we get enough | revenues, Revenues and- expenditures are out of balance now and until the balance is restored we cannot ggt, the highest efficiency.” - President Hustis sald: “Charges have been mude that or- ganized labor was in part responsible Yor the terrible accidents that have taken place on our railroad. I want to take this opportunity to say that or- ganized labor, as such, cannot | De | charged with intentionaliy taking g { sition that will tend to increase acci® dents. In the past few vears there | has heen a wave of rebeliion affecting | the world at larze and perhaps this has affected the rajlroads. ~ At all cvents proper discipline is the first es- | sentiul. There must be suthority based not on fear, but on respect.” give courteous and the -public. | UNIDENTIFIED MAN STRUCK BY A TRAIN. Found on Tracks at New Britain and | Died of Exposure.” i L it New Britain, Conn., Jan. 25.—An unidentified man was found mear the railroad tracks about 300 feet west of Corbin's crossing early this morning, |and he died while being taken to a | hospital. The man had evidently been walking the tracks and was struck by a train, being thrown to one side of the tracks and into a pool of water. He was cut under the chin and had a | fractured wrist, but the exposure he | suffered after being unconscious prob- ably caused death. The man, apparently a about 45 years old and w | a laborer | PARIS TO ATHENS i IN SIXTY HOURS. | New Railroad Route to Be Built Be- i tween the Two Capitals. -W Swede, was s evidently i s, Jun. § mor { western Turope will ct rafl- road communication with Greece | means of a projected new line | necting the Pirasus, Athens and L sa railroad with the Oriental raiiroad, The contract for the construction of | this line was signed today by the Greek nister at Par and the French contractors in th | the Greek premier, Eleutierios Veni- 105, The journey hetween Paris and Athens will thus be reduced to sixty hou Steamers Reported by Wireless. Halifax, Jan. -Steamer Rotter- dam, Rotterdam for New York, sig- alled 720 miles east of Sandy Hook at noon. Dock § a. m. Tuesd: Cape Race, N. Jan. 25—Ste: Canadian, Liverpool for Boston, nalled 185 miles east at 10 g. Steamer Pretorian, _ GlaSgow Portland, signalled 275 miles east at 12.20 p. m. 24th. Sable Island, N —Steam- er Merion, Liverpool for Philadelphia, signialled 868 miles eyst of Philadel- phia at 2 a. m. Steamer Canopic, Genoa for Boston, signalled 750 miles from Boston at | noon. ‘ Suffragists Address Labor Men. { . Troy, N. Y, Jan. 25.-The Central Federation of Labor this - afternoon | threw open ils doors to the woman | suffragists. known local a large mas Helen Todd and Miss Rose Winslow, 1Wo of the leading speakers in the suf- frage movemen:, delivered addresses. Stephen MecGrath, a well abor leader, presided at Hotel Burns, Guest Perishes. Hrairbanks, Alaska, : The “Third Avenue hotel Lhero was destroyed by fire tonight and one man is believ- =0 o have ben Luried in the ruins. A flreman was taught under a falling tal, . Prederick Straup, a farmer 49®all-and badly hurt. The-lods is about hospital in, Mineola this afterncoq, aft- er hie had been shot in.a struggld.with of Port Washington. * Straup, it is bBe- the Jand th¥s year, said John 1. Red- | mond, Jeader of thc Itish nationalists, | peaking hefore wi immense o hering Nere (his afternaon ! Tieved. went squirrel hunting and was | by the zame warden. azle which discharged In the followed Allen's gun ate CGame Warden Thomas H.* Mien | S i »Steamship Arrivals. w York, Jan, 25.—Steamers Cam- , Eiverpool La Savoie, Havre; nello. - Rotterdam: Sant ’Aund, i Marscilles: San uglielmo, Napl Queenstown, Jun, 25 —Steamer Cam- | eronia, New Yorl Glasgow. meeting af whili Miss | 1 | presence of | | was devoured | i ogin in Wok PLANS TO PUSH ANTI-TRUST PROGRAMME HOUSES TO COOPERATE Joint Hearings Are Proposed and Ad- vice Will Be Solicited from States- men and Captains of Industry. AWashington, Jai. 25.—Iow to expe- dite’ the anti-trust legislative pro- gramme outlined to congress last week by President Wilson was the subject of ‘an informal conference today at the home of Senator Newlands of Ne- vada, ehairman of the senate commit- tee ou interstate commerce. Purtici- piting in the conference were ihe m Jority members of the committee, Se: atovs Pomerene, Robinson,\ Thomas, Thompson, Myers and Saulshury, and Representatives Clayton, Flood and Carlinof ‘the - house judicfary commities. - Co-operation of committees in both Dhouses. of congress was agreed ' upon as essential to the quickest and best results in carrying the programme to completion, and. to.this end, the sug- gestion of joint hearings on tho bills already ‘prepared met wiih general favor. Chairman Clayton agreed to submit the matter fo the Judiciary committee for determination. Suggestions to Be Solicited. The conferees further agreed that there should be selection in conduct of the hearirigs: that matters which recently. have thoroughly been in- quired into by committees of congress should be djsmissed 3s briefly as pos- sible and that representative ment should be, called upon for suggestions. Such men would include members of congress outside the commiltees and leaders In the commercial and indus- trial thought of the country. It also was determined that the committees should seek counsel of Attorney Gen- eral McReynolds, Joseph E. Davies, the commissioner af ~corporations, mem- bers of the Interstate commerce com- mission and the president. An effort will be made to begin the hearings next week, the first bills to De taken up being those relating to prehibition of interlocking directorates, definitions of restraints of trade and “cut-throat” competition. The aims of the committees, it was said, would be to have tie programme ready tor con- gress by March 1. Doubt as to Holding Companies. Furthér. joint confererices” o mittees in charge of trust logl wili be heéld tomorrow, and: Tuesday be house fudiciary committee will meet to pass upon proposed plans -for hearings-on the bills submitted. - Besidea plans for hearings, the sub- ‘composed of -Representa~ tives Clayton, Flosd and Carlin pro- poses to confer with the president and administration leaders on an_amend- ment to the trade relations bili which would prohibit holding companies. It was concerning this feature, of the sub- programme that President Whison has n saild he is siill openminded. nis message to congress on the the chief executive referred to this feature in_an interrogatory form. The administration leaders, there- fore, still are considering this phase of the subject, and it was because of the doubt as to how far to proceed that 1o effort was made to inciude pro- vislons relating to holding companies in tentative bills made public last | weel Investigation of Mine Conditions. The house interstate and foreign commerce committee also is expected to meet during the week to take up the interstate trade commission bill, Chairman Adamson planning to study carefully the measure already subm: ted by the judiclary sub-committee. This committee and the senate inter- state commerce committee also will Degin deliberations on, the proposed measure to give the interstate -com- merca commission authority to regu- late the issuance of railroad securi- ties While the preliminary anti-trust programme is being shaped has much to keep it busy. posed federal investigation of condi- tions in the Michigan copper and Col- orado coal mines will engage the at- tention of both houses during the week. Tomorrow the senate committee on education and labor wiil take up for consideration - the Ashurt ana| Thomas resolution on this subject. | ongress The pro- CHILD DEVOURED BY HUNGRY WOLF.| Colc Wave in France Driving Wild Animals from Woods. Paris. Jan. 25.—The lopg continued | cold, espacielly in the central districts | of ¥rance, is bringing numbers of wolves frantic with hunger out of the woods. A little girl returning f cchool at La. Coquille, near Periguex, by wild animals, the searching parties finding only a torn | pinaforé and a few bones. Hunting | parties are being organized every- where, The temperature in Paris has shown a slight improvement in the last day or | two, owing to the liant sunshine, | the mercury today standing above the | freezing point for the first time in | many days. In The country districts | the cold is growing more intense, and | the weather bureau sees no immediate probability of higher temperatures. The thermometer registered 6 below zero today at Poy-de-Dome. The cold is likely to Drove disastrous. as many | farmers have sown late wheat, trust- | ing to a repetition of the mild autumn | and winter of the past few years, and it is feared that crops in many places will be destroved. Intensely Cold About Turin. ! Turin, Jan. 2.—This district is still { experiencing inteuge coid, 20 degrees of frost having been recorded for the past few days. Despaiehies from Acqui, in the province ‘of Alessandria, repori 27 degrees_of frost. ~ Alfonso to Visit Argentina. Madrid, Jan. 25.—Announcement ‘is | made- in_several of the Madrid news- papers of King Alfonsos projected trip Argenting. { One Not Counteti. | The, United States mathematicians | higve just finighed counting the islands owned by this country, and they report | 1hat the exact number is 800. It's § to | 5; in-shillings, that they did not count Canev.—New York Pross. Established & Record. | year 1914 mav be luckier th i “but ‘there seems un possibility beins busier in a legislative way. —Washington Star i ./ The Bulletin’s Circulation in‘ Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and Its Total Girculation is the Largest in Connochci%fii'_« Hearings May Ghost Used in “Third Degree” IN A PRISONER MET A SPOOK DARK ROOM MADE NO CONFESSION Charged With Poi Note Claimed to Have Been Left by Woman Pronounced a Forgery. oning His Wife— Los Angeles. Cal, Jan. ~The “third degree,” with a “ghost” as the central figure, was applied by the lice in'a futiie attempt to obtain from John H. Grondin, a young druggist, & confession that he killed his wife, Zelia, according to a statement made public today by his attor din's counrel de i after he ¥ arres night he was taicen by dote 2 darkened room where a "zl appeared and demanded: 'V You murder m . Charged With Poisoning Wife. His attorneys said they consideyed such methods outrageous, but positive proof of their client’s innocence, as the shadowy form and the dismal question falled alike to caus emotion. Grondin. who ing poisoved hi * soon aid wife and with having attempted to establish that she had lled herself inhaling gas, was said by the police to have tried to kil his wife while living in Portland, Me. Wife's Letter Declared a Forgery. When Mre. Grondin was found dead Gct. 30 Grondin made public a notice which ‘he said had been written by bis wife and loft as an explanation of her alleged suicide. It contained an ad- mission of infidelity and the hope.that the he would Le happy with “woman who truly loved him.” Hundwriting _experts note was a forgery cou; d with the arrival Maine of a widow here. in whom Grondir was said to be interested, caused the from ondin’s body jury had declared exhumation. of Mr: although & coroner’s OBITUARY, John Henry Frederick Bacan. Eendon, Jan. 25— John Henry Kred- erick Balon, the painter, died foday. He painted the coronation of King George V_and Queen dary He was born in 1865 Collision on Mithigan Cent + Jackson, lich,;: Jan. 25.—Tive per- Sons are said to havé:been killed and a large number injured Jate tonight in a collision betwean freight and passen- ger irains. on_the Michigan Ceniral railw: ight miles outsiael « Jacks on_occurred the n division of U road Proportion to the City's Population Condensed Telegrams There Were 643 Persons Killed, 2,231 injured on Canadian railways during | 1913, a -~ on railroads, was reintroduced in the Canadian parliament ! A Bill Prov Railroads in the Piftsburgh district | | are waging vigorous warfarc ‘against | | tippling among their employes. | | Francis §. Cantrell, 70 years old, one of the oldest practicipg lawyers of Philadelphia, died of heart disease. | Robbers Blew Open the vault in mel Farmers' bank at Ludlow, Mo., Sat urday and escaped with §5.090, mostly silver | William Campbell, negro wus | hanged at Montreal Saturday for the murder of George Muir of that city on August 14, i | Mrs. Domitilde "(Dallaire) ~Pothier, ’ ~ mother of Governor Aram J. Pothier, 5 3 died Saturday afternoon at her bomein | Panama, Jan slonel Georze W ‘Woonsocket. | Goethals today reiterated emphaticall ; | his dec jon (hat he A Fund For the Founding of a hus- | et \BC Fost ital in Rochester, N. I1.. s jprovided | it the will of Jesse F. Frishee of | o i o s | the has im- { e wosed is undery Captain Edwin E. Maryin, connected | stood that thix. would Keep him on with the United States court at Hart- | the isthmus for another 1% months for a half century, died Satur- aged 81, ford May Hasten Government Action. Delieved here t Yok to take C will It is generally Frank L. Polk, a great nephew of Presideni James K. Folk, was gppoint- physicians are puzzled. Colonei ( Three Fires Within an Hour in the Pittsfield, Mass., City hall lead the secret of mus ho wishes to se pleted. and the car firebug had officials o helieve that a ¥ ] ' ; een at work in the building. fore he returns to other dnuties in il s el United States. IHe has told friends Peter A. Gross, an American land- | that the 1 2 growing Tis scape painter resident in, Parls for i the last forty vears, drogped dead in|icism that has com his adminis- | N hatale at: Cie e tration from varipus quarters. Advised Against Is Embarrassed in His Work by Failur manent Government in Canal Zone— il'}‘ton That He May Be Appointed Civil Covernoer and Later Placed in Charge of Alaskan Raiiroad Project. - Opinion in Washington That He Will ed corporation counsel b Mayor t Was Mitchel Saturday. biishment of | posed 3 ent in the canal fy This Lafayette Young, former United [ E00C The 1;‘,.‘11 ‘nl.n.q...‘{ ml.x\\“‘ 1o | sever s senator and publishe of the - i ,“‘ ”vm the l“ v‘< “\ tir Des Moine apital, is seriously il B m mueh embarrassment he-| thas with pneumoni o im j ua whom he would Arthur F. Nichols of Austin, Texas, | permanent operating organizatior was injured when one of his eyes ex- : ploded. It was glass eye and Anxious % Leave Isthmus. R ! Pounds of butter Joseph Johnson. | misstoner under iiye was fire com- wayuor of New | |y fnd wh U Bdward | M 1= 3 gu last ' I vember, was T a scrious conditlon in | . a private hospital last night, seme | Qo 3" i Nours after un operation for ApDendi: giomen T ciris E Cormcl, « the South- | erm Pacific r A Young Man Whe said e - ‘was Douglas Whitdkel of \\‘h\lhl:bp Aass., entered @ telephone booth-in'i hotel | Ansenia’s Everybody-at-Church Day. | tat Newark, N. J., Suturdicy, got his! Ansonia. Conn., Jan. ! home town on the wire, and ked for vervbody-at-church™ mov an hour and tw minutes. t¢ =irl it _Suceess, | that city. The tall chars s Whituk A pre were special ) e ek vt u New dlng to a |Amend v praminent ar eity, in dow ¢ t Amend endin = plu EAGER TO GET AWAY FROM PA s For Bimentniy 1o | COlONEl Goethals, However, Desires to Refain Thsrg _ Until Canal is in Successful Operation : CI-_IAFES UNDER DELAY OF ADMINISTRATION Be York Mayor tions her a suicide. 3 g Accepting Commis ounced Colonel Goe= — rge H. Babbitt, a_former member E A the post wers fl Alleged Previous Attempt at Murder. | ,$tor9s, M Vt.. Public Serv- sionership. re in Pathologists reported yesteraay that | jce commission, after a§ Spea t sl , accentance they had foun son in Mrs. Gron- | hrief illness of acute indigestion, | Colone! hals today dmit- ave bee din’s vitg Grondin's arrest | —— g | ted 1 offe the New Vorl far as the followed. be arraigned to-| The Heating 6f the New High School | post had attr 1 him o police Com= et avt, flaho, by electricity is the tacles t »ald make meerned, I refer you, Mrs. Grons the daughter of on necord wh large build- | sible for him to carry int speaks for itself, George Da aggist of Water- | fnes have heen heated entirely by this 2N SR s yille, de., - married Grondin | means | = when hie s old. Mr. Daviau _ f | TWO THROWN FrOM }THIRTY BOATS BURNED engaged - atiorneys and detectiv If the Recommendations of Major { : 2 e gunortly. affer his daughter's Geath to| michagd fSyivester. chief of |\ofl(c.l are | _AUTO INTO. BNOOK-l AT’ PORT WASHINGTON: hake -an investigation. He also was | goo 0 Washington will soom have P Al “Ballet” . sald to hisve furnished the authorities [ Sovern) ®police we hdded to its | TRomaston Man Has Very Narrow |The “Bullet” Which Cost $50,000f bere, with information concerning | pey i U Escape from Drowning. Among Those Destroyed, J * #ixondin's alleged attempt to kil his | - o I foir e St - wife in Portland, . last year. Charles D. Thaye( one of ‘t.h» ‘F.r,::| s eyt o e Sont i“—glox1\‘af";r;“c i-"" ¥t L 3 » e L ‘“,!,'”" o el? “ago. | Dill, which is & glare of jce, just op- [power cruise “Gas Turned on Accidentall: Loty g 63 from | Posite the entrance to Hubbard park. |launches and Portland, Me., Jan. 25.—Alrs. John e N | Wiiliam L. Ly omobile skidded |lest today H. Grondin, for whose aliéfed murder disease. and he and his companion, both from | completely r husband mder arrest at Los & S g R were dashed across the | Stationar: Angeles. Cal., was T e e e s and hurled Into a brook | Suppiy Jan. 1. 1913, Wwhen the o | were in whes feo Sk o machine turned turtle on |Long two. children were Iivis the AL an Y The dam- | 0P of them. The two men were pin- [flamés that iouse in this city. A plant lev z ned in the brook by the top of the car |the y o had resuscitated her was $200 and 1.5. head w completely sub- | could an investigation 8 8 us be- | merged, while his companion was able | 1 sas had been turned on accidentall District Attorney Whitman has (2-\| t5 kean. hia head above S N R B e of Ciarics T Murphy, leader of | bY the frantic work of Ernest and COTRARIaE S ] gt - | win Schuerer, who succeeded in raising CRITICISES LONG Tammany Hail, and James E. Gaffney, | L0 SShucrer. o suctceded In raising | ping lost SUMMER VACATIONS. | s business associate. extricated and escaped drowninz. The York 2 5 men were removed to a nearby house Commissioner Claxton Believes in Con- | Walter Von Elinsidel was arresced, i and later bothy were taken o the hos- | Aion= the : hilac phi because cha pital. It is feared “tha Lyor ullet” w ers, 4 Syn- yrevent him from straying from the o B e e . 0.0 e Washington, Jan. 25.—Character Job to a nearby saloon. R s o Dmraatieieeal Raoi. st fanmu peed of 36 the practice of osing the pulgic | — o L, T PP . nil g h: 2 Meech of Middletown, and containing —r e schools during the summer months Rs| official Recognition of the movement | ;o™ f0f ST IICIOWN, 208 containing 1 rim)[n\'r and preposterou. and de-lg,)" ihe establishment of Catholic boy through the kame expe: ,,l'h._e' at the SHORT CIRCUIT DUE claring that the most important prob- | gcoyts in his diocese in affiiliation With | game spot. Not one of the family was TO A PICTURE WIRE. Tem of today was to “keep the ity boys | ¢ho" national or; Tl heen i SPoC. Net onbi from threc months' contamination in| giCen by Cardin N Do ovtivents Naw Beitain. ManT Killod ! Wheat el the streets.” P. P. Claxton, commissior G, cuxtaing v pha lieds er of the United States bureau of edu Rev. J. Frank Norris, pastor of t ona o the Beool Il ressed Liaht Button. T8 cation, today approved a plan which | gt Bibdist church st Fort W oy the e : L Would mean continuous school sessions | pesas, was nequitted by a jurs - - | New B 25— Bnsi- and ‘throvgh which two million chil- | urdu of the charge of buruing b A PERTINENT LETTER Bt g dren might be enlisted in va onal | chureh on February s, 1912 comm d made wwork g e L GOVERNOR GLYNN Cireumstamces A programme for summer vocational | Women Suffragists Met another de- | — L Comst a submitted to the commissioner by tee by tie vote, four to four, with Murphy. COmpENTOT, Wl o Clyde Allison M secretary of the | Jution for ap- ot the LIES Amer for Thrift. The com- | suffrage come e e missioner cx d the belief that one | it o e an Inven o vocational teacher in each school | Jhe: s should be employed all the year. The Gioucester Fishing Scheoner askod the governor of high ten~ “These teachers should teach nature! Sajma Captain Downey, was wrecked r explan; 2 as to form study and the principles of hortic S Meagher's Beach, east of 1 he and ture said Mr. Claxton, “going from|j on board reached shore her democrs . home to home, supervising the garden | ; he vessel will be a total | ew York last sprin < = work and continuing work durinz sum- | = regarding the meel- | USED HIS EMPLOYER'S ¢ e — Fugene D. Wood wrote t mer vacation 2 Sk v Captain John T. Chancey, for 50 Hennessy | NAME ON FORGED CHECKS. # 1 fh " years a -special e ove of the House the meeting at 4 S STRICKEN "BLIND of Represent e tiven oo holder ar. the h friends aiways have | Samuel Richardson Arrested at Stams WHILE DRIVING. | [ongest continuon rvice record at|averred, Sulzer's impeachme was | ford After Assaulting Merchamt. — the capifol, died Saturday at Washing- | Planned. Governor Glynn recently said Feke * Winsted Man Became Unconscious | ton, at the age of 8§ o et the peeiReurbatis, Stamtord.. CoNp., Jan N"im‘h* and Died Shortly After. | t bill_and_(he | Richards. : as @ red Tast - prosperous primaries bill were discussed nizh arged w in s = | ;Henry. Hsin, Aged 57, s prosperay T fought ike & tiger for the hydro- | forged checks on sevéral morchants. 1t & Windsted. Conn.. Jan. 25—Michael | farmer ear . Henr: . 3 electric bill,” he declared d that he tried to have Samuel Father Amibrose. this afternoon. was | came home intoxicated and s | oot o 3 i e stricken blind, later became uncon- |and her two children. the legisiature at least wrrest. The police: say = scious and died while being tuken to —— - | before the New York meeting. | That he had two checks—oneSfol his home. Acute uraemia was given Laws to Prohibit further immigra i Sl G | e - two chiacks ors TR as the cause of death. tion till all surplus labgrers in _the| .. .in:'in New York~ the. governor | name of Dr. J. G. Hertz, Richard= Finn was 30 years =i and was em- | United States are fully émploved were | (5 S§,on' the letter was called 1o his | 5 was signed to the ed s mechanic in a local factory. | favored by a resolution adopted at the | Sd Fhen e JUEr Yax tatied to bix | 4 £ i widow survives. o ,;f'"{',',",.;;f. .” Eredatlice "7 | before the legisiature adjourned. 1| Z ] e ——— e — | exs ol Amerioa, S - neve, at any conferdnce, the im- | : RETURNS HANNA WASHINGTON'S | prosident Wilson | peachment of s wed - | NEW ENGLAND TO GET WILL TO VIRGINIA. | & post office money ) ! TR T I MODERATE COLD WAVE, < Sl pupils of the fifth grade in the-Lin- | BROKE THE WORLD'S b diiod Assprtmeat -af Winter Wastitis It in His Pos- | coln schcol at Anaconda, Mont., Who aried Assortment of Wil = New London Man Had 1t in His Pes- | Coked him to send it to the wufferers . RECORD FORICRSES for This Week. el | in Japan from the recent disaster. Cow Produced 17,567 Pounds of | | " — PR o 2 SEaiEtax, Conrihouke, N 3. Professor Samual P. Capen, of Clark Milk Last Year, . sortment of wintry weather . for! tha E. I Egeleston of New London, = " " “says & despatch from Iairfax | university, Wo will accept different sections of the country was Courthouse, +a., has returned to lho\ay]lnlvnnvfln ten him by Sec forecast by the we: cr bureau to clerk of the Fairi nty court the | retary of Inte Lane for the coming week 5 will of Hanna Washington and other | specialist in bi on_for the kb “This week will vpen With generally 1 valuable documents which were stolen | United S ducation. - | e or yunsettied weather except in iha nortirs 2 from the courthouse at the time ihe 2% B Jeroes G e f Ser,. the contral ook Moontain res ¢ Wl of Martha Washington was stolen. | The Massachusetts Asseciation of | amatlean Tersex, Cotile club. The pro- | L0050 e extremno soutinvest, : e, Memiasion a1a ot know that_the | the United Association of Plubers, | duction » | fe bulletin, “and there will be 3 documents had been stolen until he | Steamfltters and Steamauers: HApera | “png five v Je same cow, | eRte cold wave in New Eneland-and. ) had read accounts of afforis to recove e -annupl conventifn shglarci] iy Mnouncad, is 2By he mi Atlantic states 2 wide Taw governing aging o pounds of valent to 4,435 | WOMAN JUMPED FROM v TWELFTH STORY WiNDOW Incffectual Attempts to Prevent Mrs. Amend from Destroying Herself. Yor dow wa ot a fash ho her life. | dent since her o Establish a Pa- s TO BE GOVERNOR. * g imuporting frm of thic . frow onable West Side apagt rding to the pelice reports Mrs, 1ped from her apartment T 4 woman companien Bad £ pinion in Wash- 1 - make, g . sly ad= 18 @ that theirviews t withy him,; Appointed. George ¥ ivil zov when he. > reres an m to su- CONFIDENT. Believes All Condi- Can Be Met. ving it. and m,"” ell “declared George = efforts ~ commissioner assumptions 5. -Afrs, Alice ert . Amend of u niy killed late onight 1 twelfth floor wine. {0 WEevent her from Sho has, £

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