Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 31, 1914, Page 1

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ich is Doudle Tnat of Any Other " FORTY-ONE GO DOWN WITH STEAMER] _cos rumsgr Belgian Auther's Work Ini F Rome, Jan. 30.—The Sacred Congre- The Monroe of Dominion Line Sinks Ten Minutes i S o After Being Rammed by Nantucket More ~Ma’rines - ~ Ashore in Haifi THOSE ON SOUTH CAROLINA ARE | LANDED. Hugh W. Cronin Was pointed postmaster at Con all the w wurice Maeterlinek, the Beigian author, shall be classed as forbidden literature to Cathollcs. | [Change Tactics TO ADOPT CIVILIZED METHODS 4 OF WARFARE. . ok uod WILL STOP EXECUTIONS Egbert Dillon, aged six, W in Evans’ ditch at Na terday. ACCUSED OF BEING “GLORIOUS- LY DRUNK™ AT SEATTLE. Merry del Val to Succeed Rampollia. Rome, Jan. 30.—It js reported that Cardinal- Merry del Val probably will be appointed chamberlain of = the POSSIBLE TO LAUNCH ONLY THREE LIFEBOATS | cEresiar Shee wieiins vioe polla. Facing close of New Jersey -{ $2.300,000 at the fiscal year. George William Sheldon, editor author, is dead of apoplexy at. home in Summit, N. J. a’ defieit of the present ALSO FULL AT ATLANTA| A PRECAUTIONARY STEP and “his Pops Pius in Good Health. Rome, Jan. 30.—That Pope Pius is in excellent health seems apparent by an invitation received tonight by the Rt, Reyv. Thomas D. Beaven, bishop of Springfield, Mass., to be received in private audience Saturday morning. Congressman James M. Curley con- tributed $4,000 to his sus ma- yoralty campaign in Boston. i Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth is bequeathed one sixth of the estate of her grandmother, Mrs. Caroline H. Lee. Juarez, ma- -_— , The Imperial Sugar Company’s large mill and warehouse at ' Sugariand, Texas, were destroyed by fire yes- terday. Prisoners Will Not Be Put to Death Unln_o- They Have Broken Faith, Declares Villa—Seeks Recognition. Disabled Steamer Rolled Over on Her Side Before Others Could be Unshipped—Lifeboats of Nantucket Make Res- © cues From Sea, Some of Victims Later Dying of Ex- pooure—Bnfl'epwt Man by Heroic Work Kept Wife Afloat, But She Succumbed to the Exposure—Collision Due to Dense Fog—Martyrdom of the Wireless Operator American Federation President Makes ; Candidates for Presidency Are March- Vigerous Denial of Charge at Con-' ing Upon Port au Prince and Cap- vention of United Mine Workers. tain Russell Intends to Be Prepared. Washington, Jan. 30.—All the me rines from the United States battlesnhip South Carolina were landed at Port au Prince today to reinforce the bluejack- ets from the cruiser Montana guarding foreign interests there. Captain Rus- sell’s despatch to the navy department Indianapolis,” Ind., Jan, 30-—Scenes of the wildest disorder marked today’'s session of -the convention of the United Mine Workers of America, Liuan-Chow, province which” heard Duncan McDonald, sec- Ngan-Hwei, murdered Father Rich, a | retary-treasurer of the Illinois miners, French Jesuit missionary, and cap- |declare that Samuel Gompers, presi- tured two Jesuit priests, Fathers Al- £ lain and Taille, who are being held for ransom. Chinese Bandits Murder Priests. Mexico, - Jan. 30.—General Shanghai, Jan. 30.—Advices received Francisco Villa announced today that civiliged warfare, particularly with Teference to the treatment of prison- would hereafter be adopted by the RS |rebels. He procured a _little book Leon Waronick, the “Pear! ~King”'| from United States army officials deal- ved at San Francisco from Hahi- With “The Ethics of International b ‘arflo’ with & 20 t black pearl, valued [-Warfare,” which he said would be put THE POWER OF ADVERTISING - at’ $60,000. : in e Eaid would be ST Tth, he stated, no federal officers The Sale of the Wabash Railroad | Would be executed unless they previ- at foreclosure was authorized yester- | OUsly had been captured and on being day by Elmer B. Adams, United States | Feleased Advertising is a business helper .which goes on indefatigably, It is constantly at work as a trade accelerator. It is one of the great building forces and yet as one observer says the ordinary newspaper had broken faith not to fight Circuit _judge. & Attack on Torreon in Ten Days. Fire Yesterdiy Destroyed the tan- reader does mot dream of the potency of good advertising. One of the }nx‘“e.lt if not the largest general advertiser in the United States is a manufacturer in the Philadelphia Metropolitan distriet, There 18 a as of interest because of the im- er company at Woburn, Mass., ca —never ending race at that plant between the advertising department | pending attack on General Refugio 2 loss of $100,000, Yelascss federal garrison at Torreon, Holders of $9,100,000 of the $10,- and the builders. The advertisers bring in so much business that the builders are kept busy enlarging the plant, which is looked on as the probable 000,000 Boston and Maine notes, due The business has been built up and it is steadily growing through scene of the big military movement in co. ' General Monclovio Herrera, February 2, have consented to an ex- fone of Villa’s commanders, with a tension of four months. . thé efforts of judiclous newspaper advertising. Something ltke $1,000,- 000 & year .is spent on advertising the company's output which is luxury In every sense. At the present mement orders for new busi- brigade, today moved south from Esca- lon. It may be a week or ten days be- ness are so far ahead of the eapacity ef the plant that it would seem = hopeless job to catch up. ptain Berry had aroused his sleep- ing crew. As the ineffectual rays of searchlight failed to pierce the fos, Captain Berry ordered out his Iife- boats. They found only the struggling survivors crying franlically for heip. Many of those picked up were ut- terly exhausted - and unable to help themselves. Several, unable to climo the ladder, had to be nuuled over the gide. of the Nantucket with ropes. . Bridgeport Man Loses Wife. Thomas R. Harrington of Bridge- port, Conn. kept his wife afloat by superhuman efforts, with her hair in his teeth, only to have her die a few minutes after she was haul- ed aboard the Nantucket. Captain Johnson, of the Monroe, and all his officers got away from the sinking vessel and were rescued. All the officers and the crew of both the Monroe and the Nantucket were Ni Vi Jan ' 30—The .story of/ no’fv“fi"rg’.mi" victims went down to “deatli in the chill waters of the Atlan- tic when the liner Nantucket rammed - and sank the steamer Monroe early to_ ) day, was brought to port tomight by the 99 survivors, who were rescued by the Nantucket. It was a story of ‘sudden death, Sweeping out ‘of the dark fog, and taking unawares the doomed half hundred with the hea = Tess of sleep still & them. It told how the stricken Monroe, with her side gored deep by the steel prow of the Nantucket, filled rapidly Tolled over on her side.and in a’few minutes - turned completely over and plunged to the bottom, carrying with her the passengers and members of the crew who had failed to get ‘c.lur of the 41 Lost, 99 Saved. Tonight the revised lists prepared by Political Prisoners Ordered Released. Santo Domingo, Jan. 38.—At ai|| meeting today of Presideat Bordas and his cabinet it was decided to order the immediate Telease of Federico Valas- quez, former minister of finance and a candidate for the presidency at the last election, and several other prominent | men who have been under arrest on political charges. FURTHER EXPENSES OF NEW HAVEN SYSTEM. Member of Massachusetts Legi on Company’s Payroil. Boston, Jan. 30.—Publicity and oth- er expenses of the New York, New Ha- t‘.’;: and Hartford raiiroad were again Hereafter There Will be a censor- ship, according to the st: of the Roman Catholic church, of every play on the New York stage. fore the rebels actually open the at- y op Chihuahua the Rebel Capital. Meantime Chihuahua City, the larg- est rebel stronghold, is rapidly being transformed into “the provisional capi- tal of the republic. A mansion has ature The Harvard Cancer Commission, after a year’s experiments, reported subject of investigation by the that s is at present the only sat- | been provided there as the executive Captain Johnsen, who survived the helgghere; might o AWhit an Investl. | public service commission today. Hen- But the advertisers never relax. Those at the head of that depart- ot Coataat for it o office of General Carranza, who is ex- ~ sunken vessel showed: e btkun immeiatoe e hele ol | ry B. Xnowles of Gloucester, a former ment never let up. The head of that great concern now knows almost Pected to arrive from the Pacific coast Lost—Passengers, 19; crew, 22. To- | be begun imme ately by the federal| rapresemtative, testified that he receiv- 6 AL, = 5 Burglars Broke Into the residence |about Feb. 15. alteh steamboat inspection’ service. 1 froby this maliredl DeTicat Tor oo better than anybody else that before you can reap a harvest you must of William C. Warren, president of| ‘To Governor William C. McDonald Saved—Passengers, 39 crew, 64, To- Widowed at Age of 20. tain services while a member of a leg- ‘ first sow the seed. The advertisers are the chaps who are doing that the Buffalo Commercial and stole jew-| of New Mexico, General Villa reiter- tal 99, Eight of the Monroe's pas- | islative committee in the summer of and the results count. Wisdom directs that you sow vour seed for elry amounting to over. $2500, ated his statement that he had no am- sengers, whom wireless reports had put_in the list of the lost, walked or Were ‘borne from the steamer Nan- tue when the latter landed the rescued at .Norfolk this afternoon, 1912 Investigating tation prob- lems in the western part of the state. It was this committee which drew up the so-cailed ‘“‘western trolleys” bill to give certain street railroad rights to the New Haven. List of the Lost. Revised list of the lost: Passengers. Mrs, W. L. Bolton, Newark, bition to become president of .Mexico or to overshadow General Carranza. » Villa Considers Himself Incompetent. General Villa asked Governor Mc- Donald if there was any prospect of business in The Bulletin’s advertising columns. persistently. It pays. The Bulletin for the past week, delivered at your door for 12 cents a week contained the following matter: Do it now and do it The Plant of the Morgan Manu- facturing company at Charleston, W. Va., makers of desks and furniture, ‘was destroyed by fire yesterday. 5] _These were George M. “riag [ i S e T erviliot ar: | New York: Mrs. John M. Ray of Now | Mr. Knowles explained that for many \Bulletin Telograph' Local General Total Miss Marie Doro will be the.first | Sracen toR Of the rebels by the United “enal, N. Y. (died after rescue). York; E. P. Lyons of New York, B. B. | Years_before his election to the legis- ~ American actress to - ap) before | “We wish our friends in the United . Edward, U. S. navy. < Vernon of New York; W. G. Clausen | lature ke had been in the pay of the Saturday, Jan, 24.. 109 143 806 1058 || XKing George when she plays at Wind_ | States would help ue. because we o Mrs. D. Gibsdn, New York. - = of Milwaukee; Ed. Gorman'of Phila- | New Haven, but that during the exec- Mond J 26 98 113 25 536 sor Castle in “Diplomacy” next Mon-|your friends,” said’ General & Villa, amiall Caetianat, MY delphia;. . Albert Snyder of utive session he was not in its employ. onday, an. i 32 e e RS L O. Wagner, U..S. Marine corp: Orange, N. J., and C. W. Poole He was paid for interviews and for in- Tuesday. Jan. 27 98 114 194 406 earth, and your president is the best. W. H. Ingram, Sumter, S. C. Gray, Va. Mrs. Ray’s husband was'|Vestigations regarding train services. 3y % e s Instead of Dying a pcor man as his| We wish you to know the truth about Charles M. Joileff, Baltimore. lost and she, a girl of 20, was tonight | Other work which he did was in the Wednesday, Jan. 28.. 102 110 232 444 friends believed him to have been, the | us. We are not always executing peo- ) Mrs. Thomas R. Harrington, Bridge- | in Norfolk without friends or means. | Bature of confidential service for Tim- Thursd: % - 29 6 late Senator Shelby M. Collom, of|ple. Indeed, we Intend to execute only port; Conn. (dled on steamer Nantuck- | Bridgeport Woman Died After Rescue, | °L2Y I. Byrnes, former vice president. ursaay, an. 29.. 126 131 311 568 Tilinoir, left an estate valued at $100,- | traitors or ‘those who have broken = ey o e : 3. Otis Wardwell, a lawyer of Haver- Eriday -~ J 30.. 115 118 6 5 : faith with us. Please tell yoir coun- RN LR e 04 Domipion Steamship com- | hill, for many years a member of the riday, an. %o i 213 44 : et thit Tanen T s xes 1. Okakamato, Japanese. ManegerToush lts assistant general | republican state committee, told the s 3 L e R o 2 Charged With Embezaling $15,000 | tent to hold high office because of v Mrs. C. W. e S o e "’;‘jyc'{,"fii,;’; mg-‘“ that he had recelved 362, TFotals i 648 720" 2081 3458 ||fzom Vietor bank of McKees Rocks, & ot e et oo A can only Sussex county, Va. ' . > ' & d * At i y - desseehean ttsburgh suburb, Samuel the of o 1. FxRay, New York e A st 4 ed. @ retainer in 1609, "An addi- e Mpisin Ny ) \l?rou;g‘:l:‘ yesterdsy - froes s e Bt T Poealr ‘St Passengers. T oy B S SRR ~Governor McDonald visited the rebel e R Sectrity dunt of the, American Federation ot | Sreaisony worn ootes, OF the Haltion | Secrstary Daniels tofll the House|JSRfuartcrs i a3 vrivats capacity. J: n 3 g e residen: i r., son of c] - M Beten, New , York. ¢ mlmé was “glorlously drunk,” during | Port au Prince temerron: o O% | government should develop its ewn ofl | GOl TEETEAR TT Sson of the rich land- C." Roper,” New Yo o4 supplies for battleships. He favored B oo on ang on dther a $500,000 appropriation for locating occasions, and also heard Gompers’ denfal ‘and the reiteration by Charles H. Mayer, president of the Western Federation of Miners, that if the cop- f.l‘ strike in Michigan were to fall it would be .due to lack of flnancial assistance given by the American Fed- eration of Labor. to this end were well underway “when the management of the "road was changed recently. The witness said he was a legislative agent at the state- house for many years. Charles H. Innes testified regarding money received by his law firm from the road. . This amounted to $13,000 last. year, he said, the payment being | hua for ransom, said to be $250,000 in gold. Members of the Terrazas family who arrived on the border reported that recently Terrazas was tortured in order to compel him to reveal the hid- ing place of $600.000. The money, it is sald, was hidden in one of the Terrazas the A Precautionary Step. Department officials understand that | and developing an oil plant, there had been no further disorders in — the capital, but that Captain Russell| Dr. Thomas A. Carter of Chicago be- had landed the additional men as a lieves that he has found a cure for precaution. Hope that a constitutional | bichloride of mercury poisoning, hav- government would be re-established in | ing successfully treated one patient, Hait{ following the flight of President | who took 35 grains of the poison. Oreste has not vet been abandoned " Wison.” Néw York. Sy e 2 er L g ‘?’c': Lie;tenang'%firfil was taken from the S ¢ water uneonscious an adly. ured Boatswain N, Nelson. 1&nd the only mark of memm‘guxon A Boval found on the body was the name “Cur- Bow ‘A. Soydin. tis” Sy Devk Watchman 1. Juvich, upon’ a handkerchief taken by % the coroner from the pocket of ‘he Saloon Watchman L. Ward. s R DajeTNRE; = Tirst Wircless Operator Ferdinand J. " wi : homes and was revealed after prisoner had been half strangled. Wirsless Operator a Martyr. Kuehn. b Third Asfigtant Engineer Braxton Haskins. White Stewardess Mrs. Gourney. Colored Stewardess Patsy Wallace. Second Cook I White. Third Cook Joe Bradrolf. Head Waiter :P.'Davis. _ ‘Waiters J. Delk, J. Martin, A. Prad- dri, D. Proverb, W. A. Gardne! Names of several deckhands and coal passers have not vet beej checked up. Upder the thick bank of fog, both big ships were making their. way slow- ly and with difficulty in the early morning. The-Monproe, with Captain Johnson on,_the -bridge and a double lookout peering imto the mists abead, was -edging under half speed to the northward, having - left Norfolk for New York last:evening. - The Nan- tucket, heavily laden with freight and with only two passengers aboard, was nosing her way:southward bound from Boston to Norfol Monroe’s Passengers Aslesp. The crash came about 1.40 o'clock Thomas' R. Harrington, after . his heroic struggle to save his. wife, was himself overcome ‘when lifted aboard the Nantucket and revived to find his wife dead. With a blanket about him he remained beside her body until it was borne from the Nantucket. Mr. Harrington will tomorrow accompany his wife’s body to the home or her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Kelly, No. 56 Stevens street, Norwalk, Conn, There were notable deeds of herolsm by Assistant Engineer Oscar Perkins and First Wireless Operator Ferdinand J. Kuehn. Perkins, when the inrush of water put out the main dynamo and left the Monroe in complete darkness, rushed below. and put to work an emergency dynamo. He is among the rescued, Wireless Operator Kuehn gave the first “S. O. S call and after adjust- ing a life preserver which would deubt- ess have saved his own life, re- moved this from his vody and put it on a girl. Kuehn was lost. His as- r sistant, R. L. Etheridge, was saved without warning. Out of the grey-|and walked into the arms of his wife, black fog that-shut out even the!who waited to greet him ~ the Nan- waves from view, the gleam of the |tucket docked with the re. “ed this Nantueket's '~ wearchlight = scareely | afternoon. ‘touched the ing side of the Mon tai bound vi ppe % J./ who is in business in New York, 4 N e A o A e | was ‘one of the Monroe's injured pas- e 2 isengers who had to be sent to the o i T veessl Tean | hospital ~ Snvder wae too exhausted e eithen. shouted an order Tor |10, talle It was sald Tre weas ot much 3 < , but suffering greatly from iong lifeboats. ~ . exposure in the water, ~W. .C. Clausen of Milwaukee, came the Nantucket wrapped i t and went to the hospital with .;fll',xm ‘{oot slightly hurt. Clausen said -~ | the first he knew of the accident was ::rl lp“.fi, rl:ncr‘ !i&fi;c-mr’:"&fl- "hflll: W& | When water came in upon him in his side, awakened the SI6eDIng. passent- | ot out and adjust a Hte preserves ers and sent them clambering toward | = Captain Johnson of the Monroe lcame frém: the Nantucket much de- | Pressed. f1&7%ald he felt in no condi- hur-\flun 1o talk about the disaster and and | would Have 1o defer Warned by _the officers, riedly adjusted © life preservers made for the deck, But the time was that he makes until he had time to | ‘ail too brief. Those rescued agreed make an official from the time the Monroe was struck |of his company. until she settled beneath. the waves, {wo days t not more than a short ten minutés | Johnson, nd you can weli under- alapued. |stand I hardly feei like talking about Baggage, clothing, valuables, were |this maiier right now. T will do so all forgotten in, the flight from the |later. but for the present can have "staterooms. - - Pajamas, nightgowns, Dothing 1o sa; bathrobes and blankets were the com_ | In Water Three-quarters of An Hour. mon apparel of those wib reached the | Ralph Pisnmagan of Breoklyn said .deck before the water trapped them he was in fhe water for three-quar- below, and most ‘of them ‘wore that|ters of an heur hefore being rescued, garb when they left the Nantucket at! James O'Connell, vice president of her dock here this afternoon.” vg:éh?‘mezean Fede;atioin of Labor, was * , “Three _lifeboats. jamas and bathrobe when he oo :':e"""’ Qhly.- a mi:: "::flh_ came Off The,gleamer. It THd mot take o th: deck tehxau‘p rectan td mere than about ten minutes for the Y She Héciaais ey were. 73 umd "m‘. Monree to BSink after the Nantueket e lifeljoal e officer; truck her, ' There was very little, if any, col ion. The erew and pas- rs behaved well, the men allow- ing the few women and children to get inte the lifeboats first,” said he. Actresses Saved, Miss ilda Haviland, leading. lady f the a - Theatrical company; ‘the un &i— Leons Soule of the same com- ‘turned |.pany, who had previously been iden- i ol as Mjss Seville; F. C. Davis of okiyn, and George Williamson of ork, who had bpeen reported ng, are among the saved. Miss nd, .been removed to & hos- ‘sound | The Monroe went down' easily and 1 be-| there was but little suctios + The coromer of Norfolk will insti- tute an inguiry bearing on the death | {of Mirs. Harrington 'and Lieutenant érself | Curliz. The Jocal United States steam- . and | boat inspectors. will proceed with. an had time Lo] for interviews with Mr. Byrnes and for investigating tax matters. The hearing was continued until next Friday, when former President Charles Little Sympathy For Gompers. The delegates showed little sympa- thy for Gompers, who declared he was belng tried “before a jury whose here and instructions were sent today to the American legation at Port au Prince to aid the islanders in their task. S. Mellen, Vice President Byrnes and|minds were already poisoned.” Ev- | Rebel Leader May Take Possession. Mayor John F. Fitzgerald are expected | ery point made by Moyer and Mc- The victorious rebel leader, Theodore, to be present. Donald was wildly applauded. Aft- on Port ‘au Prince is now marching with 500 men. If he takes possession of the government the United States administration probably will insist that as soon as order be restored he take the necessary steps to call con- gress in session to choose a president. Sufficient Force on Scene. The navy department is satisfled that it has sufficient force in Haitien \\l'aters to meet the needs of the situa- tion. AUMULLER MURDER WAS A SACRIFICE. Alienists Testify Regarding Statements Made by Schmidt. New York, Jan. 30.—When court ad- journed late today in the-second trial of Hans Schmidt, th ex-priest charged with the murder of Anna Aumuller, taking of testimony was nearly com- pleted. Thirty pages of the testimony of the state alienists remained to be read, and Justice Vernon M. Davis an- nounced that at the resumption of the trial next Monday this matter would be disposed of. Drs. Smith Ely Jeliffe and William Mabon, chief alienists of the defense and prosecution, respectively, are to be subjected to a brief cross- examination, and Terrence J. Mcan- | FAVORABLE REPORTS us, counsel for the defense, will put to ON ARBITRATION TREATIES. Dr. Jeliffe a hypothetical question of | —_— [ 45.000 words. Will Soon Come Up for Ratification in | Tt is understood that if this plan can | the Sonats: bhe carried out the case will go to the | jury next Tuesday, instead of Friday, | as announced yesterday by Assistant | er McDonald had concluded, the tu- mult was so great that Gompers, des- Dairing of a hearing, started to leave. The delegates were silenced, however, by an appeal from Moyers, and Gom- pera returned. The session was short. gates re-affirmed a declaration in fa- Vor of woman suffrage cussed a plan to decrease the representation at the conventions; which was refer- red to & referendum; and voted down a proposition to place a clause in the constitution prohibiting affiliation of members of the military with the miners’ organization. ] Gompers “Full” at Atlanta, Gompers- sat within four feet of The dele- FOR THE INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION. President to Name W. M. Daniels and Henry C. Hall. (Continued on Page Eight) | Washingron, ‘Jan. 30. — Winthrop — More Daniels of Princeton, N. J., chairman of the New Jersey public utilities commission, and Henry Clay | Hail of Colorado Springs, president of the Colorado Bar association, probably will be named as members of the in- terstate commerce commission tomor- 3 . _row by President Wilson. The senators 30.—Responding | from New Jersey and Colorado were Washington, Jan. favorable reports on a large number of arbitration treaties between the United Wwas not insane and that the murder of the Aumifller woman had been a sac- | States and the leading countries- of | rifice carried out according to the man. | the world. These were laid before the ' date of God. ‘]lenule later in executive session and | | FALSE ALARM RAISED BY THE SUFFRAGETTES. | Bishop Visits: Jail - and _ Finds Mis Peace Very Comfortable. | promptly ‘to President Wilson's appeal { consulted about their int) District Attorney Delahanty. made at the White House conference | late today. eppointments A A A | last Monday night, the senate commit- & e syl s examined today. i at | tee on foreign relations today ordered | . Schmidt had Insisted to them that he | i iai S el > ! OBITUARY, | William A. Moore. Hartford, Conn,, Jan. 30.—William A. Moore, vice president of the Phoenix {at his residence late ‘tonight, after a The far-reaching character of this Short SHinpas group of treaties is shown by the long | Hist of first-rate powers with wnich | they are made, Including most of the great powers of Europe, South America | and the Orlent. On the list are Steamship Arrivals, Madeira, Jan. 30.—Steamer Laconia, | New York for Naples. any statement | - | Britain, Japan, Italy, Spain, Norway, | Plymouth, Jan. 30—Steamer = St. London, Jan. 30—There is no truth | Sweden, Portugai, Switzerland and | Louis, New York for Southampton. ort to the officers | in the allegations made by militant | France, the pact with the la | Libau, Jan. 24—Steamer Kursk, “T have been up for | suffragettes that three of their com- | ing been rafified last Februa New York, nd @ night” sald Captain | rades imprisoned in Holloway jail are | ilar ireaties which will expire within | Hamburg. Jan. 29.—Steamer Pres- ! subjected to excruclating torture while | & year or two exist with The Nther- | being forcibly fed, according to the | iands, Denmark, China, Austria-Hun- | bishop of London, the Rf. Rev. A. F.| gary7Peru, SBalvador, Costa Rica, Para- ident Lincoln, New York. Liverpool, Jan. 30—Steamer perian;-St. John, N. Hes- W. Ingram. guay, Haiti, Ecnador, Brazil and Uru- | Southampton, Jan. 30.—Steamer St. | The bishop, accompanied by another | guay. Another treaty of the same | Louis, New York. { clergyman, visited Holloway jail at |Kind with Mexico expired last June| Antwerp, Jan. 30.—Steamer Laplana, | the request of a deputation of militant | and was not renewed. New York. R suffragettes and with the consent of The senate committee considered Rotterdam, Jan, 30.—Steamer Nieue the home secretary. The bishep in a letter to the Woem- en’s Bocial and Pol al union says: I found Miss Peace in the ‘remand | | hospital’ which is 300 yards from the ‘convicted hospital’ where Miss Ansell | ‘was lying, Miss Peace lay on a com- fortable fully dressed, and in a | well warmed cell. Her face was fully rounded and she showed no signs of emaciation or distress.” Miss Peace informed Bishop Iagram that she had never shrieked and had never been put inte a padded cell in the jail, where she is undergeing 18 months’ imprisonment. | those of the treaties soon to expire and | agreed, inasmuch as they are identical with the eight recommended for ex- tension, that they should be approved for extension as rapidly as they expire. Amsterdam, New York. New York, Jan. 30.—Steamer France, Havre. Cassidy’s Case to Jury Today. New York, Jan. 80.—It is expeect: | that the case of Joseph Cassidy. mer democratic = leader of Queens county, eharged with having accepted a bribe from William Wiliett, Jr., in connection with the latter’'s nomina- tion as a supreme court judge, and Louis T. Walter, accused of having acted as' go-between, will be ready for the jury tomorrow. The prosecuti rested its case at the adjournment of today's session. Eleven Chauffeurs Convicted. New York, Jan. 30.—Eleven of the fifteen chauffeurs employed by the con- | tractor who handles the United States mails here in motor trucks were found | guilty by the federal court today of conspiring to obstruct the movement of the mails.. The other four were ac- quitted. Would Eliminate Labor Unions. Boston, Jan. 30.—Profit sharing and the elimination of the labor union were declared by Charles W. Eliot, vu;io&t am\ern.us of Ha‘n::rd, toda;; i iry ster | to e only. way out of e presen g}lyy‘ n%‘hw ;:mtomtrhethflnmm ‘fi:. }nd\mrlal warfare. He was address- portant inquiry has not vet been fixed | iN8 the Master Builders’ association. and may not be determined upon un- N e P The average teiephone exchange in China has fewer than 200 subscribers. - Three Ice Fatalities. Providence, R. L, Jan. 30.—Treacher- ous ice cost three lives in various parts of Rhode Island today. The vic- tims were: Reuben O. Jilson, aged 50 G vears, who went through the ice into et g | the Stamp Hill reservoir in the town til- John 'W. Oast.- Unitéd - States s Explosion in German Mine. | of Lincoln, and two boys, Oliver pervising inspector of ‘sieam vesseis. | Bortmund, Germany, Jan. 30.—3 fire| Adams, who was drowned in Gorton’s returns from Washington, where he | damp explosion occurred in the Achen-lnond. Apponxug, and - David Center is now attending an annual meeting | bach colliery today. Six bodies had | Cartwright, drowned in South Watup- of the supervising inspectors. been recavered up to 9 o'clock tonight, | pa pond, Tiverton. 8 will soon come up for ratification. | Mutual Life Insurance company, died | for- | The Springfield, Mass, Police. re- celved word Friday that a man sup- posed to be Arthur H. Brodeur, want- ed in Springfield on a charge of mur- der has been arrested in Petersboro, Ont. Legislation Requiring every hunter to wear a hat and coat of bright red was urged before a Massachusetts leg- islative committee on fish and game by Carter Tobey of New York yester- Suits For Divorces was filed yester- day by Mrs. Lucille Polk Carter, a member of the exclusive social’ circle of Philadelphia, against her husband, ‘William E. Carter. The grounds were | not revealed. George L. Macuen, a Milford, Mass., coal dealer, and William a chauffeur, ‘were killed yesterday through the overturning of an auto- truck in which they were returning from Nerwood. Desire to Keep Up His End in fast company and temptations offered by | his position as cashier and auditor | for Sylvester Brothers, wholesale groc- |ers of Seattle, Wash, led Harold Wililams to steal $1,000 from his em- loyers, Although She Declares that ghe was never bitten or even scratched by a \dog er any of her animals, HFilen [ Brown, 20 years old, of Philadelphia {® in a eritical condition from what physicians have disagnosed as hydro- phobia. Fifteen Troops of Boy Scouts, ag- sregating nearly 400, will seareh the | woods of Newton and Brookline, Masa, | today for Miss Eleanor Ariin, of Gole- | brock, N. H. who has bees missing | from mer boarding place in Brookline for several days. | | _The Death at Shanghal, China, of | Samuel B. Capen, chairman of the | board of trustees of Wellesiey college { and president of the Amaerican Board { of Commissioners for Foreign . Mis- | sians, was announced in a | yesterday. Without Committal Services of any church, and attended only by his son, Frank, and a half dozen employes, he bedy of Frank W, Jones, ecmme | millionaire resident of New Hartford was buried yesterday in a rock-hewn | grave, on a granite crag orowning | the range of hills running through his estate, Promoters Held in $5,000. New Yerk, Jan., 30.—Warren Hutchindon, a pafént lawyer, and WIB‘J. liam L. Tucker, a promoter, both of this city, who were indicted yesterday by the fed€ral grand jury on a charge of using the mails to defrenfd invest- ors in the bonds of the Hast E Jersey Match d e company, pleade l;gt‘nnm court. They were 58,000 each. e Proof Demanded of Blackmailers.: Los Angeles, Cal., Jan. 30.—. demar: for proof from the d s of Francis Lewis Clark - ; they have the Spokane their custody was made o lice Chief Sebastian in ietter received by him W persons who signed th Blackmailers,” stating they ng Clark for $73,000 1 put under bonds of - Japs Pay Respects to O’Shaughnessy. ‘Washington, Jan. mander of the Japanese cruiser Idzumo and the Japanese minister in Mexico City paid their respects to American Charge Nelson O’'Shaughnessy” yester- WIFE OF UNEMPLOYED = his assistance to his father. Judge Mc~ Kinley held that Charies Baker was ;:fifled to ne mdre than any other Vanderbilt Yacht Breaking Up. - Calon, Jan. 30.—The wireless reports 30—The com- GUILTY OF LIBELLING KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS. Two. Philadelphia Men Escape With Suspended Sentences. Philadelphia, Jan. 30—Pleas of not gullty and nolle contendere were en- Knights of Columbus felt that they had been vindicated by tered and said the order would be sat- isfled if the court would discharge the defendants under a suspension of sen tence. the pleas en- The court granted the request. MAN WAS DESPONDENT, + Cut Her Throat With a Razer and May Not Recover, Ridgefield, Conn.,, Jan. 30.—Despon- dent because her husband had lost hiz as track foreman on the branch of the New Haven after 24 years, Mrs. James attempted suicide at her home in Railroad avenue today. When Mr, McAdams returned hame at noon he found his wife faint fram the loss of blood flowing fram four euts in ths throat, made by a rasor. don was reported critical at a late hour tonight. . Loses Suit Against Father's Estate. Chicago, Jan. 30.—Charles H. Baker today lost his sult to obtain the majer portion of the $3,000,000 estate of his father, Willlam T. Baker, dent of the Ch: plaintiff asserted Her condi- , former presi board of trade. Tha portion of the estate beeauss of $50,000 for” Bowdoin. Colisgs. New York, Jan, 30.—At the 44th an- nual dinmer of the Bowdcin Collezs Alumni asseciation of New York here tenight it was announced that the col- of Brunswick, Me., had recelved a bequest of $600,000 from the estate ol the late Bdwin B. Smith, a former as- sistant atterney general of the United States, ? today regarding Frederick W. up amd that her., X Morality of American Colleges.

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