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VOL. LVI—NO. 41 NORWICH, CONN., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY _ 17, 1914 e —— “’RICE_TWO CENTS The Bulletin’s Ciruc —— N GASE IS A “FRAME-UP”, SAYS GORE Oklahoma Senator on Witness Stand Brands Allega- tions Against Him as “Infamous Lie” GIVES HIS VERSION 'OF THE CIRCUMSTANCES Three Disappointed Office-Seekers Were Close at Hand to Serve as Witnesses When Episode Occurred Upon Which Suit is Based—Outlaw-Candidate For Governor a Witness—Case May Go to the Jury by Tomorrow. B senator testifled, Mrs. Bond asked him te meet her at her hotel, as she was | breparing to leave for Oklahoma City. Oktahoma City, Okda,, Feb. 16 De- | mouncing_the allegation as an ~infa- mous lie,” United States Senator T. P. Gore from the witness stand in district court here today declared that charges of improper conduet, the basis of the $50,000 damage suit on trial, were the invention of a coterie of disappointed officescekers intended to bring him into disrepute and wreck his chairces for renominacion at the primaries in Okla- homa next Augus Mrs. Minne E. Bond, plaiRtiff of the suil, ‘alieges that Senator Gore attack- 2 room where, : tclephone message, the senator testi- lied, she geized his hands and fell over on a bed. Just at that time, accord- Fitzpatrick and James R. Jacobs, un- successful applicants for federal pat- ronage, appeared in the doorway. tinued, “and demanded to know what Si'fer ar s Washington hetel on March | it meant. Mrs. Bond replied that she 24 last. ‘dldn’t want Bond to know about it. Denounces Case as “Frame-Up.” I realized then that I bad been the p .| vietim of a conspiracy.” | I knew that they had ‘framed up' | " Ropertson and Fitzpatrick have tes- on me,” Senator Gore told the jury. 1|, IOPSELSon ans Tuspatrion bate ted told Dr. Barp when he called at my | calied in rebuttal. e O S b Asked About Blind Girl. Defore 1 would male terms with them. Attorneys for Mrs. Bond sought to A% N time, elther in my office or in | open tae way for thie introduction of the Motel, did T ever offer Mrs. Bond | evidence dealing with the life of Sen- eny Improprietics or attempt to take ater Gore prior to the alleged episode advantuge of her.” in Washington by asking the ques- Dr. 3. 11. Marp of Oklahoma City was | tion: a witness for the plaintifl. Do you know a blind girl in Corsi Senator Gore was on the witness | cana, Texas?” stand the greater pare of the day.| Sehator Gore did not answer, how- Wheil he concluded several witnesses | ever, under instructions of Presiding | ware called to corroborate previous . Judge Clark, who ruled before the testimony for the defense, and before ' irial started that only testimony deal- Court adjourned attorneys for Senator | ng generally with the reputation of Gore announced their case completed. the parties to the sult would be ad- 5 " mitted. Exceptions were taken by Gore's Version of Affair. Mrs. Bond's attorneys. After seveYal witnesses testify in re- | Former Outlaw Testifie: buttal tomorrow, argument Jill begln. | A1 Jennings, former outlaw, now & caudidate for nomination for governor, also was a witness today and contra- dicted testimony glven Dy Mitchell Bonner, a banker of this city. not true, Jennings testified, that Ja- iven to the jury before court adjourns Wednesday 4 Senator Gore was a willing witness and seemed unperturbed. Mrs. Gore sat with the counsel for the Senator | hs had stated in conversation with wiid from time to time whispered sUg- | Bonner and himself that for $25,000 Eestions. & his acauaintance with | Ie would “cail off” the charses agafnst 3 b 2y A & t. Gore. Jirs. Bond, Senator Gore told of meet: | “Jennings admitted that Jacobs man- B0 Ber husband's odididacy ror the | 2820 hiscampaicn for county siter- e mney. post of city revenue collector Sust’ before Proached. At the time, Sengies Gors| v and was recalled just b court adjourned and asserted that af- ter the alleged incident at the hotel Senator Gore called her on the tele- phone twice, but she refused to talk | with him. said, he {0ld her the position had been Ppromised to another man, but asserted | that she persisted, coming to Wash- | ington last spring to urge his appoint- ment 7 The second time,” Mrs. Bond tes- Fhiros WItnesibE et TN E"s tifiod, “he Asked e to come. to his On the day of the alleged attack, the | office, and I hung up the recelver.” | | was | | i | PROMOTIONS FOR FOUR MOB HALTS TRAIN At the hotel Mrs. Bond escorted him fo | aiter she received a | Ing to Mr, Gore, T. . Robertson, Kirby | “I freed myself,” Senater Gore con- | Cabled Paragraphs Crown Prince Has Ton Berlin, Feb, 16—Crown Prince Fred- erick Willlam of Germany was con- fined to his bed today suffering from an attack of tonsilitis. Bond Cuts His Throat. London, Feb. 16—Lee Bond, a wealthy resident of Lyndhurst, Hamp_ shire-,who was arrested yesterday after a thrilling automobile ride that lasted thirty hours, cut his throat in prison today. His condition is pre- carious. 1 New Swedish Cabinet, Stockholm, Febe, 16—King Gustave today approved the selections of Dr. Knut Hammarskjoeld for the new cab- inet, in which he himself will be pre- mier and minister.of war. K. A. Wal- lenberg has been chosen for the min- istry of foreign affair: M. Brostroem, marine, and M. Vennersten,) finance. Rebels Still Hold Esmeraldas. Panama, Feb. 16.—Late advices from Esmeraldas, Ecuador, report that the { eity.is still in the hands of the rebels under General Carlos Concha, who | have succeeded in repulsing the fed- | erals after heavy fighting, in which the losses on both sides were large. The ed. | PRESIDENT WILL VEVO THE IMMIGRATION BILL. | Disapproves of the Literacy Test for ! Which It Provides. Washington, Feb. 16—President Wil- | son will veto the Burnett immigration | bill if it comes to him for signature with the so-called literacy test con- | tained in it. This became known from an author- itative quarter tonight after Chair- man Smith of the senate immigration committee had announced that the bill, virtually as it passed the house, including the literacy test, would be | favorably reported to the senate soon. Prospects are that the bill will pass the, senate as reported from the com- miftee, but the measure will never be- come a law, according to cluse friends of the president. The president does not consider lit- some other means should be devised to | prevent undesirable aliens from en- { tering the United States. He told callers today that he had given his view to the senate committee and had left it to them to make it public or not as they chose. It became known tonight also that suggestions with reference to Chinese and Japanese immigration made to It was | the house committee jon immigration last Friday by Commissioner General | Caminetti of the immigration bureau, | are not in accord with the views of the | president. Mr. Caminetti’s views were expressed without previous knowledg Dby the White House. The Burnett bill claims no Asfatic exclusion provisions. the house having voted down all amendments In that direction. TO NAME B. & M. TRUSTEES TODAY. Covernor Walsh Will Submit a List of | Ten Names. | of the Merchants and Miners Trans- portation company, asking that suits in other courts against that co panx_growing out of the Nantucket- ‘Washington, Feb. the Boston and Maine railroad, who | ASSISTANT PROFESSORS. More Gifts Announced at Meeting of 2 | Yale Corporation. i TO TAKE NEGROES. | One Lynched But His Plea Saves His | Companion. Hernado, Miss, Feb. 16—Stopping | an lllinois Central passenger train in | the woods near Love Station, Miss, late tonight, fifty masked men held passengers and members of the train | crew at bay under cover of revolvers ‘while they forced Sseriff E. F. Nichols | to turn over to them Johnson McGuirk | end Bill Phillips, negroes, accused of | | wounding J. K. Ingram, a Wealthy mill | owner, near Byhalia, Miss, several New Havemn, Conn, Feb. 16—Four | assistant professors at Yals were pro- moted to full professorships at the meeting of the Yale corporation today. Three of these are in the Sheffield Sci- entific school: Frederick Bliss Lu- quiens, professor of Spanish; Avard Longley Bishop, professor of geogra phy and_commerce, and Treat Baldwin Johnsen,” professor of organic chemis- istant Professor Henry B. ght of Yale college was transfer- | geveral weeks. to the newly established Clement | When the sheriff and his two pris- sorship of Christian methods at| oners disembarked the mob permitted ie Divinity school. | the train to proceed while they march- | of $5,000 toward the endow- | ed the handcuffed negroes to the | trestle. Preparations were being made | | to lynch both, but the pleadings of | Nichols in behalf /of Phillips, against | whom 1 is stated the evidence is slight | 4 were effective and he was returned to hip "f[h-”}’ in memory of | {he sheriff. A rope was placed around | -ewls B. Warren, '108. 'The | yjcGuirk’s neck and he was forced to | ty has received $25,000 from | ; p | the estate of Loulsa Kelloge, widow of | 2P fIom the bridge. The mob then | o 3 dispersed. { President Martin e { Do Martn clogs, 50, of ihe| Ingram was shot fro mambush three the university will imatels’ | weeks ago. He is reported to be in a | from this estate. 23.000 | precarious condition. | PRISON SENTENCES FOR MINE GUARDS Convicted of Manslaughter in K of Striking Miner. A gi ment of instruction in religious edu- cation in the divinity school was an. unced from Sidney F. Shattuck, '99S of Necenah, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Warren of New York have offered | receive KENNEDY’S FUNERAL TO BE HELD TOMORROW. Former Mayor Hopkins of Chicago to Have Charge. | Buftalo. N. Y., Feb. 16.—The funeral | ng | —The four Hougnton, Mich., Feb. 1 of Tohn J. Kennedy. state treasurer, défendants in the' Seeberville murder who committed. suicide here Sunday, | ¢3¢, convicted yesterday of man- i1l be held on Wednesdav morning | $iaughter for the killing of Steve Put- Bishop Colton's chapel. John P, | Tich, opkins, former mayor of Chicazo and | teTMinate terms in Marquette prison. a lifelong friend, will take charge of | . James Cooper, Arthur Davis and the funera. The board of aldermen, of which Mr. | MUst serve a minimum of seven years Kennedy was a member for 26 years, | Of & Maximum of fifteen. 'The maxi- adonted a resolution ressing et | = - . &t the los ‘of “a fatnal punlic ofcial, |, Fawin Polkinghorne. a deputy sher- a loyal and patriotic citizen.” { iff, subjeet to the same maximum and g e Taihizime’ of ZWelve years boams o Soft Coal Miners’ Wage Scale. | 2D b e o tis Phiicsclbbie; ¥ 8. e Gnionats | ' SUEESHEE Sty 1 B cass. counter propositions of the operators, | convioted Heh s sl ere placed in the hands of a sub- | % Beale committee today by the general | ecommittee of miners and operators of the bituminous coal mines of western Pennsyvivania, Ohio, Indiana and Ili- | nois which has been in session here for & week, “Mother” Jones Causes Discussion. Trinidad, Colo, Teb, 16—After list- ening all day to arguments on its right to subpoena ‘Mother” Mary Jones, a labor organizer, now held as a m tary prisoner at San Rafael hospital, the sub-committes of the house mines Naval Appropriation Bill Completed. | i o e, 16— Without pase- | committee investigating the coal strike I e omelolIL Pase” | thin afternoon. declded to reserve de- e, {he house Haval Altairs sub. | cision and proceeded with th e e cmletad Tte deatt | ation of witnesses for the miners the nuval appropriation bill 1o be | = upmitted to the fall commitiee to- | Kennedy Had No Cause for Worry. morrow If the two battleships, with Buffalo, N. Y., Feb. 16. ehn H., troyérs and submarines ave il Cannon, cashier o the state treas- d, the bill will ca from $143,000,- § yre office, tonight said there was 000 to $145.000,000. iuol]”lx§ that should have caused Mr. e e o Kennedy anxiety i the questions Murder Suspect May Be Insane. | wiich District Attormey Whitman ne San 16— in | tended to pui him before the New e cf are divided on | York grand jur: o sanity of | b Kpedicrs. wiio ‘s cliurged_in Chiagn | $4,000 Fire at New Haven. 15 55ags Wik @ hammer on Novembe! | undetermined origin tonight did $4,000 broken tnder the strain of imprison- | damage fo the cap shop of B. Fink, ment i tae potiet of e two dttee. | 318 ‘State street. The fire started on the third floor. Presses in a printing ! establishment on the second floor were damaged by water. tives who a rested him last wee Freight Rate Decision in April. Washington, Feb, 16.—Deciston by | the Interstatc Commerce Comrmission on"iHe pending request of the eastern railroads for an advance in freight rates probably will be made auring Died at Age of 113. Coltinsville, Conn., Feh, 18.—Mrs. Katie Kontoskay, whoi was born in Russia September 14, 1810—113 years the latier part of April. This was | ago, dicd at her home here today. She learned Arom an autheritative source |had enjoyed excellent health until a tonight. fow days age | Justine wrote the letter. were sentenced today to inde-4 which | William Groff, Waddell-Mahon guards, | vill care for that property when it e> from the control of the New , New Haven and Hartford rail- road, probably will be named at a con- ference tomorrow between officials of the department of justice and Chair- | man Elliott, Moorfleld Storey and | ‘Walter Hines, counsel for the road. | Although no_official information had | been received tonight from Governor | Walsh of Massachusetts, he is on his way to Washington, and it was report- ed that he would be present at the con- ference to submit a list of ten persons, | any five of whom he would be willing to see placed upon the board of trus- | tees. BOY WROTE BLACK HAND LETTER FOR HIS FATHER New Canaan Man and Fourteen Year Old Son Found Guilty. New Canaan, Conn., Feb. 16.—Nlcolo Galemmo and his fourteen-year-old son, Justine, were tonight bound over o' the next term of the superior court by Justice Dawless, charged _with sending a Black Hand letter to a Brew- sters, N. Y. man. at 35,000 each and in default, were taken to the county jail. It was alleged that the father sent a letter to Emilio Annunciato at Brew- sters, demanding $300 in cash threatening to plow 'up his house if he failed to deliver the money. The boy both Flew Over Coast Range. Los Angeles, Cal, Feb. Christofferson of Saii Francisco ar- j rived ioday in a biplane from Bakers- | field, Cal,” having flown over Tehachapi and Coast Range mountains had resisted all previous at- tempts of aviators. In crossing Slerras, Caristofferson at times went { up 7,000 feet, nearly 2,000 feet above the highest peaks. { miles in three hours and 45 minutes. Veteran Killed by Auto Racer. | Los Angeles. Cal, Feb. 16.—Driving | 50 miles an Hour in a practice heat | over the Santa Monica course, Dave Lewis, an entrant in the Vanderbilt cup race, lost control of his car today and dashed into a crowd. One man was killed and five persons were in- jured, the latter including himself und three' women. The man killed was Louis G. Smith, a Civil war veteran. | C. V. Mail Car Burns Up. | _ Brattleboro, Vt, Feb, 16.—Seventy- five bags of mail destined for Vermont points were destroved by fire today in a mail car on the Wesi River branch of the Central Vermont .railrohd. Tne mail had been accumulating here for tiree days, snow-blocked tracis having made it impessible to send ol | the ca Federal ‘Washi Interference Resented, ngion, ¥eb, 16.—Federal n 'the radium industry | proposed in pending bills was attac oday us “‘paternalistic, government, | fensive to 98 per cent. of the peopl { of the west,” by Wil m H, King, fo mer member of congress from U { before ihe senate mines committee, ABLES /- Glynn's Alien Insane Bill. | Albany, Feb. 16.—The resolu- | tion memerializing congress to assist the state in caring for alien insane | patients, which was introduced at the | suggestion of Governor Glynn, passed | the senate tonight by an unanimous lvou. \ | Argentine’s New Cabinet. Buenos Aires, Feb, 16—The new | cabinet was officially announced today. Tomas Cullen takes the portfolio of justice and instruction. Horace Cal- deron Decomes minister of agriculture. greater part of the city has been burn- | eracy a test of character and believes | 16.—Trustees for | | watchman i Bonds were fixed | and | | 16—Silas | the | the | He made the 170 | Failed to Use the Life Rafts MONROE'S OFFICERS CAN GIVE NO REASON. NO SUCH ORDER GIVEN First and Second Officers of 1li-Fated Steamer on Witness Stand—Crew Was Practically a New One. Philadelphia, Feb, 16.—The conduct of the first and second officers of the steamship Monroe, sunk off the Vir- ginia coast, was under scrutiny of the local board of steamboat in§pectors today rather than that of Captain Osmyn’ Berry, of the Nantucket, who is on trial charged with negligence in | connection with the disaster. These officers were Guy E. Horsley and Jo- | seph E. Gately. Each | periences. Horgiey manned one of the two boats that go away from the Mon- roe and Gately jumped overboard as | the vessel went down and was picked up by a boat that had fallen from the ship, Couldn’t Explain Failure to Use Life Rafts. Horsley testifled that in a fire drill one of the boats had been lowered and manned in one minute and fifty sec- onds. The members of the board said they could not understand why some of the Monroe's lifepoats could not | be lowered, even in five minutes. Both | officers replied that the ship listed immediately after the collision and that in a few minutes she was almost on her beam ends, making it impos sible to launch them. The witnesses | could mot say why these boats and a | nest of five life rafts were not cut |away and allowed to fall Into the | water where the struggling passenges and members of the crew could have hung on to them. Both witnesses sai { that so far as they knew, no order | were given to cut away thls life sav € equipment, Crew Largely a New One, Horsley, the first officer, testified that except for the officers and one or two others, the crew of the Monroe was a new one, having been together about a month, Gately testified that he wa; | that Captain Johnson had slow. | | {in the fog after midnight, because he | remembered the master remarking that | it was Friday morning and he was go- ing to reduce speed, | LIMITED LIABILITY. Proceedings Come Up in United Stat: Court at Norfolk. Norfolk, Va., Feb. 16.—Limited la- bility proceedings growing out of suits against the steamer Nantucket fol- lowing the loss of the stesmer Monroe at sea January 30th. came up in the Monroe accident be enjoined. John B. Jenkins was appointed spe- cial commissioner by Judge Waddill to hear all claims against the Nan- tucket before May 21, 1914 S. Grant, trustee In the limited lia- sure the Nantucket at $150,000, the premium of $300 to come out of the Nantucket's freight money. Trustee Grant reported that wharfage in the sum of $15 per day is now being paid at Newport News for the Nantucket, the steamer being in charge of = here at $3.50 per day un- til she can be sold in the limited lia- bility proceedings. SEVERAL KILLED IN A RAILROAD COLLISION Two Frisco Passenger Trains Crash in Missouri. Springfield, Mo., Feb. 17.—Scores of probably fatally, two Frisco pas Junction, four miles west of here, late last night. Two coaches were reported to_have turned over in a ditch, Reports received from the scene of the wreck at 12.30 this morning said that the engineer and fireman of one train and several passengers had been killed. in the collisfon of Steamship Arrival ew Yor ika, Hamburg; G New Adriatic, Naples. noa, Feb. 13.—Steamer Perugia, York. panello, New York, Liverpool, Feb, 1 | Halifax. —Steamer Scotfan, Villafranche, Sant’ Anna, New Genoa, Feb. 13 ew Yorl Feb. 13.—Steamer York for Marseilles. —Steamer Stampalia, Glasgow, Feb. 15.—Steamer Pre- torian, Portland | Queenstown, Feb. 16.—Steamer C: edonia, New York for Glasgow. Halifax, N. S., Feb. 16.—Steamer Empress of Britain, Liverpool. Queenstown, Feb, 16.—Steamer Cym- ric, New Yor amer Colusa, Se- atile. Steamer Lithu- ania, New New York, Feb. iane, Havre. 16. Charged With Betraying Federals. Mexico City, Feb. 16.—Eustaquio Angeles, a_nephew of General Felipe Angeles, one of the generals who was Dprominent in the overthrow of the late | President Madero, and who —is new | with Venustiano Carranza, | ed here today, charged with information of the movement eral troops io the Tebels. ported to have been ex: {morning, but this is not confirmed, firmed. | Trade Commission Bill Strikes Snag. | Washington, Feb. 16 —Determina- | tion today of ‘the house interstate and foreign commerce commiftee 1o dis- regard the interstate irade commis- | sion Dill, which is pending in Do | branches of congress and to frame entirely mew measure, may T in further complications in the adminis- tration anti-trust leglslative pro- gramme, Steamers Reported by Wireless. Queenstown, Feb. 16 —Steamer Cym- ric, New York for Queenstown and Liverpool, signalled 186 miles west at 3 a. m, Due_ Queenstown § p. m. New York, Feb. 16—Steamer Kron- prinzessin Cecilie, Bremen for New York, signalled 1,012 miles east of Sandy Hook at 7 p. m. Dook $.20 a. m. Thursday gave his ex- | down | United States court today on petltion | bility proceedings, was directed to in- | Steamer Louls- | | ! | i all | g Charles | g1l { | [ | | Ann Aumuller not Murdered DIED OF SURGICAL OPERATION, SAYS SCHMIDT. HE CUT UP THE BODY | Realized That He Must Death-4-Admits in a Confession That | He Has Been Si Hide New York, Feb. ler died from the effects of an illegal operation, which Hans Schi was convicted of * Schmidt C Schmidt's reported confession is said to have been in effect that the woman had submitted to the operation at the FOR WESTPORT WRECK lation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and Its Total Circulation is the Lar gest in Connecticut in Proportion to th ’s Population 3 Condensed Telegram: was 69 years old Sunday. Wome tango in Auburn prison. suffering from Mrs. Faustina A. Spence broke Mass. The Old Freighter Constellation Newport. Her | lunch counter. Elihu Root, United States Senater, Convicts are permitted to Senator Luke Lea of Tennessee an attack of mumps. kneecap whilé tangoing at Waltham, not be permanently taken away from e 1 i The New York Health Department has banned the fork from the free- LINER ASHORE ON NO MAN'S LAND French Steamer With Over 500 Aboard in a Perilous Position For Six Hours Last Night is her REVENUE CUTTERS RESPOND TO CALLS FOR AID will { Vessel Finally Floated and Continues on Her Way to Provi- dence—Reassuring Wireleo; Message Received From Her e vung Weadn): A Hen at Venice, near Los Angeles, - cal, establisned "o recora by lasine Captain Who if Making Maiden Voyage as Master of the four eggs In two minutes. | et B A | Albany Firemen responded to ten| Ship—Vessel Had Bucked Gales All Way Across Atlantic according to a confession who recently is re- ported to have made to an assistant of the district attorney on Sunday in the death house at Sing Sing prisen. midt, her murder, ut Up Body. Indictments Against Other New Ha- | persons were reported injured, some | Military Movements on Island Report- | alarms o'clock yesterday morning. Speaker Clark was confined home yesterday with a cold. sentative Fitzgerald of New York ed as speaker. arrest for intoxication. persons will be arrested, charged in the 24 hours ending at 4 to his Repre- 3 / A Republican Filibuster prevented ensideration of the Indian appropria- Indichtions Are That from 200 to 250 Gay Head, Mass. Feb. 16—For six on the Atlantic coast. A single f Bours tonight the Fabre Steamship il lives there (his winter. i it 5 he first wireless message from the company’s liner Roms. with more thall | poma was preked up 2t fhe aver agi 400 passengers and a crew of 100, from | station at Newport at 4.40 o'clock this Marseilles for Providence and New |afternoon. It was in French and was York,was reported in a precarios con- | NOt_translated until some time later. act- Dandy of another pecson than Schmide | tion bill in the house yesterduy and | dition on the rocky shoals of No Maws | LRG0 and had died and that Schmidt had | foreed un adjournment. land. Shortly after 10 o'clock a mes- | Send powerful towboat with well pro- cut up and disposed of her body. Prior St | sage was picked up saying the vessel | vided towing material. Impossible for to the second trial of Schmidt it was | George E. Brewster, one of the best oo g o0 00 T0 2 ceeding to|US to get off with our own power.” understood a plea of this kind would | known druggists in FEastern Maine, | 7 it ket i sgaiond WEas Patinding -t n be made the substance of his defense. | took his own life by shooting yester- | Providence. This was confirmed by a | 0 Seapitys The insanity defense was adhered to, | day, at his home at Dexter. age to the naval radio sta- | HeTul&c }‘r;xn‘r"ul“g\;—n rv[:mwnwd to r.,yt however, wport. Conditions for wire , Mass., which is the nearest point i A Bursting Water Main on St. Ur- |iess work were very poor and details | having a life saving station. Gay Head, q?:‘*)j Was '-0“‘"‘ His Hands. baln street, Montreal, yesterday flood- | of the accident were lacking. But from | 3t the western extremity of Martha's Schmidt, it is sald, told the assist-| ;G the cellars over a large area and | the messages sent by the Roma's radio | Vinevard. s almost due north of No ant JJistrict attorney that Jhis story | aid damage estimated at $50,000. {here seemed to be no grave concern | Man’s Land. Captain Cahoon of the Dersots. When the Ammulier wome s e et o o el idcscabo the SbE 1l ot B reatin ayhen, the Aumuller womall | Mrs. Alics Roosevelt Longwortive | the safety of his ship or passengers. | Would undertake the cight mile row to said those at her bedside made a hasty | share in the estate of her grandmoth- Saved by Direction of Gale. | it possible, but that no craft at his exit, leaving to him to get rid of the Mrs, Caroline Haskell Lee, ' th€] mne Roma struck on the southerly | command couid live ieht's storm, s P T e I Of 47t Tund ofR U side of the bleals little island during a | There Wwas no motor boat at the sta- ‘[ @id not know what to d = which at that 3 saw ‘l’:er"dr:\‘tl" before me, Schmiat | The Ohio Company yesterday de- “Jrhsz:\nmlr\\ t‘n?‘nrl;,. ” & secona message from the Roms is reported to have said. “T loved her | clared a dividend of #1.20 per ShAe|The gale was fron said that she was pounding heavily, 80 much that I was driven frantic at [and an extra dividend of 75 cents Per|,,iq packed into the northwe but scraps of subsequent despatches the thought of losing her. 1 knew |share on its capital stock, payable on | S ol S q0™ inute. Th were more encouraging. One seemed to | that T must hide her death and it was | March of the gale is Delleved, indicato that a tug had reached the | then the idea occurred to me to cut saivation o e steamer and was trying to fioat b up her body and throw 1t in the tiver. | Secretary Wilson of the department | SUNSTIOR OF 100, $iramet o and another that the fug had been This T did.” of Tabor braved the storm and the {ve- | Jianaged o get free, mariners said the | successfal Admits Shamming Insanity. I e Srade his Must visit | to| Merthwest suio d help biow her o “The Captain's First Voyage. “So you did not make a blood sac- | Fhie Y, And, M i w8 D e 0 Tatro | - Captain Combernous 1% to be rifice of her?” the assistant_ dlstrict x % R ey arcly attempt to move |meling his_ first age as master of atiorney s said to have asked Schmidt. | Captain William H. Hand, one of the | ; Tagansett bay at night when the | the ship. He communicated: with the No.' sald Schmidt. > Vton aeitor- captaing Gf” tha JLMIPHE s e owners at New York znd gave the tm- tromnd vou did not hear commands | giates revenue cutter service and a| of Newport.$ | pression that the vessel was in no | from heaven to make a blood sacri- | vateran of the Civil war, died at New | great danger and would be floated with sure | fice of her | Beafora vesterds | message was rece from the | the aid of tugs. Tho.* ;hr ex-priest replied. | - ’ Ul et e A0 o The ,R'?f,"“ app went_ashore en, it is said, Schmidt broke down | pregton Little West Newbur. e e S are | At Balf tide. The wind was then im and admitted that all his seeming acts | \nr®®*90 HEUE, T U A e de | | It Tea o - the northeast but tonight if veered Ihusanlts swess Sngied. by hanging vesterday. It is believed | t2XINE therouic S Al AuIREEIIRRG e Bortiwent: and,’ ohmtirusss e Gy that he was despondent because of his | o The H0ES & did not | gerong. MELLEN TO BE TRIED question the a e mes- SEgSAna the G 418 PASSENGERS ABOARD. late tonight s their was safe. with, Majority of Them Are on Their Way 3 contempt of court, as a result of the Revenue Cutters Respond. to Providence, ven Officials Quashed, rloting near St Casffirs church at| Assistance was delaved by a Vind-| oo oo oo L = | South Bend, Ind., Sunday. ing snowstorm, that carried on the [ New York, ¥eb, 16.—The steams A s das Emas wings of a 70 mile wind, made navi- | Roma. ‘ashore on Martha's Vinevard, e e oy (oday duashed the| John A. Blazier, a Portland, Ore. | gation in the vicinity of the forbidding | earries 413 passeng T officials of the New York, New Haven | iber OPerator ¥ eater iy e stie. | island extremely hazardous. The revs | S essel is owned by the Fabre and Hartfora railroad, but refused to | LoD 1o bankruptcy throush atice” |enve cutter Itasca in the western end | . 2030 FIo8€ R S00 ™" Giloce’® dgents anul the indictment’ agafnst former | lo3n, acclaring inability, to pay obll- | of Long Island sound was first to res |} Jarhes W. Eiwsll and company { President Charles S. Mellen. The in. | S2FONS ag8Tegating §499,412. {5pond to the distress signals, but had | might received a wireless from Cap- ctments grew out of the wreck at | S before her a hard fight of seversl | (o0 E ombernous describing the posi B e et ahe, wreck &t! The United States Naval Tug Po-|hours. The rev cutter Acushnet | tain Combernou 6 o D tomac, caught fast in the ice, floes of | set out from New Bedford at 10 o'clock tom of his ship. = e e e omS T Kllled. tor. | the GuIf of St. Lawrence, was aband- | on an equally difficult trip. SRR Combernows reporied ' thist oy fnin connoction the state’s attor- |oned on Saturday night by the 36| The Roma was due at Providence |the Roma was shaking a little but of the four counts against Mr. Mellen | Oicers and men of her crew. {last Saturday and after bucking gales | Was suipplng ne WATT. IS T, SoC i oy ol - |all the way across the Atlantic, ran | consider her position dangercus at the e iy illy on| Tom Sharkey, Once Famous as a|into a gale tha ing castward, was | ime aud said a change of wind woul Dlaint. which unlike the. tast of ihe | heavyweight pugilist, was e central tonight off Nantucket. Appar- res“_xlr e Dt Boes ot e e gt 1°hs e | thirty days in jail and fined $500 yes- | ently the vessel was 20 miles off her | Uation would be mofe favorable. “The { the causes of mesligence which is said | LeFday for maintaining a disreputable | course which ong what is known | SIERIET T = | 60 have been 1n & Criminal senge, man. | Fesort In Fourteenth street New York.|as the “20 fathom curse” when she |SROWSORR 1 p o oeities on Jan- siapshier e £ A _$500,000 Campaign against cholera | Afan's Land. The direction of the |uary 31 for Providence and NewsYork. The six railroad men who were in-|anq a horse disease called dourine, is | wind w immediate salvation, for | She was due in Providence today. cted Tor e ey aiDOrt Wreck Were |to be financed in.a bill which was| o escaped from The passengers include one of the “harles S, Mellen, former president of | jagsed by the house vesterday, and oE the 1itile island with the wind | irst class for New York and two fo the New Haven foad: Henry I Horn | WiTCH aleady has passed the sendie. | from the south Provilencs; thres of e second ciase Woodward, ~superintendent of _the | ; ! First Wireless Message. dence, and twenty of the third class Store’ Line _division: " Benjamin Pol- | .\'n‘fr!l ’..'!L!T.v"?f" Deardman It The egg-shaped island with a coast | for New York for Providence, lock, former general superintendent: | G,jette, now the Railway Age Gazette ' line of three miles lies about eight | together with Lawrence J. Carmall, superintendent|gng for eight years its editor, died at | miles south of Gay Head light and is |classes who em: > | of motive power, and E. H. McHenry, | pis nome at Ridgefleld, Conn., yester- | the most isolated place of habitation | islands, all bound for Providence. {® former Vice president P o e CAMPAIGN AGAINST The Argentine Dreadnought Riva- | HOMAGE PAID TO THE POLITICS ENTER INTO davin came into Boston from a trial N s THE QAVTIAN. REGPELS [ Iavinicame iatotPosion focie B0 MEN OF THE MAINE. STRIKE INVESTIGATION. zard, with a report of endurance runs | pigra| Tributes on Graves of the Dead | An Irrelevant Report Ruled In as Evie ccessfully accomplished under ex- enger trains at Nicholls | Rotterdam, Feb. 14.—Steamer Cam- | mander Ha ed by U. 8. ‘Washington, Feb, Naval Officer. 16.—Progres: Closing in on Cape Haitien, Port_au Prince, government troops under command of l¢ ar] amor are Cape Haitien, whi the rebels, headed by Senator Davilmar According to Theodore. ceived here, the are strongly opposed to Davilmar, while the government has the support of the | great majority of Haitiens and foreign residents. TO BUY R tr me wintry conditions. United States in the pres nt situation. | in Arlington Cemetery. i dence by Chairman. the freezing blasts, however, to partici- pate In the ceremonies at the graves. President reporton the ground that it was irrele- vant. Wilson, confined by his iver ¢ {He | Washington, Feb. 16.—Homasge to the | Hancock, Mich, Feb. 16—Congress= {against the rebels in the north of the | post office and railroad station their lives in the epoch-making calas- iman of the congressional committes island was reported 11. naval despatch- | hrrasted early yesterday by post trophe in Havana harbor sixteen years | investigating the copper mines strike, |es today. Commander Bierer of the | fice inspectors on a charge of opening | 380 Was paid today by the nayy and | coday overruled the objections of the | Eimboat. Wheellng. at Port au’ Paik, | lugers and stealing from the saiie. | hish officcrs of the nation at Arlington | (o republican members and admitted | Bnasr vesterday's date, announced that | s Nitional” “cemetors. Snowcovered | i etidonce the oport made several he had found that place in the hands i ;| mounds over the- _sleepi e oo b ed 3o > | of foderal troops and that the town | Briimspars vestmimn woatoninson. of | were decorated with floral fributes and | SO0 oS cctizaator sent to the cop- : | Was “occupted The Maitian gunboat | at aeide the will of her sisten the | & staunch littie vessel plowed through | Do feids by Governor Feris of Michi- Feb, 16.—Steamer Amer- | Nord Alexis was due to leave Port au | Jate Ruth Louisa. Bailey, widow of | 1@ ice floor of the Potom e e L gan. - g | Paix for Cabe Haitian, under orders | fames A. Balley, long associated with | 82Ves @ detachment of uejackets **Ltter the hearing closed for the day | of General Zamor to blockade the:p 1 Barnum in the circus busines: fired three volleys as a salute and the | ;. “mgyior said that the democrats | Cape Haitian and Porte Liberte. Com- | = =" e G siness. | pugler sounded “Taps” . . ihad a majority of the committes. al- ison aboard the cruiser i ™ mpressive exercises 5 ~ | though one of their number had n ported the place qu 1th " about a | Siites Defore landing 4 3 of ma- ss S carry ull | Tt iaely. he ma hundred revolutionists tn posscasion of | st atep oot Tesardsd ae con. | Programme arranged for the oceasion | R oL lnilives Howsll and Swit- the town |trary to any principles held by the | e Moo piusts, however. o particl- | zer_objected to the admission of the ~ r “hal lor and Representative Haiti, Feb. 16—The| Edward MoDermott, foreman for a ! pjveician's orders to the White House, | Chairman Tayior and q contracting company engaged in build- | hent & beautiful floral tribute. Presi- | Casey argued that the report showld bo slowly closing i on | Ing the Boylston Street subway af | dent Menocal of Cuba cabled an ex- |8ccepted for what it was worth. Cc oh 1s in the hands of | Boston was found guilty yesterday of Sel for the mining companies offered ESIGNATION. Woman for Prosecuting Attorney. Feb. Ravices re- | peopla of the morih | | 16.—Reeom- extortion Lim $5 for a they neld it. n compelling laborers to pay job and $1 a week wi | pression of the reverence of his gov- | ernment for the dead of the Maine. Orations were |h-lhw~n-.lt.‘\“)"a t Myer 31:5 - by Commander in Chlef Washington | W term Gardner of the Grand Army of the Re- | should be kept I 1o objection, but they pointed out that purpose of Murphy’s investigation o determine whether the militia rere and that his report Charging the Republican Leaders | public, Representative Logue of Penn- | could have no bearing on he situation with conductigg a isn of mis- | gylvania, the Rev. Eugene . Hannan, |as it exists todsy” representation” ag | representing the Rev. Mr. Chadwick. - | party, Willia ganizer of th al campaig; committee, spoke at of the country formally already accepting the progressive congression - conference | | on record as terme of the federal reserve act, the officers of the | MURRAY SECOND NAVAL AVIATOR TO BE KILLED. who was chaplain of the Ma John McElroy of the Army union. | d by Navy | and Cas- cartridge entered the boy's abdomen @ and took 2n upward course, penetrat- = a British subjeet, was found today in_his saloon at Mexi- | . { per, Wyo., last night at a Danicls Believes Science De- American Financiers Seeking. to In- | Der, Wyo, | Secretary Daniels duce Huerta to Retire for Cash. ““' PROgTeskiven g/ STRONG SUPPORT FOR | mands Too Heavy Toil Sl e ks 1| . Representative Moses P. Kinkaid of VALDEZ FOR PRESIDENT | 1, ngton, Feb. 16—News of the Mexico City, Feb. P aaoyisional | Nebraska. in the house yesterday call- x5 - [ fatal uccident to Lieutenant Murray President Huerta Ig sald toda !r‘"l‘ ing | €d up his bill to provide that the mar- | Dominicans Exiled for Political Rea- | J [\ 4 naval officers and officials of pald r»rz.‘n-t{ e 1 000,000 pesos to | 1iage of a homestead entry man to a sons Invited to Return. | the mavy department, who regarded Bt el e neny St T tead eniry woman shall not im- ? —— | the young oficer as éne of the most for armament furnifned to t eral | Bair ther to t.| Santo D eb. 18 —The { skilful aviators of the carps. He was Loy The © nation retition ot Jose I | the second navy flier te lose his Hife. & O o today/thit ‘s PR 1 the | having been Emsign W, D. L WA O O s, teying 10 || .8 Letter Réceived by the Massa- | s ngaley, who fell to his death in Sehuge for-the Tosign o ierta | Chuseits Public Servi omminsion | | Chesupeake bay, near Amnapolis,i on arrango Shs - cteneT i | yesterday Charles Mellen, former | ! June 30 last. il el | president he N New Ha- | “When I hear of such accldenis as Pavment of a substar en & Jiarts ) declined for | this I am aimost persuaded to the be- i A ”h < cond to connection | that the tolls which science ug SURL ORI e = o | with the investg f the road's|countries f re too heavy,” sai o publicity expenses {turn witho: Tieutenant Mur- Battleships to Leave Vera Cruz. —_— being fu vay was regarded by his fellow efficers Washington, b. 16.—The navy In the,Suit of the State of Missouri | has be us a4 most mising character,” he, pa ent has .no present e to recover $2,400000 in alieged over- lican mir d. “He bore pre nxisn‘4allm1z increasing the American na ce | charges from the Kuansas City South- = ss to his country in the devel- in Aexican wa and today res | ern Raiiw company, Judge Calvird Accidentally Shot His Son. | opment of his profession, and I know | tars Daniels sald he had ordered the | iy the circuit court at Butler, Mo., | Hartford, Conn. Feb. 15—Right year |of none whom 1 gould’ more justly batileships Rhode Island, Georgia, Ne- | vesterday appointed James D. Lind- | old John Galccio dying in a local | praise for his application te his ¢ n braska and Virginia to' leave Vera|iy of Clinton, o master to receive | hospital as the result of being acei- | Work. Cruz immediately upon the “arrival|ciinos against the railroad. dentally siot by his father today. : there of the dreadnoughts Utah, Flori- — | While clesning a revolver Mr. Galecio British Subject Murdered. da and Delaware. | With 97 Percent of the national banks | aceidentally pulled tho trigger. The| ¥I Centro, Cal, Feb, 16.—Charles San Francisco, mendation that Mrs. appointed one of forwarded _to John W. Preston, trict attorney. \ ing a lung. call, Lower California. D wlution A" A Adams be | federal reserve organization board last = - Cash Smouation 10 116,000 W Gl his assistants was | nixhe issued a warning that all Mrs. Helen A. Hager, of Hacketts- | Gale's head had been split with an Washington today by | tional binks must signify their ac- | town, N. J., celebrated her $6th birth axe as he lay in bed. to A United States dis- | coptanve before next Monday, Feb-|day by cousting with her greatgrand Mexicali before the s u..n"... o ruary =8 ehildren,