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P st £ . % iy o VOL. LVI—NO. 45 NORWICH, CONN., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1914 PRICE TWO CENTS The Bulletin’s Ciruclation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and lts Total Circulation is the Larg;str in Connecticut in P.l‘ofir-tiofiito the Eity;s Population BITTER FEELING ALONG THE BORDER State Department at Washington Harshly Criticised | PUBLIC MIND INFLAMED BY BENTON’S DEATH Resolutions Adopted Demanding From Government Record | . porary Tesidence 1 Mexican ation was aroused to a Concord 20.—Reasons 3 3 ver a week ago has she been | MeXica L | E e Owned a Revolver, His Friends Declare—Two English- | sauare ver ek A e e vy | Washington, Feb, 20—A slumbering | for gran of Harry K e e = point of International interest | Thaw for a writ of habeas corpus to men Who Went in Search of Benton Have Failed to Re- | ™¢ g5 : : E = 0 | CONSUL HAS SENTENCE 1 turn— meri- | Villa Refuses to Deliver Benton’s Body ‘to A OF NEIACAN BEINEED % T can Consul—Intervention Feared at Mexico City. Refused to Stand During Rendition of | Bufletln Advemsmg Draws Trade Austrian National Anthem. | b, 2 the latter| Vienna, Feb, 20—Through the in- 51 Davs, Tows Roh Moehiptorm of by him sto higfstends. but the labiel | tervention ‘of Frank ‘Deedmeyer; is st what the out trade, that which is within the trad! lins indignation broke today along the bor- |agree that he never ~went further. | 'S O e e Juat syttt . g 2 cradd - der when it became known that S. M. | They asserted unanimously s s el e e L of Norwich means to the busin louses of the city has bee 1y Benton, a British subject and wealthy | kept out of poiltics and accepted his | SEOTOWSY | SREOHCL O oricgh - R A AT Toe aeteahbe T ttate Baut s of § thesielectaio dines Lk e o 0ad boglicreaimes Nithout any overt act of 8¢ | saasaderihere; s sentence of \fourtesn chance for advantageous buying is and has always been an incentive to Cnasiby, Tehele e ey D0 e temptecupeprisal | days’ sonment against S. Krut Srafiain. Notsrion as inci d by e tlat! fraveo made a protest to General Francisco| The many persons who knew him | days’ imprisonment sssiost O (o0 trade in Norwich but it was increased by the b nent of trans Villa about alieged depredations of the | well in Chikuahua and aiong the bor- | e e tation metNods’ Beaopls cin geb hive qiicker easier ‘and oftener but constitutionalists. der assert thai he never owned a re- | JCAh ¢ D o ie iy e it is only by keeping old as well as possible patrons in touch with and resolutions were adopted censur- | when he went to Juare: s on | omment, and an order ¥ i~ : stores e o xlafcan be e e e eparment A Washing. | Cinesday Hignt aocried that he hud | PO WAS FOTOREL ey || rendered o the visiting buyer and better romis obtain n ton for its alieged suppression of the | Bentor's six-shooier. L e e e e tores. To be retained trade must be kept intereste CommueDauion Ie Drsioncose Wit 409 yow think jof SN of the national anthem at & public ball The most effective, satisfactory and economical method of doing and caling on congress to demand would come here and threaten me e N o T e R trom the state department a full rec- | exclaimed the rebel gener in die”town of Pisek althoush he this is by advertlsing and taking advantage of the column The ord of alleged crimes anmd outrages; A Mexlean bystander repiled: “He had becn aQmonienel oo (¢ Pl Bulletin. The most direct route to the buying public of Eastern against foreiguers in Mexico. [ OUERE to be ehot e after the execu- | recently came from Chicago to take [} nectiqut, the remote as well as the 1 by towns is by way Open Mesting Not Permitted: | 4son e [ Vot Tessone: ) suietict e s necanie it 1 the omaizaver circulates The meeting came as the ciimax of a | poe. 1 Sl Po 0 5o Body. - |} those very people whose trade is desirec day of excitement catized by news of n 5 con- | ENGINE AND SNOW PLOW | The railroads and railways will bring peopie here but The the deata<5f Benton. The meeting was la.did not tell the American con | B e £limys gl bk peopte here ot Tho first cakled for Cleveland square, but at Benton was courtmartiaied | GO THROUGH A BRIDGE. || tin advertising columns will dr sine each and every busine Mayor Kelly in a letter to George official Juarez was busy today e ’ | house are not profiting by it, it is time to commence. The Curry, former governor of New Mexi- assertions to that effect. Names | Four Men Killed at Scotch Settiement, | Bulletin e co, asked him to rent a hall he ne- | Of those who sat as a court were given | Nove Drufilicic. i Bitn e to & P L ¥ garded an open meeting as dangerous, | Out for publication, and it was stated | In t elc the following matter has appe 1 The mayor s2id he would suppress an. = fee o ‘U‘“\tmg;l‘::;v-* lastibes | Moncton, N. B, Feb. 20.—Four men all for twelve cents a week attempt to hold the meeting in t ques i his ¥y be turned | (oo killed today when an e ne and S=p b i oDen 4 theatro was rented and mes- | 9 \\;r:‘; ‘\;u:m;"w.“ s s, \;’1‘3‘:7 eday _‘!\:n:u;h e Ste and Bulietin Telegraph Loca Gensra Tota/ land square to building. . Sl by but the request Was |, nwest of here. The dead are Daturaay, Feb. 14.. S{ 12 4 ll & Former Governor George Curry of | L | nk Hall, super nd of the nday Fe 1 5 3 3¢ 168 New Mexico was the principal| ‘“Then, as a favor to me and to ‘hpi*‘“l"“a Hall, superintendent of t ‘ Monday, Feb. 16.. 5 25 ( t a prompiu ind " | widow, Wil you have the grave mar e el ARSI Sy 103 182 Sheldon, headquarters of the foreign- | Promised. Erakeman [Sourg Wednesday, Feb. 18.. 98 176 ers #ittven out of Maxico, Mr. Cuity | :Bemton: tt'is said, was tried onys| Sretoman JBoueqne G o T e 04 = Was mared a committee of one to in. |charge of conspiracy axminst the rebel | They Were on am engine and su Thursday, Eeb. 195 1 27 vestigate the killing of Benton, but his | Soverrment and with “provoking and | PIOW sent ou C A e 08 S ¢ 3 on, is | £ peat disd [ the tracks of the Moncton and Du. Friday. eb. 20.. 8 246 {nquiries developed nothing new. Insulting General Villa. touche railway €0 this eity ) J Mr. Curry went first to Thomas D,, Major Jesus Rddriguez presided; Ad- L ) 3 Edwards, United States comsul at |Tien Aguirre acted as legal adviser to —_ o = &= = Juarer. the court, and Major %‘lfiamm] w-.m\r..qAMEchN FARMER Botals 2o e e s et 2 744 2036 3354 : acted as prosecutor. Benton is be- | Conaul Gave Promise of Silerce. | {icVey 10 ive’ been neld dncommuni- NOT EXTRAVAGANT. | have telegraphec he secretary of | cgdo the while, and it is admitted that >3 s ,3: hat !immns\defl(h has 1,,.:3 o!,, :m‘_" Was 1o one there to represent | Will Not Abuse Rural Credit System, o = LR ~ — ficlally reported to Mexico.” stat: the | Says Dr. Coulter. i e consul, | “Other detalls I have fore | % .. - | S | today by a message stativg that Will- prevent his_extradition t» New York warded to Washington by mail. Gen- Villa Cautioned by Gen. Scott. | Washington, Feb., 20.—The American iam S. Benton, a British™ subject state as a fugitive from justice, were eral Villa sald he did not care to talk That there was a real courtmartial | farmer is not quandering his money | been killed in Juarez by order of presented to Federal Judge Edgar Al- of the case to -zl.‘e press or p;xbi)c,\;vu; Qu‘agrdsvtr'ibod_xy‘:ndmfi sldec Uful‘):::on frills and furbelows, Dr. Johm T. | eral Francisco Villa, the constitution- i "n:]m“:n L\yu;m,-m_“ against the | ave me informatlon for Mrs. | Tiv w oubters contrast | Coulter told the Joimt’ congressional | alist commander. atition will be given tomorrow b Benton, the widow. and the state de- | the case with that of Gustav Bach, 8 | raral credits committee fodas Sir Cecll Spring-Rice, the British | William T. Jerome, repres partment. Thay are at liberty to talk, | German-American accugsed of being a | “The farmers of this country need a | ambassador, conferred with Secretary | York but I promised the general I- wousd |spy. According to the rebels, the ca%o | rural credit system,” sald Dr. Coulter, | Bryan about it; President Wilson and | Regarding the other que remain silent. of Bauch has been on trial for four | “They will not run to extravagance if | his cabinet discussed it briefly; and a | volved in the hearing—that . ;‘:;jib T his use of the phraso days and it was s;uahu:iay that no do- | money is made cheaper for them. The | thorough investization was ordered by | ting Thaw to ~bail—Judge Al ‘o v repor! ead,” and if he |cision has been reached. American farmer borrows money, ac- | the state department. thout making a formal ruling, in personally thought the oMicial report | The execution of Benton comes on | cording fo my investiEations, for £00d | United States’ W, T = by Villa might have been misleading, | the heels of a secret interview between | and useful purposes. riedStnton iy somng URnescec or decision the consul Tebels have been sending Chihuahua prisoners to Juarez and the prisoners to Chihuahua, he had a faint hope him. Be M of Villa afternoon from investigation at the Briti Mr, Bdwards” Villa is reported as saying, “Mr. Benton is deagl. an official ment, and I give you this information at Indignation Meeting at El Paso of Crimes and Outrages Against Foreigners in Mexico— Benton, Whom Villa Accuses of Threatening Him, Never said that inasmuch ag the ithe former bandit and General Scott |on the international bridge here last | Saturday. General Scott, a week or | more before, had sent Villa a copy of the rules governing civilized warfare; | and while the conference last Saturday concerned the establishment of a neu- tral zone at Torreon, the American | general took occasion to renew his ad- | vice that Villa observe the rules of war and treat all prisoners fairly. Villa accepted the caution in ap- | parent good part. He pointed as evi- |dence of good faith to his recent { guarantee of the safety of foreigners | Who wished to resume their wonted occupations in rebel territory. Benton’s Grandfather at Balaklava. George C. Carrothers, who Juarez that Villa might have misled nton disappeared Tuesday. Villa’s Statement to Consul. Edwards made his first inquiry regarding Benton yesterday on _receipt of instructions Secretary Bryan, who made the | request of the @ ambassador, Sir Cecil Spring- You are of the Amei govern- can as oiliciaily your due. I have made | repre- denialg to other inquiries, as this is |5¢nts the state department in many of not a matter for the public. It is for |its dealings with the rebels and who the information of the widow and of | WiIl be present at the battle of Torreon o atate eren it |In the ‘interests of foreigners, was at else passed between them Mr. | Promised a report of the alleged court- ‘would not state. It was gen- | martial erally believed that Villa, who had | News that the government at Wash- known Benton for years, was trying ington had ordered an investigation solitary confinement as a corrective to | was received by refugees with indif- Benton's well known disposition f{o | ference or with sneers. They were too ®peak his mind frankly, without re- | excited to take & calm view of the sit- Zard to consequences. uation. Edwards waited until after his last | Henton comes of an exceflent Scotch hope ftickered away with the depar- |family. ¥is maternal grandfather, ture of Villa’s train for the south he- | Colonel Hay, is said to have partic pated a san officer in informing Mrs. Benton that her the famous and was dead. She is a Mexican | chargs of the light brigade at Balakla- #nd, while highly educated, under- |va. | stands the English language imp: Two cousing are in the British army fectly. One of them, Captain Norman Benton, Wanted to Bring Cattle to United |15 with the englneef corps at Fast- Biatie | bourne, England. The other, Lisutcn- S . 3 ant Bvan Benton, 15 an artillery officer The inabllity of friends of Benton iFeadnt ot 1asve to ger defmite detatis nad much i gy |4t Present on leave in Bwitzeriand. in arousing excitement, and the ulti- mate selection of Mr. Curry as an INTERVENTION FEARED. agent to seck the truth. After leaving | = . = the consul, the latter cailed at the | Mexico City Apprehensive of Conse- jefetura at Juarez to see [Kederico quences of Villa’s Act. Gonzales Garza, the jefe d'armas, but | the latter absent. | Mexico City, Feb. 20—The execution Just what occurred beiween Villa |of William S. Benton, a British subject, and his jll-fated visitor last Tuesday | by the constitutionalis's in Juarez, has may never be known. Through the |revived the fear among government widow and a cousin, William Henton, | supporters that the United States will and through friends of the decedent, |be forced by Great Britain to take it was learned that Benton wished |some action that may easily become permission to bring to the United | intervention, S Los ates 400 head of cattle on his ranch, | J 5 s Although since revolutionary cond! Remedios, in western Chihuahua, A - | tions umed serious proportions i, cousin, who ls part owner of |three years ago, there have been killed Loe iomedion, thought the .LoIUest|in various parts of the country some ould be wasted, although other for- | 150 Americans, includi 1 s eigners have been considerately treat- UatE parHclpant {on both sides of the revolution, there ed when asking similar favors. Charle Gl il Charles | are on record the deaths of only four Qualey of New York and Mexico, 4| pritishers, Including Benton, The . DOW, Teze), Aong © opther | three others were killed in districts efugees, advised him of the probable p Benton Accused of Unfriendliness. “y quest, but he'll give you a lecture, and | you ocedure. where the chiefs of neither faction had any direct authority and Benton's is the first case where it appears that culpability may be placed definitely. That the constitutionalists had exe- cuted a foreigner did lla probably will your re- grant must not resent the lecture. If | not surprise do, you may get i trouble,” | President Huerta, who always has in- ey “said | sisted that General Francisco Villa be- he lectures me, I'll lecture back,” | longed to the irresponsible type of n replied. “I have never made a | leader and was certain sooner or later al move in Mexico, and if he ac- (to bring about serlous complications me of it I have some accusa- | with some foreign power. f my own to make. | Gossip has been current here for Benton made the request, and his eral days that certain of the s mever saw him alive After- | Buropean powers again were planning A clined A friend of Mrs. Benton gathered the | to om Consul Edwards, Villa de- | to grant the permit, saying: | Benton, you have never been a urs, and 1 don't want those urge the United States to assume a more active policy in restoring peace in Mexico and many persons today expressed the bellef that the Benton incident might be selzed upon as an £ =4 cattle taken ut of the country. We opportunity to impress such a view can use them ourselye .| upon the Washington government. Va, At this point, it 1s understood, the |ripus diplomats today intimated that arted | they would use the killing of Benton Berton Never Owned Revolver. |us the basls of reports to show their Banton was not in accord ‘with ‘the | helpiessnoRs wher. it comes to protect. Madero Tevolution . wiieh expelied | In& thelr nationals in tho greater part Porfirio Diaz from Mexico, and in the | °f Mexico. foreign club ai Chiluahui was wont 5 5 t0 express his opinions freely. Su LS4 C ayalehman in Brush. ceeding revolutions 50 were critieized | 11 Paso, Texas, Feb. 2 —A brush be~ | | | | Cabled Paragraphs Tasmania te Participate. Hobart, Tasmania, Feb. 20.—The Tasmanian government decided today that Tasmania should participate in the Panama-Pacific exposition, United States is Blameless NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TON’S EXECUTION Not British Museum Pictures. Paris, Feb. 20—t developed today that the pictures which the police found in the baggage room of the Northern ratlroad terminus here yes terday and which it was first believed had been stolea from the British mu- seum, were taken from the collections of Count De Cleet and others in Ilan- | ders. BEN- SENTIMENT AT CAPITAL Where is Mrs. Pankhurst? London, Feb. 21—The whereabouts of Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, the mil- | itant suffragette leader, is a mystery to the police. Not since she addressed & crowd from the window of her tem- in Campden Hill Villa's Action Discussed by Secretary Bryan and Also Discussed at Cabinet Meeting. May Not Rule on Thaw's Bail JUDGE suw. CH MAY NOT TAKE JURISDICTION fcouR'l‘ SO INTIMATES British Ambassador— | As Case is Likely to Go to Supreme Court, May Allow It to Be Decided There—$160,780 Windfall for Thaw. | In this case, for the first time s the present revolution began a MRS. BOND APPLIES ago, the general warning from FOR A NEW TRIAL. | United States to Mexican factio —— protect all forelznmers wegt unheeded, Eleven Grounds Set Forth by the| {iough there is every ovidemce that ; both the British ambassador and the Nisrans Counm!: | State 'department were . advised of el Benton's impending fate too late to Oldahoma City, Okla., Feb. 20— Mo- Kahoma City, Okla, Teb. 20—Mo- | | tercedo specifically for him. Tha tiog for a retrial of the $50,000 damage instituted by Mrs. Minnie E. Bona | R®WS_ shocked officials, who had come of Oklahoma City against United Starey | {0 believe that General Villa fully real- Senafor TP {Gorein whichia\ver= | o0 the Wuostlon of the | SMISACAS Gict for the defemdant was rerumer: | government in regard to the protection of foreigmers in Mexico, particularly here Wednesday, was filed in behalf of in the north of that country. Mrs. Bond today. Date for a hearing ! - has not been set. In her suit Executed After Military Trial. Bond charged the senator with attac T have not sufficient facts on ing her in a Washington hotel which to base an opinion,” sald Secre- March. tary Bryan toda ‘Until I have, the Alleged misconduct of the jury, mis- E : department will express no opinion. direction of the court and the refusal | This was the official view of the of Judge George W. Clark to permit | uation, with messages passing bac questions_concerning the past life of and forth between the stato depart- Senator Gore are among the eleven | ment and Consul Edwards and his grounds set up in the motion. | temporary assistant, G, C. Carrothers SRS D A conmular representative at Torreo far announcement by the stats <t fhsare Beft for Kines. | s that Renson had beon Norfolk, Va., Feb. 20.—Grave fears executed after a military trial were felt here tonight for the safety of 3 the five masted schooner Kineo and Consul Sending Full Report, her crew of eleven men, supposed to| A copy of the sentenca of the court be somewhere off the Atlantic coast setting forth the evidence in th battling with a raging gale in a blind- | case, was promised the American con- ing snowfall. No word has came from | sular (representatives. Mr yan the schooner since she w sighted by | sald a full report of the affair was c the steamer City of Atlanta Wednes- | its way by mail from Consul Edyards, day | to whom General Villa had person- == | ally explained the imeldent Train Hold Up—Threo Killed. | Fhe killing of a Firitian subject, u Bellingham, Wash., Feb. 30,—Thres | SoF CPumStances such As despaiohes passengers on a Great Northern pas- | om, e border portraved, —-caused senger train bound for Vancouver, B, | those famillar with Great Britain's resisted three bandits tonight and have been wronged to expeet inter- re shot dead. Thomas B. Wads vorth, a Canadian Pacific conductor Vancouver, B. C.; R. L. Lee of B merton, Wash., and M. B. McElhoes, traveling salesman of Vancouver, T C., were the men killed sting developments. United States Not Responsible. sion of the case between t dor and the seeretary of state developed clearly the abseence of any = s | of the British subject, even though | Rev. Dr. Adam Accepts Chair. | responsibility on e part of Hartford, Conn,, Feb, 20—Announce. | the United ~ States for the killing ment was made today that Rev. Dr. J, | ibvestigation should prove it to have Douglas Adam had accepted the chair | Déen unjustible of practical theology at the Hartford | The United States, it was asserte heolasicell Serilhny had exerted exery cffort to save th Lhieidl man's life and the fact that througi its consular offices the American gov- _New Haven Fur Stors Burned. e s hE e ittty reon New Haven, Conn., Feb. 20.—Fire of | nized the de facto control of Villa over undetermined origi damage esti- |a certain portion of northern Mexico mated at $4,000 tonight to the fur stora | it was held, In no way incre its of M. Smirnow at No. 154 Orange | liability for Villa’s acts: streef. i | Villa Starts For the South. 5 = | The British government, through the tween Corporal Jemsen, Troop M| embassy, was informed that the state Thirteenth cavalry, and a score or | department is awalting the mailed re- more of Mexicans, ‘during which the | ROTL on_the tragedy from American Mexicans returned Jensen’s fire, occur- | CGRgul Bdward: $ Ted tonight. Though the consul's report is not S ikely to reach here for a few day TWO MORE MISSING. details of the incident began to filte into the state department in brief des tches tonight. The departure neral Villa for the south was not looked upon by officials here as hav- ing any connection Wwith the death of Benton, as it was said that Villa had Englishmen Who Made Search for Benton Failed to Return, El Paso, Texas, Feb. 20.—Two more Englishmen are reported as having | pe, i I e fol - “Zisappeared” In Tearer wne ving ld:)ex; planning this move for several came tonight from Samuel Stewart, = who says that the men,John Lawrence | and a companion named Curtiss, went to Juarez Wednesday to search for Willlam S, Benton. Stewart tonight expressed the fear that they, like Ben- ton, had been shot. Thompson, with Major Holmdahl of Villa’s staf, was permitted to search the jails and guard houses of Juarez today, but they found no trace of the missing men. Lawrence is chief engi- neer of the California Development company, and camo here on a vaca- tion from Yuma, according to Thomp- Peace Society Against Free Tolls. Boston, Fi 20—The efforts of President Wilson to secure the repeal of the clause in the Panama canal act exempting American coastwise vessels from the payment of tolls were ap- proved by the board of directors of the Massachusetts Peace soclety today. Steamers Reported by Wireless, Sable Island, Feb, 20.—Steame: Prinz_Adelbert,” Hamburs for Phila- phia signalled®{00 miles east of Sandy Hook at noon. tay Go to Su mentioned when pressed a desire for il petition was & fore urnment an immediate ng on it. They gued that since a commission appoin: | ed by the court had found that Tha was not a menace to the comm o reason existed for refusing him ad mission to bail. Mr. Jérome remarked that he wished to be heard in opposi- tion at the court’s convenience. Judge Aldrich said tha the tion of bail had been attention earlier, he migk ques- it in a diffes light. With the 1 lihood in mind that the whole would soon be removed fr diction to that of the U. supreme court, he felt t be best to leave the quesion to the justices of that court for sion. Three-Cornered Debate. To this Judge Willlam M. Chase | of counsel for Thaw replied that as Judge Aldrich knew tho: Iy a | branches of the case he ought to pass | upon that feature of it rather than re | fer it to the hizher court before which | thers would need to be a repetition of he eviden in_the pro form | Governor William A. Stone Pe sylvan gued for Thaw To was frequen interrupted by the court | with questions end sugsestions. Ar | Jerome also joined in so that the pr ceedings were in the nature of three- | cornered debate riefly the status of aw as a_ward f Laneas| > the {atute under d for; the suffi- ndictment, and the al- good faith in the pro- $160,780 FOR THAW. Will Reccive Estate Held in Trust Unless Declared Insane. | Pittsburgh, Pa., Feb. ceedings to show that re instituted in the hany county within Thaw will receive ome from the esta | him by the Fidelit company of Pittsburgh. A decision to this effect was handed down today by a majority of the judg 20.—Unless pro of the orphans court Alléghar county In the decision it is declared Thaw, as he alleges, is this county and state and this ¢ was his last place of resid | state the jurisdiction of lur pro- | ceedings in the common | of this county. The majority report | agrees that, notwithstanding the fac that Thaw was acquitted of murd: on the grounds of insanity and lodged in an insane asylum in New York state, he has never been declared | Insane in this county or state and no proceedings to declare him sane can | be taken here. | Plea of Salmon Fisharmen. | Washington, Feb. 30— Willis Free- | man of Seattle, representing the sal- { mon fishermen of Puget sound, today | asked the house foreign affairs com- | mittee to frame a bl under consid- | eration to give effect to_ fisheries | treaties etween the United States and | Great Britain so It would not impose | undue restrictions on American fishe men - Condensed Telegrams Negro Pupils in Kansas City schools cost $1.83 more per pupil for tuition than whites. Mrs. Robert Heman is dying at Una dilla, N. Y., as a result of being bitten by Her pet cat. A Series of Earth Shocks at Reno, Nev., between 2 and o'clock yesterday morning. occurred 4.06 William Whitman Bailey, professor emeritus of the botanical department at Brown university died vesterda President Wilson Yesterday nomin_ |ated Earl B. Rose of Ashland, N. H. | to be clerk of the United States court of China. Abbott Kinney, founder of Venice, Cal, offered $1,000 a pound for the rst grandson born to him. He paid | i $10,000 Sunday Night Secretary Daniels will speak from pulpit of Rev. M. Hardin, Thirg Presbyterian | _ Geo. Barnhardt, a cook, was arrested | yesterday in West Orange, N ed with writing threatenin; to Pres dent Wilson. Ernest and Ott York on a charge | | _An Involuntary x terday against th States Cotton corporation. Rev. J. W. Campbeli, prominen | home of aughter, Mrs. Nor- man Barnesby, at Scarborc N.7% | Lieutenant Comm in the ts th New An Approximate Shortage of turis 5 3 Samuel M. Jeffsrson, pr w of The board reign Missions of nor whos ‘l Colonel George Goeth: _ Theodore Harris, 111 Years Old, was | found dead ne at Cam a d lain a wmable to Rev. George Ga ag T Goverror Baldwin Yesterday ar | To Encourage Young Men to enll in the F being once in the pavy, to stud advanco them- ! uhorizing hir appoint an nually 25 yor to the Naval Steamer Sankaty, which Mahan, president Associatio Mary McCormick, nsation on a crowded dgepor t Monday kb threaten to sk ¥e man stenographer, with ve yesterday adjudged insane and com- | mitted to the state asylum at Midc | town Dr. Martin E. Griffith of Monessen Pa., held in jail here under a coroner’ charge of murder for the death of | William L. Robinson, a music teacher | whom he was ed when he | Griffith, Jan. yesterday eged to have muitilat- found him attacking Mrs. 26, was admitted to bail Hugh Sullivan, Who Says he beaten and thrown overboard rowdi the night of Augu 013, a rip from New New the Sound riscilla, brought suit t at New Y New Engh on ring a York, on | the | | | | the Alaskan railroad bill will begin |10 the effect that Louisville and Nash- tomorrow with virtually only one point | ville trains should stop at Bay St in dispute—the house amenament fo | Touis | require that entire line to b 2 g SR L built by the government for the de- | | tory shall be standard guage Chicago, Feb. 30—The death pen- eosiaroniia {aity for ine kiling of his wife in a hotel here last Octeber is facing Wii- { Freight Engine Derailed, liam Cheney Filis, former Ceinnati | waterbury. Conn., Feb. 20— loather hant, whose trial began intendent R. D. zmaurice of the |today. Stephen Malato, assistant Wesiern division tonight reported that | state's attorney, who has charge of A freight engine went of < |the prosecution, demanded of every - track at Devon belonz » | venireman that he announce his wil- ulf Refining company wt $,15 to- ingness to infiict the extrema. Demsity ARBITRATION OPPONENTS DEFEATEL - Efforts to Amend Pending Treaties in Senate Voted Down by Over Two-Thirds Majority RATIFICATION OF TREATIES IS NOW ASSURED Opposition Element Concedes That the Big Fight is Over— * Indication That Free Tolls Provision of Panama Canal Act Will be Repealed—President Declares For an Abso- lute Repeal and Takes a Stand Against Any Compromise chairman_of Chamberlain rejected wit mendmen them refer- known repeal ere can tion in to the wiil ob- mem- ted from r, would dministra- r a Amendment Again Rejected v, that pact was passed | bellef tonigh itish treaty calied up by dbe actec n before WILL PAY A VISIT ! sTRIKEBRE RS WERE TO NEW ENGLAND Di Government Officials Seck Light on Railroad Situation. eb. 2 h a H 20— Unem- 1 Maine rail- | day befors th ant e nderstz journey and to Tha strik merce the New REBEL ARMY ROUTED hope t AT CAPE HAITIEN Refugees Seek An Asylum at the For- eign Consulates. == ST . E n, F Feo. 20.—The TO ESTABLISH MOTIV oo et e FOR BUFFUM'S MURDER, | sev e ey . g : ment s I back inside the Prosccution to Show Relations of | elty « - Hastien. The leaders of i rnest Frah, tho revolt ar rng to flee to Wife and Ernest Frahm. Ouanaminth, some thirty miles to the Fe east = arase | M Panie : - an Amer- B L L L - arines. The i t 3 o m to ref- am for e . ave given husband. I & peo- et FlEs proot s o DieECd | lutionary soldiers in order to keep them i b . . from committing acts of brigandage. show a motive in zed re = = Parmer Slain and Barn Burned. of murder Barbou Feb. 20.—Hear- W a fire that was Revising Trade Commission Bill. pday, Perry A. ng near here, rus! Washington, Feb. Determined t ccompanigd by t decisive action on framing an i I met with a vol- erstate trade commission bill as the b 4 Fultz instant- of the administration’s anti- several of the others. ve programme, the sen: the dead man's fam ommitt tee on inters e commerce to- the reason for the day decided to complete its revised A posse is seek- draft of the measure within a few days. The araft, it was s will be s to Présiden 2 #na Altorney Gemecal St ol Roma’s Passengers in Quarantine. fore the committee reports it New York, Peb. 20.—Because of twe senate, suspected cases of typhus discovered —_—— on the Fabre steamship line steamship Roma when she arrived at Providence from Marseilles in a damaged condi- tion early weck, 183 of her steer- age passengers are to be quarantined here for a for The passengers were brough re by rail, as it-was not a expedient _to transpart poths e them o damaged Roma. T Macon, val ¥ be given to the city for a Sulfport, Miss., Feb, 20—The Louis- memorial to his twin sons, | ville and Nash raliroad today was n 1884 fined $402,000 and enjained from do- |ing interstate business in “e by a decision in chancery Mlasican Refjroed | Canfessnes. based on the chargo that the ral Washington, Feb. 20—A conference | company had failed to obey an between the senate and the house on |of the Mississippi raliroad commission K the evidenve called. fox i -