Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 12, 1914, Page 1

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~ The Bulletin's Circulation in Norwich is Double That ' Any Othor Paper, and Its Total Girculation is the Largest in Gon riov ty's F HONOR DEAD HEROES OF VERA CRUZ| Cebied Parawrashs - INg Sggragy News From Gondensed Tolograms () DEMAND RELEA: 2 ol SR e About Payments| Mexico City| e v v Bryan Detormined that Do essi : i Ti y ‘audience duration with Most Impressive Funeral Pageant Since the Time|monis, i ient is to oo sent to e | an e s ; the pope. ! st e May 16. o —— ~ i K . S S i 5 ED THAT BOYS |, John D. Rockefeller has 3 of the Spanish-American War Witans S mtnds, | THY. E BYANES TESTIFIED | mEroRTED THAT MEN AND 80¥8 | itk P, Moy e i3] Consul at Saltillo Must ¢ London, May 11.—Mrs, Mary Wood, AT NEW HAVEN HEARING ARE DRILLING IN STREETS. Plains, N. Y. . the militant suffragette, who on May —_— 4 mutilated the portrait of Henry i S ::i'&‘:'mz BUSINESS GENERALLY SUSPENDED IN NEW YORK |5 S % % |MONEY LEGALLY SPENT|PLAN TO MEET VILLA|Efiu'Furiie GRAVELY EMPHATIC IN MAKING Royal Academy, was temporarily re- The Italian Ministry of Education leased from prison today. She is in —_— 4 very weak tondition from the effects will spend $15,000,000 for public scheol of & “hunger and thirst strike. $20,000 Annually Paid J. Otis Wardwell | Federals Preparing to Make Stand at | bulldings in four years. H Throngs Which Numbered More Than a Million, of All Class- |, syncHing oF pEFIANGE, %o Keep Management Advised of | Peubla Against Advance of Consti- rhe_bospital ship Solace arrived st g es, Stood Shoulder to Shoulder in a Community of Grief,| -~ . AMERICA’S CUP DEFENDER| Financial Fight Against the Systom. | tutionaliste—U, S, Consulate Looted. | wounded at Vera Cruz. Twenty-four Hours—Huerta’s Agents 5 - 5 i & . B Lymar N. Clark, for nearly 60 years | Along the Route of Cortege—President Wilson’sVoice | fully ‘Into the Waters of the Ken- | twningion May 11, Asserting that| ~Vera Cruz. May 11—From Mexico|{n Sctive newspaper worker, diéd at i s nebec, - there was absolutely no secrecy about | City come late reports of quiet bus- L Mass, aged s 0 Shook With Emotion as He Pronounced Eulogy of the SR ment Conterftls That Huerta is cHipper aver siade i pmitial piunge | Bmmeotians s atord, railroad in the|of men snd DOTS arllling Jn the|Engiand, built a hand fire enginc, s Closi 2 on Pacific SR = pper ever made her on of pul P a 4 ing Lighthouse Men Who Lost Their Lives in Defense of Their Flag—17 | £t o 250° 15, 2200 EIU2ES | Promotion of publicity “and that the | streets. A fow nights ago o mob|TR€IS0d DUl o and frs, eogine, oa good wishes than followed the cup |obtained at a high cost to help wage | and . demanded that Luls D’Antin, an tully into the Kennebec today. that ht be shot if found smoking oplum @t “"Within an hour atter aunching. the | 5" Byrass, formesly e vise, pronaunt | 1y i Touse thers be deliversd| Chencu, tn the Frovince of Sue-chush, “Sniping.” Heartily Cheered as She Slid Grace- —_— s S o Li Tasisd Dayments made by the New York, New | iness conditions, but a large number Boy Scouts in - Buckingha s Caissons Carried Bodies Through the Streets. defense candidate, Deflance as she slld | a campaign against financial interests | attache of the American embassy, who |, Porsons under 40 years of age are to Seeks Release of Subjects Who Are m—— second - of the three American cup |of the road, in' charge of logisiative S i this season had her mast | matters and publicit; g 3 ; ~ ork, May New Yo join- ; demonstration found-a small physical | boats bullt P Y, was the prin The Brasilian minister notified the " o the nation teday in memorlailzing | compass. . Less than 10,000 were able | on end and by (he last of the week [cipal witneds today when the. Inter- | State, dopesiment oo adas st ‘ho Dty vahar dnd (Dwen ot 06 Sin simple dignity the herolam of|to pack themselves into the enclosurs | * "5y, rrances Clark, davgnier of B | fte o ions commission resumed | would surrender D'Antin only if he|USTnsd military core of AVIAORS | (ue iington, May 11 —While peace | for thie bensfit ot} the nineteen bluejackets and marines|and “gm theh.u.ml dwl;‘e::d :too& “t,!;: W nIt:.r Clark of Philndelphia, treas- ::cl’:llq‘:;;'l r!:w the New Haven's fin- | was o'vhary&w:;-d by th‘;. l:]:ob.m’l;:: at Steetin. . ne“;:u;uon- mu-ke: e, ngmnx for- | stand that the : 1 at Vi Cruz. [president with bare = . antipathy e attache u m: ttings of the South American ::h e ot Mgmm'- ive fanaral pa- Ritchel was at his right and Secretary 2t nfi‘}id'ynmc:f:;; ‘Z’"";'.l::mfl;’ Mr. Byrnes testified that J. Otis|facts that he is the only American of-| g tary Joseph C. Grew, of the | mediators to begin Monday on Canadi- zeant, since the of the Spanish| Daniels of the navy at his left. focn o wechflhee] = it Wardwell of Boston received $12,000 | ficial left in the capital and that he United States Embassy in Berlin, | 22 Soil, the mediators and officials of S tatieq on itsbolémn router from| With sharp precision, the bluejack- 2nd emashing the traditional bottie. on | the Jast yeur o5 Kbty and, $20000 | has been active In reileving the dia- GRS} oo his%nnuel vacation and lef | the state department here todsy wers the Battery to the Brooklyn navy yard, | ets drew up into military formation | 8 smashing the traditional bottle on | the last year of his employment by the of American non-combatants. | g ¢S OR WS @ occupied_with several serious phases it was as if the pulse of the city tem- | before the stand. At the sams time | .6 SPRIRmIetl: S8 SEURE SCH T | road, to keep the management advised far as is known, no measures of the Mexican situation demand:ng. porarily had stopped. the seventeen calssons, draped with |BFen U E AW S rd b aatony | o & t.h;’ rend of the financial fight | have been taken to fortify the capital. 8an Francisco builders were the only | {Mmediate attention. Secretary Bryan All business was 'suspended and|flags and banked with flowers. con |\ "JiTcady touching. It when Mite | Smercs (o piaven-and to give ad- | “A¢ Guadalupe which is o stratesic |, San Francisco builders were the only | THRESR'S, ienion, SICRIaTy T34 over the commercial section of the| tributed by the sailor comrades of the | RUS, @ TR80Y TOUCHNE i Dromachniiiolt ;’t e 8s to how to effectually resist|point on the Mexican railway enter- the Massachusetts bullding at the Pan- | t1® afternoon and spent two hours in cits there fell & reverential hush. In|tie dead were laid directly In front | qul¥i SIOS the Shining Lrase Winch | it He said there was no desire or | fng’ the oity, there are mo algms of | SioMassachuset conference with the South American the throngs which numbered more|of the stand. down the front of her blue. sailor | SLLeIPt to keep this under cover. The | fortifications. The federals, however. envoys, discussing the continued deten- than a million. East Side and West| A moment later the crowd was DEC | gory but in the exhilaration of the | thouent. tre miiinately spent. he|are taking steps to provision Puebla,| The Senate voted to adopt an amend- | on of Johr R. Silliman, American vice Side peace advoeates and war en-|mitted to enter, and immedistely % moment it passed unheoded. She step- | wes medo iy o ay (it ABY effort | about midway between Vera Crus and | mant o the e L ooy | consul a¢ Saitfilo, by Mexican federals: thusiasts, native Americans and im-|filled the entire fleld. ihe band of | ;4% ook o it to her father, who 5to0d | laton et thse s gy i the capital, on the Hne ofyine,Inter: | bill striking out $267,000 for distribu- :,",'m"f&“"mm’;‘u’!“fm‘," o S migrants—New York’s polyglot pop- Naval [in the forward companionway and |purpose were made thi h . i nie. General aret! tion of free seeds. Tican tor —st, to shoulder in | Nearer, My God to Thee and Nav 3 made throug! im. | to_be holding outposts east of Puebla : pedo boats, and. the case of the five In the line of mourners that follow-|In titud 1t the boat r and 4 4 | Teported that many cat ave Y s 2 ed the artillers caissons bearing the | Prayed it would not, be necessary to | i o o At bt Bewn o frrViees similar to those rendered | gathered at Puebla and much srain | vom on, to, 24dress Brokivn Tonpuc s | stilors and marines. Mr. Bryan 162 dead were the chiefs of state and city | make a further sacrifice on the Amidship st George M. Pynchon | "Mr. ‘Byrnes testified, furth. hat | 204 supplies of various sorts are stored | civic organization » & | sisted lh;t the l_"et:oem of IMmWh:: government ‘and many distinguished | of patriotiom. o G e et e . Eynchos: el s lesMBed further, that|ipery must be brought about at ence. ; When S men of nearly every calling: but every | Secrotary Danlold then tarned 1o the | th syndicate and the vacht's master- | g sonousron® st Bt i S Planning to Meet Villa. Harry Gissing, a New York athlete, | ans o, 200Ut the matter later, he woul eve in the tifrongs that lined the way | Presiqent, FSed e mames o ' was | hand in the coming races. Beside him | Haven for sasistorm® 0% the New | . umor hdh béen eurrent in fhe|was metiooins nofumed o arork Rapian | e O L h s s turned first to the carriage whers | Men in Whose hBovor Che D ‘eulogy. was_Commodore Dallas B. Pratt- of | rious newspaper 'men and others had | capital that in case Villa drives the|Mich., while saving a woman from an .,..“".:;, em°pn:fl¢ s am?&uncm: the President Wilson rode, close behing Sl % the New York Yacht club. = Sitting at | been employed by the rocd (o federals out,, Huerta is planning to|attack by three ruffians. vernment's determination to bave the last funeral car. The president| President’s Face Lined with Grief. | he cars of a rowboat in the slip was | publicity matter. In. this mm‘f.zfi‘.‘,? make a stand at Puebla which has ¥ fime;rr\g;df: 's determ! jon e I O o procession | bonsy\dent Wilson stood with head | George Owen of Newton, the designer, |t developed that Mr. Byrmes test | military advantages for defense, Peu-| The National Order of Cowbey As to the Lobos Jsland Incident, the night and was with the procession|bowed. His deeply lined face showed | while on the wharf and on excursion mony was the same that he gave at | bla is the city where the Mexieans | Rangers was organized in Cheyenne, | secretary informed ‘the mediators that from the time it left the Battery un-|the grief and solemnity of the mo- |steamers, in fact at every point of made a d rate resistance against | with the intention te t i} had recel: til the squad of marines fired their| ment. But in general his appearance | vantage, were inhabiants of the oid | 15, nvestigation condueted several lo Leape: ntention to perpetuate the | so far the United States recelved, ears ago b assach Ttil- | the French invasion. old spirit of the West. ficial confirmal taking of parting vollevs over the flag-drapped |gave no indication of the recent strain | shipbullding port, shouting and cheer- | Jties Commbssion Mo oot o L | N rarican Hemed Doster, former- s oo : o R o coffins at the Brooklyn navy yard and | at Washington. He delivered his eu- | ing. continued tomorrow, -when Mr. Byrnes Iy a correspondent for a New York| The New Yerk ferryboat William J.| consirmation he could offer mo formal the navy bugler sounded the “taps”|logy of the dead in & low clear voice | The erowd saw in the Defiance an | will resume the stand. paper, but latterly employed in a bank | Gaynor, which was to have been DUt | explanation of the reported action of oL that proclaimed the end of the cere- | that carried to the farthest parts of | able-bodied, powerful looking boat ot i capital, i missing and is sup- | into commission two weeks ago, 18 00 ton circies 1t mons. the field. It was followed by & praver | Her lines are longer than those of the | NEW BANKING SYSTEM Boacd to Base beon Impeiscmed by tha| biy for the Taxy wipe. R e g B e S On the stand with the president at| by Rabbi Stephen S. Wise and a ben- | Resolute, which was launched . twe Pederals, g e it B oL A the navy vard were mothers, sisters | ediction by Dr. John P. Chidwick, | weeks ago, but her bilges. are. fulles SET IN MOTION. ed his new: r work | The Senate voted te reinstate Fran- | o H bt mi a and widows of the dead sailors and | chaplaim of the old battleship Maine. | and her keel more extonded. Her ton. e e e T nk cla . MeCoie ot ot slon sgainat Hucria vue mepiy e marines, but in all the throng of| Three volleys fired by the marines | sides are of polished mahogany and | Five Banks Named in Each-of the -‘Mexieo City weat to Vera Cruz. His|as cadet at West Point. He W8 ex- | azamst possible disaster as a result of surners nuuul.e mmmt_ 4 ::m d.;le:hx;l; uerlox u.: S::‘nm‘;e?h :efih el:: flmfl." run u& .3"“’.1"’“. "’“u,"l‘fl 'xh' has Tweive Districts. quarts ‘were searched and a secret | pelled for drinking beer. the closing of the lizhinouse by the iched by e §pi of e my ly o an - | some 'r and a bow at is impres- Py j- i the man whese .'ord sent the lads of | vices were completed. It had lasted a | give. 4 code found, to which the auther | feder: P ‘Washington, May 11—Machin 1 tie ich impertance. He The fishing schooner Gladys and| f official the landing of 5 the navy to fight for their country’s |little less than an hour. Uilike, conditions which have pre- [one of the. Ainal pieps In the ehtnblish | ook Socectd a tho e but seas Too | Netllo reachen Baston wit Tlag 2t | americon, tatiors ~ on 1obo . aleks £ e cr-ef g & e : R paty i pureciese L1 Jalled atethe launching of other de- {ment of the nation's new banking sys- | leascd Under Ordens 10 raport (o the|half-mast for two members of the | moshod tho oo deomrtont tabe President Voices Nation's Grief, | Drcssite heat proved too much fOf|fenders within the last twenty years | fer was set In motlon tomight. when | helles ot & cortain hour duity. . He| crow lost at sea Jast Friday. nisht. Rear Admiral Mayo cabled that there was no s about the pro- 5 And to the president was left: the | had (o be GaEtes awar. on Stoouchems b o, OoReC. Dro- | the reserve bank organization’ certifi- | failed to keep this agreement and the Mexican keepers deserted the great The Deflance rested | cates for the f. 3 i and, Prince Muenster, of Austria, who Is | lighine, e lsland and thet the privilege of voicing the nation's grife| One marine Was among them. on her cradle, just outside the boat | When that !Mo "e:u‘ru“l mmfi:m:flthad &d;c;i:;eed.nfl-ucc- :medadehmh,;n)fl‘::" him. | the guest of John McGhee, of Mt. Ki d"nlroy‘::el::de?e Dixie was “maintain- Sed 1 the p'-';'r 08 Qi itmA ] the " camoni 1ay g g e e TR un: | 04 boards of directors organized in |- Cosulate Reported Looted. -ademy 7 et Womt ooine ¢ MIAry | ing it for the benefit of navigation.” . formance ut e ns as they er over critically, and hun- | each ¢ osulate Repo . et oint. ci tative done for their country a service not|placed, in front of the stand where all | dreds of cameras were snapped at her, district the comptroller of cur e While the Mexican representatives rer a1l 2 inted by General Huerta were Qudy measarsd by thetr individual] could view them. Then they werscar-| Jt is expected that the yacht Will | tho Tanks to Beein basinscs T i2% | The secrstary of the Amerioan con-| i London Dally Chronicle tn.ite ] ioEointed by General Huerta 'wers dends e | were taken Beci iy the Shomtan., whloy |isave Bath on Saturday for. Marble- | “Tme committes announced that every | Sists %5, Sutillo. Jose Marchirl called| tesue of today asserts that certain | commisy weicomed aud Eiven Godsposd \The feeling that is uppermost.” he | were taken back to the Montana, which | head where she Will be inspectsd” by | effort was Dot mame i pedite’ the a rted that the comsulate|Dusiness houses have received reports | by an American general waiting with i T ome of pepbupa g‘nrrftnnd yet :;m ::‘z“tfi: ;!;:"m:or g:hm:. ihe cleht Boston members of the syn- | organization #0 that the system might | foore bad baon lootad by the federals, | that the rebels have captured Tampico. | armed fdrces of the United S there is mixed with that grief a pro- . cate, - had Huerta’s gateway, the United Stat found pride that they should have!claimed the three bodies of those | No effort will be made to test the | oo, neufurated by August 1. ~Buch| Secret o e come? Jomer s | The grand jury begas an investiga- | goverament oMelally . announced Ita . Fone a3 they did and If 1 may say it whose homes wers New York and|sailing qualities of the yacht morth | Bemiee: eonl, i 2 di didates for dl- | Baitme S Tihy wife: W ted | tion of the fire that destroyed the Mel- | representatives in mediation from the out of my heart, a touch of envy of)preparations were made to send the [of Cape Cod. After a day or two at rectors, who are to be divided into dmfi ““ the governor's palace. | Vi apartment house in Allston, Mass., | negotiations before the South Ameri- i b s e s e T furGeomatls dastioh | Marblabead ahe will be' towed. - to!l (iRl s isete: | Thres. ditectors of| et faken fo the sovernors SalACS. | Liesl"the doas Gf lClEht lives & mONEY| an dettirate. ot Nisgara Peils ou - P& e o v here she will have | each class will be elected for each bank ago. nest Monday. The head of the nation looked out Montana Sails for Boston, ‘permanent moorings oft Mr. Pynchon’s | £2C1 - ank | eventually become of them. - Snited States over the thousands d about the| Cambridge, Mass, May 11—Mayor |house. and the federal reserve board will ap- | The number of American women left Justice Lamar of the Unite int three additional. is variously estimated| Claiming that Leonard Martocci, a | Supreme court and Frederick W. Leh- <coffine on the parade ground and his | Good was notified today that the ar- ol in the capital ously E 3 B former solicitor general, Were voice shook with emotion as he de- |mored oruiser Montana, bearing the | PROSECUTION OF BECKER The banks named to execute the|up to three hundred. They are waiting | Lawrence’ L. I bootblack owed him | Dam i - N o zation certificates in New - ri: “the last | pard, Holland's Minister to othe United | ¢hosen by President Wilson as the clared his creed: “We have gone|bodies of three New England men who EEGUN W EARNEST | et e e o Jew ENE | ror what tfiay chirasterise ax the last | Pard. Hotlands Misister o othertinived | SRS 7. Esioert B et Huer down to Mexico,” he sald, “to serve|fell at Vera Crus—Danlel A, Haggerty ® iateiot 'No. J-_Federdl Resarve Bank | \Sacoucts werming” They eppear toffsdh ta are hastening Augustine Rodriguez, - mankind i we can find out 'a way. W of tnis city, Walter L. Wathon of Or-| L. - Stand Dur- | Bt o cheaeTs, Rescrve Bank | believe that the capture of the capl- Ly Hebora rd Fais Bigvero, ame | them over (o Geners e Want to serve the Mexicane | N H.olett New Tork st s3e b m| - ing Yo s Procsedings. . | National Ban, Bridseports Maine. Cas- | ing “worme than flenting within the| Clarence B. Bowen, a wealthy Chi. | bassador Da Gama of Brazil, Minister | Ofdered thelr trial b T T u Wit Beis W T L RS R o Yatnddar & Pinoisdingk. co National ‘bank, Portland; Massa- | city, probably & Bomberdment, bug | Cag0 stock broker wae arrestad in | Nuon of Argentina and Minister Suares | Mission which was R R e ton o o 1| New Vere May Torhe proons | chusetts, “Nefional, hawemat bank o | o e b e e bt | P adeip R, aasaced o eloiated 2 e e e iastion e S or was under fire, but I fancy | Plans have been compieted for a|tion of Charles Becker for the mir- g:m“;,.,.",:'cfi,:f.’:?.’.“?mfll“fm.’f:; to certain districts of the city, Ap-|19-vear-old girl. He had $15,000 on his | FISS50, SCr (or both governments and | Secretary Gerrison zome thines jist s hard|military funeral for Haggerty on Wod- | der of Horman Rosenihal was begun | tonal banke ConcordM Rhods Island. | parently they did not anticipaio any | person. | Hle Further 4 expocted In the Bre- 1 §o under fire. I faney|nesday. at which state, eity, army, |in earncst today. Five witneases were | NAUO . - |looting by the rebels or the destruc-| o —— T ence mepetations untl sil in Just a2 hard to o your Guty |mayy snd milia oficers will bo prea: | placed on_the stand. ‘ater ‘District | STCE. \ Ny 2 mederat Reservo bank, | 100, OF, O ZoPrieels by Fuesta, | Samusl Poller seven years old, of haye met in Canada. o ' N’ v 4 eral Carranza an when thev are shooting at you. When | President Returned to Washington on | how Rosenthal was killed, named the | NeW York: National Park bank, New | Mexico City refuse to leave their pa- | head was caught in the mortise of a - gunmen and ace: onal Commercial bas vho seek Huerta’s overthrow -~ Midnight Train. whp did it, and accused Beck- | Tork, National Commercial bank, Al- | iienta. o American bospital is |beam from which he had suspended a | {5t 5" be represented in the confer- | 9 er of being the “brains” behind the | BANY, J.; Marine National bank,|,pen and in it are American nurses|atrpeze. nce, according to latest advices. They armoon President, Wilson went Sor & |~ e s Y Tty R JC ISRk, B +| 854 ‘wevecal: ANorican paients. The | | Wil continue to make war in Huerta’ Picture of Vast Human Stream. 2 e on went for a| The afternoon session opened with nurses were all trained in the United| John Duning, of Yonkers, and Lo territory while the truce between the - . |motor ride out into Long Island. He|John J. Brady, a policeman, on the | MILITARY AVIATOR BIG States and_they .are standing by the | Marion, of New York, were held In | iniermational disputants proceeds. From a bird's eye view, the multl-|astarted at 2.50 D. m. and returned to | stand. He and the next witnesses were doctors. The enly likelihood of their | $500 ball on a charge of robbing poor fode aiEhied slong the route of the | the residence of f Colone} House at 6.40. | used to prov the | crime. Brady,"Po: FACTOR IN FRENCH VICTOAY | {SU0TE: 11l i the peasibllity of ~the | bexes. Thelr pockets were flled With | arouse . Interest throughout the - day. cortege o en nan Fry. 3 G ruz of & vast humen: strelss conneeting | was at fhe Biping Rock Country Club, | Patroiman oo ?r!‘zuefnowei ser- | Directed Fire at Artillery on Moorish ;;.H}Tc‘a;v::xfmué . contingency £ ;;:u'fld *.3“:?;‘"2;,.‘ Brasilinn minister two arms of the sea, Muffled voices, | where He left the automobile'and walk- | geant, described the murder and their Pesition: ‘which might arise owing to the erowd- | Secrtary Bryan and W. C. Van Ra- | at Aexico City to release some South aoft poken commands, by milltary of|ed about the grounds for a few mi- attompta to capture the assassing. Sl i ing of the native hospitals by wounded pard, Hollond's Minster o the Eatig Americans, including three Brazilians Scers, nutes. ", 2 & col s - ez, 'orocco, "Bz - e arrested and are Triulty church bell, emphasized a hush | Returning to New York, the pres- |siclan, who Der!onn‘ed an nmnn-; .’,'n French military Lv::(or, ‘was :;a o.t b .k.k e ™ the arbitration treaty for a period of | 1‘;.:0;‘;1.1 I?rn ‘sniping” American sol- that had fallen over a city of noises. |ident went to the residence of Colonel | the body, said a bullet in the brain | the principal factors in yesterday's vie- Medical Supplies Growing Scarce. five years. Glers from the refuge of a tramp The dead wers landed by the tugs |TFiouse, where he purposed to remain |killed Rosenthal instantly. tory of the French troops over the| Hospital and medical supplies are steamer In Vera Cruz harbor, - An ap- Traffie and Correction early i the | yntil jt was time to take the midnight | Louis Krause, formerly a Coney Is- Moors at Teza which gave the French [ growing scarce daily and medicines| The new Allan liner Calgarian sailed | Deal was made to Secretary Bryan by morning and lay in siate in the Bat- |(rain for Washington. 20 malter, was the last witness. He | command of the key to the eastern|ang bandages have been commandeer- | from Liverpool on her maiden trip to | the mediating envoys on behaif of Gen- iy plaza for aver am hour Defore | erta’s Commissioners Start North. o Of celng the four gunmen. who | approaches to Fez. | ed from the drug stores. Quebec with mors then 1,200 passens- | eral Huerta because of feports that cut i s i3 Moxican snipers homerad- today died | Mromprincessin Cecllie salled - fro At the conclusion of the proceedings | air directed the fire of the French ar- | joots in Mexico, urging the advisabili-| afier the Montana left Vera Cruz with | here laf °4"_‘ . ¢ | Justice Seabury handed down a de- | tillery. At the same time he drop- f their leaving the country im-| William Dunn, of Denver, sat in the [ maintalned was aggressive and in vio Whe bedics of their comrades. D e stoamer wise cariad £,000 rifies | Cltion fining the editor, the city editar | ped & namber of pemba amens. the | Lao, elr loa ¢ the British resi- | OPerating chair in the county hospital | lation of the armistice. This govern e Dolice escort headed the fu- | e O o for Fluerte, | 224 @ reportar of an afternoon news: | Moors, who eventusily became” de T hooding the warming, which | and smilingly watched the ainputation | ment maintained that Huerts had vio- e o s oining | Which it was not permitesd to land. | oPS 2% Well as the corporation own- | morilazed and fled, leaving many dead | ta poing spreed throush the intarior by | Of his two worthles legs. ie suffercd | lated the armistice in_ordering light- Disturbing elements continued to Tampico, an act which Huerta’s agent: ln;-l_r ba iong from 13‘. W, e‘:-ng s L’;l c!::flm;_rm 2’&:" e:eh ftlvr °“"u"[‘y‘," on the fifield. s from locomotor ataxia. houses ‘tl:lo:edh;n the Pacific. coast to apd Texas Then cume the seventeen : mistake, the i 3 : e the peril of shipping. €un caissons carrving the dead, Hach|NO REPORT OF newspaper on Saturday published an T e e to sutoide points | _ Jossph O. Proctor, Jr, J. A. Lowell | From Tampico, where Mexican fed- NO CARRYING OF WEAPONS ship over messages to outside points o drwwn by four ho BATTLE AT TAMPICO. | advance copy of Attorney Whitman: P itutionalists have been astiide twe vt Uik coks thekibery, of opening addrass. The men were com: | IN COLORADO STRIKE DISTRICT,| !5 beins maintained. * At the cable| Blake and Ralph S’ Wentworth were | erals and constitution: - | appointed receivers for the M:; preparing for a sanguinary struggle, the Prat and Second regiments of the{ Admiral Mayo Reports That All Amer- | nitted In oustody until the fines should °"“;°“‘;°b§,‘m"fi§“;dd:§v:;’,“;” Furnace Co., of Chelsea, Mass, by Fed. | came rumblings of battle, while reports fleld artillers, icans Who Wil Leave Are Now Out | b® pald. Proclamation to That Effect to be En- Wi ac- | eral Judge Norton vesterday. that Huerta’s strength was waning in Thers was in addition one mounted | CL 7 : forced Wednesday Afternoon. BT i g D gl Mexico City and that the bandit leador polica escourt for sach caisson. Four Building Trades Lockout in San Fran- foreman of the El Favor Mining com- | Warden Clancy of Sing Sing said | Z4Pata was about to attack the capitel galiors on each side scted a& DRI | wosnington, May 11—All Amerioun = oisco. e, ol MY L1 After five| pany at Hostotipaquillo,“In the state that the reports that he would resign | from the soath served to rouse snxiety woned with pecent ervies . i Vers |citizens who ‘will lesve are now out| San Franclsco, May 11-A general| C.C10¢k Wedneaddy afternoon all per- | Be"Y o “were hilled” by . bandits | on Fridas sere incorroct, Fiia cestas | amons ip vics _in Vi co City i mad besn Catied o' New ¥ork |of Tampico, Rear Admiral Mayo cabled |lockout in.the bullding (rades ‘Tndne. | 57 In the strike districts of COIOTa- | When thelr camp. ws attacked . ro- | ton, handed i some time Ao Era et bete. moinent Ganger of perse ruz had been called to New York |l TRTIBION, S50 Alhire) Mavo cabled | gckout, in do who are sispected of carrying muight : Francisco was ordered tod: cently. Walter Neal, the manager, | take effect on May 1, but has not been inelr fend comraden | TomO™ | despatch made no mention of fighting | by the building trades employers s | ¥eapons will be searched and dis- | 10 nother American were sHERUY | sccepted: O i Bicvstsy - By Iirectly Dehind the single fils of | I€POrted to be in progress between the | sociation. This action was caused | &Ml If weapons be found, by the|indes but fedesal troops artived Becre e their Hves. | | hastened to the ~Argentine legation, wsone eatrials: - | federals and constitutionalists at Tam- | by refusal by union painters to call ofr | OfiCers and soldiers of the United | i time to save The ban- | Administration anti-trust bills b dent” GovermorGivan, Becretary Dan. | P22 3 o strike for higher wages current for | States army. This order was 1seued | ita took nine bars of bulllon and sack- | framed by committees of poth honves | R il i R The admiral reported that at the di- [ & month. About 25,0 - | o all commanding officers today by | eq the mine store befors they were of consress wers sharply critiscized ce, but it learned els, Mayor Mitchel and other Fuesta: | ciico™of Rear” Aarairal Bodvos oo | fecrr 4 00 men are af-| Colonel James Lockett, on authority | goivie ob by oo trome i | today before the senate interstate com- | Some Gio,Sonrerence, LUt i m: esico The Dresence of the president In the | was sending the ‘smteamer Mexico to O e edent e IOl oy ®¥S3 | Tt ‘in reported that General Husrta | merce committss by reprementatives of | City, togetbor with @isputed points -hat | oa® daag Prooemlon came as e surprise, 107 U | Vera Crus, via Tuxpan with all refu- Yacht Floating Bottom U through the war department. A | s getermined to prevent the further|some of the leading railroads. had arisen over the armistice, had been | of more 1 had been "‘“"“""m""l‘,',,.',‘..,,'""flg-'Mmmlflwm-unmd Biates | poyracht Floating Bottom Up. prociatnation informing the mine op-| JLinping of bullion from the country, | By - . iee e the S Thed = e said the forelgners on board the < Sioon TRCht Mot | exditos and stifkets A8 tigthe opsex- | o e | Prof. Karl Langlotz, ssle surviver | State department officials were In- | Susimes ] / ing bottom up was passed In the Car- | ti f mines in this district, wi 3 I TN vha m &/ Tamploo wanted refuge | ;15 20tL0% 1P Tras passed Frott O | eisnea strict, was | gARTHQUAKE VICTIMS fo the Faculty of Princeton, of fifty | dignant when it became known that was black with speotators. Win- o % . Years ago and famed as the composer | Vice Conaul Silliman and his clerk, Jo- o St haif completed steel frames | o\~ B, T Plasala T fonket __Now NUMBER 200. | 40 the music of Old Nassau, the bai- | seph A. Marcham. as well as several 5 of buildings were erowded, ssolution of Oyster Company. the e Bnquet of Fusilier Veterans. Recorded-for | tel Bymn of the University other Americans, had been imprisoned | + New ot 1§ e i Boston, May I1¥edural Juige Mor-| Guoen. — Ha could sor mers PS8 | Rogton, ‘May 11.—Speakers at_the | Largset Percentage Ev " | hopeless invalid. by the federal commander at Saltillo | state pask - (.r. "-“"".ucmm e ooy 110 tla‘tl!’-yo;mhufllod the {ecei:"gln o Bailing port. A lifeboat crew from | banquet with which the Fusilier Vet- Area Oovered by Disturbance. { and that the consul still is held, despite [ Hstemed > thousand 3 Seals] ster System to sell the =4 . ¢ 1 3 Tgent representations for his release | haw icn feet, held the crowd back on the | company's property within the court Sty L Y T ::t.“.f’,.a:;"f,‘,",‘;:’..‘g.";?fl‘.:‘,.”,v:l;.‘_!‘;f R Ay 11 —Tha ofeial | ek o ik ‘:?'A:‘rmf:iu‘.::::\;: the | piade by tne. Brazilian minister in | for state § 1 e : . =iy Central | Mexico City. despatches were ge- mony thers was ot a. sugEestion of | ine property o e an> Yoo parier Areund the Yaeht it was balloved: that 8l SEUTERets, o et s it Men i [ ustravea | e oiring tha S L e | o Tadioating that the Mexican | sion 1 oard many villages e eastern > ~|war minister's assurances to cation. sorder, on entered ity it | I0UPR, Va8 granted o the’ todersi Satea aamivied T the " aiebration, | Meunt Bena places the number at close | QUring companies to give e s | French charge last week that neither| Fiaza, 500 children sang Nearer. MY |The receivers, in their application. co. Steamship Arrivale. among_ them being the Putnam Pha- | 9, 200 God 1o Thee, pressed the belief that thel eamer 5 is said th. Lonsul Silliman nor any member of the ir operation | Glasgow, May 10—St Caledo- | lanx of Hartford, Conn., and the Gov. | This is to be the largest per- | MO staff. nor any other Americans embasy ulogised the | of the property weuld net earn enough | nia, New York, nor's Foot Guards of Miwon, [ St SUs asoeniall onsilectiiar the r in Saltillo “had been in danger.” ; smaliness o fthe arca affocted by the | The administration ramme met e dacetve: atate . the caissons | iy pay the indebiedneas. = whiymonth, My 11 Steamer Kaiser | Sonn. i v i its first serious setback in the spesial B hcialy s 1o the real stabd'ar i , B e b O L session orado _general E OBITUARY, xg'l:m May 6—Steamer Russia, Now Druggist Seld Luiquor lllegally, ——— ‘|“ 5 ‘:I :;’ 't;:‘ e _”"' 1 at Saltillo. T After this briet hait, the-eortege re- | Mayor General Charles B, Hal Sibalta, May 11_Steamer Panno- | g WA, Conn, May 1 oohn W, | e e o2 bin“eotaniont ate con . [ fortmation. concarning 4 progress to Man- - > . . guilt bill establishing a state constabulary, st e b 0 f orrotle A g his to ihe | Pertiand, Maine, May 11—Anneurice- New Youlc for Naples. o g L] B 4 the | B e e Me 11—Bteamer Rema, < and o sangs complained of hy the M shrd. The sestraine teac had [ment was made here of the death at | . ldsben. liquor and was Hn an on i Lo DTt to. Tho IS ehaucterizid the s n the buse | Washington - today of Major Gonaral | e, [ork and proceeded for . Mar- | on, cach county. Spain wes said by |\ R Wil ilday plea S S fness district gave 'vi; #s the' pro- | €harles B. Hall, U. S, A, retired. Gen- & his wife Saturday te have 3 ;un old. ool s e m-l-hu':m:r‘ i m:‘ou::t :“JK"J.' /Lightiisuss - Waa Dessrted.. fion proceeded through u-x‘ st | eral Hall, who was 70 years old and = but he showed up in town irday of Scheel Teacher.|death yesterday of Philip Lo “Tobes Isiand has net and_Brooklyn to storms ‘a native of this city, enlisted in a Steamers Reported by Wireless. . [might and was arrested. Herkimer, N. Y. May 11—The jury | and was held in $4000 bail for Fhe Dixie and some I it seemed the' pres- | Maine 3;"'.‘;.','%“:“"’“::«‘:..‘".: ST | tmoumet. Maes, Moy A Steamet 7 .| which will hear thie case of Jean Gia- May 19. -hored there a: = of the eclis the grief | break war i ‘Hamburg, Genoa for ork, = s - jchete A 3 ed the regular army, remaining in-the nlladm‘nfl_,untnt;:m!y .‘5,: E Te ec i a:

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