Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 25, 1914, Page 1

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Lightning and Wind Jause Sevoq Deaths and Wisconsin--Scores Injured _ infimnim' ‘THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS DAMAGE _Heavy Damage to Buildings Reported—Telegraph and Tele- phone Communication Between Many Cities Cut Off— Feared that Large Loss of Life Will be Revealed When Extent of Storm is Known. i JAGE TO CROPS 23—Seven deaths, scores of injured, crop damage amount- ing to thousands of dollars and heavy damage to buildings were caused in an electrical ‘storm that swept Minne- mota and Wisconsin from. the north- rwest today. " Communication ‘between many cities was cut off owing ;8 the ‘;:{a:tra.uon of telegraph and ‘telephone wires. o t that a still larger loss of life would beirevealed when the full extent of the storm is known. In Minneapolis, Miss Loretta Grams, Margaret Kelly and Louis were drowned when the wind over- turned their .canoce, “Esther Munson was killed when her home collapsed. Two deaths were reported Wis., when a barn in which a coun- try wedding was being celebrated was demolished. Another death was Tre- ported from Clarlake, ‘Wis. The storm struck Wetertown, 8. D with its full force late last night and demolished 300 bufldings composing sixteen city blocks. Scores of persons ed in and near Minneapolis, two fa- y and _a score more Seriously in- jured at Watertown, S. D., damage estimated at more than one million dollars with an almost cem- plete prostration of telegraph and tel- ephone communication, for a of hours, was the reported havoc today of last night's wind and raid,storm which swept over North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin. Apperently the storm struck with greatest severity at Watertown, where #t cut through a section of the city for sixteen blocks with a cyclonic force. Between 250 and 300 buildings were demolished. - Mrs. Carl Backlund and baby and Miss Marie E. Cleve were caught in the homes and poseibly fatally injured. In Minneapolis Esther Munson 17 years old, was killed when her home collapsed. ~ Louis Grams and Margaret Kelly were drowned when their canoe was blown over in Lake Loretta Grams of Jordan, Minn,, also was caught in a canoe swamped in Lake Harriet and drown- ‘were reported seriously injured. St. Paul, Minn., June 24.—Four kill- CONSTITUTIONALIST LOSS 18 -, SAID TO BE HEAVY 80 FAR A8 UNITED STATES AND “ HUERTA ARE CONCERNED. other _aviation > : : the German arm: today 1 4 (HVEN when Lieutenant yK':plbe “was Killed by FEDS Loss NOT the overturning of the aeroplane he o .wu xéll‘oflnt during a too abrupt land- i i tained b brobon Heols passensges, sus-| 1yq of Villa's Generals Are Reported Paris Letter Carriers on Strike. Wounded—Many Federails ‘m Paris, June 24—Six hundred letter| tured and Large Quantiy of Ammu- carriers of Paris had ‘?dny h.rrl:xd- 7 v . ed themselves within the central post| hition. office. of which they took possession et fi'g e:egng ';mso? =i O ay The temperature in Canada di rce placed in position mup:d %Ta:nu;m‘: Elpaso, Texas, June 24—Zacatecas,|., pejow freezing and it is feared that| Niagara Falls, Ont, Jun 24 —T by the authorities, wh a-|on importaant city of Central Mex!-|crops will be greatly damaged. for the composing of all i et g orities, who were consid-|co, fell into the hands of the comsti- aifr Spdang.of sl hmn-&:u g whether or not to storm the| tutionalists at sundown M than 1,000 erences between the United es yesterday, ac- persons witnessed | an. ey place and forcibly expel the strikers.| cording to announcement t b 4 irexico have been concluded. The ng tonight by | g game of baseball mch'wu played | conditions under which diplomatic re- Suttieshipe Sale Dotighls Grasen. | STEI, IS ST S5, T | mldnianin ioen 30,02 eumet W toaight ens, June 24—Great satisfaction| The constitutionalist losses were| Joseph K. The - | signea & a B"“ was expressed in political circles here | heavy according to an official des- layer who ;m m';:n:;:kb:'::. bil, the bg'm:aeuun £ O 1" from * today over the news that the United |patch. No mention was made of the|time, committed suicide by inbaling|tina and the "Amero ! an ant fil’en- States congress had authorized the | federal killed but it was sald many g.._' delegates. G = s sale of the American battleships Idaho | prisoners were captured with a large The character of th :fi;fl Mi-t-haiw! to Greece. The acqui- | quantity of arms and ammunition, J. W. Haas, who was arrested | not expected to arouse :m“fln‘nft - e ;:c’:re;he-&}:‘:a‘::: ‘V:‘uela :guf Villa Lacked Artillery. in mistake for J. Wilkes Booth, slay- | the constitutionalists who will uflm?} Vi o s g4 ‘-“::d Tuar- It was believed Villa’s lack of effect- | er of President Lincoln, died at Shamo- | cipate in and to a large degres mould key and thus prove a factor in main- | iVe mm";_yo ‘m‘;“:;‘{fi?n ioe g m:‘"’_f iepsin, P — :;lv?tuw““mgm N P i peace. 3 n rus e federal . tintvy ¥ infantry, taking the c!v‘;" bycn: v;rr:""cx"" d 1, ‘r"“ "“ 1":,"'; o sudden attack, which, according to the Y week against 1, BUTTE HAS QUIET DAY representatives, resulted in 'i{, cap- | deaths during the corresponding week AFTER NIGT OF RIOTING.| ture of a large portion of the garrison | last year. s e and its munitions. — 1l s ' e of th h ear sts at the T Facti Up to a late hour only one offic annaul convention e Sout! Miners’ Union M: ::u':“'.::h“ and no press messagés had arrived | Carolina Cotton Manufacturers’ Associ- Fooitla y urther| from the front. ation will be held at Chick Springs on| Cofncidentally with the action taken Celebration” at Juarez. s tonight it was announced that the lection of visional pres qtte Moty Tune T-Butte waa| e O o eicbration. Fie | g Sir Edward, French arcived st San | ident and ‘the srganization of the.me lung from . ernment which is considered caused by internal strife in the local "‘%b%:f:l&%:xmv‘gfluzg He is returning to Bngland by way of | purely internal Droblem, will be left mmers union, which cost the life of commander, and by Lasarc de la Gar- Canada. - to an informal conference of repre- € man, injuries to four others and za, Villa's 'axent here. It was signed —— sentatives of the constitutionalists— a heavy property loss. by el Oreaton B% command- | , Edward Wilson foreman of the Peek- | Luiz Cabrera, Rafael Zubaran - and Mayor Duncan, however, would not pi ‘G‘““" eTeon- The mm‘““‘e Tollows: skill Hat Manufacturing Co., of Peek- | Jose Vasconcelpe—and the delegates co! ‘Px?!?lge:utor::m‘al ll’:’e‘t‘:e:x: “I have the honor to communicate to skill , N. Y., vas killed an explosion | sent by General Huertat to the media- PROTOCOL NOW SIGNED There Will be No Further Sessions Until After the Two Warring “WMex- icans Factions Meet to Adjust In- ternal Problems. Triumph for Envoys. When a new provisional ernment is established to succeed th”.:t headed by General Huerta, the resuit of me- dlation—recognized as a triumph for Pan-American diplomacy—will becoms effective. $25,000,000 TO COLOMBIA IS BELATED BLACKMAIL. If Proposed Treaty is Right, United States Should Abandon Zone, Says Rooseveit. SHERIFFS MUST SERVE WARRANTS ON GUARDSMEN Attorney Genera Light Hands Down Decision at Request of Adj. New York, June ‘24.—In a lengthy statement issued by Colonel Rooseveit upon his arrival tonight on the Imper- ator, the former president declared that payment of §25,000,000 to Colombig for having secured the right to build the canal, as provided for in the pending treaty, would be the payment of be- lated blackmail. He said if the pro- posed treaty ‘is right, the presence of the United States in Panama is wrong and Panama should therefore stored to ' Col States should IMPORTANT RULING ON COMPENSATION LAW | Court Will Direct as to Errors of Law, Not Errors of Faot. Hartford, Conn., June 24.—Attorn General John H. Light today hand down an opinion at the request of Adjutant General George M. Cole of Connecticut National Guard, in which he holds that serve warrants on soldiers for neglect Mr. Cole complained that sheriffs fatled to serve warrants on militiamen for neglect of duty, al- lowing the pavers to expire on th sheriffs must The attorney the sheriffs do no i~ ] within~the sixty day dimit, they are i liable for the full amount of the fines neral says that if idon the zone. serve the warrants LIPTON'S CHALLENGER 18 BEING SLOOP RIGGED an of a boller. tion conference. the twe factions of the local union of | YOU that yesterday at § p. m. the mi. Y the Western Federation of Miners, but | POrtant city of Zacatedas was captured |y ., Zpaqky six yoars old, was struck No Formal Adjournment. , sald he would not ask for troops as| oY he ar on”oF the Borth.. We taok d ba b? k No formal adjournment of the me- ho believes the sheriff should make mg"fl"'mlfl“’fld‘ B ore B g o B S {iation will be_ taken, but’there will that uest. Th no - sessions “while the - take-nn;o wtlonet:heflfli' t};‘::ve::;._ has | There were large Josses on our side, | Street in New Haven. tives of the two warring rcpmruh::t?n “G 1 dad ri) as seri- Citizens looked to Governor Stewart oual;nvev‘:un-g:l ume::::l Maclovio | , Harrison Johnson, of Columbus, Mexico endeavor to arrive at an agree- at Helena for a solution of the trouble. " Mi celebrated his 1 iyt | Dot 0% the Dersaunal of the yew: wov. Charles H. Moyer, president of the | orera Was slightly wounded. Dy taking a phinge in the Sreakers ot | Srament. the agrarian and i « federation and others who were driven Atlantic City. = xeta e 2op i g from the Miners' hall under fire-ap- | PREPARING TO TURN OVER g P A T Al pe: 0 the governor at Helena to- e day for state control st Butte. BATTLESHIPS TO GREECE. | 1,c”sldest ministers of the Reformed | tors i e R et i o' 2 - x . ay for far, thmme ;snun;d c‘;"mm “ga:: Sale Price Believed to Be in Neighbor- grhl‘:'mv!i‘ck.“x. AJ'“""“" died at New | iho complete settlement of the difficul- not been brought into the eqntroversy. hood of $11,750,000. Sies b“'mun e m&nd It was officially annoumeed® that the The Messanabie, the Candaian Pa- | M¢Xico e of tae et mine owners have taken no part in| Vvashington, June 23—Navy officials | gific’s new steamer for Atlantic servi & Hoerta at Tampico to slute the factional fight, were busy today preparing to turn | was launched at Glasgow. The boaf | the Stars and Stripes which was de- Altogether, 280 pounds of dynamite|over the battleships Idaho and Missis- | is 13,000 tons gross. Toanded -as. reparation. fof' the. asrest was expioded In the strects Of Butte| SIDPi o the Greels government Final s of American bluejackets, lsst night in four hours.- The dyna- | action on the naval appropriation bill Mrs. Marguerite E. W. Westinghouse, The single outstanding proviso in mite was obtained by rioters from a | Which includes authofity for sale of | widow of George Westing house, the | L1¢, Protocol is that the international mine after the engineer had been | Ships, will be taken in a day or two |noted inventor, died at her country p;ob ‘efn L hé dectaped Silsited ‘on forced to lower the rioters to the pow- | and as soon as the president has sign- | home in Lenox, Mass. the eve of ilie mol Stuviiionsl. gov- der magazine. i ed the measure the department will be —_— frament ho Prolool Sits: GCh. One man stood in the middle of the|ready to order the transfer. o F. W. Russel, of Jamaica | , That the TUnited States and Argen- stroet in front of the Minerss Uniom| It is left to the president and the ns, L. |. reported to the police | in®& Brazil and Chile—the mediating hall, cut-holes in sticks, inserted caps|Secretary of the navy to name the |the disappearance of §10,000 worth of | COuntries—shall recognize the new D. Edward Tanjore Corwin one of Whether Change Will Be Permanent Depends Upen Result of Tests. Southampton, ‘England, J\m;v 24.—Sir Shamrock lenger for the America’s cup, is sloop rigged agaim, longersbowsprit and will have a big- than before. ‘Whether this change will be perma- nent depends upon the result of fur- ther tests of the challenger with the older Shamrock. Before the re-rigging was begun Shamrock IV another trial with Shamrock III {f a strong wind and a lively sea. The race, however, was abandoned after twelve miles had been covered, in order to avoid risks.of ac- cident to the challenger’s gear. Sham- rock IV was leading.at the time and had stood the severe. test Hartford, -Comn., June 24—Judge Bennett of the superior court today in respectt but retains ity compani Habfli previously. allowed a week for 312 making his ruling, the judge expressed a willingness to hear the testimony in relation to the appeal GOLFER “CUSSED” PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES Covered with Confusion When He Found Out Whom He Had Berated. ‘Washington, June 24—The story how President Wilson, golfing on a 1 cal green, sent a ball whizzing near - Steamship Arrivals. Fishguard, June 24.—Steamer Caro- nia, Boston for Liverpool Queenstown, June 24. bic, Boston for Liverpool. New York, June 24.—Steamer Caser- Hh‘\‘x;tklune 16.—Steamer Russia, teamer Ara- and fuses and then tossed the dyna- | S&le price, the intention being to fix | jewels from his home. rovisional government and that mite into the building. Pistol shots|this at the actual cost of construction 8 enceforth diplomatic relations be- Warned the crowds in the streets to|2nd equipment. This involves a rather | Official announcement was made Im | tWeen the United States and Mexice fall back when the fuses were lighted. | complex calculation, but it is believed | the House of Commons that the Bri- shall be resumed. No- attempt, was made by the civil|that $11,7750,000 will be about the tish Government had decided to re- | United States Demands No Indemnity, suthorities to stup the rioting. Mayor | figure, duce the income tax 2 per cent. That the Uniteq States demands no Duncan the opinion that ‘WIth the vessels will go most of the Voulbely: et Gon iDE indemnity and does not further exact more serious trouble was averted by |Supplies now aboard and a full stors| . m““’co“' “"?."""“"' Y | satisfaction for any of the incidents not making arrests. Charles Hender- | Of Coal to earry them to their destina- | (v NEReTet T m’f:"_. Wmm‘“" connected with the patrol of Mexican son, a former sheriff, as chairman of | tions. N oy mt L ® speak- | waters and invasion of the country, & citizens’ committes, went to the po-| According to the tentative plan of mmencetent dinner. That a commission shall be appoint.. lice station at one o'clock this morn-{ transfer, the Idaho which is now at Thieves cut a hole In th ind of ed to adjust private claims growing ing and colplained of the inactivity | Gibraltar will be sent northward to| o Borg -‘:',. - @ in the window out of the revolution and interna- of the police. Henderson said he| Gravesend, England, where she will be land, ': J '};"‘ at Cleve- | tional incidents, . found seventeen policemen in the sta- | met by the battleship Alabama, now in | o hedm t“:z“;go‘ L 2riom) ;" and hook | The protocol was drafted early to- tion and that thirteen of them were | Feserve ‘l-:‘l:l:kl’hi{-l%elpm; navy yard, | Ot TUNL. ONIh o8 Demee ?lywlng' its Dhrasesology telegraphed playing cards. ‘which w! e of er personnel, in- One hundred and ty-one indict- 0 ashington for approval cluding the Annapolis midshipmen Rt WS SRt ed‘w':t' Ottawa, Tl At 9 o’clock tonight word came from ROOSEVELT VIGOROUSLY now on their summer cruise. The Ida- | goningt John E. Hartenbower, president President Wilson and Secretary Bryan ho will be manned by a Greek naval | 2%} roiled Tonica Exchange Ban authorizing the American d to DEFENDS G. W, PERKINS cra\;. i sign it Th; Mexican delegation had * The ississippi, now at Penascola, not expected so prompt a response. Declares He Has Been the Most Use- | will be sent to a northern navy yard |n|’1‘¢: Em’,m,:c::.liwlzufldv{,:' h‘"' . Naon, the minister from Argen- ful Member ‘of Progressive Party. |Probably/Boston, to be stripped of the | band as he entered her home. gl:; o e ithetn $al aerapautic appliances that encumber | claimed her husband threatened to at. | LP2t there would be a full com noe. New York, June 24.—Upon his ar- | her-deck and superstructure. Her | tack her. rival here tonight on the Imperator, | Personnel will be transferred to the Theodore Roosevelt vigorously de- | North Carolina, now in reserve at Bos- fended George W. Perkins_ - ohairman :‘"1 "::d greek sailors will be on hand of the prosressive national executive | to e her across the Atlantic. deal Y i committee, whose resignation as chair- The possibility of an actual outbreak und:: 'm,o‘,:: e°; ,_K:tfig:;',mh:':o;g“:: man was demanded recently by Amos | of hostilities between Greece and Tur- | Boston. Pinchot, who declared that Mr. Per- | key is being considered in connection Louis Elguero, one of the Huerta del- egates, was several miles away at din- ner, when the conference was called. He made a hurried trip in an auto- mobile and upon his arrival the con- ference began. WHERE DECLARATION OF Bottle openers, shoe 'Ilonn. cork screws and fans, distributed by liquor Palermo, June 17.—Steamer Patris, New York for Piraeus. London, June 24—Steamer Ausonia, ident of the United States and then, in the chagrin and confusion, made profuse apojogies, had a sequel today ‘Wilson and the other ifer exchanged letters, one an ab- apology and the other an ac- coupled with a frm . president that bhe was within his rights under the of the ga.ma the club wers me&- ing ‘to take some action against the “cumsing” member when he wrote his pelogy Plymouth, June 24—Steamer Cleve-~ land, Bosten for Hamburg. Havre, June 24—Steamer La Prev- ence, New Yo! Rotterdam, June 23.—Steamer Kursk, I New York for Libau. Liverpool, June 24.—Steamer Victo- pres: s $800,000 Fire Loss at Manchester, N. H. N. H, June 24—Loss | estimated at $800,000 had been caused up to 8 a. m. today by a fire which destroyed the five-story brick building of the John B. Varick Company, hard- ware, jewelry and photographic sup- ply dealers, on Elm street, and a three- story brick annex, and had spread to an annex of Manchester, Investigation ‘of Nicacaraguan Treaty. ‘Washington, June 34.—Investiga! into the negotiaations of the prop Nicaragua will begin on ore ths BSenate Aerial Guard of Honor, Vienna, June 24.-—An escort of twen- ty aeroplanes flying mourning flags and manned by aviators from several nations, formed a flying guard of hon- or at the burial today of the nine Aus- officers and men killed in the air catastrophe a few miles from Vien- na on Saturday. President to Receive Suffragettes. Washington, gaimed control the republic. The heartngs will not be- pubdiic. y Beclined to Authorize Sale of Pope Co. 24.—President Wilson today agreed to receive on June 30 a deputation of 700 woman suffragists representing the organized club women of the country, headed by Mrs. ?‘rv:y W, . Wiley. h‘l‘lmy will press for his support to the suffrage constitutional amendment, Westinghouse Directors Reelected. eourts had never allowed its receivera to indulge in financial spec- R. 1. Republican State Chalrman Re- R, I_June 84—Charles vésigned th £ state ecentral ie has heid since the ufacturing cemipany, meeting in New iscussed the strike con- ditions at Bast Pittsburgh and voted to approve the position taken by the officers in the situatien. The pres- ent officers were reelecteq for the en- Providenes, A, Wilsen today York today, d Filipine Mess Boy Now in Vera Cruz. e AN i gy M Ere- e no mess bo; Of the battleship Florida, who wany dered out of the lines on May 6 and by the federal troops, ‘here today under the escort ction of Lumber in United States. : June 24—Approximate- % oition £ annuall feet of Jumber of all kinds in the United to the forestry ser- amount 25 kins’ affiliation with certain big bus- | with the arrangements for the sale of Th issi INDEPENDENCE WAS REA iness interests made him unfit to hold | the ships. In the event of actual war olln; m%&fnfl"mm f;; = * - hh_sml pontlioul e b 3:_!”-.0'1’!:::;' &e:l:ruauon fily eitm;: May-Mott-Lewis liquor law limiting | Excavations Being Made to Locate e colonel reite; e e could no shi ts to i e not be a candidate for governor of | consummated or the ships delivered | at :mtT:x:. @575 e okt s o"“”“"y__m.:h'hd.lpm.' New York this fall, without a violgtion of neutrality, lvv‘h:ln l?:dbout{:gh the Imperator the: colon: a s t touwch of fever.|w Forty-eight hours later he had another FANEEn PFOPHET LAMONT attack which was more severe. The KILLED BY AIR LINE TRAIN. last tjme he had a fever of 105, he A I said, 234 was forced to remain in his | Became Confused While Crossing rooms, Tracks N Mi own. The colonel said he would speak at s e P Philadelphia, June 24 —Excava- Richard J. Hartman, 46 years old of | tion was siarted today in historical Tenafly, N. J., former president of Ty- | Independence square in an effffort to son & Co., ticket agents of New York, | locate the foundations of and obser- was held in $2,500 bail on a charge | vatory tower from which #t is sald the of perjury. Declaration of Independence was pub- < — lcly promulgated and the former ex- United States District Attorney |istence of which had not been gem< French filed a suit at Boston against | erally known. The digging s being done fifty-five feet south of the east wing of Independence hail It is at this point, according to the data fur- nished by Wilfred Jordan, curator of Pittsburgh, June 30. - “T had to have Middletown, Conn.,, J —] il S Al e une 24—Richard | the Boston and Maine Railroad to re- cause the after-effects of the fever I fi}l::;;lt‘ ;vho ;ieg‘vgth "li:cle Honedh " | cover $500 for alleged cruelty to ani- n in redicting e weather, | mals in transi: . ;?ntmmm”iieBzél )‘e"!l‘thl"! '?l&:k :; was Kkilled tonight by an Air Line sl Y 3 s effect w train on the New York, New Haven Miss M A. Stevens, a bli 1], that the old observat probably lbl:t for some months and I}and Hartford Rpilroad near his home | school u:.l‘?;r in uflno: Me., ::r !: :::nthe:l.. 5 rr A AT T L :?a.ll ng( able mt.im ip the open | in the Staddle Hill district. He ap-|years and for 19 years head of the it is generally believed that e mr an mmmm.ker'ee oo mw‘vube apgllfldntg parently became confused while cross- | department of English l:\ms High | Declaration of Independence was read Sive: el -huw bcceheg | In& the tracks. The train stopped, and | school commited suicide. from the steps of Independence hall, er a numl| of speeches | brought him to this city, his death oc- — but Mr, Jordan declares that records in P R o A s Three persons were killed and a indoors. curring on the train 4 his possessi show that John Dizom *has been, on the whole, the most Mr. Lamont was 81 years old and | fourth seriously injured when an au-|read the w‘::flnl.flon from the bal- i o + was a veteran of the Civil War. He | tomobile was struck by a Pere Mar- | cony of the observatory on July § and n.lofulty & mbem‘h:‘ :vpflo‘;mlthi e Dtl“ was a farmer by occupation. Of late | quette passenger train at Hales Cross- | not on July 4. le‘ll‘:?:d amg«::t,;n H. has | Years he achieved notorlety through |ing near Greenville, Mich. re ARl TR N TR Strtven in absolutely good faith for | Lio,iocal Press by making weather pre- MRS. JESUP LEFT MILLIONS the principles of n,yg party. both dictions. He “poked fun” at the pre- uel J. Graham, assistant at- relicds . Sorvoretions s ol - busineas | dictions made by Horace Johnson, the ¢ general " of the United States, TO PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS generally and as regards the group of Middle Haddam seer: and his predic- | left Washington for Flint, Mich, to Suestions dealing with the welfa:z Of | tions were usuaily contrary to those | address the annual meeting of the | American Musoum of Natural History the wage elrner‘;.nd Sée. Sconosiic. i “K‘:Ll e"aov'l:’:“:"&mm O 3 Michigan Bar Association. the Greatest Beneficiary — Gets out o ‘the party, whem that ta° dong, | Meriden. Ceptain Mark L. L — they will have to read me out, t00.” k last of the six brothers who New York, June 24—By winl of o e s e < raael iy Suit for Loss of Spoonfui of Brains. | famous as commanders of coasting | Mrs. Morris K. Jesup, as flled AIRSHIP ALSO PROVES of brains, Irv- land, ,Me., at the age of 90. e..guolg L. I, June 34—TFor the al- | Ye58els and steamboat, died at Rock- | millions of dollars are left to TO BE GOOD WATERSHIP | [o8°Q loss of & spoonful et 3 o ;beansultin| w G Gorgas, surgeon-general of z superi i Hydroplanes Have Been Fitted to Hull | SiBTI0%, SOuLt today for $60.000 dam- | 4y United States Army, was decorat- of Flying Boat America. York city and Long Island, v's ed with a gold medal by the Americen 5 s counsel contends that the brains were | Medical Association in Hammondsport, N. Y., June 24— | removed after the chauffeurs skull | M8 Work in the Panama Canal Zone. Lieutenant Porte, accompanied by | was fractured by the explosion of George Hallett, James Lamont and | gascline tank he was repairing at the Geerge, Robinson, flew about fifteen | defendant's coun home. ce the miles tonight in the ‘Wana- | accident, fl?.nflt[fl avers he has been mentally impaired. — og i hydroplanes were fitts Just aft of the step-and these proved Warrant Issued for Arrest of Ty Cobb. of material value in helping the ma- | Wetreit, Mich.,, June 234—A warraat e to rise quickly frem the water, ollowing t, Sumner Russ Hollander, and Wil G-.s‘ls, persenal representatives of Mr, . joined Lieutemant Porte and Hallett, Lamont and Robinsen in the machine and went for a short trip. Ne at- tempt was made to rise from the wa- ter on their spin. —— e Bill to Prevent Tipping. 7 ‘Washington, June H——led to port- - ers and waiters Steam’- Holl; ;s = — boats in interstate resuli t"' fi“mmm‘l‘:”mm“ gt prohibited by a bill l{troduoed today | days Y. by Senator Works, At the same time, nu:nm died in his today. League flag raising and no effert will be mdde to serve the warant until he returns. . Male Hunger Striker Dies.

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