Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 9, 1914, Page 1

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WOULD MeAN SEVERE LOSS TO RAILROAD Are Very Different. from Anything that Was Contemplated, They Say—Stamping of Stock With State’s Right of Purchase is Objectionable Point—Would Make Shares Unsaleable—Government’s Anti-Trust Suit May be Filed This Month. ey St ‘Washington, July 8~—The govern- necessary to take the public inte his ment’s anti-trust suit for dissolution of | confidence later. the New Haven railroad system may | Statement to Stockholders. yet be avoided if the New Haven's of- | New York, July 8. —Although men- i 1 | aced with the institution of a govera- ficials will accept the terms of a bill | [ -he anti-trust suit for the dissolu- for .the separation of the New Haven | tion of the New Haven railroad $ys: and the Boston and Maine, passed by | tem, thotd:rec;t:re lor lfi:.'ltd r;n.d pai: ”: statement to e stockholde! the Massachusetts legislature ?)elore it} unanimously today declared ithat th mdjourned Tuesday night, Officials here | Now Haven cannot carry out the regard it as not improbable, however, | March agreement with the department that the suit may be filed 'some time o& Jjustice providing for the appoint- this month, in . accordance with the | mént of liquidators for the Boston and original understanding between Attor- | Maine because of the conditions at- ney Gemeral McReynoids and Chair- | taching to the sale passed by the man Elliott of the New Haven board. | Massachusetts legislature’ on Tues- BMr. McReynolds agreed to hold off the | day. suit .while the railroads and state came | Copies of the statement were sefit 10 “an agreement, but not later than | to Governor Walsh, to the president of this month. | the senate and speaker of the lower Governor Walsh, while at the White | house and the chairman of the public House today to ugn a federal ;ppro- service commission of Massachusetts. priation for the Salem fire sufferers, | No Right to Accept ‘Conditions. discyssed the New Haven situation : briefy with President Wilson and At- “fzem‘““ofu:xlpzmgvm% g:‘tihe: Seshey Chmmial MBS soits, | that ogniitions Giposed by the Megshcd It was _understood _tonight that | t1at condition po: v, = b R v |MRS CARMAN CHARGED WITH BEING MYSTERIOUS ASSASSIN WOMAN SEEN ON LAWN e T R Authorities Find Insurance Agent Eye Witness—Heard Report—Saw Wem- an Hurrying Away From Wlni.&.r Vanitie Led-All thé Way—First Across Paris, July 8—The opposition of the French ¢hamber of deputies to Fremch official participation in the Panama A * AR et R I A et | The e buling o, the Souny /, Wl N an un- it the cup was d uswally full chamber .voted for the 7 the ac- ‘,,"'n*,.':;'.m of $40,000. appropriation of $400,000. e - —_— MASSACHUSETTS GOVERNOR APPEALED TO PRESIDENT. ) lowance by 1 minute and 18 seconds. id to. Get $2 " for| Resoluts Came Up With the Breeze. ‘Sought His Aid to. Gnt $200,000 for . miles from the finish of the at whom the 5 “Salém Rolief. [ 3¢ mile windward and leeward course plc‘m‘n'clon . Washington, July S—Governor Walsi the Vanitie bad the o e been pointing of Massachusetts, urged President ; ing up a freshening breeze, cut the lead | Wilson today to lend all assistance | .%o ~ochrane yacht to 30 seconds at possible in getting from congress an line. fiance, the third cup appropriation of $300,000 for the relief | the line - The Defance, o O noon 3 of the Salem fire sufferers. The &0V-| opon ~ghe wae scarcely outside the “ at @ { ernor _told the president the situation harbor, when two of her aluminum B she will remain until Monday, when - | she will be taken out and - at Salem was very serious with more Halliard blocks gave way, drop- 3 3 and again ex than 17,000 people out of work and m her gaff about 10 feet and putting 3 :;l.hu»d bydfll;o ioxvnc.:.y b.:nhr: whom '.l;'.‘h.et ;fimmfdp;;m tt‘l,y ud-in in | Der ““‘;; 'NE - I“M |onfonr “m‘;:z. s raigned tpday, after her lrmtnln -t!:; oport. B room. where Mrs. Bail every way within his power. ey died. Governor Walsh was accompanied to | """ Vanitie Won Day’s Honers. Mrs. Carman Col the White House by Representative 5 lapsed. Gardner. Despite the action of the "“flm Clmun x nerve is shattered, for house appropriations committee in re- ola jan eel-barred door of the Mine- fusing to approve the request for the Bex et c.l.noed“ fbohlnd her she pulled appropriation, they thought i® possibie g 3 vy vell from her face and broke to get congress to act. long desired to see the yachts eou: 3 S After leaving the White House, | Pete. Members of the committee fol- Augustus of Boston, Mase., Governor Walsh called on Vice Presi- | 10Wed the yachts and were uncommit- | wag killed when his automobile skid- dent Marshall, Speaker Clark and Sen- | t3l, but the general opinion in yacht- | je3 and everturned.on a newly oiled ator Martin chairman of the senate |ing circles tonight seemed to be that | oagway. 4 appropristions committee, to get their | the Vanitie won the day’s honors, that x she is a much improved yacht and that Thomas Justice of the immediate . " port. . a President. Wilson feels that the New | Chusetts legislature were “so different [ SUBBOTE -« 0 = (o |the trial races are likely to develop: the | pegce. of Patimen, N was fned | was the testimony siven thls mormmme i templated” Haven officials should have accepted | fom S wea oty the effort of the Massachusetts legis- | ?‘;flt:;;‘;‘ m‘g agregment b?'::j%:f lature, and that he fully approves the | (5 {00t “; i"’mwn The determination of Mr.. McReynolds to |35 Whrs Dessed by, the drestores F0S proceed with the dissolution suit. « B hoddints rltied e I the Wies It was understood that some de- | ffl: directo: 'toham.’hgvs not. the partment of justice officials look upon | f s e B e s the refusal of railroad men to accept | ..o eytm. > acceg " the Massachusetts action as a plain| jon% TOF 1o wecommend at?ckhm ¥iolation of the agreement between | mem;?_;f & % Chairman Elliott, attorneys of the Néw | % < 3 o Haven and Mr. McReynolds, made sev-| Cmm::'flhn! the h‘u‘n lnttun; mhm 4 eral monthis ago for the purpose of | pOT that the -Mma.inp(; ok itk the :’;"{fi‘e"“m’;?m & peaceful dissolution | giitement that the state reserves the {ight at any time to purchese it ‘at & The Massachusetts Act. ; Price fixed by agreement or by a court The act just passed by Massachu- setts, as explained 'here, gives the ' made to the state at the time of the Boston Railway Holding company formation of the Boston Holding com- mecessary authority to sell the Boston . pany, the directors say that the com- &nd Maine stock, but does not affect} pany gave its consent to a provision the reserved right of the state to pur-. for state comtrol of the sale in return ehase it, and provides that this right ' for an agreement that it might hold shall be stamped across the face of the shares, afid thereby make the Bos. stock sold So far as is known here, ; ton and Maine rgilroad a part of the XNew Haven criticism of the amend- New Haven system. ment is based upon the sfamping of the stock, and department officials are wunderstood to be at a loss to explain ‘why the road should find this an in- surmountable obstacle. Officials are said to feel that tihe| Concerning the stamping of the| New Haven opposition is based upon | shares, the directors say: technicality and not on a failure of | “This condition makes the shares e department to live up to the disso- | unsaleable atid plgees the company in Bution agreement. tI is probable that ' a worse position than if it were com- this view will be set before the New 6 pelled to s®\ them by a decree of the Haven officials by Mr. McReynolds be- federal court after ‘the decision of all gore suit is filed and he may find it questions against the company.’ 'w,y%t inot give that for which the ck 'was paid,” the directors say, addressing the commonwealth of Mas- sachusetts. TRAIN RAN INTO SECRETARY OF STATE WASHOUT IN VERMONT TO WED STENOGRAPHER Gully 20 Feet Deep Bellow Central | Announcement of Engagement May Be Lentral Vermont Tratk=—Ten Persons Expected Within a Few Weeks. Hurt. 3 Hartford, Conn,, July 8—Formal an- Sheldon, Vt, July 8—Ten persons | touncement, it was learned tonight, #weref injured when a Central Vermont | may be expected within a few weeks, #rain ran into a washout near Sheldon | of the engagement of Secretary of Bprings last night. The: acoident hap- ; State Albert Phillips, and Miss Pauline pened in what is known as Chadwick | D. Kempner of this city, a stenogra- Cut. [ DJ In the secretary's office. It was The railroad had been washed away | St#led by Mrs. Kempner here tonight ®y a rainstorm, leaving a gully twenty | that her daughter was in New York on feet deep below. the tracks. The engine | leave of absence, would be away prob- assed over but was derailed on the |ably for several weeks, and that formal rther side of the gap.” Then the a8nnouncement of the engagement tracks gave way beneath the weight | Could be expected on her return. of the tender. The tender did not| Secretary Phillips declined to dis- fall, however, as it was telescoped by | CuSs the matter in any way. If the the baggage car in such a way as to | eNgagement were a fact, he said, the gorm an arch across the gully. announcement of it should properly The fireman was badly scalded, and | come from the parents of the young mail clerk was hurt. The engineer | Woman. aggageman, and six passengers re- T T e geived minor injuries. All were taken ; TAKING BIRD CENSUS. 40 a hospital at St. Albans today. Volunteer Enumerators Assisting DEPENDS ON ANALYSIS euEal OFicun. OF SUPPOSED BLOOD STAINS, | Washington, July $—Officers of the « | Biological Survey in the Department - of Agriculture'hope soon to be able to Btamford Coroner’s Report May Be announce an accurate count of the Ready This Week. birds in the United States. Returns -~ from some of the hundreds of nature- Stamford, Conn., July 8—Possibility | lovers who have enlisted as volunteers t the inquest of Coroner John J.|enumerators have been coming in, re- helan on the death of Waldo R. Bal- | flecting an enthusiastic interest in u may be closed in'a few days, per- | the count. aps by the end of the week, was said { The counting has been ' going on fonight to rest largely on whether the | since June 1, and was to have-ended port of the analysis on supposed |July 1, but it probably will be some lood stains found in and near the |time before the last of thé returns are *firtment of Mrs. Helen M. Angle, |in and announcement is! made of the 0 is under arrest in connection with | total bird population. The: us will e case is submitted to the coroner not include the varieties own as within a day or two. Ballou died of | 8ame birds, but in all- other re- # fractured skull after a visit to Mrs. (SPects it will be as thoroligh -and as Angle’s rooms. well classified as is practicable. Pre- The coroner said tonight he hoped | Vious estimates by the bird experts have the report on the stains short- | Were that there were 880 main. species , possibly Friday. He could not say | of birds in the United States and Can- definitely, however, whether with this |ada. report in hand, he would close the in- : quest. It was believed here, however, Constitutionalists Will ‘Not Confer, that such may be his action. Washington, July 8.—Border . des- filitsctge:v s‘:fdu‘ng that the conutivtxtlon- 01 not accept the imvitation AUTOMOBILIST PLEADS of the mediators for informal peace GUILTY TO MANSLAUGHTER | conferences with rcpresentatives of General Huerta were partially confirm- L. B. Kautz Fined $400 Without Costs | © here tonight by persons in close —Law Violation Technical One. “"fi?};.’;'mzfiifi?’a‘ifi"flfl' Cabrera, ;:c'ew Hm‘ene.dConn., July z:l.ouis B. 3‘::8";? &?‘:fir‘f!’gminent ‘Wm' utz, charg with manslaughter as , bhad A= result of a collision between his an- | fa o ol on the subject, but word that a majorit: oblle and a wagon driven by John | gencrais b0 apen. (e Constitutionalist 1 lan for cenfer- Horn near Morris Cove last March, in | ences had b & hndwdlu.) which Horn received - injuries from m-o:id it, &o;;ugx:;tte&en informed which he died, pleaded guilty to the | sources. peharge in the criminal superior court - i On recommendatis £ , . on o] < state aitorney who said he regarded Stray Shots Struck U. S. Gunboat, the violation of the law as a technical { Washington, July 8.—Recklessly fir- pne, Kautz was fined $400 without|ing Dominican 1s sent several costs. 7 b shots against the hull of the Ameri- y = g&nb;::r;boa&hl:taet;m: in Puerta Plata . s¢y | harl ate night, and drew u Mexican Mutineers “Now in Eternity.” | 70 08 e 8 warning volley n Vera Cruz, July 8—Only forty mén | the Machias' three pounders and aute. involved “in- the revolt matic rifles. The shooting from shere federal o stopped at once. ~ $2,000 Loss in Ellington Fire. e, Conn, July 8—A large Hngton, with s contents, sacluding o h 4 a large number of e i is but a recognition of the concession |- “lt.is mot just to retain the vfle--.uva:-h: whils giving no decistve word, the Government for relief. tack. Fut to windward Captain Haff| Arthur Bailey Blanchard, recently *| figure. directly in the transaction. ‘The | them over the rail of the Resolute, In | residents. e utom in | by Ellwood T. Bardes, an insuranee amendment to the sundry bill to ap- ‘best yachting of the seasom up the $25 for speeding his a: obile ‘propriate the $200,000. ¢ cup races in Septembér, Brooklyn. el o oo SRR Captain Haff Secured Advantage. crim <sevbnth 1 conven- e. Bardes is under lock and ke; BULLY DAY OF REST The gale of the past two days was| . The forty-seveath annual conven- 4 L] : FOR ROOSEVELT.| beginning to subside when the three | . o, = opened at St. Jokns, New ok . K Maine Delegation Asks Him Not to ‘The preliminary signal was sounded — said they I-re?l.n uun:nt“u. ba Run For Governor. at 1130 and two minutes later the Frank Breitner, of Petersburg, Mich., | made to get him out of the mé't'.‘fi}:‘.. - Resolute had trouble with her fore 1 Oyster Bay, N. Y., July 8.—After his | staysail and lost several valuable min- ;",:,,‘ &'.‘ .::.,:- :”':Q:m.h near crowded dey of conferences with pro- | utes fixing it. The warning signal bad | v " r 10g, gressive leaders at national headquart- | been blown when she came up to N s N Bardes’ story, ers in New York, Colonel Roosevelt| Wrestle with the Vanitie for the bet-] . . \w Munter, of Camden, N. J. At 7.30 o’clock reached pore Hill at 8 o'clock to- tuerbo‘rvt.h. o fl:;oll!:o..n ‘T:n‘_ um:; died after 21 epileptic fits caused by a | murder, Bardes - ever, - :llfl:t, ',c’!.ylnl e had had a “bully day the =, ~ o= forced to &-b?’mt:“;'lu A delegation from Maine, with Hal- | 8ive way to Captain Haff on the Vani- bert P. Gardner, progressive candidate | tie, crossing in a bad place three sec- | . .o oo cutter rigging, the Sham- for governor at thé head, urged Colonel [ Onds astern. The breeze hitting the| L v oooisy defeated the Shamrock Roosevelt to decline to make the race | big. mainsail of the Vanitle back-| 70 " "1t "or the trial races off for governor. . Mr. Gardner urged ' winded the Resolute as the two yachts Southampton. that the colonel ought to save Mmseul CRESMAC this: Has..40; tL SV Iptter Lot l What He Saw. briefly told, s this: on the of the Y determined to pay mmdhhm‘ fl;lt to Dr. Carman, “} ow o dress a minor ifjury one of his heels. % ® a fire cracker at him . for the presidential fight in 1916, when | mediately tacked off for wind | The body of Sir Denie Anson, the r - | This board was held only a minute and - the pro'r.?‘allves. the ::o'untry over ex: o ~rly o Resoluth flung | YOURE Bfl'.h baronet, who jumped in- Thames River aft: party, @ardner ‘left he sald the |around and started after the fleéing r‘:.th:..- _;'-,.‘_ % &Y = Work will be on laying a cable New York and Panama e of 2,500 miles at oAy States battieshi| and arrived at GI Vanitle. Vanitie Made Better Weather. The yachts sailed nearly 12 miles gradually had conveved the impression thdt he fould not run for the governorship. Colonel Roosevelt due sovih with the breéze Maine delegation to make a three day les and with trip throzh their state, beginning on | o tmep il Miting the starboard bows. Labor day. 3 It was soon seen that tthe.Vn.nme‘wn.lh.n flnfl' u‘f'.'.'.'f A E FLOE .y making better work of the seas sou i WARNING OF FLOOD. *| the Resolute. The E‘rdll‘lu nh?t men on bm‘:d -~ Railraad President Says Colorado | {e Resajute mads. more fuss. wnder | o "t eane River Threatens California. her. lee bow and appeared to plunge| Eleotric fans have been installed in Tipped Off District Attorney. . into them. the First Presbyterian Church at the last witness to take the San Francisco, July 8.—The entire The Vanitie held fully as high and | Montclair, N. J., Ice water and paper stand before the inquest was ended. Imperial valley in southern California | footed quite as:fast as her rival so|cups will also be supplied. Wwas aiscovered onmly ¥ His is threatened by flood waters of the | that the two -yachts sailed more than story inight still remain untold had he Colofado: River, according to a state!an hour hard “on the starboard tack of Genesoo, | & o o tioned it Arst 0 & Wt Reho ment made today by President Wil- | wichvat either gaining an advantage - urged to become a condi- llara Sproule, of the Southern Pacific | of more tnan a few seconds. date for Unn.dnll:nhnl o::-htor. to sue. m‘fi:‘z’dl‘:trnlet?” Tecently returned Resolute Missed the Mark. ceed Senator u s “Conditions are more threatening| Then came the Resolute's second| A 200,000,000 pound decrsase in the now, and will be more so if not at- | mistake, the first being her loss of po- | tobacco crop is indicated, a total crop tended to,” he said. “If there'is any | sition at the start. Believing that he | of 733,000,000 pounds being estimated Siatrint attorn temporizing with the difficulty, an ex- | was overstanding the windward mark, | by the government report. ey. penditure of $1,500,000 will have to| Mr. Adams tacked to port at-13.57, fol- Strengthen Mother’s AlTbL. be made” . lowed 10 seconds later by the Vanitle.| Four hundred priso Bardes testified today after Mrs. Sproule declared\ the Southern Pa- | As the yachts neared the buoy it was| Charlestown State Prison- at Boston, | Carman's 12 year old daughter, Fis- cific could not afford to spend any |Seen that those on the Resolute had|have contributed $288 for the rellef | gheth, had tried to strengthen hee more money to control the Colorado m a miscalculation and that the | of the Salem fire sufferers. mother's alibi, and representatives River. He urged a united appeal 'to covld not be reached on that the manufacturers of the tel b B the Venitie stralght for | appointed A n Minister to Haiti, instrument had told of seiltng de. i P - FORECAST OF NEW the buoy. The Resolute drove by the| grrived at Havana and will proceed nt:l‘lt: ltthlan !g'}::::.. (‘!’:‘r:vng"":- to his new post immediately. ton after spending an hour studying e the testimony of Bardes and other = coming - heart” te robbers to 930 Million Bushels—June Weather | few mirutes it was a question whether pmm.v..w. = wmhmmP. Ellett, of ;:‘“:m he'z?!::umupont mlm":"“flhfy‘ Was_Most Favorable. the Resolute would force the Cochran ! Branchville, N. J. after they had rob- that Louise Bailey came to her Geath by yacht about or go under her stern. the postoffice of $2 in pennies. Washington, July 8.—Thirty millon | The Vanitie proved her worth by | cc % e bushels of wheat were added to fhe | crossing under the Resolute's bow| An accident to a New York Central | Conct fired into her body with 2 re- prospects of the crop during June by | with a hundred yards to spare and a freight train between Oneida and Can- "’g:'nf‘t:”or:’!"“fl °lmn.“c rman’s ar- astota mark to leeward and then tacked to RECORD CORN CROP | starboard for it, meeting the Vanitie up on the port tack. For a| :fi ub?um mg{" mndlh tions, mak- | few moments later wore around the blocked all four tracks for | yeet tl forecast tl crop as an- | lurn. eral hours. No one was hurt. nounced by the dep: ent of agri- The times of rounding the outer _ culture, 930,000,000 busheis, a new rm were: Vanitie 1.51.46; Resolute Spopes, a Blackfoot Ind ecord. -52.31. - The acreage planted to corn this Lively Tars on the Resolute. % year was only slightly less than that Th was livel rk each ht | was pardoned by President Wilson. the mother said: of last year while the condition of |in “gfn‘ lplnm\ie;:oon ?im m’:fi"_ — “If Mrs.. Carman is gufity, God help that crop was one per cent. better | and the tars on the Resolute beat out The ine and four coaches of | her. If she is Innocent may God help than the ten year July 1, average |those on the Vanitie by 10 eeconds. | train 35, New York to Chicago on the | her. This murder has broken up a condition, making the prospects good | The Resolute soon began to close up | Pennsylvania Railroad were derailed | very happy home.” ° for a crop estimated by the depart- |the gap, but before she had gained | near Altoona, Pa, No one was injured. Upon the arrival at the jail, Dr. ment at 2,863,000,000 bushels. enough to cut the Vanitie’s wind the o— Carman alighted from the automobils would be better than the average for | latter smothered her spinnaker and A bill introduced by Representative | with his wife’s suit case, took her arm the last five years. estward. and led her down a papsy-bordered Mhm to the steps of the jail. The bar- “May God Help Her™ n, servi ‘When Mrs. Duryea, the dead K wo- a liés tarin for murderin the Federal | man's mether and her husband, Will- Hospital for the Insane at Washington, | iam D. Bailey, were told of the arrest, T started luffing out to the w Park of Georgia, would prohibit trial o o g T g o Vanitie Half ile Ah judges in Federal courts from instruct- PAYS FOR BATTLESHIPS anitie Half a Mile Ahead. ing juries what verdicts they should Four miles from the committee tug | render. Secretary Daniels Receives Check for :’l:e gulgtnfly ‘llnlt ;oaflo ahead of o e 3 . e gt e prepared 12,535,275.96 of Greece e Resolute, and as were mov- A statue + Abraham nooin was er, she was en ‘warden's $ froen Mpene ol 9 ing rather slowly before the decreasing | ynveiled in Frognor Park, Christiiana, | quarters on the top floor. Thers her ‘Washngton, July 8—The sale of the | breeze, it looked as if the Cochran| Norway, by Miss Dorothy Hanna, | “pedigree” was taken and she was battleships Mississipp! and Idaho for | ¥acht had savegd her 1 minute and 46 | Gaughter of the Governor of North | piaced in the care of the matron who use in the Greek navy was consum- | S¢conds time wiiich she allows the flag | Dakota. gave up her own room to the prison- mated todey by the delivery to Secre- | Officer’s sloop on a 30 mile course. —_ 3 tary Daniels of a check for $12,585,~ e, Fortune Favored Herreshoff Yacht. Mayor Badin of Milwaukee says he Dr. Carman and his wife's attorney 276.96. The check was signed by an ut the wind proved fickle, and after | Will oppose any attempt to change of | remained in the jail until late to- American agent, representing the | dangling the day's honors in front of | rescind the tuberculine milk test or- t. Greek Government, which does not | the Vanitie, dropped astern and handed | dinance govgrning milk supplied to Grand Jury Will Investigate. . In the court house adjoining the fail, the grand jury tomorrow will investigati check was at once endoreed by Secre- | thc last three miles the Herreshoff B tary Daniels and sent to the Treasury.|yacht drew up rapidly and at one| Pleas of not guilty wers entered In | jtx on of the murder. All+ The ships will be delivered to the | tifhe was nearly abreast of the Gard- | the Federal Court at Des Moines, Ia., | the witnesses who have appeared be- Greek Government within a few days, | ner boat. Both took in their spinna-|on behalf of the 36 plumbers charged | fore three sessions of the inquest and the Mississippi at Hampton Roads and | kers and reached for the finish, the| With violation of the Sherman Anti- | some others were today served with the Idaho in the Mediterranean, prob- | Vanitie getting the committee whistle | trust law. subpoenas. . ably at Gibraltar or Villa Franche.!by %0 seconds. The Idaho will be known as the Lem- Vanitie’'s Owner Pleased. AUTO INJURIES FATAL. n while the Missisef, take e e xenku, Ckig Mr. Cochran, the owner of the Vani- e nmei‘ tie, m uh:l;ch pleased after thcnt:. illacoublay, | George W. Lane, Struck by Machine, as e won, as the Reperted by Wireless. S haa s m" g Dies in Middletown. Queenstown, July 8§ — Steamer|, Cymric, Boston for Queenstown = and e B Taes auine, WELR S eaching legs, ts~of salling in fivugz:lquzn:lo?n 'lv’e-t at 425 a. | which the Vanitie has shown herself oot U ot JulyP'l:LS e wmb. much faster than the Resolute, 2m N‘Mn B N Yormk,v = t‘mf" winds and eome sea is pre- mflom“ =4 Ofifi( Hoak ot - dicted fer the second trial race tomors Pock 8 a. m. Sat: y- Al 4 Steamship Arrivals, * Southampton, July 8.—Arrived, ;:t:‘mer Amerika, Boston for Ham- v.:’,“h & i s20s 3.57.54 < 3.57 it Fily b Aiveds 23 anitie wins by 27 seconds time. Martha Washington, New Yor. : %re. July ‘I.——‘A:rlvod, steamer ufw n‘::" La Bavol 34 5& Summary. : Ce I Time. Time. | crrrrresss 3.66831 3.56.85 . il | by 1 minute 46 seconds Elapsed Pime onLegs. First N~ e e, New York. Olln Representative From Avon. Hartford, Conn., July S —Matthew C.. Woodford, born in Burlington in 1837, and a representative in the gen- ral assembly for Avon i:.ilc 1

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