Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 2, 1915, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

VOL. LVIL.—NO. 2 1915 . SIXTFJ-:N PAGES NORWICH, CONN. SATURDAY, JANUARY 2, Formidable When She Sank in the English Channel- 150 of Crew Were Rescued o P - . race, if the fi ds were availabl Adrift in an Open Boat in a Mountainous Sea, Benumb- | 7275, f the funds were avatlable Austrian Monitors Bombarded Belgrade Thursday With | But Little Damage. tstanding feat vessel was torpedoed both fore and aft | SUSPICIOUS DEATH Iy ¥riday morning and sank almost ELARE e TR, time to_cacape. The Chroniele's Brixham correspond. | Woman's Stomach Sent to Chemist for above, | Examination. authority for ti captain of the trawler hich rescusd 70 sur gale that was 1d 20 [ were close at New Year’s e 2 Poland the | ng vigorou shment of armies and hinders the Carpath says that con- salicia the Rus en_repulsed with | Muscovites and | The British ambassador, Sir Franci Bertie, as dean of the diplomatic corps, congratulations of In his address s remarked that the diplo at the reception com- “representatives of the nations ng at the side of France and of other nations where on neutrality im- DPoses special duties in the grave crisis which Burope is traversing.” colleagnes and himself. OF CREW OF BRITISH WARSHIP FORMIDABLE SAVED. | Rescue Work Conducted Under Dan- serous Conditions Struck a Mine or Was Torpedoed. AUSTRIAN MONITORS BOMBARD BELGRADE. Slight Damage—No Conflict With Bulgarian Guards. tieship Either Their Fire London, Jan. 2, to Reuter’s Telegram compa from Belgrade “Four Austri n monitors bombarded caused widesr siight damage. “Reports recetved from Sofia, Bul- garia, of a serious clash between Ser- vian and Bulgarian frontier guards are denied here. s the official statem n guards arreste d number abitants of Baganwzawz trying to leave the country to avoid There were no cas- {ualties and there was no conflict with | Bulgarian guards.'” “The_truth ‘that Servi- Rescue Work Dangerous. REORGANIZATION OF THE BRITISH ARMY By Addition of Six Armies, Which Will Consist of Three Corps. those on the | to | order issued tonight t{that the 50 p. m.—An army that announced Teorganization | will be further developed by the ad- | dition of six armies, Seas Thirty Feet High. which will con- | army will be commanded ant Sir Douglas Heig, who headed the i corps of the expeditionary the second half an hour's =0 exhausted by by General Sir Jan ®y General e sixth by M. Hamilton, Major-General Sir Crarles . Lieutenant-G imselt, Fergusson and Lieutanr.ut-G H. C. O. Plumer have eral Cir Bruo; for the purpc Sailors Were Benumbed. corps respectively. reorganization_f¢ absorption of Lord Kitchener's into the regular arm were cared for The naval men the warm eng! the trawler dis and tobacco the benumbed sailors. Japs Delivered Guns to Rus:i Tokfo, Jan. 1, 10.20 a. m-—The fact iers went to Russian frontier some time ego io de- | liver guns and ammunition purchased in Japan and that an authorizstion by Emperor Nicholas serve in the Russian army was gazet- 3 1s advanced here as a Dossible explanation of the culation that a Japanese Japanese eol the | sec nkets, clothing srvivors and housed them in comfort- these survivors from Japaneso to almost indescribabl heing rescued the: against the storm, until the brown s of the Providence hove in sight. of the storm engulfed _ in report in ci army was on the way to ing against During the Wrecking Tug Saves Steamer Falk. Norweg.ian . which ran ashore recent- 1y on the San Blas coast, nea arrived here today in company with the wrecking tug Namesis. ustained only continually steamer Fall FORMIDABLE TORPEDOED BOTH FORE AND AFT, Says a Corrsspondent of the London Dailv Chronicle. slight damage when she grounded, will be repaired London, Jan. 3.42 a. m—The Daily States that survivors of the Formidable Movements of Steamships, Liverpool, Jan. that the * Balti The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Double T';;\@o f Any Other Paper, and its Total Circulati;n is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the struck a reef soon after leaving Rotter- dam Friday morning and probably will be a total wreck. Her crew of 2 was saved. @ i o Ca+’ .“_‘,o. ' 41an Steamer Struck Reef. H..cwich, via London, Jan. 2, 2.15 a. m-—A torpedo hoat brings the news that the Norweglan steamer Odeneence S Cargo of Copper Seized by Danish Authorities Copenhagen, Denmark, Jan. 1 (Via London, 8.20 p. m.)—A large cargo of copper 'which is sald to have been shipped to Denmark by a German- American, in an attempt to smuggle it | through this couatry to Germany by {means of a false bill of lading, was selzed today by Danish authorities. ONE-THIRD OF PALESTINE SHIP WAS EITHER TORPEDOED OR STRUCK MINE SnEERe g Y For Home of the Jewish Race, if Funds Were Available. St. Louis, Mo., Jan. 1.—One-third of Thrilling Rescue Work Done by a Trawler—Men Were | palestine could be hought now for res- toration as the home of the Jewish Kaplansky of The Hague, made here ed and Exhausted From Exposure—Plight of the Sur- |today before the annual convention ot vivors Almost Indescribable—On the Entrenched Lines in Flanders and France Artillery Duels Continue—In |cord with a rule established at the con- the Knights of Zion. Heretofore the chief argument of opponents of Zionism has been that Palestine was uanpurchasable. In ac- vention forbidding the mentioning ot . . the b g of the Europ . 01 Poland the Russians are Blocking Efforts of Germans 0 |thc Zionist movement T Bapiansios | Reach Warsaw—In Galicia and the Carpathians the Rus- sians and Austrians are Battling for Supremacy—Four |or the sewish Nat was responsible for the condition he mentioned. Dr. Kaplaneky is general secretary al Fund bureau. 000,000 francs, he three-fourths of which-is invest- n Palesiine farm lands. The total { Jewish wopulation of that country, he {said, is about 120,000, though there is {room for more than 3,000,000 people. The fund now totals 1 AT MANCHESTER, N. H. Manchester, N. H., Jan. I.—The po- from the battleship in {lice are investigating the recent death a cutter, states thet other fishing boats | of Mrs. Bertha Comery on a suspicion The capalin ex- |that she may I presses the belief that other survivors [husband, Osca have been rescued and taken to Dart- He saw no_other rging to the Formidable, howev ave been murdered, Her J. Comery, is under ar- rest on a technical charge. State Chemist Howard, to whom the wom- an’s stomach was sent for examination, tonight declined to disclose his find- PRESIDENT POINCAIRE BELIEVES | /78S and said he had not vet made a WAR WILL END THIS YEAR Made at a Gatheririg at Palace of Elysee. formal report. Officers today examined the records of sales of poison in every n the city. who formerly lived in died suddenly on Nov. . Palisoul, who offi- The belief ciated at the funeral, recently reported vear now beginning will s the end of the war was expressed b; sident Poincaire in an address to- of the diplomatic | corps who went to the palace of the present New Years atlons to the president, ‘I do mot doubt that next year, at i this traditional reception, we shall cel- together the estab! a beneficent peace which, solidly based on rect'tude and respect for interna- tional treaties, will give necessary curity to the nations,” said the presi- to the police that he had reason to sus- pect that the womans' death had not been due to natural causes. As a re- sult of this information, the body was exhumed. TORSO OF n HUMAN BEING IN BURLAP BAG Found in a Marsh in a Suburban Sec- tion of Brooklyn. New York, Jan. 1.—Two burlap bags were discovered tonight imbedded in ice in a marsh In a suburban section of Brooklyn, and when examined in a po- lice station one was found to contain the torso of a human being and the other a frozen bundle, wrapped in a { sheet, believed to contain the arms and legs. Wrapped about the torso was a newspaper of date of Dec, 21, a petti- coat, a skoirt and other clothing. In the sccond bag was a newspaper pub- lished in Italian __Detectives were set to work at once in the hope of developing clues which might lead to the solution of what the police accepted as a murder myster: e T NEWSPAPERS ARE NOT ESSENTIAL TO LIBRARIES According to Opinion of Members of | Library Commission, | - Chicago, Jan. T—Newspapers are accessible to all that they are not esw sential to libraries, according to the opinion of members of the Leasue of ? | Library Commissioners, meeting here |today.” Dr. Frank P. Hill, librarian of the Brooklyn publlc library, sug- gested that the cost to the public for newspapers was so low that to main- tain a free reading room of daily papers would be a burden to the li- brary and not of sufficient benefit to the patrons. Action may be taken next June look- ing toward the discontinuance of cur- Tent newspapers in librar said. Hot Springs Only “Wet” Spot in Arkansas. Little Rock, Ark, Jan. 1—Hot Springs saloons were reopened at noon today, and that city now is the only spot in the state. Saloons in all other cities were closed at mid- night and, under the statutes, peti- tions containing a majority of the names of white adult citizens must be presented to the coun: court before they can procure licenses. The Hot Sp NS? Was reis- | sued om the anti- liquor forwe < is expected to remain dry London, Jan. dam worres s he learns tuat Emperor Willia o ntly was ered from an generaily suppo: {lin for an o is defsrring the tr arxions o return cn ed o crushing vie Damags by River Floed, Dougl 1-—The Yaqui tiver in southern Sonora is in food. tock has been drowned, bridges washed out and crope, farming im- provements and irrigation ditches des- troyed, according to men arriving here today. Tk inhabitants have sought safety In the hills and it is ramored some have been drowned, Hanged Himself in Cell at New Havan New Haven, Conn., Ja: hours after he had heen arrested for begging today. John E. Harris, 50 years old, committed suicide in a cell at po- lice headquarters by hauging. He had made a noose of his underclothing, tied the improvised rope to a bar and then jumped from a bench. His neck 1—Arrived, steamer |was broken, death probably being in- taneous. . puint of revoly a fire with kerosene. German orylsers. “asras Demonsivation |The Ambuiance | =S Toewrns [JUMPEL $37,500 BOND, REGK was unable to state whether the war | off by reserves ror State Bryan to Elon should be laid cn the contesis in the spread them over the entire unfon. |Gt Saie However, this is a matter of opmion ang relates to the policy of national|iectifieq that althoush It was his raec i Now in course of construetion. action at this time rather than to the principles invclved tha danger of live wires, he failed to |, Richar a few day sentiment i loon. In the de thet. The liquor interests more respect for local self-govern- of England announced today consigament of 1,014,000 pounds ster- | it It was. stated tonight in banking cir- | Tacson : 1 Seltivg o e i _bsfore a general court {count. supposed to have been the same ones | burns received at her home eariic ol and other towns on the east c s th e had robbed Mrs. Clifford Weston at the | the day, when she attempted to 3 Jugland, had been bumba.rdedmlhs;lmu il oll. but scemen e maa e | | Asa X. J. Siayton, of Somers, Conn., wne of the seitiers of Iowa, is dead atl of Unzmployed, Chasers’ Trusf ™ "2t Immigration through Boston during Francis H‘ Griffin, a New York A torne 1914 showed 2 loss of 43 per cent. compared with 1913, which was a CULMINATED IN FIGHT WITH PO-|CONSPIRACY UNEARTHED BY AR- |record year. S WIfe Brought Back From cmoradn% ' LICE IN NEW YORK REST OF BRIDGEPORT LINEMAN Guglielmo Marconi, of wireless tele- raphy fame, has been apponted a member of the Italian Senate by King OBJECTIONABLE FLAGS [LAWYERS ARE INVOLVED | Victer =mmanach DEFRAUDED ACQUAINTANCES QUT Announcement that the Portland, Me., Daily Press will be a one-cent e vSDa * Wa de by the Portland Men and Women Attacked Police in|Organized Method of Mulcting Cor- | LOWERRDEN WAS MAce bY an Effort to Release a Man Whom| porations for Slight or Imaginary | ¢ : { Pair Were Located Through a Country-Wide o [ Preparations are being mads for o Had Placed . ieei i . {test In the mear future of the muc e < They Had Placed Under Arrest. Injuries in Accident Cases. e it e iriie ar e ! Federal Authorities—Mrs. Griffin Had Op s ——; l[wuurd headed by Rear Admiral Fisk 3 ographic Bureau in New York City, and Th employed men g in Milligan of the steamer Na- and women in this city began the| New York, Jan. L campatgn O e g s of, e mtenrn g which is fas Holmes Ledges, S . new year with an outdoor demonstra- [against “the ambulance chase: yarra which is fast on Flolmes Ledges sentations That the Bureau Had Obtained tion, which culminated in a fight with |so called by District Attorney Martin | 't 8 ¥, New York, Jan. 1.— ay h came ' vard a 5 policemen who interfered when an at- |of the Bronx, was begun today by the | ¢l 3 tempt was made to liold o parade with |arrest of Dennis Murr: . foreman of us. tracts, the Couple Got Large Sums from | ectionably worded banners flung |lineman for the New or] Nen a- 0:5in & 3 g}’gm l ven and Hartford railroad, at his home | Mrs. Mary A. Burns of Raymond, Judgts and Several Women, lemg Their Noge About 700 idle men and women gath- | in Bridgeport, Conn., on a warrant |N. H,, aded not guilty of the murder ent- | of her husband, Frank Burns of Not- tingham on December 26 in the superi- | o reourt New Yo ered in Union square to listen to dis- |charging erjury. He was subsel Start the New Year Right instituted The Griffin in Groton, a stenographic bureas social | city and it was charged k, Jan. 1L.—Francis H. fin, an attorney. and his wi Chicagoans spend a garter of a mil- | H. Griffin, who are u {Tion dollars for food and drink while | dictment on the charge of having de- | welcoming in the New Year, according | frauded acqualntances of hi York to estimates of leading cafe and hotel | st g out of between $200,000 and |representations that: thet has owners. | $400,000, were brought I from Col- ned large comtracts fos rerx- —_— orado Springs today, whence they fled | ment stencgraphlc works the eouplk Wallace Davis, 12 years old, of Mel- | @about a month ago, forfeitin, obtained large m.lawyer: st =3 rose.. Ma d from Injuries receiv- | bonds of $37,500. They were locked Judges, crs of clubs to whici At the opening of the new year when a fresh start is being made ed while coasting. The boy was|in the Tomt Griffin belonged, and ge - women by so many relative to habits and weaknesses, and endeavors are thrown from his sied and sustained a| The pair were at first giying their notes therefors made to wet out of the old and unsatisfactory rut, it is a good idea fraciured skull have fled to Canada, b They failed to appear. located through a country-wide charging the National stock | — : Trust in restraing of trade. was feid | MADE GOOD $3500 STOLEN WHITMAN'S INAUGURA’ in the circuit court by the Attorney FROM THE GOVERNMENT General of Illinois. i : : case was called for trial to give a little thought to the manner in which business can be im- o proved. It s the time to give the proper amount of attention to the ser ices which can be rendered by advertising. If the questlon of bigger business depended upon improved fixtures such would be worth g ting, and if it depended upon o better location the remedy would be applied. There can be no question but what business is stimulated publicity and the merchant who is lacking in that department is attempting to reach a zoal rezardless of the signboards. Why not start the new year right by heiping your business to grow, by giving it the benefit of a wisely conducted advertising cam- paign and thereby employ the services of one of the greatest con- structive forces in existenc It is not a time for delay but for ac- tion. Employ the advertising columns of The Bulletin and prove to yourself that advertising pays! { Denver Man in His Will Says Money The collier Wagama, which left Wae Taken in 1863. Out Early Next Boston in ballast for Louisburg, C. —— S B., returned to Boston leaking baving| Denver, Col, Jan. 1T -s| Ambany, N. Y, Jan, 1—An @ struck a ledge off Cape Sable during | Attorney Harry B. Tedrow j but quiet inauguration marke a thick fog Tuesday | has been served with a citation order- ning of Charles S. Whil | ing_him to appear before Tra C. Roth- | as governor today. Frank L. Staples, former judge of | zerber, county judge and show cause No appointments were . the Bath, Me, Municipal Court and|why the government of the United | the governor, but it is b i rcies throughout | States is entitled to receive § trom | list of then He was born at| state of Rufus (“Potate”) Clark |next week. ars ago. | s announced today. Martin . Glynn, the ni —— rk died abou four vears ago, | ernor, expects to leave ‘The Bulletin, the home paper of Eastern Connecticut contained the The biennial American chimpienthipl!fla\'in%)nn estate of more than $100.- i\fass:;;;::setu to visit ving readi tter 15 the past week: checker tournament will | 6o0. he bulk of the ate was be- | few days. flmlng peadink e lten durE S vask N e e | ehatnot o s aelltins b o e his Bulletin Telegraph Local General Total {lcontenders from il parts of the coun- | for missionary work in Africa. One | will devote his time to editing: A | try are expected to compete. clause of the will, however, was as|newspaper. 3 Saturday, Dec. 26 74 139 810 1023 || — follows: The inaugural ceremonies ay, « <0.. 0 bt = | Congressional action to vest the| “I direct m cecutor to pay to the | marked contrast to those of two: Monday DPec: 28.. 74 140 327 541 R president with power to prohibit ex- | Sovernment of the United States the |ago, when William Sulzer. Js » i S | port of war supplies was urged before | sum of 3,500, the same being a sum | the capitol to take the cath Tuesday Déc. 29. .95 150 280 323 Q| the House foreign affairs committec | which I knew a ma 1368 to have | Long lines of militiamen and ety B by Representative Towner of Illinois. | defrauded the United States. The fact | liantly arrayed military staffs Wednesday, Dec. 30.. 110 109 238 157 I s was never reported by me and I now | incoming and outgoing gov & S a o 5 800 | Mayor Mitchel of New York feel bonnd in honor to make good the | day made the scene picturesque Thursday, Dec. 31.. 99 108 692 8 sued 202 all-night licenses for the cel- | money.” sands of persons sheok b o ) i i 3 s0g || eoration New Year's evy Svery | The religious organization which re- | governor after the exi Friday, Jan. 1.. 100 1350 348 59¢ | reputable restaurant applying and re- | ceived the larger bequest seeks to pre- | In his address Governar e ceiving the comendation of the police | vent the pavment of the money to the | promised an immediate im Wwas glven a license. | United States, holding that a ‘bequest |of all state Lo luu: xS 53 6 2695 to _the government is illegal. itures and rems legislation to Totals ........... 552 796 2695 4043 With decks awash and masts car-| Clark recefved his nickname of “Po- |rect any evils, ursed a better | ried away, the schooner Warren |tato” when he sent a carioad of pota- | cial system and civil service: re E? Adams, from Charleston, for_Phila- | toes from Colorado to the destitute in!for the state and indorsed the B - —— = delphia, abandoned Sunday off Cape|Chicago after the fire In the seventi _!naHOL cussion in several languages of their |lv released on $7.500 bail by Judge |Hatteras, was brought into Newport problem of welfare through the win- | Louis D. Gibbs of the Bronx court ,_\'vws by the revenue cutter Itasca. |AWARDED $10,000 VERDICT | WELLESLEY HAS OBTAINEI T i nle (il ool 4 moceinterapcithe Slomign Ghotmee | _Immigration through the pert of FOR LEAD POISONING $2430.000 IN 14 MO meeting, which was orderly throug ,nfession obtained from Murray, | xew o = out, but later ordered the dispersal of k for 1914 fell off to the ex- — | ing to the police, and backed DY | tent o 501,410 persons, or 45 per cont. | Miss Mary Sheets of Chicago, a|Includes a Pledge from the Res the League of the Unemployed. The | vers ‘exists for the purpose of suing [ (Fres complied by the commissioner | yegter Co. Boston, Jan._ 1.—The sum of 32 inscription on one banner read: |j,.g0 oorporations, particularly th erday i N 000 was_obtained for Well “Homeless men, revolt.” Another an-|Now Haven road, for slight or imag T O el T L [Phis finary injuries in accident Sases. ‘The banner George Druer, ? ears old, 4| nembers of the “trust, istric t- told to haul down. |iorney Martin said, generally have set- . Jan. 1.—Miss Mary Sheets, Ty ohetu” | leze in the fourteen months ed according to a statement gl by the treasurer, Lewis K. xm Spryos Sarandakas of Lowell, Mass. | & W0 W0 loning at the type ParAne D ooy v et | oo lay was awarded a verdict bail on harge of murder and his | C3%eT, feday W sy who alleged cook by trade, !a meeting of the trustees The police sald that Druer was Te- |iled these cases out of court for large | wire Athena un 10,01 2 e |of $10.000 in her suit against the | this amount $430,00 Including & luctant to obey. Witnesses declared ges, 50 per cent. of which invaria- | 200¢ 2 hent nder 510,000 "I‘,')‘d;?oi;‘:’:[(:‘~’r"- Harvester company. The | ditional pledge of $200,000 that “the police clubbed Druer. —He went to the lawyers. | tion with the death of Nicholas Pein. | C35€ o e e oy hus | General Educational board, was was arrested, charged with assault| e district attorney expressed the |pon W lead poisoning In T 5 s before the fire of March 17, and disorderly 1”;':‘1""‘- pien mans ef that when the Bronx oty Is el D T tastiied that ‘aftar twol| IS8 bRl an I:iumed_ Iz'dhe women attacked the police in grand jury reconvenes next week Thi Saniatas | Miss Sheets testific that afte $2,000,000 includes a pledse fort to liberate Druer and were dictments will be handed down chars- [ 1% YSar'® aPPle crop was the larg- | voars as o type distributer in_the | FuNCENN IPEOIE, & RIS ing certain lawyers who have been s_printing plant Harvester compar nce last August” says timates announced by the depart ¢ Tead pois The o ; _ prominent in accident cases with sub- |} 0 (RECES BRI 914 | She became il of lead poisoning. ment. “only three gifts of 1 acclde A UL Iment of c re placed the 1914 jence showed that she now 1s a & i u TE ornation of -erjury. This found | e O 000000 Tampied gthe 1814 | evidence showed that s > | bave been received. One of © ERECERENCE (FOR STA |indictments vesterday asainst Murray | yieid at 250.000.000 bushels, of 114,000.- | Cortial ‘y Sore than gets DAV BoeR ecelled, One tad ACTION FOR PROHIBITION. ang another man who has not vet been |0, Dushels : produced | printers a l:l"x i aed of | Very_senerous gift:‘:lom Mr. Carx — arrested. Toare | them =z at they never heard of | o¢ 395,000 for the enlargement of Expressed by Secy, Bryan in Letter to Well Organized System. Homer A. Rédsheaver, the Evange. | 1°34 Poisoning resulting from work in | jiy ; a printing pl CHILD BURNED TO DEATH AT PROVIDENCE Prohit it n Association. Mr, Martin expects to prove the ex- |listic sir istence of a well organized system, | an. 1.—A_preference| with an agent in every town, he said. |c n for prohibition, at|A member of the legal department present, rather than an immediate ati-|the New Haven road who appeared b. tempt for national prohibition was «x-|fore the Bronx county grand jury ve pressed in a letter from Secretars of | terc Borton, ne-|fo er, announced at Pittsburgh, that he had settled for a money sideration the $30,000 breach of promise action brought nst him by Miss Georgia Jay, a Chicago setn- ographer. v is said to have stated’ that be- s the railroad came under its pre: Although the European PANAMA-CALIFORNIA EXPOSITION DED By Secretary MecAdoo As Pr Mother Had Saved One and Made Wileor's ‘Rebreses ' Heroic Efforts to Find the Other. tathi opeka, Kan state act tional secretary of the Intercoilésintelent management it was mulcted of |enormously increased the velame Providence. BT, Tan. i Onei chitd a,ffl;fl}::,‘f;.,f“‘,‘iwfifim Prohibition essociation, read at thellarge sums by settlements obtained |food products exported by the Ur was bur to death and Mrs_ Philo- | the world at midnight by the closing session of the nventlon of | through manufactured evidence, and |States in the last fo Do Angelts and’ her orhe-fins that organization here tonight. |that the Westchester county grand [of prices of meat animals in fant may die. notwithstanding the|jdent in Washington, was In bis letter Mr. Bryan said jury recently handed in indictments in |country has declined as compateq e e | et e “In the matter of prohibition 1}connectlon with the matter, with prices a year ago. o 3 ” wresi little family from their burning home | sonal representative, Secretary: Treasury McAdoo. think that, at LTesent the cmphasi Alleged Perjury. s X The alleged perjury in Murray’s case | The Foix Tunnel through the Pyr- | . De Angeiis d her stx| TLyman J. Gage, former | states. In some states the time is tine| ., cerned his testimony at & coroner's | °nees has been pierced. It is part of a * old baby from a crib, quench- | of the t resided’ a8 At is bett o or Y ca B > - Yy 0] 3 e treasury, p al for act‘vn “},do %m‘_‘c '{“)""“‘(P :’l‘l;;‘:’ to|inauest a year ago regarding the death [N line of railroad communication . her hands and car- [ monies and the list of concen e tl C '8 2 of James Fletcher. who had been acc e, electrocuted. Murray, who | 27 T oulc was Fletcher’s foreman, is sald to have | from A between Pariz and Barcelona by way | of the house. On another | cluded Mr, M S2. ,The last link in this line | trip, nto the burning building the | gon of the expasi es-Thermes to Ripoll, Spain, | mother failed to find her four year | De Salazar, representing the: old daughter and was forced to 8ive|Spain; John Barrett of the s lup the quest when her clothes caught | Tnion and Charles C. Y Stewart, 21 colored, claim- | fire. She was taken out by firemen, | dent of the Panama-Pacific as his home was arrested | padly burned. The girl's body was|of San Francisco. The v ford, charzed with assault | found in the kitchen nine states were present. a5 dead, as|Upon Mrs. Louise Smith, 75, in her The woman was struck three tom to warn the linemen dally ag: ns: “The strong vote polled In the house| g, s on the day of the accldent, and |INE I ago shows how rapidly|that he told Fletcher that the wire |3t New B growing against the which caused his death ! he Delieved it was not charged at the | Bome. te over the amc ment a wood deal was said about the|time times on the head with a hatchet, lock- | PRISON SENTENCE FOR PRISONERS TRANSFERR doctrine of local self-government Confessed to Detectives. ed & room unc sfous, and her which wes irvoked agalnst nationall g, (OROESEY e Doectves house wa ranzacked BRISTOL. VT. DRUGGIST WITHOUT | prohimtion. You need not worry abeut |, - a8 VARG s | S Who Sold Liquor Containing Dena- tured Alcohol, Frem Sing Sing to Au of Mew York an Time in Prison History, expected to confer than they have for federal ac- with el T 3 3 |I'{'fr'.’,-l~ hes a W Toor of the oiard | afigatebury, Ve, Jan. 1—A prison| Auburn N. Y. Jan. 1—For the' = 4 - {ern departr United States | Sentence of from 12 to 16 vears was|time In the prison history of 1 BANK OF ENGLAND SELLS S larmy as to the advisebiie e Tiete®|imposed today uron Dr, Don A. Bis- | York s dreft of Drisoners fromi# tem of milit "~ | bee. the Dristol drugeist convicted yes- | Sing to Anburn has been made hieh schoors’ THDINE | iav of mansiaughtef in causing the | out the use of shackles, Seven 7 i death of several persons by selling | prisoners wera transferred tod X them liquor containing denatured al- | between Albany and Syracuse evem 1,014,000 POUNDS STERLING. < e Commander Om ° - : Destination of the Coin H e vi- | North R ::,:‘,ed°:,"e"'na\°,;“‘;:‘: cohol. Bisbee ndmitted a violation | the handeuffs were removed. & at- Bincloend: = - |partment news of the death of John|Of the law in selilng spirits s a bev- | tempt was made io . escape the | Pugilese of Fall River, Mass, eoa]|crage but said he was ibnorant of the | entire draft arrived at Auburn: passer, and Thomas P, an of Buffa- | Presence of the poison. At Syracuse arrangements {lo. fireman, st Beirot, Syria, Dec. $6,| F6_ was tried on four charges of | made by telegraph for coffes & ¢ 5 e 1 The men were drowned while swim. | Mansiaughter, although it was alleged |lers, also an innovation. g £$5,070,000), forelgn coin. had heen | ming and their bodios g foim: lthat 13 persons died after drinking| Thomas M. Osborne, the new. e peton offlie coln (s i | ; 18 were burled at| ints purchased at his pharmacy. | of Sing Sing. wae thanked by h oners in a round rTobin London, Jan. 1, 5.0 disclosed and it was at first be " 8 fon | Eetrut eved that the money was for France. | Turks Enter Russian Territery. rl ¢ Phin % Potrograd, via London, Jan. 2, Pacific Railroad Shops cles, however, that the cofn was not to | pint of iy Phindelphia navy yard| Petrosrad, vi v 2, exported an- that the transaction | zona’s 1 1 g s atbert P. - Niblack, com- |s. m—The Novos.Vremya statos t Ogden, Utah, Jan, 1. was in effect a_transfer on behalf of | fe i w 3 battleehip Michigan, to]strong Turkish force has succeeded in fcloged down for six wemiis tae Zank of Ottawa to New York ac- | violation of the responsibility, if any, for|entering R n territory in the Can- o g few daye eariy in Decy yiolstlon LofiH o of the blg wars casus mear Kars amd Ardahan. The | op > foir daye earlr o s e e g | Humpton Roads during & steniD ST dds thai the plan (o envelop the | ba opened agath Tan & ot e Tt . {latter part of November has been cone n rear however, was upset by |nounced here today. Five law (hat the constitution: ; ed. are employed in the bag of {ment should ‘go into effect t0ax i been closed down. pey en Dy 1Miss ; ly every officer and sea- aith Hatoh, o high ecio n - odhio v $ e S Haloh s bian LR Hariford Woman Dies of Burn ; teamer Daltonhall Building Contra t rtlepool, Eng., | Geneve, Switzeriand, vi handbag tonight, produced such dis-| Hartford, Conn., Jan, ¥ we When thes % Py i IS alarmed when they 11.05 & m—A Swiss diplomat | Kauffmen, build eeable resulis that the men ran|nestine Kawders, 42 years A DY the first time upon thef whko tu d 1! Vies v] away. Half an hour before, two men. | tonight in a hospital as the 1 + pon thelr | who returned here from Vienna, where | early today from ir 3 Powoy, Eng., that Hartle- [ he say Emperor Francis Josaph Christ- | night whew oo physicaily well, but seemed sadder and mere anxlous toen usual,

Other pages from this issue: