Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 20, 1915, Page 1

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Buallety L4 % VOL. LViL—NO. 17 ‘ The Bulletin’g Circulation in Norwich is Double. NORWICH, T ——=5 hat w@“"my Other Pabéri,iihd? Its Total Circulation CONN., WEDNESDAY; JANUARY 20. 1915 TEN PAGES PRICE TWO CENTS is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the Cify’s‘ Popfillaliioh : GERMAN AIRCRAFT IN RAID ON ENGLAND | Eelfort, France, via Paris. Jan. 19, | - m.—A severe earth shoci | { shook the houses in Belfort last night & SRS | about 30 oclock. In some cases | { furniture was overturned and the | Long Threatened Attempt Made To Blow Up King’s§ Royal Residence In Sandringham KING GEORGE AND QUEEN MARY WERE ABSENT Bombs Were Dropped In Yarmouth, Kings Lynn, Sand- ringham, Cromer and Beeston, and Everywhere Except At Beeston Casualties and Damage to Property Result- ed—At Yarmouth During a Ten Minute Bombardment» a Man and a Woman Were Killed and a Number of Other Persons Injured—A Youth Killed at Kings Lyrmi nce the formation of the larse Am i ican corporations. . g = | avthor and investigator, and b and a Man, Woman and Child Injured { Manley, secrotury. of the commission, | . iwcn» ti rer witnesses called today. - Miss ell said she believed that 3 large corporaticns ere constantly in- Tondon, Jan. 225 a. m—German|of light occasionally could be seen| A'S¢C m;‘.;;“]‘;:’iw‘g" o ia the Fros o Yir long threatened | coming from it i of their employes and she cite - nffffia”:f Dt iend &t~ | The visiv of the aircraft lasted ten B e S it e o Sl fempted to blow up with bombs the | minutes. ; lieaimatttion: afi=s* aellEtsor bs King's roval residence’in Sandringham, Great Excitement in Town. the Installation of scientific manage- County Norfolk. | Great excitement prevailed in the|ment in shops and the establ King George and Queen lary. With(igivn and special constables, the po-|of an eight hour day as remedies for their family, had been staying at San-|jic. and the military were called out|labor troubles and a social u ¢ and dringham. but returned to Londc | to caim the peopls, who streamed out|a means of bettering the iiving cond terday morning to resume their resi-|fqp the explosions | tions of workere. As for the steej cor- dence in Buckingham palace. took | poration. sae said that she believed t still ot itely P ! twenty-five per ce! e o aditner Ihe rataors i e r.n:Y“o?; Town in Darkness. 1t twenty-five per cent. of the em aeroplanes, but Zeppelins were report- ed yesterday passing over the North gea in a westerly ection. and most | of those reporting that event incline the belief that these were the ratd- supply was immediately the town was plunged in f the ng of the propeilers attracted attention to it. came the explosions the Whirr of Propellers Heard. sound of breaking gla bomb . ite calm, but very | Gropped nead the rec sround | T B N e Saas it Impoc. | and others near the drill hall. In ail | five bor After a sou dark and cloudy, which made it impos- | sible for the people in the towns over | which they passed to distinguish even | the outilnes of the raiders, though the | whirr of their propellers and the dro ing of their motors could be distinctly heard. were thrown by the aviator. attack the aircraft sailed rwesterly The Casualties, in ection man was found outside his home ] ; e P Plain. His head had Zeppelin 18 reported to bave been | oot He was identified as Lrousht down by the fire of a warship | 3557 CTushed. He was 1o st Henstanton, a few miles north of | S2qnuel Smith, o shoemaker. . Sandringhem. © identified also was found dead, while a Hombs were dropped in Yarmouth |gojjier was discovered In ~ Norfolk Kings Lynn, Sandringham, Cromer and square with a wound in his ches Beeston, and everywhere except at=Ig8Te With & ¥ < R . 3 o r n be ascertsined thus Beeston casualties and damage 10|far" theee are the onlv casualties in property resuited. .. |Yormouth, but ewing to tie complete Yarmouth First Place Visited. | darkness that prevalls as a result of The first place visited was the well | the SULtnll of the electric lght ser- Efown seaside resort and fishing town) Vic% This stater Anot be accer f;.j“}’,?“‘;;‘,‘.'p,f‘;f‘;i the sudgen visit | The greatest damage done by any of| Two. persons, = man 2nd a woman, | the bombs Tesulted from:one that fell | were killed and a number of other per- sin, near St Peter sons were injured and much Jdamage to f h dameged a whoie row o ¥ ki hy in | Property was dome by tne raiders in bresims’ allifhe Mindops in | heir visit, which I i less than ten | R I e e ors i L Sildten « Wours o & rom the roofs and bricks. dropped in Yarmo Little Signs of Panic. When the attack began the aut i % gave instructions that all lights in | town be extinguished and precautiorary measures were taken to | sateguard the populace. Lit s of 2 punic were seen during (f | SNOW HINDERS FIGHTING IN FLANDERS AND FRANCE In Russian Poland the Russians Are Making Sweep to West and North. Yarmouth. London, Jan. 1 Apporently the raiders, after visiting r“rflh’x -\“‘mmi‘l_ Nifl ne. Yarmoutk, procceded to Cromer, whero | ST i1 imance and in Fle hey aiso dropped bombs, and thence | Wiere there have been heavy went lo Sheringham and Be _suow. that the fighting has Ther, turning inland, they onfined” almost entirely fo art Sendringham, dropping exp sagements. There has heen un ex- clles there and at Kings Ly n, however, to the southwest of vouth was killed, and a mai, Pont A Mot A and a child were injured and nch are reported ve ap- | houses were destroyed. Between hed a few hundred near | and seven bombs were dropped German frontier. : Kings Lynn. Military men place considerable on The damage done in the operations in this region, thew has not Jeen reported own, | 52 nction with the continued e S ce escaped ressure on the German line G f the fortress of Pert At Sheringham a bomb penetrated | U f successful, relieve the a nouse but did not explode. German operations against Ver it was only vesterday a he | @round which have had a half | Scotland Yard authorities ed in-jcircle drawn since they invaded structions concerning the measures to | France, : o | be taken by the police and other offi-|__Of the progress of the battles in cials in the event of an air raid | Bast Prussia and Poland, the official The_pollcs and. special constaples |reports are more scant i informa- | were called upon in the instructions | HOn than ever. Loguacity seems (o | hold themselves in readiness for a | Pe avoided when a big movement possibie rald on London and the fire | Commencing, such as that i brigades also were warned to he in | Russians are carrying cut between the ! cadiness. "{;m I asian border and tho lower i istula. In this operation, as far as Caused Commotion in London. Ee i e e The report of the attack on Norfolk cou | furnished, the Russians are making y caused a considerable commo- | & bie sweep to the w. and north, tion in London. The searchlights all | evidently in an endeavor to preve uwbout the city were busily engaged |'Field Marshal Von denburg’s | throughout the evening, scouring the forces from forming a junction with slky with their rays to pick up any the German troops in Fast Prussia. aircraft that might approach. Up to| Some Petrograd new er corre- & late hour, however, there was no [spondents credit the Russians with sign of any smerial visitor. crossing the Vistula river to the south Reports reaching London are to the jand east of Plok. If this is mil- effect that a squadron of six Zeppe- |itary men say, they must have a very line crossed over the North eea and on reaching the coast line separated, | position to threaten the left flank of some of them taking a southerly di- |the German army which has heen fry- rection end others an opposite course, | ing for weeks to force its way through large force and probably are in a These reports, however, have not peen | to Warsaw | confirmed, | CARDINAL MERCIER PROTESTS GERMAN AIRCRAFT DROP HIS TREATMENT BY GERMANS Says His Own Dignity Has Not Been Spared by Soldiers. BOMBS IN YARMOUTH. Orie Man is Reported to Have Had His Head Blown Off. TLondo Jan. 19, 5 D. m.—The = i Amste; correspondent of Reuter's Yarmouth, via London, Jan. 19, 11.30 company telegraphs that p. m—At half past § o'clock tonight a | Mercier has made a formal hostile aircraft passed over Yarmouth | against hie treatment at the and dropped several bombs. Consider- | hands of the German authoritles in ble damage to property resulted and | Belgium. The cardinal has published it is fear:a there was some Joss of his protest in the form of a letter date One men is reported to have had his|Jan. 10, and has sent copies to al head blown off. { priests in his diocese. The letter fol- One bomb fell in Norfolk square, se 1o the sea front, and another on | © south quay. A third struck the: % Road driil ball, fragments of the hout doubt, you have seen the communication from the German gov- ernment of Brussels, as published in sing of the shell crashing through s, and in which it is de- glass roof of the Dilliard room of | clared ‘tnat Cardinal Mercier, arch- | headquarters of the national re- | hishop of Malines, is in no hin- | A fourth missile ar the ! dered in the exercise of his episcopal | y depot. {work’ The facts show lhow far this| ; LAY report is from the truth. 1 _ Concuesions Broke Windows. “On the evening of the Ist of Janu- | T'he concussions resulting from the|ary, and on the next day, soldiers | loding bombe broke the w @ number of shops and houses. It was dark at the time of th tack and it was impossible, there adows in | forced their entry into the vicarage, cizing my pastoral letter and, con- at- | trory to my eplscoval order, they pro- fore, | hihited reading of the letter before to see the aircraff. The noise of its|congregations, threatening the severest engine, howey couid be plainiy | punishment, which wouid have been liezrd. It was evident that the ma- inflicted on vicars or parishes. s | carricd a searcalight, as flashes own dignity they did not spare. / i ! AS CORPORATIONS ENLARGED jupon today e | Thomas M. Moore commissioner-gen- ' CGabled Paragraphs i Paris Has Nothing Notable to Haport.! Paris, Jan. 19, 10.40 p. m.—The offi- | cial communication Issued by the war office says that no notable incjdent has l been reported from the war front this e i Earth Shock at Belfort, France. doors residences were burst open. Zsppelin Over Ipswich. I.ondon, Jan. 20, a. m~—The Daily Ma reports that a Zeppelin ap- peared over Ipswich during the night i | but that it did no damege. Ipswich in Suffolls count hich lies to the | south of Tolk. It 1t 75 miles | southwest of Yarmout! INDIVIDUALS WEAKENED.! Testimeny of Chairman Lewis of | House Labor Committe: New York, Jan. 19. resentative David J. Lewis. chairman of the| honse coramittee cn Jai testifying today before the investigation be conducted by the federal commis: industrial tions into the great anthropic \Gations and causes ndustri ved th cer hac Leen gre: t, declared that he ns of the individ- tly weakened condi ployes were now werking twel a day hours anley quoted flgures desigmed hat fifty per cent. of the cor loyes wers worki poratio hours CORONER TO HOLD MEN FOR BARKHAMSTED MURDER. Harry Roe Now in Toils With Pfaef- flin and Williams. i Winsted, C¢ Jan, 19.—1 hold those men for the murder,” Coroner S. A Herman today asked as to his finding on the ommissioner Huber ? Case of Barkhamsted, last November. The coroner would not amplifiy statement, of County These men have figured in the inves- tigation by the.authorities They are| Arthur PLGefflin - of Colenrook and | Williams of Bridgeport, who ed up here, and Harry Roe who was to have been sentemced at| Pous N. for burglary, but| who instead is being held there pend- the Connecticut authori- er would not indicate be- vond h yted statement whether he meant to include the three or only two of them. IHe added he could not| »w seon his finding would bej HEAVY SENTENCE FOR RINGING IN FALSE FIRE ALARMS. Britain Man Fined $200, With Three Months in Ja New Britain, Conn.. Js 1 d 24, and Ja i aged were convicted is} morning of ringing in two f | of fire last night. Meyers was fined| ang cos months and cost. A third member of the trio Wi Riley discharged when lie proved he was (oo intoxicated to take an active part in the 2 ing. Judge James T. Mes the hench, This is the first time in over twenty ears that ansone has been St - ed his city for ri a fal ™ RUSSIANS IN PURSUIT OF TURKISH ARMY. Clearing Region of Transtchorokh of the Enemy. Petrograd. Jan. general | headquarters of the army of | e Caucasus today i statement | . i “We continue the pursuit of the| Turkish army and we are successfully clearing the region of Transtchorokh | of the enemy. “On_Jan. 19 we took possession o the village of Suidrevati and captured positfons on_the mountain of Suitan Selim, inflicting considerable losses on the enemy. TRANSCONTINENTAL AVIATION CONTEST PLAN APPROVED In Connection with the Panama-Pa- cific Exposition. ew Yo ] pproval of the plan for a transcontinental aviation contest in connection with the Pan- ama-Pacific_exposition, announced at the annual dinner of the Acro Club of America_here last week, was agreed at a conference between eral of the exposition to the Atlantic | states, Allen R. Hawley, president of the Aero club, and Henry Woodhouse of the clud’'s board of governors. Three flights, beginning at Boston, New York and Washington and ending at San Francissco, were formally pro. posed Dby Mr. Moore. The ex: routes of these flights, Mr. Moore said, could not be designated until the work of the exposition organization commit- tee was completed. Movements of Steamships, New York, Jan. 19. d, steam- ers San Guglielme, Naples: Verona, Naples: Minnetonka, London; Roma, Kinsale, Cymric, New York for Liverpool. Jan. 18.—Passed, steamer Gene Jan. 18.—Arrived, steamer Duca D'Acosta, New York. Glasgow, Jan, 18.—Arrived, steamer Pannonia, New York. Plymouth, Jan. 18. Minnehaha, New Yor Algiers, ' Jan. 11.—Sailed, steamer Thessaloniki, New York. New York. Jan. 10.—Arrived. Steam-) er Rotterdam, Naples. /18 OTHERS SHOT DOWN RECLINED AS HE SPOKE | | Senaie Filibuster on Ship Purchase ONE MAN MORTALLY WOUNDED | SENATOR BURTON HELD FLOOR| IN CLASH WITH DEPUTIES | ENTIRE DAY Sirike Riot at Rougevelt N. J. At Private Depot of the Williams & !Other Senators Who Are Opposed to the Bill Aided the Ohio Man—Dem- ocratic Caucus Called for Tonight— Clark Plant, Where Deputies Were | al of Strikebreak- Awaiting the Ar ers—Deputies Pursued Strikers. President Confident of Its Passage. i Roosevelt . Jan. 19.—One m Washington, J 18.—Republican < mortally wounded and 18 others|opposition to. the government ship were shot down—all of them striking| purchase bill took on all c\'l_d(‘l’\“,?& of smploves of the American Agricultural|an actual filibuster today with Sena- ( mical company—in a clash today|tor PBurton of Ohio, leading the a:i- Detween veral hundred strikers and|tack. No progvess was made on the sixty sherifts deputies. The officers| measure cXdept - that another day 2t the time were awaiting the arrival|of Senator Eurton's speech went in of a train which was supposed to con-| to the record tain a force of laborers to take the| President Confident of Passage. places of some of the 00 men Whol o\ i enging the determined op- QL oL (o el d, when their| oeition of the minority and the ef- Ny i 1o | forts of democrats still in progress to e ting ~ as ol oie sl inetmiensurel i Brestdents WS wethete the s or the deputles| on ceemed today to be confident that Hore L nmie W. Bdwin Flor-| 5o i) wouid pass at this session. He ance, Middlesex County Drosecutor| ioiq callers he though it “very prob- Seerfan 1ndlilyy QR Wk -| able” that the bill would be passed aimed nearly a hundred parti befors March 4 and he emphasized nd_cye-witnesses, announced et SnallE femonasas would at once place the evidence be- fore a zrand jury. Man Dies of Wounds. ery Democratic Caucus Tonight. A third caucus of senate democrats Alesandro, 35 years old,| on the bill which had been set for to- of Carteret, N. J, who was shot in|nizht was postponed until tomorrow the back and the leg. died onight.| night and the commerce committoe Stephen Dodd f Cateret, has aldecided to await further discussion of revolver bullet wound and some fifty | the measure and to consider all pro- buchshot wounds in his back and ac-|posed amendments next Thursday. cording to the physicians cannot live | Most important of the amendments Ten other men are suffering severely from builet and buckshot wounds in the abdomen and legs. suggested are those which fould ada four experts to the proposed shipping board and fix some definite method Deputies Opened Fire. of incorporating the shipping corpor- 2 3 ation, e trouble occurred at the Cen- tral Railroad of New Jersey private Senator Burton Holds Floor, enator Burtor senate hout held the floor in the throughout today’s session. depot of the Wi Iliams and Clark plant, a subsidiary the American of cultural Chemical com x wi once technically taking his cutor Florance said tonight th seat and was still speaking when the ers and police told him th | body recesse tomorrow He train, on which it was thought there|had piled copies of the Congress: on,uJ were strikebreakers, came to a halt,| Record chair, 50 as to r est a force of sixty armed deputies open- without actually sitting ed fire and pursued the waitin down, ¥ .4 ers y fled into the marshes. o l'h“ ‘Afll‘fl; y of at- tempting o develop an Impressive Hegastaatinn By Siikers. trade with South America was the text | The prosecutor said th deputies| of the senator's remarks. He talked testified 't etween d 300 | about necessity for long doc for strikers had made =a nstration | hiz ships and the absence of these! against an earlier train; that when the| gocks in South America, ridiculed the| put approached this train, in-|idea of piacing a boat like the inter tending escort company officers|ed Rotterdam, which carries 3,000 from the depot to the plant, strikers|apoard, on seoh a rofite, when the last armed with clubs and revolvers opened > which ‘satied from Rio Janelrs to fire, wherengon, accordi iz 1o the pros-|{ New 26 passengers and eculor. the “deputies rveturned the| spoke emply markets® of shots, not aiming to hit, but firing in-| South America, Condensed Telegrams More than a foot of snow fell in Memphis. Dallas, Texas, celebrates the bir day of John H. Reagan, Confederate leader. There was an increase of 1,77 in the supplies of hogs in this try in 1814, 3,000 un- Prohibition in the District of Colum- bie was defeated in the Senate by vote of 10 to 33. The Pope has thus far received a fund of $4.000,000 for the relief of earthquake sufferers. The Noble committee has decided not to award a peace prize for 1914, but has not vet decided about 1915. The Empire mill, at XNiles, Pa., owned by the Brier Hill Steel Co., r sumed operations in all departments. a a year ago. Of the farms in them are operated by against an average of 37 the United State: to the air or toward the ground. Senator Relieved thers. Says Strikers Were Unarmed. enaton Relievadihy. Others. : three hours the Ohio senator evelt's stree ~ en_spells of rest by other op- fled at f the bill. Sepator Suther-| said he witne r to ask long hypothetical the strikers wer £ 3 prefaced with “Is it armed and were attacked by the dep-| fact,” and embodying camefulls uties. He said he saw one heaten| veloped arguments asainst the bill with the butt of a revolver afte jeach of these Senator Burton would| ing to the ground and that h |assure the Utah senator that hi no shots fired by the strikers statements were facts, Police officers _aft tho Democratic Senztors Desert Chamber. ver revolver and e ground Democratic scuaters —deserted ! a statemer chamber when Senator Burton nj entered t(f tailine aving one or two ! ted was guard. When Senator Sutherland at| empted oint -uggested he would like tol o remove employes e the atrention of the “democratic | o work and he " Senator Kern, ths lone majo the employes’ ty member p nt, gravely arose and sbreakers Installed. waliced over to the republican side IDAHO STATE OFFICERS | | e R INDICTED FOR PERJURY | Jo Ty oo | Concerning Investigation of State | t, playing { Treasurer’s Office. 1 s and =y 1 e Eoise, Idaho, Jan. 19.—Indictments | sad of deputies g were returned tod gainst A. R. V: i E S Houghton| Nuvs, state examiner; Fred Tus- | earlier had communi S talaphirelto state suditor and the latters Governor Fiel 5 brother, R Huston, a clerk in the situation. |anditor's office, as a result of an in- | ki S Sle g = | vestigation 1 tate affairs. | IN ALASKA TOWARD NATIVE |tigation of the state treasurer’s office SE e {in July, 1914. Soon after he reported | g Asb > i {the books in proper condition, a heavy | Condemne 1 hDepu(YJ Commissioner/| E32 bnoks In proper: cond SRE Aot voTea. | The Hustons are alleged to have| e S {traded for transportation Los An-| Washington, Jan. 19.—A scathing ar- | geles and return railroad scrip to the raignment of the conduct of the white |value of $86.50, supplied by the state | man in Alaska toward the native is|for traveling expenses within its bor- coupled with charges of wholesale and | ders. I continual ions of liquor traffi St regulations and laws to protect fish | i and fur-vearing animals of Alaska and | GOVERNMENT VICTORIOUS H the Pribiloff and Aleutian Islands In o N i FEnart SsobmiticaE ioass sl IN OLEOMARGARINE CASE. | Nhson and Secretary Redfield by Dr. | Forty of the Defendants Changed Pleas | . Lester Jones, deputy commissioner | rifs i of fisherles. { to Guilty. Dr. Jon recentiy from P e ol Alaska, where he spent mon { St Louis Jan. 19.—The federal gov- | making a survey of the fishing and f P e e opoxtaR LV Icsony seal Industries and st the JhetoleomuiEacine foraastu o iewe | ministration of the various islands. Iie | ;20aY when the first four of forty de- | concluded that proper regulation would to he tried Chaomed hdivi be facilitated by vesting full authority ot sty lo enilly shorfyec | over the industries in the department I e % detense of commerce. Immediate steps for the stified. protection of the na tation of their m The charge in pleas rasuited from an ress to the attorneys by Judge Pol- d rehabili- E the United States distriet LEROS L Sea e | He pointed out the futility of EOUND WIFE'S BODY ntinuing a trial where such a g preponderan of evidence wa in quality and quant IN A CHEST AT HOME. nted by the gov- Mystery Surrounds Death of Mrs,| The men who pleaded guiity to « e g mond A. Martens, George H. M Pittsturgh. Pa., Jan -—Mystery | George YV. Gilmore and Richard Wo surrounds the death of Mrs. Minnie| mar tose body was found today — —_— - band, Frank Hunter, a ma- | GLOVE CUTTERS’ STRIKE ! IS DECLARED OFF ! ! | manufacturer, in a cerad chest their home. Mrs. Hunter disap- in peared vesterday and her husband aft- er searching for hours, went to the Has Paralyzed American Fine Glove Industry for Five Months. chest to see if she had worn her furs. Lifting the lid he was horrifieq 10 find the hedy, Lead doubled against the chest. Police and the coroners office are endezvoring to unravel the mystery. Gloversville, X. Y., glove cutters’ strike, | alyzed the American fine glove indus- sry in Gloversville and Johnstown for five months past, was declared off Jan. 19.—The | which has par- Returns of Rhode Island Railways. early this evening. The strike was Providence, R. L. Jan. 19.—Returns | for an increase of the cutters’ wage for 1914 filed with the public utili- |sccle and was declared on the 20th ties commission by steam and street |of last August. Sixteen hundred cut- railway corporations operating in |ters were involved, which meant that Rhode Island showed an increase of nearly $34,000,000 in funded debts and a decrease of more than $41,000,000 in working liabilities, according to the commission’s report submitted to the governor today. the entire glowe industry was event- uaily crippled nearly to the point where there was no output, Since the first of the year several hundred cutters bad left the strikers’ ranis nd returned to work. it is stated. to t in the price of wheat lan a shed fact, and seven-cen bread i; not an improbability. _The erection of the $500,000 benzo nt of the United States Steel Cor n at Farrell, Pa, will be started W the next three weecks. Mrs. George A. Carison, wife of w Governor of Colorado, took up her | duties “asistant Governor”, a position created for her by her husband Unokichi Hattori, professor of erature at the Iperial University 0, Japa has been named Japanese Jecturer at Harvard A H y hored Hoolk, J To take advantage of January places the condition of wheat at 95, against 97 in December, and 101 Texas 53 per cent of | Six-cent bread in Philadeiphia, due eot of ocean-going vessels an- unable | ¢ wuse of | ng over the Y(vv\v)‘! Legislative News of General lnterest 1$10,000 ASKED FOR BACKUS HOS- PITAL—$10,000 FOR DORMITORY JUDGES AND DEPUTIES {Jdohn H. | Barnes and John D. Hall i Named for Judge, Frank N. Gardner | for Deputy Judge, Norwich—Other Eastern Conecticut Judgeships. i Although the rain in and about peCal to ThefBulloting Paris has ceased, the Seine continues| Hartford, Jan. 19—Mr. Bailey « to rise, submerging many of the lower ,\or‘l\llt’h presf‘{-‘eu an rx 1 rItmzvhl "w, quays. smally which referred to the 7 ommittee on public health and safet. President Wilson greeted “Billy” | Under the act it shall be compulsor: Sunday, the evangelist. with the words | °1 the part of iown and city heaiti ;,od bless you for the work you are g_fh;l-exm [» Tax:;cflwrm; h investiga.- oing. ion and accus reports on vaccina condition of smallpox patients treat- The January meeting of the ex-|d In smallpox hospitals or outside o ecutive committee of the Connecticut | SUCh Dospitals. Such repc hall be Congress of Mothers was held at attested and presented to the Hartford. g_i health h ov i officers, for fo {iEhe S\ Standecd HCheroal. (iiron | & | fraamaissliy, Sin to the umber Co. of Canada, Ltd. reduced | ; i its capital stock from' $5.000.000 to | (Continued on Page Six) 5,000,000, == L | FOUR MASTER AGROUND The Ohio State crop report for| SIGHTED OFF QUOGUE, N. Y. No Sign of Life Aboard—Life Savers Unable to Reach Her. Quogue, N. Y., Jan shore lifting at times the plight of a four aground om a bar a g —— Her sails were furle President Wilson will address the|the water, apparen - meeting of the Chamber of Commerce | heavy cargo S8d combers smept oves of the. Unitea Ststes on February S|fier: ‘There was mo men. ot e on trade conditions aboard and it was believed the crew — was below working the pumps. The —London Board iof Trade an-|'rite severs mads froitice corts to nounced a plan for the shipment of | throw lines acros “schooner an merino wool to the United States by |to launch boats vessel lay a system of licenses. too far out to I ind heavy ¥ 5 seas made it for small A reduction of ten points to 4.95¢|boats to be ser e hodnse for refined granulated sugar was an- | before daylight had i nounced by the Federal Sugar Refin- |signals but later in ing Co. in Philadelphia. nt from shore in emained The Anaconda mines, near Butte, | S which have been running five d 2| cutter be dispatcl week since August, have been put on|don, Conn. She six-day schedule again. ashore her name i 4 Ton anchors anc The British steamer Penarth was|vented her from . fiin yrecked on the Norfolk Coast, Eng-|west wind and continued Sure Jand. Twenty-two members of the|ently threatened to oile hor - crew of 27 iwere drowned the beach 1 :1d reached her soon | _The car shops of tue Louisville &} e acK: ’ { Nashville Railroad at Decatur, Ala,| MORE EARTH SHOCKS in Increased activitics by working five| SOUTHWESTERN ITALY s o week instead of four. { — — In a Comparatively Barren Region That Is Not Built Over. 1 | a4 1 p > f the opening | i of the Panama Canal Orie Steamship Co., of Tol will start regular service between Japan and United States, The habeas corpus appeal of { | SWITZERLAND FELT c E ! b a1 nk, convicted of the murder T esavEsDAY HicyT Mary Phagan, an Atlar ory irl, | Several Houses Damaged at Neucha- s Coit S ey tel—Caused Many Avalanches. The Ford Mator Co. be negotiating with the Stevens: yea Automobile Co. for the purchase | that company'’s piant at Bast | ngfield, Mass. i liam Noicus Landers, United attorney of Puerto Rico, died | at his home in Los Gatos, Cal. of a | tropical disease contracted in Puerts Rico ar ago Working in a southeast gale. the|FREIGHT CARS DERAILED revenue cutter Seminole pulled the | : = rwegian steamer Trafalgar 7 NEAR EASE LITCHTIELD Lookout Shoals, N, C, where the v: s 5 sel had grounded. [Track and Roadbed Torn Up for i -soue3sIg Swiog The Cotton Weavers’ Association of | TR 19 Stuttgart, Germany, desires to know e e the present price in’ New York of cot- | gDt Al ton middling. cost of freight and in- | Sar iEaet L itchaeld m sible to obtain. i e v . e distance. > | Passengers on the New York and 34 2 | Winsted express. due in Waterbury a i Yilliam Carnegie, Canon of |7:05" were transferrod around. the estminister in London, announced to | wreck ane Ethe Gy is parishioners on “Intercession | ook @nd the wrecking equipm unday” that he would not comply h the request made him to pray for success of British arms. the Edmund J. Flavin of Malden, Mass. leaded not guilty today to an indict- charging larceny of $1,700 from organization of which he ncial secretary for many fraternal was held in 00 bonds. Orders were issued by Sccretary Garrison withdrawing the United States troops from Naco. Ariz., where they were stationed to protect Amer- ican lives and property from stray bullets from across the Mexican bore der. Joseoh Rigers, who gave his age as and hi: sidence as at Stamford, charged | with having paseed on a man a fraud- ulant chack. The police believe he is a member of a gang of New York forger In order to give work to the unem- ployed. the committee on agriculture of the Massachusetts legislature was asked today by F. T. Fuller repre- senting Governor Walsh, to favor the appropriation of $50,000 for the re- clastion of wooded land in Walpole for farming purposes. New York | of the western d on closely follow- ed that tra: Jt is expected that the | wreckage will be cleared in a short ftime and traffic med. No one was injured. | Governer of Texas Inaugurated. Austin, Texas, Jan. 19.—James F. Ferguson of Temple was augurated governor of Texas toda; In his in- augural adires he mounced that he would discuss the aims of his i istration in a essage to the ture - tomorrow. OBITUARY, Thomas J. Odell, New Britain, Corn., Ja 18 —Themas J. Odell, one of the city’s best known drugsisis, Gied at his home on | street at 8 ocicek thi a short illness with was 41 ) of aga brothers, cf this city, D, of and one sister of Rocl House Pastes Rivers and Harbors Bill. Washington, Jan. 19.—The rivers and harbors appropriation bill, carrying more than $34,000,000, passed the house tonight by a vote of 164 to 1. The bill now goes to ‘he senate, where a pro- tracted fight is expected Hill.

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