Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 15, 1916, Page 1

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GRRRN VOL. LVIiL—NO. 223 POPULATION 28,219 The Bulletin’s Girculation in Norwich is Double That ofi ENTENTE FORCES ARE CLOSE TO COMBLE ~_ NORWICH, CONN., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1916 EIGHT PAGES—64 COLUMNS P z g i &, Other Paper, and Its Total Girculation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportien to the City's Population Gabled_Paragr " [Stpamer at Sea |Auto Accident N, Y. TRANSIT CONDITIONS SERIOUS Harrison Line Condensed Telegrams Fire destroyed five buildings on Glen . 'm—The London, Sept. 14, 11:3. » 3 » Island. S e el DBSITUYEd by Fire 'n]urlBS Fatal (The,Shest Motal Warkers Uion o | Rucinacs and Professional Men Are Offering Their Dead 102d Year. e Peabody, Kan., Sept. 14—Abel Cart- wright, who would have celebrated his 102d birthday November 9, died at his home, near here today. The Nipissing Mining Co’s produc- THE PACIFIC COAST COMPANY’S tion in August amounted to $208,989. LINER CONGRESS MISS HELEN GAYLOR OF HART- FORD DIED IN HOSPITAL Co-operation to Mayor Mitchel ’ $500,000 in gold was withdrawn from the sub-treasury for shipment to Spain. British Are Less Than a Mile From the Western Out- skirts, French a Mile to the East STRIKERS AND SYMPATHIZERS HELD PARADE Two Brigadier Generals Killed. London, Sept. 15, 3.09 a. m.—Two brigadier generals have been Killed in actlon, according to the latest casual- ty lists printed here—Henry Frederick Hugh Clifford and Louis Murray Phillpotts. Gasoline was reduced one cent a gallon at Cheyenne, Wyo., to 22 cents. a gallon. NO LIVES WERE LOST|HAPPENED IN LYME A severe earthquake was reported in Java. All houses jn Maos have collapsed. Vessel Was Two Miles Off the Coast of Oregon—Ships Which Answered Dis- tress Calls Took Off 253 Passengers and Crew of 170. When Machine Overturned Miss Gay- James P. Holland, President of the State Federation of Labor, Told the Striking Carmen That 70,000 Allied Trade Unionists Would Strike Saturday Unless a Settlement of the Transit Strike Was Reached in the Meantime—A lor Was Holding an Infant in Her Germany's Pig lIron Output. Perlin, Sept. 14, by Wireless to Say- ville—The German output of pig iron during August was 1,145,000 tons, as against 1,134,000 tons during July, the Overseas News Agency announces to- day. The Bright Cigar Machine Co. has increased its capital from $100,000 to $1,000,000. Arms, and the Baby Escaped With- out Harm. g LE PRIEZ FARM IN POSSESSION OF THE FRENCH Kaiser Wilhelm has appointed King! . William of Wuerttemberg, a Prussian arshfield, Oregon, Sept. 1$.—Fire o New London, Conn., Sept. 11—Miss tonight completely destroyed the Pa- Helen Gaylor, aged 19, of Hartford, Germans Apparently Unable to Disturb the Entente Wedge ‘Which Has Pierced Their Lines, and Combles is on th¢ RAT FLEAS RESPONSIBLE cific Coast Company’s liner Congress FOR SPREAD OF PARALYSIS two miles off Coos Bay bar. Several vessels which rushed to her assistance died tonight in the Memorial hospital here, as the result of injuries receiv ed in an automobile accident early in The American Association of Port Authorities opened its annual conven- Score of Persons Were Injured, Several of Them Serious- 5 5 —Presi nts _ Advanced by | N Tesponse to distreas cally helped [ the evening at Hall's Corner, Lyme |tion at Montreal ly, in Surface Car Accidents Yesterday—President Sho s e 5 2 Is the Latest Theory Advanced by | emove her 253 passengers and crew | Her skul: was fractured and she had Verge of Falling to the Allies—The Teutonic Allies Ar: Medical Research Men. of 170. It is believed no lives were | Internal injures The New York Central has ordered 4,000 all-steel cars mately $6,000,000. Announced That No Strike Breakers Are to be Employed in Operation of Trains in the Subway, as the Number of lost, although this will not be estab- lished beyond a doubt until all boats which went to the scene have return- ed here. The car in which she was riding bore the state license number 40,360, which is owned jointly by D. ¢ Stoughton and Samuel Rogowsky, the to cost New York, Sept. 14.—That rat fleas I are responsible for the spread of in- fantile paralysis is the theory advanc- ed here by medical research men who Continuing Their Advance in the Dobrudja Sector of Ru- mania—In the Carpathians the Russians Are Pushing - yners a o siness 5 Julius Molter of Brooklyn, one of . a3 e By e T e rming| . Passengers Fought Frantically. |o%mers of & frue busiiess w [Iai3|the oldest members of the' New York Employes Who Remained Loyal Are Sufficient to Man . . the carrier and transmitter of the | When the dredge Michie and the lhere, Mr. Stoushton, who was driv- |Stock Exchange, Is dead. Their Attacks—Events on the Macedonian Front Are Be- | discasc, according to_an announce- |8as schooner Tillamook reached the ing, ‘tried to steer out of the rcad for a dog and the machine overturned. Miss Gaylor wag holding a the Trains. Congress they found the liner almost onight by Dr. Haven Emerson, 3 ment tonight by Dr. Haven Imersom | qompietely shrouded in smoks and the Edwin B. Cox and Thomas F. Ellis city health commissioner. clouded by Contradictory Reports—Usual Bombard- el baby in |have been elected members of the The commisisoner stated that ex-|Passengers fighting [rantically to en- | her arms and the infant escaped harm. | Chicago Board of Trade. ~ g : periments with almost all_bugs and : Lot L th The three other adult occupants were o = —Teading busi-, Although & score of persons were ments and Isolated Infantry Attacks on the Austro-Italian | Vermin had been abandoned as of no [ ¢f the situation, however, Captain .| bruised but did nmot require medical| Louis Brufore, of Hoboken, N. J., mf;‘i‘d’m}‘l’fr‘é'feie‘:,',;z}‘;“Az,‘el.,.“git took | injured, several of them seriously, in value and that attention now T ey attention. wasstrangled to death by a tight coll- | 2 b5 ‘ etrike which for | surface car accidents today, the ps Frout T Seomeentrated on fleas, this idea | Maintain control andl the work Of | 'The other members of the party |ar, while in an epileptic fit. a hand in the transit strike WATD (00| Peported there was comparatively lit= e having first meen suggested by Dr.|lransferring the people aboard to the | were Mrs E. J. Lovelle, Mrs. James . the past seven days has Mem” tho |tle violence. Subway —and elevated Mark Richardson, secretary of the|lescle vessels was carried out in an | McDonough, Dwight H. Stoushton, all hard Straus, noted composer, has | jenspotiation (f - S MM \Vestchester | train service continued about mormal, Massachusetts department of health, 3 25 of Hartford. finished a new opera entited ~The|mronsy *“Swiile James P. Holland, | while, it was said, there was slight Wwho lost two of his children of the Heat Almost Unbearabie. Woman Without a Shadow.” SOty othe o Federati % | improvement in the number of surface set by the British on the west andtacked vigorously the forces of the | disease. 1 : president; of the State Fedoration o Before the last boat load, in which was Captain Cousins, left the Con- sress the smoke and heat were almost unbearable. Flames were shooting out of the ship's ventilators and up the passageway. GENERAL BLISS TO APPEAR BEFORE JOINT COMMISSION When Discussion of Border Problems ench on th in the France, apparent capture by the entei cars in_operation. Theodore P. Shonts, president of the Interborough Rapid Transit company, announced that beginning tonight no trikebreakers would be employed in . the village of | central powers at Smotrec, Ludova and region ot | Kapul. storming positions’ after heavy 3 preparatory bembardment. Their ef- on the verge of forts to drive forward, however, were forces. ‘stopped with sanguinary losses, ac- is based on careful Emerson sald, “but net vet been fully ‘The flea theory Labor, was telling 8,000 striking car- rvation,” D: men and their sympathizers at a meet- ing_in Union square that 70,000 allied trade unionists would strike Saturday unless a settlement of the transit William J. Mryan will begin a speak- ing tour next week through western and central states for Wilson. mme s pointed out tonight that one h o is Renewed Today. Gen. Obregon whose health has im- | %7} 3 antime, | the operation of trains in the sub- With the Eritish firmly established | cording to_Vienna. . n Braes of Harvara university,| Soon afterward the flames cnveloped 24 proved, is expected to Tesume his post | STIKe was effected dn Ahe o | way. He said that the number of in the Leuze wood, less than a mile| On the Macedonian front consider-|who studicd the disease here for six|her from stem to stern, lighting the| New London, Conn., Sept. 14—Major |as minister of war immediately. e o tocing thelr co-operation to|employes who had remained loyal to from the western outskirts of the vil-:able heavy fighting has taken place, is working on the flea trans-|sky to a crimson hue. With the wind | General Tasker H. Bliss, assietant o Mitenel and the public service | the company was suficient to man lage, the French a mile east of it have | but with the results beclouded owing | mission theory, as are surgeons of the|and tide the steamer then began drift-|chief of staff of the United States| Secretary of War Baker announced | DL 1 the trains. driven their wedge in farther a to variant reports by the different war | United States public health vice | ing in toward the spit of Coos Bay. |army, is expecte dto appear before the |that the National Rifle match will be | “OREISSOR. o 1o strikers and their| Frederick W. Whitridge, president of captured Le Priez farm, through which | chancelleries. The Serbs in the Lake [and the Rockefeller Institute for Med- No One Injured. ‘American-Mexican commission tomor. |beld at Jacksonvile, Fla., Oct. 20. : ';mf;”:}gm”o“,ed a parade which | the Thirfi Avenue Railroad company, Tuns the road 1o ¥ The farm, [ Ostrovo region are declared by Paris|ical Research. £ The dredge Michie docked at North |TOW. when discussion of border prob-| . T O 2 lasted more | tonight extended an invitation to for- which had been h the Ge to have made appreciable progress| Commisioner erson, however, in-| oo 5% [C208) To iohight witl all the |1ems is renewcd. He will be the first. [ Six men were burned in the plant of | o hour. The mayor and the|mer employes of his company now, on ms a point of support against Ire nst the liulgarians, while Dboth |sists that the chance of spreading the | Dend ncar heve, tonight Wwith all the| 5% Joiibly the only, withess to be|the International Arms & Fuse Co., at| Bof &0 ROIF o iioion ot the same |Strike to return to work, —promising encroachments upon Combles, was in and Sofia_report bombardments | diseuse from one person to another is | PASSenEers and the crew of (he sleam- | iy rogated by the commission in|Bloomfield, N. J, by a powder explo- | B STl o rerance with com. | better working conditions and an in- taken by assault. In *his vicinity, but mention gains for | by far the greatest. Hacser wax ioiiives Ak, joint session, as it is said to be the|Sion. e O D o amber of com-|crease in wages amounting to $50,000 Along the Peronne-Bethune road, |neither side. On the front where the| "Lt was pointed out onight that one| - s S s Bl the S loer conminethners e e ae cha st latscaiadbn” anii|in year, Rorth Snd pouth ot Deathavesnes. the | Ialians are facing . the Bulgasians, | renson why ifantile paralysis . had | Fire Was Discovered in Second Hold | {S€e O fie dmerican commissioners} 1, tonth annual convention of the | Merce, the merchants’ assoclafivr SR ™ 0 ioving today at the public ser- Germane, according o Paris, have |Sofia assorts, the Italians have been |not appeared in various children’s in-| According to word reaching here. | endless succession of persons who wish | American Association of Title Men wil | kindred oreantzations, 1o S8 €08 D ;oo bommission investigation, William Vainty attacked the newly won French | put to flight. In the Doiran resion the | stitutions probably was that rats and | the fire was discovered at about 3 D.|to he heard. thus delaying the delibera. |Pe held in Cincinnati on Sept. 14, 15|end_the strlice. Aol o o o rece | B. Fitzgerald, organizer of the car- positions in the hope of regaining | British have taken a Teutonic posi-|the fieas they carry were absent|m. near the second hold in the steer-|tions. It was thought advisable that|and 16. T R A stics Las bo.|men's walom, placed the responeibiiis Phetr transport line to the morth, but | ton north of the town of Mucukovo. | there. age cabin. No word was received | General Bliss should explain in person — ognizing that the sitiation has b | e ke on| fhe fransitscomiie all their efforts h: been without | Several Germans were made prisoner from the Congress, however, regard- |to the Mexican comnissioners ime| A Socialist conference, represeating|tome sexions and FRAf reeCs BC 0 | les. He said the companies refused succe and the French have main-|2nd a number of machine guns were | GERMANS SEIZE 750,000,000 ing the fire until mearly o p. m. At|military aspects of the various border (0 P e S s té"{girx‘;‘% e he bubtic service | to deal with the Amalsamated Asso- tained all their gains. captured. hat time the steamer was running | p). i oentt i At in Sept. 21, to decide the party's fu- ihe iy i & 5 e Tect; v and a t advance by the French |Stazefl that the Greck forts at Kavala SRraEs A L B b S T i o finite i r o e o - o the “ a by me: dvance by the Trench |statd that the Greck forts at Kavald| ;. of German GCurrency Has Been|coon was at ihe. scene. . Bants. wors | peOpucinite plan for border patrol| Thomas Nelson Pags, American Am- |lic service commissicn into the causes | tzation therefore mover Tiad anyhing Eelloy Santerre, south of the| Berlin says they are all in the hands Forced Upon Belgium. lowered at once. The: Easoline schoon- | of ng R s e A ereans [lbassadon ‘arvived 2t Dafie: Tialy, for| which ied i she presens BURR Pru ity O et DinGingt G Somme, the s n lesewhere on the|of the Bulgars and that the Greek o gr Tillamook arrived just before the|wire long in. conference with General|tne, announced visit to the Austro-| ¥ W 1 M 3 % v s Peli <. - v 3 s 2 o - o e . g 2 C eneral 3 then neither Mayor Mitchel nor mem- |not to seek wage increases for two entire front France and Belgiym | troops which were at Kavala have Frarn Sept. 14, 5 p. m. last of the passengers were removed |jijic ors x P Italian front. t 2 The. Tentomie aliles are continuing | Wil remain antil the ond of fhe wey|of finance, today authorized the fol- | BTess; Whero watchers on shore could | fiot, the Proposal fwhich has appealed| Miss Mary Dawson of Philadelphia, | tonight, would announce definitely, the | a2te, U2 MM Cor 1S roons’ a0, thint their advance on the Dobrudja sector | “in the state of neutrals.” lowing statement gee dane IAlocyOE s N el Sentatives of the Washington zovm. |died In a Bospital at Easton, Pa, of |blans, they have in o B e the DreserttGomb el of Rumania, acCording to Berlin and| In the Austro-Italian theatre the| “The news of the seizure of 750,000,- Eent St D yeon sovern: libums ineceived | while smokin outiljihe (il Pt L 2 Sofla. Across the mountains in ‘Tran- | usual bombardments and isolated in- [ 000 francs in the Delgian national bank|w., H, TAFT IN A LETTER be created to operate as a police force |Caterpillars from a tree. Eylv t anians have attack- | fantry attacks continue, by the German military administra- AL i e @ POllce foxce - g e Der e ed wes Hermannstadt, but | Late Athens despateles declare that |tion in Brussels is prefably true, al- ATTACKS ADMINISTRATION IS & s (6o fowe 0o commament | e ooy e or=e =écioualyfinjurad aad (ILAFEST URERORTS EHOM BARTEERESIDE were repul says the Vienna war|M. Dimitracopulos has declined to | though no otficial confirmation of it has| _ L — ik e composed | 16 others hurt when the roof of a TO TAKE IN CAMPAIGN office. |form a cabinet to succeed tha of M.|vet heen re-eived First Campaign Utterance to Hughes |95 £ em b ocrs, of both countries, |water _tunnel belng dug under the LLLINOISAERIMARICEL ECRION In the Carpathians the Russians at- ) Zaimis. pumi' German milliazy rulo has com._ National College League. ared DY hoth sovernments|LCCr OF Lake Erio caved in. Governor E. F. Dunne Has Plurality | Was Subject of nvDilc:; n at Long = oS Wy b e s vl 03 i i S clicd the payment of contributio — s e D spyernments; > : e fevied upon Pelgiars to bo made in| New York Sept 14—In mis first|not been worked snty o 07 3VC|, Gold to the amount of $10,000000 has of/About 83,000- BranciiYsstaniay E Y MILITIAMEN U. S. IS ASSURED OF THE francs at value with the mark at|campaign utterance in a letter to the been receive rom Canada an de- - L BedEnch Arem o : 1.5 francs. and it has at the same time | Hughes National Colleze Leazue, posited at the Assay Office for the ac-| Chicazo, Sept. 14—kLatest reports| Long Bianch, I, J. Sept 1i-°Tbe OO E INTEGRITY OF CHINA. | 25, iR B uitements in Belgium | made public here today, William How- | VICE PRESIDENT MARSHALL count of J. P. Morgan & Co. from v térday's Tiinols primary elec: | Bart e ot O election was 3 Y ;i arks. German © cy has be aft a s in- s n_indicate h G e 5 y Seventy-five Officers and Men Dissat- | Russia and Japan Reply to Inquiries— | 3, Tks: | German currency has b ard acs fatlacied theuprestatiadmin NOTIFIED OF RENOMINATION.| A thousand barrels of Plue Point|E. F. Dunne's plurality for the demo- | discussed here today by the president, isfied With Food Scrved Them. | Open Door Policy Unchanged. ner to replace Be “There are so many reasons why e oysters were packed In the refrigerat- | cratic nomination for governor would | Secretary of the Treasuty & 0% A Large Number of Prominent Demo- c 5 2 g Burlesor: and Sec- Lol Ll e st Wiikon ehot ot b conit ors of the steamship Adriatic, which | be 83000 and that of Frank O. Low- | Postmaster-geheral wei Jersey City, N. ¥, Sept, 14—Dissat-| Washington, Sept. 14-—Both Tapan|ed e drriom o the mational Dark| tho'head L o mretenemied 3% | “crats Were Present at Indianapolis. |sailed yesterday for Liverpool. den on the republican ticket 100,000. |retary Tumulty. The plons, it Wwas isfied with the food served them, it is|and Russia have given the United | gnd endeavored to compel them to|former president wrote, “that some The defeat of Lieutenant Governor | Soaouneed Lomsth Wil o0 R omdey 3aid, 76 officers and men of the Fourth | States formal assurances that the new | s et o o T oamy o, tho | Miportant anes. are apt to ba. forgot- | ,indianapolis, Ind, Sept. 14—Vice| A new type of ship has arrived at|Barmatt O'Hara, = democraby —for rec | O 0 RS Sigent S loon, Vance Mo regiment, national guard of New. Jor. | Rueso-Japanese treaty does mot repeal | oo rer e Caeh In O o s on | tamin thelr multipliclty, It is of the | President Thomas’ R. Marshall was|Christinia, Norway from Christiania- | Bomination by Henry W. Huttman of | ;CSRe B0ty by, '5e°the democratie ey, have deserted their command in |or affect the treaties of 1907 and 1910, | fused and one of them, M. Carlier, was | highest importance that in the very |RBotified toni; of his renomination |fjord. It Tesembles a huge barge and | Chicago, was assured by late down-|[SNCET O TRT and Fomer. 8. camp at Sea Girt, | Colonel Georse T.|in which thosc nations pledsed them- | the irosted amd is kept as a|critical issues that are to be met in|for vice president on the democratic |is constructed entirely of concrete. statcirotuns. (I bprobabjonthal 128 s t - ickers, regimental commander, to- | selves to maintain the integrity hina and the open door policy. of than determine the | Cummings, head of the speakers’ bu- where we do not know. G e e s onding of the wap | ticket and formally accepted the hone L0 pres Wl night asked the police of Jerse ere e 20 RO KON ould | we. Should have & consistent and intel. |OF: The ceremonies were the third of | Pope Benedict will make no more [ Fepublican attorney generals nom e o e e and neighboring cities 1o The assurances were Elven 1o Am- | know i o el W O eno ™1 | sude policy, of @ constructive and |the kind to be held in Indianapolis |efforts to end the war until he is|Dation between Edward J. Bronfagt|.orch ‘campaign” at Shadow Lawn the men they could find. bassador: krie at Tokio and Fran- R0 i) eramenus mature and this canmot be | Within the last few weeks. The other |convinced that one side or the other | Of Chicago and Richard J.. Barr of | B eek. In the meantime he ment recently returned from ser cis at Petrozrad in response fo In-| A despatch from The Hague under|predicated on a continued democratic|two motifications were for J. Frank [is approaching a stage of exhaustion. | JOel- ¢ will write a number of letters to the Mexican border. quiries. The state department today |gate of Sept. 11 quoted the Lel + | administration.” Hanly, the prohibition _presidenti — For congressman-at-large the nom- | Jo B0 e “candidates in doubtfal The police were informed that three | Fecelved from M. GUinre a note on | aaie of Sept. 11 auated the Belsische | A0 o llcox said that an Oc- |candidate, and Charles W. Fairbanks,| Judge Alfred K. Nippert, of Cincin- | ination of Medill MeCormick by the | Cie,™" Qithough he has_definitely of the men who left the camp wero | the subjoct addresscd fo him by the| osPiad as announcing that the GeIC| . her speaking tour was being arrang. |republican vice presidential nomineo. |nati, announced that the East Prussian | FePublicans was certain and IO Wil | decidea to make no speeches away officers, but that none was of high|Japanese foreign office stating in un- | pounds placed in the Deisian national|ed for Mr. Taft and that during the| A large number of prominent demo- |Relief Committee had sent 320,000 to rurning mate, Former oo e his | from here except before non-partisan rank. eanivocal terms that Japan had et |Louncs placed in the Belsian national| o e mesih Kliha Root would speak |Crats, including National Chairman |Germany for the relief of Fast Prus- | liam B Mason was SHensthenind U% | organizations, his political _advisers Two privates and one corporal were |for a moment entertained the Inten- | op the momeriim the Gomming of: | In several places in New York state in | Vance McCormick, froma all over the |Sia. lead over B. M. Chipperfield, incum- | oreanizations, Ris Rollcal A3Ters arrested here tonight and held to|tion of departing from those policies. | fering th pay 5 Der cent. imterent and | Mr. Hughes behalf. United States were present at the Dent. Ry anieq by tha | be able fo get his views before the gwait orders from Colonel Vickers | =Department officials Tet it be known el s s oy e E notification. _Irformal political confer- | George Joslin, of Union Valley, N. J., A B e o Inaicased. thas| country effectively. B e Kreatad Colit this peliee ¥hey fithat tho Statiieht i S Dfley years 2y ences were held by the leader. was Killed, and _Rudolph Heidin B s nad Do intention of deserting, but |latactory and that Inguiies regordimg | 0% °f the war. HOTEL JOHIRT ons K e g : i A decision has been reached that the president’s campaign will follow closely the lines of his speech of ac- ceptance. iries regarding the new treaty, over which they had been considerably perturbed, probably would not be pressed further. The Japanese note resulted from in- Joseph O, Kostner of Chicago would win over Everett Jenkins by aoout 5,- 000 for the other place. The total vote in the state cast at the primary was only 57 per cent. of was seriously injured when Joslin’ motoreycle collided with an automobile bus. plans for the campaign were discussed thoroughly. Reports of what had been done in Indiana were made to National Chairman McCormick. that they had wanted a “regular meal” and had come to their homes in Jerscy City to get it. SESSION IN MERIDEN Nw York Men Defeat Their New Eng- A NEW WORLD’S RECORD IN NAVAL GUNNERY. land Brethren at Golf. iirles made by Ambassador Guthrie Tokio by direction of the state de- partment regarding the effect of the new treaty HENRY FORD TO SUPPORT WILSON FOR RE-ELECTION. Has Been Made by the New Super- dreadnought Pennsylvania. Meriden. Conn., Sept. 14—About fif- ty hotel men from various parts of the country attended the combined conven- tion of the New York Hotel associ- Bainb ‘Washington, Sept. 14 record in naval gunner: A new world's has been made ge Colby to Enter Progressive Martin H. Glynn, former governor of New York, delivered the speech of no- tification, after having been introduced by J. A.'M. Adair, candidate for gov- ernor of Indiara, chairman of the cere- monies. All the speakers praised the Dr. Charles W. Pilgrim, Superintend-. ent of the Hudson River State Hospital was appointed president of the State Lunacy Commission by Governor Whitman. the vote cast for governor In 1912. EIGHT WATERBURY FIREMEN OVERCOME BY GAS FUMES ONE-POUND SHELL BURST WHEN STRUCK WITH HAMMER. Three Men Cut by Flying Piec 3 1 Ruins at Black Tom Island. ¢ x | prese it Ten persons were injured, two prob- ; J Primary Contest for Senate, STOLEN CLOTHING WAS by ‘the ‘ew super-dreadnought. Penn- o A e N e e rton | Dliae 10 T ol ipistration, ve-].riy tatally; when & Jliney’ bua was|Captain Wilton| Taken to Haspitabl .. =~ o fo=oe (bl 0l New York, Sept. 14—Henry Ford SOLD AT HALF PRICE |s¥lvania, the mavy department an-|LCGRSY' ihe Highlana Country club a|had been made on it and expressed |'ammed by a trolley car at Charl Violent From ' Conyvulsions. pouad aneily picked up Tevm: the xiive the Detroit automobile manufacturer, [Then George W. Simm, B O e tinins 35 |£olf team representing the New oYrk | confidence of a democratic victor, street and Palisade Avenue, West Ho- . 2 of the explosion on July 30 at Black declared today that he and “his neigh- rge W. Simm, a Salesman, |13 EIVER to he I8 B e tery | assoclation won the team match from| A Dig parade preceded the cere- |Poken, N. J. Waterbury, Conn., Sept. i4—Wight|ny; re)0g which resulted in several bors” would support President Wilsor Lost 1li-Gotten Gains in Wall St. (il ious it oot which: onln shica) | the New England association by the | mories. firemen were overcome by gas fumes ey for re-election, it was announced at score of 15-9, thereby winning the sil- Lo 2 Warm weather attracted about 250,- deaths and property damage estimated fire here ton- dent Wilson, a statement progressives announsing that could enter the progressive party the nomination to United States senate. of New York,” clothing at half the price and had lost most of the money in Wall Street speculations. Mr. Bohan sald Simm told him the clothing had been remov- ed from the store in suit cases before other employes came to work in the morning. and E. M. Tierney of New York city tied for first and second places in_the best net score, each getting a 78. This tie is to be settled by plaving a mtch at a later date. In the evening a meeting of the board of directors was held at which plans were discuss- ed for the fall meeting. It will be but none equalling that of the Penn- sylvania has been found. The Pennsylvania is the first vessel to have its entire main battery mount. ed three guns to a turret and her per- formance is declared by ordnance and construction officers to be the final answer to critics opposing che three- cution—Was Valued at $20,000. Erwin, Tenn., Sept. 14.—“Mary,” the big circus elephant which killed her trainer at: Kingston, Tenn., Tuesday, was hanged here today. A railroad derrick car was used in the execution. The animal was forced to the tracks by other elephants, heavy chaips were cratic Chairman, and former Goy. Martin H. Glynn, left for Indianapolis to notify Vice-President Marshall of his renomination. President W. G. Besler, of the Cen- tral Railroad @ New Jersey, has di- rected all of its freight agents to di sequential. MRS. ANNIE S. HOWE 1S STEADILY FAILING President Wilson's Sister, Who is at a Hotel in New London. N neous discharge in a recent trial, res e whileifieh log o s at $20,000,000, burst today when cra . % ¥ New York, = | —C 3 > 2 4 vi - 0 ersons to tl ght’s - ight. seri ly affected 1 2 o’ o democratic headquarters tonizht, neaeny Yomk, Sept: 14—Charged with | {ords’ five hits on @ small target 11| JST Jo¥ing Gup presentel hY the I | CIRCUS ELEPHANT WHICH T e T o i et en . o | atrmokiwithia Ranmars-arls o s Bainbridge Colby, who nominated | ;2108 ZiONS, U0 teh VS N | miles away. At that distance a tar- | (71 300"0f Bost e Dt "eross Flv6 thousand. sWoodmen of the wosld | hospftal, - violent | from convulsions, | three men. Andrew Welker, an ‘em= Theodore Roosevelt for president at|f7Med, 4 between 36000 and $75.000 | got 15 not visible to the gunners. A e ot il ith o oaen KILLED TRAINER HANGED |ycre present A rors “were brought to the |Plove of the Lehigh Valley Raflroad the progressive mational convention In |\ simm, 5 salesman, accoraing i |, Bicords, of the highest scores ever|ofos 47.os Eharles H. Bowker and | A Railroad Derrick Used in the E § same institution but thelr cohditions | SOMEaRY I tho Hlack Tom, yarco, Who «C 'Ago, ‘wh has declare % H made der similar circumstances ¥ el Vo = e Exe- i ' o ‘merl W - | wielded the hamm lost two fii TS, : ohut Assistant " Distrl made un ™ v fass. Vance McCormick, Nationa : ot serious. The fire was incon er, wo fine himself fn favor of the re-election of | Asciocant ' Distriet Atforney’ Bohan, | I heen examined by naval omeers, | Y-, V5 Kimball of Northampton, Mass., ick, National Demo- |are not serio Two other workmen were cut by fiying pieces of the shell. The Lehigh Valley railroad notified the authorities of Jersey City today that it is not handling explosives in bulk in the city and that ammuaition is not allowed to remain in the city over night. TURKEY CONSENTS TO it held in Stockbridge, Mass., in Novem- continue handling shipments of ex- tied around her neck and she VILLA FORCES ENGAGE 3 1 r was | plosiv city! - ok RELIEF SHIPMENTS e M otads snd Oklahoma, also new | ber- The exact date was not decided. | hoisted in the air. She was valued at|> - o *© Jorsey City ey Longon, Conn, Sept. M4 P~ |MERIDEN POSTPONES GOVERNMENT TROOPS.|additions to the navy. are equipped EIVE MEN KILLED WHEN $20,000 by her owners, The Champion Lumber Co., one of | Mrs. Annie S. Howe, sister of Presi- OPENING OF SCHOOLS From the United States to the Famine with two three-gun and two two-gun w [ P! the largest lumber corporations in the South, has been declared bankrupt by Federal Judge Boyd at Greensboro. Liabilities from $4,000,000 to $6,000,000. turrets. Neither of these has been able to cope with -the Pennsylvania, although both made unusually good ecores during their preliminary prac- tice. The Pennsylvania and Oklahoma at the present time are undergoing their final tests and, navy department re- Capture a Village in the Neighborhood of Chihuahua City. Presidio, Tex., Sept. 14.—A report reached the border tonight that Villa followers have engaged government troops near Meoqui, a town of some fmportance on the line of the Mexi- dent Wiison, who is critically ill at a hotel here, issued the following bulle- tin_at 8.30 tonight: “Mrs. Howe has failed steadily to- day.” ittocets 2F Sysin, AN AMMONIA TANK BURST. OBITUARY. J. Rice Winchell. New Haven, Conn., Sept. 14.—J. Rice ‘Winchell, for many years collector of customs at New Haven, and a former newspaper editor, died at his home to- Although Health Officers Stated Was Safe to pen Them. Meriden, Conn,, Sept. 14.—Although infantile paralysis is on the decrease in this city, the school committee vot- ed at a special meeting_this evening It ‘Washington, Sept. 14.—The Turkish government, in a communication re- ceived today at the state department, consents to shipment of relief supplies from the United States ta famine suf- ferers in Syria. Tank Had Just Been Installed and Was Being Tested. Announcement was made at the De- partment of Agriculture that a special nation-wide Inquiry will be made into Newark, N. J, Sept. 14—Samuel NOMINEE HUGHES IS Botjin, president of the Interstate Milk ENJOYING A REST. > i o and Cream company, at Elizabeth and | night after a short illness, aged 85, |the cost of producing milk and the to defer the opening of the public The action reverses the previous at- |30 Central railway, about 50 miles :‘;;Sifi::a;)n:rein‘;m}l\li‘g"fiyl:gt(:erggé;ig Hawthorne avenues, and four others,|In the late 60's he published papers at [ProPOsed increases in price in various|o .. pay With His Family and Goes |SCh00IS until September = 25. They titude of Turkish officials, who had re- | foutheast of Chihuahua City, with the |70 "0 C7 including his son-in-law, were killed | Hannibal and Palmyra, Mo. In 1886 |Cities. P YRR, S y were to open next Monday. fused two urment pleas by the . de- |result that they were able to occupy 3 and three persons were seriously in-|he came to New Haven as deputy col- Out Riding. Foth City Health Officer L. F. partment for the privilege to make | Julimez a village of the neighborhood. 2 Cor issi John J. Dillon, of th ALL YALE BATTERIES WILL jured when an ammonia tadk in the State Department of Foods and Mars lector, the position he held until his Dlant exploded this afternoon. such shipments. retirement a few years ago. At one Wheatley and Town Health Officer E. Villa himself, according to the rmmor, Bridgehamton, N. Y. Sept. 14— joined his forces in Julimez. BE AT NIANTIC TONIGHT | " The tank had just been installed and time_he was editor of the New Ha- kets, conferred with representatives of Charles E. Hughes rested from his A. Wilson stated it was safe to open O prenenat Rl s the schools Monday. Dr. David_Gibbs, POt Vi being tested when the explosion|ven Palladium. airymen’ ague, 1 campaign activities today a is sum- | superintendent of schools, and Charles NEWSBOY HELD FOR SELLING ITALIAN AEROPLANES MADE Preparatory to_ Being Mustered Out | oicirred. Thera ave five buildings in| He leaves hir wife, a daughter ana|York and Pemnsylvania, on milk mer home here. He spent most of the | F, Rockwell, chairman of the commit- NEWSPAPER WITH LIQUOR ADS RA of the Federal Service. the plant, all of them close together.|two sons. One son, Benjamin L, |tribution in New York. hours with members of his family and | tae, were given the power to further ID ON AUSTRIAN ARSENAL No dstimate has been made as vet as| Winchell, former president of the Chi= | 0. oo\ op o | sought xecreation also in riding. He| defer the opening after September 25 i . > ., Sept. M.—By edam: 0, Rock Island and Pacifi |- ajor < ad no statemen 0 ake regarding|if they see fit. Matthew Mindy Held Under $500 Bond | Dropped Five Tons of High Explosives | yomervou “uimt i ot ‘the batierics | oo e cific rail- f o e partment asking the arrest and | the political situation. o ] at Atlanta, Ga. —Large Fires Were Observed. & of the Yale battalion of field artillery will be on the state camp grounds at Niantic, preparatory to being mus- : . return to San Antonio to stand trial, Dr. Enrique Nunez Condition Critical. of Captains J. D. Walrath and Fred New York, Sept. 14—The condition Aviator Injured at Fair, W. Laas, quartermaster of the First Bulger Gets 60 Day Reprieve. Atlanta, Ga.,, Sept. Denver, Colo., Sept. 14—The state Mindy, a’ newsboy, was 14—Matthew Rome, held under 14 ¢ Movements of Steamships. Sept. via_ London—A = i v 4 i p ina, Sept. 5.—Sailed, steamer |board of pardons today granted a re- squadron of Italian aeroplanes made a | tered out of the federal service. Two |of Dr. Enrique Nunez, Cuban secre- [ Bethany, Mo, Sept. 14—Fred de Kor, [nd Second Illinois regiments. Messina, Scpt. ons t $500 bond here today, charged with |raid yesterday on the Amnm arsenal ni&‘lne,f A and B, are already on the |tary of sanitation, who is ill in @ hos- |an aviator, was probably fatally injur- Napoli, New Slortk TN prieve of sixty days ‘:D Jam‘es C. Bul- Foing “Rew Tork. Jacksonville and |and seropiass Mamars oo oot | e Battery G passed through | pital here, was pronounced _critical [ed this afferncon whon he lost control | The most remarkable taregt practice | New Work, Sept. Ls—Arrived, steam- | gor, unfer death sentence in connec; B ot mewspapors . containing | savs wn omelal e rment asued by |t oity today on its way from Toby- |tonight. Dr. Nunez was operated on|of his biplane and fell about a hun-|in the history of the United States|er Lapland, Liverpool fion wi © httheklilnINNre oo avertisements. The case |the war office. todey Tive “tons: of | hanna Pac to Niantic and Battery D, |a few days after an infection caused |dred feet, striking the grandstand at|Navy, took place in Chesapeake Bay| Genon, Sept. S-—ptuved, steamer) ton with the killing o T will Do heard Friday, fs_ the |high exploslves - ice —dropped - and | the isst division of the battalion i |by @ cut on his foot. He came to the|the county fair grounds. Fifteen |last week, when the United Stats bat- [Duca d'Aosta, New ¥ork odemus, a Denver hotel proprietor.. wers observed The board decided to appoint an alien: = | f 5 first of its kind to be brought here|large fires Qmdes Georgla’s nesd mxahbibitied Jaw. the statemsnt adds. expected to pass through New Haven United States to visit springs nofed tomarzawe. curative nawers. thousand persons witnessed the acci- for their tleships Oklahoma and Pennsylvania dent. 'nit a target at a range of 2 New York, Sept. 14.—Sailed, steamer 0,000 vards. United States, Copenhagen ist to investigate Bulger's sanity.

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