Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 7, 1916, Page 1

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Bush T inal Buildi Ci HAssmsEAsouzn FIGHTERS IN | has tocrensnd fro captinl from $1510903 | ESTABLISHMENT OF NEW KING- GARRISON THERE O LI00 0 i DOM IS PROCLAIMED Shipments of currency from Chicago VO.. LVIl—NO. 268 POPULATION 28,219 NORWICH, CONN. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1916 12 PAGES—84 COLUMNS ie.. PRICE TWO CENTS M-w The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and Its Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the City’s Population. gzn‘;um ;u.n;n l:;y be Inhr;-d‘;. a n:cm o rgmmm" of the ndon, Nov. 7. 1:00 a. m.—A Reut- L reller a . 2 - P e Ghlhuahua Gity| e eqoe somm: e e | HOISTEM @t Lublin ¥ the outbreak of the war, has arrived ———— at Flushing, with the purpose of con- OF POLlTlCAL RIVA tinuing the voyage to Rotterdam to- | HALT THE TEUTONIC ALLIES IN ™ | Placed anoard the atie- which win| THE ™ o 'DIA REGION 1 French Flng on Greek Flotill l&!f m:mth“":l': 817..816.771. against epublican and Democratic Leaders Are Equally Con- |, sensen, Nov. & 525 5. m—meuier + ENEMY BACK|TO FIGHT TO THE LAST|fhrifiis's 1o rbo DIAMETRICAL CLAIMS mta""’":a:fl":"’"’n Btima:;::hgfl::sm Carranza fo Hold | Condensed Telograms |Boligh Flag jg PLAY NATIO&AL ANTHEM - flag, was hoisted yesterda; on P 3 ¥ | president Emeritus of Washington and = fident of Ballot Victory Today Greeie lieht fiotilla’ at Keratsial, . Jn the Transylvania Front the Teu- |Offensive Against the Villa Bandits | Jefferson College, is dead. Polish Flag Was Hoisted Beside the e Eaernment last Yok refusel! tons Have Brought Up Reinforce-| Wil be Resumed When Reinforce- AR old trunk was found at Little| Austro-Hungarian Colors on Al ; s, N. Y., containing the body of a e I D D s soso il | ments and Have Checked Rumanians| ments, Now on the Way, Arrive. man ‘about thirty years old. Public Buildings. PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES AT THEIR HOMES |vustore w__ — Fatrick Counihan of Now Yorl, was iy ville) —The establishment Sl et i rC AT the |rudja region of Rumania, where ths|ranza forces is not being considered,| Qne hundred Leland Stanford Uni-|Xingdom of Poland als was prociaton: 5 b afternoon. forces of the Teutonic allies had been |and if an attack is made by the Villa ed at Lublin in the palace 2 Both Parties Claim New York State by About 100,000 Plu- _— marching almost unimpeded morth- | bandits the garrison will repulse them, | Yorsity Ten volunteered for setvico in | b0 (00, 1, B8 Briace of the eor ¢ DENIAL MADE BY ward scross the province from the|General Jaciuto Trevino declared tol.qmpe from that city. The proclamation took rality—Officials to be Elected Are President and Vice- President, 33 United States Senators, 435 Members of ! the House of Representatives, 35 Governors—Three Wo- BRITISH ADMIRALTY | Black Sea to the Danube, comes the|the correspondent of The Associated P place in the presence of the adminis- report that the Rumanians have now | Press yesterday. Roberto A. Cizar, first secretary of | rator general, the clergy of the dio- Of Order Not to Save Survivors of |{aken the offensive, probably aided Prepared for an Attack. the Colombia Legation, was promot- | cése, deputies from all Polish associa- German Submarines. o Ussians and compelled the Teu-| e have more than 8,000 seasoned [ed to Minister to Argentine, Chile and | tions, veterans of 1563, the vice presi- kil onic allies to retreat at several|fngnters in the garrison here and our|Uruguay. dent of the central relief committee London, Nov. 6, 10.27 p. m.—The ad- [ POt - e fortifications are impossible to over- 5 and numerous officers. Wil V. . |miralty tonisht in a published com- e n Transylvania Front. come without heavy artillery, which = MadrvmuH-r§ gf iNew York,kwas Proclamation Read. o ‘N e in | munique again denies that it ever is- n the Transylvania front, however, | Villa does not possess,” General Tre- | found guilty of having shot and killed Accompanied by his associates, the men Are Running for Congress omen ot sued orders that survivors of German [the Rumanians in the Jiul valley who | vino stated. “We are prepared for an|Martin Reddy on June 25, during a|governor general antered the rose ang & 4 submarines need not be rescued. The |for some time had been holding the |attack, and my men are ready to fight | £ang fight. read roclamation. At its con- Twelve States This Year—Nine States Are to Vote on|communique states that the German|ubper hand over the Austro.Ger. | to the last. The spirit of tie men is = _ clusion e said: R - v press “is trying to make capital out of | mans, forcing them to give ground.|unbroken and I am determined to re-| Three women and two children were| ~ “The aliied monarchs thus most sol- ez what they describe as a second Bara- (have now been stopped, the Teutons|main in Chihuahua City and repulse |rescued from a fire which destroved | emnly guarantee the re-establish: Prohibition. long case, possibly in_order to incite [ having brought up reinforcements. In | the bandit horde.” the Summerfield Hotel at Asbury Park, | of the kingdom of Poland. This fact American’ opinion against Great Brit- [the Predea! pass reglon, after heavy Reinforcements Expected. A cannot be any more overturned.” ain or as a pretext for an unrestrain- | fighting, the Rumanians also have mat : = . = Polish Flag Hoisted. ed_submarine campaign. with a reverse, being compelled to re- | . 1t 15 expected the junction of Car-| Golumb; h Q a New York, Nov: 6.—On the eve of | ceeded by 3,02 that cast for Wilson.|“The communique citcs the alleged | treat atter lons and stabborn bac. |fanza forces at Hscalon, south of |, COMMSIA University has a record| yo concluged with a cheer for _+ presidential election general confi- While the repuolicans contend that|facts of the case, showing that a Brit- | tles. Jimenez. will be completed tOMOITOW, | naarly 3000 over the registration this | oland in the Polish language and was dence in the result of the balloting.to- | the greater portion of those who sup-|ish auxiliary fiving a neutral flag on Qécnthns - Hald' Firmi Tn- Franbe. When the forces of General Fortunato | firat jast year: frantically applauded. At the same orrow was expressed in the camps |ported Roosevelt four years ago will|September 24, 1915, approached a Maycotte, those of general Domingo SF The Hival repiiican snd”democratic | ewing to Hushes this year, the demo-|Gorman submarine In the . western b 2long the battle ine in France| Arreta, another column under General| , . Shovlin, 16 A forces. Political workers had com-|crats scoff at their claims. It was|channel, engaging in sinking a British | 4 en the Somme and Ancre rivers|Murgia, and *the forces from Parral) i ur Shovlin, 16, of Newar leted their tasks, their leaders had |asserted at democratic stite head- | merchantman. When within range|{D® CGermars are tenaciously disput.|under General Luis Herrera will meet|Was found on the tracks of the La ssued the usual final forecasts and |quarters that a careful canvaes of|the auxiliary hoisted a white ensign |Il€ attempts by the British and|and form a division in command of|Wanna railroad under the Nesbitt St. hoisted and troops rendered to it while t; band played the national anthem, amid the shouts of immense crowd before the pdlace. nothing remained but the work of [every county in the state indicates|and fired o n: sank the submarine {‘;"m"" to gain further ground. Ber-| General Murguia. The offensive against | Pridse, Newark. wo airplanes dropped a large num- bringing out the vote and then getting | that serious inroads will be made by |and then rescued the crew of the|lUn #Savg that in Sunday's fighting|the Villa ba g e | ber of Polish banners and the Polish news of the result. President Wilson upon the normal re- | merchantman from their boats. When | 9VeTr & front of twelve —miles the|sumed, acco atement ot} SIS = mllonx ce Baulles, who 1s su-| fag was h d beside the Austro- ; publican pluralitics up-state and that | this was done she aiso rescued two of | French and British suffered heavy | military headquar here today. It|Ing John L. de Saulles for divorce, ar- | Hungarian colors on ail public build- Both Candidates at Their Homes. | BIDTGER BtCitns AR ot A reater | the submarinc’s crew who nad climbed | €asualties and won nothing except a|is expected General Murguia will have |Fived at New York from England on Tonight the standard bearers of the | New York will ‘more than coffse: the|into a drifiing boat. local gain in the St. Plerre Vaast|approsimately 11.000 troops in his|the steamship Baitic. Vice President Stecki of the Polish leading parties remained quietly at|republican lead down to the Harlem The communique claims that the use | Wood. London admits that the Brit- | division when it pleted. Y relief committee, to the thelr homes, President Woodrow Wil- | river. of a neutral fiag was justifiable, as |ish were compelled to give back to t e William Johnson, of Adelphia, N. J. neral, said: son at Shadow Lawn, and Charles E. On the eve of tomorrow’s election|shown by the German practice in the rmans ground the British had prs RESPONSIBILITY FOR PITCHED Lawn jus : the proclama- Hughes at his hotel in New York. Sur- | the chairmen of both the republican |case of the Moewe and in other in-|Viously won at the Butte de Warlen- BATTLE AT EVERETT, WASH. L tion insists upon the necessity of tak- rounded only by immediate members [ang © democratic ~ State committees | Stances and says that “nobody but a |cCourt. In the St. Pierre Vaast Wood, ’ E ing_into consideration the general of their families, the candidates pian | {aimed victory by at loast 100,000. German could base an allegation of | however, the French Monday made Has B I b TR e o political relations in Europe. We to receive the election returns at their il brutality on the lapse of a few min- |further advance in the northern pa REyEeey aced pon Industrial The Marquis Henri Charles de Bret- i shall follow this indication faithfully homes. Tomorrow Mr. Wilson will 80 |\ oeciin) 1 PREDICTS THAT utes between the rescue of Britishers|of the wood and captured addition: Workers by Coroner’s Jury. a famous personage in Paris e we are convinced that on it de- to Princeton to vote at the old fire en- and Germans. prisoners-—613 of whom were taken in e . |society and intiniate ends o fthe late ds the happy future of the Polish gine house near the Princeton Uni- WILSON WILL CARRY OHIO _— the fighting of Sunday and Monday. Everett, Wash.,, Nov. 6.—Responsi- ) King Edward of England, is dead. nation and the permanence and evolu- versity campus. Mr. Hughes will vote TAKING CENSUS OF COAL Austrian Reinforcements at Triest. | DAty for the pitched battle between tion of the state.” in a laundry on Forty-fourth street, | Closed Campaign Last Night in Coli- New York, near his hotel headquar- e Tolado: Folr Weathes Predioted. Toledo, Ohio, Nov. 6.—Predicting The weather man has promised gen- | that the democratic party will be vic- erally fair weather and moderate tem- | torious at the polls tomorrow and 250 members of the Indusirial Work-| Officers of the British steamship| IHc added ihat the Pol E I i olish nat prsaecrencrts that the: Austridns arelcrs of the “Warld andis n Chinese Prince, which arrived at Hos- [ never' forget the names Srtte s % e 3 ;mgnx.%eu?m“:a:".‘\;nr;ir;frog;e‘rnint; on | Everett citizens ton, reported sighting the bark St.|a To Determine Whether Speculators riest. Here | terday, in which seven men lost their | paul in dist SO ae e e - Are Taking Advantage of Public |L'¢ Austrians apparently have takea|lives and fifty were wounded bt S e L s the offensive, but nmowhere have they|placed upon the men on th E i , e 1 the men on t! mperor Francis Joseph has accept- | thedral with the assistance of all the perature in mo% parts of the country | pleading for support for President| New York, Nov. 6.—A census of the ggmx:‘}g‘! ;gcorreag‘?_‘:x :;n,\il:;lethe-r lost t:e Coroner s ULy Wi fch in BonLEs ed the resignation from Austria’s dip- | clergy. Tor election day and political leaders | Wilson and his administration, Vice |c0al supply in this city, to determine | PORURRS, FROORCIRE G0 JOMe: | 0 fflfipd%fl‘ o itwal Hvere t menllomatc servce of Dr. T. C. Dumba,| The governor general decreed all o1 22id this presaged the coming out of | President. Thomas R. Matshall closed :val'nr:at'gxgeer :Fefi:\e]a;uursugrfn gr;;i s:g- ttacks, cenate to feature the fighe | e hre e bricf deliberation, re. | [OFMErlY Austrian to the United States | partial amnesty for all worthy of it -breaking vote. b aign here tonight i 1y | V: 3 = 3 :nian ¢ verdic “harle: Cur- S R R, S Ty & record ng v 1is cenpafngate ght In a rally | B0 AES O ekun Ly the police today,|inZ in the Mnced:nian theare. turned a verdict that Charles O. Cur-| Five persons were killed and seven- | AN APPEAL FOR AID TO Offic %o be Elected: & London roi(rts that a British sub-|tiss, a‘posse man, who was Instantly | teen were injured when a Norfollc & el : vour|1ts purpose, it was said, was to learn : Officials to be elected follow: support more. than evers "ea1g 3te | whether a coal shortage ‘exists in some |Marine on the North Sea off the Dan-|killed, and Deputy Sheriff Jeflerson | Southern train ran into an open switch EUROPEAN WAR SUFFERERS President and vice president. Marshall. “You know ivhat he has]Sections -and a surplus in others and|ISh coast has scored a hit on a Ger-|Baird, who died of his wounils early | t*Zebylon, twenty miles from Wilson, — SUPPLY IN NEW YORK < ttléskin of the dreadnought ay, met death from ‘“gunshet | ¢ May be Inciuded in Thanksgiving D. Thirty-three United States senators. NALIOThe X k oy, the supply may be regulated to4an hat day, = - N. C. ay be Included in anksgiving Day Four hundred and thirty-five Tnem- | Gon 1wl oo e O R I relicve. suffering in COIG Weathers s oS e NC SaTrSiadesa e bnfitten Shses Tivtons mob, Ou 4 e Proclamation. bers of the hotise of representatives.|gafety of the United States. You do|. United States Attorney Marshall, | {0 the battleship is not known by the | the steamer Verona at the city dock. President Poincare ' conferred the mai e British admiraity. e Thirty-five governors. not know what the other fellows will|District Attorney Swann and agents of cross of the Legion d'Honteur on H.| Long Branch, N. J, Nov. 6.—Presi- Legislatures and other minor state|qo if elected and that is why you|the department of justice are invest- T 37 BENSON’S OPINION OF O. Beatty, director general of the!dent Wilson was asked today to in- offices. Chonia ot ati the hardes for’a cers|igating the situation to learn if the|SKELETON OF PILLOTHERIUM WILSON AND HUGHES | American Relief Clearing House in |clude in his Thanksgiving proclamation Nine States Vote on Prohibition. |tainty instead instead of permitting |Present famine prices are caused by WHICH LIVED 2,900,000 B. C. Paris. an appeal to the people of the United : natural conditions or by an illegal - o Ere o = - A pumber of states will vote on |the nation to be ruled by a sew set of | FZIIT COTIIONE, oF . g Says Litter Lasks Bravne audd Formest| . cofongl Rosaniv) Gassln, Villa's cotit- rs. The request was made by certain amendments, chiefly of local s vote for WileorTarans Deaces with The police also expect fro mtheir | Has Been Added to Collection of Has Too Much Polit'~al Sagacity. mander from Sonora, and two of his|Ignace Paderewski, the pianist, and a interests. Nine states, however; 1daho, | /15" 2nd continued prosperity.” Mr.|census to, be able to tstify as xperts| American Museum of Natural His- R men were executed in Juarez after be- | delegation representing organizations e e M N oman- | Marshall declared. He predicted that [Should inVestigations to be started this | tory, LR et Ing convicted of treason by a military to give aid to European war 7 h s SGeTal idate ng ¢ sted in relief work in Germany, a, Ma Procident Wilson twill catey Ohlo. week reveal conspiracy to raise - the e L ] st cendids surt. Hungary, Poland, Russia, Ar- sas_and California, will vote on the g price of coal New York, Nov. 6.—The skeleton of { dent, closed —his campa . Syria and other countries. prohibition question, an issue that has speech here tonight after a tour loomed large on the political horizon | poOSEVELT DELIVERS USUAL T e b— the pillotherium, an animal about the BOY FATALLY INJURED size of a black bear and described as ittee ga e to the presi- . Two robbers overpowered and "murvd 2 Co! through the country which I bl sl e i oo s ’ on in which it wa sstated for some years past. The Territory of e 4. § days. He criticized both candidates|of Canaa: Okotoks, 30 z e i i 4 g a rodent, which, accord- . of Canada at Okotoks, 30 miles of Cal the gifts of the American peo- Alaska will also vote on this ques- ELEC_TION EVE ADDRESS BY TRAIN AT MERIDEN |ing to scientists. was in its heyday |LOF President of the republic ary, w the safe and escaped with le generous and ('unsl:xn(,p.u‘«: tion, In Arizona an amendment for 5 the abolition of capital punishment | Urged His Friends and Neighbors to will be up for popular decision. Wom- + Vote Republican Ticket. e between 2,998,084 and 2,498,084 B. C. |democratic parties, but added: : commensurate to meet the de- { 10, Sustained Crushed [has been added to the collection of |, 1 @m paying more attention to mards of our brethren in distress, 3 President Wilson because I am trying| Fire -destroyed the warehouse of Ar-!which ¢ constantly 1 st d +8 part in the presidential election i to shell the live ones rather than the R R e B Due of The GELIGLAlns Teatuces, - History, it was announceq tonight. |0 SN€’ the Lve ofns rather than the | buckles & Company |it should be frankly admitted, are as o A e i i g 2 Oyster Bay, N. Y., Nov. 6—Theodore | periden, Conn, Noy: 6—Ralph| The skeleton is the only complete|d5ad gnes. The chief & difference a firm, and s iy yet by no means proportional to our Women to Vote in Twelve States. Roosevelt delivered his usual election | Swift, the ten-year-old son of Mr. and | one of its kind in the world, it was e Hugh S et At o h‘ 0 ) “‘( urgh Pos t Pittsburgh, at a | resources and are not an adequate ex- - In one-quarter of the 4 states wom- | fve dddress to his friends and neigh-'| yirs joseph Swift of No. 138 1-2 South |sald It was found in Colorado by |7 FIuspes s that th his so | 1058 of $500,000. pression of national unselfishness.” en have the vote this year. The twelve | oS hiere tonight, urging them to Vole | Colony street, was struck by the 439 |an expedition of scientists, headed by brains. Wilson is alert with his po- : : The committee left Shadow Lawn states are Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, | the rePublican tickst tomorrow. Re-|northhound train on the New Haven | Walter Granger, asociate curator of ot Ak Ly The American steamer Willapa, | under the impression that their request Idaho, Washington, California, Arizo- I_?"‘ r’]‘fi 'C;.‘ is 9gfnpa gn for Charles E. | .o, here this afternoon and so se- |the department of vertebrate 'pulaeon_ SOMERVILLE MAN SUICIDES Y‘mund from B]l}_efields for New Orleans, | would be granted and that the presi- na, Kansas, Oregon Nevada iontana | “fy ‘makes ne’ diff chether 1|Verely injured that he died within half | tology, after a twenty years’ hunt. sank off the Nicaraguan coast. Capt.|dent already had something of the and Ilinois. The women in the last |, ‘It Mmakes no difference whether 11a5 hour at the hospital. The young- |Fragmentary pieces of “the npillothe- AFTER SHOOTING HIS WIFE | Charles Johnsin and his crew of 21|kind in mind. named six states have the vote for |naVe been on a trip to the River oflgster was upon the tracks with a wag- |rium have been unearthed before and e men were rescued. e oG ke Doubt, on a hunting trip or a political 3 president this year for the first time. [ pop"p O & SURINE rib of & PO} |on and when warned by a boy com- |are in_the “Yale collection. Neighbors Tell Police the Couple Had Ralph Swift, Hip and Amputation of Leg. the American Museum of Natural The interest political leaders take in | {rof panion of the approach of the train| W. D. Mathew, curaror of the de- ; g The body of a well-dressed man, who IR W e T rorectaton: whoH I olonel Roosevelt predicted ¢hat the | 1€ Attempted to leave the tracks. Hin- partmest, said that Albert Thompson, Quacreled [Ereauently. . oo rommatdestaly S AEitL YA RoRe: seen a VOlvi v N = dered by the wagon, his foot became |in charge of e museum's expe: on 7. il months ago, was v - 0 elect;pfit \!&'Egs?t;ti?tzfl:‘%:rg ?fi;re. nation, state, Nassau county and O¥s- | Gatihe n the rail and he feli Hig|in Nebraska, had ecured two speci- | g Somerville Mass, . No After | ¢he Boulevard and Lincoln Avenue, | Three Passengers Instantly Killed— ter Bay wotld “go republican.” agarreliing with his' Wite in the home SR of a neighbor here to near Oakwood, S, L one-sixth of the electoral college’s to- right hip was crushed and his leg cut | mens of the pliohippus, pronounced Driver Dies of Injuries. A, tal vote. e off. The shock and loss of blood re- |to be a mising link between the three- | grofr,or 8P C PR ORSEL - FUIS A — 2 i sulted in his death. toed horse and the modern horse. The body of an unidentified man| Camden, N. J, Nov. 6.—Three men Three Women Running for Congress. | HEAVY VOTE EXPECTED A e, aniial. Has one: too . 0n. each foot. ?:ge]isgzpf)?lmn:“‘:;:dllt)blxmz::n“vlvt:s ;]el(-é with the right leg cut off was found on |and a woman were killed by a Penn- One woman, Miss Jeannette Rankin, IN MASSACHUSETTS | SUFFRAGISTS WARNED TO —_— ported in a critical condition at the|the New York, N. Haven & Hartford |syvlvania railroad train which struck a of Montana, is running for congress on 7 — TRREE CARDINALS TO BE Potnital | Neishbors 1o ipe 2 liee|Railroad tracks at 138th Street and|bus in which they were riding at the republican ticket. If she is elect- [ Republicans Cl 75,000 Plurality, VOTE STRAIGHT REPUBLICAN eae THe Coatie o tea "res | Park Avenue, The Bronx. Freeman station rn @ here today. The ed Montans will be the first astate of Democrats 20,000, —_— CHOSEN FROM FRENCH Sib el i nan od i passengers were insiantly killed and the nation to send a woman to con- And Thereby Avoid Any Danger of e e e e Mthe. | Gov. James Ferguson of Texas,|Thomas Hampton. the driver, died gress. The progressives of the First| Boston, Nov. 6.—Political leaders Making a Mistake. Pope Benedict to Show His Sympathy o haye Jvee oung /ehfdren. drove a six-mule team hitched to a|Wwhile being removed to a hospital Colorado congressional district also | agreed tonight that if the weather was for the French Clergy. HARVARD EXPEDITION HAS wagon load of cotton in the parade |here. nominated a woman, Hattie K. How- | fair tomorrow, as predicted, Massa-| Chicago, Nov. 6—dzrss Harriet . Lo which opened the eleventh annual cot- | One of the passengers was identified ard, but she has since withdrawn. chusetts would poll the largest vote in'| Vittum, director of the Woman's de-| Paris, Nov. 6, 9.35 p. m—A despatch RETURNED FROM PERU |ton exposition at Waco, Texas. as Edward Stahlknecht, an insurance s Jeannette Rankin of inspector of Philadeiphia. Afon- | its history. Last year a record-break- | partment at western republican na- |to the Havas Agency from Naples tana, is running for congress on theling vote of 515,000 was cast for gov- |tional headquarters, in final instruc- |Says: Has Been Making Anthropological John Nello, aged 4 years, died at republican ticket and in California| ernor but this year the total is ex- |tions sent to workers in the twelve ccording to the Mattino, Pope and Zoological Studies. New (Britain from injuries received|PHYSICIAN FORCED TO Mrs. Josephine Fernald, of San Fran- | pected to reach 523,000. equal suffrage states, warned women i Benedict at the next consistory will Saturday when he was ‘run down by TREAT VILLA’S LEG clsco, is an aspirant for a seat in con- | Governor Samuel McCall_and |against the possible aanger of losing | name three cardinals, from among the| New York, Nov, 6—Dr. W. L. Moss, |an automobile owned by Dr. E. T. . AREAT: gress as a democrat. If they are ele~t- | Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, both of | their first vote for president by ( French prelates in order to show his|of Baltimore, head of the Hirvard ex. | Freman and driven by Herbert White. | pr. Encarnacion Bromde Whitt Taken ed ey will be the first women to win | who mseek re-election, virtually closed | scratching thelr ballot, sympathy for the French clergy. The | pedition which spent four . months e seats’In the national house of repre-|their campaigns at a noon rally in| e are advising women to vote the | candidates will be the archbishops of | making anthropolosical and zoological | America’s Christmas ship to foreign Prisoner For That Purpose. sentatives. The progressives of the|Fanueil Hall today. Frederick W |straight republican tlcket tomorrow, | Rennes, Rouen and Lyons.” Studies in Pery, arrived here tonight |lands, will leave New York December First Coloradn congressional district A to avoid the possibility of making a = from Papama on the United Fruit|l with foodstuffs and clothing for Bei- | FEl Paso, Texsa, Nov. 6.—The Asso- also nominated a woman. Hattie K. (Continued On Page Two) mistake if they undertake to scratch| A despatch from Rome October 23 |steamer Calamares. Dr. Moss previ- |rut, Syria, from which port relief will | ¢lated Press correspondent at Chi- Howard, but she has since with- SHATE beilon S datd “Mileg. VIGtita said Pope Benedict would hold a se- | ously reported the discovery of two |be distributed to Syrians and Armeni- | Uahua City who reached the border drawn. “If women put a cross in the re- |Cret consistory Decembér 4 and a pub- | ancient cities in a hitherto unexplored |ans. T med, Lothre, leav. Anoiher woman candidate for con-1g The Bolls r:yv-:ilri; ictarouil °',’,°o"p§,f publican circle and stop there the|lic consistory December 7 and fhat|region in the valley of the Naranon T e . xtall.-de 5 = . ; 5 Fr ion Brondo Whitt, the physician of gress is Mrs. Frances Axtell, democrat, | ¢ H ) vote is sure to be counted.” Monsignor Count Rafaele Scapinelli, | rjver, a tributary of the Amazon. Dr.| Allied artillery fire and bombs drop- |, in the Second Washington district. in all districts until- 5 o'clock in the former papal nuncio at Vienna, and | Mose studied the diseases of the In- |ping from aeroplames have caused 3 | Guerrero, Chihuahua, who 'had been afternoon. g e Ll B n o made prisoner by Viila sud forced to L dians of that district. 348 casualties among civilians in the treat the bandit's woundad leg, was in 3 = ez 1 2 2 , IN A TRAIN wRECK | T caricy in the ‘Sacral College has been o BIacan, wicKiE | vrkatove WhRV iz Meioan Sitisen, nce & Srt- Neither Professes Any vings ile Attempting to rop reat! is Della Volpe, prefect of the congre- e . sh subject. He was reported recently Gonceriiing) ‘the) Otfsnie, Onjthe s News, Pottige) Branch ofyeha Near' Grave of Joe Bocquel. Stion Eonee 878" | Denial Made by T. J. Williams, A. F.|, A man known to the police only by | ' PUricCel from Chihuahua City as Pennsylvania Road. the name of Peters of Rocky Hill Was | paving been killed by Villa bandits. " - of L. Branch President. fatally hurt on Franklin avenue, Hart- E i s New York, Nov. 6—With Governor| Altoona, Pa., Nov. 6.—Seven men |, S2n Diego, Calif, Nov. 6.—Oliver [SWEDISH PASTOR CHARGED ford, when the wagon in which he| 1t Was reported today to the Ger- l£ Whitman and Samucl Seabury, candi- | were injured when a heavy freight | Meyerhoffer, an aviator, had a narrow WITH FELONIOUS ASSAULT | Washington, Nov. 6—Thomas .| was riding was straok by a trolley car, | 1an consul at Juarez ihat a Belgian r bject had been killed in Santa Ro- te for governor, making final appeals e escape today when from a height of Williams, president of the Building | Hig skul shed. oL : date for g moking Lain ran awayfor ten miles on fhe | GRE SOCRY WESH SO0 0 el Pt derinithant: Aethia’ Anatican ] L DL a8 orn saria by Villa forces but this was not to the voters of this city, the New|New Portage branch of the Penasyl- York etate campaign closed tonight | vania road and crashed into four light | Wreath near the casket containing the | Shot Boy w:: ;v s Playing in Front| 5 " tion of Labor, tonight denounced | - The first section of the Ninth Mas. | COPfirmed. only a few hours before the polls|locomotives standing at New Portaze |03y of Joe Bocquel, an aviator who 2eyscnage as false an interview advocatin gthe|sachusetts regiment passed throush | cUBAN SENATE HAS opened. The head of each stae ticket|Junction, near here today. The dead: | Was killed here Saturday. & 2 republican national ticket credited to | New London soon after 10 oelock joined his campaign managers in pro- | A. L. Rising, Derry, Pa., engineer; R.| Meverhoffer hovered over a funeral [ New York, Nov. e Rev. Hugo | him today in a widely published news- | afonday morning, bound for home from OPENED REGULAR SESSIONS fessing serenc confidence in the out-|C. Schrum, Consmaugh, Pa.. conduc- | Processien that was escorting Boc- | Holmgren, pastor of a Swedish chapel, | paper advertisement. He authorized |y, Mexican border. There were 18 —_— come of the balloting. tor; Frank Fry, L‘.onsmaug:h, Pa. a quel’s remains to the railroad station | was _&l'resled tonight and charged with | the statement that he never had made carloads of the soldiers. Listened to Reading of the President’s . Because New York is considered a|brakeman; W. M. Thompson East Al- |fOT shipment to San Francisco. As the |felonious assault for shooting James |the assertions quoted cr anything like T Message Yesterday. pivotal state in the presidential elec- | toona, fireman; R. C. Jncl:flon, Altog'na. g‘;i’g; Wfl‘fey";er!;gfle :ake‘?mptggén thhl: f,‘:"{fi; ls‘t)"{;‘f: ;;':;“'ytwm:a;!rg:&:g them. % Announcement was made by Felix M. gt e tion, chief popular intcrest in tomor- | enginee: N. Gorton, Altoona, fire- = ‘Warburg, chairman of the joint dis- Havana, Nov. 6—The Cuban senate Tow's voting centered in the contest|man; W. A. Baker, Juniata, Pa. en.|Wreath. A gust of wind brought it up [in Harlem. The boy was wounded in Police Chief Drops Dead. tribution’ committee of the funds for |opened In regular session this after- between President Wilson and Charles | gineer. against the motor of his machine, |the side. The pastor. sald children| g rington, Conn., Nov. 6.—Chief of | Jewish war sufferers, that $6,171,123.- | noon and lstened to the re of : hort-circuiting it and killing’ the en- |had been annoying him. He was, N 0 X rhes. V. 11 be called upon, TR R o s the Police Robert B. Newett dropped dead | 63 was collected in this country for|the president’s message. A Rowevar: io cioct 'n. complete SWis |50 NEGRO STEVEDORES ARE S evernotiey enipigul plaging was |taken to a hospital for examination |from heart disease today while in the | fhe work of the committee. meet tomorrow in ex i ticket in addition to governor and O ihe Py rabled toeffect slandlng | o A RMAKERS: OE CINCRGQ office of Dr. F. A. Weed. He had gone Sion to consider alleged sleotion irreg~ United States senator. LOADING THE DEUTSCHLAND -, there for medical treatment. He was For the second time in a year, fire | ularities and the handling of public Forecasts tonight depended upon 5 £ : DEMAND INCREASE IN-PAY |58 years old, had been on the police|last night virtually destroyed Wirth, |funds was approved. Regarding the whether the person who made the pre- | It is Expected th: Cargo Will be All Movements of Steamships. p frete— force for 15 years, and chief since|Okla., in the Healdton oil ields. Fifty | election tangle the president’s message diction was a democrat or a republi- Aboard by Friday. Liverpool, Nov. 5.—Arrived: Steam-|About 4,000 Union Men Are Ready to|1912. His wife, two daughters and a|buildings were -destroyed with a loss |says: ecan. Both sides azreed that the tide — ers Kroonland, New York; New York, Strike to Enforce Demand. son survive of $125,000. More than 300 homeless| “The general elections have ecar- would be turned for the mational| New London, Nov. 6.—All day the|New York. X = persons were taken to Ardmore. ried ont ‘with perfect tranquillty and ticket by those who voted as progres- |80 nesro stevedores have been busy | Gibraltar, Nov. 3.—Sailed: Steamer| Chicago, Nov. 6.—bout 4,000 union Auto Fatality at New Haven. ge order, the complete liberty and hfl-— sives four years ago. The combined |getting the cargc for the return trip | Verona, (from Spezia) New York. cigar makers are ready to go on strike| New Haven, Conn., Nov. 6.—Mrs. No confirmation of the rumor that|pendence with with which ull ‘were al- 'r.n and, Roosevelt vote in 1912 was|aboard the German undersea freighter | Christiansand, Nov. 4. — Sailed: | today as the result of an order issued | Mary Malebury, aged 40, died tonight | Americans in Parral, Chihuahua, were | lowed to exercise their rights as elec- 80, as compared with 635,573 for | Deutsshland. Ths nickel that is being | Steamer Hellig Olav, New York. by the Chicago cigarmakers union. The | in a hospital as the result of injuries |killed by Villa troops when the latter | tors: being reeognuedby all contest- 'Willo . - In Greater New York, which |loaded will take the place of the iron Bordeaux, Nov. 5.—Sailed: Steamer |union asks an increase of a dollar a |received when she was struck by an |entered the town was received at El|ants and the national foreign the republicans concede will return a|ballast that was brought on the trip | La Touraine, New York. thousand on the different grades oflautomobile driven by T. F. Coffey, a | Paso vesterday. Army officers and |press, the authorities MM done no ratic_plurality tkis year, the|to this city. It is expected that the New York, Nov. 6.—Arrived: Steam- cigars. The men are now neeivln: local wufacturer. Her skull was 'ogvernment officials have received no ! more th..n mnnn guarantees nd Roosevelt vote together ex-'cargo will be all gboard bv Friday. er Carpathia. Liverpool. $8.. 50 a nmu-n‘ H fractured. - S . Information whatever of the to all.

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