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CONN., MONDAY, DECEMBER ed Paragraphs ATTLES SEETHING 1#7 fecomsis _Muderer Holds Off [Poliical Griss in | Soversd Tesrans yila Driven o b e sesiet) Philadelphia Cops Other Paper, and Its Total Girculation 4,. 1916 TEN PA COLS. PRICE TWO™ CENTS— wa in cmpqfiwt th'lifiirfion to the City’s Popv!az uie a i Nfixpo r for the month England is Acute] .. xwes == sices oo | Of Chihuahu - 4 4 2 powers have o ) z B representatives who bave been in con- ident of the Illinois Central Rail; £ o ) b K 2 trol of the Greek postal and telegraph > ,"1,_',_.1 E ; ] Unes. " William L. Balluf, of Balti 1 o bigadid j ; B NEGRO HAD BARRICADED HIM-|RUMORS THAT DAVID LLOYD|knaan in the theatrical profession, is| MANY BANDITS WERE CAPTUREE 3 g . London, Dec. 8, 12-55 p. m.—Lloyds SELF IN A ROOM. GEORGE HAS RESIGNED dosa. 7 AND KILLED = reports the llnk{n‘ of the_ following . N o be vessels: British steamships Burcombe, m"g&finzimfi‘;:hgh&xg"g: = brs smou 3,516 tons gross, and Istrar, 4,582 tons MANY SH e Encircling Movement of Teutonic Allies is Drawing |5 Sonresion steameniy Skiolatt Briantais, 256 tons gross, and Caplihou, Closer Toward Rumanianca'pita' : itk prom Fifty Policemen Were Held at Bay for PRESIDENT WILSON TO Nearly Two Hours—Two Were Se- READ HIS MESSAGE. e O Is to Hold Conferences With Congres- sie Leaders. ‘Washington, Dec. 3.—Back from New York after inaugurating the new light- ing system of the Statue of Liberty Petrograd Asserts Thata Southwest of Bucharest _the' Rus- | last night, President Wilson today be- | Philadelphia, Dec. 3.—Besieged by gan worlk preparatory to the ovening | Afty policemen in a third story room . . . of congress tomorrow. With Mrs. Wil | Where he had barricaded himself aft- sians and Rumanians Have Forced the Retirement of the | gon, the president returned to Wash. | €f murdering a woman with whom he ington at 7-30 this morning. bad been infatuated and after serious- Germani m_l-l"d lghhll' g tin The -president has made few general | ¥ wWounding two policemen who tried ic Fo Fi Continues From the enme:l-.nu for tae weck because of [ l0 arrest him, Charles Westcott, a Siris . . his desire to devote himself almost|D€8roo, held the attacking force at Borders of Bukowina Along Northern Rumania, With |cntirely to conferences with congres-|bay for two hours today and finally sional leaders in an effort to get the | 6hot himself dead. Both Si aiming Advan Great Ac- | executive machinery started properly.| Husdreds of shots were fired by, the oth Sides Cl 14 tage—No Infantry Expectins to remain almost constant- | Ao6T0 and the police. " Then the'fire wia s X Ka s ly in Washington, he probably will ac- called and an at- tivity is in Progress on the Other Fronts—Fighting Be- | ceot few of the mans invitations now |tempt was being made to fille the before him to speak in dlfter::lnt places, :‘;‘;’g ;illtllédfl-kl:::;ifa fumes when the tween Greeks En eased, | No final plans have been made for de- 1 and Entente Troops at Athens Has C livering a special message on the high p g cost of living to congress later in the | CONSTANTINOPLE ALLOTTED TO the Latter Having Been Ordered Back to Piraeus. session, but Mr. Wilson is understood | RUSSIA IF ENTENTE ALLIES WIN riously Wounded—Murderer Took His Own Life When Ammonia Fumes Were Used. THE TEUTONS HAVE GBOS;SEDAARGEGHU RIVER to favor taking such a step when the 2 adolb L Dp%gl;:\:irg;v‘:rflfiéhson U R Agreement to That Effect Was Reach- e d in 1915, & d 5 = before congress per- - x Rumania still holds the center ofjern Rumania, with both sides claim- |Custom of soing o interest in the world war. The en- |ing the advantage. sonally {o read his annual message.| yongon, Dec. 3, 9.50 p. m.—An event circling movement of the Teutonic| On none of the other fronts has|wednesday he wili eutertain William | gy passing in far-reaching importance allies continues to draw closer toward | there been any great infantry activ-|J. Brvan and Mrs. Bryan at lunch in|ihe actual military operations of the her capital, Bucharest, although the |ity, the big guns of all the belliger- | the White House, and Thursday night| war comes today in the public an- Rumanians apparently’ are stiffening |ents still doing the greater portion of | Be Will give a dinner in houor of|jouncement by the new Russian pre- their defense. the work. An attack by the entente|vance C. McCormick, chairman of the| mier ~ Alexander Trepoff, that by an The Teutons have crossed the Ar- |forces northwest of Monastir on Sat-|democratic national committce, 10| ggreement concluded in 1915 and sub- gechu_river west of Bucharest, but|urday was put down with sunguinary | Which have been invited members of | sequently adhered to by Italy, the al- both Petrograd and Bucharest assert|]osses, according to Berlin. The Ital- [ the democratic and progressive cam-|ljes dfienitely established Russia’s that southwest of the capital the s are claiming an advance of 30!; paign commitrees. right tc Constantinople and the sians and Rumanians, fighting [etres over a front of two-thirds of q e e R Straits. The existence of this agree- gether, have forced the retirement of [a mile on the Carso sector of the %\us— REPORTS OF SUBMARINES ment has been for a long time alleged, the Teutons and taken prisoners and | tro-Italian front, a maneuver which| * but never befor it thus publicl bootyz't.he lum;‘ lm:lud?ng 2& guns. snsughlmed out the Italian line. GFE N.E_VX_EEELAND e and formally aednvxvi?.tsec;. PR T The German pfficial communication fcial advices from Athens ‘are 0| Has Caused a Stir Among Captains of | Simultaneously, while the fate. of Toioe 'Wwas uthenkod and thrown Back | tween Crochs and entents" troobs has Transatlantic Fraighters. AR T R with heavy casualties. ceased and that the entente troops| o, .. = =~ ceport of the| Which has been accused in some quar- Hard ting still continues from |have ceased and that the entente oatan, s e - TeppEL: . O €| ters of failing to render assistance to the borders of Bukowina along north- | troops have been sent back to Piraeus. | Presence of German naval submarines | jts sorely pressed ally, is making he- Drouzht 1o port by Captain Detar Froe. | Foic_efforts to turn the tide of events tad of th¥ constwise steanier Melrcss, | 11 Bumania, in aadition to exerting BEGEIVER OF BT TANEER caused a stir among captains of the | iSORoUS efforts to turn the tide of UNDER ARREST IN CHICAGO | trans-Atiantic freighters today until | SYGats 1 Rumania, in addition to ex- —— 3 3 —_— ¥ naval officers a.ssux:m them that the Falkenhayn in Moldavia, where the Speaker Clark and Minority Leader| Admits He Represented Himself as|boat wis probably the new American| Rugsians have gained a rfooting at Kitchin in Accord. James W. Osborne. submarine L The L-2 left New-| iiriibaba and the battle is continuing port, R. L, Friday for a test run in[\with the utmost eneresy. Washington, Dec. 3.—Speaker Clark| Chicago, Dec. 3.—Detective head- | Block Island sound before starting with e — and Representative Kitchin, majority | quarters announced tonight that they,|the L-1, L-3, L-4 and L-¢ for thel|.peney GOVERNMENT BUYS leaders to talk over ‘with them the|had arrested a man who has admit- | fouthern submarine base at Pensaccla, OCEAN TUG PAUL JONES CONGRESS TO HASTEN RAILROAD LEGISLATION Wilson at « White House conference |ted he represented himself as James | Fla. tonight, that they would do all they | W. Osborne, a New York lawyer, in| The Melrose, bound from Baltimore . could to hasten the passage of rail- | escapades with Miss Ray Tanzer as a|to this port with coal; was off Block | From the Thames Towboat Company— rond legislation at the short session |result of which misrepresentations|Island yesterday afternoon wien Cap- Price More Than $250,000. of congress which begins tomorrow. Osborne was sued by her for $50,000 | tain Frostad sighted the submarine The president summoned the house | tn_March, 1915. three miies distant and hecaded in a| New London, Conn, Dec. 3.—The leaders to tal kover with them the Wax told of meeting Miss Tanzer | southeasterly direction. Captain Fros- | ocean-going tug Paul Jones, o legislative programme and to secure | about October 1, 1914, through a flir- | tad said that just before the submarine | the Thames "Towboat company, he their cooperation in expediting impor- | tation near Columbus Circle. fle met | partly submerged he saw the nnmerals | peen gurchased by the French govern- tant measures. Legislation to supple- | her frequently xm- that,.] d, and | "42” hite on her side. She itk o Mo morout ot nfent the Adamson law, he said, was|was surprised after an acqu nce- | earried no & 5 it eF of a' milkion dolars, accord - of the utmost importance and he ask- |ship of several months te read in a| ‘Aecording {o naval officers, all Ing to a statement made b. an omicial ed that this be given precedence in|newspaper of a suit agaiast *hs law- | American submarines are being matk- | of that company toaignt, At the time consideration over all other general|yer, Oshorne. ' ed with white numerals ‘as an aid in|of her construction in this city in 1303 legislation. “The story told of the my manoetivres. The new submarine. L-2, | the Jones was the biggest towboat in ReaMzing that three months is a|Oliver Osborne,” Wax said, “an it 1s said. has the numerais “42” on|ihe world and on hor first tow trip short Period for consideration of gen- | decided to go to my namesake, but|both sides just below conning | from Norfolk to Boston she broke i.h eral- measures when appropriatfon | he was not there, but his law partner | tower, indicating that B i1 "the | préviois recoras = bills also must be passed, the presi- | gave me his home address and I went | fourth Xtlantic_divizion A& that her |’ Hlew net tounage is 345, length 159.3 dent asked the house leaders if they [out to Broadway and Seventy-second | number is 2. She is due to arrive at|preadth 39.3. depth 20.1. hois ik thought there would be time for en- | street. I met his wife and assured her | Delaware Breakwater tomorrow morn- | § gon ana carcim w orow ob g Pomer actment of new railroad laws before | that her husband was not the Mr. Os- | ing. A e s s : id ;\‘I,arch 4. lr;otg. toltzihlm thay thought | borne mixed up with the.girll‘. I met . by oSl il o Sl AE S LORE there wou! e and promised to ex-|him the same day and gave him sev- e it i b ey ert every effort to economize time on | eral letters the girl had given me and | MAVAL PENITENTIARY Representatives of the I'rench gov- other matters. made an appointment to meet him the IS ABSURDLY MANAGED |érnment have been in this city dur! Scores_of members of both houses |next day. I didn’t keep this because —_ the-past few dava in conterence’ with reached Washington today and tonight | I got frightened and also was ashamed | Thomas Mott Osborne Will So Report | - H. Chappell, the head of the firm, and a full attendance of congress to- [to go on the witness stand ang tell of to Secretary Daniels. In reference lo the purchase. The morrow is assuved. One of the last|my relations with her.” 4B Jones is now being ovcri:uled on the to arrive was Vice' President Mar- - Boston, Dec. 3.—An indication of the | a8 Of the towboat company. She can shall, who was :icn an enthusiastic SUPREME COURT TAKES report that Thomas Mott Osborne, for. | CAFFY.€nOUEh coal to cross the ccean. reception at the rzilroad station. mer warden of Sing Sing prison, will o I UP ADAMSON LAW TODAY. | piake to Secretary of the Navy Dan-|AN ORGANIZATION OF : : ign- | lels on his investigations of the peni- = M:mn “:;I:“‘B:;Prz.::;“:n::r Assign-| (ntiary at the Portsmouth, N. ., O RS ST NE I ERoRI navy yard, was given in an address it i ; % by Mr. Oshorne befsre the Twentietn| T® Resort to Boycott Whenever it is Charged With Neglect of Duty While| Washington, Dec. 2.—Steps to sccure | Century club, it was learned today. Deemed Necessary. Acting as Police Judge. an early decision on the constitution-! Ay Osborne asserted that the pen-| * .. — ality of the Adamson eight hour law in| ity seemed to him “absurdly man-| New York, Dec. 3.—An orzanization Sandusky, Ohio, Dec. 3.—Mayor |the test case of the Missouri, Alahama | aged” that the uniforms were “de- |Of housewives, through which every Robert. Koegle was arrested today on,and Gulf railroad will deminate inter- | grading,” and that the treatment of |SOmSUmer in this city may be reached & secret indictment returned yester-|est in the supreme court's session to-|the men was “the most severe any- | Whenever it appears necessary to es- day by the grand jury, charging neg- { morrow following afgwo weeks' rececs. | where.” tablish a boyeott on articles of food” lect of duty in connection with crimi- | A motion will be presented by Solicitor | ~ “What is it for?” he asked, “to fit | Will be formed January 1, it was an- mal ‘eases which he hears f@as police | General Davis, with formal concurrence | men to return to the navy Or to go |Dounced tonight by Josepn Hartigan, judge. le is mayor by virtue of | of counsel for the railroads, asking the | out in the world? In either case it is | COMmissioner of weights and meas- /being president of the city commis- |Court to assign an early date for|a fajlure.” ures. g < ‘sion ‘elected under a new charter | hearing the governments’ appeal from “Though it shelters youths who The plan, Mr. Hartigan said, is to MAYOR OF SANDUSKY, O, HAS BEEN INDICTED ad ‘recéntly. the decision “of Federal Judge Hook |haye committed no crime in the eyes | Dave at least one woman assigned to ;fid jury investigated the mayor's|of Kansas City, Mo, helding the law |of the civil authorities, the treatment |€ach of the 420,000 square blocks here, gonduct on_instructions from Com- |null and void. is the most severe anywhere,” Mr. Os- | Whose duty it will be “to keep in touch Pleas Judge R. E. Williams after | The railroad brotherhoods, according | borne continued. “When the men re- | With the residents of that block and hayor failed to file transcripts|to present plans, will not bhe repre-|turn from working on the sea wall, | Keep them posted as to the prices of eriminal cases with the court as or- | sented ip the formal proccedings to-|in a place where could not possibly | the various articles of food.” These dered. morrow, but may have counsel partici- | have obtained anything but sand, {Women, he added, would work with The jury also returned two other se- | pate in the arguments. boulders and seaweed, they are strip- | the retail dealers, as #ar as possible. cret indictments in connection with Although' motions to expedite cases|ped and searched. Portsmouth re- The Weights and Measures League, city contracts, which have not yet|are seldom acted upon by the court|minded me of Portland, England,|8n organization numbring approxi- been made public. until a week after their presentation, | where men are searched in that ab- |mately 228,000 men, also will work.in it is considered not unlikely that Chief | surd fashion ten times a day.” conjunction with the women, Mr. Har- COMMITTEE TO INVESTIGATE '|Justice White will immediateiy an- s drnci nounce a date for ar t THE HIGH COST OF LIVING |instance. What that date may e HEAVY CASUALTIES OF DAVID HUNTER DIES - i e S > NEWFOUNDLAND REGIMENT Has Boen Appointed by Governor | rowss. calendar of <0 easés snermy | . - ; OF AUTO INJURIES Whitman of New York. * |assigned for argument is unasually | During the Opening Day of the Brit- Received When Car Went Over an Embankment in Hartford. long. Albany, N. Y., Dec.;!t fiThe apnoint:- % ment of a_commiitee ve unier the| HEAD OF St. John's, N. Dec. 3.—The ex- chajrmanship of Georze.W. Perkins THE: VENIZELIST tent to which the Newfoundland reei. | Hartford, Conn, Dec. 3.—David Hun- to investigate the causes of the high | RECRUITING BUREAU ARRESTED |ment suffered on the openinz day of |ter died in‘'a hospital here today as “ cost of living and to recommend such o T e 3 the British drive in July last became |the result of injuries received Satur- legislation as may result in lower | Charged With Inciting Greek Soldiers|inown today, when figures of its|day night when the automobile in ish Drive Last July. prices of food through economical dis- to Desert. losses were made public. In the fight- | which he was riding with Frank N, tribution, was announced by Governor —_—— ing near Beaumont-Hamel about one ] Davis went cut an embankment in Ma- ' Whitman today. Athens, Dec. 2, 405 p. m., via Lon-{hundred members of the regiment|ple street and turned turtle. The e other members of the commit- |don, Dec. 3, 8.10 p. m—General Cora- | were killed or died shortly afterward |Aautoombile turned out for a motorcy- tee ‘are State Senator Wicks, chair-|kas, head of the Venizelist recruiting |from wounds, and the regiment lost |clist, it is said, causing the fatal man of the executive committee in-|bureau, has been arrested, charged |15 officers and men who were listed | plunge. . After the accident, a mo- vestigating the dairy industry; Judge|with ineiting guerilla’ warfare in|@es missing and of whom no trace has [tocycle license plate was found, bear- George W. Ward, counsel of the Wicks | Athens annd using his room in the|since been found. ing the mumber C1219, which belongs committee; S. J. Lovell, master of the | Hotel Majestic as @ point from which Of the five thousand men who went | to one of ithe machines owned by the state grange, and Clifford S. Sims, vice | to fire upon soldiers and civillans. A |from this colony to join British | state police. Captain Hurley of the president and gereral manager of the | number of soldiers deposed that Cor- | military and naval forces, ut 600 | state police said tonight that as far Delaware and Hudson 'railroad. akas paid twenty-five drachmas-per | have been killed. as he knew none of the state motor- ad to induce soldiers to desert the cycles was near the scene of the acci- READY TO BUILD FAST, ) l'l;\lfi fl‘ng -101"1 tge ‘{(eniznlis;.:b;l\t Sa- | ARCHBOLD HAS NOT dent Saturday night. i oniki. General Corakas probably will Hunt 3 L LARGE PASSENGER SHIPS. | 12t a G e “Cniae of anetting troa YET PASSED CRISIS.| whitlesey ‘and company of this city b s ’ and company of this city. M. Boulajanis, eflitor of the ob- B e s . dcure Venizelist journal Astyr, has \ also been arrested. It is asserted-he LOANE SN THENE ew York, Dec. 3.— The International | was found to be carrying 51,000 drach- | Tarrytown, N. Y., Dec. 3.—Hope was < + FRENCH MUNICIPALITIES Mercantile Marine is ready to build | mas. The Venizelist police lieutenant | expressed by his physicians tonigbt for T farge, fast passenger ships and oper-|Maroudas- was taken ~into cdustody |th erecovery of John D. Archbold,|'n the United States Has Been Ap- ® ate them under the American flag, ac- | while carrying 20,090 drachmas. president of the Standard Oil company proved by French Government cording to P. A. S. Frarklin, presi- of New Jersey, who was operated on : dent of the International Mercantile ‘Wage In in Apponaug, R. I. ten days ago for appendicitis and sirce Paris, Dec. 3.—Government decrees Marine, who arrived in New York on Apponaug, R. ™., Dec. 3.—Effective | then has been dangerously iil. . will be published tomorrow authoriz- the stcamer St. Louis. Ves:fel‘s of 32,- | tomorrow, the 450 employes of the It was said that he apparently had|ing the towns of Borgfaux, Lyons and 00 tons, with a speed of 25 knots an| Apponaug company, will get a 10 per,become no weaker since a hlood trans- | Marseilles tp contract loans in the our, have been under consideration,|eent. increase in wages. This is one | fusion operation on last Tucsday. The t‘ said, and 'mtlw&e if llum of the dm;c tfllr‘u.uhhg Pht‘t‘})' in Na‘: crisis, huwewn'-:hwmhnot have ory can made Englan 'ollow the cotton mills according to e physicians, for am- The International Mercantile Marine Hope for His Recovery is Expressed to Be Operated Under American Flag. by His Physicians. ~ OTS WERE FIRED |AS SECRETARY OF WAR [vears, o Gea. NO AMERICANS KiLEEL 1 T The Newport News Shipbuilding and o Dry Dock Co. announced a 10 per cent. gt tio %0 Efforts Are Being Made to Forestall |increase in wages. During Their Occupation of: the= Ot} the Complete Collapse of the Coali-| The exports of copper from At-| the Bandits Showed No .Meray fa tion Government—Premier Asquith lantic ports for the week ending NoVs| the Chinese—Villa is” Mouing oo is to Exblain the Situation in the| ooy Seoml L i reso| Wards Western Chihuatgal,; Wil House of Commons. ~ lident of the Equiable Trust Co. of| Trains of Loot. st 3 New York, resigned. b Gold coin to the amount of $400,000 ; A0 pned London, Dec. 3, 6.45 p. m.—The po- ithdrawn from the sub-Treasury Juarez, Mexico, Dec. 3.—It litical crisis has become acute, It is ;'.:-B.:spment to Spain. cially announced at m“’mffi.””wm stated in well-informed quarters that quarters today that the Trang David_Lloyd George, the war secre- | Mrs. Lillian L. Doelger, wife of |forces have re-occupied .{hg.Gits.n0 tary, kas tendered his resignation | Charles ¥. Doelger, brewer, left an es- | Chihuahua, having driven { ‘é‘;:g?%g which has not yet been accepted. tate valued at $87,198. bandits out. Telegraphic commu n: Party Leaders Consult Premier. tion with Chihuahua City, gver Premi e Twenty-five persons were killed and | federal line has been re-e: pf% day buterl'etA“!P?'lwh t}leitst tx:::nl:;sf;d thirteen others injured in Michigan ' G;mraélClflon Ozuna, entered; throughout the day there have been |during the game season. el st e the) DOPRLRY {ide consultations and meetings of party e as Ins t, according $9,4. tele leaders at the premier’s residence. Gen. Carranza presented to the Mex- gra _received tonight by, Geners Mr. Lloyd George had a long con- |ican Constitutional Congress the Mag- dl‘ancl;‘go Gonzales, brigade comman sultation with the premier this after- {na Charta of the new republic. Oen e message was froBi-tGeners noon. Other visitors were A. Bonar Zuna and was dated Chih*hu Law, secretary for the colonies, and|_ The British steamer Roturua, Lon-| General Gonzles was pfpa the Marquis .of Crewe, lord president|don to_Auckland, arrived at Newport leave late today for Chihvaht: of the council. News, Va., to take on fuel coal. :flth a lla;rge command, of, Carranz Perhaps the most significant inci- o A g nriooglfl‘ He !i‘ed tel commu dent was that Sir Edward Carson and| More than 3,000 operatives in worst- Jica on has been res outh t Mr. Law appeared together and ad- |ed mills in Woonsocket, R. I, will re- | Jimenes S & M dressed 2 morning meeting of the Un- | ceive a ten per cent. increase in wages. | [ ate3t vepo il that man lonist committee, while the Earl of = 8 and Killed, " No dshuite news by oe Derby, under-secretary for war, had| An honorary advisory council o nsci- | 814 killed. 'No definite news has bee a long interview with Mr. Liloyd |entific and industrial researca has been b(I:? ived about Americans, but it George. established by the Government of Can-'| be /ey Cegml;?;e a;ha;uall foryfeh¥rs ex 2 e safe. Itof:icu.l dAnnounum.u Expected |2da- ol e go Was announced that Vig, has le s understood no official an-| _joseph Vinaccui, of The Bronx, was | for western uahua . followin T Sq! will see thelin a roliing machine which he was cp-| g again tomorrow morning and erating. “arranza commander whokfx ) thereatter make a statement in the : moving slowly northward. o DT ouse of commons in explanation of President Wilson accepted an invita- | €01, Was also reported. tesiieaesse e Ml tion to attend @ conference of wovern- | tered the clty today after_having de i Th\lx)s far it ;:ppea.rs no arrangement | oo of states at Washington, Dec. 14 eattehd ;hzh};mah colm}ln,m mile as been made for Secretahy Lloyd sou of Ci uahua City: George to see the king, -which would | 10 22 16- - ————— MATR3G! indicate that at the present moment| Earl F. Raymond, mess sergeant of NO AMERICANS KILLED.;:3 so will be surmounted without the com. | Compeny G- Second AMissourt Infen- IN_CHIHUAHUMASGIT plete collapse of the coaltzed cabinet | Lz, Statione: G e ; e and without the resignation of Mr. |Ditted suicide.. £ T Segy F"::'g';:.' to Suffer We felov Seoree : More than $3,500,000 has been pleds- e Chinese. Sy armd fund to_pen- TO URGE RECONS ed toward the 35,000,000 ; Juarez, Mexico, Dee. 3: TRUCTION sion clergymen of the Protestant Epis- | o0 ™yt oo™ 1iiea -3 OF BRITISH GOVERNMENT | copal church. City by Villa, according Premier Asquith Has Advised King| Alfred D Beresford,. a salesman message received here that city. The message s : s th George €0 Banctior Chanige. leaped from x::;e i{.flnlll}h“:tg;i‘;)m‘f ang | only foreigners to suffer were the Ch nese, f S N B nese, for whom the bandifs showed 1 A h mercy. G%ne-rals é{urgul; and Tr squith has decided to advise the king vino were both in Chihuahua City t to consent to the reconstruction of the| Charles Pomeroy Parker, professor or | day, it was said. Uni g government. This was officially an- |Of Greek and Latin at Harvard e nounced toight. The statement reads: | Versity, died SHURy T brief | FRENCH TRANSPORT SUNK: “The prime minister, with a view |illness with pneumonia. WAS FILLED WITH TROOF to the most effective prosecution of a5 g th i of| Three New York Central cmployes e jouah, has decided to advise His|iere instantly killed when they were |Steamer Karnak, 6800 Tdls construction of the government.” struck by .a_ - Michigan express the Bottom Near train at Gigson, Indiana. Berlin, Dec. 3 (By wi erlin, c. 3 (By NEW ENGLAND ROADS T. R. Wilson, of Waco, Tex., who|ville). The sinking by a @ OVERTAXED BY BUSINESS !shot-and killed Banking Commissioner | marine of a 6,800 ton — = ~- - {Patterson, was-convicted and sentenc- | port filled with troops- Are Doing a Gross Business of $90,- |ed to ninetey-nine years’ impriscnment. | today by the ad 000: Vour: e nouncement follows:" 2 i 000 a Year. Two persons wers injured when| “A German submarine oA ovemb Boston, Dec. 3. — The facilities of |a toledo, Bowling Green & Scuthcrn |27 near Malta sank the French tran the Ni i Tl ointerurban car jumped th e tracks|port steamer Karnak, 6800 tons. T Tord ana Coniral Nem emeand Hart- | orth of Bowling Green, and turned | Karnalc was crowded with troops de ;;oads are over-taxed by the volume of [OVer. tined for Saloniki.” pares favorably withmthat of many|S. Hall, which sailed from Gulfport, | built in 1899 and was owned ip Ma other roads, according to a report is- | Miss., Aug. 14 for Fort de France, |gellles. She was a passnggh lin sued today by the cbmpanies. The|Martinique svith lumber and a crew of | and was last reported: on fiegf arriy report covers the first manths ending |SiX, Was 'en up for lost. A;A_t La (}:‘mmt, on August 8, elwhi October 31 of the fiscal year. It says, o a e by it € that the two roads, which are really| The Dennison Mfg Co., at Fram- gernce o Ithe French admiralty. Le all one for commercial and operating |ingham, Mass., announced that be-|January she reported on her arrit purposes, had a total operating rev. |sinning Jan. 3 the plant would be op-|at Marseilles with a large number enve for the four months of $30.239 - |erated on a 48-hour weekly schedule|passengers from Alexandria and M: 058 and total operating expenses of | Without reduction in wages. tf; }h%t she qu beenwfiur?ued for se 19,220,939. The net income after de- eral hours, by a submarine. ot Edward S. Wertz of Wooster, Ghio, s frctions for taxes, interest, etc. Was | it 3"'States Attorney for northern MR. AND MRS. RICHAR®\ J The fisures indicate a gross busi-|Ohio, is being considersd by President SEERE e o ness at the rate of $90,000,000 a year|Wilson for ~apopintment as Unired on the 2,306.14 miles of railroad,” says|States judge for that district. Former Tammany Leader i F the report, * : - S . el ohwoh of S 1o aerd S tno| Miss Anna Adams, of New York,| Mmain in America For -n,.}, o heavy mail lifies. This great volume | W38 fined $100 to“towmg her c‘on\g»‘; ears. x R i icz ®|tion on a charge of carrying a loade # 5 » 0f Pusiness indicates the need of add- | volver in hef handbag in the City| New Yofk, Dee. 3.—Richard Crok at the important terminals. Hall subway station on Sept. 16. Lormer _l::d:x'- lcz"'rgmx‘?qgtffiég i, Pusiness 1s so dense that it iS| Mpes. Mary Stark Rowell, 65, a direct todiy O bodrdrths &efiwg"&fig ot % umber, Of Places {0 Eet|descendant of General John Stark, hero | Louis from Liverpool —'*Mr31E45) ments. In spite of the over-taxing of |Of the battle of Bennington in the Rev- | said he probably would mn Peiiities, the ot oF rover taxing oflolutionary war, was found dead _in | America two or threey o ¢ nue to ex- |3 her home in Grasmere, N. H. |spend a week here and then 1{1 pense, of (3.55, compares favorably to Palm Beach, Fla., 5.1 The mysterious young man known as | Mrs. Croker plan to spen e wint Lieut. Bruce Somerset, who killed him- Conditions in Ireland, where self in the Hotel Rosslyn at Los An-|spent much of his time P23 gelese on Oct. 1, was positivey identi- [ from politics, here, Mr. Croker s od as Rudolph Bruce Pfohl of Tren- | were very bad at the presenktirdaid shown very clearly in the reports for | {58 3¢ FUACIP cost of living has about doubled, lSemember anddOc}(lober. The increage added. S a- n expense and charges seems to be| o yo4uffe amounting to 2,300.000| “The Irish question is settle greater in those districts where there|gy tong and valued at $227,500,000 | asserted Mr. Croker. s‘&gv 5 800, with many other roads. “The tendency of expenses and charges against income to increase rapidly, due to higher wages and prices for all kinds of materials is is intense manufacturing activity.” have been sent. into Belgium and |have had home rule lon e oy S I northern France since the outbreak of z 1,000 LIVES LOST IN the war by the Commission for Relief | oLEOMARGARINE REHEACESC A CYCLONE IN INDIA|in Belgium. Shtreie say Four Hundred Bodies Have Been Re-| The Appellate ————-Jgg 4 e . |preme Court disbarred William G.|Thus Far the Dozen Giving T covered—Tremendous Damage Done. viliean, Iio was ‘;ha !Sfiwm_‘ ot Show aiNet Gaift of 4 30 BbIHd sy fessiona misconduct in assisting an ex- PR > - N:‘:: dg{';p’fffi, 35-:{‘4,,8 %’,fi;}n{: S:;‘;’?} ecutrix in an attempted conversion of | Chicago, Dec. 3.—OleomaFsamii is éstimated 1,000 lives were lost in [BSsets of an estate. be substituted for butter in the 1 the recent cyclone in Pondicherry, the 5 - tyo dayE f Sh e L] chief of the French possessions in In-{ A fine of $26 was impossd by Mog-|in an effort to learn approxima dia. Tremendous damage was Inflict- |istrate House in the Tratfic Court ,on | what Saving, can be effected—throt ed throughout Madras province: Four |Miss Maude Wetmroe for speeding on | the use of stibstitutes. hundred bodies have been found. Fifth Avenue. The defendant is-a| Seven of the twelve persons v — § daughter of George Peabody Wet-|are trying to denfonstrate that = OBITUARY. more, No. 1015 Fifth Avenue, New |meals can be served for less than et e York. cents a day have. shown a gain John W. Tuttle. weight since the beginning of the i 5 The War Department announced the | periment, November 22. e o it T S Joht W. aseptinde Ty Pehe Dresident of the | lost weight and two have shown e e omre o IionIPILion | restgnation of Capt. Bernard G. Cum- | change. There is a totd] pefigaly & short iliness, aged 86, Ho was state yminss and Second Lieut. Hugh & |43-4 poundsh. : . ¢ nage, nfantry, an irsf . O e eI Tiout. Joseph Donaher, Medical Corps, | BUFFALOS INCREASING ON trict and at the last election was can- |2/l of the New York Natlonal Guarl. GOVERNMENT RESERVATIC didate for senator. P - |JURY DISAGREES IN e Are Mok Mrs. Caroline Jacobs Hunt. i Beltacs, Mo Dec. 3oMrs, Garoline | TRIAL OF ALBERT FREEMAN| sorves and 67 Bird Reservations S e e uate o Moo Ha: | Who Was Indicted With Jullan Haw-| Washington, Dec. 3—Thg bu pl S A g L, B thorne and Dr. Morton. once threatened with extiictlon, is v ears age. creasing in numbers ong, ghvernn :aitzéezt lt"tldnun.t ‘é;?'yalzgn:‘::'; New York, Dec. 3.—After deliberat- | reservations, according fo an an: £ {ng more than 24 hours, the jury in the | report of the biologicalig§fvey.. ] ;lt?ery wi‘."ifii' w‘x’.'i?:‘fin"fhe‘h flof"s‘iff,‘ case of Alfred Freeman in the fedar- | big game preserves and G‘rflm li: Senator William H. Hunt of Liberty. |8l district court announced today it| vations are malintained by Tthe Mrs. Sarah Backus Lyo was unable to agree. Freeman was The report urges thm tract Liting indicted several years ago with Julian |land not saitable for ural 1 Meriden, Conn., Dec. 3—Mrs. Sarah | Hawthorne and Dr. William J. Morton | poses be converted i Backus Lyon, widow . of Thomas M.|for an alleged conspiracy to swindle |grounds - for birds. Many H e Big Game F H Lyon, died ir her 100th year at her|investors in mining stocks by illegally | acres of marsh land, it d < home on Johnson 2venue, this city, | using the mails. The three were con- |be turned easily into. T Saturday. victed hnnd' lununc:d t:‘ prison. i Free- | tor water fowl. man, owever, apj ” was bt R RO N, Movements of Steamships. ° |granted a new trial. Hawthorne and | Paul Andriola, a coal dealer of 1 served their terms in thelYork was chargegewReres o short weight.