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voL. LIL—NO. 103 £ Tl : Cabled Paragraphs TMAY DAY LABOR CONDITIONS | Coved Paregrapis ports that there had been an expul- sion of Jews from Kiev are false. Numerous Disagreements in New England Be- Jlmich, Mas T _The American axt ition “was formally opened yes- terday. Prince Regent Litpold viewed tween Employers and Employes. e Dlerures . Company with Aot Jayne Hill and Mr. Reisinger. Tokio, May 1.—Official announce- E IN CONNEOTIGUT ment is made of the marriage engage- C. i . | ment of Princess Nobuko, Fumi-No- LITTLE DISTURBAN RN TS the emperor and empress, and Prince Asaka. The nuptials will be solem- nized on May 6. The princess was Aside from the Dispute Oven Wages for Trolleymen— | 555 on august 7, 1591, Fuilding Trades in Providence, Fall River and Other| PLEAIN HOUSE FOR JEWS. Cities May Be Crippled Today by Declared Strike of| Resctution Asking President to Pro- test to ussia Is Introduced. 2,000 Men for Increase of Wages. g S e R e asking the president to use his friend- ly offices to prevent the recurrence of 1—Askio y about 2,500 carpenters and laborers, | asmacess of the Tews I arsin war T the wase quee. | seaking principally increases in wages. | introduced In the house Satarday by e oamecticut company, | In Fitchburg, Gardner and Leominster, | Representative Francis Burton Harri- 1 Polley holding company for the Mase, and In Portland, Me. the car- | son of New York. Sew York, New Haven and Hartford | penters may strike for the same tea-| The resolution recited that there is Jiaiiroad company, and its emploves, [ Son. About 700 men @re involved infapprehension of further outbreaks in e Mitle Jisturbance in the labor | these latter places. Rusafa of fanaticism and persecution les of th- state on the opening of F of the Jewish race. It declares that “ii vear In Hartford four | CONNECTICUT TROLLEVMEN It Is the sense of tne house that “per- st buldi contractors have secutions of lews in ussia. and re- S an open shop in the build.| GIVEN RERMISSION TO STRIKE. strletions upon their natural_rights s, but there the situation is| o y 0 to life rty and- happiness are Tn stself. The umion men Conditions Are Serious—Crisis Expect- | shocking to the enlightened conseience efused to alow outside work- ed in Forty-eight Hours. of mankind and are to be severely con- even when members of similar S demned by the American people” It ns of the Federation of Labor, to New Haven, May 1L—The Journal- | was referred to the house committee S with them until they have joined | Courier in the morming“will say that |on foreign affairs. s l1ocal council of the trades. Don]lxus I—‘nzge:al;d. mfizber of the E C:mplfln' with the request of the _ Be | Trolleymen’s international executive | Jewish societies, the state department ntractors Say Wages Will Not board, stated last might that permis- | has cabled to the United States consul Raised. 2 sion had been given the men employed | at Odessa, Russia, to ascertain the s stand on the part of the union | the Connecticut company, holding | truth of the published report that there n bas delaved work to a consider- | company for_the trclley roads of the | had been a massacre of the Jews there ible extent Iu Middletown the car-| New York, New Haven & Hartford |and that others had been driven out of venters have asked for an increase of | Railroad company, to 80 out on a|the provinece. “wages. svith & threat of a .tr: if it | strike. e R « not granted. The contractors say| The members of the advisory board “hat there is Nitle work aflsnfl z“ the | seem to consider, the conditions as be- KITE FLYING EXPENSIVE. resent time and they will not Taise|ing very serious, ani say that a crisis k. e e ni nat St makes no difference | muy be, ronched 1 forty-olght hours, | GOVernment Has to Pay $200 for In > them whether the men strike or not. | On Tuesday z’n.uz-nfm a_conference will juring a Horse. New Haven Road Telegraphers. = 5 e A ‘Washington, May 1.—It is proverbi- ner trouble which affects | the Canmectiut compeny, and & de. | 51y “cxpensive for the Umited States +he sta ew England as well, is | TR0 1O & B o e will be made, | Eovernment to do aimost anything, but = Tapute between the telegraphers of | COn P ot to hove | ™0 one suspected that ¥ cost it as . ow Haven ana Hart- | This the men suy they expect to have | 78, B 850 ot ned s, "tn Fne. innos r the_company. Ger | e o Wil cent amusement of fiying a kite until <ne wage question. A demand has) PIgbAPEEROW. . oo | vesterdny. Saturday - afternoon the een made on the road by the men and | , "PF e of the Trollymenmy ral [ house passed a bill reimbursing a man cfused and a strike vote is being | Orr. treasurer of the Trolleymen's In- |, Virginia the above amount for the taken, fhe Tesult of which will be /[ tern: l}l‘ma}l‘un{ofl- Who is here tonight, | 1,05 of a “sorrel horse 18 1-2 years old, inown Tuesdas. gaid that he had received no motice of|315.1-2 hands high and weighing 1,300 s a sanctien of the strike of the Con- | noiq w2108 JIET AU8 FOETRE LI IN NEW ENGLAND. necticut Gompany employes, and that | wire of a government kite used by the —— any such sanction would have to come | agricultural department for weather Wearly 10.000 Working People at Odds | tNEauER BN o/ Mol 1 “rThe on. | ObServations and ruined itseif. With Employers. B ~= 2 b e e n| _The kite came down in the pasture 1y develdpment in the trolley situation where the horse was and the two got Soston, May 1_May day, generally | NeTe tod@y was the actlon of the Cen-| mixeq up with alleged disastrous re- regarded as the first day in the indus- | {E! (SUCT UPEOS T VERE 10 S olley. | Sults to the horse. It took a dozen trisl year, finds im New Bagiana nu-| & PoSUON 8K the{r gy e h’:_ affidavits, a printed bill and report and meroe dissgreements between em- | Ter ublon i some oratory on the floor of the house §logers and empioyves. Nearly 1:);6030 rease: 8 to induce the government to pay for g le were tonight at odds b T the injured animal. T Cmpioyers, largely because QUIET DAY IN FRANCE. e <2 demands for wage increases. 4.200 Union Trolleymen Ready to Strike | §overnment Had Taken Strong Pre- The 4200 union trollessnen employed cautions—Troops Under Arms. in Springfield, Worcester and in other K in Sosiggmeis, Ve d i other| Paris, May 1. day In Parls Du:m'nn in Estate of Noble A. i Conmecticut on street railway lines S0 ernmertt | Ladd.. r s B utions Toerdich ey tha Tul R .. pacroned the Bolt b Bon-| T tne probate court on Saturday 2 ~mmnn_ hm&e Tow York - boulevards, but_their ser- | Judge Ayling was presented with a KoMing com g oot ] not required. Throughout | safe from the estate of Noblc A. Ladd ;-‘1lu‘d tonight, only: {6 of nces also quiet prevailed. of Framklin which could not be open- Seir nationat oficers before calibe & riy Parade in Madrid. e e i oy e ;;fl;-nm ffl:me"g:k of their d“".;flgf May 1.—The laMbrists, in|fore it could be opened, the combina- Increase weges. The view of Ahe pending general elections, | tion not being known. A will was L IO S R A R ure of the May day demon- | found inside, but it was mot signed, St reiinr Sk e Ment Ty and another, partly written, was found. montha ‘l;.\‘nv‘ing volunuflxyf.:?m:d ad- sond on- Styikh: :‘hl; L“d.sot d-nolxfi‘;'ll‘?:gogtp:&:amv “ances ages ranging from fiv usand, 3 5 ten per cent. g y 1—May day disorders| By request of Oliver W. Beckwith, The Beil Trades. | here, whers 60,000 masons | Jr., of Farmington, Judge Ayling may ding ike; at My where the | decide to open the estate of B. . The bullding trades In Providence, | strikers 85,000, and at Bologna, [ Thompson, who died ten years ago. Ho Pawtucket, Neéwport and Auburn in| where 10,080 men arg on strike. All | was a tailor and left an estate of $523,- Rmode Island end in Fall River, Mass,, | traffic sxma and the streets were|000. It was settled satisfactorily then, will be crippled probably tomorrow | strong!: olled while the meetings | but claims have been presented in be- morming by the declared strile of| were being held. half of the Minnesota Thesher com- pany, and to_settle these it is desired to open it. The claims are for $4,400 FAXKE MATRIMONIAL SCHEME BUFFALO BILL’S SUCCESSOR and it is understood the ycan be set. WORKED BY WEALTHY FARMER, HAS BEEN SELECTED, | °¢ for about 1,000 Who Had His Daughter as Assistant— | Major Gordon W. Lillie, “Pawnee Bill,” FOURTH ANNIVERSARY Both Under Arrest. A9\ Heads Wild West. Celebratod by Workingmen's Jefferson Citr. Mo, May 1—J. A.| New York, May 1.=Youn o St Esiumg. Campbeil, a wealth farmer of Morgan | is not to be "é)o\n its %’llAdma;‘esi 3 3 eounty, and his daughter, Mabel Addi- | hero, despite tHe fact Buftale Hili | 35 Swatdburg hall g Sunday eve- on. were held to the federal srand |is to retire from actis Mfe . Euer | NINE Workingmen's circle. No. 128, had Jurs here today under $1,000 bonds to | since Colonel Cody annognced that he | &, cTowded house for the celebration @nswer a charge of conducting a |intended to ssek rest the question has | Of1t5 fourth anniversary. Meyer Rich franduient trimonial scheme. . | been asked: “Who will succeed him?” | ¥38 chairmand Secretary K. Raisin’s Search of Mrs Addison’s rooms by | Ang the guestion is answered: “Paw- | FPOrt for 1309 showed a prosperous postoffice inspeciors brought to Wght |nee Bill, Major Gordon W. Lillie.” For | Year. more than four hundred letters from | many vears Major Lillle has been| - Feldman a member of the na- men in all parts of the United States, | prominently identified with Wiid Weet | Honal executive committee in New Cinaie s Bazice Bovenal ot ibe 1o | it b York, was the speaker for the evening, contained smms of money Fanging| The Lillle family were among the | MABINg an address in <which he told 35 tau$30 for 2 wedding outfit. | early settlers of Iltnois. His father, | Of the progress and plans of the or- ampbell mserted an advertisement | N. W. Lillie, migrated by wagon train | 9€I- in a matrimonial paper about six|to Wellington, Sumner wounty, Kan.] OR the eftertainment programme meonths ago, giving the name of Nora | The impressionable young Gordon W.| Was a sketch called The Mistake, ——— Tillie soon Jomed “Trabpac: aon wi | which opened with a prologue read by The advertissment was so successful | Party of hunters; was adopted into the K. Raisin. Those taking part in the tha the postofce authorities became | ranks and became an soeect o the | skietch were Morris Taft, Morris Huro. IN THE PROBATE COURT. Necessary to Pry Open Safe to Get Circle, suspicious because of the many ietters, | chase of big game in Oklahoma, No | Witz Isaac Fishk Jacob Friedman end the artests followed. Man's Jand and the Cherokee strip, | 28nd Louis Swidlove. — They were Campbell confessed today, but said | Under these conditions he has often | 10udly applauded for their clever act- he inserted the advertisement “just for jated with Indlans and bécame a | I8 Refreshments were served. fun,” and that the replies came so fast 1 associate of the Pawness. It he ‘was unable to return the money here he becdme an adherent of the FUNERALS. as ast as it eame in. celebrated Major. Frank North, white fora Jotmeon’ was supposed to be | chief of the Pawnees Om the death of Maurice F. Garvey. 17 years ol an orphan, ai ess to Tajor o1 - young ie succeeded to The funera} of Maurice Francis Gar- 317,000 in a year. his titlé as “white chief. vey was held from his late home, No. ampbell is 52 years old. Through his and busi S = ca o acumen he astablished what is now the | 1os Lam o o kS praay morn- MRS. RUTH BRYAN LEAVITT important settlement of Pawnee City. |quiem mass was celebrated by Rev. J. . m:}r ?‘l:‘ t:lle ?:)tcv he has a country|J. Smith. Beautiful Land on High was " Be Married Tomorfow to Lieut.|Tome and i:-m::::m“;nfil‘:l;;nfi sung by Mrs. M. J. Sliney. There were Reginald A. Owen. “ many present, including a number g = preserve the American bison. from Worcester, Providence, Putnam, Beimooll: s Moy 1_Mes. Tuth | PREGIDENT TAFT IN PITTEBURG. | At Wilimenne rne ericrs afte 3n Sdeomce of several months| Faces a Strenuous Day Today in the | Demiel Taler b aw Londun Senerr v Lieut. Reginald A. Owen, Royal En- Graft City. Counthan, Albert Murphy. James Fo- < neers to whom sha will be married 2 ley and John Murphy of this city =iy at the home of her parente,|, Tiltshure, Pa, Muy 1.—Anticipating | There were many = beautiful flora Sir amé Mrs. Willam J. Bryan. Mem- | & Strenuous day tomorrow at the cele- | forms. including the following: Pil- Tece of the Brvan famile ace now at| Pration of Founders’ day at the Carne- | low from the parents, wreath from the Favimm cxcant William 3. Brvan Jr. | &i° institute, a baseball @ame between | brothers and sisters, forms from Mr. wor was nnabie to leave his home af | Pittsburg’s champions and the Na- | ana Mrs. M. H. Donahue, Mr. and M. Tucen Arzons. The wedding Tues- | 10021 Icague team whose ownership is | Louis Bassett, Mrs. John Murphy, Mrs. aax ~il be 4 Buiet affain with gueers | Senerally sccredited to his brother, | Patrick O'Neil, Mr. and Mrs. Bierson, Pmtte: o the Famile and lees tian a | 204 @ rousing banqguet of the Americus | bouquet from Catherime Drescher of ¥ club tonight, President Taft, who ar- | Willimantic, standing cross from Mrs, a % N e e = ;‘:ndt r;remm'ly"u e 1;:!1 B:lfhlo 3. 3. Cnleyfllnd daughter Katie of — = e day quietly e seclusion | Providence, floral placque from Ha OBITUARY. of the home of his sister-in-law, Mre | Counihan and Afbert Marphs, fiat X Thomas K. Lawghlin. bouquet from clerks of Sherwood Pot- Maj.-Gen. J. P. 8. Gobin. In the morming President Taft at-|ter. standiing cross from his uncle, . jnded the Unitarian chrch and dur- [Jokn Garvey of Groton, anchor from o Lebanon. P2. May 1.—Maj.-Gen. J. went for a long | pumber of his__companions, wreath P. & Gosin. tnn L Mas-Gen. 3. | automobile ride through the city pasks | from John I ‘Moulatte of Worcester, guard. prominen: in Philadelph! ra SSass marked Gone But Naot Forgotten. fairs tor more ‘,,‘.’_’, Shilpdcirhia 2T | RUSGIA BARS JEWISH SINGER. hnufi-!x‘ qum 8t Mary's cemetery, centary a fora, where Rev. J. J. Smith read & com- Chier of the Grand srme ot the Re.|Selma Kurz Cannot Appear in St.|mittal service public, died at Bis hone here today of | Petersburg Because of Her Faith. peraivsis. He Was 73 years old. Two More Enumerators Finish. Gobln Was e lawyer by pro- | ' Loudon, May 1—According to the| 'Seven of fhe census enumeraiors fession. He entered i civil war as|Jewish Chronicle, Selma Kurz the | pave finished their work, the last iwo and was brevottea ‘well-known. operatic singer. who sc- | peing Joseph 1 O Swliivan nd hom of volunteers : : 20 engegement to appear in |28 'F Kelly. Vi, Kelly had 2600 on o = sburg, ‘been told that she | his Yist, and there will be others whe orgasization: t eiter Russia ou accoumt of hev | will go*Well over the 2,600 mark, and the G. 4. R and was eleeted couman- | falth. | some witl meach 38,800, it is expected. der in calef in 1887 h Mfl-ln nine others io finish, and - e . Taken to New Maven. ¢ § m | requive the exiza tine siven Passover Ends. _ Oh" Saturday Poligeman Irish took - Sundav was the final one of the cight | Miss Isidore Reynolds to the Ftorence| et Hebrew Paseover feast and | Crittenden home, where she was.com- | The international White Slave con- boly day. so that the stores on | mitted until she is 11 years of age. - |ference in Paris adopted agreoments & de, jeh are usially . e e e for the furtherance of an organized eveming. were quite gensral-| They are new making buttons of sour | eampaign against photosraphic publi- ok cations u:‘ im the fllicit traffic. eyl anfus vosevelt in person when the ex- president visits Berlin, 4 6. It Is Intimated that New Brunswick Bamng Accldents He Will Resu will follow the example of Quebec and 4 prohibit the export of wood pulp. ; R b HIS SISTER JUMPED, ESCAPING | ACCORDING TO GLAIMS OF THE| o . o —=om = bors this Afternoon. WITH SLIGHT BRUISES. CONTRACTORS. in the insolvency of the Alabama cot- ; ton firm of Knight, Yancey & Co. ¢ 3 per cent. AUTOMOBILE TURNED TURTLE A Te Be Turned Over to the Retailers— Captain Fletch. f the Crui . v B, ds Monrovia attributes the trouvie at | Leaves Yonkers this Morning at Daybreak t as to Scarcity—Ex- | Monrovia to emcouragement on thc 2 planation from the Producers. Ste g Gear Broke, Causing Machine to Swerve and Go Over Twenty Foot Embankment into Hop Brook. ot part of local officials. of his Journey—Official Escort from The Statute of Governor Pi t, — Wil x""s'.f A g ?’.‘;:m“ hattan to M-ior G-y::r g Offi:vci“ . in atual hi ‘ovmal e~ — 1 8 € B o o P e dress Crowd There mirers sent Naugatuck, Conn., May 1—Wien the | _Boston, May 1.—The milk famine for steering gear of an _automobile in|Boston, predicted to begin today, which Dr. Walter A. Riley of this | through the determination. of the farm- e e | S o i Dlinmlik upions peid | o o o e DGR e n Bridmeport, wece riding, Becke mere lavs | Shmmar . Seame g e oniine | esplonage of jurors in criminal cases | Youkers, N. Y., Mdy 1L—Edward Pay-|by trimming the vetoran's today the machine swerved from the ng to the claims of the con- [Was ordered by the semate. =on Weston, whose untiring”legs have | besrd- 0 g highway and down a twenty- ." It had been asserted that foot embankment the bed of Hop | from 30,000 to 35,000 cane of eight and | The Arrest of Four Russians at brook and turned turtle. Dr. Riley and | a half ‘quarts to the <can would be | Honolulu on the charge of inciting dis- Miss McGraw were severely injured, | withheld by the producers, beginming | order caused a mob of 500 of their and Miss Riley, who jumped, escaped | today. countrymen to attack the police. with slight brulses. No Complaint Heard. Caught Underneath the Machine. . | The milk trains which came in carly The machine, which was being driv- | in the day brought many empty cans, en by the doctor, was going slowly | DUt on the other hand there appeared dowi North Church street when with- | {0 De the b e b e ciee ke | for the contractors to turn over to the e e IS Soar PIoke | retailers, and from no section of the carried him triumphantly across the | eint®or hig last Guab . ontiment, willbarring unforeseen acci- | Bounced toniiit/. gthar WG dents, finish his remarkable walk of | rise at 6, breaksast and be | s s T ‘att. | thereafter, B ernoon. He will leave Yonukers at dawn When He Reaches City The Russian Douma Returned the | Si% e ™sage of s journey and | Reaching the City hall, Westoh W sovernment's bill for the extension |gay g39 a m. is due to reach Kings- | hand to Mayor Gaynor & froul of the authority over Finland of the | prigge, in the upper part of Manhat- | the mayor of Los Angeles, and wil doumna to the czar without action. |ian from whence the official escort m dresy the crowd breifly, telling i : 2 accompany bim dowt Broadway (o made such g trip at his age, Martin Moma Delgardo, a negro po- o litical leader and secretary of agricul- | CIY hall B T plunged down an embankment into the | €Ity was heard any complaint 28 %0/ 1yrc'in the recently reconstructed Cu- | Kept His Bed All Day Sunday. | fook the tasic fo nmpire the 508 brook. Miss Riley jumped as the ma- | SCarcity of milk. ban cabinet, died at the age of Weston does not walk Sundayw, and | {he country with hikh regued K08 A chine was going over the bank and es- | Contractors Drawing on Surpius. today was no exception, Afier the Tt caped with bruises and slight cuts| The representatives of the producers — rousing ‘recoption he reccived on his | IOTL When the spoceh Is Guer AEER about the face and head. Dr. Riley | explained this tonight by stating that| At a Luncheon Given in London |arrival here last night, he retired and | J0 BCCREA® P CAE CRREDE : and Miss McGraw were carried down | the contractors had put into circula-|in honor of Louis Paulhan he was |remained in bed practically all of to- | 5™ ; ¢ ‘with the machine and caught under- | tion milk which had been colected pre- | given the check for $30,000, the prize | day. His meals were served as he re- | Joined by His Daughter, Mra Ha neath when it turned over. viously and pasteurized or otherwise |for his flight from London to Man- | clined, and he received callers garbed | Weston's daughter, Mrs. Anns Concussion of the Brain. provided. The eftect will not be felt, | chester, and it was announced that|in a brilliant red bathrobe, propped | gan of New York, joined her fal The doctor received a bad scalp | the producers say, unmtil the limited | there would be another aerial com- {among pillows. A barber from New [here today and will ride in the ol wound and is suffering from comcus. | SUrPius now on hand begins to get ex- | petition for $50,000, York broke the monotnoy of the day 'automobile tomorrow. sion of the brain. The extent of Miss | hausted. - A ety McGraw's injuries have not been ascer- DEMANDS FORTS AT PANAMA, tained, as it was deemed advisable, | SENSATIONAL RAIDS WANTS DEFENSE READY | AMERICAN SCULPTOR DEAD, NEW HAVEN ROAD'S * R D I N o ON ALLEGED POOL ROOMS.| '~ ; JOHN QUINCY ADAMS-"__.AD.| INCREASED PASSENGER RATES o en Canal Is Opencd-—Message from = T e g o it Is| Ancther Step in Determined War Prosident Taft. Died Sunday Morniz_ .. New York in | Affect Entire System and Will Go lnts being c:l.ed for at Dr. Riley’s home. Against New York Gambling. —— His 80th Year. Effect June Tst. ‘Washington, May 1.—In a message, re New York, May 1.—In three raids|accompanied by a detailed report from | New York, May 1.—John Quincy Ad- | New Haven, Conn, May L/ in- COLONEL ‘ROCSENELY VISITS upon alleged poolrooms yesterday af- | the war department, President Taft on | ams Ward, one of America’s greatest | creased tariff of passenger »a of NATIONAL TULIP SHOW. | ternoon by police inspectors acting un- | Saturday sent to congress information | sculptors, died this morning at_his | New York, New Haven aud Htrfiz?h e der the direction of tlie district attor- | regarding the necessity for beginning | residence in Manhattan avenue, New | Railroad company will be fled with & York, In his eightieth year. He had |interstate commerce commismion & been ill for three months. He is sur- | Washington tomorrow morning, Whle Motors from The Hague to Haarlem— | ney’s office, nineteen men were arrest— | the fortification of the Panama canal ed. ~ More than tbree hundred men |in order to have it completed by Bulb Land Feel ud. ) - Capd SRa. By were driven from two of the places and | the date- set for finishing the con- [ vived by his widow, who was at the | he specific Increases on fhe vaeous A a truckload of racing charts, telephone | struction of the canal bedside, and by a brother, Edgar Mel- | lines of the company are not disclosed A, My o e s ccneYelt | Wires and tables was taken to the|. The reports accompanying the mes- | #ille.Ward, a painter. who was in Chi- | here, the incraase will affeot the whots B e ey var b an Inspection of | storeroom in the old police headquar- | sage do not give the exact locations | cago at the time Gf the sculptor's | system and will 0 Into effoct the et .. ters. of the proposed fortifications, but it } death, Funeral services will be held | of June, except the rate hotween New Pten attings. TP e membecs| | The maids will be followed by a gen- | is explained that this cannot be Tur- | at the New York residence om Tues- | YOk and Boston, which under & previ- of hie family, the American minister eral war on gambling in the city. A | nished until information has been ob- | day morning and the body will be sent | ous filing went Into effect toda: R is T s Besapre: Paxton Libben. sec. | Score of policemen have been taken | tained regarding the “status and avail- bana, Ohlo, where he was born, | understood that taking last year's pass ot e B esion: Minis. | from suburban preeincts to secure ad- | ability of certain parcels of land sit- | for intermiont, senger recelpts of the wihole system fe : mission and evidence against the al- | uated along the route of the canal” | My Ward spent practically his en- [ basis, the average increase will be L s d poolrooms. The armament for the proposed fortifi- | tire life in New York city, having come | about five per cenf. and will incres of the 16ad were thousands of acres of | _The two most spectacular Taids were | cations is enumerated as follows: Ten | here from Ohio in his youth, His first | the total passenger receopts of the blooming tulips, great masses of color, | €8rried out in the dowutown business | 14-inch rifles, twelve 6-inch rifles, and | teacher in_the art of sculpture was [company by about $1,000,000, The com. | - ’| section. The police planned the on- | twenty-five 12-inch mortars. Henry K. Brown, with whom he col- | putation is subject, however, 1o uneer- { B e o St Porfume. | slsughts to the minute and at 4 o'clock | The coxt is esthmated i excess of | laborated on the famous equestrian | tainty owing to doubt as to the extent aariem, Presi one squad. led Inspector Russell, | $14,000,000. The report states that the | statue of Washington in Union [ to which the increese will lead 1o B e e n] roient| st B T e Tty | e e o o ot tho | O R i1 19ooh | ikrgor purchiase of tie. cwo chiitelm il party at the entrance. M. Krelage in. | Cub in Cortlandt street. At the same | terminus of the eanal and of territory | works are equestrian statues of Sher- | mileage books and the diverslon of e time Inspector Daly and his men en-|in the neighborhood of the canal’s|idan and Hancock in Philadelphia, and | business to the trolley lines of the T e M geaetth Titime Tas | tered an alleged poolroom in West | course, with o view of choosing the | in New York ety the statues of the | company which paraliel steam roads - > street. There was no warning, and [best sites for the big guns. Indian Hunter, the Pilgrim, Shakes- —_— O T n e, avilt | the police came away with ehough | = ~Tt is. the right and duty of the | peare. all in Central Park; Henty | WHILE RUNNING AT HIGH SPEED, Tk Bul land e pnar Tacing charts and other poolroom Stuff | United States o defend the work up- | Ward Beecher in Borough Hall park, | viaciiNE SKIDDED, TIRES BURST He then presented Colonel Roosevelt | 0 fill up their patrol wagon. on which it is expending such an enor- | Brookiyn; also statues of Commodore Al L with @ Silver modél of the . Half| A third raid was made by Inspectof | mous sum,” the president says in his [ Perry at Newport, R. 1. and Israel Gunkle ‘of Hartord . Haaill Moon” eayIE: McCluskey, whose men broke into the | message. “An adequate defense re- | Putnam at Hartford, Conn. He com- Ao o i “You may caM it the Half Moon or | Sporta club in Kast 19th street. They | quires suitable fortifications near the | pleted shertly before his death a statue Broken in Auto Accident. were delaved by heavy iron doors, andd | approaches to the terminals. I am of | of Hancock for the Smith Memorial (o T, just as like.” Lh;nn{ny:flo;cad: R M_W“ age de- | When these were finally broken down | the opinion tl scribed the eshibition amd the tulip | the members of the club had escaped | be erected for Vew Britain, Conn., May 1-—An &us mobile driven by Johm J. Coffee, # er for the Columbiw Automobils t such works as may | in Philadelphia, which will be unveil- he defense of the canal | ed there next autumn. y, Holland | @ver the roofs of adjoining houses. One | should be completed, occupied and L}‘.‘,’,‘,’?LS’;D"A’.‘.'IS'-,‘; g,‘z’:w,;z;'poun« of | man, who gave his mame as Albert|ready for operation at the time the | RHODE ISLAND’S INDEPENDENCE | company, turned turtle on Mast strect bulbs yearly. Couter, was arrested on a charge of | canal itself is completed and opened near Pratt$ station, today, and Miss In Feplying, Oolonel Roosevelt said: | Violating the Jaw relating to pool-|to the passage of vessel DAY NEXT WEDNESDAY | Elsie Gunkle of 251 New Britain ave “Americane always are especially | Fooms. = : nue, Hartford, was caught undes t struck in Holland by the way in which | In the raids which were led against WON'T REPLY TO HEARST. Will Be Officially Celebrated on the | machine and recetved a broken k. you, one of tlie hardest working peo- | thes alleged poolrooms in Cortlandt ™ Sk - i Above Date. Coffee and Miss Nettlo Borg, the oth- ples of all people, contrive to add beau- | Stréet and West street Detectives Don- | “Let Him Stew in His Owa Juice,” e er occupants of the car, escaped with ty and enjoyment to your lives. We in | Relly and Dungate, who formerly pa- Says the Mayor. | #rovidence, R. I, May L—Rhode Is- | out injury. Miss Gunklo was taken (o America have in the past had to work | trolled the rural sections of Brooklyn, land’s Independence day will be offi- | the New Britaln hospital and Coftes so hard that we have not always been | 8ave the inspectors the signal to rush New York Mayor Gaynor | cially celebrated on Wednesday next, | Was arrested for reckless drivimg and able to pay as much attention as you | the places. They had warrants whici | geciined yesicr to- commwent on | May 4. Through action by the general | released under $500 bonds for his to the things that tend for enjoyment, | had been issued by Magistrate Breen | wijliam R. Hearst's counter-aitack in | assembly the citizens of the state will | @ppearance In eourt in the morning. and, If one or the other must be sac- | in the Tombs police court. | response tG the mayor's declaration at | by observance uphold their contention | Witnesses of the accident say {hat rificed; we think that enjoyment should | At the appointed time. policemen | the Associated Press dinner on Jriday | that the Rhode Island declaration of | the machine was belng driven at ge sacrificed to werk, ut more and|sprang up from every point in the vi- | ight ¢ “two state prison falon independence antedates all other such | high rate of speed and skidded, twe more we are growihg to realize that | cinity, and detectives scaled up the | namely forgery and falsificatlon of | documents, including the famous Phil- | of the tires bursting at the same tme beauty-and enjoyment can be combined | fire escapes, while others leaved up |z public document, were committed |adelphia declaration of July 4, 1776. | When the car turned over Miss Gunkle with work. Americans come here to | the hallway stairs. In Cortlandt street | j, the eagerness of this publisher and From among the musty archives of | Was caught underneath, and the other see how you are able to combine | the police trapped more than a hun- | cgitor to wrong the mayor of the city | this state there has been brought to | two wers thrown out and to one side. A dred and fifty men, but only eight of New York.” light within a few weeks a document : were wanted in answer to the war-| “The mayor was asked yesterday, as | which not only supports the contention | SEVERELY CASTIGATED BY DEATH OF REAR ADMIRAL rants. The raid on the West strect . jert his home in Brookiyn to take | that the legislative act of independ- ARCHBISHOP O'CONNEL Pplace brought ten prisoners, who were | yj,e train for St. James' to spend Sun- | ence dated from May 4, 1776, but is in L PHILIP HICHBORN, RETIRED,| picked from a hundred men who had | gay with his family, if he wished to | itself of much historical significance. g e & 4 stopped there on their way to New'|reply to Hearst’s counter-attack or to | This is the original paper on which | Roosevelt’s Action in Rome Called in- One of the Best Known.Figures in the | Jersey. comment on the editor's intimation | Gov. Nicholas Cooke and members of sulting—O’Laughlin a Traitor, American Navy for Many Years. The raids downtown attracted thou- | fhat the reproduced (ohalan warrant | the general assombly of Rhode Island sands of commuters, and before the | yag of slight consequence. individually enrolled themselves pub-| Lowell, Mass, May 1.—Thecders Washington, May 1.—Rear Admiral|police could remove their prisoners No, indeed.” he replied, “Let him | licly as open rebels against the king. [ Roosevelt’s action in not meeting Pop Philip Hichborn, U. S. N., retired, for | they were compelled to call the traf- | greqw in his own Juice.” -=olh Pius X., on the former president's ro- many years one of the best known fig- | fic squad to clear the streets. —_— FIVE BULLET WOUNDS IN HEAD. | cent visit to Rome, was called Insults ures in the American navy, died at his FLIES OVER BRITISH FLEET. ing and a violation of Mrs. Rooses Body of Waterbury Man Found in | velt’s principle of a “square deal” by home here tonight at the age of 71. TORMEN He had been sick for the past two| P HILADELPHIA MOTORM Cecil Grace in Wright Aeroplane Woods—C: months, being confined to the house AND CONDUGTORS FIGHT. | Cgrrl, Oraee 1 O Tat Sheorme practically all of the time, by arterial 2 - sclerosis. Last Wednesday he had a|John McGuicken, Union Conductor;{ y .. May 1 Most Rev. Willlam H. O'Conrail, aroh~ bishop of Boston, at a public mesting of the American Federation of Cath- olic Societies of the diocese, inethis of Suicide. Waterbury, Conn., May 1.—The body The fleet of Hritish of Attilio Greguoli, aged 35, of 145 cerebral hemorrhage and today had hot and Instantly Killed. Sl ol Sheerneak Tis % : 0ds | city today. John Callan O'Laughiln, another attack from which he did not St . T b e T i | Biver Strcek e Ao ™ fve Wotiat | former. assistant secratary . of) westll rally. J % Philadelphda, May 1.—John Me-|aeroplane from the Aero club avia- | wounds in the head. Medical Exami- | Who conducted the negotiations be- With him at the time of his death | Guicken, aged 36 years, of this city, a{ tion grounds at East Church suddenly | ner A. A, Crane decided that it was | tWeen Mr. Roosevelt and the Vatican, was his wife, son and son-in-law. His | union conductor, was shot and instant- | appeared out of the hs d manoeu- | & casesof suicide, a 32-calibre revolver | Was severely castigated hy the arch- daughter. Mrs. P. . Pearsall, was not | Iy killed early today during a fight be- | vred over the vessels at varying | being found near the body. Despon- [ Pishop, who declared =Mr. O'Laush there. Further than that interment|tween unign and non-union motormen | heights. - After making a_deliberate [ dency is thought to have heen the [lIn had “played the part of Juda will be in Mount Auburn cemetery, | and conductors near the Frankford and | yeconnaissance the aerial craft disap- | cames, and Is “the gort of, Catholic that we Boston, near the admiral's old home | Lehigh avenue barn of the Philadel-| peareq from view. The man had been missing from his | 8r¢ ashamed of.” which Was in Charlestown, Mass., 1O | phia Rapid Transit company. Victor [ PSRy Zl0 Y 1io) giartiea the | nome for three weeks, but his absence | The archbishop's —genersl subject funeral arrangements have been made. | Farrell, aged 21 years, a NOn-union{nayy officers is a Wright model and | had mot been reported to the police. | Was “Loyalty.” After thirty-two years of active ser- | man from Washington, D. C. admits | m, floted by Cecil ce. fter x artrideee in: the — = vice, Admiral Hichborn, who at the | firing the fatal shot. but maintiins that | Joaviny the harbor It flew Aearis 50 | revelver had boen discharged, which | KISSING A SAFE PASTIME. timé was chief constructor of the navy. | he shot in scif defense. miles in 51 minutes. rising at one time | caused the police to make an investi- NO FEAR OF BACFERIA was retired in 1901 with the rank of At a hearing this morning he was = hal £ 1,500 feet el con- s e rear admiral. - One of Wis most {mpor- | held without bail to await the action | ©* * P11 O 7 T o T el Professor in Harvard Medical Collage tant services was the preparation of | of the coroner. HIGHER SALARIES AT YALE. . the American ships for the Spanish- ks Sends Out Good News. American wa 2 = g AMERICAN ROBBED IN LONDON. erican war. > NOT DEAD, BUT MARRIED. University’s Income Sufficient to Jus o S Boston, May 1.—Kissing as & per- o1 i ining in tify an Increase, Says Dr. Hadley. | More Than $3( aken From His| soot1y safe pastime hae fust received Four e e At eor™ing i | Mrs. Tyrdell of New York Makes Un- Room as He Slept. tha 0. K. 'of Dr: A. M. Wonthington: o > . expected Discovery. New Haven, May 1.—Président Had- A a professor in the Harvard Medical Ossining, N, Y. May 1.—Four per - w of Yale university will bring be London, May 1.—H, H. Meyers, school. Persons who refrain becauss sons were injured here early this morn- New York, May 1.—Looking through | fore the members of the corporatic guest at the Piccadilly hotel, who of fear of the interchange of baeteris ing when the automobile of Burton | the records of the board ¢f health here | and the alumni advisory council a plan | described #s a wealthy American are martyring themselves uselessly, tha Robinson, a cousin of the late Mrs.|to find out if the husband who had de-| for the increase of professors robbed of upward of educator told his andience at a lecty Herbert Slocum, got out of control on | serted her three years ago in Passaic|aries to be paid n the incom tected thief who entered his roc on “Man and His Bacteria” last night a sharp turn and, starting to climb a | was dead, Mary Tyrdell found instead | university funds which have now ac- | Meyers siept and abstracted a pocket- | The bacteriological expert assured his hiliside, turned turtle. Mrs. Slocum, | tha¢ he had been married again and | cumulated sufficiently to justify this [hook from his clothes. The matter | hearers that the only danger in the who was the wife of Major Slocum, U. | that a son had been born of the union | action. has been placed in the hands of Scot- | practice to healthy persons was. that S. A. was killed in an automobile ac- | two years ago. % The salaries. it is stated, will be |land Yard officials. Meyers, who sub- [ of a sudden and violent attack of Hieart cident in Washington, D. C., only re- She told District Attorney Whitman, | adjusted chiefly upon a basis of merit. | sequently left the hotel, had not re trouble. cently. In the accident today Mrs.|and yesterday Andrew Tyrdell was ar-| The r of Yale professors at the | istered his home address. “There 1s every roason to believe Bessie Jackson of Peekskill had a| pmigned in the Tombs police court,| present time is regularly £4,000 a yea — that when two wholesome pemsons kneecap broken and Mrs. Julia Conklin, | eharged with bigamy. While he was | Several years ago they had an advance Muskets for the Cuban Army. meet 1ip to lip they may break five also of Peekskill, had a leg brokei.|at the bar of the court his two ohil- | of $250 a vear each. ‘Washington, May 1.—The Cuban ar- | without upsetting the bactorial bai- Robinson and the chauffeur were both | dren, one a five year old girl by his —es my and” rural guard-are to be. armed|ance,” was the way he put the good badly bruised and cut first’ wife and the two year old boy | New System of Electives at Harvard | ¥, @Rc JRIGH SUAte&re (0 00 SIS | news. whose birth record she had found, University. ini f United States ordnance e ~ Prince Teai Tao in New York. played together in an adjoiming court] o, rigee, Mass, May 1.—A Dorts, namely. the latest model of the | EX-PRESIDENT OF HAYTI DEAD. New York, May 1.—His Imperial|room. &yrdell was held in $1,800 bail|, o070 0,0 on based on the prinei- | Springfield musket, which is now is- » Highness, Prince Tsai Tao, of China, | for the grand jury. Dle of knowing a little of evervthing | sued to the American army. Major | Nord Alexis’ Health Had Been Broken a brother of the prince regent and un- | . After deserting his wife in Passaic| 0.5, o0 00in." well, and at the same | Eduardo Lores, commander of the by Rugged Experisnces. ole of the baby emperor, arrived here ,ma"fi:"‘"m Bave marrled| fime to make the student plan the full | rural guard, has just completed the . today from Washington at the head of vak. Goliege curriculum seriously and plan | purchase of these . muskets. Five | Kingston, Ja May 1. are the intenis embodied | thousand are intended for the al | Alexis, « ex-president of Haytl, an extensive rotinue, for the last days | &t No, 490 Wast Seventy-first strect| (P L0 (0] of Mhis visit to this' country. During | When he was in the new system of electives at Har- | gaard und five thousand for the Cubun < today. i death occurred ufbe his stay he will lay a wreath on the Al vard university, sccording (o the an-larmy. The new muskets will cost the ilness. Hix health, RoWese:, tomb of General Grant, will visit West | Locomotive Plunged Down Embank- | [ ] report made (e trusiers by Pres | Cubans $15 each making a total pur Teen conatdéranly brokeniEsiIEN Point, and on Wednesday night will be ment. jdent A. Lawrence Lowell and given]chase of $150.000. The suusunition | expericnces of the lusi yesr and *nr the wacst of Tiwnor i & Glnner givan by ¢, Comn,, May 1 —Engineer|ou tonight will have to be purchased in open | wfter h josed from i e A-‘i}ul (éELl,m“' .. w Ll e Eu- | g iward negan of New Haven was +- - Tarket sent e exile. Fe dy m rope on Thursday. severely “burneil’ by ‘bursting steam Accepts Call 1o Hartford Pulpit. T here since the revolution. of ¥ 3 on his engine bwere lats tonight Hartford, Conn., May 1 -1t was ah- $20,000 Fire in New Haven. 1908 and was possessed of copmid bie Death of Mrs. Richard A. McCurdy. die locometive plunged off the | nounced todsy that the Rev. Charies| New Haven, Conu, May L—Fire to- | bropeily in Vv .-:‘,'m"m'w R ously Patimated at fe 2 1.—irs. | Gacks in the East Bud frelght vanis | F. Carter, pastor of the Hancock Con- | day which iy thought to have bheen ;| ciused by apontaneous combusiion aid | of ase. | damage estimated at 320,000 to the R ; storage building and stock of the Bow- Steamship Arrivals, forpistown; N. Afa; hard A, McCurdy, widow of the late | down an embaniament. A misintor | gregational church, Lexingion. Mas president of the Mutual Life Insurance | preted signal was she eause. had accepted a calk to the pastorate conwany, died at her home here today. the Park church of this city. ‘The pu She was 72 vears old and was married | Colonel Roosevelt Continued to re- |pit of the Park church was left vac ditch” Furniture company, located at| At Gibraltar, May 1c Be 4o Mr. McCurdy fifty-rwo years ago.| celve the cheers aud honors of the |y the resignation of Rev. W. W.|the rear of No. 106 Orange street. Twn | New York, Trvo children. Ry H. McCur Hollanders. He visited the tomb of | Ranney. who has gone w Colorado | alarms were rung in. the mulding be- | At Southampten, May 1: rs. Louise A. auld, survi ‘William the Silent. near The Hague. | Springs. ing in & congested part of the city. from New York, %