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o ..'? e 13 hours the steamer had been -fih Up o midnight she had sufered Qugh dufln: zn z,ly houra of the nl‘h'. m a point by the swelling' m 2 Carde from Stranded Vesesl. Meanwhile a number of boats ma- noeuvred about the Pdnxeu but no one attempted to board her on account of the treacherous d swell. O vis- im‘ad WaS tg:l q - endeavor was w‘:b‘gll = list of the .c gn !:&n was said in German Lloyd Hsts of ngers from Me never recefy t added, howdn:-. tht” m were~ known y ien the steamer s Wj!fln and:Miss Wil ‘Conn. t.lrt. New. York, ‘Mrs. 1..G, Ogden, New ‘wine .in va. She beat the time limit and saved the im- in - duties. 8till A.l'filfl at 130 A. M. 2 was still -xmund “this mornin; {l had moved her 25 degrees, but the tide had - to recede after one o'clock. At t hour there appeared little hope of Mslng her clear. NORWICH'S PETITION FOR BOND ISSUES. Last Week's fln W ', mud Corporatien Csansel Fanning Explains defective, a today by State’ A.tchltec! 'w;r e WW"'*'“? ‘ay and Spesker Fris ‘epinton | eomi oltc- ,uuu ‘tfi ‘of | start’ under thé new charter m.minn a.uhn ‘i suchi a_ sy {debt is Situation 8 Fi (S’ecifi\ to The Builetin.) go F‘ —;Carpor-tlon ‘anning appeared before nu committee on finance of (he Kk agssmbly Thursday afte: relative to the p.tmonl of the cif Norwich for right to issue water bandl w m‘“%:at $320,000 and floating amount of $160,000. ey Fanning’s statement. to -the ‘was.relative to thz condi- imake it .desirable to issue 3. He explained that the fltot ‘bonds were intended to meet the pense of ‘bnhdmx water works and ce- Committee. | securing “a‘permanent and adequate wateér supply for his eity; that -the wark of ”‘""5‘“.’3?..}‘;" volhg a0 ad- vanced; ti engineery’ estimate of the cost of Iuch improvement ix" $304,- .000, -and -that ths land damages and ‘water . rights sécured will Tequire the expenditure. of approximately the re- mainder o flm*amoum. of the bond is- ipe Out Fioating Debt e other propoped issue At:omiy said that it been r-commaum t) the charter commis- ‘which the proposed new eh.y charter with the idea that the city ¥ith an ting int of aceurateiy. xnown debt. Th, $160,000, the amo the vrom ‘hond issite. _-Thefe petitions reached the general assembly ofly after the time for filing " (Feb. 2) had expired, but 85 there wers 'several g:fl tiofis before the city relative to lectiofi ‘of a water supply site and dpo had not been definitely decid- of | 8d upon up £d° that time. A resolution, n unanimousl; ssed ln‘.fi dttended lpndflym«“fl the plan to issue the 'bondl - to Be Suspended. od that there is not ovposmon to the sus-. rule regarding the ad- business and.that’ the ‘come into the senate in ‘be later” transmitted to L. Ama‘ ot ng sald that this was | o2 home: ho joked. son_ [ith somely furnish sideradly about his poverty, that the old suit ‘which he wore wi have to give place to a ready-made suit, as he could not afford taflor-mads c\othq :lum Teft N Y 3 Colon ew. Yor terday Afternoon. Benjamin. Paris v nor’s | said hn fair deal ONE pflp. TWO WOUNDED, i P e R R usaexto to ithe’ N’l’l%‘. “for / protection six months, declaring Hand was after him. ‘LORIMER MUM ON - : NEW INVESTIGATION. ‘Has Nothing to Say.Absut Attempt to ¥ ~Reopen His Case. tht th' Jnhutflm, Pa., April 6.—United | States Senator .William Lorimer, who came- here today on private business, would not discuss the investigati the electon « Fediogt i et muvm to give him al’ 1 Tex., Am-u 6.—O Paso, | death of his tlthor D iecnn in the Edward’ G. Wade, a native of and known throughout the 2 Gem-sll, rage fgiate as The ‘Wade Who Never Saced- 1 hce. he-had’ been severely beaten, - the “extent that blood had been Wi, ‘and lse had been kept-for days nter ‘focd’ pmfloh in high nown lan- QM nce was broken 6nly ed apd fell to the chiello, " who hafl with syncope, an Uproar. Pt E:)le couli'trotohm was n‘an uproar n.na e men in'the cage workod mm-!vu inte a frenzy, rush- ing irnr, shrieking and hurling 3 “#executioners.”’ Errj- “Fhe world has never bals!” “Qur persecution ‘is ivilization!” The others. g a din, the like of the orfitives were rfl §.—William Jen- “the committee today ,sent ‘here ths citizens of Memphis to. lnvih ta make his, home in tbnt city tgl Be could not accept. e t" Memphis could - easily rauo 3!. ,000 if that would be any mdncemu;t to him. lfi n ‘replied that it was not ney . collaldmflon and that if he ;?kod at it in that light he would not vp:my of such an invitation. He-gpld he knew he had friends in Lh -south that mwhy they did not ninsg mynn tofi < him thare, -they - peeaed him more in comml! ‘When Mr. Lorimer nmlvod the news of the La Follette reso! said: “I'make it a rule never to discuss for publication matters ‘which affect me Ppersonally.? < 200 INVALIDS '‘REMOVED FROM BURNING HOSPITAL | Blaze -in Philadel Amon' tlu lnm-m Philadelphia, Aprll 6—Fire which was discovered in' laundry build- ing of the: Philas fa - hospital to night, almost completely. destroyed the structure and spread terror among the: insane and. other patients, housed: in{. befors the patSaie Souid be quisted efore A - Two hundred inmlm of the:ward for ~incurable tuberculosis.” were removed -on cots from the build- ing which they oeeupied until flames had been checked. The loss utxmltefl at un,ooo YOUNG WOMAN TOOK .ARMOUR SEGURITIES. Since the Theft of Bonds Mrs. ar-f mour’s Will Has Been Changed. <ansas City, Mo., April 6.—The Sta today says: “It was a_woman who took the se- curities to the value of $105,000 from | the safe deposit box of ‘Mrs. 8. B.- Ar. mour in the New England Nation: ‘bank sn‘nsnld them. She was young, entertaining and close to the widow of the Jate packer. So fond had Mr: Armour become of her,.and 50’ satisfi ‘was she of the young womsn’'s businass ability, that she had named her as an executur in her will. Since the discov- ery, the will has been changed.” - POLIGEMAN MAKES A STARTLING DISCOVERY. Waman He Had Fished from River £ Was His Wife. — Boston, - April 6.—Wahile assisting to carry the body of a woman who had committed suicide by jumping into thel Charles river basin from the West placed over-ihe face -and found the woman -~was his’ wife, Mrs. Mary E. patients {* the L ’m,n mrmva ;. the north. - Suggesting that he should ‘not be om-one side al' the country, he said his home ‘at Lincoln is.elmost in country and only Tide to any section 2 baf needed to hflp sthe: cause O racy. He gfih . visit Memphis at wery Creates Terror| Pii:qfinu, fi LDl g $.—Thirty - ~six pa.s- infured, ten seriously. late today Carnegie di- g Rallways com- nlh at Westwood, near hung mended over a bfi«nkme-t hurt, all residents of ‘are Mrs. Nicholas Leonard, and -Frank -Lester; iternal injuries. In nt the passengers rushed door and. rolled into g broken limbs and West Farr, ; New York banker, for- merly dwned” by “Gen. George B. Mc- Cléllan of eIV war fame, who died t was ‘bwned to the ground to- % --while firemen sought in vain' to ‘coay water through 3,000 feet of hose attach 0.a Hydrant in the valley 5 5. eitimated at $50,000. *u 6—A special oming _county, ‘says. ygq n the vault of nal bank 'Lhere during the ht, bm: failed wn access.to the: ith ;25 in cash ana) 7 found in a till. Hurley,. 26 years old. The coup -elhad |- Deen separated’ for some time. De- spondency is believed to have caused “Mrs. Hurley’'s ‘act. died snddenly in New Orlean: sed | yaofficial Monterey, Mexi cisco Mi'dero Mexico City, April 6.—Ignorant £ the character of the measures ::: v ernment may be taki to. lcroémentuot Ppeace :fih dxt‘&, exico was iriclined. bit more b pessimistic | the immedfate tm.\rre Flora - lrnrly Bhneh-rd, al worker and ck woman ., strangled her in- | sville, aanet. to death and then committed sui- ¥ ‘Repres MoClll Reintroduced in the ‘hous2 a bill providing for the publicity of campaign contributions in congressional elections prior to the eiection. 7 Su{-hry of the N-vy Meyer and Secretary of State Knex sefit ‘to ths senate an explanation of. their course in giving naval plans to the Argentine Republic. = 3 : Fire Escape Towers Within the walls of buildings have been recommended in a repert to the board of underwriters in Naw York after the investigation of the Asch building fire. As a Result of the “Hard Sledding™ which cotton mills in'general have en- countered during the past year or two, seventeen New England mills have re- duced or passed their dividends. . Rev. Dr. Christian F. Reisner, pastor of Grace Methodist church, New York, advocated the employment of advertis- ing by churches, at the annual New England conférence of the Mathodist church-in session at.Cambridge, Mass. Elias Morse of North Livermore, Me., has a cow from whose milk he has ob- tained an average of a pound of butter a day since June.' The cow is more -than 20 years old. but her teeth ars good and she eats her food as well ap- ‘parently, as she. ever did: Monynous AGAINST ; PLURAL MARRIAGES Prwqm Jcnph Smith Defines Atti- tude- of Chruch. L — Salt Lake City, Utah, ADtil 6.—The positien .of the . Church of. Latter Day age was reiterated.to- | day by President Joseph F. Smith in his sermon, opening’ the 81st annual conference of the Mormon church, He said_in part: “We ought to. obey the rule of the church with regard to marriage. As announced repeatedly at these conter- ences, plural marriages have ceased in the: church. There is.-no man author- ized to perform a plural marriage. We have been’ doing all”'in our pewer to stop this, .We. have been doing all we can to trace the men who are perform ing such ceremonies. It is hard to lo- cate the men, but when we find them we.will deal with the MRS. BROOKS TELLS A-PITIFUL STORY. Locked Up Husband’s Pistol So She Would Not Suicide. Fort Worth, Tex., April G—Testi!y- ing again that she set aside an hour each day to pray that Mrs. Mary Binford, whom she afterwards killed, might become a better woman, Mrs. T. M. Brooks concluded the evidence of the defense in her trial today on the charge 'of murdering Mrs. Binford. She .said shz prayed for Mrs. Bin- ford for four years, She testified thu she locked her husband’s pistol closet for fear she wounld commit: sul- cide with it. . This was the pistol she used to Shoot Mrs. ' Binford in January, when Mrs. Brooks went to the store whers Mrs. Binford worked. . She .contends that Mrs. - Binford had. alienated her- hus- | band’s affections. PEARY HONORED BY BROOKLYN INSTITUTE i Honorary, ‘Membership Lne Night. New York, April 6.—Members of thd Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sci- ences, who struck the name of their _fellow townsman, Dr. Frederick A. 4 Cook, ‘from their roll a year and a half ago, presented Rear Admiral R. E. Peary .tonight with certificate of ‘honorary ' membership in 'the insti- tute.” The presentation was made when the. explorer appeared for the first time in Dr. Cook’s home city, to deliver his polar lecture at: the Acad- emy . of Music, . ; CARNEGIE.DECLINES “ THE CHAIRMANSHIP. Will- Not T:k. Part - in Movement fur - Arbitration Treaty. New York, April 6.—Andrew Carnegle has declinéd !o ‘become chdirman of a PTO] d united association” of all or- ganizatit now ‘working for an arbi- ‘m{hr ‘between this country and ‘Great- Britain. He believes that it is wiser to allow the United ‘States sen- ‘ate to deliberate on the form of a treaty unprompted. S AVESRRRI S T T OBITUARY.. : Col. Alexander Savage. Norfolk,” Va., April G—Col‘ Alexan- der Savage, aged 78 years,'a distin- -| guished confederate soldier und Pprom-, -inent cotton. merchant and exporter, died here today. He commanded Thirteenth Virginia envt:lrry -purs | ings, a bill - Fear, F.fluu of Peace Sfiém- loBot{. Mexicanc - a';xd foreigners who ng to see the end of the revolution g'ms :(t:“u L;‘dfllel un’b‘;:i e m' auspiciously n at ington By Minister of De Da Barra on the eve of his ure for Mexico and Dr. ‘Vh.:quet‘(!o- mez may be continded, but there is a growing fear of failure. No Statement of Progrm At none of the government o was it possible today to obtain statement that would indicate that deflnite . progress towards a. cessation of hostilities had been. made, thm it was frequently denfed that is an impossibility, and in one or m guarters it was hinted that it was & robability. “Peace Negotiations at' an End.” San ' Antonio, Tex., April 6.— revolutionists are determined not mak8 peace unless President DA steps down and the envoys from the government are just.as stubbornly de- termined to keep him in power,. al though they are willing to make con: cessions otherwise. All peace negot fio;s with Mexico have come to end.” These are official statements made here today by Juan Sanchez Azcona and Attorney Jose Vasconcelo: the comniissioners to’ Wi named by the insurrectos. Now the Opportune Time. Washington, April 6.—The adage of striking while the iron is hot mll to the necessity for arr: ; Mexicoc:uw, n:‘.l th; ontintign of Dr Vg- quez’ Gomez, ‘head of- the ;gency of the Mexiun M&% ‘Dr.. Gomez pbin’tod out that sit ‘Ull most opportune at present to tremt peace, but that a.. mun'nth tmmfl ’ e revolut B s el "fio ; tions: as' to make nn&l-nt T plete triumph‘ and the capturs ico :City acceptable to the moluf.l ist forces. lnlumqt” ‘Will Go Hailf Way. Dr. Gomez said, however, that his constituents were willing to do any- thing within reason and did not wish to ‘be accused-of bloocdthirstiness ia the insurrection. For this reason, he added, they would meet any overtures for peace way, and wers demonstrating at present their re® to take part in peace negotiati ® once initiated. General Activity of Insurredtos. Merida, Yucatan, April .—News has Just reached this city of renewed act- ivity on the part of the . insurrecto ‘bands_to the southwest, along the ll)o of the United Railways. It has been thought the bands had been effectually dispersed. From Tenabo, a short distance fiorth of Campecho, word was recefved of the discovery of a plot to assassinate the authorities and join fortunes with the rebels further north. Troops were dispatched from Hecelchakal $8500 SHORTAGE' AT CHICAGO POSTOFFICE. two of ington Head of Envelope Department Missing Since 1t Was Discovered. Chicago, April 6.—A shortage of $8,500 -was reported in the wholesale stamped envelope department of the Chicago 'postoffice. At the samé time ‘Postmaster ‘Camipbell said the head of the department, John J. Daly, hi not appeared- at the postoffice since. the shortage was called to his attention last Monday. A ‘general investigation of all the books kept in thes various deparfments of the postoffice was begun some time ago and the. investigators found they could not bflluncg the accounts in Daly’s departmen Inspectors who “visited Daly’s hunu found Mrs. Daly ill. She told them she had not seen her husband since Mon- day night, when, she said, he told her he was going out to do some election work. DANBURY MERCHANT DIES OF INJURIES. Horse Started ap He Was About te . Enter Carriage. Danbury, Conn., Aprll 6.—Morria Scheanblum, a merchant tailor, 'place, died in a local holbflll (o% from injuries recéived Tuesday & he ‘was gatting out of a carrigg: As Scheanblum was about to ‘step to the ground the horse throw- ng him so that he struck head, 3 ‘tnctuflng his skull. *He was 50 years d and leaves a widow and several dren. ¢ . New Hampshire Legalizes Frelght Rates. g . Concord; N. H., April. consideration in many con xisti n re bt ok ¢ was passed by % ummuven toduy byia zzo gxmm-rx, Apl;:ll ; -.? »e«a& sermon . m ni &m“f‘ -dqlmte,d 1o him & ered Sunday morning e, b Ptext will he