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VOL. LIV.—NO NORWICH, CONN., MONDAY, APRIL 28y 1912 The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Doubie That ci Any Cther Paper, and lts Total Girculation is the Largest in Gonnecticut in Proportion to the City's Population Buti’s Body Not TAFT DENIES CLAIM OF ROOSEVELT Never Approved Roosevelt's Decision to Delay Prosecution of The Harvester Company. ABSENT FROM THE COUNTRY AT THAT TIME President Quotes Official Records to Show That He Was in Philippines When Matter Was Under Consideration— Cabinet Members Do Not Recall That Question Ever Came’ Before Them—Robert Lincoln Objects to Roosevelt’s | “Perversion” of His Father’s Views and Words. — Before to re- t Taft | Washington, ~ April 28, aving the White house tods ¥ on it in order to . Presiden rn to Ma: huset on the Steel tru gued a personal statement denying | negotiat “olonel Roosevelt’s allegation that, | 24, 1912, when, as I have b men- while secretary of war, at a cabinet | tioned, they came to a conclusion, and it was determined that could be reached which velt's no agreement he approved Mr. he app the gove to immedia pieeting ision not e International Harvester company. |ment could accept; and on that date President Taft's statement says he | the attorney general was directed ever heard the International bring suit. “WILLIAM H. LINCOLN'S SON OBJECTS. TAFT.” ester company discussed at an: pet meeting, and that the records of | he war department will show that he | as out of the country when the inci- the Colonel oc- Indignant That Rooseveit Should ent referred to by ¢ : prred, “Pervert” His Father's Views. The President’s Statement. (S “ i dreside: 1 's statement was as Jn Baar >resident 2 rain, g ot Twts aa | Newark, N. J., April 28—While on his ““Mr. Roosevelt, in his speech at | Way nor imo his cam: Rvorcester, as reported by the public | Paisn in ident Ta. ress, referring to the Harvester trust | made pu uit, said: Lincoin, “‘As a matter of fact, Mr, Taft was [ member of my cabinet when this entical case was fully discussed be- ore the cabinet, and he cordially ap- | ved the action taken, and indeed, s a matter of fact, my memory is g ) hat he himself made the motion that g"}gw”l‘{"l AL here should be no prosecution of the | URESICERE (aneotn arvester trust pending the investiga- | v} "\b* } .‘f C b fon into the trust by the bureau of | PUCE m"‘ ‘]’“ rorporations.’ 4 - is written request for rtions 1 Roosevelt's Memory at Fault. “Mr. Roosevelt's memory is very ch at fault. 1 am authorized to say il Mr. Root and Secretary Wilson, | pijica] fs saptomied Uy tis both of whom were members Of the | ecorded views” of the martyred pr abinet at that time, that they have | gant o recollection whatever of ever hear- | g the prosecution of the Harvester ROOSEVELT RESTS UP. atter discussed in the cabinet. And | r. Root 18 very certain (hat 1o NeVer | Takes Walk in Morning and Auto jaw or heard of Mr. Herbert Knox v oen Emith's letter to Mr. Roosevelt under Ride in_Afternoon. fate of September on the | posion, April 2 for meet- Subject. ing the leaders of his n in this ith ; state, Colonel Roosev ide poli- S Bmitih ifettes Until tics foday and spent the time. at rest. Ppsiiny Ho was the ®uest of Dr. W. “l_am able to say the Bigelow, In the morning he went f o far as my recoilection go eard the Harvester trust r tioned in any cabinet meeting that I attended; and I cannot he mistaken in the statement that I never saw or knew of Mr. Herbert Knox Smith's Jetter of September 21 to the president until after my adminisyration had be- | un, and the time when the question ¢ the prosecution came up in 1910 or 911. And 1 never w or read the fetter until about two months ago, | The Dates Involved. a walk and in the afternoon t automobile ride. I Colonel Roosevelt will leave for the last ) his Massac! campaign at § o'clock tomorrow, going first through a number of North Shore towns. PERKINS' STATEMENT. Says He Contributed to Taft's Cam- paign Fund in 1908, New York, April “This correspondence shows that the |, 2 ow Yo subject matter of the prosecution of | KIS (|“|;Iqi£|’1“'n‘1':lr\'r‘j the International Harvester company | letter tonight to Repre came before President Roosevelt on |lam B McKinley, August 22, 1907, which is the dato of | {MPalEn manager, hig letter to Attorney General Bona- flm‘"d. e Texcinael withip jarte; that Mr. Herbert Knox Smith's [ [FONCERCe €XbIanscec Wi 75s. etter dis i fle Tnter ussing the question and ad- yising against snit was dated Septem- | house and ofiic als of the International of nich Mr. Harvest 8 Sptom ;ompany, ¥ Per 21, 1907: and that Mr. Smith's | paTVester company gt etter was forwarded, by direction of | Feriins in a director. T criticises ¢ Sesident Hoossvalt,, inder date of | Po% 0% OF the correspomdence of eptember 4, to the attorney general| 1o 1, A1 chirges rogarding the Har- with direction to the attorney general | YeSter company thal it was done to to bring the letter to the president|f reqEtben Fresident Taft's cause in | ghat week to talk over the matter, | L9 forthcoming by The official records show that Presi- t dent Roosevelt left Washington in |, YT- Perkins cl that Represen- | B N e O e o tative McKinley and other friends of | president have endeavored re- peatedlf¥ to place him in the light of being a man “actuated only by sor- did, improper motives.” defends course in supporting the candidacy of Colonel Roosevelt for the presiden- tfal nomfnation, and denies that J. P. Morgan was secretly behind him in the fight that is being made in behalf of Colonel Roouseveilt. President Taft's policy with corporations, M terizes as “farcical turned from Oyste: ton on Sepiember 24; that on Septem- ber 29 he left Washington for a trip down the Mississippl river, returning to Washington on October 23, 1907, d that he remained in Washington that time on. What Official Records Show. .“The official records of the war de- tment show that | left Washing- E in June of the same year and went Murray Bay, Canada; that I re- Bay to Washi in dealing rts that pained thers until August, when I |"“because of the f: cal results of the Hsited Oyster Bay on August 13, and | ‘trust busting’ programme of the Taft fhen went to Washington on the l14th, | administration, Wall street knows that it has nothing to fear from Washing- ton.” Mr. Perkins admi tributed mone; campaign, by sisted the T After the ele he informg Repre he lent to Ge of the reput $15,000 to pay during the ca this money has nc that he holds M. ¢ that he con- to Colomel Roosevelt's asserts that he d left Washington on August 18 for E western rip throughout Oklahoma, | uri, the Yellowstone park, Oregon id ‘Washington, reaching Seatile on | ber 8 and sailing from Seattle ! the Philippines on Beptember 13, ald not return i tha UUnited States | wntll the 20th of December, 1907, Taft Was Out of Country, “1 have a letier from Herbert Knox Bmith, commissioner of the bureatd of eorporations, written at my request, in | which he uses the following language: ‘On November 7, 1907, which date 1| ¢ 2Tount fx from my personal dlary, 1 mp_l Taft in Bay State Today. { Mr. Perking at the president’s| Washingiou, After nine erder that the president took the view |bours’ resi in House, Presi that the bureaw's investigation shouid | dent Tafi started back at 5.35 o'c eome befors the suit’ for M. d mtinue ‘his “This indicates with certainty the |Campaign 8 delegates to time when the matter was deeidad, and | the republican national convention. shows that if the matier did come je- | The president will spend all tomorrow fore the cabinet at all, it must have |in the Bay State, starting to speak ear- | been after September 24 and on or |1y in the morning at aunton and before November 7. 1907, a4 period when | WInding up at Boston in time to catch I was out of the country and could |® train which will bring him back to not have been present, and certainly conld not have made « metion or sug- | gestion in the cabinet that no suit he | prosecuted until afier the investiga. | tion, Why Suit Has Been Delayed. “Mr. Roosevelt asks why suit has not been brought In this administra- tion against the Harvester trust, A report made to me by the attorney general shows (hat shortly after the decigion by the supreme court of the Standard Oil and Tobaceo cases, the the capitol aga Wednesday morning. WOMAN'S CONDUZT CAUSE OF A DOUBLE TRAGEDY. Her Husband and Former Boarder Kill Each Other With Ravolvers. Martins Ferry ., April 28.—In a revolver ducl h 2y before many persons Earl Shatfer, 45, was i killed, and Philip Smith, aged badly’ wounded that he died in a h atiorney general was about o begin | pital a short time later. Mrs. Iarl sult against the International Harves. | Shaffer und her son Robert, by a for- ier eompany, when its representatives [ mer marriage, are in custody. Smith an oppertunity in apparent d faith to submit a reasonable plan reorganization or dissolution; which would meet every just cause of esm- plaint. With my approval, the atior- ney general delayed bringing suit the consideration of this prop- and during pegotiations which easued looking to the accompMshment of such result, Order to Bring Suit on April 12, “Phese negotiations were delayed, first, by reason of the time required to make an examination of the books of the Harvester company, and second, because of delay in compieting the ve- port of the examiners, due (v the [act tormerly lived at the Shaffer home, hut left recently at the request of Shaffer, who was a well known millhand. Smith WAS 5 teamster, Shatfer is alleged to have heard last night that Smith and Mrs, Shaffer were going driving foday, Smafler visited the pike read and waited. Soon the buggies came along, Smith and Miss Mary Viel, aged 17, occupied the first and Mrs, Shaffer and her son were in the second, Without warning, it is said, Shaffer begun shooting at Smith, Who promptly return=1 the five. Shaffer fell, shot throagh the heart, while Smith, weunded several times threngh the bady, was driven to a hospital at Whasting, W. Va,, where hie disd, r. Perkins charac- | Cabled Parazraphs Brussels, Belgium, April 2§-—The ex- ecutive bureau of the International maritime committee has voted to study anew the international regulations Io: the protection of Iife at sea. < London, April 2: The body of Jus- tin McCarthy, the novelist and histor- ian, for many years a member of par- liament, who died at Folkestone Wed- nesday, was buried in Hempstead cemetery yesterday Constantinople, April | bazaar quarters in Damascus have been destroyed by fire. Several per- sons were killed d many injured and the damage is estimated at $10,000,000. The fire began at midnight Friday and lasted until iate Saturday night. ~—The great Danzig, CGern v, Aprll 23—The | battleship Koenig Aibert, named for a former king of Saxony, was launched Saturday. The present on king, | Fredich was present, _and made a and his sister, Prin- cess N hristened the vessel. EXPLODING TiRE CAUSES DEATH OF HINSDILL PARSONS. Victim Was Driving Ninety Horse Power Auto Near Albany. of Albany. Nicholson, of fracture of the local hospital in Mr. Weisbrod of Schene song’ secrets Mr, Par- seat, arsons and his secretary left at 9 oclock this morni a new mobile to his ho at the wheel wi Clinton Heights denly one of the r¢ This cause tonne | erus under it | 48 years old and is Mr. gurvived | TWO TOWNS WIPED 1 | OUT BY TORNADO. ! | Forty-one Persons Known to Be Dead | and Over 160 Injured. yma City, Okla., April i reports come in the extent ation and lc of life nd prop- | erty from Sature nado increas and news 1Irom man, 2s now 1 unt of high wat of telephd the losses al lin | Wit 2dd to ad; | ed. 1t is now ruck 1 northwar Texas thr nd m, know the wake of the torr | | | from Eidorado, Blair, reported fered severely, w Colony and Hintor ered today to have aged. All of central Oklahoma seems to b everal days emoralized ¢ re an acc > and pro. A COMPLICATED BALLOT AT | MASSACHUSEYTS PRIMARIES. Result of Tomorrow's Caucuses May Not Be Known Before Wednesday. April 28 sits Lo the r personally or the five candidates for nomination, I "ol ston, atives of presidential v be made at the primaries on '] | Owing to the complicated ballot the absence of g it definite r e next day i i the Chicage known. fal pref. Bay election was t t ele for state office: who voted at th to vote As the n one of the | most sire d the | Bay State rs, it is expect- | ed that I go to the polls on -ninths | whom can vot. [ of | | SELECTION OF RABSI i AUSE OF DISORDER. Police on Duty at Meeting in a New Britain Synagogue. New Britain, the gogue Beth Isracl io name a to Rabbi Levine gned, broke up | were pr serye ory Conn., April Syt n dis ie choice of rabb jority appeared to f of Newark, N. receivad, 38 pa n of fees w sher hutc? The congr: make the s; X tion tonizght sough $600 and 40 per cent of the fees from kosher meat. proposition started trouble. Benjamin Solomon, who spoke, howled down | and finally the meeting broke up. HEAD CRUSHED TO JELLY | BY WINDSHIELD OF AUTO. Adolph Anderman Instantly Killed and Others Cut by Glass, April 28.—Adolph Anderman, age 30 rs, was instantly | killed and Philip Westcott, his wife | and two daughters were frightfully eut by flying glass when a motereyele | which Anderman was riding collided head-on with an automobile driven by | Westeott, Anderman was throewn ggainst the windshield of the autombile, his head being erushed almost to a jeily, Eeg Harbor, | gle pictur ! improbable Used Dynamite To Get Bandits FRENCH SOLDIERS BLEW UP WALL OF A GARAGE. Ty DEPERADOQES RIDDLED Two Members of Anarchistic Gang of Automobile Bandits Hold Off Large Force for a Time—Terrorized Paris d gang of tomobile who have been rorizing is und the surrounding distri 1ths past, and Dubois, a notorifu archist, were shot to death today in the most thrilling encounter in the an- nals of French crime. Soldiers Blow Up Garage. A garage at Choisy-le-Roi, six es south h the its had blown police t of gendarme nies of republic any engineers. ctators viewed of vanta 5 gement equaled in dra- and a com- thousand attle from cumsia January, 1911, wh has gone down history as “the battle of London,” desperadoes suspected of being murderers of police in Houndsdi hapel dist death battlng London police and so; A Bandits Trapped in Garage. Bonnot and Dubois after wounding it down to their hundreds of two policemen refuge in ped in the building at onc rround- ed, pReinf were to he police aid t 3 ublican les, when a small of rs succeeded In placing dynamite against the struc- ture and blowing out the front wall, Bonnot was captured alive. He was wound- the Colmar by of April 2 1 the ins morning, , superiniendent of tracked Bonnot to the is: Rol. As Gu M. Gui- detectives, ited garage hard and h men approachec to be Dubc to while he retreated to the the same moment thers w bullets from a window and two 'detec- e with two bullets in his It was Bonnot shooting rst floor. General Alarm Sent Out. . detectives retired and a general - and directed hun- of builets at the garage, from |to a house and borrowed a shotgun | came a steady rain of lead in |from one of Larkin's neighbors, while | Neenah, Wis, were divorced, Mrs, i ct of police, | Larkin went into his home and re- | Rusch was awarded a $10 cemetery ly , and he tele- | turned with & double barreled gun. |lot as her shari the property. The ctions to the police to do | A8 Larkin advanced toward Rody, he | couple were married 55 years and had nothing until he arriv o will | was siot in the legs and body. Lying | ten children. blow them up with dynamite,” he said. | on the ground, Larkin emptied both | 3 s barrels at his opponent, tearing away Dr. Daniel Kimball Pearsons, his lower jaw. years old, who in recent years | e e more than $3,000,000 to small colleges, ions and ocoupied post. | RACING AUTOMOBILE | chiefly in the middle west, died on | tance. They became WRECKED BY A STONE. | Saturday in a sanitarium at Hinsdale, | the soldiers were Ill, comparatively a poor man. at length, to drive them back they were interfering with of the siege, whict ng conducted aggressiv s00n b Dynamite. nd the guard Decision to Use ine,- M. G d been at fever 1 back and forth giving orders to restrain the crowds which were now surging on the streets. But as the cart w: icked slowly to- the great itement ha g lo b fell, even hear to- the click of the cinemz graph machines which the operatc turned calmly £0 as not to lose a sin- drama. Dubois Found Dead. When the cart eutenint Forte two huge of dj 3 building and ignited the orse galloped out of range ited. But no 2 operation was Then came a terrific mn of smoke and d All the while e ng steadily, but As the front wall col- reache u e the plac was hit. { lapsed with a crash, pelice and repub- lican guards rushed up. On the ground floor they found Duix They mounted a narrow stairway and ob- served a man sireaming wi blood come from a mattress. He showed g y white in his face and had wounds in his head and chest. “Curse you! Curse you!” he cried. He was overpowered, carried down and placed in an automobile. Twelve Wounds in Bonnot’s Bedy, It was then that the crowd changed into a wild mob, howling for the desth of the handit, The soldiers protected him with the butts of their carbines, but many blows fell on Bonnot hefore the automobile started off, mowing down a score of people, cleared a path and speeded to Paris, Bonnet was uncenscious and expired on his way to the hespital. The doc- tors found tweive wounds. Thers were two builets in his head and two in his abdomen and they marvelled that he lived as lonZ as he did. Dubeis had three wound: He also worg a belt containing poisen, but it is considered at he had time to swal- lew any of the preparation. Anarchistic Confession of Faith, On Bennot was found a statement, Bonnot, the leader | :es the encounter in | | { | the only man to witn 3 | probable desti | ¥rank Rody Sailed Under Sealed Orders TWO DESTROYERS AND TRANS- PORT OFF FOR MEXICO. SLIPPED FROM HARBOR Destroyers Showed No Lights and Were Seen Only by a Party of Fish- ermen as They Left San Diego. San Francisco, April 28.—The trans- port Buford, bound for the west coast of Mexico, cleared at 9.40 o'clock to- night in the teeth of a heavy southeast N W { . She cerries forty enlisted men | President Taft Received a Letter as a guard. i from a man in Pugwash Junction, - Canada, requesting him to redeem a May Put in at San Diego. 1t is understood that the Buford will TAE T put in at San Diego for a convoy. Al- | John William Smith, for twenty though ro official confirmation of this | years” girector of the (Central Park be had, it is.EuP=l mendie ew York is dead, fc h from San Diego two of the tor- s in port there aled orders within pedo boat destr would sail under 24 hours. DESTROYERS SLIP AWAY, Two Leave San Diego Harbor at High Speed Under Sealed Orders. largest ve: ed out of the nd went to Phat they are hound for the west coast of Mexico 15 _the eral belief, though naval officials line to ation of the de Well Supplied With Coal. eret orders came late Satur- t, and soon after were on their wa »or unnoticed €x els of the flotilla, ay. They pt by a as they steamed aw rnment doc near where they had filled their bunke also piled coal on their decks. Showed No Lights. fishermen say that The stroyers the de- One of the Combatants Dead and the Other Dying. Philadelphia, dead and anoth r is dying as the re- ult of a duel with shotguns today in ——— % 2 Martins Village, a settlement in the Dr. Karl Erancke, the eminent Ger- extreme southern section of this c man s the sheath skirt is In an effort John Larkin, to prove their gamen later in @ hospital, while his opponen away and is fatally Injured. mother and 2 man who had been > top of - York city drinking wit the two duellists, wit- pictures nessed the encount: to per- According to Charles M. Trimmer, | mit it. ss the shooting, he met Larkin and Rody last night in E oon in this city. Later, when were returning home, Rody and Larkin quarreled and a fist fought re- sulied in which Larkin had the better i hands. of Rody and wanted Rody, how to shake ver, refused. He went in- Two New Yorkers Who Occupied It Only Slightly injured. Southport, Conn., April 28.—A high lter R. a]mn}e of il Dowered Iacing automobile, in which | Fepresenting a syndicate of Ma v were H. J. Moran and George W. Hol- | ¢tts capitalists, The sale price was | den of New York, struck a stone on | $30,000. | the Suuthport turnpike this aiternoon, then began to the building to prevent the | the bandits. A cart wi with thick mattresses as a and the attacking party toward the garage. Prior | | | { ling stillness | It was so marked that ene could ! struck a telephone pole, turn- | The New York Fire tle and then caught fire. ne n of $30 stolen by a rat ien w-ore taken Lo a Bridgeport hos- was found in a hole pitol. Their injuries are not serious. | tWeen the flooring of a building at No. It is said tbat the automobile was | 483 Pearl street. If the owner does | racing with F. M. Bernard of No. 123 | hot claim the money it will be turned l'emple street, Haven, who was | into the firemen’s pension fund. ding a motor Mr. Bernard wa e also thrown from his machine. He| Rev. O. R. Miller Wrote an open let- badly bruised about the head, but | ter arnes, Jr. chairman was not in need of medical attend- | of the republican ance. His machine was damaged. | New York, war A number of automobilists were on accident the scene shortly after the last midnight ith sealed orders. discuss the the Perry party of Italian fishermen who passed from the quarantine, and showed no lights and were April 28.—One man is years, Teceived fatal wounds in his leg and body, and died , 30 years, had his Jaw shot Larkin's Condensed Telegrams Rear Admiral Chauncey Thomas was placed on the retired list of the navy Saturday on account of age. It Costs an Average of $3 to be married and $35 to obtain a divorce in Kansas, The International Red Cross confer- | ence in Washington this week will be attended by a delegation from Japan, | During a Windstorm in Stelton, N.J. a 137-foot steeple on the Baptist church was hurled to the ground. A Report of the Hospital Commis- sion says foreign-born insane patients | cost New York state $2,44%,706 an- nually, i Mary Carpola of Patchogue, N. V., | while playing in front of her home, fell into a honfire and received injur- fes which resulted in her death. quantity of confederate money lowing a surgical operation. | Two Hundred | Students of the Sterling, Ill, high school are forbid- den by the faculty to wear corsets, French heels and hair rats in school. | \ # | The Exhibition in Philadelphia of moving pictures depicting the sinking of the Titanic has been forbidden by Mayor Blankenbur | | | Wreckage Washed Ashore at the Dardanelles leads the- belief that | the Italian cruis avese, one of those which took part in the bombardment, has been lost. The Four Children of Mrs. C. Slack | of Rochester, Mich.,, were burned to | death and the mother painfully injured when the Slack home was de- stroyed A Treaty of Friendship, Commerce and navigation between Peru and ( was signed at Lima, Peru, hy the | ruvian foreign minister and the Cuban | minister to Peru. | Pe- d wi 1d died on the | going at high speed. rfront men e | The great crowd | state that even with dec The 90th Anniversary of the Birth of had gathered, th cries of | Lardly I e s el Sl h to Bonnot!” a st tore ‘the | ther than Maz b Galena, HL, Sa from the . several of | thought to des John Ireland of St. Paul, delivered an whom were injured the collier Prometheus and transport | past o Picia Foel Bosn Tevroriced Buford, both of which will soon be in 3 e : southern waters, may meet the de- 3 on. t¥ 4 = because of the recl s crimes | © ST bicis i stitutional amendment for direct e of the automobile ban ich | BRUNKEN ROW tion of semators until postoffice | reached a climax in | | appropriation now, bef been | K Asidatant Bap st RESULTS IN DUEL | gisposed of. | State Senator L. R. Andrews of | nton ©. convicted of accepting a bribe for the senatorial vote, was tenced to nine mont the tiary. peniten- devel- knock- ruining female figures, opment and producing a race o kneed women. Steeplejack, at- o small chil- Sam Hughes, tempted to ta | s | Thibet Declared Its Independence {from China and revolted. A whole- sale slaughter of Chinese was reported and President Yuan Shi Kai ordered force of troops rushed to When Mr. and Mrs. C. Rusch of | The St. Albans, Vt., Street Railway sold at public auction Saturday Christian republicans would the ticket if 1. W, Wadsworth, Jr, I- | lieves th | brings | | has apparently | the Mackay-Bennett and will probably w | reach here | nasco on { who is at the Hotel Plaza, New York. | ing the fi | and her maid were | ta; Department | steamer and | until the ratch | officials of the British Seafarers Yet Recovered REMAINS OF MRS, STRAUS ARE ALSO STILL MISSING. MAY NEVER BE FOUND Body of W. T. Stead to Be Buried at Sea if Recovered—Members of Ti- tanic's Crew Arrive in England, Halifax, April 28—A wireless mes- sage reccived here today from the ca- ble ship Minia, which is supplementing the work oi the Mackay-Bennett in searching for bodles of those who per- ished in the Titanic disaster, indicates | that there is little hopa of getting to he 180 odd now on the Mackay-Ben- nett, due here some time tomorrow, The weather has been made, the ses r((;ugh. and bodies are widely scatter- ed. Bodies That May Not Be Recoversd. Captain Decarteret of the Minia be- Mackay-Bennett has picked up nearly all oblainable. If the pre- diction is; correct, the bodies of Major oY o Archibaid Butt, Mrs. Isador Straus The Carnegie Hero Commission at|and other prominent person# not re- Pittsburgh @warded $37,500 | ported as among the identified dead in cash and 12 pensi ows and | Will never be brought to port for several children left orphans. | burtal. > Total of 192 Identified. A revised list of the identified dead, compiled tonight from wireless mes- sages received here and in New York the number on the Macka; Jenncit at 184 and those on the Minia *eight. Ten all told were reported s overed by the Minia, but one d fireman was buried at sea and the body of another man in even- ing dfess gave except gold cufl links ma Among the eight bodies identified on the Minia none are those of promi- nent persons excepting that of Presi- dent Hays of the Graud Trunk, previ- ously reported as recovered. His body been transferred from later In the week when the Vincent Astor at Halifax. Vincent Astor and party artived b today in a private car and will for New York with Colonel As- s body as soon as It is positive identified and encoffined. Among t other arrivals was Isador Unizola, whe will search for the hody of ctor Pe- behalf of Penasco's widow, Senor and enora Penasco were mak- part of a trip from Spain round the world on the Titanic. She saved. She is a ster-in-law of Premier Canalejas of |"\l|n and related to the Spanish royal mily. Stead May Be Buried at S Representatives of the family of W, T. Stead, the Englitsh journailst and author, have asked that if hig body 1s recovered it be buried at sea. A re- quest to this effect was sent by wire less from here today to the steamer Mackay-Bennett, but so fa~ as known she has not recovered Mr Stead's body. Stormy Weather Delzays Work, The steamer Minia h: taken the place of the steamer Mackay-Pennett in search for bodies, but toda; impossible to continue the search om account of stormy weather, according to messages received at the White Star line offices today via the Camperdown (N. 8.) wireless station. More Bodies Identified. The Mackay-Bennet, however, sent an additional list of identified and re- ported that she would reach Hallfax With the bodies tomorrow noon. The additional names are R. C. Bristow, Katherine Buckley, Danton Cox, H. Y. Faunthorpe, Ralph Giles, Hans C. Givard, Tosnal Hen ‘eksric, Gustaf J, Jonanson, Wentzell LCinhart, Thomes McCaffry, Thomas Morgan, Robert D, Norman, Poggi, George Swane, Del Carlo Sebastiano, Leopold Welsz, Mauri Der Zacardian. SAILORS REACH ENGLAND, | Board of Trade Fails in Its Attempt te Detain Them in Barracks. Plymouth, April 28.—One and sixt, of the hundred of the crew ed from the Crowds of | people on the docks and heights around the town witnessed the arrival of the e landing of the small contingent which remained of those who manned the great steamer of the White Star line. Relatives greeted many of the seamen, while others were thers to inquire regarding those whe were lost. The palns of the board of trade of- ficials to detain the crew In barracks statemenis of all could be state committee of | formally taken were frustrated by the ing him that 100,000 | action of President Lewis and other union, the same organization which counsel- and renderec assistance to the injured | # Nominated for governor. | ed the strike of the Olymplc's crew. men. The automobile was completely g Thoy advised the seamen that the wracked. : To Offset the Edict Issued in Swe- | board of trade had no power to con- —— den last year, ng all Mormons | fine them and that they should not WOMEN’S MEMORIAL from that country, the Mormon board | submit to such treatment, and after of school directors at Gateway Col,|a few hours’ detention the men were | TO TITANIC HEROES: | £ 88 Sl an e to exciuds! sl giyen tha liberty of the port “ | Swedish children from the Gateway The first squed was released from Mrs. Taft Contributes First Dollar for | Svedis! 3 the dock and thirty newspapermen a Monument to the Men. ~ |" = ___ surrounded the men® and obtained hington, April . Taft his given the woman's Titanic memor ; ose of demonstrating a nesw proposed to erect Washington to ! "m usage making, Carl F. S commemorate the men who went Gown | azod 26, fatally shot s ough with tha ship. A committes of 100 | ooy o, el : s hias been choser ontributions will be m men. Mrs. John Hay, Mrs ested The wife of the president wrote in contributing the first dollar; “It gives me woman's Titanic memorial giving the first dollar. enable her to do the same. (Signed) “HEL] . PAPT> It is planned to reach the be sent throughout the country. A Strike of the 400 Weavers of the | Warren, R, I, Manufacturing L com- pany’s cotton mills, which was to have been called today, was averted Saturday, when the management posi- | ed notices announcing that the system | of fines had been abolished, — consisting for the most part of an an- archistic confession of faith and con- cluding with the words, believed Jast moment: “l die, Jules Bonnot.” He was armed with four revolvers and a earbine cepted | John | s Hammond and others are inter- | pleasure to start the fund by I am glad to do this in gratitude to the chivalry of American manhood, and I am sure that every woman will feel that the small- ness of the contribution secured will 28,000 women's clubs with an appeal for the memorial and thousanls of letters wiil o have been feverishly scribbled at the Two Hours After He Had Returned to Portlard, Me., from an un i | business trip to Boston for the | machine | the head Saturday. A Big Westerner, | blance to Sidna Allen, in Lakewood, N. J., resem- arrested | conatable, | who thought he had the famous out- | Memorial Service for Titanic Vietim, la The man proved to be a native | of Michigan and had come New Jersey to look over real estate he had purchased. Over-Producticn of Kentucky Whis- the four key, similar to that dur years from 1890 to 189 which was followed by severs of depression, is feared by the dis- | tillers, who have agreed that curtail- ment in the output is imperative, ng Antonio Mariano, of Providence, the boy of 13 years was found prob- ably guilty of k 12 vear old Will- w illing on Februa Sockan ing rais *d from the et by A Feature of the Titanic Memorial and benefit performance to he given | {at the Metropolitan Opera house, York, this evenin; the Dhenefit the families of the T will be the present Marconi of a gold w | 1ol oration of the part pla telegraphy vivors. in commem- red by in the rescue of the su:ul and, | TPSCaes from the water, wircless | his npew duties May 6. many interesting stories of personal experiences similar to those told in the United States,” stories of sufferin on rafts, deaths from exposure dnx All agreed | that the crew and passengers clung to | the belfef that the Titante ecould not sink and made light of the colloslon. According to one seaman, Captain Smith's last words were “Every man for himseif.” New York, April 28.—A memorial servica for Henry B. Harris, the the- atrical manager who perished in the Titanle disaster, was held in the Hud- son theater tonight, and was largely attended by theatrical men, members of clubs, benefit and fraternal orders and others with whom he was associ- ated. Mr. Harris' widow occupfed a boxs and other members of his family were In the audience. Senator Williams Criticised. Washington, April 28.—Senator Joha Sharp Williams was today the objeot fam Mather, Jr., in Maviesville, R, I, | 0f clerical critclelsm because of his recitation in the senate last Thursday of a paredy on the Apostles | o purporting to state the political beliefs i Theodore Roosével Enfield Police Chief Resigns. Thompsonvifle, Conn., April 28— of | Chief Edward Eromage of the Fnfleld 1'e’s musicians, | police department resigned tonight to to Williwm | accept a position as chief of the West Springficld pollce. He wail‘l' &nter upon has been chief of the Enfleld ment since It was organized In 1903,