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VOL. LIV.—NO. 108 NORWICH, - CONN., FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1912 FUNERAL FOR 59 TITANIC VICTIMS One Hundred Seamen To Participate In The Services To Be Held at Halifax Today. THE SEARCH FOR BODIES TO BE ABANDONED Captain Lardner Discourages Idea of Sending Out a Third Steamer—British Investigation of Disaster Gets Under Way—Memorial Service For Major Butt at August:;— Widow of Astor’s Valet Files Papers in $50,000 Suit. May his aide ever since he entered the house and who had traveled d a lengthy con- HOUSS - MM . - ands of miles with him th Captain Lardner ¢ Taft made only a short address nnett, discuss the | put I came near breaking down osal to send out a|twice. e e reh for| “Never did T know how much he was g amndd s |to me until he was dead” said the of Titanic victin | presi “Lacking nothing self- Cabled Paragraphs Frankfort-on-the-Main, , Germany May 2—Robert Sommer, while test- ing a monoplane built by him today, tried to glide and when landing fell and was dangerously injured. Constantinopfe, Ma; tugboat which was engaged in in- specting the channel buoys in the Dar- danelles last night, fouled a mine and was blown to pieces, Firemen Now 2—A smail FIFTY RAILROADS, Seek Increase. THEIR DEMANDS PRESENTED TO Berlin, Ma: mperor William has shown his faith in the future of | A SHORTER WORK DAY the colonies by purchasing for $24,000 | | two farms in Southwest Africa. The | 5 lands will be devoted to wool grow- | | ing. | Ten Hours or Less or Runs of 100 | Madrid, Ma Premier C:mulel'-\s Miles or Less Asked—Will Cost Rail- at an audience with the King today % jold his Majesty that the Government | roads $25,000,000 to $30,000,000 a Year expected to ach soon an ag] ment with France concerning Morocco T through which all difficulties between | Spain and France would be overcome. May 2)-The Germania to- a story that Count Zeppelin, operator of airships, | challenged Theodore was secretary for the | Artic Expedition, to a duel | that matter has not yet been de- depending upon the outcome of al law suits between the prin- and the managers of the fiff Berlin day prints the builder and some time ago Lerner, | Zeppel but o their hours of roads today The the employment of a rlin, May 2 skull of Jo- New York, May 2.—Following closely upon the agreement of the engineers railroads st of Chicago to submit to arbitra- tion the demands of the engineers for an increase in wages and changes in work, the locomotive firemen and hostlers of the same rail- ubmitted to the managers a schedule requesting additional co pensation for their labors, changes in their hours of work and in aome cases sistant firemen. Increase of $25,000,00 to $38,000,000. rdner expressed the cc respect and giving up nothing Lie owed | hann Schiller, the great German phil- | . S Carter of Peoria, 1L, presldent would not be possible to himself, he conducted 1| osopher and poet, which has been | ¢ the Brotherhood of Locomotive Fire- d Y 8 eness of purpose and to the | missing for nearly thirty years, has|men ana Enginemen, presented the de- pactihad B ar. | ba and comfort of the president | \\ en i lmI.T )J'r‘(vu’vsnr' August | mands of the men to J. C. Stuart, c M useless, | WHO Wis his ol O hns | N oreay odop of Tubingen University, | ohatrmen: of the ‘conterente: commnittee RS o “an- | ualities he added loyalty and whon | o vear ago opened an old vault at | of tho raliroad managers, who told him = s hecame oo lof My Ty g wes | s rem e oD o contain | the managers grould be called to meot as a son ol other. | Schill nains. He made a ¢ S 500N as PoSSik iscus at- Widow Gets Body of Fox trom | p 2 Taft told how ie met Major ) examination of seventy sk i )";"‘ flulcsrp‘f*“{icxfiiés ,,RSSL‘&E?*L: ¥ Y. ey direet- |as alde to President Rocsevelt. e | Indispt y 5 nE ould mean an additional an- y dwelt on Major Butt's devotion to | Scl and himself. Roosevelt has always seemed to me," said president, “that Agchie never mar- ried because he love§ his mother so. The greatest sorrow of his life was i ncluded with a_ word Butt's spirit of self- clf-sacrifice,” he said, “ha m of his nature, If Archie could ted his time ken the one m. BRITISH INVESTIGATION. Questions to Be Asked of the Various Witnesses. Twenty-Six ord Mer wreck commiss! 1SS ors, who will advi. im ning on the techhicali- ffairs, held today the 4, May acity as s quest es of nautical rst session of the board of trade in- LITTLE ACCOMPLISHED. uiry into the loss of White Star steamer Titanic. Semator Smith Journeys to New York,| jyom the series of 26 questions But Obtains No New Facts. which the attoriey general announced would be taken up, it me evident New York 2 —Testimony |that the inquiry would cover practi- taken toduy by Senator Smith of Mich- | cally the same ground o investi- ign, ob he senate commit- | gation by the comumittee of the Amer: tee iny Titanic disaster, |jcan senate, but would be conducted did_not facts tending to | more in accordance with the procedure confirm the report that news of the |of a court of law and deal definitely Thanic dissster, which the White | with stated cases, Eight questions, Star live made public on Monday | Sir Rufus Daniel Isaacs said, would evening, April had e i New (relaie to happenings before the cas- Yoek early that morning. wlty; six to warnings given the Ti- | tanic and the resultng precautions taken; ten to the casualty itself and squent evenis; ome to equipment construction of the vessel; and Smith Questions Telegraph Operator. To determine qu principal object of the se to New York and he had before today private hearing John tion was the tor's visit him Bot- and the last to the rules of the merchant 1 shipping act. = SR ey o e i | A 20-foot model of the Titanic, car- New York merchant who had testi- |TYNg 16 miniature lifeboats.and a big fisd In Washington that he had been |chart of the North Atlantic were \nformed by the som of a Western |Prominently dispiayed before the in- TN Siatiaor Giat & Tacadage estigat In front of the platform oceupied were the seated one ar which they Leen e New York on Mon LT 'r e tu Mopney hundred members of marning telling of the Titanic's fat repre- and the oprator himself, who retarned | Seating various interests {nvolved, and 19 the cits today, Mr. Smith said, after | one hundred representatives the having been absent simce Sunday | Press. SENE. Thaws two witiisases Wers dis- only reference to the American gwed to be recalcitrant, the senator | Investigation was Sir Rufus’ an- | #aié, apd thelr examination wus very | nouncement that owing to the deten- unsatisfuctory. He sald he wo tion of many witnesses for the sena- call the operator agaln when he hoped | torial inquiry in the United States, o obtaln more definite informa the tesiimony would not be presented in a loglcal order. The seamen who Got First News at 6 P. M. Monday. rrived from New York on the steamer Vice President Bottomly, aceord Lapland were called first as witn to his stenographic testimo 1o the construction and equipment of claimed all knowledge.of sny such |the Titanic. news bLeing received here at the time | The twenty-six questions to be asked reported. the witnesses are in substance, briefly The Marconi Company, he said, re- | stated, as follows: refved the first message of the sinking | 1 What were ths numbers of the of the Titanic about § p. m. Monday. | passengers and crew, their sex, and Made Every Effort to Get News, |0 forth. The witness testified that he made | 2—Did the Titanic comply with the Ivwey wffort 1o gt news of the Titanie | Téduirements of the act aplying to disamter from the Carpathia and e s g Bemt instructions to all wireless sta. | 3—Was there a special provision in Hlome asking them 1o furnish the oo |the desizn of the vessel for safety’ any with il the mews they could He| +—Was the steamer fully officered denled that he had in any way tried o | *0d manned? Snflmemce Cottam and Bride. the wire. | &—What was number of the | J#8s operatirs on the Carpathis, in | ifeboats, was the number sufficien: regaed to sending of infor. | 3nd had there been z hoat drill mation untii the vessel had passed | 6—Hegarding the installation of the Quazantine, when with Mr. Marconi's | Wireless system—Was ji in eflective Conment, he had given wireless per. |Order and what was the number of misston ide to his stor | wirdless operators? i o N | T—Were there amy and if so what PRees Siviag Blories ts Ons Paper. | quprrugtiona givod (o the mas RN Lk it & proper to garding the navigation of the si 1 think it 8 advisable he wax the track safe that Slery ‘o o ther than have e of the year; and did m it seattered and writ el . by verious have any disorstion regarding t R s s, | 9—What informatien reached the T1- 1o u Bemeral understanding mend | tanic of the existence of ice; and was ey, e mens | the course altersd in conseaiienco of salamities of this char \—Was thers a proper lonkout fo B T ARt e ice maintained; afier the warning was | received, and were directions given tn Mew Line of Evidence Today | the speed: and were the direc Bonalor Smith suid prvow | tions carried ou? B @apeciod to take t a| 11—Wus thero an equipment of Fcognizanteol the fact that mem- | searchlichis and binoenlars and was of the crew could ot turk a cer- | SuFh equipment. necessars? beit in cue of the watertight | 12-What preeautions were {aken by fompartments o which depends its | the Titanic when lce was met? eMclencs.” 13--Did any one see and repert jce bofore i casualty occurred; what measures were taken 10 avoid the ice TRISUTES TO MAJOR BUTY, and wera these measures proper? | 14—What was the speed of the ves- Pacticipated in at Augusta, Ga. by |sei imme ‘y;l'mvdllt" (an r\(: | President Taft. ualty and was it excessive under the circumstances ? Aususta, Ga, May President | 15—What was the mature of the Taft aad the city of Augusia paid trib- | casualty? ute loday to Major Archibald Buu 16—When the casmalty occurred, fhe president’s personal aide. who was | what steps were taken immediateiy; dest in the wreck of the Titanic how Jong a time elapsed the Augusta was Major Butt's home, | casualty before its seriousness was pad veral bours to business what steps were then taken Was practicaliy suspended me- |and what endeavors were made to save orial services were conducted in a{the lives of those on hoard and to| beater. prevent the vessei sinking? Flugs were at haif-masi on most of | 19—Was proper discipline’ maintaia- e public huildings and thousands of | ed after the casualty gsons crowded around the theater, | 15—What messages B 15 hea: Presient Tatt peak. | ance were sent out and what answe President Taft reached Auguata were received? @elock this morning. He was a| 189—What apparatus was there for akfast guest of Mayor Barrett, Af(- | lowering lifeboats; what was its puion at the Commercial club | efiiciency: did the hoafs get away un- e will leave for Wash- | der propdr supesintendence; and were is due early tomor- | the bomts p Iy manned? e president was visib in saving Jife; whut was the number here were tears in hiz eyes as on leaving the vessel: how wxs the #ulied up memories of lue man who nuwber made up With I td o the al outlay by the 000,000 | | sex and cla tween and did the boats railroads of be- and $30,000,000. Days of Ten Hours or Les: | carry ads, otherwise, why The demands of the men were form- 21—What were the numbers ¢ ulated at a meeting of the eastern fed- ssengers . of the fi second and | erated board of the Brotherhood of Lo- third class respectively who were | comotive Firemen and Enginemen held saved; W was the number of the |at Chivago February 15, and embrace | crew 'saved having regard for their |increases in the pay of firémen in the | ratings and sex; and what was (ne |Dassenger service and through local proportion of the different cla: and way freight services and on e ers and the different grades of | EWitch engines, and hostiers and help- leir total numi ers on electric engines. ; and what reason was th, roportion if such ti They also call for a day’s work or ten hours or less, or of runs of 100 miles or less. A stip- ation in this latter respect is that all s ‘question further de points cove: in question No, mileage in excess of one hundred miles What were the happenings on |made within ten hours shall be paid liner after the casualty oc- | for at mileage rates. to the time she foundered; | Want Relief from Eleaning Engines. hat was the cause of the 10s3| e men ask also that firemen held Titanic and the loss of life at other than a home terrminal shall id continuous time after the ex- | mittee was - The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and lts Total Circulation is the Larg est in Connecticut in Proportion to the "o & & 1 Rosy Dreams at Dolfar Dinner DEMOCRATS SEE VISIONS OF PARTY’S SUCCESS. A PROPHECY BY DUNN —That New Sec- rict Will Elect a Democrat Tells Party Colleagu ond to Congress at the Fall Election. Bridgeport, Conn., May rhe “dol- lar. dinner” of the democrats who had peen attending the state convention, held this afternoon at the Stratfield hotel, brought together fully four hun- dred ‘members of the party. Chairman Charles W. Comstock of the state com- the toasthaster, and_the speakers were Governor Baldwin, Con- gressman_Reilly, Dudley Field Malone of New York city and Mayor D, P. Dunn of Willimantic. It had been ex- pected that Congressmen Sisson and Murray would be present, but they sent a message stating their inability to reach this city in time, and wishing the democrats the best of iuck. Mr. Comstock said he was impressed with the determination shown by the demo- (Continued on Page Six.) ALLEN THREATENED TO KILL FOSTER. Testimony Begun in Case of Floyd | Allen, One of the Outlaws. Wythenville, Va., May 2—"T'll kill Bill Foster before the sun goes down tomorrow night if I'm convicted.” Floyd Allen, the first of the Hills- ville courthouse assassins now on trial here for his life, was charged with making this remark before the shoot- ing on March 14, according to the tes- timony today of I. B. Wodell of Mont- gomery, one of the first day's wit- nesses for the prosecution. On cross- examination Wedell stuck to his story, though he admitted no other persons were present during his conversation with Allen. Six witnesses, three of them specta- tors at the shooting affray, testified. The first, D. W. Bolen, a lawyer who was defending Allen in the court where the murders occurred, testified that he saw Claude Allen fire the first | [ | | | | s question further develops of 15 hours fom the ttme they | shot and that it struck Judge Massle. the subject of question No. register off duty, and that firemen |The court officlals Toturned the fire, he N DL AN ¢ onstruction and | shajl he relieved from cleaning engines, | sald. Two of the juryment who were what was the adequacy of the equip- | The claus in the demands calling for | then trying Allen testified, one of them e 2 stant_firemen specifies that these | said that Allen had fired in the direc- | This, designated as the finall en ghall be employed on coal burn- | tion of where he last saw Foster, the question, constitutes a, req to the locomotives in the freight service, | commonwealth’s attorney, who was ourt to report upon the rules and |ang that the assistant shall aid the |killed. Other witnesses told of con- regulations of the merchant shipding | regylar firemen in the prescribed du- | versations with Allen In which he had act and to make recommendslions | tjag jncident to the firing of a locomo- | threatened Foster. with a view to promoting (he Safety | tjve, The pay of the assistant is to| Prosecutor Wysor, opening the case, | of vessels and persons at sea. | be determined at a conference of fire- | said he would show there was & con- | T men and the railroad managers. ;spiracy am;fm;l th; fl;ens to shoot/ qu = — the court if Floyd Allen was convict- g s AGREEMENT REACHED |ed. Attorney Willls, for the defense, | Papers in Action of Widow of Col. | retorted that reports of the tragedy tor' ON A PENSION BILL had been grossly exaggerated, and AstoreaYaleb dreitiled, | s | that he would introduce testimony to Now York. 3k u._‘ Papers’ i Provides For a Maximum Pension of | ghow that BBL(U;! Alty;)es twas(}g“é»d r\,y | rst e i dg i 3 | & bullet from Clerk Dexter Goad's re- n,]«‘:l \:u t for '““i"“”l“': ‘-l a $30 and Minimum of $18. by e s "]"“‘ e feder: g ere to- | Washington, May 2—Conferees of | defense would show, he said, that | e fraeral istrict court Bere 10| hoth houses of congress on the general | Floyd Allen had been wounded befors | brought by Mrs. Louise Robins, widow | Service b | of Vietor Robins, Colonel John Jacob | ment today on the basis of the senate | Astor's valet, who lost his life when | bill with Some increase for advanced | the Titanic sank and is that in which | 2%e and length of service. This action id to ensure the e: general service bill into law. | the testimony of J. Bruce Ismay and usion bill reached an agree- actment of the officers of the sunken steamer is desired. It charges negligence on the | The increases grent $18 a month to part of the Oceante Steam Navigation | Soldiers sixty six years old who served Company and asks for $30,000 damages | tWo and a half years and $19 to those | who served three Those nd costs. years. | "1t is asserted in the complaint that | Years old who served one and a ha the owners of the steamship were | Years to get $2150; two years $23; | negt firt because the Titanic had | tW0 and a half years $24; three years been warned that she was in the vicin- | $23. Those of 7 years who served one ity of icebergs and in spite of the|2nd a half years get $27, two and two | warning was going at a speed of | and & half years §30. more than 20 knots when the collision | It 1S estimated that the increase in occurred; second that proper precau- | the government's pension expenditur- | tions were not taken after the look. | ©S for five years under the terms of | cut sighted the feeberg; third, that the | the agreement will average about $25,000,000 annually. i was being operated a new | $ E ried crew; fourth, tha ere Was mot a suficient number of Hfe. | BATTLE RAGING FOR | boa fifth, that after the collision | THE PAST TWO DAYS. | the lifeboats were mnot properly | e | manned, Mexico City Menaced, But TO CARE FOR SISTER Madero Says He Will Never Resign. Mz, —F vo d. Beattie Liberated From Prison to 1;‘, }r;.«;in‘;or;nm:*;ii‘:flii Support a Titanic Survivor. eén the Z forces i about 2,500 New Yor May ~The wreck of federals are said to have the t tanic, ich brought sorrow t ge of position, but the outcome i HBertha Maron, a widow who es- engigement is still in doubt. ped but lost her when the ves- rs, as well ag “The went down, has been the means of Morales and other ad her sther Bdmund ers, are there, having met for a Wwho will be liberated from | council of war, whea they were at- tomorrow In order to support | the federals. | the official statement of attle had served all but ninety | conditic ear Caernavaca, despatch.- | days ¢ two and a half years gen- | es to Impar state that the city is | tence in the penitentiary for shop- | menaced by a large force of rebels lifting and when Mrs. Maron arived | which advanced near the place since { here in destitute circumstances a plea was made to the special sessions | protect the ratiroad. judges for his release in order that he | might take care of his sister agreed that there were cireu; Culiacan bav roops under Gen. officially rol jeda. surrounding the case and formation, but with red the T v released to join | ceived at tne department of ASTOR'S BODY ARRIVES. FATALNEALDEHON Every Flag in Village of Rhinebeck, N. Y, at Half-Mast. Lisutenant McDonald Dise of Sustained in New York. reported to been retalen hy the governme nt This in- 1t ‘detafls, was Te- interior STEP OF TROLLEY | Injury Rhinebeck, N, Y., May 2—The body | 2 | of Colon hn Jacoh Astor arpived | New York, May 2—Tieutenant Ray at th Astor estate, nea Straith McDonald. S, A »d in a s afternooy 2 | Brooklyn pital early this evening be held her from as the result of etured skull sus- © Messiah, of which Col- | tained fn a fall lley car was a arden, Saturda Lieutenant | pinz w b vas at half- 70 ¢ | ference between the he had taken part in the shooting. NEWSPAPER PR#SM EN QUIT WORK AT CHICAGO per Officers Say Editions Will Be Published as Usual. Newspa Chicago, May 2.—Owing to the dif- pressmen of Chicago newspapers, web pressmen’s | union No. 7 and the Chicago local of | the American Newspaper Publishers Association afternoon papers were un- | able today to get out their regular editions until late in the day. Mem- bers of the pressmen’s unions were not on duty at the morning newspaper offices tonight but it is said the reg- ular edition would be published. Another difficulty was encountered by the newspapers late this afternoon when the wagon drivers refused to make deliveries until the pressmen’ dispute had been settled. A limit ha been set by publishers on the number of deliveries to be made by wagons tomorrow morning. Extra police are being held in readi ness to curb possible violence. yet there has been no trouble. WILL SEND THREE SETS OF DELEGATES | ture by Louisiana to Furnish Complicated Problem for Chicage Convention. Alexandria, La, May 2.—Three sets of republican delegates @ large will g0 to the Chicago convention from Louisiana. This complex situation was brought about today when the “lily white” wing, in convention here, split | the federal garrison was reduced to |38 far as natlonal delegates are con- cerped, six being instructed for Pres- idént Taft and another set for Col- onel Roosevelt. The “black and tan” faction already has held a convention and selected six delegates at large, in- #tructed for President Taft, ELEVATOR MAN SAVES_ LIVES OF FOUR WOMEN. Turns in Alarm of Fire and Uses Ele- vator for Rescus Purposes. Chicago, May come by smoke by John Cronin, ned at §190,000, at 32-34 South W venue, 1 discovered t After turning m he ran Four women, were resciied | | | tempted to boaré n He then arrived, acec car at the Brooklyn end or and nied by Vineent Astor, special | when his foot siipped d he was |Miss C a shorth rain w hrirg a funeral party | hurled against an elevated railroad | teacher, to safety | feom New York | pillar. He died shortly afterwards. | e e " | Lieutenant McDonald was married | Monument to Railroad Telegraphy. ritish Fu o, | Dritish Pund Reaches $1,000000. | about.a month ago in Washington to| Newburgh, N, ¥ —Commern- | TLondon, May The British Titanic | Kathryn Hellner, daughter of the | opating the sending of the first rail. \:u."m.\ mount to approximately $1,- | late Captain L. C. Heilner, U. S, N | way tolegraphie oror, wired in 1551 | 608,000. A conference was held ot the ™" General A cer 0 r E - by General Manager Chavles Mot ¢ | Mansion House today to arrange for| Tornado Wipes Out Another Village. |(he Zrie raiiroas, a momumant and | tong npution, It Was decided to ex- | Okiahoma City, OWIE; May 8.—Ac- | tablet were unveilsd at Harriman fo- ! te immediate relief to widows and | cording to a dGesps ‘ from Altus, | day and sented (o the Erie Rallroad bereaved families of the members ¢ - SETA 1 from us, | day and pre e Krie Rallrc | v s of th mbers of | Okla,, tonight the of Korn, in a | co by the Association of R the crew, pending the organization of | yemoie ion [ of Washita eceunty,|w egraph Suparintendents and a commiitce to undertake the admin- was [wiped tor- | the Old-time Teiegraphers and Histor s A e ohis committee | nado which swapt throueh the ssuth- |jcal asseciatéon, The monument was L o vor, the wastern corner, of Okighome last Sat- | taken fron n the E. H, Har of Derby and the governor of the TEdn tdnriian Dot nok pomibls | s e e e B Bank of England, B it “thal OF Sl s d; i T nigh "L 13 persons | tending its placement and preparation - vere killed at Korn and a number in- | were defrayed b; Harriman, Emil Boas Seriously Il jured, | st @reenwich, Conn, May 9-—F S e | Mrs. Vanderbilt Undergoes Operation, v | Anarchist P Boas of New York, American repre- | narchist to Be Deported. New York, May 2.- . William K, | sentative of the Hamburg American| Duluth, Minn, May 2.—Karl J, Pe- | Vandbiii, Jr. underwent an opera- teamship line, is seriously ill at his | terson of Biwabii, Minn., was foday | tion for appendicitis Tuesday at her Greenwich residence. Three physi ordeted deported gn the charge of be- | residence on Fifth avenue, it was ans are in constant consultation, Mr, | ing an anarchist. | learned tonight. Reports of her con- | Boas was just recovering from severe | B | dition at a late hour were righly | fitack of kribpe when plomaine pois- | A weman isn't nbcessarily a soefety | vorable and ther: was every indication oning developes His condition has |leader because she Yeads her husband been eritical since Monday, areund by the nose{ that she would make & speedy recov- 55 Condensed Telegrams Arizona's Six Delegates to the re- publican national convention will be instructed for Taft. Japan Has Accepted the invitation of President Talt to participate in th Panama-Pacific international exposi- | tion. ) ol | The Detroit Budget for the next| fiscal year calls for $9,000,531, com- pared with $7,311,161 for the current year, Mrs. L. O. Martin of Columbus, Ga., shot,and killed a farmhand who, she says, insulted her. She was not rested. ar- Mayor Gaynor's Fund for the bene- fit of the survivors of the Titanic steamship wreck now, amounts to $114,224, While Flying in a Hydro-asroplane at an altitude of 100 feet, Waiter Brookins and 0. G. Simmons were thrown out. | Woodrow Wilson Was Nominated on the fifth ballot at a mock democratic national convention held by the lumbia sthudents. It Has Now Been Decided that the German battleship squadron will sail for America. on May 11, proceeding first'to Hampton Roads, Taxicab Holdup Men Grabbed a handbag from Mrs. Veronica Schubert on St. cholas avenue, New York, and n their machine. Butterfield, a Student in the got away y_of Michigan, ill with ty- | Another joint convention with | all difterences may yet b adjusteds” phold fever, attacked his male nurse | 9PeEators will frst be sought by the | “ iy CCHCES WY VO BG SAITRIELE and escaped from the hospital miners in all probability to see if fur-| yight by William Green, representl : ther concessions can be obtained, it | T p \rnite, presidentof the Gl The Benefit Performance for the Ti- | Was said after tonight's session. The | \yne Waorkers. tanic stfferers given at the London |Miners’ committee adjourned to to- Hippodrome was attended by Ambas- | sador Reld. The proceeds amounted to §4,500. Commissioner Stover of New York | will not permit any May rties in Central Park after May 15, as he de sires to have the grounds thor i dried out, A Colored Patrol to | Was Admitted membership in the Boy Scouts of merica. The company is known as vanston troop No, 3 and hails from b. the Chicago subt Surfman William F. Hooper of New Shoreham life saving st been appointed captain of the new Green Hill . R. I, station, and charge of the place yesterday. on has Rimbault, One of the Paris Motor Bandits who is in jail, warned the ex- amining magistrata that the whole of the wealthy quarter of Parls woild be blown up inside of three days. J. Bruce Ismay, President of the Ir ternational Mercantile Marine, ~sailed for his home in England yesterday o the White Star liper Adriatic. Mr. Ismay said that he was worn out. E. E. Galbreath, President of the Second INational bank of Cincinnati, s arrested yesterday by a United tes marshal on a cha misay plication of the funds of the bank Daniel Willard, President o timore and Ohip railroad yester- ay named by the railroads as a mem- ber of the arbitration board which will ttle the engineers’ the ¥ w demands. To Give Frank Agerman, attorney for the packers, time to read 7.500 pages of evidence, Judge Deniel Diilon of the Missouri supreme court cont t hearing to May 2 ued the beef tr Governor Foss Will Take No Action | in lower Mississippi flood history, was | Naples is Archbishop Giovanni Bonza- on the petition of Clarence V. T. Riche- | abandoned yesterday afternoon. Late (00, Who has been appointed apostolic son to commute his death sghience to | tonight water was rushing through the | delegate to the United States in suc- i | t the rate of ‘welve |cession to Cardinal Falconio. As the nor's secretary. | veral s owns | Steamer did not reach quarantine uns # Ly 225 % A inz [t 6.80 p. m, it was decided to hoid e | were inundated. The dyke protecting | Hl | , it was Six Thousand Dollars, to be made | the state penal farm ai Angola save |her there until § o'clock tomorrow immediatel; for the wi way this afternoo the twod will | morning, so that the programme of United States | be confined to a section. It | recaption committee appointed to lives from other places show the [ the new representative of Pope oted by the | gauge readings steadlly going upward, | might be fittingly carried out. . house yesterday = S S Mgr, Bonzano Teceived his first wele Sy e | Baton Rouge h?sr ‘"T"' "‘fde come o America by wireless ww. the Capt. - Bt G Sxtlon: Porht - Tor parsoue teamer was at sea today. was 5 pasies PDdTke Hebingon o ss by the Torras break, LD |pregident Taft's greetings to the new Globe, both in the composing room and | LLcas Were taken there yesterday and |apostolic delegate. When the Koenig the editorial department. dféd yost st night, The work of caring for | Alhert docks tomorrow morning the day ‘at hig home in Warehaum - | these people wenl on rapidly consultors and monsignors of the dlo- after an illness of eignt years. | Doubtless preparations for a break |cese and a lay rflmrxnlt!er; hrdea % s |at Torras prevented los sof life. As|Supreme Court Justice Dowling w at other threatened points a train had | welcome Mgr. Bonzano, who then will ity parker, Former Presidential | ot o ced at Torras roady o g0 at |be driven to the residence of Cardiny upreme court of the United States iy |2 moment's ice. Whe nthe oieak |Farley. In the afternoon the papal wvor of allowing the colored order of | came the inhabitants rushed for this |delegate will be temdered in St. Pat Knights of Pythias to beco: " | harbor. Even some livestock was put | rick’s cathedral the ancient reception AS | borated in the stateof ¢ aboard and the train run out of the | ceremonial accorded prelates of this danger zone. Steamboats pickei up mn:(h This {nr;;'t,:: “t-’ulfbfi‘n.t:nded The “Full ” was 1 | many marooned ¢ ns and took them | by the entire priesthood of the diocese St u.l‘fi:f\‘]fla"u b 1| {0 Baton Rouge, where government ra- | and thousands of children of the pa= 5 vernor Foss vesterday. The |tions are being dealt out :mmm srn!e;]nn- nf‘ t:flsNd'f,)‘.YMkl*.- would compel ds in Mas : ¢ 115 Fiholei lonzano will remain in Ne }’Ll“a\:w '\“ ‘(.y:fr,\ 1\:\ liroads in Massa- | ‘If is est‘lm:ud that JCPO h MeIeS | week before proceeding to Washington car triin and five Tmen for tratns hav | Lo S A O OnE vermmbnt . eitorss, |and during that time will be dn atie e et s ot S e | dance upon numerous receptions. ing less than 30 cars. |in the refuge camps that have been | AA5E, DO BUMCTOVS FReORRANS L ; et oo e 5 Mgr. Bonzano daily sald mass In the m’fil‘:fi"fi'flk F“,Sd °“,“"' IF"S;F”‘"_ N chnpes, monin DoN music Toom of the steamer, and last lirse, sid yeatecdny that Coi hics | Aooer St N TIDOSE Sunday he held services for the second ze, s yesterday that Col. Theo- | break cannot be accurately estimated, | oopin™Toseengers. dwr{a Roosevelt’s request that the Mas- | but it will be thousands. - sachusetts delegates at large to the Chicago convention vote for President | goyen ot e ohu ohor 9%, Wr¢ | SON OF A MILLIONAIRE i noanis Sim brought in from Pointe Coupee | WORKED AS COAL PASSER - . ish tonight, they also had a | = i i of Tarroposed Aerial Pleasure Trp | oy of their own. The water is | Earned Money For His Own Tuition Mass, to Portland, Me., carme to 4 e’ |in @ foot, of the top of the bag; | at Oxford University. den fermination at. Kemmebunkooct | Bave been placed on the leves ore, Me., vesterday, when the magneto .of | L® Tiver is rising and it s Boston, May 2—One of the coal the biplane became disabled while fly. | {80 & portion of the city | passers of the Bucknall line steamer g at 1t s 5 A flooded. Only the wholesale distrizt | Katuna, which arrived today from ing at an a b 1,800 feot would be affected. Caleutta, is M. A, Shah, son of a mil- Suit Against the Federal Sugar fining company $116.000 by the governme he f iiions »f t stration committ Counting of th ey g : : 1 sident STadero will | Bolved he discovery that one of the 4 v Oscar ¥ . pia patients was swallowmng the missing i e : re grticles Dr. W, C. Mason and Dr. E. B, row Wiison showed ¢ Banger recovered from the man's pian developed g tre pravisis sth | wch nineteen teaspoons, Seven. " ead e : son’s hold | esign 1 s teen of them belonged to the hospital ¢ i e i ife romu I and two liad heen swallowed évidertly, . | flag which the peanle oi Mexico have |before the man was committed, placed in my hands, » ¥ . Tuesday’s president nee primary, with several cour others incomplete, show a majority for Undersy Wilson of 5.464 voles, for state officers e necessary to at lsast twe cas ip the winner in ecid | conference for a miners' convention. This action [ mictes of anthragite operators entered followed rejection by miners’ full | the joint conference today,” says the committee to at the joint confer- |statement, “with the full expectation ence with the operators' committee of | that the agreement recommended by ten of the tentative agreement for a | the joint sub-committee would be rat- | settlement reached recently between |ified by the mine workers' committes the sub-committees of the two in- |and would be adopted later by the body terests. | of anthracite mine workers. | FLOOD SITUATION Full Committee of Anthracite Miners Disapproves of Agreement Made by Subcommittee, PERRERAY Operators Granted a Ten Per Cent Increase and Made Other Concessions—Operators State That They Expected Ratis fication of Agreement as Leaders of Mine Workers Con« stituted Subcommittee—Still Hope of a Settlement. New York, May 2.—Calling a miners’ convention to approve or dis- approve of the sub-committee agree- ment for settlement of the wage and other differences between miners and operators in tke anthracite coal field Granted 10 Per Cont. Increase. The operators made numerous cons cessions, chief of which was one tha$ the contract rates and wage scales for all employes shall be increased 10+ per cent. over and above the contract rates and wage scales established by the anthra was practically. decided upon by the ite coal strike commission, and members of the boards of thres | rosous Of the sliding scale are by mu« tual consent abolished.” Not Discouraging,” Says Green. 'he outlook, while rather complis cated, is not discouraging. It is hoped anthracite districts affected at a ses- sion here tonight May Meet Operators Again. Operators Expected Ratification. The position of the anthracite of erators’ committee is given in a state« ment made public tonight. “The coms morrow, when a decision will be reach ed, it. is announced, whether a further with the operators shall be sought or an immediate call be issued Can Convene Delegates in Four Days.| Approved by Committee of Ten, If a convention were called, as it| “The operators’ committee of m! evms certain to be, William Green, | passed a resolution approving the ac who represented Fresident White «f [tion of the sub-committee, thus rati= the United Mine Workers in today’s | fying the proposed agreement. Wh conference, said tonight that it would | the joint meeting had besn called t be held in' either Seranton or Wilkes- | order Mr. William Green, as spokes= batre and would be comprised of four | man for the mine workers' representa= hundred delegates from the three d tives, announced that the sub-commit~ tricts. Such a convention could be |tee's report had been disapproved by convened within four days after notice [the full committes representing the of it_was given, My Green declared. | mine workers, Mr. Green expressed the opinion that Leaders in Sub-Committes. el Ll N LT R “Tha resolution adopted in Philadel it would uphold the action of the min. | Phia empowering a joint sub-commite ers’ full committee and vote disap.|tee to negotiate an agreement Statell proval of the sub-committee a that the sub-committee’s action would Nt not be binding, unless approved by the 2 » full commiitees on both sides; but Operators Disinclined to Confer Again | from the personnel of the mine work= In their atement and accompany- | ers’ committee, which was composed ng memoranda tonight the operators’ | of the recognized leaders of the mine ommittee indicated a disinclination to | workers' orzanization, the operators neet again with the miners’ repre- | assumed that the proposed agreement, sentatives until after the latter had |arrived at after three weeks of cone endeavored to secure ratification of the | stant negotiations, would be ap~ pending settlement agreement. proved." WIRELESS GREETING FOR NEW APOSTOLIC DELEGATE, President Taft Sent Message to Steamer Koenig Albert. DECIDEDLY WORSE Levee at Torras Despite Ef- forts to Prevent It. Break i Hope of patching the bre Mississippi river levee at Tor the worst New York, May 2-—A distinguished pussenger who arrived here tonight om board the steamer Koenlg Albert from in the 18, La., situation expected to cause 5 lionaire horse dealer of Lahore, India. h has just finished four years at Oxford University, paying iitfon from his own earnings. He EXPERT TESTIFIES THAT REDDING IS NOT INSANE, tarted to work his way back home ; i \at Murder Case Will Go | @nd Eot as far,as Port Sald when he Probability That Murder Case Will Go |, s; {he Katuna on which he expects to Jury by Thursday. eventually to reach Calentta. His 2 J resent pay 18 34 & month. He carries wven, Conn., Ma evlslan order ‘for $2500 which was sent I e Red der tr !|him by his father, but has thus fac e conclided to and 3| refused to have it cashed, u’r-pendlli f x ) o wil| entively on his own resources. » o case will o to v | B e first of the state's insansty ox- | NINETEEN TEASPOONS Horts, S S Mathoste vas o IN A MAN'S STOMACH, “"‘ n “ : ‘.‘5“‘ ot “v“ 5 “.’;Innn. Patient at Maine Hospital = Thrived' on Silver Di Bangor, Me, May 2 Al op- eration has just been found necessary to recover a lot of teaspoons whikh disappeared one at a time fTrom a ward of the eastern Malne insane hos- |pital B Whei the mystery was Beof Boosted at Seattls, Beattle, Wagh,, May 2.—~The price of Teddy Off for Ma land, New York, May 2.—Col. Theodore [beef is the highest ever known in Se- Raoosevelt left this city aver the Penn- |attle. Prime steers are selling at 13 sylvania raiiread at 9 o'clock tanight {eents a pound wholesale, one cent for Salisbury, Md.: where he will ape higher than a year age, kers nte lomorrow, morking his two davs ctritrge the high prices to scarelty of spoachmaking eampaigy in that siate, sto <,