Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 25, 1913, Page 1

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LV.—NO. 72 NORWICH, CONN., TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 1913 PRICE TWO CENTS The Bulletin’s Circulation‘ln Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and Its Total Circulation is the I.argest- in Connecticut in s Propork;on to the .y’s Population APPALLING RECORD MADE BY LAST SUNDAYS TORNADO he went to work a half hour ahead of electrocuted while repairing electric Condensed Teiegrams Gen. Castro En Route to Hamburg. Cherbourg, France, March 24—Gen- eral, Cipriano Castro arrived here to. day ‘from New York. He did not dis. embark but proceeded to Hamburg. Destroying Opium Crops. The Rirbrakes - Did Not Work Cabled Para_ aphs The Supreme Court Recessed yester- day until April. Coney Island Will Open May 15 with 3 three-day fete. Capital Punishment has been abol- | Wilson Seeking To Avg[d Snag: Reports Thus Far Received Show Total of 695 Persons Injured---450 Houses De- molished at Omaha light wire. The storm which was accompanied by hall, rain, sleet, lightning and & gale which blew seventy miles an hour for a time was felt most severtly in the northwestern section of the city where houses were overturned, windows time because he feared he would get wet if he dld not hurry. Incidentally this is the third time that Wright's home has been destroyed by a tornado. Lost Two Other Houses by Tornadoes. Sixteen years ago in Norfolk, Neb., HAS A TARIFF CONFERENCE WITH UNDERWOOD TRAINS IN COLLISION JEWETT CITY ished in Washington state Amoy, China, March 24—The des- truction of the opium crops by the government authorities is being car- ried out with great energy. AT The Parcel Post Carried 6,000 Easter hats to women in the corn belt SECTIONAL PREJUDIC Avalanche Sweops Thres to Death. Mrs. F. E. Lord of Montclair, N. J. NORWICH MEN INJURED | his hom o, and 42 years | pOOESR (NCR? OrTooted and | electric| Berne, Switzerland, March I4—An asked the mayor to have all cats muz- d b | ago in Panora, lowa, he barely escaped | REOReT 008y PPICleS biown to . the | avalanche today overwheimed - thrcs Zled. | with his life during a tornado. = e ek ground. Nearly fifty small fires were Set and hundreds of men, women and | children fled from their homes in terror. Considerable damage was done to Desplaines, Park Ridge and oth- er_suburbs. The property damage in the city and suburbs is estimated at more than $500,000. visitors who were skiing near Pon- tresina in the Engadine. They were swept over a precipice and buried in the deep snow in a ravine. Pope Continues Weak. | " Little Gladgs Crook was revived af- | a house fiad been blown over her and she had been imprisoned for more than half an hour. It was necessary to chop a large hole in the side of the | house before she was taken out unin- jured. CIiff Daniels, his wife and their two children met death together. When Over 200 Dead in Neighborhood of Nebraska City—Relief'somifl_s ren et e togetner. Whes Fund of $100,000 Raised Yesterday—Churches Con:| (0" 1o Ji 4 0e "Sitore i he verted Into Coffee Houses For the 1500 Homeless Peo- A New Counterfeif the Marine National has been uncovered, nk Note on Buffalo $10 bank of of Do cratic Senators—Method of It Among Myron Beckwith, John Hollang and Admitted Fear John Clark Sustain HOMES OF MILLIONAIRES AMONG THE WRECKAGE Injuries—Pas- senger Fireman Badly Burned. Heavy Weather in the Guf and ac- | a Perplexing Question For President Rome, March 24—Owing to the weak cldents to several vessels were report- cohdition of Pope Plus X, Professor ed at Mobile, Ala., yesterday. Bttore Marchiafava, his_ consulting | ; = m_ = physician, decided, after & consulta- John Skelton Williams of Richmond. tion this' morning that It would be Va., was sworn in yesterday as assisi- impossible for his holiness to hold the ant’ secretary of the treasury. audience he had arranged for tomor- = row. Washington, March Wilson started work in earnest night on what he considers most task of his adminis vision of the tariff. Ho conference at the White I O (Special to The Bulletin.) Jewett City, March 24—The worst railroad accident in Jewett City for | years occurred Monday morning, when | Governor. Will Ask Legislature Make Appropriation For Omaha. rms of their mother, while the body of the father was over them, as if he had tried to ehield them with his own to Miss Fannie Crosby, who has writt S | body. ' — S . . 04 spel hymns, celebrated her 9 ot ve Oscs y ple—Nearly a Score of Deaths at Terre Haute—Several | % i Omaha, Neb, March 24—City Com- Suffragettes Set Another Fire. tho e dotlenn morth vt i bIi Sl RSL dgtrert yaeieaay, L | pecasntative Oncas. V. e g 1 MANY DEAD IN IOWA. missioners met early and appropriated| TLondon, March 24—Suftragette In- | gtrcet crossing. The switeKine ensing. < A 1 e detail o T i H inoi: s : o < eitizens p serat ing. switcliing engine, | canvassed mot only the d owns in Nebraska, lowa, Indiana and Illinois Suffer- ; L e R L e e e cengiaries marauded Beckemham. 'a | 3oy Connors P o L ;n“{;;i John D. Cunningham of New Haven, | tariff bill drawn by the b ot T e $25,000 more The citizen’s relief com- | dawn ' today, sotting fire t> & nouse | ASPimook = siding, where it is' down| Well known ae a printer and fraternal; | and means committee, ist, died at his home yesterday. sideration also the essa; grade, with a heavy load of cars, and g it is claimed could not hold them, as Floods Cause Serious Damage in Wisconsin Towns— | to Death List. mittee was organized composed of fifty | under construction. The women were v to steer S Z : Z Blufts, Towa, March 24— [Citizens and an executive committee | disturbed during thelr work of des- | the airiinkes ai Gor yois) A New Edition of Parcel Post|speedily and effectively ir b P a. | LN tended |Of seven to work with several city |truction by a passing policeman. They S i) s soon, with eac g athetic Incidents—Floods Follow Tornado in Indian ceding hour tonight tended |Of seven e i e e epolictiuan, They Orders for Clear Track. e oo Wit SelIuais (of dungrens 1 increase the list of dead and injurs o lost. ination of a different color. ] | tc increase the list of dead and injured |eogncllmon. Lo aver & denomination of a different color. i RS The flagman, whko was Walter Jack- — due to the tornado. Every town in 5 : = i - = Dahlman that he would send a special | son, formerly of thi id h 7 i e S Towa that it was possible to reach oy end & NEIGHBORS OF EATONS ; ly Of this place, said he had | Three Soldiers of Peace openly de question _admitted Chicago, March 24—The totals of |snapped In all difections and it took | jon® SUaL (& WaS BOSERIE, 00 BOC! T i message to the legislature asking for recetved orders for a clear track for | nounced the killing of Maders in Mes- | in the Coimie o oas EEFORE GRAND JURY. Ak o the dead and injured in the track of hours to gather and circulate the appropriation of sufficient funds to the coming train, and it does not seem [ ico C: many ity. The | day added to the enormity of the de- ay they were | now is whi tarifr o her the Sunday's storm are as follows accord- |news of the disaster. it care for the homeless throughout the —— possible to tell the exact cause of the | hanged. Aised schedule by schedule ing to reports received ftomight s Dol Out in Dobris: SUruCtion. o iartlett added three to | State. Orders were issued for all sa- | Most Important Witnesses Will be | acoident. The rules are that a switehs | —-° vingie tanit. oy "The Mive Foodke ork in the, debris of snany’| the ‘desth 't Haward Denfeanand [10ons iln ‘the Swlumicyof ‘the ‘wrecke(l Heard Today. ing train shall leave a clear track ten| Damage Estimated at $150.000 was | Ti¥ Gecide the issue bu o W Dead. Injured. A ballames in. the’ Nab two other members of his family. district to remain ciosed until further minutes before the arrival of an in-|done by fire which Sunday night de- | 56 1o Dretiqent are being cor Omaha and suburbs . L omes Tn, fhe Nedaam t Beebe, Mrs. Kate Cavanaugh wes | notice. Plymouth, Mass, March 24—While | coming train. The passenger, train|stroved a block of six stores in Rule- | “ 'y 500 of coming oo Terre Haute, Ind. . metropolis and these were menaces | @ obably fatally injured. She was tho ) Cots were placed in the auditorium | counsel conferred ~ yith Mrs. Jennle | Struck the frelght engine with such | ville, Mise, on a single measure ca w oD : for some time as the fire companles | Mother of Mre, Lec Hopper, whose two | 8ad those without shelter will be | May Eaton at thecounty Jail today | impact that the passengers were sy Phe ‘welght of the adm . Yutan, 3 5 Dlockaded streets, A heavy rain fol. | daughters were killed Neola anl | houseq there. The city purchasing |the grand jury convened in speclal | thrown on their faces, and nearly all| Every Hotel in Coatesville, Pa. is |10 WEHEL O W0 SO 07 Berlin, Neb. ..., 1101 P e e horeeey Y hieh, "o1- | Who was herself serlously hurt. A pe- |agent has arranged for enough beds |session, wgs hearing evidence upon |in the smoker and baggage car were | closed, excepting one, as an’ indirect | Proiient™ Y ochnse it sug Council Blufrs, 1a.... Lo e g, Do e e ®12 | culiar foature of the Hopper family's | to care for all those who can sieep In | which District Attorney Barker will | more or less injured. result of the lynching of Zack Walker, [ PYeSifient bectuse ot v t Bartlett, Ta. P e e e T | experience in the storm was the fact | the auditorium. The Blks rooms have |ask for her indictment on the charge Fireman Badly Burned. $he petzo legislation on currency a Weston, Ia. OF e s e e vithin the | that the father was carried for more | been thrown open to the homeless and | of murdering her husband, Rear Ad-| Tne fir i th > rr questions before ht eadjc Neola, fa. o E area covered by the storm. 152 were | then a quarter of a mile in the tornado | Union. Gospel milssion will' provide miral Joseph G. Eaton. B HOHICk of Haethord e b | sinrles H. Pockham, for 20 ~aars &l the' dxtrs session. Glenwood, Ia! - 4 kel 2nd was found unconscious wi carly s. The ry ses | I B- c artford, wa ed | clerk in the Newpor postoffice Beebt, Ta. Sesidents of Omsna | The remaiming | N IO Yo rom s hoas | The. cltizens commities has asked | befors 5 but hose. upon WRom ihe | 1,i5, i necls In coal, "Iewas shov. | was arrextea yia(erduy on 4 tharke of | To Overcome Sectional Projudices Malevin, Ia. d are scattered over a considerable clothing torn from L0 | ihe newmapes: to) Gosspl: - donstions ks o e e LD - . n. ¥ burned | robbing the S e p Sterlings, T reporting twelve; ¥utan, Neb. 16 | oM (e o urm, Missouri "Valley | mittee for distribution. James Frame, the Eaton family | SS08r, tratn, Jobn O'Nell had overy| =Mistaking Carbolic Acid for cod liver | nESTURC qhout” enoust Taverse City, Mich. ... Sl o iy NPl o | and_ Malvern. No deaths were report- e e cian; Medical Examiner Gilman i : o olb, Jpumes el M L AL L ong the democ n S 2 ond, Bartlett lowa 3 o The 53MC | Ci'trom any of these places, Three! THE IDENTIFIED DEAD. | Osgood, who made the autopsy: and | 78 extrscted later. His face was bad- | Haven, drank Rty of the poisun | G100F the mansura. there. 1t $F ottt ca. Ortoied o miles east of this place a section of | —— Professor Wililam F. Whitney of the! 'V UL o o o Fs sufficient to cause his death. urged that by the schedule by Totals ~..... of S 0 fe Great | Couple and Their Five Small Children | Harvarq Medical school, who found aftville Man Badly Injured. et E plan, enough republican v a z : este vay i Among the Victims. | poison in the admiral's ‘stomach, will [ _John Clark, a Southern New Eng-| Washington Anti-Suffragists have|Cniisicq on those schedules w Omaha Wortt Sufferer. 1500 Persons Homeless. { gt | festity. land lineman, of Taftville, had two ter- | offered p £ 3100 to girls who sub- | enlisted o, those schedules By far the greatest damage wa Perhaps 1,600 persons are homeless. | 18 pEAD AT TERRE HAUTE. Omaha, Neb., Sarch 24 Latest re- | Mra. June A. Keyes and Miss Doro- | Fible cuts on his head, his head hav- | mit the best essays demonstrating why | iS00 Sifhout difh though in and near Omaha, Neb., through part | Aside from this, 3,000 buildings were | = ports tomight fave the following list | thy Answorth, daughters of Mrs, | IDg gone througsh a window. 5 g R quickly. While Representat of which a tornado wind swept Sunday | damaged, including number of | List of Viotims+ Will Be Increased | of identified dgad Eaton by her first marriage, remalned | Thirteen stitches were mecessary to| o ..\ oo oL |Sood has been understooe a evening, throwing down many sub- |churches and school buildings. Bight | Wiish (Dabiis e Clbased: AT, Peck; Benjamin Barnes, broth. | an ante-room of the courthouse | Close the wounds. These three men( Decisions by tht Supreme Court ves | B0 ol siniie tarie biil ia stantial buildings, ripping off roofs and | of Omaha’s public schools were er’of B. J. Barnce, arugglst; Mrs. A. | throughout the day but were not taken | Were carrled to Dr. G. H. Jennings" of- [ terday did not include the intermoun | (3080, %8 PG o Gemoer siding off hundreds of houses and kill- | wrecked 5 Terre Haute, Ind, March 24— | H. Bigelow: Henry Elauveli, fire and |Defore the jury. They were asked to | fice, the doctor belng assisted\by R. W.|taln rate case the state rate eases b7 | %0 hoyse and members of - ing men, women and children by the| All forms of communications were |, Terre Haute Ind. March - 5SSO, DO Phooker, Jean B [ be on hand tomorrow. Dearnley and J. A. Hourigan. any_other o g case e D AR e rot | Shpost amminilated by ‘the wind and | (GG S o fos Serlously. in- | rooks, real catate Geaisr: Intant mon | | Several of ‘thoss who appeared be- RanderadUnconssiaila ourt. nd e Slanain mave opemt kept its work a secret 1 v vork- | jured, 275 homes destroyed and other | 9f Morris Christenson; Harry Cooper, |fore the jury today were neighbors or | william J. Keating of Manchester, ries H. Hilles, Secretary "to for- | Mr. Underwood to their way of th from the rest of the world for hours |Ing condition when daylight relicved | J1000 aumage, estimated at neariy | telephone Hneman; C. F. Copley: Mrsh| itimato friends of the Eaton family. | N.H., a traveling man, was rendered | mer President ot wnd chairman o | 106 3 and vicinity last night. Tonight the |can, advertising solicitor for the Bee, to the home of Mrs. Rliza Saungder: | dent Witson state capital, to give out the first def- | ing the day to aid in bringing order |38 VICIVEY Tast TUERC T ERENT U Gied at Nicholas Senn Hospital. He remained in the grand jury room e | today with Sen inite news of the disaster. g | QUL Of what for two hours had been | STUHE L EC.G Sl bo dncreassd | C. W. Dillon, propricter pool Hall; |an hour and iwenty minutes. Dr. C.| Mretmushiin - Ho . was taken 1ator M| Twelve Firomen Were More or Less | Tab and Hughes of New Jersc = Sic eaxbhouss ol Ehe mHERL (Lo as the searchers clear away the debris | —— Ferguson; two aaughters of Cliff |H. Colgate, who formerly attended the | an wuneonsciow ndition to Backus s ooy s mgam (tavor _ the ‘Schedule ns worked desperately | Tonight these guardians of the peace | 27 the Searchers oled = | Daniels, aged & and 12 years: John | Edtons, was clossted with the Jury for | A0 unconsclous ‘conditie: gexipusty hurt and damage estimated |gcheduls process. persons had Been |are patrolling the residence district, | FUerel POSGEEE oo ¢ niehs are | Dovle, iron worker; D. L. Fields nearly an hour. hospital, 2 3 | af $100,000 was caused by fire at the | ™ Senator Goro also rred w ganght bencath rased bulldings. ‘The |alding tho pelice to maintain ordec |, LuRdreds of homeless tentght are | ¥le o Worker B X F e | O etrison of some of the oth. Norwich Men Injured. plant of the Union Abbatolr company |the president as to his failur @ebris caught fire in many places and | and relleve such cases of suffering s | {ione and citizens while the wrecked | Mrs. F. G. Goodemough; Henrlotta |ers occupled much less fime. What | Myron Beckwith of Norwich, son of | in Baltimore yesterday. cure men of ability many persons were painfully burned |come to their notice. Sivtrict 1s being patrolled by Company | Grieb: J. G. Hansen. truckman em- | transpired was carefully guarded, | Wiliam W. Beckwith, received a gash| _ M EROpIoed i (s oh arie.| oot i ot U ; before they could be extricated from | The destruction began with the mil- | SSUIot IS betng patrolicd by Company | 15005 o¢ sireet car company; Judge Dubuque baving warred thg | in the forehead by his head striking | Twenty Men Employed in the chan- | matic positions. The se Boncatn Droken timbers lionaire Momes in s exclusive” West | D% s na the Tocd1 police forca, e | G. Hansens Mr. and Mis Hardy: of | Jurors that ihey Woula be MeW re. | 2gainst the seat ahead of him. John | deller department of E. Atilier & com- | ed ihai perhaps congre A Record Violent Gale. Farnham and Bemis Park district, but | S360, and the local police Twee, Moo | Cogar Creck Valley, reported Géad; | sponsible If disclosures woee rde. Holland of Norwich was reading .a|Panys manufactory at Meriden Sirics |able to appropria = farther northwest the bulldings coi- Miss Helne and sisters; Andre & i newspaper when the accident happen- | vesterday. The men are dissatisfled | embassies and legation: 0 great number was killed in any Governor Ralston, who directed the re- w Hen! Attorneys Willlam A. Morse and s v ci O wkatem St one place. The wind swept along, tax, | 4psed more easily; and a large number | io¢ meagures from Indianapolis, drickson; Mrs. Ellen Hensman; Mrs. | Fred Geogan, who have been retained ®J- Hls head crashed against the back ' ihe olipts anpene i hine aon ool Ik, 2 = 1ot dsathis ‘resuliad. ; = Vandeun; Mrs. Hoge; B. L Barnes; |by Mrs. Eaton, spent much of the day | Of the seat ahead of him. He was| p . poiijjion Handed Down vester- | EePresentatives, = abroad nado even jumped over porticns of the | FOrty Physicians from Des Moines. THE DEAD IN IOWA. Mr. Tarson; Lloyd Glover; George (with her. It was stated that counsel | dazed for some minutes and recefved| , ¥ 7 "SR 500, "ol om e court rulea | BEFEE been burdencl city in its path, swooped down again | Rescue work etarted as soon as the 2 Hansett, “Sunny” ford and T. K. |proposed to fight vigorously every step | ijuries tohis knee . o o . |53t ‘Senator F. M. Putrell, president | temast fa & possible. seration. of and dashed obstrutions to earth. peoplo were sbis fo hurry to the | Several Victims at Council Bluffs,) Johnson, afl colored =~ John Doyle; |in the proceedings agatnst themr client. | D S H. Hoimes and Dr. ¥ B Rain- | (0%, F5t0i sonate, was the logal aci- | maestion = © e The gale left Omaha only to sweep | stricken district, but the night's worls Weston, Neola and Glenwood. Hanson; Mrs. Hanson; John Ry- | Today they instructed Mrs. Eatom's e e e Ingured people on | fng governor of Arkansas. @ e structive manner that he had attacked |little was accomplished. The storm | Council Pluffs, Iowa, Johnson; Nathan Krineky, baker. . |grand jury room. knee and others belng cut about the| 4n45nio Cincotta Was Sentenced to e rds villages in Nebraka. The rage of the | took down all the wires in its path and | Following Is the’ revised list of dead | W= WHnsey - fl\‘{: small Krinsky s ead. c Kot Track imprisonment for not less than two |ge,gt P. A. Barrett and M element even extended in a somewhat | the electric power was ehut off imme- | and injured in Council Bluffs and | & Roestng, 13 yenrs ola, Hecri | BECALMED IN MIDOGEAN, ace;Iops Trncke and @ half or more than seven and a e L pbated form to poin‘s far to the east | diately to prevent further loss of life. | nearby towns: Biiiia Hossing, years old, outh a2 The cars did not leave the track: | {oje Sears at Sing Sing for attempting cCrohan Married Fek in Tlinois. With the arrival of daylight a -train- Dead. e e enson Mrs. Frank Da- CREW ALMOST STARVED. | The engineer of the freight reversed |ys" extort $15,000 from Enrico Caruso, | 2 e MO, No sooner had the great a pass- |10ad of militia from Lincoln and the| James H. Rice and wife; Margaret | nus, G N e s _\-}‘ Fitch; $ —— his lever, and with the impact. when | the tenor. T iee Toniun A 1 ed than a second violent gale swept | presence in the city of Governor Moor- | Rice, throe months old John Schulte | vidge. Iavidee mos tmoni Mrs. La- | Norwegian Bark, 152 Days Out, in a|the engine stopped after the col- | Cars Faap e a ol Ml : over much the same territory, but|head, the work was systemized and|ana wife; Mrs. Willlam Poole: MT. | Mus: Hineas irs Harins mors ol Terrible Plight. lision, it was above the fréight house. s Virginia Harned, the Actress, | $iopa%: (RVEWEr of U0, and W5 with lessened fury. tonight indications are that one mora [ ang Mrs. Johnson; infant daughter of | Vandevan: . O B. wis o - The platform leading to the freight|formerly Mrs. . H. Sothern, has for | L F0&C mElIanelh oF T Nearly a Score Dead at Terre Haute, | 92Y Will end the search for bodies and | Afrs, Johnson, mi Unknown | Kiawe: H. V. Fits: Rostag, | New York, March 24—Becalmed in | house was partly demolished, but the | several months been the wife of Wil | New' Londen paper, to ) What seems to have been a separate | Ty aing amges © Seneral attempt at | woman at Dans ing: child, | South Omahaj Frank Davey, | Mid-Atlantic' with all hands starving | track was not torn up fo any extent. |Jiam Courtenay, also well known 10| narriage to piorm swept portions of Indiana, being | ** Des Moinas sent a special train with | Y55 Bert Nertzard. Miss Hase. slster | of . Wiliom | 8nd With seven other vessels in sight Passengers Transferred. piagpers, |1t “begamo bl knowa | ot the Second comw freatest in ana mear Terre Haute. | forly physicians, cnd thess arriving a: | yor o colon_Mrs. Lon Thomas; Mrs.|Hass, salesman; _Mrs. Holm and | hut unable to give holp, was the con-| Passengers were transferred until|Yesterday s tioned at Fort Wri the frhere nearly a score of persons Were | nuon heloed the ool erer TAin& 8¢ | Joe Swinerman. : baby daughter; * Miss Fred Hult-|fiten In which the steamer Harfleur | the track was cleared by the wrecker,| o ¢ tho Best Jobs at the disposal | EOPUlar non-coms siain and hundreds were hurt. Other | boon at vk sice o orornm: hao had| At Neola—-Mrs. Bdward Jonmes: two|ing died afier reaching Child Saving | f0und the Norwegian bark Rimao, ac- | which arrived shortly afterward. The | One of the Best dobe af the disposal | gouple were married on Feb. 4, b places in Indiana report lesser dam- | hofore. Nursos and medical suppiies | Homme o i of Mr. and Mrs. Lee | Inlitute; Mary “Hansen: _fourteen- | COTding to the Harfleur's officers, 'who | train and trolley schedules were run- | of, o WL el AC0 M 0N 00 ton | Kept the marriage o secre e e o opper. 5 ML year-old ‘daughter of Edward N. Fou; ship to port toda: ning as usual within a few hours. i iyl . 8 e POStion | even the bride’s parents we *The slect and wind Storm of the last | WT® &0 brougnt o s tein oAt Glemwood—Mrs. Baward Lam- | son: ' Jimpson, workman, Mi | The Farfleur lett Cefte, France, ear- | ™ Growas . visited th spot all day, | o the chief of the forest eervice which | 0F %o foe On Baturdar annoa few days had reduced telegraph and i led Mother’s Body. bert; Tlisha Lambert, 12 sears old; | Pacific roundhouse; Nels Larsen: 1y in March, sighted the becalmed fleet | watching the wrecker and its crew at| Bays 30.00 and Stics ment of the happy even v felephone companies to sore straits,| Money is already pouring into the | Clvde Merritt, 22 years old; Mr. and |pel McBride Mrs. Ida Newman, head | Of sailing vessels on March 17. The | work. S = £ and In the evening Sergt and gs hundreds of poles and thousands of | ¢ity, the city organizations taking the | Mrs. James McDonald. - nurse at Child Saving Institute, killeq | Rimao was flying urgent signals of Mise M. B. Shedd of Loweli, Mass,, | E&¥rett left for a honeym s of wire were carried down in a |lead in providing funds. Many are injured, several of Whom |instantly; J. B. Nichols; Miss Coralie | distress. She hailed the Harfleur, said | OBITUARY. T Pione i Darion’ Of At 5% | Scranton. Pa. On their retur terrible tangle. The Faster tornado| State and religious bodies are so- [are not expected to live. Norris; T. B. Norrls; Helen that she was 152 davs out tromlfiujqugw S T 000 Tatass ahe marries | Will make thelr home at 4 added to the havoe west of Chicago, | OPerating and offers of help are coming MILES OF WIRE Mrs. Peck; Sam Riley, 5 years old, | for Falmouth with a cargo of nitrate, | Dr. Ira Van Geisen. T ot Siaren. according . to the | Street, Norwich. Sergeant Barr although wires were repaired to the |from all quarters of the United Statex. RE DOWN. workman at Grading camp; Rox. | and that all hands aboard were starv- | New York, March 24.—Dr. Ira Van | $0q N5, GUUAren, SCCOTCONE , [0\ (7 | at present on detached duty ast. In many lirse remions rallroads | The Child Saving institute was a - 14 | & workman at grading camp, dteq at | In&. A boatload of provisions was sent | Geisen, ome of the foremost patholo- [ Yo 0T B¢ osals. ? i [Reing ke tnairucion, in) on Svere unable to use commercial tele- | veritable death house after the storm | Telegraph ~Companies Harder Hit|Chid Saving Institute. Mrs. H. A. | her from the steamer. The capta of | cists in the country, died in Bellevue [ d€178ed With proposals. service of tb ‘onn u Fravhic facilities and news associa- [had pent its fury. Every availablc Than by Any Storm Since 1909. Sawyer, died at hospital; Cassius C.|the Rimao declareq that they had been | hospital today of chromic heart and guard. Three Thousand Girl Stenographers Shriner, have signed a petition circulated 1= tions were compelled to send reports |1COm was pressed into service and one president Ralston Town Site | On short rations for mors than a|kigney trouble. He was 47 years old | March 24—The FOUND IN PROVIDE ies today. Many miles of wire were O e st meual Wavs in order to |after another the dead and injured| New York, tele- | company: A. B. Stanley, abouts years | month and that the last food had been | £ b sainet Phe® por bt Were brought into the house. graph companies were harder hit by | years old; Bert H. Fields: Mrs. Sulli- | eaten when the Harfleur hove In sight Branford’s Armory Dedicated. S T L e - = o A pathetic sight was that of 2 young | the storm in the middle west than by | van, first name unknown, dled at hos- | Light winds and calm had delayed the | g S b m,iuarsU ot mambers of thelr eratt /1 § Oramel: Brockway Had D " oeds i Wisconsin. , girl keeping watch over the body of |any other storm since 1909, it was | pital: baby Thelma, 2 years old, Child | Rimao. Branford, Conn., March 2 | moving plctures as c & Wife in Hallvitle Floods swept through several Wis- | her mother. 'The mother, Mrs. John |said at the local office of the' Western | Saving Institute; twelve-veur-old bo: After leaving the becalmed flect the | ford's, handsome new 340000 Brmcty fand wearers of “ra o cities, damaging many thou- | New. ™| Tai ot i y & 4 bos 5 ormally dedicate - S e SN < n ci aging Newman, had been killed instantl A Union and Postal Telegraph compan- | killed in home; Shaw, Nel- | Harfleur damaged her propeller. \‘mpasin, ceremonies Governor Bald- A Recommendation That Massachu- Providence Mar sands dollars' worth of goods In base- Dams washed out in the body lay on the porch of the ley, or Nelleigh; fourteen-year-old Constable Nolan came to win and staff were present together setts officials co-operate with the New blown down. Gangs of ments. were tute, awaiting suitable burial arrange- men were | boy, belleved to be named Ryan; Mr: N i - »t | Monday morning and found thers many places and the released Waters |monts, the deughter, Mabel Newman, | thrown into the stricken district lay- | Niehart: Mr, Kramer; Mre, Roce | BETTS FOUND GUILTY Tt & delegation of the Ner O | e B T e ylating - sutomobils | mel Brockway of Hallvile, wh ewept over the fields below. . |told of the storm. ing emergency weather-proof cables | Gray: baby Sherwood: Scott Barber: | OF GRAND LARCENY.|Foot Guards, Baltery B B sent in | rafe was made vesterday by Gover- | brought to Norwich and had loc o Chicago all the. elementa seeme CEE e SN alons the ground and with thess i | Liosd Giaver: Tom Johnson: Charics JEgenA gecupy” the building, e o wae eaterday by oY e | ot patlce hoadquarters on (e ch to meet shortly before Easter Sunday Teplace the fallen wires one-fourth of | South Dunn; Mrs, | funl wniform. Governor Baldwin was | nor Foss in a special messag . Y Odessa. three st- of desertion and constable was armed v whiich had been lssued Former Insurance Commissioner Con- in New York, | “Mother was ill and confined to a room on the second floor of our home,” After the was a bad closed. Wind blew a violent gale, lesistature. #now fell before it in some places, hail the speaker of the evening. the service of the Western Union be- dedication ceremonies there £ Parks; Marle Lindsey; th a wer tween New York and Chicago had by Grand Juror Egirl ears ‘old, daughter of Morris Ch victed windows in other ‘parts of ‘théjshie’ Bl SEWhen ihe winds hit the cq_tonight. ir- = | briniant ball. The Néw York, New Maven ana |which - Gt g house it toppled over as if built of | berrs he wmont oa Bad been rieen cir | son Al SR New York, March jrantianc il Hapstord Railrond. company was fines | Catpenter after Mrs. Brockway e After the storms had passed, the |pasteboard. Mother and myself were | “'Tonignt Omaha Is reached from | bal. 59 years o1a Winnipes Ganaan; | BSits, a former insurance commission- | Steamship Arrivals. 00 in the New York court of special | Complatned that she had been Jeser wind died to a gentle breeze, the sun |burled in the wreckage. A8 e00n as 7 | practically all surrounding cities, it | Frances Kimball, two years old; Mary | shoon Gonnecticut was found sullty of | ¢ Southampton: March 23, Phila- | sesslons vesterday for violating fhe | “Uoifc oy Tog wording an e Shonc brightly and the warmth of | could pull myself from the debris I|hyas stated. Trances Kimball, two vears 0ld; Mary | grand larceny today in swindling But- | 4 st Southampton: March, 28 FAIS | smoke nuisance in its yard In the i s working epring pervaded the air. began a search for her. Board after | " Telegraph officials said that the area | Morgan, Raiston: . E. Said, stove | 1o, Co% Bacon & Muchie a Boston §'H% 'O Yok for Hamburs, Broux. A plea of suilty was emtered | FIC8 iOr OOy ond en Scuth M st Coffee H. board I lifted; I tugged and pulled at| o storm as indicated by the effect e SO i emiaaoYe | law firm, out of $2,500. Betts has resi- | “& from B o R wil. | some time ago. e name of Raymond or s cigdise an(Coftes: Hpon them until my hands were cut and ; 3. the cficct on | polisher; Mrs. H. W. Said: unidenti- | dences in New. York and Hartford, |, At Plymouth: March 24 Kaiser street with a Hubvilie woman w No such catastrophe ever had vis- |pleeding. Finally I reached her. T bent ég;xrmm:”mfi;‘mfledd v’flif {a&‘,‘s. of | fied man about 36 years old, supposed | Cong. helim IL, from New York for llrer_nvevs. Antonio Musioa of New York, who |it 18 charged he ran away w tted Omaha and it was overwhelmed | down to raise her, but she was dead rcacoct casn | to SholBext khomas, employe ot In 1510 Betts was secretar: | (Cherbourg, March = 24TArrived: | o as placed in jail at New Orleans las. |6 Bbe also jeft chilaren and 200 miles east of in Boston office of the Metropolitan Insurance company. He sent out ter saving the company _intende: buy property in New York and off ing to let the law firm, who were at- torneys for the company, in on the on | Steamer Kaiser Wilhelm 1I, New York Movilde, March 24—Arrived: Steam- er_California, New York. New York, March Steamer Verona, Genoa. stove worl . Unidentified woman; Morris_Kiene; Jason L. Garrison; Mrs, Hansen, mother of Hans Hansen, burned to death; Mrs. Rathke two Sons of Mrs. Rathke, aged 11 and 13, bodiés found” with mother Mrs. Ed Mothe uniden- The man is to be tried bef of the Peace John I hospital tomorrow & ) Brockway was formerly by it. The citizens quickly rose to the situation, however, and measures of yelief were organized promptly. Trin- ity cathedral, parish of the Omaha Eoiecopat “church, was temporarily turned into a coffee house, Catholi priests homes that had been week with his three sons, charged with defrauding New York bauke of a large sum of money, suftered a severe heart attack in the jail vesterday morning and his condition Is reported as seri- ous. A colncidence among the injured at the Child institute was that all were badly cut about the face, while the bodies were comparatively free from wounds. Ugly looking scalp wounds marked every injury. WORST RAIN Floods Following Tornado in Southern Indian: IN YEARS. 24— Arrived. London Street Traff The most frequentea street visited inister- A Birthday Party in Progres Ind lis, Ind, March ifl a v “ground floor” of an alleged syndicate. s Reported by Wireless. in many cases administe; ianapolls, Ind, March 24 —The | tified man about 85 years old, supposed : = teamers Rep: y o P P ki) S o e e W et st rites of the church, and | The home of George J. Duncan, ad- | worst rain storm in years last might | to be Bert Thomas, an emplove of the | 1t was charged that Betta, in addition| gopio Teland, March 24—Steamer | Vo an Endeavor to Restore to the | S0% WOWd appest te be T ublic organizations began the forma- |Vertising manager of the Omaha Bee, | and today followed in the wake of the | stove works, was identified earller as | {0 the 32,500 sent him by Butlet, Cox, [\ 2800€, SIS Tl erdam for New:| orse some o 2 D) i B S ey g & Bl orE e ommittees. . Tonight | was completely. destroved. Mr. Dun. | tornado that carried death and des |J. J. McDonald. Bacon &' Muchie, collected larse sums | Yieuw amstorias, Botiorcaim for JOW been lost throush the growing use of | F in 13 bours ~The equtr $176,000 had been subscribed for the |can died at a hospital this afternoov. | etruction into southern Indlana. Four - from others by the same method. e O ok 5t 5 &, | automabiles, an' orunization was In- | trafc velume 18 764 Other his ] Mrs. Duncan is in a critical condition. | persons were drowned today in swoller. 1,500 BUILDINGS GONE. _Sentence was postponed. S Deoleat corporated ~at Providence yesterday s are 76. i Kenning Telief of the destitute. Insurance Companies Hard Reconstruction was_begun _tonlght when at a meeting of the real estate exchange a committee Was appointed to take up this work. Insurance companies heavy losses. most of Park road, and 721, road, E. The bridge taking the e fest traffic is London Bridge, o which 11,358 vehicles paas in ths hours. ~ This is followed clos Westminster Bridge, with 20 Blackfriers, with 16,307, i i J\ ith prominent horsemen and makers Steamer Columbia, Glasgow for New | %/ = s . W. W. MAKES TROUBLE Yorlk, signalled 523 miles east of Sandy | 9f carTiages. horsesboes. = horseshoe AT PEACEDALE MILL, | }ock at noon. Dock § a. m. Wednes-| among the tncorporators. B Cape Race, N. F., March 24—Steam- Sang cf Strjkens Intscieres With [Offi- er Ivernia, Liverpool for Boston, sig- cers and Are Clubbed. nalled 400 miles southeast at 6 p. m. ‘At the home of Patrick Hynes a par- ty in celebration of his 8ist birthday was in progress. The guests had just begun dinner and were drinking a toast to the health of their host when the storm swept the house away. All in the party escaped with minor injuries except a grandchild, Miss Ce- streams and tonight practically every creek and river in Indiana Is out of its banke. Rain_in torrents has fallen for 12 hours from South Bend on the morth tc Evansville on the Ohio river, ani the Wabash valley is flooded. At La- fayette .the river is rising a foot an A Large Area of Residences Destroyed or Damaged. Chicago, March 24—An official de- spatch to the Burlington road received this ~afternoon places the number of buildings_destroyed at 1,500, and states Hebrew Scheol Gives Entertainment. ‘Willimantic, March 24.— Hebrew school, under the di- experienced eir fire insur- or Bridge, with 13,010. Reducing The ance policies carrying a tornado |ojjje Bigelow, who was internally ln- | hour and the lowlands are inundated re 4 jor o Peacedal I, March 24.—There | rection of _Morris Lebin, assisted by | fEures to units of comgestion, s clause. Sured. s 2 e e e e e e he | British Steamer Burns. Bontamin *Blsenbers and Isaiah Helr, | friare Bridge, suys, Dogineertus, ¥ © IN OMAHA. “The party had just begun dinner,” CHICAGO ALSO SUFFERS Dort “was - fied: Tno teport puts ihe|dale Manufacturing company today,| Boston March 24—Fire = tonight | gave an entertainment in Franklin hali | Foof crowded. tia tramo vowme be AWFUL HAVO - sald Mr. Hynes. “The young peopie = ,, number of dead at 75 and the injured | When the police stopped a machinist | caused $50,000 damage to the British | Sunday evening in celebration of Pu-| no” w1's5s wnits, the corresp. TRt Vicinity—450 | Fere maidng merry and, old as 1 am, 1| Five Killed and 32 Buildings:Wreck- | a; several hunared o was enterins the sate and (ook a | teamer” Gullstan and her cargo of | rim. one of the Hebrew faast dava, | o<t with 908 unics the corresp Over 200 Killed in That Vicinity- had entered into the spirit. Suddenly ed Yesterday Morning. & s it s it ReVolver from dHiv | jute, burlap and saltpetre. The blaze [ Tha ‘inatructor gave an historic ac- | sk OFure for London Fridg originated in the after hold from an unknown cause. count of the feast day, and others made interesting remarks and the chil- dren sang. Miss Anpa and Morris Rothblat contributed violln and piano selections and a soclal hour followed the interesting exercises. ‘Will S8ave State One Salary Hartford, Conn., March 24—The res- ignation of Timothy F. Conway of ‘Watarbury an chief oiler®f roads for the atate of Connecticut has been ac- cepted by Highway Commissioner Charles J. Bennett. Mr, Bennett says Homes Demolished and Many Oth- ers Damaged—Financial Loss of $5, 000,000. Omaha, Neb., March 24—More than two hundred persons were killed and 400 were injured in a wind storm that demolished 450 homes, damaged hun- dreds of other buildings and caused a monetary loss of 35,000,000, accord- ing to reports available up'to a late hour tonight from the main path of the tornado in and near Omaha. there was a roaring sound. The next minute the house was in ruins. I wig- gled around and out and aided the others in escaping.” John Wright's Close Call. Then suddenly brought back to ths fact that his grandchild was near death, he said: “Oh, if it hud only been me instead of_Cecelia. ‘When the storm had passed Mr. and Mrs, C. M. Wilhelm found themsetves burfed under a mass of broken and twisted furnfture. They extricated themselves with difficulty. John a railroad watchman, lfi‘u ewas bia 3l o the fact that Friends of the man Interfered and were clubbed by the officers. The mill 15 closed, the 800 operatives haying struck a few days ago. The strike followed the organization here of & branch of the Industrial ‘Workers of the World and the dis- charge of some of the leaders by the mill officials. “The tornado crossed the C. B. & Q. tracks at Ralston, Neb., and demolish- ed factories there. The storm entered Omaha near the South Omaha line, west of 40th strect, and passed in a northeasterly direction through the city, destroying buildings in a residence belt a quarter of & mile in width, crossing Farnam street between 37th and 43d streots. As it extended north- werd the path widened, erossing Cum- mings street. A large area of resi- killed at| dences were destroyed or seriously im- debris, paired, 75 persons belng Kkilled and By ividing these untts of trafm ume by the width of the en In tens of feet, the relative Gensity 1s obtained. The highe tre noted s an average of 275 on Tower Bridse, rising to 6.1 dur the heaviest hour of the 4a ford High street has, on the sams b is of 4s0on, An overage traffic density of 24.9. Old street one of and Cenming Town Bridge one o Dundea Advertiser. New Haven—The New York Mwsy Chicago, March 24—Five ns were killed, fifty injured, 32 bufldings were wrecked and scores of ures damaged by a storm which over this city and its suburbs early this morntng. The dead: Clyde Rogers, 24 years old, brake- man, Fon Du Lac, Wis, killed at Des- plaities, IIL, by failing chimney. Frank Sheridan, 27, years old, brake- man, Fon Du Lac, Wis, Desplaines, Ilis, by fallin Boy Run Down by Aute. Danbury, Conn. the 11 _year old Louis Heller, was perhaps fatally in- jured tonight when he was struck by an automobile driven by Emil Can- ter. . Ellington.—The quarterly meeting of the Rockville Chrigtian Endeavor un- ion was held in the Consregational church here Monday evening. Rev. J. New Britain—Cromwell H, Case nf No. 95 Maple etreet, who is a high school student, has & wireless station Orlo Slocomb, 12 years old, crush- | several hundred others injured. At |Howard Adams delivered an address [ rigged up at his home which —has|no appointment will be made to the | confevense of the Methodist chirches eq_in ruins of home on The Supreme ldeals of Christian | proven very successful in szecelving |place and the salary of $1,200 & year Yutan 20 persons were killed and &0 will convens in Trinjty, church in News Zhomas Yspowics, 85 years old,i a £ = p\ihmnmm_,_im g — o mcomgn ' P \ .

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