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NTS PRICE TWO C VOL. LV—NO. 79 The Bulletin’s Circulation In Norwich is Doubie That of Any Other Paper, and lts Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proporticn to the Ciiy’s Population sed Teiegrams Fire of Unknown Origin destroyed | Cabled Paf,graphs Mrs. Pankhurst Indicted. CRISIS PROBABLE AT GAIRD TODAY |Yale Welcomes [Terrible Cost | &néer TIMITATION CREATES A MONOPOLY Levee Which Protects City in Dangerous Condition and Ohio River Steadily Rising GAP OPENS FLOODING AN AREA OF 7000 ACRES Residents of Affected District Leave Their Homes—All Hope of Saving Drainage District Abandoned—Dayton May Need Federal Loan to Rebuild City—Conditions "in 3 Northern and Central Indiana Becoming Normal. : Springfleld, 1iL, April 1.—Today’s de- velopments in the flood situation may be_epitomized as follows: Levee cut below Shawneetown to al- low the water to escape in order to save city from destruction. Appeal from Epworth.for a motor boat to rescue persons marooned in the ‘Wabash bottoms. . Tramps Interfere at Pulaski. Mayor of Pulaski wires that a band ©of 100 tramps is interfering with work of protecting city. All hope of sav- ing drainage district levee near Cairo abandoned, and territory of 100 square iniies soon will be flooded to depth of from five to fifty feet. o Levee which protects Cairo from Ohio river in dangerous condition, with river rising. Threatening Situation at Cairo. Late in the afternoon Adjutant Gen- eral Dickson talked over the telephone | with Colonel E. J. Ryman at Cairo, who said all hopes of saving the Cairo drainage district had been abandoned, and all available help Fad been mass- ed to prevent the destruction of the levee. Reports tonight from western Ken- tucky continued to tell of inundated lowlands. Refugees were coming into the cities, where extensive refief work was under w: Most of Towns Prepared. Major J. A. Logan, in charge of the federal reliet work on the lower Ohio, | said. tonight that reports recefved b: him indicated that most of the towns were able to cope with the situation unaided. ANXIETY AT CAIRC. Ohio Steadily Rising and Crisis May Be Reached Today. Cairo, TIL, April 1—Word was reach- ed here tonight that a gap had gone out in the Big Four leveee in the drain- &ge district to the north and that the district will be inundated to a- depth vorying from 19 to 20 feet. The sec- tions has an area of 7,000 acres and has in it many hig manufacturing, mail order ard lumber _distributing plants. The residents have abandoned their homes. The loss will be 3$1,000,- 000. Cairo feels no alarm over this particular break. What temorrow may bring, however, is another story. The Ohio is rising slowly and the leves protecting the city is endangered. DAYTON NEEDS MONEY, May Require Loan from Government to Rebuild the City. Dayion, O, Ap April 1—"Dayton is| gacing one of the gravest problems that any city of the world ever faced, @nd we want the world to know we peed money,” said John H, Patterson, president of the relief committee, to- it afier he had returned from a our of the city. At & meeting of bankers and officials | »¢ the bullding associations tonight it | [z decided to appeal for federal id. | tw in large numbers while hundreds of laborers are at work sandbagging the leven to keep out the Mississippi. At 10 o'clock tonight the water was about 1§ inches above the top of the levee and only sandbags held in place by a temporary frame wall kept the fiood from the downtown of Hickman. In the hilis scores of tents have been erected where refugees are being cared for. PORTSMOUTH INUNDATED. Citizens Well Cared for—8,700 Being Fed at Relief Stations. Portsmouth, Ohio, April 1 (Via tel- ephone to Columbus).—Although com- pletely under water and all telegraph and telephone communication cut off, this city is being well cared for. The arrival of the steamers Kiondike and J. 1. Ware, yesterday brought sufficient provisions to supply those in need for a week. Eight thousand and seven hundred persons were fed yestord: at_relief stations, Major General Leonard Wood has ordered the steamer Ware to Kenova, W, Va., where conditions are said to | be’ getting worse, Shawneetown Entirely Under Water. Shawneetown, TIL, April 1.—As a re- sult of dynamiting the south levee this afternoon in order to reduce the pres- sure and gave life and property at Cairo, thejentire city is under water from 10 to 30 feet deep. Spring Floods in North Dakota. Dismarck, N. D. April 1.—Great damage is being done by spring floods along the Cannonball river in south- western North Dakota. Chicago, Mil- wavkee and St. Paul railway bridges at Regent and New Engiand have been washed away and dynamite is being used at Mott to break the ice in the hope that it will not dam the water thers. Cordage Strike Riot Auburn, N, Y., April 1.—The cordage strike situation, Involving more than 1700 operatives at the International Harvester company and _Columbian Rope company shops, becams acute to- day. After a eerles of riots in which cleven persons were hurt, Chief of Police Bell said tonight ho would put his entire force at the doors of the mills tomorrow. 71 Bodies Found at Columbus. Columbus, April 1.—Eight more bod- ies passeq through the morgues tod: running the total of dead in that sec tion up to 7i. Among the bodies found today was that of James M. Hearny, a merchant, who was drowned River Stationary at Cincinnati threatening | several months ago. he property | damage in Columbus, like the death toll, is confined principally to the west side, the business and manufacturing districts having gone almost un- scathed. Cincinnatl, April 1.—The Ohlo river.| London, April 1—A true bill against Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst was Te- turned today by the grand jury at the Old Bailey sessions on the charge of incitement to commit damasge. Welsh Miners Threaten Strike. Cardiff, Wales, April 1—Over 50,- 000 minérs in South. Wales today handed in a monti's notice to quit their employment as a protest against the engagement in the mines of non- unionist workmen. Health of Ex-Empress Fairly Good. Brussels, . Belgium, April 1—The health of the ex-Empress Charlotte of Mexico, a sister of the late King Leo- pold of the Belgians, and who Was re- ported by several newspapers to be d: ing, continues fairly good. Russian Lieutenant Suicides. London, April 1.—Ljeutenant Perlov- ski of the Russian army committed suicide at Warsaw on Sunday by shut- ting off the motor of an aeroplane in which he was flying and dropping from a height of 600 feet to _the ground, according to a Central News despatch, | Papal Audience to Connecticut Woman. Rome, April 1-=Pope Pius today held an audience, at which many prom- inent Americans were presented by Mgr. Thomas F. Kennedy, rector of the American college in Rome. The pope spoke to each of those presented and gave all the pontifical kiss Miss Penfield of Qonnecticut was among them. , Kaiser and Tenant Agree. Berlin, April 1.—The German em- r's_trouble with his tenant, Hel- 7 Schst, on his estate at Kadine has been settled amicably after being before the cdurts for several months. The tenant has consented to vacate his farm voluntarily before the e: | piration of his lease which has an- other five vears to run. A SIMPLE FUNERAL SERVICE AT ROME. ;vfln Be Conducted for J. P. Morgan in Room of Hotel. Rome, 1 1.—A simple funeral o | service will be held over the body of |3, P. Morgan tomorrow. The service "\x 1l take place in the room at the hotel where the body now rests, sur- | rounded by great masses of flowers. tributes ffom friends and notable per- sonages of (various countries. Oniy reldtives, intimate friends of the- family and the American ambas- dor, Thomas J. O’Brien, and Mrs. Brien will attend the seryice, which o will be conducted by the Re Nelson of the American church. |~ The geath of Mr. Morgan has created | an impression which has become more | profound as time passes. Everywhers | flags are flying at half mast. This is particularly noticeable over the.art in- stitutions in which Mr. .Morzan had taken so deep an interest. | Throughout the day there was a constant stream of callers at the hotel to offer condolences. Family Plans Not Yet Made. New York. April 1—Members of the lzte J. Pierpont Morgan's household were not inclined tonight to make { known- any plans for his funeral If a decision had been reached in Rome | as to arrangements for bringing the financier's body no advices regarding | them had been reeelved here, it was | stated. J.“P. Morgan, Jr. sald that not even fentative plane for the obse Guies had been made and that it might bo some time before the final arrange- ments were completed. | Henry M. Flagler Wors West Palm Beaeh, Fla, April 1— The conditien of Henry M. Flagler, | the railroad and southern hotel mag- | nate, who recently suffered a- painful fall at his home near here, was report- Relatives and friends erable anxiety over Flagler is stil at | ea worse today, expressed consi: | his condition, Oceanic cottage. Professor Taft UNDERGRADUATES GIVE ROUSING RECEPTION. | HIM |A GIFT TO MRS. TAFT Wife of ex-President Made Recipient of Bouquet of Violets—“Again an Active Yale Man,” Says Mr. Taft New Haven, Conn., April 1.—Under- graduate Yale welcomed former Presi- dent William Howard Taft back to his alma mater today in a manner no less hearty and enthusiastic than was the Godspeed given Woodrow Wilson by the Princeton students when he left Frinceton & month ago to take up the duties_at Washington that Mr. Taft was about to lay down. The parallel is unique in the history of this coun- try. ¥ No Stranger to New Haven. Mr. Taft is mo stranger to New Haven, having made frequent’ trips here during his presidency by virtue of being a member of the Yale cor peration, but it-is doubtful if he ever received & more cordlal welcome. When it became known that Mr. Taft had accepted the Kent professorship of law at Yale, New Haven was anx- ious to give him a fofmal welcome, but it was omitted at Mr. Taft's request. Yale students however, were not to be denied their wish to welcome him baclk to the college. o Violets Presented Mrs. Taft. Practically the entire student body, 3,000 strong, reinforced by the Sec- cnd Regiment band, was at the station When Mr. Taft and his party arrived this’ afternoon from New York. An equally large erowd of citizens was also nresent. As the Taft party step- ped from the train, Captain Spalaing of the football team stepped forwar and presented Mrs, Taft with a huse bouquet of violets A moment later Yale's fameus “Frog Chorus” cheer, with nine “Tafts” at the end, reared from 8,000 throats. Headed by the men of the ath- letic teams, and a bulldog siraining at its leash, the procession proceeded to the campus to the ringing strains of 0ld ¥ale songs sung by the students. Mr, and Mrs. Taft, with a delegation from the faeulty, followed in an auto- mobile. All along the line of march the ex-president and Mrs. Taft were ziven a continuous ovatien from the crowd that thronged the streets. Address by Professor Taft. Arriving at Universtty square on the campus, Mr. Taft was escorted to & balcony on Memorial hall which was d@raped with the Yale blue and the American colors. As he started to Epeal he received enother ovation from the cheering throng below him that lasted for five minutes. Visibly _affected, Mr. Taft sald: “Men of Yalel You will belisve me when 1 tell you that T am greatl touched by this student reception. Then, with a smile, he said: “When it was suggested to me I deprecated it and thought it might be better to de- fer 1t until I took my departure, but s T hope that may be indefinitely post- poned, and a& I hope that Mrs, Taft and 1 are to become permanent resi- dents of this eity, and members of the faculty of Yale college, I theught it best to take what was coming te me first.” Great eheering Interrupted the ex-president at this peint. Again an Active Yale Man. Continuing, he sald: “Yeu may hawve heard meore ey less diseussion, when presidents of the United States are re- tired—voluntarily er etherwise—ag te what sheuld be dene with them, When I teek invenmtery, all I had was a semewhat tarnished reputatien as a lawyer, p professien that I had aban- | doned 'thirty vears age; but at the To Bulgarians LOST 10,000 TO 12,000 IN CAPTURE ‘OF ADRIANOPLE. HOLD 62,000 PRISONERS Included— Montenegro Answers Powers’ Latest Demand—Bombardment of Soutari. Forty Turkish Generals Sofia, April 1.—According to an offi- cial report from Bulgarian army head- Quarters, the capture of Adrianople cost the Bulgarians from 10,000 to 1. 000 killed and wounded and the Servi- ans -1,200. Made 62,000 Prisoners. The Bulgarians made prisoners of 40 generals, 2,000 other officers and 60,000 men. The Bulgarian besieging forces numbered 120,000, with 98 guns. The Turks had 200 siege guns and from 450 to 500 fleld pieces MONTENEGRO TO POWERS. ogrets Its Inability to Defer to Their Wishes at Soutai Cettinfe, April 1.—Montenegro has answered the latest demand of the powers regarding the withdrawal of civilians from Scutari by stating that army headquarters have refused -for military reasons to permit the trans- mission to the commandant of the be- lenguered town of a cipher despat from his government. The Montene- grin government, however, has offered to submit to headquarters a request for the transmission of a message ni plain language. In reply to the powers' previeus note Monienegro expresses regret that it ie unable to defer to their wishes to cease hostilities at Scutarl and In the territories alleged by the pewers to Albania. | Bombarding Scutarl. Belgrade, Servia, April 1.—Speclal despatches from the front say that the Bervian and Montenegrin forces are bombarding the Scutari forts with success and that their surrender is expected within a day or two. Mentenegrine Take Tarabosch. London, April 2—A Cettinje despatch to the Times dated April 1 saye: “It is reported tonight that great Tarabosch has fallen inte the hands of the Mentenegrins.” ENGLISH SUFFRAGETTE ADMITTED TO COUNTRY Net Barred Because She Served In_a London Jall. Boston, April 1—AMiss Tlorence Ward, a’ militant’ English suftragette, will Tiot be. barred from this country because she smashed a few windows in London. Becretary Wilson so ruled today and Miss Ward tonight was given her freedom. She had been de. tained since her arrival last Friday, following action by a special beard of inquiry which had ordered her to bs deporiej because of her militant activities, for which Miss Ward ad- mitted she had served three months in jail, It was claimed by the local immigration officials that her windew smashing involved “meral turpitude” while Miss Ward and her supperters declared it was enmly a political of- fense. “I den’t blame the United States T My detention” Miss Ward ex- claimed after her release. “The whole thing was engineereq from the other side, You may be sure that my friends there will see about it.” Miss Ward boarded a train te visit a sick friend, the object, she said, of | strike at Chicago yesterday. the Lyceum theater at Wichita, Kan., | yesterday. | Five Thousand Union Painters, pa- perhangers and decorators went on | Peter A. Conlin, Editer and publish- er of the Worcester Evening Post, died yesterday, aged 55 years. Canada Has Just Closed a Year of unprecedented -Drosperity in all | branches of administration. The Annual Meeting of the National | Assoctation of Cotton Manufacturers | Will be held in Boston April 24, and 2 About 125 Painters Went on Strike yesterday at Pawtucket, R. 1, for an increase in wages from $16.50 to $15 a week. President Wilson Spent Sunday in | bed, suffering from the effects of the vacéination which he underwent last week. Two Hundred and Thirty-five car- penters and cabinet makers struck for higher wages at Newport, R. L, yes- terday. A Severe Hailstorm gave Middletown, N. Y, and vicinity a fright and did considerable damage to fruit orchards and shade trees. Rev. Isom P. Wooten, aged 76/ for- merly well known throughout the United States as an evangelist, died at Seattle, Wash,, Monday. Ottumwa, lowa With 40,000 inhab- itants, has elected Patrick Lenney, a switchman of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul road, as mayor To Enforce a Demand for a ten cent wage increase to sixty cents an hour, 200 members of the Painters' union of Kansas City struck vesterdayv. Willlam Frazier, arrested in Yonkers in a hotel, charged with stealing $27, denijed the theft. Durlng 2 coughing spell he coughed up the greenbacks. A Strike of 150 Journeymen painters was called at Marlboro, Mass., dgy to enferce an increase in wages from $8 to $5.38 & day, with a Saturday half heliday. Eugene H. Kelsey, for years deputr highway commissioner under Commis Estimates of the Fortune left by J. P. Morgan, as made in the New York financia] district, range from $75,000,- 000 to $300,000,000, this sum including his art collection. Governor Sulzer Offered a Reward of $50 for-the arrest of John Doran, who escaped from a policeman in Albany on Mareh 28, while being talken to pris- on to serve an unexpired term. By a Vote of 61 to 45 the lower house of the Minnesota mgislaturé yesterday passed the bill providing for sterdliza- tion by the state of defectives, habit- ual eriminals and degenerates. The Massachusetts Supreme Court yesterday overruled the exceptions of Stefan Borasky, who on June 30, 1913, at Springfield, was found gullty of murder in the first degree. Thirty Quarts of Nitregiycerine ba- 1ieved to have been buried by Ortie I. McManigal, confessed dynamiter. have boen ‘unearthed near Muncie, Ind. by the flood waters of the White river. at Hopedale, Mass, manufacturers of textile machinery, was closed yester- ‘day by a strike declared by the Indus trial Workers of the World, who called out 660 men and boys. Red Cross Officials in Ohio were In- structed yesterday by the society head- quarters at Washington to be on the | effort to repeal t T | propriation. The Foundry of the Draper company | One Argument Against Bill to Reduce Number Saloons to One to 1000 Inhabitants m LARGE ATTENDANCE AT THE EXCIS Oppcnents of Measure Heard by Committee—Womar frage and Election of County Commissioners t bated in House Today—Senate Kills Hatpin Puts Finishing Touch on the McNeil Repeal Bill. house y dence pract com Mr politi ring i agai the which Mr nend 1-—The the woman's debate on ti strike Hartford, Conn tomorrow will taie suffrage question unfavorable report of mittee on constitutional on the proposition to *“male” from the const suffragists expect to T force. The monster peti nearly 20,000 names in favc suffrage will be carried into This petition is larger than exhibited two years Field Day For Orators. The house will also debate & the bill providing for election of cc ty_commissioners by the peop! other matter which is the order of th day at noon is the house bill to amend | the constitution of the United Stato relative to_election United Stat senaters. The day promises to be a field day for orators. Two measures are planks in the democrat platform. his cratic_caucus the I that faith were Cummings .the national comm man ,Ch n Forster o commiite d Mr. T nority leader, i nd those things whi re 1aid . the party platform Apr up missioners “Why will temperan Limitation Mr. Fitzgerald sa of the saloon Mr bill aid themselve 1 the pudiat . compromise It is expected county commi proposed amendme | rebuttai ana points made revi te sioner J. H. MacDonald, has tendered | constitution therc will be a division c his resignation, and it has been ac-|party lines. On_woman's _suffragc, | WHITE WIFE ( cepted. Representative Wilson of Bridgepor S b will to sk te dc 1 has announced that he sy favor of suffrage in orde there will not be complis b ythe democrats o fthis great ment the prosres The disappearance of St. Lo sive members in the house was point- =Farlane Ge l ed out as completely accomplished, for | wife of ¢ when one of th endum on matt fare of the peoy preme court of er be conmstitutional reported, not a party rose to Wilson, a democrat, after the bill was about to be and spoke in favor of the principle it. with Mrs. r vorce Mrs ¢ gro, it wal here death had Ge ngle protest. Re po took on t in Senate K The attendance rge in the house tion books for the run out. Debentur in both branches and members « now begin drawing their salar mileage in instalments. The senate killed the hat-pin and put the finisl touches or the New Londo; Senator McNeil announc~ would put ih a Fraw The campaigy pest born .. whi officer to ab 2 Hatpin Bill Is although commu first quarter h bills were pas bill, b orsewoman ntre g ed that previ 1gainst Fruit in allows a health nuisance in th on which insects Oppesition to Barber’ named I bill usly the pass had ito and [ to ses her on bus The gevernor een $20,000,000 and $40,000,000 b o %,909.99° | at this poinf has been stationary since | — SBgestion of President Hadley it was | her visit to this countr lookout for & $1000 fur coat sent by i 00 her on Juay beIoauired ap loan from the £07- | carly this mornins, and Indications are| School Closed as Mark of Respect. | dacided that what little law T have | mistake among ‘the clothes sent for |Loan Commissioner Woodruff “for| A monih aso v feee nstitutions. 1t was estimated | hat it will remain statlomary untll| Vevey, Switzerland, April 1—The |left might be put into prastice here | PARCEL POST HURTS | the relief of the flood sufferers, Judge of The Litchiicld Cauhty Com- | 8t tho houso s night that the property damage | 50Me time tomorrow, when it will be- | school which J. Pierpont Morgan at- | and I am here again as an active Yale EXPRESS COMP. 1 e o s cou Jjudi oo s aceth P one by the flood —in . Montgomery | €in to slowly recede. No additional | tended as a pupil in 1854-55 was closed | man. . s ANIES. | The Undermini g,0f one of the plers | for which_the nomince is undersiood | matriage certiflea Jounty would agsregate $150,000,000. | dammage has occurred here. | today out of respect for nis memory.| “Men of Yale, as I heard yourcheers | Have Lost 25 Per Gent of Small | Of the railroad bridge across the Con- |to, have a swong lkine . - o — = = and songs. I foul young again—as If I : necticut river at White River Junc-| The bill to give to the s oard ; PANESVIFEEIBRDIY. HiT. | i ok Vet ioha o o Rave shed some of my vears. All this| Package Business, Counsel Declares. | tion, Vt. put that structure out of |of health the supervision of barl , too e Ol O b s ! may seem egotistical to vou, but I commission vesterday for rallroad |in place of the present comu 4 eske E 000, : Z s | e i can, the young men who are. going untry have been hit | layea as Senater McDonough w Sl N | of othe gtete yhich bave suftcred the | Peabody Woman of 73 Wed Man 26| out fnto the mation. T, want fo’help | hard by the operation of the new par- | Penny in the Siot Machines returning | sent. | Buough was said, howe S T 3 ing Yeoata Hier hinior: preserve that part of the nation that ystem, according to state- | varying quantlties of candy according | Indicate thai in the senate thers : e ; e aTae e 30060 i | Sl (Das ton, Eenmlesdees is worth preserving, and without [ments submitted to the Interstate | to the Juck of their patrons were plac- | Strong epposition to the change S Gomar with others which have been flooded, | ited the looal veliot oo places vis- | * paayody, Mass., April 1—Because | Which the nation cannot exist. If I|Commerce Commission today by coun- | ed under court ban al New York yes- | The activity ef committess last weel [ ]2 © - = one o the icatest Tostrs, Branial: | omsoried el Gk, Sommities Wil Do | paiph W, Reovs, counsel for the heirs | on do this T shall thank God for the | sel for the companies in thelr fnal ar- | terday. They were held fo be £am- | Wwas shewn by reportns in of man i v i e o St | chael cGover: v Dportunity. e reduction in ex- | bling devices. ills. The calendars in both | . "“The monetary loss fully revealed Lo of Mrs. Michael McGovern, who dled | OPDO & bil . e R R el apportionment of losses can be | Sunday, claimed that - (He causc of | Proposed Chesr for President Hadley, | DFSSS rates proposed by the commis- | — are now good sized volumes tF S Saa0s, oee 10 Tamns e | mRde, Owing to defective wire ser- | GUn Tras mot eleat. an Antopsy was |t ew Reon 19 Work o the ranks wien | S1o8: It was declared that the com. | Abeut 150 Journeymen Painters and | The excise hiearing on the 1 - usiness mem’s organizations. el s stlll in ignorance | porformed today after which the vital | you and-to aid the president of the | P2fles have suffered a loss' approxi- | paperhangers are on strike at Hart- | lmit saloons to one to 1,000 Reliel stations have been feeding ;umgm:”t neods of most of the com- | {rzans were sent to Professor Whit- | sohene wio 15 nosw away from vou, | DAting twenty-five percent in small | ford because of {he refusal of the mas- | itants filled the house chaniber . 15,000 persons for the past week. Many Doy of the Harvard Medical school Tor | bt who Io soon coming pack In o | P2ckase * business—a loss * which | ter painiers to pay an advance from | OIF conducied (i case for th of them are homeless, as 300 to 1,000 =4 > examination. proved health. I ®ropose a cheer for ounts to about six percent of the| 45 1-2 cents per hour to 50 cents per |Dénts and Arthur McOrmond, homes were ecither swept away or are River Rising at Louisville. At the conculsion of the autopsy, | Arthur Hadley.” i onues of the companiey; hour in wages. DetRAu i of the Btate Tigaor o TeaNy io caiuas cud’seveeal thow | Ioulsille Ky, pri) 1 The Onlo|Mlical Braminer . J. Foster satd: A 'long Yale cheer was given with a |, V4iter D. Hines ’;:";:g";‘;:tleg"r} s S ) | et Hiven Atiorney. David B are maged. The river here at 7 o s “I e ¢ tell of what Mrs. Me- | wi % ot -~ e Navy Department has several | New Haven. Atforne vid o OGNIZ onight at 7 o’clock showed ould not tell of what Mrs. Me- | will and another for Taft. Then came|ine Adams, American. United ‘States, | tHousang ollare Pw‘mh o ilverveare | Berald of New Haven and At L SOON REC cot a a mile and a half wide | a stage of 45 feet, and was rising slow- Govern died, as the body had been em- | | | | the impressive singing of “Bright Col- Southern and Wells-Fargo—applica- its hands that it doesn't exactly | Klein of Bridgeport spoke. All THE CHINESE F through the city. ly. This a.rise of .3 of a foot in the | balmed.” lege Years,” Yale's song of songs,with on slar t he Fee—— last 12 hours. The further rise of| Dr. John Hickey, who attended | the assemblage standing with bared | HOR of the proposed rates to present | know what to do with. The silver rep- | OUSIY combatted the ‘claims of ihe | T ' . WATER DISAPPEARING ahout 4 of 5 foot Ia predicted by to- | Mrs. McGovern in ‘her last ' ilness, |heads. Mr Taff joined in the sing: | PUSiess would reduce revenues avout | resents the ritts of states or clties to | LBPANC® (it Wio B (Icly JRRINE | United States Likel 5 - morrow noon, When the crest of ihe|Zave the cause of death as arteris | ing and waved his hat in unison with | 326000000 a year, or 385 cents on |ships bearing thelr names and which |45 weely AMr. Splame mado | the| Great Powers to A Conditions in Indiana Gradually Be- |flood is expected here. sclerosis. He said today that in his | the students with the concluding . 8 yorth of business done. | now have gone out of commission cribing e i the falla . R i ¥ i Bl m ARt o reincss Tone. . | seribing what he termed the fallac e Corning Normal. = [ opinion there was mothing suspicious | words: iy D omsion un resclives.. ue oF profubition. Afterwards in replying | ., Washinston, = . Jersey’s Full Crew bill. SDOHEAL S For God, for country and for Yal * £ olutely destructive.| Former Gevernor John Burke of | to questions by Senator Keeney {lippines n Ingtanapolis, _April 1—Conditions | mrentom X 3, Al 1. Governor | ol l% FIAAEe of Mrs McGovern, | Mz and Mrs Taft later went to the |\ |0 Uore Do s North Dakota yesterday took the oath | Spidine said he believed in remos fore the cabinet hroughout the flooded districts of 10~ | Fieider . foniight " approved the . bull | Sy sty aT5 old, was not gen- | Hotel Taft, where they are to make | of office as the treasurer of the United |all lmitation in_the number of . s advisers dis diane. excopt in the extreme Southern | crow” bill Tatenils Passed by the lon. | ool S hoNT [R(R se rose in the| their home temporaril. &= o AT HARTFORD ELECTIONS. | States, succeeding Carml Thompson, | censes to be granted vin, o of recogniz on of the state, rapidly are ro- z- | urt in Sa anuary ended Facu ecting. s | Who turned over $1,426,422,051.48 2-3 to | question the coun early ¢ & to normal - Reports from over e LTty ecmes s etective, and announced that she had been wed- | Later, Professer ot aitennin hin)| BoRUBlicaia Catey: Town: Democratic | the” custody of the new dpmocra(io‘ e ery lkelhood that ¢ e state today show that the waters o 8 Michael Mc- 3 i official. rents of a c in will be thefirst of the powers Which remained stationary for days | Govern, 'a real estate agent, 26 years [§iouiy, meeting where he met the Gains in the City. pHols o JEEngs ot & 0w mianity practically _have disappeared and | BATTLESHIP OHI0 ber Junior. She was formerly Emily | remninder of the evening in his rooms | Hartford, C Apri Gy E. Condra of the University| €°m crepelCan Be Tnusted dministration of homes deserted by their owners are W. Brown. She had been brought to , Conn., April 1—The an- ALl 1 lana| Mr. Fitzgerald in his argument con- | was consideréd b e IN A COLLISION. | court on the petition of her niece, Mra, | > the hotel nual city and town eleotion was held | of Nebraski and George A. Loveland | o\t ieithe' bmmiscioners Can o | the mame of Josen i 2 2 = 7 - 4 . but, belng an off year, there|of the United States weather bureau | (o} irelae ) QlBeration R ariatai & g Sy p o In Indianapolis hundreds of homes | Came Into Light Contact With Steam- | LooC Lo DAY SO0 (he appointment of 2 | FouR YEAR TERMS Tns & lght vote. sbout 53 ber cent. of | Wil leave this morning for an auto. | UNSed o exereise Oiscrition | Mg | somn el of ¢ re "clean: urn! ; i : B the registration. In the town the re- | mobile tour through the storm-swept|%id that very rarcly has a decision of | national commitice, v E ol il ol o Bl R ke er in Delaware River. ing presents of money and real estate FOR HOLDUP MEN. | publicans carried the ticket, and clect. | area of the state to gather data for the | &, COmmIission been' yeversed when it | governor-gencral of tho lsi Plied by the relief - committee, tha s . = to McGovern. P R st amried the Skl stareto has been taken to the courts for re- | Davies has un con 3 Bwners were able to resume house- | oot riadelphia, April 11t was learn- Several State Prison Sentences Im- | {hreo members of the hieh scheel | o Lo oo view; only once has such a reversal |an offer to be assistant secreta Recping. | Rellet funds are constant- | §ijon#he that the United States bal- | TOWNSEND MAKES THE < Soaed i New (Haven! Couct e e e R R leastng | BeeR made in New Haven coun w i lon last nig] g gy e se o oston as a clearing | declared that the supreme cour It was stated tor [ 1y nereasing and all persons who lost | ity 0" e uT, SLSion Iast night SUFFRAGETTES HAPPY | __ board of echool visitors. house by smugglers of women's gowns | declared & license to be Droperty thority. that If Mr « home: e Merchants ang Miners’ line while pro- E: P —— New Haven, April 1—A number of n_the city the democrats made |js to be investigated by a federal grand | this bill would wipe oui the v come the governor ral Inpcaredithes - Rl ceeding up the Delawarer iver. In pass. | United States Senator Rgceives Cable- | State prison sentences were imposed In | 8ains, securing control of the board of | jury. Arrests of custom emploves in | rights of 1,847 dealers. He asked the | po & member of (1 il Many persons in the We: ian- | (52 the Frederich, which was Stomamas S R e the superior court here today by Judge | ¢Ommon council. The democrats now | that city and confederates in New York | committee not to take away the Tighis | mission, G apolis flood district toady were treat. H Bi ichael Orsi d 20, d | have a majority In the board of alder- ri e in the same direction, the battleship, = urpee. Michael Orsini, aged 20, an v are to be delayed, pending the comple- | of these business men. ho president received today, ¢ ed with an anti-typhoid vaccine and Philip Thomas, 22, who held up a Lib- | Men of 13 to 7 and in the board of | {jon of this inquiry. tnal O'Connell ston, wh Dr. T. V. Keene, in charge of the med- jcal relief in the flooded districts, said Be feared no epidemic. TO AID CHILDREN. on her way to the Philadelphia navy yard, was drawn toward the steamer by the suction. The contact was not heavy and the most serious damage done was the dismantling of a six inch gun on the Ohio and a rent in the London, April 1.—Mrs. H. R. Emer- son, and the American suffrageftes in London, are greatly pleased at the contemplated action of Senator Charles E. Townsend of Michigan in taking up the case of Miss Zelie Emerson. Miss Scott-Troy has sent the fol- erty street saloon in this city last Feb- ruary, were sentenced from four to ten years each. Peter Simthona, aged 48, guilty to the charge of an indecent as- sault on a minor female, and was sen- pleadeatto 20- 2 councilmen 27 to 13. A Year ago the democrats controlled the aldermen 14 to 6, but the council was a tie at 20 Senator Acoused of Extortion. Petero Hajdals, who was engaged, it is believed, to Miss Stefanka Smyr, the pratty voung Russian, who committed suicide by jumping from the Middle- town-Portland bridge into the Connec- Men Will Get Liquor Anyway. Mr. Fitzgerald said that Rev. Mr. Belden in his speech had sald that the bill would not affect drinking me: men would get liquor anyw: idea was to decrease the mumber « Steamship Arrivals At Rotterdam: D £ from New York. : g plates of the Frederich above the wa- All Relief Funds Contributed by | Bt the W2~ | jowing cablegram o Semator Town. | tenced from three to seven years. Albany, N. Y., April 1—Accused by | ticut river Monday night, is missing, | R12¢S8 In which men could get liquc e e ~ Sohool Children to Bs So Used. send: : Gastora Girelano pleaded guilty to | George ¥ Kendall, president of the | ang fears for his safety are expressed. | -iF: Fitzgerald said ihat Judse Maib- | New York. McCombs Ready to Go to France. “We expect ‘to send instruments of | the charge of theft and was sentenced | Now York Bank Note company, of at T ihe P e oA AN [ At Ldverpocy: 2 Washington, April 1.—Special ar=| 2 b7 Apri g, | torture similar to those being used on |from one year to sixteen months. He|tempted extortion, Senator Stephen J: Fatally Stricken While Drivis Bl T tno uiAfe of himantl| Gom b ok ashington, April 1—William F. | Miss Emerson. After the senate’s in- | Stole a roll of money from a Shelton | Stillwell of New York today refused atally rStncien, e DO, fl‘;m“‘;}gyvls‘égjl’;;‘ piifting of human- | April 1, Canada F 1 : od ‘that he would like to | “YAt Hondons Eon p rangements have been made by United Danbury, Conn., April 1—While driv- cCombs, chairman of the democratic i tates Commissioner of Education | M be, c! spection, suggest placing them in the | horse dealer. to resign at the suggestion of Gover- v } B Swith the TRed Cross soclety | national committee, i3 reported on ap- | Smithsonian mstitution. Your inter nor Sulzer and demanded a thorough |ing his team on the outskirts of this [ know whether the judge was a suint or | New York. whereby all funds raised by theschools | Farently trustworthy guthority to have | cession after the long inaction of the ShaablE Prosid investigation of the charges by the |cCity this afternoon, Levi Jennings, | sinner.— He had declared that this| Gipraitar, April 1. Arrived r of the country in response to the com- | 2dvised President Wilson that he |embassy is a great reliei chwab Resigns Presidency. Benate. The senate ordered that an |aged 60, a well to do farmer, whose | Measure was for human uplift, “and | Carpathia, New York New York, April 1-—Charles M. |irquiry be made at the earliest possi- | home is in the Haystown district, wus | Yet,” sald Mr. Fitzgerald, “the judge| “Doger "Aprll 1 1, missioner’s appeal of March 27 will be would accept the post of ambassador to France. Neither confirmation nor Against Railroad Separation. Schwab resigned today as president of ble moment. stricken with apoplexy and fell from granted more certificates to convicted Zeelund, New York set apart from the general contribu- denial of the iste : s ate: lnicatate persistent report was 7 o the Bethlehem Steel company to be- the wagon to the roadside. He was | liquor dealers than any other judge | Now™vork Apct Srived atad o of helping children 1n the flooded obtainable st the White House to- e P meres TibeTS Of the | come chairman of the board of di- Firolinr Nl Resuriey. taken to the hospital where: he afed | Who sat on the New Haven bench.” | e yor mionk ADHl 1.—A gistricts to return to. school. :‘vir e Tt o gr;}m‘.' hotwl;- mously at the spectal meeting today rGecton of (hel e foompany. in hc;,. Meriden, Gonn, April 1Tire broke |00 afterwards. = = iq&q:e :;I“B:;‘gn‘:o‘;.t\,f S SE Tohm M B et ; e DRy eve the | {5 adopt the report and recommenda- | oy o> ©ected president in‘his| i Gh the gerating room of the > claimed thers were students in Yale | Steamer Tunisian HUSTLING AT HICKMAN. tions of their directors in regard i = Connecticut Breweries company short- Methodist Conference Closea; Who did not kmow it was 4 crime to gl B s % Tailroad situation in New 7 phs fie 1 R mproves. Hundreds of Laborers at Work Bunbuiy: Church Calls | Bastor: Tie “direotors . reported Inst “weer | Steamers Reported by Wireless. | Ster ten ofclock tonight but little | New Haven Comn, April 1-—The s DO S ‘\'e: ‘;"or: TG:;NI, e A Extending tha Levee. Danbury, Conn., April 1—St. James | against the advisability of any separ- | Sable Island, April 1.—Steamer Oce- | Hartford branch of the .Shore Line | Conference of the Mathodist Ipiscopal | 21~ said Mr. Fitrgernid, | Someiimes | in the conditon of fevi b viome = ik Episcopal church aas called Rev. G. C. [ation of the New York, New Haven |anic, Southampton for New York. sig- { divisidn were completely ‘blocked for | church closed here tonight, with the | reformers got great bir follows who | which followed what woe 1 > Hickman, K. Aprl £ Retugesn are Coburn, curate of Grace church, New | and Hartford and Bosion and Maine | nalled 616 miles east of Sandy Hook | over an hour by. lines of liose. The fire | announcement of pastorsl— appoini- | look over 31, send them into saloons b be an alarming <iicing Spell yesters reshing to the hills-back of Hickman | York, to become pastor, _ lrailroads at the present time, at 11 a, m. Dock § a. m. Thursday, |was caused by, defective Wirlng. ments : .1 to get a drink so they may el eyle day, was maintained todad 1 . 9 4