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CONGRESSMAN SLAPPED BY BANKER NORWICH, CONN., MONDAY, APRIL 21, 1913 PRICE TWO CENTS The Bulletin’s Circulation [n Norwich is Double That-of .’\;ly Other Paper, and lts Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut "inil’roporuon t o the bity’s Population President of Washington Bank Resents Reference to Him Made by Congressman Sims 'MAY BE CHARGED WITH CONTEMPT OF HOUSE ‘Dozen Members of That Body Hold Conference and Decide to Present a Resolution of Investigaticn in House Today— Some Favored Immediate Arrest of the Cffender—As- sault Has Been Publicly Admitted by the Accused. Washington, April 20—Formal no- tice will be taken in the hcuse torgor- tive Sims of Tennessee, Friday Charles C. Glover, a Washington bank president. A dozen members of con- gress, including most of the Tennes- see delegation, conferred at the capi- tol today and determined that an at- tack upon a member on account of &n utterance on the floor of the house was too grave a matter to go un- moticed. Committee to Draft Resolution. Representatives Garrgtt and Fous- fon of Tennessee were appointed a committee to draft a resolution to be presented when the house convenes fomorrow. It is proposed to have the resolution provide for an investigation by a committee of five to ascertain whether the facts warrant the arrest of Mr. Glover on a charge of con- tempt of the house. Some For Immediate Arrest. Some of those in the conference wanted t o order an immediate errest, urging that the fact that Rep- representative Sims was attacked while on his way to the capitol to at- tend a session of congress justified drastic_action ,but the counsels of those favoring a preliminary investi- gation prevailed. "Speaker Clark was consulted as to the method of pro- cedure and before the resolution is Presented tomorrow will be discussed With other house leaders regardless of party. Admits Slapping Congressman. In a published statement Mr. Glover has admitted he slapped Representa- tive Sim's face on account of the rep- resentatives reference to him speech on district legislation. those who have looked up the and precedents contend, _constituted contempt of the house. Various pr cedents are cited. In 1870 one Patrick Woods used a bludgeon on Representa- tive Porter of Virginia and upon be- ing haled before the house was sent to | the district jail for three months. Similar Case in 1832. A case regarded as nearly analogous to the present incident was that Samuel Houston, who in 1832 attack- ed Representative Willlam Stanberry because of 4 speech in the hou ergeant at-arms, held in custody for a_we: arrested by the Houston w and, upon being found guil tempt, was publicly reprin the speaker. Yesterday's Conference. Today's conference was held in offices of ihe house committee on propr and Crisp of Georgia, Pou of Carolina and Hull, Garrett, Hous McKellar, Byrnes, Padgett and of Texas. All present expressed view that a contempt had been com- | mitted and the only differences were as to procedure. May Mean Protracted Contest. It was suggested tonight that if Glover actually should be take! custody pending disposition of | proposed proceedings the way would be opened for habeas corpus proceed- | ings and possibly a protracted contest in the courts. | sion Ao Jamos Bry ations and_those presnt were | Representatives Fitzgerald of New York, .Sherley of Kentucky, Hardwick ®trange man r room. Her hu JAPANESE INDIGNATION SOMEWHAT COOLED DOWN. | Efforts of Administration to Check Legisiation Proves Soothing. Tokio, April 20.—Announcement that President Wilson and Secretary -of Etate Bryan are making efforts to bring about a compromise in the proposed California_legislation with respect to the alien land ownership bill, and that Governor Hiram Johnson is opposing the bill, has softened Japanese ire and public opinion has now become more optimistic. The alleged unwillingness #f the American missionaries to assist in resisting the bill is the subject of Barsh criticism in the Japanese papers, but_after a conference which Count | Okuma, the former foreign minister, | Bad with the missionaries, the latter espatched telegrams to California, the exact nature of which are not known. Count Okuma ironically * reminded the missionaries that Japan owed its first iessons in foreign humanitarian principles to the United States. “Now 3he duty has devolved upon Japan,” he @dded, “to teach tho Californians the game principles.” The Japanese consul at Vancouver, who has arrived here, has caused excitement by the statement that anti-Japanese lezislation is pend- g in the Canadian D ritish Columbia, Sa Manitoba. DEDICATION OF A MOTOR CAR CHURCH. Oblate Fathers to Use It For Mis- sionary Work in Southwest. Chicago, April 29—The first motor ®ar church to be used by a religious @ociety in America was dedicated to purpose today on the lawn of _St. vier's academy by Right Rev. D. J. ugherty, bishop of Jaro, Philippine The car is called St. Peter's Motor Chapel and was doraied by a Cali- fornia woman in memory of her hus- band. The equipment will be shipped to Brownsvilie, Texas, and two Oblate Fathers will take it through the south- west for the next yaar. A huge ten: carried on its top, surrounds the car when it is tsed as & cturch and seats 200 persons. HOPES FOR A REUNION OF ALL DENOMINATIONS. Governor Baldwin Believes That It is a <New England conferénce of the Lu- theran Augustina synod, which has | been in session during the last week, closed with what was termed a Chris- tian patriotic service, at which Gover- mor Simeon E. Baldwin was one of the Bpecial speakers. The governor in his address paid a glowing tribute to Mar- tin Luther and in conclusion said: “I am one of those who hope for the virtusl reunion of all Protestant denominations during the next one or two centuries; nor do I deem it im- possible that reunion with the Roman Catholic church might~follow. Steamship Arrivals. At Sa. John: April 20, Virginia, from Liverpool; Cassandra, from Glasgow. At Halifax: April 20, President Lin- eoln, from Hamburg. ‘At Moville: April 20, California, from New York. At Liverpool: from New York; John, N B. g nAt Southampton: April 20, Amerika, from New York. At Naple: April 20, Ivernia, from New York. 3 ‘At Genoa: April 20, Cretic, from cston & New York, April 20—Arrived: jeamer Kleist, Bremen. .tomstnwn. Alil'llY ZLI.—ArH\'e $Steamer Cedric, New Yorl New ork, April 20 .— Arrive Steamer New York, Southampion. April 20, Franconia, Victorian, from St. New Haven Church Dedicated. New Haven, April 20.—Bishop John 3. Nilan of the Roman Catholic diocese i Hartford, today officiated at the im- pressive dedicatory ceremonies of St. Lumher of clergyman from out of town Were aiso 10 aitendance, vinces of | ewan and | ew Britain, Conn., April 20—The | ‘aec’s church in Blatchley avenue. A | TRIPLE MURDER BY YOUTH OF SIXTEEN Lad of Weak Mental and Her Two Children. Elgin, Tills., April 2 pes, whose mentality s so low that sixteen years of age he has been able to advance only to the fourth grade in school, confessed today that he was the slayer of Mrs. Manny Sleep and her two small children, whose bodies were found yesterday in a cistern un- der the itchen of the Sleep farmhouse, five miles west of Elgin. Coppes says the killing resulted from Mrs. Sloep saying that she would “see about when he had refused in ill humor to af- do one of his accustomed chores ter school. Lack "of sleep after being arrested appeared to be the cause of Coppes’ in- clination ‘to confess. At first he omly admitted writing the letter found with Mrs. Sieep’s body, which purported to tell of her intention to commit sui- cide after she had slain her two chil- dren. Later he gave the de his crime. | FORMER PORTUGUESE KING TO TAKE BRIDE. Will Marry Princess Augustine Vie- | toria, His Cousin. Berlin, of Hohenzollern. A similar announcement to this was | made in Munich as long ago as Janu- | ary. Princess Augustine Victoria Manuel's cou She is 22 years age. OBITUARY. Sir Charles Day Rose, M. P. London, April 20—Sir Charles Day Rose, M.' P., president of the Ro: Aero club, yachtsman and breeder race horses, died today with tr suddenness. He made his first flight as a heart failure. Sir Charles Day Rose, the second r John Rose, | of Montreal, was born in 1847 in that son of the Right ion. ty. He was created a baronet 50! treal in_1866. He was a member of the Jockey club since 1891 anq was for a time a | racing_partner of King Wwhen Prince of Wales. He was pres ident of the Royal Automobile club of England. Later he became interested in yachting, his boats including Emerald, the Satania and the Auror: Ha ond med a challenge for is America’s cup,” which, however, was withdrawn. Ex-Senator Charles G. Lounsbury. 0.—Ex-Sena- tor Charles G. Lounsbury, a_prominent business man in this section of the | state, died at his home here today af- ter a years illness, aged 64. He w Seymour, Conn., April born in Bethany and represented t town in the general assembl enteenth district in 1911. He was rector of the Seymour Trust company and was closely identified with business interests of the town. widow and three children survive. Joseph Palmer. Washington, April 20—Joseph Pal- mer, the oldest emplove of the Nation- a] Museum, who made the death mask of President Lincoln that has been used in most of the portraits of the martyred president, dled yesterday at his homei n Rosslin, Va., near here. Suicide in Bridgeport Park. Bridgeport, Conn., April 20 A. Behrens, aged 26, w park at midnight last night Commissioner William Behrens, Jr. The Carl e, Pa y Slays Woman —Herman Cop- aroused by & noise of some wounded in Teceived a bullet through the shoulde: pril 20—It 1s announced | lthat ex'King Manuel of Portusal [engaged to marry Princess Augustine Victoria, daughter of Prince Wilheln | sen- ger in an aeroplane at Hendon th afternoon and was delighted with h novel experience. On his way to his | home in & motor car he died from {iwo men wounded when | firea ‘during an afirs He was a captain in the Mon- |y garrison artillery and assisted to quell the Fenlan rebellion in Canada | Philippine {won a in 187 He was elected senator from the Sev Des- pondent because of ill health, Henry ent to Seaside na drank two ounces of carbolic acid. His body was found this morning by two fish- ermen. He was a brother of Charity Herald newspa- per plant was destroyed by fire, Loss $10,000, Cabied Paragraphs Balkan Armistice Signed. Constantinople, April 20.—Delogates 1epresenting Turkey and all the Bal- kan allies with the exception of Mon- cgro signed an amristice on Satur- day at Bulair. Poincare Pardons Bandit. April 20— itomobile the Paris court of assizes on was pardoned by Presi- dent R are yesterday. New Ambassador Coming. Londo: Sp April 20.—Sir Cecil Arthur ng-Rice, tiie new Pritish ambas- lor to the Uait:d Siates In succes- e, left London yes- terday for Liverpool to sall for New York on board the Carmaria. X Martin Not Located at Vevey. Vevey, Switzerland, April 21--Joseph W. Martin the Mem er who disuppe April § and who has been reported at Vevey. cannot be located here. Tele- grams for Martin are piiing up in the be has gone to Genevi. Bomb at Smeaton Tower. his cotton brok- Plymouth. England, April 20.—A 1 itunt sufiragette “bomb troop” yester- >y morning attempted to blow up the amous Smeaton tower on Plympton e, which is_tbe-original Eddystone so bulit by John Smeaton in dismantled when it had be- come antiquated and re-erected on the Hoe as an historic relle. ATTLEBORO WOMAN | KILLED BY BURGLAR. Shot and Wounded. April _20. ean Plat flled by _Mrs horo wa 1y wounded. lieved to have sor and Pawtucket had_worked 1y dressed 1 suspicious t into the 5 to the police, was kencd this morning by a r part of the house, o him for help. ning the intruder aw 4 shot the and disappeared through a fr. Colbert sal that when he rushed into his wife was harely able to gas pout he at6d from a bullet room st her story the police, who had t be: heir investigation of the | case when word came of the shooting | sidence, nc description They had been > in their room, they said, and when the called out both ivere shut. Powers was he arm, while his wife at the Powers r Mr. and M the thief wa. They are expected to recover. . he bur glar escaped with a few hundred dol- lars worth of jewelty and silverware from the PPowers home. He got noth- fng at the Colpert residence. ADVISED TO MARRY A MAN HER JUNIOR. Church Jury Passes Upon Question of a Young Woman. lev eland, April 20.—A church of six men and six women w | elied ton by Rev. Robe Alpine a e evening service a | Roulevard Presbyterian ch { swe of the many questions pro- pounded by members of the tion concern e on Th brought many appea the young m: atior onight a young woman's marry n voting “No. ons submitted pastor a jury will be impanelled to whom will be given all the facts ex- | ept the questior identity. The Ven the mer r ady 1 be FIRST FATALITY DUE / TO PATERSON STRIKE. Anto o Veracho, Struck by Bullet, Dies of His Wound. Paterson, , April 20.- as the result of a riot incide silk mill strike here W night when Antonio died in the general Veracho was hit by a bullet as he sat on the porch of his home. crowd of several hundred stri en detectives fired in to frighten the dem- was passing the air, they o e 2 | onstrators. “Winning a Philippine. How many readers know what a is? A correspondeng writes that on Christmas day he was telling a friend how a certain young lady had Philippine” from him. I was much surpr; ) ed to find (ne writ that he had no idea what I was tal ing about. Further inquiries showed that some half dozen or more of my friends were equally ignorant. Is the practice of eating a “Philippine” nut iond quite unknown in Lanca- er or evening party when any- acks a nut with two kernels it called a_“Philippine.” The finder gives one of them to,a member of the s their respective nels. Whoever of the two on the | opposite s They et thei next day or any future day is the first to say to the other “Good morning, Thilippine,” is entitled to receive a present from the other. The word is found in the New Eng- lieh Dictionary, though the form Philippina_is preferred. The word is understood to represent the German elliebchen, to various writers in “Notes Queries various’ parts of and ngland in the mid- dle of the nineteenth century. In the northern states it was a common cus- tom b 1848, Tt Is also widely spread in_Burops, for it is known in France, Holland, Germany, Demmark, Norway and Sweden. Some of the correspondents of “Notes and Queries” said they were, even in England, ac- customed to_the French form, a wom.- an saying “Bon jour, Philipp man “Bon jour, Philippine.” Littre helieves that ‘the custom first arose in Dieudonne, one of ndits sentenced ed from London cn | Woman ‘in Neghboring House | r later | | | | | | jaw embodies beliefs that h | vrophed in the battle of ideas and then | bave 1 y sit front asainst each other, the time for law has not come; the notion destined m. | dictions came true he would tell ne The custom is as follows: At ? the diminutive of “Viellieb”"—“well-beloved.” According the custom was known in and a Criticisms of Supreme Court ANONYMOUS LETTERS REACH JUSTICE HOLMES, CAUSE Hi HEART-ACHES Accused of Being Corrupt and Repre- sentatives of Money Power—Due to the Present Day Unrest. Washington, April 20.—Ho preme court of the United S ai jeast cne member of If, Vi picseal iy criticisms of the Set fieihs in a speech by Justi s Oiver W et FEimes, made publi: £aday in the form of emi-public document. Justice Holmes delivered the speec New recently at a private dimner in cience has taught the wo-ld skep- ticism, the justice d by way of preiace. and made it legitimate to put ing to the test of proof. Accused of Being Corrupt. we are not excepte nz to the supreme court are we told that when 1 pronounced an act of con- onstitutional, he usurped a that the constitution did not t we ar told that we the I get letiers, many anonymoas are corrupt gentlemen that it It Is very painful, when the energies of one's shou] in trying to dc & with no thouzht b problem actordir one is bound, to otives was consciously bad An Expression of the Unrest. But we must take such thtings pt osophically and try to see what we learn from hatred and distrust and whether behind them there may not ome germ of inarticulate truth ks on the court,” the jus ostly en expression tice of the v that seems to wol vaguely wi - law and order pav.” Law is Behind the Times. A very important truth to be ex- tracted from the popular discon according to Justice Holmes, is judges, particnlarly In state courts, have read their conscious or uncon- mpathies prematurely into the s-ious & lavw. “It cannot be helped—it s as it should be—that the law ie behind the times,” declared Justice Tlolmes, “as ve tri- nslated themselves into action, le there still is doubt, while 0ppo- convictions _still keep a baitle to prevail is not yet entitled to the ficld.” Fear Translated Into Law. In connection with this discussion of premature law, he expressed the belief that twenty years ago( when a vagus torror wnet over the earth and the word sociallsm began to be heard, “fear was translated by Jjudges int the _constitution or common law.” “Judges are apt to be naive, simple- ed men, and they needed some- tning Mehpistopheles,” observed the ce. The Future Problem. Justice Holmes concluded by t he grew old he srew pro ed that competition R raies would cut deeper in the future than worl and wiii A Prophet Without Honor. £ pitation_ for the of the ciency o 12, and a grea stations show a few nof ble excep- ecially in the fig- vres at the In a| Clinton paper s given a able of the precipitation figures at the achusett dam, by months, showing a inches for the year. Eoston's figures were 3455 inches, a difference of mearly a foot. In 1811 on the other hand, the Wachueett dam gures were 98.73 and those of Boston were 35.78, a difference of only three inches Willis L. Moore, chief of the weather (not to mention others in the vice) scoffs at the tr of a cold winter or a rm winter, as denoted In the thick- of a squirrel's fur, tk of & hen's feathers and other signs of similar il here may be some eround for such scoffin For in- a “prophet” in Fiskdale, Mass., there would be the coldest ather ever known. He said, on Dec. 17: “I have been studying the signs of the moon and stars for two months, snd 1 knew a month ago that mexi - will have the coldest weather ese New England states ever knew. Cthers have been telling what they knew about the weather. and if what I say does not come true, why anyone can say I don’t know what I am talk- |ing about. There will be 44 snow- storms this winter, and we have had three of them now. 3 The prophet added that if his pre- year his secrets and how to figure what the weather will be. But the “coldest weather ever known"” did not materialize, so probably the secret will not_be revealed. “Greasy Phrases.” Speaking of the Balkan war and of that followed from great events, Augustine Birrell said that | words accumulated, phrases multiplied, and were handed about from mouth to mouth, from one leading article to another, from one Fore'sn Office to another, until they became as greasy as a bundle of Scotch one-pound notes in the slimy pocket-bock of a High- land drover. Then something really happened, and away it went. “Were I once young again” Mr. Birrell remarked, “T should not dwell as much as I was early led to do by my reading upon the transitional character of the period of time in which I found myself nor upon any particular crisis T was supposed to be facinz. I should try to be content, without compassionating myself or frequent takings of my moral temper- ature, to lead the life of my own time, sharing to the full its thoughts and speculations without recklessness, levity or cowardice: not, as were the mediaevalists, intimidated by the fear of death. yet with a Johnsonian grav- ity befitting its ever-nearing approach. “I say to vou, therefore, think seri ously, for the times we live in sre Germany.—Manchester Guardian. _ 3 serious.” - e 1ce that one | le New England as a whole shows | ot - | and. making a total co: e thickness | \Is Recovering His S_ireng!h STEADY IMPROVEMENT IN CON- DITiON OF FOPE. NO NIiGHT BULLETIN sary to Issue Gne—Sat Up in Arm- chair for Over an Hour Yesterday. Rome, Apri h improve- | ment was found ia the condition of the pope by Drs. Marchiaf: and Amici on t 1 the sick room ¢ did not conside: a bulletin holiness has haa £ the ameliora “¥or four dav no fever. Asa | tion cf the bronehial affection the pop |is lually recovering his strength.” | Mass Celebrated in Cnapel. | Bonsiznor Bressan, the pope's sec- | retary, and Father Parolin, his nephew fcining the papal bedroem, in \.iesence of A “arto and L roy ers ar 1o me lesirons tha® the mem { pess < family shall re to thei | nanes and has requested them to re- | se hic friends outside of Rorn. i e hopes soon to resum: the re. {winr .- - <2 of his life and { £ Brut who come 1o Rome tc | _The physicians have som bis anxiety on the pa work may have an unfavorable effect and cons.aut:y impress upon him it ! neccssity of patience and rcst. T e waried the attendants that i sider them responsible for imprudence. The pope, howeve: rose from his bed and remained for an hour or more in an armechais. “his seemed to rather cheer ‘he pontilf Pontifical Mass at St. Peter's. At St. Peter’s Cardinal Rampolla ce! chrated <olemn pctifical mass for ! c 1ine jubilee. The ssrvice w < Ty the members of the p- e | ! ihe sf cctal t i and niec> occurie urz, while Anzelo Sart 1 m ile pope had requested to say rravers for him, occupied tae trilime Cardinal Vice were seat ished guestsincludins | eral Americaus. Al inguired ns to | health of the pontiff, and Angelo an | swered: “Better—much betrer. Pope lssues Instructisns. Cardinal Merry del Val, the papa coretary of state, today rec: al Ferrera and gave him la sciiong in the name of the pope + aarding e Fucharistic conare | hel st Maliu, for which p'ae | teatgee CRAZY TALK BY AN ARGENTINE AGITATOR. Tells Auditors United States Wants to Absorb Latin-America. Antofagasta, Chile, April 20.—The a1 | campaign against the United States spoke here last night and urged the necessity of all Latin-America uniting to prevent the absorption of the var ous republics by the United States He declared that the United States was promoting revolutions and over | throwing the presidents of the smalier re excited his ho- Ugarte was cheered bv a audience who escorted him t left here for Valparaiso e his propaganda. Mexican Pineapples. Pineapples are successfull grown Vers Cruz and several large land com- panies are growing them. The sandy sub-irrizated slightly rolling coast | lands, with the coast dews, and fogs, make this section far superior fo th foothflls and mountain valleys to the weat, where pineapples have been suc- | cessfumy grown for v Along the | bank of Lake Tamishua ar Am | can_settlement called Pineapple ¢ is the centre of the pineapple al | The principal varieties srown Cabo Rojos and Red Sy The cost of clearing virgin land preparing it for pineapples is 320 in gold an acre. Cabo Rojos Dia 0 be purchased for about $5 t of $45 gold an acré plantec. Red Spanish plants are | scarce and cost about $25 a thou making the tolal cost an acre abe $145. Pineapples commen caring in | eighteen months, and with proper care | will be in full beuring in two vears nish | Bach piant will produce at least one ble fruit being low estimate—an cents returning $75 gold an acre. cost of cultivation and har- not_excced $20 gol apples s | plantats The tof !vmm,: not as high as on some other prod a sure crop and a ready ma alway: suitable for pineapples can be had in 1,000 acre tracts at about $10 gold an | | acre and in small tracts ai about 20 | | g0la an acre—Consular Report. | Even Bill Came Back. Secretary Bryan's assertion that also led the political mortality list and political freaks-are hard to kil Pittsburgh Dispatch. It Can't Be Did. is is easier for a rich man fo pass througn the eve of a needle than for 2 poor man to represent this Demo- cratic government at one of the first courts of Europe.—St. Paul Dispatch. Fate of the Vice President. A congress of refrigeration is to be held in Chicago in September. By tkat time the Vice President ought to be fit for presentation as Rxhibit A—Binghamton Press. Another Lunatic Fringe. Colonel Roosevelt's St. Louis can- didate for mavor received only 4,611 votes in a total of 12 “lunatlo fringe.”—Columbia (S. C.) State. Where He Would Shine. What a pity to spoil an ideal am- bassador to Pritain by wasting J. Ham Lewis in the United States Henale.—Omaka Bea. | McAneny, the population New York is nov at Washingtcn Satnrday declared faver of the army canieen. instal.eq D. C. as an aid vue hospital, tated after e | poisoned Harri Difisburgh. hysicians Did Not Consider It Neces- | regeive a g mentaliy deranged y in the chap.i | 1t Dalton, to_priv extending ov h strike if the bul mice. out a couple of wecks ago, has be broken by mu | | | Argentine poet and agitator, Manuel | doctrines that had no proper place in | Ugarte, who. is conducting a’ pers United linois_legisi along the Gulf coast of the State of was J. Blanch livered at the acre. While the profits on “pines” are svred. Well located lands { of the drowned man found the mouth of the F 3 night was- positively standpatism is dead Tecalls the time |as that of Joe Tinbulock, aged 22 when the Boy Orator of the Platte | laborer, wl 5o ! his home here since > Various things. such as cats, weeds | President Wilson is realizing that | ric, tewn 11 p. numbering 134, families, has received word of the des nephew, Harol to an untimel explosion in Monroe, N. Y., where ho was engaged as foreman of a large farm. 000. Another Condensed Teiegrams Q{MY OF ACCOUNTING FOR DEMOCRATS According to Borsugh The Annual Congress of the D. A | Moving Picture Machines are to bo | in schoois at Washington, | | | education. rs Medical Staff of Pe New York, was inca g s The E; 8ix Persons of Diilsburgh, Pa., were ter cating candy sen? from bUrs to Postiaas Altmand, o | i | Dr. Galucha Baixe, of Yonkers, is recovering from biovd poisoring, du to a cat bite. cat from his he s drivis e when it bit bi Sidis, 15 Years Ol sree of Bacheior o William J from Harv He entered as clal student of mathematics age of 11 vears, | | Mrs. Phitip Snowden, of in an interview at Louisville dted that in her opinion . n Pankhurst, the militant suffr s Otto W. Brodie Was Killed Satur- lay when a machine he w estin choo! fell from he avietion The People of the Berkshires united Nirs. Ca pman Catt, suffrage | leader. turday for Tondon, where she will 1 s and non-militant mmbers of the suffrage The Pennsylvania Railroad Company ed o ruie which w disease The Wemen Clerks at the Belmc orities the Friends of xplosion w vhh was n tual consent. The Treasury Department decide | that Dr. ¥. F. Friedmann has not vio- |1atea the ‘public health®iaws by his actlon in treating patients at Provi- dence for pay with the remedy he claims is a cure for tuberculosie. | Kraus Mor, a_Rich Coal Dealer of South Orang 1 3 his s | six mon $1,000 for Months May Elapse Before ihe si- the Italian o nt for the extra- American war ftaly to wer to charzes of murdered hi wif A Bill to Be Introduced in the Ii- ind be ilar divorce. Tramp Mangled by Train. ves old and haa 1 che, No marks e found on the tally Injured by Trol New Huven April 20.—M:hae) Kit- © ¢f Mr, Carmel was peinaps fa- tally swlv-ed tonight when he s strech v a Ne aven bound trolle car fren Waterbury, He is in a lorar sspiiar in a {ous condition. Ta onductor J. Gra d the motorman 1so of th it ciity. ar was in cha ham 0. Waterbury teamers Reported by Wireless. Cape Race, N. I, April 20—Steam- er Minnetonka. London for New Yorik, signalled 1,000 miles east of Sandy Hook at 1.80 p. m. Dock 8 a. m. Tues- day Wilhelm I, Bremen gnalled 1406 miles colc at 10,40 p. m. Dock. Drowned Man Identified. tford, Conn., April 20. ri rive; o had been miss from ov. 10. Identifi- ation was made possible by his cloth- | ing. Steamers Reported by Wireless. estown, April 20.—Steamer Ced- ew York for Liverpool, signalled m.les west at noon. Die Queens- m. Belgian Strikers Coming Her: Alost, Belgium, April 20—The am- ilies of fourteen’ strikers in this dis- trict left here today for the United States. Party of 134 Bound For Detroit. Ninove, Belgium, April 20-—A party compesed “of strikers' e today for Detroit. Teft he Woodbury—Airs. John Munson h of her Wilson, 24, who came death by a dynamite Hlis Satanic majesty never bese any- | body to give him bis due. Nevertieless . ba zats i PR Gl Minority Report of Committee Calls Attention to Destructive Tendency of Proposed Schedules and Predicts It Will Necessitate Lowering of Wage Schedules to Enable Suc- cessful Competition—Bungling Work by Tariff Makers. val- [ the duties have been placed on ticles used by imperted whoil “tax on = democratic ar the low rates of duty bave been put the free iist, whils the comparats cost of production hers snd abroad is such that it will ke impossible for business to continue without down our Accounting Will Come Later. e have not the report says it imposes a g tax when pri DIl of the maximum and minir featurs of the present law is deplor | by the “republicans, who claim through this provision great tari cessions and regulations were cured apd much added to the cxport trade of the country Feature Eliminated. | drich tariff, the minorl in the last four years | the country have been more prospe ous thap ever before in our history Will Lower Scheduies of ximitian | it ¥l Come if Tariff Bill is Enacted e token aian iDELUSIQN AND SNARE AND ABUSE OF POWER y_our manufact from abros. suvtactarers, ih bave been lowersd £o that much iess than the differen: he cost of labor at home and abr many artioles mow paying ver cale of wages to of the rates paid abroad. In m cases articles are put on the free while a protective duty is laid upon the ipaterial used in their manufac- Favors the Perjurer. Attadking the ad valorem sys es are high and con m not o keen and a lesser tax prices are lower and competition eper and much more injurtous ta the American producer and “that it bears more heavil on the honest im porter and favors the man who perjury and fra undervalue# his goods and escapes his fair share of taxation.” Most Prosperous Era in History. The elimination from the democratie Defending the exi ting, Payne- Al V asserts tha the people of Payne-Aldrich Figares. Figures are presented to show under the Payne-Aldrich tariff the tariff ad valorem rate on all imports iin 1912 was 18.58 per cent. lower tha during any year since 1850 except from 1857 to 1860, CAUSES A FATAL | SUFFRAGETTES CHASED n | AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT. | Mrs. Henry B.Warner, Wife of English Actor, Killed. - English actor who | had plent | public has tired of militancy and enly The pitoction afforded by large bodies of police saved the women from the hands of angry mobs. At Bright ras appeared parts on the A serican stage during o badly injured | automobile Merrick road in after being take; boring house. ! by howling thousands who bombarded the place with st ev on meetings in Hyde park, the wo men's @ocial and political union at tempted there. Londoners had anticipated th such attempts would be mad 2 widow of Fred Hamlin of « cne of the producers of tomary meeting plac ed the box fiag than t were a few cries of “Free speech, atones we: ruches were made Lo but a large force of mounted and foot police s mob in check. automobile Baker, a_chauffeur for York city, pas severe gus in the rame Campbell sutor burving Mr hysicians gave treatment_and then ordered died without regaining con- fractured | vas internally of the the- | VICTIM OF BLACK | HAND VENGEANCE | Inflictsd Upon iy militent Industrial Workems o Werld arriveq in Grand Junetion to night apd at_once the police. Led by Jack McDonald, Tweive Stab Wounds Italian on New York's East Side. ~While two wo- Vito Pucilatio, 3 Ded to death Dbelieved to have The crime dark passageway East Side ten- aring of the jan- | was_committed in a in the basement o ement within the litor of the house who were !in the bofler room Dy the loud cign tongue and The body | laughing of the and one of the women, speaking in English, urg- Ing her compan As the footsteps derers died away of the mur- the janitors hurried into the passageway and stumbled over | Pucflato’s body. Examination showed | had been stabbed twelve times in the face and body before a stiletto thrust haq found weapon was A semi-circular marked the in the fat Taft to Read Paper. Washington, April 20. ident Taft has accepted an invitation paper on a subject to be at the annual meet- ing_of the American Bar association at Montreal in September. tice White the United States | mession of the associatic | count Haldane, —Former Pres- to read a announced later, Chief Jus- supreme court of | preside ut_the the lord high chancel- lor of England, wiil make the annual no rose strewn path coward who cannot BY MOB AT BRIGHTON | Wouse By Which They Sought Refuge Bombarded with Missiles. London, April 20.—The suffragettes of evidence today that The the suffragettes were chased off the seplanade and took refuge in a neigh s was surrounded nes and smashed In deflance of the ban window o carry on its propagands assembled at th persons No sooner had a suffragette mount— and unfuried the militants® police interfered. Thers these wer Turf an reatening he women ‘Are vou in Russia’ irowned by hostil e thrown rounded them snd kept the No sooner had the police escorted group of women to a place of than others appeared from an- quarter. It took the police thres finally o restore order. Similar scenes were witnessed al Wimbledon and Hampstead Heath. An infernal machine was discov- ered by e policeman early this morning in_the @oor of the Yorkshire Herald office at York, The wrappings In scribed “Votes for Women” indicated its origin. INDUSTRIAL WORKERS TO BE DRIVEN FROM CITY | Posses Being “Organized at Grand Junction to Do Job Today. Stx- the " Grand Junction, Colo., April $0. caused trouble dartyr” of San Diego, they marched | 2 1o polise beadquarters where the men Jaughed at _hi€ struggles for life, | damanded food. It was denied them years old, was stab- | teday in what IS | restaurant where they enjoyed 2 plen- tful meal, for which they pay. Bixteen, of the band then went to a refused to The proprietor called the palice and { special deputies arrived at the rae taurant pefore the Industrial Work- ers of the World had left. With drawn revolvers the deputies forced payments for the dipner. The men declafed there Was no money m the party, but | nevertheless they expected to stay in jthe city for three days and be fed. { Citizens tonight are organizing posses | to drive the visttors from the city im the mornimg. THREE AUTO BANDITS % DIE BY GUILLOTINE One Gives Flash of Defiant Sarcasm Before His Execution, . Paris, April 21—The suto banaits Monier, Callemin and Soudy wers guillotined at 4.35 o’clock this morning. The execution of all three took less than four ang ome half minutes. Soudy was the first to suffer the penalty; then came Callemin, and last Monter.” All dled quietly. Monjer alons gave a last flash of deflant sarcasm. As he was pushed on the plank he crled: "Goodbye gen tlemen all and human soclety.” No untoward incident occurred, An Austro-Buigarian Combine. * London, April 20.—A Beigrado des- patch to the Dally Mail says that the existence of a secret Austro-Bulgaria. convention prowiding for reciprocal as sistance with comfiicts with Servia has been revealed through the indiscretion euhosdimara dinlamaiig.efimei (0