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NORWICH, CONN. MONDAY, MAY 26, 1913 The Bulietin’s Circulation In Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and Its Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proporiien to the City's Population ; i PROTESTS BY EASTERN CONNECTICUT Hopkins & Allen Arms Co. and Aspinook Company Remonstrate Against Tariff Bill MYSTIC MANUFACTURING CO. ALSO PROTESTS Over 132,000 Connecticut Wage-Earners Represented in Protests Received by Senator McLean—Wallingford Concern Will Have to Compete With Six-Cents-a-Day Labor of China—Brief From Connecticut Manufacturers ) | venir cards saying they cannot com- pete with Germany in the manufac- ture of these cards without some pro- S | tection.| : | Deep River Manufacturers Object. The iv manufacturers of Deep River claim that no country in the world places a_tax on ivory tusks and to place a duty on them of 20 per cent. will put them out of busin The n pufacturers of snap !fns‘\‘;vcrs volved. have filed a brief in which they deny e the testimony of S. Busch & Co. given o0 | before the w 1 me: commit- e tee in which they asked for a reduc- S5 | tion of the duty on fasteners “as there are no articles of th kind manufac- tureqg in t country, and therefore competition with an American pro- hundre from Connecticut ysed by him in ding tarift 3 3 1 urers, em 1oing $74.021 dug 8 1 o em- | _As a matter of fact, the brief sa §7.706 dnh proite W& S | {hese articles have been manufac- & and producing $65.595.- | {,10q by the Waterbury Button Co., " . 5017 | of Waterbury, the Traut & Hine Mfs. w2 o smploying 3,217 | (3, "of New Britain and tbe Ball & : : Sk, stanity- Mfg. Co. of West Cheshire. 8, an ng $1,508,0 | Wages in Connecticut and Germany. ng 27.623- | For the information of the com- 3 mittee a schedule of the wages paid ny and the wages paid in | t in like branches of manu- 4 facture, is appended Than, i 1008, i Germany. Conn. t the frax foreman on into in ey 300 BB die makers, .13 1-2 39 1-2 10 08 for " pres ,on presse Packing girls Protests fram Eastern Connecticut. in the | Other Connecticut manufacturers hin they were under | Who have filed protests are: The Broad ' | Brook Co., of Broad Brook: the Mys- tic Mfg. Co. of Mystic; the Somers- Protestants. ville Mfg. Co. of Somersville; George wxd Co. af Con- |l. Cheney, of Deep River; Ensign - pee sched- | Biekford Co.. of Simsbury: New Ha- H. Dexter & Sons, Tomstock, Ferry & od- | ven Clock Co.; C | of Windsor Lock - towns in (hn’fln, of Wethersfield: the Connecticut . Tobacco assocfation: the Rattan Mfg. Hartford, | Co., of New Haven; M. Swift & Sons, of horse- |of Hartford; Herne Mifg. Co, of nd the| Bridgeport; the American Tube and s on the | Stamping Co. of Bridgeport; the New wnufactur- | Department Co., of Bristol; The. Hop- | kins & Allen Arms Co., of Norwich; | the Corbin Screw Co. of New Br ; Sessions Clock Co., Forestville; | Gilbert Clock Co., Winsted; the Amer- ican Buckle Co. st Haven; Stan- . n dard Mfg. Co. of Torrington; Lenox riford, protest | Shear Co. of Brookfleld: Landers, . en t laced | Frery & Clark, of New Britain: As- ds, here »n the | pinook Co., of Jewett City; Warren- r ton Woolen Co.,_ of Torrington; Ru: etition wi ; sell Mfg. Co. of Dethel; Stamford Mfs. Pafition Wit e Co.; The Underwood Typewriter Co. agford. file { o¢ 'Hartford; the Stanley W cents Per | Now Britain: Yale and Town Co s iey claim | gtamford; The Union Metalic Ca g 2 urers in the { {;igze Co,, of Bridgeport, and the Win- - not feel that| cpesior Co., of New Haven. with Chinese labor | but 6 cents per day | Protestg to Be Filed Today. an average of $1.50 | TUnder the rules adopted by the r | must be filed with the proper sub- Gravure Co. protest | committees by mnext Tuesday. This i tor McLean will do on Monday. n of posteard sou OF JCAQUIN MILLER AMONG FLAMES. | eremony Car Out According to| Harry Stone, a Weaver, Run Down by Freight at Rockville. | TRAIN DECAPITATES A WOONSOCKET MAN. Dead Poet’s Desire. i ¢| Rockville, Conn., May 25—The body of the | of the decapitated man found alons the railroad tracks at Vernon Saturday s funées that had | morning was ldentified today as that e s own hands. | of Harry Stone, aged 35, a weaver, of 8 se Miller | Woonsocket, R. L. ‘ ihe pic- | ldentification was made by his brother, David Stone, assistant chief the Woonsocket Fire department. wncis- | & < Swhicn | The body was taken to Woonsocket for ’- than 500 | burial widow | Stone worked in a mill at Broad! av old- | Brook, and it is presumed he was run yver by a freight early Saturday morn- i mpres- ing. ance with Mil- e et s o ; the snclu- TO RAISE BEEF SUPPLY. o pyr | Kansas Will Provide Cattle for State sh. “is noi an Penitentiary and Reformatory. W ere not to mo he | Topeka, Ks, May 25.—As its an- 4 n Milier, but to rejoice | swer to the high cost of beef, the &~ s still lives.” | State of Kansas is going inio the stocl splied a torch to | business at the Leavenworth penitent zzots on the pvre. As the|iary and the Hutchinson reformatory. n pward ho took the copper | The State board of correction has au- et's ashes had heen | thorized the purchased of several car- i Zave 5 the fire. In- | loads of cattle and 250 head of goats sus wind whipped the | for feeding on the pasture at the State h d bore them ' benitentiary, at Leavenworth. Good dairy herds are already main- —_— t2ined at both institutions, bu FORTY VICTIMS OF time in the histor. an effort has been made to NEVADA'S DISASTER. | jceep up a supply of good beef cattle for butchering r the prison and re- Tws Score Drowned When Steamer | formatory tabies. tines in Smyrna Harbor. 5 WORKING HOURS REDUCED, Pfister & Vogel Leather Co. Antici: pates Tariff Law Chang Milvaukee, Wis, May 25—In order to be on the safe side in case the tariff law passes in jts present shape, Smyrna, May Shipping is com- | the Piister & Vogel Leather Company, iralvzed In these waters on | ihe largest in the world, has taken he recent accidents due 1o | SeDs to protect itself by reducing the 1o companies have warned | WOTKing hours from ten to eight per ik aws ay in its Menomines plant. This exhel afrad to affects 600 men. e ¢ The company has been working on v practically a twenty-two hours a day schedulea ten-hour and a_ twelve- hour shift, but the night shift has The anthort- [been clinfnated, The company did search fur | not desire Lo discharge any of jis men aged 19, son of Mr. |and istituted the elght-hour day in le Howard Hawkins, wh order to keep the®men employed, seen sipee’ last Friday %A after was last seen In a local | Japanese Emperor Now Normal. garage. where he wegt tosescape the | rokie, May 26—The condition of rain siorm. He had only & 8mall | mmperor Yoshinite was o fovapsbis amount of change with him When B | Sunday that he recetved in audienes left b several stute officials,” The bulleting == | fssued by the attending physiciang will Plainville William A. Cassidy has | probably be suspended in view of the been named as supreme alternat steady improvement, The bulletin this onvention of Foresiers to be | morning indicated normal conditions, ria TO AVERT A STRIKE road He will begin hearings tomor moring, The good offices of the de- | o partment were called into play by a {j 80C0 B SHS session, - he joint request to Secretary Wilson Haven. agreement between the New Haven al Manager Bard. and agreement to meet all committees by a big ms onized. a time, but arbitration was finally agreed upon. Jjiton, aged 86, of Weno, Nev., had one of the most remarkable escapes from death in an aeroplane accident today ever seen on the aviation field here. Hamilton was trying out a new type of monoplane the framework of which is built of iron tubing. debris, was picked up in a dazed con- dition and {aken to the Nassau hos- pital, where it was found that he had a ba chin and chest and. numerous con- tusions. Fe probably will recover. |BOY OF FOURTEEN 5ot MIDDLETOWN CLOTHING Eearly Sunday Morning Fire Attribut- T =k for the retentl finance committee all of these protests | clock this morning did $15,000 damage = Rifiaan. | S 2 the clothing store of the Bartan s 1 Shies Clothing company in Main street. The |[Amazons, for the police are now look- | fighting 1s illegal un d | Ing for a fourteen year old boy, who | of Caneda. v o g . el ey on to the charge against Pelkey other charges would be placed against Tommy Burns as promoter, 1d_Smith enlisted in the campaign of destrie. | Of Chicago as referee and Billy tion because his s | Carney, manager for McCarty. These, {E s mohenid sieier lad | however, are not expected for aome! > soon surpassed | time- all his feminine competitors in post- origin is not known, but 2 some to defective electric light |18 said to have left a trail of desctruc- | 2ddi whose name | police, b wiring. The | second floos | discovered. The loss is covered by in- surance. CUT GLASS FACTORY DESTROYED BY FIRE. | box raid glass factory of Wel officials inclin fire was of inc inv Derby, Conn, May Charles Ed- | ward Clark, one of the city’s most | prominent and highly respected eciti- | vears old he entered the employment of the Birmingham National bank and gradually rose from the ranks to be- come_ vice-president ~pd cashier. e |land are disposed of. | was also president of the Home Trust | soon remove to some State fn America | company, ‘the Star Pin company, the | where women enioy the franchise and | DIVORCE FOR WIFE OF Birmingham Water company and di- | £ 4his is |rector In a numbe of the |tlons, city of Derby |rated in 1394 toinette Randolph Phelps, well known | oromimentiy: fGentined ™ yoiarities. and | qigeovery of a plot agiinst the life of Socleties, died here today, aged 75 | President Yuan Civente Gomez has |Soiltan, Glasgow for Montreal, ) ip s Dersons | nalled 100 miles east at 11 a. m. According to Jatest Information from aCracas the intention was to kill tho president on May Her father, Dr. G. R, Phelps, was on of the founders of the Connecticut | 4ie8ed to be implicated. Cutual Insurance _company. Miss | (1% Phelps was a member of (he Daughe ters of tho American Revolutfon and the Colonlal Dames, glary, thought to be professionals, to< nlght entered the houses of Percival 8, Btoddard and Howarq I, White, within a few blocks of each other in Maple street and carried away jewelry valued at $806, Mr, Stoddard sut. | Tammany's impending fats except Mr, {fered the most, his Jewelry feing | Murphy and his Tammany braves-— valued at 3600, In each case entranse | New York Herald, was effected through rewr windows, while no one was home, . Thers are no elues, Uantic City. Ar, Cassidy It | The {emperature was 98,75, pulse 12, treasuwicr oi Court General Lawion, respiration 22 ] Cabied Paragraphs | Bogspyelt Suit / Student Aviator Dies of Injuries. Berlin, May 25—The flving = pupil, Dietrich, who was badly injured while traveling as a passenger on a biplane which_collided with a monoplane at the Johannistral aerodrome on May 14, died yesterday. s A $200,000,000 Loan for France. Paris, May 24—The draft of a bill authorizing the French government to borrow approximately $200,000,000 for years in order to meet military expenses was submitted To the cabinet vesterday by Charles Dumont, minister of finance, and approved. Prince Weds Princess. Berlin, May 25.—Princess Vietoria Luise of Prussia, only daughter of the German emperor and empress, and Prince Ernest August of Cumberland Were married with the rites of the Lutheran church at 5 o'clock last even- ing in the Royal chapel of the Impe- castle, the ceremony sealing the | reconciliation between the house of | Hanover and the hopse of Hohenzol- lern. OF RAILROAD CLERKS. Acting Commissioner of Labor to|for punitiv $10,000. Eight Challenges Allowed. 5—C. W. W. F sioner of labor tistics of the department of labol left tonight for New Haven, Conn.. where he will make an effort to settle the strike of the clerks on the N York, New Haven and Hartford hington, Ma weting somm the clerks and President of the HAD VOTED TO STRIKE. Manager Refused to Recognize Conces. cessions Granted by Predecessor. New Haven, Conn., May 25—The dis- arose when Gener- ofused (o recog- nize concessions that had been grant- ed the clerks by the road previous to the time he became general manager. These concessions overtime work, an increase in wages road and its clerk of the cl The clerk unle striking v A strike seemed imminent for MIRACULOUS ESCAPE OF AVIATOR HAMILTON. Bruises by 100 Foot Fall. Mineola, L. I, May 25-—George Ham- Hamilton who was pinned under the d sc: p cnt on the p wound ,a d ed to Defective Wiring. Middleown, C re, which started on the well under way when | Incendiary Blaze at Millville, Conn., |vouthfdl raider Causes Loss of $9,000. | nirfety g £ | were his specialt Naugatuck, Conn., May 25—The cut |1 ter OBITUARY. ' Chicles Edward Clark of Derby. zens, died at his home this morning after a brief iliness of pneumonia. was born here in 1850. When sixteen | aid fo be'of gpéat | | Ha | of other organiz He had been treasurer of the nce it was in Hartford, Conn., May 25 —DMiss~ An- Ready For Trial MARQUETTE, MICH,, PUBLISHER, | PUGILIST MWCARTY'S HEART THE DEFENDANT. ASKS $10,000 DAMAGES Action Based on Assertion That Colonel Not Infrequently Gets Drunk—Roosevelt as First Witness. tomorrow afternoon the sc: be weighed in the c} | cuit court of Marquette county the editorial assertion George o'clock | of justice will with blished Theodore un- | - Mich,, who is to pres ed hére today. opinion that, as only four of the chal- leng jury box might be filled before night. The judge said that as women scldom frequent court they would have a They would | cau ts and | on his feet for half a minute. The left s followed by Pelkey with nt to’the heart reglon which aused the spectators to believe the latter blow had brought the knockout. Pelkey Charged With Manslaughtef. re of the opinion that the for the occupy the spac bench and the railing. Roosevelt May ze First Witness, Colonel Roosevelt will probably the firsi witness put on the stand. At- | the dislocation of the neck was not torney Pound, chief of counsel for the | sustained in the fall which followed. e | He fell slowly and did not strike his Tables | to the jaw er men 8 ween the judicial lawyers and plaintiff, arrived here would not divulge his plan but it be- | head. came known that the colonel is like- Arthur Pelgey, ly to testify at onee. his statement the plaintiff is expected to call for all he evidence in the han This will open the way By the nature of of the defense, eneral manaEer |for the intorduction gf the mass ncluded RO ames [evidence gathered by the plaintifr, May Speak Memorial No social programme has been pré- took a strike vote and [pared for Colonel ority_vote in favore of |though doubtless he will be asked te s their rights were rec- lmake an address on Memorial day. ROOSEVELT ON WAY, Was Joined at Chicago by Three His Witnesses. Roosevelt here, al- Chicago, May 25—Colonel Roosevelt | McCar Suffers Only Scalp Wound, Cuts and |reached Chicago from four o'clock this afternoon and mained until 6.30 when he left for Mar- The former presijent spent the time fiere in a visit to the animal house in Lincoln park. He was | accompanied by naturalist with on the African tri New York quette, Edmund Heller, the Roosevelt party the , former secrota of the interior, joined Colonel Roose- When about 100 feet in the air the [ YeNtS party at Cliveland this morning. monoplane turned turtle without an instant’s warning and crashed to the ground before a large ngmber of spectators. Frank Tyree, United States marshall for West Virginia, and formerly the United Sf Dboarded the t ree was President Roosevelt's bod: Robert Bacon, service, in in Toledo. guard. tary of state, All three are to testify Roosevelt. 2 former secre- joined the party here. Colonel AIDED MILITANTS | STORE DAMAGED $15,000 | Said To Have Set Fire To Ninety | Totg | Letter-boxes. London, May Richmond chemist, who conspiring with suffragettes in an arson campaign, is | supporter of the | Edwry Clayton, the May 25—Fire at five { With militant | not the only tion behind. has not been legrned by the Dbee were is said to have fired -boxes but he is also be hi ved to have nd Briggman | Lime to the destruction of golf greens, | none, howev situated in MiHville, about two miles | Because he was not suspected, the boy | lllegal. The case of Pelkey will not be from here, was totally destroyed by | Was able to raid boxes in the neighbor fire\ early this morning. = The factory | hoo o the theory that the | eScaped ndiary origin and an |have some difficulty stigation is under way. The loss | DOV, is about $5,000, covered Jt is thought the facto built. s where a woman could not may locating the his will be re. | the plea that he accomplished | auite enough his militant relativ: WEALTHY WIiDOW TO QUIT ENGLAND. To Locate in Some State Here Where | SMith- Women Have the Vote. London, Ma; widow, | has de- | clared, according to a friend, who not permitted to give the lady's name | unit her property en of the United States. that she will never st o ngland until the vote is | g po- | granted here to women on exactly the thongh a republican | same terms as the in politics, ha was cndorsed for-many | vears by the democrats for the posi- | will educate them in Ame: | tion of treasurer. | 5 He is survived by a widow, one | daughter and two sons. The funerar | Co or ACY AGAINST | arrangements have not been complet- ed. Miss Antoinette Randolph Pheips, |ATrests of Eighty Percons Alleged to Implicated. The lady I VENEZUELAN PRESIDENT |a 3 ~ Mass., in 1906. The plaintiff was given $30 a week alimony and the custody | Willemstad, Curacao, May 25—The led to the arrest of eighty move- Dislocated Neck FOUND TO BE SOUND. Calgary, Alberta, May 25. Heart Found to Be Sound. was found to) be sound, blood In the brain alded in of | the physicians that death was not due ar- | to the blow near the heart. the : Blow Sent Head Back Quickly. the S [ter the contest began yes the jaw which sent his head cly. It did not apbe d any pain and he w be | Physician McCarty manslaughter in police court Monday. The Royal Northw sary pape against him. Pelkey Taken Into Custody. was announce Pelkey had sl mobile, It hed and as not until he of | took him inte custo ‘s bedy will Wiil Put Lid on Boxing: located outside the city limits Carty was st; of 3 supposed that Pelkey could bhim a chance with McCarty. Spinal Cord Ruptured. i » | morrow. plLegssd | Promoters to Be Prosecuted. In discussing the case tonight ths own prosecutor sw'%zd that ail prize far enough ady ‘o | blows. It was said unofficial | that as soon as the responsib | MccCart: Arena Burned to Ground. is key, was burned to the ground | | night. children and she Reno, Nev, May 25—Charging | sertion” and ‘mon-support Mrs. Harry N. Atwood was granted a divorce ves- | |36 ator, They were married at I of a little girl, five years old. Caledonta, New York. New Haven Burglars Get Jewels, | M¢nt in Venezuola aro current but the | geandinayian, Montreal, New Haven, Conn, May 23 newspapers and tee citizens are cau- Bur- | tiously avolding open discussion of the | o (itani, Menireal, situation. Southumpiop, May 25-—Arrived: Nobody Cares Now, Ansonia—Invitations are out for (he | resident o wedding of Miss Mav Duane of Mid- | heart disease hgre Kfidlr, as he alight- A —- dletown and Dr, Cluude V, Flaherty of | ed frem his antemebile California’ stale govermment for | Hartford Tuesdny, June 3, the mext twe vears will comt taxpayers $20.657,733, ’ Bteamsyr Oveanfe, New Yoric. L, Judson, carpenter colors was swallowed by a black snake on a farm at Rocl cause of Death detective to New York to assist in running @own the Black Handers. Princess Luise and Prince Ernest of Cumberland total RESULT OF AN AUTOPSY tenant of one of his buildings for $3t Dislocation Not Due to a Fall, as Mc- Carty Did Not Strike Head—Pelkey Held on Charge of Manslaughter. A dislo- s cated neck caused the death yesterday - | of Luther McCarty during his fight With Arthur Pelkey, according to in- formation given out tonight following an autopsy conducted by Dr. Moshier Roosevelt “get drunk and that no in- [at the request of Coroner Costello. on one side, and the lat- tion that the charge i true and libelous and the proper basis damages in It was stated by the physicians that of | death undoubtedly had been caused by diglocated neck and that the heart A clot of onvineing McCarty received a sharp jab r to have afterward opponent in the ring at the Burns arena vester- day afternoon, will face a charge of t mount- ot | ed poljce today completed the neces- s in the charge placed Just before the death of McCarty , it developed today, ped into his street clothes at the request of his trainers and was taken to his hotel in an auto- resseéd that he learned of Carty’s death. He had started from the hotel when officers arrived and be shipped to at | his birthplace at Hastings, Neb, Moa- re- | day night. The fatal ending Wwill have the ef- fect of putting the lid down tight on boxing contests in western Cana Tommy Burns succeeded for just one year in running bouts at his arena Betting on yesterday's contest was lively at two to one against Pelkey holding out for ten rounds, while Mc- ight five to one favorite for the decision. It was not generally enough science in three weeks to give Shortly before miduight tonight, and after the second examination had been made, the result of the autopsy held last night also was made known. The physicians stated the investigation showed that McCarty died as the re- sult of the blow to the jaw, which dis- located his neck, causing a rupture of the spinal cord and a hemorrhage of the spine. The medical evidence will be produced at the formal inquest to- er the statutes timated that in Several Police Attended Contest. A peculiar situation confronts the | the | authorities because of the fact the bout was held outside the city, that it was under tbe jurisdiction of | the mounted police and that several | police officials attended the contest, protesting that it was nced to be tried at the assizes now sitting and if he answered will come up in October at the earliest. Pelkey to Meset “Gunboat” Smith. : PRl it \Pelkey showed a great deal of im- v_insurance, | family to desist from the campaign on | provement over former appearances. { In the brief contest he exhibited better judgment of distance than his oppo- nent and also put more steam into his | s death has been placed Pel- ey will go south to meet “Gunboat” Ty, Alebrta, May- 25.—Tommy | prizefight arena. in which Lu- | | ther McCarty was killed vesterday aft- | ernoon in the fight with Arthur Pel- AVIATOR HARRY ATWOOD. Atwood to Receive Alimony of | $30 a Week and Gustody of Child. | mistake ay from Harry N. - Atwood, Steamers Reported by Wireless. Cape Race, N. F., May 25—Steamer Sable Island, May 25—Steamer Can- adian, Tiverpool for Boston, signalled = 400 miles from Boston light at 5 a7 m, 5 at the horse races at Par- Movile, May 26—Arrived: Steamer aigo, a guburb of Caraca: Rumory of a revolutlonary ers Carmania, Liverpool Glasgow, May 5--Arrived: Steamer Plymouth, May 26—Arrived: Steam- Noples, Moy Zo—Arrived: Steamer Byerybody seems to be worrying oyer | Carpathia, New Yerk, Dropped Dead Aftor Auto Trip, Hleomdsid, Conn,, May 28—Frank Aged 59, a weH lkpown # Bristol, dropped dead of afier n ride D, Wlaher | with his two sons, Heart disense wag ty iy u graduate of (he Ansonia High | the eunse of denih, He was a retired school and of Yals Medical schook Condensed Teiegrams An Iron Rabbit Painted in natural ford, Pa. King Victor Emmanuel Has sent a The Wedding Gifts Received by ,000,000 in value. Vincent Astor Filed a Suit in the supreme court, PBrooklyn. against ‘a rent. Miss Vinnie Colt, a Runaway Girl, vas killed and her body was partly qten by, bears, about miles from Truckee; Cal. The Northern Presbyterian Assem- bly, in session in Atlanta; refusea to amend its constitution so that women may become deacons. J. B. Webb, of Lombard, Ill.,, after five vears' work, has traced his fam- ily back to 1330 revealing ten thou- sand ancestors and relatives. Frederick T. Moore, who abscond- ed from the National Bank of com- merce of Boston 14 yvears ago with $53,000 died in Valparaiso. Chile. Army Surgeons Who Have Succeed- ed in minimizing typhoid in the mil- itary establishment have been equally successful in eliminating malaria as a military disease. The Uniteq States Penitentiary at Leayenworth, Kansas, will be com- pletely reorganized by Attorney Gen- 2l McReynolds, as the result of a recent investigation, Physicians at the Cincinnati Hospi- tal are working day and night to pre- serve the life of James Moye: a railroad employe, who is slowly hic- coughgag himself to death. Hoping to Minimize 1 aviators who compete at Chicago, the Aero club of Iliinois h arranged for the establishment of a bureau for testing parts of aeroplanes. cldents to Joseph Ellarly Was Jailed Satur- day on charges of havinz shot and killed Oliver Ayotte, at Hermansville, Mich. Ellarly asserts that Ayotte was intimate with Mrs. Kilarly. Nat €. Goodwin, the Actor, was mar- ried at Los Angeles Saturday fo fifth time. The bride was Miss Mar- jorie Moreland, leading woman in Goodwin's latest stage venture, First Naturalization Papers have been granted by the United States dis- trict court at San Francisco to a Hindu, Dalta Kkumar who is a na- tive of India and a missionary. Seth Lucas, a Farmer, has confes that he murdered his' wife with a billy,” poured kerosene over the bed- ding and set fire to #is home near Willlamsburg, Ind.. last September. od Announcement Was Made Saturday. that the Bigelow Carpet company at Lowell, Mass., would not resume work again until June 2. No particular reason was offered for the lay-off. The Police Censor of Providence, R. I has forbidden the exhibition of the motion pictures of Hawthorne's Scarlet Letter, charging the pictures were obnoxious and disrespectful to ministers, The Body of Mrs. Elmer Chubb who disappeared from her home, at Hard- vick, Vt. was found in the Lamoille river Saturday. It is believed that Mrs. Chubb. threw herself in the stream during a fit of despondency. H. Meutch. of Chicage, who killed his three children ter he had been injured in a street car accident, is suing the company for $75,000 dam- ages, alieging that his hurts made him criminally insane. The Race Question was put squarely up to Postmaster General Burleson Saturday in a petition signed by more | than 8,000 railway mail clerks urging | the segregation of white and negro employes in the service. Despendent Because His Barber business was failing and the sheriff | was about to sell him out, Frederjck chimmel and his wife of Philadel- phia Saturday ended their lives and that of their five-year-old daughter by inhaling gas. of art, pictures, books and antiques of the late J. Pierpont Morgan will be exempt from the stafe inheritance tax provided the collection is turned over “to a_ municipal corporation of the state for educational y heirs within two years. rposes by the | James Connally, One of the negroes held in connection with the murder of 14-year-old Mary Phagan, at Atlanta, Ga., Saturday was alleged to have admitted that he wrote the notes found beside the dead girl's body. for Leo M. Frank, also a prisomer in t case. Frank L. Snow, a Past Grand rep- resentative to the sovereign grand lodge of the Odd Fellows and ten years ago grand patriarch of theg rand en- ago grand patriarch of the grand en- ped dead at Brunswick, Me atus day “while taking orders in cery business. PIER DISASTER VICTIMS TOTAL 36 Two Aged Women and Girl Succumbed to Injuries Yesterday---Two- More Deaths Expected The Valuable Collection of Works After Suffering All Night with pains | In his abdomen, W. L. McCutcheon, a | Chicago automobile salesman, 22 yea of age, was horrified to discover Sa arday that he had taken three one- | graln bichioride of mercury tablets by | or a headache remedy.. | Aftor Several Houre' Discussion the | executive commitice of the republican | nation: committee Saturday tenta- | tivelr agreeq to call a meeting of the national committee sixty days after the adjournment of the extra session of congress, to determine whether a national convention shall be called to consider changes in basis of repre- sentation. - k-~ Steamship Arrivals, New York, May 25—Arrived: Steam- Cameronfa’, Glasgow; St Paul, Bouthampton; Lapland, Antwerp; America, Genos, | astnet, May 25.—Steamer, Manre- tania, Néw Yori for Itvorpool, mig- nalled 884 miles weat at 5 p, m. Dus Fishguard 8 p, m, Monda: Mam Head, May . Blgnalled, ll.ll.l'nnl' Corsican, Montreal for Liver- pool. Brow Head, May 25.—Signalled, steamers Minneapolls, New York for London; Bcouas, Montreal for Len- on, Hartford.—Charles Wells Gross was recently elected a member of the boar of park commissioners for u periad of ften vears to muecced his father, Charies 1, Gross, who has besn member of the beard for 17 yeurs, with an interval . ND JURY TO PLACE THE RESPONSIBILITY Section of Pier Which Collapsed Said to Have Been in State of Decay—Supports Subjected to Tremendous Pressure at Time of Catastrophe—Suits For $1,000,000 Threaten- ed—City Attorney Declares City Not Legally Responsible Long Beach, Cal, May 25—Prospec- were placed on guard thiy tive damage suits uggregating proba- | morning over the ruined section of the bly $§1,000,000 or more and a grand Brey were Instvucted to. keatt jury investigation ended the attention constantly, in 12-hour shifts of city officialy tonight as the most | until relieved by the grand jury, and imminent outcome of the disaster ves- | to allow no tampering with apy part terday when 35 persons lost their lives | of the structure that collapsed and in the collapse of a_portion of the | dropped several hundred mertymalen municipal pier just after the close of | down a funnei of jagged timbers and the British Empire day pageant. , boards to the strand within a few feet Three Deaths Yesterday. of the ocean tides. Several hroken The list of Gead, which numbered 33 | tmbers which are ‘expected to_ show last night, was added to by the deaths | fhe general condition of the pier, and of Mrs. E. C. Bush, 70 vears old, of | {hus aid in developing evidence of neg- Long Beach, and Mrs. M. P. McDonald, | 1i§ence, if there be any, were taken out n aged woman of Compton, Cal,, who | of the r today and locked up under succumbed to (heir injuries this after- | officlal seal. noon. The list is expected to be fur- [ Tremendous Strain on Supports. ther Increased before tomorrow by the The weakness of the pler, which was death of Miss Marguerite Reed, aged | built eight years ago, and never res 2, of Long Beach, whose back was | paired in that particular portion, is be- broken, and of William Cooper, Pasa- | [leyved to have been due to decay e of the two veterans of the [ caused by the action of salt air on san war who were in the van of | wood and its iron fastenings and sup- Empire day ports. However, it was declared that Miss 1 Wyv died at her | g much stronger structure might have Los Angeles today. Her | heen wrecked in the same circum- was among thise instantly | tances as the participants in the big parade marchcd upon the pler In step. But One Man Killed. Military ‘men pointed out “that ths Rectification of errors made yester- | rhythmle vibration created by the day in the Iist of dead brought out the | IeAsured tread of thousands of feet following names: | cau dous strain op Miss Frances Harriet Newell, Keno- | gupports, which alrendy nhad _besn s, Sotlte Gates, Oak_Park, TIL thronged about the auditorium doors Miss Lilly M. Holme, Denver, Col. | &walting admittance, el o Turies T Elee Claims City is Not Liable. B, MeDonsa; C 4 The grand jury investigation was Mrs M. P. McDonald, Compton; Cal | qemandsa by the officers of the unitel Py ph e Uil | societies of British-horn residents and s body remained unidentified until | SoGeRes o UCICCNCPT Theiend SO0 late today, as well as that of his Wife. | Victoria’s birthday annfversary was Aot iln. | - - interrupted by the accident. City At- it 4 torney Long answercd reports of the To Fix the Responsibility. prospective damage suits with the While City Attorney Stephen Long | statement that in his opinion the city wag 1'with the legal phase of | could not be held responsible for the dis: h today, Mayor | deaths and injuries because no charges . Hatch, members of the city coun- | had been made by the city for the use 1 and of the board of public WOTKS | of the municipal amusements property. conferred with District Attorney John | Use of the pier and auditorium had Fredericks with reference 1o the | heen given without cost and the cele- grand jory inquiry which will be| prators, he said, had used it at their started either on or just before tho | gwn risk. coroner’s inquiry 'l'lll'F'(Ll_ The {nvhx]‘f-‘t( About 65 Sericusly Injured. of e inGu is to fix responsibility for the condition of the pies, & section | ATl -but the most seriously injured of which in front of the municipal\au- | were removed to their homes in Los ditorium went down under a weight of | Angeles and nelghboring citles today. human beings which has been estl-| The total number of injured prob- mated at less than 750 tons. ably never will be known accurately. On the order of the district attorney = About 65, however, were seriously hurt, ANOTHER SUNDAY AUTOMOBILE CRASHED RUMPUS IN LONDON | INTO PLAINVILLE TREE Anti-Suffragettes Cause Riot at| New Britain Merchant Escapes with “Votes for Women” Demonstration. Slight Injuries—Autos Collide. 5V i <, i inville, Conn.. May 25—M. Ra= mi“fl.’,‘:’y" ;E:‘n W L\il:‘\(:r&‘-:nrfifflnu‘\?;)) Hfl; 5 New Britain merchant, had o e des unionists and | a escape from serious injury g oy e e s "dom. | this afternoon when he lost control of socjalists atiempted to hold em.- | this’ afte L when he lost. contzol' of onstration ‘in_support of _ voies for | the automoblle he was driving. snd O O thex were elaborately | Raphael was thrown out, but escaped e i with flags, | The crowd | with slight injuries. The machine wag stormed a truck o Whicl rere S | P dothorserious nccident was ard ankhurst and othel ant suf- | 4 us @ n « fragottes and dragged it outside the 2:?3“:;!\’?';&1 l:“«l\'(:lv\‘"."!;rtfikl;’;\ul}l\;\,fi(fii{ Mounted and foot police by repeated | town manufacturer, collided with & charges finally drove the {-de away m:(’hi’nn u\\'n‘m.]‘l..\ (‘b.sl'ly;’\\‘-;Lder\‘{ Women and men fainted in the crusijwi OD?' nm‘ne could m" m-hlnp"w;rg and children were trampled upon. | one was hurt but the m Many of the women had their cloth- | considerably damaged. ing nearly torn off. There were in- S it numerable free fights and the ambu-| . §. MAIL POUCH ance corps were kept busy. e eoeiuts paraded with thefr colors. FISHED FROM SOUND standard bearers wearing re - — : e e Phis was ihe cause of | Believed to have Dropped from Train more disorder. The mob tore the dec- Whils Crossing Drawbridge. orations from the platforms and car- ried away the flags as souvenirs Stamford, Conn., May 25—While fish~ On Saturday suffragettes attempted |jng off Stamford Light, three miles to blow up Wheatley hall,‘at Doncas- | from shore today, two fishermen hook- ter, owned by Sir Wililiam Cooke. The { g g United States mail pouch, filled place was unoccupied. An unmexpioded [ ({(iin' newspapers. The papers wera bomb and suffrage literature were | Joaved to o pulp. They bore the date found under a staircase. of May 7. The pouch was brought prR— —— to police headquarters and the post office department has been notifled. ¢ BUSINESS SLOWING is thought tho pouch dropped from a DOWN IN THE WEST.|train while crossing the drawbridge at - _— Cos Cob. Mefluence of Tariff Revision—Less Optimism Among Bankers. Qu | ¢ 25— Si i In the twelfth century London e« Chicago, May 25—Signs point more | joyed football. Fitz-Stephen, clerk to gleastyito =, slowing dewy h:‘ ] Thomas a-Becket, tells how after din- as the spring prosresses. Such indi- [ TROmAS a-Beekel, tells Mow efter din- cations are present in lines of trade dress themselves” to football Thess which a few weeks ago seemed to be sportsmen were fastidlous in their completely ignoring the influence of | way, The scholars of each school had tariff revision and other retarding fac- a 6."" peculiar to themselves, as had tors in the business situation. Dis- | & fioy Tecltiar 1§ MCweees, - tinetly less optimism cxists among | Bre sathers of the Bayacs oo etas bankers in the west regarding the out- | ugg’ youthful as the voungest For. look, and the wave of optimism which | uheir natural heat seeming to be re< has held the east in its grip for S0me | vived at (ho slght of co much agilitve weeks has swept through his center.|they sprang from their stands into At the same time, the crop situation iS) (he arena. In later days, too, the ex< {almost ideal, and this fac Lor canuot | citement of the game has been knowmn be entirely ignored at a time when | (o {ntect. the sseetate o mabe gt other infliences seem so potent d | wrote of a game In 1508 “These two depressing. Of course, the underlying|men were Ikilled by Ould Gunter. Gun= factor in the present situation is the | ters sonnes end se Cregaries fell to low bank reserves which the comb- | gather by ve years at foorball. Ould troller's abstract rather clearly de- | Gunter drewo hls dagger and broks fines. boothe thelr heades, and they dlad Chicago bankers are not = satlsfied | honthe within a fortnight aftar.” with the situation, especially in view | As long ago as the relgn of Rdward of conditions abroad, and even those|JTi, the hunger strilo waw known in who werr optimistic & few weeks ago | Finglnnd, Ceoolln, wifo of John de are now inclined to believe that there | Rygeway, was in 1357 confined in Not- must be considerably more liquidation | tingham fafl on a ohargo of murdar- in order to put the banks in shape to| ing her hand, and there, -:rd- finance ‘the harvest of what now |ing to the old records, she ahstained promises to be a bountiful crop. Nat- | from meat and drink for forty days, urally bankers are not satisfied to en- | Which being reported to the king, he ter the crop moving period with Te- | was “moved by piety, and tor the glory serves for all the natiomal banks | of God and the Blessed Virgin to grant showing a purplus smaller than that|fhe weman s pardon” The reaords which has been frequently reported | sey nothing of her guilt or {nnecence, by the assoclated banks of New York | nor do they threw any light on fours alone. v teenth cenlury jdeas of forcible feeds Ic s with some degres of satiafac- | img, tion that bunkers are noting a reac- ho remariablo racognition of ton in busines:, as through this re- | Christianity by the new Chinese gove Retion, together with the liquidation | ernment is the most striling stage in, in sedurity markets which has beem|B Btory which hes covered o under way for some time, they expect | milenmim and a haif, For Chel; - to rebuild thelr resctves and put| ity first reached China nearly a cen- themselyes in Khaps to meet the mu. | tury befors Auguasiine la on- the . tumn’ requirements without a mevers {1810 of Thanet, Noi from Hurope, gweln, The fact that business is ofc \ ‘oring practically no resistance to this —RavY, Sffort At a reduetion’ of loan 18 reas: | des rater of Gt Pusbe suring and. may wvold (he experionce of raiher dwatic and forced lguida- tion, which ususfly hecomes of a chas- acter net pleasant to contemplaie ,