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7 T VOL. LVL—NO. 53 NORWICH, CONN., TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1914 The Bulletin’s Circulation in v Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and Its Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the City’s Populatlon Cabled Paragraphs THE WORST BLIZZARD SINGE (888 Alfonso Signs American Treaty. i kbt e Duin New York and Vicinity Emerging From Most Des- suiit = ™t it o . | Cardmal Kopp Seriously Iil. tructive Storm in Quarter of Century | e, S ”"’ et 2 Cardin- of the many Roman is seriously trian ‘Silesia. MANY TELEGRAPH LINES OUT OF COMMISSION | s.cons vicom o Auropiane Accident. Buenos Aires, March 2.—Lieut, Jim- " e { Lastra, who was badly injure Metropolis Still Cut Off From Communication West and| jeorge Newherry the b | d toda, South—Many “Lost” Trains Reported—Vice President Marshall a Passenger on One of Them—Ocean Linec Hungary to Withdraw from Pool Vienna, Marel ngarian Makes Roughest Trip in Sixteen Years—Losses in State. O ot T Conditions for_emi e e Unite New York, March 2—With tempera- | wind and of flood losses in cities and tures rising and fair weather prom- |towns along some of the larger river ised, New York and vicinity tonight | One man is reported mis with ex began to emerge from the storm which | barge Rose ; Towi IEhle ¥ e railroad and telegraph companles de- | company of York, whic GANGSTER REPULSED | torn from her anchorage off gale, clare has been the most destruct ve in this section of the country since the [ Point during the and MOTHER'S AFFECTIONS. | memarable blizzard of 1855, lieved with Zito Romano, the ¢ = | Reports from other cities showed on board, was either swept out Doomed to Chair, He Tells Weeping | damage caused by wind, snow, rain |Long Island sound or Woman Not to Bother Him. 2 | and to widespread. From Two Escape from Schooner. vy | on the south, to the Canadian and 1 schooner : ) S| ni, | Nova Scotian borders, the storm has | ot S \hich grounded on out istened _to general. In New England further ey ciierany, iat the first de- | « expocted from rivers and | oL from the fshma thde nim for the | Bycotien melting ice and | They had been jammed on the j ceman Wii- hed yesterday and today | o WWestbre Charles Teare fatalities were reported | Vessel struck emar Rizzo, | summer cott i v fllec Heavy Losses to Telograph Companies | of, Jale, Whore (hes 1 DO L ne * still remained cut off from tel- Ayang ity &raph communication with the west | - Fie Heilup | Providence to New York witl ; nosompany officlals sald | ™ ilapse of Drawbridge Feare aking repairs. The loss | Freed by the rains and accompa ompany e was placed at | ing warmer weather, the ice 32 for New York and vicinity. tonie, Connecticut, Norw the sericus wi ituation | rivers has begun fo ¢ t has continued f. than two | and considerable damaz days, the service of The Associated 'sourcc is feared. On I intact | po especially on t t ory af- | Saugatuck bu 1 ns normal con- | flooded or undermined @ | port a large drawbridge was orn away, so that its collapse e and Schenectady were | Derby ice jams have alreads temporarily cut off | sending the stream out of orat Sttt M hs Testeor | Doty ihamiiy Marooned, I Goethals nnection with that point was | S0 quickly did the ws ¢ tirely Competent Official. iy aronat, point was | one family found themselves magoon- | . Y from wite intereourse with the | €d in their home and had to "t worid for thirty hours. Con- | on the seeond fioor as the iload n Scheneciady were mot o | ¥ Jneo the i aute and t bargo established by (0 _be in mo im the storms was broken after o fow | SVeT. and, it was ex) = R e . S foW | freed as #oon as the waters I ; ste 3 of the state som he fallen telegraph poles which | ID the eastern end of Intermpred. Wite Sorrh Do aviioh | of tho factorles have been compeli delav trains for many hBfrs. Trains g waters c o on many roads In New k. New Jersey, Penns ia and San o Fennevivanis Talls | the temperature dur 20 resumad Sonding out tetiny oot | of the day and tonight pibr al terminal at mport- P m sura inters 1N NEW ENGLAND. erkc of the sub- Fic ds_traina sent out | . of the canal, It | b i gulrains sent 9ut| Wind Reaches Velosity of 100 miles | 5 filRenat 01 tlons B ra- | ~ an Hour at Nantucket, i signing in order to acce business | bject which had erod nim, | “Lost” Trains, m s enroute fr hich entered in So entirely exon- Shaie r New York today, altho - ey el e senrenton and | tanglea up telephone sl nia railroad. Some- | Wires. and 1 sion of \ train with Viee caused r mm Yaur was seding alowly to- | 1 fiomed by neavy rain. tonigh = tm it Jefe New Yorr Loaterd Southwestern - Ne | ca TO PREVENT OPERATION was helieved fo he mear Wilmington | the worst of the g Nantucket OF e Eab pULE Ta tonlght. An express train that lere | fcial maximum here yesterday a: f sek, it was ;;v":;‘;“w‘_q“\"'_“;_‘ Prominent British Citizens Make a 1% oie i ah }",""’“ Dhia { e an hour Pledge to That Effect. ‘the “lost Is one besr- | With all the New En r- = ing — sheds buried under ihe ; te X in years Hight © he Centr fee th s New Jersey and was suppos anticipated sho 1o De Heat HOmGETOte, B weather continue, but tor the 4l road 5 Uation had not become. critical i & N wes "0 THIRTEEN DEATHS. which Four Die From Exposure and the Lehig themseives, were in the From Other Causes. o e sterda Philadelphia, _ Mar 9 nat nsyivania ne ed here at' Pennsyivania, Delaware et vh-» wught. Todai's Federal express | New Jers gradually : to pre- had not been heard from up to a late | from the effects of the bli: ¥ e raged from early yesterday until noar- — o Provision Famine in New York, iy nightfall today. Wire communica- | THORNTFON FOR REPEAL | Tiie train deiay prevented the tion between this city and New Y i | Poitation of malie and has as well as points _on the New Jersey! OF FREE CANAL TOLLS. | elty fucing u pomible shortage coast remains préctically at nd- == | SHeat ant Rroviblnge. . A o still, hut railroad traffic to from | Louisiana Senator Ready to Récede | & threutened in parts of 1h New York has been re-established, al- from Former Attitude. @R s the snow filled str tho) ) on an uncertain scale. \ e 1 = almos: impassable after Thirteen deaths du the storm | Was ., Marcn 2./ n fall of between 12 and 1t ir were reported from this d near- | his s President Wilson's pe Pesterday morning Dby sections. Four persons died here the provision * of _th Fire Commissioner Rober from exposure and three others from anal a exempt from | the danger of a confh aecidents due to the storm. In coastwise \ipping he greatest in vear: | den, N. J.. one man dropped dead while | n, democr | alarm telegraph system he- | shoveling snow, and another was kill- ement tod: 1pted in some sections of the | w plow. Four deaths were rm | i hundred uniformed fire- om Scranton, and a young judgme e e ex-| men were assigned to patrol the un- | woman froze to death while in a| embilon clause is necessary for the protected d There were no se- | sleish near Hazelto ontinu: of our present friendly re- | Several northern New Jersey ciles| Central New Engiand Resumes. S 2 were in darkness again tonight. Jer-| ,-°, o Tl PEELC T T or Thorntc Prote Kiui Boien Sputentled s tie clty | 00T IC2 OVEL Lhe, LRSS 0f Ahe Ceniral | president:t r 8treets with lighted lanterns, prepared | o PREATS TATwar, WhICh Was nd in alarms by telephone. In T iing becas e tracks ark, schools and factories closed. | Yest of West Pafterson, N. ¥. were | AMERICAN PACE A toveral thousand men and women Were | rosumed late today, the trac CAUSE OF INSANITY. been el running ar on d and tonight tr regular schedule. Roughest of 230" Trips. e Per Cent. of Indigent Ins ane Curtailment of Train Service NEW HAVEN TO DISCONTINUE ABOUT 35 TRAINS. A MOVE FOR ECONOMY Trains Which Do Not Pay for Their Operation Will Be Affected—Reduc- ed Service to Take Effect March 15. Boston, Mar service on ‘the and Hartford beginning March 15, H. Hustis, while decl detatls of night iha and the nd h the I other @ cted. Passenger train 3 through tr: Will Retire 35 Trains. stated_that to between 6 reduction would amount s unofficially per_cent., ind 35 traix which the trains economy. The details rocommended in experts wl oen tistics to find which t for their d operation MURPHY VOTES FO! will ating retiremen This will mean fn the schedules of many make stops ew York, New Haven rliroad is to be reduced, President James ning. to give any he curtailment in operation, ston suburban ins to New stant points would the to be dropped. Recommended by Experts. 0 the R the interests to be followed are reports of otug over st Ins did not pay of NEW STATE CHAIRMAN. Lines Tammany Leader Glynn's Reorganization Plan. New York, Marcl members of the demc mittee, most of whom atlc ere Up With Thirty-three tate com- Tammany men, and Charles F. Murphy himself, today unanimously voted into effect Governor Glynn's reorsanization plan for the committ William Church Osborn, or's choice for rge M. Palm issenting vot to chairman to was elected without He also wi name a finance fore the treasurer a the govern- succeed always has heen elected by the committee. Arthur can, the pre: r, who was cc soliciting :n contributions, gned to- resignation to be effective » selection of his suc iam A. Mr. Murphy meeting betra; committeemen the close of the me platform, shook and said: Shortt of hout opposition sat silently thr ing no sign when other applauded r. Osborn, Mr. Palmer and others. ting he W hands spee h the s by At alked to with Mr, “Whenever you want me, send for me.” Ar. Osborne thanked him, but made no other response. OBITUARY. Rev. Nathaniel E. Cornwall. Bridgeport, Conn., March 2—Rev. Nathantel F. Cornwall, rector of Christ Episcopal church, of Stratford since 18: tory’ after b into a Heart trauble w: and p ad t pastorate the west, Whitman Probing Siegel w York, March 2.— Stegel of two New York which are now in the ceiver, was today additional grand jury that six nection fallurs of Haven, | meeling her Order_of Railroad < New York, New Have: firoad these General chairman, Boston; vice chafrman New York; secretar Huntington, New Ha a lifelong friend roclined on a o his 2, died suddenly tonight at the rec- returned from offi- 1e fimeral of Assessor Day- After h and fell rer awole, s given as the cause nwall came to Stratford from Cleveland | the filled several pulpits in Failure. e failure of Stores corporation, owners department stores, hands of a re- brought Charles S. Whitman witnesses were examined with the case, of a bank which suffered the firm. , March & officers were Charles W, n, Railroad Conductors Elect. 2 At t »nductors_on today before an District A It is aid the the and Hartford ., H Alleged Murderer Shot in Saloon. -treasurer, W. n. alected: Merrill, Hardy, B. St Louis, Mo, March 2—Wesley (Red) Simon, on trial here for mur- . was killed during a recess of the t before which he was being oday. Simon was shot in a sa- by the principal witness for the prosecution. Sugar Men Seek Injunction. one of them | March 2—Notice was y McAdoo today by v General Pleasant of Louisia that the supreme court will be asked | to grant a preliminary injunction to restrain the treasury department from | giving Cuban sugar a 30 cent preferential under the new tarift law. To Limit Terms of Judges. Boston, March 2.—Argument in fa vor of limiting the judges by years instead of for life was mas tenure of office appointment for a term of of | e o- en Gay by Assistant Attorney Gene Arthur E. Seagrave at a hearing gi by tue committee om constitutional | amendments. The first steamers to arrive since | s Are of Foreign Birth. Sunday mornng reached quarantine | Concrete Bridge Carried Away. = toda Tie Philadelphia of the Amer- New Haven, Conn., March 2.—A con- Was] gton L 2.—Stress and fear ne, in 28 hours late, loomed up rete bridge in the Stanley quart of n merican life quickly develop s a glass ship as she was covered | New Britain, 30 feet long and span- nt insanity amons immigrants,who from stem to stern with ice and snow. ing a stream which crosses the - | become burdens to the states in which Captain A R. Mills said the vovage | way between that city and Hariford, | they ‘one to live, according (o was the roughest of the liner's 230 | was carried away when a above | statements before the senate immis ps during the sixteen yvears past. the bridge burst late wa- ymmittee today by medical he Minnetonka came in a day iate | ter main broke under the added pres- New York, Pennsylv t Kaiser Franz Josef I, the Cin- | due to the ra d, who urged r cinnati and several other vessels many i f the pe immigra hors overdue. " The Peruvania, from Snowdrifts Six Feet High. | s Joston, arrived after losing her port| Geneva, N. Y, March 2—Geneva is| DF: Fram ecdunry l.n“ni” or v;%“!' n_"rlnr(h-«ms of chain yes-| 4, the arip of the worst snow storm ‘:‘::‘ “”“n'“‘ ta i punarbor traffic generally was inter- | Snowdrifts in many parts of the busi- u % thsita rusted. Including ' some of the ferrics | RAOF SIS, Y FASOF 0 QUL | sane i hat state were o i, he, frst time in (wenty-five vears | feraxban trolley servico is badly crip. | DIt e the Bro Pled. The mercury stands at 10 abovet. « SR ; aterfron” Thelr "erews were res- el Medical Society Expels Physician. f Gale and Rain at Halifax,. Hariford, Coun,, March 2—Dr. How- ata il oo BcsicT Halif S, March 2. Flalifax | ard F. Smith, a former police su N CONNG et heavs galo and raln | Was ionizht cxpelled from the Hartford Expected to Reach Thousands of Dol- | foday. The Cifect of the gl along | Metfoal Society, Charses, bad prevl- | sesnna e ke g been made against him that he lars—One Man Missing. e ¢ 4ave been 5| haa tmproperly prescrived drugs and | e L See a committee had recommended oxpul- In Connecticul as a Tesult of the severe | Minsterial GrisisiExpoctad: J G o SR = wind and rain storm of yesterday and| Rome, March 2.—A ministerial crisis | last might would, it was belleved to- | is expccted to occur during the pres- | Died at Age of 106. mige., o 1 jnto the thousands.|ent week, after the cabinet has ob-| Hartford, Conn. March 2.—Alr: Repoits continued to come in today | taincd a vote by parliament approving | Catherine O'Neill dled at the home ¢ from various parts of the state of | ite appropriation-bill for the hew ol | her niece tonight in the 106th year of buiddings damaged vr wrecked by the ony of Libya, Notth Africa. her g S P R Girl Freezes in Sleigh. Hazelton, Pa., March ars old, today in’ a James B: death companior went for help. where Major Ray Loses Appeal. 2 —Major Be Washington, March er M. Ray, an army p lost his_appeal compel P in_the courts here sident Wilson to nominate was found frozen eigh, wrtholdi, 1 lla Sween- to her d left her last night in the blizzard while he him for promotion to colonel because of his senic Want Wast pine ions urg to provide ity Immediate March ngton, Am nz the at the present the independence of the islands, Fire Destroys Paper Plant. Lynchburg, troyed the Va, Bedfor wi surauces March 5 pany’s mill at Big Island las h o Joss of $500,000, per and Independence. The Philip- wssentbly’ last night adopted reso- an congres session for Fire de- Pulp nit i 'Disappearance of Two Barges WERE NOT SEEN AFTER THE HAWSERS PARTED. SEARCH OF THE SOUND Tug Fails to Gain Any Missing Craft—Crews Totalled Nine Tidings of Men, Including two of New London. Providence, R. I, March 2.—F that nine lives were lost in coal laden barges Frank Pendleton and Josephus which were torn loose from the Edgar F. Luckenbach off Fire Island lightship in last night's gale were ex- jressed here tonight. The tow was ound to this ity from Norfolk. Two New London Men Aboard. Captain Partridge of t ckenbach reported to the Luckenbach Trans- wertation company, owners of the craft, that the barges were quickly swept out of sight after the hawsers varted. With the tug Kdward Luck- enbach of the same line, the Edgar F. Luckenbach searched the stormy waters of Long lsland sound all day day without hearing any news of sing boats. Both barges were faring men here were of the Condensed Telegrams | Washington Society has put the ban on the colored wig. The Plant of the Lynn Box Company in West Lynn, Mass., was destroyed by | fire yesterday. | Thomas Holt, a selectman of South Ington, has been appointed deputy dairy inspector. Philip Troup, Eider Son of the lale Alexander Troup, became postmaster of New Haven yesterday. Cerebral Hemmorrhage Sunday caused the death at Cleveland of Otto L Lelsy, 50, millionaire brewer. All Train Service over the Central New England railroad, of Dan- bury, was annulled ye Jack London, the novelist, will an nounce his candidacy for governor of “alifornia on the Socialist ticket, General Horatio C. King, well known as an orator, author and lawyer seriously ill at his home in Broklyn Fire Yesterday destroyed the four story building and stock of the Louis P. Aloe Optical company, at St. Louis Rev. Gaudentius Payden, retreat master of the Blessed Gabricl mons tery at Brighton, Mass, died yester Minnie Burke, a burlesque was fined $25 for tansolng act: on the steps of the White House in scant at- tire. To Win a Wager of $5, Louis C \WILSON READY TO ACT DECISIVELY President Intimates That United States Will Take Effective Action if Necessity Arises WILL NOT BE STAMPEDED INTO INTERVENTION | Recent Mexican Developments Combine to Create a Grave Situation, But Every Peaceful Means Will Be Used to Adjust It—England’s Attitude in Benton Case an Im- portant Factor—Carranza’s Refusal to Treat With United States in Benton Affair Adds New Complication—Villa Expresses Belief That Bauch, an American, Was As- sassinated by Personal Enemy—Other Rebels Say He Was Executed—Dead Man’s Relatives of That Opinioa. Washington, is felt March 2—President | b ny th will snow Just Wilson disclosed to those who discuss- | how £ . ritain expects repara- ed Mexlc = with him today that | tion f ¥ ¥ ng at this he fully realized the gravity of the sit- | tin uation resulting from the killing of “Drifting Into War.” William S n, subject - e oaly persons opinion that they foundered pani of Columbia, 1II, #wailowed S metiian: o v all hands. On the nk nickels. He Is in the care of a phy St sontiiin ..m, sisss dleton t Alexander Eng- | clen. e Tight of the United S ] blom Albert Clark of v | aiter (he interests of fore Maine and Arthur . Humphries and | The Third Giraffe to be born in cap. | 31K, (he inter | George Mosler of New London, Conn. | tvity came into the world yesterday | 3410 Mexteo. = : | The Josephus carried Captain Charles |at the Barnum winter quarters in |, A1€ Bresident spoke d . would not be |McIrney of Philadelphla and a crew | Bridgeport b e i ts O of four whose names are not known : = | pcwer of xvmxrr\.l i Lt Bt here, Fire of Unknown Origin yesterday | BOWeT of a country like = ih . today is- An Unlucky Tug. swept the bus dlstrict of Danville, | . "050, 0 208 SR aent wa s b The Edgar I, Luckenbach figured in | K¥~ doing > estimated at mors | pyance with the American *Hand fae- a (},(n:tn off Barnegat on December than $100,000 was being sought r za. 26 Jest, when she lost the barges Un- i H Qnunted and A. G. Ropes with eighi | An Early Spring was predicted by | Much Depends on Engl BAUCH ASSASSINATED. g Boston fishermen when thes | callers sot t1 sl vesterday that shark d i 5 3 g | president Villa Attributes Death of American Four Barges Adrift. the middle bank try every o Bl = i omn Newport, R. I, March ~—IFour 2 Wil posal to = 2 barges were Teported adritt in Long | 1 10 68;Raem Ho e iion | but that El Paso, Texas eral ordered from her patrol of Vineyard | 2 larger scale determinat a eks s the victim 26 o {heir assistance. One of the to action by = . ettt s | stations kept a watch on the craft. | 1y, ., Opera. lLitise, died yeaterday | ment could be. ex case h 3 | It was impossible to de! BBty e asis menthieilingss | c1stvely and efre clusion t er anvone was on board. Amother of | S Upon Great Liritain's atti {a e hargun N6y Al vinls o Foe Germany Has Protested against the | (ne S Ja b, @ | immigrant ships to carry a United | pecon ved. Should Ei = AN EARLY VOTE ON | States health inspector | an_inclination to let th el | — await a final i et | WOMAN SUFFRAGE.| Under a Ruling which went into ef- | 243t & final adjudic g, [ has was executed and Action by Senato on Amendmant Like- | boards of Heslth in. Massachbseie are Ry e gp L thee w lay that | Iy Within a Few Days. | placed under civil service rules R s o ge 'f"‘gi- - hf»‘ne‘_ o ted for Chihuahus. | _Washington, March 2—Action by the| Fewer Persons. Were Killed in the | {nforme i oo, T datn | apet Danch ¥ senate within a few days on the pro- | streets of New York by traffic acci- | atl * s death. | Villa declare | posed woman suffrage constitutional | dents during February than during | Carranza is Offended. SEIE i amendment Seemed |any month sinco February, 1911 | Trepresentationa have been- made to:] i e Patterac | a day of deba | General ( za, it understood. | Pho sentement i asure was mada the “unfinished | Louis W. Hill, Chairman of the board | through American Consul” Simpich at | Lo, oatem | of directors of the Great Northern ! Nogales and on their outcome depends | Sort con | ediate vote seemed imminent | railroad. will become president of the | whether the exp e ot | & gne time when thers was & Ghorus | road to succeed Cari K. Gray, resigne | Diumncd to go 1o Chi Patterson as the truth o lemands for a roll call, but Senator | ed. i asterday S e | Shafroth ana others held up the vois| ! Betar PROGRESSIVES WIN to_continue debate. Mrs. George O. Fogg, wife of an au- | Washin IN ONE MAIN TY * | ¢ Senator Shatroth's speech tn favor of | tomobile dealer was struck and killed | ever, 1a takis Bt o the amendment drew. forth hostile in- | by an express train at a crossing near | yamgerents Mayor Fowles of Auburn Re-elected | quiries from Senators Bryan and Mar- | Winchester, Mass., raiiroad station | yillg foe the with | tine. Senators Clark of Wyoming and | y erday. | sion to ¢ b | Works expressed doubt as to the pro- | - { ed by Carranz i | | priety of the fedaral government forc General James Fresman Curtis, who | B et 5 Ahe 5 " | Ing equal suftrage upon states that did | was commanding officer of the [daho | compleicd " nnid Seeretars Brvan. Ic |onty on ‘uarod the amendment should not be|d'Alene disturbances in 1593, at Bos- | Administration oficial , =ymzr ssive adopted If it was not to be enforced | ton, died Sunday In¥nat: communteating: fir - in tho southern states. Ia quotsd — L they have offended hia persopsl speeches to show that the proponents| The New Jersey Supreme Court de S Ehey Mo fo crm Y | of the amendment had cantended it | clded that Angelo Ceriells, who is e o oope to oV i | would not interfore with the “grand- | awaiting death in the state prison for | oy tonsoiing him now, imp : | father clauses” disfranchising negroes | wife murder ,is entitled to $500 1ne | oy e g o Uonalist chief incident- | 0 was | in southern states. | surance on her does mot think formalities ought to | Where Dr. A . | ¥ B | 5 stand in the w f obtaining cessful repu indidate, and at | CONGRESS THANKS clM‘.rI.pC:N,‘nf’ Dal;\hury,r\nu ppoint- protection for foreigners Lewi £’ progres. a nporary receiver of the Hawes | Great Britai ek | sives, s elected | CAPTAIN KREIBOHM.| Von Gal company and the E. J. Vor iV enit Deal SWithiCari 1y 2 1 ‘demo= 1 et Gal Hat company of Danbury by | ragta. crats ol by | To Be Presonted a Gold Watoh—Crew | Judge K. S Thon | General Carranzw’s decl choosing Philip Howard, m Tl Resso Mbtats: | lgn sovernmenis In th es were | e | Charles C. Knowles, confidential sec- | bout tie weifare ino ups: l“ ‘!W}\uvg[nn,l]l h 2.—A joint res-|retary for Hubbard Brothers & Go., | toa v Secretar e — olution wes adopted by the house to- | cotton brokers, dropped dead in Brook- | P¥ Sir Cecil Spring-Rice, B 1 | dny extending the hanks of congresa!lyn vesterday while on the way to his | &mbassador, and Senor 5o AT heARING to Captatn Paul H. Kreibohm and crew | office in Manhattan. | ambassad Bot | ON THE MODERN DANCES of the steamer Kroonland for heroic | —_— ritain Ve t & = | Bervices in rescuing 39 persons of the| Twenty-Nine Concrete Suggestions | Bavemmant Bissexciusetis’ Bill fEth Subse s | burning steamer Volturno tn the North | in tha form of bills for changes i the | I20KIng (0 the United Stat i and_Opposed. Atlantic ocean, Ootober 2-10 last, Boston city echarter were considered them In n_ Mexico, = = 75 | resolution provides that Secretary | yesterday hy the legislative commit- | SVEry in that this course will| Besten —Mc dances | Redfield_of ‘tho department of com- | tee on metropolitan sffairs, e continued, and it is clearly estab- | were denounced before o lestslative merce shall present a gold wateh to | 2 | lished that Carranza’s manoeuvre wiil | committeo toc hearing on a bill | the captain, and gold, silver and bronze| Three Children Were Burned to|10f lead ti government into | introduced by Representative L. R. to the officers, petty officers|death ,two seriously and a mun was e Sullivan of Dorely » prohibiting the | and members of the crew, | overcome by heat and renderad o = | tango, lame duck, Argentine, chicken Sinds i, | Scious when thres cotiages wera des: | Eresident Wilsor explained to cailers | fip bunny x grizzly shide, | Panama Machinery for Alaskan Road. | troved by fire in West Shreveport, La. | “d-:u'.:hfii "_'F;"?;“h e et - :‘l““ Mrs, W, Page and Mrs. ;I‘ nna | _ Washington, March 2.—Col. George | Sl cots, but that, of course, they | aiver | meaante | i ary lLane over of the | e i agsieng S e e Storm | 55t demanding Strictly speaking iy e . s oy = Eovernment r The | In New York which delayed trains and | Carranza might insist on his HEht ne; | Iiternational Associa Srrey ity of the personnel of | Prevented the arrival of scencry and | i deal with one government in the . | of Dancing Colleges, apposed it on the and the ma for the Alaska | = | undoubtedly would produce g om- | Who ol Bt railroad was considered at length. The Supreme Court yesterday refus- | piications with the United States gov. b Much of the machinery, in the judg- | ©d to review the decision of the feder- | ernment, upon which the powers. of Steamship Arrivals, t of both Secretary Lane and Col- [ 4l courts at New York, holding the ! the world have learned to look as the Gen Feb, Antonie ioethals, might be used to ad- | Waltham Watch company could not fix | nt factor in Pan-American di- | Lopez, New “'Dat ncither was fo cariain | the re-sale prices of Watches by re- | biomcy e er Tiama e i U | g §EEwT, Future Dealings With Carranza, |New Yol 5 | | g s er Colum- Stancn i irelaes: Rev. John F. Quirk, professor of phil- | _ Gene) wcknowledgment Steamers Roported by Wireless osophy at Georgetown university, will | General his_superior au- _Sable Island, March 3.—Steamer | fake up 5 Simbar DOSItion at Bose all ¢ heio : : Kroonland, Antwerp for New YOk, | comoge ona, i lontion at Bost s chief of the co D hamp Cincinnati, | signalled 600 miles east of Sandy Hook | cd Ly the recent deatn of fes. Wi | alist movement and has re o | 2 - Fgus Sdvemati ik at noon. Deck 8.30 a Wednesday. | o b, Brett * s BT ernment of the nedes. | Trieste; Minnetorka, London. riape Race, N. F., March 2.—Steam ! ; 2 ¥ sidcring that point. Here pn.u.m:p..‘..‘ | Maieh f‘—(\‘xsaredi Royal George, Avonmouth for St | - 2 General: Camames requerc. | steamer Prinz Adalbert, Hamburg, B Sl L SR \|Tx’|"1e Difficulty Between the Barre and ey o Bremen, Feh, 38.—Arrived, steamer B, ; Montpelier Street railway and its em- . UP ! Kronprinzessin Cecille, New { .50 p. m, { Dlovesitve va nd h s will also be called to | KFoRpHR: n-ceets, o i ew York, March er Ber- o > G ROurs. of 0T, cey 11 hari Gadmes e . March 2—Steamer Ber- | WONES QUCF, Waaes and hours of labor, | gecount for all harm to foreigners - Genoa Tor New York, stgmalled |iicoiince by both sides of ihe de. | identaily, General Vill's defer- Mexican Bandits Rob Fexans. | m. Wednesa cision of a board of arbitrators. | e constitutionalists was told in « | Austin Texag, Maveh 2.—An urgent | s = 7 2 o pea] for TeXas ramgers at Lyford | A Modification of an Act known as | Message from American C Letch- | appea for C | Accused of Giving False Testimony. |the “Bar and Bottle™ bill which for | er. If cleared up some of the points | and other pointsalong the horder near | _Chicago, Mar bids the sale of liquor in bottles over | i the mystery which for a time sur- | Brownsville w celved today by [ansen e e | 2 bar, was urged yesterday by severe) | Tounded the halting of the investigat- | Governor €olquitt from residents there. Aot F 22 g hquur. el s b“furl‘:» e = eral ling committee yesterday. | They allege th Mexican bandils cross } suit brought by chusetts legislative committee. 1t was | W hile fundament 8 Carransats | SO EIg Grand, stesl cattle of commit bellboy, against Clarence S claimed that drunkenness had ll‘tl‘l‘fi;L i m i tat W ;" peye the dep | pthoc gapragations &t :nl:ht' 'h(—rt e tional Harvester company, asking $25,- kol plained that the receipt of instructions | Colquitt has nol o % 000 damages for the alicnation of Mrs. | Women Teachers in the public | I fgnte dopRromeat 1 iavons —— Henning's affections, went to the jury | schools at Meriden are all stirred up | A0 ot the ‘commission 1y phibi's Watecbury Boy Drowned, e | S ey has been sent out | permit to board the regular passenger | Waterbury, Conn., March 2—While = e ki Rt U, S | Sy r Chihuahua controllied by the | foo! 01 e bank of the Mad river | Elks Must Pay Taxes. ing ‘each for/s BEIAE histayiof hiero | p, o Coibuahua controlied by the [Eooltetpmithe hank of Thy Mal - Boston, March The full bench of | Self, including the age. The teacher No Special Train Available. own age, George Barry, § years old, the supréme court ruled today that al- | take objection to the question of age P 8 i 2 toppled intq the Taging torrent and Cigueh =iy Shanbania funoilous s &85 =¥ ey millietose lnsemen ) o i dosomolaty: s imh it hai was cartied downstream before any as- f_f‘r(onnod by the Boston lodge of the S e isston fo tale @ special train. bat |t | sistance could be rendered. The bods | Benevolent and Proteetive Order of il Arrest Church Disturbers. | {iSSion 10 © "Uvas | of the chIld had ‘not~hech recovered Elks, it maintains a club for the social| New ¥ March TR L A S . Sousn: | at-midnight. entifled to exemption from | = \; u!.u ez "t the p e 10| Thl L exchange Crew of Thirteen Pecishes. it | arrest hereafter a tators making | of m. General Vi at| Cuxhaven, Germany, March 2—Fhir- Last Day for Income Tax Returns. | attempts to hoid up church serelone | ey B oriers QA Come | o nEmbeiy A e et ot e R ‘Washington, Ma —This was the | The action is due to the b not to pernti mmi: to take | wegian bark Tasman perished toda. Inati ity for the of tcome tax | the unemployed on the old First Pres- | the regaiar train «dy [in the: North sea when the patk caj eturns, but » mt of { byteri; lower Fifth avenue: | en rec m | sized. The news of the disaster x"a‘k number of Individuals who are to pay | the Catho reh of the Transfig- | poning tie ed here tonight. when a fishing steam- he tax mor estimate of what the na- | uration, e Second Avenue Bap-| r Edward Grey's expe s er ca into rt i g fibn wiil collect from them, will be | tst jo o Kt Sl ana g | ment. 3 So of commons i oF (he Easmanth Crem: Chsouks Bars Labor-Templey availabie-for at-deast 48 hourar | asvaited nere swith-muich. {nfcrest s i whommavived” the wae 3