Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 5, 1917, Page 1

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_____~ NORWICH, ! c PRICE TWO CENTS The rts of co ending Mareh 1 3,908 ton: FIVE FIREMEN KILLED HOAX PLAYED ON MEMBERS OF IN DETROIT YESTERDAY| THE HOUSE Were Caught Under Mass of Timber ——— * Led by Senator La Follette and Encouraged by Chair-| oo s “aeareh o rive are . BREFINL, SIL ADVANCE 2ibs00000 "ot or o unnists | Declares a Little Group of Wilful Men Have Renderc: .of Foreign Relations Committee R T T T o ik ot ameouariin i iionds; G- | G- tin REporth the Binking of i Aist | Watter . e ow York, “ il ; man Stone ! eigl ‘ 5 w:‘f:: e L T e s 95 R R N g o e | et M‘:’-‘.“? oF New York, was the Government Temporarily Helpless 1 3 downtown business / e Tt ke Injurea| Belief That She Was Miss Jeann-| the Largest Vessel Yot Sent to the DEFIED WILL OF AN OVERWHELMING MAJORITY |xo giueny sncer s mass of Gmbsr| mette Rankin of Montana. Sold coin to the amount of $100,000 t ury lower floors of one of the buildings T ammittm Tor” shipment to Spam. TO REQUEST A CHANGE IN RULES OF PROCEDURE collapsed within thirty minutes after « the fire started shortly before 2 a.m.| Waskington, March 4—A hoax play- | Again the. British have advanced | Naw Yok Kerago wne 40 the leading 4 ¥ 2 . Two firemen were thrown from a|éd on members of the house and the |their.front on the right and left 26 Unyielding Through Twenty-six Hours of Continuous Debate latter %o the sldewalk from e third saileries in the In the Somme and Ancre reciing 5% |37 10 38 cents & gallon, Opposition of One or Two Senators Has Blocked Many lssues . loor.. e are n lex France. n left flank east of i 2 President 5 B T T A o o'y kg | st Gold coin to the amaunt of $600,000 & 3 . in What Was Denounced by Wilson's Spokes- | Coskiurn thres sivemen ‘and ' nd- aging, Svirine, apd, fpsech okind [ commsous e compunt pive 80w LA S| That Are of Vital Necessity—Declares Rule s Werens - The two:bulldings were occupled by | It ail centered about interest that |average depth of 1,200 yards wenil or shipment to Japan. 3 men as One of the Most Reprehensible Filibusters in the [ e Fela Clork and Supply company | Miss Jeancit Raniin, of Montana, the | the right Rank. east of Bochoe o 2 2 - . That Permits a Small Group of Men to Overcome a: N F and the R H. Fyfe Shos Sompaey. o Arst womar over elected to the Unil- |an attack gave the British terrain on| Fire destroyed n”;'"n.w";'d"'e."“"’ ' 3 ivil 1 e crash came ithout warni , | e es congress, wi ‘e her front of 1.200 a ree -story icl otel at rdner, . ab S o - - History of Any Civilized Nation—La Follette Was Anger- carmying down fwenty Aremen " of |saat fn i Aex house m'bmt,:fi: o Eonaine 1 ae) LuE, 113 prisondue. 2 e n At & loss OF $75.000. Overwhelming Majority—President Wilson Will Pro 2 om gt out unhurt. |pec here today, bu not [Heavy casualties were inflicted on the 2 4 o When Senator Hitchcock Refused to Yield the Floor | [eutn Coosbumas shis o Sirce |8 250 Moe, Soores, WV mbmgnds | Germnce i sever sounter stUske. | Empegor Chtarite_ sopelnted Ganors | pose to the Special Session of the Senate, Called to Meet " e 2 German Retreat Not Strategi ‘ount Karl Huyn governor of Galicia, [im # i risonment £ B ‘befc ‘his [ Pennsylvania, received thunderous egic. 3 i to Him in the Closing Hours, Hitchcock Talking Till|prisonment for an mour befors his|Pennsyivania. recetved the thunderous| .. " 0ot ceding of sround . by | °PI2cing General von Diler. Today, That They Revise the Rules “to Supply the = . ly-lix n% reaching m.i holplh.led i :a.% Bk:mundl ph;; n; rokh flmflt E”u;\fi :;.g.’.":fl;fll ;n: a:":oni :*'a“:rl s:mm: Exports from Colombo, Ceylon, to Suty-fmflh Congress Expired—Seven Senators, e monetary loss cause y fire | dreds of persons who shook hands ‘ed out |the United States in 1 eans i om Di 4 and water was $350,000. her in an impromptu reception which |for strategic positions but of neces- |at §38.857 80 u mews mih nerord Ued M of Action and Save the Country From Disaster. i McLean, Signed a Manifesto she held following anmouncement | sity. according to a staff correspondent 5 Including Brandegee TWO COACHES OF EXPRESS from the _fleor of the presence of Aiss |of ke Associated Frees "X Vsl to| Semator Page introduced = bill nu- o e Rankin wen thorizing th ait, 5 Proclaiming That They Favored Passage of the Measure. DERAILED AT COS COB |rea] identity. Eoyl 5% thesBeitian had . torn X wip for the purchase of Hoekaway Folnt. whioington, | March | 4 Presiient] sbtiitiis tmpression malle &l : 4 2 country, be that It is Hot 80 = = No One Was Hurt, But Many of the Hoax Was Prearranged. es and searched out thoroughly the| A dozen New York detecti lett | in a statement, that he may be with- | other governments may act ; Passengers Became Hysterical. Representative Britten of Nlinois, by | ETound on wide area benind the Ger. |for Washington Saturday to assiat the | Ut Power to arm merchant ships and [ please withaut fear that this & i jon to 5 pre-arrangement rs. Edmonds, | man , where many hundreds of|capital police during the ina: e e other steps to meet the German | ment can do anything at all. We w"}.’g":'fl‘sm D | e A e, ] Btameoed, Conn., Conn. Marchi 4| perpretrated the hoax. Half an hour | dead were fater found. e i . RUER submarine menace, in the absence of | not explain. The explanation 1 Bemator Stons. demo- | ing vainly for'a chance to eiiver & | TWo day coaches of an express train lufter Speaker Clark had adjourned the | In the Meuse district the Germans sthority from conress. credible. A - of the forelgn rela- | speech on which he had worked many |on the New York, New IHaven and |session and the voices of members and |north of Eix in an attack preceded by| During February the United States e S rowiion ol icousTeas, the Tha genate of the TRIES cratic chairman e O e eenieor. the doomsed | Hartford railroad, bound from visitors had began to show signs of (a heavy bombardment succeeded in|mints 'colned 31528624, Of this| President sayw, s required io clothe | the only lesislative body in & I legisiation inflict the death blow which | York to Boston. were derailed as the | throatiness, owing to the fervor in |entering French trenches. but were amount $10,014 was McKinley me. | AIm With authority, but it is usc which cannot act when its majority 16 piatined. train was crossing the bridge over the which they had sung the high notes of | driven out in a counter-attack. Reci- |morial dollar: 2 cal qne. while the schate Work ready for action. A little groy Mianus river at Cos Cob today. The|“Dixie” and the low notes of “The Old [procal bombardments, espegially se- der ‘the present rules which perm: wilful inen, represcntiiiy NS Hitohoock Forestalled LaFolletts. |Xfiont 2 o . a ¢ 1} SIREICy e S s s d led cars when the train was stop- | Oaken Bucket,” Britten passed word | vere east of the Meuse in Whe Bois| A special federal grand jury was | $Mall minority to keep an overwhelm- | but their own, have rendered the Instead of La Follette, Senator | eq brought up against the guard rails|to Representative Gallivan of Massa- | Caurleres sector have taken place. |asked for to make an investisation io. | INg majority from actins. government of the United States today and denied to the president | Hitchcock, leader of the majority in|at the side of the bridge, which prob- |chusetts that Miss Rankin was in the | Austrians Storm Italian Pasitions. |to alleged frauds in Chicago at ths |, Ihe President proposes, therefore, | less and contemptible. Jow authorizing him to arm American | f2V0r of the Dill, talked out the wan-|aphy prevented them from falling in-|chamber. Gallivan sprang to the top . _|1ast national election that the special session of the senate| “The remedy? There is but merchant ships fo meet the German | IDE hours of the session. Timing his|{; the river. No one was injured but|of a table in front of the Speakers| Along the Russian front and in Ru- e which he has called to mcet tomor- | remedy. The only remedy is that e opportunity to the minute, Senator La | 1o the SVEL, 00 One Fas e O | orana, Sannounced that the first con |Mania no important fighting is taking| | eanard Ames, former president of | FOW. revise the rules ~to supply the | rules of the senate shall be so A1t oS Follette entered the senate chamber | ploy ”y votorioal at the narrow es- |gresswoman. was present and named |Place. In the Austro-Italian theatre.|ne ames Iron Works. ot New Torn | means of action and save the country | that It can act. The coantry cs 28 Hours of Continuous Session. shortly after 9 o'clock this morning [ 22na™ 0 3" vome fainted. Representative Britten fo escort her |2n Austrian attemp to storm Italian (\Jio ‘died on June 23 1916, lett an se. | (Tom disaster.” relied upon to draw the moral Unylelding _throughout twenty-six | prepared to take the center of the < 7 i e AR 5 positions east of Gorizia was frustrat- 7 g lieve that the senate cam be relied Stage for the last act of the trazedy. |, The Work of clearing wp the trmck|to the front ed, according to Rome. Minor infantry | ate Valued at $761,139. Wilful Obstruction. | to supply the means of action When the moment he had chosen ar- |15 PPoCoering FoR BEL BUy the WreCT ng Tremendous Applause. operations and artillery duels continue| Miss Bessie M. Coulthard, of Pater- | ;2 [ittle &roup of wilful men, says| gave the country from disaster.” rived he addressed the chair, but Sen- followed on the other sectors of this front. the president in his statement, “rep- r} storm. The cause of the derailment| Tremendous applause follows as son, N. J., won a verdict of $4,500 from 4 Old Law in the Way. ator Hitchcock prevented his recogni- | Ftorm. The cause of the (oraliment| s Edamonds, who was in a mem- Russians Keep Up .Offensive. Hdwar® M. Applegate, of Passach, N.| oo ok Do obinion but thelr own | At the/same timie the prelieds i have rend reat governme tion. Whs Tonning about 25 miles an hour, |bers seat, waiked down towards the | <yith the important town of Ham- |J. for breach of promise. e B e 1d con. | thorized the further statement th tion since the Civil war, La Follette Struggle Seldom Equalled. 3 B e A S idatis the Ereotin e e > e bridge is one of those under |Speaker. Acknow! ng BTeeting | agan already in their possession the ' it e and his small gro ‘support - & mptible what rendered the situation even i =¥ n..somyw:aosaux eollentnes | semic, Oeusic strugele Which fnsuSd |suard by members of the Ninth com- [With a bow, she said In atrons. clear | Russians are keeping up their offen.| Rudolph S. Brauer was appointed| ‘“The president's statement i full| Erave than had been supposed an ty to vote on the armed | tne mis 7 the senate.. Volces were:| Pon% C- G., of Stamford. G R to make my|SiVe asainst the Turks iIn Persia.|by the postmaster-general as division | ollows: the discovery that, while the presi Beutaiity DI and It fiod with the | e Ty O e A er | fote "wre| Fommer Presidest Wiliam H. Taft} -My ffiends 1 prefer t0 Eighty miles northeast of Hamadan |Superintendent of the raflway mail| ' “The termination of the Jast session | Under his general constitutional sixty-fourth congress at noon. ahaken -at the presiding officer. while | 725 & Passenger on the train. o Beea ol i i it they have captured the villages of | service, with headquarters at St. Paul. | of the sixty.fourth comsress by cons| ers could do much of what he & Played Part Wi Eijar and ‘Khanikali. stitutional Wmitation discloses a sit- | asked the congress to empower hin Senators Signed ifesto. I ked . o g n..oi'.?mn"‘.'."m ine | on Breatnlossis: But e mciaent soon | AUTO STRUCK TELEGRAPH Bowing again, che sst dawn. The| The loss of a torpedo boat destroy-| The American stemmship 4 A |uation unparalleied in the history of | do. it had been found that there gomntey, esventy-six senators, thirty | Boee], N omator Hiaicock and La POLE NEAR DANBURY |ecens which followed was SaMterins fo | Beillsn admicalty: ~The- vessel went|for Mantanzas, Cuba' west 'sshiors.) the Bietors oF anb modém Rovern phBbich may Taise msuperabie prit ‘and forty-six democrats | Fecognized Senator Hitcl b | Miss Rankin. Frem every of 2 £3 helf & mile south of Bodis Telan 'y any odém ~ govern 4 ment. In_the immediate presence of it e snd Bar sulio his ey ‘worl that iwwored passag ~ i children—the floor being open to fam_ a crisis fraught with more subtle and 1 0 by the pr i = Foga i passage of | SV closing moments of the session the Machine Was Wrecked. e e e over 15| _Berlin. in a statement regarding ves- 2 = far-reaching possibilitics of national | ident was adopted by congress i s dociaration, embodies in the | were tense and impressive. Ten min- y, C ~Sarch 4. Three|&rest the ‘congresswoman” Without |sels sunk by submarines mentions the| Harrison W. Craver resigned as Ii- | danger than anv other the government| and referred to the resisiance rortis declaration, embodies in Ihe| Wies befors the end. Semator Hitch. | Danbury, Conn. Mareh 4 Thres|EISel, i @ tten of embarrassment, | 9nking in the Mediterrancan of an (brarian of the Camesie Library and|fhas known within the whole history | American merchantmen asainet fact m:.‘ e n.g"’ Thuraday night | cock had mad his last appeal for un- | MER Were severew _'dl‘{.r; oA *t | Mrs. Bamonds began shaking hands, |2rmed transport steamer of 34,494 ton will become chief librarian for _the| of ifs international relations, the con- | attacks of privateers and pirates m.u-:afl:. oliae Il By & vote of | animous consent for a vote on the |DiSht on the Danbuty-Rifsefeld road) Lin cmiles and thanks. It is added that some of the troops|United Engineering Society in New |‘gress has heen unable to act either to | exeluded from vessels which might senate rule permitting unlimited de- | braska senator, prefacing his CIosing |, 5 rcq were Charles Decker, the|the Speaker's stand and the galleries |70 FPOv 070w, Sok o The House rejected with a vote of | Mora than 500 of the 531 members of | States and submarines are ‘“pis licans hcock and La - Y ‘part of the| british S manifesto proclaiming to the | Follette's opportunity was snatched | Three Men Were Severely Injured and |chamber, members and their wives and | {7¥(0 10 ?‘:u‘;"gfl: :;:e_ nd is believed | Pate emall majority oppor remarks with a portion of President ; el e v submar B e o mea. | Wilaon's Sddress to congress asking | ariver, Thoaiss Coitne - S e e ave. Mcekor "of | . A cabinet crigls has arisen in China |200 to 192 the Senate bill retiring fed_ | the two houses were rendy and anxlous | armed Vessels” of Germany. Jority. / for the authority about to be denfed, |Dursy, all of this eitv. = The men|JR 200, 7ang his little band of singers |OWINE to the president having refused | *fal Judges more than 70 years of age | to act, the house of rcpresentativesi The president’s statement follo The text of the manifesto follows: | solemnly said: mat e R T rors t0 huold coliision with |in the middle of the floor attracted lit- T2 Aprows the Uactalon OF the cabitiet PO IATe wenod 0k s (bengh 19 bad acted bvias overwhelming ma- 8 conference at the White Hotse nifesto. “It is unfortunate an o g . ds slip- as ina shoul ollow the Tnited 4 jority but e senate was unable to Mr. ison, 2 'cAdoo, o Text of a 3 that twelve men In the senate of the |SD approaching car steered to the side SRl e g g B B B S - fority, Dut the senate whs Mnable o | mastac-gunetal Barison,. Comm ““The majority of United States sen- | United States have it in their power | f the road = iis car went into a Had a Jolly Day. many. ips Andover Academy students | tors had determined that it should | M. House, Vance C. McCormick have voted unanimously to accept the | uot. chairman of the democratic faculty ploposal of military training No Limit to Debate. committee, ana Secretary Tumult ators favored the passage of the sen- | to defeat the will of 75 or 80 mem- ate bill authorizing the president of | hers by one of the most reprehensible Decker is believed to be injured in-| Old attaches of the house said the CAPITAL CROWDED FOR mited States to arm American E rec Totorsternally. The other two were thrown |jollification today outdid any they had as a substitute for compulsory ath-| |, : T¢ will be motea that ihe presiie B rchant yesasin, s similar DI have | o e Tiviesd countays 0 "' through the Windshield and bady cut Witneased in many years. It lesied| INAUGURATION CEREMONIES.[ietice e e ox eoumht 1o an | reterret. folithe IopPu it LN ing already passed the house by & _ - |ana bruisea. more than an hour, cbate can e limited or brousht o an | Containing eleven seistors whereas Vote of 403 to 13. Under the rules of L'a;:'"m“:c:c:;‘p:'u::":;";: B As Speaker Clarics gavel dropped | They Are to Be as Simple as Circum-| By a vote of 46 to 26 the Senate| end. no rulcs by which ilatory tac; | who had opportunity ' to do s fuk the senate allowing unlimited debate, R prompt] . mem| encns Wl Porot adopted a committee amendment to 3 % anifesto. ~Senator he naval bill authorizing establishment | Single member can stand in the way | rose did not sign but sald he wo e words echoed throush the chamber. La Pha Tho preas gaileries wiio, peeviousty 3 B o e e e $250 A HUNDRED POUNDS L o OF & second navy yerd on San Francis. | of action if he have but the physical [ have voted fog. the armed neutes @ vote previous to noon March 4, 1917, | Foilette glared toward the Nebraskan, had been supplied with bpok of old o ided that perhaps he : ¥ - | Washington, March 4.—Tonight, the endurance. The result in this case y ‘Deen' ‘ot ‘the record to establish the fact that words. cepted Proposal of Manufacturers. |Charles Linthicum, wife of Represent_ |lave come from the four quarters of| yhe New York Senate passed the | \€Sislative —and of the —executive| eliminated also Senator Stone | the semate favored the legislation and| “You are perfectly safe” La Follette ative Linthicum of Maryland, rose in [the nation for the quadrennial event,|gage bill, which creates the Hospital | branches of the government list because Stone announced M ould pass it If @ vote could be ob- |Tetarned. without rising from bis chair.| Washington, March 4.—The federal|the gallery and unfurled a huge silken [ Was a-tiptoe in anticipation of tomor- | heleioprient Commission, named to Ti F P Need posed the bill but did not oppose tained” < “No one can answer you.” trade commission accepted today & |flag, one end of which was gathered |TOW'S demonstration =~ Although the | dopt a general plan of hospital de- ime of Pressing Need. L% Thirteen Declined to Sign. No one did, for the hour of noon had | proposal by news print parer manu- up by Mrs. Champ Clark, wife of the jinaugural was planned under the pres-|yelopment. “This inability of the senate to act| o e st nec- has rendered 'some of the mo rtoin: Senad struck and the Sixty-fourth congress |facturers that it fix a price for their |Speaker. A storm of applause follow- |ident's direction to be as simple as the o b one of thati, Senn. | 7S ended. 5 product and named $2.50 a hundred |ed. - gircumstances would permit, it will not| geate Excise Commissioner Herbert | essary legislation of the session im- OATH OF OFFICE YESTERDA e e Fepublican, of Pennsyiva-| Befors the manifSsto was presented |pounds as a reasonable charge. Higher | ~[n another part of the gallery, Mrs.|be difficult in general character from|s “Sissions has named Clarence W.| posible: at a time when the need for e a A mia, nnoumoed that Me would have |[many democratic and republican lead- | prices were set for paper in less than |Leona Sherwood, a daughter of Rep- <R e 1. fter he | Davidson, of Cooperstown, as second | It was most pressing and most evi-|g, .0y jhouguration Ceremenies W voted for the bill had opportunity been | érS Worked unceasingly to prevent in- |carload lots and for sheet paper. Tesentative Shewood sang “The Star| As customary, the pres devfit a lerme deputy in his office, succeeding Ernest | dent. The bill which would have per- (s forded nim. The twelve who. went | evitable defeat of the bill. Semators Spangled Banner.” Mrs.David Kinche- (has taken the oath and delivered his|nVan Wie. mitted such combinations of capiti ake Place Today. on record with the thirteen members | Simmons, Pomerone, Hardwick _and loe, wife of Representative Kincheloe |Inaugural address on an open air stand and of organization in the export and of the house against granting to Pres- | other democrats joined with republican | of them aware of the coup about to be | of Kentucky, whistled “Dixie” with | before the capitol, will ride back to| Joseph A. Mulholland the fourth man | Import trade of the country as fhe| Washington March 4 Preside {dent Wilson the authority he asked |Semators Lodge, Borah, Brandegee,|gprung, hurried in with confident |help from the crowd. “How Dry Iam,” |the White House at the head of the|convicted of the murder of Mrs. Aus_ | circumstances of international compe- | Wilson took oath of office for his s from congress : Sutherland, Smoot and others to reach | smiles to enjoy the spectacle cf seeing |sung particularly feelng by “wets” who | Parade of many thousands, including|tinuy Nichols was sentenced to die in [ tition have made imperative—a billfond term at noon today In his roon = I8 Iha Qeluts wers o comiprimmiee eIt SHttand OF Hie TOr § o e e e | were 5o overwhelinmegly defeated in the | the distinguished of the land, military | the electric chair during the week be- | which the business judzmeht of the |the capitol and will be formaily The Obstructive Senators. oign relations committee and the pro-|Ta Follette, sensing the ruling, raised |last congress, followed. and naval organizations and a lons |ginning April 9. . Whole country approved and demand- |augurated tomorrow with public Republicans — Clapp, Minnesota; | ;ssive republican group. v ilcn et (5 wiiolci art e = line of delegations of private citizens. ed—has failed monies reflecting a great national e Cummins, Iowa; Gronna, North Da- i ing his forefinger menacingly at Sena- Patriotic Outburst. Then he will review the marchers from | <The House adopted a m “The opposition of one or two sen- |pression of Americanism. kota; Kenyon, Iowa; La Foliette, Wis- Hope Abandoned at Midnight. tor_Saulsbury, shouted: The timely arrival of a body of |2 Stand before the White House|tending the life of the Fe ators has made it impossible to in-| Before a desk piled with executive consin; Norris, Nebraska; Works, Cal-| Several times they had reason to| "y will continue on the floor until I|New York National guardsmen in uni- | 57QuUnds. Insurance Burean until September, | crease the membership of the Inter-|business laid befors him in the clos ifornia-—1. hope for some result, but after mid- | ouoees SOUATES PR Te B0k T e on the. floor created a patriotic| One feature, however, will reflect di- | 1918, and appropriating an additional | state Commerce Commission or to give |hours of congress, and murroun ary for | by members of bils official family, the Democrats—Kirby, - Arkansas; Iene, ! night they virtually abandoned the rectly the gravity of the international | 15,000,000 for 1ts use. it altered organization nec 1 body carries me off the floor. and I |outburst. $15,000,000 Oregon; O'Gormas, New York; Stone, |fight and prepared the manifesto to | X%, LU Tee the man to do i situation.” Down Pennsylvania av- its effciency. The conservation bill [president reaffigned with uplif Missourt; Vardaman, Missiasiy; record the real sentiment of the senate | "pegore La Folletts coul complete enue the parade will pass between| Resolution pledging the spuport of | which should have released for imme- | hand and grave features, his prow Associated with them in oy ion | on the subject. After abandoning hope | 4,4 sentence Senator Robinson leaped | PLOT TO INVOLVE lines of national guardsmen, chosen |the Legislature to President Wilson in | diate use the mineral resources which |to uphold the eonstitution in to the armed neutrality bill were the |'the defeated senators determined 0|4, 1ic foet and stamped down the| JAPS AND MEXICO REDICULOUS |from the New York regiments forming |his effort “to protect American lives | are still locked up in-the public lands, |ever crisis may confront fhe natis following represertatives who voted|make Senator La Follette pay for his | lue on the democratic side. shouting a military barrier on either side of the | ang Amerfean honor” were adopted | now that their release is more imper- |in the momentous four years hefo against the house il Thursday nisht: | coup by sacrificing the crowning fruits | S nde ‘that his point. of order bely T Sl = z line of march. Not since Lincoln’s!unanimously by the Massachusetts | atively necessary than ever and the| After he had repeated solemniy Republicans—Eenedict, Cailfornia; | of his viotory. During the early morn- | coB2ItE, T80 Bp, POTRL o0 OFeer be Japan Times Alludes to German'Con-|gsecond inauguration during the Civil | Senate. bill which would have made the un-|oath taken first by Washington & ce Cary, Wisconsin; Coopsr, Wiscon ing hours they worked out the plan t0 | sorced to his seat. 5 spiracy as “Proof of Diseased Men- | war have troops been stationed to keep —_ usual water power of the country im- |tury and a quarter ago, he knssed Dayis, Minnesota: Holgeson, North|prevent him from delivering his ad- | ™ Sepator Saulsbiry promptly sustain-| tality.” 7 spectators back from an inaugural pa- | Dr. Thos. F. Finnegan deputy com- | mediately available for industry have|Bible at the passage reading Dakota: Lindoergh, inmessta; Nel-|grogs to the senate. The plan was rade. missioner of education of New York | both failed, though they have been un “The Lord i8 our refugp; a we son, Wisconstn; Stafford, Wisconsin: | mage quietly in the: cloak rocme and |55 prommely sepesics fomn bis s | Toldo, March 4 945 p. m.—In the| Tonight the president had not com: |State, was, elected president of = the | Aer consideration throughout the ses- [present hejp in time of trouble ‘Wilson, Ilifnoie—% . the time was fixed for 10 o’clock this comment on the piot to involve Mexico | Pleted his inaugural address. - superintendency division the Na. | sions of two congresses and have been | Chief Justice White administe Demoorate—Decioi, Miesouri; Sha- | moming, when most of the semators | Snetor, Robinten aulckly moved to | ooy, o (s urt Sieh the © Umited tional Education Association at Kan- | twice passed by the house of repre-|the oath and was the first to exte Rerweod, i ;mu-‘:r be hckmln the chamber ready |patable motion—and there the coup | States, the Japan Times alludes to the | CHINESE FAVOR BREAKING sas City. sentatives. his * ;flngrfll;“‘ugnn; Wringing € for adjournment. against German conspiracy as “proof of . — iati 5 president’s hand, the chief Jjustics Soclalist—London, Néw York—1. La Follatts Fresh.and Eager. It-r::‘f:’l st :flnd‘ cased mentality.” but thinis 1t wii| OFF RELATIONS WITH GERMANY | A¢ his own request, Col. Chas. H. AEFOEISen, for riny. Rutied looked fervently into his fact for Those Who Signed Manifesto. i st gh N, 6%, ¥.| , “The appropriations for the army 1t and Sl b okt La. Foliette, looking fresh and sager, | “The ayes and moes,” shouted Sen- | Sianity in- Amotean. amass ‘il |But the President Refuses to Approve Z‘;;“R&?S"afl?’;.f.’.":fl'r’um?u.:. 2g | bave failed, alonk with the appropria: O3, President, T am very, very ha gotered the chamber whilo Senator |etor Ashurst. His mame heads the Het | doubts and suspicions of Japan which, the Cabinet’s Action. Was the second senior regimental com. | tions for ihe civil estabiishment of |y . y lain, ~Chilton, Owen was speaking. He did not ap- |ang always starts the roll call. however unfounded, it says, they were mander in the state, with headquarters | the sovernment, the appropriations for ™ jfembers of the cabinet then crow Hitehoook, Hollis, Hughes, Husting, |P°Ar to be aware that the democrats| w“Ashurst” called the clerk, while La |unable altogether to free themseiveq| Peking, March 4—The cabinet to- [at Binghamton. the military academy at West Point,|oq up with expressions of regard. 3 Sames, . Johneon (South Dakotay, | mere ready for ‘him.- When Senator | rollette frantically appeaied for the | from, owing t6 contiaual poiconig " |day decided that China should join the % i and the general deficiency Dill. It has | 3510, reveivad them with & smille s Za Fooe: Lewis. Martin (Vie. | Owen started to take his seat both | recognition which he saw was doomed. | | caimoriabes conanual poisoning Dnited. States in breaking off reln.| Swedish Ministor Ekengren inform_| Proved impossible to extend the pow- | JTISOR Teoeived them wich & smile s Einiay; Martine: (New Jersey): Mey_ | =iichcock apd Le Follotte addressed| Ashurst responded With a roaring |ses as clear as the sun that German|Hons with Germany. This “decision |ed the State Department that he|ove of the shipping bourd to meet the | ooty hia interrupted tasic ers, Newlands, Qyerman, Owen, Phe- | 1N Chair. lusbury, presid- % intrigue is at the bottom of all the|W2s submitted to the president, who|would protest to the British govern- | RN BRCCE P (0 G P00 00 L ooq lhTom:&;row (ihe president will i e onth again on the ineugursl st lan, ~Pittman, Pomerene, Rausdell|in%, under the rules would be com-| “The motion carried, 52 to 15. Pernicious efforts refused to approve the cabinet's ac- |ment against the seizure of his dip- Bl e Reed, Robinson, Savlebury, Shafroth, | Delied to, recogmize the man who ad-| Thus beaten in his plan to talk the it Triotion becmaen” America to|tion, saying such power rested entire- |lomatic mail chest. removed. from the | OF 0 e e e vmeck vihs | before the capitol. He might Sheppard, Shieids, Simmons, Smith sved him first. The chair recog-|pill to death, La Follette was forced | States and Japan in the last . th Iy with bim. Premier Tuan Chi-Jui|steamer Frederik VIIL, at Halifax. e n IEEAHERAY Ing | omitted today's ceremony (Georgia; Smith (Maryland); Smith | MZed Senator Hitchcock, but La Fol- | to sit and hear Senator Hitchcock dis- | years. Te€ | immediately resigned and left for Tien i unusual circumstances of the existing | ; ocedents established by other (South Carolina); Swanson, Thomas, [1ette interrupted. cuss the measure until congress ex- |’ ~What has followed the exposure of|TSin, accompanied by several other| Military training for the hundreds or | financial situatlon. idents, but he decided to comply (te Thompsen, _ Tillman, Underwood,| “At 8 o'clock this morning. when 1|pired. the conspiracy, adds the newspaper, |Cther members of the cabinet. thousands of pupils of the public Majority is Powerless. ally with the constitutional stipn Walst and Williams—45. sought recognition, T was told that|” Restive under the restraint. the Win- | togioscas Ahat. Semmmns SarorslPer: | “The resignation of the entire cabinet | sunools of this country was proposed| “It would mot cure the difficulty o |tion that he take office &t noon o Republicans—Borah, Brady, Brande. | When the vice president left the chair [ consin senator drummed on his desk | gain o Fooing on the Ariito ts_expected. to the annual convention of superin- | call the 65th congress in extraordinary | fourth of March gee, Catrom, Clark, Colt, Curtis, Dil- [he had left a list with the names of | chewed an unlit cigar and interrupted | spiracy, adds the newspapers. indi. |, Perfiament is virtually unanimous in |tendency division of the National Ed_| session. The paralysis of the senate| Vice President Marshall 4id not ta lingham, DuPont, Fall, Fernald, Hard- | tWo senators upon it who might be |frequently with statements about his | cates that Germany’s ambition fo gain |{2VOr of the opinion of the cabinet.|ucational Association at Kansas City.” | would remain. The purnose and the |the oath today. ing, Jomes, McCumber, Me- constitutional rights. At least three|a footing on the American continent| T he leaders of all the politica’ parties 4 spirit of action are not lacking now. Lean, Nelson, Oliver, Page, Poindex- times, however, when a unanimous | through Mexico will Boldity the nen |are adversely criticising the president’s | The commander of the United States | The congress is more definitely united | HEADLESS BODY FOUND v tor, Sherman, = Smith (Michigan) consent agreement was proposed for a jtorn ! position. The vice president of the |warship San Francisco at Santiago,|in thought and purpose at this mo- 3! Smoot, 'Sterling, Sutherland, Town- | these lists are disregarded by presid- |vote before moon, he objected. He |against the dangers ot Germmi-Phere | rCpublic supports the action of the |obtained the release of the military | ment, I venture to say, than it as IN A BURNED WOCDSHED send, Wadsworth, Warren, Watson |ing officers, and I would like to know |appealed unaveilingly to Senator | tarism.” N ~ | cabinet. prisoners Colonel Eduardo Lores, Cap- | been within the memory of any man v and ‘Weeks—30., i Iam to be recognized” He made | Hitchcock to give him an opportunity tain Cagigal and Comander Luis Del| now in its membership. There is not | Chdrred Skull Found, Later—That o . |this statement as a parliamentary in-|to be heard. CALLS FOR HELP FROM Rosal, held by the rebel commander | only the most united patriotic purpose John Moran of Che e Sematore Nt e eq, | Iy andWSenator Robinson immedi- | Shortly after 11 ociock Senator|FLOODS THREATEN TENNESSEE, THE STEAMER LOUISIANA, |RiSoberto Fernandez. The released | but the objects members have in view 00, e seven ors nof , | ately made a point of order that it was | Eftchoock proposed an agreement for ALABAMA AND GEORGIA men boarded the Cuban gunboat Cuba. | are perfectly clear and definite. But| Cheshire, Conn., March 4.—After not a proper inquiry under the senate [a vote on the house bl at 1180 . et o Wilae Gt Shokd OF the senate cannot act unless its lead- | burning of a tooished on the farm & laws. : Senator Stone said he objected to | H. e . Rk Bt ground of inter LIFEBOAT CAPSIZED, NINE ers can obtain unamimous consent. Its | M. L. Coleman here today, the charred La Follettes voice began to rise. | the bill but not to voting on it, e 5= 0, Deiven, the Coast of Maryland. majority is powerless, helpless. ~ In|and headless body of John Motan, o e e e La Follette Becomes Any Senator La Follette MEN BELIEVED DROWNED | the midst of. a crisis of extraordinary | hired man, G0 years old. was fouss s e | 1 a6 meacave T e na of Obdurate. Newport, R. I, March 4—Calls for v | peril, when only definite and decided |the ruins. Later the charred sl 318 nck: Tamen th, ik o Gir this ahe shouted, “what| “I object now, and will object again : help fro mthe steamer Louisiana, of |Was Going to Aid of Tanker Louisi- | action can make the nation safe or | was found. Moran usuaily alept e sen- | point of o answer makes. 2s often as the request is made,” said | Tennessee, the Texas Oil company, aground on anna, Of Ocean City, Md. feld it from war itself by the ag-|the shed, it was stated, but was & ; .fldr;dngmm s gepator insisted on |Benator La Follette. 1 Winter Quarter were picked up % i ssion of others, action is impossi- | customed to spend the week ends ou gidressing the chair again and L& | “The semator from Wisconemn is con dy Dby the radio station here today. The| Norfolk, Va, March 4—Radio re- | bl % of town. No call for help was hew ou! e center aisle | gtantly violating the rules of the sen- | tions have overflown their banks, driv- |calls soon became too faint for the |ports tonight announced that a life reates Wrong Impression Abroad. |from the shed during the blase anc t ate” interfected Senator Willams. |Ing hundreds of persons from their|local station to distinguish. It was[boat sent to the aid of the fanker| “Although as a matter of fact thelthere was no Indication fhe: for. the ] “Ot course,” was the reply. “So are|homes. No loss of life was understood here the coast guard cutter | Lovisiana, ashore off Ocean City, Md, | nation and the representat he had The almost deserted senats chamber] . but property damage has siready been Yamacraw was sent (0 the steamers|was capiized. Nine mem are bolleved | Eation stand mack ot e’ oxerntine Gad opent the e P B began quickiy to flll. Democrats, most (Continued on Page Three, 7th Col) largs, atd. . to have been drowned. o ith " unprecedented uncnimity - and the Are e HoL Knpay, e cause ¢

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