The evening world. Newspaper, March 31, 1913, Page 1

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een ont yacht eareameel MORGAN, UNABLE TO EAT, DIES IN ROME; BODY IS TO BE SENT HERE FOR BURIAL : STORES SEIZED TROOPS END PRICE ONE OENT. a ee ee oe ee a ie ee cm ef Consriaht, 1918, IN DAYTON: QVERCHARGES BY THE GREEDY GROCER Floods Sweeping sane Cuwts Now Threatening Towns in Southern Illinois. THOUSANDS IN FLIGHT. Fifty Buildings, Some of Them on Fire, Swept Away at Lawrenceburg. DAYTON, 0., March 31—Every gro- cory store in Dayton was seized to day by military authorities following complaints thet some dealers were selling their goods at high prices. Sol- diers were placed on guard at each store and relief workers distributed friends to pardon for him. He faces smaprunanels for violation of the Gherman law. “3 am guilty of mo crime,” Patterson telegraphed the President. ‘I want no pardon, I want only justice and some Federal action that will make Dayton safe from recurrence of such @ catas- trophe as we have just had.” STRANGE ADVENTURES OF THE ADAMS FAMILY. With the rapid subsiding of the flood waters thrilling adventures continue to come ¢o light. Among the most inter- eating of these was the experience of the family of Charles M. Adams in Riverdale. When the flood firet rushed through that section of the city, Mr. Adams got his wife and ten-months twin girls into a ekiff and took them to the home of a friend in Warden street. An hour later it was again necessary to move, and the family was taken by Tescuers out of a second story window. ‘The cance in which they were being transported was dashed against @ tel- egraph pole by the terrific current and capsized, Adams ewam bravely in the fey water for tew minutes when he was picked up by some men in a flat doat. Just before he was rescued he saw hia wife eink Into the water. The baby @irle were floating down the street. ‘Then he collapsed, Three hours later he regained consciousness to find him- eeif in an attic. Beside him on the floor lay te wife, whom he believed to have been drowned. A few minutes later a man crawled into the attic window from ‘the floating roof of a barn, bring- ing with him the twins. They had caught in the branches of @ tree and were picked off unhurt by the man who was riding to safety on the roof, Mra, Adams was rescued by a high echool boy @ hastily improvised raft. The lad was a member of the Riverdale Troop of the Boy Scouts, and had been trained how to administer first aid to drowning. PHONE MESSAGE SAYS SHAW. NEETOWN |8 DOOMED. @T. LOUIS, Mo., March 31.—A long- distance phone message rtecelved from Shawneetown, Ill, says the town was doomed; practically all the women and children have been removed to the halle. ‘The girls manning the telephone e: change ordered out of the building ‘as this message was being sent. PLOODING FACTORY BUILDINGS BURN AT LAWRENCEBURG. LAWRENCEBURG, Ind, March 31.— Practically the whole city is under day and more than fifty buiid- known to have been carried , The Knippenzurg Carriage Fac- From that day to this Mr. Morgan had not tasted solid food. He had Hy Mve simply among those who hav ee ( th ree burn d during the night, Owing oerik eam Public Service Corporation competitor; e d shai d cha 1 believed there he effects of the @ame tastes that I have. f ah been nourished on champagne ani mpagne glace. Two davs a eae veal vee ue iite here. (he Underwent last week, The President |Great Britain as a working Ambacaa, | Emterborough Rapid Tra USE WORLD ADS go even’ LEADER HAYWOOD (S SENTENCED 10 SIX MONTHS’ TERM I. W. W. Agitator Found Guilty of Disorder in Pater-° son Silk Strike. ‘William D, Haywood, the I. W. W. leader and professional etrike agitator, Was sentenced to-day by Recorder Car- roll at Paterson, N. J., to six months in the county jail at hard labor. This ‘wae the maximum penalty under the law for the miedemeanor of which Hay- | Who are close friends, was embarrmesed, | W004 ae charmed—being a disorderty person. A mob ef more than 2,000 persona, mostly strikers from the sitk mills the vicinity of Paterson, clogged the streets in front of the courthouse when Recomler Carroll rendered hia decision in Haywood's case. One Hundred po- ‘ Oe. (The New York Werld). The “ Circulation Books Open to All.”’ NEW YORK, MONDAY, | MAROE $1, by The Press A Ei eggs Ia yo ag TE ae _ OREO Fd NR al NEL 5 a aid aL ala GS eee al . — + 0 ewe ce ee = 1018. WALTERH, PAGES MADE AMBASSADOR TOGREAT BRITAIN <<a Editor and Author of This City Accepts Appointment From the President. BEGAN WILSON BOOM. He Was One of First to Sug- gest Princeton Man as Candidate. $10,000,000,00 Walter H. Page, editor and publisher, of this city, has been appointed Am- bassador to Great Britain. His ac- ceptance of the post was announced from Washington by President Wilson to-day. The announcement was hur- Tied Secause, owing to the similarity ‘between hig name and that of Thomas Neleon Page, the Southern author had been confused with Walter H. Page by Pereons in the Foreign Office in Lon- Gon, and it was thought right to cet them etraight ©efore either of the men, Walter H. Page is 6 member of tl in licemen armed with flot guns, sur-|ofeanisation, ¢dftor of the Attantid rounded the court, ready to resist any effort to rescue Haywood or the fitty other men who were arrested with him during yesterday's demonstration at the Welsman mills. Attorney Marelli, representing the W. W., was Haywood's counsel, of the complaint on the ground that evidence f a misdeameanr had existed| summer, on Haywood'’s part when he was He made the usual motion for @ dismissal Monthly and The Forum for a time. MR. PAGE ONE OF THE FIRST TO BOOM WILSON. Mr. Page was one of the first to see the coming of the Woodroy Wilwon movement, With Williain McCembs, he! was a pioneer of the little group who threw thelr private fortunes into the movement to secure the Democratic nomination for Mr. Wilson last The new ambassador ts fifty-eight rounded up with others of his followers| years old and is # native of North Caro- yesterday. Recrder Carroll dented this| line. motion and then Police Sergeant Ryan and other policemen took the stand describe the dicking of Haledon avenue by a great Crowd yesterday. When the Recorder had found Hay- wood guilty his lawyer gave notice that Among his works on theoretical poll- tices are “The Rebuilding of Ol4 Com- monwealths,” @ study of the recon- struction of the South, and “The New Spirit of Nationality. He has done much work on the various boards for industrial education of negroes in to! he would apply for a review by « higher |the Gouth and was one of the incor- court and sald that to-morrow he would |Porators of the Rockefeller General sue out a writ of habeas corpus for Hay- wood's release. The Inbor leader was not taken tm- mediately to the county jail, for the po- lice feared the mob would be incited violence if an effort was made to take him through the Paterson streets. He was locked up temporarily in a cell Police Headquarters, which je in the same building the court, ——>— H. SNOWDEN MARSHALL SAID TO HAVE BEEN MADE Educational Board. Graduated from Johns Hopkins Uni- ith special honors in ingueges, Mr. Page wae for two yeare a correspondent of the New York ‘World before its purchase by Joseph Pulitzer. He went to his first editorial employment on The Forum from the @taff of the New Yory Evening Post. ‘The post of Ambassador to Great Britain was made vacai to at |. Choate, B. J, Phelps, the great international law, and mes Russell Lowell, The appoint U.S. DISTRICT-ATTORNEY. ment has always been considered as the Is Senator O'Gorman's Law Part- ner—No Official Confirma- tion, but News Is Credited. next highest honor to an important cab- inet position. SAYS HE WILL GO AS “WORKING AMBASSADOR.” Mr, Page satd to-day that if the It was reported at the Federal Buiki- | "te contrines bie eppasntaee’ he ing to-day that H. Snowden Marshal! |!e4ve immediately for London. had been appointed United States Dis- | Senate meets April 7 and the Page trict-Attorney for the Southern District of New York though !t lacked confirmation at o'clock, Mr. Marshall ts a law partner of Sen- ator O'Gorman, The firm is composed of the Senator, George Gordon Battle | public entertaining. 1 and Mr, Marshall, _—_—o——_ WILSON IN BED ALL SUNDAY. President Welt Effects of V tlon—Retter T. 7s WASHINGTON, March 31,—Preaident Wilson was Indispose! yester spent the day in bed. pointment will be one of the first to come before it. Mr. Page did not show any apprehension that there might be unfavorable action on his name. “I cannot talk about international policies, of course,” he said. “You ask me whether I shall try to keep up the record made by the late Mr. Reid in ail-powerful reasons. I have not the money. place, I should not know how to ac- complish the special triumphs which Mr. Reid attained, even though I were Dlessed with aw great a fortune an his, “1 have been @ workingman and com- paratively # poor man all my life, 1 have never had enough money except International Harvester International Marine United States Steel. General Elecirie American Telepho United Dry tioods........ Under Control of J. P. Morgan. ~ PRICE ONE CENT. == J, P. MORGAN DIES IN ROME; DELIRIOUS SINCE EASTER © RS Ue Rene Aioct d datos alae KEPT WALL STREET On His Egyptian Tour—Was STEADY TO-DAY) Seventy-six Years Old. Great Excitement but No END CAME SOONER THAN PHYSICIANS EXPECTED. Signs of a Flurry or a Raid on Stocks. 90 PAGES sit Eola tei: Selina on King of Italy and the Pope Had Sentt Frequent Messages of Sympathy | During Last Few Days. 4 ROME, Mareh @1-—J, Pieiwont Morgan lien dead here at the Grang Hotel, His death, which had been certain for hours owing te the fact thay he had been able te take no food for twe days and but Iittle liquid feed feu Action in Passing Resolutions. | many weeks, came with » swift decline at 7.05 thie morning, New You® ~ ; Wa adiyi dla ed cg ys J tok ned | "About Mr. Morgan during his last earthly hears wore only four mem | deen anticipated by repested reporte| bers ef his family—ble sea-inclaw and partner, Mervert L. Satterlee and of the precarious ft hie vealth ; bod the cirbumatantial detalis of hi Satterioe; bis granddaughter, Helen Mamiflten, whe fe alse cate sete te no Ht oe 7 sdman, printed in the morking rey fadifty pirjsicton but one of hie closest frivudss Br, |] papers, Je ‘was alee well known copmped hid Dixon, whe has been travelling with Mr. Morgan, and Dr. Giuseppe Bas thanelll, an eminent Roman specialist in disences of the stomach. : we market when the Exchange it was announced this afterzoon that Mr. Morgan's bedy will be taba +49 Borg spain He teaser to America as noon as proper arrangements can be made, “ the Bachai jammed as) it had not A statement giving the fall story of Mr. Morgan's illness has beom pres ttn the ects of ail the promincat|Pared by Prof, Gluseppe Hastianctll, Dir, M. Allen Stary and Dr. George SORROW IN THIS CITY. Members of the Stock Ex- change Take Unprecedented een tl ate ‘wotoad. juently there was.no flurry in Pca ae ee * tt ‘s family with the sin- of the members of (Continued on Second Page.) = SSS anit the verioce trading | 4+ Dixon and cabled to hin’ son In New York, ‘The statement reeapitalatgs nd he axeitement , Pegi ie rosgee the symptoms of Mr. Morgan's malady since It first developed in Berm: © Morgan influences and the Morgan| It qualifies his Ulnes ax nervous prostration, but says that bis Intelligences ob eae aga yy Nana aid "| remained wormal until Kaster Sunday. .Then « gradual general collapes STOCK EXCHANGE BREAKS PRE-| supervenod, affecting the digestion and tht mental facultles until delirium, / CEDENT IN PRAIOING MOROUN.,|¢naed. The rive of temperature noted was, It le stated, probably due to. ; Exchange and the Exchange itself took | lesions of the brain. ine pipe tvepeeypeabline y one hat The chd came sooner than the physicians haa anticipated. Drsic never been done before, Starr, Dixon and Bastianelli had issued a bulletin an hour béfore, saying’ } | cont ik Smee ot that while Mr. Morgan was unable to recognize those about him and bigs and influence, had never condition was hopeless he might linger for torty-eight hours, , bag sno bg halen A quarter of an hour betore the end the physicians asked Mr, wt lery of the Stock Exchange at 12.18] Mrs, Satterlke to leave the death chamber agd to go into an adjoining ne oe eee Jarry room, They teared that the end might coméwith a distressingly violent. ell rung, commanding attention, | spasm of, pain, Mr. Morgan's life taded out without the slightest indlcay ~ | tion that ne was conscious of its passing. Mabon, who read the following resolu: The members of the family were called in just at the moment ot: i HR ae ee 7% death, and were at the bedside when the last spark of life flickered out, ~ Pic aet Mortes hes remerea trom | WORRIED BY WORK OF PUJO COMMITTEE. ian ye Immediately after his death Dr. M. Allen Starr, who was very rc To the development of the resources | affected, said that Mr. Morgan's illness and death were directly due to, ee eT has contributed | the emotional strain inflicted by his being called upon to account for his fenmense constructive genius was de- | life and his financial career before the Pujo committee at W: voted not merely to ' nerican finance just before the Christmas holidays. His departure for Egypt was at a bp Mcrestaeotareh er "rhe insistence of the physicians, who said that his nervous breakdown de- whole world hax low a wise coun- | Handed a change of scene and a departure from this country, aellor and @ hetpful fi le Hesolved, That a The whole truth of Mr. Morgan’s illness was confided to The Eve © ning World to-day by a close friend of the Morgan family. Mr. Morgan was ill with a nervous breakdown when he left New York on the Adriatic, © 4 i. When the ship was stuck in the mud down the bay he did not feel well The bal at the areas exchange was) ough to go to the deck with the other passengers who were wea the tugs haul her back into the channel, a remaamiet Before the ship reached Alexandria he was iaken ill on the Mediter. = Don’t Get Fooled ranean with acute gastroenteritis. He suffered horribly, and it was. To-Morrow—April 1st] feared he would die on shipboard. On his arrival he became slightly bet. ‘Avoid the risky little paths of pub-| ter and took liberties with his digestion. Welty in your’search for “things wanted.” An immediate return of the earlier attack occurred, and there was 7 Keep to the re WORLD |? again grave danger of his death. Dr. Bastianelli, the Roman special ' ne Oo was summoned. He found on his arrival in the first week in March th EAI B g very week The World prints thow.| tH? gastro-enteritis, almost certainly fatal in a man of Mr. Morgan's. sands more separate advertisements] years, WaS complicated by Nile fever than the Herald, The World's nearest my van slightly feverish and tired from the uring the fire the factory bulldings | Was 8! a uae lacn from their foundations and |heavy week's work and Dr, Grayson, the carried about five squares, by which White House physiclaa, thought tt best Hudson Companies ‘ Brooklyn Rapid Transit. They get 2 circulation in Yew York| this slight nourishment failed, and he did not assimilate the food City, Sonne land Sundar crea ministered hypodermically, The physical exertion of the convulsions that he remain in b nd rest through: | week, along with his daughter Jal boghos Meer toe oe Pan whieh accompanied hg fw alleen of mperoventeritis had oy burned he ¢ t hrough- | week, alon) is dau rs and a ress ¥ fhe) a Bulan bd burned ee ee eee a waa ue Taster tek ine icine oka’ Meaaite Ore whos he “april Feel” About attack of paralysis which affected the throat and reduced him to {itul for those refugees who fled to the |day, however, and besin his day's work |fice employees, The smalipax ware at|P FOMMR .. ve sseesececeerersceserrereserseeenseesesueue cs Werld Ad. his brief communications to the physicians and his family. and fh the high lands, but it Is not believed there jat 10 o'clock, His sehedule of engage-| the White House was due to the fact ments for the day was not heavy. The President wae vaccinated last that one of the kitchen boys there had Advertising end Circulation been exposed to # case in his family, to communicate with them by signs. There was grave fear of his d Reserds Open to Al on the ship which carried him from Egypt to Naples. He was on deck bi 3 (Continued on Fifth Page.)

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