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some isolated island of jealous authority, sending messages instead of | speaking with his own natural voice” in short, that he is a “human being “trying to co-operate with _otaer human beings in a common servic Meinbers of the two houses and the intently. GAYS THEIR RELATIONS WILL c NOW BE NORMAL. “Hereafter,” he continued, “after en- foying this pleasure and privilege I @ha!! feet absolutely normal in all our Gealings with one another.” Here the President paused and again the applause came as a tribute to this Intensely frank m: ¢ bringing to- gether again two branches of the govern- @ent that for more than a hundred yeare had been kept apart on isolated dalands of jealows authority, When the applause checked itseif quickly in order to bear what war yet to come, the President entered upon his argument fer reduction of the tariff. fm just ten minutes he finished, unin- terrupted dy applause or noise The galleries were silent, ocause not one ‘Buditor desired to mise a single word of the message. The finish was quick and Yorn spectacular effect. commites, waiting for the ‘inal words, stepped forward. The audience arose ‘The President bowed to the two Houses. ‘Turning, he bowed again to the two “presiding officers, and stepped from the restrum, The committeemen accom- , him through the side door. # Vice President Marshal stepped down from his high place and led the Bena-l ing prestient'n friend; and Mann of tore o'1t of the House toward their own Iiitnota, chanber. WILSON 6HOWS SHE PLEASED. ; ore was bustle and confusion in| to lend dignity and decorum to the tre vike hast The verdict | House in the presence of the President, galleries amd on the floor. was unquestioned approval. who had leaned forwan, seem Mrs, Wil- 5 to relax and a emile of Joy with | soeaker dryly expressed a desire for wealth of color suffused her cheeks, ‘The Prosident himself was an object ste etudy and analyse. His garb was wes brushed emeothly across @otion was made that the House adjoura until Thureday. Over in the Senate there was adjournment unill) Wednesday. The President entered an _ atttomobie led by tw n for the Capitol Mr, Wilson wes back in the White The President had epoken to to face advocating his @olicies and pleading for a new era of economies freedo mand equality. to-morrow and for many 4 Gaze and nights discussion and ele ‘will follow in the Capitol over thoome “ss and tariff. MADE CHANGE IN MESSAGE AT LAST MINUTE, to: write & Sew iitroduction to menage Congress—a graceful peretnal expression te smooth the way for ghe tarifé arguments that followed, A ‘Femartiadle composition this intro- fe—hale explanation, half as- of authority for the Executive rensserting the old practice of address-| Hing the legislative branch of the Gov. ernment. It was the product of night thoughts @rived trom counse! with his pillow. was out Led to Some of its phrases will be repeated| bassador Bryce of Great Britain was| Son broke the custom of 112 years and read in person in Congress is round the country, quoted and requoted the subject of comment and criticism. JAtter breakfast with his family Mr. Wile Yeon went to the White House offices. thie merning he was indifferently late by fifteen or twenty minutes, There ‘were double duties for the morning hours, First was an appointment with | dent, arrived, she was held up at the| tunity to address the two houses ‘W. F. MoCombs, who as Chairman of| door, The Vice-President had furnished| rectly and to verify for myself the the Dentocratic National Committee had managed the President's successful cam- Paign. They are supposed to have dis- euened that dificult and still unsettled ‘problem of the embassy to Fr » Then for half an hour there sand ten minute interviews of previously ‘arranged appointments, At 11 o'clock the regular Tuesdsy meeting of the me CROWDS AT CAPITOL—WOM- + EN OEIZE SEATS. While these calm and dignified pro- \ecedings were going on at the White Mouse end of Pennsylvan' Teunded by its beautiful gardens and ‘ewers of early spring, with only dotted ‘pfoupe of sighteesing tourists here and vastly differen scene was stir- Capitol end of the avenue. Al- if 3e8 i i 3 st it if Gays to come. ira ‘The entire House wing was cul 1 Each Senator and each Con. had been allotted two of them, wing admission to te House gallery. a A@ soon at eles lied by « curiously mixed crowd. Ther Are eight hundred seats for spuctators overlooking the House. Five hundred of thom were seized b; Wemen, and each door way was packed | Gimoets to claaphty ‘who and what wore, Bowed tari changes will bring radical With meck-craning late comers. these privileged invitees. MANY MEN BARRED FROM THe [enon two billion pounds of euger HOUSE. + emand for political rights had exerted | comes # most important factor in the ¢ legislators possessed American market. Every social, Hawaii and the beet suger men of the every age, every style of dress West will be in active competition for Marked this feminine assemblage with | the trade, Maleidoecopic color and effect, During ‘the three hours of waiting they talked | is practically cut off under » handi quivered with the ex-/of one and nine-tenthe of a cent quarter hour wit bigher vi its pressure on et the coveted “tickets, ona wach ‘The escorting | CLARK CALLS ON MEMBERS TO 18) » od | * desire to greet them, .@ long frock coat unbuttoned but cling | or gound would be @ gr ing closely to bie‘Agure. His trousere| this there was laugh! dark gray striped material. ipoay realized the spectacular event was not 1 o'clock, the ‘on the acene time, Then ¢ol- troubles that will confident of their ‘were at every portal, corri- etairway visitors were shunted retunda and the empty Senate! Entrance in any part of it was by only, and the tickets were trouble Qs Gallery doors were opened pe gold to the consumer at less than ven o'clock every seat was quici..y i Apparently the influence of women's Germany in the future, moreover, be- galleries were watching and listening | there were stormy rumblings of discon tent. The man voter—the free citizen of the republic who had fought to break down barriers of priviiegas--found himself | narred out from the scene of de racy's triumph, The constituent from home districts had no chance to #ee the great show. Even in the great rotun with its circle of statues of bygone statewmen, was in possession of police- men who kept the crowds moving round j and out with gente persuasion. | At sharp noon Speaker Clark rapped with his gavel. ‘The house was called to order, There was brief prayer—a couple of minutes of respectful silence. Then came @ buze of gallery animation, and a long, tedious hour of routine pro- ceedings on the floor went on amid in-| different attention. ‘This waa the cur- tain ralser for the dramatic climax of the day. KEEP THEIR SEATS. Gpeaker Clark announced the ar- fangements for the joint session, the! Senators to have front seats, the Vice-| President to sit on the night of the! Speaker and @ committes of three to escort the President. Underwood, the tariff maker; Palmer of Pennsylvania, | the Republican leader, | named as the committee. The Speaker he hoped the members would keep! seats after the President finished, | re the! unless, of course, their guest indicated Then looking up at the galleries bl quiet when the President oame in, be- cause, he sald, if every two or six or eight persons whispered the sum total At baolute impossibility f nimated excited women—three of them with bables on their laps, and two of them with cameras pointed over the gallery ratis. The House recessed for fifteen min- utes waiting for the Sénators, led by Vice-President Marshall, to march in at the apointed hour of twelve thirty, They came with rather supercilious ar and indifferent mien, took seats in two front rows of easy chai waged in quiet conversation, some si veyed the excited galleries, and all waiting impatiently for the announce- ment of the President's arrival, MRG. WILGON AND TWO DAUGH- TERS ATTEND. A quarter of an hour before the President’ rrival Mre, Wilson and two of her daughters, accompanied by Cousin John Wilson, took seats in the Executive gallery. Mre, Wilson was a symphony in light brown, a tailor- resident Wilson's first action to-day! made gown, and brows jacket with| ° | broad lapels turned far over and faced with black; the pleeves had deep cuffs of black. Her hat was « wide rimmed Diack straw, circled completely with a brown feather. There was color in her cheeks as she smiled and talked with those about her. From all around the galleries there was craning of necks of other wumen and whispered comments on this Grst lady of the land. In the @iplomatic gal- lory, next to the Executive gallery, Am- the central figure, surrounded by a group of junior Ministers, secretaries and their ladies from the legatioss of many nations, HELD UP. ‘The crowd was so great that when Mre. Marshall, wife of the Vice-Presi- his wife and two ets, they granting Mo gallery only. friends with blue tlok-| 4 Marshall was finally recognised by a newspaper correspondent. “Cannot you ‘help me out?” she asked. “I have three tickets here which were «iven me by my husband but they do not seem to be worth the paper they are Printed on.” Mrs, Marshal was escorted to one of the officers and was finally admitted and @ place found for her in the exeo- utive gallery, Her friends could not be accommodated there, They sat in Representative Flood's office, across the ball. Outsile the House entrance to the Capitol w large crowd on foot and in automobiles watched the President ar- rive. Thousands were there unable to obtain the coveted cards of admissioa, ‘These cards brought from % to $10, but fow were for sale. MOVING PICTURES OF THE NOVEL 8HOW. A record of the President's visit on moving picture films was made by Cap- itol oMolals, A machine owned by Bupt. Elilote Woods was planted at the House entrance. The films will be pre- eonted as an .oMcia) recom, Other ‘movie’ machines and @ battery of newspaper photographers bombarded | the Presidential party outside, —— | FREE SUGAR MEANS | 3 CENTS A POUND | TO THE CONSUMER. Free sugar w! mean that sugar will | three cents per pound! The proposed c) | of % per cent. in duty, if carried un- | chenged in the new Tariff bill, will mean sugar to the consumer et tese than five cents per pound, ‘The sugar men declare that the pro- y | cbanges in the sugar market. It is/ known in the trade that Germany alone ready for export under the new tariff. Cuba, Loulsiana, Under the present tariff, German sugar iD pound. Free sugar would cut this of [ax once and sugar to the consumer would i Dut drop this much and probably more as admission to the pub-| United States is @ person, not & mere Gepartmen: of the Government hailing After being rebuffed at the door Mrs.| Congress in ell our dealt tm extraordinary session because a duty was laid upon the party now in power at the recent elections which it ought to perform promptly, in order that the burden carried by the people under ex- {ating law may be lightened as soon as possible and in order, also, that the business interests of the country may not be kept too long in suspense as to themselves. It is clear to the wh country that the tariff duties must be altered. radical alteration in our eovnomiec life which the country has witnessed within the last generation. While the whole face and method of our industria: and commercial iife were Deing changed beyond recognition the tariff schedules have remained what they were before the change began, or have moved in the direction they were given when no large circumatance of our industrial development wes what it te to-day. WHERE WILSON ADDRESSED CONGRESS TO-DAY ON NEW TARIFF WILSON MESSAGE DEMANDS PROMPT ACTION ON TARIFE TO SMASH ALL PRIVILEGE The Sooner That Is Done,” He Says, “the Sooner Business Will Be Free to Thrive by Law of Nature.” WASHINGTON, April 8.—The ever been delivered in Congress. Grover Cleveland's tariff message in {Mine o'clock 1s his customary hour, but| WIFE OF THE VICE-PRESIDENT | 1887 fs nearer It in length than any similar document in recent times, The Wilson message follows: “I am very glad to have this oppor impression that the President of the isolated Aftor tits pleas- experience 1 shall feel quite normal Inga with one another, togeth “I have called the Con fiscal changes are to be to required to adjust wed to meet the “They must be 2 e conditions of “Our tack to to equare them with the eetual facts, The sooner that is dose by the law business) inetend of by the law of leg- deletion and artificial asrangement. LONG AGO PASSED MODEST NO- TION OF “PROTECTING.” “We have seen tariff logt @er very far aficld in our indeed from the field in whioh our pros __THE EVENING WORLD, TUEZSDAY, APRIL 8, 1913. CUTS IN TARIFF AID WOMEN WITH TARIFF FIRST, OTHER MATTERS WILL COME AFTER. “We are called upon to render the @ great service in more mat- tere than one. Our responstbiliti ghould be met and our methods be as thorough as mode! and well considered, based upon the facts as they are, and not worked out aa if we were beginners, “We of to deal with the facts of our own Gay, with the 1 of mo other, laws equare with Old Which Housekeepers Can Readily Understand. WASHINGTON, March §—The woman with the market basket will find many items of interest in the new tariff bill. Here are some comparisons of the ¢: isting and proposed duties on mark: basket commodities: the opening of your session which can obscure that first object or divert our js «from that clearly defined At « later time I may take the your attention to re- forms which should press close upon the heels of the tariff changes, if not accompany them, of which the chief the reform of our banking and cur- bar A laws; but just now I refrain. “For t message for which President Wil- tem which may best serve to open on more the free channels of prosperity to @ great people whom to thi parley | Buekwhest | Buckwheat would serve | Corn ot ‘ _— itt Scheie to give each group of RAD TO BE SIX WEEKS fpele dttieste dad presen bile Kayes HERE TO GET ON THE order to maintain a practically exelus- ive market as against the rest of the world, Conactousiy or unconscionsty, we) 50 He Takes a Conductor's Job Secasnsca teeta: weaeeec hoes | oe er ne i Cougtt which it wae easy by cay, even the Nickelling. forms of combination t0 or-| Henry J. O'Neill of No. 168 East Sixty-|¢ anise monopoly; until at last nothing |*!xth street, five weeks in the country normal, nothing ts te stand |ffom Londonderry, Ireland, was ar- im Faigned in Special Sessions to-day for “nickelling” while conductor on the ” Bighth avenue, He pleaded guilty. lee “Kou got to the ways of the men feeb try very quickly,” eaid “And sure I did,” replied O’Nel!! “How did you get your job?” asked | {i Justice Salmon. c “Oh, sure, I just asked dor it,” was Sod you ey t Onions ts you try to get tl ‘force first?’ asked ‘siatice Move, pee ‘No, Your Worship, I wae told on Dilis Island that I'd have to be in the country ix weeks before I could constabulary force, so I tool ase to keep of the influences that quicken en- terprise and keep independent MUST ABOLISH EVERYTHING RESEMBLING PRIVILEGE, "It te plain what those principles must be. We must abolish everything that deare even the semblance of privilege or of any kind of artificial advantage, and put our business men aod producers under the stimulation of @ constant Because of bis " Porton necessity to be efficient, economical and | guilty, ONeiN got of eines rae ra] enterprising, ; eeprimend. Pe te QHedasl J, Sullivan, who, socording to $0) v9 bah Hn ves Acsistant District-Attorney Breokin- lee therefore, and the duties laid upon wuz- uries and rely for the sake of the revenues they yield, tife object of the tariff duties henceforth laid must be ef- fective competition, the whetting of American wits by contest with the wits of the rest of the world, “It would be unwine to move toward this end beadiong, with reckless haste or with strokes that out at the very roote of what has grown up amongst | und ue by long process and at our own ia- vitation, It does not alter @ thing to upeet it and breais it and deprive it of @ chance to change, It destroys it. We must make changes in our fiscal laws, in our fiscal syatem, whose object is development, a more free and whole some development, not revolution or ridge, confessed on Sunday that he shot and killed Bugene Smith in Park Row, near Roosevelt etreet, carly Saturday morning, waived examination before Coroner Feigberg to-day and was 00 mites te the Tombs to await the In- perity might have had a nprmal growth ‘and stimulation. No one who looks the facts squarely in the race or knows anything that lies beneath the surface of action can fall to perceive the prin- ciples upon which recent tariff legiiaa- tion has been based. “We long ago passed beyond the mod- out motion of ‘protecting’ the industries of the countsy aud moved boldly for ‘ward to the iden that they were enti- ted to the direct patromage of the Gov- ernment, “Vor @ long tine—e time 60 long that the men now active tm publie policy hardly remember the conditions that preceded itewe have sought im our tare upset or confusion. We must build up trade, especially foreign trade “We need the outlet and the enlarged fleld of energy more than we ever did before, We must build up industry as well, and must adopt freedom im the place of artificial stimulation only so far as it will build, not pull down, Tuesday 5 Offerin; MARKET BASKET = Beef, New Rates Compared With the! if real ‘enigoa, Game ‘specifically alte, ‘Dead’ the statute bouks is the question now confronting” Demooratic leaders of the administration, Early to-day the Democrats met in “a ee Be rere es Ott Sh 9S EL a a AT 1 Yo ‘eat tet 10% 2% te Ib 2e Ib IFAME OF TONIC TOPIC OF TALK NOW IN EUROPE Inquiries Are Coming from All of the Largest of the Eu- ropean Cities. HAS WORLD-WIDE FAME- Every User of Tona Vita Is a Walking Advertisement, for Its Merits. CAUCUS ON TARIFF Tee gate cee ot ones thee | ‘ona. enjoy wes TO DEVISE PLAN Presi mre rap Ba Sot City ‘has ovum ropean FOR PUSHING BILL, \204 many inquiries have been received iby the manufacturing company from London, Paris and Berlin. In New York it is meeting with an ever-continuing success. The fact that, Satan added largely toed poplar. a 0. ‘ John, Mitchell of £04 East tist_ 8. New York City, a user of Tona Vits, wi only too glad to allow other to beat from his stated | think it is the est duced. It has built my wife eclf up in ® wonderful wa; be ly recommend it to any one is suffering from berrene debility. very mucl re better since it. ‘WASHINGTON, April 8&—How to steer the new tariff bill through Congress to caucus, but immediately adjourned to await the message of President Wilson, After providing for working committees of the extra session they will consider the tariff bill as rh aM by the Ways and Means Committee. The principal problem confronting the both feel House leaders, who are listening to) ve tak, members of the Senate for the sake of | ‘Tons Vite is essentially a family harmony, is whether the bil should be |tonic, for it contains only ingredients reported in the House in its entirety |that have « beneficial action or schedule by schedule, Democratic/human system. take it A child can Senators who oppose the sugar schedule | with just as much safety as an adult. with Its provision for free sugar in Nervous debility can be indickted three years object to conaideration of symptome:— the tariff as one bill ay ‘Though no decision has deen reached |i: and susceptibility to other ailments; of weight and appetite; failing and ambition; or s general ee ey one ul a ep in- dicatlon of the presente of this nervous disorder. Tone Vita can te, — aad pro- @y- cap We there was.e probability to-day that the House caucus might determine finally to segregate the sugar schedule, taking up ail the other schedules and the in- eome tax as ene dill. It also was prob- able that the question of the method of conederation might not be determined by the caucus, but be taken up on the floor of the House after the bill hed been reported from the Wave and Means Comanittes. ‘The imposition of a “compensatory” 4uty on flour, or the temoval of all duty ‘wheat, will be one of the chaages be obtained at vptede drug store in New York ity.—Advt. Ls) fillings...61.00 fasb. = og See tm Na aL RN ANA NR GP MRR Rp gs ren te LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. Wh Woods,