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4 i] we 3,000 Troops at Buffalo des sf Get Order “Shoot to Kill” WEATHER—Hain to-night ané Thersday. r EDITION. ©) PRICE ‘ONE CENT. = ‘Cops rant. ce. ~ WILSON AT CAPITOL 10 Ta CARRIES HIS DIRECT 10 Goes ‘to Meet the bers of the Finance THE SENATORS Democratic Mem- Committee Carrying No Papers and Expect- ' ing to Win by Persuasion. BY SAMUEL M. WILLIAMS, Staff Correspondent of The Bvening World. WASHINGTON, April 9.—President Wilson made his second in- wasion of the Capitol at 3 o’clock this afternoon. Sharp at the appointed hour he drove up in an automobile, accompanied only, by Secretary Tu- multy and:a guard of Secret Service men. At the entrance of the Senate wing he was met by the Secretary and Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate. They qui Senate corridor to the long deserted ickly formed a little procession and led the way through the President's room, where the Demo- cratic members of the Senate Finance Committee were waiting. The doors were closed and guarded so that no interruption or in- trusion could disturb the conference, In the were Senators Simmons, Chairman of the Finance Committee; And his associates, Stone of Missvurl, Sahnbon of Maine, Shively of Indiana, Smith of Georgia, Thomas of Colorado, ‘James of Kentucky, Hughes of New Servey-and Gore of Oklahoma, Not a Republican was present, nor was any @ebected, for this was a conference of Democrats nly, There was an attitude of business determination about the President. He looked neither to right nor left as he approached and entered the Capitol. x wae brisk and so rapid that those around him had to hasten to freep up. He was dressed in a light gray business suit, topped with a dark evercoat. XPECTS TO WIN BY POWER OF | PERSUASION, When ho entered the Capitol building the President took off his hat and car- Pied it in his hand. He had neither pa- Pera nor documents. His fight was Yo be made with power of persuasion only. He was meeting face to face on if own ground tho men who will to bear the brunt of the turift bat. te. The lower house he oonsiders su: to pase the bill, The Senate is the} @eudttul ground. ‘The President wants to get all nis | forces lined up with’a united policy and comshon purpose, ao that to-day's con- ference was much like a council éfwar Wherein the commanding generals ure not all agreed on the plan of the mor- row's battle. Mr, Wilson greeted the ten Senators with @ grasp of the hand for each. ‘That much was visible before the doors mere closed, They drew up chairs around the long conference table on which lay printed copies of the tariff bil, All secretariqs and attendants withdrew, and for the next hour the President of the United States talked with and listened to the views of the lawmakers, Out of the meeting will come the decision whether sugar shall be eegregated from the main tariff bill, t@ be fought out on a rate battle- field, or whether the forves of tariff re- form will stand or fall on # single pro- Gramme. The Senate itself had adjourned an hour or more before the conference, All the Republican Senators had left the e side Congressmen debating details of thelr part of the fight. SOME CRITICS CALL IT SUBJUSA- TION OF CONGRESS. Bmall groups vf tourists who chanced to wander into the corridors joo! with curioaity while the making of po- tieal aistury was going on. eritice the events typitied the subjuga tion of Congress to executive dominay ton; to others it meant that a new era of @irect action und quicker response to the nation’s demands was at hand. The news of this latest move on th part of the President spread rapidly threugh the Capitol. Such an aggres- sive policy, such direct action, such shattering of tradition—yet such simple amd obviously desirable executive pro- ceedings in order to accomplish results— have erested a stir in Washington that males even the strenuous Roosevelt diagp gem quiet and peaceable, =, Senator Kern of Indiana, Democratic leader of the Senate, said he considered methods of President Wilson proper and desirable. It was highly beneficial, 3 he sald, to both Administration and the nation that the President and Congress should bet together and work in 60-0; erative spirit. Tho visits to the Cap- {tol were welcome and would result in much good. The old conservatives of the Senate had no comments to make, They 40 not approve this encroachment on what they regard as their secred rights and privileges, Yet they cannot voice open protest because of the acclaim that has come from the country in approval of the President's invasion of Capito! Hill Mr. Underwood, Chairman of tho House Ways and Means Committ who prepared the tariff bill, takes ground that thei jould be no ting up. He says the bill is @ com! unit, and must be #0 considdfed, To take away any part of it for separate change and mutilation would be to af- fect every other part and lessen tho #Meclency and benefits of the. whole, both for revenue purposes and for re- ducing the cost of living. WILSON FEARS COMBINED AT- TACK ON SINGLE ITEM. President Wilson has been desirous of (Continued on Fourth Page.) ———__—_. {DEFIES EDUCATION BOARD TO COMPEL VACCINATION. Ekerbold Doesn’t Approve Inocu- lation, That’s All, He Tells Magistrate Kernochan, Hagford Ekerbold, @ civil engineer, of No, 4170 Park avenue, was haled into the Morrisanta court before Magistrate Kernochan to-day to explain why he didn't have his ten-year-old eon, Romar, vaccinated. Romar returned from Norway three months ago and was sent to Public Schoo} No, 2% at Anthony and Tremont avenues. Tho boy's teacher, learning that he had not been vaccinated, sent him home and his father kept him home. Finally, Officer Pugligsa of the Board of Educa- tion learned that the younger Ekerbuid was not attending school and summoned his father to court. All that the father would say was that he didn't approve of vaccination, He wouldn't say why and Magistrate | Kernochan gave him till Saturday, by which Ume he said Mr, Ekerbold must come to some arrangement with the Board of Education or 8 14 the boy to & private school, cated SE | "| PARROT AND MICE IN COURT.’ * hey Tell Maat hen Owner Fined, George Selazzino's trained parrot and white mice picked out a fine fortune for Justice Appleton of the Jefferson Market Court this afternoon from among a lot of cards promising more or less luck to the purchaser, but the Magistrate, though he sald he had felt encouraged with the lot tn store for him, fined Selas- fino $3 for telling fortunes without a Ucense. Policeman Bishop had found Selazzino surrounded by @ crowd ut Sixteenth street and Sixth avenue. —2>—— FOR RACING SEC PAGE 2, 7TH AND 71ST SS $15,000,000 GIRL GIVES UP IDEAL NEW “YORK, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9, “1913. WERATHER—Rain to-night and Thereéaye i vetre ONE ORNT. EGIMENTS MAYBE} TO ) WED A ROMEO WITH RED HAIR TAREE FHT ‘on TO BUFFND Have Been Detguniet by Gen. Dyer if the Strike Grows More Serious, TROOPS ARE FIRED ON. Three Thousand State Soldiers Called Out to Keep Mobs in Check. Rumors that the Seventh and Seventy+ first Regiments of this clty had been ordered to get ready for strike duty in Buffalo gained wide circulation this afternoon, “I received a telegram to-day from Adjt.-Gen, Hamilton at Buffalo,” said Gen. Dyer, “asking me to designate one regiment which might be sent to Buf- faio if circumstances should make the Tove necessary, I replied that the Seventh wis the first regiment in the Point of seniority with the Seventy- first ‘second tn this respect. Conse- quently, if it does prove necessary to call out any of the National Guard these two regiments will xo before any others In the order given, I want it un- derstood that no orders relatin: way to the Buffalo situation have been \asued' to these or any other regiments, and I doubt if any will be issued.” BUFFALO, April 9.—Complete paraly- sis of street oar traffic, both city and suburban, for twenty hours, a thorough policing of the main city streets by State militia and an attempt by Mayor Louts C, Fuhrmann to bring the oppos- ing factions together were the features of the fourth day of the carmen’s Btrike on the International Railway Company's system, Not a car was moved up to 2 o'clock to-day, when two Main street cars were] sent downtown under heavy police guard. They carried no passengers. Approximately 3,000 militiamen patrolled the strecta. Earter in the day mounted scouts of the Seventy-fourth Regiment were fired upon from the corncr of Niagara and Tonawanda = streets. The soldiers charged the crowd, tut aid not capture th who fired the shots. No one was injured, The running of the cars on Main street was the signal for rioting. The first car out made the trip without interference. The second car was stopped at the cor- ner of Main and St, Paul streets and stoned, The crew was driven off and the car badly damaged before the mt. {tia and police were able to disperse the Moters, Seven cars became stalled and attacked at Main and North streets and serious rioting followed at this point. ORDERS GIVEN, ‘SHOOT TO KILL’ AT BUFFALO, At Main and Seneca streets, the former scene of brick throwing from the top of a new seventeen-story bulld- ing, ® large crowd assembled. When heads appeared above the cornice of the structure the militiamen took alm, but no missiles were thrown and no shots were fired. Sharpshooters were sta- tloned on the top of the Chamber of Commerce building opposite under or- ders to “shoot to kill” & series of rapid explosions aroused the people in the sorthera part of the jeity aud im Tomawands early this | morning and the rumor apread that one |of the International Batlway's tresties om the Miagara Falls line had been | tracks or bridges. | 3t was found later that am abortive attempt had been made to blow up the tracks near the trestle, but that it |ha@ failed. The explosives had been improperly end hastily placed, and |emly one oF two cartridges had ox- ploded, doing tittle damage. It was quickly repaired by gauge of men seat out ander guard by the railroad company. Two thousand membeds of the Fourth Brigade of the National to strike duty Guard, summoned on an order from the Supreme Court were quartered in the armori at daybreak. An additions men, forming the third (Continued ea Gecond Page) regiment jes tell. Brunette and ciea shaven. HER =| Cari over left ear. Repabti . IDEAL ran ‘end vue MAN THE MAN | No carl over ear. SHE Democrat and never ° e Destitute of ideasaboat pigs end poultry. The time has arrived for placing the] deadly paralie: on the ideal ot Mise Lilah B, Gilbert, heiress to $1h400,- 000 and the real man she has selected for her husbang, The marriage Hcense| ham deen tesued, the wedding ceremony’ fs to take place on Aprit % at the Of Miss Gilbert's mother, Mrs. 11. Mellia~ hall Gilbert, at No, «© West Fortyseev- enth street, and Howard Renshaw, twenty-five years 01d, of Troy, N. ¥., te the exceelingly lucky, man. Tt was just about a yoar ago that Mise Gilbert, @ young woman of indepen- dence of thought and expression, set: forth her tonception of the ideal man— the man she would marry. And it #o happened that shortly after that 6! met young Mr. Renshaw, who has nothing but money and spare time at man 6 feet tall, brunett mn with Arm ja shaw is 6 feot tall, but stooped, has reddish hair and a mu tache, The thick hair over the left ear that Mise Gilbert pined for ts missin, Miss Gilbert wanted a Republican, a a dollar, but he fits the ides @ good horaeman, He doesn't know a thing about pigs and poultry, another Fequisite Miss Gilbert Iasted, doesn't take lemon in his tea or admire John Drew's clothes. There you are, solicitious reader, Probably Miss Gilbert has come closer to choosing her idea) than most young women, for all young women builé up in their minds the ideal man, and if they waited for sald ideal to appear few males would ever succeed in get- ting married. Mine Gilbert's future husband 1: x feet tall, an Epieco- palian, and is a good rider and is fond of horses and dogs, which makes hie batting average as an ideal about 338, Mies Gilbert when seen to-day by an Evening World reporter and asked about her ideal man, daid she had forgotten all about him, She very well eatis- fied with Mr, Ho Price Renshaw. As tor Mr. Renshaw, he {s not jealous of the ideal man of his flancee. He @44 not know she had ever described an ideal man until to-day and when he read the description of the ideal he laughed. Mr, Renshaw has a sense of bumor and he says that tf the time ever comes when he feels it necessary to become a money maker he will go to work. Mr, Renshaw is a son of Richard Renshaw, a wealthy inventor and manu- facturer of Troy. He is a nephew of Mra. Lily Hammersly, who was the Duchess of Marlborough and mother of the Duke of Marlborough, who married Consuelo Vanderbilt, The chief recreation of Mr, Renshaw is hunting big game. He has hunted in Alaska and Labrador and was getting ready for a two-year trip to the Arctic when he met Miss Gilbert. Next winter he will take his bride on a hunting trip into Africa. —__ BLOW OF BABY’S BOTTLE CAUSES MOTHER’S DEATH, Her baby daughter Mary struck Mrs, Catherine MoDonough of No. 6) East One Hundred and Thirty-firet street over the eye with a nursing bottle a week ago and this morning the woman died in Harlem Hospital, Coroner's Physician Schults performed an autopsy and sald death had resulied trom creumatic meningitis, breught en, provably, by the blow of the baby, DODGERS BEATEN. OO4OO6-56E 4660666456694 + FESESONE £4-04006-986699552 28006 00000400006-84-0:5 644 BY PHILLIES IN OPENING CANE 18,000 ei hig Shiver Through | Pitchers’ Battle at Ebbets Field. ‘The Evening World.) | EDBETS! ‘3 ‘STADIUM, BROOKLYN, April 9. hteen thousand fans evi-) Gently didn't mind the cold weather! thie afternoon and were out here to Bive big league baseball for 1913 » rousing send-off. It was the real rip roaring opening, and the Dodgers and) got @ running start on the| fational League teams, ‘The crowd was late in getting to the park, Once inside, the early comers! made @ bee line for the few sunny spots in the stands. Becauge of the Arctic in their seats it came slowly. A few Polar explorers of both teams were out on the flold as early as 2 o'clock, but they were very careful how they caught the ball, for frozen hands were the rule. The fans, bundled up in overcoats and sweaters, gingerly ap- Plauded the early practice, Not only| because they felt ke doing it, but be- | cause they had to do something to keep | warm. Cosey Dolan of the Phillies, lookout for something strenuous to do, ran over to where Shannon's Twenty: on the! third Regiment Band was pounding out! a ail the summer selections, fumped to the leader's place and led ti Col Ebbets at the Dodgers-Hig r game | Saturday exhausted all his opening cere- mony ideas, and the only thing of thia kind was the parade of both teams be-| hind the band out to the centre fled} fagpole, where all the players gathered | around and raised “Old Glory.” The, crowd tested Its singing ability by Join-| ing in the chorus of "Tho Star Spangled Banne! Col Charles Holiday Ebbets, py special permission from the league di- rectors, was enabled to open t son 8 day ad of all other big Pescall teams because the Dodger owner was ansious to display his new Tiiao0| etadium. ; ‘The Phillies, coger to get off to @ musie. VPHDDS DHS OOODGOOD PPLEDYDDOOG-1-000O0009 SCORE BY INNINGS. PHILADELPHIA— 10000000 0-1 BROOKLYN— 00000000 0-0 BATTING ORDER. Philadelphia, Brooklyn. Paskert, cf. Stengel, ct. Kaade, 2b. Cutshaw, 2b. Low Meyer, rf. Mag Wheat, If. Luderus, 1b. Smith, 3b, Dolan, Daubert, 1b. Doolan Fisher, as. Dooin, Miller, c. Seaton Rucker, p. dD. Unpiree~iKiew and Orth. flying start, borrowed the Athleties’ mascot, a little hunchbacked chap, Bx die Miller by name, Eddie perched the shoulders of Alexander tn the march acroas the fleld and vowed all kinds of dire things to Dahl men up in front, Seated in the boxes, shiv- ering like everybody else, were Pr dent Tom Lynch, Borough President Alfred A. Steers, who t out the first ball, and many other city govern- ment oMcials, The Phillies got one run as a starter, Que principally to Knabe's double and Meyer'’e muff of Magee's fly, which enabled Knabe to score from third. Cutshaw got on bi for the Dodgers in thelr half, but Dooin's throw killed any chance he had of scoring when he tried to steal second, Luderus and Dooin hit the ball in the second, but always tn the vicinity of @ Brooklyn player. n Brooklyn's half of the second | Wheat, Daubert and Smith were easy victims in succession. In the third Rucker got going good and got Seaton on strikes and Paskert and Knabe on jnfleld grounders In the second half of the third AMY after one out, batted out a sing it was wasted, as bh wt and Rucker out Whe lyn to prove In th voklyn portion of the fourth Sten Hed and neither Cutshaw nor Meyer could get it out of tho infield, ‘The Phillies threatened again in the fifth, w Wheat let Dooin's single get thro his legs, but the manager waa finally left on third when the next two went out, With one down in the fifth, Daudert fingled and stole second, but after! Smith had fanned he tried to reac third and was nipped, atill runtess, Knabe opened the sixth with @ single centre, was sacrficed to second and to (Continued on Beoond Page) ving Brooklyn | ; DECLARED VERY WEAR | AND CONDITION GRAV Suffered Feiiing teak Spells for Hours This Afternoon and Ru-; 4 mored in Extremis, Is State- V4 ment to London From Rome. KEPT ISOLATED IN ROOM; HIS SISTERS SEE Seems Hardly Able “to Those Near Him, but Attend Pope suffered from a fainting fit lasting two hours this afternoon, it was rumored in the lobbies of the Italian Chamber of Deputies ¢ Pontiff was in extremis. Prof, Marchiafava, however, continues to assert that the Pope ts worse and that there are no grounds for anxiety, POLICEMAN SAVES es GIRLS IN RUNAWAY INPROSPCT PARK == “We are glad to be able to give’ assurance that after his relapse on Miss iiisidias oid and Miss Casky " PLICATIONS INTERVENES Near Death as Horse day evening the condition of the Makes Wild Dash. 1s constantly and notably a! The condition of the Pope wast Proved to-day, a@scording to Prof, chiafava, the Vatican physician, visted the Pontiff for over an hour morning and found his fever greatly'ii Sonne His temperature at that @ ‘Miss Irene McCarroll, daughter of for- mer Public Service Commissioner Will- jam McCarroll, whose home is at No. 768 St, Marks avenue, Brooklyn, is con- fined to her room to-day the result of an escape from death she experl- enced yesterday when her horse ran un- controlled for over a mile on the East Drive of Prospect Park. Miss MoCarroll and a friend, Miss Casky, were finally saved by Mounted Policeman John Me- Loughlin of the park squad, In @ victoria belonging to the fam- ily McCarroll and her friend were taking @ drive through the park, Thom- ae J. Walsh of No. 125 Atlantic ave-! ciated Press that His Holiness fering from a relapee ‘of which, ike all relapses, is certain amount of anxiety owing exalted position of the patient ang afternoon. When Deared to feel too weak to take Rotice of those around him. He | howe when he was visited oy isters and his neice who sat @ in the room for some time withegs, turbing him, The temperature of the Pope slightly at 3 o'clock this af nue, the MoCarroll coachman, WS reaching 9 degrees. handling the reins, On the East Drive, ‘The oMcial Vatican newspaper, Just opposite the music stand, the hOr8e Osservatore Romano, says in ite. becamy startled when an automobile suddenly passed him from pehind and tho animal bolted, Walsh was thrown from bis seat to the roadway as the carrlage swerved sharply around a corner by the lake Then the horse, mad wi edition to-day: “We are glad to be able to gtye.’ assurance that after his relapse ow. day evening the cundition of the re constantly and notably am ye The unofficial reports which. r becn spread as,to tie Pope being of. fected with nephritis or . drive miraliea down the a of the kidneye are, sald the 7: bie sh of the drive about the lake absolutely unfounded: a shore. - Mounted Pollceman ‘Thomas Ryan Waat the Ponte needs gbove alt at firat essayed to cate the fying rest, continued the eminent pi se but a sudden swerve of th and the twenty-four hours he-has epeme” | threw ity mount yt his in bed completely isolated trom aay af Es ‘d J and the horse nearly fell on thy rs has already produced @ i man, By the tine he had rec eftect Po eee ee ie yas SUFFERS FROM PROSTRA | too fur away to catch 18 REPORT, Several automodilists tried to nead off! Al the symptoms of a the runaway, but their efforts only character which have been meni caused him to sprint faster, Pinally, Unauthorized reports are either when the swaying Victoria was ap- inary or grossly exaggerated, proaching the stone gateway at the them being quite consonant Ocean avenue entrance to tho park, present condition of the Pont, Polleeman McLoughlin managed to ride | abreast of the runaway, seiy his vridle and bring him to @ halt | Both women were thoroughiy Unstrung eral, tgaued ordera to-day for with fear, but they refused medical at- prayers for the Pove in ai} he tention, ‘Tho driver, to whom tho fall of Rome during the neat these 4% from the eeat had not caused serious! Many of the pligrime hurt, also decline&to go to @ hospital. and other far countries had = { excludes any danger unless tt hould intervene, Cardinal Pompiil, the new