New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 26, 1918, Page 1

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HERALD BEST OF ALL , \ A/ v LOCAL NEWSPAPERS Y ¥ NEW BRITAIN CONNECTICUT, SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 1918, —TEN PAGES. PACKERS ACCUSED |SCHEIDEMANN THRE! OF CROOKED WOR ~ THEY WILL BE HUR Tnspired Message to Wilson | ¥ “Soidiers Chase Enemy |NEW TRIAL FOR MOONEY | Aguinst Probe, Heney Claims .RAILRI] AD NEGLEGT |PEACE PROSPECTE Agent Running Away - SUGHT OF PRESIDEMT puawxeo teLecran FLood CAUSED CONGESTION| BY HERTLING and Sergeant Escapes| ~ — e S (e : * Death by Inches, |Ms Investigators - Report) o, e mow vare vent| Gommissioner MoChord Says Lo-| MANUFAGTURING TOWN Utilities Tried “To Get” Intcrests Control Street Railways, DAMAGE fi;;MATED Labor Agitator. \l;u;]l:::l:;t:‘y u:iL :anl:_me " comotives Were Not Cared Ior N GANAI] A AFLAME AT MILLION DOLLARS| (. hinsion, Jan. 26— itecommen- | ho snos or mremr® onarod today | ENGINES NOT PROTECTED Heney, special counsel Fires Also in New York, dation that President Wilson use his |in the Federal Trade commission’s Ofl Barecs Plor Warchonses and | E900 offices to induce California au- |investization into the meat Packing | ypacpines Allowed to Freeze TUp in Buffalo, Paterson and S0Ee bk = thorities to bring about a new trial of | industry, with having attempted to Frelght Cars Destroyed—Dynamite | Thomas J. Mooney in case the Califor- [ (Wi Infuence o bear on President} Roundbouses and Damaged By Jeo Maynard. Blasts Lane Through Ice to Allow | Dia supreme court sustains his con-|tion stopped —<New Haven” Unable to Accept viction for complicity in the San Mr. Heney told commission ho | would =h later tha L joint tele- o5 gram, i nt to the president | in progress in Peterboro, an extensive Submarine Boat Corporation in Dan- [ today by the president’s mediation | ;o "pumi { Detroit bankers pro- - manufacturing town, 94 miles north commission. testing ti e investization was dis- | sence by railroads under private man- | cast of here. Wire communicatio In a report to the president the |turbing cconomic conditions, had been | agement in giving proper care to lo- | has been interrupted inspired by the packers, The Lindsay, a town 25 miles away, sent ol b e el g | comotives is a principal cause of commission which has conducted an | “Npojiency's statement was made in E ; 2 2id during the night to help fight the e o o & fire Delieved to be | exhaustive investigation of the trials | connection with the reading of fur- plessnificelen feongestion accordingiintmes. stroyed today E re elieve N 3 = reSH o ay irec- ! WO} “nies which burned | of Mooney, Warren K. Billings, Mrs. | ther confidential documents taken 0 a report presented today to Direc- The burned build included the e T S e el o RiAe R os o RCRI Co ol v Cardl [BeonaGer e TUBRAC, SOl VAR In xSt el ok eTliEn ier B Dominjon it el B b & L M baelesl Bl e L T8 4C | \hich showed that the packers| Commerce Commissioner McChord. | other huildings. The blaze was eaused e A 2 f,"', o i Bont cor | clarea this could be done by post- | planned an elaborate campaign in 1916 | After analyzing the reports of inspec- [ by o hoiler oxplosion. The loss was O e tne uar. | Poning the execution of the death sen- | to influence congressmen against or- | 1ors who have investigated conditions | estimated at $590.000 Temps. b et s .L;.x?nf tence imposed on Mooney awaiting |dering an investigation into the live | at the principal points of congestion ;s department of the army. | 4ence Hosed O a1 based apon | Stock and meat packing industries as | in the east for several weeks Mr.| Peterboro is a port of entry on the | o : | % ‘M: (x ihl\;rLaaxv n,) r:x‘;.r; proscution under one of the untried | PTOPosed in tho Borland resolution McChord announced that hundreds of | Otonabee river and has many manu- | tained by a majority of the morning diers, who claimec > S8 SC’ 2 > o1 ivy i e sorelv 3 3 " . o v SDa - : 3 ¥ 4 scene sh indict ts against him, Deluge of Telegrams. Jocomotives which are sorely needed | factorics of iron, woodenware, wool- |newspapers here respecting the perial government that 7 running away from the scene shortly | indictments against him. 2 MtRe e Sh el e i e D b bl Fd rial g ent that if they did nd after the fire broke out. When they A history of the four cases is given lecommendation was made by shops GGl SRR 2 il el = ,‘_‘ “‘]";"w s fi'm speeches of Chancellor Von Hertling bring about peace between Ge tried to stop him a shot was fired and | in the rcport and the conclusion |counsel for the packers that thev |y o oh neglect or lacking repairs | ous “I'cterboro D nnutan” | and Foreign Minister Czernin is that 204 Russia they would be hurled.fre; a bulle: went through the hat of the | reached that the “Mooney case soon | should undertake to have the judiciary : S e : Sods AnUAC [ Germany regards power. = Y | which might have been made if pro- | tured in the town. The population is Yy Teg herself as the con- b erscant in command of the grard. | resolved itself into a new aspect of an | committee flooded ~with telegrams | FRICH FUSEH (NS FOTR TRACE T PIA s 0 aueror, that she is determined upon | ‘}f the United States had not e The man who fired the shot escaped. | old industrial feud instead of a sub- | from all over the country, especially.| U0 008 (O/E e b0 & Y : ~ a sion and is prepared to listen Lo¥¢d the war, we may be sure t B oial Lndrsa Tesivoridi i ject demanding calm search for the |the congressional districts where the | !0(3 Talway oelals. =~ = : to no peace terms except her own, and 1ussian revolution would long burned before dynamite was used to | truth. members came from, protesting e ‘,]’ ‘p:f“' <'lf( ht e or h York n. 26 For two hours | that therefore the war must go on, 1@V brought a general ‘*peacel stop the spread of the flames. After telling of the connection of |@8ainst prosecution of the Borland z"”,‘,d’{ V;mmlfmrcf f-t» Rrtac) l‘?’.” today, Iirc Chief Kenlon and several | It is admitted that the tone of the | Scheidemann said. “What about Jixtra Guard Has Been Ordered. Billings and Mooney, the report|Tesolution on the ground that live|stalled for days awaifing motive | companies of hix men fought a stub- | Austro-Hungarian foreign minister is | A¥MY?_Suppose the army should cal s plant was recently inspected by | points out that Mrs. Mooney and stock was selling at very satisfactory | POWer, Commissioner McChord sald, {born three-alarm fire in a six-story | more conciliatory than that of the| 93¢ Calais and Paris; would th airman B. N. Hurley of the United | Weinberg, facing the same evidence, | Prices and any investigation would dis showed that engines lay In round- building in Bast 14th street before | German chancellor, but this is attrib. | 620 beace? I say, ‘no.’ ates Shipping Board, who ordered | were acquitted because the testimony | WD such satisfactory condition houses without doors to protect them the Dlaze was brought under control. futed largely to the pressure of inter- | ., SUuPPose the army conquerd X Shipping Board, w BLOCUIIY ¢ % 2Ok Y “It is important to reach Gard of A against cold and that machinery was ! The d:unage was estimated at $50,000 a itic A e ©T- | France and England W additional military guards for the|of Frank Oxman, the main witness 7 nal conditions in Austria-Hunga Fhe Vould th; s Lol ; 9 : Hamilton, O.” the memorandum of damaged by the ice which encrusted — c St mean peace? I say, ‘no’; for we w yerty. The order was given, it was | for the state has been discredited ount Czernin's respectful reference to 5 : Of 'We e because of hints of a spy plot | before their trials. Ba counsel read. “Perhaps Proctor of | it. For lack of rapairs, other loco-| Bufralo, Jan. 26.—The Westinghouse | President Wilson's address are re. | Uil have to conquer America.” SR 1{Eh! nenchen BT Fiuricy | TholLael )'mi.\ (‘(\n)m\\‘:]:-n in detailing con. | Cincinnati knows him.” motives were operated with steam | mlectric and Manufacturing company’s | ceived coolly for the most part, as Herr Scheidemann fiercely attack D T s i s reventiy | ity (o B I aetailing con| Questioned by Commissioner -Mur- | seeping from loose fittings, and power | service and repair plant on Lock |he also declared fidelity to the al- | iy ararist leaders, declaring ¢ 1t down 3n the yard i SRR e s > | dock, Mr. Fleney said the Proctor | was reduced correspondingly. street, near the water front, was & | their attitude toward Austria wi D s ware Thagied to a wooden | emmoncy's trial says: bt that|TcferTed to was the soap man-| This condition was reported to be|burned today. The Toss was $150,000. Hlikely 10 lose for Germany her Ia s = oo 5 A e g t 3 a.cl o ke o 5 city in- ¥ 5 g 4 riend. doci which was being used by the | Mooney was regarded as a labor agi- “'vf'”",u‘rl('r'. Mro Murdocl fiound congldue m:lv, fortne ‘:Cafli;” t,'{ = 5‘“ Von Hertling's evident anxlety to pla-| = 1t ‘our government lead auartermasters’ department and In or- | tator ot malevolence by the pubilg|SiGcrable interest in & gentence of the | ists and repairmen, who have been | .Paterson. N. J., Jan, 26.—Tho |cate America is very remarkable ani | frec us from these ‘patiits der to save it soldiers and workmen | utilitios of Stn Franclsco. and thy | memorandum which recommended | drawn to other industries, but very | midelity storage warehouse was burned | cannot reconcile his professed agree- the social demoecrat ey Sa 7 sco, 4 , ] e B areely ieen - flway S 2 R 5 5t < e socia emocratic leader. My Avnamited the dock o prevent £ho | waiis aomins whiin oieor and the |that all the messages should be dif- | largely to nesligence of local Tailway | here last night With an cstimated loss | ment with President Wilson's general haq better go. 1 n wder, “th i S e e e SN - 3| ferent. He said it was the psychology | officials in making preparations be- | of $150,000. One life is believed to | principles while differing as Sl go. warn them that spread of flames, -The Submarine | agitation sought ‘to get’ him.” mE s LR 4 _ ek | ving a8 to de-! (ney 4o not bring us pease Wil IR B RGnprorationis el deparimants R o N e ([ iognsxessmenithat fwhoniy they fire i iaralwintors atxived. have been lost tails, but assumes that the speech was | gin they will be I gralls realizing i vas getting bey il 1e jury’s good faith | ceived a large number of telegrams Shortage of locomotives prevents| John Soulion, 19, a check boy in a constructed, as so v ha i 8 they. will be hurled Sross N realizing the fire was getting bevond | is raised in the report but it declares || : ) ! many have inter-| g ol thetk = Sdhe Nowabke | v ares | jgentical in form they suspected some- normal movement on the New Haven, | dance hall, is reported to have been preted it. with equal reason tc e - £ their control, summoned the Newark | ughat it is because of subsequent de- |pody whs trying to. put . somethin Wfimor: = Aon L Si PR e e ad e TRk el T N St s Sebldsmann went ton; ) vl G e ;1 Qr(«l’”m;]"’[‘]-nfll’ll“‘:]’“fi”w:‘m :f‘\'\‘ velopments that doubt is based on tho | over, which undoubtedly was I ense er making an in-{ many will say to the Enten D et 80 15 : 89 Jjustice of the conviction.” nized by the packers als recog- phia and Reading, Central of ew | of the warehouse toppled over and dignant condemnation of the proposal: ‘we accept t York fire boats could reach the barges. | ° e cCalifornia supreme court is Indication that the packers had ad- | Jem lersey and other lines. At the Har- | feli upon the roof of the adjoining that eat Britam Sixty guards and 200 soldiers are 4 . J & % . confined in its consideration he | vanc srmation of whi s being e ; c b z engaged in protecting the terminals |, : 5 = of tho|vance information of what was being ' 4,000 cars were held by roads for de- = “Now, having rec and boat building plants where thou appeal now pending, the report says, | done in regard to the Borland resolu- livery to the New Haven, which was & s S “{to only matters found in the record |ti as dine. a 2mo 5 i . 4 i ands of workmen are employed. [ 0 20 % <"m'rm<‘\:‘0urt mm(i‘mw th: :“‘;’1‘:‘ }’_0;‘:“[‘):"“‘_“;(:"“"f‘ ‘\‘\]"11“-:1;1 '\"""(']:‘ unable to aceept them because of | hart of the rolling stock of the Con- Of Ingland, we will get on with they i [ ; o % S o lackeyof ienaines cord, Mavnard and Hudson Strect war” ‘ | 1,000 Cars, e Boats to Approach—Plant of Toronto, Jan. 26.—A serious fire is Francisco bomb outrages was made Washington, Jan. 26.—Gross negli- | acr—Troops Block Public. News Jan. 26.—More than a mil- lion dollars’ worth of property was de- London, Jan. 26.—The view enter- | (nancellor von Hertling’s speech the Main committee of the Reichsta warned the military leaders of the in] liance with Germany. The Morning Post thinks Chancellor cannot see the day,” give up Gibraltac river terminal New York, nearly | huilding \nd other defenses, the Post heasRten ol Justing 1S chD Lo says ( day when England, Fr e and t ed another proef | ¥ ing United States will say the same to us Mavnard, Mass. Jan. 26 A large ©f Germany's inexpungeable hatred Regardir relationg between Ge) many and Austria, Herr Schedema said an indication of the Austrian fed ir toward the pre T German me might be gathered from the fa { that during the recent demonstn e ated at §130,001 nd el tera Jradical - di- | jons in Vienna, the Austrian empe ST owEwei I bwakthat halach | ve shi oMl thatine Eorlnakcarin. ) e asmiosnoin L US CSRNIIRTE Bl GRS a oo e e i eeEtval sl maonce aHsien fysoRt SHE tention to the case was first aroused | have been definitely set for June 28. forq, commercial adviser of the Brit. chancellors views are especially v © oo Goaiah emperor was onentyig | through meetings of protest against|Do not mention the fact that we have | ish ombassy; Andre Tardieu, French | BRITISH AVIATORS e e et opsa tediynsulted. L THIN NG the Mooney conviction in Russia. | this advance information as the official | high commissioner, and Count di Ce- ably the fact that the militarist narty ; “2id: to attacks from German Junie Yt From Russia and the western states | word will be out within a day or two. | cilier, the Ttalian ambassador and RESUME RAIDING | in Germany has sained a remarkabla 00 Austria. Ie declared the juaig Sergeant McCabe, in charge of the | Protests spread throughout the coun- |It is not believed that Mr. Tisher | high commissioner. e wscendancy. iy preseihad een demanting soldier suard, states that as the fire | Ty until it has received momentum |knows it as yet.” i) e G inE thelittorancea ot it = oxashouldile iebH (DG started he saw & man run from the | from many sources, sources to whoso| M. Tisher referred to was Walter German chancellor and Count Czernin, | _ ToUching on President Witsos S the storchouses whero | opposition to violence is unquestion- | Fisher, counsel for the livestock men. | DOCK WORKERS OUT; More Than 300 Bombs Dropped on | {1d memps says their words of vester. | PACe ferms Herr Scheidernann saj he appeared on the roof. McCabe | @ble and whose devotion to our cause | Who were urging the investigation. . day indicate the choice each has made: | , - cgarding Alsace, there is notht e adder and as his head ap- | 0 the war is unstinted, The liberal | Control Kansas City Trolley Lincs. TROOPS ON GUARD = indrincescyon Continuing the Temps says: | for msito rediase. 1t wlll rar S peared above the roof sutter a shot | sentiment of Russia was aroused, the | Statements by J. Heney that Ar- . oemet S0t Doy “Although Chancellor Von Hertling | Cut 8 for Belgium, let us cease me was fired and the sergeant’s hat was | liberal sentiment of the United States [ mour & Co. had been found to con- ; j accepts such clauses in the American | 91108 in Flemish politics. sent spinning to the ground. The man | Was aroused because the circum- [trol the street railways of Kansas i London, Jan. 26—Aecrial activity on | program as upnears advantageous for | ¢t US Seek in honor to save ¢ escaped in the darkness, stances of Mooney's prosecution, in |City was the first indication that the | Longshoremen on Five Southcrn Pa- world from new bloodshed in 3 . o a large scale on Thursday owing to | Germany by interpreting them accord- : N E the light of history led to the belief | financial ramifications of the packers favorable weather is recorded in the |inz to his liking, he rejects the | SPTiN8. Let us give up illusions that the legal and sacred instruments | touched many street railway systems. | cific Steamship Piers at New British official statement today. It !others | both sides. Remember that the fe VETERAN GARRIER DEAD of criminal jurisprudence were [ _‘‘The influence of the packers in o Golon Stril o) cays morc than 300 bombs were| The Chronicle says that Chancellor | \N§ among our people is most serios pOR I consciously or unconsciously made | }ansas City is more widespread than dropped on ihe Courtrai Ledghem |Von Hertling, while giving guarded | II YOu permit the Russian negotf use of against labor by its enemies in [IR any other city of the country ex~ New York., Jan. 26.—Longshore- | and Douai railway stations, the air- {and practically valueless ani to | tions to break up and the peopl Peter McAvay, a Postal Employe Over | an industrial conflict. cepting Chicago.” Mr. Heney said. men employed on five piers of the | drome near Courtrai and on German | <ome of the president’s principles, re- | 10P@ to be disappointed. what e | “However strange or however un- Bvidence of the packers' influence | Southern Pacific steamship company | billets west of Cambrai. German |fuses cvery one of the concrete terri- | “40 Pe expected but catastrophe?'| expected it may be, the just disposi- |in the tin industry also has been dis- [on the North river went on strike | hangars at Douai and other ground |torial demands. - = in Hartford. tion of the Mooney case thus affects | covered, Mr. Heney told Commission- | {oday for higher wages. Although | targets were bombarded and seven The C(hgonicle finds it difficult to say Continue Peace Parleys. influence far beyond the confines of | ©F Murdock, who asked about that | federal troops are on guard the sol- | hostile machines were brought down|phow mucB Count Czernin’s phrases Copenhagen, Jan. 2 The Peter McAvay, a former New Bri- | California and California can be de- | Phase of the inquiry. diers were reinforced by the ew | fighting and five others were driven | rogarding President Wilson miean, for |ttonal Russian congress of soldie] tain letter carrier, died this morning | pended upon to see the wider im.| Control by the packers over finan- | York police. out of control. Two British ma- |in concrete points he considered noth- | #nd Workmen’s deputies to which ] at the home .of his daughter, Mrs. |'Dlications of the case. With the | ¢idl institutions has reached such an One thousand men were reported | chines are missing \s soon as it |in Concluding, the Chronicle savs | Bolshevik government referred 4 Woods in Hartford., He had been in | mere moral aspects, with the political | €XteDt Mr. Heney said, that recently | to have quit work was dark British night fliers bombed { {nat “it looks as if mothing but Ger- | AUestion of war or peace has authd health for some time. Up to about ; and journalistic conflicts which the | WheN @0 independent packer asked E. . Patton, an official of the |a German airdrome northeast of [ anois qefeat could change Germany’s | i2¢d Foreign Minister Trotzky to cd axo, Mr. McAvay was a let- | case has 'occasioned, neither the|LOF & 10an from one of the big New : company, charges the men with hav- | Ghent and other airdromcs near | peares tinue the peace negotiations, a H ' position he had held for commission nor the country at large | C'K Panks the bank wrote to |ing repudiated an agreement reached | Courtrai and billets around Roulers. | rhe Daily Mail says: “If there are | trosrad dispatch reports. M. Trotz rs. He leaves two daught- | is concerned. But the feeling of dis- | L10M2s . Wilson of Wilson & Co., | Jast October at a conference with | All of (he machines returned. At |ane shirkers or believers in peace by | Will return to Brest-Litovsk = eas a son and a brother, Who is a | quietude aroused by the case must he | 25KINS If the credit should be extend: | the United States wage commission. | the same time other — machines | negotiation still among us there will [ next week. priest in Minnesota. The funeral will heeded, for, if unchecked, it impairs | " Ireight for coastwise ports is held | rcached several objectives in Ger= fhe none Jeft when Chancellor Von probably be held Monday and the | the faith that our democracy protects Evidence of Trust Plot. up by the strike. The men demand | many making dircct hits on fac- | frertling’s speech ig read. It is clear Austria and Russia Agree. hody will be brought to this city for | the lowliest and even the unworthy | Division of livestock buying through- | }7-30 cents to $1 an hour according | tories, docks and in the town of | 1ha¢ Germany is unrepentant, unbeat London, Jan. 26.—Austria ha { against false accusations. War is|out the country by the five big packery | [ Mr. Patton as compared with the | Mannhein. and swollen with victory for agsres- | clared her readiness to conclude | fought with moral as well as material | which would have the effect of limiting | W#8¢ ¢! ions award of 45.50 The bharracks and railway station | gon » separate peace without Germany @ SGHWARM IN TOILS | resources. We are in this war to | competition between them was charg. | #nd : an hour, at Trest. the steel works at Thion- | " mpe mimes thinks the two speeches |to accept the Russian democratic p While the fire was in progress the sol- | /o) viction, the relief will have to ba | but which carried notat how diers created a fire zone and kept | cOT VNPT b FEICE ave to ba|but which earried motation showing, Assurances that adsquate numbers | Railway company was lost in a firo The Telesraph fears that ths Shooting thelr funs in_the air to pre- | Supplied throush executive action. that it was sent all of the five pack- | of railroad cars will be furnished for In conclusion the report discussed |ing companies. The memorandum | transportation to seaports of Allied | here last night. The loss was esti- nothing to the pacifications of Euroj thelinternationaliaspectyilof: thelicase i said M SN il Ha Tl or M (coun s lWRFOTHl St T auel af Tooastirs a1 el Dol il at sl D00l hh e mieior ih AndlPelleyes iheraiainol aalcaT i d) saying Armour) has received word from Director General MecAdoo which destroyed the company’s barn sbecches of hoth statesmen contribute vent any one from approaching the blazc Three women and fourteen men were in the barges when the fire start- ed and they have been rounded by the military guard and placed under de- tention. No lives appear to have been 25 Years, Dies at Tiome of Daughter | vindicate the moral claims of un-|ed by Mr. Henry on the basis of a _ ville and the railway stations atlgere arranged in collusion and consti- | sTam with the exception of self-dets stained processes of law, however|memorandum taken from the confis HOMi: GUARD ENTISTMEN Saatprocien tute a combined diplomatic offensive | mination of nations, says a dispa | slow, at times, such processes may he. | dential files of Kdward I, Swift attacked with excellent results, the | ;oqinet the Entente allies. The Times | from Petrograd to the ¥xchange T Local Young Man Nabbed by Spring- | hese claims must be tempered hy| Details of a visit to Washington dur- lHartford, Jan. 26.—More than L- |gatement says and the pilots re- [ ool graph company the fire of our own devotion to them - Rl s L hanesd fromiuthe | portediilares exploslonsian ol obiec- | " he attack obviously was intended - at home. (Continued on Third Page) Mot Gy miobt fein mefemtme s o R 0 L N0 | to shake the soliderity of our defenso Rioting in Germany Reported, = : e — forces of the nation, nccording to & | Mhe. mamitmte sancenees | ihat |2t several polnts, but Presldent Wil- | London, Jan. 26.—The ‘Amstoisl Chiet W. J. Ralllngs this atter- NEW ENGLAND POAI ;‘}ITUATHON el i, e AR, A || Ael e 1 @ German At | o¢ tho conversing foroes. Neither | extraordinary reports are curront o noon received a telephone message g 4 [ e e e s el el o aere - on WIIAAY, | speech discloses the least readiness to | cerning a revolution in Germany g from the Springficld, Mass., police | - Mhere: were 16,500 enlistments in | Loking dircet hits. - All the machines | make any concessions which the Al- [inat there have heen rumors of @ stating that Harold George Schwarm. | REPORTED TO BE EMPROVE[) e o SN Wednesdny, |lies deckire to be indispensable.” Aieortors In Dorlin amin s T it giving his address as 66 Prospect| ) The army got 602, navy 107, | {he | s i e SLhse days, thie rioters clamorin ‘ street, this city, was under arrest — draft 201, National Guard 151 a d - French Editors. The corrcspondent ot there for issuing worthless checks. . According to the information, Schwarm has been in Palmer, Mass., for the past ten days where he posed | New England today and expressed the and Oberbilliz also were ficld, Mass., Police for Issuing Worthless Checks, adiralty announcement says for pea admits thath o rmation of these rumors is further cnemy aircraft were de- Boston, Jan. 26.—Railroad officials P edl TrombLc] other branches of service hundreds | gprgyed and two shot down out of Paris, Jan. 26.—"Never was the Al impng reported a freer movemnent of coal intn iney Haven, Mass., Jan. 2 - i roster on Jan. 1. 18180 (ontral One British machine is *1*"""1“‘ raine question farther nrrmn ‘ ¢ but thinks it is remarkable that with 22 coal-luden hirges diicers and 13,500 en- e being the sole obstacle to peace,” says | telegrains, either press or commeng Dr. Dundewiven. In his posses- | opinion that with continuation of good sgaton flett higve g oty e :he Tl"“”"" l.‘” 18y seomulient Lo l‘lh" i i e 1‘“ ]“" "“1“‘ On p r. Dunde en, s P S~ . : in port since Thursday by 2 1 5 = speeches of (he German chancellor [ direc rom Berlin g omi sion at the time of his arrest was|Wweather conditions would show much = A B ] LEXAMINATION FOR PRIVATES ‘B;d T A e e B RS »\‘M’t :"ufll‘hl\:i sund checks on the New Britain [impravement within the next few ¢ Nas o ot A orthvaky Ayer, Mas Jan 26.—-More than minjgter, *“This only is the most vis- | morning Berlin newspapers RACaY Trust company and the Third National | davs. i say they ex 500 privates a non-commissioned 'jhje gymbol of the untractable German | rived. g Bk of Srrinyhetd, Mass : yflicers of the New England division | tmperialism.” Another dispatch to the Exchs 2 AEHh R e calloncd i paned o TGRS LRl (9l > 2 et ot mew Britai 1 National Army will be given The Temps s: the German chan- | Telegraph company from rv’étm‘:'l containing the signature “Geors| Providence, Jan. 6.—The publ [ ditions had improved vicinitr s Smow Iate tonighi oy | an opportunity to hecome second |cellor fails utterly to follow the rea- | dated Friday says: b he: ec of the New | <chools here have been closed fc i would he able to pass Sunday: coldor. i licutenants in th quartermaster | soning of his collaborator, Dr. Richard “The Bolsheviki Gener e is | indefinite period due to the la of sails holstoa corps, it w earncd today. The L | T | S i tlon Wb oM o (Continuc 0INOrTOV newspapers tod 3 on feoond Page,) (Continued on Third Pag e)

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