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FROM THE HERALD % % x % » % | LR SR A TO THE SERVICE. ESTABLISHED 1876, NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT. BOLSHEVISH GAINS "> xevov== | BACK FROM HORRORS, PICK |ANDERS IN SOUTH AMERICA ... .. e oo ... OFHARPOOT, TURKEY FOR NATIONAL = Wrecks Buildings, Blows Car Business in Lima, Peru, Halts, o Track. [Former Mission Employe Saw : | molasses in a freight yard near Cutts e i wharf, off Commercial street, today MING { UES WATER SUPPLY THREATENED | tne cxpiosion view awar ewo of ine THREE YEARS C HOME ‘ | supporting pillars of the Atlantic e o e =t avenue elevated railway structure, | argentine Senate Considers Bill to! demolished several buildings, blew an |Hautune Tashjian, With Wile and A | electric freight car off the track, . Landers of this city will be the next | Declare Martial Law Throughout | gverturned a number of heavily load- Children, Escaped From Persecu- | ca | ed trucks and killed about a dozen | tors and Lived In Mountain Cave | from Connecticut. horses e 3 o ot ! e resignation of Vance (. Me- | - < Seriou: Reports Disquieting. | The men killed were teamsters and With Kurds for 11 Months. e : ; ! | Nation—Land in A | employes of the city who were at A e EISRNTRY ormick as chairman- of the national | s Lima, Peru, Jan. 15.—Business iS| ywork in the city street department o ans ia this city are entertain-| .ommitiee leaves a vacancy to which | arvis, Jan, 14.—Greee S . : A ing Hautune Tashjiun, a refugee from | fore the peace conferepf@ paralyzed and there have been SeV-|yard adjoining the electric freight | Harpoot, Turkey, who has spent the | Homes §. Cummins of Stamford is | anium sisnod b Pras i eral clashes between mobs and troobS| yurd where the explosion occurred Dast thves years reburning| t6l this| evpected tol be alected) | It 15 bellaved!| seting! fortr: (s r'm ol a result of the general strike s e : 5 i L e ¢ g Siie 0 be elected. etting forth the situation of W sy m' ']1 oo “‘J" T e LY ““““" e spread over the strect | country with his wife and two chil-| y. Sl Rtier1avil M rtiniel workens (EEGINE S en et e e i : TS o = i Ia e I R e S T tion = g L inches. | dren after escaping massacres by the |y spellacy of Hartford would he the [ the war. The memorandum says the Then onsnass 2 Many of those killed or injured were |7Turks. T e e 5 s : s e purks. Tashjian is a1 American citi J \ Hellenic n ¥ rvice are idle. The strikers = NaVe, ,,0req with molasses and could not |zen and speik ool Ebngiiany e ocical eandidate REoEs s fnlage Suit [ o onton conslsts of BARL NSO and zen and speaks goc inglish. ~ Hel np o gpellacy is in Europe. It is be- | Persons. of whom 55 per cent. live | = Vot g oYt 3 | be readily identified. : Larpoo ears ago and be- : | ew thousang e alis ! me - ar ty t‘-— . went to Harpoot 14 yvears ago and L lieved t1he democratic state central | il the kingdom of Greece andshere- | 1o s D Sy T are |’ mity Looms Tarke—vil anced against the needs ! eiv worthy circles today, George M. | Venizelog democratic national committeeman Nation As Situation Becomes More Should Cummin will resign. Thomas | and her claims in the settlement o is th » POTOI: T ent and Ques i y up rails on several roads o 4 ve attempted to cut Off thercity s e The tank contained 2,000,000 zal-|came associated with a Congrega-| 5t G mainder outside its limits, FHalf not to He ba lons of molasses. tional mission, beiag employed as an D] ittee of which 1 inders s = : 4l / for s S ot o g Sl | isi ngla P | D1o3 ' | a member will clect him to represent | Million Greeks in America are” in- SO ot for Millions o5igy: ARUPNGEnslana | st The {instructor in tailoring in a boys or- T t It is pointed o o rei ) e E e e e LRSI e den fin s ngutes Burnitied pointed out that the commereiad | i 1o 6 v 3 tary authorities. - . by the mili m_v RE"]N fl[: TERR[]R IN ) phan asylum. mitiee Wishing to reanite the Greok pop- | Necessities of the Jugo-Slavs demand | a 1 | Previous to the Turkisk res, Ec i S 5 * k an o € i : e s el he S0l ety = e ulation in the Balkans, a-Minor | &1 outlet to the Adriatic and that if | ris, Jan. 15. (By the Assod) 2 he As-| | there were 104,000 Christian Armen- ind the islands adjncent 1o the king- | 1AV ignores those nccessities she may | : Buenos Aires, Jan. 15, (By the As lians in Harpbot. Tashjian and 23 dom, Greece et na Snhits bf (oA sontiats oy | Bress)=he suprenie: counsliil > rtial law a asks, first orther : becorne effective throughouout others were successful in fleeing to A reeks against 80,000 Albanians. 1t | Of Burope 10:30 o’clock today. Thosc a country today if the senate acts fav cafety he does not know. He does says that “the “It is supposed that President Wil water supply A few traing were | operated last| | former, besides being dance were Premier Clemencead srabl a bill to that effect passed S ; : A 0 SN sunt t crably on a bill o that effect pare: know that many thousands were | in the majority, alsa possesses a high- | 300 does not consider that Flume as | oo o B g 00 o o0 by the chamber of deputies yes | B > and he testified that he b R a free port in ltalian hands would | z chon The bill provides that the nm\mfr,v au- | I:prlsmg of Spartacans Put ssed the burying alive of 6,000 s a1 second demand. Greeee asks | Meet the needs of the Jugo-Slay hin- | President Wilson s Secretat] thorities mmfl‘r‘vl» the country fo &) little Armenian boys by the blood- R i, S H“”m_“; terland.” State lLansing for the United S period of 1a Down and Law and thirsty subjects of the sultan. lithrace ol N, Clee i Premier Llovd George and [ Five provinces have asked for jian asserts that the massacres were | N ow 7 nace BuceoRd NE Lt D OzE 7 S troops, and every army post there Order Restored P b e e New York Manufacturer ! m. i Y\j‘:v’y‘~’(’-, I\‘Hv“1"‘~ by ",'»}},‘f‘\ M[]NR']E []fi[;TRlNF NflT Secretary Balfou s : antinopie, Jagoorcing 1o - Forcign Minister Sonnino for Ita was activity today. Government offi-| Tashjian fled from Harpoot on Juae : r . 5 = a5 . ik ¢ b d e T ) the twelfth point of President Wil- cials admit that reports from outside | 23, 1915, with his wife and children, peaks at Chamber of S e '” o L St e Viscount Chinda and Baron Mat the city are disquieting and sa) 1rmm<i g Azad, a girl, aged 9 years, and James, | e ia e e ”l‘: :.”“,'\‘ ,‘,,m“ ,” o ) 2re necessary to control the situation. Berlin,Jany 14,0 (By the| Associated | deaa sl soas’ o 11 moaths it Commerce Di 2 irkish rule”, the memoranc de- Japay At Rosario and neighboring cities| Press)—-Berlin’s long week of Bol-|lived iwith Kurdish tribes in .the A ce Dinner. ‘l“ o “"‘ R SRR Beniel 110 Wit tion today of the . 2 i e % % s o award Cons tinople « ireece {he situation is grave. At Canada de| shevism is ended. Here and there|mountains and subsisted on grass and AU Pl Sopan dnoniaion Loecs SN ings preliminary to the peace ¢ Gomez, near Rosario, strikers have| scattercd desperadoes, mostly vouths, |other vegetation they were able to and to establish international gu tini : t . : gtz 3 Speaking at : 5 : antees for the freedom of the straits.’ ; oh bl e ence it is appavent that captured the police station and, ac-| still f occasionally, from some|gather. They spent the greater part peaking at a noon-day luncheon 2t for t1 ‘]f' edom of the strait Would Remain in Force Un- ¥ A ks cording to latest reports, were )mhlmu‘ housetop and during the nights at-|of the time in a cave and at night|the chamber of commerce to t 1s pointed out that the "””"”"‘; o lment to create e of 1 out against troops sent to oust them.| tempts are made by small bands of | the father foraged forth anr at night | Frederick W. Keough of the Natianal| Loure element of the population Changed., Lord Robert is being carried on by two foroag A large number of civiliansat Rosario | the followers of Dr. Karl Liebknecht|wild grapes that abound ia that re-| assoctation of Al 2 JonstsninonloyisiGraec Sheing R ni; i ing the same object but diff have enrolled themselves for special| to revive the reign of terror. They|gion. When the Russian armies in-| o o ooon ¢ RS eIy N s el ereacerii anhgallthagother ey % ” g | are insignificant however, compared |vaded that district the Tashjians were | > OT<» &ive his views on the rehabili-| nationalities put together except the Cecil Says. ogts meats oy matle ol Police Carry Rifles. | with what has passed. able to escape and start for Vladivos- | tation of badly wounded soldie In this ity no attempt is heing| A few Spartacans tried to recap-|tok, Siberia. declared that the problem must m:# - to run street cars after dark | ture the Charlottenburg police head-| At Harbin, Manchuria, they were|phandlea sanely and ith he exteption of one line. Pa- | anarters the night after they wero| cheered by the sight of Americas, trolmen are armed with rifles and| taken by government troops. French and British forc Tashjian and have received a cam-| Dr. Liebknecht's sister was arrested | is generous in his praise of the Am- - | today and several hundred rebels are|erican Red Cross and the Y. M. C. A. for indicate| locked up awaiting trial which, in as | without whose aid. he says, his family that ihe disorders there are mot dus| much as martial law was not pro-|would have perished. He pays par- to Bolshevists but fo strikers, the ma- | clatmed, must be left to the regular|ticular compliment to Director Frazer jority of whom are railway workers.| courte. of the Red Cross in Siberia, and on P Territory in Asia-Minor. The situation on the raiiroads is said| T.osses inflicted on each side dur-|returning to this country visited the 5 4 » The third territorial clajm made by to be rapidly approaching total par-| ing the past week are as yet estimat- | home of Mr. irazer’'s X, NI ) P i S Greece is for parts of vilavets in Asin- S ed only roughly, but 4t is helleved| Austin, at Dedham. Mass, and : ; 8l | AMinor. These have a population, it If the Allies sell at auction Germai’| that : Tt . decisions of the proposed worl “But if a society of nations be es - et R tablished immediately’, the memor- without hysteria. | andum continues, ‘“‘Constantinople might, in consequence of great inter- natignal interests connected with the | nalists tonight his views as to the ; bined physical forces, while the| possession of the straits, be formed | work of a league of nations, expressed | 'epresents the view tha its fi as a separate entity by the society of | the opinon that the league of nations | €an be enforced without the al nations, which would nominate its | “certainly would provide for the | C0mmon world police force governor for certain-fixed periods.” limitation and decrease of present Diplomatists seem impresse armaments.” He also said the league | ¢ View that loth these ided would do away with all treaties incon- | Woving toward a common d sistent with its tenets including com- | Which. for example, might p pacts providing for a balance of that the nations could reser power, each individual case their 1 Paris, Jan. 14.—Lord Robert Cecil, | contention th 1e decisions who discussed with American jour- | league miust backed by its| bayonets paign supply of cartridg Reports from the inte they will greatly exceed 200, brought her word from her brother. . W 1s sald, of 1,188,000 Greeks against inferned in neuatral ports, the|dead and a thousand wounded. The| Tashjian declares the atrocities of ] s oo 0o 000l Mohe e wovernment will do its utmost{ overwhelming majority of these are|the Turks were bevond description. - 8 bl | iimcd to e both - “zeosraphically | @ 1eague of nations would have upon | force or avail themselve sossession of those interned | Bolshevist They slew all the old men and wamen 4 5 and historically integral parts of | the Monroe Doctrine, Lord Robert Means . ers of that coun-| The reinstatement and arming of well and children, and dragged the i Greece asserted he could see no conflict with There is re ports from Santi-| the police gives the government a|Young girls off to their harems. B 3 i - The Avipenian provinces, with Rus i arrangement | new force of trained men who know In 1914 he was directed by the gov- e, : i o GRS T AT e !"the eriminal world and whose absence | ernment authorities at Harpoot to : i ould be erected into a separate during the first days of the revolu-|to prepare 14,000 uniforms for the S ttate, organizmtion of which should | trouble with the league he replied: . . representatives ! tion gave the disorderly element a|soldiers. He succeeded in rouading o entrusted tc i s by “Then I think an arrangement Ik h : be entrusted to eat powers b up all the tailers in the city but was . 8 It is admitted | could be made by which Ameri Russia’s Case Considereds Asked what effect the formation of | Whether they would utilize ships Chiles to obtain n the territor the doctrine. Asked what would hap- pen if Mexico or a South American country did something that caused | 4nd it would be rejecte by some of tt there is nothi free hand. Police records, including the society of nations | those of the Rertillon system, wers | Without material with which to com- : : hat fhe Vlleoii o Tenioadlaod || conta¥actin henaltiofihetlengyic not destroyved, as was first reported.| mence the work. In a few days the ¢ - it i asas e et e Regarding admission of the Central Detectives are already rounding up|material arrived from Germany, cu R i 0,000 and 70,000 Greek inhabitants, | POWers and their allies to the league, Alleged Pogrom and Several Hun- | old acquaintances and the work of |into garments ready to sew together. 4 s B | | icht be attached to the new Armen- |Jsord Robert said they should be ad disarming lawless elements is pro- | The goods bore the stamp 1908, I % ¥ S fan state mitted, “If they showed an inclina- ared Are Reported Slain. eiatng | showing how far ahead Germany w o i T . ey ton to do the right thing Property losses during the past|prepariag for the war with the Turks i : Gonmigeaithil lisnpiicaty Speaking of Germany, he said week of terror amount to tens of mil- | as her allv. S 3 All islands in the Near East thatare | «ywe must await events. If she turns | P04y i ror Mons of marks, in addition to the| While making his way across south- ethnographically, seographically and [ et W8 O E T o repain | be. entirely disposed of by Sat reported' to have taken place At} ... o0, howspaper plants and gov-;ern Russia and Siberia, Tashjian kept FREDERICK W. KEOUGH. cconomically Greek must return to the | o qamage she has done, there is no Brediffchcy “’“""”"“"" BRoNIF 2 I e rnment Ruildings il Merchantsillosseq | 2 dianywhichihelis anxiois §{olhave : _ (i Hellenic state. These should include | roo oo oot S o T e e Jewish capital of the Ukraine, = e islands, according to the treaty made | Jeisue 10 for the mood of humanits S .. or ils 'hiough looting are ver; bigh, ope|lublished. Belns without sumolent | its ti being captured with §0,000 funds he is unable to undertake the He pl«th\j‘\tw] that the burden would | in London in April, 1915, whichtare | Sguet o o s et eronn. It il worth of jewels which he had|Work himself. The diary includes|not be lifted from manufacturers for| 10 be annexed to Ttaly benefit her if she comes in.’ : e S e omplete notes of s journey to | I the figures gi the memors ; In some streets near the po- | Complete no f his journey to|years to come and every effort should | ? 1§thepiley ; e "”‘”‘l"’ Austria because of her internal con andum are said to have been taken i1t of an Wt by Vst : headquarters mearly every store | Viadivostok, then to Japan and final- (3 50 SR S SO i Al i 5 i | B. ¢ > made sach disabled men trades | St h ot UalicaM et e i b i e inizing for their protection in all | Was systematically looted e ; | from Turki tatisti mherelial @ e R arert ata He de. | ©ffort seems to be to bend all St e | i so that they shall be sclf-supporting| long discussion of Bulgarian claims, & i i gies to the laying of the faGnMl centers which they anticipated would | ! clared, however it would be an in : and become an actual asset to indus-|in which that nation’s attempts to |5 fo " For)ide Bohemia sayin of the league, so that the confd Bolshevist troops holding the S!lf“ —— 1 e e i tono || FAT0 GO el (19 s b (e | e they used it to grease their zuns and | LABOR SITUATION IN try. Mr. Keough said firms which | dominate the v;m\‘,n,‘\\—m, @ view £0 | ighe was not to blamo for the war | May proceed to the ,;xvm 1;mk 1t | | realizing her dream to possess four S the peace treaty in the early e the| boots. R i AL o st oy : and is progressive i | have already taken in wounded fight-| coc ™ (he s G R o e T even it be only a preliminar Reports received here give . N i number of persons killed as eral| The center of the city has been| STATE IS ANALYZED |ing men are agreeably surprised at| £ : R e ol cEl-aia the loasuaimicht : im quiet all day today. Late this evening | thein spirit and onclconcenn (axpresst o itlie can and the Adriatic e e e e e S lhwnicn willfdiEnose or LT A a few shots were heard in different| Al e ian fi oo concern eXpress:| are detailed.. The memorandum ends | P°000, S50 50 2 100 R fles of | fuestion of demobilization (SHN parts of the town, being fired by sni- | S Gt = any | py saying reat Litornational Interest. e safd |Ioturn of the warring countr! pers and locters. Merchants having' Council of Defense Official Says Be- Mr. Keough's speech in part fol | Militarism is as deeply rooted In | (52t Dalestine and G atenting e urly as possible to ‘t.'h(. eco shops along Unter den Linden took | lows g "} Bulgaria as in Prussia. The Bulgar- conditions of peace. This is = might be in this class. He stated that & tween 15.000 a 3 s ha sry right to hoas e- = 2 rized by ali the statesmen as d 5.000 and 18,000 Arc ians have every right to boast of be- |} = - o icq President Wilson's view v'v““ : .M:T“m t that the league must be constituted by the present peace congress. adding: | Wilson Considering War Dam4 “Otherwise it will become an im- | ; possibility | : Whson i e er o ak r war, but are far fron = him an independen estimate peron rmeling U o As to the attitude of the Allies as a |, o0 pone - = | cqualling the Prussians in the domain | % Rt A8 @1 actual physical damage su of science, letters and art.’” EEILOfC R O S LY S Sty bl and Belgium during © nee 20be said every omne o err Robent eid By e f them | (yoh the peace congress reach The work before today's sess| the supreme council comprised pletion of the allotment of repre tion of the various nations, an ther consideration as to whethen sia should have delegates in the These matters are expec| Jewish Capital of Ukraine Sceme of Warsaw, Jan. 30 (Delayed.)—(By the Associated Press.—A pogrom is when the first sitting of the ngress will be held The program commonly agreec calls for primary consideration forming of a league of nation the congress will work on this exclusion of all other subjeets. place deriving Il Jewish latlon. The trouble rted to | jecurred as a re- is repe 1 ditions, is not vet ready for the arm militia, which the Jews w Iy to Vaacouver, hundred while other hundreds are de- to have heen wounded There some exaggeration as to the extent of the casualties, however It is cansidered here that the con- trol of Petulrn, the Ukrainian leader, | down their 4’\1"\m& and business} “TNustrated feature stories on the has weakene: 15 otherwise he would | went on as usua 4 re-education of the wo ded soldier: not have permitted the pogrom, his The government has no intention Out of Work. e S mvh[:(m‘” ”1‘:".: policy previously having been to pro-| of slackening efforts against the| Hartford, Jan. 15.—Directar Joseph|cal and human miracles. Such pi tect the Jews when possible. | Spartacans the Abend Zeitung says itj W. Alsej of the Connecticut State|sentations of the subject cause us to It is pointed out that the Jews late- learnsz from best authority. Emergen- | Counsel of Defense, said thaday that|think that there is an enormous task Iy have been more bitterly hated be-| cy measures are being taken against | reports received up to Tuesday night|ahead of us in making, hy mechanicul cause of their allesed Bolshevik | the leaders of the movement. It is|indicated that between 15,000 and |means, whole men out of little more teadencies and aiso their employment | reported that documents found by | 18,000 people were out of work i |than remnants. To accept this as in- e Ol eon O B e ene ace conere the Bolsheviki as spies in many | loval troops show that the Spartacan | this state. dicative of the problem of re-educa.| REDS HAD DRAWN ety | s Rty discHsR s R QO T cases. they being the only intelligent| uprising was Inspired from Moscow. ‘These figures do not spell disas-|tion is to warp the judgment and mis- PUBLIC PROCLAMATION. | vital point bably be conducted by more tha educated instruments obtainable = ter,” he said, “and we expect sit- | direct the general endeavor. At th S 4 i Foocbiine nit |0 S tho Rerlin, Jan. 14, (By the Associated army officers chosen especiall; this work BAGK WITH WAR WOUNDS juation to clear up withaut serious let it be uaderstood that the | == e | - Geneva, Jan 14 (By Associated facturers are carrving larger working | the extent of at least 50 per cent. of | Spartacan leader, Georg Ledebour, ss.)-—Two thousand persons have| ! ~ forces than they would if actuated by |a medical nature. A disabled soldier | Leen Killed at Przemysl. Galicia, by | Corporal Steve Doniem Was Located | business reasoas only. All are doing|or sailor is not necessarily a man | 11 Ukrainans, according to a dis- On Verdun and Soissons Front I'or | {Deir best to meet a situation ag | without legs or arms | XHHL i e pat to the Neue Freie Presse of i | vated by cancellation of government| ‘'Ninety” per cent. of all returneq; Chiefs were so certain that their plane Ducheas of . Euzembure Aoa Ass Vienna, a copy of which has been re- Year and Half. orders. wounded men £o back to their olq | foT the recent uprising would succeed | jobs. With them the employmeng| that they had prepared a proclama- sumes Her Office Today. in problem is simple. Only 10 per cent, | tion, dated January 6, in which the wd . ; | | The Ukrainians have een bom-| 4 T e | | home from overseas with three serv-| - 4 Yrir > 1 W , 1 Jai Al and ainiendhconaltionsiiniEhelll nib i oty e R SRS St 1B R LR { many more men are injured annually | declared deposed and formal Charlotte, sister of Grand Duchess | the question of what indemnitie] wn are described as terrible the Verdun and Soissons fronts for — in American industries than we may | nouncement made that the govern- | Marie, has been chosen as the latter’s | to be exacted from Germany has The gas and electric plants have| ona and one-half years and still re-|Threc Taken Into Custody For Alleged | €XPect In a year's war. Seventy per|ment had heen taken over by the|successor by the chamber of deputles, | made plain on een destroyed anc e is : Sl i 5 h B0 S llese al njur revolutionists, | whie . after the ab- | believes damages should be rest been destroyed and there is no Nght| aing part of the shrapnel with which cent. of all men injured in war or| revoluti which met immediately after the at < lamag u res he town. Water and food also are - dication of the grand duchess was |to restitution, reparation and r | ing ‘the Prussians of the Balkan: They resemble the Pru n in mili- tarisin, in their worship of brute strength and in their inhuman man- President Wilson will have | | i | survey is being planned and wil head of the revolutionary independent . actual damages will be so greaf the Entente nations probably w Princess Charlotte Becomes Grand | /0 oo carmed with the ability German people to pay it than wit possibility of exacting further dax the nature of punitive indem| socialist element and the immediate supporters of these revolutionary ceived here Corporal Steve has arrive rporal § Doniem has arrived war costs, several occasions Peculation of $38,940—One a Texas | peace never had a trade. Conse. | quently the teaching of any trade or| APPEALS FATHER'S WILI announced. By a vote of 30 to 19, rhe CEreyman, any kind of machine operations to| pap chamber decided to immediately ap- k point a delegation to receive Princess ‘ | he was wounded in the shoulder and tlon and shotfld not be extads Bead i financial pumshment of the Gel There is one conspicuous wound in BANK OFFICAL ARRAIGNED. his head where he was struck by a| Paris, Jan. 151t hecame known = bullet from a Hun machine gun when | yesterday that three Young Men's Ronikier Accused of Stealing he was leading his squad in an attack, Christian Association workers are un. | on the nest of guns. He will return|der arrest in Paris, charged with de. | to Camp Devens for an operation on | faleation of funds of {he association king — E of appeal from probate of this 70 per cent. gives them better in- | {j,o last will and testament of the late Deople comes and easier work than their for-|y,yke Meehaa were filed in the pro-| Charlotte’s oath of office. Princess mer occupations. To the extent of | yate court today by F. B. Hungerford, | Charlotte will assume office Wednes President Wilson may visit Jn over 90 per cent. re-education is noth- | ,(torney for John F. Mechan day on his way back to the United § ing more than common, ordinary in-|,ppeal is returnable before the super e next month, but r to confer soston, Jan. 15.—William Ronikier | hjs shoulder and then will return to|The men are George Schoeffel, former e . jor court in Hartford on the first} NORTH & JUDD TO BUILD. e iara has hoped was arraigned today before a this city where he was employed be-| secretary of the chamber of commerce (Continted o enth Page) day in February | The North & Judd Mfg. Co. has|@Ple to sail trom a British porty commissioner charged with the em- | fore he went to war of Rochester, N. Y.; Rev. R. Atking of z e h ST s L L 8. Co., has |, 1) " Queenstown, and have ar bezzlement of £27.000 from the Manu- | i . = BarldiPase e ian B s ot = ————— een granted a permit by Building facturers' Nation: bank of Cam- LANE RESIGNS POST. said to have M'f‘.vv‘;x r'nl'nwr.\,(‘(‘l('!‘u\‘ bridge. He pleaded not guilty and his Bridgeport Jan. 1s.—Charles H.|of the Sailors’ Union of New York eXamination was put over to January { Lane. special agent here of the bu-| City : < i Hartford. Jan. (3. cast for Now Britain and vi- cinity: Fair, colder toniahi Thursday fair, take commend of the central depart-| architects and the contract has beeh [ honrs at Oxford to receive an hd f shich has been re- by the war of swhich has been re | ment, were issu >d today by the war|let to the Kllison Construction Co. of | ary degree which the univ 1 department, Hartford, L A wishes Lo conler on him, May Revisit England. From Cambridge Institution. WOOD GOES TO CHICAGO Inspector A. N, Rutherford to erect | LOTEuRIlY o tnspect the bam Washington, Jan. 15.—Orders di-|a six story brick building on its [ poiqr 407 ““'k ¢ recting Major Gen. Leoaard YWood, | property The building is to be 23 war e now commanding Camp Funston, | by 28 feet and will cost $11,000. Un- e lson it 18 said. pE Kansas, to proceed to (‘hicago and| kelbach & Perry of this city are the | if he visits and, to stop for WEATHER. in the anti-submi 2 Bail was set at $20.000. He was | reau of investigation of the depart The total amount alleged to have committed to the East Cambridge jail. | ment of justice. resigned today He ( been misappropriated 'va Iroxir (1‘\4 He was brought here from Montreal | will take a position with a local man-| $35.940. most 2Dl Skt Where he was arrested ufacturing concern covered,