New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 30, 1919, Page 1

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rerrrre ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ X ¥ TO THE SB.B\I(‘E. "ABLISHED 1876. TE Q. ’ TAS STAR HAS ONFERENCE AWA ATE 1§ AfiAlNST = ng fQE*Tfifv‘é;Zm\. UREES CUNERESS T(] K e Railroad Leglslatlon I5 Neoded, | o mowcsin vesacrs Aol Paris, Jan. 30.—As vet the peace Uu]mes Gommlssmner Says conference has received no formal re- ply from the Russian Soviet governs ment regarding the invitation sent to all the Russian governments to meet AGA]NST FIVE YEAR CONTROL conference representatives at the Princes Islands, but the Russian com- mittee in Paris will probably make a formal response in a few days on be- half of the various other Russian gov- Says Congress Should Remove .\t | ernments This committee now is considering ; Once Menace of Centralizing Con- | {je jroposals but the prospects seem Doing A to be'that it will decline to sit in con- i i Formerly. iblic Utllities Chairman Says Ford—oficers Bected. Hartford, Jan. 30—With more than Rates Are More Than Belore | soo actesates ana visttors present the . 15th annual session of the Grand apter of Connecticut, Ovder of the PROTESTS TO GONGRESSMEN Eastern Star was held at Masonic Tem- ple today. An address of welcome = was made by the Rev. Dr. Wm. I. of Telephone | English of Hartlord, grand master of Masons in Connecticut. The response Service Mere Is Intrastate and New | was by Associate Grand Matron Mrs Ada Oakley Pazan of Danbury Zone System Materially Increases = e o T ; HROC i : ipters of Massachusetts and | qpol e e t ; : Rates, Richard T. Higgins Declares. | &0 EOP, 00 1 Fes tron report- | Qi Boad-RliOne i an ference with any representatives of cd 154 member: ervice, Washington, Jan. 30.—Enactment | the Bolsheviki. The expected declina- Washingtony Officers were clected as follows of railroad legislation for the protec- | tion. however, will be couched in | 00" e tpe e Worthy nd matron, Mrs. Ada O. | tion of the public before congre courteous language and will embody | w4 5¢rikes th g Pagan, Danbury; worthy grand pa- | journs March 4 was urgently recom- | @ lengthy explanation of the commil- | oh, jes Pleg, dired il i tron v 12. Garde, New Haven: | mended by Charles E. Elmaquist of | tee’s reasons for declining epresenta ‘ o LSS0 s grar atvon M LN esota, testifying today before the Members of the Russian committee senate interstate commerce commit- | State that all the Caucasus govern- : us president of the National Asso- | ments, as well as the OMSK SOVErN | g heen out for a week, clation of Railway and Utilities com- | ment, now are in complete 1‘1‘:‘”““‘}‘»‘\’1» Francisco, where he said; R missioners. B R NG S s B " | ported workers in two tradesy® 4 unqualified support. Pres. Tschaikov- [ faiaoq Wworiers i o 4wg oo e - sky, of the zovernment of North Rus- | - = BHoT N BRETYGOL the DIl wit : all the work in the district. — A Bution pnilaseutiay: - While the army is being demobil- | i ' who sailed from Archangel Jan- £ o ized and war industries are returning | yay 1. is cspeoted {0 reach Paris Breathing Spell Needed. BP0 HaeBIE Trom Thizeport avill to a peace basis, Mr. Elmquist, said, | within a few davs to confer with the Mr. Piez declared most of the yards the nation’s greatest industry, the | committee. needed a breathing spell, that he did But Little New B railroads, remains under the control VTN = | no tthink the government would guar- FRANEE ANB ENELAND of one man and the life of many com- | | tee to furnish work at extremely high mercial undertakirss is dependent on STRIKERS EXONERATED wages unless increased skill and out- | the will of a director general, who - put justified it, and that in his view it AGR[E “[lTH wu bGN claims exclusive control over all was highly unwise for shipyard | rates. Increases in rates of a billion |y\war Labor Board Brands As Fa orkers in theit own interests to:call y dollars a year, he declared, had been strikes at existing scal 5 omor put into effect without consulting the the Insinuation That Harvbor % i Output Is Decreasing. . ‘ g 5 | ployes Received German Money. “Most of the yaras need a breathing | £ Yesident’s Plan Concerning | shippers. Would Suspend Rates. spell,” said Mr. Piez, “and an oppor- ooy _— few important constructive bills You should remove at once the | NeW York, Jan. 30.—Adoption of a; unity to go over their organization Control of Captured el been rece ity cis) Per® Gent: Charles E. Elmquist of Minnesota ter of Connccticut Ield At Hart- J | i | | i | Hartford, Jan. 30.—The public util- ies commission of Connecticut has, rough its chairman, Richard T in letters to Connecticut sen- emergency fleet yErpo | today. He referred particu taker and in opposition to the tel situation at Seattle, where ¢ Ginand, Bridseport; grand secretary, ephone s scheduic '””"‘_‘f, DUl Mrs, Harriet( v‘ rwell, Winsted; sl Lot I B M e | vl it AV e o War emergen Ly ! Gallup, Moosup: grand conductress, ing caus Eetleraling _\“:“”;.‘”“" Mrs. Hattie M. Stickle, Newington. control ) & dominzut feat- ure and should no longer be used to He adds that the telephone service of Connecticut i )6 per cent. intra Southern New Bngland I, Too Much One Man Power. | adoption of th lution dled by the Sou Telephone company Fiat Rate Satisfactory 1 =} =3 The flat rate system herctofore in | Senator Pollock force in Connecticut has worked very satisfactorily say the comn ion bta“d Ot LOdgC, II\I\O_‘; and, with a slizht increase in the base or rental charge, affords the com- Bor h d and Reed. » sufficient revenue to pay a fair r ] : » » dividehd (7 per cent.) on its invest- menace of centralizing the control of | Feésolution by the war labor board ia| with a view to eliminating production o o ! Washington declaring that there was| guctors which have tended to incres Territory Accepted. ent the railroads in one man”, the wit- geeon ¢ Washington, Jan. 20.—Critics of | ness told the committee, urging that | N0t the slightest foundation™ for an| .,sts Iow greatly the costs have insinuation” by counsel for the boat- | | oen increased is shown by the fact { President Wilson and his proposal for | section ten of the railrond control act 4 “The system of zone rates, hased o0 {4 Jeague of nations were sharply re-| he amended to permit the interstate | O%NeTs In the New York harbor labor | ypa¢ in one Pacific coast vard, typical Paris, Jan. 30.—The British and distance, recently established by Post- | huked in the senate today by Sena-| commerce commission to suspend | COntroversy that ShoMmepIosc: master-General Burleson under fed- | tor Pollock of South Carolina, demo- | rates initiated by the director gener- | Were in receint of German money | L was announced here today by Frank | | per cent. to the present tota Plan s Reunion. For cunion onf 300th anni wry of the geners sembly Ma L resolution by Se Hemenway creating a committ to some extent of the general situa- | French governments have accepted | | ¢ two senators and six represents w0 ses Costs Here, 2 tion, wages now give each worker | in principle President Wilson's plan 1 sral control, may theoretically be cor- rat, who in his fir prepared ad-| a] pending determination by the in- [ $1.70 for pulting in the same time | concernir mandatories Iror | the | o malsel aiDrogram within Sl rect, but the same schedule of rates | dress, charged that partisan politics| terstate commerce commission and |T; Walsh, attorney for the workers| } i po \vould have been given $1 for | league of nations for the administra. | V&S @dopted is not necessarily correct or cquitable fwas the basis for much of the criti-| state commissions. He also declared | 311° received a cony by felegrabh. |, "oy ago, while in the same period | tion of captured territory it was stat- Mo for all sections of the United States. | cism voiced recently in the senate. the act should be amended so as to | Al: Walsh had protested agiinst the " verage output per individual ed by Captain Andre Tardieu of the I believe the zone system recently in- | Senators lLodge of Massachusetts, | restore all the powers of the states | oinuction as an “irrelevant fssue in-1 5 520" (ocent. of what it was a year | French peace conference delegation | 127 Doverty R exen stalled materially increases the tele- | Knox of Pennsylvania and Borah of | over intrastate rates phone rates for Connecticut, which is | Idaho, republicans, and Reed of Mis-| innecessary for efficient management | essouri, democrat, the South Carolina | 3¢ the company \We believe that | senator id were among those who | :\‘\r'h\)vn;x:-'j';zvl"\ <hould be returned to | had labored for *destruction iastead | Petween f Norfolk, put in erning “the abolition of inv jected into the case by an improper Il 1 roducts f ago. today. The acceptance, however, is | a1 product rom tax. remark by comnsel for the bhoat-own- : thereby . t Conflict of Authority. ST Gl o P e, More Pay But Less Work. subject to learning under what condi- S y > tax upp Discussing the conflict in authority | fusal of the attorney to withdraw it “In an Atlantic coast yard that I | tions the plan will be carried out S s of tate commission and the | The insinuation was declared by the| have in mind, workmen receive $2 for This plan, in its practical applica- et constructiont if the! peace plans railroad administration, Mr. Elmquist | board to be “gratuitous and untrue.” | putting in time that brousht them §1 | tion, now is under examination before | 7 ; ‘ I / i o a vear ago, and the average output | the supreme council of the peace | Pe accessible to ever ibitar do- 3 : RO s | Senator Pollock, who took his seat cad : sl wihichids vitallyginte “'\'.‘l ,1{'\}.' juris. | last month ta fill the unexpired term | Ary 6 by Willlam G. McAdoo when hae | per individual has dropped in the | conference. ‘ der condgeions of democratic equd mestic enterprises should ha ‘Y'M_“Q lof the late Senator Tillma., said hol was director general which said that DELEGATES WON T TALK same period to 66 2-3 per cent. of Captain Tardieu made the an- Favors Referendum, dictionsoyen Jrosulntiye i probion 12d listened with impatience “to petty | the director general could not subject | what it was one year ago. nouncement during his conference | Mr. Talcott proposed a bill n the federal B9y SIS M| partisan criticismsof the president” by | himself to the control of commis- ‘Combining this decreased effi- | With the correspondents at the for- | quire a referendum on all pro Ins MBS Eoodn o senators ‘“attempting to bring the | Sions or courts as to rates. Australian and New Zealand Premicrs| C1€DCY With the increased wage, the | cign office federal constitutional amendmer ndit president of the United States into Opposes Five Year Control. e - result has h(lvn 1“- m]flw ‘~IH(»‘ t’)n]n— . ‘I ::mlm‘:;vn \n\v‘w‘v. ;;’:“ \(h:‘:m u‘ny‘”(‘l' ‘”uly More Sunday observance and Flate congitions the disfavor and contempt and ridi- i ecline to Express Opinions Relat- | struction costs entirely unreasonable. i ories ov ierman colonies | day movies bills appeared in thd L R Mr. McAdoo's plan for an exten- Some contracts for ships have been | Wus proceeding among all the powers | ate. Automobile bills would p ule of the world” and praised former| HARTFORDVS GRAND LIST 4“:1({.\“; ,(-,| TG '”ru hI‘J ;”;’(:W.ot ”k,,. 21(2‘0;:5\::::;231h?:\t‘x;: ::“n:i\: tve to German Colonies’ Disposal. | already cancelled by the government. | ‘\um : ..”n.mlumm ' sentinient Sl posER ey e g . : : : s was : > 5 Fa R smper of | the desire to reach wu unanimous ; : | President Wilson ia behalf of a league| wp, suggested December 31, 1919, as | Paris, Jan. 3, via Montreal.—Pre.| In MV viev 4 ‘»T\_ et oahe ship | agreement he said. This applied {o] 4n sutomobile is stolen; tliat au of nations .| the limit of control if a special ses- | mier Hughes of Australia and Pre.| CON8ress and its a At Japan asi well as tol the other powers| .o Pciug towed IsHonld: caid 3 . “We will be recreant to our duty,” [ oo et cas called act | mier Massey of New Zealand shawed | comstruction makes it highly unwise e flags or red 1d incrd Taxable Property Valued at $150,000,- | o1 Vro Wil DO TeCIesnl 1o, our duty: | sion of congress was called to enac A o | for shipyard workers in their own in- | With colonial interests, as all were in- [ Jo8%) Br - bes 3 g legislation. He thought no legislation | the greatest reluctance today in dis- el ‘all strikes against existing | SPired by the same purpose, whici | people and traitors to the human raco| oy than that suggested for the pro- | cussing with interviewers the attitudo| ferests to call strikes ags & was to reach an agrecement in com-| ¢ Permit minor [Bbesdo notiber i ';":‘ e ,'f"f]"", "C-| tection of the public should he passed | of the peace conference toward the| WASe scales. ey Vears fo operat List of 1918. licols tnat mefavill vy aeldery at this session. He sald the five year | German colonies. Mr, Hughes was Ask $1 an Hour | AGced concerning the Irenchl inters| | Ln asricHlau 3 e e e plan would continue the guaranteed |asked 4In Seattle, where the men havel ests in (he former German colonies | 2 single department Hartford, Jan. 30.—The assessors’ | fault-finding, unless we can s | compensation involving a billion dol- | ‘‘Are Premiers Botha, Massey and | peen out a week, the demand is for $1 | Captain Tardieu said France desired st of taxable proper cre, st | something better, and encourage our| . % i Lk 2 5 Nist of taxable property here, just lars increase in rates and high oper- | yourself satisfied with the situation?”}an hour pay as a minimuin for all | the Kamerun and Tagoland, which completed ows a total of $150,000,- | representatives at the peace council i iaray o 8 fut E ] : ‘ 1 ¢ 7,000,000 over a!as to the best way to effectuate the| 2ting costs. continue the war powe efe no to answer,” Mr. | workers in the yards. skilled, semi- | owing to the character of their popu- 000, an increase of $7 i i s » | Hughes replied after a pause ,, ns d. 1 do not think | jutio e pro ¥ o vear ago., There are 800 more names | hopes of mankind for the peace of| Of the president, continue what he : : . [ = e goLRu Ekiiiad B jatoniand. the Ebroximl o ) : S e e called the chaotic condition of rate e — | that the government will continue to | }'rench colonies, France was in the on this year's tax hooks thar 30 ) i i S (e R, i | furnish work at extremely high | best position to administer f the year before. It is said that Today is the day; tomorrow may s 1 | < 2 et A ¢ o : I . voice, and thrust government owner- wages unless it is justified by the in-| The direct anaexation of the colo-| Maxfield, at Orange, indicating 4 more home-owners developed in | be tao late. He who would postpone ey : e ¢ H . 1 of the workers and the | nies wauld 1 by | test there, and F. 1 s 1918 than in any previous vear of the |the consideration of a proper league | ShiP to the fore before governmen creased skill of the - Ui, i L) S ST sy en preferred by an dej oy ThelTravele Insur- | of nations is hardly less an enemy to ¢ < . DSLg 2 sh | Bra ¢ S ) y S thu » company is the heaviest tax-|the human race than he who comes Common sense, the witness said, de- | George Washington Grant. mous | wWages ought to brin | idea of mandatories was being care- Senator Srooks, in hree Ul IR ¢ of $4,051,- | out boldly ia full opposition.” manded that this valuation be com- —— | fully examined with a view to deter-{ would enlarge the opportunitil payer )\_1'!“ «”1'_ jhj .-l",'[‘,“ ['v‘”m'n | 2 = e/ S pleted bhefore government ownership London Movie King, Ascsumes Con- | STABILIZING ]MPORTS mining how it could be practically | savings banks investments by 030, That o G gtk was considered " . | applied. He said the time requirved | sion of certain kinds of bonds of Arins MielColin's 20,04 MARR]ED AT ANNAPOLIS : S : trol of Beantown Club. SRR I for defining the method of applying | eign governments and public uf The city expense budzet is ex- the system would not dels S 3 about a > a Boston, Jan. 30.—The oho . ; e syste ould not delay the for-| corporations, etc.. in the list of pected to inere wout a million and RN FAVOR REGOGN]T[ON Bo o S0=slhel suleton the | wynpeTrade! Bonrd Announces Ex-(iration of) the 'lansusl of nations bl s etic e e e AR a half for the coming fiscal year, coatrolling interest in the Boston L e 2 ies wh 3l held under 5,000,000 Insign Froderick C. Stevens Takes G National league baseball club to| clusive Simplification of Procedure | ResbORS ThF Sl ine o beace with | fied restrictions. George Washington Grant, for the . S Wang TrollcyECars Henlg Miss Ruth W. Marshall 3s [His | Forcign Relations Committee Wants | past ten vears the owner of o strin Wheel to Stimulate Trade. vowers, he said, would first cstablish e lls would provide 8 a full agreement on all points and it I JAT THIRST QUENCHER G bt e : ) & picture theaters in Londox, wles, prohibiting p GRE T TH f 1 sride—Both Are Local People. United States to Acknowledge | gy g 08 o e day SRCOR Washington, Jan 10.—Hxtensive | would not be until this agreemeat | o T S iplification o 1o on pro-| was effected on the league of nations : ; - | Iinsign Erederick (. Stevens and Government of President Tinoco. - e D simplification of importation pr ) ffected o « o ' to stop operation of one e S 5 e ' | cedure, expected to result in stabiliz- | and the various questions of the war) e il Thro Death for Inchricty Among | Miss R olcott Mars h of | T se! , Germany wou L Threat of ¢ ol ‘\ iss Ruth Woleott M nl oo AR e Tant 40 R asomntilon SWIFT WAIVES IMMUNITY ing the imporl trade into the United | Settlement that Germany would be i his city, were married yesterday at d today by the | called ia. 2 R I Bolshey dicis Is Expect o | . : y ‘nited States of the govern- States was announced aoted 1 X | Annapolis, Md., where Knsign Stev- | DY 18 SBR0! C ! Y - Ol « € ind George Siswick commissiong g ment of President Tinoco of Costa — war trade board. = = M . | ens is stationed with the naval forces. | ™eM E S1 ") nQ srove Eflicient Prohibition Move. en tationed wit S S L L I i et y 0! censes frc ® 15 ha & Prove « i Tove S i e B P R e G v B ity ago Packing King Willing to Tell Individual import licenses from th SECRET TREATIES Tolland county; John H. Dady made to the senate foreign relations United Kingdom, Rrance,) Italy | and BT e ns coninii stockholm, Jan. 30.—a (hreat to | well known in this city, Ensign Stev- : 4 _ 5 : £ 5 Inl' o i i hs beine the son of My and Mrs ©. | committee taday by a sub-committee | All He Knows of Industry—Docsn't | Belgium and their Buropean und MUST BE TOR? Windham count vunish inebriety amoi Joishevik oili- € S be g e s oL 2 g TS, chic roc o, o i ° l z 1 N, Stevens of 680 West Main street which recently concluded an investi- ; . Mediterranean African possessions To Scll State Ple oy death is con- | 5. St o5 e : | gation of Costa Rican affairs. Tinoco, | Fear Prosecution. - I ) 1 and his bride being the daughter of "‘ 1 s t et sl - el into the United States will be no A\ bill by Senator Fox would | 1 - - i ormerly war minister, can Q 1 ser red ¢ ept Lo he follow- f S e e e S . 5 : . | longer required except for th ; 5 ale of the { New L Mr. and Mrs. War farshall of | ;o Coveral years ago through a| Washington, Jan. 20-—Louis . | lonser required except for tho _ | London D Mail Holds to TFhis : : 2 Stanley street. She is a granddaugh- | P ool SEVELC FERIE AED OO en | SWift, president of Swift & Co., form- | 8 ey > < the feder Egy e and ter of Loren D. Penfield, for many | oo ®0 0 St T hut recogni- | 21y waived before the senate agri- | CMery and its ore, feathers, ferro- Opinion. Unless Powers See Fig erection by the commission' of g mnd proposes curative | YEars city clerk. tion has been refused by the United | Culture committee today any immu- Ricifon state NUnEORCR (A Tieil nslgn Stevens attended the local | gtates under President Wilson's pol- | DIty from prosecution which may bo E ”,h.”:h;’“’.v NG aie Stevens | Was iy of withnolding reconition from |&ccrued throush his testimonyiin tho | Deanuis, Hic : o i graduated fro o @EERT G| b St SO 0o . R, committee’s hearings on legislation to | concentrates the Daily Mail prints a report from | d€ieloping harbe titon, N. ., last June. regulate the meat industry more than five per cent. of tin Ao i P ot ot A heal 1d establish th penalt The board also announced that all | % . otective bureau to guar ung = - Iheboardiala: nged feet that Great BLritain's decision re-| R ! il 1 youn 3o commodities imported into Alaska, | oo plc om vic na 1se. Th $55 D00 : 5 « L 5 garding the treaties with Japan rela- $25,000.000 FOIR SOLDIERS. HUNS MAY NOT PAY | TO LIFT COAL BAN OVER BILLION FROM the Canal zone and the island DOs- | tive to the islands In the morthern | Iropriation would be §30,000 = E | L SALE OF WAR STAMPS | sessions may now be trans-shipped 10 | pacific and with the Arabs regarding A game bill would pro 3 Anstralia Will St Aside This Sum 16, i | London Paper Belicves Peace Confer- | Restrictions on Prices and Regulations out of use shall dered ung able and the source 11l wealth, private ownership d that the state, rivate ownership, and tha a press statement issued s should be based upon local 000 Is Increase of 000,000 Over Minimum. missioner and abolis of agriculture J Wolf rmed . fi New Haven t as coul both b Judgeship resolutions were for valuation was completed S increased output France, Captain Tardieu said, but the | Naugatuck going to appreximately $ Lees hich degree a Soviet ce printed in sues of the Petrograd newspu- The deer oints out that kenness amonz such oificials is 2 S | manganese, spiege leisen, fur skin nitrates, meat and meat products, | to Modify Terms Greatly, don city bill would provide for 2 | | measure If thesc do not prove ef- lion-dollar bond iss or purpd tin, tin ore and tin ctive, however, the offense, g Londoa, Jan. 20.—1In « late editio or metals containing N0 . lat lition Washington, Jan. 30.- War saving | 4estinations other than the United | serin e e e stamp sales this month, increasing j Irance as to the future status of the|another would Serve Ex-Service Men. Kamerun involves the admission that{ song birds BAKER WANTS GOVERNMENT they must be arbitrarily moditied, i Among excise TO BUY BIG CANTONMENTS | nat torn up was one to define spirituous iiqug 1 “The Japanase delesates are angr of the prohibition amend war savings and thrift stamps since | Mment of 14 of the 16 National Guard { #nd alarmed and declare their unal- < E. Graham asked' for they were placed on the market| camps and purchase by the govern- | terable determiaation to claim the is-| right to acquire the Danbury thirteen months ago of $1,049,000,000 | ment of the sites of all National | lands, as promised,” the correspond- hel Street Railway including $77,000,000 estimated sales | Army cantonments, was urged today | €ht says and adds e Nomination Approved. for January by Secrotary Balker and Assist [T lw‘“w lnlands are really:theficrux [8 Mo isave printingHbillsl vasil Crowell hefore the house military | "‘_‘\' w l\‘w .\im wtion . ; favorably reported on various no 2 & s e Australians,” the correspond- : i \GR 2 co ee. Camp Kearney, Calif., and tions of the gover were ad LABOR CONGR WILL oIty Camp) Kearney, ent coatinues, “believe President Wil- 2 amp Sevier, §. C.. would be the two BEGIN MEETING SOON | goin Sovien 8, € 3 el urne, Jan. 29 > ence Iias Given Up Idea of Impos- Will Be Removed as Soon as Gar- | over the record of last month, sent million pouad ! A . d | the total of receints from this source ing Riz Indemnity on Enemy. ficld Signs Notice. | above a billion dollars. The treasury | | London, Jan. 30.—The peace con- Washington, Jan. 30.—An order re- | feported today a total from sale of W¥ashinsioni Tan SIS0 s bandon. has settled one important | moving all restrictions, including price | point with 'd to the indemnity | and zone regulations on anthracite question, the Paris correspondent of | coal, has been prepared at the fuel | the Evening Standard says he has rea- | administration and awaits Administra- states of the commonwealth | i sons for reportine The conference, [ tor Garfield's signature to make it sledes ettlers from: the nmon now | he declares has eliminated any inten- | effective. An official announcement is | | tion of calling on Germany and her 'eXpected shortly | = | | i R o: a der suspension ¢ 1 rule anc - . N . foooch s to pay the Allied countries son’s firm stand in this matter is du a . PELLED FROM LORRAINE. | he cost of (ne war or to impose TR = guard camps acaulred by the govern=i| g0ty Sh BEnd &1 s WRTEr 18 fUs Jan. 30.--Albert Gregoire, a | heavy indemnities upon the enemy S. CRUISER BRINGS PParis. Jan. 20.—The commission on | ment, with the others returning 10| (¢ the jsdands swould impuie his pres. | BUPEess, Lo P Smith, L. H. W < and B. H Hurd New [ { | 1.317 BACK FROM FRANCE | international Iibor regulations estah- | land owners at the expiration of [ {jga in the United States aad that he i and former deputy from Mots | nation izeichs has bheen - J Tonuos ket . s in | Darbor commissioners; W < - N S T ey New York, Jan. 30.—The TU. S§.| fears to meet a hostile congress in led Lort Although of | ARTISTS TO PAINT SCENES cruiser Frederick arrived here today ,,,‘,‘,“‘ it i _M\al\'\ 4 OF WORLD PEACE CONGRESS | from Brest with 1,547 troops. These to the house. These included lished by the peace conference will | Present well, I Chapel hegin regular meetings next week ’ to b vers harbor I} March if he rees o the absolut ANOTHER CONNECTICUT retention of the islands by Japan BUILT BOAT LAUNCHED Ltalian delegates fraokly avow theip | Commissioners; I vood London, Jun. 29.—The British art- | included 24 officers and 1,022 men of | Siratford, J 3 The S. S.fcliim to Fiume and insist that the | o W. Kowle L ftish Orpen and St o ; the first battalion o sing > ) » | wpen and John, who have attalion comprising Ganerl. secoi 1= woodenilih sore i it e e Dalmatian | missioners; | held an official post ’ i selected by the government to |pbanies A, B, C, and D, of the SPARTACANS PUT DOWN, scenes from the peace congress, | infantry of the 88rd, division; e Amsterdam. Jan. 30——TF i gin work immediately, it. is | headquarters medical detachment of P Seti : 30—Forecast wising at Wilhelmshaven b ted. Botih recently returned to |the 88rd.; and the 466th. and 492nd sty ain and vicinity: : cen put down, accordin to Beriia £ from the British front, where | aero squadrons, together with a num Fair tonight and Friday, \‘\\‘LQ\ Janis Russell Dickard, a direct| his declaration of the rights of peo o the Hamburg Nachrichten y have been painting war <cenes. | ber of casual officers b descendant of Daniel Boone. vl utlined in his ‘14 points.' " (Continued on Ninth Page) steamers hui Housatonic | coust stipulated in the pact of Lon-. | commissioner: €. the Urited States g0V- | jon must he made good. They d highway commissiot X tory dirg shipyards for t 10 o'cloc ernment, was launch clave that President Wilson's attitude | bard to b The vessel was christened by | vogarding Fiume drectly contradicts | Burton Manstield insul

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