New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 12, 1919, Page 1

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e ‘ FROM THE OERALD ¥ ¥ X X + ¥ !»t»n\\&;! RVICE. TO THE s ESTABLISHED 1570, NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, WEDNESDA! S \ cruited in America. Demand to But Must Be Fed, i Only to| Be Put Ashore. i t troops of the British army who 31 of them Halifax, March 12.—Threats of 3 Combat World Anarchy listed in the United States, \merican citizens to sink the Trans | port Tolon, unless immediately al- SECRETARY LANSING STATES | towed to tand and procecd to destin. . ations in the United States by rail were reported to the Canadian at- thorities today by commander of the transport. The Tolox, after debarking Canadi- an troops here, sailed for New Yorl but was ord to this port to coal for the eturn ip to England the outhreak of the harbor n Jackson #serican Peace Delegate Despises d bac Given Fighting Chance or Bolshe- vism Will ad More Terrowrs. hecause of I strike in New York. Capta i | | Huns, But Says People Must Be | | i i | | HLL =W reach- [ 9" he authoritics he had no guns afful world.” | joard and that his » was at the y of State Robert I mercy of ihe soldiers wiquet given tonight by ‘he captain said his orders from o Inter-allied Press club, in honot | tno prigish admiralty were to take of the American peace commissioncrs | tne men to Halifax and disembark Mr. Lansing wa ic it the | (hem there, but the military authori- Allies must Zeed German 1 aive | tieg at Ottawa refused, it is stated, to the Germans opportunity to sell their | pyrnish transportation of the nwen to products in forcign markets if the | {heir howes in the United States. o be avoid- After consultation with the author- danger of Bolshevism was a er Captain Jackson He painted a vivid picture of con- | jties the only a sion ditions in t . zonc of France and | took back to the ship today was tha pointed out enough money to pay pointed o that it was not through | those wno pity for Germany bul to the Allies own | their transportation and additional RISy ¢ anarchy was| money to meet the American immi- S \ieor German em- | gration law would be allowed to land. e . | But only a few, it is understood, pos- “In the infancy of our rep the od the necessury fund ‘In Lhe ingancy of our republic the | individual liberty the supreme ruler as been, and still and most compelling impulse in poli- | tical life in America. Our policies at | nome and abroad have been molded | 101st Trench e | L7 MenBof R0 totesman has dared to depart from it or to speais to lessen its influence over s | Tortar Battery Arrive at New York. American thot Today we Ameri- | cans are as earnest and intense in our devotion to human liberty as were ouy ¥Qrbears | = U. S. Tought For Democrac Nev o arontio h ‘It was when they came to a full | (roops the steamship Towan arrived realization that the liberty was in|{jpere today from St. Nazaire. Units Burope were imperilled from ihe ai- | 26th div tack of an am ey that | New England division to arrive home. the nation determined to do its part in | These troops are assigned to Camp freeing liberty and the world from | Devens > autocracy. | Also on “A migh'y victory has been won. | 315ih, 310 and 108th trench morts The imperial armics of the Central ! Latieries; 33rd company transporia- Powérs have ceased to threaten. T. ious autocr structures of is the price A. Walsh of Boston, r of the 101st said his bat- tery when in the second battle of the Marne was within 700 feet of the Ger- man lines and that its sli I is suffering bitierly and Ger- | squadron. ¥ s entitled to suffer for what she | The hospital ship Mercy arrived hus done She has paid a fearful | from Boveaux with 381 sick »r the crime of plunging \h"i\\'w\mm'd men, mos: of them bhed- nto four years of blood and fire. | yidden farvation and want are the | ymong 32 casual troops on the n ot the German people. i »a n La Pallice nce and murder stalk through | was €o. No. 35 of Massachusetts, one | if treets of their great cilies. The v 1 Sffans and izt ey are tottering Captain Jame own cvil doing, | command >ution of their crimes. i But Little Pity For Huns. | ‘We may he disposed to pity those | innocent among the Germans, but KHH'} | i the j pity is almost dried up when we con sider wha* France and other nations fer f , Chateau-Thier tles om Seicheprey have had to I Janded in France, in December I!(heir valor made it my business to visit the bat- | The 101st trench mortar baftery tleflelds of the Marne, the Alsne and janded in England, October 24, 1917 tthe Champagne. No man could see what I saw without bearing a burning | 1t was in aininz for three months indignation ags vesponsible { ot the big artillery camp in Coetquidan | for OnRSHCH ructions, with- | anq first went into action February out an in g hatred for | » 918 in the Chemin des Dames g ctor of the KFrench front. The unit 'rance has cndured unspeakable ated throughout the war with the fNoes a fortitude and determina- | 24ty New England division. French tior excite the admiration and | guns were used at first but later the | Investment vonder of the world. To these splen- | unit was equipped with British troops who strugzgled without | jnch mortars and did effective work linching and with high courage, | with those piece | France and ‘the world owe a debt of | mhreec men of the battery returncd ratitude which the eternal memory |jn the ship's sick bay but no case is Dfimanioniyicaniipecay dangerous They are Corporal Anarchy Must Be Checked. | Harold Tibbetts of Portland, Me., Pri- And now we have new problems | vaie Edgar Conlin of Rockland, Me., to solve, new dangers (o overcome.|nq Private Kim Stephenson of Bos- ®1ast of the Rhine there are famine | ton and idleness, want and misery. Like | (orporal John L. Tasey, Fairfield, the anarchy which for yvears made an Russia, the fires of terror- ism are ablazes in the states of Ger many. Over the ruins of this once | | Conn., who returned | | i i 1 the flames are sweeping | | | | the American Di Cross and the Frenc War Cross awarded for exceptions bravery sages under heavy fire. sual wore inferno o ing me carr estward s no time to allow sen- timents of vengeance and hatred to stand in the way of checking this con- sration, which will soon bhe at the . German horders and threaiening other Jands. We must change the conditions men who had preceded him had been killed on the same mission. Ca who wen‘ over wound wa d in the lez while engaged on which social unrest feeds and strive | " Jiason duty near Verdun Novem- 1o restore Germany to a normal .. 7 {houshiit pelalwehltenedisocial brasin| o NN SRR ONE R Germans Must Have Chance. Rt ch T e Two words tell the story——food and | o¢ chicago, who was an elecirical en peace. To make Germany capable of | ginaar attached to the signal corps esisting anarchy and the hideous | i L & potism of the red terror, Germany | must be allowed to purchase food, and 902 000 MEN IN BRIT]SH ARMY to earn that food industrial conditions | 1 VA must be restored by a treaty of peace. | s ! 1t is not out of pity for the German | ppis is Total of Officers and Men in | ¢ nle that this must be done and | | done hwithoutt delaybutibecauss Swes, Armics of Occupation—197.300 this ill he the { sufferers if it is not done rast Work In Order to Pay, | priconers Being Fed. You may demand re n as muic vou please, but unless the German people are furnished mater- ment announced in the house of com- ia many can never pay, even in part, for | strength of the evil she has done. Furthermore, | france, Relginm and Germany, It the nresent state of chaos continues! ¢iudinz domini troops on pnd political power continues to grow | ¢ 1ary was 1,7 weaker there will be no responsiblo | 197,000 German prisoners are bein= | T fed by the British commissary ¢ (Continued on Eleventh Page.) Daitment ACCOUNTING SOUGHT OFNOPITYATALL oo s oo o ON SEATTLE ESTATE Mrs. Ella S. Rosenberg as Executor, Defendant in Suit A NEW BRITAIN WOMAN Captain Jackson, | Former | Paris March 12 tecomme] ! that the navigation of the Rhimel Extrava- Improperly Expended Her Husband. Washington, improper Rosenbherg Rosenberg, decedent King county Himelhoch Levinson, for an accountir property, thousand conipany, president Manhattan of which manager, ¢ to the suit. Large Real Estate Rosenberg, Levinson wealthy busi died October | consisting the Sorrento Curtis building on Second avenue, be- 1916 leaving an e 000 insurance pol- property, inches in Oregon and California com piaint who was Rosenberg's second wife and not the mother of the plain- Levinson elhoch Lecame executors of the estate 1 in accordance with the will This will | providing raid, as well as the adminis- should go to , the plaintiffs all the plaintiff renounced rges made by the defendants when they realized that | included the 101st trench mortar dat- 1 compensation of § ince and the great democracies of | (ery, four officers and 183 men of the | sion—ithe first troops of 1his | heen appropriating to themselves larze sums of money themselves fees e Towan were the 314th, ! administrators Investment Company, Levinson, ninistrators, 1ey | tion corps, ath battery trench artillery, | which no longer cxist. Giermany has suffered | and supply detachments of 6537th aero ; compel them to set forth the consider- Manhattan Investment executors. the court aside the sale fraudulent. defendants | authorized plaint, but last night Joseph Levinson, executors, ht casual- y avill es, four killed and 25 wounded, not- | withsianding participation in the bat- exectitors should not an accounting to any provisions sed to malk financial affairs of the m the invading [ 5. Mihicl and the Argonne were “re- | had 1ies of the Teutons. Ten days after | markable.” FHe praised his men for | Investment This was company ind reached Krance four days later.| $12 virtually closed up. foundation Manhattan company, stockholder | corporation. Attorneys McMicken, Thorgrimson plaintiffs Rosenberg daughter rt Solomon CAPT. GRISWOLD NAM HIS CAMPAIGN MANAGER. inguished Service | o¢ " Seicheprey. » | nounced M I eollecto vreviously candidaey beginning determined campaign He volunteered to carry a message at Ot bion Chajeau-Thierry last July after three | can ticket and today appointed Harry s campaign manager. ckson is also an ex-service man, vith the 102nd infantrv, | later being admitted o an infantry raining school HARTFORD PEOPLE SALOONS' DISCUSS Hartford, One hundre problem of a into effect will be discussed movement PRESIDENT, were appointed London, March 11.—The sovern- ¢ to the civil service commission by succeeding mons loday that the total strength of for their industries and commer- | effective and non-effective British cinl opportunities to sell the products | tpgops in the armies of occupation in | White House some time ago of labor in the foreign markets, and| a1] theaters of the war amounts to unless the laborers have food Ger-| gge 000 men, including officers. The British arm 1 resignations IREE GERMAN STEAMERS 24,106, It was stated that rus have arrived here for | internment CONFERENCE W@ OPEN RHINE \lso Adviscs Freedom of for Shins of All Nations'# Times of Peace. | opened to all nations withoUfl Crimination was made in a reps (he peace conference today by i | commission on the internationali® gime of waterways, railways ports. It is suggested the Rhined | controlled by a commission similag | the Danube commission. The sta of the Kiel canal has heen settledd the commission on the basis of '8 for all nations f@ s or warships in tin canal would contintf eecdom of us merchant vesse i of peace. TV ¢ inder rman ownership and operss tion. A | The question of the fortification offf the canal is left hy the commission to the scision of military and naval experts The report of the commission was the Belgian be imposed claim t special dutic oh German vessels g eport furthe recommended that a geneval conference be held within a vear to deal with all ques tions which b in to the navigation of international waterways, are re- garded as too intricate or complex | ta be settled iinally within the limited life of the peace conference. © T0GET 83 SHIPS | This Number of German Ships Intern- ed in Chilean Ports Are to be Given to U. S, English Use One Cabl war the Britis the two German cables from Emden to America by way of the AZores anq | | \ “able between ManroWia, the of the Ger- Buenos Aires, March 12.—According to a dispatch to the Nacion from San- tiago the United States will have | turned over to it $3 German ships in- | terned in Chilean ports by virtue of ! the decision reached by the supreme war council in Par The Chilean adds the dispatch, velieve ihis decision will ultimately bevefit Chile, it being the opinion there that the United States will | i | S assign many of the vesse to the Chilean trades. It is added th United States will send erews to navi gate them " ANOTHER BIG ROBBERY | $26,000 in Cwrency Stolen From | Vaults of New York Banking House ML Some Time Monday Ni New York, March 12.-—Thefl of $26,000 in currency from the vaults of the Cosmopolitan bank, a Bronx itution, was made known here to- v by the police. The robbery oc- curred some time on Monday night after the bank had closed and wa | not discovered until vesterday. The money had been pluced in the vault by the cashicr. FIX TROLL e | HEARINGS. irst Three Days of Next W Set Aside, < to he Hartford, March 12.—The special commission it iring into trolley af- tairs announced today that it will hold | | | | hearings next Monday, Tuesday and | Wednesday 10ons, and at the mentioned time the general public will be gladly welcomed to give any infor- mation it may have or any suggestions it may have to offer as to trolley | problems. | The hearings thus far have been public but the witnesses have heen various per ns identified with trolley | companies invited to give views on | various aspec culties, s of trolley d TO JURY. Joseph Ryan of Boston Faces Seve Ser al s Che 2es. | Hartford, March 1 The case of | Joseph Ryan of Boston, one of the five men taken from an automobile | on the Conmnecticut river bridge by the Hartford police on the mornin of February 15. under circumstances :'\\hlri\ led to an investj tion, went to the jury in the criminal court this 1fternoon Ryan was charged with two sep- | | arate offenses on the first count of | carrying concealed weapons without | | permission and on the second count | of being in possecssion of burglars | tools without lawful excusc There | | was an added claim by the state that | Rvan was an habitual criminal | ONLY ENEMY \LIENS MUST | HAVE DICENSE FOR EXPLOSIVES | Washington, March 12.—Expiosive | may be purchased without | | except by enemy aliens after March | \ 15 for reclaiming land. stump blasting ; wnd othier asricultural purposes the | | | | intericr depsrtment announced today i in modify s war time regulation. | SWITZERLAND RECOGNIZES POLES AND CZECHO-SLOVAKS 3erne, March 11—The Swiss govern- ment decided today to recognize tho | Pole ana Czecho-Slovak states and to | establish diplomatic relations with | them. | Il Martford, March 12, —Fore- |1 the || east for New Briwin i ity: Fair, warmer tonight and 1‘ l Thursday. i | man-American transatlan- cable they \e French govern- e submarine cable materal and of cable laying ships. n Claims Differ. cables do not intend Germany as subjects to disposi- conference. however, unlawfully reconnected, * because are prizes of war. American delegates, unlawfull was there There nev to cables o Americans established can business Europe after the conclusion Cables Taken nsatlantic Singapore, connecting the Dutch Jritish cables Possession ess control Australian these, it is insures bus Polynesta, properly within commercial ef- | of American The possihility of these cables pass- Japanalone mandatory of the captured American prevent any STRIKE IS DEADLOCKED Employes in New York Show 1 o Signs of Set- tlement—Liners Have employes settlement Meanwhile becoming longshoremen boatowners conditions the harbor complication unsettled Government Leather | Manufacturers Defraud | Contracts. prosecutior PINCOLN'S DRESSMAKER - sty Grand Djake Says Bolsheviki Menace Must Be | Crushed Now. Paris, March 12.—Former Grand Duke Alexander Michaelovitch, who arrived in Paris recently from the Crimea, told the Associated Press to- day that unless armed Allied inte vention in Russia began at once the situation would become so hopelessly desperate that it would take years, perhaps decades, to restore sem- blance of order and bring about peace in eastern Europe. The former grand duke, who is a brother-in-law of the former emperor, continued: “I do not ask the Allies to fight for us. We merely ask them to order in the territories wrested from Bolshevism by the governments al ready fighting the Soviet. “I came here in January in an at- tempt to help my country as a private citizen acquainted with conditions in Russia. I thought I would find jus- tice and sympathy at the peace con- ference, but I have been disappointed las I found only personal intrigues. »arty politics and national esotism visible “I requested President Wilson to | receive me but he replied through his | secretary that he was too busy with | peace conference matters. What mat- | ter can be more momentous to the peace conference than the Russian problem? I asked to be allowed to { g0 to England, but was refused pass- | port, vet they received Kerensky 1 dare not request perm | America, not w 1hllfi Alluding to the proposed Princes Islands conference the grand duke said the proposal was a mista it gave the Bolsheviki a strong weapon to wield in Russia over the cowering population. The Bolsheviki are cl: ing, he added, that the Allied govern- ion to visit shing to invite a re- ke & | im(-nl\ ave recognized them because | the; feared them | “On January 25" he continued, “seven days after the Princes lIslands proposal, the Bolsheviki led out my two brothers and two cousins from the Fortress of St. Peter and St | Paul and shot them without trial | They never would have dared to do | this unless they had been sure of the moral support afforded by the semi- ( recognition by the peace conference. Had President Wilson come out trongly and surely with a repudia tion of and non-recognition of the Bolsheviki it would have ancouraged the vernments warring them. Bolshevism will be the devil in the future League of Nations” TELEPHONES VERY COMMON vinst Country Had Phone in 1917, Census Bu an Asserts, Washington, March 12.-—One of every two families in the I States had a telephone in 1917 during the year the total calls made wveraged 200 for every man, woman and child in ‘% untz These fig- | ures are included in a preliminary report on { the cov telephote industry of 1try made today by Director Itogers of the census bureau | DALMATIANS DEMANDING COMPLETE INDEPENDENCE Trieste, March 11, (Havas.) ndependence of Dalmati The E ecially ¢ city of Spalato, was demanded at o demonstration held here today. Resolutions were adopted declaring Prieste will not consider the redemp. ion of Ttalia Irridenta complete if ster cities do not regain their erty. final voice of the people has made at Quigley. be voted, repudiation administrat 1sseTtions ministration strengthened Polls Opnen paratively the polls will be this evening that a much heavier time ¢he afternoon expressed considered| stronghold rdministration registered voting was PRESIDENT NEAR FRANC Expects to parations delegation president important abeyance U. S. WILL GET SHIPS NOW

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