New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 10, 1919, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

———y - pem——— _ . NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT. THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1919. —SIXTEEN PAGES, PRICE THREE CEN 4700 ARTILLERYMEN OF 26TH|COURT MARTIAL SENTENGES OF LFEHUNG AR] AN FORCWES CLASH AND OTHER LONG PRISON TERMS ARE DIVISION ARRIVE AT BOSTON; i ’|ARE BEING REDUCED TO MINIMUM OF IT ARE GIVEN GREAT RECEPTION qoNTHS UNDER ARMY REGULATION WITH CZECHS’ BOTH SIDES e AMERICAN SOLDIERS o SUF FE R MANY CASUALT]E ) Complement of Men in Units | M ANY ARE KILLEI] AS [ Plan Involves Scheme to Re- is Made Up Principally of | | BALK UP IN RUSSIA turn Soldier-Prisoner tof Rhode Islanders — Go STURM RAZES H[]USES SR Civil Life Free From Sigma SOAP BOX P ROPAGANDISTS Diplomatic _;{elation‘ | Drafted Men Expr Aversion. to Bee mafi Meets Ship. Death Toll Reaches Hun.| MEMme Asinse Boishesiit | of Prison. WILL BE MUZZLED BY NEW Between Bavarla S Forces in Archangel G 3 H OUTFIT REPRESENTS | - dred Mare in South |, sy, vognoe o | cOMPARATIVELY FEW | BILL, REPORTED IN SENATE| 2t Russian Sovie o 2 . e Associated Press.)—. company { i ENTIRE NEW ENGLAND western Tornado. Bt o = e D MEN ARE CONVICISD Gl i s Republics Reported e fighting front south of Archangel, Sleouh e | ENT MAKING : Yewer Replacements Are Among | Dallas, Texas, April 10.—One hun- | declaring that the war with Ger- | PRESID Proposed Measure “"Ollld; EStabllShed. dred known dead had been listed as|many was over and that the United |Col. John E. Hunt. Commandant at | E vietims of the tornado which yester-; States was not at war with the Bol- i PROGRESS ON PEALE | These Artillery C s Than | . 5 3 X ibi Sneakers K { = iete -artiicty Command “ | day struck northern Texas, southern |sheviki. The regimental commander | Governors Island Disciplinary Bar- - " Prohibit Speakers From Any Other Contingemts of Yankee | Oklahoma and parts of Arkansas, |told them they were fighting a des- e Fi Py " s z NEW RED F T X when order began to form today from | perate defensive battle and appealea | Facks Explains System—>Men, While Report From Paris Causes Satisfac- Spreading Dangerous Doc- | E REPUBLIC Division That Have Yet Returned— | the chaos cauged by the storm {to them to stick it out. The company s e * | - % i 3 s - | Serving Terms Are Given Opportun- | ST NS T - " . R ! 5 | The injured, some of them so badly | then left for the front. g Ll | tion in Washington—Today's trines Before Anv As- IN GERMAN-AUST Composed Almost Entively of Rhode |yt that they cannot recover, are ex- The situation arose when the com- ities for Bettering Themselves Both | i i pected to number several hundred. | pany named was ordered back to the } | semblage | The property damage, while it will l‘;mv nflgler a rest period at Archangel. Physically and Educationally. Washington, April 10.—President ge. People in Some S‘ectiohs will be smaller than expected, 1 iy R0 . | marti 5 f life imprison- | has made “good progress” in his ne- | S50 Boston, April 10.—The transport | path of the storm avoided all princi- |again. They asked to have their ar- | artial sentences -of life imprison-|has made ‘good progress’ 'n Hs he- | Bavaria Have Revolted s ¥ . | e oL houses | guments answered |ment or such terms as 20 and 30 years | Botiations in Par wccording to ad- | Rongolia Tandedidiiofarkillerimen fofijipal Rolfics atriiinsRonly Fatil Faob 8 8 0 | re reduced to a minimum of months | Vices received today at « the White | : s the Yankee Division hero today. They | and smalier villages. Last night the| The men contended that they were |, "duced to & minimum of months| Hees y UP NEXT WEDNESDAY | Against Bolsheviki Gov- entrained immediately for Cs | homeless were cared for by their|draft men conscripte OTLDO WAL [ tions - Lt Sttt =l e nd T P i ‘ \ Shs Seem el L S e The aorm in its erratic, with Germany which was finishea || i"S Which has been introduced | It was not stated just what prosress t— Heavy Fishts ns to join the 17,000 Yankee Di- | neig e ] e | with ‘ar | I0t0 the disciplinary barracks at Gov- | had been made, hut the advices seem- — — ernment—Heavy Fighting vision comrades who' preceded them | course did mot devastate any entire|now, that America was not at war | o " LiRciplimary barracks at Gov- | hed beon made hat Lo advees 2em | | J in the return from France. regions, often leaving several houses|with the Bolsheviki, that the entie |cor Jonn 4 fruns. s aon ioatins | in omeial suirios Is I'ourth Transport In. untouched and then dipping in and | Bolsheviki question was the subject |, far renching seheme be hich Lhe ' B Rights Bill, Ad I By Colored The Mongolia, the fourth of the| demolishing the next few Domes “;I:;kf}fl T“&grfi"’;gsil‘i‘z"lfi““h:“"_d‘:gri""“ 48 |soldier prisoner may not only return| Paris, April 10, (Havas)-—President Rights Bill, Advocated By Colore troopships to arrive with units of the | temperature dropped o ree: ey > d Y Un- {5 civil life free fro stigma Wils: Ao 1 yreside over > Dbjecte - 26th Division, brought the 102d and | along the northern line of counties|able to see why they should be fight- m the stigma of | Wilson was expected to ¥ People of State—Objected to Bus- | 1 v imprisonment but better equipped |the League of Nations cominission | | 1034 Field Artillery, four batteries of | after the storm. Ing if there was no war. physically and educationally to take | When it resumed its sessions today inessmen Discriminating Against | the 101st and Brigadier-General The counties most seriously dam-| The regimental commander said |yp the battle of Iif | s German Government Troops Roportdl John H. Sherberne, commander of the | 2564 Were Grayson, Fannin, . Hunt,|that, perhaps, their own lives de-l "m¢ explain th‘v " working of the| T:\ZI\IX\;: n:‘s,ll(r:t\:ljl::c:lo;w :;{e‘LFrPnOJ’l People of Their Race—Oyster In- % 1 S ¢ hi | Fan Za Vichita, Xolin, | pended on the fighting on this front | . Shs | Faent EaLos : e Fist Artillery Brigade, with his head- | ;\\\;‘;.d. «\n(:i"’l'fi;:d\:; ,,.;‘fr el A e appeal s"he",;e, and of the care of prisoners, | American and Japanese delegations. dustry Will Receive Support. S oy ontn ’ L o e, i O St e 50 mron Gt e 7 (e || e BUNEIELE e i it % pied Krupp Plant. Permitting The tr: port anchored in :Presi- | S0jton ‘and tont iohtia count and) amen . > jed to visit the island under the au Andre Tardieu, Viscount Morely and | Hartford, April 10.——The o il dent Roads at 3:40 a. m. and re- | The ‘”:] "9“"“(“]{‘ll"(“ll,‘ B e e e e P_l]r‘esfol‘ the national war work coun- | Charles H. Haskins, the special com- {aid the oyster industry, which has | Many of the Employes to Teturn mained there until 6:45, when she | 0f southerr S pal el o ‘ B one € N ©rob-icil of the Y. M. C. A. The council is | mittee on western ISuropean bound: suffered for four years through fail- S . started up the harbor on the last lap | Areds of thous: Hek) o1 dl""[r?md“"‘e';‘\f‘“e ping of what ssems 1o be the general {co-operating with the military author- | jes, were called beore the Council of |ure of the “met” on the spawnins | t© Their Labors—Troops ' Throw of her voyage escorted by a fleet of | I Wrecked derrioks and o o ] T E A e e ro0PS, lities in the educational work being | Four today. This gave rise to the be- | beds on the state side of Lons Island welcoming * commiftes boats: iiShe || Lhe TourBUR S the SONE S fofcers a8 Well a8 O, | BecAtsc Of jcartied onamong the! prisoners lief that Premiers Lloyd George, Cle- | Sound. Today the shell fishers com- docked at Commonwealth pier at e e e Sen it . [ithe feclingult s admi bed morebrde There are between 600 and 700 | menceau and Orlando and President | mittee reporied a bill to provide for | TLondon, 0 IOk all f;!_ ”N ":'U:'S Tis "fi;ost enerally L}}m the trn_ops‘ now 41\_01_ prisoners at present in the barracks. | Wilson were considering the problem — Gove Beok: Welc o contained sleeping Deop S o v will be of little use after|Some of the men are from overseas | of the Rhine valley. (Continued on Fifteenth Page) | 5 : sovernor Beeckman Welcomes Men. ases the first the occupants heard o e . land about half of them are serving Sl —_ — e "~ |&nd Czechs Ungvar, near the Morfi- Notwithstanding the early hour of fl(\l.a : D G (v;‘l’\;:x l::(;: walls crash- n]" .)mcmlr cireles in v'uhlang;fl sentences for militz offenses, 1n- | vian-Hungarian border, says a Cens Tier arrival, she was given a reception | ed down upon their beds. here is no disposition seriously to |cluding one life term, several of 20 NOT SINGLE MAN IN ARMY HAS LOST T iy fully equal to that accorded to the ¥ R blame the troops for this condition. years and a few for less periods. | {tral News despatch ‘from Afhfi‘vrdam transports which had preceded her. St. Louis, April 10.—One man Was; On their arrival in North Russia last { What these sentences really mean was | j today One hundred and fifty Hun<| Governor Coolidge, of this state -_ | killed and three others seriously in-| September, the Americans were keen | explained by Col. Hunt. | BOTH ARMS AND LEGS- AMPUTATIONS garians were killed The Czechs alsol ernor Beekman, of Rhode Is F jured last night when an automoblle | fighting the Bolsheviki, who, they had | “In practice,” he said, “men servine | y |had considerable losses Major-General Clarence R. T s, | in which they were riding on a coun-| peen told, were German agents, They |10, 20, 30 vear or life sentence Y . T J former commander of the divisiomw, |ty road five miles west of here Wasipyve fought bravely throughout. the |really sentenced fo indeterminate | NUMBER LESS THAN 4000 . 125 BLIND' Diplomatic Relations Established with officials from’ various cities, led | C@ught in the vortex of violent | samipaign and they are still doing so. [terms. When a man comes here wo | Y. | Berlin, Wednesday, April 9, (By .the welcoming delggations. ..{ squall and hurled 50 feet in the air. However, since the armistice with|make a careful investigation his Session Tmportant One. Island, Connecticut, Maine and New Judiciary Committee Kills Fqual Against Spartacans Men- tioned in Dispatches, to Have Fntered Essen and Occu- Hand Grenades Into Crowd. April 10.-—Violent fighting has taken place between Hunsariang The Associated Press. ) —Diplomatig| General Edwards and the two gov- e e Germany was declared, the spldiers|whole life from bovhood. All the v|r-$ oS relations have been established be-| ernors went aboard the troopship | LONERGAN SEEKS TO have been subjected to constant Bol- |cumstances involving his offense arc from their steamer and were cheered | shevik propaganda, which, together|reviewed, and if his general conduct » o= # heart by the artillerymen. The | HAVE 102D PARADE | with their desire to return home aft-[is and has been good he can apply | Put 125 cases of tofal blindness chicering was renewed mheniihelzons er the end of the war for which they {for ‘restoraton’ after three months. | less than four thousand amputations cral called Private Norman E. Elliott, e were drafted and the hardships and|Such an‘appleation:is rarely refused. ! jn the American forces engaged in the W R e e e N loneliness of the Arctic winter has|and within six months from the time | ented him with the Groix de Guerre | Asks War ‘Department to Giye Per- | caused them to lose their spirits. he was convicted he may rejoin his il Conanaiiat e R o : N Meanwhile, they have had no offi-|regiment to complete his service and : mission to Parade in Hartford, | .iq] statement from the government[receive an honorable discharge. Rhode'Istand Day { to answer Bolshevik propaganda, and| “There has been a good deal of |tween the Ru an and Bavarian| Soviet governments, according to the Zwolfuhrblatt. Washington, April 10.—There were , manent by the medical officers in and | charge. Relative to amputations, de- nial is made, on the authority of Sur- | geon-General . Ireland and Colonel Charles B. Banks, chief medical offi- war, it is stated today by the Bureau | cer of the war risk insurance, that |, 1ondon, April 10.—The proclama-| of War Risk Insuranc in an an.| there were any cases in which men ;tion of a Soviet republic in Selzbursz, nouncement concerning the bureau’s| lost both arms and both legs. More , German-Austria reported in .an aclivity in supplyving erippled soldiers | than 500 artificial limbs have been 'Amsterdam despatch today to fhe and sailors with artificial limbs and | furnished to disabled men to date by . (entral News, lzburg is near the in otherwise caring for the wounded | the bureau under the provisions of Bavarian border. and disabled. Not even all of the 125 | the act of congr == cases of total blindness cited, it is —— Peoplc Oppose Soviet Ryle stated, have yet been declared per- (Continued on Seventh Page) Copenhagen, Wednesday, April §.— Despatches from Kissingen report New Soviet Republie. vew Haven and Waterbur, S - Tt was. Rhode Island’s special greet- BT ¥ no American in Archangel is in a po- |criticism of the heavy sentences im- ing day. Young men of that state! Iartford, April 10.—The war de- | sition to tell them officially what they| ~ —_— enter largely into the makeup of the ' partment has been asked by Con- | are fighting for. (Continued on Fifteenth Page) 103d ¥ield Artillery, and their moth- | gressman Lonergan of .this city to | ers, wives, sweethearts and fathers, | permit the 102d United States In- | with state officials, senators, congres: ‘if;mtry to parade in three Connecticut MORE THAN MlLLION DOLLARS IS that the citizens and - officials of men and mayo were out long b cities—Hartford, New Haven and | i | e e e e e : | MICHIGAN “WETS” THREE HUN LINERS | Wuersburs. ity milee o'e nortt \-‘1\]r ki\ihd‘r;d fror:xll’rn\'klenr'e andi;;u:til:‘d 'commr!:‘tec sgegki;z zo( :r- EXPENDED IN FACTORY ADDITIONS ‘ ASKING RECOUNT START FOR AMERICA!“"':“L"‘I:’Q"“;‘ fi::;l,:,w.nic?.?: 'H{MI”;'QP o, t | | | i | | | places came by special train lr;\ng(‘ a parade of _the great regi-| own is in the hands of goverfiment Providence at 4 a. m. and,{ment is that the war department P TWO YEAR e _— — troops.. Heavy fighting againat Spags by Mayor J. H. Gainer, boarded rdered the 102d to entrain at Camp tacan forces occurred when governs| steamers Which took them down the |Devens for a three days tour of this Not Satisfied with Result of Flection | Nine Other German Boats Will Soon | ment troops stormed the roval palace harbor. Tt was just dawn when they :state, one day to be-spent in. each of ! | caught their first glimpse -of the Mon- | three cities from which the greater through the mist. The yell that | part of its national guard strength| Tnteresting figures regarding fac-] Other factories having made exten- arose gave the artillerymen the cheer- | was originally drawn. | tory construction in this city during|sions during the two year period and jest reveille call they have had since| Hartford parade committee mem- | the wa: period is contained in tlie re- | the amount of their expenditures in th left home 18 months ago. " bers said today that other members| port of William 8. Hyde, commission-| this line are: New Britain Machine Governor Beekman and some mem- | of the Connecticut congressional dele- | er of the department of labor and|company ,300; Traut & Hine, bers of the Rhode lIsland delegation | gation would be asked to join Con- | actory inspection, which has been| $50,800; Hart & Hutchinson, $50,000; were on the U. 8 . Adr al while | gressman Lonergan in his appeal for ' submitted io Governor Holcomb. The: North Judd, $79,150 American others from that stute were on the |war department action that would Stanley Works leads the local fac-| Hardware corporation, 840; Faf- steamship John H. Sullivan. make possible the demonstrations in fories in the line of construction and | niv Bearing company, §26,500; N et o o honor of the 102d, for which Connec- | extensions, the total costs of all such | Barnes & Kobert, $18,000; Union MIg. | ¢'(o the press foday, announced that 3 = At ticut hass been eagerly waiting. work done by that firm during the | company, $17,850; Skinner Chuck, | ; recount will be sought of -the vote cia, the first to sail, \s a special tribute to Brigadier-| The war department is also asked | war period having reached 4,000, $5 Stanley Rule and Level, $500; on the wine and beer amend. | &t Boston April 20; the Grar Walder- General Sherberne, a former member | ror permission to have the 101st according to Mr. Hyde's report. Lan-| Hart & Cooley, $300; Malleable Tron | i Monday. The statement claims | see is due at New York April anq | Dssen and ; 1 of the Massachusetts house. more than | \rachine Gun Battalion parade with ' ders, Frary & S the great- | company, 3250. (48 aii deourate count o the nalicts| the atuen A Krubp pieny which, achotdlug te SR two-thirds of the members of the leg- | the 1024 in Hartford. est number of T s and con-| The buildings erected during the | mewis o Michizan voted wat B3| D¢ Kaiserin August Victoria is ex- vious reports had been seized by the islature were among the welcoming Tha tHartford will have a parade structed the greates umber of build- | period were as numerous although not | zonuu_' Mhet lEntbtabulh tlonlor o | pected to reach the same port April [h*j‘” j”"k'"’fi ¢ he v' oD ‘;;’ hosts. The artillery units arriving on | of its Twenty-Sixth Division men was ings during the period. The number | quite as costly as for the preceding | cis] figures by local newspapers gave | 1 everal others of the twelve ves- | Artillery and machin Sl o . the Mongolia were more directly rep- | again asserted by the parade com- | of improvemen that factory wus| two-year period. The total value Was | , .o majority of 119,000 with returns | sels now are loading troops at Fren }*)fl\m"\'h»‘ ':"'nj “1‘ . ““\‘( y_'n“mr;,“' resentative of New FEngland than of | mittee today. If the war department 17, though the cos 44,000, { $1,094,015. o Ulian & rronil Brecmntinel piina| N Sl e iy S e oo Wi [ Chal Intervention by RS ROV any other contingents of the Yankee | does not grant the consent, the Hart- S s ¢ 4 ire flee expected | fo § fhv .jm). ”..] S Division that have returned. Few ford committee will plan a demon- ; e FEAS T “Macomb county, (Mount Clemens) to be in service within a short time [amoathinds Wit b Ui < placements from outside of New |stration in which merely the Hart-| OUT AGAIN, IN AGAIN, COHEN. - - - e e e et | 'A:;;“r l'*":i pf""‘«‘“ of the : Bt ;'"‘1'1; 3 o b n d w cessary te ai o e 102 me S = o floieseaion R e ol R .. | American ports they will undergo a e p 5 T attories in action and they re. | of the two companics of the. 1oios | Released From Prison This Moming | THE IERALD TO ATD e Gancoee, Kot Bay and stveral | (CTations to increase thelr troop car- 2ads, became greatl e turned composed almost entirely of | Machine Gun Battalion will partici- Is Immediately Re-arrested. I\FgI?TF\l‘:SS\,;‘('_‘;?S‘W‘ Up couriies it = nafed e veng inzicapacliy IO I 0 I ‘:“I-I'”:_»w ns Of the trooNSLLNNS Adasaschusetts IRnode Island iConnes |ipates Hartford, April 10.—When Joseph T =S investigated by the wet for tricta and the Kalserin August Vie. |th the midst of a crowd plundgring Heut Matneiand HowiPampshinamen: Einer, alias Joseph Cohen, left the | It any member of the United toria have not been announced by the | baggage van o i ot Oiess " | QUREE KILLED IN WREGK . | vove sioen v veonecmen e | et mivary e pevel e | DEFENDS SELF WITH AKE | i stsbumnt U BEP SRS BT Al ey e o o : ! : | o a is out of work in this city and brings the personnel of base hospi orted. The communists 1024 Pteld Artillery regiment, given —_ | morning after having served the | gghoq employment, this paper E—— numbers 5, 14, 21, 44, 50, 72, 47 and | Vogtland district in southweste out by the adjutant, include 30 men s , : e [ greater part of a three year sentence | e G oklor 202 S lialin 2 and six | Saxony have issued demand that| and two officers killed in action and | Worst Train Crash in 23 Years Occurs | ¢ ptaining money in this city ;:s::.mq?fie \::elgfaobnglgraw)g I || doseph Pinto, Arrested, Said to Have Cfi:\;ai‘e,ff“f}f’mf’i‘ii’ e e e hine a\ Boviets peplll officers and men wounded. Sixty Today On shamokin Division of under false pretenses, he was re-ar- | umns on the back page, with || Pulled Knife on Samuel Giardino, | while the metal workers at Zwickan, per cent of the members of the bat- rested by Police Inspector Thomas F. other classified items, is offered Who Wielded Other Weapon SN I | southwest of Chemnitz, nn% a large teries to return today had been with Reading Railroad. Gleavy wof Boston and taken at once | free to him. A specimen of the AL s | SERYIGE MEN TO MEET proportion of the Saxon mihers ha | and captured the rail y 8 tion, but { the fortress of Marienberg, acriilis the Claimed. States, ;Mniu river from Wuerzburg, W | handed over without opposition Detroit, April 10.—Charging that Washington, April 10.—Three of i Most of the Spartacan leaders are wholesale fraudulent reports have | tne twelve German liners allocated to ;TéPorted to have been” arrested, bit been made by the dry forces in a Irailwvay communication with the number of instances, Charles W. N {city has been interrupted ton, treasurer of the campaign com- | Service have left ‘Brest with approxi- | mittee of the Michigan Hotel Mens' | mately five thousand officers and men | German Troops at Essen. —Differences in Figures is Be Headed Towards United the United States for troop transport American expeditionary forces, Berlin, Wednesday, April 9 (By Most Representative Contingent. is due | the Associated, Press.)—Government i troops are reported to have entered t occupied the = ""‘" A‘wfi‘ since it went overseas. % to that city. He is wanted there on ad recommended will be found Joseph Pinto was arrested on Main zone on strike. oo n‘r»\ J. F. J. Herbert, command- Shamokin, Pa., April 10.—A run-|an gld charge of obtaining four ounces | on the back page. If vou have ||Street this morning by Officers Lam- | ing told the stories of Private Elliott | away train on the Reading railway| of platinum valued at $240 before no work call in with your ad phere and McAvay, on a charge of r;' Battery ¥ of the 102d, who Was | crashed into a locomotive on the Lo- | he came to Hartford. I'| written up similar to the sample assaulting Samuel Giardino. It is al-| Returned Soldicrs and Sailors Will $50,000 REALTY DEAL. decorated by General Edwards, and | cust Summit grade. Three trainmen and we will insert it for three |[leged that the men became involved R : : SRERY “’- T bt st PRI | T R G T 0 Jh i nights free of charge, repeating |in an argument at the Grand hotel on Organize Camp of American Legion | 4 Gorbach Purchases Seven House ebstes hoy ,‘_'-'I‘,(:,\"‘”‘{fi,a‘:"? l;hf‘ c)rf,:’x o ”‘e'"‘*"kst'z“d_’.“’;W’f{“k;”é crews | DESTROYER AT NEW FOUNDLAND | it in one week if necessary. We | |Miile Stroch qfi“:‘ Lot f‘:;'r'fr"‘”‘hf,’w at Waterbury Saturday Night. | In Eastern Section. oner at Seicheprey, Aell 2, 1917, and | oisls say It was the woret wresk on| V/ashington, April 10.—The de- | eannofpromice you work butof: | |02, o8 K%t FTENh G o knife. Giar- 3 b P cials say s 3 £ ck | - er this means of bringing your © L T R was reported 3¢ missing. The French | the Shamokin division in 25 years. :“'U“‘el:g ’i‘““““e:’-nn‘r’"l:w:‘h‘::i’c C‘:”“:'l‘ | AT e B T i ‘f]inf:;‘::}:‘b"h:f‘l“a:]"q"\“:'k i S Sont o Uls moiber wie: o = = = i cctively and Pinto needed the atten- [World war, are to meet here Saturday stice was signed he was released ‘and PROVES ALIBI, RELEASE observing possible landing ptaces B :iun of Dr. Joseph Walsh, Who dress- [night to establish a camp of the sent word .ome that he had gone Derby, April 10.—The police today | Navy seaplanes on the trans-Atlantic | back to his battery. Mrs. Elliott for- | announced that they would release |flight which will start from Rock- e . |hien Lieut. Col. T Roosevelt, | B2lo 18 52id to involve an amahBS arded the decoration to @eneral Ed- | Henry Salse, held as a suspect in con- |away Beach, next month, h WEATHER, AGAINST JAP LEGISLATION, |Which Lieut. Col. Theodore Roosevelt, | ¢4 g9g wards in order that he might pre- | nection with an assault upon Xirs, | reached New Foundland. A despatch e Sacramento, Cal, April 10.—Intro- |JT., is chairman of the temporary | The houses consist of two tenpmpnts sent it on the transport, Louise H. Bradley, who died Mond today to the navy department NSy il { duction of anti-Japanese legislation in | committee of organization. The com- |six rooms to each tenement. The ten Hero Captured at Seicheprey. s a result of her injuries. Follow- |the vessel had cncountered consid Martford, April 10.—Fore- the California legislature would he imission issuing the call for the Wa- ements were built by Councilman Gor Colonel Herbert said that Elliots | ing an inquest into the death of Mrs, | able ice off the coust. On the 1l cast for New Britain and vi remely unfortunate at this time.” | terbury meeting includes Major Wal- |bach and were sold to the late M \ wus one of the 14 men holding a dug- | Bradley. by Coroner Mix yesterday. it [attempt to reach New I'oundland cinity: Rain, warmer tonight || c.iq nrobert Lansi secretary of [ter D. Makepeace. Captain Charles E. |Schupach. As the estate is being set = was stated that r was held u ice and forced re et Briday. : in # cable ta the senate receiv- {Hart, Jr., and Caplain Theodore Lil- jtled, Councilman Gorbach decidgd tof (Continued on Sevenih Fage) alibi fturn to Hai - 1es Irepurchase the houses. . £ real estate deal was con Waterbury, April 10—Returned sol- | A 1arge T 4 | summated this afternoon when Cou diers and sailors, veterans of the | g . cilman A. Gorbach purchased sev | houses on City and Connecticut aye nue, from the Bchupack estate. The ed an ugly wound on his arm { American legion, the organization in |

Other pages from this issue: