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ews of the World \ 3 terald “Ad : IMean 3y Associated Press \ ) 1k ) / Better Business ESTABLISHED 1870 NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, .FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1921—TWENTY PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS W ‘x; TE@F S}QAT” ' Edwards Of Famous 26th Division Is ‘;@LERGYM AN H AS " HUSKY GRIDIRON MEN WHO EXPECT TO TRIM HARTFOR ey s s A DOTIC TFIFQ MO s'"?omrrary Pall Bearer — Solemn Procession ARMAMENT IDEA ST N it ivg s sl 1.;/':«;; o BOWS THIS I\‘I@@N Wends Its Way From Capitol To Cemetery, iHead of Michigan Methodists| | o M’ A G SN Sl Pays Silent Tribute to Soldiers, ! E,.P V:vr HEWEBQL: ‘Yz;)g:gr“glvpiamfle:ls V‘Vva:l-l Fears for Outcome of Coxiference aves of Many Service Men. All Honors Allied Nations Gen. Pershing in Procession [ Both Yale and Wesleyan Hold .\pr-‘ Could Bestow Are Ac-| to Final Resting Place by Bishop Henderson of Detroit Also | Says “If Militarist Heads Meeting, | cial services—Monument Dedicated | copded Yankee Soldier. | the Potomac. | B i s ; L SR B ; i Nortolk—Old - Lyme Dedicates Ghosts of 10 Million Dead Will | 2 £ » x i § 5 & 2 L 3 | Haunt Session.” i ] R rabn’ YL WY ; Buildiag, [ ton, i . 7 ston, Nov. 11.—The national ; Ty } ; e Nov., 11.—Silently re ik I the nation today in doing Detroit, Nov. 11.—Unless the va- y % with 2 A all: Connepticut, to homage to the unknown soldier from cant chair at the world conference : ¢ y : PR o Ve i i 5 CGdithe Ankiown o dionw 1ge a gre > ‘rance. : on limitation of armaments is oc- s 5 i 4 ? e S his resting place : e o * It was litle more than broad day-« i / ¢ i e . fhoon I him a people stood at pause a|jjght before the tramp of marching cupied by Christ, the conference will oy 4 i i _ Goawaed | oS joes | Htt ace, the rush and tumult of | men, the clatter of hoofs and the adjourn without any hope of perman- § 3 : s hurrying life stilled in rev-| grind of carriage whels on the ! : % mark the day, t ] lent peace, Bishop Theodore S. Hen- ; SR ek : 4 " i \ e initey Tn some | cFence. e et gre; ¢ y t_he capital told {derson of Detroit, head of the Meth- £ R : # . s of consider ! a president -gladly ged | that parade for the dead was odist Epis opal Fnbinia Aty ;. A 4 T 2 s | “anc vas to be gh the streets, chict mour-| eqpy Up past the gray mass of the ydis Ipiscopa I Vc an, | 3 ¥ % 0 3 5 = & i 4 « yeople' prou S0rrow ler res v said today in an address before an b ; 3 % 3 ¢ i % 4 ¥ t wit n more impressive- [ 21+ (0! people’s proud sorrow [ bui under trees where only a armistice day mass meecting of all re-| B A ' . ; 3 i % ' t ; rked Memorial Day. |['°" U A ._ ~|yelowed leaf here and there lingered, iigious organizations in the cit | L . . - A - g in New Haven or hir mirals and generals and | {he khaki tide of a funeral escort for “There will be a vacant chair at the v S e s A SaLRam an T offt the |, general of the army rolled to its | nce table and the occupant of | Bottom row, left to right—Davis, right haifback; Mahoney, left halfback; “Dixie” Griffin, [ Ha as this alob fChied B o) Sl ‘:nv:)i[ A 4o |piRee: Giing Boom Al L‘”"fir'”‘;““]"“_‘:’:}“".4‘1"_,'[’“\':,‘,“,'.“1“ “{“‘Y"_ I’I“""'l:; q‘u;n'tm'l)z;cl\'; Murtha, {ul]lmc]\'u Standing—Meu cke, right end; Capt. Feineman, right tackie; | fhe i shin SH 2 el | him honor., e o tha EahosE kakRkead i Ter e e i, i o minitariet wits 1| Cooley, right guard; Bentz, center; Schaefer, left guard; Williams, left tackle; Landino, left end | i families | O 1 O s hreClous |march. to the grave, the first, far s I‘h“ ffiw;v‘(.m“:l o 1”'7}’“'””“‘ Lead by the Foot Guard band and | the annual ¢ with the New Brit- ( the completion of the Manager | b M > ervie | i bier; crosses and lals and ”'"w'\‘ll.lv“vl'r :im{“xlly\‘»Il]r‘ll\‘-:‘rphr:k‘;nin:tm}o‘:rl\-f HIAIEN L0 0 RE L e SN OLA0 SVl {fa SRt B [ e 1% son abne ar I S and the GEtD & moth- |3 RE i1l haunt 'the confererica and 16 wil | suna soatecs AL of awhom have chars | G Gtarts ot 2:15. i gt et otamps. 2 iop | Yoices slaelie ve, ot b {0 e standing apart. smong |0, Alence: Through the Hous gt row sounded in measured interval, War Is a Carse, inder of whom will come to this|Mary's playgrounds hefore an an Officials Selected, 4 kil rage alone might touch his cask i city tine | ip to Arlington. The knell of the guns var is too costly, then the | vade this city tomorrow aiternoon for | danger of darkness interfering with | (continued on o 14) ) Brotherhood of Nation P10 ; S 8 with glee. Vot until we declare war TR E R k ¢ oy C omeé yattl 4 1 1 b bat (iirce crashing salvos the last soldier ome to na b tered a special train and the re-| The game will he yed at St.|o'clock. oLy wen for their high-hearted deeds of | an economist sits there and ar-| city by automobile, the foothall team | dience that it is expected will run into | After much dickering between the | i t; OR roardl e iset wlariann| BiorOne elosen and glosapile HtEk gl > lords of the world will chuckle OngWes Munphy I alisenogaofst for him a shattered, name irked the way of the funeral train is an unmitigated curse and a denial 9 ES!DENT iddres LY Was eV, DI | pance where his great r U s of the gospel of Christ will war ever CITYS NIEMGRIAL PR LUL@GIZES AIWER}CA rville € ormer ¢ e Garhah i | farewe ther 1 louder as the cortege wound its w: that we must reduce armaments | of the Hartford High school will in- | five f . So that there will be no o Sl OPLLER! Yy A Sk AU, has bee A i 3 ““lstep by step and culminated in the fiahxoene) Irom 8:30 a. m. until far past noon, e i it so ot 10 SOLDIER DEAD UNKNOWN, BUT NOT UNHO NORED| _ servisavwme |k S Vi 05iel™ fi |t ssant vooming wise ne wory service at Yale university was |all, after all, there was littie of sor- cach, if America cannot afford war nple but i ive. Major D. A.[row. There was pride and circum hecause cents out of each dollar : g ‘y: S A bl e e Mt et s i thecnationalSbud Eetigocsitol Sipny FRE SRR ardi Als s Tri o ods i heyps | W. H. H 1 E. L. Lord of the |martial pageant; but over and under | Tl war bills: if that is all that the con-| Services at Noon and Pa- Harding Also Pays Tribute to Hundreds of Rothers ) ' 1! L el NLgDUEoa SeRae oK Casket in Capitol ference delegates can say, then kar “vh() Fi'l(l %01 4, Tl oucl t Tl o s Today | acet S it v el A eaei e 3 il !]\ 'm.flm x"n.mn:]v;t m\ (\.\(\ r:xpl}ill will be delayed only until the ma- rade This Afternoon na »oiace mn nougn nat INatie oday | P A Shhronr memshiall tablelatin| bratt Tt jo. | resting on the catafalque where Lin- tions have enongh dollars in their cof- 2 ety : oriale hall, Thesa it (S8henr Ia i : s ‘f-.mw. G . . and McKinley s to start another war. Not until e Eeatines Bows Over Her Son. i il e e R L Sl e B ad stood amid heap- he prime consideration of the reduc- & s e i Bresl oA Ta e ) the unknown sol.|in& piles of flowers with its silent fion of armamen 1d abolition of SRR SR Rowiand Aneellior the university andi aleriwha seve histail for She Nag uard of honor, a soldier, a national var passes from the zone of econom- Arlington National Cemetery, Nov.| “He mig \ me from any or it AE e SRR ¢ nothing Incking in _ the [Euardsman, a saitor and a marine, erence delegates can say, then war| New Britain took on her holiday [ 11.—President Harding, in his ad-fof mi f erican homes il e Tha e iminttes e o the moment when |through the night at the four cornera ver cease.” attire tuday. And yet, it was not all | dre: Arlington Cemetery today, at | mother g im in her love and e 3 vt he Do mInE ' N o Vet art dhn peered in through | ©f the .4_ hen there began to gath- rejoicing. The crowds who thronged | the ceremonies in observation of | derness, with 1 most ¢ tional & from a Yale bat-|the hi windows of the capitol ler a little group of fellow soldiers, I the streets in the afternoon rejoicing | Armistice Day and the burial of the d s. md of mothers |{ery posted | d High streets. | tunda where the d soldier lay in |cach wearing a hero's drrom!Inns. to LOWER FRhIG {T RATES {1 the successful culmination of the [ unknown An an soldier, brought | & 1 finding a touch g Cotetionlas [ state, until the shock of a hattery |[Pear the casket to the waiting gun World War and celebrating the anni- [ iome from France, spoke as follows: | of solac ssibility th - e it fic i tha T riag and East of Mississippi Planning | came to an end, presented a striking | pay the impersonal tribute.” The | be, f 1 ity contrast to the heads bowed and un- [ name of him whose body lies before | tc : § General Reduction, covered which stood at attention dur- | us took flight with his imperishable | chords are touched, fon ing the silent fwo minutes for mem- | soul. We know not whence he came, | there ce glowed the New York, Nov. 11.—Reductions in | g joq noon, and the unshed tears| but only that his death marks him reight rates which will reflect the | ) pohy faces as the memorial serv- [ with the ever ing glory of an “[the nation stood sileft for two min- |utes just after midday in honor of the War Heroes They were led by Sergeant Samuel . first mentioned in Pershing’s ir heroe nd with him were s Harry Taylor of the caval- e homas D. Saunders of the en- neers, Louis Razga of the Coast Ar- ry, James W. Dell of the Field ut in the v of nearly 750,000 | oo were held by the ex-service men [ American dying for his country. (Continued on Seventeenth Page) s and for the navy, Chief Torpedo mployes of railroads north of the |4 he center between 11 o'clock and § Shich baars thi Everywhere about his simple tomh, [Man James Delaney and Chief Water - e e L whic JEdIS | g slopes or in the|T Charles Lee O'Connor and Phio and Potomac rivers and cast of | joon. Mingled with the happy feel- |~ : & 5 1 he Mississippi will probably be tak- |, that lh- country was at peace A S e fdent |shaded: 1 Arlington Nation- | Sergeant Ernest Janson of the carts. tl AK\I) 1 Sha si monuments and | M ] rolden stars. [ over th ommission by executives of the lines [ Jicarts awho felt keenly the xmuln.ll‘ e graven | omorrow. A committee was appoint- | jresence of loved ones who had |mp o Casdi ES e addr s gu At s gl A Gt he great rotunda the ho: i vtk o eATeR o e R e e e b o | (homes iR dassid v, BBt coR oTaTLod nl‘ KH‘L GGVT p API\B Olin : k. To ol | nam are written imper In the great g::(lm_m onoriry e best n s of bringing about the | inswer to the call of duty and pa-| Teacher, Was On Return Trip i L liad LAt A i ¢ : ey i side the gun carriage up Pennsyl hment of lower freight tar-|iriotism. | | i e el : ediio h Pag a 4 le. At their head was 0 s o e Business W ctically at a From the Philippines. } < 3 : " s B |Tator General Harbord: exeoutive ins was expected here today that |siandstill. After 11 ock there was | iec mie Recom- ; ekt i jstant to General Persh as chie btices of the wage reductions would | pardly a store open and not a wheel| Thomas Cassidy, a brother of Reject Premier’s Recom- i oo et o 2 I BRIDGEPORT RULING ot o f; himse nl ;'. :nt»u‘x‘\y.nr ‘r‘nl“::ll‘f; e posted within a week, cach road |turned in many of the factories, ex- | George C, Cassidy of the High school mendationsiotiseithing h b ; s o i man and glad to walk beside his iking individual action. The execu- | cept, possibly, that necessary machin- | faculty, passed away on high seas, ac- : 0 T TERN honored comrade rather than ric ves have directed statisticians to vx.\" \\{w h could not be stopped. The |cording to information received by BT T S Mulle el A, IO GOVERN OTHERS 1 RER b ],‘ :,,‘:,Z,v‘h l\]\lv,,'l‘lh;m“: repare data for use in the hearing|post office was closed to business, | the local man. Trish Problems Henry L. Jon CLEANALT e skl figlor gensrels | whuew ey expect to be called by the rail-| pank doors were shut, doctors, den- The deceased had been engaged in . Pa., both Eragu R s R Rl T HsmArioaor thal ey ‘r sad labor hoard relative to the jus s and lawyers closed their doors [governmental work in the Philip- | listinguished service csand ot | ppie Utilities Commission to Have [ 00 M arlo iR AwaT R hE Neb ce of the wage cuts. las ght and did not open them this | pines and was about to return to| | o N 2y ) I G6th Division; there was ning s country. The vessel « emovi cdicn O Cities in Mind in Mak- tl : morning [tnis country. The vessel which is| ‘0 g ther Citi ruled at Hobgken while D DI I\ | Apprehensions regarding the |bearing the body is expected to arrive t d ) : i TGO R OF 1 e TRl S UEra VRV tere BAIL FO[{ RH)HARDQON weather and the probable rain‘or|at the San Francisco port today or|jected the gove ‘ play i : \ ) 1y : ing Fare Ruli oy o S | snow storm were dispelled when O1d | tomorrow settleme More | human ba trive to do this s than 500 members of the faculty and | dier ho en left undonc I aceful Setting. High o1 oded ridge bes Yotomac merica’s nameless hero ndergraduates stood ot attention Memorial chapel at noon. Two min | utes dater the chimes e tower | America’ | wil p bivouacked with the bra ed at the hasc ey, O'Ryan of and Rlckards of the navy walked i 5 ) e Y : 1 < R rear admiral and va\w t T Siliae - 7 o elut ter- | &b \ e ¢ bl n » of the battle fleet that Sol broke forth in all his glory | 'The death is the second in the Cas bright and carly this morning | sidy family in less than two weeks for One Son of Former Detectiv Practically all husiness places | The local man's sister was opened at the usual time and all but | jast week Sergeant. a . smaller stores closed at o s e K 8 L few of the smaller stores closed a Wever are p g fo \ o ; n's 1 lo W : 3. Wilson former After having been locked up for | T ":“""mm, o F[ND ANOTHERSTILL ‘1\\, : ‘ SR R wers of the JAre i SRR et of ‘_””“-\”‘ tic fleet, and le past six weeks, with his father, el ! | marines, was Major yrmer detective sergeant of the lo- | At 11 o'clock the ex-service men | 1 Al police force, and his brother, | Marched to the center where there | (gyone Arm Squad” Visit Oak Street | govern hou ’ o8 | the it S iad 1 « A i ien. Pershing while he | followed a military service, cor ting 1 allace Richardson probably will be | i > i jeounter sals ot ¢ 5 ’ it g t to er trolle ) road was named as grand 3| 1 on bonds tomorrow or Sun- | 9f & flag salute, laps, music and a renement This Morning and Selze | o000 I and o cost it $45,000, . 3 nar [ military ceremonies, silent two minutes for memories. S : 10 g : y e was | S5 : CIAA Gt e et At 2 o'clock in the afterncon the| Hoach Device in Full Blast. cabl raise \ i ) : . 1 ! L : i o T ¢ AT 1 unique gaid: | p, g t ) ) i 4 e v ort but this program T ) yarade formed a “rank Ve i The angements are said to have ””1 . ‘M B tter it| Armed with a search warrant, Po- . estions put forward by | who serve he ¢ T . t the former commander of square and a ha ur ‘ I t on the een made by an attorney for the m‘my] Major M. H. Pease acted as | llcemen Patrick O'Mara and Thomas | the imperial s ¢ were t noon t S Nneove | ! 1 he too walked bes fchardson family, who found a 5 o a A3 | Pecney, of the so-called “strong arm |ceived lat v ¢ 1 v 3 ¢ « ! ¢ casket going afoot all the it T % 1 | chief marshal and was assisted by \ 1A he ( fend who was willing to go bail uad,” visited the home of Max | sidered Vhine raw ; veside the ‘ Schiideliand I8 ' capitol to Arlington br Wallace, The fact that Wal ”-"; "l‘l“““”‘I*‘»”-”‘]""“ h"fll"l;l-‘l I,’;;”‘,’-"," jchmond at 28 Oak street this [ing up lotaile eply B | esans w ert Knox |1 ! Smetery g son, Silas Lynch, Josep cinge y N 1 time the only married son explains the : morning, and seized 6 “moonshine |hoped fo forwa ort ¢ s. |1 ; y Grand Marshal of Parade \ John Janaitis, Willlam Hopkins : et . f ason for his being selected from | t . . f B tio | IWEVCT ind i The ‘delcol 6t it t 1 he v t the o P lovieta ¥ S5k | Frank Pinches, Harry Hargraves, [ SUll” In full operation ; sche i f th Sedric. Powers 5 Rogers an The “still’” was discovered on a gas | princi r ed ( o Boulevard in Bristol 3333 \ ' sandhoitz, The amount of bail in Wallace's | Codic Powers, J. I\ Rogers and C.) ooy bathroom, and was hoil- |tions which noil ibin sl A aa st kT2l Totile i i ol ¥ict ot ol hse in $15,000. The brother also is ing hot when taken from the police |stance ‘ tainment, [ vard which wi € t 88 A oS r ien. Pershi 21d under §15,000, while the fathe patrol at the station 1 3 the [Sir Jam: for) with | roc ery S AL g 1 1t President il is $50,000. t \ ) riends Come [orward With DBail lay, according to a well founded ru- or. The first division formed on Frank- lin square, cast, with the head at | : : ‘ Pearl street, and rear towards the | Stil”, the police seized about three | th imo ¢ « i ice hy 39 « e : gk i ! ing who were flanked by their gallons of mash and three pints of |leagues, he premier houlevard was tur er o e g oelnld @ Vice-President Coolldge formed on Franklin square, west side, | @/cohol. Richmond was hooked for | that f « v \iral Coontz, chief of thelr Run to Game Saturday | ;.. i the rear towards the iigh | tion betwer e o lic derad bt i (ing in his place as former The New York, New Haven & [school. The third division formed on | Agk Foch to Visit | Waterbury faieE &b e { f e United States and artford railroad will run extra | Bassett strect, heading north, with | | (Continued on 'l ] : terbury exere « ' ex- | pair h Admiral Jones commands | | | High schoc The second divisior | ach trains to New Haven on Sat- | the head at Rockwell avenue. The | Allentown Hospital oll cail of Croic i the ¢ of | er Atlantic fleet. ay for the Yale-Princeton foot- | fourth division formed on Rockwell New Haven, Nov. 11 Marshal | % * |at or roll 1 the cing | ¢ ¥ bl ] detert | 1l game, leaving Berlin (New Brit- | avenue, heading east, with the head | Foch will probably asked during his ; there of a flor oss. Just ore ; " i (Continued on Fitth Page)s n Jet,) at a. m. and 11:25 a. [ at I'ranklin square | stay here to pay a visit to the Alling- | | THE WEATHER 001 \ ervic en o went : i = E ., due New Haven at 10:35 a. m. first Division—Platoon of police [ town hospital Sunday morning and ¢ After the m S o bd 12:10 p. m., respectively. Re- aded by Chief Willlam J. Rawlings, | greet the 450 former service men who | Hartford, Nov. 11.—Torecast t silence the chimes of Ll 1 i tishenbe ol e rning trains will leave New Haven rshal Maurice H. DPease, Assistant | are under treatment there, John Gun- || for New Britain and vicinity: n ) forth “Nea WiILL HAVE o ne very pretty feature of the ex 5:30 p. m. and 6:30 p. m. People | Marshal Cedric Powers and staff, | shannon of Hartford long active in Increasing clondiness tonight. My God " ce” In the afternoo The i xliary ! cises this morning was the ringing 1 the chimes on the South church, ey being played by Professor Joe Be ing to the game may avoid delay [ Philharmonic band, National Colors, | tuberculosis work has been asked by || or Saturday. th L parade of former purchasing round trip tickets in he men to express to the marshall | 34 vance, (Continued on Third Page.) | their desire to sce him. (Continued on Third Page.) g at K. of ! g. | seph Clair