New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 9, 1922, Page 10

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1922, ave prohibited gatherings of lence of railway delegates to be held | M viets and no more; a progressive seale | £rade of advancement under the sys- tq merit more contildence on lh_a pur: more than 10 men because nn-!m Anasol to discuss terms of settle PRISON RE"DR of privileges and freedom within a|tem, and each group will be assigned | of prisen authoritles; position ...'n..., strikers were holding mass meetings ment which have been offered by the | pricon makes men,” according ‘to[to onc of the eight celthouses, the | within prison walls; lfe In cottagea il intimidating the employes wlmi!im Indian railway | - - — John L. Whitman, superintendent of [second of which willghe completed | outside the priskon but' under the - anted to we [ R T [y Jare Matkes Convies| 11018 prisons, under whose super-|and in use within a few days. Prison- | pervision of prison wuthorities: pa- T"AN HUMAN BE'N More than half the Calentta subur- | 5 [ Iran Hand and Bars Makes Convets | 00005000 T ew state penitentiary at|ers will move from cellhouse to eell. rnifi fr"‘,d"f"' . TR I ban trains, which usually carried TREASURER TO KING | and Nothing More, Declares iois | Satesville, near here, 15 being con- (house with their advancement In| The -;.lu.lluln 8 gu, outsronth. of ‘;‘,”. 20,000 passengers each way lLondon, May 8 In order to effect | structed, The architecture of the [ grade, psychologiea'l ntudy .' ¢ kbl have been discontinued owing | economies to the extent of £10,000 a! Penitentiary Dirvector, (bullding 18 designed to facilitate ap- The plan provides that prisoners o conducted by \rl-uu;g “l:\": e"x:t W][h()[][ L!ves[()(‘l( in Russia N(] o m. strike |vear in the royal housenold, &, E.| A [plication of the' *Iilinol idea,” or|may pass through the following| Whitman, the lue \Warden Fveret secretury of the Indian Labor | Harwood, has been appointed deputy | Jolet, DL May 0o-An dron hand | ppoeiossive merit system. Prisoners | stages; confinement under strict pris- [ J. Murphy, and u staff of exports . wsociation has ealled for & confer. ! treasurer to the King |and merg confinement “make con ‘\\m be grouped according to thelr|on discipline; increasing opportunity | ing the lnst twenty years, Crops Can Be Raised . SpiEr e RO Samara, Russia, May 0 (The Asso w clated Press)—There is ample liv stoek in Samara provinee o work the | fields and harvest the crop of 14 despite the fact that it suffered most geverely from the tamine. The ru ged, shaggy ittle horses, great groaning camels and slow moving . : oxen of the famine regions have with- stood the winter's hunger as well or even better than the sturdy peasants, | In isolated spots totally lacking in food the livest as well as the peo- ple has suffercd tremendous mortality Thousands of draft animals have fal- len dead in the road while hauling preeious food o the snows to the ! ed tor food t v far the great pro- portion ¢ hrough the winfer oo o e e e ar| REG.U.S.PAT. OFF. eulture of Samara province, says g 1 ! ther still more than 200,000 hea X 8 e of wor ¢ live stock left or 90 per| 9 3 o ! cent of those available in 1921, . . Peasants who hate seen members 3 ; . v their own families and neighlors die A e R R of hunger have saved their camels, K S horses and oxen aeept in villages | 0 « where starvation knew no bounds, § : they have nat killed their beasts, ev i W, S 3 when they knew that a few pounds of | K i 2 ; horse flesh might mean a week's life | o to themselves. . Horses Very . Horses were more precious than humans. Without livestock no food could be brought from the railways| . and the seed for next yea crop k | would lie useless in the box cars far from the fields. Ragweed and other vegetation or-| y have been used for forage. The ani- a mals have heen able to do only half the work that a well fed would do. Most of them, particularly| the camels present a wochegone ap- - ° 9 * o . pearance. These dromedaries groan ) snow roads at a rate of three to four miles” an hour, protesting over every bump or snow drift in the road. k Nevertheless, they drag loads of more than a ton 15 ta 20 miles a day The horses pull at least half of this load. Even with the scarcity and dear- ness of forage, the peasants whom the correspondent encountered were not selling their live stock cheaply. Re- 5 fore the revolution, a good' big v.rk ; ((((—)])))» camel in Samara province coald be 3 NI Y bought for 40 to 50 rubles. “Vhis rep- | resented $20 to The 20,000,000 | to 50,000,000 rubles now asked for| camels in this district,represents only about half that amol ‘Llehen figure al but compaief with prices| aske? for other commodities, livestos! is still held at a high figure. REPARATION 15 NEARLY E(]MP[ETEI] Many Germans However, Are Staying 10 Russia Riga, lLatvia, May 9.—Repatriation of the hundreds of thousands of of- ficers and soldiers captured by the Russians during the world war has| nearly been completed. Thousands o Germans, Austrians, Hungarians and | soldiers of various other nationalities, i whom the Russians took prisoner have married and decided to remain indefinitély in the Soviet country. Among a detachment of former Hungarian officers passing through ’ B Riga recently enroute home was 5 A e f Count Valentine Szechenyi, whose & Y cousin married Miss Gladys Vander- | 4 > g —umvnn ‘bilt, of New York, the Count being accompanied by his wife, a young | Russian woman, I'rincess Mary Gal- itzin. The story of the marriage of the count and the Princess, which took | place a year ago, was published in America at that time. The Count was permitted to leave a Soviet prisor under guard, long enough for wedding ceremony. Immediatoly érward he was returned to Ar vevsky prison, ncar Moscow, there was a wedding hreaks black bread, tea and coffee made of toasted gmuin, a substitute used ex- tensively in Germany and other coun- tries cut off from the outside world during the war. The Count,and Countess, traveliig under auspices of the Internatisnai Red €ross with 300 other prisoners of war, were taken from Riga to Buda- pest. “Later they planned to go to Congtantinople possibly to make their home. | Count Szechenyi and the other HuS- garians, many of whom were officers faken prisoner in 1915, were ox- ‘changed by the Sovicts for an equa number of Communists who had Leen in’ jail in Hungar ,T‘ e gl ' OUR CHART WILL TELL YOU THE SEE OUR LUBRICATION BOOKLET, prisonmall. anl before his discharge kR KRG ol RIGHT GRADE FOR YOUR CAR OR ASK YOUR DEALER system. Countess Szechenyi speak splendid English, iearned as a chilc and ‘plans soon to visit Awmerica DISORDERS IN INDIA Some Troubles Ocenr From Sirike of Employes of FEast Indian Railway | STANDARI CO. OF NEW YORK have resuited from the strike of em-| ployes of the East Indian raliway| which began l‘ehr’uur_\ 2 In eonse- R Y quente of a disugreement over vages, | The strikers at Anasol burned the OA I ’ vv A temporary quarters occupled by the! workers there and this start cus between the werkers striliers, two of whom were injured Magistrates at Alluhabad and l.:un-‘

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