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" AUSTRIATRIES NEW GOVERNMENT FORM Soclalist-Pan German Coalition Ministry Starts Functioning Vienna, July 7.—With the Christian Boclalist-Pangerman coalition minis- try formed today in succession to the Behober nonpartisan bureaucratic cabinet which fell recently. Austga enters upon another experiment Yn government, Ministry has succesded ministry since the eoclal democratic majority was overthrown in the electiens two years ago and left no party with a SAYS ENGLAND MUST AcT Second Reading of Washington Treaty %akes Place and Baufication B Great Mritain 1a| Ufiged. London, July 7 (By Assoclated Pri ~The sécond reading of the treaties of Washington bill ratitying the pacts slgned at the Wyshington armamenta conference whick has been passed by house of lords was moved in the house of commons today by Charles Amory parliamentary secre- tary of the admiralty, Mr, Amory sald the government considered that the United States had fully carried its undertaking into ef- fect, that France, ITtaly and Japan were preparing to ratify the treaties and that Canada already had done so. The secretary said he did not think Great Britain could claim to be act- CHINESE SEEK T0 DISBAND MILITARY Minister of Justice Named as Peking, July 7.—Dr. Wang Chung who was a the Washington confer- by Chinese hul, Mi delegate ence, h, merchants, students and Chiel Advocate — nister of Justice, to as been chosen othery to urge the disbanding of China's vast armles, Dr. Wang sald he believes the greatest obstacle to a prosperous China is the existence of a large mili- tary class, “The powers included as part of the City Items Chautauqua season ticket sale ends Baturday noon.—Advt, All coupons for Daughters of America linen chest must be in this evening. Drawing will take place on K. of C, lawn— advt, Your wash day worrles are over when you send us your wet wash, T8¢, Unlon Laundry. Tel. 904.—Advt, Mr. and Mrs. Ell Berard and daughters, Alma and Rita of Winter street, are spending the summer at Mohican Point on the Thames river, Chautauqua geason tickets $3.00,— | Advt, Chautauqua season ticket sale ends Saturday noon.—Advt. the Catholie WALL STREET STOCK EXCHANGE REPORTS Wall Street 10:30 a. m.—Rails gave promise at the active opening of to- day's stock market of adding very substantially to yesterday's broad up- ward movement, Initial prices showed |Kalns running from fractions to a full point for the leading coalers and sev- eral of the grangers and trans-con- tinentals. Oils resumed their irregular | course on further heaviness of Mex- | fcan Pet. which reacted 1 1-4 points, domestic issues, however showing | firmness. Continuance of disturbing | conditions abroad was reflected in yet | another new low record for German | marks which fell to the level of | 0.18%, Noon—Trading broadened during PUTNAM & CO Members New York Stock Exchango 1w Members Hartford Stock Exchange (Successors to Richter & Co.) Stanley R. Eddy Manager WE OFFER: 31 West Main St Tel. 2040 50 shares North & Judd 50 shares Stanley Works 50 shares Landers, Frary & Clark PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Willlam C. Steiner of | 261 Arch street, Mr, and Mrs. Wil- | liam A. Leupold and Otto Leupold, also of that address, will leave to- morrow for a two weeks' vacation at Clinton Beach. working majority in the national as- sembly, Each has assumed office un- der greater difficulties than its pre- dacugcr. Despite the superficial bet- terment in living conditions due to widely bestowed charities and foreign credits sufficlent at least for food, and the fact that the constantly depreciat- ing money increases in quantity and still has {internal purchasing power, this new ministry faces an actual economic and financial sjtuation con- ceded to be worse than has hitherto existed, ‘When the Seipl government took office the krone was 11,300 to one dol- lar. It is stated t.at the recent Brit. ish credit was virtually used up in an effort to stabilize ths currency. For two months this policy succeeded in holding the krone around 7,500 to the dollar, but recently the dam broke and it gell at the rate of 1,000 kronen & day. Prices of necessities have risen to world parity and above, and the new municipal socialist rental tax, while ylelding the landlord nothing, has in- creaced rents emormously. This tax £0es to the city for a bullding and re- pair fund for the amelioration of haqusing conditions. The consequence has been the nat- ural one of demands for higher pay by all classes, from government eni- ployes to unskilled labor. The recent Schober government granted the enor- mously increased demands of the civil sérvants and met them, together with other obligations, by means of the money printing presses until the cur- rency circulation has reached the as- tounding total of over 420,000,000,000. Industrial employers, however, have oftered resistance and in instances af- fecting some 200,000 employes, they have denounced existing wage agree- ments. The issue has become a sharp one. So far the labor unions have shown a moderate and conciliatory epirit and have avoided an open break. Employers claim they can no longer . manufacture for export in competition with Germany where wages and living are far lower than in Austria, even on a gold basis. The instability of the krone, its wide and suddén fluctua- tions, also make it impossible, they say, to deal in future contracts. Ex- port is practically at a standstill and there is widely unemployment. -This is the situation which con- frants the bourgeois ministry of Mon- sighor Seipl, by far the most reac- tionary in its make up that the re- public has had. The new chancellor is a cleric and considered one of the cleverest politicians in the country. The Christian Socialist-Pangerman combination throws the socialists into a hopeless minority in the national assembly and it is very freely pre- dicted that the new conservative coa.ition will undertake to wipe from the statutes many of the laws placed there by the socialists when they were in cont#l. The socialists still have one weapon, however, in the fact that financial legislation requires a two- thirds vote of the assembly, which the coalition cannot muster. The Pangermans have made it dis- tinctly understood that the working agreement with the Christian Solial- ists must terminate with the generally believed imminent elections. At the the morning, dealings for that period being the largest of the week In spite of realizing sales, there were | many additions to the higher move ment of rails. Exceptions in this group, however, included Union Paci- fic and Canadian Paeific both forfeit- ing part of yesterday's advance, Bald- win, Gen. Elec, Am'n. Woolen, Pull- | yman, International Paper, Allied| Chemie. and United Fruit were among the popular shares to register gains of 1 to 1 1-2 points. U, 8 Steel hung around yesterday’'s final price but in- dependents, notably Gulf States, Va- nadium, Colo. Tuel, Midvale and Lackawanna, were firm to strong. Call money opened and renewed at 4 1.2 per cent, 1:30 p. m.—Weakness in the Mexi- | can Oils, Mexican Pet. falling 5 1-4 and the Pan-American issues 2 3-4 to | 3 1-4 points caused the market to| | waver for a time with Baldwin, Cru- | cible and Coca Cola relapsing sharp- | ly. A later rapid climb in Studebak- | er to 133 the highest level in several | years cauged renewed buying | throughout and the list began to move upward again at a rapid pace. Standard Oil of California advanced 4 points and Calif. Pet., Stromberg Carbureter, United Fruit, Famous Mr. and Mrs. Carl Arute of 14 F_flson|r’\a_vers, Am’'n Ice, Allis Chalmers and street, died last night. The funeral |some low priced rails displayed ag- was held this afternoon at 2 o'clock. |gressive strength. Burial was in St. Mary's New ceme-| Quotations furnished by Putnam tery. & Company. ing greatly in advance of her co-signa- tories, “but whether t s the case or not” he continued, Ywe ought not to show any hesitation In making it quite clear that the parliament of this country is fully behind the states- men who slgned the Washington treaties.'"” Former the treaties. 100 MUCH RUBBER STOCK IN MARKET official record of the Armament Lim- itation Conference at Washington a suggestion that China abolish her armies,” sald Dr. Wang in an inter- view today. “I am convineed that they were giving us warning that not more foreign ald may be expected until we get tid of militarism. It 1s estimated that 1,500,000 soldiers are supported by the Chinese people and that these|DP!e street, have returned from Long soldiers absorb half the nation's|Island. revenue, Viewed from {its economic s | aspects alone China s handicapped so| Miss Helen Giles of Boston, Mass, | long as these soldlers are withheld|!3 visiting her mother, Mrs. H, 8. | from industry. To convince the Chin-|Glles of Maple street. ese people of the gravity of the prob- lem I have translated and am dis- tributing widely the speech delivered by Sir Robert Borden, the delegate from Canada at'the Washington Con- ference. Sir Ilobert's speech warned that we cannot continue to hold the sympathy of the world unless we re- duce our armies to the actual needs of defense.” Dr. Wang's views are reflected in the Chinese press. Recently the edi- tors and publishers of various Chin- ese papers held a public demonstra- tion against the existence of large Chinese armies. As an indication of the drain on the ngtional resources it was stated that the various military leaders owe the railroad administra- tion $260,000,000 for transporting trops since the overthrow the Manchu | dynasty. UDD & CO. MEMBERS HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGE BARTFORD: Hartford-Conn. Truat Bldg., Tel. Charter 6330 NEW BRITAIN: 23 West Main St.. Telephone 1815, Premier Asquith praised Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Gard of Ma- WE OFFER— 50 Shares Bigelow-Hartford Carpet Co. Common. 50 Shares Torrington Com. Minor Rogers {s the guest of his| grandmother, Mrs. D. O. Rogers of Sunnyledge. DEATHS AND FUNERALS Patrick Corbett The funeral of Patrick Corbett was | held at 9 o'clock this morning at &t | Joseph's church. Rev. J. Leo Sullivan was the celebrant of a requiem ma; The burial was in St. Mary's new | cemetery. Colonial Secretary Reports Hard Times May Follow London, July 7.—The rubber in dustry jn British colonies and protecto- rates has hard times ahead of it. That {s the opinion exprested by the committee appointed by the Colonial secretary to investigate the situation. The committee has just made its re- port. It says the total world stogks of crude rubber at the beginning of the year were estimated at 310,000 tons That was much more than the world required. Therefore it advises Win- ston Churchill, the colonial secretary, to “contemplate with grave concern the position of the industry in Brit- ish colonies and protectorates unless steps are taken to reduce stocks and further to prevent over-production of rubber so long as the potential normal hi5 wife used a pair of binoculars to Iprov‘duczion conol;nuzs '°;;fzh5",am_};';i'watch him while he was swimming y in excess consumption. | wit 4 girls, workers at the committee adds it is of the 01’"‘“’"‘glr;;m‘vg:;;‘d:ncni Rescue Mission, of that consumptmn 1s not likely to over-| wyich he is superintendent, was the take ppodudiion for aomie veaTa. testimony in court here yesterday of ‘There s no doubt,” the commit-|¢ps Rey, Melvin' E. Trotter in the it i o Ui e 2 T0Es s esance D GG 2 " |Mrs. Trotter. e ,‘"”é“':“?hpi“;'gedm':”;‘i];'m’:fi"‘; Mr. Trotter said his sister informed d g 4 ' U him his wife watched him from the 'ffrrm':eca?nrg:nil:i?=:ilfk(:r::|?e t:natdn?l porch of his summer home at Maca- mediate solution of the problem, since WA-'S“T“VS‘EMW quarrels invariably ?;\::hair;yen:i;s!a:gcfi::;r:;;:lu:f; h;( were brought about because women in kaw the mission audience came forward :]‘i:“";0“;’”:‘:“‘:‘;;j’:“‘;’;’::l‘,‘iafl‘;’_’;:’ after the service to shake hands with 3 T |me,” Trotter testified. “My wife ac- creased consumption. Further it 4 & % 5 to Should be realized that improved c“s"‘;. these “:t"g;‘“t QOLINE methods of manufacturing rubher|WOrSHIP mé, 1 2 products, such as tires, undoubtedly e S prolong the life of the article and con- ROCEAWAY TO CLOSE. sequently curtail the demand for raw rubber.” In the matter of the compulsory re- striction of the production of raw rub- ber, the committee says the Dutch government, whose lands also produce much rubber, will have to be con- suited. P REPORTS VERIFIE Stories of Prehistoric Hawaiians Re- Thomson; Tfenn & . NEW BRITAIN Hartford New Britain National Bank Bldg, 10 Central Row Telephone 2580 Telephone 2-4141 Members Members Hartford Stock Exchange New York Stock Exchange Nellie Arute. Nellle Arute, infant daugh of PASTOR ‘Wife Spied on Him As He Swam With Girls, | Grand Raplds, Mich,, July 7.—That High Low Close 47 47 47 503 o 48 49% 165% 1647 *165% J114% 113% 118% . 62% . 803 L.120% L1427 91% WRONG. Gustave Kracmer Gustave Kraemer, aged 59 years, of 250 Maple street, died early this morning after a lingering illness. He was a native of New York state, but had resided in this city for many years. Surviving him are his wife, and three daughters, M Emelia | A Kraemer, Mrs. John Unwin and Mrs, | Wool A. A Williams; three sisters and two |Ana Cop vooo 585G brothers, residing in New Jersey. He|Atch Tp & 8 F.102 was a member of Gerstaecker lodge, | At Gulf & W I. 397 1. 0. 0. F. and the Concordia society. | Baldwin Loco ..115% The funeral will be hedd at 9 o'clock |Balti & Ohio 4. 517 tomorrow morning at St. Peter'’s| Beth Steel B ... T6% church. The burial will be th St |Canadian Pac ..142% Mary's new cemetery. Cen Leather ... 387 Ches & Ohio 69 ‘(‘hl Mil & S P. 28% Chi Rk Isl & P. 45% Chile Copper .. 23% Chino Copper 203, Con Gas . 121% Corn Prod Ref.1041; ‘f‘rnrxh]P Steel . |Cuba Cane Spgar 1635 | Endicott-John |Erie . |Erie 1st pfd Former Lahorer Arrested in Connec- |Gen Electric tion With $2,000,000 Theft. |Goodrick BF ,.. |Gt North pfd New York, July 7.—Jeremiah Se- Insp Copper ville, formerly a laborer in the old Inter Con ...... general post office, and now proprie- [nter Con pfd tor of a cabaret at Rockaway Beach, Int Mer Mar pfd 7 vesterday was held in $25,000 bail |Ajlis-Chalmers charged with aiding bandits who Pacific Oil robbed a mail truck of nearly $2,-|Int Nickel 000,000 on Broadway last October. |Int Paper Post office inspectors charge that!|Kelly Spring T'r Seville furnished information as to|Kennecott Cop.. the contents of mail pouches and a Lacka Steel description of the man to George An- | Lehigh Val derson, Gerald Chapman, and Charles | Mex Petrol Loeber, now being held in $125,000 | Midvale Steel bail each after the discovery of $500,- | Mis Pac 000 worth of the stolen bonds and se- Am Bt Sug Am Can .... Am Cr & Fd. Loco We Offer: STANLEY WORKS COMMON LANDERS, FRARY & CLARK JOHN P. KEOGH Member Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York Waterbury STOCKS Bridgeport Danbury New Haven Middletown BONDS Springfield Direct Private Wire to New York and Boston G. F. GROFF, Mgr—Room 509, N. B. Nat'l Bank Bldg.—Tel. 1013 e CARD OF THANKS. We wish to thank our neighbors and friends for the Kindness shown us during the illness and death of our beloved husband and father. Also for the beautiful floral pieces MRS. WM. SHEARER, And Family. 5% men affected and not the workers themselves. ; STAY PROCEEDINGS | —_— Judge Rogers Acts in Bridgeport Case When It is Reportad Creditors Might Lose Rights to Collect. WANT PEDAGOGIC MOVIES Hays Favors Plan of More Edugcation- al Pictures and Seeks Co-Operation of Producers. 31 Boston, July 7.—The co-operation ,,“; |of the motion picture producers with é‘!he National Education association | in finding a way to make pedagogic | pictures ‘*“which are scientifically sound,” was offered by Will H. Hays, president of the motion picture pro- ducers and distributors of Americ ‘in an address last night before the 7 {convention of the educators’ organi- |of the circuit court of appeals it was ‘Zfl"ff'n- 3 announced by Referee in Bankruptey ;| ‘There is aermvdy a great demand |7 J. Keough today. |for pedagegic pictures,” Mr. Hays| The first lien of the assets of the. said. "I propose that we jointly Study [company came due on Wednesday and that demand and that we jointiy find |it was allowed. The claim was made ROBBERY SUSPECT HELD. Navy Department Confirms Report to Abandon Famous Site. Washington, July 7—Officials of the Navy Department last night con- firmed the report that the Naval Air Station at Rockaway soon will be| closed. For a long time, negotiations were under way between the Navy Depart- ment and New York city authorities, with a view to having the city turn over part of Jacob Riis Park, which was held necessary to keep the station | in operation. The city anthorities have decided not to turn over the park land and | the department has no choice. Most of the equipment was moved away long ago. Bridgeport, July 7.—A stay of pro- ceedings on appeal from a decree of Judge E. 8. Thomas in the federal court adjudging the Morris Meta{ Products Co. a bankrupt has beea given by Judge Henry Ward Rogers 4 ported Accurately According To LF R Testimony of Ethnologist. Honolulu, T. H., July 7.—Stories N, Y Cen same time they have not abandoned the .slogan of fusion with Germany. In a recent §peech their president, Dr. Dinghoeffer, emphasized the state- ment that the absence of any clause told by native Hawaiians of footprints in the lava flows on the slopes of the extinct volcano of Haleakala, “House of the Sun" on the island of Maui, which would indicate that the island The government has spent $1,000,0 00 on the station. Seeks Prison about | curities on Tuesday. Seville waived examination. BOAT OUT OF GAS. | Norf & West | Pure Oil NYNHG&H S a RS d North Pac é Pan Am P & T 73% ways and means of supplying it. Let a committee be appointed of this a&s-| sociation made mp of the very best| talent within your ranks; let them that if this alowance held, all credis tors who followed this first lien would lose their rights to collect as those whose liens were prior to the one Q@ | meet with the great producers of ths" ¢ [country and find ways to use our facilities. We ask you to aid us and |to let us aid you in the study of the | whole problem of the use of the mo- | tion picture as a direct pedagogic in- strument.” | Mr. Hays assured the delegates that the motion picture industry accepted the challenge “in the great demana of the educators that the full instruc- tional value of motion pictures shall |be developed and used.” GOLD SUPPLY NOTED which judgment was given alone. would divide the assets. PLENTY TO MARRY Women Outnumber Men in Furope By Large Total of 25,000,000; Olde er Yecars Prevail. was inhabited centuries ago when the | voleano was still active, have been| verified by K. P. Emory, of the Bish- op Museum, who investigated the re- ports on behalf of the institution. { Emory, who is assistant ethnologist at the museum, originally decided | that the prints had been made by na- | tives fleeing betore the last flow of lava down Haleakala, when the lava still was hot and plastic. Further in-| vestigation showed at the prints| could not have been made by persons who had been running, the toes were not more deeply impressed than | the heels. | Scientists here are puzzled over the | | prints, which range in size from four | |inches long, two inches wide at the | |toes and an inch at the heel; to ten inche$ long, four inches wide at the toes and three inches wide at the heels. The toes in the prints are na- |tural in size, as is the curve of the foot, Emory said. — BAN BROOKLYN BRIDGE Craft Oft Milford Sends Up Skyrocket: for Help. Milford, July 7.—Residents on the shore front at Woodmont were at- ltracted by skyrockets sent up from a craft about two miles off shore last |night. First reports to the Milford | police were that a steamer was in |distress, but summer visitors who |went out in rowboats learned that |three young men in a motor boat |were in need of gasoline. After this| |was furnished they went on their way. Penn R R ierce A . Pittshurgh Coal Ray Con Cop Reading . Rep I & 8 Royal D, N Y . clair Oil Ref South Pacific South Railway Studebaker Co Texas C Texas & Pacific Tobaceo Prod Transcon Oil Union Pacific | United Fruit .. United Re §t .. 6 g | U 8§ Food Prod 5 U 8 Indus Aleo U § Rubber Shanghai, China, July 7 (By Asso-|U S 5100 - |clated Press) —Three Methodist Mi H;h' ‘,nm:” . sion Chapels between Changhui and \'x‘”\‘ Bosriand Kianfu, Province of Kiangsl, were \_‘“w‘m Lead |looted and destroved during the re- ° R cent. mutiny of troops in that prov- ince, according to advices from Nan-| |chang, capital of Kiangsi. One na- | tive pastor is reported miscing. No foreign missionaries were stationed at |these places. Cholera has broken out among the troops involved in the mutiny and |the Methodist missions aré co-opeér- |ating to prevent epidemic. DECLARE MARTIAL LAW. 1% in the Austro-American peace treaty 19 stipulating that Austria remain an independent state was a ‘“great and joyous asset.” o REFORMER TO SPEAK “Apostle of Prohibition Will Tell All He Knows of Violations. Rochester, July 7.—Clinton N. How- ard, reformer and Chautauqua lec- turer, who styles himself the “Apostle of Prohibition” and the “Little Giant"” recently subpoenaed to appear before the grand jury here to tell what he knows of liquor law violations after utterances derogatory to the courts had been made by him, will “bare his mind" at a public mass meeting Sunday, it was announced today. The meeting was arranged by the “moral committee,” compoled of churchmen. Preachers are campaign- ing at their Sunday services, asking the congregation to notify the pastor of any infringement of the prohibi- tion laws. Berlin, July 7.—Man's minority om earth as compared ta women, a fast even before the war, has beeh {n- creased by that conflict until today it is estimated there are 25,000,000 more women than men in Europe |aione. Official statistics published here show that the surplus of women {ia Europe has increased by 15,500,000, | Before the war there were 1,038 wori= en to every thousand men; now the proportion is 1,111 to 1,000. The ris« |ing surplus has been most marked ia ia where the number of women CHINESE ROB MISSIONS. Reduction of 500,000 Pounds in Lon- 667 | 633% i don Bank Returns Shows England 9% | 122 844 | S 101 | Three Methodist Chapels Looted and Pastor Missing. Lvidently Regarding Debt to U. S. 7 (By Associated attention to the fact that vesterday's bank return showed a reduction of 500,000 pounds in gold the financial editor of the Morning Russ Post says: has grown from 1,042 to 1,299 foe When it is remembered that gold |€VEry 1,000 men. This is on the basie [no longer circulates in this country it [0f figures for 52 governments. will be seen that this withdrawal i¢| The situation has also been notably |suggestive of important exports of [changed in'Germany, Austria, Jugoe |metals and the development occasion- | S'avia, Great Britain, Luxumburg, |ed the greatest surprise in the ecity amnce and Ttaly. Ta Germany, 6xe |becanse rightly or not it was regard. | clusive of Upper Silesia, there are 1 ed as being connected with prepara- |i00 women to every 1,000 men whares |tions for meeting the seérviee on our as before the war there were about Niles-Be-Fond com .. debt to the 1'nited States government, | 1,206, On the contrary, the number N ind Judd 51 53 | “The only course stent with |of surplus women has decreased ia’ P Stow and Wilcox |our own high financial traditions” he |Denmark, Norway, Sweden and the Mfg Co s to intimate at once our |Netherlands. Co An outstanding feature of the it uation is that girls of u marriageable age are in the minority in the surplus, | most of those in the éxcess classifics [tion being of elder years and many of them widows. (Putnam & Co.) Rid 160 Asked 165 125 180 No More Autos Can Travel Over| | Famous Structure Hereafter. New York, July 7—Brooklyn bridge, once the show piece of New York,| has dropped back to the position of‘ a mere second-rater. i Grover Whalen, commissioner of| plant and structures, issued an or-| der restricting the roadwa of the famous structure to slow-mov- ing horse-drawn vehicles. Manhattan bridge, Brooklyn bridge’'s younger sis- ter, was restricted by the same order | to the faster-moving motor traffic. | Both bridges will continue to carry| their present quotas of surface car: |L trains, subway trains and pedes- trians, however. Hfd Elec Light Southern N E Tel 122 Am Hardware e Billings & Spéncer com 238 13 28 PRESIDENT'S APPEAL Asks For Rarmony Among Republican Ranks For Good of Party. Columbus, July 7.—President Hard- ing in an address here last night made a vigorous appeal for harmony in the ranks of the republican party. Too many who ‘profess to be repub- licans,” he declared, are attempting to “attract attention to themselves,” in- stead of working for the good of their party and country. The president said he did not care to be a “soloist,” but added that some one had to act as director, otherwise there would be no harmony. He spoke at an open air banquet which celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of the Columbus Republican Glee club, of which he Mast night was made a life member. RUSSIAN VISIT UNEXPECTED Appearance of Foreign Minister in A-u.sman Tyrol Yesterday. Vienna, July 7.—Foreign Minister Tchitcherin of soviet Russia who went #to Berlin after heading Russia's dele- gation at the Genqa conference ar- rived unexpected at Innsbruck, in the Austrian Tyrol yesterday. It is un- derstood here that he was diverted , trom his intended visit to a German | Sesort by 4he politigd situation, an iers B Machine orth Russell Scovill Mf, | Situation in Vera Cruz Critical—Wom- en Radicals Lead Mobs. |desire to effect settiement by a fund (By Associated | S i " has been de. Standard Screw ...... ing_arrangement on terms consistent | wal of the clash |Traut and Hine .vvii. 5 |with the size of the obligation.’ Union Mfg Co eues Stanley Works ........ B 54 | | NEW YORK CLFARING HOUSE REPORT i) 400,000 continues Vera Cruz, July 7, Press).—Martial law |cl1ared here after ren | between police, soldiers and members |of the red union of revolutionary ten- |an NOT DISCTUSSING WAGES 200 REPLACE §TRIELRS Pittsburgh, July 7.—The Pennavl-| |*"Herén Proal,: tounder of the syn. | VAR TRIIYGRD oAy, Tepuriec aum Doylestown (Pa.) police declare |dicate is confined in prizon, having| bers of striking shopmen returning t0| prmm, Mack, 26, crippled, confessed [peen arrested on charges of homicide | work at eight points in the Pittsbureh |, them she had given a poison tab-|and sedition | district and employment of ot to e five-yearsold child that Ene| Hiotars were: 164 by wemen tadi: : men to replace strikers. Passe | might be imprisoned and get clinical |cals who are said 1o have insulted the | xaw Enzland A. A, A. U. Will Have and freight traffic is normal, offi | attention. The child died. lesitar gnarde and attempted to e 5! : . declared. $ - 2 Events tor Tair Sex on Ang = cite the syndicalista and to storm the PRESIDENT LEAV COLUMBUS. ‘|:nscn and free Proal | Columbus, O, Ju 7.—President | Harding and his party left here be- tween 9 and 10 o’clock this morning | on their return motor trip to Wash- ington. The start was made from the | tives today the Paxton Bros home of R. H. Jeffrey, where the|distillery, five miles from Lawrence- President and Mrs, Harding spent the | burg, Ky, with 400 barrels of whiskey night. stored in its warehouse. | Hcad of Maintenance of Way Men | Refuses to Talk. 6 Excha Balan: ¢ APPEAL LAND DAMAGES. * WOMEN WILL COMPETE. Stamford People Unsatisfied With Offer of Common Councfl ~—An appeal | Detroit, July 7.—E. . Gradle, presi- | 4 |dent of the international brotherhood | |of maintenance of way men and rail- chop laborers withheld comment | Bridgeport, July 7 today on pres dispatches to the|from land damages fixed by the “For the first time |cffect that maintenance men on sev- |Stamford common council for land in the history of the New England |cral roads have voted to send an ul-|taken for park purposes in the Mill A A A U. women will compete in|timatum to him demanding wage in-|Pond district was fled by Kneeland the meet of that organization to creases sdick and six others in superior held on Franklin field here, August Mr. Grable expressed no surprise at|court teday. The case will be heard 27. The New Engzland track and field |the report however, declaring he had [before Judge J. W. Banks July 17, championship committee will open the |received me asking that wage|On May 8 the Stamford council made 60 yard dash, 60 yard hurdles and the | s be deman but that they|an award for $1 for land to 8¢ high jump to women athletes. lhad come irvia sylwapalbhizers of Lha‘a.ner; way ust 27, Boston, July 7 FAMOUS SURGEON DIES, Toronto, July 7.—Sudden death in India of Dr. W. G. Wanless of this city acknowledged to be one of the outstanding surgeons in the Tndian empire has been announced by the| Presbyterian foreign mission office here, 400 BARRELS WHISKEY TAKEN Louisville, Federal opera- Taa W B e B L}