New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 17, 1922, Page 10

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10 e —— e e e e GHIEF BUFFALO BEAR SAW CUSTER MASSACRE (Continued from First Page). e sometimes the etion and it has educated times & quarter = a whole section Indian as much as it can, to give an education and influe him to a better and more sanitary than the Indian tepee life “In the last 60 years houges have been the country where roamed and these grea changing the life “Today, most of the generation, speak the guage and take up the white man's habits and traits, Although I am an Indian I can see and appreclate that life the school throughout Indian houses reservation huilt the 1 8¢ are Indians of my Indian's lan him | T YA et A e NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JULY 17, 1922 feather its own story, He wore a breast plate of ivory beads and a wonderfully beaded vest contalning all | slgns and symbols of his tribe, elk's teeth hung around his “Although T don't belong to the Elks,” he smiled A striking set of earings, 15 inches| long, made of shells and beads by In-. | dian women 150 years ago, ornamated | the Princess. One other such set is in | existence she said and at is in the Smithsonian Institute, She wore a| squaw's belt of silver disks, almost four inches in diameter, beaded single | white fluffy feather and her hair, in»’ | the Two dicated that for her benefit the tribe | had given the."pipe dance” said to be| the greatest honor the Sfoux can be-| any individual. Both are members of the Indian Iellowship | club formed by ex-Governor Lowden stow on September, he chief will talk before the Ro- tary club at its noon luncheon Thurs-‘ day. STOP POLIGE FROM | | | | | | | | | CLUBBING ON HEAD English Court Judge Rebukes Cop. Who Struck in Self Defense | London, July 17.—A London police | court judge rebuked a policeman the |other day for clubbing a prisoner {over the head before arresting him. He did not censure the policeman for !striking the man with his club, as‘ he was violent, but for striking him | over the head with it. He said the| policeman ought to have hit him over| |the legs or on some other portion of | his anatomy. Police Free Her® The incident serves to {llustrate a' | striking difference between the com- | | parative freedom allowed the police in America in using force in subduing| |an obstreperous prisoner and the re-| strictions that are sought to be im-| City Meet me at advt A dinner was given last evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Albert Sherman of Dwight street in honor of the engagement of their daughter, Mildred, to Samuel Lawrence Feln of Springfleld. About 40 guests were present from Rrooklyn, Springfield, Hartford and this city. The engage- ment of Miss Sherman to M, was announced a short while ago. See Moorland Milk Advertisement, ge 2.—advt A meeting of John Barry council, R. 1. R, will be held Thursday evening in Judd's hall. At the request of Rev. Elisha Adams, Assyrian minister of the South Items hmarr's for dinner.— Pa | of Illinois, when a state Indian holi- | Congregational church four new pu-j day was declared in that state last|pils were admitted to the Daily Vaca- tion Bible schoo! this morning, bring- ing the total membership up to 225, There are 27 religious denominations now represented there. Mrs. Fred Hewitt and Miss Bertha M. Hitchcock | were added to the teaching staff this morning A hearing was held on the bankrupt case Galati of Arch street this morning of Domenico in regards to a settlement of mortgages. Referee Ed- ward M. Yeomans heard the case and the meeting was adjourned until next Monday morning at 11 o'clock. Max l.eopold of 361 Arch street, caught a mess of hlackfish off the breakwaters at Clinton Beach yester- day morning. The catch totaled a welght of 15 pounds. OPERATORS LIKELY TO REPORT TONIGHT Coal Mine Ownmers Differ, But Will Have Reply for President Very Soon Washington, July 17. —(By the As- soclated Press)-—Overnight discus- sions of soft coal mine operators, who have met here to respond to President Harding's offer of arbitration as a means of settling the coal strike, de- veloped great diversity of conclusions. Fein | OUTING IS PLANNED BYY.CAGIRLS Club Members wfi_(}ather Ir| Supper at Sunset Rock w. on Plans are being made at the Y. | C. A. for an outing to be held Thursday of this week to which all club girls at that institution will be invited. The clubs included are the Business Girls,' the Tuesday and the Thursday clubs. The outing' which | will be in charge of Miss Gertrude Fossett and Miss Jean Wardrobe, will be held at Sunset Rock. All club members desiring to attend are ask- ed to leave their names at the main office not later than Thursday noon. On Tuesday evening, July 25, there will be a joint meeting of the Tues- day and Thursday clubs at which time plans will be discussed for the | Altamont conference. The gathering will be in the form of a supper to h.n‘ served on the recreation ground lawn. The Hi-Amo club of the Y. W. C. A. has returned from the Girl Re- serves camp at Leesville, This {s the first year that a camp has been con- ducted for the Girl Reserves and be- cause of the reported succesg of the affair it is expected that one will be staged each year. The swimming pool Mondays but is open from o'clock in the afternoon and from 7 until 9 o'clock in the evening on oth- er days during the week excepting Thursday and Saturday afternoons. Thursday afternoon is free for private lessons by appointment. The Juniors have the use of the pool from 4 until 6 o'clock on Tuesdays and on Thurs- day and Saturday mornings. 'JUDGE KLETT SEES | CITY’S PROGRESS | is closed on 2 | “Chamber of Commerce and School |est street were at Madison over PERSONALS Mr, and Mrs. F. E, Rybeck o South TRurritt street, are enjoying a weeks' vacation at Hotchkiss Grove, Miss Karie I. Hagen of Noston, has left for Christmas Cove, Me, after a two weeks stay with her brother, Willlam L. Hagen of 30 Duell street Clarence Tennett spent the week. end with his family at Weekapoag, R, I Mrs. Hermann Strosser and chil- dren, have returned to their home on Iforest street ,after two weeks at the shore. R. C. Twitchell of TIorest street, spent the week-end with his family at their camp on the Connecticut river, Miss May Booth of Murray street, is on a week's tour of New York stare, Walter H. Hart has gone to Mar- tha's Vineyard where he wili enjoy a short stay with his family at thelr summer home at Hart Harbor. Miss Anna Croshy of Fairview sireet, is spending a two week's vaca- tion at Sound View. Mrs. Anna Savage and Miss Flor- ence Andrews of the Y, W, C. A, left this morning for Silver Bs where they will attend a conference. Donald McMillan, who has been Mrs. | re- son with his parents, Mr, Dugald McMillan, of this turned to town today. John Loomis of Forest street spent the week-end at Crescent Beach, Ni- antic, with his family, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Stanley of For-| the | | and city, week-end. Mrs. Margaret Turnbull of Rock- well avenue, is spending her vacation | at Point o' Wood. . | LR o Y | WAR'S FIRST VICTIM | e e Te— 0 MEN KNOWN DEAD INNEW MINE WAR (Continued from Firat Page). country for members of the attacking party. Five Men Wounded Avella, Pa,, July 17. - Five men, suffering from gun shot wounds drift. €d Into the office of Dr. Quinn here this morning and asked that their wounds be dressed. Tach had been shot in the arm and one, in addition had been hit in the leg. They did not give their names nor did they explain how they came by thelr injuries, Sheriff Makes Arrests Washington, July 17.—S8heriff Otto ‘,Laullrn, deputies and state police, | early today broke up a march of men who were on their way to the Lincoln Hill mine near here. Nine arrests were made. The mine has been op- erating with non-union men since the coal strike was called. Ambulances Fired Upon. Steubenville, O., July 17.—Automo- biles corrylng newspaper men and | umbulances proceeding from Wells- burg and Foliansbee, W. Va., to the | Richland mines were turned back bLy | bulets at 9:45 this morning, accord- "ing to word received here. Firing is | still going on along the road leading until 5| spending the past two weeks at Madi-| 10 the mines. i Four deputies, Cody Robinson, Charles cholson, Emerson Hough and a man named Mozingo, all seri- jously injured, have been brought to | Wellshurg. At 10 a. m. an ambulance loaded with deputies started from Wellshurg to try to force their way to the mines to bring in the victims. March Across State Linc, Wellsburg, W. Va., July 17.—(By Telephone to Pittsburgh.)-—Police | headquarters today reported that its information from the Richland mines was that ten men, including the gher- iff, met death in the fight there this morning. The chief clerk in the po- = THE HERALD “WANT ADS” Alphabetically Arran, For Qniok and Ready Reference. LINE RATES FOR ECUTIVR INSEPTIONA Ohar, Piy 30 dayn ...., 1 iine 8 0 Yearly Order Rates Opon Apnlication, ——————— e e Count 6 wordyu to a line 14 lines to en Inch, Minimum Apace, 3. Lines. M'nimum Wook Charge, 35 Centa —— e e No Ad. Acneptad After 1 P. M. For ClawsifieA Page on Bame Day. Ade Accepted Ovar the Telophore For {i Convenlence of Customwrs, Call 926 And W I Want' Ad" 1 Lntge vr.rie le and granite, estery work, John W, A 8t Y an: all grades Everything tu cems Méehan Monument FLONAL ORSIGNS and flowors for &l eo» ‘crrlons; anniversaries, parties, banquatw weddings, funerals, etc, Call “Flower 1'hone" 1116, Prompt attention. Vole Floral Co,, 50 Weat Main 8t, DORCIH PLANTBE, window boxens, weddingy And boujuet Flowers for all occasiens. fay I* with flcwars. Welch'e Flowoer 8Wap, £ West Main St, . “HAMMER MURDER” TO BE PROBED TODAY Dramatic Situations Were Predicted At Inquest Which Is Being Held At Los Angcles Los Angeles, July situations were forgcast at the body | years old w mer murde; Official plans called for the pres- ence of Mrs, Clara Philllps charged with the crime; Mrs. Peggy Caffee, chum of Mrs. Phillips, who gave the 17.—Dramatic by officials inquest here tocay over the of Mrs. Alberta Meadows, 20 ow, victim of the “ham- | posed upon them here under similar circumstances. And some other dif- ferences, too. The man who was clubbed was| haled before the police court judge |on the charge of assaulting a police- | man who was trying to get a drunken | woman to a police station. It appeared-likely, however that there! Board Take Step in Right Di- would be in the hands of the presi- dent before night an acceptance of the; arbitration proposal practically with-| out change and that a majority of the| .. 2qvance in progressive government employers would join in its support. |mpe chamber of Commerce has put The operators proceeded today to|comathing across,” said Judge George draw upia proposal thal Svould, get 'y iiettiat the nioon lincheon of thei | lice department said that the trouble !'started about 5 o'clock this morning| | when striking miners, said to have }m:lrrhflr] from across the Pennsyl- | vania state line, fired the tipple, Story of the Battle, The clerk said that a Brooke county deputy named Mozingo was brought Shaft To French Corporal Unveiled By Poincare county grand jury the eyewitness story of the slaying that resulted in the indictment against Mrs. Phillips; A. L. Phillips, oil promoter husband jof the accussed woman who told the sheriff of her alleged contession of the crime to him, and Dr. A. F. Wagner, county autopsy physician. rection,” He Says. Paris, July 17.—The monument to the first soldier killed in the World War was unveiled yesterday by Pre- mier Poincare at Joncherey, near Bel- fort, Alsace. The soldier was Corpor- “It is a step in the right direction, | | eihiai CHIEF BUFFALO BEAR the white man came to this country with his civilized life, because in my life I have seen both lives. “I remember the days of the Indian wars. I witnessed the famous battle with General George A. Custer, on the Little Big Horn mountain in Montana, | on the 25th day of June, 1876. The Sioux were led by my grandfather, Chief Red Cloud, and Medicine Chief Sitting Bull. As a boy of 10 years of age, I sat behind a rock with my mother and sister and Custer's last fight on the other of the river. “‘Again {n 1891 T saw the last Sioux battle, fought with the . when General Nelson A. Miles fought the Sioux Tndians at the battle of Wounded Knee, in Pine Ridge, South Dakota. saw side white Last Battle 1891. “There also 1 tought, Chief Buffalo Rear ht with this .tomahawk, although my grand- father, Chief Red Clound, also led the fight.” As he spoke he lifted a large copper tomahawk he carries with him The tomahawk, he says, is one given by General 1 Grant shortly after his inauguration as president to the 18 Indian chiefs who called upon him at the White House to pledge their loyalty and support It is an em- blematic weapon and is prized hy th Sioux.as a valuable relic first received it the ‘“‘war hatchet™ had some rough usage and now has a bpift handle held together by tightly twisted colis of brass wire From that time to the present have come gradnally to see the &om of living a civilized life,” said the former warrior. T am vears old and I have seen the changes in the Indian life from the savage fn the wilderness to the age of the automo- bile, the flying machine, the radio and ether wonderful inventions.” “Of course T have,” he replied with a smile (Indians do smile, pite the popular belief to the contrary), when asked if he owned an automobile “It's 2 gpod one, too, T drive it myself.’ Colonel William (lod (Buffalo Bill), was a “‘four-Alusher.” aceording to Chief Buffalo Bear All the In- dian fighting he ever did must have been in Fast Tndia, else in th newspapers and his show, eontinued the speaker, seemed continued 1 wis- or wild west who to characterize a spirit from the past, | ‘Out in the heard of him. General Miles and Gen- éral Sherman were the big white leaders in those daye. Princess Buffalo Bear very enthusiastic as she spoke their splendid reception hy President Hard ing in the White House He looked just like a big doll, all dressed in white, with white shoes and every thing,” she said in characteristic fem- inine comment, “and he treated splendidly. He is a very large man, even bigger than the chief mark was followed by a real grin on the face of the chief who is a man of powerful physique and would be & striking figure in a group of large men. Chief Buffalo Bear attracted considerahle attention on the street, in their striking costumes, wihch while characteristic, rich in color and quality and very obvious- ly expensive. Neither showed any signs, of age, hoth having a wonder- ful copper complexion and faces as smooth as velvet, there being not a sign of a wrinkle Native Dress ‘The Chief wore four feathers hair, relics of his warrior days, oux country we never waxed of and his were in his each Special Notice NOTICE M. B E. A short business meeting of Every- man's Bible Class will be held in Trinity Methodist church on Tuesday _ évening, July 18, at 7:45 o'clock. Sev. eral items of businces must be trans. aéte R. B. SKINNER, President. men, | Since he | This re-| wife Story of Battle. | The policeman said he was sur- | rounded by a hostile crowd of about | | 200. Whitehead—the man who was| clubbed—struck him on the face and | body. 1In the struggle both fell to | the ground and someone then kicked | the policeman in the ribs. The po- liceman drew his club and hit White- | head, who was still showing fight ‘just where 1 could reach him easi- est.'"” | In many of London's mean streets |a hostile crowd baiting a policeman is as common a sight as in the United | States it is a rare one. No Revolvers, Here the policeman carries “truncheon” which is by no such a formidable weapon as the| American policeman’s club. And if | he hits a violent prisoner over the head with it when he ought to have hit him somewhere else, he is apt to| |get into trouble Only when he is cn, a very dangerous “beat’ does he carry a revolver. The rough who as- |saults him ordinarily runs no risk| whatever of getting shot and very lit- tle of getting badly hurt. he is not afraid of a “scrap” with a policeman, especially when drunk. There strong feeling a| means | is a | thority over them know their own, | business best and what is best for the ! protection of the police i ‘Eric Ericksofi Lands A 22 Inch Bass Saturday Eric Erickson of Park street has |entered a six and one-half pound bass in the largest fish contest which is being conducted by The fish in question was canght Sat- urd night by Mr. E son at Crystal 1L and five-eighths inch- es girth & inches long. The fish was caught by means of a “plug" in- stead of live bait Monier Brothers will offer a prize to the local person catching the largest fish this summer. 5 [ Vacation School Classes Change Place of Study Because of repairs at the Central | Junior High school, the daily vacation | sehonl classes will meet at the Elithn Burritt Junior High school, commenc- ing today. The attendance has in- creased somewhat since the opening of the classe last week New en- rollments have been added each day BLAKE IN TURKEY. London, July 17.-—Major W. - Blake has covered another lap in his attempt to encircle the glohe by air- plane. A Times despatch reports that he arrived Saturday night at Basra in Asiatic Turkey, about 270 miles sontheast of Pagdad He expected tn continue his flight today, starting for Bushire, on the Persian Gulf. unanimous support. On the basis of the seperate meeting it was said that Illinois operators, a section of Ohio operators and delegates from opera- tors’ association in the southwest and west generally favored acceptance. Secretary Hoover discussed the sit- upution and was understood to have urged acceptance. He later went to the White House. Alfred 1. Ogle chairman operators’ tion expressed hope that an agree- ment would be drawn up which would be acceptable to all the operating groups meeting. REACH AGREEMENTS of the England, France and Belgiunt Settle Points of Controversy on Mandates for Former German Colonies, London, July 17 (By Associated Press)—An agreement has been reached by Great Britain, France and Therefore | Relgium respecting the points in dis- | George told the house mandates and pute in the various former German colonies for thost here | countries will submit to the council of | conference over Russian affairs at The | against arming the police and it must |the league of nations at its sessions|Hague the British delegation be assumed that those who have au-|begun here today, new draft mandates probably return to England by the end for class A and class B territory . These revised mandates are lieved by the allied powers to embody all the changes requested by ' the United ‘States and to meet the ohjee- tions raised in Secretary Colby's note of February, 1921 Only one point remains unsettled It concerns the missionaries in French mandated territory, The be- Monier Brothers, | French desire more protection against road on the Gertrude C. Ritter estate political activities by missionaries 1t |is said the episode in Syria last spring| A revolver lay beside her. in which Charles R. Crane of Chicago was involved has made the French | more emphatic on this point Fl.\“D BOY CHAINED Police Hold Par*nt After They Smash Door Down New York, July 17.—Smashing down a door when their command to open it was ignored, three patrolmen last night rescued Andrew Karo, 9 years old, after he had been chained in his home, 523 Sixth street, for four days. The hoy was taken to the Fifth ctreet station where a brass sash weight chain, padlocked to his ankles, was filed away revealing two deep gashes where the chain had cut into the flesh With his two sisters, Helen 13, and Julia %, the boy was afterward trans- ferred to the shelter of the § P, C. ¢ in Irving place charged with improper guardianship. The father of the chil- dren, John Karo, a blacksmith's help- ef, was locked up in the Fifth street station on a charge of endangering the life and health of a minor. committee of the associa-| Chamber of Commerce directors to- day when the action of the school board in granting the use of public| schools for voting places was re-| ported. Secretary Makin reported the change in the attitude towards the Chautauqua following the conference | of the guarantors with the director, I'rank B. Ward. The campaign for service by Dr.| A. F. Sheldon was left on the table | until next fall. A list of delinquent | members was left in the hands of} President John C. Loomis. Questions | on camping sites for auto tourists and a camp for disabled veterans were held over for further information. | DELEGATES MAY RETURN | | Unless Deadlock Over Russian Affairs | i | Is Solved, George Anticipatas De- parture From Hague Conference. July 17.—Premier Lloyd of commons | unless a solution | deadlock in the | London, this afternoon that was found for the | would | | of the present week. Manchester, N. H., Young Woman Ap- parently Committed Suicide | Manchester, N. H. July 17.—The | body of Alleen Gregory, 19 years old, | was found today lying by a lonely wound near her heart The girl's | home was only a few minutes’ walk | from the scene. Her father is super- | intendent of the Ritter estate. | A passing autoist sighted the body. | Attorney Gen. Francis Archibald ar- rangad for an autopsy this afternoon, with a buliet HINTS AT COLLUSION. | Washington, July 17—Senator Len- | roct, republican, Wisconsin, charged today in the senate, and Senator Smoot of Utah, ranking republican on | |Dry Law Interferes With Bay Rum al Jules Peugeot. He was 21 years old and in charge of a squad station- | ed six miles from the German fron- tier. Peugeot was killed by a Lieutenant Mayer, commanding the advancing German troops, on Aug. 2, 1914, thir- ty hours before war with Germany was declared. i | | | | i INDICTME 32 Arrests Lxpected As Aftermath of | B. P. O. E. Convention Atlantic City, N. J sational developments, expected to follow the alleged ‘lid-tilting"” here week during the Eiks' convention, are causing nervousness among cafe men of this city. A rumor is current that | forty-three liquor indictments have been found by the grand jury. It is said that profiteering last week was rife among restaurant proprietors who charged as high as $1.50 for a highball, as well as cover charges of | $1 or $2. One report tells of a wine bill of $1,500 for a party of eight paid by a New York visitor several nights ago. TS FOUND July 17.—Sen- VIRGIN ISLANDS G | Manufacture, Is Claim New York, July 17.—The Prohibi- tion amendment is interfering with the manufacture of bay rum in the Virgin Islands and a commission now in New York is on the way to Wash- ington to protest. The commission wishes also to arrange American cit- {zenship for about 20,000 Virgin Is- landers who were forgotten in 1016 when the United States bought the islands from Denmark. | NON-MORMON PICKED “Old Liners” Lose Out In Utah When Deadlock Arises Salt Lake City, Utah, July 17. Hopes of ['tah republicans for the capture of another seat in the United States senate this antumn have been dampened by the nomination of a non-Mormon at the state convention yesterday. The choice fell on Ernest | | the finance committee conceded that the section of the tariff bill imposing | an additional duty of 12 per cent ad | valorem on fancy cotton cloths was | word for word" as proposed by for- | mer Senator Henry F. Lippitt, a cot- ton goods manufacturer of mei»‘ Rl THREATENS JAIL TERMS | St. Louis, July 17.—Federal Judge | Triehe today announced he would im- | pose and not fines on strikers who violate federal court injunctions. The sever- ity of the penalties will be contingent | on the seriousness of the offenses, he added ence, Bamberger, nephew of former Gov. | Bamberger, by a sudden shift of votes | after Mormon candidates forced a| deadlock. | | | | | TWO STRIKERS FINED. New Haven, July 17.—Two strik- ers who were arrested at the station yesterday during a slight disturbance were charged with breach of the| peace today and were each given a | nominal fine. A newsbhoy who Wnsl ail and penitentiary Sentences |y ..ot into the affair was given a|FPress) — The reparations commiesion suspended sentence, | | | Yellow was the tavorite color for wedding gowns in ancient Rome. to Wellsburg shortly after daybhreak. He had been shot and was {n a serious | ccndition. - This deputy, he said, re- | ported that the sheriff heard trouble was brewing at the Richland mine and he rushed there with his deputies, ‘They stationed themselves about the mine property. At 5 a. m. a body of marching men appeared from the di- rection of Avella, Pa., and the clerk said his reports indicated the men opened fire, drove back the officers, ond set fire to the tipple, in which some deputies had taken refuge. 'The | sheriff's son, he said, was in the tipple and it was believed these officers had been burned. Five hours after the f:ghting started, the situation was quiet, the clerk sajd. CONNECTICUT LEADS UNION, National Guard Here Ranks First of All 48 States, Records Show. Hartford, July 17.—Connecticut leads the 48 states of the union in National Guard strength, according to reports from Washington, received by | Adjutant General George M. Cole. War department figures show that of its authorized maximum guard strength, Connecticut has raised a larger proportion than any other state. Recruiting has been very ac- tive in every unit of the guard in re cent. weeks, General Cole said, and many companies have already ex- ceeded thelr maximum authorized strength. General Cole will inspect the 169th infantry while at Niantic and Haven. The regimental review in honor of Governor Lake will be held: at Niantic July 27. GOVT. ANXIOUSLY WATCHING Increasing Seriousness of Railroad Strike Causing Grave Apprehension ‘Washington, July 17. (By Associat- ed Press)—Increasing seriousness of the raflroad strike continued today to | engage the attention of government officials but action was for the mo- ment withheld while everything pos- sible was being done to straighten out the coal situation. ‘War department officials said they expected receipt at any time of the report from Col. Lincoln, inspector general of the eighth corps area who has gone from Denison, Tex., scene of disorders on the Missouri, Kansas and Texas railroad to confer with Governor Neff on the rail strike situ- ation. DEPOSITS —(By, MA Paris, July 1 Associated was officially notified today that Ger- | many had deposited 32,000,000 goid | marks in designated banks to meet her July 15 reparations payment. { East | | 125 members of local a | Mrs. Phillips was brought here yes- terday from Tucson, Ariz., where she | was taken from an eastbound train, She smiled at everything and every- body from the time she left the train until she was placed in a cell adjoins ing that of Mrs. Madalynne Oben- chain, on trial for the second time for the murder of J. Belton Kennedy. ISTS CALL Examine Woman Hcld for Killing With Hammer ALy D IN Brutal Los Angeles, July 17.—Mrs. Clara Phillips, charged with the brutal mur- der of Mrs. Albert Meadows with a hammer here last Wednesday, reached l.os Angeles Sunday in custody of Sheriff William 1. Traeger. She was |taken to the sheriff's office and ex- amined by alienists to determine her mental condition. Mrs. Pegry Caffee, eye-witness of the hammer slaying, after being taken out of town secretly to meet the train, |also arrived with the prisoner. 6,000 AT OUTING Several hundred Lithuanian peopls from New Britain motored to Indian Grove, New Haven, yesterday where they attended an outing by the Lithu- anian Alliance of, America. It was jvery well attended. About 3,000 auto. mobiles and from 5,000 to 6,000 peo- | ple were present. The gathering was addressed by a representative of the Lithuanian Independents from Lithu- |ania. He spoke to them about their country and congratulated them upon | the number present. After the speeche es there was dancing and refresh. ments for those who cared for same, while others took advantage of the weather and went {n bathing at Savin Rock and other nearby beaches. WARNS OF ANARCHY, Will Come, Laborite Sa) Unloas Courts and Congress Go Slowly. Boston, July 17.—The I'nited States will be in a state of anarchy “within five years after the United States su- preme court, congress,. the natignal chambers of commerce and the manu- facturers' association kill the Amer- fcan federation of labor,” declared Edward F. McGrady of Washington, | legislative agent of the American fed- eration of labor, in an address at a labor meeting here yesterday. 25 \l’)RF‘\\ ALK OUT. Cleveland, July 17.—Approximately 51 of the Am- Federation of Raillway Work- ers, employed on the N. Y. Central lines went on strike this morning gainst a wage reduction. About 150 members of the stationary engineers, firemen and oilers’ union struck here at 10 o'clock this morning according to C. E. Mabie, business agent. There were no disorders. erican POLLY AND HOW “THEY) BITiall & BROTHERT i a8 B i \ | | | | HER PALS Geat! 1) KETCHED |GixTy Bass \ YISTERDAY! Y'KNOW WHO | AM? PROPRIETOR oF Tis PLACE! ) IM THE R | Well, Anyway, Pa Isn’t Caught K THE BIGGEST! LIAR ou BVER BY CLIFF STERRETT

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