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0 City Items “All Over Nothing At All"—Victor Record 18943, C. advt, Tabs' Fair tonight, hadvt, & Meet me at S#hn.urrg for dinner,— navt f Gulbransen Player Pianos, Morans, —advt. / “Jack Horner" Chocolate' covered nuts and fruits, special for. Saturday, 49¢ a pound. Besse-Leland's,—advt, Four new Victor Record Specials. C. L. Plerce & Co.~advt, Large couats for large Besse-Lelands.—advt, abs' Fair tonight, advt, b LLOYD GEORGE GETS WONDERFUL OYATION (Continued from First Page) shoulders, but .my sword is hand."” SULTAN'S ENVOY 1S : - GIVEN FROSTY EYE emal Eeaders Reluse o Recog- nize His Existence . Constantinople, Oct. 20 (By Asso- clated Press).—The Sultan's govern- ment has been soundly snubbed by the first dignitary of ' the’ Turkish natlonalist government to aryive here since Mustapha Kemal Pasha's army consolidated the strength of the An- gora government by its victory over the Greek, Rafet Pasha, military governor of Thrace upon his arrival at his Stam- boul reaidence yesterday found wait- Ing’' there offiofal representatives from the Grand Vizier and the ministry of the interlfor. The former sent in his card first. The stubby little general smoothed out the wrinkles in his tunle, gazed at the card in a pompous, officlal man- ner and said: f “Who is this person. I know of no Grand Vizier; there is no such of- fice or officlal.” Gives Frosty Glance, Next came the envoy whose card stated that he represented ‘‘Field Marshal All Riza Pasha, minister of the Intérior.” Again Rafet assumed his official alr. * “T am sure I don't know any such person,” he again announced. “I re- member an amiable Turkish gentle- man of the same name but I cer- tainly know of nobody occupying such u position in the Turkish govern- ment." Meanwhile a third envoy had been cooling his heels uneasily i1 the ante- room. This was a still more distin- guished personage, namely a member of the Sultan's own household who had been sent at the last moment as the personal representative of the Bultan to bid the military governor an officlal welcome. . When he heard the report of the other two envoys, however, he was seized with panic. He quietly tucked his card in his pocket and slipped back to the Yildiz palace. Thus ended the effort of the sul- tan's government 0 obtain recogni- tion from the powerful visiting dele- gate from Angora. Rafet Pasha expressed his great pleasure at again visiting Constanti- nople “if only for a day or two en route to my pleasant patriotic duty in Thrace." Jester's hall.— " women at Jester's hall.— in my Message On Ireland. An interesting exchange of tele- grams on the question of the Anglo- Tvish treaty. in connection with the |change of government in Great Brit- lain took place yesterday between Pre- mier Lloyd George and Willlam T. Cosgrove, president of the Dall Eireann in Dubliin, "I wish to inform you at the earli- est possible moment that I have this afternoon tendered my resignation to ")lf" king," Mr. Lloyd George tele- |graphed. “You may rest assured fio {action of mine will compromise the treaty concluded between Great Brit- ain and Ireland last year.,” President Cosgrove replied: "My colleagues and I .much appre- {ciate the kindneds and' promptitude of | your message. We needed no tele- gram to-assure us that no action of yours would compromise the treaty to which you and your government have pledged your country.' Germany Perturbed. Berlin, Oct. 20. (By Associated Press)—The _resignation of Premier T has aroused a widespread feeling o) perturbation in political circles here and further developments are awaited in eagerness and even anxiety. The morning papers are unanimous in pointing out that Great Britain's future and. the policy of her gavern- ment are matters of vital importance to Germany. WAY OUST SMITH Future of Turkey. Speaking of the future position of Turkey, he s3id: . sy e . “Weé know ‘we have ome of the big- gest armies in the world, and we arc today the most powerful military, na- tion. We hate achieved a victory which I am confident no other army coutd have won. “The spirit which the Turkish peo- ple have shown has excited the ad- miration of the entire world. When cur country was threatened, the whole people took up arms voluntarily and cagerly; there is no conacription in Turkey, nor any necessity for it. “foday Turkey is no more divided; the niation is erie.. History has redord- éd our milltary success. There is still 2 great task before us and it is work for our younger men. It is the up- building of our country te economic ‘prosperity. “We have won our full freedom and | nobody canstake it from uss Hence- | forth Turkey¥'will Be purely Mosiem snd can make Jt §o without let or hindrance from the outside” (Continued from First Page) shi rny’ vote with the “in. | strength to seven and a new dead- 16ck will be the result. The “insur- | Be! 3k ednfldent that they will athen— {6 fo ‘offéct a declsion to reorganize the committee to keep “pegce in the family" until after the | fall election, at least. If so, the first | move will be in the form of another drive at Registrar Smith, which have been numerous of late, and Mr. Hal- loran will be given a place on the committee, Halloran, &s treasurer, | will then have a vote giving the “in- surgents” sufficient numbers to put NARBASTDATESET |y sRvG BT | Tenn. Nature. Healer Had Youngster, | " ence Tt Novemiber 13 af Lausanne— o Without Clothes, Locked Up—Fed France Opposcd to London. .JiParis, Oct. 20 (By Associated | Press)—The Near Eastern peace con- | Nashville, Oct. ference date has been tentatively set nine vears old, h;yl a (ull_ mrql yes- for November 13 at Lausanne, The |terday afternoon for the first time in | on Nuts and Milk. 20.—Owen Pardue, L. Plerce & Co'so— | FROM DEM. GOMM, ALD, DAILY HER , FRIDAY, O DEATHS AND FUNERALS Jdames Joseph Fox, James Joseph Fox, the two-months and 11 days old son of Mi. and Mrs, James Iox of 22 Beymour street, died this morning. The funeral will be held tomérrow afternoon, and the burial will be In Bt. Mary's'new cem- ctery, . | PRICES MONDAY Fuel Administrator Calls Meeting For Monday Afternoon—8$18 Coal, Mix- ture of Two Kinds, is Proposed. If'uel Administrator Ernest W, Christ has called a meeting of the Jo- cal fuel committee and the coal deal- ers for Monday afternoon at 4 o'clock | at the Chamber of Commerce offices at which time an effort will be made to bring about the establishment of a maximum price, The fuel administrator's action is taken as the result of a request made by Mayor A. M. Paoncssa a few days | ago. Maximum prices have been| fixed in a number of Connecticut| cities, and in all cases are lower than | the market price here, the mayor| | fingds. It is reported that the coal dealers | will make an effort to educate the public in the use of coal which is a | mixture of equal parts of pea coal and CARD OF We desire to express our sincere thanks t6 the \neighisors and friends (for the kindness and sympathy shown {us'during the fliness and death of our father, | \PERCY DELVALL® AND FAMILY, YLADIVOSTOK HORROR Terror Reigas in City it As Darkness Shrouds and Plunderers Rob Homes and People Continually, Teacher, Appears Before Judge Marvin in New Haven Court. New Haven, Oct. 20.—Margaret V. utler, aged 22, of Wallingford, a public school teacher whose automo- bile struck and killed Mrs. Elizabeth | Carr on East Chapel street, tids city, | | July 7, was fined $200 and costs by| | Judge Marvin today. She had been held criminally responsible by Coro-| | ner Mix, the evidence being that after 1a trolley car had stopped and Mrs.| | Carr had alighted, Miss Butler drove| her car to the left of the standing| trolley car. Mrs. Carr had passed | around the front of the trolley car| and was hit by the automobile. The defence was that the trolley car came |to a sudden stop and Miss Butler was | stove coal. The former selling at $20 | nation approaches according to llls-‘o,h,‘,. cities where maximum prices eity in the darkness pillaging business Eastern republic are reported to have | ment and to held ‘reds” outside the | Japanese and the latter sought to gotiate and the clash hetween the - '8 ton and the latter at $16 will pro- | Toklo, Oct. 20, — (By Assoclated| ige o good burning conl at $18 a ton, Press)—Terror reigns in Viadlvostok | they say. This price. they declare, is {as the completion of Japaneae evac-| apout the same as that charged in| | patches received here today. ‘e been fixed u Last night the city was plunged into | PaVe been pe: darkness by the faflure of the lighting . |plan. “White guards” roamed the Is FINED szm] | houses and residences and holding up | pedestrians, | On the outskirts of the town Japan- | Miss Margaret Butler of Wallingford, | dse troops and “red” forces of the [Far | | | School clashed. The original plan of the Japanese| was to turn over the administration nlf Viadivostok to the municipal govern- | B neutral zone until evacuation was completed. Then the municipal au- | thorities refused to take possession of the war munitions lett beh'nd by the open negotiations with the ‘‘reds” to give the republican troops control and thus avoid an interim of disorder. The Chita commanders refused to ne- Japanese and ‘reds” is reported to have followed, RUSSIA THREATENS ‘ | forced to drive to the left to avoid IN NOTE TO ALLIES |t: A plea of nolo contendere was | entered. Declares Refusal to Consider De- TARIFF FAILS New Rates, Expected to Flood Mar- mands May Lead to International Difficulties. Moscow, Oct. 20.—(By Assoclated Press.)—The ropeated refusal of pow- lers to take into consideration Rus-| I'sla’s most elementary and just de- Iraands, far from contributing to the Washington, Oet. 20.—The flood of conclusion of a general peace creates | imports which have been expected conditions which are likely to bring|1Uring September in anticipation "of serious international complications, |the new tariff did not materialize al- ! says the nete addressed to Great Brit- | though the nation's combined imports [ain and Italy by the soviet foreign | flnd exports for the month showed an | minister, M. Tchitcherin. pipcreses jofanione uthanieoli 0001000 Considering Russian’s geographical | CVer those of September, 1921. | position®and the political boundaries| IMPOrts for the month $50,000,000 uniting her with some of the Black |Under the total for August and thoce sea states, says the note, it shoul be (Of September, 1921 are shown in fig- | quite evident that'a peaceful solution | 'S made public today by the de- of the Near -Eastern problem {s fm- |Dartinent of commerce to have total- pessible without soviet participation |1ed $233,000,000 as against $179,000,- in the treaty negotiations. [ 000 in the same month a year Ago. | It Is pointed out that having rec- | The September figure was about $50,-| ognized, by the treaty of March, 1921, | "00,000 under the total “for August| the Turkish frontiers as lald dewn |20nd Was the smallest monthly aggre-| by the Angora national pact.the Rus-|5ate since last April. Exports for| slan government f{iereby took -an|SCPtember were valued at $317,000,-| effective part in solving the Near |00 compared to $324,000,000 in the| East question without limiting itselg | S3Me morth last year. | to consideration of the status of the| , s straits of the Dardanciies and the | PRINCE REFUSES $1Z 000 | Bosphorus. The straits question, 1t is | Y added, cannot be separated from the | problem as a whole, and if it were | submitted to a separate conference no tangible results could ensue. {Rome Suffering From Effects of Bad Storm Rome, Oct. 20 (By Associated | Press).—Rome and surrounding re- | gion suffering today from the effects of an unusually severe storm { which lasted 30 hours and during though Increase is Seen. | | | | | George, Eldest Son of King Peter,| | Says Amount Given Him Would Not Keep Him Up. Belgrade, Oct. 20.—(By Associated | Fress)—Prince George, the eldest son of the late King Peter of Jugo-Slavia, | and until March, 1901, heir to the | | Serbian throne, appeared before the | Jugo-Slav cabinet today and rfllusedz | announcement that no new financing pward trend, selling at 2% cents a kets, Do Not Work Out There, M"A the offer of his younger brother, King|Int Nickel CTOBER 20, 1922, WALL STREET STOCK EXCHANGE REPORTS Wall Btreet, 10:30 a. m.—Stock prices made gnod recovery from yes- terday's technical reaction at the opening of today's market. The whole list moved forvhrd in response to a brisk demand for oll whares. Mex- ican Pet. opened up more than 2 points higher and soon extended its gaing to 6% while Standard Oil of N. J. was pushed up 4%. Official was required by the Pacific Ol Co, and that no disquietude was felt over the dividéend, found expression in a 2% point gain in that stbck. Bteels moved upward on good buying of U. B. Steel common which advanced a| point. Ralls also displayed more ac- | tivity, Reading rising 1% and North- | erny Pacific one with fractional gains by a number of others. Studebaker, and American Locomative were strong. American Can was pushed up 2 points to a new high and Manhat- tan Bhirt established a peak price on a gain of a point, Noon.—Virtual cessation of selling pressure combined with the apparent case with which pools pushed up thelr favorites, stimulated the advance which spread over a broad list. High priced stocks continued to set the pace Mexican Pet. extended its gain to 103 points. ¥asler money rates and a good recovery in sterling exchange had a'cheerful effect on sentiment German marks continued their down- hundred, another new low record. Corn Products, St. Louis Bouthwestern pfd., Gen. Am'n Tank, Electric Stor- age Battery and Gimbel Bros. pfd., all sold at new high records for the year. Call money opened at 414 per cent. Wall Street' 1:30 p. m.—Prices! made further progress upward in the early afternoon an increased inquiry for the eastern and trams-continental ralls elevating them 1 to 3 points with Reading and Lackawanne the strongest {ssues. Absorption of the coppers, American Bugar, United Re- tall Stores, Endicott Johnson, Cluett Peabody, Porto Rican Sugar, Ameri- can Express Mackay Co. and Pan-Am- erican A and B 1ssues resulted in gains of 1% to 2% points. Concert. ed ‘selling of the motors, marine pfd and Cruecible’ Steel halted the upward trend and there was a general re- lapse ffom the high levels, Stude- baker was hammered down three points and Plrece-Arrow pfd. Max well B and Chandler 1 1-4 to 1%, Quotations furnished bv Putnam & Company. High Bt Sug ....., 42% Ganiiniini 6% Cr & Fdy..190% Cot Oll 2614 Loco Y S8m & Re.. 625 Sg Rf cm.. 801 Sum Tob 381, Tel & Tel..123% Tobh 162% Am Wool 100% Ana Cop “ie.. D27 Atc Tp & S F..106% | At Gulf & W I..20% | Baldwin Loco. .139% | Balti &- Ohio Beth Steel B |can Pacific Cen Leather 41 Ches & Ohio ... 7614 Chi Mil & 8 P. 321 Chi Rek Is & P. 454 Chile Copper 2614 Chino Copper 2914 Consol Gas ....144% Corn Prod Ref .13415 Crucible Steel 8514 Cuga Cane Sugar 131, Endicott-John 881, Erle 16 Erie 1st pfd 2458 Gen Electric 184 Gen Motors 143 Gt North pfd 51 Insp Copper . 39 Inter Con 1 e 3% Inter Con pfd ... 134 Int Mer Marine . 14% |Int Mer Mar pfd | Allis-Chalmers 4914 Pacific Oil 513, 16% Low Close 42% 2% 74 75 190 2614 131y 61 79 381 12314 16214 100 5114 106 29 137% 54% T4, 1478 40% 32 435 26% 28% 1407% 1291 8314 13 85 1558 241 1833 14% 4 381 0 Am m Am Am Am Am Am Am Am Am 148 25% 2815 | 144% | 183% 84% 13 87% 15% 241 184 148 4 1 1414 57 473 402 57% | 51 p? 18 Ip |Bouthern N E Tel Standard Screw Stanley Works . Stanley Works pfd .. Torrington Co com .... 44 |Traut and Hine Travelers Ins Co . Union Mfg Co .. Sofia Parliament Rules That |adopted the | that the people decide by their votes on November members of the cabinets Premiers Malinoff, Daneff and Gue- de Parls, however, advises care % [ choff were guil 48% | profling Bulgaria | sufficient PUTNAM & CO Members New York Stock Exchange Members Hartford Stock Exchange (Successors to Richter & Co.) Stanley P. Eddy, Manager 81 West Main St., Tel. 2040 40 Shares S. N. E. Telephone to Yield 6 1-4 % =T JUDD & CO. Members New York Stock Exchange MEMBERS HARTFORD STOOK EXCHANGE HARTFORD: Hartford-Conn, Trust Bldg., Tel. 3-6320 NEW BRITAIN: 23 West Main 8t.. Telephone 1818, Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. 8% Preferr od Stock to Net 8% Earning Five Times t he Preferred Dividend Thienn & Co. 10 Central Row Telephone 3-4141 Members Members Hartford Stock Excha. New York Btock Exchange Donald R. Hart, Mgr. Thomson, New Britain Natious! Bank Bldg. Telephone 3880 We Offer-— 25 Shares BRISTOL & PLAINVILLE ELECTRIC CO. To Yield About 7% JOHN P. KEQGH Member Consclidated Ntoek Exchange of New York Waterbury STOCKS Drideepert Middletown BONDS Springeld Direct Private Wire to New York aad Bostom G. F. GROFF, Mgr.—Room 509, N. B, Nat'l Bank Bldg.~Tel 1018 129 290 59 29 45 22 690 49 ..127% .285 58 28 |FRENCH SEE MORE HOPE FOR SUCCESS 17 680 46 | Some Believe Lloyd George's Defest Is Victory for Them—Oth- ers Silent. Paris, Oct. 20 (By Assoclated Press).—The dominating note in the People | French press comment on the fall of | the Lloyd George cabinet in England is that the change cannot fail to make negotiations for the settlement of Europe's problems easier. T6 the majority of the newspapers it {& looked upon as a victory for France. Andre Tardieu, writing in the Echo e in or not guilty of em- | pamsing judgment. “It will be the ] in war without| yogue of the moment, no deubt to diplomatic and military | say that the departure of Lloyd reparation. | George Is a success for Franca,” he $276,618,032. NEW VOTING LAWS. U. 8. Treasury—Balance, Shall Decide on Cabinet Members Sofia, Oct. 20.—Parliament has| government's proposal | | whether of certain former | 12 preliminary conference which it had | weeks, after having been fed on nuts, | Alexander of a civil list of six hundred | Int Paper 61 been proposed to hold today in Lon- milk and persimmons while m-r‘\}md up | Which lightning caused several fires don was abandoned after France had !]»‘lar]k naked o:ol‘}em farm of a “nature y as e healer'” near re. ::;::,:1';,,i?r°\o Ol Afflicted- with hoils and ulcers, Whether the conference proper will | Owen was sent to the “sanitarium” of dave to be further delayed depends .\Iurh_n Valleau, an ugevl. (;'ur,emnc{ \ipon the British political situation. 'Who is convinced that nfotm«;s“ :;1.114_ France ls urging the necessity of ln:’a‘:’d:;‘t!n‘rlfn:l: cause o S ’ ng as soon as pos- | Ments anc ; daily more restless officials say, and | county health off 3 regard the allled premises as % o & ,liv.':nfi'f ungtll the peace meeting 1is'3 Dead, 7 Injured in Wrecl.( aétually under way. | Of Night Passenger Train ) | Williamsport, Ind, Oct. 20.—Re- lief was expressed by authorities to- ! day that a rail was removed to wreck Wabash easthound passenger train No. 2, near here last night. The wreck killed three persons, injured seven others, and caused the de- truction of seven coaches by fire. Bridgeport High School Boys Off to Harrisburg ‘Bridgeport, Qct. 20.—Cheered by 1,100 students who were given 4 half | holiday for the occasion, Bridgeport's High school's football team left this morning for Harrisburg, Pa., where, on Saturday, the team plays the Tech- | waghington, Oct. nical Higin school team of that place.| aoqivity in the cotton spinning in- Twe game is the first inter-sectional |y stry during September as compared contest in which the local team has | ity "August, was indicated in the participated. |census bureaw's cotton spinning re- e pOit lssued today. Active spindle & y P | hours for September numbered 8,033 S' H I N t' {002,129, a decrease of 272,158,650 peua otice |from August. . Spindles in place showed an increase but the average N. of C.|active hours per spindlg in place de- tonight. | creased from 217 in August to 209 in " September. TRY SLACKENS Camp Clara No. 4376 R. will hold a public whist playing at 8:30. Dancing at 10, m | TO THE PUBLIC O NEW BRITAIN AND VICINITY DO YOU NEED FINANCIAL AID? DO YOU NEED IT NOW? We loan up to $300 to honest people, steadily employeil, or with steady incomes, on your HOUSELHOLD FURNITURE, without removal, publicity, or annoyance, or on Eight to fiftcen months to repay it, legal rate of interest charged on actu number of days due. HERE IS YOUR CHANCE to clean up your small ply of coal tn, or other necessitics. Remember it is casier to pay one th HERE TO SERVE YOU, as we have served countless others Our slogan is—‘“Those Who Serve Others, Serve Themselves.” BENEFICIAL LOAN SOCIETY 87 WEST MAIN STRLEY Licensed by Banking Commissioncr, and Bonded to the State. 20,—8lackening of | If <o, call and CONSULT US at once, |and the heavy rainfall flooded Dase- s 3 2 ments in varlous perts of the oity, | Lo o0 diners, approximately §12,- The Tiber overflowed its banks out- | p, i sides the city, inundating a consider- | able extent of the countryside and ; drlving hundreds of families out of | their homes. Prince George read a declaration tefore the members of the cabinet saying that the amount suggested would not suffice to pay his debts and support him in accordance with his rank, - As a prince of the royal house | he considered himself entitled to live almost in the same style-as the kfn:v‘ Under no condition, he said, would he ’ S— ‘More Fuel Administrators | - Are Appointed by Russell Hartford, Oct. 20.—Fuel Adminis- is i f o e to ! 4 oo t r [1ediore iht v Btate Fuel Aq. |2ccept his brother's order to retire to| ini Nish, Serbia. ministrator T. W. Russell today, were: rbid, - |C. E. Davis, North Haven; T. L( Public opinion is much disturbed “|by the prolonged conflict between Haynes, Lyme and Old Lyme; M. C.! o 3 L Thompson, Sharon and Sharon \'|1-',’;::"xm.‘,"°°"‘" s TEENATIAR IR lage; I. N. Hornbeck, Falls Village and Canaan, | STAY FOR MRS. GIBERSO! | - Writ of Error Granted in Murder Case By Supreme Court. Trenton, N.tJ., Oct. 20.—A writ of Oct. 20.—For the |€rror, acting as a stay, was taken out William (In supreme court here yesterday aft- Lyman Biddle scholarship has been |ernoon on behalf of Mrs. Ivy Giber- ,awarded to Charles J. Woodbridge, of |Son. ronvicted yesterday at Toms 8hanghai, China, it was announced at |River of the murder of her husband | Princeton university. The scholar- |and sentenced to life imprisonment ship whicli carries with it the interest | The assignments of error’ detailing on $40,000 is awarded annually to the points upon which the case is ap- student, who besides having the high- pealed to the supreme court will bhe' |est rank scholastically, is actively en- filed later. Arguments will be held gaged in some form of sport and has|at the Novembher term of the supreme partially supported himself during the court, If the supreme court dismisses ,/first two years of college. Ithe appeal, the decision may be re-| [viewed by the court of errors and| appeals, the highest in the state. | AWARDED SCHOLARSHIP | Charles J. Woodbridge of China Gets | Second Consecutive Prize at Princeton | Princeton, N. J, second consecutive year the POLICEMA | New York Rookie Is Ashamed to Ask [His Way Becanse He Was in Uniform. F | | New York. Oct. 20—Patrolman Wil- | |liam Seidler, rookie policeman, | walked into the Sixth precinct police | station at Newark one hour late for| roll call . | “Where have you heen?" asked |Capt. Harris. | "1 mot lost,” was Seidler's answer. | Seidler said he lost his way from his home to the poliee station and be. | cause he was in uniform was ashamed to ask anybody the right direction That night Capt. Harris assigned | Beidler to a well lightéd thorough- fare so he would not get loat again Yestepday Seidler premented his |resignation to Chief of Police Michael |T. Long. Seidler failed to report for duty last night. We can make YOU a loan guaranteed note. al number of dollars due for actual debts, or to get your winter's rup- an a crowd, and BENEFICIAL IS 357% 441 11y 83 2318 334 21% 100 321 121% 803, 3014 4% 483 59 148 be) Kennecott Cop. | Kelly Spring T'r Lehigh Val lacka Steel . Mex Petrol | Midvale Steel | Mis Pac . V' X'E8n . INYNH&H . Norf & West North Pac Pure Oil o Pan Am P & T PR R ‘Plllshurrh Coal Ray Con Cop | Reading Rep I & § |Royal D, N Sinclair Oil South Pacific South Rail Studebaker | Texas Co Tobaceco Prod Transeon Oil nited Re St 8 Food Prod Indus Aleco Rubber (o Steel \ Stedl pfd . Utah Copper Overland Mid States Ofl Westinghouse National Lead v Ref 34% 951 261 1335 50 36 % 14 L5 A 6814 571 1008 1224 814 134 A3 14 109 (Putnam & C Co v v v U v v 0.) Bid Aetna Life Ins Co Am Hardware Am Hosiery Bige-Hfd Cpt Co com Billings & Spencer Billings & Spencer Bristol Brass Colt's Arms Conn .t & Pow pfi Eagle Lock Iafnir Bearing Hart and Cooley Hfd Jlec Light Landers, 17 J R Montgomery con J R Montgomery pfd N Gas (R N B Machine B Machine pfd es-Be-Pond com Judd Co ‘N | N |North and | Peck, Stow Russell Mfg Co 8eovill Mfg Co com 2 pfd 25 and Wilcox 8 850 200 17 1 3 39 A3 o4 9 80 35 It 70y 83 231 38 21 20 88 30 98 48 59 14 83 56 57 34 95 26 30 49 88 1 85 108 Asked 660 205 70 % k) The proposal is that those voting g, s “but prudent people wil the ministers innocent cast black bal- | (e 4o jud‘;t,, peop 1 take Iots and those voting guilty use white | . . ballots. Should half of the votes' l;::,’:::;:;:z;’ s e [cast In the referendum be for guilt a | cached an acute and painful peint. % | people's court would be created o de- | witn gother than Lloyd George % | cide upon penalties. Parliament “]“‘there cannot fail to be an impro 1 | voted to sequester the property of the | ment with loyal effort and atter trank | accused minister: explanation.” ,: Gustave Herve, editor of La Vie- 5 | toire, says: : 1 “Lloyd George {s flnally over- > | thrown. Now perhaps it will be pos- sible to proceed seriously to the re- construction and pacification ef Eu- rope." L'Eclaire thinks Llovd George's great mistake was in net understand- | | fikian E e iy 1y | Those Who Attack Foreigners or % | Property Are Classed as Such Now ,‘S Mexico City, Oct. 20 (By Associated 1, | Press)—Mexicans who during periods s, |of disturbance attack foreigners or 5 |their property are to be regarded as|ing that the interests of Irance and " |traitors and dealt with accordingly Britain are closely connected. | under a measure submitted to the de 1 Teh Echo de Paris declares it | partment of interlor by President|woyjd have been easy for the Fremeh O)hr?;n ;«r vfo:;r‘nnlmx;r:senlfl"on to | premier to cause the fall of Lioyd the: amber o e S, y N The bilt s denisged as an amend- g;:’y:{‘v’ d’:'cl::f‘ng“tr;:t !llrl;:ence‘ sr}:d r‘:}: | ment to the federal penal code and coiered her liberty of actien. |according to the presidential ex-| wour premiers preferred to planation, is prompted by the fact!, .6 the newspaper adds. |that in the past numerous persn?s :{ Le oJurnal warns the French peo- low class have taken advantage of the ai % |evolutionary periods to molest | (’j;’n:::",‘:‘ &zu"éfi_?tg‘!:pm,z,?m, 'hl: 4 |foreigners, thus causing international | /. jyiomy that divide men rematn,” ft complications. {sa)s. o S | “All we can hepe for {s that the new men will strive to solve them in a concillatory sirit instead of seeking the element of continual division.” Le Matin expresses in vivid terms the hope that France never again will see Llieyd George. MEXICAN TRAITORS. % Y ™ tem. WANTS UNIFORM COFFINS % | Funerals At 825 and 850 Would Then Be Possible Atlantie City, Oct. 20.—After a cri- tical address by E. W. McCullough of | the Fabricated Products Department FRENCH PRE T PLAN, of the United States Chamber of | paric Oct, 20 (By Assoclated Press) Commerce members of the Caskeét __The French plan fer financial con- Manufacturers' association in conven-it;o] of Germany presented to the tion vesterday declared funerals could | reparations commission by M. Bar- be conducted satisfactorily for “"ilhou today suggests the immediate $50, if sentiment were eliminated and {creation of a committee of the standardized caskets were used |world's leading businessmen to deal Mr. McCullough recommended a|with Germany's capacity to pay and uniform type of coffin to consider the question of the inter- | allied debts. It would leave the final settlement of the questien, however, to the proposed Brussels conférence. | | BRITISH STOCK MARKET. London, Oct. (By Associated | Press)—The generally accepted beliet | |that Bonar Law will be able to form | 'a cabinet had already been m-.;nly’ 14 | discountéd today on the stock ex- change where the price moverfents nf‘ British gilt edged issues were narrow- |ed but upward. The other sections of }Lmls wiil deliver a special sermon the market were quietly cheerful. (te the Grotto. This will mark the French loans and the rail sefurities |fret anniversary of the founding of lcovered welk the class. | 20, GROTTO DAY Everyman's Bible class will ébserve “Gretto Day” Sunday, Nevember §, when members of Aziz Gretto will be guests of the class. Rev. John L.