Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ESTABLISHED 1870 e | NEW BRITAIN HERALD( CONNECTICUT, THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1923, —FOURTEEN PAGES 'GERMANY MAKES GCOD ITS THREAT NEW BRITAIN, ' McMahon Estate Goes to Family; REPAIRS TO ARMORY SURE; REFUND ON AUTOcLflEMSEum Will Filed in Court of Probate, | UNDER COVERT' "ww. i If Passed, Person Selling On Pro Rata Basis—$ Edifice—$200,000 As Car Could Get Buk Fee 15,000 For Arch Street ked. For New Military Quarters in Bristol—Liquor and Other Items (Apecial to The Herald), Hartford, Jan, 26—~Practical as- surance was given at the State Capitol in Hartford this morning that an ap- | propriation of $15,000 will be made this year for repairs to the armory on Arch street, New nrmm Representative Krnest W, Christ In~ troduced a bill to that end after consultation with Chairman Payne nr‘ the committee on mMtary affairs, and since he has secured the approval of that committee, the measure will go directly to the committee on appro-/ priations. Auto Fee Refund Senator Richard Covert introduced | a bill this morning to have fees paid for the registration of automobiles rebated for such part of the year as| the registered car is now in the pos- session of the one registering it with the state department. ' The senator also brought in three automobile bills of lesser conscquence at the sugges- tion of Commissioner Robbins Stoeckel of the motor vehicle depart- | ment, A bill was submitted this morning to restore the forfeited rights of Gus- tav Carlson of New Britain, Fund For School. The New Britain senator also in- troduced a proposal today for an ap- propriation of $500,000 for the new sttae normal school plant now in course of construction in the Hard- ware City. The proposal to have the state take over the highway between the New Eritain-Berlin town line and Flan- nery's corner was today 'referred to the committee on roads, rivers and bridges as was a proposal to have the state take over the [Unionville to Plainville road. $200,000 For Bristol One of the most important thus far submitted was offered today by Representative 1% F. Merrill of Lristol, asking for a $200,000 appro- priation for a new state armory in bills | ll-ta' HLAN RESPONSIBLE Thought to Have Swooped Down at Doves in Yard at Southington—— Has Wing-spread of Two Feet, (Fpecial 1o The Herald), Plainville, Jan, 25.—Mrs, Reuben | | Day of North Washington street was nt.rtlrd yesterday afternoon to h FOR TERROR REIGN (Atty. Gen, Goco Flays K. K. K. for Outrages in Louisiana STATE'S CASE IS ENDED Witnesses Today Tells of Secing Two | | Cars With Danicl and Richard in Them Toward “Death | Lake." Headed —(By Associamd open hearing “Morehouse | Bastrop, Jan. 25 | Press.)—The state here into the so-called gings, deportations, kidnappings a the death of two men, was concluded | today after having been in progress sinee January § Leon Jones of Moselle, Miss., the last and only witness today told of| | having seen two cars with masked | men near Lake LaFourchee the night Watt Daniel and T. F. Richard were | kidnapped near Bastrop. Two bodies, identified as those of Daniel and Rich- ard, were found floating in the lake on December 22, Before adjournment of the hearing, Attorney Gen. Coco made a statement to the éourt concerning outrages in the parish, charging the Ku Klux| Klan with responsibility for them. | Flays The Klan. The attorney general, who address- :journm(‘nt declared that since the advent of thc klan in the parish there had arisen *a condition of disorder | the crpsh of hreaking glass in the | [living room of her home, Upon in- vestigation, she discovered a hawk fluttering about the room, Mrs, Day has about 30 doves about her home and it is thought that !hr; e |New large | All Property is Left in Truat| HAWK SHATTERS WINDOW | One-Third of Interest to] = AND FLIES INT0 HOIJSEI be Given to Widow and| Local Fuel Administrators Are . Two-Thirds to Testa- tor’s Children Britain Trust Co.| amed' as Trustee—Will June 23, 1914, hawk had muade a swoop down on one of them but had missed its strike and gone through the window. The bird, measured a little over two feet from the tip of one wing to the tip of the other and when found, was |making a desperate attempt to fly through a dow which was not shattered, strength was exhaust- ed, however, and Mrs, Day had no |trouble in capturing the bird, I)wlrl it in captivity for a few hours, |after which she let it fly away., A group of neighbors whom Mrs. Day !called in to view the bird were doubt- ful as to the species, . Some thought that it was a young eagle, but Mrs, Day was inclined to think that it was a large hawk. “I]ll[}Tl]R’ UNDER ARREST HAS NO STATE LICENSE Antonio Poalillo Held for Court Hearing Under ‘ $2,000 Bond hooded atrocities” investigating fial-‘ | Antonio Poalillo, claiming td be a | mechano- therapy doctor was arrested | this afternoon in bhis office, on the |second floor of the Bollerer block on | ed the court immedlately before ad- | ommercial street, a few doors west |of the police station, by Sergeant | Matthias Rival. He is being held in | bonds of $2,000 on a warrant charg- law con- She | Coples of the will of the late Pat. rick 8. MeMahon were given out this | afternoon by the New Britain Trust executor, Perusal of the shows that the entire estate is left in trust for the widow and children of the testator, it being provided that the widow shall receive one-third of the income and the remaining two- thirds shall be divided among children, under certain restrictions, An wi fa to charities, churches or civic funds, The will was drawn June 23, 1914, | as follows: Know all men by these presents | that I, Patrick 8. McMahon of the town of New Britain, county of Hart- | ford and state of Connecticut, being | of lawful age, of sound and disposing | mind, memory and judgment, do hereby make, publish and declare the following to h@ my last will and tes- tament hereby r#voking all previous wills and codicils by me made. 1. I direct the payment of my just debts including such part of my mort- of be forced to pay and such part of my |at mortgage. indebtedness as my executor | may in its discretion deem advisable to pay to protect the interests of the | trust hereinafter created. I give, devise and bequeath all my property both real and personal wherever the same is situated and in whatsoever the same may consist to| the New Britain Trust company, a corporation chartered ‘by the legisla- ture of Connecticut and located in New Britain, Hartford county, Conn- the | special ‘gage. Duly Cireulation ,043 PRICE THRE® CENTS Jumm,\ Jmh T0 TIE UP RUHR ZONE RAILROADS; FRENCH DISCUSS MILITARY ACTION i0fficials Are in Occupied Asked by Russell Not to Resign Territory Devising BUT TWO DOUGHBOYS F“UNI]A w " I. T[mAY Help of the 80 Officials for Basis Drawn by Hotel Man on qp,0, Others Miss Connec- | tions as Eighth Infantry Embarks at Antwerp Antwerp, Jan, ntwerp transport St LK men, were transferred traing directly to the and immediately began preparations | | eight largest cities in the state when | ard vo The ntry, men absent three missed their train, posedly overiooked the fact that thFlr furlough had expired, It is still possible for these men to al drafted a law, catch the St. Mihiel by regular trains|us all the powers we thought neces- as the- work of weighing anchor may | sary. be delayed if Major Gen. Allen grants | amended and amplified by a a request made by the telephone from |who is one of our most capable local | ve time for the unloading administrators, and was approved by | ermasters supplies in order|the attorney general. the officers' bag- Captain Oliver, commander of |to the governor for his approval. The gage indebtedness as my executor may [the transport, hopes to get under way |mext day, I was shown a redrafted bill here to quar 5 p.m, NEW TROLLEY MEASURE | Proposed Statute Would Permit Nine | Or company, whom the deceased theater Press.)—The last and hotel magnate had named as his | troops who went to the ald of the whigh will be accepted, document | allies in the world war | today to make room f 26.~(By Assoclated | deputy, Charles W, of the American to Governor Templeton last night and and Mihiel without arrived boarded largely of the Eighth in—\ from thelr | follows: On January vessel, In the will there are no bequests |for their trip, the first stop of which | the situati will be at Savannah, Ga. pany commanders reported only tWo | ing that the distribution While | | longer having sup- | without the backing of la leave, if the weather holds. Or More Persons to Buy Line Lines of Street Railways. Hartford, Jan. 26.—A street railway | senate today would | bill offered in the the for their home- of the letter of The com- | 'Declnres That Citizens of | Means of P“m“ Occu- | thebState Will Need the pation on Systematic Next Four Weeks at Least | lTeuton Mine Owners Prom- ise Their Workers Full Pay in Case of Strike or Shutdown, Hartford, Jan, —I*uel Adminis- trator Thomas W, lhmu oIl today asked the 80 local fuel administrators in the |#tate to continue “on the job" despite the resignation of himself and his| Jaynes, tendered in| The letter Mr, Russell sent to these . local administrators included a copy resignation referred (By Associated Press) The Germans seem to have made good, at least for the time being their I . e - o1 ’boant-sualits 15 an 1t t to tie up the Rubr valiey rail ways, we held a co Y o arence with the administrators of th Duseseidort advioes veport (il throughout the v y and the adja- occupled tervitory paralyzed by allwaymen's strike, He added: “The history to. on was discussed at length ;‘l‘”‘ was passed stat- |tP€ rallw could nol The French are preparing to oper- controlled |4 the roads with 4 outside rallway workers, Report from various sources |indicate the process of collecting these 4 !men from different parts of France is well under way., It is also reported [that railwaymen, miners and other workers are to be imported from Czecho-Slovakla and Poland. d, Marshal Ioch’s |chief of staff, and minister of public Iworks Le Trocquer are in the Ruhr to consider sterner military measures l«n‘l the putting of the occupation on tematic basis. he German mine owners have promised the Ruhr miners pay in case of a strike or shutdown forced by eir- cumstances. Everything today after last tion over the court fining Fritz Thyssen magnates. A vote, seven to one be satisfactorily Proposed Law Drafte “At my request the attorne which wo was slightly lawyer | Later this draft “This amended draft was presented | containing several new features, one | of which would have apparently given |us authority to issue orders to the railroad. I immediately stated that this power was so drastic that we | would never think of using it, but that if the legislature wished to pass the bill in that form it would make no difference to us. Recites Recent Events | “On January 18 the governor sent a special message to the legislature stating that an emergency existed and in Mayence night's demonstra- martial verdict and his fellow was quiet Strike Is Effective, Duesseldorf, Jan. 25. (By Associat- Press)—Virtually the entire rail- system of the Ruhr valley and ed and lawlessness which has ripened in- | . to a supercession of constituted au~)::fn:::tlh}: p;:(::’::s"o,",':?d.dne Phry o thorities by the K. K. K. and the es-| oo 0% % PIECEE 8 00 O Rival mhnahmm\t of a govermment or "’\who has been at work on the case for own.” The parish, he added, “was| |two days, has listed eight ounts on the hrink of a riot and.bloodshed” | v ¥ At TG CIERL ¢ when Governor Parker sent troops| ST-. !""1 tacc 3 i ! movement, i, G. Hughes of Bristol, | here and initied the investigation. H At LanipolloseeNons KBt assistant manager of the New De-| Mr. Coco declared that while n‘mltted {hstahe Hag ngtLemaren €08 parture works and secretary of the|might be conceded many Klansmen | cénse to p';",“‘:f 4 ‘,’2}2,:‘:“,;,,,33 e Bristol, with understanding that Bristol would give the land and form W a military company by next July. | the occupied territory immediately Mr. Merriti was 1n conference this morning with Adjutant General George M. Cole who assured that he would !end hearty cooperation to the permit nine. or more persons to asso- | requesting lgislation to assist in con- ciate themselves for the purchase of |trolling the situation. & 1168 o1 Nindh. OF koot FAIRFATY fc| . 'O the kame day (ie rdraft biiy|asjoialis s pexiveed Wby by i {public usc. The bill was of length|was handed to the sesatc eador wign [ HAke of - the XeliMamen. power and authority without order of (ana apparently its aim would be to|a request for immediate action. This The disoreanization of ‘the publie the Probate court to sell, morgage, enablo u corporation to acquire por.|bill could on that day have been re-| Ulllitles services which Bas been slow- lease, convey, invest and reinvest the |sions of the Connecticut Co. and in|ferred to the Jjudiclary committee, IV *PEAdtNE Rubs same both' principal and income in|ipis way gradually take the trolley|That committee could have held a ince the beglnnlng of the Franc whole or in part, and fo 4ispose Of | gystem out of the hands of federal |hearing on the following Tuesday the (1o %(th CCH el trustees. | 23rd instant and a bill could have| ppe main rail lines on both the ecticut, in trust, however, for the fol- lowing nuses and purposes: To hold, invest spd reinvest the sfme, collect the hitome, with full {January 22, Chamber of Commerce is one of the | instigators of the movement for new armory in the Bell City Discuss Fuel 1 Hartford, Jun. £5 (By the- Asso-| ciated Press)—T0a¢ fuel question was the chier topic of discussion among members of the general assembly to- day and it was based chiefly on the contents of the jcttdr of resignation of Administrator Russell and Mr, Jaynes, his deputy, sent to Governor Temple- ton last night, Many members were making inquiries trying to find the author of some of the drastic pro- visions of the bill which is now with the judiciary committee and on which a hearing will probably be given Tues- day afternoon, The absence of Huose Leader Buckley, still confined to his room with a cold, made house members reluctant to hroach the mat- ter in that body. The senate had less interest as Senator Ells had stated that the bill would be reported as quickly as possible, preferably Tuesday. The house gave the use of its cham- ber to the railroad committee for a hearing Wednesday afternoon on the| resolution to investigate train service | of the New Haven road. Enforcement Amendment., Senator McGrath offered an amend- ment to the state enforcement law as | follows: “T'he term ‘spirituous and intoxica- ting liquors' shall be held to in(‘lullc all spiritnous and intoxicating liquors, | all mixed liquors, all mixed liquors of which a part is spirituous and intoxi- cating, all distilled spirits, all Ja- malca ginger, all wines and cider con- taining more than ten per centum of alcohol by volume, ail ales, porters and beers manufactured from hops and malt or from hops and containing more than four per centum of alcohol by volume."” A bill in the house to amend law regarding shipment of diseased cattle would set a forty-five pound standard on calve: Waterbury's Bond Issue. Mr. Butler of Waterbury offered al- ternative bills to consolidate Water- bury bond issues, The issues would be those of 1915-17 and 1915-17-21 He also had another bill to make the Waterbury city election hours same as those at state t‘ll‘(‘flpnfi and still another for zoning in that city. Osborne's Nomination. The governor sent in the nomina- | tion of Gilbert E. Osborne to be New Haven harber commissioner for five years from July 1 next, vice F. H.| uinley ar< his reappointments of H. H. Lyman, Middlefield, Philo T. Platt, Newtown, and William Spaulding, Norfolk, to the state board o fagriculture for four years, Other Bills A house bill asked for a fuel com- mission in Waterbury, with power to buy and distribute coal. The attorney general would be given legal assistance under a bill by Mr. Dunham. Mr. Andrews of changes in payment compensation. A highway bill would provide for Danbury offered of workmen's (Continued on Twelfth Page) out [ barley | the | the | | tentionally holding up traffic. did not actually participate in ac- tions of lawlessness, “they neverthe- less may be deemed responsible by | reason. of their silence and inaction.” Attack Legality. Judge Barnett, counsel for Dr. B. McKoin, T. Jeff Burnett and wt" Gray, tdentified by numerous | witnesses as having been members | of various masked parties, issued a statement attacking the legality of the hearin g and the testimony given by | those summoned to the stand. JUDGE RAPS TRUCK DRIVER | FOR “HOGGING THE ROAD” Joseph Rago of Hartford Fined $10 | and Assessed Costs of $18.50 in West Hartford. (Special to The Herald) West Hartford, Jan. 25 Vhat believed to have been one of the first, | if not the first prosecution in this state under the motor vehicle law which compels a ‘person driving a | vehicle to turn to the right to give other traffic the right of way oe- | curred in the West Hartford town | court last night when Joseph Rago | of Hartford, a driver for the Atlantic | Refining company, was found guilty and fined $10 and costs, amounting to §28.50. An appeal Wwas taken by his| lawyer, Attorney Phillip Roberts. A cond count of evading responsibil- was dropped by Judge Collins. Evidence showed that last Friday evening Rago, driving a truck, got into the middle of the road at the end of the Stanley street trolley line, | New Britain, and refused to move to the right to let vehicles from the| | rear pass. Witnesses declared that | until Corbin’s corner was reached it was impossible to attempt to pass, as Rago refused to heed the sign |horns, At Corbin's corner, Carl Bar- shay, |in his Ford sedan. | truck, swinging to the left The rear, of the of the | The truck continued and State The- ater Inspector Arthur N. Rutherford, who was passing, pursued and arrest- ed Rago. The accused denied knowledge of [ the accident and likewise denied in- Juage | Collins accepted his first denial as plausible, since it was the rear of his heavy truck that hit the sedan. He declared, however, there is no ex- cuse for truck drivers to “hog the road,” especially at night, he said, when if they cannot hear the horn they certainly can see the lights from cars in the rear. Moreover, the court opined that it is the duty of a driver to be on the alert for traffic both in front and in the rear. 18 JITNEURS ARRESTED. Bridgeport, Jan. 25.—Eighteen jit- ney bus operatoes arrested for over- crowding their vehicles were advised by Judge Boardman in city court to- day to seek relief in the general as- sembly if they were themselves un able to enforce the law in regar? . passenger limitation. The operators) were fined from $3 to $10 cach. is | a Hartford man, tried to pass road, hit his car and turned it over. | |to the police that a patient {named Joseph Tata of 181 Washing- ton street, aged 54 years, had called |at his office for treatment. Accord- |ing to the physician, Tata appeared ‘to be in poor physical condition. To | Dr. Klein he unfolded a story of hav- |ing been to Paolillo, who advised him that under his treatment, he could |be cured of his ailment in 15 days, |for $50. It is alleged that , Paolillo ‘prascrlbcd some pills which Tata | took for a time, and when he did not lmpro\c he again called on the Com- mercial street mechano-therapy ex- pert. Tata, it is alleged, was advised to increase the number of pills he | was to take. | It was after the increased number of the pills failed to bring about an |improvement, that Tata decided to ‘consult a physician. Dr. Klein came into possession of some of the pills, |which he turned over to the police, |and which have been turned over to |a chemist for an analysis. Sergeant Rival communicated with Dr. Osborn, chairman of the state board of health, |who said that the man arrested today |had no license to practice medicine |in this state, On searching the office of Paolillo this.afternoon, Sergeant Rival uncov- ered a large carton of pills and pow- |ders. Paolillo has been making this city one of his offices for about two months. He has offices in Meriden and \authlngton and at one time he | conducted 'an office in Bridgeport, ac- |cording to advertising pamphlets se- cured at his office. Among his ef- fects today was a registration card showing that he had registered for the draft at Waterbury. A note book | was also among the effects, with names and addresses of people in va- | rious parts of the Connecticut, New | York and New Jersey. Paolillo had |on his person at the time of his ar- rest :mu in bills and some change. 10 lMPROVE SERVICE ublic Utilities Commission Believes Weather Partly to Blame For Sit- | local | uation on “New Haven” Road. | Replying to a | Mayor A. M. Paonessa communication of asking that | portation service on the Hartford- Piristol dinky line,, Secretary H. Billings of the Public Utilities com- mission today informed the mayor| that his commission has spent several weeks studying the “New Haven™ road's problems on this particular line, and was in hopes that better weather conditions would bring about improveinent in service. The mayor recently placed his sig- nature as the first on a petition draft- ed by people who use the line, asking that an effort be made to better main- tain proper schedules. WANTS C. N. G. AVIATION. Hartford, Jan. 25.—8enator Rudd who is chairman of the military af- fairs committee today offered a bill te form an aviation squadron as a part of the National Guard of the state to be located at Brainard field, Hartford. action be taken to afford better trans- | ¥ the principal and income thereof as| follows: To pay one-third of the income n! all my said estate as and when the same accrues to my wife during her life, To divide the balance of the income | as it accrues (including the whole in- \ come at the death of my wife) lnto‘ as many equal shares as I have chil- | dren living at the time of my decease; | to keep separate accounts of income for each such child and to credit to| the account of each child his or her pro rata share of such income as and | when the same accrues. While any | such child is a minor under the age| of twenty-onc years then said trus- tee shall pay to or for the benefit of such minor child such part of the in- come credited to the account of such child as in the opinion and discretion | of said trustce may be deemed neces- | sary and advisable for the comfort- able support, maintenance and educa- | tion of such child during said minor- | ity and said trustee shall add the un- expended balance of income, if any, to the credit of such child. Said un- expended balance of income is to be| afterwards treated as principal hereinafter stated and is hereinafter called ‘“separate and accrued prin- | cipal accrued.” | As and when each child arrives | the age of twenty-one years, | trustee shall pay to each child so ar- | riving at his or her ac to | par | | (Continued on Eleventh Page.) | SHE QUITS THE MOVIES 1 | th Mary Miles Minter to Retire, Go to Country Place and Possibly Marry When Lover Gets Divoree, “Mary Miles | T} Los Angeles, Jan. Minter, whose contract with the Fa- | mous Players-Las Corp., recently | expired, has announced that she is| through with motion pictures, accord- ling to the Los Angeles Times today. | | Miss Minter_said she planned to go st to buy Aeountry home at West- | | chester, N. Y., study music, return to| |the state and perhaps to marry, thr‘ paper said. She intimated she would marry Louis Sherwin, playwrightyand scenarist when he obtained a divorce from his wife who is living at Oyster | Bay, N. Y., with their three children, the Times said. Miss Minter and the interviewer went together to Sherwin's home here where Sherwin stated he hoped to marry Miss Minter as soon as legally possiblp, said the news story. He sai he planned to file an action Mrs. Sherwin from whom he been separated since 1914, accordin, to the Times. thi | as Ja pl id tin ar * THE WEATHER Hartford, Jan, 25.—Forecast | for New Britain and vicinity: | Fair, colder tonight; Friday ! fair. and w(h: tivy It is understood that financiers quired. ed by Promotion of Captain Kelly |returned to full at Special Meeting. A special it Kell Washington, expre: Atlanta, e February |received by | Paul he me: Yo is time sociation nuary, 1 persons out of estimated about the oyed, le by mes. any Jan. abrook, rk, 0 meeting of commission will be held this evening is expected that | geant will be named to fill a va |created by the promotion of Captair ‘(‘corg:- J Hughes Muzzles B;}den At Reparations Parley 25.—~Secretary as | Hughes revealed today that he had in- |structed Roland W. Boyden | with the reparations commission not| opinion regarding | reparations settlement in the commis- said | sion’s discussions and to refrain y.-nmm\p,. thousand, “urging the consideration of majority sueh | gestions in the absence of instructions/me that he thought we had Jan, t of the share of such child of |from the depnrhnvnt | planning a great we American Rhine army of occupation expect- ed to arrive at the Georgia port about according to Governor Harwi mayor of § age requsted the chief execu- to take part and Governor Hard- \mok indicated that he would accept. | soldiers Jan ment in New York is far less a year ago, announced , there work. 100,0 number out their own choice, TWO MORE E Waterford, Iréland, had been ms. 4 |sociated Press) against |O'Reilly and Vitzgerald, residents of has | Cork, were executed at the Waterford g|Infantry barracks this morning. Both | found guilty of possessing ~Two EIGHT CARS DI Cornwall, Jan. 25. — Eight freight cars were derailed here this morning a short distance south of the Corn wall Bridge station of the N. Y., H. and H. railroad. 'xlra freight bound | |INo one was injured. e #|crew was summoned from Waterbury. [of $20,000,000. Jan. the state hold an opinion that only way the Connecticut Co. can be ownership of Con- | necticut stockholders is the purchase of portions of the system until all are T0 PICK SERGEANT TONIGHT Police Board Will Fill Vacancy the a 'Savannah Planmng Blg Welcome to Doughhovs Savannah oming party for members Emplq,yment Situation ‘n New York Is Better Ne 25.—Unemploy- than at the merchants’ today. were Today are of 00 ECUTIONS, men, The train was an | Telephone Co. today asked the general | propaganda and declares for Bridgeport. |assembly for wrecking [to make the total $40,000,000 instead |ments, is poisoning the future moths A the Caus- police new ser- observer his sug- | jars, a telegram | . from annah. 330,000 it was unem- work or in normal o (By As- named in | been reported and passed under sus-|ight and Jeft banks of the Rhine are pension of the ruies on the 24th. tied up along a stretch of nearly @ “Instead, on Tuesday the 23rd the|pjjeg hetween Wesel to the north of bill was referred in the senate to the|pyesseldort and (Jologne south of thiss judiciary committee and this commit- |citv The Paris-Berlin and Warsas= . tee finally fixed date for a hearing|paris expresses are stalled in t some day next week. | Duesseldorf station. Two trains “In view of the above history anc |foodstuffs from Holland represente the entire absence of assurance as to|the only movement by rail into the the enactment of ;any legislation we interior of the@Ruhr during the morn- are not willing to continue longer in |ing. the position of assuming responsibility | Tn addition, without any legal power to help us.|phone employes of the postal ““You local administrators, eighty in linformed Gen. Dénvignes today number, have been serving your fel- | the operators would strike at mid- low citizens without pay and with no [night. The Irench commander re- motive except that of public spirited |plied with a threat that the leaders service to your commpnity. Your|would be sent to jail. work has been irritating, difficult| The mobjle crew of telegraphers and for the most part thankl which custbmarily follows President Needed By Citizens Millerand .on his official tours has ar- “Your citizens still need your heflp|rived in Duesseldorf ready to take and will for the next four weeks, 1|over the service in the event of a carnestly hope you will continue on |strike. portunity to take my hat off 1o you BOIL ON NECK FATAL 10 EDWARD N. PETERSON lall, one of the most capable un- the telegraph and tele= ervice that selfish body of men I have ever scem. “Incidentally you may be intere to learn that the total expenses the state covering all the work of the organization from its beginning to the efd of his month have been onty ight hundred dol- Ex-Governor Lake recently told saved least or & Well Known Connerton Street Man Dies at Parvents' Home—Marriod Only |'n|‘ Months, iliness h [the citizens of the state at Foliéwing o five tays hundred thousand dollars P v o boll o1 S Hash e NEGROES DRIYEN 0T el g street, d this T'rom aged 23, of nerton d morning home A of his paren Peterson of The vietim complair night of the growth on his neck medical attention was given him infection spread into the young man's head to his brain and poisoned his entire system, causing death. Peter had been employed for several years at the Mildrum Jewelry factory in Fast Berlin, but more re- cently had been with the Stanley Works. He a native of this city and marrie only four months John ] is Sunday 9t Ousted and Every Colored Family Blanford, I, Following Assault of Little Girl, Blanford, Ind., Jan, 25 This little on | coal mining town was quiet today and negro families had moved aw. | following the warning issued by number of white citizens that unless the colored man who attacked an 11 year old white girl was turned over to them before noon yes iy Sthey| Surviving is the widow, would be “run out of town." four brothers, Harry A When the “zero hour” approached, 1'aul and Clarence Peterson the last of the negroes were on their Mrs. Douglas Ericson of way to Terre Haute and Clinton near Mass., and Miss Lillian here. Many families did not wait for SO0 of Boston the time lmit to expire but left im. Funeral services will be held Sate mediately after the warning. No dis. 'rday afternoon at 2:30 o'ciock frem orders were reported. the home on Iast street. Rev. J. K. An investigation of the Klingberg will officiate and interment of the orders issued by will be in Fairview cemetery for negroes to move, was be, a ¥ et today by Captain H. A. Collins Turkish Paper Attacking Indiana National Guard under 4 N W, (' from Governor McCray. Y.M.C. A.and Y. W. C. A, Constantinople, Jan. 25. (By Asso- ciated Press) An_open attack on the 2 ctivities of the Y. M. C.,A. and the Winsted, Jan. 25.—TIsaac A. Wood, |y, W. C. A. is made by the radical 66, a former conductor on the Centra! | noewspaper Tevhid Afkiar, which de- New England railway, employed | mands that the government and par- | cently as a flagman, died of heart fail-|ents of the nation take steps against | ure at his home here today |these organizations. The newspaper alleges that under the guise of educa- cation and physical development the associations are carrying on a religious that the entertain- all was had his parents, Egnar T, and two Med- Ppters sisters, In ford, attack - the order OLD RAILROADER DIES N Hartford, Jan. 8. N. E a capital stock increase|Y. W. C. A, through free erhood of Isiam.