New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 30, 1923, Page 1

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] News of {he World By Associated Press Avel Daily Circulation Vet g 136 [ PRICE BR1 ESTABLISHED 1870 THREE CENTS NEW BRIAIN, CONNECTICUT, THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1923. —SIXTEEN PAGES.. ITALIAN FLEET REPORTED READY ACT AGAINST GREECE AS WAR CLOUDS GATHER; LEAGUE OF NATIONS MAY BE ARBITRATOR SCHOONER FORD S [T PAmicK conia GREEKS WILLNOT AHEAD [N CONTES| ™ "0 HATERINGORMANS - ACCEPT ALL TERMS Fishing Vessel Making Fast Time | Object to Humiliating Demands ol In Today’s Race Italian Government WER NOT ENTERED rTerms Italy Demands Greece Agree To In Ending Trouble The Assoclated Press. . F Rome, Aug 30.—The Italian government today issued a state- ment dealing with the ultimatun issued against Greece, gi\'ing" the precise terms the Greeks are expected to meet in reparation | for the massacre of the Italian boundary mission at the Albanian | frontier. The terms are: 1—Apologies of the most sweeping official nature to be pre- sented to the Italian government through the Italian legation in Athens by the Greek military authorites. 2--The vietims of the massacre to be given solemn funeral ceremonies with services in the Catholic cathedral in Athens all the members of the Greek government participating. 3—Honors to be paid to the Italian flag by the Greek war- ships in the Piraeus for which purpose an Italian naval division will be sent there. The honors to be in the form of 21 guns fired fiy él\e Greek ships while flying the Italian flag, at their mast- eads. 1—The severest inquiry to be made by the Greek authori- P ties on the spot of the massacre, assisted by the Ttalian military ‘ attaches in Athens for whose personal safety the Greek govern- fog. A fourth entry in the race, the ment will be held absolutely responsible. This inquiry to occur FIND SOLE SURVIVOR DYING Mayflower of Boston was tied up at| o { within five days from the acceptance of these demands. her wharf, unable to compete becanse | Lone Mess Boy Lives Six Days on Lite | 5—Capital punishment for all the guilty she arrived only yesterday from the | e TRy A Fe X Banks with 200,000 pounds of fish in| [Aft Of Vessel 6—An indemnity of 50,000,000 Ttalian lire, (approximately her hold, her hull foul and dragging $2,160,000 at the present rate of exchange) to be paid five days a propeller that must be unshipped | from the presentation of the note, beforelians (sould rane : _T—Military honors to be rendered the victims when their bodies'are émbarked at Preveza on Italian ships for their return immediate investigation into the cir<| The Henry Ford of r:loune:tor.j Captain Clayton Morrissey: the Eliza- to Italy. WRS. ENSWORTH PASSES | HARTFORD FOOTBALL | cumstances surrounding the massacre. ! Decision to send the telegram was | PLAYER DIES IN FALL taken by the secretaries of the council' at MINERS AND OPERATORS AGREE ON PLAN FOR MAINTAINING MINES IN CASE STRIKE OCCURS SEPTEMBER 1 T00 MANY HANDLING COAL BOOSTS PRICE | Two, Three and Four Dealers Get" | Prolit From New Englanders | STATEMENT OF COMMISSION Margins Running as High as $4.75 a Ton Added to Mine Price of Fuel Springfield, 11, Peculiar Mixup as to Who's By ‘Related to Who. Springfield, Iil, Aug. 30.—The *“clan" of Gorman, camping in Lin-| coln park here, was knitted closer to- day by two marriage knots which | uvnited two Patrick Gormans to two Kathryn Gormans. Patrick Gor- man of Cineinnati, O, married Miss | Kathryn Gorman of Washington, D. C., while the same ceremony united Patrick’s sister, Miss Kathryn Gor- man of Cincinnati to the first Kath-| | ryn's brother, Patrock Gorman, of Washington, D. C. And now all the other 36 Gormans in the party are | puzzling over who's related to who. Gloucester, Mass, Alki . —Three | The ‘brides and grooms are distantly fast fishing schooners, the pick of the | yelated to other memhers of the American fleet felt their way out 'o"gm“p which came her a week ago in Eastern Point thls morning in readi- | automobiles for an outing. ness to stast in the open fishermen's race for the Lipton and Prentiss cups /| postponed from Monday because of | Each Side Has Until Tomor- row Noon to Accept or Reject Gov. Pinchot’s Pro- posals for Compromise Settlement. ALLIED COUNCIL'S DEMANDS Sends Ultimatum Insisting That Ene ergetic and Immediate Investigation Concerning Recent Assassination Be Made. London, Aug. 30.—A dispatch to the Evening News from Milan says the Italian fleet in Taranto harbor has recetved orders to be prepared t¢ sail in the eventuality of a movement against Greece. VAYFLO £, 4 oo 2y, Lipton Donate. ™ Harrisburg, Pa., Aug. 30.—An York « agreemept was reached today between the poffey committee of anthracite operators and the officials of the miners union under which the union men employed as pump men, engi- neers and maintenance men will be allowed to stay at work after Septem- ber 1 if suspension of mining becomes ‘effective, The men in the classification named are needed to prevent the mines from tlooding and caving in during periods ot idleness. Terms of Agrement By the terms of the agreement men’ in the maintenance service now work- ing 12 hours per day ‘will receive a wage adjustment of 23 cents per day less for working eight hours than they now receive for working 12 hours and will be paid overtime rates if their days exceed eight hours in ' service Men on nine and ten hour shifts will werk the same hours that they pow put in, but will receive a wage $1.15 per day for those now receiving the lowest rates, with greater amounis WProportionately for those who are em- ployed at higher wage rates. In addition any general increase in wages® granted will be made retrp- active to September 1 for the bene- fit of all maintenance workers who are held in service Lewis’ Statement, John L. Lewi president of the United Mine Waorkers, said that the principles followed in working out the pay adjustments necessary in estab- lshing the eight hour day for the maintenance workers were the same a3 had been established in past settle- ments in the mining region where the eight hour day had been granted to workers formerly employed for long- er periods. The signing of the ag last minute action of the operators policy committee representatives be- before departing for Philgdelphia . to meet with their associates, to consider Allies Protest By The Associated Press. Paris, Aug. 80.—The inter-allied council of ambassadors today decid- ed to send a telegram to the Greek government on behalf of the French, English and Italian governments, jointly protesting “with the energy! that the gravity of the circumstances” warrant against the outrage of which the Italian mission of the commission for delimitation of the Albanian fron- tier has been the victim."” The telegram further invites the Greek government to institute .an/ Before It Reached Retailer In This Part of Country, BY GEORGE H. MANNING (Washington Bureau of New Britain Herald). ‘Washington, Aug. 30.—Passage of anthracite coal through the hands of two, three and even four wholesale dealers, with margins running as high as $4.75 per ton added to the mine price of coal before it reached the re- tailer, was a prime factor in creating the extremely high prices paid for coal in New England last winter, ac- cording to a special statement issued by the United States coal commission today. i Mylie—Saw Com- panions Die. 8y The Assoclated Press, { Shanghai, Aug. 30.—~One lone Chi- | nese mess boy dying from thirst and hunger aboard a life raft was picned | up today by the Hong Kong-Shanghai | coast steamer Sinkiang, and he 1s be- | | lieved to be the sole survivor of the| | British steamer Mylie which founder- | led in a typhoon recently en rou from Chinwantangtao to Shanghal | with a cargo of coal | Middlemen Profiteer Leaving aside consideration of min- ers’ wages, and operators’ profits, the commission states that in many cases middlemen received as much in mar gins as the coal miner received inf wages on the same ton of coal, and that this pyramiding of middlemen's profits, hitherto referred te in only one paragraph of the July report of the coal commission, is one of the largest causes of high premiums paid on hard coal. . Place For Wholesale “Under normal conditions whole- salers have a proper place in the dis- tribution of coal,” the commisgion’s statement asserts, "They furnish an outlet for the coal of small mines whose total tonnage is too small to warrant the maintenance of a selling organization, In times of normal market, competition among whole- salers for the operators’ available tonnage on the one hand and for the consumers’ and retailers’ trade on the other keeps margins and prices low and commensurate with the serv- ices rendered as distributors of coal. AWAY AT AGE OF 90 YEARS Ben Pine; and the Shamrock of Bos-| ton, Captain Marty Welch, were th schooners to dispute the speed honors, of the fishing fleet. The 31 ‘mile course is a five mile Residents, sence of ambassadors who are on vacas« tion. The ambassadors have been urgently summoned and will probably reach Paris in time for the meeting to« morrow when Captain * Limperani, stretch from a line off Eastern Point thence around a triangle seven mile Thet DetOTelALAlas the 'boy . (hal general secretary of Albanion bound- ary commission will be heard. on a side and five miles to the finish| stcamer picked up a lifebeat in buoy. | which was th ¢ Engineer | Sir Thomas Lipton is donor of the | Taremy crees e e fi"{ff@""gfr“,ff:f cup which with ao cash Dprize of [ were found about 80 miles from $1,000 will go to the winners. A cup| Shanghai presented by Col. J. W. Prentiss and | The mess boy, according to state. | a prize of $800 will go to the vessel | ments of the Sinkiang office, lived for | vi vife the i finishing second. Third place carries!six days aboard the life raft and saw Ei[l\l;.wo:llé; GI)'f \'l;w I&éerngfndldiz:asgi an $800 prize. | five of his compantons perish. away early today at the home of League May Be Called in Captain Marty Welch won the| — S Mis. Dickarman: 6 Walhut Etnaatiins It is expected is some quarters that honors at the art. Berthing the | GONN ;h,‘ aéu of: 90 vesra % | the action of the ambassadors’ coun- Shamrock 200 yards away from the 3 GOAL SURYEY M¥a, Bneworth p&;seseed PETE Sy cil may be followed by some move in starting line he lay to until a minute | PRl R x!ac-)lfi 4‘ "_p to a few weeks ago the council of the league of nations before the starting gun. Then filling | | when she suffered from a slight J. now in session. It is held by students away he crossed near the windward | Agent shock. She was the daughter ot | 01, of Harktford, Lonxz. died of a|of the league here that the couneil end with a rush. After crossing the | .o\ 4o Make Compl Horatio and Charlotte Hart Pratt| Proken neck today. College officials | has power to take cognizance of the Shamrock’s bow the Ford got away | Hake Complete Report| = 8 0 e among the first settlers of | Pelieve that Fallon elther walked in | gituation and make immediate repres and followed the new boat across. The| Within Ten Days. v New Britain. Older residents will| 18 Sleep or had moved his bed be- | sentations to Ttaly in view of her ul- Howard came for the line too soon| {recall the Pratt and Ensworth|aUse of a sudden iliess, timatum even though no appeal has | Tallon, a guard on the varsity team, | peen made by Greece for league in- tervention. . The drastic character of the ultima- tum caused considerable comment in diplomatic circles this morning and the hope was expressed that Italy would be satisfied to suspend her de- mand for. satisfaction until an inquiry Prominent Among Older She Probably Was Otdest Mem- | Kevin Fallon, - Brother of “Mickey,” Suffers Broken Neck at St. Bonaventure | ber of South Church, Mrs. Julia A. Ensworth of Plain- Olean, N. Y., Aug. 30.—FKalling from a fourth story window in the main building of §St. Bonaventure. college { near herey <Kevin J: Fallon, 21 years Governor's Caihlentificd ¥ and had to go back and follow the| Waterbury, Aug. 30.—Governor 3 ’ | Sy & | Templeton today stated that he had m';{:q 'n,:::',’,lr?h tf,';‘fl,""’:“.o children, | Was sleeping in a room with six other The Ford passed the Shamrock at|Several days ago appointed an agent|(no |ate Frederick C. Ensworth and | Students All had arrived for foot- 11 o'clock and took the lead. The |t secure for him accurate informa- | nfrs james Taylor of Plainville, with | Pall training. 5 Sk Howard drew up rapidly on the Sham- | tion concerning the amount of an- whom she had made her home the He was a brother of "Mickey"” IFal- rock and was only a short distance | thracite in the state and also to give| st 15 years. Three grandchildren | !0 & coach at Syracuse. astern as the boats neared the flrsl}a" estimate of the amount of sub- survive her, Mrs. Chase Hunting of | Governor Pinchot proposals for settling the main controversy in the anthracite region. Ifailure to keep the pumps golng In time of a panic or sellers' market, however, the independent wholesalers (Continued on Third Page). i mark. nearly flat and hauled while the Ford and the Howard had | The Shamrock’s mainsail was down hard little main sheet. | stitutes that will be repuired to meet the emergency in the event of a coal strike, The governor, who declined | to make public the name of the agent Newtown, Conn.; Ruth E. and Fred J. C. Ensworth of this city. nsworth was a life long member of the South church and is believed to Mrs. | BOY BRUTALLY MURDERED | Newark Child of 7 Slain While On could be made. Italy Acts Hastily The Italian note was made too late for comment by the morning news- papers but the mid-day editions ex- pressed the opinion that the Rome government was acting rather pre- cipitately, even if it had just cause for complaint against Greece. The terms laid down by Italy are compared in some quarters with the conditions im- posed by Austria upon Serbia in 1914, Hope is expressed that some good result may come from the action of the ambassadors’ council, the inter- national jurisdiction of which has been generally recognized. Greece May Refuse Athens, Aug. 30.—It is understood here that Greece is not disposed to accept the humiliating conditions im- posed by the Italian government in its note demanding satisfaction for the killing of the five Italian mem- bers of the Greco-Albanian frontier delimitation mission. May Call On League In the event a dealock is reached in settling the affair, Greece for even a single day after suspension | ll_was said, would seriously damage mines and equipment. | appointed, said he expected the re- port would be in his hands within 10 days. “IFor the present,” he said: have heen the oldest member. Fu- neral services will be held Saturday o at 1:30 p. m. from Bailey’s undertak- In order to obfain the best results, ({50 P b bl e g purial | I think it best to withhold mention REJo: TR of this official's name. will be in Falrviaw cemetery, | Windham, N. Y. Aug. 80.—Local Pm—B*A HURT AS GARflERTU—RNS |and state authorities sought today to | unearth some clue to the slayer ‘of seven year old Howard Rothenberg \ i : Cab Cuban Legation at Washington Re- 3 Is No All three schooners were able to head for the first mark on the port tack. The wind dropped to five knots as the boats approached the first mark. Once around sheets were eased well off for the seven mile run to the sec- ond mark, all three boats moving very slowly with booms to starboard. At The First Mark The boats turned the first mark as follows: Ford 11: 10, Shamrock 11:19:09, Howard 11:20:15. { On the run to the second mark the‘: Howard drew up alongside the Sham- | rock about 200 yards to leeward and a few minutes later had taken second place. The Ford was still well ahead of the other boats although all three | were making slow progress in the| light breeze. It looked as if they would have difficulty in finishing et - within the time limit of six hours. At/ GOVERNOR BANKRUPT. 11:45 the Ford was still leading and Indianapolis, Aug. 30.—Governor bad sailed about half the distance to | Warren T. McCray today a |the second mark, Vacation at Windham, N. Y—Crime An Unusually Gruesome Onme. FIFTY NUNS ESCAPE FIRE Fire Burns Out Second and Third Mary’s Convent at Each Side Considers By The Assoclated Press, Harrisburg, Pa., Aug. 30.—Propo- sitions for settlement of the anthra. cite controversy which Governor Pin- chot placed before operators and miners yesterday went before each group in separate meetings for inten- sive study today. S. D, ‘Warriner, chairman of the operators policy com- mittee called his associates to meet in Philadelphia away from the scene of the negotiations but John L. Lewis and his scale committee of the United Mine Workers stayed here, Sharp divergence in views taken of the governor's proposals early crop- ped out between operators and miners representatives. The offer of a 10 per cent flat increase for the anthra- cite workers of the universal eight hour day, of the right to have a union | agent in the company offices for col- lection of union dues which the gover- nor made, along with a tender of union recognition and of the princi- ple of collective bargaining won @ more than friendly reception from the union contingent. There was & grow- ing impression that Mr. Lewis would recommend and his scale committee would grant a substantial aceeptance of the proposal and call in orders for a suspension of work September 1 if the operators consented. Operators Hostile But with the operators the gettie- ment basis suggested encountered al- most open hostility. Their consistent stand for arbitration of all outstand- ing. issues was almost completely neglected and there was a disposition | to consider that the proposals had not adequately measured the increase in the price of coal which would re- sult from the wage increase awarded. Governor Pinchot estimated this would amount to 60 cents a ton of Placed Old Automobile Chassis Across Rails Knowing 4 g Py i n:‘l"'fl.:f':;':..lr:f South Bound Train Was Due At That Time. themselves calculated that establish- | % ing a universal eight hour day would i {1 add almost five cents a ton to costs. Sergeant McCue andugPoliceman| Further they contend that all of the Stadler this morning c6Wucted an| increase would have to be added on|™Orning by Detective Sergeant Wil-|invesigation as the result of which the the domestic fuel the steam size pro- |!il@am P. McCue and Policeman John | boys were arrested. The lads admitted duction of anthracite being incapable |C- Stadler on a charge of attempting|that they had purchased the chassis| of bearing it in the market competi. |0 derail 3 passenger train on the of an old automobile from a man on| ton with BRtaminsed main line of the New York, New! Belden street and had placed it . Have Until Friday . Haven and Hartford railroad com-|across the tracks to “see some fun.” Both sides had until P‘rl«'iay noon to | Pany, between Newington and Berlin! They admitted they knew a train was file their answers. yesterday afternoon. | due south at this hour and therefore| An unsuccessful 11th hour attempt Policeman James Coyle of the New | had placed the chassis on the south- was made by the operators and |Haven road last night ®omplained at| bound track. One of the boys told | miners officials to fix a basis for the | police headquarters that he believed | Sergeant McCue that he wanted to| X B! employment of pump men, engineers |an effort had been made to derall|see the crash THE WEATHER | and maintenance men,who must be |the 5:40 o'clock local out of Newing- is was carried for a o kept at work in case of suspension to [ton. As the traln neared the Cremo|quarter of a mile around the bend|| Hartford, Aug. 30.—Forecast prevent the mines from flooding and | Brewing Co., plant the engineer uw:nenr the Cremo plant before the|| for New Britain and vicinity: caving in. Union officials demanded an |a large object loom up in front of | train was brought to a Standstill. It{| Fair without much change in eight hour day for all men so employ- [ him but was unabie to stop his train| was badly bent when removed by the | temperature tonight aed ¥ri- ed and while conceding that the oper- for reduce its speed greatly before the! crew. Northerly winds, object was struck and thrown ome| The bovs will be arraigned side. | duvenile dburt Saturday morning. Stories of St. Pittsburgh This Morning. Pittsburgh, Aug. 30.—Fifty nuns had narrow escapes from death or in- jury this morning when fire gutted the second and third stories of St. Mary’'s convent, a four story structure in North Canal street. One of the nuns discovered the flames and sound- ed a gong in the building. The oc- cupants, several of whom are ill and| had to be aided in escaping, took ref-| uge in nearby homes and later in a| community house. The cause of the fire, which caused $40,000 damage, | has not been determined. |of Newark, N. J.,, and the motive which prompted the killing. | The boy, spending a vacation with |his parents at a summer boarding !house here, early yesterday left on a fishing trip. When he did not return, touring [the family became alarmed. Search disclosed the boy's body behind an| The head had been | Six Nuns Injured When Taxi Turns Turtle at Oakville Early This lceives Word That There Great Trouble on Island. 1oty Waterbury, Aug. 30.—A car, driven by Joseph Votaka, Bridge- | port taxi driver, conveying six nuns old saw mill. en ronute to the Notre Dame convent, | beaten by a blunt weapon. A gag Watertown, overturned in front of|was tied over his mouth and his the Oakville Co. plant in Oa,kiwt'illr at|hands were bound behind his back. { = fan g 110 o'clock this mcrv}ing. resulting in The inquest threw no light on the province of Oriente. | being badly cut about the face and | ‘ ‘Death, We Want Death,” Is | ‘Washington, Aug. 30.—A message | to the Cuban legation today from | Foreign Minister Cespedes of Cuba) [said that ‘peace” prevailed in the island. L 1 “There is no foundation,” the mes- Peace is main- | g > & » tained throughout the republic.” ailiithe fotiiers) sawerely, AMAKEN < V| It became known that as a resuit | Emploves of the factory went to to) | assistance o e d e A > 2, | i P called |of erroneous reports published in | SEREERC B TG PR tory Thospital. |Cry of French Prisoners it is further undermopd. Wilk- Y | Shortly afterwards the Shamrock | Cuba the legation had sought and re- | o " " 55y "o ooupants was seriously |to submit the question to the league from the state department None of the GoRuRIrE URL Mcarned _ |of_nations. ¢ ol Casablanca, Morocco, Aug. 30.—| The Greek government is disposed meeting of his creditors to be held| e o 3 v .jand the Howard w i | ceived 4 here Friday afternoon. The govern-| ent into a ’““'"‘mrmm.x EMUrance that's & merican : e oot ‘ Crowder had made no(the n es wore not made public. 'Death, we want death. Sentence us|to express its profound sorrow over L e to death,” shouted two Krench sol-|the massacre and to indemnify the or's action confirmed reports that r.vu“‘fl&?h "‘[';ld :‘hdptaln Welch won out, | 5 i puttin oS < i | cently have become widespread to the g amrock in second place | gtitement and would make none re- | Arver betag treated at the factory hos- After being G diers, Podevin and Tourbes, today, |families of the Italian officials who | Ambassador cffect that the governor was financial- | —— - 2 garding support of the assembly of | Al 8 | Aait i | pital they continued on | along with a string of invectives they | were murdered on Greek territory. various public questions, | = = —— Three Men Killed i tude for life on charges of insubordi- to T D »! P T . t victs, across whose foreheads the|lute the Italian fleet and punish the 0 ver $ ger r | Dunbury, Aug. 30.—Robert W. Rus- {men were killed as the result of a| ain shrieked “a mort.” The court|ably dispatched yesterday. v st instantly k this | this village and East Wallingford to- : , Jiieg yus Riuioat inelaniy e Din] They were George Congdon of | they will be guillotined for ."striking [said Premier Gonatas bad informed The Associated Press. By n Auto ly embarrassed. (Continued on Thirtesnth Page.) |iateran patriots, which has been | Dl iney holding meetings in Cuba to discuss| ‘Watertown. hurled at the court-martial which had | just condemned them to penal servi-| Italy’'s Demands 12 Bo Arr ted For Tr . | - ! The Italian government's note s s i s nation. The judge o_rdered them led | Greece demanded that the Greeks pay ys (] ! ymg Danbury Yardmaster Hit Crash at Wallingford, Vt. away, but with frantic rage the con-|an indemnitey of 50,000,000 lire, sa~ By Tram, l“Stantly Killed | Wallingford, Vt., Aug. 30.— Three|words “out of luck” were tattooed, | Greeks responsible for the assassina- threw their hats in the face of Col.[tions. An answer was required withe . | sell, yardmaster of the New York, | collision between their automobile and | Julliard, the presiding officer, and|in 24 hours. The note was presume I New Haven und Hartfon 4 |a motor truck on the road between Point Near Old Cremo Brewery i e s | aors “vanron b Al T e R e L | forenoon when stepping out from be- |day. s <y - ¢ i o Was siva | Wallingford, John T.|a superior officer. the corgespondents that while Greece ween two cars he was struck by the g Mo., and |did not find all the Italian demands motor bus of the Litchfield branch. Congdon of Kansas City, L s — ‘ He was 49 vears of age and had been |James Derrick of Wallingford. Hm-dmg Memorial Stamps |acceptable she would agree to some l {of them and ask for modification of eapioyed by the New Haven Co. for AR 2 > | vaore than 35 years. On Sale at Marion, Friday |the others. The Athens government | : | signified its intention of replying to EIE O wW. A ‘ Washington, Aug. 30.—The first of |the note within the time lfmit “v“'.‘lhe special two cent stamps struck off | - {by the post office department am a| Albanian Statement | memorial to President Harding will| Rome, Aug. 30.—The Albanian les | chen traveling in Scezh-|be on sale tomorrow in Marion, O. |gation here issued a statement today | ed by bandits when travel e O g to|Mr. Harding's home town. Twenty | declaring that Gen. Tellini and the nce August 14, according 12 | million of the stamps have been print- | other Italian members of the Greco- & lsttér from Misnchow cecel led and they will be placed on sale Albanian boundary commission were P & |Sunday throughout the country at|killed by a band of Greeks while on . & | They will | Greek territory 12 miles from the such offices as are open. remain the official two cent stamp for | Albanian frontier. The statement | received by the legation e | several months. | which was Paris, Aug. 30.—The American Red { tram s government tol) . |Cross delegates to the international | o i el - - conference headed by Ernest P. Bick- WEI_ PLANE CAPTURED. | ‘The Greek, Italian and Albanfan % New York, Aug. 30.—A seaplane | missions left Janina on Monday in . ely today not to! H :&!n.',“m"?nrwn";.:,\ Geneva | trom the rum fleet was captured by separate automobiles for the Albanian | the coast guard cutter Seminole when;“‘"““"- The M“n"'; ““h‘:“ < o e e A 2 | it landed off the Jersey coast today.| first, followed by the Ita mission, +SEIZE CANADIAN ALE | Prohibition enforcement officials who | the Greek mission being last. - Rochester, N. Y., Aug. 30. — Five| pyrried out to meet the Seminole on “The [talian mission had arrived at hundred cases of Canadian ale and|ihe cutter Lexington beli that the | the outskirts of Delvoinaki, on Greek ! |beer landed by a yacht at Manitou 0n | source of the fine liquors which have | tercitory when it was stopped by an he shore of Lake Ontario, were geiz- | peen flooding Broadway of late has 5 ed today by federal agents. ]bccn discovered. his brother MISSIONARIES SLAIN The Associated F Shanghai, Aug. Whiteside and Rev G British missionaries of the church | missionary society, were shot and kill By * | 30.—Rev ¥ Twelve boys, whose ages run from nine to 17 years, were arrested this HIGH TIDES August 31 (Standard Time) At New Haven— w ovi 141 8 m; 130 P m || e At New London— 12:10 a. m.; 12:37 p. m. st x RED CROSS WITHDRAWS | >, | By The Associated Press ! day. in| | la e PRI (Continued on Tweltth Page) ‘|

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