New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 26, 1923, Page 1

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News of the World By Associated Press \STABLISHED 1870 NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, GRANTING AMERICA RIGHT TO SEARCH Government Accepts In Principle the Proposal That Vessels May be Stopped Within 12 Imperial Conference Is Ex- pected to Approve These Measures When They Are Submitted Next Week, The Associated " . i London, Oct. 26.—The Brit- igh government has accepted in principle the proposal of the American government that ves- sels in American waters be searched for contraband liquor within 12 miles of the American shore, The expert committee of the imperial conference which has been studying the question un- der the chairmanship of For- cign Secretary Curzon, has drawn up plans which are be- lieved to meet the essential points of the American request. The plans will be submitted next week to the full confer- ence, which is expected to ap- prove them. » Washington Not Surprised. By The Associated Press. Washington, Oct. 26.—The deci- sion of the Briish government to accept in principle Secretary Hughes' proposals for a 12 mile right of search in suppressing liquor smug- gling does not come as a complete surprise to Washington officials, al- “though the British foreign office in- dicated its disapproval of the pro- ject in the last communication on the subject to be made public. In that rejoinder the foreign of- fice disclosed that the question was to be laid before the imperial con- fe'®nce, a move which officlals here construed as a hopeful sign. Pending receipt of the plans shaped by the British committee, no officlal can say whether the essential points raised in Mr. Hughes' proposal had been met. Tor the sake of conven- fence the secretary’s plan was in- corporated into a draft treaty which covered not only the right of search but provisions which would release from existing regulations the stores of ship liquors brought into Ameri- can waters under seal. It is not entirely clear to officials here whether the stipulations of the American draft treaty have been sub- stantially accepted. Presumably the ugreement must be in treaty form and must be ratified by the senate before it can become effective. FOUND DEAD IN BED London Woman Who Lived . New Alone is Overcome By Gas During Night, Now London, Oct. 26.—Mrs. Eliza- beth Ileury, 59, was found asphyx- jated in her bed in a tenement in the vear of 46 Golden street this morning when other tenants in the building traced the odor of gas and got the agent of the property to cnter the apartment where Mrs, Fleury lived alone. A leaky gas jet was the cause of death. 'The deceased was in busi- ness of making cake for a local lunch- 1oom and is survived only by a daugh- tor, Mrs, Alice Gingras of this city. Germany Appeals for Aid For Rhineland Sufferers By The Assoclated Press. Berlin, Oct, 26.—Germany has is- sued an appeal to the charitable in- stitutions of the world, through its official representati hroad for re lef work in the Ruhr and land, where the 1ood situation gpeedily becoming worse, MORE SHIP' VIOLATIONS Washington, Oct, I8, violations in New York of the sn preme court's ship liquor ruling have been reported to the department of mstice and are being investigated with A view to possible seizure of the ves selg involved Officials here decline to disclose the registry of these ghips which are said to have been prompt- 1y opening up their liquor as soon as they cross th three mile limit on their® eastward voyages SHIP CAPTAIN ACCUSED rovidence, Oct Accused of ng permitted 31 aliens from the e Verde islands to escape in this rt frem the chooner Valkyrie ugust 1 and Captain Benjamin 4 of New Bedford, Mass, today was held by U. 8 Commissioner Henry . Hart for trial November £ He gave $2,000 bail for appearance Ay DEUTSCH-FISCHL SUIT DELAY The breach of promise sult of Mrs Anna .Deutsch against Joseph Fischl was not reached in superior court vesterday. It isexpectqd that it wii be assigned for a hearing next week SHIPS AT SEA FXSENATOR KELLOGG | " WILL SUGCEED HARVEY innesotan Selected as New Ambassador to Court of Saint James M | ' hington, Oct, 28, ~— Frank B. Kc'go.:(. !:‘mtr United States senator from Minnesota, has been selected for American ambassador to London. He will succeed George Harvey, who recently resigned, and the appoint ment' is expected to becoms effective In the near future. Mr. Kellogg, who was one of the Iittle coterie of personal friends whnv accompanied President Harding on| most of his trips away from Washing {ton and was a frequent guest at the FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1923, - TWENTY-EIGHT Dally Cireulation: 10,007 PRICE THREE CENTS verage a’nh Ending Oct, 20th PAGES, ENGLAND IN AGREEMENTON |STEINMETZ NOTABLE WIZARD ' FRANCE, BELGIUM AND ITALY AGREE - OF ELECTRICITY DROPS DEAD - 10 REPARATIONS MEETING TO FIND " _|World Loses One of Its Greatest Mathematicians and | Electrical Industry One of Its Shining Lights, Edison ys——Came to This Country a Penniless Youth, Schenectady, N. Y,, Oct, 26,— Charles Proteus Steinmetz, elec- trical wizard, died at his home here at 8:15 o'clock this morn i nfl'he cause of death was given as a physical breakdown due to a trip to the Pacific coast, from which he recently returned. The famous scientist died | | l suddenly while breakfast was| being prepared. Trip Was Too Much, The trip which Dr, Steinmetz had made to 1, and g than eit! adopted sult, he 1 his return on October 13, Advt, Dept,, Hartford, Conn, At the White House during the Harding ad: | 40 yig physiclans announced that u ministration, is a lawyer by profession. | yeut way advisable, although it was During the single term he served in|omonasized that his conditlon was Rhine- | is | Renewed | bars and «ellhlzl the senate he devoted considerable &t-| ot sarious, tention to forelgn affairs, wa lead- er of the “mild reservationists” in the Versallles treaty fight and served as & member of the foreign relations com- mittee, In the 1922 campalgn he was re- nominated for the senate by the re. publicans, but falled of reelection in the sweep of the farmer-labor party which sent Henrik Shipstead to the senate from Minnesota by a majority of more than 80,000 over his nearest opponent, Mr. Kellogg is 66 years old and 1s a native of Potsdam, N. Y. He studied law at Rochester, Minn., after his par- ents had removed to that state and was admitted to the bar in 1878 He was for three years city attorney of Rochester, served later as county at- torney, and then rose to national prominence as special counsel for the federal government in its anti-trust suits during the Taft administration. prosecuted were those against the Standard Oil company and the Union Pacific-Southern Pacific railroad mer- ger, Although Ambassador Harvey said the other day that he would leave the London post with his desk ‘“clean,” his successor now seems certain to find heavy burdens awaiting him, Of first importance among the negotia- | tions in which he will have a part stands the reparations difficulty. Another question pending between the United States and Great Britain is determination of the status of Tangier under the act of Algeciras. The United States recently communicated to London and other European capi- tals an outllne of its views, in which the flat statement was made that the open door policy must govern final fn- ternational conclusions as to Tangier, The London embassy, under the new ambassador, probably also will have to deal with some phases of the Lin- cheng bandit outrage settlement in China, NEWS FROM NORTH POLE McMillan's Ship, 11 Degrees Away From Goal, Wirelesses Below Zero Weather and Heavy Snow. Avalon, Santa Catalina Island, Cal., Oct. 26.—Direct radio communication with a ship only eleven degrees from the north pole was established here yesterday for a fow moments, accord- ing to Major Lawrence Mott of the! United States Ariny Signal corps, who | announced that he had exchanged wireless messages with the radio op- erator of the Donald B. MecMillan Polar expedition. | The McMillan exploration vessel, Bowdoln, he said, responding to his| signals, sent the following message: “Winter here with weather below zero and very heavy snow. 'The sun was up for a few minutes today for the last time. All well. We aro| eleven degrees from the North Pole, | “MceMILLAN." The Bowdoin was last reported in| the vicinity ot Etah, Greenland, about 1,000 miles above Baffin Bay, fn| ¥|m|gon,,1.~ 76, latitnde 81. ! Italy Reducest;n;bcr of | Her Saloons by One Half | Rome, Oct. 26 8hops selling al- joholic beverages are rediiced 50 per | | cent in number throughout Italy by a government decree published in 'lm’ | official gazette today, providing that | | there shall be only one such shop to every one thousand Inhabitants in- stead of to every 500 as formerly, Meriden Cafe Man Sent to f ! Jail, Also Is Fined $100 | New Haven, Oet 26.-—8sbastian Krystowski of Meriden was fined $100 | and sentenced to 15 days in jail by | Judge Simpson in the court of eom- | mon pleas today on a charge of sell ing liauor. - e e ‘ {New Haven and Middletown | Druggists Are Suspended ! Hartford, Oct. 26.—-The state board [ |of pharmacy today suspended tlhie | | druggist licenges of Lewis Peisner of Middletown, and Philip Cobunchi, of | | New Haven. Both have been convict. ed of fllegal sale of liquor, f NEWSPAPER RECORD 8. Louis, Oct. 26-—The 8t Louis Post-Dispatch today issued a 64-page rewspaper. It was not a special edi- | tion. It carried a front page an iouncement that it sets a new world | ceard in size for A regular week-day ane Among the suits of this character he! | machine Awoke in Cheerful Mood. He awoke today in a cheerful mood, expectant that he would soon be allowed the freedom of his house As preparations were being made to serve his breakfast, a sudden heart attack seized 'him and he died with- out warning. It was known. before Dr. Stein- metz's trip to the Pacific coast that his heart was weak, and his program was so arranged that brief rest periods might be allowed. Hundreds of iInvitations to deliver addresses wera recelved by him, but he was forced to decline most of them, Visited Many Places, Because it was his first trip to the Pacific coast, D¥. Steinmetz and his party included a wide territory and virtually all of the large cities of the Rocky mountains and the western slope. Accompanying him were his adopted son, J. L. R. Hayden, gen- eral electric engineer, and members of the Hayden family. Was “Lightning Producer." Of all the ’‘accomplishments for which he was noted, Dr. Steinmetz was hailed everywhere on his trip probably more for his invention of artificlal lightning than anything else. This achlevement, which gave him the popular title of *“Jove, the hurler of thunderbolts,” was the result of his studies of transient pheaomena one of his three most important inven- tions, according to his own estimate of his work. Doctors’ Statement The physicians issued the following statement: “Dr, Steinmetz died suddenly a few minutes after 8 o'clock this morning ing a chronic myocarditis of many years' standing, which is a weakening of the heart muscles." ‘When Dr. Steinmetz died, there was {no one with him, his nurse having left the room a few moments earlier. { One of his adopted grandsons, William | Hayden, entering the room with his breakfast, was the first to notice his condition, Soon after he awoke this morning, Dr. Steinmetz told his nurse that he was feeling fine. Last night he spent much time chatting with members of (Continued On Page Twenly-four). KILLED IN 75 FOOT PLUNGE Three People Death Auto Goes Over Bank Into Barge Canal Near Rochester, N, Y, t as Rochester, N. Y, Oct. 26.—Miss Ada Anderson, of Antrim, Pa., entified today as one of the victims a Th-foot automobile plunge into the barge canal near here last night. | Police are dragging the waters for }anolhc‘l' woman, belleved be Mrs. Clifford Ladd, a sister of Miss Ander- son, and an unidentified man. The ride came to an cnd when the left the road and plunged down the 75-foot embankment. Miss Anderson was huried out. Her body was found along the shore 300-feet from where the accldent occurred. The thres persons in the car wers en ! toute to a dance at Avon. Bathing a la Nature May Be Calif.'s Claim to Fame HSanta Barbara, Calif, Oet. 26.— Bathing a la nature on the ocean beach in the evenings and early morn | ing may become the custom in this { city, as 1t has beengdiscovered that Fthe old ordinance in force in Santa Barbara does not require that bath- ing suits be worn at night. The law provides that suits must be worn be- tween the hours of 6 o'clock in the morning and 8§ in the evening. It has been known for some time that bath- ing parties have been held sans guits, but it was not known that the retur: to ancient eustoms had legal backing RESCUED FROM FIRE, Hartford, Oct. 26.—Awakened at 3:30 this morning by smoke from a fire in the bakery of Max Reiner, Windsor streef, which filtered through the floor into the tenement they oc- cupied above the store, R. D. Reyn olds, colored, was forced to carry his sick wife to the street before either | kad any time to put on clothing. Four children sleeping in the attic were carried out by Mr. Reynolds’ brother YES WE — = = - Panama, Oct. 26.—Advices from Boeas Del Toro say that 350,000 banana trees were destroyed by the recent storm in Talamanca Valley. of acute lilation of the heart, follow-, Connecticut State Libra Vo STEINMETZ SEPARATISTS HAVE SUPPORT OF FRENCH PR — Wherever Established General Sentiment in Coblenz is “If | Only the Americans Were Here Again"—Berlin Must Take Definite Stand Soon, By 'The Associated Pras. Coblenz, Germany, Oct. 26.—The Rhineland republic's chances of sur- viving have been considerably en- hanced by the newly applied French policy of recognizing the de facto status of the separatists wherever they succeed in definitely installing themselves and alse giving military protection to their movements, on the ground that it Is necessary to the maintenance of publie order. 3t. is Jearned wuthoritatively thaf in each city of the French the Rhineland high commission has received instructions from M. Tirard, president of the crmmission, to pre- vent with French troops any disor- derly manifestati)us the population may attempt. Evidences of the appli- cation of this policy could be seen today both in the activities of the French troops around the public buildings occupied here by the sep- aratists last night and also in extracts from today's French official communique reporting yesterday's events. French Troops On Duty ‘When the inhabitants of Coblenz awoke this morning and learned that they had been presented with a new government overnight they also saw Irench troops guarding all the public buildings which had been oc- cupled during the night by the sep- aratists under the cover of the curfew law, and French cavalry patrols later galloped through the streets tering little crowds of townspeople whose attitude expressed hostility to the new government, - The scparatists’ provisional police force, although not yet supplied with uniforms, blossomed out in brand new green caps as a sign of author- ity, but the real pollcing was done by the French troops, the green- capped republicans merely looking on fand seeing how it was done, People Want Americans Only a few minor disorders had oceurred up (o mid-afternoon inelud- ing the tearing down of the Rhine- landers’ flag from the post offices by a group of loyalist youngsters, but 1t appeared that trenble might break out before nightfall. The general attitude of the popu lation toward the new “government” may be illustrated by the expression: | “If only the Americans were here again,” which fs heard everywhere wtresemann Must Act. The Associated Pross Berlin, Oct, 26.- Political close to the government believe that Chancellor Stresemann is confronted with the immediate necessity adopting a definite policy toward the Rhineland in view of the headway Ry (Continued on Page Twenty.Five) STEAMSHIP SCHEDULES Arrived-—Resolute, New York, Oect 26, from Hamburg RBeyern, New York, Oct. 26, Hamburg. Mauretania, New York, Oct 26, Southampton. Polonia, Danzig, Oct New York President Pierce, Shanghai, Oct San Franciasco. Sailed—Reina Maria Cristina, celona, Oet. 20, for New York. Presi dent Jefferson, Hong Kong, Oect Seattle. Derfflinger, Bremen, Oct New York. President Wilson, Kot Oct. 24, San Francisco, Empress of Asla, Hong Kong, Oct , Vancouver, Kroonland, Cristobal, Oct 25, Francigeo, ™ Bar- he [ OR—— THE WEATHER —r— Oct e ey I Hartford, tonight and cooler tonight; northwest winds, || —— occupied | area the French superior delegaté on | scat- | leaders| of | [ELOPERS BACK HOME FROM WEDDING TOUR \Ward, Hushand of Miss Mueller, Is Not Family Chauffeur | J. Everett Ward of Brooklyn, N. Y {and his bride, who was formerly Miss Ottilie Mueller of 415 Arch street, this city, have returned from their honey moon in the Adirondacks and Canada and are visiting hers. They were | married at Clifton Park, New York, |on October 18, following an elopment |from New York Mr. Ward, an upstanding young {man who might have posed for the collar advertisements, didn't know whether to ba angry or amused when |shown a copy of the “Herald” in | whieh It was sald that he was em- ployed as chauffeur by the Mueller family. He explained his presence at the wheel of the Mueller automobile by saying that his family owned a lodge adjoining the Mueller summer home at Friends Lake, Chestertown, N. Y., and that he drove Miss Mueller to this eity when her father, Charles Mueller, died recently, and also drove |the machine around town for the young woman who later became his bride, l)u- was not known in New Britain, it was family chauffeur. Mr., Ward is en- gaged in the frait packing business In New York and is a member of a prominent family In Brooklyn. & graduate of Adelphi academy, exclusive educational institution Brooklyn. Ward and Miss quietly away from New York on Wednesday, October 17, and were married at Clifton Park by Rev, M. W. Fuller of the Methodist church. Then they went on their honeymoon. Mr. Ward said today that he could not say where they would make their home for the present. 19 HURT IN WRECK Cinadian | an in Mueller siipped Fight Copches on Pacific | \ Overturn Near Savanne, On Badly Injured. Montreal, Oct. & Nineteen people were injured, four seriously, today, when eight coaches of the Canadian Pacific, Vancouver-Toronto express left the track through a broken rail near Savanne, Ont. The injured were |in the colonist cars on the train, ac- | cording to advices reaching the head office of the road here, Pullman passengers were not in- jured, according to the gdvices, but the injured passengers include several | harvesters returning to their homes in |the east. « All of the injured were Canadians. ;$38,000 IN BUILDING PERMITS { Seven Tenements, Three Garages and Inspector Gilchreest Today. Permits for building operations fig- gregating $38,000 and the erection of seven tenements, three garages and one store, were issued today at the office of Building In- spector John C. Gilchreest. Mario Cianci took a permit for a store and tenement at 135 West street, the building to be 25x33 and to cost | $4,000. 8, Symolon was granted n permit to build a two tenement house and a garage at 159 McClintock road at a cost of $10,000. The dwelling is to be 28x48 and the garage 20x20. A, I. Nelson will build two two-tene- ment houses at 261 and 167 Corbin avenue, the cost of which will be $24,000, The houses ar AUTO BREAKS BOY'S LEG Steve Borezak Taken To Hospital Af- tor Being Knocked Down on Main Street by O, B, Varsell Steve Borezak, age about 10 years, of 666 North Main is at the New Britain General hospital suffer ing with a broken leg as the result of having been struck by an automobile driven hy Os B. Varsell of Lake Boulevard on Main street this | morning According to eye witnesses | the boy was crossing the street with a small girl directly in the path of the machine H. T. Burr of 42 ported to Captaip George Kelly police headquarters this afternoon that whila driving south on Hartford |avenue at noon he struck a three |vear old girl named Margaret Juto skie. The girl was not badly hurt, he sald, and was taken to her homwe | Bank Robbers Make Away With $5,000 Loot in 111 Effingham, 111, Oct. 26— Two ban street ar and ran Franeis street re 8an | g445 today robbed the state bank of [trains; pirates are attacking ships. Tt and escaped with be ) and $6,000 commerce } tween $5,0 |Worcester Tech Rush Fatal to One Student Worcester, Mass., Oct. 26.—Tha parents of Milton Fream a Wetrcester technical freshman who was buried | vesterday today attributed his death to the recent flag rush hetween the | two lower classes at the institute, i GERMANY'S CAPACITY FOR PAYING Specify However, That it-Shall Take Form of Com- mittee of Experts Under Authority of Inter- allied Commission—Hughes . Note on Parley Demands Complete Cooperation or None The Assaciated Pres London, Oct, 26.—France, Belgium and Italy have accepted the British invitation for a reparation conference with the-un- | derstanding that it shall take the form of a committee of ex- perts under the authority of the present interallied reparation commission, o It is understood the British members will be the same as those who served last year on the bankers' committee, on which the United States was represented by J, P. Morgan. Berlin Probable Place It is thought that Berlin will be chosen as the seat of the conference, since the chief function of the committee will be to inquire into Germany’s financial assets. Selection of the French, Belgian and Italian personnel is ex- ¥y | pected to be completed shortly. The French Reply. Because of this and because | ssumed that he was the Mueller | He fs | Store in Applications Approved By | providing for | 4| at | Associated Press. Oct. 26-—The French gove ernment is willing that an interna- tional conference of experts, to ba named by the reparation commission, be called to consider the question of reparations in conformity with the Treaty of Versailles Nt Wants U, 8, Representation, The French government, it was said in official circles this morning, woyld be most happy if the govern- ment of the United States wounld name an expert to participate in such a confercnce Await I It was s that Premier of the Irench had informed 3 Hughes that he would accept an international commission of experts to determine Germany’'s capacity to pay, but that they must be: named by the reparation commission. The British government, it was added, has not vet accepted this condition. The Paris, y FEARS DISTURBANCE BREWING IN ORIENT Miss Cowlishaw Writes of Conditions in East and of Earthquakes zland’s Acceptance, vy announced in the name t, already of State Miss Irene C. Cowlishaw, a former resident of this clty and several years ago a teacher in the New Britain high school, was at the jetty at Shanghai when the first shipload of Japanese earthquake sufferers from Yokohama arrived, and in an interesting letter to her brother, Charity Superintend- ! ent William C. Cowlishaw, she tells of conditions in the Orient, expressing a fear that the strong anti-Jap feel- ing in China, piracy and banditry have brought about a condition that nay result in a recurrence of the Boxer { rebellion. Miss Cowlishaw is following her ! profession as a teacher in China. She lives at 164 Bubbling Well road, Shanghai. She has been in China sor veral ¥ going to the Orient er she left the faculty of the local and prior to that timc service in the mi-oflic Poineare, governme Secrets Poincare’s View Premier Poincare, in short, main- tains the attitude he has taken from the day he retired from the presi- !dency of the reparation commission, which ig that this body alone 18 quali- fied under the treaty of Versailles to take up sucl questions as the exam- ination of Germany's eapacity for pay- ment. There is no reason to suppose, eith- er, that the French premlier is ready to accept any revised estimate, even if it were made by the commission. It was declared by high officials of the foreign office this morning that he still held to the schedule of payments adopted in London in 1921, with a to- tal of 132,000,000,000 gold marks. Jusserand Thformed | Ambassador Jusserand, who is ex- pected to reach Washington next week had a long talk with the premier Wednesday evening when the whole subject was gone over, M. Poincare had already carefully weighed ali the consequences of the decision, having had Prime Minister Baldwin's proposal in hand since Sat- urday, with all of Sunday to think about it in ealm at his summer home in Sampigny. The premier was plac- ed in an extremely difficult situation. He was most reluctant to reject any proposition that had received the ap- [proval of the American government, but at the same time, it is understood, {he does not wish to throw the whole question into an international confer- [ence which may possibly deal with the |matter as though the treaty of Ver- sailles did not e ' ALLEGE FRAUD IN LAND DEAL Water [ ab high school, was in government Philippine Islands. She has offered her services to the Red Cross for relief work and if ac- cepted she will leave at once for Ja- pan. If not, she plans a tour of China after which she will sail for the States to spend the winter with her sister, Mrs, E. L. Walker, who is the wife of Dr. E. L. Walker of the Uni- | | versity of California. Excerpts from Miss | letter follow: “Under senarate cover I am send- ing you parts of the local® papers describing the terrible disaster in Japan. 1 understand the Associated | Press is sending much information | to the states but of course they can- | not cable some of the personal stories back. “The ca rophe is worse than | anyone can imagine. I am enclosing |a small article by Mr, Harris, a friend of mine who came in from Yokohama Saturday., It was at the Jetty Sat- urday noon when some of the refu- | gees came and ‘it was a pitiful sight | T cun tell you. Some of them were | wrapped up in bathrobes and kimonos |and they were bruised and black and blue and burned. The tales told me made me sick. 1 had several friends {who were killed. Jules Madeson, the great Danish artist was killed at | Kamakura, 1 had tea with him |about a month ago. He was such a {tine fellow. Mrs. George Komer met | terrible death you will read about | it in the paper. Her sister-in-law lives with me and she was almost |crazy. Mrs. Komer had been mar- {ried only two years, She was huried beneath the debris and her hus could seo her but could not extricate {her and he had to stand by and see her burned death and hear her calling | Cowlishaw's ury Residents Attach Land on Fast Street, Claiming Preference Was Shown Creditors. Alleging a commit the Domonic drone, that aud has been od on other creditors through of street land by irone to Giacchimo Cal- & Mascolo and Dauch have filed a claim on the property in the interests of Dan- {iel D. Caldrone, Michael Monteroso |and the Campagna Producing Co. in bankruptey The (deed 1 The claim the since Glacchimo Ca preferred ereditor. The real estate action consists of Lenox plot on transfer st [e to v orge, den't leave me ‘I have offered my services to {Red Cross and if they need me | reltef work 1 shall go to Japarn “Since the foreign refugees [to Shanghai there seems to be a |strong anti-Tapanese feeling. They |said the Japanese murdered foreign ers after the shock and took their jewelry away from them, and then Japs are blaming these things on poor Kor Mr. Harris told | that he saw Jap shoot an | Amerioan of the €. bank while | he was treing et to a place of Oklahoma C ot 26 W | safety with the cash box. They cut | ahoma City, Oct The house women's fingers and ears off before | today added to its impeachment biil dead in order to get the | against Governor Waiton, charging The Jap government is cen. | MM With abuse of pardon and parele all the news out of Japan at | #"thority, with having illegally issued I don't think they will ever | Aeficiency certificates when deficien appreciate all the other countries are | in funds did not exist, apd with doing for China is in such a | f2!ely reporting the expenditures of state of chahs T don't know what is | NS Primary campaien. The votes | going to happen. The different poli lwere 72.11, 79-9, 7712 |tical factions are fighting and the mili- | [tary chiefs are running things to suit | APPROVE PURCHASE |themselves. Bandits are attacking New York, Oct 26 -—Directors of the General Eleectric today ap proved a proposal to piurchase control |of the Canadian General Eleetric Co, | Directots of the Canadian company |already had approved the plan. the for ame was delivered 5 Waterbury attorneys transactic was a fraud was mada March 923 in tha 7 in the concerned te and t street | | | | | | | i the the me 1 ans I MORE l,‘lf‘"\:‘fl)l to n s they were |iewelry prosent them Co jen’t travel. If the foreign | powers don't take action soon it will not be safe for any of us white folks { There will be a repetition of the | Boxer rebellion | Vivid accounts of are contained in the “North China Daily News” a daily publication | printed in the English language and having a wide cireulation throughont safe to RRADSTREET'S REPORT. New York, Oct. 26 --Bradstreet's | weekly compilation of bank clearings shows an aggregate of $6,940,687,000, a decrease of 9.5 per cent from last vear. Outside of New York thete was #n increase of 1.2 per cent the catastrophe (Continued on Twenty-Fifth Page)

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