Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 8, 1919, Page 1

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a & & & ; _ Bulletin Service Flag VOLT LXI—NO. 34 | h (2 [m POPULATION 29,919 mitted as delegates to tne perr International or Conferenc is in process of formatic B Vas dec.ded upon at ting ¢ International L. mission held this morning ur Famestness and Simplicity Marked the Proceeding—Inde- x; pendent Socialists Heckled Chancellor Ebert During|ttion in the conicrenc His Opening Speech—Statement That “We Have Done |1} Forever With Princes and Nobles by the Grace of God’ Was Greeted ith Approval—28 Women Are Mem- bers of the Assembly—Berlin Policemen, * Assigned lo;\h‘,“ aiD Weimar, Kept the Huge Crowd Outside rrom et oos Ittt congrass fering With the Delegutes. WORK TENSION | as >T)CE DJ“"LSSED »n of the | pre mmission 1tion which and or- the | by ociety would lom so as to| ession of N m VE INDIANS HE PEYOTE BEAN be s present, nd effor approval revolution | months responsibility an ‘independent wrm- | corporati un- | between employes whole | ment, and d PARIS TO SELL FOODSTUFFS T TO THE CON m ion | b: r(lNG FOR RELEASE OF VORARLBERG PRISONERS || rénresenta- | v wvernment of | on ouncil| Berne, ng | tives iscuss- | Thu discus- | tion panied of | hoth wos of the PRUSSIANS ASK POLES TO EVACUATE POSEN | ). y—During Berlin “for | their par tree- | the ca "M\uvulr : ‘,‘,:‘]‘R:QU:sT& THAT T TH ion DIV. BE LA - | ference for t in their | of host 15 refus- WILSON FORCED TO AZANDON PROPOSED VISIT TO BELGIUM | COMD Paris ison has proposed d that e he in the event accept the b The pressurc of the AT , tles in Parls will be o0 great in the HOLIDAY BI in their | few . 2 8 _ 10| parture rohik 15t year. The | has pre prohibition is | forego his trip to Bruss bhearing. _ parts-of Belgium, wilt nt's du- de- he | been compelled INTER. LABOR CONFERENC Paris, Feb. 7—Women will t the presidency of “nead | Who of the Am The question of pro repri entatives of gover | men's RAILWAY WORKERS LEADER FAVORS FEDERAL CONTROL Washirgton, ~ Feb, kept und plan {ment, Glenn E. spokesman for or bor, today tol nmerce comm i of government control, au here; ¥ the by the present wi = in sufficient time for working ¢ S | tution, M. 3 ra tives ¢ and duction of rates w in amou at nt power to r ts of t build up vea rm firmly esta | pre e | all over Chi SUPPLIES OR A OCCUPA Washington, Feb. T 000,000 pound 632,000 pou | se0,00000 For € SURPLUS partmtn: its comm ton, Feb. requ e the T to h sed of Nev 1 o zuard troops, la , the division returr g milar telegram v Irew ROOSEVELT NATIONAL NORWICH, CONN., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1919 solabled Perzgranhs |} ¥ Macter Bulders . Threatgp 4 m- | Unless *7 of Unions - Gone on Strike With the Striking Carpenters Return 1 In Sy.pathy J to Wo k 1 H OF i"OLA‘quS TAHK c:ss CRY OT GUILTY! NOT TO BE REDUCED | W three Telegraph 78 92 W river to 12, Aloys Fe w American Casualties In Russia Tot 1409 | Up to Jan. 31 180 Had Been| Killed, Died of Wounds,| —229 Have Been Wound-| ed or Imured | ties_in the | includin o ef—uhol of Elcaae inded | casualty list of numbered Thit DoCcuU MENTS BEARING ON SENATE TO VOTE i AFPROPRIAT\ON E\LL I'ODAY nd New veh OBITUARY. Rev. William A. Fitzgerald. S to withd: born i in Norwalk Charles Taussig. Hartford, Feb, 69, constable, of Hartford et ltaly's national debt increased $12,500,000,000. | The new Bascule bridge of Thames River, kgl Baruch, purchased ton Exchange for $15, 0. amounts to 9,000,000 tox Yale's annual celebration of ary dictments at St. Louis ¢ teen men charging conspt The elections in Po of the constitueat in the list headed by {rewski and M. Dmowski ol per cent. of the total vot 1c bly re: mier I |of the republican En announced t | candidate for | the mext cof and time awarded to New York. 1 half for 5,000 fr ov [land for the week Builion_in Standard il Co. ice of Caddo oil L mills |, Banking and currency committce of | the Se bill to of Cur A m auto p: Detroit Twerit; Suu!n:rn P\m. association jor for §3, )0 feet « fro I Secretary Baker recu torney Genc on pra | Canal pr y War Trade Board announced | machinery and r oS navia and Holls Twelve enlisted m who ived stowaways were sent or court-martial a A Supreme Allied was organizec r ition of ¢ into enemy ¢ I dual ownc Governme for the watc Interstate ruled shipper nip Cong mmer. Cer Privates—Wi sam, Conn.; Geo \iass.: George Killingly, Conn. Worce 1 ngton, Conn.; J \nsonia, Conn.; Aaron Jaco London, G Swen K cester, Mass FRIDAY AFT_EREOON'S LIST ticnt names town PRICE TWO CENTS Condensed Teiegrams and, was opened. H. B. Baruch, brother of Bernard 1 seat on the Cot- @iz Britain's war less in shipping | umni . | university day wiil be held on Febru-| Sickness or Other Causes| | The federal grand jury returned in- | d for members | ining 3 Representati Fess of Ohio, chairman ongressional cam- | it he swould be An increase of five cents an kcur Totals reserve for the Bank of Eng- son ntitied the i to- Seartle today, had not | kiteher a Tacoma | unced they woul e result of difference between em- |ploves and empioyers at kFall River of concerns manufactur- s and ‘makers the “army William Jennings Bryan propose jan- | than 1 on strike, The only nks | noons off. reopening of 15 of the KES HAVE HALTED ALL IIDUSTRIES I SEATTLE ’-.ffsycr Hanson Has Decided to Ask the Federal Government to Assume Complete Charge if the Sympathetic Strike cf 35,000 Union Workers is Not Called Off by 8 A. M., Saturday—Copies of the First Newspaper Publish- ed Since the Strike Started Were Distributed by Soldiers The fed-|to work at once, and the reopening of by | one union barber shop. com- rike The Post Intelligencer, a morning newspaper, announced tonight that it would publish a four-page paper with- out advertisements, mainly to “quiet sturbing rumors that have unnecessary worry to the iding citizens of this City” The paper will be distributed free of Operations of the union ‘“soup " by which the strikers hav -d to feed their own membdrs d the public dependent upon restau- 1ts, showed a noticeable falling off in patron: » to . This was due to | the stri difficulty in_supplyins f00d to their own places and to a raise in price of meats to the strikers | themselves, which placed them on & | par with other patrons. |STREET CAR SERVICE TO BE | RESUMED IN TACOMA TODAY | Tacoma, Wash., Feb. 7.—Declaration by officials of the street carmen’s un- ion that 1 tively be resumed in Tacoma tomorrow morning was _the predominant feature of the general strike situation here to- ht Troops have been stationed at the shone and telegraph offices and at er points connected with govern= t operations. | on the streets today was the cause for commotion amone strikers. An L was immediately issued that any , | striker or |labor buying the Tribune, which was | compelled to suspend yesterday on ae- 7| count of the strike, would be fined §10. | MACHINISTS ON STRIKE ON THE PAC|F|C COAST San 00 machinis n of the shipyards here failed to report for worlk today, claiming the employ- ers would not grant them the wage specifiad in the wage schedule drawn the federal shipbuilding labor ard beca king Saturday after- In | boilermalk referendum_propo: 11 East D’l\' o strike Feb. cation in STS CONSIDER T"RRITORIAL QUEST!ONS c_discus- | 2dvices ) containing | aye termination of shall MAYOR OF STAMFORD SUED FOR NON-SUPPORT that | < from her ad- | WARSAW | BILL FOR PROMOTION OF | FOREIGNERS ARE CAUSING on, in s there, he said, threat- strikes in the metal in- throuchout the country as a c movement. eat strikes,” Representa- Johnson said, “were preceded by a series of riots on Sunday ter one of these the authorities in 2 arrested thirteen men, the S| array of Slovinskys and nam two An | wished t | other cans, of whom one said he alf of the eleven were Russians. “I am informed that the commis- | sioner of immigration at Seattle, rep- resenting the immig that part of the country, stated he | would take steps to deport these men. If our- government officials will pro- ed under the s enacted by con- gress and depo come here undertaking to tell how to run our sovernment and our affairs trouble from these they had to say about « | the United States and to learn that ino steps were proposed to be taken to deport them.” | PADEREWSKI DESIRES RETURN e OF PGLISH ARMY IN FRANCE ce Jan Paderew- committe ris to urge that the ailied power to Poland of the Polish te information received at 11 headquartaes from Pa- h0-Slav troops have in- the t the trocities in the in- vaded te ry, on tre ground that inhabitants, being civilians, have 1t to offer resistance to tne in- commi 1dd that Paderewski egate to the in Paris and that he join his colleagues from Poland, NEW CLAIMS BOARD OF WAR DEPARTMENT ime board to su- | nate the work of | ke i jepartment the settlement of claims res e termination of contr son of stice, and to authorize 1lting from VOCATION AL REH/-:EKLXTA TION Wa 7—T) sm ation today favor- ably a hill providing federal »r the promotion of vo- tion of persons dls- The minimum lowed a state s 50,900 zes an aps or the year 4 0.000 for the Tune 38, 1920, and $1,000,- {00 for each - r. ' The ! federal co duplicat- ed by the states receiving them, treet car service would posi- . appearance of the News Tribune ny member of orsanized the workers nd 4,000 members of the union are voting upon a rds unless STRIKES ON PACIFIC COAST —Representative speech , declared tnat northwest were should be de- inst whom no action government officials. and af- e names were a great class | of that refore. i sort. Out of the thirteen there were > were not an American. The eleven were aliens and more jon service im hose aliens who stonished to read the he Polish national acquiescence ound _that zecho-Slavs creation of ncies in cts by rea- house

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