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& = *'s &8 ullmn Service Flag VOL. LXI—NO. 35 POPULATION 29,919 NORWICH, CONN., <¥ONDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1919 EIGHT PAGES—56 COLS. PRICE TWO CENTS TR“]”TES 10 THE MEMORY SIgS“t?flg Ba??ske::tle“Tgogngggrrmsance MORE SEVERE CONDITIONS 10 Operaied Almost on 8 |ouisie Sotia il depse o L geml;;n e Every Phase of the Late Colonel’s Activities Were Touched sNo:-m:.l Basis. o e e e s Because of Germany’s Attitude Toward the Fulfilling of Her catle g : Upon at Memorial Services in New York—Charles E.|n American Smelting & efining Co. al early today tral committe to suspe “ipbuilders at Har- out on strike, { Feb. 9. — Plans for thahodiee for o Obligations, the Supreme War Council Has Decided the | reduced price of lead from 5 1-4 to 5 e manral | s ind marines now buried s : X 5 Hughes Sounded the Keynote When He Referred to|sympathetic strike ora Y miccpper miners of Butte are consid- il are bein worked out Renewal of the Armistice Wiil Contain More Drastic De- on all lines in Seattle unerated on rike because of a reductoin 18 Ny deps ot +nd the act- ds Th the Original Contained German ’ rallel in|aimost normal = U'work will le undertaken within the mancs an = Tiginal ontained — Germa Roosevelt's Life as One Which Has No Pai A in e R e en within the American History—15,0C0 Persons Joined in a Com-|wouid he on> hundre ; 40,000 francs. Silver before tomorrow . 4 dropped 683 ran, memorative Service in Kansas City, Mo.—A Roosevelt! iadications were, civy cicials =o'l Warrants were issue that the strike would be sroken oy ! ings gain a not only National Assembly Has Passed the First Reading of the as to the return of the todivs but al- 53 s by British au- |50 25 to_their fial disposition. Those Provisional Constitution. thorities for the arrest of leaders m\’"m”ii“ home either wil by sent for-|* = i i ot is- | the gradual drifting awav of unions|ipe e Jelfas ward for private intermen: or buried| Paris. Feb. 5-—(Ifavas). The full accord with the action of the Mass Meeting Was Held in Chicago—Memorial Exercis et e e BT ‘;‘)‘ajnez}‘s‘e‘f SR gton, or soma cther ma- [Preme war council is reported to have |soidiers, and thus the prospective 3 hi | strike. s ')Tu\ by the United . States | to | Uoual temeiery as the jeia‘ives may | reached ecision at yesterday’s |fight of the sovicts for the retention SETERE. o cEm e ot s been de-| ymerichan forces on the Rhine. (e meeting that it was necessa to im- {07 their authority undiminishes proni- conditions upon |ises to supp % York, Teb. 9.—New Yorkers of [covery of the Ter Commandments. To | moralized and will arteent today expre sed a|pose more vor 0|7 C pban capitalists formed $5,000000( The dep e 4 cly counter zctiv T -+ | Hanson® said today- meane al . s o {preference for bringin Nome all{Germany for the renewal of the to that of the constituent assembly. . and political belief | him right was right and ~rong Was ey petween decent laio a tiel| S E\P\“\? e BISIDY 1odier Te was pointed put that as a|miistice Germany’s atti- e iy | utes to (1h\- mem- EonE s 2 }“l:m Tl e e (SRLEDEITECh donntlion ano ang. ba | Theodore Roosevelt. The 2 {result of the cz ireful ma outhreak of the sikle to retur s at the | tude amon tiatinos are under way E] aaE ers to grant an initial | gium of $50,009,000. nent o {\nx: ~ob- INEW CONSTITUTION READ IN are also said to GERMAN NATIONAL ASSEMBLY for the control o! t restaurants being unabl x opened 1) secure sop Archdeacon Carnegie 1efeired to the upon every phase of his A Jei outbreak of the war and now the Brit- jes praising without sti ations. De s of hundreds |have been r £ the bod an to + . = 3 We Saturday T § (by The ot s . e ntrol 01 Weimar, Saturday, Feb. § (by Americanism. which they |ieh saw Belgium invaded and declared | A e wou1| Inspiration Consolidated Copper Co| Gt i . [duction of piunts foumerny nmmcoh’® 4. P) The German matio ey e alves o ide of the flicials declare. attle woulll 5, ced 6,500,000 f of copper 2 s formerly engaged In|yi " q o0 o : would stand forever in his- \!lcm.\fil\(‘s or the sidc of the ; ’m_.‘ AT | produ \, 00 1::;]m 2 l”m e 1he Pioducing war material. Iy today P.vsul t ¥ N obiect lesson fo the voun- | Colonel Roosevelt saw it, 0o, added i {in Jant compare 5 e L e el ‘e provisional constitution the speaker, und aroused’ the Ameri- December » chief |can people. The archdeacor After | Colonel Roosevelt's ser ireer, | the British aod the Ame: reviewed to brinz|men to cans toget "“"‘"'”f. i “He spent himséif, ne sacrifice | The collap em of permanen- ma maticn. Th are set ond and londay, to session was adjourned ecution of t 1 would be v on oi the cou of curing the e > nearest | tions #ié dov who g ‘Ionda' s se: Director of Railroads Hines formally named defendant in all was | epub! for w mer pr v of the men of the general sir lives for their country desire. IIO;'! of "1"‘ i > his lif2 as | e S minis be left to rest bably i devoted to b e B R that s aliotted task was com- |ment lacked Sippprciang, % s e not in favor of Sen where pernet ! | SOLDIERS COUNCILS! ed in drafting .o ere is an everlasting need,” he | Pleted. o dnd lution of Withdrawing | genition will he Be day, Feb. 7. {By The A inist cre i3 @ erlasting b nee. Z e congress of ers counciis ieter of the provisions of the men TR Rovserel W |GEN. WOOD'S,TRIBUTE oL v 13 y 4 3 = hed to varj ches of the rument. from which the embly pe nicipal governmer: may A ke riandllst. dimocacy:. He did TO THEODORE ROOSEVELT PR s RS erman arm¥ corps con the Toundations of society. PRISONERS N GERMANYlSiOus here today with th "At tho request of |@ resolution calling upon ng the Amoerican Red of the soldiers y:nted hunrds to ate with the 3 ion for feeding Russian pr! ided adopt the centr. to derive ng body The pro €rs the il ht Kansas City, Mo. Feb. 9.—Fifteea!for suspenai tlousand persons joining in the mel- |serted t not fody of the national anthem opened |y | commemorati services for Col. | ft us when we coull iil afford iLoosevelt at Memorial haill this B him. Against all that t ternoon. A great crowd was unable stroy our government, to gain admittance. sinister and cor Major powers as a lawmak r 1 reports health| ny at home col “the gener Ned its mission in she lidarity of labor” and furihe: the S in the Germany refuses to | a new 1 rood, rank pstimatec a committee of - for tl Atior eral Leonard Wood, rank- L f estimated are 100, - th ion tes of in- R e Jer- | counci 2 u sum- £ b sha 2 t eveey sort ing officer in the famous Rougl Rider |BELIEVE STRIKE WILL | Rl o Hsian i D e ‘;g,?,r“ e oipich shallloc he wea regiment of 9% and in the intervenmng N N 24 HOURS o bon poo .ty man: hands. e MRS Aneh Ln s of a quasi second Jass hatred and Sore ot s 2t devotedifrisnaiof (oL : ‘END W "HH‘ ;5 0‘ S 0,000. | There more than %00 prison| AS the Berlin body is wholly domi- the enfeebling i | Boosevelt delivered the ¢ le, Washr ). 9.—Conse logy tor record |tive labor ieader that when the g American steamer Fiirt with acargo | coal was totally in Germany w 1 by fire | 1,100,00 men of | h hield at one prizoners. The against the impra visfonaries, against the man he erted tor strike confe radical clements it is expect- | The provisional constitution vill lose no time i g ttes Titic o aid h'\lor\ Wwou will lose no time in makirg \;m at V(mw to anticipate o limit the SHRE Event J nera | is new believed te have been | Of the prerozative given ft, nt constitution. except- 1 to anarchy and Dolshevism.| The general s was replete |ence committee of union deleg men are| ced by de: and mien released |peciaily as the central council of tail. This is codore Roosevelt would hav> led {with reminiscences of ol. Rooseveit |@ssembled tomo mo; i 00,000, who receive .arely fifty |has already returned Eritorot t with his invincible common |as a soldier and resident and (wWould renew the fizht to Canadian railroads ask Government | per - of the amount of nutriment jthe nationzl .’x\-som'hv\-l. v 1 not be aitered ¢ his sound Americanism.” |ha declared thoi t hud | Sympathetic strike called of 000,000 for additiong tip- cep an unempiayed per- | s function: their This is obvi- ( M. Depew dascribed Ccl.!djed on h spint [finite time fixed for will de m\-n inereas good condition. | Illation o {m‘ government method of. as one of the greatest ard {would contir o hearis | They were ss 1 1o beiiey tion with those of | } T“P:rhnwd::o;;xyli{; Foyernment. i \m'," g the opposition avoked by the extraordinary men of uny poricd lof the people would come to an end with A el ! % doi ok lenenior R oehe v o blbiE bt Terry- | Coane bl S The waterfront from neutral capitals that! LLOYD GE_OPREELAD%‘;U‘?_SRES. |ingmen’s boards all over Germany are |sis was contemmistad 2 treet Y. M. C. the former !ident to make the world r decided tod: defeated at Arch 1E B X OUELES % % y York said: the Unt¥ied ands for and what {ti”s on an open s be based on aj London' Feb. = % h Lircoin. I have{a republican 1 of government |Union men ret work v the Allies toiCeorge who returned from Paris LAWRENCE TEXTILE 65 MEMBERS OF NATIONAL every president of the United |yeans,’ declared Mejor General Leon- | Meetings being position. s engaged early thi with considerable intimacy. ard Wood, 1n delivering an ad e them had all the qualities of |(he memorial services in honcr of Coi- ip except Mr. Roosevelt. Helonel Theodore Rooseveit today : : morning WORKER SUICIDES | ng the labor troubles in R0 ited Kingdom with the cabinet |, -0 nlonce e s to Ttaly to al- | ministers and board of b by the long: ans' union lvote on w e government ex 0,000 pesos to F ended a ance and |the U WOMAN’S PARTY ARRESTED ime Kap-| Washington, i e general commit- | memb. ade officials, ; St in YhT S I s % Is-1tee of riers in this|par e, Bkt M. ot men General Wood decl hafx tonger on the Sympathetic to purchase Ar-|Many meetings of railway workers | iy 2 e e Beveridge, former senator |velt's “broad vision, Know Several of the tneater itk |fyere In progress during the day for|yndersanding burned President Wilson in effig ¢ na, in an addre: Brook- lof world affairs and souand judgme red to n today »cmmerre Committee ap-!the discussion of labor qies from | the strikers £ ils ES T Mr. Roosevelt chi credit|\ere never more needed tnan today.” {€0ing so at the recuest of emnloy by. ari engineers | ihe national standpoint. - of constructing a| Immediately upon the veturn of Ar- *twween the Grea thur Henderson from the contineat a n River. jcint meeting will be an and British boot and shoe hor party ached an agreement that|t, or making America the decisive fac-| “It was or in the war, all the nations admit, Aiarica | irned th tide, then to Theodore clt more than any other sing! front of against impossible neutral in the face o for him to peltiat the Th wrong. e be- €t an opportunit lieved in a free press and free speech [ quitling the 1d understood that a democracy re Althou nting criticism, smothering he jannounce 1 Federation to take a final vote n on vote with members usideration A press an_erroneou st eld of the 1a-|Charies G. Wood, a me ard trades unior parliamen- | board had cffered the se as a protest defeat of the resolution in the senate al thousand persor but there uman to_continue Dele ! ; i c o _reac commitice and other interested e b e e s ine et ing, is due the victory of|press and hampering publ: is «|sympathetic strike w should admot American shoes | hodies to discuss the entive situation. | dviesnts said it & Whien Stakenfos police/ ssations ne eedom said. democracy in danger if not a democra. |Was learned from del same vroportion America ad- | RE Ve e e romen, who represented sixteen The memor serviee of the Ameri- |cy dying. jmeeting that a heated ~ from Britain. i Sahtorers: | state refy ed to furnish bond for 1 society held at Prin- | “Alons’ the fighting line 4in . |indulged in by mer Rickert, chairman of the LAUDER DELIVERED Sl o0 p | their Telease and were placed in t un eloguent culogy of [and Flanders, here' were more® in. |it Wise tocall.off miftee of Chicago, told ¢ EULOGY ON ROOSEVELT | My. Wood suggested jjcane loktoetention b ke watt frial kto: peaiden dstivered by jquiries concerning Col. Rontivells {00t Untl aiter mor tion Committes that it ¢)oeiang, Ohio, Feb, 0—The mem- | 656 g0 sted {morror. TR e m T. Manni ractor. opinion, his views, his probabl L L on BT s s ™ hoit lory of Theodore 'Roosevelt was hon- | tlement, but dic not teuns ey e bresident was ices were every lof action than concerning ali outside 2 ¥ foncrs would HIShiored by thousands of Clevelanders aliWage offer from xan ey o ! gt and was irch in the city. i Americans corabined,” s shouted | reduction. i | memorial serrices: held this atteradon | ers’ delegates aer g et DR o It wasScarvied(fom Rev. Dr. Malcolm James M-Tcod of | General Wood declared that Roose- |action to end the e i and evening. Several (housand people | the suggestion. i o party headquarters by marchers ke Colleglate Church of St 10138 | veit realized that leaguss of raticns (Keneral sivike comm 2d | CHARGED WITH o A | i , which Mr, Roogevelt beonged | em- {could only be enduring when they & ¥ y of in‘erest and I community of |Ward Director Gener able to zain almittanc to the tor ¥ ternoon services at which John Me- on the char. Cormack opened the programme by | i w cession of rly 100 wome of Leing an lighted in a caldron k and as two w sized the former president's erance, his manhood, his trie tes said tha ised on commun x nd above the murder of Biagg g valk men held 4 singinz The Star Spangled Banner, |S , last Friday mornin he po- 8y over the blaze otners made anism 1 his record for re-imorals and ideals He never |of the United States and Harry Lauder delivered an eulogy al other to the r-rmw!‘ The poiiea ilieved or for a moment tolerared the | on was ex {on Roosevel hefore tervened and wholesale arrests s who paid tr o idea that we should cnter into and greatness were Ehiu {league which would derp us of th followed. Most of the women protest- ! ed and continued to harangue the presided meetin i1ight of free action wiihin our owr S| 1941 NAMES IN FIVE f foday: pectators until they were forced into association; Captain I sphere of nfluence pat us in a| | ARMY CASUALTY LISTS!| ondency over t t ol w: ormer collector position of unpreparedness te do what | 1 R r-| Washington, Feb. following | ad brown him ou o | In the proc h left suffrage W. Anderson, for- |we believed to be right, or in a con. | e FiniETe ST caua e e Srpir v the com-| sl S | re only twd state dei- of internal revente, who |dition which would render us unaile | to have reinstaic e manding general of the A n Ex- MEETING OF POLAND'S H. O. Havemeyer of $ in alf '; " negroe ‘x‘,\ );vv\ to defend our own interests in ease | jobs men why 1 | CONsTluLYIONAL ASSEMBLY | N 1‘\‘ \&xk P I urran of Wilkes- |of need.’ s = died from| oo Tper e A belh Mc- Larre, I personalfriend of the for- He belleved in avoiding ent 26TH DIVISION 1S 1| wounds ,15; died from accident N SRR s oS (I € esit Ra ephen jaliiances, but ized that Amer TO DEBARK AT & { other 5; liel of | constitutional assembly today i P e (Einxt Pl ot "“‘.“'f‘ Chiladt Foston, F: 26 s “l:‘:(‘-fifo‘ix Gl { Marius institute the work « 2 a0 08 Siers s % s port debarkatiot t By 0 e rst ! nd < 5 it i SocCt F MEETING IN CHICAGO [u0 man who refuses when the r 8 e e etion I first gathering, the embly will SOCIETY OF NATIONS Feb. 9.—Chicago paid trib- | Pit of his ability 4 g sed to} The second section containd the | quickly down to business, wudopt 9—(By t A P) iy i Pt or peace, i3 fit to be a citizen Cerit voung | following names B 4 ot e & bl g e0dote | «Theadore Roosevelt was th: most i Wounded een for the gr re T held at the ApAttoriiy, Tas¢ Meet: |inepiring and hence the most domi- | < epted | 264; wounded lec ! . at the Auditorium. Raymoid |nant figure fn American life since | Lngland i elect and the principal ¥ s s (e SIRCCH gree Nations yesterday Abraham Lincoln. i jovernor Frank O, he could malk: “We must pick up the tarch where | A t Friday ha had told Ma e of | Kansas | ‘whe eulocized | Wtal to our country and to mankind." | o tha the ma N G 1l the pos elt statesman: FE teverythi pessible to expec 2 Torr ton, Cecan.; ( . Dynne of | SERVICES IN CAMPS AT home coming of the N Schepp, Bridgeport, Conn. seveli, the HOME AND NVERSEAS | 'T0% Addams of Wounded Slightly. Rnosevelt, the James A. Cavanaugh, | , Conn —Luigi Orsi, Winsted, hingon, Feb. 9.— i Han CRpIb R o COST RICA THREATENS s exercises for the former prosident were NIACARAGUAN FRONTIER Cemap held in vario'g: cities over the coun-| Managua, Nicaragua, Tel FRESIDENT ATTENDS A try and in Americ home | semi-officially reported that [1re ants drawn 10 rivates—Mar Jast Green- ROOSEVELT SERVICE [and oversers. Congress met in f]m]r.v}-‘\. resident of C a been S e ria. Pell. Prestad Filson session. Virtually all memters of the|threate LY VN 1ton, Conn.; Edward H. Hu 3 ‘l’f -y g \‘q","rd“’} enate and house attended the ses-|Wwith for co *|Uorwalk, "conn.: steve service in honor of Then- | 8100 Vice President guan exiles. 1t Speaker Clark pre GREEKS PROT:ST ITALI AN Ri v | Hazerdville, Conn.; Charles elt at the Am M cricen : : | | ers | OCCUPATION OF EPIRUS |l ccar to o Dé Berr thi Aoy > them Nicaragua and that N -tmms;s\_i—: SALLOON PICKED = SUMDAY'S LIST | A RS - 7 trom| 1o o o e ‘p:nlw'\?‘mr:(‘ und 3 UP OFF GEORGES BANK| 1o cummary of army casualties to | various < in northern Epiras who | premic The memo: eermon was preached »m'{;mmg n'rlm:\n ’_“,r o Tt S 9 z naval dirig: s officially reported are ol- { are tempora here have m\xl-‘ renou a a8 T Qe ‘ioodric} i * ai : rly a | Prem zelos and 1o ) id be i o em: ¥ e o By, W. Goodrich. lygy ot the diplomatic General | government a3 no r xivia U : A e d to Prer relos and 10 M. and he wi : . o o iste; “oF americal | Mareh chief of staff, and otber. asmy |and is only Jesirous the | in action (including 381 panos, from northern |strength outs own o borh commission, and Arthnr Ral- | vy omcens W o M";”‘n gl et s 5 e . the fishi; Bimah N $ Sraglh protest against the lin war ti Stne . the British foreign soore ormer President Taf: occupied a|by the goveinmer o oD [ Diediat yue It et T EAMERS nded a_similar memorial servic at|prominent seat in the centor aisle and |partment at Wash Charles Col-|nfeq of d B 15,043 against | NINE GERMAN STEAMERS he Ameriohn Lhburch .of the Holgasapplauded as he was sscorted into e Henond Rad abelt mon | ik om t and l»lhor» Italian _military | ARE TO TRANSPORT FOOD 4 e e e Y |the chamber. |CHAIN OF RADIO STATIONS e Jth mas bar aboard his |yt Cau ! Aprfest Srilchy : - ) ALY an Senator Lodge's addre:s was inter- ALONG ATLANT! Al S S LG > = IS | Missing N , em- hed the sermon. dupted occacionally by applause ana | ANTIC COAST | snip, Boston. Feh. 9.--The a ch mately 30 miles ag |lantic coast was annou headquarters of the I . trict here today. death because | that by prisor © 11,183 | bodies a_demand that their n: re on be joined wit ue of northern to Leonida Bi Ttalian _soc § . despatch tha t times by quiet laughter as he re uf ROOSEVELT SERVICE INM lated M}e(,dm{-s of Cnl. Roosev life. Marked applause sreeted WESTMINISTER ABBEY | i .n¢ that of the nations of the Feb. 9.-—A representative earth Germany alone did not mourn of Americans and English|ihe former's presiden tminister Ahbe; Total to date Today's summery | Died from accident uses ind escaped made several uns locate it Some time o compos: Hamb 1 rfim"s him o the| el Died from acroplane aceid for the ideals represented \ this after- | g S hite toio % this h andoned in the belief [ DI° 2 = noon to pay tribute to the late Theo- Joce e it e ha L Anisr Teascls ne 1a0ioF 2y Off the | that the AT e e D Ol‘lmgfpddlw\rm‘\ o8 SRR AL Ra T izatc SHIEh for the Atet time.tn blstory dloc S asily by communicating with. sharn | 415,00 s R (LLT|CHINA-JAPAN SHANTUNG a0 placed ~vensong in the Ahbey. Am. |ROOSEVELT SERVICES | recardless : con- | ——— ———— e onl C“,’,‘r':?“m‘”‘,n";’,‘,“e Seouet RAILWAY AGREEMENT | have hassador and Mrs. Davis, {he staff of AT ARMY HEADQUARTERS Alons the : 4 | DOZEN SOLDIERS INJURED IN the American embassy. Robert P.| Coblenz, Feb. | A TRA!N WRECK IN FRANCE | nner, the consul zenera! and his|Memorial serv By *The A b, IO Athin the 1 s hor ormasdnc | stations are already in and Private William| Peking, Feb. 9.—China at the reque el street, reported!Of Japan has consented to the publ st i - 4 e > i ermined) pre- | cation of the Shantung railway agree- | taff. Vice Almiral Sims, many navy |Roosevelt were held tods Par S ~domen 2 ment signed last September but mnot|at and ‘army officers, and the represen- |cut the American army of occupa REPUBLICAI® COUNCIL fiEekdis cedoilohtiotathen: ratified, under which Japan advanced T = tives of American sociaties were| At army headquart the c FORMED iN FORTUGAL' S l‘ loose o ar-ox’i\‘v-SATURDAY AFTERNOONS LISTS | twent for the purchase of | BOY SCOUTS RECEIVING resent. Prince Arthur cf Connaught |was the Church of ths i 'eb. §— Premier 7 2| SRO0D robis el TR aes] The first section of the Saturday ! construction on exter | GCVERNMENT ME represented King George and Earl|p here formerly the | men were izken to a|afternoon list show: { Kiao Chow r: The T S R R T Howe represented Dowager Qucen Al-imembers of the German royal family 1 oy Died' from accident and other caus- | v s 3 t exardria, to whem he is lord cham- ) expended in the unsuccessful | 1 worshipped when temporarily residinz operations against the South berlain. there. Chaplains IEsterbrooke and America are receiv lway management |€S. 11; dicd of disease 43; wounded |milifary constituted a3 follows: The sermon was delivered by Arch- in the debris of |Severely 99: total 155. .| China rebel | orothe s ok Jefferies were in charge. Maria Silv.a lonis Antevil tunnel, in| The Connecticut names. in this ! China, it is decls their uid fu win deacon Carnegie, who said that the e Sk ! democrats i Carv hich 1tly hinded oved |include the following: Wounded se- ! circles, consented to the p S ribute shown here “at the shrine of | MEMORIAL EXERCISES Vasca V . DN Carie into Aames, a|Yerely, Privates George L. Vorn dam,the hope that what is considered | g R0 Bere o \ the Anglo taxon Race’ proved the | HELD IN WASHINGTON | Navier Esteves clockwork e founa | Bridgeport; Isaco Gravo, New H | Japan’s acceptance of the principle of | 4¢02 I aliead il high place dor~ Rooseve ! . O ckwor c ma | Brideepo % : wards to Seots pl that Theodors Roosevelt g 3 national renabli the ‘he state-| The second section of this jmaking — put b A - held in the hearts of th» Fritish peo-| Washington, Teb, 9.—Besides the |ros and Teixoira Que an explanation | Shows: i would he generall el S o ple service at the capitol, memorial exer- { Wounded degree undetermined | , 13935° A T | s P Aoy o |GENERAL STRIKE IN t = S |276: wounded slightly 413; total 683. |pSSIAN FACTIONS ARS |fa5he ,I personality, vital and strone in work ay a e -Amel nion | % T . e : IR = h seen given Taid the arcsieacon. “He|building and at a theatre. Several | TACOMA CALLED OFF |PRESIDENT WILSON SPENT e G rect Dut i | ! *m hearted fr nl and a fair|hundred wounded soidicrs from the| Tacoma. Wash., Feb. 5. Tk He was a good sportsman | Walter Reed hospital heard Jehn Bar- |strike in Tacoma was offici ly fearless and the soul of hon-|rett, director general of the Pan-|off this afternoon by the gener: TC CONFER AT MARMORA ! — — Paris, Feb. 9.—Hav The Uk |BRICKLAYERS IN & lvanian government h CITIES ORDERED TO STRIKE B Ted | strike include: Wounded degree A QUIET SUNDAY |ined, Private Charles (By The A ") Pres- | Bridgeport; wounded _slightly, Paris, Feb. « nuounee i son spent a quiet Sunday por . Ryan, Waterbury in |that it is willing to nccent the inv ¥ eb. 9.—irike order He had all these qualit’es, which | American union, extol the life and vir- | commitiee, cifective § a. m. tomorrow. o el o e e e e e the to the proposec S © Anglo-Saxon ever appreciates and|tues of the former president, while | s el S ] i son in the morn- | Antonio Podzukas, Waterbury; Chas.{Marmora conferegsze of Russian engineers in 112 admired.” Senator Poindexter of Washington de- | ing; after luncheon he took a long au- | Schmidlin, Bridgeport; William J. St.|tions, according to the Temn “Colonel Roosevelt,” #nid the arch- |livered the oration at the theatre. and exemplar of work and action. He |tomobile ride in the air | Arnauld,( Wallingford. considers the date fix: deacon, ‘had case his Inilnerce always| “The great keynote of Theodore | put his talents to work and the result |and later received W : arpe, P ST gonte suas Salise },mr t hand. The ; T on the side of moral right. Some|Roosevelt's life and success was ser- |{was a great harvest of henefits for his |(he American amba . who has| Unionville—rs. E. V. Sage cole- [expresses a preference for hohlns cre tonight one had sald, the spealer remarked.|vice” said Senator Poindexter. “He|time and generation and for those to|just returned to Paris from the United | brated her ninety-first birthday this |conference at Paris instead of on son, presid that gredtest feat was the redis- eerved mankind. He was.a teacher ' come. States. 1 week. Princes Islands. hood of ( . PIRPREIRHEE WLx R DA 15