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AT ] Norwich %= ’ . %!.fiLPmJUhe‘Em VOL. LXI—NO. 38 POPULATION 29,919 NORWICH, CONW., - THURSDAY, 13, 1919 TENPAGI‘B—W COLS. PRICE TWO CENTS ,—————————————'—'—'—‘—“——fie by the British government. Who They Are and Why for Home. Horace G. Allen, transit commis- W 9 sioner of Boston from 1896 to 108, Not” Workin Names of Americans Suspected Given by Rev. G. A. Simons| . 0 e | @ed at his residence in the Lrighcon 82 = : Feb, 12—Tne Leagus of e niat (‘dhlga,t?. Feb. 12—The police today . . . - | tions mmis: , says e Temps, % o raide he once busy general head- to the Senate Committee Investigating Lawless Agita-| Uope Sommission, avs the Memne| Twenty-three hundred returned ¥ ral hea aidealitho fonce b Provision for a Military Force of 536,000 Officers and Rhode Island soldiers and sailors were e e . W. and arrested . . ° Thi ik | the cauncil of the powers the definite | cirertai . “ twenty-nine idlers “t tion in the United States—In Describing the Bolshevik ibe cauncil of the powers the def e | cotertained yesterday by the weleome 0 see who they EESbE e T who Men, General Antagonism Developed Against a Stand- s & home committee. W were not working,” Regime in Russia, Mr. Simons Stated That Most of the | Wilsows departure, - ilson . A wrecking ebmpany. itavted s thail anofcer Government agents ing Army in Excess of 175,000 Men z i “In its present form,” continuecs the | work of salvaging the rnment- | Professed no i st in the raid, al- Leaders Are Jews, Many of Them From the East Side|raver. “the project anvolves ihe ha|owned cargo of the Britisa steamer | though the police said the arrests were tions, mem! o league, mak- [Foredpas® SF the, Brithh steamer | made with the knowledge of ihe sove of New York—Not More Than One-fifth of the Whole of & @ detinite engagement to take ub | chce shoal in Vineyard Sownd. ernment. The W. headquarters 5 arms for the maintenance of their| The New Hampshire house of rep-|has seen little activity since William Russia is Represented in the Bolshevik Movement. territories, and the safeguarding o 5 5 € resentatives by a vote of 173 to 14¢, | D. Haywood, the head of thesorganiza- international treaties. 1t would seem |lijed 1 During Debate on the Annual Army Appropriation Bill, With Washington, Fsb, 12.—General op-{ Much of the discussiy1 was on to n standing urm ex- | over to the nutional guard Represen- s of 175,0(0 men as auteorized -in|tative McKenzie said =iat whatever onal defense act three vears|the future military pol voicad sn the hou dur- | the national zuard shou given 2 a bill to legalize the sale of | ion, and nearly a hundred others were | ing debate on the al army ap-|and his declacation was v Washington, Fel ‘_'Thc Bolshe- | inquired if it were not trus that Wil- 'Mtvl‘“?fi{l","f;?“l"!‘g“?fi\"“}’“ discard- | hoer and light wines. convicted of conspiracy and sent to|propri LAl with provision for |plauded. Other membe: og R 4 described | iams came fo this country as a rep- |ed whereby the league hecomes a su-| Oyt of a total of more than 103,990 | Leavenworth prison last fall PPt 8 el ta k) resentative of Lenine and Trotzky and e = vOh Ol blenes onsilic a military for men during ports of an alleged | tion. zainst the life of Pr v the Rev. fore ihe ting jawles of 535400 officers and |retention of the guard a 4 : period of derobiliza-|tion praised the work of the A. Simons in tes- visions during the war. B ; applications for naturalization in the| The activity of the police came after |; of close mutual obligalismis |1 ¢t vear, only 116 cases are pending | Publication of r shing guarantees for the inde- |jportine o ¥ o0 o conspiracy pendence of each nation more efficient b : - 4s to organize a Russian informa- senate committee | tjion bureau in this country for the itation in the | Russian government. The witness . . Al irman Dent, of the miiitar Rer ntative London, of New York, e & Four transports and a cruiser with|dent Wilson and W. G. McAdoo, for- | mitiee, was «uestioned o urged repeal of the espionage law, de- tes, as a minority military | sajd he understood Williams was to nefoidgeatoms fon alianc jmore than 10,000 troops aboard have|mer secretary of the treasury, for|the futur ictatorship supported by terrorism.|do that work 3 my with several members | ¢ ailed from Fra are due at|which Pietro I Simons, who for :nany year: e socialist hal been umn. PROGRAM ADOPTED BY b y d nh ask if the forc has | Chairman Overman interrupted to sailed_fro ranc ¢ e RO Elerres v N provicéd in the justly impriscned by its application te | New York and New News be- | Cle yesterda erre, an .| was to be permarent army | throttle free speech and free assem- een head of the Methodist Episcopal | inquire: EASTERN SHIPWORKERS |tween February 16 and February 20. | .. released last October from Le: w“-|~1rm~u ne chaTman blage. h Russii, said most of the| “How about Raymond Robins?’ He!| philadelphia, Pa, Feb. 12.—Reprc-| Canned soups have been added to|Worth penitentiary, had expected shevik leaders were Jews, many |referred to the head of the Amer sentatives of the tepublican T.eader na criticised the delay in_casualtias repcrts, say.s alibongh having jden fiom giving ’ relatives un‘css the War had previo announc- nipworker as not and thers from both s presentative 1lirois, 1epui- tee favored ion in the > day Trom | the regular gar \d field ration of | Obtain financial aid'in Chi rom the I Maine to the Great iakes he|the army in France in order to dis- t l‘:‘u‘!m wilt presnt St 1',“‘1 Henr|bote fithollire snlis supplys fhere |\TO RENDER GERMANY UNABLE can of them | Marshall at i conference in Washin ind in army depots at home. TO RESUME HOSTILITIES ton Friday a program upon which, it| Christine Antonelli, 8 years old, was!| pyyis Feb 1 said, organized labor has agreed as|run down yesterds ¢ an automobile | c.ommunication >~ | far as it relates to the shipbuilding driven by Frank J. O'Reilly in Bridge- | meeting of the Suprem 1917, | industry. This program is embodied | port and probably fatally injured. | this morning, the Havas tbles for thelin resolutions adopted today at a con-| Two haurs after swallowing three | tands that the coun propaganda tion here of the Shipbuildin dozen pills, Aron 17 months , first o place Germany tion of the Atlantic Coast, old son of Mrs. Augusta Veterichik of | st Side of New York and | Red Cross mission in Russia. aside large sums He was supposed by the Bolshe- spread of their doctrine in all | viki to be the best Amer he countries of the world. The 1. W.1all' replied Dr. Simon: movement in this country, which| Major Humes read into the record committee included in its gen- text of an official order of the Te- was said by Dr. Simon e government dated Dec. be identical with the Bolshevis ppropriating 2,000,600 spread of Dolshevik toroughout the Dr. Simons 1 1 the militar: smaller army. Fousa continued h no offi al by Representative Hersey republican that regular army cers were unduly favired in France demot of many levik propaganda apparently carried on in the United State in almost from s o ¢ tuation where it would be onal guard ~ommanders, 1 | Lakes and Gulf attended by T | Bridgepo >d at St. Vineent's hos-| (o recommence hostilities by Renrcsentative nops said, by means of speak- |the beginning of the Bolshevik regime | gutes representing various allied | bital, Bridgeport. pointed out that the enemy countries it in praiss ¢f General and articles in news- movement was lcd and agitated | erafts and trades in indust ¥ Anyi disscaition.of, the . ailrontl] e i s ey, colntries ) L declared “the Un'ted States rs and magazines. He declared postate Jew, t of whom bore| The conference, to be | problem that would result in lowering | ting them to equip very rapidly an|P moonits | w only country in the war to und Abert Rhys Wil- [German names originally, but who | by members of the house : Al would threaten national [y et TeaEt 3000000 man s i0a of arniy head who stood the test s in writers, had been |futer changed these Ru n names. | has heen arr he labor s ! i . B Garretson, presid ' t 1 Miliated with the Bolshevik | He pri ted a list of Bolshevik lead- ernment in Russia, and that Wil- |ers with their Russi had come to this country with A their orj The council decided 1o Havas, “to mak that w ¥ condly acco: £]of the Germany 1id tonight ahout unit ction, discipline, the rights of ard employes of Railway Conducto Charges of irregular ~ practices in| nst Pres- of hool ided sat Pershi th was the first the German umed names | ) name: decla ¥ . i firgeguls e < i e conquerors ,wrl‘ Kiig Geo e beaten and that the mes. | | 2d to lend every ef-|connection with the election of Tru- i Tt valot S CoulTeh: Sasroan iantity of Bolshevik publications. | Scores of New York E Side Yid- | fort to carry out the big shipbui {man H. Newbery as. United States|are seeking to impos 2 1e witness said publishers of Bolshe- h went to Petrcgrad_shor after | program and to s ze the industry | t are under investigation!' |, Gormnany = 1 ',"""‘ o e ‘]“" I‘ “']"“‘f he overthrow of the ‘\‘;"‘“»l ', O~ |life of this country of justice *nts i) goed graces, continues Havas, it is| STATEMENT OF INTER |COMMITTEE AGREES ON neluded the Rand School of ernment, the witness said. and he at- | “he programme briefly. stated is: oBsible:that tha" Britente Sl s | Sclence in New York. Charles H, tributed’ much of the success of the | “To cancel immediately the pend-| Andrew Allan, a member of the | ilitate the recrmpiion ot LABOR COMMISSION | TERMS OF ARMISTICE any, Chicago: the Soc Ishevik movement to aid from the |ing $62,000,000 contracts with Chinese | well known shipping family which at|ie's works e _eace f Paris, Teb. 12 (British Wireless| Paris, Feb. 12—(By the A. P.) The Company, New York, lower east side New Yorl |vards and the 100,000,000 contracts|one time owned the llan line of N « L Russian new paper in| Dr. Simons explained th rot mean to cast reflection: s, whose headquarters !n general. Ife said the oetter c rograd before he fled the [hoped for the overthrow of the pres ial s iy Germany. The cou with Japanese yards and to build the |steamships in Montreal, died after an|imine the demand - Boles | proposed vessels in American pla operation. Ie was born in Montreal |, clause be introduced into the | To construct the great navy and|in I1860. istice .that the al mac merchant marine as already planned e war council met at the for- fice at 11 o’clock morning the purpose of reaching a finul rmination of the new terms of the rvice).—The of ement re- | supre meeting today of the com- | eis international labor legis: E. Delaney suspected of being|tioen be the : eventh meeting of the com-|German armistice. There were pres- October, told the com-|ent regime and that many Jewish|and to make both second to mnone in|one of the men who entered the East|stored. ¥ i mission on international labor legi t, in addition to President Wilson John Reed and hie wife, |rabbis had thanked him for exposing|in the world. rooklyn Savings bank Dec. 3 last| mpe nt, were very ciose to ” the situation within the Bolsheviki or- leaders in Petrograd and | gahization. lany navy vard or mueh time at their headquar-| The witness declared not more than'is ‘such as to nec Reed was described ‘“persona fone-fifth of the whole of Russia was coune programme also con- tion took ] a ed questions of effeciives 2 e| IV of the employe after stealing approximately | paising of the blockade | conrerning | This prov tate 2 lay off.! $12.000 of the bankers' funds, WPS|Turkey and Bulgaria that transportation he provided to the |arrested in New York. ) to the Bolsheviki government |rcpresented in the Bolsheviki move- they wanted | men effected to their homes, and that| General Pershing notified the war 1 1o make him con- [ment, that 90 per cent. of the peasants | That whenever the labor situation in hipbuilding plant ‘e this morning. d the foreign ministers of the great h draft was adopted. | bowers, Marshal Ifoch, Iield Marshal at the proposed in- | Haig, Marshal Petain, General Persh- conference the repres | il and General Diaz. E ments, em- full agreement on the terms was should be en« and killed the cashier and another; csented in the revort from the sub- T e B e L e 1 ihe| BETTER{OUTLOOK 'FOR spealk and yote independently | Commitice, em 1z military and general In New York and probably 75 per cent. of workmen | them. |35th division (Missouri and Kansas) | RUSSIAN CONFERENCE e views reported | cconomic memt The repdrt was Was he regarded by Americans|were nce in sympathy with the Lenine| That every man discharged from the |to prepare for return home. i A A of their na- | unanimous, including the adherence e as an American 1 Bnlshevi- | government army be given sixty days additional| Sixteen hundred officers and men| re brightening for the as- he delegates present the American members, General aquestioned Senator King of Utah.; Dr. Simons =aid that in a promi-|pay and that wherever possible that!from warships recently returned from | s of at le the Rus- rences have represented | Tasker H. Bliss and Norman Dav As a_Bolsic replied the wit- fnent edncstional inctitation in Petro- |he receive back the job he quit, or at |oveseas were welcomed by Boston. |sian factions at the confertnce to be | s only, and the voting ¢h indicates that ecenomic meas ss. “There wege a number of {grad, young girl students had been|lepst amother equally a5 %0od. | Francis A. Houston, formerly vice!held on the Princes’ Islanc beeniivimuniipny ot American Bolsheviki sympathizers |compelica 10 ave in the same quar- | That instant atten | re in the new terms equa Ukraine however, that in dea]m:.‘ ith military measures. at former legislation employers and © report must be approved by the part of Russia will participate in the | workers must be permitted the fullest jSubreme war council before it .be- rmy and navy in order that unrest| The United Fruit Co. ‘declared on bhe given to|president of the New England Tele-! \ord problem of caring for 1.000,000 ! phone and Telegraph Company, died at sanctioned | men already discharzed from the|his home in Concord, Mass, At this| ters w the Bolsheviki Red Ciuards | the Williams frequently [and that the Practice wa | olshey meetings. | by the Bolsheviki leaders “heart and come from government of t Alhert Rhrs rticipated fn that the Simons said, and w : i a: conference, and it is reported that the | opportunity of giving free expression |comes effective. e int the committee went into execu- {and ynemnloyment may e curbel | regular quarterly dividend of 2 1-2|imdecision of the government of Gen- 1 to their ideas 1_that they could not he German authorities have been with them, speaking in very ten- |tive n. at.yhich Dr. Simons gave | immediatelv. bRrREan e terms of them.” nd an extra dividend of[(ral Denikine has names of Arericans suspected of he- ven way {0 a desire | do this if the delegates of cach na- {asked to furnish information confirm- R : e 0 cents er share payablein. April | to- join fhe conference, The govern- | tional order were not allowed to speak | i§ the amount of their war material, fajor E. Lowry iumes who is di- |inz Dolshev®.i propagandists in the| MOCNAHAN CASE GOES A four days’ conference and exhibit! ment of the (timeq alrady 1 | ana vote as a unit. | cannon, airplanes and other equip- inz thesdmem¥y T8¢ the committee, | United States. | TO THE JURY TODAymnnwufl to stimulate interest in dairy | cepted the invitation, as well as the| “The commission then aiscusses (he{"‘“‘ This question came up in the e e _ 3 e and agricultural pursuits in Massa- | Russian Bolshevik governmen i articles dealing with establish- |Técent sessions of the war council | New. Haven, Conn.. Feb. € chrsetts opened at Boston | it is beginning to appear thai a suf- j ment of a permanent international la- | When the extent of this war material CONFERENCE OF BOARD HENEY WARNS OF FCND e o o | Governor Coolidge announced that | ficient number of other factions will he ' bor office and the g oty that | ¥is advanced as a reason for taking OF FARMERS' ORGANIZATIONS CONTROL BY BIG PACKERS | mardoved hor third husband, donn T B e L L £~ Cvidanceioinfeet the Sy vl Cpect S1E . ne s Lot Siht el e . il T e ey et g S B tes had accepted his intitation | the entente and Americar j that the office should be established at [of warlike activities. 5 in the league of | Heney, formev coungel for e Foder: | Closing srguments were heard this af- | L0 attend a conference in. Boston on | the success of the con- | the capitol of the league of nations as| Before determining on any such 0dy to deal with |al Trade Cdtamitasi W il Bl S ftor the state had completed | Friday to. make plaus_for oming | ference plan. The success of the con- | part of the organization of the league |StP. it was considered desirable to pocinl b al with) s ade nmisssion, t ing today | ternoon after the state had complet | the members of the 2Eth A on on | ference, however, is believed to depend | and should be under the contro! o ‘”rv 1uest information, both as a memo nal ~agricultural questions | hefore the Ilouse Intorataic ~ Com- | its cz Judge Webb will charge the | 10, ™M Feom® e co. Vmen the (williaohess of. the. Moroow | diféctor. appointed the governmsg |G¢aling with the subject and as tesi- was aoptad today at the closing' 868 | mercs Gommitaion. attred that with. | Jury when court fs comvenad esgor- | 0 e L T : & T8 lirg the gocq faith of the enemy in of the semi-annual conference |in ten years and probaliv .. | row = £ . e e LlE A AT i \ sclosing the status hi ili ational board of farmers’ | the five leading imeat packers | Assistant State’s Attorney Pickett in | 10 BE NO WHOLESALE | ;“"[""15’{ h"ri"l[‘f" G i kAt tHelsud o e | equipment. oL ey, 2 i control the catire food supaly [ his final argument told the jury fthat DEPORTATION OF ALIENS| e bonlbe | tions. th SIal) BIAY | eothies snt ool e By Th6re s o et AR e M |\ 3 il Anthons | from the provinces which they bave ! tion in ponor of the .;rm\r: sary of the | o = N v 1 X s ' el . i 3 7 = invaded. It is by no means certain that | birth of Abraham Lincol | BANQUET OF AMERICUS er under ‘plan. of the |anv price thet desired. Afr, Heney | ahan’s death by poison, but the jury|Caminetti, cecmmissionar 21 of ! the il s \ B oard wouid uniform | said the packers h: Jnd their | must decide whether it was accidental, | immizratibn, =aid tonizht tnat reports | thE, Soviet government will agree to | REPUBLICAN CLUB uality of pa | act : & g | : : OrtS|any such guarantees. | PORTO RICANS WANT THEIR Pittshurg Fet —Uni qualit; : pay and | ies inta so | or crimin {of prospective wholesals deportations | e S B A DEF(NED‘ itt '[lr\h‘v 1‘ e It\ 12 hLmteg for the farmer as haceme a menn T Attorney Al alled “upon lo faliens ware “anjust fied et | States Senafor P. C. Knox, who wit workers in other occu- now conirol the che,x» uleonwr- | the jury for a verdict of murder in the | Sinnated that amout six | AMERICAN CASUALTIES San Juan, Porto Rico, _yp | Will H. Hays, chairman of the repub- tive bargaininz through | and L*iter markets, Le said, and | first degree, for which the penalty e to deported | IN NORTHERN RUSSIA the first joint resolution introduced in | !i¢an national committee, was a speak- 2 aholition of | rap are chtai \ ‘munopoly of | hanging. He denounced Mrs. Monahan hov are| Washington, Feb. 12—A cable | the ninth Porto Rico legislature, con- | °F at the banquet of ‘the Americus Re- ory that 10 |a jarge number of otic food pes |and declared that many motves for | wise D charge-. | patch today from the headquarters of | gress was asked to provide that “the | Publican club here tonight, made a rmanently for | qucte her allezed cr'me had heen shown by ! spid. of the|ihe American expedi * forces in! people of Porto Rico he empowered to | DIed for a new foreign policy of the g of natural re- Heney :aid the nacke: s received | the prosecution {rem diseased ave beat | France gave the tot sualties in ! decide by means of a plebiscite their | American government because. he said, e of nations to 1 rst srart tow domination | Attorney Arthur B. O'Ke and | found - of offense subje American forces in Russia up to Feb, ! future political status; that until | duestions of our foreign policy néw om ex essential agri-lof the food markets ihr.a:h rebates | Bublic Defender Ford made the them 10 depos tation. few, compas- |9 as 10 officers and 314 men killed, died | Porto Rico decides its definite status | t0uch the life and interests of every ral supplies, {zranted by the r: The second | ments on behalf of the accused wom- | atively, are ators who are opnosad | of wounds and disease, wounded and | the legislatu to 1 Zhizen. ries Barrett of Georgia. president | step was the i af c-|an. They asserted that the state had [1o our form of zovernmcnt o all or- | missing in action, 3 e iEon e o it hairman Hays devoted much of his Jiational Fe > railroads - re- | produced no evidence that Mrs. Mona- 2 aent. The total was Jdivided as foll ali reccally tas on g Killed in action, 2 officc!s, 60 men; Ellis Istaai f. ¢ { of wounds, 1 officer, 14 1y conmection witn tie! , intended .-riginally for {han had ever purchased poison or| t TEoists llbrie placed any in her husband's medicine. | £, Honer :aid, now | Mr. O'Keefe said that in the 21 months | p political affs progr island shall elec th t the people of the | 2ddress to the lives of Lincoln and cir own governor; | Roosevelt, associating both in many zovernor, with the consent of | €vents of the country’s history. “The speakers at of wounds. 1 oficr, | 5 ot Toito Rico, shall name | one controlling motif of botli _their dedthe | Jnable and | that Mrs. Monahan has been held the | ttle or VU 10 men: wound of departments, judg [l i R L e ihe raiiroad prob- |} and at sueh | auehorities failed to detect anything|w: men; wounded men; wounded and in time | in her speec) or manner which would | ——— compet tion, | indicate that she e Ey T saie grocers | asked the jur operation lation termination to do that which they (h(\uzh\ was right. There must be two polit: national co- | ator Lenroot «consin, speaking on the railroad other j officers, al parties t S e, | in this country,” he said, “and both S tempt to theorize on a woman’s : .BURng AT SUFFIELD Thl:wv = S CE b owh _ | must be strong and virile. Let the two ] e e o G el e LT O e b o matuiaueny n | become law Il arUen maxclli oo and consolidation bu and scient | bar ed by Andréw Pratson ¥ 1 1iste “the gener rel A, government operation | THEFT OF $16,000 WORTH p i Tehic) L destroyed by fire here today with 1 (A=A i e ns for doing the greatest good e b ol ouL TS _ OF MAIL CLEARED UP | 51| |ES HOLD GAINS [ e i o GRS T RIKE” OF BUTTE MINERS | preme court justices are now appoint atest number. 1 repeat and railroad pork ba Harrisburg, Pa., Feb. 12.—With the .MADE ON BOLSHEVIKl » - Lisceo tools were burncd MAY' BE EXTENDED |ed by the president with the consent | *hall continually declar % . — Butte Mont, Feb. 12—Further ex.|of the United States senate. Other | Need Tt e 5 fian : 2 x=1 i nts are et | tics," by 1,399 NAMES IN THE | tension of the strike of miners in the | *PPointments are made by the go = ARMY CASUALTY LiSTs|Butte field may be decided on to-|DNO¥ With the approva ¥ e arrest of George Rober L years TALIANS ARE REMOVING old, discharged from the United $tates | Archangel, Tues: COLLATERAL FROM VIENNA |army at Pittsburgh last month, Dep-|The A. P)—Tolshevik nna, Monday, Feb. 10 (By the A. v United States Marshal Harvey T.|Sumed the cfiensive in that what we s not ‘less poli- tiof to politics.” of the ins | wouLDp SETTLE PEACE TERMS 2d v : . - ! senate s e { mith, of this city, has cleared up the | Sredmakrengn. For a bricf time las ] y TS i e i LEDieE ~ltalian troops and bankers today | Sith, of this city, ha the " Hoanp the | nleht the Bolsheviki occined several ington, eb. 13-—The following|the Engincers' Union take action on a | 5 - {5 1(»0R1‘ \ORGANT'!Z'N? e Fo henny n% from banis here bank | ance of approximately $16000 worth |allied blockhouses after prnetrating | ire reported by the com-|roquest to indorse the walsout of the ! STRIKING WAIST MAKERS ondon, ¥Feb. 12—The view that the bonds and securities valued of insured mail, stolen at New Gae. |the town. but they w reiongen 5 the eh had orig- | o, Pa., on Jandary 3 last. by a British and Russia oney was removed here for| -ACcOrding to Robert's confession, he |tack. The fighting con'n Keeping during (he war. . Mili. | Bried open a pouch of insured mail at| Patrol activity continnes ¢ ks were backed up in front|'Pe New Castle railroad station while |ish sector, but ihe Ameiic v hank, the enirances of which | $I€ePing there between trains. He ex- |and Russian iroops main z ed by squads of Ttaiian sol- tracted $8,000 worth of war savirgs[made in tho offens] riven out|mandinz general of the American|jfeta) Miners' Union (independent) ASSAULTING PEDESTRIANS | [€rms of peace with Germany should ~unter at- | Bxpeditionary forces. and 1. W. W, who are et o b o arASSAUL ErroE N % | be settled before the organization of a A1 P Section One—Wounded seve Ry Sesi ot : York, Feb. 12—Complaint that | society of nations is dealt with was ection st a cut in wages of §1 a day and Trep e | : Connecticut men: O e Russian waist on strike here|cxpressed in the house of commans Wounded Severely Seeed SRl e e i this afternoon by Horatio W. Bottom- ins| Privates—Milton R. Gaa Monday after the carmen were threat- | boons OF Iifth and A1 | e last week. On|dence, R. I; Joseph Marco, ‘fllp(l 1 rikers ,\\“jg “vm‘llnf ‘\'\‘FT‘“‘:' o Crowds of curious onlookers|S!AMPs: $6.000 in bonds and checks |the Finega sector, soatheast of | Second - Section—Wounded (degree!Yow, it was announced by J har- (g orl Moo treasures being removed, | B4 Other valuables to the amount of | Archangel, Mussia W undetermined), 518; wounded “shE'hLAJIOH. manager of the traction company. are king to recover | "©arly $1.000. Tne stamps aml bonds [drove bagk the Belsheviki st .|y, e speaker declared that the gov- t would lose a large part of its if it brought to the house the t 0 X 2 n “as ind al o8 tredty WHieh L T total, 1,043 after a meeting with a committee o S S a peace treaty which had to be i r L “ el = o t carme: u n, Mayor W. il : RO o > jaccepted or rejected “nhout altera- wliable paintings and fres. |be malled to the government suthori- | The ‘Frenct. Torelgn Tex'on,” wh Wounded (Degree Undetermined) | 11 ¢ ‘u",“‘d“l ‘.J".f“;\_“u ‘,,‘,‘n; HoMa . a5 e | tions. The preliminary treaty, he m is said to be the best work of ne post. office show thelr recBipt. ntw fehtin i oo | PawtneKeE, Ba L s ssed many cases o °esS-1 1o the peoples of each country. Tier t o Roberts e be s now fighting an fbe Kadish | P2 g 5 s wren h ¢ y Shuiht ‘of came same in Udine. A | 110UOr at the time. He was lodged ia| “The weather continues ceor and cata | Ha/en Bope et Hollogsn, New & J“""wv‘ REDUGEDREOABULLION (oo o o e nsianahad . altes ne \Rn"\\}Ll)nlllt‘ldr‘in‘(‘l‘il';‘z:lr&c\-]}:)re tent. Wit- picture by 11 Pordenone taken from |'lle Dauphin County prison here and |along the entive front. ~The I‘“?‘ D= e Javaee Bon'® Tempo, 'New|. Phiadelphia, P 12.—Perspiring | can guarantee to all people of | oheutiie sttty fol e e F town along the Piave also js| il be turned over to the Pittsburgh |idly are growing longer .nd there is|Hav | men shoveling silver dollars into solute _protection, why cannot the | States. He said = g 5 % _ federal .xulhr)nlm now eight hours of ds At increas- | Haven | = - N e TPl o the for | States. said he supposed that in oA e, ls the enly o ing the iength of the enisemerts. | Wounded Slightly fishuith il same Eanlot o & mavor of New York do the same f0f|any case President Wilson on his re- or fro he church | = Bitheiiengih of ens . inarily used to put coal in a ¢ T = S : 3 which was destroyed during the fight- | 17,000 SILK WORKERS AT | Corporals—Morris (xf:xffm New Hav-!nace and piles of gold and ! e ','I”,Zl‘“;‘;,f,',fifi‘,f;‘a““,’é‘rl:‘ “:;"1 = o ing along the Piave. 1 PATERSON RETURN TO WORK TO :SK LAEB’:)RNng!vOr;S :ro VOTE 5 ris R”;x‘f‘m'fl‘n eport John P. xr‘»‘n ;;%‘(:I;x‘f;':\" “nnnm"l,:::: D@fll‘x,\)fl:“ STRIKE OF PRINTERS in securing food contracts throughout y [ faterson, N. J. Feb. 1z—Ten|ON *NO BEER, ORK” STRIKE | Arthur - W. Shortell, | {}ings: seen ot (he Philadeimhin IN HAVANA SETTLED | the world and “scooping the pook- PASSAIC TEXTILE WORKERS | thousand 'dyers, who with 17,000] XNew York, Feb. 12—Announcement ! b3 ;’;‘ e TR Fel The offer of a ten| Ve are talking about a leagie of na- DEMAND 44-HOUR WEEK | Weavers and other silk workers went!that all the Central Labor Unions of | urs—Frank Brehio, Worces- | gion whish. todas e i thbh\wases ot imen jionss Passaic, N. J., Feb. 12.—Formal de. |0 Strike early this month in an at- | the country will be asked by the Cen-! = $ / il Begi i b Loy : + e mands for a 44 hour week, a wage| (POt to neforce a 47 hour week, re- | tral Federated Union here to vote on|*“p i made at arning 1 rank = Bagaglio, Provi- dence, k. L; Anton Zacharich, Un- turned to work today on the 50-hour | the qu rate of 50 cents an hour and recogni- stion of a nation wide “no he f five per cr DAVID JOYALE, WILLIMANTIC, r, | basis i i ! dtced to bullion. The commission n ihat RELEASED BY GERMANS i r unil , which prevailed before the |no work” strike on July 1, was made .. ety ol 2 e i sign % s tion of their union were presented to-| % RCh RO TR O e {here. tonight by Ernest Bonm: secres | a5V lesting specimens of FIS160.348 eoinis | made by Washington, Feb. 12—The war de- by comn itees representing 11500 | Were still but_excepted resume -fo|tary of the New York union, who had | de in 1918 on of T ked all labor organizations in this| WEDNESDAY AF}"'ER_NO("[“S LIST| te to pass on the question. Bohm| Wednesday afternoon t show id, however, that plans for tne Killed in’action 13; 3 | Washington today of strikers. The owners took the de-|COnference at ¥ mands under :omi:;emnon " | activities tomorrow as the result of a Tho ctrikers spread today to 200 |Manufacturers, urion representatives partment today in imaking public in- formation regarding American prison- ers of war reported the release from a FOUND GUILTY OF ied from| RECEIVING STOLEN WHISKEY epted 1 . . ewspaper | German hospital and return to Frai-e a2 died from a ent and; b 5 c almost anjof David Joyvale of Willimantie, Cona. empl + and conciliators of the Department of | threatened strike would be cancelled “Uu"“\ G Gar i __Hartford, Conn., b. 12.—-Josepa o 2 % yase . T mployes of ths iikides Tektlle Com=|F1T conciliators, ol e AebafMNERL BE | Hhrealenee, Bl reer were i o s 4; died of disease 39; |y FAMIO e res daily pa-| Corporal Edwin J. Barnes, previo a nd 350 loyes of the O} DOFSEY | i 1 ¢ 53; s B o e x Pt b Company, wal et “onite | working hours pending investigation | be non-intoxicating. and therefore, not | Wounded severely ng -in a“" nd one of those involved in ro! dy besur puoli aton ¥ reported to have died white a_ pri mpany, wire manufagturers. | of the situation in the industry here|within the scope ot dhe federal pro- | tion 10; total 136. iies of whiskey valued ut 0 909 from agreémien el ulso includs oner in G rmany, is now reported re- —tar it N ! 4 Thiti e | “Connecticut names in the first sec- Dl T e 0 I payment by the pr ‘ leased from Camp Darmstadt, Gei- by the National War Labor Board. | hibition amendment. e New York, New Haven and Hart- | Ia) INCREASED SHIPMENTS OF Louis Magnet, head of the workers' - |tion nclude: ~ Wounded severely, Pri- | 1ofy N oad, was found Euilty by | JouBle wages 1o e men i : many. His home)is 604 Second ave- g {vate Joseph Janczwes helton; | ;50 " United Stz court tnday. He |On the day ho funes2l of x-Presi- | nue, West Haven. Conn. He is one of ANTHRACITE IN JANUARY | ¢ight hour day commitice telegraphed | NEW GERMAN PROPAGANDA | Wounded, degree undetermined;:prev- | ULy in United States court taday. He o2 WA o7 il 0 pay whel I five' Americans formerly reported dead from the capital that the general dis ¥~ |Was charged with receiving 14 barrels Philadelphia, Feb. 12~ Shipments of | O (A0 PR L B0 o€ H aitted o | PAPER IN BUENOS AIRES | jously reported missing in action, Pria| i3 “HOrS anthracite coal in January, as an-| ounced ton the Wa i Buenos Aires, Feb. 12.—A ¢ G i stolen whiskey. o P ‘ar Labor Board as soon as the Ai Feb. 12—A new Ger- | vate Dominick Petrillo, Hartford j of stolen whiskey nounced ight by tas Anthracite homas de. ,on7 ate, { and now included in the list of prison- man propaganda newspaper has made E d 5,. | temporary agreement was reached. 1an propag: has made con P‘ureau of Information, aggregated 5,- | {ferred sentence. | ers relea: 5 1 Conneeticut names in the G D . = | ALIENS SEEK WRITS AR its appearance in Buenos Afr section include: ounded severely,! ApmISTICE CONFERENCE OF HABEAS CORPUS | CARPENTER FELL FROM 943,241 tons, un increase of 197,951 tons called Neue Welt and is p: ates Charles A. Khoury, Torring- . oier the praceding month snd of 295,- | All strikers :{'b"‘:h c"‘*"t d f,'}'f‘ anticBritish. The newspaper in its is 1,0,.; Harold Connolly, 'Hartfor HAS BEEN POSTPONED | e York, Feb. 12-~Writs of habes SCAFFOLD IN WESTERL $3% tons of January, 1913. were. instructed by the "'k“ strike | (ie today calls upon Germans to re- | wounded slightly, Sergeant William F.! London, Feb. 12.—A despatcp to the corpus, sought by a group of radi 1zton, Fe For the months of the coal year 1913. | committee to return to work. sist any effort at commercial frater- | Harrington, Ansonia; Corporals Irving | Exchange Telegraph from Copenhagen |in an effort to prevent deports W e i 19 finding January shipments . TR e e nizing by Fnglishmen and urges Ar-|C. Clark, Higganum; John J. Higgins, | says the German armistice commission | 49 of the 34 alie brought fra skull and Lift lmnunlrd to 63556917 tons as com- The experisnce of age is responsible | gentinians 1o resist utterly the at- | New ain; John E. Bradley. South|has been informed that the arm ted here | Judge Knox. The'in New London where it is believed 3 writs are returnable tomorrow. his injuries will prove fatal. parcd with £4,663.456 foc the same pe- | for more mistakes than the inexperi- |tempt fo implant a British vice roy ce { Island from the w d last year, ence of yeuth. alty in Buenos Aires, Norwalk; John B. Griffin, Thompson- | conference has been postponed indefi- | tonight by Ieder: ville; James H. Kerr New Haven nitely. were He was removed to a hosp 1