Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 15, 1919, Page 1

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Am mwwtw %‘“‘W'flww"‘”fi” £ Bullet!n Service Flag S LXI—NO. POPULATION 29,919 NORWiCH_, CONN., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY: 15, 1919 12 PAGES— 92 COLUMNS WILSON GENTRAL FIGURE OF PLENARY PEACE CONFERENGE In Person He Read the Covenant Establishing a League of Nations—The President Was Received With Military Honors and Was Given a Cordial Welcome as He Pass- ed Through Large Crowds Which Had Gathered—Two Main Principals Are: No Nation Shall Go to War Until Every Other Means of Settlement Shall Have Been Tried; No Nation Shall Seek to Interfere With the Po- huul lndcpendence of the Nations of the World work of right and jus distinction between great and small the plenary Later, he said, this beginning must : extended by a limitation of arma- One of the chief results of the victory was in permitting the dis- the barbarous that had stood in the way of world disarmament. Dangers to states were not all equal, Some states, like France and Belgium, were especially d and required additional guir- He wged a nent inspection of existing arm: 4s one means cf avoiding a renewal of warfare. 3 i Japan, affer t establishing armament of o the presidenas Bourgeois_said. added that a e submitted fater which 1t was hoped would receive make known, but it is supposed to ro- to an amemdment abolishing rz international and Premier the League of Nations. Wellington Koo, Chinese delogat ve China's adherenc to the league. pointed out 1f determaing.- nt this self determing tion. He there- the powers null - Hughes of Australia asked opportunity was to be given fo cussion of the proposed league, when Premier Clemenceau replied 't the expectation he the fuliest opportunity deterryined Wilson hastened homeward to prepare | LEADERS IN CONGRFSE READ LFAGL" OF NATIONS PLAN ' Leagherof constitution lisinterested, < dcepatches wore cles dealing ,um—w!r*.‘fl!uh of the army i Representa* Mississipti, with scattering ap senators said they expected =0on io speak on the plan. Opposition was regarded as certain 10 come from some members of both hous>s who op- v kind of international organ- From the animated priva appeared that the cu the leasuc's decrees enforcement draft several of those who have been following the proceed ngs provision for economic pressure by leagne members the prin- war preveritve Wide difference of opinion fegardine he president prevalent, with doubt existing regard- could be dictated or en- It is practic complete text of the plan iden- tical with the text as c s Presa dispatches < late in the day by the State De- a discourse, RESIGNATION OF WilLL'AM GRAVES SHARP ACCEPTED — President the resignation gue of Na- | Washington, of William France to take cff a successor qualifies, 15 4 good omen, this document world before correspond- problem had been one t it was to pre- thn W1 hm- Hmwrl without commment. world with the information in offi- t whom !ho in mind for the time the r nce MeCormick as chairman of the Democratic National was known t president hal ed two main principles: Il go to war until | the Assacinted ; was said that Mr. Me- Cormick would become am!assador to dependence of the These were the | COUNTERFEITER OF MEAL TICKETS FINED $100 r aggressive pur- federal court foday after he had plead- ed guilty to an indictment charging him with de‘rauding the means of counterfeit m d on diniug cr ston and New York. rio Orl mdn. ed deep satis- wborated in what TS on’trains between Srath, a chef, men rourded up 1 federal agents In conne alleged fll"l’l“ car frauds, the scheme, Dr. these had been whose noble inspir- tion with the t forth the neces- {$30,000 Lhrml"h the sr')mn C. e pains of war,” “this js a don- EFFORT TO PREVENT BIG STRIKE OF BUILDING TRADES Washington, Feb. to prevent a demption of nation-wide strike in the building trades, the department of la- bor today assigned Henry D, ton_of Boston and Walter D, Davidge of Washington to act as conciliators pute, Which now centers in he conciliators will ves of the men in of France on iid had pre- the project, New York city. meet the representat #(New York (OMOrrow..y Cabled Paragraphs General Moinier Dead. Paris, Feb. 14—General Moinier, military governor of Paris, died last night while at dinner at the home of Jean Cruppi, former minister of for- eign affairs. Violent Fighting at Breslau. Copenhagen, Feb. 14.—There has been violen. fighting at Bresleau, where the soldiers have heer atterapt- ing to prevent strikers from releasing imprisoned Spartacans. Ten persons have been Kitled. STATEMENT BY GRANDMOTHER OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION ‘Washington, TFeb. 14—Catherine Breshkovsky, “Grandmoth: Russian Revolution,” Senate Propaganda Ingairy Commit- tee today and pleaded earnestly that America send machinery and other materials to Russia at once to aid in an industrial _reconstruction which she said would result in ridding the hevk burden. Al- lied troops, she said, would be effective against the “brigand Bolshevik” only if augmented and sent on the of- nation of the Bol fensive. “Woud allied troops be welcomed by all Russians except the Bolsheviki? questioned Senator Sterling of South Dakota. “Certainly, certainly, aged woman earnestly. “Our people ar sheviki, so tired. They have aid from you for a y beat the ~Bolsheviki. people will be glad, ver Throughout most of her testimony, | Breshkovsky spurned the | Madam witness chair, despite her 7; and stood stolidly before the The story of Russia’s revol Czardom, of the turmoil w out of revolution, of the “Bolsh disaster” and of present pover told fervently in broken Ensglist the woman who was imprisoned exiled in Siberia for 32 vear ching revolution to Russian | and who recently hid herself fo months in Moscow and Petrograd 1 evade from the Bolshevik, by she was regarded as too conservative “We ask you i America for ever: trifle,” she entrated, groping now and then for an Eng interpreter suppli “We are naked. We have no fac tories, no banks portation, no goods. Our schools have no furniture, no pencils, no pens. The Bolsheviki have destroyed all. They have torn down. We need leatk word which h: boots, iron, macbinery, sci tea—eVerything we need from you: W | cannot put back together an organiz | tion without your helj | | i SAYS ILLITERACY IS THE ROOT OF LABOR TROUBL:S Washington, Feh. iteracy was dustrial labor troubl ) Ty Lane today in appea 0 o education, commitic ) te action on a pending -bill $12,500,000 federal aid a states spending like sion was v as cong He gitati ould be coped wit derstood 1 workers nnderstood suage. recent per mines in Mon was told esulted “foreizn-speaking . \\ ve miners.” More than in some of the lar; foreign born, Mr. Lane said. Te mated that by i 70 cents a day throug country w lars a He ¢ Lttention to the fact that millions were spent hy the federal government to fight animal compared with the $200,000 education through the bureau of edu- cation, rom_inter ti- uld realize two bi ion the SEVEN ARRESTS FOR t ABOR DISTURE Haverhill, Mass., Feb. 1 rests weer raade I sult of disturbances the labor tory of the Austin H. Forry Company A crowd of sympathizers Shoe Workers' Protective Tinion the volice Teven ar s a re- with 0 are trying to proteat members of tne Boot and Shoe Work- ers' union employed at t After the wolice had d and put four men into the crowd fsllowed police turn ff e factory stationl. threatening to over In another mix-up tw> emploves wh® were being escorted by the sought refuge in a han and bottles were thrown. An automohile contain employes and a police officer wa sued and attacked by mer in another car. when stones The factory is workinz under an agreement with the Boot ang S Workers' union. Members of the ri union formerly employed there allese that when the factory was given mo opportunity to work. ime 374 AWARDS AND CITATIONS FOR AMERICAN SOLDIERS ‘Washington, Teb. 14—Officers and American service have received a total of 374 awards and the units of the citations, including the American dis- tinguished ser French, British and Ttalian dec: from France and made pub! and the 90th and 99th One of those to whom the Ttalian Croce al Merito di Guerra was awarded was Lieutenant Wallace Hoggen, Greenwich, Conn. HAMMOND'S RADIO CONTROL OF SURFACE CRAFT A SUCCESS Washington, Feb. 14.—Army and navy experts have reported the dev of John Hays Hammond. Jr, for radi control of sufrace c to be sent laden with explosives ngai ips, a success, and pr ing above water only wireless at- tenna. Results of tests wers made public today in conrection with the new for- tifications _appropriation | carries $417 experimenta which 60 for construction of an submerged hcat, ANTI-BOLSHEVIK CONSPIRACY DISCOVERED IN MOSCOW London, b. 14.—Anothec anti- Bolsevik conspiracy” has leen discov- ered in Moscow, acco; sian_ wi today. The leaders, including Mile. Aaria Spiridonovo, have 10 a Ru n arrest- of the stood before the replied the so_tired of the Bol- ar. Come and | Business Transacted fore March 18, (Special to The Ruiletin.) Hartford, less than ona-th present at F ¢ the members house was d: ceipt of bu, which was tzbled for calendar the rajection of several reports the judici ing o quorum, no action was hat would show that fa on hand was i just as if {here had heen a full tendance The federal amendment was returnc senate and tabled in the honse. oted in the main to re- holding ballot boxes resentation: Danbury; possession covered in another bill zmending ck: equal v nd exneases of t officers, ther bill intended to cover a pers e oting for towi n officers no shops, no_trans- E————————— men | est industries were asing their value | X } mitted « ind ion dol- | diseases, spent fo- NCES IN HAVEHHILL out of th the eri them off patrol wagon e wagon to the nolice several s pur- ral reopencd recently after a shut-down they were ce’ cross and various o tions. A supplementary list received c by the war department today shows addition- al citations of five American squad- rons, the Lafayette, the 17th and the 148th, which served with the British, o st enemy ar results with submerged craft show- less despatch received here|ed out that withdrawal of special v fications of electors The prohibition res: rejected by the sor house, and then went By General Assembly Joint Committee on Employ- \ ment to Report on or Be-| . 14-~There was ion of the gen- I assembly, and the session of the ness from il senate, nd from committee. There be- taken and all ensed of t- cohibition from the the point of a re dollar: Pursued through the busiest sections of Madison and Fifth Avenue by ever increasing crowd, one of the bandits turned and fired into the crowd probably mortally wounding John Mc- Govern, a hookKeeper. As he fired, a chauffeur hurl machine and khocked him uncor The other bandit escaped with a $4.000 The judiciary committes reported informally: 5ill relating to foreign Ehn b=l e Rl meen eleeticn of school hing minerity rep- ter of city i use of paymaster ing a taxicab at the sub-treasury with $12,000 to pay off the ship| workers in Brooklyn, w soon after they had crossed the river from Manhattan. The bandits ed them o elled pis ition powers and du- pioct matter in- conecerning unfavorably reported as it nal would fake away property quali- tion, which » passed by zck to the pre dition to the bandit, seriously injured, | who was felled by the chaueur, thel Paymaster Robbed of $12,000 enue Jewelry Store Robbed | New York Feb. 14.—Two spectacu- lar hold-up: ments of a wild west scenario—a tax- icab “getaw crowded thoroughfare guns, one of which dealt a probably fatal wound to a pedestrian and the felling of one of the bandits by a wrench hurling chauffeur—occurred within an hour here today. In Manhattan, one bandit held up tore, at; combining *all the ele- v"'; a chase through a flourishing Madison Avenue jewels olver while a com- worth of jewelry and fled. ed a wrench from his cious. French dreadnought Mirabeau ran ashore outside of Sek Secretary Baker places the cost of the war to all belligerents at $193,000- Dutch steamer Riek struck a mine off the Norwegian. coast. and .sank, Crew was saved. Gold production of Rand mines amounted to 6 United. States cruiser Seattle, from | 1, arrived at New York Three big plants of Actna Chemical [’ Co., at Oakdale, Mt. U , Pa., will be dismantled. Railroads of the Southern -division show profit of $12,234. valier. A United States shipping board nd two assistants, enter: > held up of the m ne wit lev- ), the driver of which, the police was an accomplice rms were flashed to every police nct in the city but tonight, in ad- Al not only on spe Dollar day has t e O] ial | me rded. It occupi looked or disreg ould therefore 0ods and those i E Bulletin Saturday, February 8 Monday, February 10..... Tuesday, February 11...... Wednesday, February 12....... Thursday, February 13 > Friday, February 14 Totals s met iy back, to motion of ious enough in the ome to the capitol as a mc ttee to be at Da the > resoiution was ARtler was ot @ Mr. Higgins ren L serious nature fered his Johr Hancock cn the by ) ition, and one from a healfs unless the nmittee in e its ope session of the eneral assembly. hat resc Ho otie of the o hot A bill amending an ast establishing he town court of Souihinrton W The salary of the judse v 100, the deputy judge § attorney $400 a prosecuting atorney $50. as follows: § 1 Jacob Caplan to he judges of the city court of New Have On motion of Mr. Kinz the house idjourned to next Tuesd:y morning 1t 11.30 SENATE. A special commission fo, zn investi- (Continued on Page Eight—Col. 4) BATES FOUND GUILTY OF MURDER OF MRS. COLE ne, Feb. if.-Landgon as found gulty late today of the murder of rs. Edith 13, 1918. |He was sentenced to life imprison- Augusta, Bates of W low, W Cole at Winslow on Augus ment Bates sho* Mrs. Cole and Miss Alice Simpson when he met them on the Simpson recovered from treet. V¥ her wound and transferved for t state at the trial. tention of the pros who was married, w Misss Simy mistake for her, afterwar his weapon on Miss Sipipsc fense admit shots, but t insane. STRIKERS IN LAWRENCE on. RETURNING TO MILLS 14— Mill d confidence that the workers were roturning to the mills in such increased numbers Lawrence, Ma: F agents toniehs profes each day that the st be of practically no effect. The stlil out and arging the strikers to re main firm in their dem: hour week with 54 hours’ pay. Four arrest: for alleged ir of operatives who*are at worl made during the day. REGULATIONS APPLYING TO EGG DEALERS WITHDRAWN ington, Feb. 14—All special Was regulations applying to egg deale and_cold fixed price margin: today by the food administration, Dealers and storage men sti subject to licensing, and offici poln: uiations did not a place in the mir to thut of the annual sales al taken advant Telegraph Local taxicab which the CHIEF PAYMASTER roll taxicab in wk with two assistant Rogers said as the resolution sapposed the lied that he has of- lieved it a standpoint. members sted, he would ation 2t the present to the Bi aken from the calendar and passed s fixed at prose- ssitant ees of the gov:irnor were uel E. Hovt Sheftall's assis when they lof ub-tre them later short time later, they said and obtaining the money which the building and dowa some distance the tare v holding the door open It was the con- ution tnat Bates s infataated with son and shot Mrs. Cole in turning The de- d that Bates fired the ed to show that he was 2 woulil soon strike committes on the other hand, distribated circuiars saying that many thousands of operatives were 1d for a 4S- imidation were fornia., republican, considel ing an expression by the senate for withd Russia as soon as practicable, torage of eggs, including were withdrawn | are | formerl ect the provisions lof the food control act against profit- cering and wasteful practice: DOLLAR DAY TODAY day has_goiten heyond the point of hein purchasing public in Norwich and wine trade opportunity in whi o rest those within, eastern Connec 1 novelty for the vicinity. It has been found to be h th business honses are anxious cut in the advantages which t on all occasions come be looked forward to 1 which cannot be iwis those ople arger hovgh on a of b those n The Bulletin's news col General Total 109 444 646 128 198 401 125 220 437 114 352 554 94 300 474 90 260 434 660 1774 2945 ice had in HELD FOR COMPLICITY Ne Yor Neil Sheftall, ars old ymaster here for the eme t corporation, was arrested la ht charged with as- and in _connection with eft of §12.000 of the fleet’s pay- - armed bandits w h he was on his way, to a Brooklyn rd this afternoon vinst Sheftall also |8 vith “actinz in concert’ th others Before the eferred aziunst him he @ been nuestoned for more than o hours 1y Cantain Coushlin. He denied persistently that he had been icated in any way in *he-theft of the payroll After the robhery had hosn veported hoilyn noli v took the éftali nnd his com er prints of panions send:ng them to the finger | print bure parison. It w Sheftall were the man wh Charles Charles when h: rested in Manbattan on Apri on the char: of forger lords showed (h 1 at headquaters for com- entical with . those of ave nis ame as was ar- 20, 1909 Tolice rec Charles he hilas ob Sl Shettar Accordinz fo Captain _Coughlin told him that 3rooklyn to o to the the pavroll. Sheftall rted wth them, saving he “had bus iry fo s to atiend to; and would meet He appearcd at the sh sury a fter iie turnedl ¢ to them to carry, l:d them from o ctreet for before * He stop icah and hegan an hthe driver who was The trio then entered 1he cab; they said, and Sheftall gave :he driver minute instractions as to ti:e route he should tak SNOW BLOCKS TRAFFIC IN ROCKY MOUNTAIN REGION Chicago, Feb. 14—The storm, ac- companied by snow, wind and rain, which for 24 hours has demoralized wire communicz ion and railroad t in the territory between the M uri river and the Rocky mountains and from the Canadian border to Okla- homa, was still in progre mo creasing severity. ng eastward, though with de- While the snowfall in most localities comparatively light, high winds, especifially in Nebraska and Kansas, caused huge drifts which delay traffic. All nulled and only were able to get throug after hours of delay. 2d ra reight trains were an- few passenger trains the drifts, NOT TO RECALL U. S. TROOPS FROM RUSSIA Washington, Feb. 12—With the vote of Vice President Marshall Breaking |t ware merchs tie, the senate late today defeated a tion by Senator Johnson of Cali- to proceed with ation of his resolution propos- wal of merican troops from SENTENCED FOR THE LARCENY OF $171,000 Boston, Feb. 14.—Luther R. Hanson, | assistant treasurer of the | Market Trust company in the Brighton strict, who pleaded guilty to the lar- | ceny of $171.000 of the was sentenced to state prison for a term of from ninc to ten Jank's funds. ars today. year under governmer the British goveriiment steamship Kwarra, reported ols and drove off in the tax-| | months ago. A movement to exclude Germany | g5 International Red € at a meeting of i j zation held in Gene A trainload of German officers be back to Germany from (m? were ignor ant of the ex-Kaiser Bill to appropriate $1,000,000 so con- truction may be started on the tunnel hetween New Y Karl Radk, Russian Belshevik emis- v, charged by Germany with being | of figh by the combined forces of ator of nume; s arrested P. A. S. Fanklin, president of the ! sm International the Distinz sAdoo last No situation and recommend | wa methods for re was no need of increasin Fire in the factory of the Bickneil & | Fuller Paper Box company on C Boston, drove more t | women employes to the street An unidentified steamer, believed to aground yeste: of Handkerchief William Andrews, 26, instantly killed dded on France has offered to present to the United State oil to Ame he field of Three transports and the battleships Rhode Island from France nearly 13,000 men The American Red Cross has p ho held up a | zed in this work Panama’s national lottery discontinued to a state departm: died at short illness. has been summone >resident Wilso: nestions founa th:t those of {313 NAMES IN TWO manding general < known | Died of Disease. Tl Crauhart Y. Rulang,|bor this afternoon and all on bo: FRIDAY AFTERNOON'S LIST after |ed severely Connectitut Tnarhes in/ this Wounded severely Pri srument over Carlson, Stamford ord; y reported missin Private Zuozupas Cervaij iCHARGED WITH MUHDER and his immediate pa OF BOSTON POLICEMAN | transported on a gunboat to the| George Washington .amid a salute of | charged with the murder Deininger, . who was shot thieves in Chelsea. T\' re held in connection with , James Colonna, charged with and Albert s today and | ral other persor occurred, and his w taken into custody later. In most they were held James C. Burr. A Samuel S. Miles. o at his home settled in Milfard, Co Reuben H. Tucke: onia, Conn.. Feb. 14 Reuben offices. e ms Masonic seganigations. - Condensed Telegrams Demobilization of Germany's - old army is almost completed. Fields containing an. excellent qual- ity of coal discovered in Sweden. Names of six Americans are con- ! tained in Canada’s War time restrictions on dining Cfl"l;s Wlill be modified after Mareh 1 | 4 A otal appropriation asked by the in Brooklyn—Madison Av- | shipving Board for 1920 is 555,912,000, ‘, | | 2t e list of war dead. pol in ,059 ounee s, valued at | State House today voted to cable to | Divi: ind_ lanc | Coolidze presided. was agreed to hold a 26th Di sion Day in Boston ter the sldiers are disc as_possible parade of the divison in the after- jon and an entertainment for the en in the evenig are features of the adopted who commanded the 26 on be sent home as a unit g T e M d at Boston. Gove ac on and Em- | s soon 9 for the first t control in council forbidding im- uncut diamonds was re- v i e, told the gover uthwest of [0VT5 | racopiion: Showld boi the ‘eeeatest: ove ved safely off the ZIish|acorded by the peopld of New Lns i o land. He said he thought it practic- Car plants were instructed to build | ;ile (o veturn to the division, before ad cars - ordered peditior % it leaves France, nearly all of tae PRICE TWO CENTS J8TH DIV DAY IN BOSTON HAS BEEN AGREED UPON 4 Governors of the New England States Have Cabled to Gen- eral Pershing the Request That the Division be Sent Home as a Unit and Landed at Boston—Committees Are to be Appointed Composed of the Members of Con- gress of Each New England State, Also Citizens Com- mittees, to Take Part in the Welcome, ,536 soldier: Boston, Feb. 14—Governor of New men Idaho abandoned her direct prim-|[ngland States in conference at the} stem of nominating state -ll\d C dugm sional officers. Lnnu al Pershing a request that the Donner Steel Co shut down its en- | iy s ! who fought with it, and urged governors to make a request for A\h action to the proper authorities. to appoini committees composed of the members of each New England with citizens commit- of the congres of the governors expressed the after the celebra in Boston the soldiers would the Boston boats would be |v|'nnlr\tl FFor them Was being. are was called by erins 00,000 WORTH OF NITRATE treani. | OF SODA BURNED AT SAVANNAH Savannah, Ga, Feb. 14—Fed by| r quantities of rosin 1 re late today de nt of the Southern Fe emical Comp: troyed the tilizer and | and burned a| he revolution. « It was reported that ail the Inter- |swath three city blocks long and Mercantile i nmnhmr]vm Marine's {about two hundred feet wide through | d by the British govern- | the terminals of the,Seaboard Air Line | turned back Railroad on H nd_with | 1 in millio sey was introduced at Al- nitrate of soda . . which were ter fiv hours radical out- German a 1 company city aided by he orts of the firemen rising from burning rosin a | tupentine and.by a wind which reach- celed almost gale proportions Mercantile Marine, w pished Serv a! his work as chairman of | The of which has|;- the shipping_control committee. not heen was di The committee appointed by Secre- |in and 1y mber to study | nt. Fire eading 10 flames leap- naval stores increasing e output unat oss to the tored. ~With than thirty i nitrate of hardon 1 100 collier bound north, was lay on the eastern ¢nd | hoa 500,000. nouth =i = m, | GIRL CHARGED WITH s BREAK!NG AND ENTERING {—Six additional 1king and entering and ferred tod list court against Mabel | E. Norris, who was arrested last weel | :d with the theft of jewelry and ing from several women’s edu- cational institutions and clubs in the Back Bay district. Through counsel pleaded not zuilty to the latest accusations and was held for the he w ice and turn larg the site for 2 monume s who died | onor. and Vir Ted with 470 officers and ria have sz the disposal of the army medical nd jury. At the request of _the use in_reconstruction an ice, bail was increased from $5,000 Hrt“ of $200 per mont 10 $6000 and she was sent to jail in and g default of bonds. When arraigned a! week ago the gzirl pleaded g three charges and not guilty to three othe after Dec. 31, 1921 £ Police officers from Wellesley and Ar] tor ere in court today with e e e L e Postal Telegraph Cable company since | yj, 19 vears of age, with jar- Plainfield. N. H.. af i cenie tho: towns. The Bostc . He was 79 years of n¢ olice he A oy \\:u‘v' i Brand Whitlock, the minister o T Officers have been able to leara lit- the - has told the police that s to Boston from Little Rock, A study music and that her allowance to discu came | w not sufficient to permit her to ARMY, CASUALTY. LISTS |dressias wel adishe wished. oD, e T T . % |PRESIDENT WILBON sAlLS ] he American Ex- | FROM BREST TODAY | forces 1 Brest, Feb. 14 (By the A, P.) Ar- One—Killed in action, 31; [ranzements were complete this even- died of disease, 109; total 140 |ing for the dep: e of President Wilson tomorrow. The steamer George | Washington moved into the outer har- Williard Hadley Nelson, |-were awaiting the arrival of the pres- \w nt. The members of the Fifth en- | zineers and the 46th machine n Yy | battalion looked over the railings of on's list show ssel all day in expectation resident Wilson might show ft of china, presented by of Brest and its environ -lceived aboard the vessel 1e ed of di missing al Wilson’s flagship, the New previously re rted wound- | Mexico, lies ready for the voyage close Private Jo! J. Keefe, the. George Washington pre- | President Wilson's reception at Brest tion, | will be in the hands of the French nfield 1 s, who will receive him wounded severely I maval authoriti at the Brest arsemal. The president 14—Jjohn Dillon w R Brtiin § Sbma ot s i‘\“(‘\‘\)rum guns to arrest erson mbers of ted wiil ers, voted b Phrusday for ¥ { an eight and one- day and a live v week. 7.00) persons will return to work, it was said, while approx 10000 already have resumed work a temporary schedule, peading oard's decision. al minority, which includes Strik unions here, el fter to the fact, | erial | L. Paeff the ga e, s mate OBITUARY. et I et s | M of tha 1. W. V not vote et pregifant of tha et for question but it i ved th e he 1 ollow the lead ol con- Mechanics Savi k. op | they may follow t 1 of the con formerly 2 te: nt her ze of T ling hard. | Servative elem died suddenly to- e MRS. THEODORE RLJ\T../E'T HAS ARRIVED AT MAVRE e, T ¢ Tvs. Theodore cattle dealor. died | Roosevelt arvrived here today on the onn., Feb. 11.—Samuel |, T2 o <y | French st v Lor She t descendant of Ric 1 741 ¢as met by I ant Verdicr of the e AR staff of Ar Prench high commissioner to th who placed her d ed S on behalf it 4l eivil and isiting the grave minent citzen ¢ € Qrendn Roosc- hos home foday. azed 71 Craaae d four terms ia the gen- 5 visit b - and had hoid . ny city ive in Carow was quie tired after a stormy voyuge., ‘ALLIED MISSION WELCOMED BY CZECHS nd turpen- | The ion which is proceeding utes between the governments | welcomed cor A through T f the delegation s of dol- | n the matter running on half of the enna. Food k suffocating | sugar crop of 1918 available coal norg tle fac- mav be man- some for ex- '('r‘ir\\ so_that the su Cazec lw) Slovas St ];v::- co rmpmwpm was unable to ob- R Vienna-Odgerkerg ¥ jam was offered as zer materials | The citizens of the new nitrate of sodaig epublic are te maintain 1st i3oicheviki pro- ing a specch m the mar- ket place of ghe town of Krakau, 20 miles from Pragie when Miss Emily in the|dent havpened to pass by. S heard the remyrks of the speaker and on to address the crowd. h a good stump speech that the Bolsheviki agen- and driven awa was hootd1l STRIKE OF FISHERMEN ON BIG SCALE IS IMMINENT rike of fisher- ng the entire Atlantic coast s said today by leaders of union to be a possi- ions promulgated v the union and submitted to pro- L wholesalers adopted before March 15. call for a minimum Boston, Feb. Ity to! The resolutions , reduction in wha charges for use of for men em- s, and increased pa k - |ployed on steam trawlers. cirl since her arrest. | cach $1,000 worth of 3 that the bonus | be_increased to $10 per $1,000. The fishermen k. tol weels_and that the only wa and the owners is to lrl\ll[ even at times when the mark > kept at a price t them enough to pay for bri $50,000,000 PUBLIC BUILDINGS BILL FAVORABLY REPORTED appropriation construction ,000,000 for of post offices and other pu was ordered favorably reported .today Buildnigs com- appropriation site for a new post office icago, which with pre- purchase of a building in C appropriations $3,500,000 for ¥ will then be | e building; P a new post of Philadelphia would a new custom house. Other large appropr lic_buildings included Atlantic City N. 50.000; Scranton, et $1,000,000 for tions for pub- the bill are: Waterbury, and Lancaste PAY OF MEN TO BE $15 A MONTH ‘Washington, in the army duced to $15 a month would be re- the provision in the annual 3 propriation bill continuing the present salary of $30 a month. A REPUBLIC RESTORED TO NORTHERN PORTUGAL restired the northern Portugal, Lisbon despatch rece BELFAST STRIKERS REJECT EMPLOYERS' PROPOSALS Beitast, Feb, 1+.—~The workers today ¢ ballot rejected the proposals of the Many proverbs are the wit of ome the wisdom of none.

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