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Bulletin Service Flag VOL. LXI—NO. rowl.mou 29,919 NORWICH, CONN.,. THURSDAY, 14 PAGES—98 COLUMNS PRICE TWO CENTS ALLIED PEAGE TER GOST OF DEFEAT INTHEIRRU DISCLOSE T0 GERMANS HLESS WARFARE; Centennial of the Corn. Gver the Top For Victory Loan Country-Wide General Assemhly Two Thousand Former Mem- Subscriptions ficers Were NATION T0 BE CRIPPLED AS Germany Must Agree to Trial of Ex-Kaiser for Responsibility of Ruthless Warfare—Army is to be Confined to 100,000 Officers and Men, With Conscription Abolished and Military Schools Limited—Navy is Limited to Six|: Battleships, Six Light Cruisers, Twelve Destroyers, Twelve Torpedo Boats, With No Submarines—No Military or Naval Air Forces Except 100 Unarmed Sea- planes Until October 1st—No Fortifications on the East Bank of the Rhine—Harbor of Heligoland is to be De- stroyed—Financial Penalties Include Reimbursement for All Civilian Damages, With Initial Payment of 20,000,000,000 Marks, Repayment of Shipping Damage by Surrender of a Large Part of Merchant, Coasting and River Fleets—Economic Resources to be Devoted to Re- building of Devastated Regions—Territorial Losses In- clude Cession of Alsace-Lorraine and the Coal Mines of ILITARY POWER tablished at the seat of the which will be at Geneva. Hartford, Conn., May dreds of men who have served in the legislature from towr state office, Many hun- ‘Washington, May T. or districts or |u,,“ were guests of the state today when the general as- y of 1919 bridged the span of a hundred years and ob: tennial of the fi sembly under the constitution of y one previous ‘. i approached today’s rved the cen- The assembly will consist of repre- Sessioniar the nas members of the league, and will meet at stated inter- Voting will be by member will have one vote and more than three representatives. Council of Five Allied Powers. The council will consist of representatives of the five great allied * with representat * members selected by sembly from time to time; operate with additional will meet at least once a year. bers not represented will be invited to send a representative when i affecting their 1818.} hering in num- . 1886, | lators| when in the capitol rormer leg there were two thous- and former members and former The rormer state sovern=| Cleveland 4 ors present were i (Woodruff, and the former it may co- Mills, Blakes- lee and Tingier. The exercises originally outdoors were of the house of representatives, was adequate merely to nold the form- Homeward movement lof er members over s 3 planned for chamber| Social Democrats won the municipal which | election in Vienna. interests are di Voting will be by states. e one vole and not more representative. C] y the assembly must be unanimous except in regard to procedure, i i specified in the covenant and where decisions will state will hav themselves bers and Forme.r State Of-| Now Total $2,458,663,000 in Attend-| 59 Per Cent. of Aggre- gate. The best re- tory Liberty campaign reached the treasury total subscriptions were 63,000, or 59 per cent. of the aggregate desired. The over- night increase was $398,000,000, of which $: 00,000 came from the New { York district. ports of the entire V. reunion{ Kentucky and Conmecticut have of- ficially over-subscrived their quotas: Percentages of quotas by districts were { announced as_follows St : Minzeapolis 74.7; ago 0. hia 40.4 Condensed Télegrams troops of agelfrom France amounted to nearly and such.of the younger men as could|10,000 a day in April. ‘The galleries 000,000. There was| Father John J. Hughes, head of the To Plan Reduction of Armaments. Armaments. mulate plans for a reduction of arma- ments for consideration and adoption. These plans will be rev are adopted, armaments | Saar to France, Poland to Have Control of Upper Silesia, Danish Boundary to be Decided by Vote of Population —Danzig is to Become a “Free City”’—France is to Ex- ercise Protectorate of Morocco—Egypt Placed Under British Protectorate—Must Renounce Treaties of Bu- charest and Brest-Litovsk. Following f¢ summary of treaty pre- use of the pr r must exceed the he concurrence .of members will exchunge full information as to armaments and| ogrammes, and a permanent comm sion will advise the council on mili- tary and naval questtons, Submit Disputes to Arbi(ration Preventing of War. or threat of w. ' to consider 3 responsible for livery of the latter. This country raised two kinds of armies for the great war. Excluded From League of Nations. The league of i and Germany handed to the pienipotentiartes a I is accepted , the (Uunul ‘(Mll me!t us operative and by Germany in prin- memberstip. S labor body is brought into being with a permunent! . submit matters of to arbitra- Longest Treaty Ever Drawn. international the longest vreaty ever drawn. usand words, sections and One was an army of soldiers—the other an army of bond buyers. Membm S agrnp international nds and for different purposes are created, some under league of nations, some to execute the Among the former is pal\v m the “hth Lomphed with ber fuils to carry ou: the award the council will propose s The councii will propose The coun- of different Our soldiers answered every call. The result is glorious history. xperts working con- peace treaty. commission a plebiscite Sth the treaty the necess; cil will formulate plans for the ests lishment of 2 permanent court of in- ternational justi national disputes or t ini Members who do not sub- to arbitration must ac- iction o the assembly.| less the parties to the! agreed upon the members held - fifteen 3 commissioner of Danzig, which is created into a free and various cites in Malmo- Our army of bond buyers have one more call to answer—the “VICTORY” LIBERTY LOA to @etermin insofar as| wing Germany t how- to carry reparations, ose formbr cept the ju If the coun Let’s finish as our soldiers did—gloriously. At Any Bank—Cash or Instalments \—__——_ Sections of the Treaty. the preamble and depos the covénant; league of nations as the fitsisec- | The frontiers in Burope as defined in the the rights of hat they will not go o' war with am} mmv to the disnute Which. complies| its recommenaations. case a recommendation by tlie assem- court and miltgss IDeRAlR fix re And a géries of bo the control of international rivers. Problems Left For Solution. sponsibilities, ion of the treaty. problems are left for solu- the alMes anr associ- Ated powers, notably details of the dis- position of the German fleet and ca- , the former German colonies, and reparation. Cer- tain other problems such as the laws the air and the opium, are cither agreed to in detail or set for early interpational ac- its members represented. on the council and a sim- ple majority of the rest, less the par- will have the force ecommendation In either case, if the ne agreement cannot be the members reserve the right to take such action as may a sing from a war eamp commuult\ Paulist order in this coum song sheet at followed by 1 which reyusred close 0 2, A band provided the mu-1T01Cdu barred vocal inspiration was di- ] had Durin, Re-| were 5. ties to the dispute, of a unanimous the council. ne military. naval as the fifth sectlon, fol- v1 prisoners of war 1 seventh an Reparation, 1s are covered Then comes values paid and ecenomi: liquor traffic, ) sections eigh . When | Sta the wers r“ trooy Members resorting to war in d time came to begin t men of sixty vears an dupwards Parties to the Treaty. The preamble names as the United intercourse guarantees final elauses, haired men made a Teritorial Changes. programme > terms of the treat Alsace-Lorraine to Fance, ac- intenationalization of Pasin temporarily league collectivel of the covenants cilities to members cooperating in this the protection j Ttaly and Japan. described i and will afford allied and associated powers. and Bel- Bolivia, Brazil, 3 ece, Guatemala, the Hedjaz Honduras, Liberia, Nica- ragua, Panama, Peru, Serbia, Siam Czecho-Slovakia, who with the five above | are described as the allied and asso- and on the other part, man of the committee, ernor Holcomb briefly g the wel-| and of Danzig All Treaties to Be Registered. Herbert Randall of Hartford, poem written Lieutenant Governor Wilson his-| read a occa- | All treuties or engagements after the institute of the !edgu{‘ will be registered with the secretariat The assembly may dvise members to re- have become Jast Prussie, cedes most international and Uruguay nounces all rights outside Europe, beginnings and chang 4s to her own s, and especially to ciated powers, time to zime consider treaties which inapplicable The covenant abrogates all ob- s between members tent with its terms, but nuthlng in lt shall affect the validity tional engagement such as treaties 0[ arbitration or regional understandings like the Monroe Doctrine for securing the maintenance of peace. Different Kinds of Mandatories. The mandatory lage of nations not yet able to themselves will advanced nations who are best fitted The covenant recog- nizes three different stages of devel- requiring different kinds mandatories i those belonging to the Turk i which can be provisional independent, subject advice and assistance from a mandu- house. Betw lett led the loving cups tion to Chester It states that: bearing in mind that on the request of the then imperial German government an armistice was granted on November 1, 1918, by the five allied and associated powers in order that a treaty of peace might be concluded with her, and whereas the associated powers desirous thav the which they were successively involved directly or indirectly, and which orig- i in the declaration of war by Austria-Hungary on July against Serbia, the declaration of war v against Russia on . 1914, should be replaced by and durable peace, (having communi- cated their full powers in good and due form have agreed as follows). From the coming into force of the present treaty the state of war will ntung. She ¢ independence of S0 recognize: German-Austria, and Poland. itary Restrictions Imposed. to hundred including officers; iption within her territories is ahol- ; all forts fifty kilometers east of and all importation, all production v for presenta- 104, ex-member, Colonel Hodge, point of service, hut ow the former w: The gathering did not disperse until Members of served monz r in 1g to the rain Rhine razed: exportation and nearly f war material stopped. ~upation of parts of Germany will con- committee, and guests were have been Connecticut. the end of each of three five-year periods if Germany 1= fulfilling her obligation. 3 v of the conditions ne of fifty kilometers east © Rhine will be regarded as an act to undertake it. NEW SODA WATER TAXES CAUSE DEMAND FOR PENNIES|ister to Poland, was r hinzton, May morr' in demand than dollars in the. soda water taxes. Si when these taxes went e United States mints : ies have been flooded with or-|) pieces| a firm, just, plenipotentyaries, 7.—Pennies ognized as Reduction of Navy. The German navy ratleships, gix welves torpado boats, +nd a personnel of not over sub- is reduced to six| From the moment and subject to the i provisions of this treaty tions with of {he German state: by the allied and gssociated powers. League of Natiens Section. T.eague of Natlons. The covenant of the jeague of nations institutes Section One of the peace treaty, which places upon the league many spscific in addition to its gon- eral duties. It ma be allowed advice. like those of central A.rlca‘ to be ad- ministered by ) conditions generally approved hy members of the opportunities for to all members; official rela- Communities Germany, and with each will be resumed and these coins have been s banks by the bushels. To meet the continued demand tlm"""- 2 Philadelphia and Denver working almost exclusively (m cmr- r'r-" and an extra shift of work has been ordered for the must be surrendered or destoved. Ger- s is forbidden to build forts con- must demolish Heli- Cana) to all and surrennder he; wubmarine eables where equal | trade will be allowed certain abuses, and liquor will be prohibited, and the construc- and naval bases and rolling the Baltic, Section One: Phidadelphia| First tion of military She may have no the introduction of compulsory nilitary or naval air forces except one hundred unarmed seaplanes until Oc- mines, and may manufacture aviation material for six anestion Germany iolation of the Other communities, neutralized zone east of the Rhine as west Africa and the south Pacific is ands but administered under the laws as integral portions BUY BONDS lNSTEAD OF FLOWERS MOTHERS' DAY Cleveland, May 7.—Mi of Philadelphia, tional Mothers’ sent the federal cou s of Christ in Amerzca such as south- Jarvis|ation to Greece. v assassinated at| e ToRnrr f the mandatory e CITY OF FIUME TO BECOME of its territory. will render an annual > degree of its authority will be defined. Fair Conditions of Labor. international S. Subject to and in accordance with the provisons of international existing or hereafier to be agreed up- 6u, the members of the league will in It will appoint three of the five mem- bers of the Saar commission, oversee its regime and carry oul the plebiscite. 1t will appoint the high commi: of Danzig, guarantee the independence and arrange for the | Penalties Imposed. accepts full responsibility all damages caused to allied and i governments and specifically Day association, today h- | the following| United States opened at Ottawa with to reimburse all e z of the free city, begmning with treaties between Danzig and many and Poland. the mandatory system to be applied to the former German colonies, ag a final court in nart cites of the Belgian.eterman frontier, and in disputes as to the Kilel Cana and decide certain of the economi and finuncial promiebs. tional conference on labor is to be held in October under its direction,-and an- other in international control of ports, waterways and railways “Announce Mothers: Day next Sun-|Cans No flowers to be y ¥t will wy Rici people to buy marks subsequent payments to be se- oFk ou ped convention | thrift stamps instead.” of the reparation commis of the plebis- BOLSHEVIKI HAVE BEGUN AN ATTACK ON VILNA amage on a ton-for-ton organization convention, e ir conditions of. labor men, women and children own countries and % and undertake to secure just treat- ment of the native inhabitants of ter- ritories under their control: entrust the league with the general supervison over i agreements established by strength ha the capital which was captured s attack| impo: Lithuania, | veral week ugo{ Complete reorganiza 1 | coustruction: the devastated regions. Agreements Exacted. E agrees to return to 1914 mest- favored-nation rimination of and associated nationals freedom of | cansit through her accept highly detailed provisions as te|; y uafair competition. 1ernationalizgation of roads und rive rcbuilding of X , according to a Kovno despatch received warded by the Vilna is said to be intense artillery has occurred. in Berlin and for- Telegraph|an opportunity (o become member under| was voted at the 20th annual conven- fighting | tion at St. Louis. ns to League. members of the be the signatories of the allow allied| Membership. 3 suppression of league will children, etc., and the control of the trade in 'ms and ammunition with countries i is necessary will make provision for freedom territories, and to| PLANE CARRIED 25 PERSONS : L FROM PARIS TO BRUSSELS| Sions was presented by Vilhjalmar The which | mons, and] Chines. who must lodge a deciaration i reservation A new state, do- re-war debis, within two months. i - colony may i3 admission iz agreed of the assembly. ¢ withdraw upon giving two years , if it has fulfilled all its obligations. Section Two. A permanent secretariat will .be es- restment for commerce of en flying bLetween the ex-kaiser all members of the league, with spe- cial reference 1o the mecessties of re- sions devastated during they will endeavor to take steps for (Continued on Page Eleven) internacional height of 5,100 meter (approximatel; carring wwenty-five pa <. The ascent was made in onelthe po hour and fifteen scent in twenty-five minutes. international mor: stoms or war, Holand te Secretariat. Be asked tp extradite the former St. Elizabeth's Hospital, 2T Willye-Overland isutapohie haniiat 00 men who refused ordered hy the firm. the week of April 26 t 9 new ca of disease re- to work the hours ]_hul S| Government deficit {oitoperating rail- | mess; were jammed, while hundreds did not|roads for first three months of 1919 hear the addresses and continued their|estimated at 1 reunions in the corridors. | more, the Germans will be allowed {who it had been feared for a timeimean in effect tbat she would de: I tungle over the Adriatic | the Ad mors of a battle between Villa | CEREMONIAL OF HANDING THE PEACE TREATY T0 GERMANS Envoys of Twenty-seven Nations Were Present When Pre- mier Clemenceau of France Passed the Document— Italians Arrived in Time for the Notable Event—Scene in the Trianon Palace Hotel—Mrs. Wilson Was an ln- terested Spectator of the Function. Versailles, May 7 (By the A. P.).— sentatives of Javan aligned squarely Germany today was told the terms|with the other powers. any complica- upon which the allied and asociated|tions that might have been threatened powers wiil make peace with her. The|over the question of Kiao Chau and treaty, containing some 80.000 words,|the wording of the league of nations was handed to the German plenipoten-| covenant having heen smoothed over. tiaries at a memorable assemblage| The ceremonial of handing the treaty here, attended by the delegates of the|t othe Germans took place in the hall twenty-seven nations which are par-|of the Trianon Palace hotel. a epa- ties to the peace compact. The treaty| cious, well lighted chamber. with tables has to do with Germany alone, except|for the delesates arranged nearly tn insofar as it is required that she ac-lthe form of a square. It was presided cept agreements made by the allies|over by Georges Clemenceau, the with the other central powers. The|¥rench premicr, president of the peace treaty is not printed in German. The|congress, who sat at the center of the text is in French and English, on op-|head table, with President Wilson and posite page. | the other American representatives on There has been much discussion of | his right and David Lioyd Georse, the the question whether the German dele- | British premier, and his colleagues on zates would sign the peace treaty. The{the left. Mrs. Wilson was an inter- Germans at first proposed to send!ested spectator of the function, engers to Versailles to take thel Paris, May 7.—The German dele- treaty to Berlin, but they were made|gates to the neace conference say that to understand that delegates with|they will sign the peace treaty, but power to sign the terms of peace must|that Germany will not pay an indem- be sent. and this was done. Further-|nity (In the discussion of peace terms by only a definitely fixed time withinlGermany through both her official and which to sign the treaty unofficial spokesmen she has invaria- Allied 1 sentation at the ceremo-|bly drawn a distinctior between repa- made complete by thei ition and indemnity, construing the farrival in Paris this morning of Vit-|latter in effect as punitive damages torio Orlando, the Italian premier. and|It seems probable, therefore, that the 2aron Sonnino, the foreign mi jrefusal to pay an “indemnity” would would not be present because of theito pay what she regarded as question. The | damuges.) Italians, however, indicated that tr Vitiorio Orlando. th thought it necessary that a solid allied| and Baron Sonnino, {he foreign minis- f presented to the Germans,| ter, in P from Rome this delegates returned from, morning spite the incomplete state of| The It iatic negotiat which, how-| Paris “White House" just aas the ver they t the settlement|council of four reassembled and re- Austria-Hungary, do not figure|sumed his seat in the council. n the making of the peace with Ger-| The Petit Parisien says there will y be a maximum delay of one month be- The day likewise found the repre-!fore the signing of the peace treaty. Rome lian premier arrived at the SYLLABUS OF THE MAIN ALL OF EXPEDITIONARY POINTS OF THE PEACE TREATY | FORCES HOME BY AUGUST New York, May 7.—The main points Washington, May 7.—Secretary Ba- the peace treaty follow: ll\tl' announced today that by August Alsace and Lorraine to go to I'rance. the t man of the American Expe- the bridges over the Rhine on their| ionary Ior will have been with- are to be in French control. |drawn from ance. He said this es- port of Danzig is permanently|limate was Lased on the movement of nalized and most of Upper 300,000 men a month to the United 1 is ceded to Pol , whose in-|States. Already the American forces sermany COgnizs Po-jin France have been divorced from nd also receives Posen and part of|the Army oi Occupation. Plans have West Prussia. been completed to supply the force in Sarre coal basin is temporarily | Germany _through Antwerp and Rot= internationalized. The coal mines go|ierdam, femoving the necessity ior {o. France: - > | maintaining: the 700-mile line of Germany recognizes the. tofal inde- | munication from Brest. The Fre pendence of German Austria and|ports will.be.maintainedy however, for Czecho- 8 it ; the withdrawal of the American Ex- Germar are taken from |peditionary For her and the league of nations will} More than half of the Expeditionary work out a mandatory system. Forces have now left France, and as is conditionally given the|the withdrawal progresses facilities and Eupen districts of Prus-|swhich were used for those forces are bordering on Belgium, with the|being turned back either to private tunity to be given the inhabi-}owners or to the municipalities to to protest. The league of nha-|which they belonged. tions has the final decision. y Secretary Baker said no official fore- and | ported among the troops in the United | Luxembourg is set free from thefcast could be made as to-the move- German customs union. . |ment of the army of occupation, as All concessions and territory in}this depended on developments at the and I'ederal troops at Jimin huahua, wer circulat. ¢l Juarez. i han|Were granted o 547 enemy prisoners | £ \ the T _lof the armistice. Community was des amounted to $10,000. of Civil V Major Darley of the 2riti with two lieutenants and three m: %! chan started from Margate, land on a flight to Madrid. troops to serve i for Ame in Siberia. | Official denial was made of the re- iport that Princess Mary of England s engaged to the Earl of Dalk eutenant in the Grenadier Guards. tal rev 1e, shov v Hugh S. Gibson, United States min- ieved by the of State. He will turn over his o "land men of the ved at Newport re we Infantr 114th to ¢ . Postmaster General Burleston "was horit by the Suprem o| Court to continue to collect incr ¢! telegraph rates in Iilinois unti <| determination. unit of 1.000 men who enlist- ed for Qiree ¥ Hoboken for IFrance on the trans- port Agamemnon. Gui to deliver nor Turks and so rn Epirus from ight for its annex- Annual convention of the National re Protection 500 delegates in atténdance from a and he United States. i cd.| War Department announced only s bonds andinew uniforms or reclaimed ones as| table for wear on | 2ood as new and s parade and other ceremonies will be issued to soldiers on discharge. Sir Auckland Geddes, Minister of National Service and Reconstruction in|declared American whiskey could be ted into England if it had been paid for before the beginning of 191 cn of the Na- tional Guard Association of the United States so as to give returning soldier A plan for converting the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions of Canada to wool. milk and meat producing re- Stefansson, explorer, before the Ca- nadian Senate and Ilouse of Com- delegation to the peace 4| conference appealed 1o President Wil- officials (0 have China included among s permitted to attend the minutes and the de-|presentation of the pease treaty to the Germans at Versaill>s, | War Department announced paroles ted States since the signing | peace. Canteen building of the War Camp | tri Service at Camp Mills, L. royed by fire. The loss Colonel Xenophon Hawkins, one of the last officers of Morgan’s raiders fame, ' is dead at his!s heme in Springfield, < : of the| ey b army, {more than 100, 000 men and cannot re- [of the navy flight, Bart- *isort to conseription. conditions for a possible flight tomor- th, a From dJan. 1 to April 30 receipts of 10|50 largest postoffices yielding about iife| half the total pe ed an increase of 9 per cent. on last!bonds to the Government immed- | | Two thousand two hundred officers | Former Empe { violations of the laws and customs of 5 to serve with the | be 3 two millione one-|American Army of Occupation, left as well a cent pieces will be turned cut dai is, who worked for 30 Association of the | son to intercede with ‘the conference | China must be renounced. Shantung|peace conference. ded to Japan. . erman troops and authorities must| paAp WEATHER PREVENTS wcuate Schleswig-Holstein north of the Kiel Canal within ten days after{ . NAVY OCEAN FLIGHT commission will s | New York, May 7.—Weather condi- f-determination ions today were again unfavorable for \vishing to join Denmark will be | starting the trans-Atlantic flight of ceded Germany. the navy fi3 NC lgoland must be demolished, and|NC-4, which have been waiting for “rman labor; the Kiel Canal|several days for an au; pmou moment must be opened to all nations. a vote of sel Where tile first stop is to be rmane. erm a have an army of | Commander John H. Towers, in charge Sered e ol aid that weather She must raze all her forts for fifty |row were not certain, but that to the |iilomaters east of the Rhine and is|present they appeared fairly favorable. Orders were issued by the Warialmost er { Department for the recruiting of 8,000 1s replacement troops hibits ' ro- vantag v ken of the delay to ir prohibited from pro-| Advantage was ta iy ducing war material. remove three engin from the NC-3 Only six capital ships are allowed |becau: their bearing had become Germany for her nav She is per-|overheated. One engine had been re- twelve de-!moved night before last, 5? now the a velve torpedo boats in 3 has a complete set of new mo- e tors. Arrangements were made this All civilian damages are to be re-|morning to 'have ons or more of lhé irvursed by Germany, her initial p: machines make test flights late th ment to be ,000,000,000 marks with | afternoon, weather permitting. subsequent payments to be secured by She must replace shipping ton| EXTRA SESSION OF CONGRESS for ton. She must also devote her CALLED FOR MONDAY, MAY 19 economic resources to rebuilding the mitted stroyers addition, light cruisers i hington, May ~ 7.—President devastated regions ing Mo B ent s Y N he! adcupled sued a call by cabl a unjxd' ,-.»pm s ”m:dfll o ession of congress to meet S Y 9 Germany must agree {o the trial of y 19. i i e o = William by an inter-| Secretary Tumulty, in making the reme. offense | announcement, said it would be im- ainst international morality and to|possible for the president to be here the trial of others of her sulfjects for!on the opening d. The date wa much earlier than democratic leaders had expected. it and Germany accept the| White House officials sald that in league of nations, Germiny, however,naming an carly date for the session, accepting in principle and not ?‘l’\nltn\ \\n.fl)fi‘“a' dfw} ln'rgr“,\ a membe the advice of Secretary Glass as to and agreements with | the necessity of passing annual appro- must be abrogated, | priation measures which failed in the caty of Buchgrest with | closing days of the last session. national court for a Rumania. German prisoners of war are to be| BUENOS AIRES PORT repatriated, but the allies “é” (In'l(l STRIKE HAS BEEN SETTLED terman officers as hostages for _ et 3 e A Washington, May 7.—The Buenos ey ndais Aires port strike has been settled and activities at the pors are again nor- a a despatch receiv- ALIAN AFTER 1923! mal, according to a des T . .|ed today by the Argentine embassy P May T By e A A% 2| from the minister of foreign affair resuming participaf e of fo; e beate’ mesabiations; Premict (OHando] bRy SRR S accepted a proposal that ltaly admin-| culties at the port of B s Alpmar ister Fiume as a mandatory of the| absolutely without foundation as, in Jeague of nations until ¥ atter| fact. the port's activities are in fall which ime will revert to Italian| Working order,” said the message. “The | sovereignty reasons which caused .the previous During the four years of Italian ad-| Strile have {r‘;fn completely and sat- minisu 2 harbor for the Jugo-|isfactorily settled. Slavs will be built at a port few miles lower down the Adriatic coast.| MASKED HOLD UP MEN The harbor will have railroad com- MAKE HAUL IN LYNN wnication with Agram and other| po.. SN T whid : men held up Frederick G. Far s r: Iso is pre-| e it e e o Al :;f, I. §. Barnett & Co.. teather manufac- 5 1 turers, in the vestibule of er e iclz C Imatian | r {‘0-‘. (mlm RSt ey ! plant on Boston street this aft- The a coen $4.000 =& The proposal which induc the| Sl e rsi i lialians to return to Paris was made| 3. payroll funds, according s to them by Camille Barrere, the; Police repori. The men aped in French ambassador at Rome an automobile. oon 00 1 FIVE TRANSPORTS SAIL CHARGED WITH OPERATING WITH 8500 TROOPS ILLEGAL WHISKEY STILL Washingion, May 7.- i Boston, May 7.Samuel Forsyth, of transports with 8,500 oficers Salem, who was arrested Monday in was announced today by (he war de-| Beverly charged with operating an fl- ment. Units of the 29th, 32d, 82d, legal whiskey still, pleaded not guiity % divisions are on board the| before Federal Commissioner Iaves which are due to arrive at New | tada; He was released under $300 York and Boston between May 14 and 1 and the case set down for a hear= 120, ing May 21. e L - bl o< W,