Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
VEL. LXI—NO. 112 - POPULATION 29,919 f.GERMANS CONTIUE THER lflefii‘éfi? ?mes I have Bt Bonds O00 I AUU JUvi . icial report from Vienna s the 16> o Wmfl John H. Towers Decides | perconnel of ihe Austrian eace dele-| Known Until About May / i 2 g . _ | gates were not chosen. - 5 5 s E = 5 Al Parties Are United in Expression of Scom for the Terms }*" u‘.v :“."{ is Favorable| “siats Decariment sticiis atach no fl.‘;‘*"%"’y Oversubscrip-| Charge Made Against the Railroad Administration by George ; % o or the Aviators. : n. ; 5 ; Imposed —Two Additional Notss communication out of Peking, - 2 : % Hae Bese Sent to et Cromeenes by ot Vo o 25717 35, o 11t ol B PSRt 8l s 0| oo, e t—er | - Petlo Who Was Chaimun of the Degartment of 4 A navy' - 1 iz o CA pul Into | li ” o) . i iy 0 . ” X iRt Iuar CISmERCEET L COUDL, WOn ey g it hs'lalccmfl{;h::n?xua&?h{fi; Sieot immediatesy by the - Shippias feny ann e smiou"c‘z;z;}aiifiwwfifb}. Commerce's Industrial Board—Declares Partisan Politic: Brockdorff-Ranzau, Head of the German Peace Dele-!seaplanes NC-1 ana” NC-3 dectareq | Board: closed last night, according to esti — . sy [after insneltion o have heen amre| . President Tinoce of Costa Rica has|mates recetved today Do the treassny is Back of the Refusal by the Railroad Administration tc gation, Dealing With the Subjects of Prisoners of War jured by their long trip from Rock.|three columns operating again mlens_ed ;Fekgrams : kish_peace delegates expocted to C the | from federal reserve banks. This come. . £ ; ; Publ: X Liph away Beach, N. Y., indications tonjeht| Fevolutionists near - the Nicaraguan | pares with about 1,000,000 purchacers Accept Prices Fixed for Steel—Asserts That the Public and Labor Legislation, were that the planes will start on theie| frontler.. .. ©_ lin the fourth loan, 17,000.000 in the SiRG . ”» . 1,240-mile “hoy” for the Amrer ai gis| Lieutenant Ervin E. Ballough, fer-!third, 9,400,000 in the second and| Will “Demand an Explanation. ) Parls, May 11.—Two ' additional|president's fourteen points, while in-|f7stinstant Commander John H. Tow-|merly of the Canadian army flew from | 4,000,000 in the first. 5t % ers decides the weath v ronto to Newark ~with a cafgo of| A few addition: notes: have been sent by Count Von|diguation 13 espressed =over Lerms|preparations area:";:\ru:?ht'a;:;:?lfiell timal pelts. = o0 Juet of the board ‘ad tg. rendér the Brockdorft-Rantzau, head of the Ger-|chafacterized as unbearable and a3 and it is believed the aviators will noti It was reported in high quarters injwas made to tabulate them, and the| COMUMErce’s industrial board, which|opinion inapplicable, yet it has been man peace deleguiion, to Premier Cle- (PRNUNE Savery fof e Bermad Beo_| cacrifice 'a favorable opportunity hy|Paris that American - Ambassador |treasury announced that the official; Va5 dissolved last week after a long |used as a basis for the abandonment menceau as presdent of the peace con- fhe’v ire. desiiv mpoved Shd outraped| Walting. for the delayed NC-4. = Thel Page would resign his post on con-! total probably would not be known un-| CORtroversy with the railroad admin-|of the board's plan, 4 ference. The notes, which were for-|,\®Y, wpid ot the tveits eElle | airmen held a closed conference aftar: clision of peace. Ul May 26, The total as compiled still| IStration concerning steel prices, de-| “In all this opposition the board has | warded Saturday evening, dealt with ¥ [0¢ P e et Fa what | examining the planes today. but the| William Hohenzellern, Jr. former|stood’ at $3.549.000.000. but late reports! Clared in'a statement tonight that the | the sublects of ‘priconers of war and T8 SRUIRIe CoaiL P! e = clozeo el 2 i sough; i}x: ain for a substanfial rea- ecisions reached were not announced.|Crown prince of Germany, has joined | emphasized the earlier indications that| Public wou! emand an exxplanatien son. It has urged the railroad admin- tabor legislation. they call a “brutal peace of force. The NC-1 ports of subscrip- |, Vashington, May 11.—George 'N. g sistent with the actual course of con- tions came in today, but no aLlempt‘Peek' chairman of the department of o 7 . " was retielled after her;a newly formed Dutch pottery com- |the loan had been heavily oversub-|©f the wrecking, apparently on the ob- |istration first to aid it by one. single The ropltes which the council of 2‘:: ‘_erzp?:;:f: u:e(\lerdict of death,” is propeliers had been shifted and or: pany as manager. - scribed. stinacy of a single individual, of alfact, or argument, to arrive at a lower four: sent to the preceding ~German [req a repairs offected. . The motors on hoth| Adjjutant General Gilkyson of New —_— | plan to make an immediate reduction}price for steel and, second, to name a notes, made public Saturday, were!Tpoite NOT HARDER THAN planes ‘are in excellent shape. {Jersey announced that part of the GENERAL REVIEW OF {1n the cost of living of such an appar- [fFice which the railroad administra- drawn up, according the Temps, with 78th Division left -Marseilles on the crews are rested and eager for the trip, the personal and particulafly active GERMAN EDITOR EXPECTED S INTERNATIONA ent national value, tion would consider fair. Tederal reserve district officials esti- | transport_President Wilson. AR ! BT e atad Drar. _“Ican only conjecture an expla: “The railroad administration’s only caflaboration of President Wilson. { Berlin, via London, May 11.—Maxi- | mated: the numbér ef' subscribers in! Judge Elbert H. Gary, chairman of 2 Bausdien Tressy) | tion” said Mr. Peck. “Throughout the {answer has been that the steel price THe protests that came from vari-|ilian. Harden. cditor of the Berlin Dic| Boston 940000 and Fhiladelphia 1.500.- | the United Statess Steel- Corporation’ | 1€ German delegates to the peace' bafiiing controver the Board has announced by the board is. ‘too, high. | ous Tuarters' in Germany over Zukunft, writing on the peace- treat The other districts could not be! beard of directors, declared “they had | COTETESS ‘xdr_nlly are workfng hard found itself checked by forces in op- That the administration would com- | peace terms, as they were reported be- |sayvs: s . mated accurately as to their sub-!no time to fight the railroads. to absorb in detuil the demdnds em-|position which it could neither under- | mit itself against the public, inferest fore the offictal terms Lecame Lnown,|, “The peace conditions are not hard- |.seribers but based on the reduced to-| Pregress by peace - commissioners | 2-2oC the leagthy peace treaty.!stand, reason i vare as nothing in comparison with the er than I expected. They were un- e asLny L ith, nor overcome, but|merely to support the ancient and 4 tals as compared with the fourth loan,| kas caused no change in the plan, of ;““*’ seem, however, to be puttingwhich grew in % rength until th dited railrcad slogan, ‘the public be wave ‘of remonstrance—angry, bitter, | pleasant o the greater part of thelthe remaininz districts should pro-|the War Department for an army of | 0I(B their oblections (o the document rendered further progress . impa g LR e S ioihed 1 sible | damned’ is unthinkable. Yet after all ! disappoinfed in tone—the} is sweeping | people. But could one really have ex-| duce enough additional individual|329.000 officers and enlisted men. Sncountered hatner hen Gemands are and forced abandonment of the plan. !it s the administration, tot’ the di- | pver Germany now that e treaty has|pecied {hom otherwise? subscribers to bring the total up to| . Representatives of the American|guotplered usamst which they con-{ “In theory the plan has been ap-|rector general alone, who had power been presenied. States, municifali- “The: Germans have not given very! fifteen million, the treasur Railway Exxpress Co., in New York, |~ [n tpo meantime Mar 2 jproved’ almost unanimously by | to thwart the board. ties, digtricts, organizations of various | convincing -mental guarantees. during| nounced. Long lsland and parts of New Jersey, | 15t Snotieially (o by > so-jmess men and associates and by edi-| “Members of the industrial board :‘or:., dsinheu l]nvms and v{]omen; the sixgmonths since the revolution| Tn New England 901 cities and towns| s2id their business was badly tied up. Ve Pt o e 1'e{u?'n {8 ?hg ;‘;‘:'( i torial and press comment the country |¢ %6 experienced business men untrain- + clubs and the political parties hrough | that ‘they have changed their system; [had achieved their w10tas before the ed private and government own- dax: : it Mot jover; in practice the plan has beened in the devious ways of partisan pol- their epokesmen are vying wuh‘ eacn|on the contrary the present Sovern-{ closing hour. Connecticut had 190, ership and operation of merchant ma-|" }yrther o Have: besn forwardeds s ren juys theiorder of steeljitics. They came to their present cther in finding words in which to ex-|ment and ‘the press have used the| Officers expressed satl faction with|rine shipping now government owned e h office by the Producers and the buying r vhich ; task without hope of reward or ad- press scorn aild condemnation for thesame methods of incitement, the same | the result of the long coastal flight|is proposed in a bill drafted by Semu- | Gerraans, i adoit s o the son immediately foilowed the announce-|vancement, and are ng gain decument, . | trieks of Bluff as under the old ruleihers for although four fimes driven|tor Jones. ations made last week > IenL oL steel pricespand, cansed. : e conclusion™that He - as opitilon, each ‘of ' them asealling:.thel and speeches are only bad coples of|her cara opaorpected. in “mid-oceair Iv calm. Milltdry casualties were fivelvications vt tei Soasreeh i e I T were enabled by their navigating| British officers killed, six wounded, terms Germany is asked (o sign, for|the kaiser's time. The whole Dress{apmaratus to correct drrors within ins{and eniisted men, 18 the bfl:y of the ‘independent eocialist:resouymds in protects and has started!minytes, i iy W o party- does not appear to agree with|a campaign of incitement against thel A warning has heen issued to the| Walter Parker, general secretay of ita organ, Die Freiheit, that Germany | allies, couched in viclent language.|puplic to be prepared for false starts| Miss! ssippi Vulley! Association, yWllli ghould sign the peace on the terms|It is agltating for refusal to sign the|ag it is intended to “hop off” with ex- | szil fo Liverpool from New York May presented. The newspapers are ut-{reaty, and to what use? All must|ceptionallr heavy loads of fuci, and| 15, for a forty-five day commercial terir swamped with the protests, be-|know that the allies, by keeping un 2 : o i AE o rd Iator oo ion alone was nt to the | - have Leen unable to pene- general, the labor clauses of * donment of a pol of such xl:\-lt}'at» ik ¢ cloud in which the po- the- trecty are s ce. Not towarll the end has the | it sqquid has concealed its es- whans, wHor how : : tior general besn alone in twart- | cape The : po: the planes may be compelled to return|tour of Europe. convention at \ersailles to discuss the S ary t sury has taken S 1S poiitically undesirable. L ) o [nactpniefithe lochade) end focugying it bRl it o IoddN e excessive. Last official detachment of the 165th | pomta raisen. o W 41 o stion with his he plan of the boatd was,good. It stance, by 'tra"'rn;ibmr Whttk: sava | e ey e o . ,%’fif,"s “’"5“"5, the naval flight{old 63th New York, will leave Camp| ™ President WV red to have message to (he president urging the|is capable of accomplishing twhat it ) by th t 3 ¥ 3 3 e s 9 R ) . I S the unfriendly attitude towards the|. “The allies have been threatened e o Lucstion of whether the No. 4 Mills for Camps Funston, Dodge and actively collaborated in the replies to creation of the board. {promised. The administration owes the first communications of the Ger-)genecral has rendered e e _bee ened| “hop offs” with the other two planes|Grant, were 10 oificers und 21 the socialist:a f,‘c:"{i: that ufi"c“gyt Wpufi jbam_ ghfd;?ol.“{‘g; Gepends unon the time she artives|wil be discharged. imans, in one of whica it was set forth of the board cox e they are in the minorite i therr | opcl: Tut that would be Suicldal o The |here, as favorable weather may cause| War DeDpartment netified com- | that the aliies could admut of 1o dige{S : s ey in the minority in thelr|only way to réacue the country is bY|the "N.C.-1 and N.C.I3 to start, witn|manders.of. the Eastern, Southern and | cussion o their right to insist uptal countfies, and the Germans must pro- |openness and honesty. The revolutiod|littre warning. Central departments of the army to’tae terms of the peace treaty an- | PR boteimont Ukewios s biing | | At o D e The start probably will be made|have all drafted and enlisted men dis- as dratted. 7 " e overwlielmed with telegrams which It| who would have lald thelr cards on | ther memaiiene i iy ants 1 wea-|charged before fie Lo el Tient e STRIKE AT PLANT OF | AMERICAN LEGION CALLS FoR is utterly unable to answer save by!the table and got the allles to under- i The body of Mrs, Grace N. Dwyer man peace delez L ey - § men t to the nation to put that plan iate mmediate execution at the hands of me agency in which it can feel po- litical confidence and sympath $ . . ; eI~ |come favorable. Conditions at sea ittsfield, wl isappea s Fersailles Ebted INTERNATIONAL PAPER CO.| DEPORTATION OF SLACKERS PPy 7 (gt et o o Ly ““"“*Pfi‘“‘*‘- It Germany showed it3; When the start is made, the planes| foundt yestorday morning fleating. in' peace situ @ the Germun gov. ing an offer made by the Internationall tion resolution” demanding that only m there,|good will to do what is in its power! rohaniy will fly the first part of the ! the Connecticut river at Springfeld Y b= Paper company of approximately 10;congre s to . deport alien 28 gone to the press from |to comply with the aliies’ requests, the | 4yon0g an night at Springileld. i - allies would see that conditions wers - s According to a report issued by theé| Late despat from Berlin assert PCU cent. increase in wages in a new:slackers was among (he principal by: : : Seut Pings crian ssatisfaction is WOrking agreement. h was to go iness c ‘ted yester: v ken to takk. TLe asertions upon|changed in favor of Germany, because Department of Agriculture ool [that w great wave of dissatistaction i g agreemen ch was to go iness conducted yesterday by th " : cau- n use : : : of into effect today, 5,000 members of the!cus of the American Legion which ad- Jich stroes are laid uro that the pro- | they know lhere must be a Germany| PRESIDENT'S PROCLAMATION Sl e Dokt dtaing Fall Knowledge having. come of (he internationai brotherhood of pulp. sul-| journed ufier n.three dav session at Don s conforms in ro ey G0 taotond shat it i impossible to destroy| DESIGNATES, BOY SCOUT- WEEK | first quarter of this year. | terms for peacc tsat have been im- Dhite and paper mill workers employed Shubert-Jefferson theatre. Numier- ¥ £ s in o y peop Washington, May 11. — President| According to the Echo de Paris, it:posed on the countfy. Bitter invective in this comp .m\I throughout \3e‘0\yxs other resolutions dealing _princi- S Wilson, in & proclamation made publ&clwas reported in American and Brit:sh |15 heard everywhere azainst the allies, ; A 1 mid-| pall. th - upholding Ameéricanism " v i o ati % g 30 :d that probably for the vigit and 8.30 o'clock this morning. were passed, 9 . i GERMAN PEACZ ENVOYS HAVE |PEACE TERMS EXCITE = . l?ifi m.i;fi{:éo311:‘:»2‘1636(*(;}1%:1?31)[3- ;itgwxmn‘xe::sumrzzl‘ewu‘z}fd?bgea‘lg{;; d:g"im?‘n ¥itinie Henistory ah m‘:iigs are one Members of {he mechanivs’ ovzinl- | The legion Tejeofed the suzgestion LEFT VERSAILLES FOR BERLIN THE HOMENZOLLERN PARTY ! Junc 14, be observed ovér the Gountry|Germans refugsd . o sign the Peave Hin the opimion thit what Germany is Zations also weni cut. The ¢ompany to the delegates that {Hiey declare their Versaille:, May 114—,(%' The A, P.jl - Asiéfoigen; Friddy, May 8—(By The &s Boy Scout Week for the purpose of | treaty s? ed to give is bevond all reason and 2greed’to lé'm:i'; !h(; dema&ld o; n;o In Hye:m?cnfl for & candmato for pres ~—<ix suemicers of the German peace| A, P.)—An, official abstract of the pre-)strengthening the work bf the Boy| Charles . Hopkins immigration .in.’ aitniess and that the treaty should not f\(-nmez'_xsox;(a)r A, -iif:cr.ec;r:mco%‘_ L_)n,wr “\;‘Uae;: ao n-"oea‘u'l:h‘;:n!le&ft?' -P{Lmh'{q 2 deit Vereaille Just night 201 liminary peace terms published in the | SCOUts of America. <pector and three Mexicans were kifled | be signed, : ation iThe. pulp, sulphite and -papéer.. mill | indivifusl CHOIES. TOF BIbsAGLE were | 0. They include the laour l=ad-| Dotcli newspapers, which was tran: plans announces 1 by James E.}and two man seriously injjured in om‘\? esia (pmcn_'\pro},.«mf«n?n o i orahbas B - olEht Dibead! baP AT dclnént o e Carl Legien, hewd ol the Gtrinanljated and read to the former Cer- t, chief scout executive, 2 nation-|gun fiight between Americ: | sue_c’l by (he ch:_er ple:mt:,r: an :xe A e o s v e e o e, alsacf‘ 4 i des Uuoa Coaiederation Privy | man emperor today, has aroused con-|¥ide campaign will be conducted for|and Mexican smuggler o, | central _Lounul protesting against he E: ¥ " eh (HAt v aelehs stal: fA :q Councllior Eberbachi, representative of | igerable excitement among the mem-| 100,000 associate members to act as|Texaxs. pastitioning of Silesia and calling upon Cents 2n howm < e 2 S the ministry of railroads, ud HeIT | bere of the Hohenzollern party. An! BCOU masters, asistants and other| Postmaster General Burleson | the BHledlans 2ty et Y SR e e S sl i Schmudt of the furelgn ofice. All three| jnkiing concerning what ths cntente leaders of the scout troops. The coun-|{nounced the wire control board was| Aside from the Indemuily which WWOrkers. WitH € €8 2 casurer. of next intended to do in_connection with (¥ Will be divided into’ twelve dis-|preparing a statement = ¥ é,: LAt AT C lttg auvl;l_ aopeage 3 62 to bringing William Hohenzollern to (icts. headquarters for which will in- | financial operations of i TNy 1510 DAy e aill Yol e;; undoubtedly have b » | irfal had reached the German of Llu’dc Boston, New York and Philadel- | telephone and telegraph lines throu iL:oNL% hl}c‘;e f\ :rxg;nmu,r:;:‘e“ S howe lon primgthoms G B B St cials earlier in the week. They com. PR B e 5 out the countr: g : s oo Ceukov kg ] he ®uation with tuc Gcorm Municated (he information f{o the' JLresident Wilson's proclamation in| Calcined human bodies are said to T e T e J B i ormée. ciipnéas, ‘who' displayed ‘sfgns, PACt, follows: ] Blive. heert dischvered - in: tl tbmurines during the period lesberts, Count Oberndorft | (SFRer €TIPress, Who CEPIEVEr, ©IENS. “The Boy Scouts of Ametica have|Gambass, owned by Henri La and several other Germans attended |2 BEPIEE PR O o aller of. | fendered notable service to the nation | masg today, wilic the usual small pur- - app o egion unti r at Minneapolis for those earni 50 cents for tion was one asking that 6 , and cent: for those ed to earning 60 cents to 70 cents, and an e: isted man who ht hour day for zll wo . Th der arrest on suspi !during the world war. They have|d A | with cex ; al S W =S Day ¢ Kot 3 3 _tt 1 2 ) ered several women who di | s ! : sted weat to ‘the Protestant church. The| fictal report before making the. news, gone efective w, 1 the Liberty loan|a short time ago. e 5 ; e rematoder of the delegation workel| S20Wn to her husband. land war part of the day on German countes 4 épecial mesenger motored to Arn propositions to the Entente derawnds. ?fi;fllofirr::wsp;;egmcure a copy ct] i i Count Von Brockdorfi-Ranizau is . N wit hthe ss' and other war!have & Feo ati ¢ confer- i comnection sh and atill In Versaille:, but it is considered| HOW the former emperor took the work avencies, in acting as decpateh ] b ces Torwons “hramenr Chmesosay | Bulgarian _:demanded possibia that he. will leave ; time | 06Ws the cnrespondent was unable 0 bearers for the committce on public | ond sasuad Foch | While it is y t the eouncil of made to reduc this week for Berlin 10 cos vith | ascertain, as everyone in the castle is, information snd in other t 3 % | foreisn ministe s nearly completed the governme sworn to secrecy regarding happen-!fields. The Boy Scouts have mot o S yingEy e | ol Sl nos The tounter proposals on wi ings. Rumors were circulated in the' demonstrated their worth to y c: in dis-{ Engagement for jcint action by the | SECTEtary, coverings. gnd | ; upon the|United States and Lritain in case ot | YTeece. bl e el sit S podn black wal y, in_cooperatingan unpravoked atiack is understood to ! Pation. z s e an effort is being L the demands of s and ould put the org ut. Col. Theodore Roosevelt called Tthe attention of the delegates to the bl r makers are under orde Hungariun is - nternational officers to re- : . Roo : : : A1 4 ” i D s i aris tha 8 { 8 D for ; v s A e t | to see that rubordinate members of the delegation | Village that he utterapted to commit tion ; ER!in Paris that the council of has | m . : CEION otatded aro. busy at work are not expected to]sulcide by hanging, but these are con- | uted P ! FORHURDER AR LEAD R’not vet taken up again Italy’s demand pape iits members got all their riglits com- be ready before next week. That they | sidered canards, since his attendants’ Ame: i A < . M e W rflé 3; are to be of consideruble length is|are quite calm. jtion of s e tatally stzbbed Jam surmised Ly the fuct of the purchase —_— g v the Germans of 20,00 sheets| RUMANIANS HALTED IN The Boy Scout movement shouly|Rcese Eurepe, directer of the band, e prescrved, but strength-| tor the cession to that country of the the Minnesota | ing to them from the government, but port of Fiume, to which President Wil- Company { that it would not be advisable to pass son iy declared still to be opposed. X the resolution. - A demand for the cxtradition from ario, { The caucus pasted the resolution in- Holland of the former (ierman em- ced 1 ce Chairman-J. J. Sulli ADVANCE TOWARD BUDAPEST 1ot oaly as on Saturday, 1t 3 . o ‘harged with m His . hearing | Hos resched Holano, accoiding RIS - cattle that congress deport all IBDVANCEN The aradibie roendel to aa s | peror has fioliand, ding WILSON MAY INSREC e he S it Count Von Brocsdorfl-Rantrau took 4| Geneva, Saturdas, stay thej 3y S s was set for May. 4 of the bhana)io @ note issucd by the Duteh lega-| SITE FOR LEAGUE Wwho surrendered their long promenade in the park with five 4.« P.)° The Rumaniin n - |sufficed for the organization and train- o Sebinigs 15 Franes| tion in Pa i, 11 (By ti u of his colleagues, evidbntly discussing|Ward Budapest has Leen halted Ly or-|ing of only a small proportion of tha|of the, S69th Infantry, known in France | e fsEa L v. L. |ders from resentatives of the al-lygig of the country, There dre ap.|2S ~Hell Iighters” was atticked inigays GERMANS HAD NO RIGHT |: been® made k i L 2 lied and associated . puwers, aceordins|ycoximately 10,600,000 boys in the|liS dresains -room duris ey TO EXPECT BETTER TERMS|(uarters that T : o i nstinlation dn el @ bile drive, to the Rumanian bureau at Becne. Tae iy . 4 i ithere last night, and died after he had| States between the ages of nd twenty-one. Of th i The prefect of tiie departme jbeen taken to a hospital s arrangements for the recepticn of | The Assoclated Pri avoiding overseas se: T bureau. seat the foilowit Rich: According | _T.ondon, i {Earl of Readis 4 2 ¢ | to the police the leader had ca : ; : i so tHe Austrian delegation will | not: be| (“XN8 American. ¢ 7 govern- |} e nenle | Wright, a drummer, again; king United s ] : - in_connection with the od releted some of his & AN, ; ments, tarough o represeutative N thin the view of the au v N 0 > t William Rappard, entious objec- complete_before e, week| MED R AbrovEy L0 F : cunnot acquit herself com-:: VS I LR B 0 7 caid ik e Germans had at . He charged us two of the fumilics whose villas arc | Mistions in G : ol with heg power and in-|% SHATCe £ e tets sxpect n in the| to be requ!sitioned for their use must { o E in the great pertod now f: 1ing her and the world unless. the boy Deva v ers he S that the war department had practi- crument find new guarters, nuliified the selective ser B perfectly | rama of 1 me site on'at the behest of the socialists, Bol- a ave given hetter opportu- |10 MEPRRIR C8 L O at whe t:h,"a; ek ce Geneva. It shows shevists and L W. W. orzanizatio TOLD OF BOY SCOUT & 3 1 heretofore to preparelg. i & van-la ywooded park quare border-| Chicago, which was turned down as MOVEMENT IN CNGLAND GREEK AFFAIRS WERE fer the responsibilities of; L2 must submit to b ¢ Jura moun-, the next convention city because of the : ey B DISCUSSION | it 3 : just vietor would| Y he snow-capped ' fact that Mayor Thompson zoverns tl Boston, May 11—z Robect Badea-| . - SUSJECT OF.DISCUSSION for it future] BANK EMPLOYES ‘OF PARIS Sk i L e e A o s Towel (!mv:r'tg: the r‘»‘usé\lwgg O PR i s A g A i CONTINUE THEIR STRIKE| - ” he added, “could}’ are many villas suitable forinamed by 2 committee as the site f T agey, haner tandered coul o [ihe.day in the couniry: but the French The hankers : be s. but the main assembly Build-{the permanent headquarters. Consi o T e eory o ey | premier, M. Clemenceu; tie Brilish g last night 1o consider a|bosoms : famili i have to be constructed. The, eration of the question was, however, potntt ia Epgignd. ie. ootibed SRR O nur J. Bdliour, ! loyes of banking in- German attitude to- five miles from Geneva, with aldeferred un til the November conven- Gl AN ee B LENelhoar of, Character, | ramier call= PN stitutions d M. Colliard, the ¥ and the contention running through the property tion. 2 : bt »_o_-'lc_)':j- Aot ) A‘r:ie’nt ‘:“ g ¢ with | Pl the means to put the B minister of finance. that they . had | that it goes r and the cily tramway to the gates, The prohibition resolution which was cae o o 1 rreventing | ¢ St Wi {uf America in a position to is6) the - em< | foncteen pofn President Wil : say red Friday did not materialize, the Bronrbter of 1 '« toain. | cussion reluted s, which | ward effes invited | t he would be glad to sce the future committee voting against bringing it ing for serv e Lutih- Jame: A, tiohal s { Wi soon pe « York, na-|ish and Bulgarian (re old «f the de-| lwuring the courxe of 5 . o s ? work, after n has accepted the proposal: home of the league, but doubt whether| before the entire caucus. It was held : i S e ) joint delezation of employ G in the treaty. The author of|phe will have time for the visit. 4hat this savored too much of taking e dmmom.’*’*,15“’:‘;‘0;‘:\;1‘0"‘ oz‘l,gg ln';t'mn- 2 and employers would examine the|the ‘fourteen points’ is the best inter-| e sides in partisan matters. €] g N v e ils: ) Wi : ’ S55ithe presdent wead for al éxtended aa- | g L 2| claims of the latter. {preter of them, and he has accepted! o NT VON BROCKDORFF- velopin & witd | i iy o [ ! | preter of b 1. the | Lomoble U Beenica, b heréuy Tosommend. (hge| The emploves ulon have made a|ie (reat RANTZAU TOO WEAK TO STAND|SHOE INDUSTRY CONFRONTED v Fing i F 3 ' Pty unter- sal {hrough h abor = A 2 : | b N L OPE HEARS DISPUTE OF e pe ipundy dun o5 fosieting. that a delegation of tneir| WRECKAGE OF NAVAL (Paris. ay 11 (By the A P)-oiWITH A COMPLETE SHUT-DOWN uf ihe! PERU, CHILE AND BOLIVIAL4: Gl Bagls {ovn shall submit their claims to_the . SEAPLANE REPORTED | Count Von Erockdocli-Rantuaus will Haverhill, Mass. May 1-—On ihe el e RN e Gt Sty L Bpifei, Sti#est ¥or tho. purpassiicbr| SHDIOYes hofote morle s mesumed. Provincetown, Mass, May 11.—The! Y25 S/ORE CRoUEn b (ORI P of Ger-| o8 su 8 lumi. | Strengthening the work of the Boy! - 1 T 3 ,wud | Seouts Amerie: | NO FRENCH SPIES IN went out from Boston yesterda from hita purtic- | — HOTEL AT VERSAILLES investigate the wreckage of a na e Gt b bitenT \m official note, fe.|Seaplane reported by the B e T FOR TRANSATLANTIC ‘FLIGHT ¥ A I oIy, O~ port, put in here tonight. The wreck- | (ransiating_comments from the Tng-| ] ~Colo- | Taghiatt a despatch that the hotell 28¢ i supposed to be that of a plane|jish papers sharply” reproaching the| P | aeniadt, o e the hotel, ywhieh was lost at sea while returning | count for remaining seated iwhen! i |8t Versailles where the German del:{{q Chatham after a flight to B speaking. To these comments the head| he. London | (Sates are housed s full of snies act-| April 25. ‘No one came ashore {rom|of the German delegation has ~been; he o ontan fne as hote!l aa ctr;de;;,m;s‘ hlyedd 'u[h?&' the Ossipea tonight, nnd!it lwa; Iimpo 7| stving considerable attention. = | 128 iore | microphones have been installed in all! sjple to Jearn whether she had locals His secretary, being - asked by a|Sh foodl 0 where 1t was| e ro0N {€ae wreckage or found the hodies of | member of the delegation what Count|eS of conferences © Merfivers of, tho { i The note brands the report as an, the three aviators lost with the plane.|!Yyon Brockdorff-Rantuau thought of voted “to. demand: 2. M ROUTWAAk LA week in-the ninety shoe factories ef | this city, which is effective Monday. George W. Dobbins, presdent of the the Haverhill Shoe Manufacturers’ As- sociation, declared that the shoein- dustry here was confronted with = complete shut-down for ‘the months of July and August. Demands of la- bor and the upward.trend of the .lea- ther market were given as the reasons for the action which has beén con- sidered by the manufacturers at a se- | coast guard . cutter Ossipee, Which Quy receive: w L many to the allies at the Versailles peace congress Wednesday, but he feared collapse if be stood. This is on the authority of his sec- WEATHEIR FOR OVERSEAS FL N. ay 11 Chdean the . steamer | ,aiouq ang caluminons invention and! nics accom- | 5 3 PIP | this, made answer: -dow 1d “affect 15,000 she Boston, Muy 11—A was ship- | (208 I I repeated the French sov-!COMMUNICATIONS FROM { "7 "Vas because he was master of|Shui-down would “affect 15009 shoe 0 the nuval communic parts and preparations for as-| fINTENT MAY fo“,_fl‘p::;’n‘;" R ars GERMAN PEACE MISSION [his voice and not his legs. i SR Lore (rom the baltl mbling the plane are now. in prog- | ¢ P SIS Or ures | Versailles, May 11.—By The A.P. TWO NEGROES KILLED 1N DEMAND FOR EXTRADITION £o8 Ritits wnew 11 i = {HYDROAIRPLANE N. C.-4 IS A RIOT AT CHARLESTON, S.C.[ OF THE FC:;MER) Kme:ha Je 2 ol b & = ~i STORM BOUND AT CHATHAM ! todav i 1ed velopes through the | ston, S. (., May 11.—A count aris, May, LSS 4 s e 8 Py L PRASC AWIRE) & NAYAL HE(;ULAERDS IO ZEA 3 | Mav 11.—The hy v?rtn“\t-hmiini:o{;;i‘wogc?:-m:; the ‘fir‘encn‘mg:ymx?;mtge police “howed two me-|Temps publisies a tote” frem the Conn, My . S9cisH 9 Sl emained storm | foreign office. The foreizn office alone | groes were killed and seventeen in-|Dutch legation at Paris declaring thai yEils uig, a3 K [sasostons s Asan, S 10 S TMCStwo bound allation of | is cognizant of the natwre of the docu- | jured in a riot last night with civilians|the demand for the extradition of the when he grasped an ele - e I o {tie enlizted men of the new eted yester- | ents. and sailors. ™sSeven bluejackets also|former German ‘emperors has reached high voltag ¢ Value of German Mark Increases. |yeserve force wnd the entire cnl b 3 R et S IO Were reported as wounded, Holland. . . wn down | 11.~-The Germun mark. |preonnel of the regu are to 23 i MARSHAL FOCH RETURNS l z - d recovercd to 47 francs peria y at once according - f = 4 i Tell on tire publication of the) £ orders received from Washingtos| Adopted Wéman Sufirage Bill. TO THE FRONT TODAY When Peace omes. Spain Taking a Risk. s connected with the German en-| stood that the r;urpese is to obtain|ond chamber of parliament today| returning to the front tomorrow, ac- Treaty is Signed Peace Will be Fif-|Spanish politics it's rather risky . of dropped consderaoly in§men for additions to ‘tbe transport|adopied the woman suffrage bill by &' cording to a Reuter despatch from|feéctive When will that be?—|Spain to undertake to export 98,600 gervies large majority. B Ll EIm Bridgeport Post tons of oil.—Buffalo Times. tuok hold of it. oruier lan will hold an faguest newce terras 4o +hades url.n the navy 4 here. Ti is under-| The Hague Friday, :iay 9.—The sec-| Tondon, May 11.—>Marshal Foch is| ine say: After | Considering the troubled waters of