Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 2, 1919, Page 1

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VOL. LXI—NO. 130 1 POPULATION 29,919 . PRICE TWO CENTS VON BROCKDORFF-RANTZAL'S M. Pl i | e e, it Vrsis TG AVIATORS KILLED NEAR TET0 ASSOCIATED ROV el Sage - o et WAt Bt ‘rur L BOWL. NEW HAVEN 3 One person was probably mortally |- rect Flight Across the At-|nurt when « srartistand in Brooklyn| Minutes — Russian Shlps collapsed with a holiday crowd. Counter Proposals Declare the Peace Treaty as Framed is lantic, "7A British legation was _sstablished| Then Fled to Kronstadt. M in nland as the result of the recent i 5 Plymouth, June 1.—(By The A. P.) e o rall Heisingfors, turday, May 31 (By “More Than the German People Can Bear”—Writes| A canvass last night among the crews [F06080ition of its independence. o i 3 i A0 s B lpe o iceons Heports. from Holland. indicate roy- |t A P).—A fifty minuie attle o “The More Deeply We Penetrate Into the Spirit of the| resaraing tite feasibiiiiy of @ direct NORWICH, CONN. MONDAY, JUNE 2, 1319 N.C. Plangs Stillin | Condensea Telegrams Balshevik Warships | Delivery of the Milwaukee Journal by ai 10 Ozhkosh was announced. - | Lieut. Melvin B. Keleher and Corporal Joseph Katzman Lost | Their Lives When Their Machine Collided With Another between a Bol-! e o L ob e dlect | ol men e ]“"'A;t‘;ff'.;hoo[;ik fieet_comprising (he batileship Airplane While Flying at a Height of 1,000 Feet—The f Atla : flight by NC- veloped Petropaviovsk ,307 tons) and three . 4 N o £ O g $ P O Opapioysk sl siides Other M e Plaj to the Earth, Striking a Baseball Treaty, the More Convinced We Are of the Impassibili- | 2 widc diversence of opinion. No one | “ZE0, port at Stockholm dealing with | SUISE Varships which had been-bom- | - l:r achine Planed i 3 o g e Out”—Note Does ssert the Ger- | impracticable hut there was general | the recent capture of Riga by the Letts| (fiicen miles west of Kronstadt), and| ackstop—Occupants Were Shaken = ty of C‘“ymg It t Note D Not Assert the Ge! agreement (h#t much depended upon |$4¥s the Dolshevik were completely ritish warships. The Russians| P B eventually fled to Kronstadt. man Delegation Will Refuse to Sign the Peace Treaty. the dircction of the wind and that | Surpriscd. 1 3 New Haven, Conn., June lfLiNItl-n-‘math\n as to the cause of the accident there was greater prospect of succe: Ov:ing to the shortage of houses in . Ll Fegrvre ant Melvin B. Kelcher. 23, and Corporal| 9 the names of the aviators Coronet ¥ ¢ X M ng o e : e don §78,250 was paid for a 14| DECLARES THE WINNIPEG SRR e Mix n i . Aol " ¢ n|in flving from Newfoundland to Ire- | Londo E 2 £ E . Mix held an autopsy tonight an ‘Washington, June 1.—Germany, al- tion. The in gr}-.auopl rt:‘)')arallo Tna R ARG et Years' lease of a fourth floor apartment R LURE Joseph Katzman, 21. Ty aviatorS iR ovTiot declined tojattand until e suli- though realizing that she must make|commission receives ;hm:;lurm! Bt oant I . Stans: pilotiof. tholinit e Tordon STRIKE IS A FAI | from Mincola, L. 1. were killed thiS|poena had been iusged. ¢ i a -|ers over the whole lifc of our peopie| licutenant I I’ Stone, — 5 : e : i Gideon | afterr h : been issued. sapeiiiows 1o obtain peace, is con-lors dver the whole fe of our BeoDIBt N'Gl4, was positive nd Aétempt i Bmeciaan Asy) Yaatharticar Vaee SRR e D el :‘ eraoon when thelr aitl e TG e e e (OBt tHat theiein: treaty Bs drawn, -are moro than the| “Germany knows d she mnst|be made to fly home by way of Ireland | keepine opep the question of O, O | Heiht or 10y toce e foE 8! planie’ whith ‘collidsaii/ it iSeletiens QUL Beubie iban D s make taesifices in order to attain|and Newfoundland. He pointed out{nent burial in France of American|il @ statement made =~ today before SRRt S e U machine was viloted by (F5) : Count Von Brockdorff-Rantzau, | peace. German) How Nor TLienisnant s mechaniciar lm\\l he machine in knows that she has,| that 11 the N.C. planes are still in an |troops who fell fi head of the German peace delegation,|by agreement undertaken to make the | €XPer ing Ottagva to confer w mental stage and that none of | An extra Traff ties said that the inz. Court has been = i : h Reicher and Emil Stoin There = 2 2 g 5 = ol r: rike Katzmaa were % D 20 s I ro: rt 1 e thus sums 1y the attitude of the Ger- | sacrifices and Will go in this matier| them was buili for a direct Atlantic |opened in New York to take care of|9f o general strike in Winnipez| SEIHRAD WWers 13 sl had be report at the scene of the man nation towards the proposed trea- | to the utmost limits of her capacity. He thought the chance of a|the victims of the new police crusade |, '0W sit In the agh S {Two men in the wree And kTN s are e elhon linatlier ghRs s 1y of peace in a note to the allied and| “One—Germany offers to proceed ble wind from this side was too | againsi motor violators. it (ympathetpNikes st a1Ways ticm ‘outright. ~The' lother Dlane| ie Dlane that collided with: him, buf associated powers. outlining various | with her own disarmament in advance | remote {0 make serious consideration | Concession by the Savernmant foy T ot DALy Wiies St B Reen it cet clarbnat ot D0 ol TDER cdnenus German counter-proposals. The Ger-|of all other peoples, in order to show > pr ble. consiruction of a cable between New | the first ainl i ) toward the eartl 1y UITING F man note. delivered. to. Premior Clo- | that she will help to usher in the new | Advocates of the plan contended | York and Rio-Janciro via Cuba is to]len at Calgary.” where the o | ,.’i"a‘"'f.( %‘l‘u;(\‘]Aht.’:‘luf.‘::\h:;l Pr ‘a\vtIWERE BECHUITENGEOR menceau, president of the peace con-|cra of the peace of justice. * * i that if one or two members of the|come before the court again. eton oM SR ainchad last field. Its occupants were shaken up! THE AVIATION SERVICE ference, last Thursday, was made| “Two—in territorial questions G were dropped. enabling the plane| Joseph Brody, of Dover, N. J, was|March. Mr. Robertson's statement|,ng ine < and propelier of the ma-| Mincola, N. Y. June ieutenar tonight by the state depart-|many takes up her position unreserv- Ty a greatly increased supply of |killed in his bathtub when his electric s follows: % maged, Melvin B. Keleher and R | edly on the ground of, the Wilson pro-|sasoline. there wis an excellent chance short-circuited and the| “The promoters of the general strike irplancs were in a group of| seph Katzman, killed today in ar rman delegation nowhere in|gramme. She renounces her sovereign | of sucec They argued that the de- 1 through his body. in Wir now sit in the s which were on aviation ser-laccident at New Haven, were drivins its note asserts that it will refuse to|right in Alsace-Lorraine, but wishes a | strovers used to aid this flight could prem.er Lioyd-George in his speech | their folly smething like 30,000 mz‘\i‘h, recruiting campaign. The \,\mm,( of - three -airplanes which Ieft sign the present treaty but declarcs|free piebiscite to take place there. * * | be stationed along the direct course 1o | 1o the Welsh division at Amiens. de.|and women were called out, professed- | Meviden toduy afte > on behalf of the German nation that he is ready to subject all her col- | ensure the afety of the crew even if Thurs § ing lh‘n)m(-d’f t Field last Th d the sday fo 4 ierman delegates will sign |1V for the purpose 0f enforcing iNe Ie-fwreaths on the home in Wallingford of| New | a rec o (‘afr‘ “even in her need, justice for her is|onics to administration by the com-|the plane came to grief. Versailles, and if not then, at Der-|COSnition of the right of colectivel Edward Lufbery, father of - Major| paign for the aviation service . A 100 sacred a thing to allow her to}munity of the league of nations if she| Licutenant David H. McCulloch of | iy » ha In responding to the ¢ ufbery, American ace, who was| cording to Colonel Archic Miller in stoop to achieve conditions which she|is recognized as its mandatory. the N.C-3 saw no possiblility of a ve- | Delegations from GCiscaucasia and|the ty violated and repud in jce. On Friday ome of|command of the field, New Haven was cannot undertake to carry out.” “Three—Germany is prepared to|turn trip to Newfoundland, calling at- | Azerbaijan, Kastern Armenin were re. | th ition to their own trades hree machin. B el herl Tohar e Bec M a T e e Sxclusion of Germany from make payments incumbent on her inltention to the prevalence of fogs and | ceived by I The claims |Unions and their contract witl . their W 1 Uit litewas sepattedi exy, of the baotiirn he it League of Nations. the note ass accordance with the agreed program|icebergs and adding that only airmen|or the countries vore laid before the | CmPployve Individually and collec- | The shird machine landed here today,| Licutenant Kelel Frank- means that in signing the peace tr of peace uy io a maximum sum of one|could avpreciate the difficulties thus | egigent tively they wilfully discarded their|but left later for Mineola. lin, Tnd., and Katzman, who lived in ty Germany would be executing a hundred billions of gold marks, twenty | presented A H. Smith, regional director of the |dSrecments, indicating that the pos-| Licutenant John T. Roullot of Broklyn, enlisted a *few weeks befora cree for its own proscription, nay, its|billions by May first, nineteen twenty- | The opinions of the commanders of | . G " STt regior o O e | session of what tey are contending | Francisco was in charge of the : ! ks own death sentence. and the balance (eighty billiens) |the three planes were not available as | airo#ds for thc [sresiencd,: e 3 ¢ 3 the signing of the ar and was to d to give any infor-'have been discharged this month. for is of little va sympathetic strike the The German people, the note says,|in annual payvments without interest.|they have heen or tive June 1. He will r have been disappointed in their “hope|* ¢ * dent of the anes. He refus ume hi: ew York ered to attend a oS re: conference at Paris at which it is ex- | Quties as pre or 4 peace of justice which had been| “Four—Germany is preared de-| pected the auestion will be thorough- | CCntral Railroad. 2 wlff,l ;‘z“}‘;;océi"i u?}?fi, EXCHANGE SYSTEM WITH EXE promised,” and stand “aghast” at the{vote her entire economic strength to|ly discussed. F The dgreign office at. Buenos Aires | 0 Ut 1o the' Ditenses Bacante! INATI EXERGISESIEOR WALE MEN demands made upon they by the “vic- | the service of reconstruction. * ¢ * The messige of congratulation from | Publishes at elegram from the Argen- | Tesponsibilit e DO EENRAL ERRORE WHO LOST LIVES IN WAR torious violence of our enemies. “Germany is prepared to make con-|King George, forwarded through the |l consul in London stating that| 9 1€ [hconversence '0ss Sng SUCEDRS W York, June 1—The exchange Haven, C une 1.—Com- Outlining its counter-proposals, the | siderable deliveries of benzol, coal tur| American embassy at London, su ipping companies are rehewing their | [POSCd UDON INROCERT DOODIC, SYMPA- | system recently inaugurated between ive exercises in honor of (German delegation agree (o reduce of|and sulphate of ammonia, as well wishes to congratul: sailng to Buenos Ares. “f,s“:‘ ;s = ;l“‘”‘,f LR L ne big | the, United States and the liberated ale men who lost their Germany's army and navy on condi- | dyestuffs and medicines. the American ambas- | Navy recruiting office in New York ocialism has chosen the one Bi8|nations of central Europe through the tion that Germany Le admitted imme-| “Five—finally Germany offers to put : a popular primrose announced an opportunity for thirty- |union idea will be an impres: two musicians to visit most of the|P2th along which to lead fihe trade 1cement Week at Yale uni They will be held on Sunday afternoon. June 14, it was announcerd diately to the League of Nations; io|her entire merchant tonnage into alijcan s S T to discard renounce Germany's sovereign rights|pool of the world's shipping. to place | cony s congratulations M. | ¢hief ports of kurope as bandsmen of | 1" NS “’bfi me A e stablishment of permanent commer- in Alsace-Lorraine and JPosen hut as|at the disposal of her ememies 1 part| Daniels and the American navy.” the U. S. S. Pittsburgl nonorable obligations, and join the bIZ|efal relations,” the “fourth stage” in| tonight, and a comm itive hymn, o all other territories which Germany | of her freight space as part pavment| The king sent Siv Charles Cust Sergeant Alvin C. York, Tennessee show. the intervention of {he American it ot e s = - Lighs i 2 s & arles Cust, t 3 AR > - E £ e occasion by Professc is called upon to give up, the nciple | of rearation. and to build for them for| equerry, personally to convey mountaineer, hailed as “greatest ! “In March last at Calgary the play|ernment in Iurope ording to e80T American relief administration is in- | of Comm tended as “merely a stepping stone to | versity. of seif-determination, applic: in German ac * 2 e Horatio Parker and Brian ker, v LR In the was” roseived Bisoaieareacr® | was written. The Winnipeg strike is | statement issued here tonight by Ed- | b oo mrenand B Um,.H,[f?l‘”,;;,,‘,Ti’r' nce, ls asked: to subject all Germa amount of tonnage exceeding their de-{ Wilcon at Paris. ill proceed to his ;.::_;]‘:;;}""}flf;; ithy e e - octon : President Arthur T. Hadley will mak colonies to_ admin n by the|mands home jin Tenn : c ed at a la misconceptions | the commemorative e _cague o League of Sy order toh berlacakuios iver Toy soidiers, airplanes and subma-|The Winnipes rehearsal has cost ap-|had arisen concerning the nature and | Bishop Chaunccy B, Brogores wi * L PR 3 o e 3 4 T Ce e e 3 d | Bish nau; 3. Brewster will of- but un x’n ?‘\lnu:‘;\ .mall‘d‘nnx’nl:}( ! boats destroyed in bol,;xT n ! CREWS OF THREE NAVAL 5 made by wounded American sol- R}o;\‘u}\i:)t?v‘ L\f,”k ;{":lg?l;mgolf;‘“r;h_:': ?{gfrulrxcv;!'nos':lx(rl ‘L»\r‘[ ndgx‘ tem, Mr. | fer prayer. asuke. Hie Infmmaaity, payinents as ern TRy offes PLANES AT PLYMCUTH ! diers out of iin cans, wooden hoxes| V288s lostin w esyern Canada, and has| Rickard ga D e ental G Details of Yale's record in the war quired but in amounts that will bur- from her own resources. Tion June 1—The crews of the|and waste material, are on exhibition | Proven the play to have been badly|sons why the administration extended |also were announced tonight. Moy den the German taxpayer no more| “Seven—Germany * * * sees an ap-|, London. June 1—The crows of the|an e et e Fth e | written and unpopular with the pub- | its reliet work to iclude transmission | than £,000 Yalo mey oment:, More heavi he taxpayer of the most| propriate metiod for the prompt ful-| three American seaplanes which start-| &% HICTY=TER ¢ “Y¢ |lic and most of the performers. of money. o cavily burdened among thoze fillment of her obligation to make rep-| €1 on the memorable trans-Atlantic|nue, ¢ (o American and Allied ser sented on the r tior ployers nclud- commission. | arations by conceding par Pl . by the| Landlords in the Brownsville sec- make rep ust not mistake the| “The intervention of the Amer ipation in £ tr 1 thetic | government in Furope can be divided 11]3\“ L b ot nt T 2 e el e ¢ loutcome of the general sympathetic| g e rope can he divided [ 1919. OF the 207 dead, 72 -w. ) The note declares Germuny is industrial enterprises. * * * flon g« Trooklys sald (Bey Mad reasivol trike ne gaufeat ot ized labor.” G ) dend Ry ereunt: A A e i hests = o trike as a defeat of organized labor.’ L dergraduates when (1 entered the ing to pool her entire merchant ma- ght,— Germany, in accordance DIcE] A ‘i e 2 org<{n yum o said : service. . More than 200 were Neted B ne with that of the ociated pow- ) with the desires the workers of th y Ameri- | lease all properiy vacated by tenants « Stionsheechua )il - More than 200 were listed ‘as Neutral participation in the in-|whole world, es to ee the work- stopp }fl who put a boycott in effect to resist| MRS. JOHN ASTOR MARRIED };,‘Z‘,‘,’"f:flm’“’f’_’\‘*,f‘i‘,}"';’,““‘ gt e ws to responsibility for the w s in all countries free and enjoying 4 ailors | inc s in rent. TO LORD RIBBLESDALE| 1y led to s ) fotg 273 decos ; P ~ nd spldigrsewho, baew. ng-for. Yoks i - 5 3 : - uons. 1 stowed 160 of < is asked 4 rights. ¢ ¢ * oo 00 solgipns. m,h‘“‘fi“_ the car it opndon denied reports that Wdian | 1ondon, June 2 (By the A. P.).—In| third, suppir'ef relief to the liberated | and the 1 6. o Text of the Note in Part. ne—The German delegation again | o SN B o (o e AL .| o9ps stail ) ed in southern Italy hadl yhe’column of paid marriage notices in| Couniries; fourth, re-establishing of | yale's activities at th i < ; | makes its demand for a neutral in-} 4 - .| mutinieq. ne Rome report said the!(pe Times this morning s one commerce between the liberated na- | versity durine at the uni- lhe text of the mnote follows i g 5 _{Read, who broug safely| ¢ Vi R Sl TnORAInG: ISToR a he liberated na- | versity during the war also are e a3 quiry inlo the responsibility for the | td, Whe SO Canopic of the White Star Line had|that Mrs. John Astor was married to ; Sutide weorld. oo ar also are enum- X President: I have the honor to|and culnable acts of conduct. * = * |3 055 0% &80 S EiRdes v ot been v';'n'-"!v!\“d by Great Britain 10 Lord Ribblesdale Saturday at Sti aving wn upon our stocks of | lery training s a na\dl‘: Iarai:\- Stit 65 Fett Dérdwish the ObBervs “Nothing short of confidence 1t down the platform and then to an au-|ScRd the mutincers home, ., | Mary’s church, Bryanston square, Lon-j food in America : placed these sup- | ing unit were established wt Yale the ‘Cermen doiazation on the | the question of guilt Will be examined | Somabiie tor o rrrans | It was announced the 94th Pursuit | don. Lt plies at the disposal of the liberated | hefore the United States entered the draft treaty of peace, ® * dispassionately can have the peopl One of the first to h the N.C-4'g| Sauddron, which was commanded by| The Daily Express, the only news-{ countries in order to meet £ The more deeply we penetrate intc|lately at war with each other in the Rickenbacker, will commander after he came from the in New | pape announcing the marriage in in the chemical war. Important wor quirements until their own harvest the spirit of this treaty, (he morc|Dproper frame of mind for the forma [ frain was Harry G. Hawker, who Tad| YOrK on the steamship Louisville to- | news columns, identifies Mr or as! became available, we shall not have s also was ¢ onvincing we become of ‘the impossi- | tion of the League of Nations. {attempted to shout his congratulations: morrow. The u had ierman | the first wife of the late John Jacob|fuliilled our full obligations unless we!at the univere bility of carrying it out. The exccu- These are ouly the most important |as Licutenant Commander Read was PInes tlv!émn.\ ba lnérw i()‘n>él'tl‘llll‘,a Astor of New York make some effort to re-establish com- gl fons of this treaty are more than the|umoni the osals we hava|being jostied about on the shoniders Liept. Generai Roberf ullard, = - . |merce. German neople can b SRt the nroposls Wi ; e s ot i e |former commander of the Second| The only Mrs. John Astor known in| “Koreigners in America are asked to | "OCKOUT OF PRINTERS IN & (s POIRE TS \Gesrian note buit | riflce aid siss os regnsds ; e {American Field Army in France, and | New Vork ia Mrs Ava Willing Astor: support this exchange system now = - BUENOS AIRES CONTINUES merates the demands of the allied and | the delegation refers fo the is wi i |now commander of the Southeastern|Who divorced the late ' T he deHulL e mme o BuSHOn Alres, June & icre were AMSSUIATOR gOMTIURRNtE 8% these' DertlnAniE S simorandnm and the .mno.-.-‘d.“;",‘ct"“:"‘d‘:’”fizcm°g°:;‘ all four city| Division will deliver an address to|Some vears ago. She is ¢ connection between no new developments today in the $ to territorial changes, and con-|thereto, istricts today « M. 0 % P. M. e class of 1919 at West Point on| Vincent Astor, who recent nd the liberated n lockout of priniers by the newspaper inues The time allowed us for the pre- e June 11. jfrom France. where he ser Vhile it is chiefly represented at the | publishers. The trouble grew out of ithough the exaction of the cost|paration of this memorandum was so|TQ PAINT PORTRAITS OF It is reported in Stockholm that the|the war in the United States {1 | Present moment in the transactions of | the strike of sewing grils. who were of the war has Deen expressly ' re-|short that it was impossible to treat LEADERS IN LATE WAR |2ppointment of an American Ambas- |40 ensign. and Muirel Astor. s |food. it will gradually be transformed |joined by the department store em- nounced vet Germany, thus cut in|all the questions exhaustively. A fruit- sador to Germar after diplomatic | Astor has leng been known as simplyinto transactions covering other com- 5, the latter charging that the p and weakened, must declarc|ful and illuminating negotiation could| New York, June 1.—Formation of |yrelations are restored will be con Mrs. John Astor. having dropped the| modities and lead to definite trade re- | store owners were subjecting the sew. herself ready in principle to bear alllonly take place by means of oral dis-|the National Art Commitiee, 0 ar-|req on Ira Nelson Morris, Ambassador | gacoP" from her name after Colonel! lations. It is prohibited by law to send | ing girls atshop methods, the war cxpenses of her enemie: on. * & & nge for painting by American art- |15 Swed Astor’s . second marriage. - Several| money by any other medium.” The printers refused to set the ad- which would exceed many (imes o0ver | “Even In her need, justice for her|ists of portraits of military, civil and | " Aloiander J. Hemphill, vice presi- | TS Since her divorce Mrs. Astor has e ments of a department stors total amount of German state and| (Germany.) is too sacred a thing to|religious leaders in the world war, was be dent of the Guaranty Tr n reported to be engaged to beipsasHlNGS MEMORIAL ) I t i % Co; huapn which refused to meet the demand of ivate assets. Meanwhile her ene-|allow her to stoop to achieve condi-|announced tonight 1‘\ SaEtenbent, Gl ; been decorated with' the medal of Bel-| " Tynomas ‘Lister Ribblesdale, fourth DAY ADCRESS AT ROMAGNE | ifs striking emploves for hetter work- n']‘.:;;“z‘x.-vnmnd. I Skechs mlt);‘n u:ref;jl tions whtlch she cannot undertake to lrnu::“ o andteasiiter gian Commander of the Order of the |haron of that name, was born in 155¢| Romagne, France, Friday May 30— nl\;'rfl_’()mllllm:h ,’md’rihc publishers de- conditions, ation for damage suf-|carry out. g ic Crown for services on the Belgian re-|ana sucoec is title 1 76 | h Ha¥ens Prese y clared a lockou he stor fered oivil population and ir| « “We are under'no)delusions wegard-] of the i peace 0 3 and succeeded to his title in 18 He' (By th ociated Press. he connec e ore inder the Sleat | SRCT WS thereupon beveotted ny : SIERL T S Joastc t ade ns. which charge: x il T e Bhieion o sudorsed 0 s on the srecr hillsides and amid e Bocodion ol save ihe capacity of tho. German| od. sed yet the forees Which . are 4%|the projest and the portraits, Together e Tennant, ‘who died in 1011 Three the flowery fields of France, in the | hi formg Sk Were being exploited i 54 rmi : S i Shioss i he peace| ;. Lhe polls will be open in all four city| daushters were born if the union.|quiet hush of peace w e leave you for-| - gn_capita people for payment, determined not|work for a union of mankind are|with a group painting of the peace | Lhe polle will be open in all four city| daushters wero born if the union|quict hush of peace w e leave you for-{ The confiet ha their standard of life but solely | stronger now than ever they were be- | conference, are to be exhibited in sev- Y -to 4 p. m. | Baron Ribblesdale owns a large estate|ever in God's keeping. ion Germany must s 5 lief committee He alr nd bit- | honorary chairman. S p _aiso goling the strength of the hatred for her allies. * * * No limit is fix- | terness which this war has e ; | conce < is Che-|was married in 1377 to Charlotte dear comr: Coxn, Yk on of Hon Monckton, daughter of Sir Charles sk nch renewed the zener- LR RIS o labor wnrest, which apparentiy )y their capacity to meet the demands|fore. The historic t of the peace|eral leading cities, according to the an- | MA|N OFFENSIVE BY g keen sportsman. He has no these words General Pershing, | heen quisted. ~ The h.“\“(:‘, \KT,‘(,’,;;:S.(,‘, of their enemies. conference of Versailles is to bring|nouncement. Later they will be plac- o sl commander of the American expedi- | committees have been recalled ¢ “In spite of the exorbitant demands, |about this union. SANTERE e Tot R SRS h e AFGHANS IS DEVELOPING | ST fi closed his Memorial Day | guard du 5 0 the reconstruction of our economic life ccept, Mr. President, the expres-|stitution in Washington, to be hung| London. June 1, vi |15 YEAR OLD TAFT SCHOOLBOY E I(l;'v;4~ at Romagne, ACCIDENTALLY SHOT H|MSELF[A'\‘H](K!‘T' , where more than 9 000 | Watertown, Conn.. June 1—William| Americans who fell in the fighting are | gx. = bs Blake, 15 vears oid, was found; buried. General Regoutte, represent- EX-KAISERTHAS ViSITORS owing to renewal of ] ; imors of impending d the same time rendered impos-|sion of my distinguished considera- - ol tion. trait gallery of the building, for which { under ( I Nadir Khan, the am: en in internal affairs we are to (Signed) an appropriation of $1,000,000 is now | comman in-chief, is developing. ! give up the right to self determina- “BROCKDORFF-RANTZAU.” | before congress, is authorized. The latest official information from| in the Argonne eventually in the new national por-|A. han main offensive against order et bullet hole in his head in!ing the French government, and Mar- AT AMERONGEN CASTLE The committee is endeavoring, Mr. | Simla, received on May 29 and 30, the Taft school here to-|thal Foch, the allied commander-in- merongen, June 1 (By the A. P.).— = Pratt said, to induce John S. Sargzdnt | Shows that all attacks on Fort Thal| g, \1 Bxaminer James S. Mar- | chief mentioning all the battles in|BEvident itement was caused today NATION-WIDE STRIKE OF PRESIDENT-ELECT OF BRAZIL 1o paint one or more portrai - the | have been repuiscd. The fort was bom- tin viewed the body and s -as|Wwhich the Americans had participated | Y the arr TELEGRAPHERS THREATENED| TO BE GUEST OF KING GEORGE | colicction, while —commi, have | barded throughout 1id death was cans had ‘participated cdnesda al of 4 number of Germans last and| ; ed accidentally by 1 : Ie s R L e T o own hand. |and dwelling upon the everlasting i“]‘ m\"me!ofln"‘n castl : 'Ilhn x 1l re- peen accepted by Cecilia Beaux, Jo- | the Afshans occupied the looted bazaar| Ry e Com Whitney ry in which those who had d gious service was abandoned 3 Atlanta, Ga., June 1—Officials here| Paris, June 1.—Dr. Epitactic Pes Seph Decamp, Jonn C. Johansen. . | outside the for | Blake was a son of _T. Whitneyjmemory in which those who had died efemote of the Commercial Telegraphers' Union | the president-elect of Braz of America reiterated tonight _their | Bologne Tuesday on a British man-of- | ing It Wiles and Charles Hopkin- |20 of the enemy near Thal. Their| DIRGERE O the CRUSEYS S oIS Con prediction that a nationwide strike of { war for Dover. He will be King|gon. camps were effectively bombed. i = 2 % justice and former German emperor walked morn- vilizzfion would be held by all|i¥ and afternoon in the garden with i three other men, discussin in a loud SR Blakc the W e et Ro- | VOice some serious subject. The voices telegraph operators would become ef- | George's guest during the period June At the capture of the Afghan fort u:“‘]e‘(‘m‘“""m‘ A Blake, the noted sur 1 1%‘9““\,’“;_"‘"‘} o His W 2, ‘;’ "l". fiihe Hnsnt wer ARt rl\-f'{y “::s: feetiv) tomorrow at 3 p. m. unless the !&}-16. |hlo ll:ng l]\av}ng s‘:mBa message |80 KILLED IN FIRE PANIC 1»’) dl'llx. : VEEs A‘;‘:n黑;?"‘v;;‘m SRR NS fLmJ;f nw?,\-. but their words could not he South¥:n Bell Telephone and Tele- | through Lord Derby, the British am- the Bri s o P 3 S S "%l understood. One of the former em- graph Company einstates certain em. | basador. His visit il be during the IN FRENCH PICTURE HOUSE/| .3 350 of the enemy. Smart v <{ UNITED STATES AND SWEDEN Where 700 soldiers are buried and|,erors companions appar 5?!35113"\;& i ployes alleged to h ave been discharg- | celebration of the king's birthday and | Valence sur Rhone. June 1 (Havas).|displayed in the assault and ARE TO EXCHANGE STUDENTS|Where the graves were decorated bY|Alfred Zimmermann, once German sec- of 1P thlon affilfations. he will attend the banquet at Buck- | —Fire broke out today during the per-|The guns made breaches in the walls| wew York, Jume 1.For exchanze ans, assisted by French cVil- | rerary for forelgn President J. Epps Brown, of the|ingham Palace, the lord mayor's ban- |formance in a moving picture house| and the fort was finally reduced by 3| of seientific knowledge and perpetua- Bell Company syl there 'was me|duet at Mansion House and the goy- |here and a Jarge mumber of persons!fanking frontal assault chang situa ai ernment banquet at Lancaster House | Were killed —or injured. rly this| The garrison fought bravely but for} chagge 1;1":11:?‘11\:1“;(lionvl‘l:‘r,\‘(‘l[m:;d flrl;':\; D Pesaon il Tomre Portemanty | evening the list of dead had reached| the most part were killed or captured. the wire board in New York on a British man-o-war for Lisbon, |80 the bodies of 53 children and 21|71t was the strongest fort in Tmion Teaders said that” telegraph | Where he will board the French armor- | Women baving been found at that hour. | tan, havins thick outer walls operators belonging to the union em-|©d cruiser Jeanne d’Arc for the Unit- | Qne man succumbed to asphyxiation.|hombproof shelters. Its fall has had a tion of friendly relations between the = king to an as embly of French ! 5 United States and den, twentyCivilians at the Beaumont cemetery AGON WENTAINTIOBIVER: students will be interchanged between | Gencral Pershing said iha ¥ 1t today was THREE PERSONS DROWNED the countries mext vear, according to|Probably the lasi time that Americans| Waterbury, Conn., June 1.—Two men an announcement today by the Amer- | Would assemble in detachments on theand a 2 year old boy. riding in a light R ; shelt dinavian Foundation, Ten|soil of France to render honors to|frame wagon attached to a horse, wero $ 2o 2 The injuries of most of those taken|good effect in Kandahar and along the P % Tean aolitors v ad died fight- | drowned here v e ployed by press associations or brok- | ed States. from the building by firemen were| chaman ;,m‘m} Showing the effect| Americans will ieo to Swedlen andten | merican soldiers wHo had dled fightfCROWRCR Aece tonieht whep He horee, erage houses would not be affected by slight. There were about one hundred|of hig h: e shells Smcd SRsfuienis Wil Sty et e c Tt B e e the strike ASK OPPORTUNITY TO £ thes fs SIS ous American universities, The foun- B e ——— the wagon with ifs three occupants and i PRESENT IRELAND'S CASE | iy . COI(;R_A—‘TULATES dation will announce June 15 names|THE RHINE REPUBLIC nmf\ -qu%}mwooa ake. The dead HAWKER ic: S 5 lare Antonio Becce, former membet INVESTIGATION HAS BEEN Paris, June 1 —Frank P. Walsh and|MEXICO CITY PUBLISHERS VOR SERPLANE Noa | S o prieE sl aelerter HAS BEEN PROCLAIMED % 102 infantry: Vito Lavango, 24, ORDERED BY BU/ILESON |FEdwaig 1. Dunne, representing Ameri- DETAINED BY MILITARY cRE ¢ Mayence, June 1 (Havas).—The!, q pasquale Becce, 2 years ol P e jean lrish societies, directed a lotter| Mexico City, June 1—The responsi.| London, Saturday, May 31—*It is a| ALL CLASSES IN IRELAND Rhine republic was proclaimed today| 3 ) ashington, June 1.—Investigation | 5 4 o i o - 5 dent Wilson yesterday nephew of the former. Two bodies were recovered up to midnight. e 4 < dnor dndls: > |jolly fine effort and I am very glad ARE UNITED FOR FREEDOM |in various Rhine cities. The popula- Y Gk |(bleiheads 08 i imes i on dally oWE-| Sred ot acrasay Wias ot comment b Lt SEE S LR m Ire. | tion welcomed the event with satis e D e e A m 0 Have Seee\Hdrry G.) Hawier when the leamned of | LSOV Rarc Junen =0losses 08 liten and “expressed the Mhope that i to Pre: of differences between the Southern|.y. tastracts o Bell Telephone Company and its :_hul their instructions prov joyes at Atlanta, G . ntatives of Ireland are not giver | morning daily, the A. B which ha race petitioner : ‘hen h ; = ea ol REQUESTS MESSAGE TO . 3 : ! = 2 R e Deen| 1o arrival of the NC-4 at Plymouth,|1and which formerly were div R0~ | would pu d to the painful unce: to a threat of a n ationwide strike of |21 OPPOrtunity to present Ireland's|detained by the military authorities inf. ;& giately I learned the mews I|liti now “are united and determin- | ypon & Y SRS 10 The PRTTHTURCR CONGRESS ON LYNCHING l‘.u, 2 C o 5 r 1 1 1 tat] d ; e {|case to the peace conference that they | the capital for transportation under| [ e ety e hgestala~ | ed that Treland shall not be the. one |fooss ronsrding the allicd Sations sud ) it telegraph and telephone workers was | %45 10 (I oot i, e marthath beatas sar agatar Jired fhe crow Juy Nhsty congratula o that Ircland shall not be the - inces regarding the allied nations and| paris, June 1—William Trotter ordered tonight by Jostmaster General | S00UK o = < > <o) LS LOr OCUMAT| {ions on their splendid achievement. It - | Germany. “deleis TR e N Burigmon, who sald that Information|. . 'e, therefore petition you, PDof tha L Stario s nich have been| was a splendidiy organized flight. I|dom is denied the inhabitan The new government is el by | oloaaia oy Parths Sppedela R of veaching him on the subject was con- |1CHer #1id “to use your good = officey|printed by these perlodieals resarding| p" pypiicularly glad it was the NC-4|cording to Michael J. Ryan o f Ph o to the peace confer- - scure 3 o 4| the milit ficting. 1o secure for us a hearing before mé\ 2 Dr. Dorden. It h: s been installed pro- Remilitary because she had all the bad luck at|delphia, one of the three delegates | visionally at Wiesbaden. Dr. Dorden| mee, ll‘“'; N —_— four great powers, so that we m e L hsaraare FII Mannowi| DHeUtATEY sent to the peace conference by the |addressed a message to the different) gion PRt N RizhS Teague. in view LACKAWANNA TO DISMISS discharge the duty imposed on us by| The other PARCs =f o P friends of Irish freedom, who returned | governments and to the peace confer-1o¢ recent lynching in the south, and Bl BATE TE the Philadelphia convention AEVOICID) 5 LONDON POLICEMEN DECIDE today on La Lorraine. ence. for the sake of American negroes who ALL 'w N _A NDEBS —_— DISCUSSED MILITARY TO POSTPONE STRIKE T T R TR e gave their lives in the war, to send a R e [ NI TESSINVERFIGATION OCCUPATION OF THE RHINE| London, Junc lL—London's threai-| TORONTO STREET RAILWAY METAL WORKERS IN REGION message to consress recommending ackawanna Railroad Company an- § e e nounced tonight orders haye been put OF TREATMENT OF JEWS| 1., “juno 1.—Marshal Foch ana|ened police strik , for which the mem- MEN VOTE NOT TO STRIKE OF PARIS TO STRIKE TODAY | that Jynching be made a crime ugains’l Into offect diomisting all women sate! Taris. June 1.—(By The A. P.)—Ig- | his assitsant, Major General Weygand, | bers of the force voted by-a big ma- J Pad ki, jority, has been called ‘off for the pre ‘Toronto, June 1—Employes of the June 1.— the A. P.)—The | the federal government. tenders cmployed during ¢ o] hace Jan Paderewski, the Polish | conferred twice Saturday with Louis | JOTity, has e Pres-imoronto Strect Railway company de- Seicrr nion'n L veribh bt — ”n"ll:r nf'»‘.'T“ o \‘l»vl“‘Tz]fexl"ruf}‘l:‘\l"l‘] premier. made it known today that he | Joucheur, min reconstruction, | SNt At the demonstration in I}}dr ided a ta mecting carly today not to hie ool Stoli e WM e Der,by.f——uAnnfl'\mcm:: mrg\vh' ,\ heen T el Tacyied ofiicialy | had decided to ask President Wiison | Goneral Tasker H. F Major Gen- | Parks which had been arranged for 10~ jnin the sympathetic walkout called to| morning because of _differences with | Ssued of the marriage of Miss Anneite that Yv rders had been lskucd as the| 1o name a commission of Americans 1o | arg] Sir Henry H. Wilson, chief of the |82V by the police, it was announced direct ree $ v H. 3 T of @ crossing accident | og 1o aid striking metal workers here. 'l‘)wl Tudge Alfred Swift of Ansonia and Poland -and inves p _ R the employers over the m ethod of a P-| carleton Baldwin of D vhi % igate the | Britic % i < 1 Diaz, that the exccutive committee of their|yoia was 750 opposed to 230 in favor of it R 8 arleton Baldwin of Derby. which took whichl occurred recently in which one | Charges regarding the streatment of | DL et D% 11| organization had decided to_postpone| fiinc: PP Dlying the vew cicht hour law. Thelplace in New Haven Wednesday aft- man lost 15 life. the Jewigh population th ity o the strike until after peace was sign- BE e # 2 S ernoon. Judge Baldwin has been judge e g ORtcre, tails of the military occupation of the| 3" affect more than 200 000 workers. of the Derby court for the past four P S i Rhine region afler the siguing of : $5,000 FOREST FIRE IN The secretary of the subway em- | years and is a member of fha renub- DISTINGUISHED SERVICE Revival of Agitation in Korea, | beace. NMiddlets o Tne A al lconunance VICINITY OF WATERBURY | ployes’ union announced today that|liean state central comn:iitee ‘rom CROSS FOR HARTFORD MAN| Scoul, Korea, June 1.—(By The A. TN, ment exercises of Berkeley Divinity | Waterbury. Conn., June 1.—A forest all the undergrSund lines in Paris| hi. gistrict. Washinglon, June 1—General Per-[P.) There has'heen a slight revival of| France to Hold Elctions in July. | Sehool will be held Tuesday and Wed- | fire raged for'several hours tonight on| Will be tied up Tuesday if in the shing in a cab m to the war de-|the independence movement agitation| Par June I—(Havas). Rumors in| nesday. Only one man is in the grad- |the Cables and Missel properti L s do not grant r of | the lobby of the chamber of deputies! uating , Umetaro Uda, a Japun- | Watertown avenue, causing $5,000{ll the demands of the union. distinguizhed service cross to Corporal| the demonstration. al|that the government has decided to| ese, who came all the way from Osa- | damage to the woodlands. A lighted Cornelius T. Glynn, 17 Winter street,| crowd which gather s dispersel | hold parliamentary clections during|ka, Japan, to take his finishing studies | cigarette thrown into the brush is sald| Women are scldom what they seem Hariford, Conn. | by troops. Five arrests were made. July are reported by Le Journal. in this city. to have been the cause of the blaze.|—and they are gziad of it. - ' off | meantime te compani partment announced the award of ajin Korea, with § Hartford. — According to unoficial records at the office of the Hariford r Bureau, about 200 Hartford men in_the rvice of the TUnited ates during the war with Germany.

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