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3 5 /. 1, 1919 EIGHT PAGES— 56 COLS. " PRICE TWO' CENTS Minsk, Russia. 3 NEW HAVEN ROAD SHOPMEN |“Sthe” Demuties | it i@ Tyus Is Rogine | EACH COUNTY T0 HAVE 70 VOTE ON ENDING STRIKE | med By Metorsccoerp e o Dmsk, Sher@ ™ "EAIR PRICE COMMITTEE iy jous New Zork state hi Is. oy : . Obtain_ S N B utehers in convention in Cleveland | tually All Necessities For :uawr:‘:‘ wsrk‘o‘n. h;:h cost of nvu“t‘t& the SH Dem Wfin‘. 000 Members Ha Decided o ako! armers are cutting . 6, i 34 New Yor, Aug. 10.—In an effort to|O0ats green to save them from grass- - Attorney General Palmer Has Instructed State Food Admin Take Vote of the Six Crafts Involved—Result Will Not| cbtain the support of stage hands and | RODPErS, | 4 jacking house em- | o Opy Tuesday, July 20.—(By The istrators to Make Appointments—Committee Is to Pub- . : > 5 shi; i hich h: losed | ployes are reported to be on strike in|100.000 ref: “h assed th: h i i i T i H Be Known Before Thursday—Reports From Washing-| Pauity asseciation which has closed | Ploves = Dt s tive pakeed throtgh lish a List of Fair Prices For the Guidance of the Public ten New York thcatres, the actors will VOL. LXI—NO. 190 ) RTIOFTOw Mt b -going tonnage of Unit: . . A t ton Say It Is Expected That Almost Normal Conditions dentis uirop '8“0';":‘ wiit afitials] Steam son_going & 85" per s Pvaey iy gle‘;‘.m°";::d"m:‘{( Sha —Will Investigate What Is Being Charged For Retail - 5 & . . i since 1914. : r i j i Will Prevail Today in Every Railroad Shop Where Men |, Arnouncement was made | tonight Yenator’ Caider says Uuited States S O, dotes and Necessities—Object Is to Ferret Out Profiteers—Be- 3 - 1000,000 houses. behind the ne; . ) o g @ SETR Have Been On Strike—Three Trains are to Be Restored | %, ,J2pe3, B Holiand, president of the :::‘:33,,"1‘;_' e e dirry Senos BansaTied. lieves Public Sentiment Will Be Enough to Discipline , state organizer of| House of commons adop! ill pro- | grqy i o . . On the New Haven Road. The American ¥ ederation of Labor, At|viding for & seven-hour day In YSri- | Smider of the teapm melng i the Men Guilty of Extortion In Prices. i this eting also will be present|tish mines. e t 63 1 New Haven, Conn, Aug. 10.—Dele- | morrow in every railroad shop where| Charies C. Shay, president of the Ins| France has agreed to pay $400,000,- | Dfasants ahd rafiwav. &factory and| woeningion. Aug. 10—Atlornby, wrote Chairman McLean that the * gates representing the 6,000 members| men have been on strike. ternational Alllance of. Theatre and|000 for American army surplus stocks |taining sick and wounded roons | General Palmer started out today tofgrowth in the volume of clrculatine of the eystem federation of the New| Director General Hines is ready to! Staze Employes: Joe N. Weber, presi-|in France. from hospitale There have bhon in- | ascertain how much of the high cost | notes was the effect and not the catse York, New Haven and Hartford rail-| undertake negotiation of wage de-|gent of tne Americ: ‘Association of Bolshevist report claiming sub-igiances where e tire trains have been | ©f 1VINg is due to excessive profits by! of advancing wages and prices gnd road decided at a meeting here late| mands, a5 directed by President Wil-| Musicians; Frank Gilmore, executive|stantial advance toward Archangel ‘S| idetrackeu wiis tvphus vietims, many | Ttailers. ; that the war period of finance would today to put the question of endins the|son, as soon as the ~men return 1o secretary of the Actors’ Equity asso.|officially denied of them in a dying condition. Every| In a telegram to all state food ad-|NolL be over until government oblig shepmen’s strike to a vote of the six| work. In view of President Wilson's| ciation; Paul Turner, its counsel, and| Stringent resrictions reported to|qisi" numbers of (desd are removes | ministrators who worked with Admin- | i0ns, now carried by the banks, were crafts involved. The results of this|specific instructions that the whole| W B 'Rubin, attorney for the other|have been placed by Russia on ex-!gont DM some of them having per- | istrator Hoover during the war the at-!#bforbed through the actual savings balléting will not be known before| matter would have to be “at a stand- | labor organizhtions. portation of furs. o i Mo el Ul & PET- | {orney general requested the appoint-| Of the people. Thursday, it was announced. #till” so long as an illegal strike con-| " In announcing the proposed confer-| United Stdtes wheat director says|'®Nl fEom Starparon, o | mentof a fair price commitiee in cach| Seveie censure of strikes and ex- Following the meeting. it was stated| tinued, the demand of .men in some/|ence Holland promised the strikers he!flour will be laced on the market at| o' committoes are Tarkine In wie.| county to investigate what is beinz|!ravazance was implied in Mr. Hard that the first craft meeiings would be| places for wage increases before £0-| would make every effort to have the|about $10 a barrel tually all the necessfties for caring|Charged for retall necessities and if in| INE's letter, which did not, howeve held in this city tomorrow, when the| ing back to the job, it was learned.|stage hafids and musicians rally to| A. C. Rucker purchased cotton ex-|gon'lh A1, (1€ Hecessives foF carn€| oy exs of what the committee consid- | Undertake (o blame any one section of striking members from the various' cannot alter the situation. Union offi-| their support. change seat from J. P. Benkhard for|feeqing stations with a ca it: '! - | ers lust, to publish a list.of fair prices! the population, but referred to the n shops, roundhouses and yards in Con-| cials here are in touch with the strike| In what is said was an effort to|record price of $24,000. otent: o cave tor T trapacity Suf- | for ihe guidance of the public. tion as a whole, especially to the re necticut will vote. Other meetings| centers make clear the causes which led to| King Albert of Belgium will prob-|fcient to care for all those who are | %, & SU 5 CRIE 0, NE RV, o of | 1axation of ecomomies practiced dorine will be held in Providence, Readville, _— the strike, the Producing Managers|ably sail for the United States about|{>= 10 jefve the frains. The Amer-| . ching profiteering which Mr. Palm- | the War and the purchase now of no: Mass., and Van Nest. N. Y., but it was| TO CONFER ON SOLUTION Protective association tonight issued|the middle of September. 5 Semnel 4% 'Bfving "‘1 besl o “C‘:fl lel;' er. recently indicated was unser con- | €$Sential articles by persons enjoying said that these probably will take OF THE RAILROAD PROBLEM |a statement reviewing all negotiations| State railways of ltaly are said to [SONFRL 18 BINInE the 3 medicamency | Sideration. He has frankly admitted | large incomes for the first time. place un Tuesday. The crafts involved| o oo o 00 7 "0 00" B0 o ] that led up to the sgrike. _ have been offered to American finan- fo"l‘;,g “fogx: ments and medicaments | ¢,om the start that there was no|, "The federal rescrve hoard helieves are boilermakers, machinists, black-| & °0 02 0" ndider all plans sub-| The fundamental tause of the dis-|ciers as security for loan. An ailied anti-typhus train is giving|Means to prosecute directly a man | hat any currency legislation thi smiths, sheet metal workers, carmen tOR SReRae 0 T0 ol o olution of ihe | agreement, said the statement, was the| Jersey City patroimen protest against ot gy et Lo ol “‘ guilty of extortion in prices. Retail- | lime is unnecessary A undesirable.’” and electricians. railroad problem will be held here Oc- | €i8ht performance clause. This, the|formation of a policemen’s union, :o| 9509, = sonnel of the train. ic en.]ers who are gouging the ultimate con-{ Mr. Harding wrote. nd would sug- The results of the balioting at the| (% [2% Fin) ™ he auspices .of the|managers said, was a demand they|be affiliated with A. F. L. aged in fumigating cars in whieh| sumer will have to be disciplined by | Zest that whether viewed from an eco Tarious meetings will be forwarded 1o ) mb organization bureau. In -mak.|COuld not comply with and charged| Spanish chamber of deputies cdopt-|£28ed in fumigating cars in which| pipjie sentiment. which officials have|Omic ~or financial standpotnt, the this city. where Secretary Robert E. ing public announcement tonight of|With knowing this, Francis Wilson,|ed committee rerort favoring Spain's Reoiits recelves ;"r‘: from Tyumen, | PO doubt is sufficiently alert to the sit- remedy for-the present situation is the Henderson of the system federation . B& Dr e stice. "Walter | President of the Actors’ association,|adhesion to league of nations. uation now to act vigorously in clear- | 52me, namely, to work and to save: tn will compile the total votes at a meet- | 1 3 ~ had publicly asked that it be submit-| Transport Great Northern brought|the oldest Russian town in cut cases. work regularly and efficiently, in order ing echeduled for Thursday morning. | Clark of the Worth Cavoling supreme | (i to- arbitration. Arbitration of the | party of German war hrides wromar- | 54Y (hat the roads from the w Hoarders, on_the other hand, can be| 10 Droduce and distribute the larmesr James Carnie of Readville Mass. inary - eight performance clause. said the|ried American soldiers ket I PUNROn: reached through the wartime food laws | Possible volume of commodities: and preliminary conference, said special 2] president of the system federation. 1 presided at the meeting, which was at- | committees would be appeinted to an- statement. could not be considered by| Steamship North Star went ashore e oF the BHemasn sct. @nd; Mr Palmer f O . 8Xercise, Teasonablb; cconoTIias 1o the managers begause they could not|on Green Island, Nova Scotia: CATHOLIC PRELATE'S LETTERS |70 0% 030 A 1000 administra. | order that money. oods and. seciomn tended by 24 delegates from the sys-|alyze the different proposals. afford to abide by an adverse decision. | passengers were safely remo-ed 'ON UNION OF CHURCHES| fors to transmit to him any evidence|May be devoted primarily to the I tem federation locals in Providence. C‘ae’?a!:‘fd tli'x:ua c;l:lg-'n‘::le(fl w{fildg: Actors gathered tonight at strike| Herber Hoover left Paris for Vien-| Rome, Sajurday, Aug. 9 of hoarding or other violations of the|dation of debt and to the satisfaction New (Haven, Readville, Mass. and | omposed of engineering and techni- | headquarters greeted with cheers an|na: he will investigate food conditions|A. P.) “Acta Apostolicae Bis” the of- | Jaw which they might encounter in|Oof the demand for necessitics. rather T hecion: ohea har Ohe| cal experts to report upon the propo-|2ddress by John Drew. who announced | in all central European capitals. ficial organ of the Holy See. in today’s| their work. with the promise that ‘the| than to indulge in extravagances.’ O ne Imtermatlonal e N he | Sals as regards ineir meeting the test|that his nephews, Lionel and Jack| Twenty-four trusties at Sing Sing|edition contains iwo episties by Carai. | Fovernmant's law enforcement ma-| Money in circulation actually has strikers return to WOk N ere dlCussed | ot economy and efciency: another | Barrymore, had requested him to mo- | prison have been on strike since Wed- | nal Patrizi, vicar gencral of Pope I | chinery would act promptly. shown na decline since the post-war at length. as well as °'J°" D e | will be composed of legal authorities | tify the strikers that they were “with nesday: they say they are “tired.” IX, written recmectively in 185f{ and| ‘There Is a pressing necessity for|Period set in Mr. Harding sald. The D O o (he oxenn. | to Teport upon the degal and constitu- | the Actors' Baquity association” He| Cuban house of representatives fa- | 1865, setting forch the ‘declarations of | the Testoration nf normal conditions” | fotal per capita- circulation on Dec. 1 nounced that a meeting of the et ] tional questions involved. and a third|21s0 read a letter from Ethel Barry-|vors resolution preventing exportation|the Catholic. Church on the proposal| Mr. Palmer's telegram said, request-|191S. was $48.13, which was reduced tive committees of the federations of N . more in which she allied herself with|of sugar at less than 6 1-2 . cents a|at that time from the Anaiiean charch | ing the men who did such effective| (0 $45.18 on the first of this month. S = pound. invitin, 1 o unk work during the war to take un the _— bany and New Haven roads will be nanc.i,al exl:d":'ssw:ro ":vem EeoEE D | LeReth et headuuscioval | MWGiimee smibgey Wohisgisnde 10 (‘hfi!gag;scc:;:;::s.er greiunion | Woel MubiSE’ the was 1o Take amiihe | oCOVILLE HAS ‘DECIDED Bt I BOP R aRT . oA P e e » stated that Al Jolson, Harry Fox, Ed|nies report that Villa bas 4.000 men|" The episties explain s o serve without compensation, the at- TO ACT IMMEDIATELY JThe SueisUiSe Sunday passenger aer: | Hmunial SEOSmaE Wynn and Frank Fay had been ap-|under his command in the state Of|lolic Church. . bein i torney meneral believing that the pub-| Salisbury O vice on the New Haven system ap-| The American people were urged byl 300, ®0C & PonE (Lo Tan ool e | Chihuahua b AR Tie Sk £o0 1 £ 1 4l Salisbury, Conn., Aug. 10.—Robert peared to be adequate to care for those | Judge Clark to consider all the pro- ¢ PoIbt Rl At s Drocont toauna | fronnon ki forces have | CRUTCh, cannot discuss a unioa Je ervice to be performed now is as|Scoville, former federal food admin Pefsons whe traveled: The New Ha- | posals “without prejudice avd<with- g the prese e. onduras revelutionary forces have|other churches, but tha: those whici | Important as when the country Was|istrator for Connecticut, said at his The managets tonight professed sat- | been defeated by government troops|lefy her must return to hec engaged in- hostilities. and that 16| home in Taconie isfaction with the result of steps taken|at Guascora, near the Salvadorean poc ol B ik patriotic citizen would refuse the call tonight that he ‘had out passion, and to examine those received the telegram sent out by At ven offices tonight announced the res- which have been ottlined in the light toration tomorrow of three trains on o v ve s 5 *| by them to fill the gaps in their casts| frontier. to duty. b 3 5 3 Se Ny Heyen and eight on’ the|of the principles Which we:have nuR: | suused by- principals golil-on. atylke. Two armed bandits cntered San|PRINCE OF WALES Is —_— oAl o e s o hat 2 entral New England. ciated. e e L Francisco jewellers, 1orced clerks to NEARING ST. JOHNS, N. F.| WORK AND SAVE. REMEDY mapped out by the atiorney general —_— lie down and escaped: with $100,000( St. Johns. N. F., Aug. 10.—The ad- FOR HIGH COST OF LIVING | He gy . BOSTON RAILROAD TERMINALS. |HEARINGS ON THE STREET HOTEL ACCOMMODATIONS |worth of valuables. ! miralty wireless §tation. anfounced | Wasnington, Aug. 10—To work and | his rormec. xesori ik With some of ALMOST DESERTED SUNDAY 2o RAIL Sl — New York, Aug. 10.—Increases in the| Senate adopted resolution autho tonight that the British battleship Re- | save” is the remedy for the increasing | Tuesday. 5 Boston, Aug. 10—Boston's two rail- |, Washington, Aug. 10-"Hearings be-| prices of hotel accommodations rans- | N8 Sweeping Investization °faneat” |newn, on which the Prince of Wales is| cost of living nointed out today by the| Mr. Scoville said the attorney gen- road terminals were almost deserted for¢ the electric railway ing from $1 10 $7 a day have been put|T28es against Americans and Ameri-coming to this colony. and Canada,| federal reserve board. eral's request for the appointment. of appointed by President Wilson to | [n& Toq 31 A0 30 5 SAY NAXe Peeh Bulican property in Mexico, Was met by ‘the: crulser Dauntiess 10| 1n sepre in on oo p 4 > : i 3 y from the sen- |0 fair_price commiit led for t make, recoimendytions far Mprove: | gjnbe 1 as a direct result of the|. Strike of all paperi \qers; Painters | miles off St. Johns at 3 o'clock this af- | ate banking pivhy-Sryo A ipeitieaplirag 4l s 1 R b 4 slnd Dol okt ment of the stréet railway situation |, and. decoratays.in 1 be | ternoon. g 3 ) . % : wm'{yemma(‘mmm I od Top A ubust, 127, the ‘it dowend s Rt was_ advisable to attempt contraction | Which he thought indicated that cloth- today as a result of the continuance of the shopmen's strike. Sunday sched- ules on the Bosi and. Maine and. the Ito) Non Vork, New Haven and Harifora & of ciirrency by legislation In the hope | ing would come within the t rnln-)a ‘ordinarily very light, were| hearings opened July 15 and after the|ciation Opposed to National Framipr. | $1 an hour and a five-day week. OBITUARY.. *~ of reducing prices, Governor I‘Jlnrdlrr:g the committee's work. cnads | Toduced to & minimirm “ands virtually | representatives of the railways had| {jon' Commercial Cable Co. announces P8 M 2 5o trains except a few cOnnccting with | been heard adisurnment was {akEW) The statement. detalling results of|that code - i o L LIRS 'A“';’l:"'l:;“’s‘ ks e T s T T e : epresentatives o (s 3 not allowed incablezrams to parts o 7 . 10.—John' S. Shaugh- . teintniyvera opetated. employes are vet to be heard, the for- | 20 Investisation. places the total fisure | 00 B Ol ipied by allied troop: nessy, brother of Lord Shaughnessy,| SEVEN PERSONS BURNED RUSSIANS SUSPECTED OF necessary to cover the hotels’ loss of e e e catoniste bound. for| mer heginning, tomorrow -and the| [oCessary 10 caver the hotels' loss of | “GUilill St h et Eng'and’s leading | chairiman of the board of directors of ? TO DEATH IN MONTREAL | BELONGING T suburban points were obliged to resort - yhv " : O MURDER LEAGUE to automobiles or trolley ir! to reach workers late this month or early in Many projected hotel plans have been fcm{nme ng:mlo'r, is act_used of re-|the Canadian Pacific rafiroad, died at Montreal, Aug. 10.—Seven persnnsy London, Aug. 10.—Sixtesn Russians, their homes from this city. The lack| September. abandoned because of the law, it was|Ceiving $30,000 in Russian gold from |his home here today after being ill| were burned to death thnight in 4 firs | including five swomen Lo @s Russiate, the Boston and Maine, Boston and A!{wm be composed of economic and fi-|JBOre H WhICH e v At the hearings beginning tomorrow | sejted. Bela Kun, former Soviet leader. more than a year. He was 55 vears|on a scenic railway at Dominion park, | Stoc v mor T e T o Sk Sau8ed | Secretary Baker and a number of Tep- Eagle silic mill at Shamokin, Pa|0ld. A widow and two children. sur-|a namusement resort near this cliv. - | decsined i aiiin oy L0 DeinE when thousands of persons commute | [esentatives of the public will testify.|34TH ANNUAL MEMORIAL suing United Textile Workers for $1,- | vive. The bodies of three men, thres wo- | bers of & redi i oL, Phing rm- fo the city for their regular employ-|AmONg the prospective witnesses 1 SERVICES FOR GEN..GRANT | 000.000 loss alleged to have been im- John Noble Golding. men and a boy were recovered from |lieved to have heen contorned iy vho ment. The New Haven railroad an.|>avor Connell Scranton. and among| . S F curred as result of recent strike. Now¥, . the ruins shortly before midnight. It |Kkilling of Nikolai Ardasief o morns = 2 20" | those representing state public service| New York. Aug. 10.—The 34th an-| SecondLieutenant ric E.Merriil, U.| . vcW_York. Aug. 10.—Jjohn Noble ] & of Nikolai Ardasfef, 2 prom i : t = is feared several more persons lost ; o 4 { commissions will be Richard T. Hig-|nual memorial services for General A., was arraigned in federal court | GOIding, real estate broker who han- | b " Java O Pireons lost Btookholm. s o;rxdh]ng“"l:flnl'l,!’mlorg‘ p £ins, Connecticut, and W. D. E. Ainey, | Grant were held at Grant's Tomb here | charged with fraudulently obtaining|%icd the sale of many Fifth ~Avenue |, €T UeS And th h i a Eentas tyenth today by the American Jewish sev- |$60.000 by raising sovernment checks | OtS along lionaires: Row". died.at| comorrow. It s beon imwossie oo | poodent i1 that city of the Woek'y nounced a further curtailment of ser- vice for tomorrow. The Boston .and Maine ra\road announced that one round trip to Portland, Me., cancelled v s : his home h da i Dispatch. The bodies of th: " T PAD s S enty. elders. The services conducted | French commisss is ho ere today of pneumonia in 4 - dies. of three other last week. would be returned to the = enc| ommissioners are arreng 5 » & far to identify the dead. pers beliave > have bee: i n: schedule tomorrow. Officials said that| TRANSPORT IMPERATOR HAS by Jacques Pollatschek. president of |ing for transportation of a large {,‘;’;s5;3‘:;:":“;e:{;nds"an‘;‘t)i;"c"’“ Cli-| “The cause of the fire, which not only | of the league hace Lecn S this “should not be taken as an indi- DOCKED AT NEW YORK | the elders marked ihe e npumber of German workmen who Will | the” Equitable Tife Assurance Society,|G€Stroved part of the scenic railway. |lake near Stockhoim, and several. oth- ikcoli 7 B . isC 3 elp rebuil ouses in dcvisted areas. . “Mystic Mill” by, e ans Trox - 4 ¢ation of any likelihood of an in New York. Aug. 10.—Returning 10| pecause of the war. Rabbi E. M. Women delegates to ternational | AUSUsSt Belmont, William Waldorf As- flfiin“),’i‘i,_‘“?,u“‘,"."‘.‘; rph”;gxir: )‘.;v:‘l; :.;lg);:n:;?o::”'}l(:uxm ..a\_(‘.‘v‘,:::“ton;;‘ mr;” creased service, but on the contrary,!ihe United States on the transport Im- Brown,. the Jast survivor of the pall|socialist conference in Luzerne decid- | {oF the Astor Estate and the late | %00 by "0 jighted . cigarette e missing. unless there is some early change for| perator, which docked here today. were | po0tiles Th€ 820 B funeral, was one Frank W, Woolworth, the better in the situation, 5 ed to call world-wlie strike of work- 2 match. The flames, d by a west- Stoc curtaiiment in'passenger servics witi| B, Sfmcers Shd men (Who won 81l g of the. inepkae: ing women ‘in event of future declar- Rear Admiral W. G. Buehler. Rt e i e PoRNSHE, SanoIn palise.. the, [corres- undoubtedly have to be made B A " aAnie) Prian FReioH T EEE D tions of war. % Philadelphia, Aug. 10.—Rear Ad- (river, on the banks of which the |rested belong to i fiol‘,,;.“:f\v.llh?:,',‘.,:',i Men employed in the power house| Bare. With them was Colonel Joseph Lieutenant General Sir George F.|miral William George Buehler, United | amusement park is located, checked zation, which is contrary to early re- MPing SEesEio [Tkt it o e R ety chit BOSTON & ALBANY ROAD|Milne has been authorized by tae | States navy, retired. died today in Ha- | the fire from spreading to fhe rest of | norte i as members of XNorth station returned to work today. I:r' Th‘:":::noe"s'. e 5 Boston, Aug. 10.—The Boston and |Peace conference to control all ailied He was born in Philadeiphia |the resort across the stream. - al'.”:‘:;'::.:uo’:]g Sl ek i The strike of the shopmen and other| Resides 5602 troops, the Imperator| Albany railroad anpounced tonight an| {roops im Asia Minor and to restore 5 1837, and entered the' nav The fire started in the mill and|purpose the restoration of the Russian mechanics on the Boston and Maine| prought home 205| nurses, -384 welfare | embargo against all freight from con- |©°red in Smyrna. 9 : He was an officer of the U.|quickly the flames laid hold on the|monarchy. The Stockholm hotels and system extended to the Connecticut| workers. 50 general prisoners, includ- | necting lines. Freight will not be ac-| Gustav Alonen. Matti Martins Mar- |is. frigate Niagara when the first |skeleton structure of the railway.|villas are filled with Russian refugess and Passumpsic divieion. Reports | ing a lieutensnt charged with coward. | cepted by the road at Boston.except|tn Petola and Michael Icey, Finnish | Atlantic cable: was 1aid and in con- | When the fvemen arrived, the i - : for its 2 . Pei : 18 r v » of whom are mysterious charac- reaching railroad headquarters here/|ice, 18 soldiers' wives and 15 soldiers’| shipmenis of food for human con- | editors of the New York Luokkataslu, | nection with this duty received the|wis a blazing pyre and a few minutes with plenty of me said that upwards of 800 men at|children, Sumption when destined o points om | Were arrested on charge of advocating | goid medal (B (he New York: Chomide | b oo part of the railway “Who are Bolsheviki and who are Springfield. Lyndonville, Vermont, and g the road. “eEtinn) smwcchy) of Commerce. [In the Civil War. he | structed over the mill fell with Sh | not Bolsheviki of the actors in t other points had quit work during the| gpooKLYN CAR STRIKERS The announcement added that the| National Bank of Commerce esti-|participated in attacks on the James|into the roaring furnace. Ac [ web of crimes cannot be unravelled night. WORK | Boston and Albany would endeavor to}mMated Tritish investments in Argen- |river and Fort Darling and in the|to witnesses, a car filled With mer- | from the various comflieiing newon As a result announcement was made HAVE RETURNED TO continue passenger service “to the|tina at $2,000,000.000. Before the war | passage of the forts at the entrance to|rymakers took a fatal leap into the HaC s toribe i ithe . corvoatonent. o b of the @iscontinuance of a number of! New York, Aug, 10.—After four days| greatest extent possible,” but that all|one-third of Argentine foreign trade|lobile 1wy under Farragut. flames. “and speculations i local trains between Springfield, | of chaotic transit conditions in Brook- | dining car service will be withdrawn.| Was with United Kingdom. Lucius F. Thayer. o Coming from the mill could be heard | are rife in the Stockholm Russian Northampton and Greenfield. lyn, because of the strike on the e During the last few days there has| | . o "0 A moans of agony. and cries for help, | community. It may be.that the thre Service on the Providence, Warwick | Brooklyn Rapid Transit company's| CAMPAIGN FOR FUNDS FOR been an outbreak of strikes through- | . Westfield, Mass. Aug. 10.—Lucius F.1 L %0 SHT Oung it possible A0 | coonimarity. At may be that the thse and Bristol electric branch of the New | lines, traffic was resumed today on a ROOSEVELT MEMORIAL |90t the Japanese Empire: wage in. | Thaver 5 years old. died in his home | Pl the Qremen found It BOSSOR (0| victims found in the lake were mur- Haven system was suspended today|normal basis pending adjustment by creases from 30 to 60 per cent and |here today. Mr, Thaver was born here <51y . ered only for their money s £ . d chidren trapped in the blasing o e tholy, eSO e o hen 23 pow f the claims 6f| New York, Aug. 10.—The Roosevelt|shorter hours are demanded. Aug. 22, 1834, and had been president | 2D o ia orrespondent’s story of fhe Work. COfhciats said eoris meatd iy | I oard o o o ted Cthat as| Memorial Association announced fo- of the ‘Westfleld Savings bank meore | fcructure. They did succeed however | murder of Ardasjeff savs that (he lat made to arrange for the operation of | early as 6 o'clock this morning 95 per|day that arrangements virtuaily had DEMAND MADE FOR THE than half a century at the time of his| " n‘“" “d! l‘. ol ‘“‘f- ”‘ T ,‘e‘“ in® | ter was lured to a vila outside of steam trains over the division tomor- | cent, of the strikers had returned to|Dbeen completed for the campaign to i death. é walls nlm (rg.,xllr;ltm_egrb!\v;t”w ;.m't;kr» Stockholm, where he was chained to row to take care of the heavy com-|work and cars were moving on regu-|raise funds for erection of a monu- EXTRADITION OF BELA KUN Ralph A. Blakelock. © 1O hen renbrts of the fire reached the |2 Wall for twenty-six hours withcut muting traffic to Providence. lar Sunday schedules on surface, sub-|ment at Washington and _establish- 2 York., A 10.—Ralph s ds of Bk stenad tol Poa DE et The next day a court Members of several of the local un-| way and elevated lines. ment of a public park at Oyster Bay Vienna, Saturday, Aug. —(By The e d ug- ~—Ralp! A.|city, thousands of persons hasten '0| martial of twenty assembled and after jons concerned in the strike held meet- " 5 : in \Dnor of the former president. A. P) A demand by the Hungarian St S ;“ lDDWer as a “painter | the park. seven miles a in every|qa prief trial Ardasjeff was found guil ings during the day at which they| FRENCH OFFICIALS VISIT Regional conierences at which state|government for the extradition of Bela cognized only after he had been | manner of conyveyance. ty of treason and sentenced to death als who left | Sommitted to the Middletown asylum | To allay the fears of the thousands | (i was announced by a member of the ol il e died yvesterday ut - !who already crowded the Dark: Sou-| .ourtmartial the correrpondent com: camp in the Adirondacks, according|sa's band, which is playing there this| inyew that if Ardasjeff would sigh to word received here today. 1is|week. continued its concert, and while | g Utt NI SITOARIGR WERE L RIEE were urged by national officers and chairmen and stife commi-tees will| Kun and other soviet o S SpEttr Jatonsl oMcss and) | DUNKIRK AND MAZEBROUEK | eR ndo s, Soma e | KURATy 2o thinea ti s in- BN ARS8 in ten cities in the next few weeks. ria is anticipated here. répresentatives frem the meetings in-| or8. SBET oS T noh: cities e mext few djcated a strong sentiment in favor of — - fri i v . left Paris Saturda: riends recently had cbtained his re-|shouts of the firemen mingled with 3 - d e checks remaining out until the wage demands | tors and deputics. lott Paris Saturday| yEGGMEN BLOW SAFE lease from the asylum and had sent|the moans of the dving, there came|bg SPared. He signed the checks but were granted. No final action was ex. | NiE AND GET $1,800 IN DERBY TO TRY THE KAISER hith, 1o, (he chmp 1o the Bope thet e | o O O i S, (a5 ooere | ¥a® then slowly strangled to death: cted t % E brouck. t mh pected today, however. Premier Clemenceau, with Louis Derby, Conn.. Aug. 10.—A safe in quiet of the woods 1d mountaing fand ragtime airs. Even when the| ol nian apmy s TO e ucheur, minister of reconstruction,|the office of' the Howard & Barber would restore his health. black wagon arrived from the morgue, NO TRAINS BETWEEN HARLEM Iifben ‘F. Lebrun, minister of block-| company department store in Main| Born in New Yori in 1847 and al- | fiying its black flag, the gay tunes RETIRE FROM BUDAPEST RIVER AND NEW ROCHELLE|ade and the invaded regions, Leon | street was blown open by yeggmen . most wholly self :du:ated in his ar(. | continued. Berlin, Aug. 10 (By the A. P.).—The Mew Yo.A ' Aug. 10—Bec ¢ tn| Abrami, under-secretary at the war|early today and money and Liberty | | Mr. Blakelock pever realized .to the| Elsewhere the bright lights blazed | retirement from Budapest of the Ru- stiile of ey ol mcause of the| jepartment, and Edouard Igna bonds totalling $1.800 were taken. The - full the fame his work haC Lrovght|forth and either unaware of the manian army owing to pressure fram on the New Yok New ‘Hanspectors|ger-secretary for military justic safe door was blown off, but the bur- p him erd received voly .a pittarce cf|taken by ~the flames or careles the entente is probable, but it will be Fartford Railroad all fraine between | Pensions. also left Saturddy night to|glars deadened the sound of the ex- 5 : the f rtune his taleat edriel. it, some patrons continued to ss|a sullen withdrawal boding no good The Haclem Hicer nd aos potween|visit the liberated regions of the de- | Dlosion by covering the safe with rugs | For many years he hawked his|their way into the sideshows ‘h | for the future, according to despatches ere discontinted carly today Fhone | partment of Pas de: Calal S e Ty ety e paintings about New York, obtaining |kept up their performanc received here from the Hungarian ands N K R e ———— store. | % r them never more than a few dol- capital. This acvelopment. wepe tomed from | PLOT TO HAVE GARRISON o e p e e Wrs and undergoing the severest | MAXIMILIAN VON HOEGEN “The Rumanians are known to be « railroad stations to trolley lines to REVOLT AGAINST CARRANZA |60 KILLED IN FOOD RIOTS : © Y] |haraships. TO BE-RELEASED ON BONDS | disgruntied and angry at the FMun : e AT CHEMNITZ, saxony| M o In 1899 his mind gave way and he 5 ¥ ey garians, the Austrians and the entenfe B Mtnitisas and &N & cer-| - R1-Pase. Rex. ARE 1o DIOL: 19 | was taken to Milldletown, sufferi Hartford, Conn. Aug. 10.—Maximil-| by they are not alone in this state 6f sequence thers was great congestion | have the Chihuahua city garrison re-| Chemnitz, Saxony. Aug. 10.—(By s P, etown, sufféring { ;o TAFLIOH CONTL Now Haven fawyer | DUt they are not alo t L : z ighty soldiers - principally from a delusion that he 3 " | mind. for sharp differences of opinion in_trafic on the electric roads. volt against the Carranza command:|The A. P) Sixty to eighty SEmCIETy. Jram ia° delisthn, , thet who Hias been in jail here for some | mind, for sharp differences of opinion The railroad company explained ! ers and join Villa Friday was discov-| were killed and two hundred wounded . 8 He remained in the Middletown asy- |lime facing a charge of treason. will|among the’ Hungarians, Austrians and it i <i- a ing, ac-|in the fighting food riots Friday, ac- < ;hu“t: hr'\l;é\ ;w‘:?(‘:!.-_(xl’ ?.3‘.\‘,,.;*”32”""";.',, I :;:;lnf_—"g )\v‘;g:fid; i a':gm ;fexi::n c‘;rd?x:g 151; pfiiaz?’es.‘fll.m here. Tgn : L\;Tin?n;l:;;;m:i); ‘no:i :fi::«“x:: dy;:::; 35.)'";19::15:2 i?.fi‘«?éi‘l?a‘?a:{’g?.".“ .OJI ufl;u- :;erh’:r:;‘;fl;‘ fa'v)-{n;Yh;’r?l‘J: 1 ‘r“,;;;r_‘ whieh would have fougit to get|officers and soldiers were placed in the| The city is now quiet and trains are m‘:allwi-:flr‘;x:.ge :“-ge;nez:: °f1 t:-e = | e St TDISIEECE Attors .2222.‘?3;.\"’.‘.““;1‘:‘5\1.‘.?{:‘,’ a return of a v, federal penitertiary charged with in-|running. v ved. homora- | EEIAT, (M oth 1o present the or- 3 a 3 4 : o ble mention at a Paris exposition.. BY) ST oeety | 5 i baad — — Eeoviaonce ond) Puil Hiter aie men| i oo WANGS™ SMA | e iGHT HANDLERS 1N - = | | pnpctialiy, restored in mind, " Mr.{ 3€T RSO LLel DU Clopen sala. | $225000 FOR RETURNED SOLDIERS discontinued today, 5§ electric trains; TURKS TRIED TO SINK BOSTON VOTE TO STRIKE 6 g . e e TouEht back 10 Yo% | hgwever, that the department.of jus- IN BRITISH WEST INDIES having been annulied. These ftrains) GERMAN CRUISER GOEBEN| poston, Aus. 10.—At _a meeting of e 2] |areat changes that had.somé over (he| tife expects to bring:Von Hoegen to[ Kingsfon. / Jamaicn, Aug. 10.—The were discontinued, it was sald, for the; Athens, ~Aug. 10.—Constantinople | the Boston local of the Boston and Al- o i1 |city auring. hiz absénce; apa to . visit | trial .| British zovernment 'has anproved a game reason as were the trains on the| newspapers received here report that| bany freight handlers’ union today it for the first time, a gallery showing| Before being brought here, Von|loan of 000 to the island govern- Harlem River branch. Other trains| murkish officers recently made an at-| was reported that the .members had o . R o ek % | Hoegen was acquitted by a, courtmar- | ment to provide work for returned discontinued were ‘hose leaving New | tampt to sink the former German| voted unanimously in favor of a strike & The subways, the great Pennsylva- | tial at San Antonio, Texas, of charges | soldlers of the British West Indies Lendon at 655 a. m. for Hartford and| cryjser Goeben at Ismid. Asla Minor,|on Sept. 1 to enforce demands for a| [ : a nia and Grand Central terminals, the|Of evading the draft. Sy g Jeaving Providence for New London at|pyt were frustrated by British officers.| wage increase averaging 20 cents an| | o 8 Woolworth Buiiding, -all these were et e 3 0 capitalidte investing e <30 . [ nour. . : L wws]l [new to the artist, and he laughed’and | STRIKE OF BAKERS peligipellysin-Nugar andx It was announced that train service A State of Mind. £ B d B Aloaied Db \thas. Mk Doy, Hoc s IN LONDON HAS ENDED e = = o ythe Sontral New jangland railtoad| 1, seeking to make Boston a state| Where Teachers Are Better Paid. . ; fime it was believed that he would{ Londsm, Aug. 10.-The hakers strike|MUNITIONS HIDDEN BY efing SHLIRtGE On BORBAWIE. " ®T€| by itself, Representative Brennan must| Teachers of English are wanted at F . -1 wholly recover and, perhaps. ~ paint| which had been in progress for some RUMANIANS CONFISCATED . know that it is already recognized the{ Prague, Bohemia. And probably the : again, A year later, however, he was | time ended today. The men agreed to| Berne, Aug. 10 -(Havas) I“rom SHOPMEN ARE TO world over as a state of mind.—Bos- | Bohemians are willing to pay them 5 _ - returnéd {o Middletown. 5 resume ‘work tomorrow on the under-| Rumanian sources it has been learned CoPv AT PREST ILLUSTRATING . | i-He was brought back to New York | standifig that the strikers would not|that 60000 rifles, machine zun T ’ | tor N ipt. aid in this coun- RETURN TO WORK TODAY|'°" Transerist. s Dalias Newe ‘Washington, Aug. 10.—Developments Yes, Luke, a woman can keep a se- - over the week end are expected to re-|cret about another woman—if it is| “Pride has bt (=~ Mgt in almost normal cenditians ‘sa-’ somathing real nice. ward spring and an early fall’ for the prosecution. again several months ago. but again| be penalized for refusing to work and|grenades den by the Bulgarians Sir Gordon Hewart, the solicitor- | was returned to the asylum. Then foi- | that the government introduce a bill at|during the operutions in the province ~o-=—a for- | general .of Great -Britain, .will . lead | Jowed-. the' trip - to ‘the Adirondacks, | the earliest possible moment abolish-|of Dobrudja, Rumania, have been - 5 where he died, ing night baking. found and confiscated