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Gevernment's farm loans in July re- ported at $10,359,390. Reichsbank repo ings at 1,108,010,000 marks, signed as ambassador to Italy, Long lsland Electric Railway will ] newspaper re- ' ¢ bridge today. The is 86 feet wide : e ~ g N cease operation, it. was anonunced. Associated 1 i and 26 feet high. i N T, . 24—Ome| Halifax, N. S. Aug. 24—The Yar- ; Allies and Powers Feel Thtfloflu_n' Durable Can e * ] SHE S w.g:.,’.‘:'.,g aane mmnflg: sngonier _Francie K| A general railrond strike shut down Be Arranged With the Present Hungarian Gevernment N THE FEACE TREATY | S persons ore e e e T .“'”-“m"".mm'*‘!‘-‘ n!"nxmn&u:nm‘:wn i [ Gt b woolhers Calitorsia, —Hungary Will Not Be Accorded Economic Support = | frains at Biwi e T e Sty Ukrainian troops are reported to X 24-—How far| Cight of the injured were Bronght 16 s | heass fos 100 miles south of Sable|have captured Odessa afier a severs w pital here and are expected. Island last night. The freighter, ‘While a Member of the House of Hapsburg is at the o e + . Head of the Government—Talk of the Possibility of | e Foesy roee S mSjeclar e [Souih, 0 0° Wodwred wre ' ey e e Sumas sins dratrs [0 Subs forics President Wilson Returning to Paris to Straighten Out|@plomatic circles. o @ tion re- | Jersey and Seashore railroad, operated | “Fnb Tord Downshire artived ofr|lation. - 3 S 3 3 g b eehsretig ined "to| Y, the Ponnayivania. rafiroad.. " | Halifax late tonight and tramsferred Points Raised By the Senate. Dirite. their qualinéations of the loague| o There were sixteen sections in the|the survivors of the schoomer's crew e”:‘ R. T. employes reported_consid- i of nations covenant into the ratifica-| WAshington excursion to Atlantic City|to a tug which brought them here. |CTE.a Strke [t only 25 per cent. in- Paris, Saturday, Aug. 23-—(By The| which Hungary needs. G el and writh UM Seadora the tenth section crashed into the| The suryivors said -that the steam- A P)—The sucreme council tonight| ‘“In its reply that Archduke Joseph| regicting that the senate will amend | of the ninth when the latter|er suddenly loomed up in the fog a: War de; = =it the d near the Elwood.station at| struck the Francis A. amidships. The partment announced plans is prepared, before approaching outright - Shantung zvm"“ and | T A m. Wathem ,and those injured | sohooner was driven over on her side sent the following note to the Hun- . G tad oS w0 | perbaps e e orSa | were In the rear coach of the ninth|and the steamer passed over her. MostOF Surplus foodstuffs. gurian government, in which an- | submit his claims to the test of pop- - an interesting set of lities Pre-| gection. He had just left his wife in|of the crew jumped when they saw Touncement was made that the coun-|ular elecions; we must reply that this|sent themselves. 3 ! E: i cii would have no dealings with 2| procedure cannot be satisfactory if | Thers has been no autheritative ex-|the middie of the coach and was walk-1 that the collision was inevitable. xports from ~the United State sovernment headed by Archduke Jo-| elections are to be carrfed out under| prescion of the presid probable | INE to the rear when.the engine of the| “The men clung to oars and wreck-|amounted to $570,000,000. ~Imports £éph or any other member of the|the auspicesofan administration which| course d the treaty b texll,t‘:'ly:‘e?tion cr:]ahed into the car. age. Some of them were in the water|amounted to $345,000,000. . - D e ulara shapl _Physicians and nurses were sum- t hour before they were| - ; e sn sl coopiagts. fo him with textual amendments o | moned from this city, Ege Harbor and | piek ol up by bosts from the steamer,| Holland-American line re-sstablish- rt placed gold hold- Thomas Neison Page formally re- FROM MEXIC! Decision Reached When Rainstorms Prevented the Pick Up of “Hot Trails”’—The Troops are to Resume T ? the Rio Grande—Jesus Bandit Leader, Has Been Killed By Licutenant R Cooper—Nine Bandits Have Been Captured By Mexic Federal Forces. Marfa, Texas, Aug. 24.—Three hun- | the questions at fssue and dred American cavalry troops tonight|which g ‘were making their way back to the Rio Grande through a driving rainstorm | t: after an unsuccessful campaign bezun last Tuesday to overtake the’ bandits who captured and held for ransom Lieutenants Harold G. Petemson and ‘They were scheduled to reach Ruidosa at 8.30 o'clock to- Renteria, the injured are gt | bound from Baltimore for Belfast| g ... .0, growers in Cuba formed| + meet foreign goverr reply to eriti were made -to dispose of practically all| . who have bedn intin Paul H. Davi to meeting Contact with Carranza soldiers also on the trail of the bandits and a heavy rain which wiped out the fresh trai o abandon States senate in decision “The difficulties in the way of ob- E et of o Talnful vo- | reservationx: written . into ratifca: | Hammonton and a wrecking train was Tonss and his brther went|ed triangular route between Rotterdam bave been further considering inform- | taining the election of a faithful re- i 3iion derived from our reports und |floction of the popular will are, in the O mitine Taasdan, Torrsan that he| Semt from here to clear the track. with the senooner. e e e Ronti to PRUalphis, rom other sources, as to recemt events| present unhappy state of lungary. consider “of qual- 1 Francis A. registered ons b in Budapest. Their conclusiors are|most serious. They would be over: | rommes mder e e e oning | PLEDGED TS SUPPORT TO ol Tad on bpart’a cargo of fish. French gunboat Comme ran aground s follows: Whelming 1f an_eclection were carried | hegotiations By, ¥ THE “REPUBLIC OF IRELAND” “They are most anxious to ccnclude| out under Hapsburg influenes. Even| " Should such amendments or reserva- : a durable peace with the Hungarian | if an assembly elected under such Cir- | tions be jnserted, therefore. an event-| New York, Aug. 24. THEATRE OPENED BY ACTORS puople. but thY_ feel that this can-|cumstances were really representa- uality which demoeratic senate’leaders | pledging i support to the “I : not be done while the present Hun-| tive, no one would think so. deny is likely but which the republi- | of Ireland” the Catholic Young 'S| New . York, Aug. 24.—The ‘“rescue garian government is in power. That Tn_ the interest, thercfore, @of | cans say is certain—the next move| National union. in convention ship which is counted on by striking Zovernment came into existence not by | Buropean peace, the ailied and 850-| would be up to the president. What| day. "divected that coples' of thd Toso- | TLELIS of the Actors' Bauity Asso: S 2 The will of the people but by a coup | ciated sovernments.mean,to insist that| he would 4o is a auestion on which|lution be despatched to Eammon De| Tie bear them safels. over the| Machinists at a mesting at Akron, dietat carried out by a smail body|the present claimant to the leader- | those who have'{alked with him dis-| Valera, “president of the republics| Srion, @ bear them, Sfely OVel osed gf police. under the protection of a|ship of the Hungarian state should|agree; but a discussion of what he| Arthur GriMith, Irish leader at Dublin, | Sroriog wad uacompromising. produc- | creased wages and betier working con- Toreign army. also resign and that a_government in|Would be authorized to do under the| Chairman Lodge of the United States | heatres anf uSeompromistie Rrotic” | aitions. i General Pershing, who wa The Mexican federals were en- countered last night by a seout patrol and after a conference army officers decided to abandon the pursuit until Meanwhile the rain had cotild be paid in g to give out on Ives Knoll while attempting to pro- NA® AL CO-OPERATIVE ceed to ‘sea in a fog off Halifax, N. S. total debts cou this morning. wiped out the trails of who were only a few hours ahead of the Americans. The punitive expedition is returning in single column with three cavalry troops leading, pack. trains, gun troops and other units following. Two troops are acting as rear guard. below the border re- sulted i’ the killing of four bandits by the Iitalian battlefields and principal cities of the country, returned to Paris. 100,000,000 pesos 000,000,000 pesos Ohio voted to go on strike for in- The six day tion’ of ‘pap due banks. “It has at its head a member of | which all parties are represented,|jaw and precedents reveals a general | Senate committee:on foreign rélations - 1 do- P night_ e the. forih, of & - ations Handelsblad correspondent in Wier- the house of Hapsburg, whose policies | should appeal fo the Hungarian peo- | g, ement that several courses would | and to the speaker of the house. >~ z h @nd actions were largely responsible| ple, TS Gpanidy The resolution declared that the war | CPCrative theatre” organized Ly Soc|ingen savs that report that the former fur the calamities under which the The allied and associated powers| Summed up, these discussions Gon- |just concluded “must be justly -char- | S{IOF Q%S0 in 1O Shows for road Jiorkl is suffering, and will long suf-(would be prepared to negotiate With| template that he might take up -the|acterized in history as a war for thef . i there is false. fer A peace negotiated by such gov-|any government which possessed the| question of changes in the treaty continuation of. force if the only white| “>Bi27 " ging ana casting depart- giaments is not likely to be lasting: | confidence of an assembly so elected.” | diplomatic. correspondence: return “to | nation in the world now.held in slavery | | Flay: read'ng B0¢ FaSURE SR New York, New Haven & Hartford Bor can the allied and associated gov-| The note was signed by Premier| Paris and ask that the peace confer-|shall be compelled to continue in sub-| TORS 249 % 2008 L BV I0y Sunced. ‘hments give the economic support|Clemenceau. / ence be reassemblad for nesotiation of | ject to foreign and despotic domina- | Stablished at onge It Tmas SERERCIT 3 / a new treaty: send a new delegation to | tion” and extended to the young men| 0% 8 QPO DGR Betors and act- | ed at $17,095,554. reopen neggtiations, or pocket of Ireland “assurance of a full know- | DY WWICh MEAY TU€ SEEIE SO0 Gna URGES RESTORATION OF TO PROTECT ANTI-BOLSHEVIK | treaty and refuse fo proceed ledse of their aims and of our sympa- ontil the bri ghts || Locomotive engineers accey o c earn their keep e bright 1 [ Locomotive engin accepted the SHANTUNG TO CHINA RUSSIANS IN ARCHANGEL | unless the senate receded from its po-| thy with their ideals. . for them on the Gay |BSettlement offered by the government . sition. ‘We assura them that _their dead | {hiNe Cgec miore ¥ | through Sir Auckland Geddes, minister < SN I e ) i - | 715 known that the alternative of| who died fr Ireland shall have our of reconstructi Beked o ratity the recommendations |ence secontly Was bech . discassins | An exchange of diplomatic notes With | pravers vrid that their living who etm |, This WL Bt fhe SAUE, Soot: s of the United States senate committee | plans for the protection of the 30,000 | the Principal powers has been- e reaninionall_have our sup-| C.; siated, and the Actors’ Equity As-| Newspapermen in Bridgeport have troops and death of one by machine gun bullets from an sald to' be part of the Ren- teria band, were captured at Coyame, in a dance hall. by Carranza soldiers. Reports that Jesus Renter: of the bandits, {OBREGON OFFERS HIS crown princess of Germany is to visit SERVICES TO ¢ Mexico City Railroad contract signed by Director 2 Hines, annual compensation being fix- had been killed were brought to the boeder today but could not be confirmed. acandidate the following President ( STUDYING POINTS AT ISSUE BETWEEN MEXICO AND U. 8. you are in charge quate means of internationa Mexico City. Aug. 24.—(By The A. The highest Mexican government officials are making a close study of the principal points at issue between|Proud to tell sociation through _its co-operative |formed a News Writers Equity Associ- contingency ©on foreign relations restoring the pro- | anti- s e ione | anti-Bolshevik Russians in sArchangel| feasible by republican senators who| ReaMrming its spirituai fidelity: to be & close second to the|ation and applied to the Federation of vince of S and along the northern coast of Rus. by “ 2 have told him that the treaty never|the pope, the union orderéd cabied at 3 ot aor R ln after the departure of the british| could be ratified as it stands. The as-| once to Rome a resolution extending , S v e 3 BT Sickarter the Mexican and American ments with the view. of reaching ar- rangements satisfactory to the United situation m @4y at an _open air megt forces, which are rapidly moving out. b o oty o 000, Cofjese. . China. | - Thus tar, however, no plan has been |i2%at o Los, SPAVCE A5 208 SInt canl: | incly ‘siicuiatic. sthitade i the iiocent b D Demartoni Tealing & Finans. 7/ AT URon, A e eyussians Who |1y once the other members of the five| war. when. though weighed with grief y O B i Ve, b, e st other cities congregated with _their |assisted the allied forces against the New York brethren to protest against|Bolsheviki apparentiy are doomed to f_":‘:gdflgzfi‘z"t;e‘;“‘x‘;m:“h, 7 ;’;:“;’5&,‘““]°c:{;mhmh‘i’: st the Republic of Poland. e meeting s nE o aaPan. | |massacre. The commander = Of eing|reservation fo the Colombian treaty | invaluable services were rendered for ation of ways and means to cffect 3 procession Jed by the Chinatown Boy |for 4000 volunteers to. aid him. e nag. nder mesotiation by mat| kg L et rosnirern of Big| Of the league called on Mr. Cohan at|tention of the house of commons to Euout band and headed by Dr. Chacies| 'Peace contorence delegates O cuaibility.af M. Wilgon's e | o e, - his Long Isiand home today and the[the fact that the price of butter Fure Ghinese Sqnsul-general Here, and |that it would be impossible to provide | o€ PO, °F Miinten Tout the| - Arenblonop Patrick J. Hayes of the| lattear formally sccepted ihe presi [35.12 a popind in London. n e | suMicient ships to remove the Arch- A a ncy of the organiza t tiamber of commerce. Proinent|angel wnti-Boishevik population’ gvem| Points raised by’ any senate oualif| aigeese of “Now Tork was ‘re-siected fancy o he orgesiantion. st slembers of Chinese tongs and of the}if the Russians desired to I Agope] eadions 1s ong g £ oy el aly, § L A . ¢ fever at Port Leon, Nicaragua, a rigid §lina Society of America were amons [of the population, I is asserted. dol yfar in- thé peas . o, | sett - 13 the marchers. s > not desire to quit their homeland, as o thg Ac 705 4Ction of the séhate committe. | they would have no Dlace to §o.. B vond ian entirely pew st o L e Fmation of its cooper:| 3 k —_— T | atlyp: sald it hoped to get resence of the ten companines of yebah '“;’"7 "vi'"‘nd':m‘k""“ the | Boy SECAESS THiEvEs & wit] mmt.lump.:esl:::ps »fiw::mu;‘a in ‘?’fi;:"u? 3 3 .Pn‘::«'idenee. R. IC Were | started i iately at “putting every-|Indiana militia quelled the riot of 1,500 EoREiR o via miive tand The Mot * SPEND MONEY LAVISHLY/| that connection republican senators | clected first and second vice presi-| body to work: striking cmployes of the Standard peopie of his natfve land. The Amer- ) g G s L W sl e Public meetings, at which informa- | Steel Car Co. at Hammond, Ind. wan people. he added. would “to al New York, Aug. 34.—A $4,000, slx| Eithcock's ‘statement that the pre- tion on progress of the strike and work rovinge. Cataten pe e (auna of the | state joy four” ' of bov 'securityident laughingly suggested = Senators| EIGHT CHINESE SEIZED of the A. E. A. will be disseminated, [ Wi P i vertolen by the Germans and | thieves came to an end hore. tonight| Iodge and Knox us possible selec- BY CUSTOMS OFFICERS Samel over to. & foreign power, when Harry J. Hillman, Arthur Eller, P ———— - o, »| tions to hegotiate a new treaty should - B both 18. and Edward C. Bicholz 21|, ent be amended. 24—U nounced. beaten once before in this count: FRENCH PRESS COMMENTS wert locked ui s Savepnt ONe e smenien. Eastport, Mains, Aug. 24—United o 5 ry. p at police headquarters| mhat the president might permit = ?| Intervention of the American Feder: P ght pe: States immigration and customs oM | ation of Labor in the strike was con-| There was no change reported ON ATTITUDE OF THE U. S.|afte ra “shuttle trip”.from Saranac|tne negotiations to stand in a dead. ody eight Chin - ¥ 0| s o It e e "unese| Adently predicted tonight ands the ar- | the condition Of the Stirke of motor. Paris, Aug. 24 (Havas).—Le Liberte, | terday. They are charged with the overnments any chan a o commenting at lengt htoday on the| theft of $45,000 in Liberty bonds from | o & nate. Inyoives pernee the|mobile \in which they —were belngl'l 'l Furope i 6 awalted eagerly.| Westchestér and Bost by the senate involves perhaps the|taken in the direction of Bangor early p C'P E oresiaear of the In- oston car line. States without impairment of Mexican interests and MeXican sov- declarations made Saturday night by Luis Cabrera, secretary of the treasury and one of the leading members of the cabinet. points, as contained statement by Secnor Cabrera night on the necessity for a reciprocal border guard service, legislation, indemnifications. F PR i ithia three according to Sénor Cabreba, the gov- ernment officials will begin giving out to tihe Mexican press statements re- garding the government standpoint on government in any place The telegram was sent TWO MORE ARMY ttlement of the strike. A committee| Major Sir Keith Fraser cailed the at- AVIATORS ARE American army leutenants was missi; Fiela touight George K. Rice, L. Bouquet as ohserver. at daylight for the punitive expedit Because of the discovery of yellow are . petroleum confused or were BAKER FOR ONLY MINOR am E. Davis, of San Francisco, CHANGES IN COURTMA are to be held regularly in the Lexing- | defeated Norman E. Brookes, Austral. ton Avenue Opera House, it Was an-|ian tennis star. Brookes was only WORCESTER COUNTY CLERKS ARE THREATENING Washington at a| the report General Fran s in- Salaries | special heir national | courtsmartial assoclation ‘in the. event of relief be- | Secretary Baker tc ing denied us by act of congress to stand that the ‘Worcester, Mass.. 24.—Postal | employes of Worcester county mass meeting today adopted resolu- tions asking for increa: and requesting flicers of Lake, where they were arrested yes--|lock by declining to take up with oth- ; - Y H 4 and arrested the driver of the auto-|rival of Samuel Gompers. president.|men and conductors on the New York, “efforts of certain lements in the| Wall Street brokerage = houses by | maen 2 o esting possibilities of all’ 5 £ today. A-man in charge of the Party| ernationai Alllance of Stage Hands| Governors’ conference at Salt Lake United States” to hav 3 employed pea S5 taki with Germany resected: save ihe work| moiclr (hey had been employed as| Administration leaders repeatediy|ales was arrested. Al were taken fo of winding un the conference must he hastened. The newspaper Baltimore, Chicago, Buffalo and Uti-| waq charged with the negotiation of ea, N. Y. ‘well as Saranac Lake, them tomorrow. meetis today that 1,100 members of|to ratif: treaties and that the whole history| The officers said that the Chinese s °gmflu‘m A et 'y the suffrage amendment. adds: “If America {5 to withdraw herlsaw the “messenger millionairds’ as|of treat, y-making showed that he|were ht t f1 St. John, o i o Py any step he des prior to the ex- "thi ity. They were placed i e ish. uis . Swift, Chicago packer, an- DeAr this oity. tarted for Bangor | The Shuberts announced tonight | nounced he will renounce bis ITialian » b o these leaders ive asserted, would b were captured four miles from The Temps in an editorial under the | stopped, the Algonquin hotel at s-r»l'b.,,,.m], Dowdrless to interfere, its | Bastmort Abour mine pounds of that the Winter Garden would close|citizenship and become an with tonight's performance, because, P American. title “The First Break” deals with the|anac Lake, the boys were reputed to i Clires that there s morningrcle de-| be leollege students on their vacation, i Sioe Soi Doyt [opium aleo was welssd. S5t Fvance from concluding with the | of oome. There th remaining $43000| (0 the acts of the executive Uuited States an arrangement such as| in bnnds were recovered, according to CAMPAIGN FOR GREATER recently was suggested before the| the police. » PRODUCTION IN ITALY | Berne, Switzerland, Aug. 24.—The ington by Thomas F. g > : adviser to’ the Chinese government, | -'=UT: WONTEITH KILLED Dkraine meson e RS meerWod 4| New Haven, Conn. Aug. 24.—A se- | three congressmen, 3,470 troopsp, or mutual aid where the territorial BY FALL OF AIRPLANE| Rome, Saturday. Aug. 28.—(By The|JOZtE® .0 "0 ing that the towns of |Ties of almost coniinuous electrical fntegrity of China or the principle of A Francesco S. Nitti, premier | RuERSt S SRV i have been |Storms which swept over Connecticut |dren. rded tonight caused losses in a number of UKRANIANS HAND OVER TOWNS TO THE POLES SeRiES OF ELECTRICAL the open door is menaced.” Sea Girt, N. J. Aug. 24.—Lieuten- | and minister of the interior, today is- iy ant R. Howard Monteith, U. §. N. of | sued a prociamation addressed to al |Panded over by the Poles to the Uk- | 8 "ot the lightning struck and| Dr. A. S. Pratt, president of the NEW YORKERS SUFFER FROM Do, e ied o Sovernor Run’]tiie prefects, Urginy them to carry on|™phe: message adds. that the peasants|a1So crippled’ telephoris’ service in thelboard of education, annonuced the PROFITEERING LANDLORDS | I o O lane from o Belont of | the comn s O e P on o8 | everywhere -are . ribing -on behalf - of | sastern part of the state, particularly [saitien wpoiniedtoeonduict . 9 e 57 i e country, Jnost fiuesl ecambmy. 4nd | ine. independerics. of: the. Ukraine. All|in Norwich .aad New London. ey, of Ehel Sliyes public Schobk. £y Now lbrk. Aug. 34—Declaring’ thiat| 390, tost &t the _state :Sncampment| the prévention of strikes. national forces are united on a dem-| A large parn on the farm of Henry|tem would begin its work Aug. 25. inguediate legislation by congress to {:::l Ll;::fifllhfll P‘%’ tMlcel“. x> “L desire;” says Sighor Nittl, “that ocratic and anti-Bolshevik basis. Gos’?e' in the town of Morriggwas hit A iy» a_French ace but an inspector 'a campaign be carried on in all the [ORE® S S0 S ONTRC STly the by lightning and fire which ®ollowed | Fred Price, of Canton, Ohio, a pi with their | senger, died of injuries and Lieut. Jos- ueet Lhe rent profiteering and housing . . " protiem was imperative. Nathan|Of aviation in the United States army |provinces, having for it$ aim stimula- e e Eanbors, particu. | two barns and two sheds. DAt Shatrinen - of Miyor FEymus| et 10 G STt SLAGEIGINER- | ton i gremtir, peoductiol sul. more e mania, are hostile the mes. |contents. The loss was piaced.at $9.- 3 g a broken hip, two|frugality among consumers. There is| 20 JCCOUCH 000. Two barns were struck in Suf-|lot, was seriously hurt when the plane commiitee ¢ B O ot Profiteering, t04ay | proken ribs, & broken collar bone and | ursency for & brogramme in the coun wade public an open letter to Attorney General Palmer in which he called at- | Many cuts and bruises. try for more economy and more Work.| p oy troops defeated the Bolshe-|Of $5.000. A barn near Norwich was | feet. tention, to the widespread suffering and 8 There is a condition in Jtaly which wk;_‘: mv““ hit and set afire. greed that Mr. Paimer take up with|HAIL STORM SEVERELY forces us to act now strong ani vigor- : The city of New London was with- | =Edwin F. Ballough, who served with ‘J'resident Wilson the question of fed- DAMAGES TOBACCO CROP |°Usly: A out_electric light service for an hour|the Canadian aviation service during a1 Jegifiation on th “A ‘majority of the public continues = 11, hail and electric storm | the war, land 4 oy g R R ek T 24| to Tive o i tosora:. Posida thare'is e tle A Banh e e e o i e ate e tng Ul night by distressed citizens | Thousands of dollars in damage was|2 12r8e Dart of the people who instead President Of Honduras |35 Cofitinued in darkness. ewark and took off again in ten min- liose rents have been unjustifiadly | dome to the tobacco crop in this cown- |Of working more intensely insist om| e ruised—50, 75, per cent, and who|ty this afternoon by a severe hail and | VOrking less and demanc, sveater com- B i eta P aa | pensation. It is clear that today in NIXON TO CONFER WITH State industrial commission an- cannot bear this burden,” Mr. Hirsch | clect orm. N Siote “In many cases we obtain con- | Whately, | Northumberiand, | Noe(h|Order to sell other countries we must LEADERS OF CAR MEN|,ounced the average weekly earning ceduions from the landlords and bring | Hadley and Sther towns the crop - is|Dave equilibrium in the Dalanmce =—of =bout reasopable ~ adjustments bY|practically a total ioss, the hailstones,| trade. 1In 1913 we imported $200,000, Tmoral pressure: but when & profiteer- | boma of them os Terve oa iooncs | 000 more goods than we sold, but in missioner Lewis Nixon will confer to. | con from _June, 1914 to July, 1015, iug landlord is recalcitrant we have no|punctured the leaves. About one-third [1318 we imported more than $2.000,- morTow with representatives of the | {27CDSrGl WIth 2 legal means of bringing him to terms.” | 5 fhe county's crop had been harvest. | 000,000 of goods more than we ex . New York, Westenester and Bostén 2 Railway and the leaders of the strik- Fire inspectors investigating food d. ported. . RAINSTORMS IN MEXICO 5 “We must buy grain, fats, coal and ing motormen and condyctors who |, e Insectors inv i n % i R 'y unearthed 44,- ARE HINDERING AVIATORS| THREE OF FAMILY ::fl:: mrm;‘a o‘nmfis:nsze“;l:f i : ;u:':g g:: ]:t:?k':'hurlday‘ in an effort { 465,000 pounds of coffee. . 15.000,000 Marfa, Texas, Aug. 24—Heavy rain- KILLED BY SEWER GASiing credits by working to produce : ‘The strikers who are affiliated with | PRUDAR Of fresh meat, 62 180,340 pounds storms below the border today made greater wealth in the interior of Italy. : the “Big Four” railroad brotherhoods, | % beans, 4633275 pou 3 It impossible for aviators to keep in| . [Pittsfield. ‘Mass, Aug. 24—Frank/In this condition the strike is the arm : have threatened to- cause a sympathe- | >43% 3 touch with the American punitive ex- | Casale and his sons Patsy, 30 years|of destruction. Every time there is tic strike on the New. Yofk, New Hat| [ .y oy 0L pedition searching for bandits that|©ld, and Joseph, 12, were killed by |cessation of work it is a serious blow % ven and Hartford system if their de-|p nder the will of Mrs. Walter H. held two American aviators for ran- | SSWer as in a cesspool on the grounds|at the nation: all indifference on the : .| mands for pay equal to that of steam | UUTHS, Sister of the late J. Fierpon Lo Colomel George T. Langhotne an.|of their home today. Casale sent the | part of producers,is a menace. . rodd employes are refused. Moy au who! disd suddenly i X younger son Into the cesspool to find | Signor Nitt1 said that up to the Non-union men, emploved as strike- | in_j, g i CET, 000 0NN Sterling. nounced. Colonel Langhorne said no out what was clogging the pipe. When nt all Italian credits had come breakers by the company, will bégin < grdecs for withdrawal of troops had| ihe boy failed to come up, Patsy fol- | hrom Ingland and the United States. a0 operating empty trains over the line|Ine towal éstate Jfoc Sentre: Rurny Lee issued. share ien Ibwed him. Casale then went down.|England, he added, now was unable o SRR ok, i 4s evon as these Tnen i the a’. of ‘Aboliato Henteria,|All were Gvertome by the gas and | furnish credits, and tne only hope of . have become familiar with ita &rades, | ; x . were dead when taken out. Italy was the United States. a0 curve d signal system, the com- |, Senator Owen, ranking democrat of brother of the bandit chief, Jesus it M HD T A T § S e T Sevice for pas. | the senate banking°committec, wrote Jose Olivas, and ld'O other OBITUARY. itior to furnish us credits,” said % , :‘n"yrns‘ to the president asking him to request isemn) of the Renteria band. Early Bdtion o g > £ gers. the secretaries and treasury and com- fn the day it was indicated that uniess Charl 0 3 e eawEs merce and. federal reserve board The bandits were located today. the| . On W TWO BOYS DROWN stabilize foreign exchange and protect would be ordered back fo the age. BOY KILLED BY HIGH TENSION | o TRYING TO RESCUE THIRD | American foreign commerce. troeps 3 - Trited - States. Such developments, | Charles D. Lakey, veteran insurance ELECTRIC FEED WIRE however, would depend entirely on re- | journalist ond father of Alice Lakey, ‘| New York, Aug. 24—Two boys, a| Samuel Wilson, asmember of the an- pots from officers of the expedition, it [ pure food specialist, died here today - s A By i brother and a .chum, today gave their | ti-saloon league of New dJersey, an- Was stated. . e e e e | 11 Seaks ol of West Haven, Jives in a vain effort to rescue 15-|nounced he would have a test case services. Crantora, N.|Hickok, 11 veare Clon he stepped on & i i Roseman _ of | made to have declared void the (60 was 3 Brooklyn from drowning in the Har- |liquor licenses in Jersey City on the Portland —Deeds were 1aat| T+, SYednéaley. Biah power slectric feed wire of the sresk for the transfer of factory build- e vy Wi, L e g “Hartford . Ners iver.: All three were In swim. | grounds they were isstod in violation jngs from the Portland Manufactur-| Detroit, Mich. Aug. 24.—Mrs. An-| raflroad on a bridse in West Haven. @ ming off the end of an East 216th|of the war-Aime prohibition act, ing Co. to the American Motor Truck | nette Henry Alger. widow of Géneral| Eleven thousand volts passed through street pier, breasting a strong incom- and Tractor Co. Officiais of the com-| Russell A. Alger, secretary of war|the boy’s body and, it fell twenty feet ing tide, when suddeniy “Benny” cried| ppinemic OF CHOLERA were about town and jt is ex-| during President McKinley's adminis-|to the. ground. % > out, threw—up an arm and sank from jed that operations at the factory| tration and & former governor of 5 X B S signt. a3 2 ‘will conmence soon. Michigan, dled at her home today at ~ o Instantly. his brother Charles, and Honolulu, Aug. 24—A Tokio cable teh age of,79. Danbury.—There have been no com-| Who it has been reported, has im+ | his chum, Harry Samuels, s the jail for intoxication| prisoned ‘his Vice-President Mem- | where: Bridgeport—The September term of| = mitments to the_criminal superior court will open| = Mil mebody has esti- | in over a month, one result of the en-| ®reno, as the head of a revolution [ai th. | mated that Middistown uses about £ of ‘war-time hibi- | 3 dn Mw‘w“ town al «’"—l nrnfmut' thd prohibi- | proclaimed recently in Honduras, |convl ot under: | 10 Tokio from Shangnal. S every_sevap days iy | ton, pet. RO Ty " one-. sert moment and | Several cases have been reported. The take an immediate referendum to de- be_changed terfine the sentiment of the mem bers for enforcing th2ir dcmands. committee wag appointed the congressional mittee in Boston on Sepiember 1 and | the discipline of agencies for | of technical ru have declared that the president alone n and Motion Picture” Operators, an- | City declared in favor of special ges- e Calals and & wearing will be SIVenf Cunced at the conclusion of a union|sions of legislatures of various states “‘courtsmartial agencies for 1t was voted to aak for, salaries for clerks and carriers ranginz from $2,- | 000 to $2.500, tim> and hauf fir over- time, 80 cents an hour for subrtitute | Who were circularized clerks and carriers and “proportic increases” for other postal employes. of the management's inability to main-| National conventian of the ¥ reflected the opinion tain its l'-uldj{d of performances|formeq labor party will be held in Chl! while the attors’ strike is on. * |cago November 22, with approximately 2,000 labor representatives attending. RAILROADS IN LOS ANGELES ARE TIED UP BY STRIKE |remedied. | about equally Los Angeles, Calif., Aug. 25.—Steam[any changes. railroads failed to move trains out of Los Angeles today because strike of switchmen and brakemen in sympathy with the strike of trainmen of the Pacific Electric Railway Com- | nesses which STORMS IN CONNECTICUT| Transpert Kaiserin August Vivtoria arrived at New York from Brest with soldiers’ wives and five soldiers’ chil- The most serious defe ing system, judge advocates and Southern Pacific trains for Los An- geles from the north are being stop- ped at Santa Barbara, San Luis Obis- po and Bakersfield but through trains systems arrived at that special young officers that they may other special duti| eph Skoening, of Chicago, air mail pi- PRINCE OF WALES AT THREE RIVERS, @ Striking platform employes of the Los Angeles Railway Corporation, who went out with trainmen, rejected the company’s offer to re-employ they would return to work only as if they had not quit they held before having to apply for employment. feld, one burning down with damage |in which they were flying fell 18500 Three Rivers, The Prince RCER A aE for Toronto. He came by WAGE INCREASE DEMANDS UNECONOMIC AND UNWISE | big Pullmans which for the next through western Canada. of factory workers increased 82 per New York, Aug. 24—Public Com-|cent from June, 1914, to July, 1919, Atlantic City, N. J. Aug. nouncement adoption of resolutions by representa- tives of the workmen of the plants of the Midvale Steel and Ordnance com- pany operating under a collective bar- gaining plan, declaring that “the per- sistent and workmen employed in all classes and kinds of industries for a shorter day’s work and an increased wage in order to meet the present high cost of living is uneconomic and unwise and should not be encouraged.” The resolutions further declare that private monopolies should be controlled and profits restricted to a rate that shall be fair to the consumer; that un- necessary exports of food and clothing shall be restricted, and that all etores of hoarded supplies be uncovered and placed in the open market. CAMPAIGN FOR MEMBERS OF AMERICAN LEGION New York, Awg. 24—In an effort to stimulate the membership campaign of the American Legion, Lieutenant Col- onel Theodore Roosevelt, founders of the organization and a member of the joint national executive committee, will leave here tomorrow on a four weeks' speaking tour through the middie and far west, it nounced tonight. Extensive speaking tours have also been arranged for J. F. J. Herbert of Massachusetts, gion's national speakers’ will tour New England, and Chaplain Inzer of Alabama, who will all Ohio cities have on the watch for the Toronto prog an_offcial reception to the din, of the UKRAINE TROOPS ADVANGI HAVE OCCUPIED Copenhagen, plane has reached vices from Kamenet troops have oceup river along the one of the 20 GERMANS ESCAPED FROM INTERNMENT of twenty German IS THREATENING TOKIO ing a severc el m to|to the Hawaiian Nashi says an_epi- haa vanished. > He re- | demic of cholera is threatening Tokio. Four others are apprehended his would-be | infectiom; the cable said, was brought 3:zit the southern states.