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VOL. LXI—NO. 218 POPULATION 29,919 NdHWICH, CONN., FRIDAY, SE‘PTEMBE'R 12, 1919 30STON NOW IN COMPLETE CONTROL OF THE STATE GUARD Man Shot and Killed Last Night By ‘Guardsmen In Raid On Dice Game In Jamaica Plain Section Brings Death Toll to Seven—Machine Guns Are Mounted at Police Head- quarters—Storekeepers Continue to Barricade the Win- dows of Their Places—A Fight to the Finish Is Indicated Between the Authorities of the State and Labor Unions— Greatest Cause For Anxiety Is Fear That Firemen Might Join In the Movement. —The death toll as commander-in-chief of the tate forces to take complete command of the measures for protection of the city, Mayor Peters w e strike Tu s making it plain aders who visited City policemen’s union would not be_recognized. The labor men were firm in their in- sistence that the police be permitted to affiliate with the American Federation of Labor and offered to guarantee that the police never would be called out on sympathetic mayor said they guardsmen on itter some of had told him that ed to-avert a general strike, after their conference with him to a meeting of the executive | committee and pats Central Labor union arrangements for a meeting at which action presidents of called to make isregarded ord- the matter thetic strike possibility telephone and t0_be taKen. strike of car electrical workers and industrial employes was serious. | the authorities the greatest cause for danger that he movement. this would place the city in the ray of hope was seen in the | declaration of the president of the fire- | men’s union that he would not take the | strike unless American Federation the firemen might join in| was recognized that responsibility Governor Coolidze. charze of pointed out owed injury | his oblizations the constitution compelled him to take | in view of the fact that the| lentite state zuard had been called out | o directed Police Commissioner Curtis to obey only such him and " asked the public. ipplement - for police duty. came from the co-operation the street corners there was dis- cussion of the quick shifting of control police cofamissioner. who asserted his authority | GHT SETWEEN AUTHORITIES AND CITY LABOR UNIONS| vesterdaw assertions | manifestinz democratic republican | the molice commis s an appointee of the sover- FATAL ACCIDENT ON NEW { HAVEN ROAD NEAR MERIDEN 11.—A fatal on the main line of | and Hari- nere, near BRITISH TROOPS ARE TO EVACUATE NORTH RUSSIA Wallingford backed into a s The cab of and the firemar setween the and kiiled engine and tender | alded by the Williams of conductor. and New Haven, a state guard the city ambulance having train was a and as the engine was unable to pull it zovernment ight grade at this point, owing in two and the first scction hauled into engine was up the second apparently the distance misjudged. or gine smashed into the heavily loaded WOMAN DRINKS WHISKEY, SMOKES AND DANCES AT 117 London. Sept. 11 Mrs. Betsy Bryngwyn, Monmouth- Murmansk x celebrations there. also smokes a pipe | and drinks an occasional that she will Methusaleh will grave and some more after I am gone,” the hus- laughingly She has worked hard all her life, and there is not a lazy »vernment time and smokes tobacco pipe that would make a youngster curl up like a shaving.” WORLD WIDE POLICY FOR U. S. MARINE INSURANCE MURDER CONVICTS 11.—An addi- 11.—“Ameri- insurance, participation in American bottoms and sup- Amecrican productive enter- American finance, to property risks. at least, change from | its proviincial policy of the | wider world policy long since followed should, as d appeals from the ground x : e FEOL am H. Hotchkiss, former superin- tendent of insurance of New York, be- fore the members of the national con= here this morning. that American insurance follow Amer- American banking, piration and achicvement in for- for hearing in ican trade if the men de- he ground of error in the verdict testimony, INDICATIONS THAT CANADA WILL APPROVE TREATY the new appeal. many charge of f errors are claimed in hetween Germany erred in refusing for the scparate trial other and morning ‘when house defeated amendment by a vote of 102 to 70. The amendment, provided for the addition of a clause | to the govermment's resolution of ap- to the effect resolution autonomous the Fielding C. S. Fielding, the house | affacted the ex- | defendants was detri- > each of the three who file minute mushrooms in their underground homes by ing a compost from leaves of trees. TC&?Ied Paragraphs ork the Sarre Coal Bas Paris, Sept. 11.—A bill ‘was intro- duced in the chamber of deputics to- day_by Louis Klotz, the financc min- ister, providing for the opening of an account at the treasury to a maxir mum amount of §0.000,000 francs for the provisional working of thc Sarge coal basin. PRESIDENT MAKES TWO ADDRESSES IN MONTANA Helena, Mont., Sept, 11.—In_two ad- dresses in Montana foday President ‘Wilson asked that the peace treity be ratified without delay so that the spirit of universal unrest spreading from Russia may be quicted. Saying he had been told the wesl was pervaded by “what is called rad- icalism” the president declared the only way to keep men from agitating against grievances was to remove the grievances. As long as “things are wrong,” he said, he did not intend to ask that men stop agitating, begging ‘only that they use orderly methods. He said radicalism meant “cuttingl up by the roots” a process that would be unnecessary if “obnoxious growths” were removed. When the president was introduced by Governor Sam Stewart at his night address here the crowd stood up and cheered.. Mr. Wilson said that the issue aft- er all was whether the sacrifiges of the war would be in vain. The task of those who fought was only half done, he declared, and if the treaty was not put into effect “men like these will have to die again.” The TUnited States, said the pre: ident, did not go into this war will- ingl¥’ and the nation had tried to con- vince itself “that the European bus- iness .was not our business.” But presently. he continued, it became ap- parent that civilization itself was at| stake. We fought Germany,” he contin- ued. “thai the world might be a fit place to live in. And the world will not be a fit place to live In as long as any great power can do what Ger- many did.” Under the-league, asserted Mr. Wil- son. there would be no opportunity for |2 People to be thrown into war with- out their consent. But if the lea failed he declared the United Siaies would be deliberately guilty of ‘“pre- paring a situation which would bring| on the final world war.” Mr. Wilson also referred to contro- versies resulting from wolice strikes| in the cast and said the strike of thel “leaving that} policemen of a zreat city city at the mercy of thugs, is crime against eivilization.” DETAILS OF ATTEMPT ON LIFE OF BARON SATIO| Tokio, Wednesday, Sept. 10.—(By| The A. P) — Detailed information| which has been received here concern- | inz the atte: assassinate on_September 2 to tio. ap- n pointed governor-general of Korea,| shows that the baron had 2 verv nar row escape. Bits of the bomb thrown | under the governor's carriage ai the! railway station in Seoul nierced his| coat and sword cord, but he was un- harmed. A Korean who s belicved jo have thrown the bomb was seen run- ing through the station and acre ailroad track. He escaped hindrance on the part of the p. police. There were no furthe orders The attack occurred at 5'p. m. As the bomb was thrown the govern-| or's carriage moved forward just far enough to escape destruction from the terrific force of = the explosion. S cial pree: | view of the recent unrest in Korea, but the assassin found a place in the space reserved for jinricksha men, jumping out as the official party was entering carriazes. When the attack| cccurred the troops were lined up to salute the new sovernor. The num- ber of persons injured, some of them seriously, is about twenty. KOLCHAK OFFENSIVE ON WHOLE SIBERIAN FRONT Omsk, Sept. 11.—(French Wircless Servige))-—General head the Kolchak army ‘announced today that the offensive was being carried forward -successfully along the whole| Siberian front. The enemy is being/| driven hack everywhere with losses, the announcement say has been compelled to abandon pris- oners and important booty The announcement or the general| offensive was first made yesterday when stubborn fighting was reported { in the direction of Yalootorovsk and Ksorgan. . These two towns are ahout 200 miles west of Omsk. The result of | the fighting was reported to have been | the retreat of the Bolshevik forees; with the loss of many prisoners and! much material. The report from Omsk of substan- tial successes by the Kolchak army follows a wireless shevik headquarters in Moscow in vhich it was claimed that Adm Kolchak's southern army had bheen de- cisively defeated and that its sur- render was expected. The scene of | the fighting described in the Moscow | message was about 400 miles south of the two towns mentioned in the Omsk despatch. SHOT HIMSELF BECAUSE OF UNREQUITED LOVE| Hartford, Conn., Sept. 11.—George Pont of New Hartford, who is in a hospital in Winsted, sufferinz from a Zunshot wound in the right arm, shot himself because Ada Schmidt, a do- ew Hartford, s affections. This was the substance of a confession made to mestic in a hou: did not return h; near, the state police, Capt. Robert T. Hur- ley said today. Pont previously de- clared that two men had held him up on the road and shot him. The girl has been sent to friends in New York. TRYING TO INDUCE ALL STEEL WORKERS TO STRIKE Pittsburgh, Pa., to go to work September peal issued here tonight by Will al steel workers. OFFICERS ELECTED BY THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR grand master of the Knights Temp J. W. Chamberlain, ed deputy srand G Newby, Knightstown, cen eralissime ;. William ' P, chester, Iowa, grand captain general; George W. Valley, Denvef, grand se- nior warden. For Nationalization of The @gl'Mines roved By Con- Principle App! e ~ni e vention of Workers. Cleveland. O., 11.—Nationali- zation of mines as a general principle this_afternoon by convéntion of the United Mine Work- ers of America with only one dissent- ing voice, shouted down when he tionalization an impossibilit : ter explaineq that he only meant im- possible for the present. Concrete pro- posals for nationalization are expect- {ed when the report of the committee on resolutions is presented, when the discussion of this theme will be con- was approved declared na- The convention voted with the same unanimity for the si in all coal -hour day mines—to demands pre- operators at sented to the jotnt wage conference at Buffalo Sep- but deferred discussion of Steadman of Chicago. counsel for Eu- /{3 and formerly for the mine workers Hill mine disaster case, addressed the | to shipping, was sweeping north onage act ers (o send representa- tives to the “American Freedom Con- Chicago, Sept. their release and the repeal the mine worl of the act. The convention stands adjourned to- morrow on account of the funeral of John Mitchell. will be attended large delegation SCRANTON PAYS TRIBUTE TO JOHN MITCHELL 11.—Thousands rangle facing Lackawanna bared heads iting hearse towards St al ch had | ERcobRated [ing away of paved roadw the hearse then i} the casket church for brief service. tomorrow morning a ¢ containing 45 per celebrated | Wilkesbar friend of Mr. of the mass will_be ihe. Rev. .. Archbald: Inkerman; by the Rev. J Comerfort. O'Donnell, of Mount 4 Hoban will impart ion and will speak a few words the memorial the cemetery deliver the the chapel utions had Deen taken. in| Scranton district ler international convention representatives FASTEST SUBMARINE EVER CONSTRUCTED 11.—Official rters of! submarine. conducted Provincetown is the fastest and st efficient constructed ble made a 20.92 knots and a submerged exceeding quirements mersibles, which attain fastest submarine afloat. should have been but as she was an experimental boat, craft caused her con- | The boat was designed and the Electric the government despatch from Bol- | a1l equipment, Fore River being built Shipbuilding Com- UNDERWOOD STRIKERS TO VOTE ON PROPOSAL Hartford, Conn. 1. — An- nouncement was made this y Albert P. Krone, Hartford Central meetings of strikers from the Under- ‘Typewriter Company tomorrow, at which they will a pronosal lool ing toward a settlement of the strike. The Underwood plant ploved 4100 persons, was closed seven weeks ago because of strike: president of the plant will to vote on \GREAT BRITAIN NOT PUTTING PRESSURE UPON CHINA Wednesday Britain has been putting pressure up- +8. 11.—Iron, steel and blast furnace workers of the United States, not working under union agreements, are requested not in an ap- m Z. Foster, secretary-treasurer of the American Federation of Labor nation- ommittee for organizing iron and authoritative denial have been gotiations Sumed on’ written proposals which Great Britain recos- to negotiate. No_diffic is declared. the friendliest MURDERER ON PAROLE GUILTY OF BURGLARY Boston, Sept. 11.—John Mackie. who i was paroled by Governor Foss in 1911 Philadelphia, Sept. 11.—Joseph K.lafter serving 18 yvears of a life sen- Orr, Atlanta, Ga. today was elected |tence for murder, ed to th estate Ities have been proceedings was ordered return- was Comparison prints showed B obtained p that he was inno- July was Mackie. role on the ground 27 0f Crew 0f Ward Liner Lost At Sea Steamer Corydon Foundered In the Bahama Channel During a Hurricane. Miami, Fla., Sept. 11l—Twenty- seven members of the crew of the Ward Line steamer Corydon lost their lives when the vessel foundered in the Bahama Channel in the hurricane which pasccd over IFloridu Tuesday. Survivors clinging to a lifeboat drifted to shore al Cape Florida this morning. The survivors, numbering nine. re- ported that all but one of the life boats was pulled under by the suction of the sinking vessel. Captain C. O. Christiansen and a number of the scamen went down with the ship. The Corydon w loaded with 23,850 bags of sugar, bound from Cuba for New York. |CONSIDERABLE DAMAGE BY GULF HURRICANE New Orleans, La center about with considerable damage to property in the vicinity of Key West and great loss westward late tonight toward the Texas coast. Th weather bureau to- Inight issued storm warnings for the eastern coast of Texas from Port Ar- thur to Velasco. Interruption of all communication in {the vicinity of the hurricane’s path |made it impossible for weather bu- {reau officials to locate the storm cen- [ter exactly or to estimate the speed |at_which it was moving. Barometer readings at New Or- leans and Mobile showed a decided {drop during the twelve hours ending at o’clock tonight. but later tonight {the barometer at Mobile rose slightly. Notwithstanding the warnings, ten essels bound from New Orleans for Other ports entered the Gulf tonight. A number of persons from exposed ssippi Sound reached Mobile late today to escape storm. Coionel George F. Con- places along hte Mis the commandant at For tMorgan. Ala.. arrived at Mobile with wives tion of the Gulf coast since 1584 ove: flowed a number of low islands today houses at some resorts and the wash- beaches, the damage was slight. borne inside| SHIP’S BOAT CONTAINING 45 PERSONS PICKED UP Havana, Scpt. 11—A s wa today off the ¥ effect from the stcamer Lak er, bound for adn nationality of the ves: ed The Dade County ceived distress signals ~ from the teamers A. T. Bedford and Kempa off the Cuban Coast and also from an junknown bark saying it was badl damaged and with which communica tion suddenly ccased. The whercabouts of the Spanish lin- ‘albanera is still unknown. MOURNERS DRIVEN FROM CHURCH EDIFICE BY FIRE New York, Sept. 11.—A hearse bear- {ing the body of Horace Traubel, poet, {biographer ana literary ~executor of |Walt Whitman, had just drawn up in {front of the Church of the Messiah \here late this afternoon and a large congregation was within awaiting the services, when fire burst from (he pipe organ in the chancel and spread so rapidly that the interior soon wi a mass of fames. Mourn the “Hail and Farewell” services, which friends of Mr. Traubel haa | planned instead of formal religious rites, rushed panic stricken from the s with- ing. The hearse w: uil 3 drawn to a safe stead came several clanging fire en- gines. The body of Mr. Traubel was later removed to Camden, N. J., his birth- place and the residence of Whitman, where interment had been planned fol- lowing the interrupted service. Expert On Orienta.l' Affairs LPRESS ILLUSTRATING SERVICE, N. Y./ Dr. Jobn C. Ferguson. the Orfen- tal expert, recently cailed into con- suitation by the Semate Committee of Foreign Affairs. Dr. Ferguson has served as advisor for the Em- Of{ peror of China and there is no American better informed of East- ern affairs. lils testimony seems to prove that the Shanatung award of the killing of Mrs. Randall in Boston in 18%3. B e was a great injustice te China, " [2 £ i ey (A oA W e H Bt ) B h o it ks ol ] AT e o s I s o e e e e RS I i AN e~ . 4 o~ Sept. 11.—With 200 miles south of | Pensacola, Fla, the Gulf hurri |which swept the Florida key ne, and 1 children of officers and men at Fort One hun- (Morgan. i Despatches from Tampa said the Ihighest tides recorded alons that sec- yut beyond the destruction of bath at’ the hip's boat picked up orida_coast. according to the wireless operator on board the |steamer Dade County, which arrived “fhere~tomight from Progresco, who re- ports having received wireless to this Ledan- New York. The name el from which the people came was not stat- s operataor re- s who were assembled for distance and in its Condensed Telegrams cabinet. on strike. The wreck of a large fishing schoon- er was c: blehead Neck. adopted. The Bratiano cabinet in Rumania poprts which reached Vienna from Bucharest. & cal seven years. By an overwhelming vote, the Bri ish trades union congress passed of the coal mine: are reported endangered. Mexico's publ in American newspapers. treaty France, Italy and Belgium. Colonel E. M. House has arri Paris from England where he ha: with the league of nations. meat was weight in the last fortnight. Acting Secretary Roosevelt instruct- ed the command, guard during the police strike. tion of the federal equal suffrag the ratification resolution, 14 to 10. denied that he sought at any time who insisted on holding meeting Sunday in the public square at Porto Alegre, in the state of Rio Grande Sul. impending styles in men's clothi; according to man the national clothiers. holding its national encampment Columbus, O. merce committee. Unconfirmed reports received in re- sponsible quarters tell of s compelled o intervene. expressed his deep sympathy tin, who was killed in the war. the county grand jury which has investigating the high cost of living. The laws asked of congress by day from thé stores of Mrs. Me. the wife of an Oglethorpe coun farmer. was captured by a poss len to the scene of the crime. his bo riddled w stake. Pleading guilty to a upen Miss Laura Martin of 21k, James Middleton, 17, of walk, was sentenced to five yea at Bridgeport. report that three ing tw Tampico, were captured by Potosi and Tampico. LABOR CONFERENCE TO DECIDE Paris, Sept. 11.—The supreme coun- cil has decided to et the Internatio al Labor Conference which mects Washington in_Octobe! delegates be admitted. The Italian delegation v matter. KIRGHIZ TRIBE OFFERS TO © ASSIST ADMIRAL KOLCHAK Telegraphic Agency.) chak_received a delega government. are about 2,000,000 in number. CHARGED WITH THEFT OF $58,000 IN LIBERTY BONDS| wick, a 1i-year-old clerk empl the Columbia Trust Company, was ar. rested at his home tonighi o of stealing 358,000 in from the bank. PRICE TWO CENTS 10 PAGES—76 COLS. SEN Marpn Lovassy, Hungarian foreign ! minister, has been forced out of the ATE GETS MINORITY REPORT ON PEAGE TREATY By General Agreement the Contest For and Against Ratifica- tion Has Been Postponed Until "Monday—Republicans Claim Enough Votes to Prevent Ratification Without Reservations. Fifteen thousand silk mill workers in the vicinity of Scranton, Pa., are st up on the beach at Mar- ‘Burial of the dead in Mobile, Ala,| on Sunday is punishable by a fine of | $1000 under a city ordinance Jjust| has fallen, according to unofficial re- ‘Washington, mission of mittee minority treaty, with its covenant for a League was made ready today for to be waged disposition the foreign weeks hence, Fewer cigars and less chewing and smoking tobacco were used in the fis- vear 1919 than in any of the last of Nation presentation ion battle the majority administra; agreement bezin until Monday. republicans, ratification were urged democratic Meanwhile resolution favoring tl.e nationalization reservatio reservations = — Lodge of the foreign La Ceiba, on the northern coast of Honduras, Is under bombardment by Bertrand revolutionists. ~ Americans GEN. PERSHING WELCOMED BY THE AMERICAN LEGION ASK SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE OF MRS. LAURA S. ROCKEFELLER debt is_$500,000,000 | instead of the $254,786,042.63 as official- {1y proclaimed in paid advertisements tlement of the estate . wife of John D. Rocke- leaving prop feller, who died Germany has ample coal reserves and if she desires can amply fulfiil provisions for supplying Surrogaic's court today by | the husband, son and daugh executors_and trustees. enumerating With these words Colonel the | former Tennessee. pendantito him in Madisc Garden to sy —uEsEd ) waticiin ) connecting Rockefeller, the petition set torth | the name of executors, | The principal basis of the cost of shown to have been reduc- ed more than one dollar a hundred- exercising introduced church and Baptist Home of Northe hoth of Cleveland, the home so- | of the Boston navy yard to establish a naval provost was distributed the mem- | General Fere New Hampshire completed ratifica her granddaughter, D. Rockefeller, ter of John the pearls were a $12,000 a $50 14-kar: D diamond ; 8anizec o| ring. a $5.000 pink pearl ring, a $2.000 | °nt diamond cluster brooch, diamond and |Tifict ear rings w m neeklace worth £10, and old fashioned | ear rings worth $1. itockefeller's lawlessness amendment when the senate passed 1| the people Postmaster General Burleson has improperly control post office appoint- ments by the civil service commission. Military police clashed with radicals e Washingto $50.15, | for Philad®Iphia uits of silks and satin trimmed black Spanish Belts and double breasts will be the| mulle and tulle worth $30. to_encourage of the members of of retail Americanism- Consolidated Standard Oil clear frem petty the distribution of the Warriors of four American wars Rockefeller joined in the Victory parade of the Grand Army of the Republic, which is Foundation re: Rockefeller price, n which have McCormick, a daughter, granddaugh- the Woman's Missionary Woman's American Missionary Society during the organization the display riotism with wh Favorable report on the waterpower development bill in substantially the form passed by the house last July was ordered today by the scnate com- advantages cise of the same pa its members their service it is the hope of all of us w the welfare of The _accounting distribution. his organi- aggregated $17.000 and still have on rious riot- ing in Fiume between Italian and Ju- Zo-Slav troops. The allies have been the executors hand $10,093 which ation that conducted vourselves the Rockefeller Foundation. PUBLICITY AGENT HARVEY WAS TO RECEIVE $500000 General Pershing visited Mrs. Theo- dore Roosevelt at Sagamore Hill and or the Joss of her husband and her son Quen- on government | principles of the if there were Thirty seven indictments against| \Vashinston M fourteen commission merchants and firms were returned at Indianapolis by been | aspirants.” suspended et | SPIRITED CONTESTS AT ELECTION OF HIBERNIANS upon conviction of the $10.000,000 it was planned for the memori. irst of the high cost of living President Wilson took form when the house ag- riculture committee ordered faverably repgrted a bill to control cold storage. connacted reception to General Per: the fund to wh cient Order hing arranz- h an admis have been charged, Hair goods valued at $10,000 and several hundred dollars worth of op tical goods were stolen by burglars to- Reginald Carles and Harry L. Pike at Portland, she had given $35,000 of her own money in obtaining subscriptions and that she was to be reimbursed throuzh! a_contract she had Abe Cox, negro, alleged murderer of the money Ga , tak- agreement Harvey, whom she expected her the mone: commissions. $400.000 already to the fund. REPORTS EXODUS OF FOREIGNERS IS NORMAL nced out of his th bullets, and burned at the subscribed convention resolutions iscious assauit and one month in the state reformatory by Judge Webb in the superior court Washington, — Deploring | &~ _——_ =@ NAUGATUCK STR VOTE TO ACCEPT OFFER Caminetti immigrati to emigration, commissioner-zeneral tatement today showing that 102513 foreigners Tnited States since the armistice The Amerioca embassy at Mexico City is investigating an unconfirmed Americans, includ- named Jones and Ferguson. of andits who blew up a train between San Luis Naugatuck Company’s was ended twelve months ended the five vears ended 618,223 emigrants compared with 1, rivdls for the unanimously departed as 679 immigrant ar- the state- same period, points out. an_excess of arrivals over departures of 554456 “Rumors that committee ON ELIGIBILITY OF GERMANS 1,500.000 foreign, resi- dents of the United States were pre- paring to leave for tneir mative coun- taking with them $5.000.000 have " the statement nd that if an agreement d the conferences decide for ii-1 will be final melt whother German: and - Auctriay | disturbed this countr: he exodus is perfectly natural and m om=ouc) normal times, to have the council authorize the ad-| mission of these delegates. but _the other delegations preferred to have! the Washington conference decide the Internation. DISCUSSING CHINA-JAP. MILITARY CONVENTION Wednesday, ‘The Chino-Japanese mili- tary convention. sizned last vear with | a view to co-ordinating the efforts of| China and Japan under discussion recently between To- kio and Peking. controversy propositions Rubber Regenerating Omsk, Sunday, Aug. 31.—(Russfan Admiral Kol- n today from the Kirghiz tribe. The delegation asked. permission to form detachments for immediat eservice and pledged support of their people to the Omsk has announced that any The presen agreement be abrogated, rangement concluded. BULGARIAN TREATY IS VIRTUALLY COMPLETED 11.—The supreme coun- | completed on the Bulgarian treaty, drafting of peace SIX INJURED IN TROLLEY IN SOUTH WINDSOR The Kirghiz form one of the several races which inhabit Turkestan. They Six persons sfield bound ick at Sta probable fractu New York, Sent. 11—Robert Borth- yed by here tomorrow and bruised the conference by Allenby, e a charze! the allicd fore- -iberty bonds rived in France.