Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 18, 1919, Page 1

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VOL. LXI—NO. 223 POPULATION 29,919 NORWICH, CONN., 12 PAGES— 96 COLUMNS TWELVE PAGES—92 COLUMNS iaz. commander-in-chief of the Ital- ian arm: has been recalled to Rome from Naples, where he had been on a vacatioy, according to a Havas patch dated Sunday received = ¢“re| Chajrman Fitzpatrick Declares ‘om the ian eapital. Upon his ar- o1 Walkout Will Come as rival, it was stated, he entered upon sk i S a lengthy conference with King Em- | manuel and Premier Nitti. Scheduled. Arriving Daily From Germany | E = Officers and Men Are There ]I . . yiwuson TELLS OF SHANTUNG Pittsburgh, Pa. Sept. 1T—¥When the i Growing national committee for organizi and the German Military Movement Is Rapidly v | PROVISION OF PEACE TREATY | Balional committee for o ere 1or — Pretense Made of the Disbandment of a Few Units— jSan Francisco. Sept. 1i—Discuss- | Q3% i SOIOSST MRS O SoAneT 0 - ng at length the Shantung. provis- z « . Posters Displayed Read: “Fight For the Kaiser and the |ion of te™peace’ treaty. President | &5, 20Journed onight until tomorrow 3 8 ilson said in an address here today " o Empire Against Democracy! We Had Rather Die Than |that he had been assured by the areat | Of the committee, made the unequives pire ecers that hoen asgured by the great| Cai' statement that the ‘walkout would Be Dishonored”—Marshal Foch Has Been Urged tog|ions tnere would be a ‘mew imterna | [3XE Plage, next Monday moraing a3 tional policy for the protection of Lt & < s . Fas ey tion was taken at today's meeting to Drive the Germans Out of the Baltic States. hinese InteBLY. | Mr. Wilson, had| POStpone the strike and inat the de2 T (Bs the A. P.).—The [ being transferred to Admiral Kol- |Japan's promise to return Shantung to| Sision reached at washinglon last ¥ £ toed Bl China and intended to see that it was yomia e e assertion s made by the Vorwaerts BT TR fullilied under che league. He said ne| Patrick said a_statement would be is- arrespondent that the GEFman mill- | wANT GERMANS DRIVEN had eked his coleaguee at Verealiieg| Sued tomorrow afternoon. | movement in the Baltic provinces OUT OF BALTIC STATES |specifically whether they meant under| The meeting, primarily called (o con- o Coaiie AMCHGY e the league to inaugurate a new pol | Sider strike plans, discussed the ques. nd men are arriving there daily from| New York Sept. 17.—Marshal Foch :;gy“;g;“d China and they told him [ [0 © POSTROUE, HE omference i G ny 1 mallest places in ed to use stronger efforts in 2 _ Pt Rl o Srieing the Germans out of the Baltic | Far from béing detrimental to| Washington beginming October 6 as Posters displaved in the office of | states in a resolution adopted at to- China’s interests, declared Mr. Wilson, o t: o ad . i A - it Captain Stoewer at Bausk.|day's session of the congress of the |the treaty. really was the first in the| Ments wWere made against postpones ‘tats the correspondent, | League of Esthonians. Leits, Lithuan- | world's history to do something for|Ment on the ground that the steel jans and Ukrainians in America. An- |China’s benefit. Tn all previous in- Wworlkers, having ‘goRe 8o far .‘“V theit kaiser and the em- ! other resolution. which will be sub- |Stances of acquisition of Chinese ter- cs'mpnflgn I?r SSCETMEC of gridvmuces Gemocracy' We had | mitted to the supreme council at Ver- |ritory. he said. the United States had (DY collective bargaining, cannot now | Sailles, urged that ltaly be asked to [not even protested. s SIS i Qrtliey weon - : Cabled Paragrashs |Steel Workers to ERAANS AREWENACIG | 2 = Nl Qi e : ; e| not to go back and face workers, se is being de of the dis- | release Ukrainian prisonere of war| The president's declarations were| DOl care EO .. > < ot a few uniter the corre. | who, it is claimed. were forced to |received with applause and cheers by | eager fo strike to win their demads, > dds, “but the troops are !fight in the Austrian armies. the 1.600 women present at the wo- | Wilh the news that the walkout had p . = men’s luncheon as which he spoke.| Peen postponed. One speaker said the There were cries of “No, no” when unmkn |efl;‘le'1"5 would be accused by he asked whether it would be wise to| Workers of having “sold them out.” WOMEN ARE URGED TO WASHINGTON PAID FULL 26 o war over Shantung. There is| Few details of the meeting were per- TAKE PROPER EXERCISE HONOR TO PERSHING |50 o0 N e S e secure the | mitted o leak out and newspaper men = i e immediate refurn of the provinge to| Were ‘kept away from the meeting New Women were ‘Washington. Sept. 17.—Hoarse with | cpin, room. Whether the twenty-four unions 5 of the Inter- | cheering, Washington rested tonizht, S i ol L1co discussed the Mon- | represented in the meeting were can- 3 Women Physi- | satisfied that it had paid full honor| o0 Dootrine Article 10 and the right | vassed to ascertain the:sentiment om . “the neglected health| to General John J. Pershinz and the ot withdrawal from the league. re-| the® matter of deferring the strike s < proper exercise. Several | fighting men of the First Di % | peating previous arguments - against| could not be learned. 5 prakers urged necessity of wo-| The nation’s victory par | Feservations on those points and de-| ' When Chairman Fitzpatrick made ng more attention io recrea- | over. For nearly three h 11| (larinz some of the chanses proposed | the positive statement that the strike Coreise and games were espec-| ing flood of soldiery. of suns i involved merely a question of literary | Would go into effect next Monday . -ommended rather than formal | horses. of tanks and motor trucks had | morning, he was asked if the strikers mpasiam. worl poured upon Pennsylvania avenue | ng to the o’N-ction that Great| would picket the steel plants. Miss Estelle Bertine. physical direc- | without check or halt to pass the re- | Britain has six votes in the league| “No. there will be no pickéting:; ‘the 2 larze New York department | viewing stand where Vice President|ascombly. Mr. Wilson said it so hap-| men will go fishing,” he. said. “We will . irew an unfavorable compari- | Marshall representing President Wil-|par@? g Mo TS0 o6 i Just as | leave_the mill guards and profession- <on beiween the “frivolous girl with a|son. The wide street ran back with|po il e ¢ “heir six.” There is mno|al gunmen run the plants.” penchant for the company of voung| its grim, living tide of fighting PoW-|case in which the assembly could vote| A letter from E. H. Gary, chairman men” and the “sensible with out- | er and organization: and as the greal|om amy important subject except ade|of the United States Steel Gorporation of-doors propensities The latter| pageant was unrolled before their eves|mission of new members without a de-| to the president of subsidiary com- was referred to aoprovingly by Miss| the humdreds of thousands of people| cision first having been made by the| panies. made public here today. gives Wertine as “the cave girl.” Hikes| who formed those banks roared council in which there was an equal- | the reasons of the corporation for re- n the country were strongly en- | shrieked with pride and approval, ty of votes. fusing to meet with the union leaders © the smeaker as one of the| sound of their cheering slowiy | “Denouhcing “hyphenated Ameri-| to disouss the affairs of its employes. most_excellent w of conserving | dwindling at the end. but only from' s the president repeated his| These reasons are along the line giv- health physical exhaustion. charze that a pro-German propagan- | en the union leaders in New York Dr. Agnes Burns Ferguson. director Riding at the head of the mighty| g, azain was spreading in the United | several weeks ago when Chairman bureau of recreation in Pitts- | column, General Pershing was car-|states. He said opponents. of the| Gary refused to meet a committee decried the fact that so many | ried forward along the whole line of | {reaty were desiring the same ends| representing the unions. The letter palities appropriate mioney for| march as though on a wave of sound|Germany was desiring but the presi- [ added that “it is the settled determ- srounds but scarcely any for in-|as the nation and city gave him his|gent asserted his confidence that the| ination of the United States Steel Cor- feligent instruction. She recom- | formal greeting. To no American Would be accepted. poration and its subsidiaries that the mended gympnasiums for corrective|since Admiral George Dewey came | The president told the luncheon | wages and working conditions of their declared that games| home in triumph from Manila has|guests that there were no words|employes shall compare favorably with form of exercise for|such an ovation been tendered. Nor|sironz enough to picture properly thel the highest standards of property and It is necessary, how- | has the end yet come; for tomorrow |extent to which the world was trust- | justice.’ e added. to teach neopie how | congress will formally add its tribute|ing to the leadership of America. _— as they do not imberit 1he| o that of the city ‘and nation and | “we cannot desert humanity,” he| GENERAL GARIBALDI NOT 1hre dorsed knowledge. with busineéss put to one side, tenderigaid. “We are the trustees of hu- To P CIP, 3 e 2 the expeditionary commander 4 form- | mmamity. 1 cABROL cOMCEIVE & JBOIV: ”oy ARI'JE IRy, BOLSHEVIKI NO NEARER al reception at the capitol. adequate to hold men off fronr thiS{ “Fome Monday, Sent. 15.—General OMSK THAN 200 MILES WP = great enterprise. 2 Giuseppi (“Pepnino” Garibaldi, GOMPERS DEFENDS STRIKE Mr. Wilson said he was not satis-|gpeaking to The Associated Press cor. Siberia, Tuesday, Sept. 8 (By OF BOSTON POLICEMEN |fied with the Shantung settlement. but :respondent today, said that he had ar- P.).—The more ~‘than thirt Rt that it was “iz-tional” to propose t0!rived from America on the eve of Ga- ns who are still in Omsk ex-y Boston, Sept. 17.—Before lcaving for | make fhe situdtion better by the trea- |priel d’Annunzio’s coun in Fiume, and surprise toda when they Washington early tonight, Guy Oys- |iv's amendment. He traced at length |that he had » Susht. Ber wotld reports had been widely | ter, secretary to President Gompers!the growth of Japanese power inlhe think. to participate in or lead any that Omsk had been |of the American Federation of Labor, | Shantung. declaring the original“grant|movement liable to set Italians against . Harris was ad- | issued a statement im which he con- |of the Shantung rights to Germany |Itajians. that a telegzram had been re- | demned the authorities for working |was the result of a hypocritical de- (It was reported from . Venice on 4 from the United States asking | conditions in the. police department |mand by the German foreign office. |september 12 that General “Peppino” at the Harbin consulate locate him. |and declured that the striking patrols | Yet, at the time of that demand.|Garibaldi was among the volunteers svidently being assumed that he had | men were not to blame for the disor- | continued Mr. Wilson, President Mc-|who had joined d’Annunzio at Fiume.) < post of consul at Omsk. der in the first few days of the strike. | Kinley made no @rotest on the part| General Garibaldi declared today tained a despatch from Peking an- | ed “deserters” because “they had the |were protests made, he asserted. When |tjon had been . premature, that he nouncine that the Boishevi 3 ipied Omsk. Thus far the Bolsheviki | after a two weeks' notice. for their | pit and not soldiers of the .§alar army,|RO movement for bettermen or Dro- as been no nearer to the seat of the | human riights and constitutional Which of the gentlemen that areland should not have gone to Fiume|8ress of humanity. But beyond and Kolchak sovernment in Omsk than | Euarantees.” now bprotesting,” he asked. “were | it Sy N military was In con. | above all this, ihe maintenance of this two hundred miles He asserted that the policemen were | prominent in protesting against thel{rol of the seaport. static condition can be accomplished had continued to | “assured by statements of the police | original grant to Germany? It makes| Unless complications arise which to whether the Si- | caused by the form of protest they |late in doing justice Garibaldi said he would sail for Amer- ns would be able to check them, |adopted would be taken care of.” and | It is not from China, but from Ger-|jca in two weeke. B g 1 operations of the past |that “not ome of the men had the|many, the president said, that Shan- Y aseured all elements of | faintest idea that the regrettable con- |iung is taken by the tieaty. There|CABLE FACILITIES WITH nopulation itions caused by the commissioner’s | was applause when he added that on e Y nezlizence eould occur.” The famd’ China's interests were pro- FOR EAST INADEQUATE] SIMON OUTLINES FRANCE'S he policemen’ he safd. “were|iccied by the League of Nations. i the American Federation of Labor to Piris, Sept. 17 (Hawas).Jn - the | be, heard; and they were forced. fto|ilS done for China.” b , amber of dcputics today M. Sime | stfike to defend the life of their ore | PIDS has been sized by K. Uchida. former vicé min- allies in driving the Germians Possibility of a general strike by . Qacssan cologics had Rerbir other labor unions awaits a meeting of Suts for the protection of the natice | the Central Labor union next Sundav. vopulations. He outlined France's| At that time it is exnected that the San Francisco, Sept. 1 b ive nia! program which would be car. | committee that has been counting the | Wilson made public here tomight the|panese and American capital, ~said g ate of y | ballots cast by the different unions on gl v e T nah (TeALY | the question will be reads to report. | will reps esent the general public in thelcondition of the wires Japanese com- i TR e gl i = Tationm “eanference. which'is to brwin |mercial houses were being limited to Non for having obtained excellent | PEATH TOLL OF TEXAS in Washington on Oectober 6 to con-|ten words of communication a day. <ions for France in the peace STORM PLACED AT 300 sider plans for a new relationship be-| Since the beginning of the waw the —_— tween employer and emplove. Twenty - | Speaker said. the business of the ca- The minister concluded by outlining a program of great improve- | _Corpus Christi, Texas. Sept. 17— mants contemplated in the colonies. | Darkenss fell on the storm stricken . Cottiacd Pmintster of Iabor dc- |city of Corpus Christi and eavirens | sanized-labor, 3 0F wor clared that the labor provisions in the | lonight with the list of dead from | tural associations, investment bankers|diminution in i treaty woulr work well for so- | Sunday's hurricane hovering around | 2nd manufacturers. armistice, with the result, he said, two representatives to sit in the con-|bles entering Japan had increased ference will he selected later by or-|per cent. reaching a total of 10000, the leading agricul-|00® words a year. Therc had been no ce. |the 300 mark and with a heavs rain| OB the president’s list of those whothat from ten to twelve days are re-| — el t which fell almost continuously | will represent the public are Ber-|quired to get a cable message! NTEREST OF MINE WORKERS |throughout the day hampering ihe| nard M. Baruch of New York, former|through. Lack of facilities for com work of clearing the debi B ®| chairman of the War Indust#y Board: | Mmunication, he declared, were a great CERTENES 09 SEEEE N !fludmg {he safErings of theutinde Sr| Robert 8 Brookings of St. Louis, handicap to trade expansion. leveland, 0. Sept. 17.—Interest of | homeless. tormer chairman of the Price Fixing il i e R e st Of [ MORM “attempts at identifying the | Committee of that organization; John| RUMORS OF ASSASSINATION today was turned to Pittsburgh, where | bodies had been abandoned because of = Gecision of the national organizing | their condition and burfal parties sent | ommittes on the proposed steel strike | Out along the shores of Nueces bay Mfonday will affect large numbers of | Were hurrying corpses to nearby orzanized and unorganized miners in | towns for interment. Gary, of New York; Dr. Charles W. i steal corporation enterprise. Initiated | He y leaders hinted that announcement of | Christi was threatening to stop relief | patches received by the foreign min-|i Hartford, secretary and treasurer. ine decision for or aZainst postpone- | trains hurrying here over the San|TO ALLOW STORAGE BATTERY |istry from lquique say that in Iquique| Hartford was selecied as the place of ment of the strike might be withheld | Antonio and Aransas Pass railway. CARS IN LOWER NEW YORK |the rumor is believed to be true. meeting for next vear on Sept. 17. All communication with Peru is un- temporarily. n ordem to gain the| The food situation, serious from the tactical element of surprise should the | OU decision be to call the steel workers | With the arrival of severa rumor therefore cannot be obtained at hundred | Mayer declined today to grant the re-| out Monday | jefugees trom the surrounding coun- |quest of n commitice of citizens to|Present. = s BT | 4 S| ily h orde toy - MOORE REP. NOMINEE FOR | g s{‘ufflfy"’:, GREATER BERLIN HAS MAYOR OF PHILADELPHIA |MEXICO TO REFUND $10,000 four storage battery surface car lines FOODSTUFFS TROUBLE === RANSOM PAID BANDITS |on the lower Fast Side owned by the Philadelphia. Sept. 17.—Complete i == New York Railways Company, which| Berlin, Sept. 17—(By The A. P.)— ot unofficial returns from vesterday's Mexico City, Wednesday, Sept. s ip the hands of a receiver. The grocers. butchers and bankers of | primary election give Congressman J.| (Correspondence of the A. P.).—The In making known his decision he| Greater Berlin closed their shops for| Hampton Moore a nplurality of 1,713 | secretary of the treasury has been or- !said the shutting down of the lines| six hours todav as a protest against over Judge John M. Patterson for the jGered (o mile immediate payment to | would cause inconvenience and dis-| further attempts to socialize the pur. republican nomination for mayor. the United States government of 10,000 | tress to hundreds of thousands but| veying of foodstuffs in the metropoli- With the vote from zll of the 1,356 di- | Pesos, representing the sum paid to |that “the situation can be saved by| tan district. ~isions revised and corrected, ihe fig- | ODtain the ransof of Lieutenants Har- | the conmsent of the board of estimate| A meeting was held and a resolu- ires stood: Moore 150,807, Patterson |old G. Peterson and Paul H. Davis.land apportionment to accord a suffi-|tion was passed whichk declared that 142,004, | American aviators who were captured{cient fare increase to bridge over the| the incompetency of municipalities to { by Mexican bandits in August. The present emergency and enable the re-| collect and distribute foodstuffs was 4403 ENROLLED IN STATE | mones wiil be delivered by a Special | ceiver to operate the cars.” He add- | demonstrated throughout the wa FOR AMERICAN LEGION A Messenger from the treasury depart- |eq that Mayor Hylan was to blame for —_—— e — | the proposed abandonment of the! PRINCE ROSPIGLIOSI AND Waterbury. Conn. Sept. 17.—With lines. Jess than one-third of the thirty-four | AUSTRALIANS ARE TO FAMILY ARRIVE IN NEW YORK posts in the state heard from. head- ATTEND LABOR CONFERENCE|A VILLA BAND CAPTURED New York, Sept. 17.—Prince Rospig- auarters for the American Legion - BY CARRANZA CAVALRY |liosi, a descendant of a former ruling drive in Connecticut here tonight re- Sydney. Australia. Sept. 17.— house of Rome, arrived here today on ported 4407 men enrolied. Hartford | Montreal.)—Premier Hughes ann Fl Paso, Tex., Sept. 17.—One of the | the steamship Pesaro. of the Llovd Jeads the state with 1534, with Wa- | ad today that it had definitely been| vijja bands which made Dr. J. W.! Sabando Line from Genoe, accompan- terbury second with 33 ascertained that Australia would be|Smith prisoner was captured by the |ied by his wife and their four chil-{begun Sunday night. The papers are| represented at the international labor| Carranza cavalry Sunday. Half of the [dren. Princess Rospigliosi formerly American Meat in Munich. conference to be held in Washingion.) $6,000 rancom demanded for the re- |was Miss Ethel Bronson, a member of Munich, Bavaria, Tuesday, Sept. 16. [ He =aid, however, that ihe Australian|iesse of Dr. Smith was paid and the |an vld New York family. ~—The arrival here of consignments of | delegates had not vet been chosen. | Villa hand was forced to liberate the - American me. enabied the —_ - { American doctor before the remalnder [ No, Hazel, a man isnt necessarily a hor the regular meat 1U's easy to make money as it is to | of the ransom tould be pald, according | thief because. he takes: a picture; he 3 unmake yourself while making it to authentic reports here, may be a photographer. . _ . Fationing prac y e et imes . A b E s T L S SRS s SO N A e thiem, After these extraordinary ac io newspapers arriving here con- | He said that the men were being call- |of the American government. Neither (¢hat in his opinion d’Annunzio's ac- |Cide the fate of all future generation: had oc- | manhood and the courage to strike, | othr nations took parts of Chinese ter- [should have employed real volunteers|Straitiacket, wherein there can be * last three months, | commissioner that any situation | masheart burn when SOme men are S0 | commer him. 1o romcaly lome: Gen“allmm cephln = R : < - - o .| New York, Sept. 17.—Inadequacy of | Was reviewed by members of the 15ih COLONIAL PROGRAM | forced to organize in affiliation with “It's the first time in ‘;he_‘hhntmra,\no: cable facilities between the United | Connecticut regiment assembled in 53d the world,” he. asserted, a! Y-|States and the Far East was empha- | annual reunion here this morning. b= e e ization ™ ister of communications of Jtpan, at|e€lected first vice president, and com- inister of the colonies. said that the | FAZTERIC PRESIDENT NAMES MEN 2 Jurieheon of the Council on Forelan|Pany presidents were clected by com- FOR NATIONAL CONFERENCE ! Relations here today. Mr. . Uchida,| Panies, the order of rank being deter- who advocated the construction of a|mMined Dby lot. They were: Company 17.—President | new Pacific cable by joint private Ja- | A, Frederick H. Peck. Unionyille; names cf the twenty-two men who|that owing to the present crowded|¢hester; Company A, John Gemmill, in the volame since the | €xecutive committee was re-clected as { also held its 50th reunion here today, D. Rockefeller, Jr.; Judge Elbert H. OF PRESIDENT OF PERU| Harrrord, Company D, was re-elected Kliot. president emeritus of Harvard Santiago. Chile, Sept. 17.—Persistent! gg' Wil ) Charies Bdward Russell of New York,|rumors are in circulation here that| e Middletomn. vice moociasat: Iorpany and John Spargo of Vermont. The last| Augosto B. Leguia. president of Peru, Gaflup of ywhitman. Mass. ' choslain Heavy rainfall to the east of Corpus ; \W0 named are socialist leaders. was _assassinated = Tuesday. Dis-lana ). E. Hawley of Company K, of | outset, took a more acute turn today | New York, Sept, 17.—Federal Judge|der censorship and confiration of the| NO U. $. MILITARY CONTINGENT ofifrson Denounces : I.eagu_e_[iuvenanti Asserts It Would Deprive the United States of Independ- ence of ‘Action. Lincoln, NeNb., @ept. 17.—In ad- dressing a large and enthusiastic gatl ering here tonight, Senator Hiram W Jobnson of California denounced the League of Nations covenant as an in- famous document and declared that its adoption would result in throwing the country into an international confed- eration and deprive the republic of its future independence of acion. It would, he said, substitute misty in- ternationalism for Americanism. Senator Johnson said: ‘The pres- ident has made, and asked the senate to approve, a league covenant that is to be higher than our constitution. Except the sovereign people, no pow er on earth can legally change our constitution or make another to override it. The people can do that, but no public servant or servants of these people should be permitted to do it. It is admitted by the president that we lose our independence in the league. Misty internationalism has been substituted for Americanism.” After enumerating the various burdens which the peace pact im- poses on the United States, Senator Johnson sai “The great fundamental question which every American father and mother should aunswer, i Should American boys police the world? Shall Amercian blood uphold, main- tain and perserve Old World govern- ments and the territorial integrity of the nations which have immenscly in- creased (heir boundaries? ‘At Omaha the president definitely announced himself against amend- ments to the l.cague of Nations or reservations of any sort. “pon what theory does he thus limit the action of what is supposed to be the great democracy of the world? When did the president of the United States possess the power to say to its people and its congress You must’ 2" “The scnate insists that the Unit- ed States shall be protected and that Such" reservations as are necessary for the preservation of our institutions and our rights shall be written into the instrument. The president denies this right to the American people and to the senate, while according it to every other nation. The senate may have all the faults which the presi- dent atiributes to it, but today it stands the bulwark of American lib- erty, stands between the American people and the unholy attempt to foist upon them foreign domination “The League of Naiions comes to us after. jts principal members have been gorged with territory, with their boundaries and their limts increased beyond- the wildest dreams, and with other immense tracts of the world's surface vet-to -be @istributed amonz - when each of the four nations possesses lands far greater than ever before, the one going, soivent, national concern on undertakes by article ten 1o & tee forever these extraordimary ritorial limits. “How can any man of liberal view agree to article ten When 1 speak of men -of liberal views, I mean those whose hearts throb in unison with bumanity; those who believe gov- ernment’s’ obligation is first to men and women and children. THhe section freezes the worid into immutabilit It makes the present generation de- It assumes to put the world in by the blood of just one nation, and REVIEWED ANTIETAM BATTLE ON 57TH ANNIVERSARY Hartford, Conn., Sept. 17.—The bat- tle of Antietam, years ago today, Norman L. Hope of Hartford was re- company H, Curtis L. Crane. Man- Hartford; Company E, Abraham Copp, le; Company K, George Jorestyille: Company ¢ George . Merritt, Hartford: Com- pany D. Claudfus C. Margerum Springfield: Company B, Edmund B Greene. Windsor, and Company T Charles S. Robinson., Hariford. The follows: Norman L. Hope, Hartford: John Gemmill. Hartford: William I Sternberg. New Britain James B. Whalen, Hartford; Jacob C. Bauer, Kensington. The Eighth Connecticut regiment the veterans gathering in_ Nathaniel Lyon Post hall. Charles Jackson of president. The other officers re-elect- STATIONED NEAR BY FIUME | Rome, Sept. 1 Contrary to an of- ficial statement from Fiume saying | that “an American contingent, (o gether with the English, embarked,” there was no American military con- tingent stationed in Fiume. or near | . according to statements. Delay by Colonel Mervyn C. Buckey, American military attache, and Briga- dier General Evan M. Johnson, a new- Iy arrived attache of the embass; It is believed that mistake in the official communication probzbly was due to the presence in Fiume of some mem- bers of the American food adminis- tration, who wear the American army uniform. TROUBLES OF NEWSPAPERS IN NEW HAVEN CONTINUE New Haven. Conn., Seit was no change today or tonight in the | strike of reporters and copy rcaders of the four daily mewspapers here, which being published under difficulties, and the Newswriters' Equity Association, the organization of the strikers, con- tinues to issue f(s~ own publication. The Reporter. A conference of the four publishers was held today but ne statement was forthcoming. German from the sion. Condensed_ Télegrams mier e AMERICAN TROOPS T0 ESCORT representa Field Marshal Allenby, on his arriv- al at London, welcome. United Stat definite date for the return of Kiau- Chau to China. President Wilson announced no more labor commiltees will be allowed in- terviews on his present trip. Rus an front are carrying out a succ fensive against the Bolsheviki. was given a rousing PARTY sked Japan to fix a|King Albert, Queen Elizabeth and Crown Prince Leopold Are to Board the Steamer George Washington at Ostend— Aboard Ship the Soldiers Will Provide a Program of Bor- ing and Other Athletic Sports—King Albert Is Coming to troops on the Archangel Repay the Visit of President Wilson to Belgium, to Thank iy the Americans For What They Have Done, More than 200 runners employed by Something.” twenty-five Wall street brokerage. firms struck for an increase in wages.| Brussels. Sept. 17.—(By The A. P.),ward passage. Movi The people of Paris demand General de Castlenau, Couronne of Polish fo Nane; When King Albert, Queen FElizabeth [ Which will be put on victor of the Grand|2Rd Crown Prince Leopold, -accom- | 44 to the pleasure be fade marshal.[panied by a numerous party, board the | King Albert has le —_— . steamer George Washington at Os-|he is going to the campaigning against |iend for their voyage to the United |three things—; the Bolsheviki gro:sed the Beresina|States, they will have as an escort|of President Wilson river and occupied the town of Bor-|a regiment of American troops who |ond. to thank the isloff. Three land. Me. quit because of labor diffi-|bert, who refused to take passage on |time, but sav the George Washington if by doing so|to be given in his honor will be kept culties. vised that China issued a statement|\word. In fa declaring day. all the allies. and hundred employes of thel The taking alonz of the troops wags |something” The ki East Coast Fisheries Coa. at Rock-|due to the urgent request of King Al-[over the prospecis of having a good Gtrmany. Fire destroyed warehouse No. 4 of | "The presence of the soldiers on the| Tt and to “Learn ng picture shows, as is the case on every American transport, also will of the trip. t it be known that United States for rst, to repay the visit to B Ame gium; sec- cans fo went aboard the transport at Brest to- |What they have done for Belgium and third, “to learr ng is enthusiasti he hopes the banquets e Tt it would interfere in any way with the [to the smallest possible number as he State department was officially. ad-|return of American soldiers home- |does not like functions of this kind itary authorities finally acquiesced. |should not be waste said the roya J. G. White "Engineering Corporation|George Washington is expected to|pating a fine time in “National the rate of be put on the market in France in Muscie Shoals, near Sheffield, Ala.|iighien the vo. amounts to $100,000 complete programme of boxing and |zive King Albert a ready-made clothing, at|pov ge,_as there is to be a|and also on the vova other sports in which the king and the |observe the life of 1 party are interested on the west- | aboard ship. ,000° suits monthly, will e the king made this one |In this connection he quoted Herbert herself mow at peace With|of the conditions of his visit to the|Hoover as saying th 3 Tnited States. and the American mil- |the food, and szid that therefore, f06d at Europe needed d 1l party is antiel- the United States age since this will n_opportunity to American soldiers the fight against high prices. LLOYD GEORGE ADDRESSES SUFFRAGAN BISH BT BROTHERHOD CONGRESS | YORK DIOCESE OF P. E. CHURCH Three men New Yorl Camden, over the increase in car fares. i in Washingt a; gress this evening., but, Shi i Mr. Reinsch, f ter to China, the president on Oriental affairs. Twenty-four hundred sleep parlor car conductors on federal con- trolied railroads were granted a slight increase in wages retroactive to May 1. Spanish liner Buenos Air Cadiz, Spain, arrived at New York. nine passengers were aboard, including the Spanish consul to New Sevent: York. Lloyd George tion of handing over the kaiser were arrested at the pbuilding Co.’s plant at charged with rioting| lLondon, Sept. 17 (By the A. P).—| New York, Premicr Lloyd George spoke before | Charles the International Brotherhood con- |bishop of as was e the er to|the important questions in which the |third ballot at a nation is deeply concerned. tion today. He The premier was given an enthusi- | Bishop David H. G g and|astic reception and bégan by saying | Rev. Dr. Ernesi M that a political platform was not in- |tor of St. Thomas' c volved at the meeting. | Burch's close compe “If 1 made a political pronounce- |ing. Rev. Dr. Wi 11 become advi from | Was outraging the hospitality of the | The remaining He dwelt on the passing of the old |Grace church: Rt order through the war, and alluded to |Thomas, missionary - |the Protestant Episco ment,” he added, “I should feel that I [rector of Trinity parisk, was third. bretherhood.” Rev. Charles L. Slatt General Smuts as having uttered the |ming. and Rev. H. P, OP OF NEW 17.—Right Rev Burch, sufiragan York diocese o pecial diocesan con- icceeds the late % imore Stires, ree- hurch, was Bishop m T. Ma ing, candidates were rector of Rev. Nathaniel S bishop of Wyo- cho o] most penetrating phase of the war in | Bishop Burch's election mu\ be rnal of Paris says Premier | réference to the league of nations— |confirmed by the house of bishop. w e o o P iny to have| “Bumanity has struck its tents and |the house of clerical and lay delexats Oy L e " | s Amate s the march.” |at the general convention of the Lpis o ) 7| He expros o ho hole thut all arm- |copal chureh which will be held in De aments woul.. Jisappear and that the |troit on October 8. Such confirmation Holland. lons-drawn ~misunderstandings = be- |is, however, regarded as merely for- d mehip Vestris, New| tWeen Ireland and the rest of the |mal. The Bvitish, stasmahip kinzdom would also. pass. After. the result of the third ballot York for E St. Lucia lo have a fire extinguished, is discharging her cargo. hold was flooded Discharged soldiers will not be ask- ed to pa or two, Upon receipt of an appeal for aid stricken people of Corpus for the 2o thei years after their discharge. under an amendment to the war risk insurance by Senator Harding. aneiro, which put into The lower| ued. “io seeing Wiste in-all forms dis- |that the election be appear and a new Britain springing up | Bishop Burch, who a really free land, free from poverty, | plauded. made a brij from the (yranny of mankind over |nowledgment maukind. Some people seem to think | Bishop Burch has that T Have accepted the position of | gan for nine years s leading counsel for the 0ld order. |Ior several yea ther than that, I would throw up |with the publishing my brief tomorrow.” cago and ‘was not This statement provoked a sreat |fortieth year. He demonstration, the audience rising and | manager of the Gr: cheering. ing Press from 18 ir insurance premiums Christi, Texas. Governor Cox of Ohio, | PSS : : issued a general appeal to all citizens [ “OBIV the spirit of comradeship and |he became rector of Obio to send fifiancial relef. Co-operation can effect the desired |church on Staten Is = changes. a spirit of deep sympathy {ed there until selec Rioting broke out again at Scranton, : Pa., among the sill mill strikers when | o valor exhibited ¢ a ¢rowd of women stormed the Bliss | GCinE over 50 girls are working. s These workers were handled roushly. mill where ‘Bonds valued at $32000, owned by|ylay for force. the L. M. Princé & Co, New York, were | pc) reported t o Elias Tieman, ger boy with uffering xhi ted during the war. to the task of ai quake or quarrel before sm:A‘lle obstacles.” Alluding to the leazue of nations as an organized attempt to substitute fair CENTENARY OF | Ty foree premier was| ~ CONDENSING C ew York, w el about Russia and Ireland, to e have disappeared and | whio i a 16-year-old messe: Bich he. replied the country play in each case on both sides.” He |the A. P.).—Sir Ol to whom they were given, is | Lided that 4t the tf e d time o armistice | eminent scientist,.in e it £ the armistice might be required to brevent smaf |With memorial c and of the brotherhood | Greer, whose strength wa: We must have fair | _Birmingham, England. S. he had not foreseen that the league |at Midland institute remonies held on the “T am looking forward.” he contin- [had been announced Dr. Stires move made unanimo: was heartily 2 ef address in ack- served as nd is 64 rs old was connecte A usiness in Ch ordained until his d Rapids Even- until 1905 - whe of t and. He ted to aid not equa recting unassisted or - and glgantic obstacles, | the largest and wealthiest diocese in NVENTOR OF STEAM ENGINE 17 (By liver Lodge, the n address tod: in _connection Japan advised the United States|nations from devouring each othon | occasion of the one hundredth anmic that she does Mongolia and Manchuria in the terms| tions more neededs he aemores. "7 | inventor of t of the consor: advancin s not favor Including| “There never was a league of ma- | versary of the death of James Wa ~ re cond um which contemplates| fear the welter of warring nations will | gine, again touched am en- subject considerable 10an 10| continue unless there is a stron® haad | Of atomic properties of matter China by an international grouP Of|iike that of the federated powers to Sir Oliver declared that the first bankers. . insist upon peace. T see no hope for | Utilization of atomic properties of the world except In such a Siromg |Matter was in wireless telephony. He THE CORK EXAMINER league added that i the atomic enersy of an = nce of matter could be utilized ¢ HAS BEEN SUPPRESSEDRyinne | ABOR ZROUSLE would be sufficient to raise the Ger- Dublin, Sept. 17—(By The A. P)— AT GRAPHOPHONE PLANT | Dl e on top of the Sottion momn The determinaation of the authroities to repre: publican suppression per P opposed the republican joan t the prohibition of refar- reto which existed under the lasking tac strike to return. recently,| with the event, He was accorded censorsh al of the censorship. The military au-|discriininate against any who had thorities, and raid part of the plant activities tod manifestataions of re-| Bridgeport, Conn., Sept. 17.—Anoth- | hoped the huma tains. He said. however. that he L race would not di o shown ?Ly the | er strike at the Columbia Grapha- | cover how 1o use this ener; y of the Cork Exam-|phone Company impcnds. A commit- | had brains and morality enot until 4t of Treland’s chief daily news-|cee of forty emploves walted upon|it properly. because If the discover to however, ed Mayvor Wilson this noon and stated|were made before it Although it is a constitutionalist and|that the Graphophone management | wrong people ,this planet would be un. the Sinn Fién, the Exam-|was discharging em; ploves a i in Vea' afih had | sate fner printed 4 full page prospectus of | thus far e wbout 190" zed Thad | S0 . Davis. t suming, criminatory whercas the mayor. in |later zames were h lapsed with the withdraw-|promised that the company would nof | hearty reception retain full powers|been on strike. It was also claimed|55TH ANNUAL REUNION s time and by t he American am- is de-|claimed that the discharges were dis. | bassador, attended the ceremony and eld in connection the premises and removed|that the company is discharging thoce OF 14TH C. V. REGIMENT The same a ed to the Dublin dailies, which refus- pany's offer were to be chosen. The ed the risk. HOPES FOR RETURN OF BUDGET |tees while employes are voting on Wwho are active in the election of shop dvertisement was offer-|committees which under the com. Waterbury, Conn. 55th_annual reunion management, it was claimed, had cer- | nectiout resirment tain ones they want on the commit- - this city today, at w SYSTEM IN AUSTRIA |their own selection The shop com - " for the mittees are to be finally chos>n fo- | crecien: o proniqent Vienna., Tuesday, Sent. 16.—During | MOrrow. e feenht sentatives of the provincial gzovern- elay any action looking to a strike | pracident, Robert Wolff. Nototon. e ments, finance, thy Josef Schumpeter, told them [matier before the Manufacturers As-| pnt secretars A F. Haf | he hoped that within three or four |sociation. ~The emploves, however, e Austrian minister of until Friday when he would iy the | Patares 1. B ool treasurer, George B. Sept. 17.—The of the 14th Com~ “ivil ~ war - volun- teers, was held at Odd Fellows’ hall in hich the following uing ‘were tenn, e president, Fred- Ellington: assist Meriden? Hammond, Rock vears the equilibrium of the budget |bave started a ballot on the quescion | vier sasioiant troncnoremond., Rock- would be cy. conversion of loans or additional taxation Chancellor Renner's “eves to the CHINESE-GERMAN TREATY | Midaletown west” remark has caused such a widespread challenze that he has been to explain that he did not Austria should turn to | France. to the exclusion of Germany. impelled { mean that The next reunion New York, Sept. 17.—The Nation in| BridZeport. its. current issue prints what it sars restored, without bankrupt- |of a strike on Saturday. R Ay e b B Milford: necrological committee, ) ENGLISH TRANSLATION OF Broatch, Middletown, James will be held at is the first complete and acourate En. | NUMEROUS ARRESTS ARE but that Austria's hove lay westward, | Slish translation cver made of tbe BEING MADE IN EUDAPEST rather than to the Slavic countries. Chinese-German ‘treaty of 1898 b which Germany acquired rights in ti MILITIAMEN TO GUARD Broyince of Shantung: tefether wisjper ‘cent..of the i1 Camde: bundred militiamen were called out| This treaty, the Nation states, shows| People’s dommissioner: tonight by Mayor Ellis, as the result|that Germany never acquired any sov- | iSts and 200 terrorist: n ~ Chinése imperial maritime custonis of- | Ment from charges J.. Sept. 17.—Three|fice at Shangha been rearrested. These include 23 of disorders growing out of estab-|ereign rights in Shantung, and the| The first man. w lishment of a zone system on the|publicity of the treaty is made =s|Dbrought to trial. offered in his own street car lines of the NeNw Jersey |bearing on President Wilson's staie-|defense that his act public service corporation which has|ment that Japan had promised “to 1e- | under the Bolshevik increased fares for “long!turn the sovereignty without qualifi-|found guilty greatly hauls.” cation to China.’ Commanded by Major Johin Andriis.| The tréaty is an extended document| MINNESOTA TO L the militiamen tonight iere sleeping [signeg by Li Hung Chunk and Baron CENT. TA. a local i armory; ready to go on|Ven Héyking. Commenting upon it |duty at 5 a. m. tomorrow to protect|the Nation says that as Germany se-| St. Paul, Minn., Sept. 1 trolley passengers. curpd no sovereign rights in Shan- | ate this evening by Mavor Ellix tonight declared if nec- | tung under _the. {reaty, Japan obvious- | passed the Bendixen bill. ! le: essary h to order Camden anarchy. ' to will he m: axk Governor Runvon |ly cannot feturn to (hina someti fax of five per cent entive state militia to | she pever possessed; and that ia bill” passed the hotse ke “order prevail over|iaining economic rights Japan is hold- woutd raise approxir irfg_al] the treaty gave her. year in taxes, Vienna, Tuesday. Sept. 16.—Tt is an- Chinese port of Kiau Chau and the|Dounced from Budapest that eighiv 000 persons re- CAR LINES IN CAMDEN, N. J.jthe German text as obtained from tic|leased by the . revolutionarv sover:- of feiony. have 37 journal- ho has t been was mot criminal law. But he was EVY 5 PER X ON IRON ORE —The sen- a vote of 38 to 28 ing .= on iron ore. This v $0,500,000 &

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