Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 10, 1919, Page 1

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VOL. LXI—NO. 242 3 POPULATION 29,919 NORWICH, CONN. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1919 12 PAGES—88 COLS. PRICE TWO CENTS W “INSURGENT™ UNION MEN | oot Pereareste Progress of Trans- \Matters Before the ™nienesd o |WAISH AGAINST APPROVAL Winter Home of Ex-King Ludwig e T 2 = (Reports resching Helsingfors, Fin- | ARE S"H.ING N v [t e Continental Flight Industrial Conference =2 == = =" " ™ e o i 'Y DUSTRY Erns o e o SEA m_—Weat.Flieu Ave| Chscreta Prosossh Fox Botter e :gg&!l‘:tik;:fitg::x:;en o i UF SHANTUNG SETTLEMENT c?‘;nx:u?& by his daughter and a few: N Hog Island shipyard established a : E ~ — 3 v Making Better Time Than R*.hom Between Employ- world's record “in " delivering 30 'Ship* 4 In Defiance of Their International Bodies, Pressmen and Long-| STEEL STRIKERS INTERESTED the West to East.. ers and Employed. 1o the Shipbing Beast nited months. g S} Lt Senator Announces Regret at Parting With His S IN ARBITRATION PROPOSAL 4 ; oremen Are On Strike In New York— Upwards i Mineola,” Ni Y., Oct. 9.—Two west-| Washington, Oct. y.—Concrete pro- | British steamship Sizergh Castle : E sh ew P of 170 Pittsburgh; Pas OGt. 9.—The propos- oL nis n e trans_continent- | posals designéd to bring about better |was sunk at sea. The American Democratic Colleagues In Voting For Treaty Reserva- i i . a 2 i 1 derby left here today. They | relations between employers and the |steamship Afel reports rescue of crew 5 o Magazines and Many of the Largest Trade ‘Papers In|al made at 'the industrial conference|al aerial derby lef emp¥=d were laid before thenational tions—An Outburst of Applause From the Galleries That at Washington by :9muel Gompers, | were Lieutenant Norman H. Langley the Country Have Been Forced to Suspend—Three Large | picsident of the ~ American Federa- | and Lieutenant D. B. Gish. indusfrial conference today by mem-| Arrival at Halifax of United Stater g Publicati H. i C o = F. oe R €| 5t Labor, that the steel strike be im-| Ko Lieutenant Gish it s st g I s rions sronvs cidkc ag 1D [ETAI (rolhtoriolar - Lend, dmabled Followed the Announcement Was Quickly Suppressed lications Have Completed Plans ermanent | mediately arbitrate: and hat the idle| start. He used a De Havilan .| the gathering. e proposals includ- |several days ago, was announced at 5 2 £ Their Plan P or P e | crieciin SPciciat pnce was re- | numbered No. 10, replacing that burn-feds L - o T e ren | PO 7 By Order of Vice President Marshall—Democrats Forced val i - & ceived h t y i 3 ed yestérday when he was force rbitration o e nation-wide stee! 3 3 . o i ts to Chicago—Piers and Terminals T ey e oo sIera bl | scend at Canadice, N -¥. He made| strike, with return of the men to work | Men who were.on strike in ship re- an Aye and Nay Vote On Senator Lodge’s Motion to Ad- Are Congested With Ocean-Bound Freight Because Rad-|!t_hd ‘been understoo d here ~that|a successtul “getaway.’ pending settlement; an industrial truce [pair plants in New York continued ‘o 5 G & 3 i o Strikers were ready te arbitrate at| Licutenant Langley and his passeng-| starting immediately and continuing return to work under previous con- journ, Which Prevailed, 38 to 36. ical Element of Longshoremen Is On Strike. e e thaY ndost ate_a%ler Sergeant Hawlins Clowder, were| three months: creation of an arbitra- | ditions. Started. ~ E. H. Gary, = chairman. ot| less' lucky, however, Tor they came to|tion board by the president gnd con-| e . ‘Washington, Oct. Clearing all growing desire of many persons i P g T s . stent| grief a short time a .| gress and including among its mem- o eighth and ten Fronch armies ! qoupt i make known their approval of tk Gecd as a resulc of the “quatrel | sordiere e eisht substitution of | [i0Ccd to arbitration at this tme|Their plane was wrecked at Quaker| hensive plan for adjudication of indus- | Mangin and Gerard were relieved of|Iuestion of ratifying the peace reald, | hands and feet. In the i certain local unions and their | (ransport plers i Hoboben end Y | because he contends the union leaders| Valley but the two airmen escaped in- | trial disputes through boards of.arbi- | their commands. Senator Walsh, democrat, Massachu- | which spread to the floor, t national unions” acording to an- | cration of charges that radical ecle- |represent only a minority of the an-(JUIY. fii o ak AR an L e sasiohe tad uges, . A, setts, declared in the senate today to |began to move away, and uncement tonight by the Periodical were responsible for hesk cou. |Ployes of the steel corporation. The east_to. west fliers are mo The conference today also took its| American Electric Railway Ascsoci- [vote for the league of nations covenant | fenders, whose conduct was noted AssoCiation of America. ditions were. the autatangine G aion” | ” Whether there is'some new angle to | in§ much Dbetter time than . those|first concrete action in adopting a mo- lation demanded electric railways be|without protecting reservations would | the guards, were hustled out result of the statement e tom it Sutstanding develoD- | ;.. Gompers arbitration proposition | journeying from San Francisco here | tion, offered by Thomas L. Chadbourne, | eliminated from pending legislation | legalize international wrongs and deny | The regulation motion (o adjour ailing in book and job TonEShoromen. Wi walked ot | that might bé:accebtahle ito- the steel| st was said tonight. While Jeutenint]a representative of the public; provid_|before Congress. to “downtrodden and submerged races | was held up after Republican Leader following publications will ccfiande of the officers of their corporation was mot known here. The|Belvin, W. Maynard, the “flying Pur|ing that a committee consisting _of of the world the right to enjoy some|Lodge had made it. the vice president son,” is declared to have L three members from each of the groups | Board of governors of the Interna-|day the blessings of liberty explaining that he wanted to find ou not appear on time. the association | ie 1 uni 2 e |only person in authority at national S: cisco by i re- | announced: Collier's Weekly e e ot R e AT O | Strike hewdquarters todsy was W, Z. e TS e mathine from | oL cmivloyers, labor and the public be |tonal Allied Printing Tradcs Assoel | Senator Walsn, in' - carefully pre- |first what the senate w o_do gy L TR = 2 . witl ke s . b ight, rst m _from | appointed to investlgate e nigh cost |tion entered the New' York printing|pared speech, denounced the Shantung |about the violation of its sianding ru 3 al Review. Cosmopoli-| joublt pay for overtime. Foster, Tae secretary. He said he had| ;;,, west is not expected to arrive| of living. trades controversy Settlement; charged that acceptance of | against applause. ot u'ous.k'e’ci;,,,}:;,""f{f,p?# i l‘:tmen of au‘_ freight requiring ;':g:g;"::‘d"g?dffo‘;'sc:r‘:“lf;"gmgl here until .many . hours later. The proposal for settlement of the s the much-discussed Article Ten gave| Then, quite unexpegtedly, when Sen- e AMetropolithn, . Scribhers| ASiieTage in New Vork harbor was or- | Inston anc i POt Care N She cass| . Colonel Gerald Brandt, whose plane| steel strike, introduced by ~Samuel| Transport Kittery, with 300 marines| the lic to the American traditional pol- | ator Lodge a moment later rencwed hi e aites Cantary Seu & Topoibn | X Stopped early in the day by Wi |0 ‘he arbitration ProDostia, is in in. | Was wrecked yesterday, tonight tele-|Gompers, president of the American|on board, bound for ports in the|icy of helpfulness to the distressed; | motion, Senator Hitchcock of Neb e N. Pollock. marine director of the o . » : graphed Chance M. Vought, chairman| Federation of Labor, and one of the| West Indies, suffered a mishap to| bitterly assailed the “lack of equail(ka, leading the democratic fight fo verybody's Magazine | United Sthtes raiload adminisiration, |competent hands in Wdshington and z bo ite : Of the contest committee of the Amer-| delegates soon after the - eonference i vesentatl Thi : daty ratification, jumped to his Science " Monthly. | This was followed by the announce- |anvihing done there no doubt had the | fcan Fiying club that a broken oil| met im the frst of th day's twe sees | o “IoFInE gear With hat OF any ofher mation " and | With a demand for the aves and T theri ob WLl eS| rocnired e TEarihr it i i b i e e bis forced landing at De- | sions, came as a surprise {o the groups| Fedoral agents and Brookiyn po- |declared that fhrough the whole cove- | There nad been no intimat 1a t trad - gulations, . - | posit, N. Y. » 3 - | representing the public and employ-|lice caused th rrest p s| nant, like u weaver’ - the democrats > preparing rEest trade papers in|aiill in effect, would be issued only to| A telegram, received at headquarters| jed on a steep bank on the last turn|ers. = In offering. the Droposal. Mr.|een on Long Isimmg and in Brocives 5(.3rce',’;*e‘.;“e“d"“p‘u‘:.rpsusihff}s?;,;‘,:tsnr‘;‘:':|u:; S AR T 5 Bt " those able to handle it themselves. tonight from John Fitzpatrick, chair-| 5o the field. Sotanire Dl that Ik b the b a £ s L, & s X § hes cmect of the printing situa | "% ontinustion fo the Sirike, it iwas |man of the national committee, an-| "' (Wi "5y again it there is a plane| STTTPEIT, e it en®d the | for seiling hard_drinks. ain to dominate the world through this | matter of fxing & time for daily 3 = Rail- |, jinted out. would result in freight|nounced that the senate investigation|available,” Colonel Brant's telegram| ing the representatives of froad g journment, and the demand added t s D ves of the railroad| One man was killed, another se For more than an hour senators and | the general excitement. The bells call- ed senators to the chamber, and on ad to postpone indefinitely | LonoiSS . 2 v Pi h o i 5 - vhi gestion at all important terminals |committee would be in Pitsburgh t read. See Colonel Miller (command-| hrotherhoods. ‘he 1, like 11 & " which it planned to intro- 3 A i : 3 . The proposal, like ollgyug] S o 2 X . D © Intro-|;ciween here and Chicago, and prob- |morrow. The national committee isling Roosevelt Field) sure and get an-| others submitted today, under the con- u‘;f,,’"‘;};‘J;dcmdcfim(f:d‘eo:“‘;‘m“’:‘igg ot }:fi?a ‘:;;"’éi‘r‘mgl‘f““.‘?\k‘h" ,fi',’(‘; & sirif Hlio maokon preraiiedl I8 s winter schedule. according to | 251 WSeR here and Chicago, and 2 ; = e X e | 2D13 S cargoes of | prepared, it was said, to lay before|other plane for me, preferably &|vention rules, was referred to the 5 - 3 - = s aE TN Vie eoaiph Peters | ciishable products are piled high on | the senafors much evidence to support| D.H-4. | eneral committee composed of five|*Venu®: West Paterson, N. J. e e L T e e R B R e at because of he printing]iocal plers waiting to be moved, while | the claims’ of the strikers as to the| Lieutenant Ross Kirkpatfick, Who|representatives of each group. It Federal troops and state militiamen | against approval of the Shantums set. | today from n sneaking trip against th could mot publish its | PArtly ‘loaded ships are tied to plers |treatment they have received from v piloted No. 41 which came down ves:|Senerally was believed that the pro-|are proserving order &t points whera | tlement “and the dangers lurking in | treaty in the west, voted with the re wailing to receive their full cargoes.|steel companies and the police au-|terday because of compass trouble atf posal-would be in the hands of this|yisience had th e A THIOId: Mo Tt e o Soanaat 8 e N : Sicamchip companies are required to | thorities in some of the towns of| Vernon, N. Y. Captain Field Kindley,|committee for some time. e o oo h e s vublicane, ot Senator Welshe She & that “three verr large g o i 3 s D Y s - enree very large] roy from $250 to $800 a day wharfaze | western Pennsylvania. : adjutant ;of Foosevelt Field, and Sec-| “’A<" chairman of the public group, el ripple ;The_snecch of Senat e moaat” eq | charges for cach day that the ships| Strike leadefs were greatly interest-ond Lieutenant C. W. ~ MeDermott,| Bernard Baruch, iniroduced the pro:| It was anmounced at Yale all aca-|marr o 7 @ MOre Pronounced out- | third of the day. drew a a ting machinery and paper | A'¢ tied Up at the piers. ed today in the efforts of the Amal-|who Briginally planned to fly an E.E-3| posal for an industrial peace. formu-|demic freshmen would be foréed 10| But it was as aulckly subdued. The | s (6 where he stood, he received ur T e o P2hS™| " President T. V. 0'Connor of the In- [ gamateq_Association of Iron, #ceel | but who now has a D.H-{ said last|lated by A. A. Landon, of Buffally and | ke gymansrem seorcises umee they | stiainy vamas quickly subdued. A2 ol e e o Bl - tcrnational Longshoremen’s unlon to- land in Workers ™ settle the strike|night that they would start from Min-| the plan that a national board of con- | (ake Some form of outdoor Soort. strident volcs of the vice president |divided attention, He quickly clears e nttent bublishers zave the follow. a R i o e g Y o ht ppedicied an early end of the|in plants where thé sssociation has|eola tomcrrow unless ruled out for|ciliation and arbitration be created, d n. -~ |away anl doubt, however, and fr the local union have re- Yic has urged anl loval dele- | agreements.. In some-mills where the Some reason o unless weather conditi- | which was put forward by Gavin M Mgt i e o b coniatio | whh T I e e e B e et patlne P o 3 smrees : : e RO £ : = can y s Ta A TS amtetatls oo ol gates of the union to persuade the men | association has agreements men | tions p 0f SHuEEN icieco B Gferfup the Pro—f,, n It L e ars utierly deTeat | rnater the oIt DRETioat aHoL e e | P e L e rained in their in- 3 = 2 . - 7o return to work Walied out causing the places to shut| =Lieutenant D. Haynes, who smashed| proposals Mr. Baruch explained that he | o ‘ag 1t 15 taneotod Sherations e’ whish mators Soubrgsldent shouted, at | freaty reservation, and, ternational union. while the pressmen K = 4 ~ i e 'n a teday while| i e s have Seceded and| _One sign of weakness on the part|down and throwing Amalgamated men| his Nieuport machine ¥ was merely acting for his group and! ’ e v 2 e e d paper hani O e i L e v Ml e haking a test Might.prepartory to.en-| ot maaey oriliE for his group andihat country will be terminated soon. endeavored to suppress the | his party principles. ruck. These local u o e : S o 4t hour week and an increase | men engaged in the bunkering of coal) “The Amalgamated Association,”| tering "the racewill be i passenger| introduction of the proposals did not " e e 7 314 mer week with duble and triple | 1o¢ army {ransports offered to return [said D. J. Davis, assistant internation-| with Lieutenant McDermott. indicate "either that the Droposals Set! oo on the trenty ta wwalt the mirival| ITALIAN SINGER HELD BY TO DETERMINE FUTURE pas for overtime. to take effect im-|to Work. Their offer probablv will be jal president of that organization, to- forth the chairman’s view or that they|,e’ (o] House who is said to be car- i Peciftes“The international unions|nccepted, it was sald. Meanwhile |day, “must uphold its contracts with| ONE RACING PLANE had the endorsement of the grou; S iy T e, R i IMMIGRATION OFFICIALS OF EUPEN AND MALMEDY « 2d that the men should return to | icaders of the strikers called a meeting | the steel companies. We do not in- FELL INTO LAKE ERIE The proposal for adjustment of la H v > Work and the entire matter be lefr ml omizht ana appolntea a* committec, of |icna ‘to Te¢ tne steel strike inereterel o F oo tm T LT L vor disputes throligh Joint hoaras of| O Pt \ow York, oot a—signor Alessan-| Paris_Oct. 9. —(Havax) nie aret ¢ publishers of o| Gve “to visit the piers and pull out the e a ments. eveland. O. Oct. 9.—Eig] employers and workers in each indus- Y dr o e Chicago Opera Com-|of the German delegation ha B i - R which left Buffalo to- | try with appeal to general boards ap- |, Edward S. Walsh, Superintendent of | pany stood on the boat deck of the|the general secretary of the confe Public Works of New York State, an- men who haven't struck.” Z 2 will attempt to|nine airplane: The Amslgamsted . eamer La France today, arrived from | ence a new note, asking that tf magazines. meanwhile, must suspend v k" : : o o Tonight circulars distributed along | n, i oSG agreements for the|day in the trans-continental air derby| pointed by the president and a final 3 : puslication until the unions ght out| | o0 R ertront by the Marine Tranc: | men cmploved I (hese mdustrics al- | arrived here. The ninth, Number 34| appeal to an umpire also came from | Bounced he Al formaily open ' the| Havre, and sans. His iyric tenor| pichiscite ‘to detefminc the future S iTiiude of Thternctional Allied | poit Workers' Industrial union No. 100 | {houzn they are not members of the|piloted by Lieutenant Alexander M the public group. It was dratted hy|NeW barse coal terminal at Pler 6| voice rose and feil mclodiously in the| ihe district of Eupen and medy Printine Trades Association was de-|ittacked the International officials in |association. Roberts. fell into Lake Erie, off Ashta-| Seeretary of Labor Wilson and was i d poetic . words of Marta’s “I Hear a|which are ceded by the pemce t fined in statement issucd tonight by |an a.ticle ded “Why We Tost the | ““NF " Inis teturned today _from/| bula, Ohio. and Lieutenants Roberts; understocd o have heen endorsed by| . wo oo o o==r i Sales: g o |Belglum, shall take place under oom- ; . president of Inter- | Last Sikike P ¥ ] A , Ohio o o ol i st i ot n | offcials discovere . ook him | League of tions and i natioual Tvpographical Union. h xt Ome. The article reaches the|igreement with the workers for 5 8 S onten PHE forwards ng plens todap Police Department caused by the|to Eilis Isiand to await decision by |neither Belgian nor German me gy 3 Y. spent today in | conchision that “we bave the- WrONg |soctat = ded T getting. ] Vieinity. - ns here today. spent today sociation haq succeeded In gettlig &} "6 Yhoge arriving today. two eon-|Chairman Harry A. Wheeler expiained strike passed the civil service exam-| Washington authorities on his case,| By the peace treaty, the Belg onference w e e L. ¥, P - | form of jabor or: izatinn” a adve- i 8 2 s c comterence with Gerge L. By e | s o b e ot AN ey |Sesumption of & operations al the | yiticq ‘thelr Journes to Byran. OBio.| that five different intercsis, were in. | inations. which is a teshnical Violation of the|thorities in the two distr : on and heads of the other intern sricero ™ with the “rank and fle rul- | oo ather In & masas{ They were Captain J. O. Donaldson. in| cluded in the group and that this fact SEEs L | immigration laws because the Italian|open registers, in which nhabit T 152" The Transport Workers' union 15 | coanting there” ha. sald, -and {od!# S-E-5. and ~Lieutenant Alexander| had delayed framing of the groups| Admiral Ugo, of the Italian battle- | singer failed to has his passport vised|ants —might record within the six ott's met condemns the |an I. W. W. nrzanization. I ™ the nesosiation had aj Pearson, Jr. driving a De Haviland:4.| suggestions for the conference. ship Conte de Cavour, declared he was| by an Amerizan consul hefore he sail- [ mont fter the treaty is in aff cadership of Pressmen’s Union No. 51 e e O i "the. company and. was) . TWo others. Number 29, piloted by| Mr. Wheeler and a number of his|Willing to transport to Italy’s war or-|ed for the United States desire to see the whole or part ¢ - unkiin Press Feeders’ Union |OFFICERS ARE GAINING S o hexotinte a working agroe-| Captain Harry Smithand Number 39.| assistants were nol present at the|phans clothing, food and other Christ-| In Bologna, he said he took the territory returned to German sever- New York local, for “the in- CONTROL OF LONGSHOREMEN | ilng o mesoats tside (he ranks of| driven by Lieutenant 1. H. Manzel-| afternoon session of the conference|mas prescnt. word of the French consul who told| eignty. chaos in the ing busi- :‘;‘i"zs:;;nfm': el taie: . MANGEE gmn.‘\zhlch arrived vesterday, also nng sent wo‘;t! that they were at work| . it i " V,;lm lhat.nl)hnu'::h”nn-rn was = mo The note asks that ¢ iscit tatemen expresse| New Y - - omé cknElon, 2 NE. | Geparted. and expected to report at tor WS rrival of 1. ritish troops, form- | American consu here. verything | instead, should be con nd e e et N T | Inteema o Qb 9—Oficers of the|The men acceptéd our proposal and| “Picileiant Cooncl H. E. Hartley,| session.s 2 OTTOW S Ly ng Dart of the international detach- | would be all right rigorously secret provisions and com pe that “t . i 2 { | work was resumeq in that plant 0~ who s driving Machine Number 11| The prospect tonight was that fol-|ment to take over the police service| Tonight Swgnor Bonel was reduced|plains of several atiempts made by “Hefé T am a prisoner,” he| Belgian authorities to influence th late emselves with the In- hi i Iermational Printing Pressmen’s -and :rr’;g:‘inh:'m“aorfvm::x%fi?:g s arjame o . ¢ the|® German Fokker, and’ who arrived |lowing the introduction of the em-|at Budapest, after departure of Ru-|to Drose o is Gililinted with the A F. of L.” ing < 4 S35 | Thomas - X e is installing a tank which will in- | recess for ten days or two weeks to = me out.” | of voters desiring German sove affiliated meeting of strikers in Tammany Hall|ihe Brier Hill Steel Company, the{ crease the fiving ability of his ma-|allow the general committee and suen| According to a Berlin report, Geme-| Immisration office ated that his = Ll lebiscite by intim 3 = in inducing the men to place their case | Western Reserve sheet and tin pla hi = v t = £ . v Soltz, i bhably will led hi NEW YORK PIERS AND |45 ToduclE SEFE s [0 plate thaly cane | Weeats L | chine twenty-five minutes to _two|special committees as may be named ral von der Goltz, in command, of [ case probably wi tied In his| ADVOCATES GURFEW LAW IN | Bt 4 mill and the De Forest sheet and tin| hours and ten minutes time to take action on the material be-| German troops in Courland, declared | favor tomorrow. o TERMINALS CONGESTED | Hlement e g fuible, Nowever. | plate plant of the :Republic Iron ani| | Lieutenant Colonel T. S. Bowen, it. " P€7 I e would remain there to protect Ge:- | NEW. NORISIGO R vBU Gy GiRte Ty o £ in tis tion k¥ urn pend- | Steel company in the Mahoning d driving Number 23, which also arriv- . Charles W. FEliot, president| many against the Bolsheviki. STATEMENT BY PRESIDENT OF New York. C s e oh New rk. Oct. 5.—Congestion of ' ing negotiations. trict, will probably be started Satut-|ed yesterday, was forced to remain| emeritus of Harvard univere: e POLISH CITIZENS' COMMITTEE|to ring tonish o aversY otF = - 3 day.’ Mr. Davie said The Amalga|here tonight because of engine trouble. | representative of the public, (00K v Printing firm of Marti B. Brown, sl | gt demATet Mva Elig o mated has 'agreements W es The ‘following machines, arriving| orous exception 3 “of the | Which had a contract for printing the IR ~ Sdwi L e P rH. SV % CARDINAL MERCIER AT INVESTIGATING CASE OF ‘| plants. . Where Amalgamated men | here today, remained tonight: | Stoike ‘losue. inte the cobrmaon Bf e | llots for the coming . clection . in|, Now, York, Ot 9._Bdward S Wit-| Grady. »Nek Yori's fitth deputy. p DINNER GIVEN BY K. OF C. HAZING AT ANNAPOLIS | voluntarily went on strike, Mr. Davis| No. 108, Lieutenant G. B. Newman: | denounced the group method of pro-|New York, granted striking printers ' Fork aaciton Hore frdm | nisht ot e — & ——— said, they did so tprough a misunders| No. 37, Lieutenant H. C. Norris; No | cedure. because, he said. it promotes|a:44-hour week and wage Increase| poland today on the steamship La|law as a r Sor inomonatite =R New York, Oct. 9—The hero-priest| Annapolis. Md., Oct. 9.—A ° gtate- |standing of orders. 32 P. Roullett; No. 45, Lieutenant|combat over “old conditions.” will be arbitarted. e it 20 Potish: ctldiors. who | youns: 8 3 Shounbed et s+ Belgium, Desideratus Cardinal|ment by Midshipman Henry C. Weth-| Efforts are being made to open in-|T. Hynes; No. 14, Lieutenant Colonel| Declaring that the substitutign of served in the French army. Poland, he| ing last summer women detectives lercicr. tomight was culogized 1is|erstinerstine of Philadelphia. in which | dependent plants in the Pittsburgh|John M. Reynolds, and Number 5,|confidence for distrust. of good will| Cambridge University proposes 0| 3:id had anm army of 130000 men i | had tuken home from Goney Tand 25 personification of ome of thelhe denies that iodine drunk by him |district having Amalgamated agree- | Lieutenant W. C. F. Brown. % | for_enmity. of co-operafion for antag- fconfer the degree of Doctor of Laws| vided amons the Ukranian, Russian | girls between the azes of 12 and 18 creates: imAMuenccs which had led|on Monday was due to hazing, marks|ments, but closed by the strike of| Lieutenant Newman and Captain A.!onism. between, capital/and labor, are|on Admiral Sims, the King of Italy,| ynd Geeman fromis. The Doles, ha ears because of delinquency. . \merica irow her weight into the |ed the first development in connection |other steel workers, Mr. Davis said. |H. Page. his passenger, narrow| the fundamental necessities Involved |General Diaz the Italian Generalissi-| ad. were determined (o stamp ot Bol- | Under the operaiion of the cu “les of civilization against the ad-|with the investigation which Rear| The Amalgamated Association is the|caped injury, landing just as their sup-|in the solution of present industrial | mo. General, Allenby, Admiral Sir John | Shavism and placed no confidence in|law parents would be able to ik vametb . foe." Admiral A. H. Scales, superitendent of oldest of the unions lnvatveq in the PI¥ of gasoline and oll was exhausted. | problems. John (D, Rockefeller, Jr. aJellicos and Admiral Hall. the Germans. D trrul sy on et e This te was paid the nation's|the Uniteq States naval academy,|strike and approximately 65 per cent. i representative of the public, presented — R againg | weltare, Mrs. O'Grady said, adding e AiTiam P "Tarkin, overseas|started today, fo Bet at. the. bottom|of ihe orsamized ‘steel workers are|EASTBOUND AND WESTBOUND |[a resolution providing recognition of| An attempt was mads to wreck the | sereior potind oiloms against —thelwelfare Mrs: . ady, rector for the Knights of Columbus. |of the reports that there has been an|members of that body, it is said. FLIERS MEET IN NEBRASKA /! (e princinle of representation in in-|plant of the Americas Sheet and Tin-| by Mr. Witkowski. * investi- | ported her in recommendation of the < a dinmer given by the Knights, and |outbreak of hazings Txcept at Yorkville, Ohio, where a Bt | @ustry under which the employes shall | plate Co. at McKeesport, Pa, when a|gated thesé reports,” S il et “hich was the culminaion of anj The fact thAt three fourth year|tin plate mill of the Wheeling Stcel| Chicago, Oct. 9.—Eastbound and|)-ican eifective voice in determining missile, belicved to be’a bomb, was|affirm that the 4ew Is as safc in Po- AEh e e Trul day im which thé —smerable|classmen are:patients 'in the nava:|and Iron Company was shut down bé- | westbound fliers met in the air at|their own terms of employment and|thrown on the roof of the Shipping|iand as he io 1 New Vori siter S ce of the church had been the{hospital led to the report: cause of a strike of Maborers, there was | North Platte. Neb.. today in the | their working and living conditions. |department of the buildina. — o ‘ recipient of unique homor in the| oo o no ‘notable change in the Strike sit- |irans continental refiability race, and [ — U.-S. SOLDIER FIRED AT STATLER CHAIN OF HOTELS A w siness e an-1 1 ict. Carnege | tonij g 2 ? - i e s & oite. e of MEN 1N BALLOON: ANCIDENT |Biost Crbany o & -siktetenti tOORY| toa *Hying. pacson- wgs ac Cheyone, FAVORS MILEAN'S IDEA OF |HARVARD TO ADD FOREIGN FROM AMBUSH IN GARY | New York, Oct. 7—Establishment-of ommerce was suspended while mor said that an average of five hun-|Wyo. hundreds of miles ahead of_the USTRIAL LEAGUE OF PEAS= TRADE TO ITS CURRICULUM | = o * == | uaq of| ZPonus and thrift system for the T presentative business men| Bivelve, N. J. v i ant|dred men daily are returning to work |other westbound aviators, while Cap- — - ,_ n . 9.—A squad of| 000 employes of the Statler Chain ol 3 reects to him Lot s e T, &ty SpLieutenant | Ared BoR Groduction is increasing. |tain Lowell H. Smith, well in the lead | Hartford, Oct. § _The following bul-| Cambridge, Mass. Oct. 9.—The es- | United’ States soldiers in an automo- | Hotels in New York, Buffalo Cleve Bid e narrowly escaped drowning in a eu.|The Jones and Laughlin plant, the|of.the contingent from the west, wasletin, with quotations from Senator | tablishment by Harvard university of |bile was fired upon from ambush to-|land, Detroit and St.’ L : s RS BY rious balion accident which occurred |big independent concern in this dis- |at Omaha for the night. McLean's proposal for an industrial |a professorship in foreign trade, and day in Gary nounced here tonight by . EEECTION: BF. Senics today off NG Jersey shore. s Claimeq to be workirg almost| Maynard, piloting Machine No. 31,|“League of Peace” has bheen sent to|the selection of Prof. George B. Roor-| The attack, believed to have been| The bonus plan provid DAUGHTERS OF ISABELLA| 'The buiiohn dropped into Maurice |normal by company representatives.ileft Chicago at 09 a. m. Central|the members of the Manufacturers’|bach to fill the new position, were an- [made by a detachment of radicals, | payment to all emploves & g river cove it noon and became en- | Strikers, however, declare the plant is|time. and flew 886 miles today. tsIAsEndSflon of Conmmecticut. Inc.: Dounran today, SrclsieokiNourbach, o | 8e ;‘f;fé:;‘x‘;;dg e o NOlooi800 orless ayear checks Providence. R. I, Oct. 3.—Mrs. Mary o B . 3 i 2 resierday | Gentlemen: Laws to protect the|graduate of Colgate, was professor s awn as Sergeant Ma- | 4 per cent. to § per cent ovidence. R ¥ | snaried in fish nets. operating. short handed. miles more than he, covered vesterday = i S FCiws o L 0N DEGCSRTE o) SEASSIgEAnUIMA - [ per cant. 10 & per | in sailing from New York to Chicago.|people of the United States from the | commercial geozraphy at Ufiversity of 3 h X d But his time, chiefly due to adverse |disastrous consequences of a_ suspen- | Pennsylvania for several years. In 1915 |members of the Fifty-Ninth Infantry | The thrift plan is sion of railroad service through strikes | he studied economic and commmercial | Patrolled the streegs of the south end|more than §1500 a vear. pro jof the steel town. The four ,~hu\~J\hv"n a joint fund into which the com- hose Booth of New Haven. Comn, Wes| In an endeavor to free the basket,| John Moskus. ,secretary of the Na- regent of the|which was fioating on the surface, the |trona district, reported that the Wes: 5 la at the ninth|ajrmen cut ionse the bag which, with | Penn Steel Comipany at Brackenridge.|weather conditions, which in one form here today. Mrs.[five men clinging to it. floated over|after attempting to operate, had clos- |or another extended almost from coast are favored by Senator McLean of|conditions in South America under the - : tocth has held this office since 1907.|Port Elizabeth and Millville. They |ed down. He also said that the Alle-|to coast, was slower. He landed at|Connecticut, a member of the senate|auspices of the Carnegie Foundatlon. |Went wild. _ pany to put a dollar for every ome regent, Mrs. Mary F. Davitt, Lonz-|dropped oft. uninjured. Sheny Sieel Company would be closed | Cheyenne at 6.25 p. m. Mountain time, | committee in charge of railroad leg- | After service with the shipping board | Sergeant Schrich, followed by his|deposited by employc Other national officers follows: vice| Meanwhfle the basket. ~containing | tonight. ~Not a man has returned to|having covered a total distance of 1,-|islation, according to letters received | during the war, he became chairman |Men, leaned from the autciobile and T meadow, Mass: secretary, Mrs. Biary|iLeutenar: Little and Chief Boat- |work at West Leechburg” he said. |696 miles in two days. from the senator in correspondence|of the federal committee on revision | Charged the clump of bushes from be-|) FAGUE OF NATIONS 5. Corrigan, Chicago; advoeafe. Mrs.|swain's Mate O'Clare. drifted out to| Secretary Foster said that new| Captain Smith. after struggling|With this association. As his state-|and re-classification of trade statis- hina whidh the attagk was made but CAMPAIGN IN SWITZERLAND Anna E. Kay New Haven Conn.:|sea. They were picked up at 6 D. m., |“favorable” reports haq been received {through three mountain snowstorms,|ments on this and related industrial | tics. their assailants' had escaped. o Cimneellor Miss. Lena O'Connor, Wor- | by a coast guard vessel. rrom omestead. He faid it was|and over three mountain ranses,|issucs are considered both timely and ——=1L cester, Mass.; treasurer, Miss Agnes F. Tot “uniikely that the Homestead |reached Omaha at 7.20 o'clock tonight, of general interest, they are presented | GREAT DAMAGE BY STORM ew Haven: outer guard, B v ed down within a|having made 852 miles today without | herewith for your information. 3 A L T T His total distance since the| Referring to the section of the Cum- ALONG LABRADOR COAST Connorsville, 1L; di- » AMBROSE CHANNEL |fey; dayes the union’s|start at San Francisco. is 1.460. mins railroad bill providing for peace- THREE PRISONERS ESCAPED tee for the League of Nat FROM LITCHFIELD JAIL | ranging to hold a nation-wide Litchfield, Conn, Oct. 9.—Three years, Mrs. Mabel H. He refused to discuss 3 ! : ago: director for two ingt e hiones | ““The remarkable flights of Maynard|ful and prompt settlement of labor| St:Johns, N. F. Oct. 9.—Great dam- | priconere Wade their escape from. th brense . ien) nt s Miss Marceila MecGraw, Kam- |pNew Xork Oct 9_The Gaslic|plens for bringing i and Smith for two days have made |disputes, Senmator McLean wrote: agel aloNENER S Birallor Rt Herom & | Tt s connes ol Tty Tanas e bt | Meetings will be neld in al T Prince has been rammed by ancther B emia) tace & Teete! T catacelly hons thit this. Brovis-| three:dave: storm iast wetk was rer | LAcuicld county jail late today by pry- i convention will _conclade its| yessel In Ambrose Channel. according event in this country. Maynard was|ion, or some provision that will ac-|ported by the Labrador mail steamer | window. The men used pulmbers’ tools| Tn snite of the‘selection of a four day session tomorrow. | e atiic Pihe o oo onisht | OWISS MIBRION HAS unable to duplicate his _sensational | complish the purpose sought. will re- | Sagona on her arrival here today. |which had been left in che bathroom. | city. Geneva, s the heidd ¥ e e B T . ARRIVED IN BOSTON |speed of better than two miles a min-|main in tbe bill Seven small vessels were .wrecked. | Sherift Tugkington notified the author- | the leagiic, there has been Some s el bies TRe < e for the 810 miles from Mineola to| “We all realize that the establish- | Their craivs were rescued and brought | jijes in. Surroupding towns to- waten | Sition S Swiiseriand L T s steamer Maracaibo reported she wWas| L . (. g _The Swiss mission |Chicago, but increased his distance|ment of @ league of peace between |here by the Sagona. i T e R o e n s rad A PAIR OF VOCALISTS| standing by. 4 tudies in North today in spite of adverse winds. His|capital and labor that will refer dis- e 2 t e | t H Sk 3 The Gaelic Prince has been beached | for economic studies in North America, = ave headed for a woods northwest of | fact that it might conceivabl outside of Buoy 9, accerding to a third|comprising seventy-five members rep- | closest follower was at Des Moines |puted questions to disinterssted and OBITUARY. the Jjail. certain circumstances require White Piaine, N. Y. Oct. %—The|message. resentative of- business, professional | tonight. I S B Wh | the (i dae Wi Sophia Bledace Horiick. The men who escaped are Jerry Gen- | abandonment of Switz d White Plains police today issued an| The U. S. S. Antigone, which ram-|and civic interests in the Swiss re- £ - thay e e "' = netto, sentenced from Watertown to | tional absolute neutr ¥ . 5. . : a. fe_ | $4,300 CASH SEIZED IN Such tribunal will be final. is of $ital| Greenwich. Conn. Oct. 9.—Mrs. So- : : ot Y polofmnstem Y, for two gags latest models—| med the Gaclic. Prince.’ reported by public, arrived here today. The mis- | # R Bt RODL. “HODH | EBarea: AtiiA s phid Bledsod Horidk. who Whe sisr. | J0TVe o Year' for h'érnin.vn assaul o en® the three days|wircless she had not been dabaged|sion is to make its headquarters in this T e e ther ant editor of,the Contury Mxazine for | mon anoiiy fnd, Henry !‘:\:-‘c;:;;:r, FRENCH SEAMEN ARRIVE city until next Sunday, meantime mak- TO MAN THE LEOPOLDINO concert staged by a pair | much_herself. Oct..9—Six men| “My idea is that policemen and [ twenty-five Years, and had written ex- | court for assault and rebbers .| ing visits to Worcester and other man- | Medford, Mass. ts Leing held for the grand g . S tas|those who are employed by the great | tensively, died here today. at th FURS 25 TO 80 PER CENT| The visitors were S Qunch U | e hnd Ward ‘Society and Medford [directly under the control of the gov-|She was born in Springfield. 0., $3|EXPECT PRESIDENT WILSON'S merchant officers and 150 seamen ar of Providence, R. I, -— several banks 1IaY: ihe rmamher. | police on an alleged betting pool at a|ernment should realize that their first | years ago. RECOVERY WILL BE SLOW, rived here today aboard the steamship -7 Pridgepors,| New York, Oct. 9—Increases of|‘tendered them By JShe cRamber of 0 mess race meeting in Combination |duty is to the public; they should unm-} ! Rochambeau from Havre to take pos- are the somgbirds. They sang|from 25 to 80 per cent. over spring|{P™NIIICe 810 S0 ‘minister. we | e A srowd gathered about|derstand*when they enter the service|—— ———————————————| "Washington, Oct. 9.—Although Pres. | session of the steamship Leopoldino =g .5 arrested, sanz | prices prevailed at the fur action here | I Sulzer, tac BW Was ome e ent. where the arrests were made|that their employment is conditioned |good and just wages but if the rajl- |ldent Wilsen continued to improve to- | formerly the Hamburg-American linér they were being bogked and|today. While rabbit and silver fox|©f the speakers. an dthere was a display of revolvers|upon the right of the public to refer |road employes are permitted to paras |day his physicigns indicated that they | Bluecher. — The "Bluecher was in a anz working. one man shifts, evir|vied for first honors, rabbit _showed in o demonstration against tWe officers|disputes =s fo wages, to impartial and |lyze the transportasion service. = it |expected his recovery to progress very | Brazilfan port at the outhreak of the since thew were ushered into their|the greatest increase, although silver; CHANGE IN OWNERSHIP OF but after Chief John Welsh of the po- | disinteresied tribunals and that the |means untold suffering and death to|slowly and that it might be a consid- | War and was awarded to the [ ch cells. Neither threats by the police |[fox brought the highest price for one HARTFORD SUNDAY GLOBE | liae had warned the loaders that the|decision of such tribunal shall be fi- |thousands of innocent women and |crable time beforc they would permir | Sovernment of_Jtimnpent incarceration or equally [skin—3685. = | officers were armed. the prisoners|nal. It is just as much the duty of |children to say nothing of the irre- |him to resume work. e S profane threats from fellow prisoners — s Hartford, Conn., Oct. 3.—Announce- | were taken away without trouble. the transportation systems of the[parable financial loss to the country Rear Admiral Grayson. the presi-| MAXCY RESIGNS AS DEAN lynchig has bee able to silence| FIVE SENATORS TO_VISIT ment was made today that Alexander | Samuel English of sGranite Statecountry from the president of the road Cvery candifl patriotic railway |dent’s personal phvsician, would make OF WILLIAMS COLLEGE rem SCENES OF STEEL STRIKE | Troup, publisher of the New Haven | Park, New Hampshire, was held in|down to/ the brakeman to prevent|employe must realize he is serving the |no vrediction as to when Mr. Wilson i T . union, has purchased the stock of [ cash bonds of $1.000 and each of the|death by starvation as it is the duty|public and that the interest of the |might return to his desk but said it Williamstown, Mass., Oct. 9.—Prof. Sibiais Narohing On Ri Washington, Oct. 9—Five members| Thomas J. Spellacy and United States | others, Daniel Bliss of Portland,|of the policeman to prevent death by |public overshadows all others and |would not be soon if he followed the | Carroll Lewis Maxcy resigned as dean ns Marching On Rig of the senate labor committee, headed | District Attorney John K. Crpsby in | Thomas L. Watson of Medford, Geo.junprovoked assault. when he enters that service he should [advice of those in attendance upon|of Williams college today, but will' re- Tondon, Oet. 9 —The Germans are|by Senator Kenyon, of fowa chair-|the Hariford Sunday Globe. thereby | Brown of Boston, dohn F. Johnion o1] “I have always been in favor of the|le willing to agrce not to conspire|him. The president is most anxious main at the college as professor of marehing on Riga, according to a dei- | man, left Washington tonight for|securing nearly entire. ownegship of | Rochester, N. H. and John Shea, of|cizht hour day where the industry |with his fellow-workmen In' defiance [to get back into the-swing of affairs | rhetoric. The trusiees elected George pateh 1o the Daile Mail from itx Hel- | Pittsburgh, where the investigation | the Globe. John F. Dennis, editor and |‘Philadelphia. furhished = $300. honds.|can survive under its application and government itself, provided he|however. and it is with difficulty that| Fdwin Howes, professor of ancient \mmEfors. Fiiland, correspondent dated lof the sierl stfke authorized by the | manazer of the Globe. will becom® | They are charzed with promoting a|l have always been in favon of collec- [may take his grievance to an impartial |he is persuaded to remain in confine- | languages at Williams since 1905, te Sk A _ genate will be cosmtinued. _ | president of the new company. _ - lottery and betting on horse racing. [tive bargaising ard the payment of ' tribunal” ment. o succesd him ey deaus St el SRS Lossraed e . e )

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