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TWO CENTS VOL. LXI—NO. 243 v oome " POPULATION 29,919 WICH, CONN. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1919 14 PAGES—104 COLUMNS PRICE MAYBE TRANS - CONTINENTAL| ot reme '* ! =JUN! H i ; King George Signs Tm:y. | - ¢ The document ratifiod by him has been : s atees ol Rmsmber 80 Y B S E ! 5 \ SENATORS HAD BUSY DAY German Forces Failed In At-| Deadlock In Committee OVer| .. ,iiion Germans and thousands UViv R 4 i INVESTIGATING STEEL STRIKE| tempt to Bomb Riga From| Labor’s Proposal to Arbi- ot Austrians are waiting opportunity | Lieut. Maynard Leads the Westbound Contingent, With Cap-| _Fitisbursh. Pa, oct. 10—senators| .Tanks and Airplanes. trate the Steel Strike. : Reports from Sicily state that the | Direct Charges Made By George L. Berry, President of the In . ‘ investigating the steel strike put in & > 35| € Behind—Ma busy aay i s Copenhagen, Oct. 10. — German| Washington, Oct. 10.—Deadlock town of Riegi; in the sulphur mining . P . , : : tain H. C. Drayton 100 Miles or More aynard | busy day in every i e, theTia: | troops under General Von der Goltz,|-the Committse of (Fifteen, ot the|district, has been seized Dy rebellious ternational Printing Pressmen and Assistants’ Union - 453 eterinined ; T sl together with Russians under Colonel | “steering committee” over lal ro- | peasants. . _ 3 N : e :D th to Reach San Fi Before Sunset To- Culliay” Slomant o Rk Homay of g o R Wl 5y i b on e e e otk Sy The Five International Printing Trades Unions Stand 3 Of Eastbound:Gro s B SIF ek O trilce | thirty kilometers' from a and | brought about adjous olish statesmen report that with T g 2 I , ; e up, Captain L. H. Smith Has | mili work ith Dlant superimenaents, |occupied Schlotsk. which is” outside | the Nutional Industrial Conference | the approach of winter Poland’s army compromisingly With the Fair Employes of New York Been Overtakken By Two Rivals—Fifth Fatality of the|2nd held informal caucuses . with |ihe Demarcaton line. according to aluntil Tuesday. In the meantime (he|of more than a half million men is in Y & 2 = Y rikers in the back streets of Home- |Teport lasued by the Lettish buresu gt | ‘steering, committes” ' Wl _ROU. Jla sad plight Employing Printers Are Determined to Present a Unit . Race Occurred Yesterday Aftern: When orth stead and Clairton. iga. % o - - i p Ture W K:IL ¥ shie S W B Kenyon ‘aaid, they wanted | _The sepucts odde ki b aWee S S B e conference| Tpe Vermont Teachers! Association Front Against the Strikers—Longshoremen’s Strike 4 t0 be aure T s was repulsed with sansuinary losses. | Wl 2 g _lin resolutions adopteq at the annual : McClI as at Buffalo. ; car both sides. and | Wi T€PS SCT WU Meneral Von . Der| . Adjournment.came after the confer-| [ UeSRIBLIONS adobied at the annudl New York Is Spreading—40,000 Men Now Idle. voluntecer and voluble interpreters : e Chicago, Oct. 10—Interest in the had covered 733 miles since leaving|™&d€ It casy for ‘the Toregin-born ele- | Goltz include Imperial German troops | ence J‘n“‘imfe’fs’“é‘:m‘;’eaé’!&';‘?fi:"m"r' Ncreasing teachers’ pay. ot e comtinente i rave ac| St Paul Neb. gnimiles since 1eaVINE|ments among the strikers to ge: heard. | With tanks ang airplanes. saps the D e a1 - E New York, Oct. 10.—The st great trans tal air Drayton had sartey foorring: Caplain| "4t Homestead, just before the party | TePOrt. Which adds that the Germans| the principl 4 fayer should | Roland S. Morris, United States am-|lockout of pressmen and feeders in{granted a 14 hour w om Bles Moines tattempted to bomb Riga but were re-| affirming that “no._employel bassador to Japan arrived at Tokio|New York, which was followed by the foma ral hundred com- || ONGSHOREMEN'S STR ke andjnever zo back to we x e close of the third day centered to- A Other ostBoTns. Tr oy arrived, there was an exchange of . ¥ en' jor S of Baeuleiieoe B, W one at Buchanan, Mich. ane at Still.| Workman, but the committee did not| The Letts claim that their losses| Sroubs of men Who are 980 M2 T confer with ‘Admiral Kolchak. positors and the suspension of a larze EW R ic “or Ca; L. H. Smith pace setter r;‘-m‘ck—»eland, and others at Buffalo and !nigg‘?’fbl:v]fraca’s. N 5 BRITISH AND FRENGH Quite a stic in the conference and| An explos ‘r‘."on o°,,°‘l‘1,'e"flei’;'w§'fi‘»2§"fi.‘22 of n.nm;ml ulr(ul:fiyl:on,i Ll N e o he contingeni from tne west, either| castern points. ills of the Carnegie com- as consi by ¢ the dele- | tank e f a new phase tonight when di- [ New York, Oct. oF ‘wehom can oach his Gestimaiion to: |, OF dhe othes Wektirness, - dastbount;y DAty visited at Dugtnessiang Syome: WARSHIPS CLEAR ACTION| Was considered by B0me Oland taken|tiver at Philadolphia. Two workmen | rect charges were made by George L. |WOn's sirile. by v erow. winathe fite Donors i the | Licutenant T 8 Worom bt ipound, | Ciead, ofifelals WoulaiBaRH e Chat oaly Bate s el 3 Gary, chairman | Were killed and ssvénteen burned. | Berry, president of the Internationai| NeW York has been vir ross country flight. | ported at Rock Island, Ills.; Lieutenant|? Small number of men were on strike.; Ccpenhagen, Oct. 10.—British and| ¢ (o United States Steel Corporatio; # 2 Printing Pressmen and Assistants’ |A04 48 @ result of Captain Smith, however, no longer| H. E. Queen planned to mae Des|At Clairton, however, the senators | French warships in the -Harbor of | 01 Si& [heed, BOUCE SRS CRIAPTSART King Alfonso will leave Madrid for Union, " that the trouble originated |Men are | decan ak eads the eastbound group, for| Moines for the night; Major John|Were told that 1500 men out of 5.000 | Riga have cleared for action, accord- | grg Paris and London on October 18 or 19| with “Dolshevist leaders who ., are | BTEL e i i wo of hi als, Lieutenant E. C. Kiel | Bartholf left North Platte for St. Paul, | hormall employed remained out.|ing to a dispatch from Riga to the!®'&ip. Lrinciples enunciated in the|under the name of Duke of Tolede. |committed to a definite policy of revo- |Pationd A ind Major Carl Spitz overiook nim| Neb., and Lieutenant Paul Richter. | Sirikers in the street meetings with |Letting Information bureau. on ac-| q.tiaration of the emplovers include: | The queen will not accompany him,|jution. Major Berry further charged |#E411 onstw ate today a an. Ohio, where the| Machine -No. 65, was last ihe senators denied these claims and |count of the attack by German troops B “Figh of stri £ that these leaders have inaugurated o |00 {he > - e - Acceptance of the xighi of SUike 07| voung Turks, under the leaders campaign of terrorism” and that men | *om » one loyal to the international unions are 0 either| Rawlings, Wyo. prepari in polyglot fashion assertel that many |under the command of Gen. Von derf o 1 £ preparing to reach at many 1 lockout, excepting in the case of gov-| Young Turks, under the leadership being assaulted by scores. Green River or Salt Lake City for the | {housands of men were missing from |Goltz upon the Letiish army defend- e Soposition to syile o ¥ G SRS L T e ination of the Armenian race after rio remained for the night. ered f »f the three, good fortune aitending hem. mizht easily first reach the fin- | night. Lieutenant Worthington, fourth|the scene of usual duties. ing Riga. & e B a ckouts, insist- - . h ac Mineola. L. L. New York, |of the eastbound fliers, stopped at| Chairman Kenyon at Homestead| = . So b Dbt K Aian of manasement | the ‘withdrawal of the British troops.| ~ine Bolshevist leaders,’ a formal|ing which it too c whench westhound men started. | Green River, Wyoming, today, the|broke his party up into details of one, | LITTLE PROGRESS MADE BY i directing industry: emphasis of — statement_Tssued by Mujor Berey dc- | Chaiman Williim 2 Maypard, the “fiving |only aviator yet to stop therc as it| Which resulted in each senator gather- MINERS' WAGE CONFERENGE| shop unions as opposed to the indus-| Observance of the 100th anniversary |clared, “have announced the following |Dresent earni parsen” whose matchless flight across| had been agreed to abandon that point|ing a crowd running up into hundreds PR O obosed by organized|Of the founding-of Norwich University | principles: first, that they favor rev- | ¥tcamship companic for three days has|hecause of weather, conditions yester-| 2l almost every front porch where he| philadelphia, Oct. 10.—No material|labor; and a declaration that co-oper-|Obened with a meeting of the alumnl|olution; second, that they will not en-|to th ms t S (k. ioniEEE|day. stopped. Senator Sterling of South | progress was made today at the first|ative relations between capital and la- | association and a special military ex-}ter into contracts with the employers; il 117 e it im o :dcr:;::y.%m,gi CJ:.;‘,T:‘.‘F'”H EATRERR e o ‘Dzko wit‘l;‘ a chstler of younzsters | session in.this city of the joint wage|bor should be worked out In Individ- | hibition. l};‘xrd. lh};u“l};u ('h'inrm:\nl of the work e RISsou: Captat - yton hanging on coattail, was t: into | cont e o 1 ral G o | i . s, Wi rd to e shops shall be the mechanical direc however | K . T Mo | Conference of the Central Competitive | ual establishments, with due regard 10| .,.guration of the proposed: direct|ior and the: distributor of the profis |the questic e oo second, 100 m or more Tosoopd. 100 nules or morel TRANS-CONTINENTAL AIR RACE | (W0 or three houses in bne block. while | coal eld, embracing Ohio, Indiana, - | local facto The | lines of entire industires as suggested freight and passenger service between|of the industry. All these so-called n | one man acting as usher would observe |linois and western Pennsylvanis New York and Brazll and. the River|principles: are Bolshevist polic Utah miles from Min-| Buralo . 2 s, iy | a1 each door: “Here's the way some of | des Thie o reor a5 his night stop. having left| o QU Y The iransiconcimental it Judge Gary's high Daid-Rep Bas 10 | bk e adioarned e Buffais| -High " industrial eMctency” was|Plate has been postponed unifl early | conatitute an endewvor to establish the | ake City at 530 p. m. Moun-|race Gocurred Rere . this. " afternoon | IVe." T o itna hect. &gDac. | stated by the employers. ias’ he|next year. Lenine and Trotsky policy in Amer- | O'Connor, e i, He planned 1o Start from|ghen Plane No. 24, a Le Pere, piloted| Senator Kenyen called in a stenogra- | ently remained unbroken. At the con- | touchstone of sound industrial reta- - je vico presid : Shdprelomorrow more determined 10/by Major A. L. Sneed crashed on|Pher (o take down some statements |clusion of the day's session Ellis| tiona. The postal zone rate system was| Major Berry declared that the five|longzshorome 5 _Irancisco, 518 miles dis-| Curtis field and his observer. Worth | Made by Mrs. Joseph Pentedi. wife of | Searics, spokesman for the miners,| After receiving the proposals of the|explained by John C. Coons, first as-|international printing trades —unions|whith —he ¢ st gt < - D. McClure, was killed. Major Sneed |2 husky Hungarian milt foreman, who | and Thomas Brewster, of Hlinois. rep- | employers. the last of the three groups | sistant postmaster-general ~at _ the!would stand uncompromisingly —withmade = Hoth o : aarhc parson” continued to hoid 120 | suffered slightly from shock but was|Dad refused te strike. She had been|resenting the operators, declared that|represented in the conference to re-|closing session of the Maine * Press|the fair employers of New York. Isar-|demufyne @ v ntage over Captain Smith and otherwise unhurt. isited, she explainéd, by a committee | {he conference had not “cleared the|port, an hour's recess was taken to|Association. ler in the"day the empioying prinfers |to abide by the ¢ to n executive session reaffirmed their| ) w0 companions from the west, who | e of strikers 4 o T e | MeClure's death was attributed by | 9 Strikers and urged to get her hus-|atmosphere at all. permit the committee of fifteen : ] i ad covered UL, Mies from Sui|omciais at the field to the fact thay|Pand to stay away from work. Pen- | My Brewster said the operators|bring in a teport on the “one res.| Members of the Washington Po-|determination to present a united|granted an incres v stopp: T¥" | McClure had unfastened his life belt | tedi. rather shamefacedly, said that he | have not receded -ome inch”.from the | olution,” which, it was announced,|licemen’s union have decided by an al-|stand against the demands of the|hour to lonsshorem : unanimous vote to sever thelr | strikers. and dischar an, Ohio, for the night. The lLieuten- ; had a. s o B v e erid e e ud done so for a couple of days|Lia = o, whid was_under consideration. ] g oA s silage n 3o |Stand they took at Buffalo, o o e | vening. however. the committes in.|affillation with the American Feder-| Afier a two hours conference with |which d the men 1 In recon- | mo: 1w had lost the morning due to a b vt brok fator at y ‘yom- | When Major Sneed made a bad land-| ‘because I was afraid and she was|that the federal contract shall remain 3 A DY Bk B B Doieegs Tor Ch day Sor Ink: e e in"Torce until April 1, 1920, “unless| formed the conference that it was|ation of Labor. e o D et of “Big Six” | and went out on strike. A 2 = & = McClure s thrown clear of the lairton, some hun s of strik- e DS unable to agree on a report and aft- - weon H. se, b oy 2 ¥ u 1 > wa red; some other demands can be s 3 Bonillas, Mexican ambas- | Svomerapnical Union, and his col- | members of the ad) 2 Saldurc as his night control—was only . 1 E2) s only | e Manded on his shouldors ] ers’ crowded around - the ' senatorisl have yeCap- | er objections had been registered by| Ygna y n 3 457, while Captain Smith who traveled | Wings party, under leadership of P. H. Groo | boseagy (e miners than have yeo ab-| G U Compers of the labor group| sador 1o the United States, left Pres-|leagues agreed. It was stated. to again | wise 8,000 with P2 a 5 ay, | about fifteen feet in front of the ma- ft ) T coveren 581 mian: Omies today, | GOl A Red Cross canteen automo- | §4n. Secretary of a local strike com- | ¥ Repfesentatives of the mine work-|and Thomas L. Chadbourne. of the|ident Carranza's party at Venegas|submit to their men the question of [about §000 with atel Lieuitnant Mavmard left Cheyennelbile started to a hospital with him,|mMittee. There was some expression of |ers contend that they have fulfilled | publi representatives, adjournment [state of San Luis Polosi, on his way|arbitration. £ 5 B D it y e wonder among the committee when |their side of the contract, that the|was taken. to Washington. According_to a spokesmah for the|Bol i e L M e, and | DU of the ihideen. westbound]Siavs still WRable ‘to’spenk: Huphen | o a2 At for all practical| With the fundamental proposals of employers, Rouse said the men would | s S Gmanatar e | ianes held up by yesterday's storm|ave their names as “Joseph Powell” | mmasco: he. federal rcontralts has|the “right” and eft" groups before| Japan is sending the largest dslega. . > 3 time, and stopped . ai|were sent away today. Of eight that|2nd “James Smith” but the senators|beme 1o an end. the conference, as well as a number|tion of any of the nations which will at 430 Central time.|came from Rochester, two went on to|finally accepted the names as an indi The meetings are being held behind | of important proposals by representa-|be represented in the International| pROHIBITION ENFORCEMENT Maynard-has 518 miles to fly to reach|Cleveland. Number 24° w: smashed | cation of a first step taken toward |closed doors and it was not an-|tives of the public, members of the]labor conference to be held in Wash- BILL READY FOR SIGNATURE he coast and Smith 650. and five, Numbers 36, 105, 10, 101 and | Americanization. nounced which of the miners’ several| conference tonight expressed their sat-|ington October 29. Lieutenant Kiel and Major Spatx, |41, piloted by Lieutenants L. V. Beau,| What thev wanted. the strikers ex- | qemands were under consideration | isfaction with the results of the first who overtook Captain|Jr. R. L. Maughan D. B. Gish, W. R. E‘l?:ed were f:rv;er holilxrs of work and jtoday. It was stated, however. that :lve‘ek'st dellbe‘r:n:;s. Mu:-_y o!‘ {:e AR'OPZi L-do;lw‘ufl: Rh.md ofl c‘hh. Jt-)e- ‘h:Va’;_l"A’l‘r‘\gl‘:‘";n L | i saoctutad -an. o, re nearly| Taylor and‘R. C. Fitz k., i re wages. o = te clegates wi e exception of theluit Order, who left Rome at the be- b o i | is already appearing c I e e ML S L ST e e e e, up Ihelt fusiees there 1s 2 modgification of thedb| (GSERIE. NIt (08 S O et (5| Bthnias of the war and romained {a|compieted today by ‘congress with the| i al £ 12.35 p. m. Mountain time, and|but he died on the way. SEES ANOTHER WAR APPEARING ON HOF Oct. 10.—Enactment of [ _ Par B s for thip Sight hands when Senator ' Kenyon a - corilgh, e a six hot S ca, report, | seems : o ERONeh 5 i thiey | el o 5 o had contributed to Red Cross And | oo Hos dus weele Maly per cont. - | attend sessions of ihe executive coun: |Swilzeriand ~untl the end of the| house adopting’ the conference nenorl| LI i ; Liberty hond funds during the war, | otoase in wages and that all contracts cil of the American Federation of La-|conflict has returned to Reme. - already algreedu;.:urey n TR ROE A e : : PARLIAMENT TO GIVE LABOR GIRL REFUSED TO OBEY but when regueste dto_give the same. mffi bituminous field shall au - | bor, lefe- Washington late in the day}. e i b e;endlnr;_ueI T brthh iouke 4p- | cign mi A H AND IRISH QUESTIONS PRIORITY A COURT RULE TO STAND [$i8n to indicate possession -of natural-|jcally cease Kovember 1,’“1!!“ for-tieweek end. . At the closing session of the bien- | for anpraval, THECRIUE IRC REHCE Bh1 e enk i A ization papers, there was a noticeable { he no asreement. The mine workers T e 4 nial convention of the Daughters of pm_voll O e Do 0y te o send 1t| now living ir London. Oct. 10-I&bo r problems| New York, Oct. 10.—Mollie Steiner, a | Fing off. threaten a gemeral strike in the sort| SENATOR' NORRIS ATTACKED Isabella, held in Providence, it was| (o 70, vain effort was wmadc (0 SO0C ) roporied | ¢ : and the 1rish question will be given |21 vear old radical, openly showed her | | COMmilteemen were keeping an eve ! .oal field on that datc unless their de- THE SHANTUNG SETTLEMENT [voted to held the mext convention in|back te conference WIR WIS ONT] via Basle S priority over other subjects of disc Contempt for the courts today by re- | day as they rode throuzh the |manas are granted. = Kansas City, Mo., in October, 1921. | to éliminate & Secr off Bl warrants Caute Sion when pariiament meets October ) fusing to obey a court rule to stand up tricts for signs of the Penn-|' Representatives of the bituminous| Washington. Oct. 10.—All of the time 2 e s B ete wongreasional approval of | tails regard ¥ e police. It was not until [ coa) operators of the outlying organ- |set aside by the senate today for con- he shipping board steamer Yaklok| the bill means that tne days ‘of two|in the Austria; are numberea. | or as soon as|made inevitahl many and Aust 22, The alien bill i% the first | when Justice Bartow S. Weeks tool : Tatier For concideration ” but v Wil | the beach for the trial of Gust Alonen | &l M: that they finally ran across |{peq djstricts, with a vearly tonnage |sideration of the peace treaty was|which was disubled yesterday by an|fthe Blll means [HaL O erzeant Pete Murphy, a state trooper. | or 300.000.000, came here today “to co- |taken up by Senator Norris, republi-accident to her steer'ng gear, souti-|Z0¢ SARe AUSE CC8 oot L 3 and Carl Piavio, editors of the Clas: a P e ommittce deal- | SEUBEIe, Who Are charsed with erims | 2t McKeesport. He was questioned by | gperere with and assist the central [ean, Nebraska, with a three hour at-|west of Cape Stble, was picked up|The hill becomes ffetive oo =Con i) ing with lreland and . composed of|inal amarchy. A court officer ordered | % STOUP. S (ive field in'Tesisting the min-|{ack on the Shantung scttlement, and [ early by the coast guard cutter Ossi- | S1&ned by Tresigent, WIHRE PNl envelopment and Lord Borkenhead, the lord chancellor: ?1:; to get up whel,), thehjufll:'e entered | .15 r:;:fln}.:‘,:;g‘:;gug :i\;b:r‘\;:};é"‘o:e ers’ demand: . f;:s mr;:;:-:g Z:fl;g::g :.eu’:{ an hour's reading of the printed | pee. g o ;;“ :5 S‘)”‘v:{::ficr‘”lll‘fr are now ng s =W Z o court y 3 g : - uti . e : ident's slgnature the| bring about a recor T a wans | mained her seat, -~ oh¢ SHEROY Te|ers "“but I've clubbed a few when T|ohensciing to the Joint wage confer-| \When thé Nebraska senator halted| Twenty-six women, under charges|ly wWith the Dresttnts, SRS UL by (hrowing y A I. Fisher. minister of education;| Miss Steimer was arrested Sept. 17| Pad to-” S hat mo modification of existing|for a momant, with his speech only |of rioting in connection with the tex- | ¥artime efiorecfii, BCOICa"a & ine | outbreak of the Bt e T ot AHaration: | atter she 15 alleged fo have thrown | 5, "yihe Natlonal Tube company plants | Srge contracts be considered “that|two-thirds through, Republican Lead: |tile strike at.Lawrence, Mass, last| SOective, TR SO0 L nlnt™ portion | ereat dead from Walter Lons, first lodr of the ad-|anarchistic literature from the roof of | &y b o pesbort the committee found | Wil increase the cost of coal to thefer Lodze gave him a breathing spedd |February, have pleaded gullty. Fines| ionipits manufacture or sale of any the emyire of il miaity: Sie Eric Geddes, minister of| 2 building on the lower East Side dur- | JD&t @ layman would considre full | public or decrease the productive ca-|by suggesting that the senate shift|not exceeding $20 each were im-|JOOC Y 0 BRTL " more than one-half|the double monarchy ramspor(. Sir lan MacPherson chict| ng the celebration of -Constitution | o C5,oPeration and the officials claim- | Picity of the mines.” The resolutions|to the reading. Senator Norris will |posed. of one per cent. of alconol. but the responsibili c for n isco ed that it was so. The strikers as|bjso suggested that the negotiations |conclude tomorrow. Senator Lodge N Dronibition members of _the ready arc i Ak t[day” by the National S v league. » E = e terminated |also may speak and the semate will| The French Chamber of Deputies |, A0t DIo0 "G00 TS fone against secretary for Ireland, and Viscouni T can aw o = L % H s 5 usual had a different version, but it 1 i iatel, | S retaras fromm I The Dl | i D e RolCs on | wagilafE for-consileration Jater’ ShOUId e mers Afree to honor the | meet an hour earlier than usual inadopted the bill ratifving the agree: | Por 5 TRdE"In voting o send he| ShEE=F o e g We, ine. workens ave’ omcermea ™ tns | Semator Kenyon announced that for- | iy Beroements. the hope of speeding up the treaty|ment between the United States and | poe poer! S\ ference on the motion| clared the statosm B chsuing mectings, ot of the Ia- | NeHoHSl BotttRY Ire sned. thelmal hearings would he' ek hero o- consideration. France for the sale to France of|of ‘Representative 1Igoe, democrat,| momentous ultimatum bor situation will depend upon the at- | ISM—their press, church and govern- |t hnmmmo oot ne had taken occasion TRIENNIAL CONVENTION OF The agreement for eleven o'clock|American army supplies left in | \issourd, who protested against “stale|judzment of history.” o e POn the 21 | ment, together with their oty Gon. | L0, SUMMoN a number of witnesses met P. E. CHURCH IN AMERICA |opening was taken to Indicate that the | France. aMeers pnforcing a federal law 5 onnection with the comference with|Stitution can all go straight to hell. | Surin€ his tour of the district. Many ST e senate will begin next week to put in — through their authority to issue search | FOUR FRENCH SOLDIERS he prime minisier yesterday regard- | Down with all constitutions! Long | weq nEmel ‘both from the striking| i oi Mich. Oct. 10—The Pro-|a longer working day with the hope| Three children of Preston.H. Penmell | \ .y, iiuts, and complained that similar WaliNBEs TN A {nE RO pinisier yesterday remard | vy it e e o5, ok®DZ | 4nd non-striking groups. will be heard, | DUl Mich, Ot 10--The Bro- |l o iting mway the bis speochmak: |of Norih Buxton, Muss, are dead: % | hrovision bad ean . overwhelmingiy Roberts Millie, president of the min- | $10,000, bail 2s well as officials and business men | leStant Episcopal Ohutel o, o e, |ing programme. At the suggestion of | fourth is critically ill, and Mr. Pen-| qcfeated in the house. g vy fre federation, amd Frank Hodge, its| Miss Steimer was unchanged in her | "5 the localities chiefly affected. In triennial Eeneral owinion on adop: | Senator Lodge, the senate also adopt-|nell is in a serious condition as the|“‘Opposing Mr. Igoe's argument, Rep- |, 5 : Sotretasy states that the miners will| attitude when Justice Wesks took up hile the senate committee occupied 1 Wil TeCONd & MUTEL SUT A the cove- {ed an unanimous agreement to take|result of a sickness which has not|resentative Webb, ~democ North | > re wo Probably take no immediate steps with | Der case later in the day. She refused | ingustmiot soraiige, T1i5S, [09AY in the |HoR, O i P aue of Nations, in the up’ the Shantung amendments Wed- |been diagnosed. Carolina, satd that the house disap-| < 1 reference to nationalization since the| (O, tell her name, industrial struggle, there was little | DARL of the LeREHe O @ on attend- |nesday. but this does not mean that proval of the provision was due to the | O Tuesdy « giiEnce to nationatization = “Although You wom't tell who vou|CHADEe in the general strike sftuation, | OPinion of leading chey will be considered under the five| The Swedish foreign department, in | falee impression that state oficials | [oday i it I irades unions congress. C. W are.” said the court, “T have learned. | foion ojesornued to.express satis- | INE the MeCINS 1o the house of [minute debating rule_then or that a|communique confirms the recent re-|would be given power fo arrest as|{CRcrincd Ge Hoe crmann, secretary of the have found that vou are a most vio- | 1> G o With the prosress of the strike. | Following acom R, o & sented by!vote is any nearer than it was yes- ports of the sacking of the Swedish|well as search. The house voted down | DO (e g T ent abhorrer of this government and | werkorr CSLAM from British steel | RISHOPS Of & eSO eter of Con- |terday. Senators explained that ‘this|legation in Petrograd and the consul-| the Izoe motion 235 to §3 i o ] w SN tacatasy 1o S that Tou are now under comvieiion for | LorKers wishing the: strikers success | Dishop Chauncey B Brewsier of 087 | piodedure would enable the body to[ar offices in Petrograd and Moscow | ' Beyond this final ~ ailempt the e 2 Claps o be taken ihe sathering would | “SPichage. But vou shall not be suc- | wAL,SiveD out today by the national |Becticut today, reduetllS € pation |revert to the section embracing the by the bolsheviki authorities. “wets® contented themselves by voic-| Severa cans Srobabip not be heid until after.the| CCSSTul In your effort to pose as a | Cumittee of the organized workers. | States semale fo tSoCOrt Bt Of ma- | Shantung provision, as the reading by ing complaint against the measure as | ! ; e Feturn from Washington of the Brit-| TATLYE T am goinz to let you zo-— | Assomaion reh, o the Amalgamated | O Our FRUNTI 0 % Ol Cxpressed in | Wednesday may be way ahead of it.| The $4,300 seized in the raid on an| “un-American” and accusing the house| [UTC mand T N e S dinnal 1. | though you don't deserve 1t. ‘You wirl | ASSOCIation of Tron, Steel and Tin | tons: ® of deputics that the same|But if semators want to keep onlalleged betting pool by ~Watch and|conferees of exceeding their authori-| Pior g L s Sor convemtion. not be entitled to enter this court | ipe rers 204 Was sizned by officers or | the house of GEPUIES LA ‘there. A |speaking that day and thereafter they|Ward Society agents and the Medford, (ty by accepting some senate amend- |’ he pris. s e Rl L again except as a prisoner. the Iron and Steel Trades Confedera- | Fesolution wopld be bagsel i ted,|will have that right. Mass. police at the harness race|ments to the measure. i e pr it | <o = The zirl walked out of the court| Lo’ godration of Bikst Furnace Men |fSht on the Gutstrl, o Mines ap-| Senator Norris, speaking extempo-|meeting at Combination Park, vester- | i en MILITARY IN CONTROL room still wearing the smile that g | 320 the Amalgamated Tron and Steel | however. although poli rancously, which is auite different | dap, will be turned back to the bei- | PRESIDENT WILSON'S Jebe= -0 fean German unifo: OF STEEL STRIKE SITUATION ::::"h,,‘ only reply to Tustice Wenke | Workers of Scotland, and was as fol- va;;';,"’,gz;';;;;,n Page. of the Vir-|from the plan followed by most of his | tors. APPETITE NOW SATISFACTORY |} iced them. A onings. ws: B g colleagues, was particularly severe in i - e e Chicago, Oct. 10—Attention of mili- it Eaa “On behalf of 150,000 British iron |Einia_ aelesation. formerly (UnIed | (CnCURIN, YRS dward of Shantung to| After spending six and one-half| wachington, Oct. 10—President| jioiin il tar authorities in control of the Steel| 10 TEST LEGALITY OF 2nd steel workers who already enjoy | States ambassador 1o TOmE (9% |japan) There was mno hope. he de-|hours in ail Willlam J. O'Brien. pres- | wilion comiimued to gain strensin to- | i strike situation in a greater part of all and more than vou are askigg for | MeRing On the action of T0 (10ce, s | clared, of seeing that province back|ident of the Boston Fish Market |3y *O% ©oNis "physicians anouced hat | miniim sir Be Chicago district today was turned WARTIME PROHIBITION [ 214 who through joint representation | Dishops. auoted Byrong W Uot ‘#1 | under the Chinese flag. once it was|Corporation under semtence of one|pi UG ic” gne of the trouble jinschine: @ B S stembing out radical inftuences.| .. - 2ot ©of employers’ and workmen’s organiza- | Sometimes Forgs taken over by Japan under the peace|day for perjury was released at mid-|go SR U neds had bee e foithe Patit Pi Forty imore alieged radicals and a uisville, Ky. Oct. 10—Suit to|tiONS have the most successful ma. | Council’ imost bitter de-|conferente setilement, which helnight Thursday, his term expiring at| iored to a satisfactory state Pillaging . A quaniity of revolutiomary literature|comtest the comstitutionality of the|SRInery of industrial negotlation In the | A NERt that was almost DU O0C| Gl loried as the “outrage of the|that time. e i oy | lasins was resumed Wy Sere seized by federal operatives and | Wartime prohibition law was fled. 1y . we send warmest wishes for |veloped in e oy |age.” He charged that the American - e aiiitten 1o ave | oot A R v people “had been coerced in some| A chase through streets and back|;; one except the physicians ani|showin soldiers at Gary. Ind. A majority were|federal district court here today by|Success of your fight on behalf ~or |the approval of a AMEmOUH (87 he na 7 /| cases” to subscribe to loans to sup-|yards and over fences at Salem.|rompers of his- family. He talked | work. =id to be aliens and military authori- | Attorney Levy Maver of Chicago and | rOTKers in American iron ana steel | prayer_for “the nations acad” WS owever. o , les announced that six were being|Marshall Bullitt of Louisville. industry. By the refy B d 7 ds . hSia Dending action by immigration| The Kentucky - Distilierics ana|Sentatives of the steel corporstios go |or With modifications which would |port this Eoverament hCh Was 100, | Mams. e i he "oaa® farep | OVer several matters of public busi: e authorities Warehouse Company one of the larg- | SUPMIt the dispute to arbitration the (Shorten the morning and eveningl I8 CON%Y by "Great Britain was|Gray of Brockton, 4nd his arrest on |mesyoMerer Wi @ Mevician wio | FEMALE STRIKERS MORE Little change in the general situa-|est concerms of the kind In (ke[ COTPOration stands condemned Drayer services, minor change: geceiNGEs Shile Grout | Bitain ) Srockton, and his arrest on|Grayson. his personal phy , wh ETRIERS MORE. . don in the area was reported. Strik-|countyr. was made plaintiff and El- ——— bagiter end mew prayers for the army |lending it fo Perslg ot l pe conl lchaywes of robhbery rrying & zave him some detailed information AL = X urn to work A = i ¢ E he had asked for. = ually increased. Strike leaders main-| The petiti = o ¥ CONCILIATOR ¥ 1 » « B seemed much encouraged at his pro Tined. the ciaims that their rankaluncossttabionat oca Lat the law New York, Oct. 10—Ten times as CALL FOR and condemning i Only a few ofjAlaniic for several days was dis- [SRO0ES, TR SIEPNREIC G Gl were unbroken and took an optimistic|the Afth amendment (o the conatie: | soend conol Probably will be' con-| Greenwich, Conm. Oct. 10—The|these documents Sont in., But, Sgmc|closed Witk the recl oD o tne fmen” [recovery will ocontinue & be very foring i View of the sicuation. tion. in that it confiscates Droperty | days. according. te miar A5 in “wet” | (e committee of the emploves of | SEREIOER, MLE SARMETE Tine" neat, | [ATY MESNET QNN cosic ‘was arift- | SO i3 : r Gary. scores of strikers arrested| wihout just compemntar e Sordiag to B K Tunison, one | fic Minpme Munufactucing -Company, | URdertock io Drint, Sieryiing . Jsaf |can freighfer Ammonoceic, wes BOLSHEVISTS HAVE I ! e T o tary aary| The property in question, according | sium here tonight of the Now’ BP0 |who walked out two weeks a0, 10~ |piris of the country there would be i ~ew YOork|gay sent a telegram to labor represen- |y . room in the Record for anything | THREE WOMEN REMAINED IN Tuies were held before a military court; o the plendings, involves 65.000,000 | section of the Amerises ohn RETAREN LIV R RIS I worier o mi, 2 5 £ e in cal so- | tatives at the industrial conferenc | else. COURT ROOM TO HEAR FILTH | g ckholm, Oct, 10— The newsp: and several were sentenced to fatigue [ gullons of whiskey i hondeq i duty on the streets. Company offi-|houses in K, £ onded ware- | ciety. Alcohol. he declared, was deg - L& it hat an appeal be Thnounced - that approrimates | maseny 3rSersucky valued at approx-| tined to come into sreater uee ax"y | W Ashinsion asking that an sppes b e s o I e i peace 5 of the 12.000 emploves of the In- sl el motor fuel as the supply of Petroleum | oo Geaccat conciliator here at once. | STRIKE IN PENN. New York, Oct. 10.—Opportunity to | Sorstte PDaEDIAG teding e o oreign-be diana Steel Company were at work diminishes. e Cignod by Mrs, Wit SHOPS AT ALTOONA, PA.!jcave the court room was offered today 3 i danze while smalier plants reported improv-| TESTING 273 BEER ON 81X irces of ker Teferrinz to new |1 GOSN Walling. chairman of the o to “ladles present who do mot want to| xo intimation of the possibility of{’T" ™ disgen o4 conditions. COLUMBIA STUDENTS | poime Septo UBRIY, Said that the nipa | bommittoe, . | oo Altoona, Pa. Oct. 10—Virtually the|hear filith,” by Samuel S. Berger. state| an impending recapture of the great| hoviom o « T Hawil Chicagh & auber. ot Btrik- palm, which flourishes in the Phijn. |COMMIttee. @ ihat the commit- |entire mechanical force employed at|deputy attorney general. He declared | aoucn Restian conior has heen recec | hl, ‘and 1 ur pines and other tromical countries, | (o) erriobng, |the Pennsylvania railroad shops in|he was about to read from “Marriage | oq from oiher saurees, althonah it wos | o o v From ers were arrestea by policemen in a| New York, Oet.’ 10— Emi I 3 a women L ; Tiot Tmear the lilinoic Steel Company |Columbia University stugmiie infacit | Viclds about 15 per cent. of - sasar | 5o represented 300 MY fed Textjle|this city went on strike tonight inland Love a book purchased at the | tecemily ataied thai Bolshecists iant During the fighting a number | jecta, Profopase or) f oemes P | Thich could be fermented. ~ He' saiq | AMIiAt T e verage wage for|sympathy with the enzine house me- | hooksiore of the Rand School of Social | were roaming in this region | . ngsworth | 50,000,000 zallons Workers: _that = ichanics who walked out on Wednes- | Science here, during today's hearing | rear of the lines of the Poles and ¢ of shots were fired and a deputy|and R. S. W, of alcohol . vears Chemi®t was severely beaten. partment M"%fi;&?}"hh‘;{,}h; de-|could ‘he_obtained from that soneen | FOMER ’mvme‘éol;s:a;}\‘-a:v;: 485 alday Lo cnforce the seniority rule. It|on the application by the State for|eea Denfkine. These two armies nstead iy Yo Dleted an elaborate set of Iaboratery | Lo e ,Considerable alcohol also may | At i i the average for men and (is said that between 7.000 and 5000 revocation of the charter of the Amer- | well advanced heyond the vicinity S ok L $253.000 LIBEL ACTION tests to determine whether “two sev. | b¢ Produced, he said. from the waste | Fooran aloved up Lo 19 years was|men quit work and that others will|ican Socialist soclety and the closing | Kiev but are not vet in touch with one |, MI%5 Dok & AGAINST ALFREDO GONZALES |eniy five” beer ls intoxicating. it was| sawdner " "0 /7™ the cellulose of [ 17" ana that the company yefuses tojoin tho strike tomorrow. oot thesenoor. "7 P | another. jBsseiteem Quesia \LFRE /RS 5 3 4 c iy strika. tomorrc e B 8 A LT U New York. Oct. 10.—Alfredo Gon-| The results have not been given otit e et with tho; sfifico CORMIPR S TRIED TO SELL $3,000 woman_in' ihe reom retained *fhelr WRECKAGE OF BALLOON - | FERRIES ACROSS HUDS za‘es, former president of Costa Rica, | Professor Hollingsworth has admit. | 9236 INVALID SERVICE MEN MANY ADVANTAGES BY PEARL NECKLACE FOR $200 | seats. The court then déereed it would | PICKED UP IN' LAKE HURON| TIED UP BY ST i Wa< arrested here today in conmection | ted that the fndings will he ue STILL UNDER TREA T S| RIR Do adyisabie to g the book alogay | - — | - with 2 libel action to recover $253,000 connection with a suit bromght hy & —— - JOINT CONTROL OF MINES| xew York. Oct. 10—Efforts to dis-jand placed it in the record g St.' Louis, Mo., Oct. 10.—The wreck- | York, Oct srought by Lincoin-G. Valentine. who | brewing concern for the right of man-| New York. Oct. 10.—There are 3.2; 3 i Pvenit Lioye | Pose of a $3.000 pearl necklace for $200 = = HRelbe the taliosn: *Wickica " in which | Ing across the H i= said to own valuable properties and | ufacturing the . i 5.236| London, Oct. 98— Premier Llo¥e|ioqay brought about the arrest of John 30000 LAUNDRY WORKERS s S 9 ann’ and Lieu- |vice at midnizht, 1w a ring the beer. ounded or invalid officers and men of | George, answering demands made by | Rejder. whe' came here from Russia & ON STRIKE IN NEW YORK | s ™ st - yopmann and Lieu | v o ! of fon- | lon, St. Louisans, left here in the business interests in C a and | / 4 5 ini osta_Ric anl: The experiments lasted twelve days | the army, navy and marine corps still | nritisn miners at today's conferences, | short {ime aso, and led to recove I e ek Min s o tudenis drank A | IAIAE Sey g e Pospi- | admitted that many advantages could | jewels valued at $60.000 which Reider| New York, Oct. 10 —Leaders of the| a1 championshin bonoon rors Aol | 1onsjore to sail on the steamship Tivivine for | teted ngain. The brooiae bonrors | & Satemnmcar New York. according to | be secured from joint control of mines |is said to have admitted having tuken | striking laundry workers of Now Yol 5 B D Do s toher i S his ative country. where his political | hopes to ahow (hat the mecr. whes | Community sersice. The ®ratcim b voamital and labor. but declared the [ on Sept. 9 from the home of Mulcolm | maid toduy they had vIPtually tiod s | Huron, aechaing to o bietam rece e | Iomie e r Toysy had resained its power oet in | drunk (o capacity. does ot impair any | cmphasized the need af continued o<, bolicies. on the Tines of the miners | v, ni Lawrence Tl Belier wan cme | o strhrer o 30 an e e mumber ed by ‘officials of the ruce Wit thiiv. | walle b e 1 he f 3 = “omfort wost. e Gesuons. 5 " Sloyed there as a butler. local has voted a sympathetic strike.' found, the message ampiified. " Lo ke T s