Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 16, 1919, Page 1

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8" COLS. : 3 PRICE TWO CENTS i Tows [IMMIGRANTS WARNED T0 o | EAVE FORGE BEHIND THEW San Francisco, his drive for American VOL. LXI—NO. 247 i3 : Halian Ambaseador to U. 8. " . - Side : ngthy. San Francico, nis BY INDUSTRIAL . o 1 | - Rom Pending an Effort By the Central Committee of Fifteen to nfl%fi“ - : “Action This Aft . Secretary Lansing presided over the | Attorney General Palmer, Speaking at Founders’ Day Exer- second meeting of the -cabinet since Agree On the Question of Collective Bargaining—Em-| 137, of the mfiuw Washington, Oct, 15 Ehtirely au-| President Wilson's finess. cises at Lafayette College, Informs the Immigrant That of " s ployers’ Group Voted Against Motion to Defer, which| Yo%, imes'st " moer: S {masier Generai Burtison ioiiy ‘muve | 11 STOWSE Seven hoe sestlon wi%| utaplishment of an sirplane trans: | When He Sets His Foot On American Soil He Must Rid Was Made By Bernard M. Baruch, Chairman of the Pub-| 2,5 Amer T tha he Aiherioan are, A5500/alion | aay ihe” hopes of the leaders on both | RERELIL L O S JOTK 2 3| g self of All the Misconceptions of Government With . lic Delegation—Labor Delegates Are Willing to Drop the| army oFricERs searcH sion here, the o “public Abuouni o | IERL be reached’ om the SPANWUNE | according to cable reports, the Mo- Which Old Conditions Filled His Mind—That His Time Steel Strike Resolution In Case They Obtain Acceptance FOR RADICAL AGiTATORS |Bi?, Miinistration. Twhich _ b nds | e i b made i resding ' the| oncan bangl Raieul o peady 1o surs| - p o Intelligence Has Come. of the Principle of “Collective Bargaining.” Bl e B ob3CCE T T he must Ditier 1| CobhC el FeAGNE of B (SR 031 Gotd ‘coin amounting to $55,000 was | kinscon, Pa Oct. 15— Law and order fof the most part evidenced by wide Washingion, Oct. 15—Deepite re: |the committee would ask for more) (G" \iet] SFRiore, who have alen; | Ginl” Wilton's. advisers, were:expiain. | Sxssion arranged for teday - but e Shipnicnt o South America. e e S L L ol & peated declarations by employers’ del-Jtime. Such action would mean a fur- | %9 the ed and difficul i 3 c t 8- B b DIt an culties of his administra- soon was evident = ihat when they reach these shore: i eral Taws/be re e o The sect ke S04 Tn | stoe] sirike: asBiization Temaniont. (vl GE A acials ama “Seaet o | tion D (hSt The Treaty ratifying body was off Tonke haees canal as epaned i Fier [Belc.fime for The’ W of 4orce s be- L e un mtiol 1 the steel s e x 2 heads gained wide circulation through- (Scribed, the business men forming the|ror Another field day of debate. i (e e v S hind them, Attorney General Palmer S reaars Y dernand e same group| Labor y . 3 - . y 2 g 4 P at federal troops Wi icmand from the same group| Labor delezates said today that they |5, the city, but the police and mili- |audience interrupting frequently with | ‘CH bios then that the way might be|No. 6, Coenties Slip, East river. BechizEn might ihiar aAirems. it ;:':«;gt:g .;!';“‘_,“t‘:’l;} e e iabor_arbitration propgsal be{ would be willing tedropsethe guieolif, - cliowikxdes then applause or chuckling with laughter morrow’s W Founders' Day exercises at Lafayette 3 : Gia: deferred action on the | principle Of “collective . barzaining” | Ficketing increased and Colonel W.|sSolemnity, iold them fnow he loved|iung’ provision today, the leaders | & Holt Line from Rip de Janeiro via| ~“The mistake which seems to have|€T§in any state. . 4. eq an ending an effort Dby the|with the right of employes (o select |S: MaDes received reports of attempts RIS critics. DOiten Mr. Burleson was|agreed Informally that the amendment (Barbados, arrived gt New York. been made by many who have come |, After refernng to Fhe GIEH ommittee of fifteen to agree on | representatives “just as the com- |0 intimidate workmen. n Ashting mood. especially when dis-| snould be voted on if possible before| o . - B Uigecis was. ap. |68 Tecently”from. other parts of the |itions o various sourtroe e Panies: hire counsels “Failure of the | . The -first, mass smeeting pemmCd,'ussm? efforts to force a reversal In|gagjournment. Both sides lined up i ::i ;, “n" urgs APl [: world,” said Mr. Palmer, *is this: “In our own country since the is - don 1o defer. made by Ber-| conierence (o arbitraie the sirike or to |Since he federal troops entered ,u;e”“il{:“:_"f'}fl been made ‘of what (| RelF forces for the test but when N mch Tl s I e [y, affect to believe that the general | ;oo™ 2% OV POl Y Sainy ot i airman of the pub- | acce iew o ine |city was held by the strikers this af- c as bee i fternoon, Senator Reed, - movement for better conditions of Jife ; o Erowing sl airmau of the pub 1 their view of collective bargain late in the afte agins movement for better conditions of lite{ 31§ \Te, " ranitesting. itseit som = N one e e . " |ternoon in a public park and was ad-|Stand for” he declared, smashing bis|gemocrat, Missouri, began another R T Il Trly | ferencs. Some | labor” epresentatives |dressed by Jonn Titspatrick of Chi- | St Into is open polm. “and IUS Not| lomg attack on the treaty, the senate it una’ the Dublic and | went so far 4 to say. oo, Chaliman of U el N e e e managers threw up their hands and| o°irain immediately for militar . supporting postponement On the “right” of the hal® employérs | committee, and others. fih‘ef among Lis critics Mr. Burle- | nnounced there could be no roll call[!® train immediately for military ser-|pendous advance which has been made Prfagline s res dalis. I © nt three grouyps is required | objected to consideration “under pres- Colonel Mapes is said to_have-made | %0 listed the: exbress; companieny today . i 08 st mbvementihere during the last 7 mfnp" .1 a tion by so- B Ve cile e to validate action. | sure” of such a fundamental princi- |3 report to Major General Wood today | Which. he said, were angered by his| “giii’other senators were asking for i Yook for|C8AtUry. by men of larger minds and |2ccounts of violent agitation by 8o A « of order. however, Sec- | ple as collective bargaining. Herbert [N the Gary situation, presenting doc- | development of the parcel post. the|recognition when a recess was taken| Budget for the city of New York for|proader visions who preceded them to|called Bolshevists and radicals, cous p i e e | B Perking of Chicamy S . wieThet | umentary evidence showing the activ- | ralireads. opposed to chanzing the ba- | ZePERIOR WVOSL & FeCOST AT Mine 11920, amounting to $316,521,428, was|{his land for the very purpose. scling, Violenos " and ursing. aviion = iies of radicals in connection with |Sis of mail pay irom weight to space,| gepate tomorrow. There has bepn no|“entirely toohigh,” according to Mayor| "It s difficult for us to give credit [ Pehalf of what they call social revoiu- Soviet government of Russia ordered | (1L Joior DArts of | must have |{imes in race riots and mob disorde the entire population of that COURITY | oe worll Fhey rernee 1o see the sty |but for the most part evidenced by ¢ widespread industrial _controversie: Tiotion inveived a question of [ not be forced or hurried into arriving ; 4 : E ec and not of policy, and|at any decision in such an important |the strike. owners of pneumatic tube SyStems,!sorma) agreement, but the leaders|Hylan. for' sincerity to many of the ultra- |Hon. & e uid be settled by a simple | matter as collective bargaining”. — == which he declared had been nothing€|pope for final action on the amend- radical class-war agitators, who seek e’ American people 1 not 2 & oeey. | THEFT OF JEWELS VALUED short of “graft” mewspapers and|ment sometime tomorrow afternoon. President Ador, of Switzerland, ca-|the short and rouzh road built by |chanse the solid foundations of ©of individual delcgates. | while J. W. O'Leary of Chicago. declar- . e e . B — 2 : Ahese fantaat . chairman of | ed> that “clear ng" BETWEEN $100,000 magazines, which had been forced to| ™}l Somerme (OmOton & Ciioh, |bled President Wilson the congratula- | force: when they nave at. hand the |social order for any of these fantast S} chapmon. of | edw ik leay Mnkington itha lishe B 940 AND $150,000 ..\ " higher second class rates, and fhe | qDUring, mo eloss to we text, which|tion of the Swiss government on his|smoother. though possibly longer, | Programmes. The relations of labe 1 States Steel Corporation | was impessible with “other disturbing », 3 e ’ i v i oard i Ward M. Burgess ‘of Oma.- | influences.” ew York, Oct. 15.—The theft of ?lmebnca;: l-ex‘ij::luqré:‘fml{ali)our‘vhflf“i’::‘ was the foreign relations committee’s|rapid recovery. route. It is perfectly clear that some |and éan‘n’sl_ azecBog ‘bemg seriously a. Neb. were the only members of the Afier the meeting. employers dele- |JeW€ls valued at-between $100.000 and;ed by his sta & = ¥ ~|amendment to transfer the Shantung L of them are honestly mistaken; it is|considered in Washington by a grou v opposiig’ Postporment, | ates. said 1ing ABG Tebor Stecl nirikel SEEI from the apartment of Mrs.|Pioves ';fl‘"fll‘r‘;"(x ""“‘ ?gr‘"’g:“x‘n’;‘_“;‘: rights to China in place of Japan. Five| Four coast guard vessels were dis-|cqually clear that many of them are |Of representatives of the \zr,nx.\gnzr n ett and T. C. Atkeson |arbitration resolution was never in- (Leyia Brandeis. was rcported to the|usin® ine strie to enforce Cemance|senators whose stand had been theipatched to the assistance of an uniden-|mere self-seekers who would exploit | ests and of the public, assembled by sentatives, alone of the|tended for other purposes than to | Police wda{‘ Mrs. Brandeis is the|He declared he had been confronted| iject of some speculation a-nouncn |tified vessel reported in distress 300|some of their unthinking fellows for |president, and we can look with cox H. Brandeis, who with|With powerful opposition exerted | .3 they would vote against the pend-|miles south of Nova Scotia. Thele oo IanEnt. fidence to a spirit of justice and ma >up, favored the tion. | force” r iti widow of . p. favore motion. | fo ecognition of the unions and | “The ingenuity of man has made the | ture deliberation upon these grave - - - . h congress hy these interests. 3 dicat- roup were solid for posi- | their spokesman. inasmuch as asree- | LWo brothers founded the department|throusi ing proposal, but all of them indica _ s g ment io aroitration of the sirike by a |Store in Omaha. Neb, which bears| “Ob. I know how. the wheels o) 0¥ JIOPOC0q% hport a reservation| Juliul Barnes, director of the United | Atlantic cean a mere ditch between |problems from that body. commitiee was directed to | committee containing union officials | their name. round in the capitol.” he\ asserted, | on the subject. They were Senators|States Grain’Corporation, asked Presi- |the continents. New inventions v “In_the meantime, the timid may rea the confer- [and company officers would have| According to the list supplied thele¥oking laughter and applause. =~ |Colt, Rhode Island; Lenroot Wiscon-|dent Wilson fo raise the export and |make it narrower still. But it must|take heart. Some ilime ago 1 tele- - econvenes at 2:30 o'clock tomor- | 3 acceptance of }wolice the s,mh:l Gt inchfided . ”:—nig;‘c“c‘:;g:[ g}’:hce“ j;pion:gg““l sin, snddsspl:misr. Mg;:om—i. republd import embargoes of wheat. ,1ws be weh enough to permit u—.; gra&n:d io the sovernor of every. stets ow afterncon. but it struck a snag late | t ings for which labor is fighting. |large rope of pearls, a diamond neck- = e "l cans, an ields, ‘ennessee, an * : imgPZrant, 7® he crosses it, to rid|[in union an at in the event empting to define “col- dward Russell of New lace, several diamond pins. rings and{®hich he sa:d carned him = fthe €pl|Thomas, Colorado, democralts. Petroleum bill, backed by President|himself for all time of all the miscon- fany civil disorder which he fou | thets of autocrat and Prussian De-| pegiges Senator _ Resd, Senators|Carranza, will meet hard opposition in|ceptions of government with which |himse!f unable to control by reason « ective bargail " and made butlittle | York, spokesman for the central com- |Other articles. which had been given 5 Readway Guring fs ihrec Hour session | milice, to1d Press representatives atter (o Mrs. Brandels by her husband. cause he excluded seditionist newspa-| poran, Idaho; Brandegee, Connecticut,|the senaie, according to Mexican re-|the old conditions filled his mind. He|ihe demobilization of the nationa The right of employes t ize was | the committee meecting that both cap- | Mrs. Brandeis visited her mother, |pers from the mails. RS _|and Lodge, Massachusetts, spoke 'in|ports received at the State department.|must realize that his revolution has|guard, the governor should commur enerally recognized, it was said, but [ial and labor were disposed to make|Mrs. Wilbur I Studebaker. on Long| Turning to cufrent polit M eclared | support of the amendment, Mr. Bran- been fought and won when he sets|cate directly with the commanding no agreement could reached on the [ concessions and that nothing had 'Island, over the week-end.. When she | tions, the postmaster general deciarec jegee reading into the records a long| New York Guard Division was des- [his foot on American sofl. His time|géneral of the department in which sestion of dealing with non-employes | transpired to shake his conviction returned to her apartment she found |the weifare of the country walted Of | pamphlet on the subject published by ignated as the 27the Division, the war |for the use of force is then behind |his state lies; and I correspondingly of a company acting as spokesman for | that the conference would accomplish [a ,stéel box in which the jewels had jratification of the peace reaty b Con’|the Chinese Society of America. Sen-|depariment announced. This was the |him: his time for the use of intelli- | telegraphed to every department com ac workers. The committec will meet | “zreat and construction results.” He |been kept Iying empty on the bath-|gress and the passage of WnRORIatt|ator Lodge, who, as chairman of the|division's designation during the war.|gence has com mander to respond instantly with th gai tomorrow morning but it ap- |admitted, however, that serious differ- [room floor. having been wrenched legislation urged by Presiden: . foreign relations committee, wrote % “Law and order are essential to im- |aid of the federal troops to any peared practically certain tonight that | ences of opinion exist which must’ be [from the wall of the closet into which [ many months ago. = about a re.|the amendment, made a speech of only| Three armed men entered an East|provement: the law must be respected | from a governor who found hims no agreement would be reached and | harmonized before the committee could | it was built. Now they ure {alkinz aboilt A itn|a few sentences in reply to the argu-|Side branch of the Commonwealth|and order must be maintained if Prog- able, with the means at his d that the labor and public delegates in report. s = e I Oy e dome. Jf the party|ment that amendment of the treaty|Federal Savings bank, of Detroit, and |gress is exbected.. I would not halt|io suppress disorder and to enforce the 2 NO IMMEDIATE DROP many thingg 16t undone. 1t 4 Taten, | would imean fis defeat. obtained about $10,000 in liberty bonds |for a single moment any movement |iocal law < IN FOOTWEAR PRICES|in power undertal uAan. B eopie | . “We never will see the day” said|and currency. designed by its promoters to bring| “The administration in Washington = L i o S g o Mr. Lodge, “when Europe will refuse -~ better conditions to any portion of our |is determined that every federal agenes will be brought to the facts. to let the United States come into| Pending settlement of their griev-|people, but T would use all the POWET |shall be maintained in the full per- the treaty on any terms it chooses. It|ance through a conferense With the|of the people's goyernment to make|formance -of its functions. We have can dictate today. but the moment We|railroaq administration and Pennsyl- | certain that such a movement shall Pe |an army of tried soldiers, of true Am SAYS STRIKE LEADER FOSTER |AVIATOR MAYNARD LEADS IS AN EXTREM IN RET s New YorkaeOct. 15.—There is no in- Eme URN FLIGHT EAST.|,, o YorkoOut 15 Thre o gt | 780 D omi i Youngstown, Ohio. Oct. 15.—In a let- | Sidney, Neb. . 15—Lieut. B. W.|wear prices, J. Frank McElwain, the n 3 e “to" the Mahoning United Labor | Maynard Blaglne the way o the sast.|president of ihe National Boot and ORPHANS IN ASIA MINOR|ecome ensnarled jn the league Welvania railroad officials, all the_strikers | conducted in the peaceful and orderly | ericans. They have seen too much 4. . received today, Senator At-|ern terminal in the air flight, as he|Shoe Manufacturers’ Association, sald e 15.—The can’t do it. P returned to work. 3 Way provided for by the peonle for the | order in .the world to under-valu savs he backs Congress- [did in his trip. from Mineols, N. Y.,[tonight in a statement. in whiw-fit v k“i'.lfq g p?%hq!r';m S0 AL R e e 5 gt > acconiplishmeént of alf reform. and order in their own country., They Cooner of this district, | to San Francisco, arrived here tonight | asserted that his remarks at the mid- | Jame: ton, > g INISTRY Immediate regristration of all aliens — SEREss will see 1o it that federal laws are en- hing Cooper has said against [at 5.45 mountain time, making the 93|dle sate shoe wholesalers' % e ES {and deportation of undesirables was|FEDERAL TROOPS TO SU forced and federal agencies left unob- Foster. head of the steel |miles from Cheyenne. Wy., in 33|here Yesterday had been misquoted - urged before the house immigration ALL FORMS OF RIOTING [structed, and they will respond in- Refraining from a discussion |inutes. Maynard will remain here|Mr. McElwain had been quotinz asihet it 3998 UAC 00 Paris, Oct. 15.—The Clemenceau|committee by Representative Welty, stantly to the call of any governor, to teel strike, Senator Pomerene |over nizht. He said he had encount.|Predicting that shoe prices were due ?"A fa 'l\’mwr amd 15.000 Christian | MIRiStry was sustained in the cham-;democrat, Ohio. Cleveland, O. Oct. 15—Secretary of | suppress riots and disorder in any part part says \ered fine weather durime the latter|for a tumble after Christmas. in: As! were being released from |DPer of deputics this afternoon by a s war Newton D. Baker, addréssing the [of the country. They are not partisans 1 have cximined into the merits of jpart of the day. He plans to leave |,k Mr. McElwain in his statement sald}|women Who ‘er x vote of 324 to 132. The premier thus| Two former railroad employes of the | delegates to the convention of the Ohio |in any dispuie except one, and that i that “shoe prices have never reached mirkis| aretns victoriously emerged from the bitter- |Michigan Central railread were arres Federation of Women's Clubs tonight. | the dispute between those who want m Z Foster. He was an I W.lhere for North Piate ai sunrise to- : a 1 : — sunrise 10 % ‘Au-{ Dr. Barten sald that unless America G A which ¢ e e a Syndicaiist. It is claimed | morrow. If he is able to maintain as|tbe high peak represented by the . = helter| €St and best organizes jout which | ed in connection with a'series of rob- | referring to the agitation and unrest|order and those who try to create dis- gust price of dides” . Although hides |centinued to furnish food and shelfer| iie ministry had ever faced, the cham- | beries from that railroad said (o have | b this Sountry sines the singing of the | order T America. A’ botween thass pim that he has since reformed. I| food speeq tomorrow as he did on his L o : tion for the Chfis- facec ad his booklet on syndicalism |westward flight, he will be in Chicago | Rave declined 20 ‘-;::"h“;;m":‘ vt :‘,’;‘: ";’;j‘““',';f“m:‘ffi““; L R ber adopting the cabinet’s policy on | totaled $500,000. armistice, manifesting itself sometimes | two contestants, they are on the side pamber §f his letters published by night. o left Battle Mountain, |Since the ANEWSt BIER PONG iower| perish. this winter. He said the uiti- | I chronslogical order of ne cicctions. | | . in race Hots and mob disorders, but |of order r ook “on_trade unionism—The | coasi time. The distance from. Battle| 8Ures. | : B R om ras » great International: proposi- | om:> . v - Zioad to ¥reedom wnd 1 have read|Mountain io Sidney is about 140 miles. | ther is also extremely scarce. Mr. Me- |G WaZ £ £t S OHOre, DUOPOL [ municipal elections in that order. | when strikers clashed with city po- | STEEL STRIKERS TO FIGHT SEC'Y WILSON MEDIATOR e e e commitier, 1 it (he, TYME parson” s in excellent| FINHT S0l opinion that shoe prices | American mandatory was | urSenlly | one former premior. came out openis | Lo & (4 Plant of the Carnegic Steel| N COURTS FOR FREE SPEECH IN SOFT COAL CONTROVERSY » e & e a 5] - v y Armenla. z t ‘ & ., . Biet of syndicalism he advocated | "4y mber of westbound flyers who |for spring will be no lower thah e e oaco treaty; he said: |in leading the opposition forces, but 8 action, sabotaze. revolution and |arrived here last night were held present,” the. statement concluded. A el b iy ainor. X Dlemenceanty walerlty was the| Americas irespe. ! Pittsburgh, Pa., Oct. 15—The fight| Washington, Oct. 15.—Secretary of — fne That the Teds, the|ihis morning by a heavy fall of snow.|coMpERS SUFFERS FROM 1s comins to the front, cherishing the|largest he had ever received when the | part of the farces to occupy the Prov- |for free speech and free assemblase |Labor Wilson announced tonisht W cant that the Reds, the|Toward noon the weather cleared, the |G VOUS EXHAUSTION |SPirit of revotution in the Near East|dugstion of confidence was presented, |ince of Silesfa, if such action is di- | which the steel strikers claim has been | 27, U508 SPHOURRed, Lon el WV the class of people Who feun came out ang the flight (o ihe NER He read a telegram from Herbert| Preparations had been going on for |rected by the supreme council, will|denied them in the Pittsburgh district | P8 Pd assumed jurisdiction under th eleve in Wr‘f,flz’y“.”; proy San Francisco goa! was resumed. Washington TS Samuel | Hoover, whl’ch ggige g st 1s the | OPPOsition awaiting the ratification of | 521l this weck from New York. will probably be carried to the wurt‘s, Betorean. the' coal bniners sud GoorataD i Ehot vou deciine f SR ashingion, 5 ol “In my opinion the Near East Is the 3 a according to an announcement made | 2 el L o \ou decline to 4ccchllrwo DERBY AVIATORS Gompers, president of the - AMETICn |, ,e( desperate situation in the world.” | he peace treay to make a definite on- | Secretary Glass recommended to|ioday at the national headquarter of | of (¢ Senirel competitive fclds, which fo 15 ImBied with the WERE KILLED IN UTAH, |\ cderation of Labor, confined to his}™sianiey White, _secretary of the|Slqu&ht on the minisiry, =~ o . |conzress an appropriation of $20,000.- |the unions intolved in the strike. e o ln el Ty nd who by every act = [bed at bl home R etion. was re: | Eresbyigrian Board of Foreln MIs-|,iorical Guct with M. Briand. The ver | (00, i0 enable the federal board o vo-| 'W.B. Rubin, counsel for the sirike = | on November 1. s interest in|_ Salt~ Lake City, Utah, . 15.|porary mer 7 ” | sions who recently returned from the g e ko cational training to carry out the pur- |national committee, today notifies Sasretary Wilson el soth J el g B by, i Oct. 15| ported tonight to be feeling much bet- 1 TCIC {0 "Sald that the -British gov- | Uit of the vote makes it positive that | 1ooci'or fhe voeational iratning At | Maver B W Babeoek of bittsbureh: | 1, Seere e e prefer to accept | Licut. French Kirby, pilot; and Lieus. | POTteq fOTEL 10 0 Taq Hat the la- M. Clemenceau's platform will go be- Sheriff William Haddock of Allegheny | United Mine Workere, a ernment had decided to withdraw as ent pr.y - o of Foster. who until | Stanley C. Miller observer, of airplane 2 H ious, fore the people, hi: % # n B e o w3 [ No. 4% Intithe trang-contincntat. pir pox ‘f“,‘ff'fie°;{.‘:§?&,-W:;u'|';lhfr;me '“t-“;;n‘r:"s":ish"nfifl;’:‘t“';h’:':.fifi_‘g““s’; Intention af Forcing & moetponement of e L "'\d.'w"'v;";'("' president of |eounty, and all the burgesses in the | Brewsters, president of the - a Eyndicatict and even now preach- | derby, were killed at Castle . Rock, ctiv al : 3 the mandat c Mine ‘Workers of America, |steel towns in the vicinity, that the|erators Association, had accepied his and Syndicalist and even now pre to resume his activities as head of the | L oj; " ould ‘take charge of it. s e peaah. M Cremaving | recurned to Indianapolis and immed- | union organizers will make 4 Lost case | {nvitation to confor wih Him bn : o= the abolishment of private property | Utah, late today when their plane, [ i the industrial confer- failed. In his speech, M. Clemenceau Chd the overthrow of the courts and | traveling westward fell about 200)labor sroup THREE HORSES TIED IN 300 never was in better form. iately began work of drafting the or- |of the alleged rulings of the public of- | the conference would be held here Fri- der for the strike of all soft coal min- |ficials in denying the strikers the right | day. ence. overnment > el e, i Mr. Gompers’ sec- : “Fermi me to suggest in o vers| Tdcutenant Mirby was killea in-| [Eamlv b (e 087 0, ST e MILE ENDURANCE TEST|THREATS TO EXTEND STRIKE | °r® T R ndly way Do mistake the|stantly, according to the manager of i@ pe t the federa- 8. n s letter of notification, Mr. Ru- ARin Sat icins are pa|the Rigby ranch at Castic . Fook|industriul conference DAL T S5 | st Johnabury, Vi Oct. 18—Atter OF RAILWAY EXPRESSMEN | A resolution called on Attorney Gen- | bin said that after & study of the state| MINERS ORDERED TO Tt und loms suffering. 1f our gov- |Where the accident happened. Lieuten- | UoR chief, had & (emPeriiire 0o g|the horses in the 80 mile road en-l \ o v et 15 Threats to ex. |2l PAlmer to say why men who were | constitution and state and local laws CEASE WORK OCT. 81 b e e TL o e Sl bl o im to remain in bed. S e e red that af the ond |tend the strike of the railway express- | Svertpran of (ix geountry advocating |he found that meetings in public halls ament ne: lne._the Seaiony *dg. s > e judges 3 nd | tend ! h expres he government were not [may be held without any permits and = et EEs At hen e changed it will be by real | CONJUNCTION OF FORCES AMERICAN SHOULD LEARN gf" (ne second dav's sixty mile jaunt ey s P chiding punished if citizens, and deported if | the denial of such meetings and their | (NGAMAPANS, Tace OO 18 AT 687 Americas and not by Soviets or Bol- ADVANCING ON PETROGRAD. SON FROM FRANCE | thee varions conditions upon which. the| the answer of members of the Interna- = dispersing and threats of arrest be-|four thousand local unions in the inevists of the Foster type. To place iy THRIFT LES! e e ehey are "Bob, the halt| tional Brotherhood of Teamsters to the b cause a permit had not been obtained, | country the official order ca Gaier at the Mead of any movéemient = 2 5 = & ased. 3 T nitimatum of Walker D. Hines, director lodman Law, brother of Ruth Law,|is without any warrant in law. all union bituminous coal m < an insult to every law abiding R SVgen: OSC 15 In oficial quatters| New . Yesl Ooct. 15—_Swbrics ‘wan|bieed covalsy modnl wihich ssw ssr-| SSSUER St WOE D Bisen SRCSOr | ooy M stn aviatrrs. ln i Tac| “T:herebiy. sespeetiaify inferm you | 2, nlen bituminous coal mir urged to learn a lesson from France|vice In France during the war, and|g jot with strikers in this city until | Public Health Service hospital, Green- |that your interference with any public|duction at midnight, October O T ™ 1 amm e of them, | €Milch, commander of the northwesi- | WTERL '3 J5er or (hrift. by President| which is owned and ridden by Colonel ., from tuberculosis. Law |meeting held under the auspices of the | L. Lewis Americans—and 1 am one of them, | o) o AAvanchi oo Boea i e 7t Or- 3y . blooded | they return to work. According 'to | Ville, S. acting president sympathize with labor in their reason-|tio 3! s In gloss. madees|Eamball it jthe NEHORR e %Dglfezfséd?:;mfl;ex“;;fi Captain | Michael J. Shell, first vice president Was famous for his daredevil feats in|American Federation of Labor, any of | United Mine Workers of America, left bie demands but they never will 4% |sianding with Admiral Kolchak, head |S8NiZation .speakits 10S0F Spich M.| Paul Hurlburt, and Donlyn, another|©f the brotherhood, *“the word has al- |I4mPping from airplanes. the international bodies affiliaied with | here late today for Washingion o at- prove a movement which 8 1 DIGVIC|of the All-Russian sovernment, ‘and|eom.of R Hifacior-general of French | Morgan, wned and ridden by Captain | Te2dy been passed.” P —— it, or any committee or sub-commitice | tend a conference, called by Secre Fosters and heir kind Thel General Denikine, in a combined ef. | Casenave, director Bencral o o bre- | Ko R Allen i Officials of the union reported more | DESTROYER REID BUILT for them under pretext that same is|of Labor Wilson, with Thomas ties bode mo good to anyon fort agaist the Bolshevik armies in|iBferests In the o 000,000 of the| 'The riders, who left Fort Ethan Al-|than 8000 teamsters on strike in New TN -THi without permit will be regarded as an| Brewster, president of the C > —— Siberia, southern Russia and on . the|Sided: More than 18000000 ad sav-|len yesterday morning and whost des. | Yok, Brooklyn and Long Island and RTY WORKING DAYS.|unlawful interference by you of their|erators’ Association. Mr. Lewis w GERMANS ASKED 7O AID IN | northwestern front. 33.006.000 people in. France DA Said. | tination in Camp Devera Masn: came| &t~ several thousand more have| ouioo oy o rights, for which action will be insti- | arrive in Washington late tomorrow OCKADE OF SOVIET RUSSIA.| Generol Yudeniich's troops are fully |ES Pank accounts, M% U00% 2osi- | here today from Nortneid. The moon|malked out in New Jersey citics, ‘at- | QUincy, Mass. Opi. 15—The de-|tuted against you and you will be made | Before leaving the city. Mr Lewis o “[eauipped now' by 'the ailies, ~ with | e =GUER B S omen. “irance 18 | feed was eaten at . Hardwick, into|iecting tle-ups in Jersey City, Hoboken | Girover Reld, buile in {hirty working |answerable for all liablities therein; | declarcd the only thing (hat could pre- ; e ors i = s , y ewark, Elizabeth and Paterson. Mr. ! ay at the|that I have advised the various union | vent a strike of the miners on Novem- : el s o - Wuum Lue genetar is n constant z of na: ich town Rustum Bey, an Arabian | London. Oct. 15°%—In connection with | fiuu:l 1 Keu b omar gueh [t it d°‘§‘3,‘,‘,"’e»w;‘-',’.',‘,f:'?s“scarc‘uv | om R B & The rabian | Cashell ‘predicted there would be 30, Squantum plant of the Bethlehem|labor organizations interested in the|ber 1 would be the reaching of an e O Crommany \to co-op- | Admiral Kolchak, it is declared, have |LOnS” he addec. S ST Grance who | cade. hbdpdtuiny L Sl e L L T mine ot oo er LBl R BelAb of aich ‘public mestings that| agreement between the minefs and o e T e ieercion of Soviet Rus- | consistently rejected all _overtures | I, T3 gwner of something ‘Alihough the weather was unusually =57 cently Joral watef that has been re-|they may do so without first obain- | erators representatives ~before (hat 2 ine correspondent of The Asso-|from Germany and maintained their|'S POt R OTRT 7 — warm for the season, the judges said| ROYAL BELGIANS VISIT Toseph W, Towcelit paunchings, Mrs.|ing a permit from jou therefor.” date. Even if that should result from A e T Prus that a comiganl- | conectio with the allies. EMEMBERS that all the horses came through the THE YOSEMITE VALLEY | vice-president of the - cosoend #| It was also announced at strike|the Washington conference, he said N I ture via Tile W PRESIDENT R ; e e ey _Yo: e aent Ol rolhe corporation, | headquarters that the labor bodies| the agreement would not ‘be binding - At Ahe"'é” eaksceice. ASSERTS JAPAN INTRODUCED MRS. WILSON'S BIRTHDAY, trivelled over mountain roads be-| Glacier Point, Calif. Oct. 15.—|cp e Bln,: flglg;ro.ver{wnh a bottle|identified with the Pittsburgh central|until it had been acted upon by m § -r Germany by the peace k tween Hardwick and St. Johnsbury. | Through the valiey of the Yosemile,! for Captain Sampel Chester Bela mgg | 14bor union will hold a meeting Sunday | at a reconvened convention. The s OPIUM TRAFFIC INTO KOR S 5. — President : ampel Chester Reid, ! nidC 5 an agreement by the repres participate in a blockade of Soviet| Princeton, N. J. Oct. 15—Charges|inar today was Mrs. Wilson's birth-| BRITISH URGED TO BUY i g queae & Thaday, aihojclals of the company expect, to Have |strike.” The alleged wetion of the ety | fore November L. It was said, however, B s e ionay| it o Ba% it indh ot (Jicenced | 15! 7" act he made ‘preparations| COTTON FROM_FARMERS DIRECT here today. For the aueen 1t was one| oage c/d Feady for delivery within 15 | authorities In denying a hearing of | Would mean the Countermanding of the later followed by reports n vice ai e opium traffic into Korea|for it several days ago, for it was f : = complaints against cf & S ol | strike order issued today, at least um- intimatins that they. 60, had|and has sought o orevent Korea from | learncd tonight that he then sent out| New Orleans, Oct. 15.—British cot-|2{ NGr sPgeial davs n | the = United - — Tusing. to permit mass meetings ana | Ul the convention acted upon the con- uested 1o Join in @ blockads |publisaing the foNy. thcoughout the |, member of the White Houge Staff to| ton spinners were urged today by eot-| St near Yosemite Village. . ine| PROTEST. TO CLEMENCEAU alleged illegal arrests will be consider- | tract. days. © definite announcement of _such| world were made Dr. Syngman ift. Today he presented|ton growers to send representatives to E 4 e Ponitare Teadl wonid Pokes cua contemplated measures had. hawever, | Rhee, prosident of the “republic of Koe| Hor hascnbiince to ner 1he Aelds of the south, buy cotton from | Suroked the ears of a mountain lion| COMES RO AL BANIA o e i ement i ai. | prediction as to the result of the com- been made from Paris or Londos.|rea” in an adafess tonight beford et ~ the farmer direct, bale the staple as|ares €7 When no one was looking, tions from the employers’ vieamaint |ference in Washington. In the mean- causing some adverse newspaper com- | Princeton University students. It was| GERMAN PEACE MISSION they see fit, eliminating all middle-| 1SPPEC, l8ide (no cage to inspect it| Paris, Oct. 15.—(Havas.)—The Ai-|was claimed today Lo sea oo POInt| ime, he said. preparations the ment. 1t was stated in Paris yes‘cr-|the first of a series of addresses which HAS LEFT VERSAILLES|men and reducing the cost of the raw| org CIO0€ly The Ton snapped at|banian delegation sent to represent|in the Pitsburen diciricre e rromPaies | irike wo pe_continued as’ i=Sun day that the United States did not| Dr. Rhee will deliver on a tour of sev- material to the =pinner at the same| {hS Mo tucy roireniod, o noe sy 4nd|that country before the peacs confor-| no ‘tmportant. Shaamer wrnorca” C7C | conference were not in progress join with the entente powers in askinZ | eral large citics. Paris. Oct. 15.—(Havas). Baron|time increasing the price paid to the| g oo™ b i0f In dis-|qnoe-Bes Skddzesned o Brensicr ‘Clem- | M5 rile’ Headontiore. had oo TPhe strike order warns the miness Germany 1o cooperate in such a| “Our cause, the cause of Korea|gyrt Von Larsner and the members of | purchaser. At an Indidn camp she chatted with|gooo A :Ictier ;protzating. aguinst algive out on the peneral situsine s v |that there must be no suspension or biockade. ang the American delega-isaid Dr. Rhee, “awaits the interna- | (e German peace mission left Ver-| ' The proposal alons the lines of the| , Al & Indian camp she chatted with| declaration made by Temasso Tittont |5 e iy o Seneral situation, ' W (000 L0C70 ") D0 S o o eror i tion there did not admit any America | tional publicity that will advise the | gailles today and went to live témpor- | systems used by British tobacco man-f g g 2rc S ePIayed no inetinaation | the Italian foreign minister, that the | girikers: commictos: Sd he hagdtional| time fixed jn,the order and. declares participation in an actual blockude | worlq of Koreas situation. We have | 22i1\™ s "an’ apartment on the Avenue|ufacturing interests in Kentucky, was| 12 ¥i% & papogsc, A shy Tndian lad of; mandate for. Albania should nave been | Samts wnd wamen ea S3d he had no re- | (i orderiv nrocedure must he follow- against Russia faith in the people of the world. in the | apourdonnais. They will reside here|made at a meeting today of a speciall oo /3 he Ties: ecognized the intrusted to Italy. Such a decision, i g o at “no news is good | eq throughout. - people of the United Staes and in the | niil the German embassy quarters(committee of world cotfon conference| US] A7 Je replied: e the note states, carries with it an at- | "V Fogier saia he b 3 United - Mine Workers of international justice. It therefore, ady for occupancy. delegates composed of ten foreign ! o it er photograph in &|tack on the integrity. indpendenca and o e Would address a| America are now embarkin on the MOUNT HOLYOKE COLLEGE our PErvenb AnEcor: piisegs. 10 an) PR gredy To Spinmcre. ton Amcrican spinnecrs saa|Sen Franciseo paper= ae. | SOVereignty of the Albanian people. | g ni ains of Bethlehem Steel strik- | ‘areatcyt erprise ever un K V9 NI TRY ey G- SR SN S |cUSTODY OF FORMER GERMAN |iwenty American cotton growers. 1t| , Lhe Queen rode horsebatk this aft-|and is contrary to the rights of smaii | Coo, it Allntown, Pa, Sunday afier- | i e hixtors afthe trade union move PASSENGER SHIPS DISCUSSED |Wwas ihe first time In Afty vears it|point’ac did the king. i % s ; ment.” reads the order In conclusion South Hadley, Mass. Oct. 15—A’|TO BE HANGED FOR was stated. that American dofton pro- T e, it ALY SaehEm b Of G o s R G o anite the Aot MURDER OF STEP-DAUGHTER| New York. Oct. 15—Formal custody | ucers and British spinners had met| peciDE NOT TO REINSTATE ABANDON ORGANIZATION REPORTED THAT PRESIDENT fiuet Nenpersfe) Rhd assiegsiie fr s fund of Mount Holvoke college from O or T SEHE AT S Sl e 3 smccess to our efforts. You will SR et Feomner 1, It v on. LB AP SN e e el hssonger ships. DHle to which is-now — BOSTON @ARK POLICEMEN| OF WORLD WAR LEGION. WILSON 15 GETTHSG BENTER guided by the policies’ of vour union urated about Nevember 1. it was an- | Cerone, who was found guilty vester- | subject of diplomatic discussion|{PLANE LEADING IN DERBY P e e =~ and the official orders emandting from nced y , i 5 e - , Oct. 15—The Metropolitan| New York. Oct. 15.—Abandonment] W et | its ofticers.” nou; today by the trustees of the|day of the musder of his stepdaughter, | between the United States and Great FLIGHT DESTROYED BY FIRE | Park Commission foday denied tne spn o the World War Legion ang sament] uny sabington. oct. 15 g R R ~oliege. The income from $2.000.000 of | Raffaela Computari, in Hamden on the | Britain, was today transferred from peal of nineteen former metropolitan|lation of its national encampment| Wilson's illness brought from his | Washington by anv other officials or ibe fund will be devoied to increasing | night of June 8, was sentenced late to- [ the war department hrough officials of i i ] ™~ 3 BHE S s for the creotion ot & bl | cuet 1 e TR Tl e B [ the, part “oF ‘embarkation here. 10 the | witth *Gapikin T 11 Stk arived | Hr. naabordinntion ame iy e it i el e e At iy oip LT e mER tiont baidire and o reaiasmre “poty” [ Soust to be hanged in (he state brison | United States shipping board. The|here from New Yorks ihis evening was| to orders in refusing Lo perforn riot|its Washingion headanar received | the recent annoyance caused by . e U i< % it ' g e T o Mg s March © mext. Be-lships transterred are the giant liger|destroyed by fire at thel local landing|duty durng the early davs of (he po-|here tonight.. All werld war . legion | slighils. enfarged iand pocd be al - > R A g b3 e s e alumnae | fore pronouncing sentence the court|Imperator, the Moblle (formerlV thelficld tonight. Captain Smith was the ! llck strike. Pleas of the men ang|members have been trged 1o J0in the | the ORIy outatandiny Chods Femoved) American Railwsy Express COmpany or the Szeater part ol n-‘»' amount |denied the molion of counsel for Cer-|Cleveland), Pretoria. Prinz Friedrich | cader in the return flight of western| their counsel thai the former. oMicers| American Legion ax the oMeline ron | oo et v \White|teamsters at Middletown. N. ¥. went waght o o e e ouidenceCt 2%ide as|Wilheim =and Zeppelln, aggregating]aviators in the cross-continent ir|ho given an opportunity ta redeem|ognized body of veterans,of the war,|Honse there was manifocted s duriis|on strike in sympathy with the New e Contrary io the evidence. 111,393 tone. Face. themselves were of no avail, the statement said. , atmosphere of optisism. | " York city teamsters’ walkous. solde. B S S 5 = , > B !

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