Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 20, 1919, Page 1

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VOL - LXI—NO. 278 Bt shMay Wede and Breal 115,000,000 Gallons Released | Weakness of Certain Stocks| Bar siver was qusted at 70 pance I-UDGE REsulum ook s Twm[ B[FMTED From War-Time m Indicat file Enforced Dis- fiafiwmmceNé: 'Ifi\:fifu\; compared with - \B g tions—Came as a Surprise. | solution of Pools. | R o e, M NTlN ) J fifteen million ‘gallons of whiskey be- | the stock market which began a little| States, during 1913, . ! \ sides a - quantily of other spirits i |more than a week ago assumed wider London, Nov. iB.—b hundred ard| New York, Nov. 13.—The break in|worth of c inuts “to the United pond in Great Britain wero Teleaded wna more Serious broporiions today: | 0. S. Carlten, of Heuston, has re- Are Still In a Receptive Mood—Fuel Administrator Gar- from wartime restrictions today and|The entire list was. carfie 0 lowes! ocrat >3 : & 3 i o bt LA " the league covenant ot -t | Y1y istribntod 1o eiiicampta; who fievels in many. wesks, gross rcession; | I eien S Terds field Issues Edict That the People of the Uniied States. . . o el prepared in the|can persuade the dealers to sell. i ulative industrials ranging g L i . ] ” Democratic Attempts to Effect a Compromise Were Rebuffed | senate fast March, and sala this bad | The announceacnt of the removal af | P qetive | Paterson, N. J, indorsed daylight Will Not Be Prevented From Having Coal By Anything: B o P I3 2y to Rati E'e‘gn l: ;:){:: gulfloe‘ :.:d the u})r;r_slden: the restrictions, which was made|’ Developments of ‘the day, With few | saving law and. will pass measure to ) y the Republicans—Failing In Three Attempts tify ssociated with him a § Sterling exchange droppéd to a g . low recora Of $£.06% im New Yotk 1§ 4 Longshoremen at Kingston, Ja- maica, went on strike for 100 per cent. Paria hat Tho cenate mever would sc: | ons 'y e Tood contronan. Tass ey | cxceptions, Eave further omentu to | S3Ver, & fve-monty period the Operators Or Miners May Do—Industrial Plants In . 9 Y . B Sl AL UL D) 3 4 the decline and the selling derives = H ) i L o m. |gept the league of nations covenant.|.amc a surprise to the memiies, | giti, i ssive | According to Bureau of Labor Sta- the Treaty the Senate Adjourned Sine Die at 10:08 p. m. | o, (e lsazue of nations covenant | .an, 8 surprise to the me ditional impetus trom the aggreselve | Accaraing o Bureay of Laber Sta. Cleveland Have Been Cut Off From Coal Supply Be- —Ratification Vote Stood 39 Fw, to 55 W__Two_ xgr!flx:.oggc:d now were to wreap the| = The liquor trade was equally eur- ! > f food increased in August. b extended short interest. 9 . cause of Shortage. ¢ prised and was besieged by the well- ol dispassionate observ- o g . P Blame for the present situation in According to. dispa. Thirds Majority Was Necessary For Passage—Senator 1c-do among the public as econ as the displayed | Premier Nitti, of Italy, and other % b the senate was placed upon the repub- | unexpected news spread. - Many orders §‘fvcehrm§f§gc§‘fDf;‘,’,:,';“i';,;ge;:‘;a the | candidates on his list, were electeq for | Y ashington, - Nov. 19.—Prospects of)of the ceal supply in the Seuator Underwood, - v : Lodge Asserts the Treaty Is Dead So Far as the Senate Is erwood, demo- | of from fifty to & hundred dozers were Seats: in -the :Chambe; . |2 coal famine drew nearer —tonight|district was pronounced - “fair” crat, of Alabama. who called s upon| placed Immediately, in addition to mu-| enioreed dissolution of several ofeT Chamber ‘of Depulles. lovith " negotiations betwesn operators | night by the local tuel . distetbu | Declared He W Not Vi them to go to the country with the " { pools, ~ whose further P pinks| Rebellious tribesmen at Lago, Juby,|2hd miners apparently at a standstill.| commitiee of the United Stafes Concerned—Brandegee e Would Nok Vote| “assimilated issuc” and. taid there| e xeparded _with disfsver by on northwestern African coast, were| A sub-committes of the joint wage|road administration, although the. 4 would be no question of the people's| Although it is figured that enough|2nd other ‘:""’r‘:‘ ot OBEY. . day was | dispersed by Spanish troops, who also | SCale committee, was in session three gauon is regarded with some appre- For Adoption In Any Form. 3 Verdict. \While the Alabama senator|spirits has been thus freed to supply| The one hopeful note of the da¥ &8 oo p)icned order. hours but it was announced after the | hension. Consumers, members of the was speaking, Senator Swanson, dem-|every man. woman and child in the|30unded by the Jocal federation resefes meeting that only the general sit-| commitiee say, cannot be too strict Washington, Nov. 19—Failing atter|ings would operate to sustain the po-focrat, of Virginia, was busily engaged | country with 6 bottles apiece, it is|Dank, whose fll"m“tg;: B Mectiit.| Desertions by the thousands to the |Udtion was discussed and that the op-|in economizing in the nso of fuel. - Tites SANAEY ratify® the peace | Sition tz:qn by Senator Lodge. in conferences upon the fioor with|doubtful if the public will find it easy|DPut evidently saw nothing vu:,- the semats late tonight laid it |, It Was Oi a.viva yoce vote that the (Senators Lodge und Watson in an a - i als to the miners' demands. The con- | there was ng danger of & soal treaty after being - before the senate|Darent eleventh hour attempt to bring |a great exient. The gevernment main.|discount rates ~ The national board |ian sovernment apparently unable io asdde, ended the special session and|rorimany weeks then was laid aside.[#bout a compromise. it the R O i ranustion in|ranks of d’Annunzio announced. Itai- erators did not submit counter-propos- Heretofore, it has been m&::& at present to increase consumption to went home. 4 ference will continue tomorrow. age in the district owing to suj tains control of the maximum price,|Of the federal reserve bank also was stem tide of desertions to his ranks. wing _ e e = “No progress was made. The op-|on hand, continued ~production ' # On Senator Lodge's motion to take up Claim by Underwood. which for whiskey is ten shilllngs and |in session in Washington, but An inquiry into reported delays in|CT2tors submitted no proposals. We|non-union fields and a 5 o~ Ratifieation of the peace treaty lati 11 i ' K -|action respecting market affairs here. seith the reservation framed by the | EISlative business, no roll call was} Semator Underwood suld the Amerl. |SIX pence pag bottle. and it 4 not be L deporting. allens held at Ellis Ioland,|2re Still in a receptive mood” said|crease in West Virginia. ¢ e président de- fcan people de e lieved that e dealers wilt sell much| Call money ruled at 12 per cent. un- Z|John L. Lewis, acting president of the | Protracted deliberations republican majority, and objected to | Clirod” it udopted by acclamation. | of the sumate - Poice 3t the handsip G0 GAF Agure, a8 the existing high|t the final hulf hour, when a drop to | ¥ill be opened in o oot omor- | United Mine Workers, as he came out| ers' and operators’ by Prestdent Wilson, was vote B ot'l"' The collapse of the compromise ne-1 “This side of the chamber,” he said,|duty will remain. 10 per cent. induced much realizing fof' mittan. « |o fthe hotel room where the conference | Washington, the continued idleness in the senate lute today wi 1 |Eotlations which this morning had | pointing to the democratic side, “is| Moreover, restrictions on distMlation|profits land incidental coverings o BUEDC was held. . |mines in Ohio, Indiana, admisistration senators 1ining Up s01° | jromised to point a way to ratification | not responsibie to the country for the| dUFing the war and the necessity of|short contracts. Capt. W. A. Swift, of Swifton, Miss,,| The operators’ committee remain-| Pennsylvania, and the sudden idly against followed another and more definite an- [ action the senate may take. The con-|MAtUring stocks may lead the dealers| Today's operaations -~ amounted to THY ¥ ed session an hour longer. At the end|snap today, have changed the tone Roll Call on Ledoe Resclution. nouncement by President Wilson that | trol is in the hands of the republicans. | t0-hold large quantities. On the other|slizhtly over 1.700.000 shares, u -arze ?c{ldx Ewb:.:f;, "vihfl'y’,‘,:";fl?wfi'?: ;: bf that time Thomas T. Brewster, | coal authorities in discussing the i: The coll call on the Lodge resolu-|the reservation proposed would. in his | The republican party is responsibie 6| 1nd. it will be possible now to sell all|percentage of ‘this tatal vepresenting |31 2 U TS (20i0n ™ e ale | chairman of tho operators’ committes | uation. tonight. 7 R followi: opinion, nullify the treaty's vital pur- | the people for the peace of the na-|(h® American whiskey which has|the steels motors ofls ard equlns |l g 585 pounds. in the central competitive fled, spoke e ‘._ ¥or sdoption g poses. : A tion. What a spectacle is presented to| Fciched and ¢ still reachine Bngland [ments, with n libersl sprinkling of optimistically), declaring that this was| M|NERS WALKED OUT epublicans—Ball, Calder, Capper,| 1In a letter to Démocratic Leader| the nation tonight by the way the re-| 1CUSh clearance from the customs|tobaccos and unelicsified specia: Owing to the continued strike of the | the first attempt at real negotiations Cummins, Curtis, Dillingham, | Hitcheock, the president expressed the | publicans are cxercising the power en.| MY Pe slow. Heavy selling of Lib i Elki since the miners and operators met at IN WESE VIRGINIA Frelinghuysen, Hale, |hope that the treaty's friends would| trusted to them by the people of the tributed to ;ho needs cf individaas ‘éfi“xa‘,’;* ;é?f;: }Sf“fieém:" ."1?,3 Buffalo. ~ For that reason, he said,| 3 - Jones (Washington), Kellogs,{vote against ratification’ on the pro-| United Statess - 4 and_cligues affects1 by ths break i o0 window illumination ang mon-|°PlY gemeral matters were discussed.| Charleston, W. Va. Nov. 18—The Keyes, Lenroot, Lodge, Mc-|grumme that had been approved by| Senator Underwood said that the|l2id aside by the senate after three|stocks, helped to unseitle the Vondjoconiin use of gas. The decision of the joint wage scale thflu‘m situation in the McLe McNary, P.\'-_luun. the majority. This letter was pre- | Lodge resolution in the vote taken up- | Foll calls on its ratification had fail-|market. Sevami of the tax-exempt conference to continue its negotiations | Southern mining districts of West Vir- wherry, — Page, Penrose.(sented to a conference of democratic > on It tonight received only a lithe| € _to muster the necessary majority. |Liberty bonds sold at mew low records.| p, Eanl of Bemerayde (Field Mar- | through a smaller group. in accordance) §ilia ook on a more serious Smoot, Spencer, Sterling, | cenators before the senate .met and|more than one-third of the member.| Republican Leader Lodge. declared nd. _Townsend, Wadsworth,|the president's advice was >hdorsed E ) ~ E tonight when reports were receir r sharl Sir Douglass Eaig) intends to|With the usual custom in making the e e k a ship, the vote being, he said, a repu-| that under the rules the senate action!gpEaK |N MARKET DUE TO Tetire as commander of the home|W3§e agreements, came after the | from ;he New River coal fields show- and Watson—3i by most of those present. diation of the exercise of power by|W2S final unless the treaty was with- JON” | forces after the abolition of Britigh|OWners and workers had heard from|ing that hundreds of miners had rats_Gore, Shields, Smith| “Expressing théir resentment ai the|the republicans, He criticized the| 4rawn and then. re-submitted by the FUNBRIDER DS SEECLLAT general headquarters, Fuel Administrator Garfield that as|Walked out, closing a number ot ) und Walsh (Massachusetis) | course adopted by the presidenr ard | “parliamentary license” by which they|President. The democratic leaders did| v, 19—The recent : long as the government stands “the|Which had been operating since the his senate supporters the republiean |were able to bring a “repudiateq res.|ROt agree with® him. Washington, Nov. 13— he urket| Seven persons were killed when a|PeODle of the United States need, | Tescinding of the strike order. * 3 1 for adoption—33. * group of mild reseryation:sts onlolution” ber S e e rest | UAfter disposing of the treaty Sena-|break in the New York stock market| Soven persons wers ldfled wheh 8| st have, and will have coal, and| According to' the:reports the men Agalnst: whom the democrats had pinned thelr| that an atompt wan 1 onerEd | (or Lodge introdfioed o resolution pro.|Was due io. ‘“unbridied speculation” | New York Centrl railroad passenger|foc" oi'® "% brevented by any. |besan quirting work todaysfolowing " - L Jspubite Bor. Brandegee, | hopes of a_compromise stiffenel fheir| drive an unwilling majority (o accepe] POSINE that coniiens declare the war Govermor R Ot e I ant to| crossing on the eaatorn - outskirts. of |tNiNg the operators and miners may notification by the.mine m ermald, Franee |1 onnson| determination to stand by the repub- ctates, of a small ‘mi i with Germany af an end. S e the city of Buffalo, N. Y, o1 peleiplen O L il o (Cwifornix), Knosx, ilette, Me-lican programme and. bluntly toift Me. | Seomen sirar e b Moty The resolution was referred .o the|Senator Owen of Oklahoma.ewho had > The consuming public, the chief par-| effect that the “check-off" system Cormick, Moses, “Norrls, Polndexter | Hitchcock on the senate floor tHat the | tors who had voted againet the Lodge| foreign relations: committee. ;i‘::ed Lfi:"sh‘ Gyl Directors and editors of German- (Y in interest in the present contro- | been IEQAB&FT bem:lsetui‘aw § d Sherman— iy olntl o P rH crash. h kS o versy, Dr. Garfield s 5 abrogates ir conf ] g S Temocrats *— Ashurst, Bunkhead,|CI10 12 {ak comprerise had pass: | respiution to “repuaiute it Ho then| o Lodze refolipel which would) Mspecilators taok no Hieed ot warn-fophile newspaper’ Brawsilol con |1, O Garfeld sad, s not ina | AEOEMEIE SRt b pag ckham, Chamberlain, Culberson %% 4 explained what future procedure could - 8 Pkl inzs issued by the rd and by e | T : e s Dil, Fletcher, Gay, Gerry, | Harris, o 1% vain 4 the L . e Y. 2t veI" | federa) reserve bank at New York that | Brabant court, were publicly executed | Brices or prolonged stoppage of pro-| hew strike I reported to, be Hurtison, Herdersor, Hitchcock, John® | i e fa%, Of Sxclied debate fora | .o shall maintain that we are en-|Man government repiied in the Ametl| reqerves were declining and that 2 AL LI offigy Bt t56 Cliy Maly Dromsele. . Rivet 2 son (South Dukota), Jones (New |y uides of th 8 friends cn}tifled to offer other résolutions of raz-| © % 2 G :| must be called. Mr. Harding said, an Mexico); Kendrick, King, Kirby, Me- - hamber. The | jfication,” Ser ok Sgent, - résrman, | M1 group eranted them on'y one con- | clared, The sub-committee is composed of | Where approximately 8,000 miners, for - Underwood de~| that an armistice has been signed and | #0™ /0o ative “movement contifiued. | - Proposed appearance of Frizt Kries-| (W0 miners and iwo operators from | employed in. 130 mines. s ' : The vice president already| Proposed that congress deelare. that|mpega circumstances, he added, then|ler, well known Austrian violinist, at|cdch of the four states in the central NO COAL FOR INDUSTRIAL Gwen, Phelan, Piltman, Pomerene, | Cet%i0n. They helnsT carry a rccon-1has ruled correctly. that we have that| the “state of war is hereby declared at|forced the New York bank to eall the | Louisville, was postponed by the|COmpetitive district, together with Mr. RIAI Ransdel] Reed, Robinson, Sheppard, |fideration motion after the ratifica- | right. Bul & majority of iha senaje|#n end ; * Lattention of rediscounting banks to the|Louisville Fine Arts League upon|Brewster and Mr. Lewis. 4 PLANTS IN CLEVELAND Simmons, Smith (Arizona), Smith|ton resolution had been defeated but|desiroyed his’ruling. When this res-| After the peace treaty had been laidl| situation; ‘in order that demands of|complaint of the American Legion. The statement of the fuel admini B e o (Muryland), Smith (South Carelina),|they indicated that they were doing it|glution (of Senator Lodge) is voted|aside and the rafiroad bill had.been| ozylar customers for call money in [— trator, which was largely statistical, e oimas. Trammell | 00ly 0 get the. measure”back before Cleveland, Ohio, Nov. 19.—Every - GoWn agall wo must fuct - the factjmMade the unfinished business, Repub-|handling . commercial transactions| -All records for daily newspaper cir- |brought out that in 1918 the average|dustrizl plant in the city, with the Underwood, Walsh (Montana). Wil-|the senaie so they could reaffirm their | shether u partisan majority, which | \ivan Leader -Lodge moved ihat the|might be protected. culation _were broken when six mil-|cost of production of coal was $2.15| exception, ot :those “iRder WS- lams ané Wolcoti—42. stand hehind the renublican leaders | intands to destroy-this treuty, can -be| Senate adiourn sine die. . The, motionj. ..~ ————— Jion “copies’ of (iie | Presse de. Paris | Per ton, leating 10" the operaior an|head of “publig utllities, _oft Senator ¥l republican, of - New| A shérn narlimentary hatile . h¥iyentrolled, and by judirect measures| Was voted dowii. 3 ; Mexico, the oily absent memiber, was|Which the .demwérale ere ~jammed: 8 Fiueuueg 'FOR YALE |Were disiributéd. Copy was céutrai average margin of 46 cenis per ton.|from ity eeal supply jate (odust. oY Gy o the senate Yow shall rati The_senate ,ad, opnosed 1o the Lodge, resoiution, ac-| tEhter and tighter irito a situation] we ol B8 et > of - the P i~ This marsin fe safl Weludic interss: | Clevelumd coal conmission fa. 1 DR e b e i 1] W pressnt 1y ar npkat A o 18 pelgeel - il a3 S IR e i e jcharses soliing. expences nd federal| to” relieve ihe" atute (.. situs eording to announcemeati by Senalor precluged e offering any comé “That is the issue”’ Senate Tndef- 5 > & Jov. 18- —_— 3 h wel s profit. heze. Severs) plants will be forced to repibllgatt SHID, Dromise proposals o the foor de | vood dga, T o prem i er | SENATGR TOBGE DECLARKES, e e, Sor SR qiSamplete returns from all but 80 L oo S | close and muny others wil be able 0 Téeslats gt e bais WRRRegtin: yote, peric - THE TREATY I AD: i id 1 5| districts confirm indications that Pave Foquifed o two (hifds mia- |In this * atraggle: ‘the JaMpintetmutad | e, Los. Neirican pequls: will” knoy fessors among the highest paid in this i ; S 55 operate only. in part as a result of the who is 10 ratify this Lrealy and who 4 been given by Yale cor-|elections to. the' French Chamber of IS PRONOUNCED “FAIR”| order. according to J. C. Brainard, the tets | reptiblican grotp Ao, voteg wen d]1s to destroy it Washington, . Nov. 19.— Senator .(y‘»onl;gignh“i\{e was_ anmounced tonight. Deputgts was a victory for the Con- — ‘hairman of the industrial division of Votex to 55 against it. Its supporters D swha.voteg again andl yp s . 3 100E) BEtar-aaiouspmenit L ORI sht. e & g ;1 b Sl ot Vere 35 repuliicans und four demo-|again to overrule decicions s of | Vies e b b g Hy sy i The normal salaries of full time pr by a 2 ty vote a r clared “the treaty is dead so far as this 8 5 d | parties. crats, and its_opponents 13 repybli- | President Marshall which ,would have v a majority vote after the Lodge fessors who have had $4,000, $4,500 an Jority for adoption: only mustered 39 | forces got no sympathy trom the mud Moderate and Nationalist| Pittsburgh, Pa, Nov. 19.—Condition resolution is again defeated. Senator|senute is concerned.” 45,000 have been. incredsed to $5.000, —- : - cans and 42 demoerats. ot othe compromise proposals get Te- | Underwood said Senator Lodge eithor| Republican leaders said the senate! 35000 und §7.000, with the undersiand- | The Jefferson County Bank at Jef-| CONSTITUTION FOR EGYPT LUDENDORFF'S ATTACK ON The result was to place th;i!;—alu‘ tore the senate for action. would have to adjourn the senmate or|need not advise the president of its|i i1t in u few cases where men are|fersontown, Ky., twelve miles from a amentary._ status which its : 1 notify the president by a resolution on nor return the treaty to him|of exceptional ability as teachers and |Louisville, was robbed of liberc wmies declared amounted at least) SENATE PROCEE! [Nes ON that the senate would take no further|With formal notice. productive scholars $8.000 will be paid.|bonds, war ‘mporarily to reiection. its friends, S HAS BEEN ANNOUNCED COUNT VON BERNSTORFF ings stamps and cash| fondon, Nov. 19.—(By The A. P.| Berlin, Tuesday, Nov. i8,—(By The E 101 the treaty. “The president may withdraw it ¢ list is retroactive to July 1,|varicusly estimated at from $10,000 to R S e LR R SR & Py R s ST Lowever, had hopes of reviving it at PEACE TREATY IN DETAIL {200 ‘;‘;,l'i‘:me',‘;’:‘u’ situation, ex-|When - the. senate reconvenes,” Senator g};;,;;:o,;:m';; With special arranze- | $30:000. : A ‘constitution for Eg and local|A. P.) The viciousness of General s unotl s - wession of congress. T ‘ : lenders on both | lL0d€e said. “and, of course, ‘he - can Vi v lained priv: y Aftec the ratification vote the re- | Mashington, Nov. 19.—The resolution| P g e B theg. re-submit if In the netx session. piblicans permitted their Tesolution | Of Fatification of the peace treaty con-[{ides, Was that with prospective overnn for ments will not share In this government for oth of | dendorfP's attack on Counte.Vom % rease. s— 2 which were announced today, Bernstorff, the former German ambas- but most of them will receive $5.000 of | Seccretary Baker authorized the re- At 2 5 adbr ‘at Srashinr s mccentigti : AR spe X “But (He tréaty a dsad in this BEnkre 3 e O T ot Wiy reniny Srmty ol ro- | siEned to) meet” the, unrest sador at Washington, Was accentuate taining the Lodge reservations was re-|Jection again of the Lodge resolution, i $6.000. * Assistant and assoclate. pk . i countries, which have been deman iy the manner of its delivery before in exactly the form rejected to come | o was re it st and they killed it as I told them they | A1l be increased, most of them |foreign service when illness or dis- o e been demand: b o Further eonstaseation put s |Jected toduy by the semate. The vote| M. Hitchcock would again seek to| 200, they killed Tt ag 1 told then ‘essors will be ‘ vas 3 o i offer _substitute resolutions, be sus- the session extended into the evening | W43 9 for Lo 03 against adoption, s 3 = X S, jer 1a| the - application to themselves of the| the sub-committee of the national as= from $2,500 to 34,500, Deans of schaols|tress in the family of the soldier is : ms e . L a . -~ % s Senator Hitchcock said the treat: . 7 st A tona i = - | application to themselves of the the-|sembly investigating war responsibil= The soiid repabiiean lineup which had | Four democrats, Gore, Shicids, Smith | tained by the vice president and have| Senator Hitehcock eaid the treaty e e oo astablos o (keills retbum 8d- o iés"or ‘self-dotegmination. and. ' the He denied Von Bernstorff's ver- held throughout the day against re-|Of Georgia and Walsh of Massachu-|& magori&y Bvirruleb(he Vvice president,| ¢y 0" b rocident would re-submit it on Lo T s ' rights ‘of small pationalities on of the conversation between the Peated democratic compromise pro- | G0N Ipted With 35 republicans ¢dr | FUNLtIRE Cut L fained, would teuve the|Dec. 1st, although he had no defnite| "ot fimeVinstructors ana assistant| Supreme Cound decided to inform|, The Exireme Egyptian Nationalists| two, previously introduced, and de= posuls, showed no of ylelding, | *BenClaiic senators favoring ratifi] sendte in the. position of refusing to| N0 {rom the presldnt to that effect | protossors In undersraduate. schools| Premisr Venizeos of Greece that 1t | have raised the bunner of complete in- e A -~ A - 2 = : . > & ik e continued “Bernstorft and Tt T e o et On | CRtion either without reservations or| Tatify the treaty but Without reject- | ierran hepiouelt the republicans had = 2 ts ! i s he nn K doing satisfactory work had their sal-|could only confirm the view of the i PR < ot - worked themselves “into a very awk-|aries increased last spring. Some fur-|Peace Conference concerning the pro- are" W0 Dersons Of. Wholli GRCSKES Necond vote taken after several|¥ith less drastic interpretations voted|ing it. ard positio ay that the e : and had_solit them- | iy £ D i o loal et o ob 0% | has ' resign s an answer to temperaments. Oir views are strong- which the democruts made vain efforts | of “nullification” rather than ratifics. | could withdraw the treaty it he de- The Lodge Resolution. salaries will be above $200.000 and| | —_— BEIEISE M o ey right 16 b asumae ;‘;flthlh-"";ofi“: i win ovac sewe of e iregubliean o ? sired, they said, and re-submit It in| Washington, Nov. i9—The Ledge|with increased wages io smploses the| NEW YORK'S “DEADLINE FOR" |, 0% ¢t the Beption complaints has) sympathetic view of group of mild reservationists, 41 sen-| " Tpe negaf 2 ded.form; a-|resolution to declare peace with Ger-[pay budget will require $5 whic] ,. P P e T ¥ s Pzt = votad in the aftIFmative and 51 | asti ek :i:; Vfiter:no:;i:;t;:‘&of'r;; f;eieox‘\xgdorb:n;:?t e:e:d::‘g % t‘lrx‘ee e hin L o e O o 1 s throush fue CROOKS” MOVED UPTOWN | its intentian to maints protector-| _ General = Ludendorfl charged Vorz g T }”"‘_5'“""; ab. steightout latter were Borah, Brandegee, Fernald,| ate or recommitted to the foreign re- fefl“il;fls approval of the house, but,|alumni fund. New York, Nov. 19—New York's fa. 5:)(&:\;‘1‘ h\“rfi :(‘;!rtwl':u: ;;r :"1‘» n;)‘m: gern::fil;fll;te“xl:lwf:;::fid ;o ::\;me‘m:h B¢ thirg Ve m & France, G Y o i according to general practice, no ac- = biis “dealline s AR it e Ehat Jsi means by ‘alt R 8 5 > ratification, without reservations Which | Knox, La' Fanctis noom oo fornia, ““‘"‘:i&::‘:.““‘f'F PG Hion by the prasidsnt, Follows: ARGUMENTS TODAY ON s oot s facka L et Nehed Protecloate/and haw 4t i8it0 be car-| Seiely SR TN got only 38 votex to 53 opposing it.|N - 2 . ST FanpoRe “Whereas, by resvlution of con- = e s S ried on. Great Britain's action injrep g 8 / 'one republicun, Senator MeCum- | The' vor eroeiea o oAt ne| Senator Pittman and Senator Pen-|gress, adopted April 8 1917, and " by WARKINEFROUIBITION [ehticy shen, tofy swas poved \p-|preventing an Beyptian Nationalist| Wilhelmstrasse. ASHEE ] orth Dakota. voted with the|consideration of possible compromise|FOSe. republican, Pennsylvania, clash-|reason of gcts commitied by the then Washington, Nov. 19.—The supreme |street. ity-ninth| gelezation from going to the Paris! “We took Americans prisoner,” he 5 ts in ) Droposals acteptubie o the milority o¢| 0 during a discussion of résponsi-| German Savernment, @ stats of Wat|o WASHington, Nov. 19—The supreme |streel, oo - b orisinil deadiing| CONORENCE o Dresent sricvances hs| added, “who had an entrely wieng 6 | Republican Leader Lodge declared | the democrats and. the mild reservation | Pity for the tieup. Senator Pittman|was declared -to. exist between that|SOUTE Wil hear argumionts fomotron| W © establishing the orlginal deadline| heon another cause for complaint. | vague conception of what they wegk & today's v ting constituted a final de- | group of republicans. ihaxsed that every resgrvation in the| Sovernment and the United States; b pRONH{ o ach I I . Fea fwarned s Hatorlons: srooks ther. thers Tnehgov;rnm(—v. Justification _ be- | Sghting for. s sislon on the peace treaty unless). : odge resolution was dictated by re-|and iy : Sl ohs elrl fore the charges of neglecting Egypt —_ —_— : President ‘Wilson circumvented the| _ Vote to Reconsider. publicans desirous of “killing the trea-| "“Whereas, the said acts of the Ger-|2PPeals from federal court —rulings |Presence within the restricted area|p,s been the enormous load of other| ExpLOSION OF TURBINE > TRLby wiMERwing g e w0 w per-fayt man_goveriment have long since| oS O, FERNE XA Cl Upheld [Feat and griliing at headquarters. matters on its hand : ENGINE IN WATERBURY nitting it again to the senate, Tn oth- |Uamentary wituation where. another| ““Dyery democrat,” Senator Penrose|ceased; and invait Sna PN X y The chief reason assigned for shizt-| The Milner commission, which is to 4 er quarters there was some difference r efforts.at ocm-| ipterjected, “has voted on orders from| ‘“Whereas, by an armistice signed|'™ i - |ing th i _|investigate the causes of unrest in . o BT of epinlon but the generdl sentiment |Promise, the senate then voted to re-| the White House.” Nov. 11. 1318, hostilities between Ger- |, OWIng to the ehort time clapsing be | 18 She thoerelioal bargier was the 10| Cevp:, has not vet started, and thena- | Wterbury, Conn, Nov. 19--Tns e weemed to be thut there was but a ;“’;';:dg; acton. ‘d’!‘\f";e;lmtwtn aras| “1deny that” Senator Thomas, dem-|many and the allied and associated i‘?z’i&%‘:’“";‘,:°“e§‘fl§'°u£x£§3n by~ the|vear during the holiday seasons by | tives threaten fo boycott it and refuse|Diosion of & BUERTE 19 bAS PORSE 0ICE slender chance that the treaty wouud | m2¢® Acemocrat, Mis-{ crat, Colorado, declared. powers were terminated; and o2 e Ppost- < to give any information. : any this i = g 3 5 g o icipated. The | Post-graduate crooks from all parts of \ |company this afternoon, which results ®ome up at the beginning of the next $0UFh and was adepted by the vote of | ~“You're about the only one who can| “Whereas, by the terms of the treaty|COUrt is generally anticipa th o = _— 2 » - seasion of congress, beginning. next | (1% democrats aad mild reservation re-| geny”it,” Senator Penroso replied. | of Yersatlpy, Germany s to (be atj S5vernmont asked that the hearing P crowed depariment Stores hotels an| COURT DECISION FAVORS 4840 the death of one nian SULUNENE . month. ; : Senator Smith, democrat, Georgia,|Peace With all the nations engaged in|advanced. theatres, exacting z . 3 s, ligh 3 One effect of the senate’s failure to |, T effect of the reconsideration was| who had voted for ratification with[War. against her whenever thres gov-| Originaily the cases would not have|thealres exacting a heavy toll i e e e e ratity the treaty will be the contin- y ng the committee resolu-| ne reservations, made a plea for a|ernments, designated therein, have|Dbee reached for at least a year. special squad was established havi 7 G : e % ; : . 3 tion back to the same status it - i i aty- The Kentucky case was appealed by | P sauad was established having| Bisarek, N. D.. Nov. 19.—Jjudge W.jthe large manufacturing plants of uw!c';\( varfous war hm; 1aws and | nioq betore the ratification r:u‘c:l’f‘:“ compromise and moved that the sen- N},l’f(‘:golsmdd ;rmttgé nowtthti:; b? it ns zfivemmm»‘ B F‘edem Judge | jurisdiction over theterritory bounded| 1, Nuessle, in district court late today,| Waterbury were able to furnish enough. time prohibition act. was 62 to 30. Tha motion was voted down. - [%id state of war between Germany|enue officials from interfering with the | SUCRIS FbRINAY 40 MUt and Sixth| ant General Fraser and Captain L. .| the, newspapers and the trolleys. <. The resolution presented 'tonight to| pitet, ee" 5, e gmooratl, Leader| e Voto on the motion to adjourn andthe TUnited States Is ereby de-|removal from bond of the Kentucky | ment ciores are locates o A e o iove, wadiklatetls Thet Sxbiaon, Sl deciarg a state of peace will come up | trnis was 43 to 42. tlared to be At an end.” fhitery Sha Stanehonse Hiskey | The “deadline squad” comprises th i ) i . xplosi it n and stage failed, the mild reserva- Th ut; about 70,000,000 gallons of whiskey % = St Jthe | jater than two o'clock Monday cxplosion occurred soon after noon an ¥ B ‘;:"e"x"uc"""'dj‘ te ey Sesson | tionists lining up with the other re.| Lodge Resolution Again Rejected. St lgwr;eiz:sr:fi:fi;l:: Wi | valued at spproximétely $75,000000, |PLek of New York's “detectivedom.” | yior ‘the mining property at wilton |1 L yas aiter, ©. ootk Deforpinti NN swbborn fight. The administration|PUDlcans against the adjournment| For the second fime the senate to-discussion. p Judge Evans held that the act vio- PRgnTY D., seized last Thu e refé‘:)f?datrg;:g';‘h":e';;fl:":::llh; 12 SHaratocd th b6 apposed to soc o | O night voted down the treaty ratific: -~ - lated the fifth amendment to the fed-, TO PROSECUTE CRUCIBLE ders from Governor Krasier. Wa terbuty: weres Rt -up; on’ their relies méthod of legally ending the war and sxTM r;:euon to adjourn was defeated,| tion resolution containing reserva-| BODY EXHUMED FOR eral constitution, prohibiting confis- STEEL CO. OFFICIALS| ‘It secms to me that it amounts, on| NAIeTAUEY: Were' halll Un) Gb LOeir P 121 Th4 'DAckgRouRE In & coRetIEMtIonl] 1 e ravtag eChsbn st e thons to which President Wilson had THE SECOND TIME |cation of private property without just one hand to confiscation and on the : ; question as to whether comgress can ¢} Obieoted. treaty was in the senate itself, and not “ o i g8 oY residtien 6t requiring ‘the lin committee of ‘the; Whole, Sendtor| qemacratis soasioce Tined. U Firome »r'! lent’s signature, Hitcheock offered a resolution of unre-fwithout defection against r t was suggested fonight amone |served ratification; against which Sen- secon fiemecratic senators, that ent | ator Poindexter, republican, of Wash-| 1 ton o romt i compensation. Washington, Nov. 19.—Prosecution of | ther to .involuntary servitude,” de- flé{fic‘éu‘i}’g: ;"fl;oif;:"f;‘d?;::;:‘;“? © New Brunswick, N. J.. Nov. 19.—For| One New York case resulted from |certain officials of the Crucible Steeljclared Judge Nuessle, in reviewing thef* it £ Imost | the second time sjnce his burial seven|denial by the federal district court of | company of America for alleged viola-| action of Govenor Frasier in ta tification. | months ago, the body of Theodore|2D .injunction to Dryfoos, Blum and | tion of the revenue laws will be insti-|over lignite mines in North DakKot: cond rejection of| Ryerson, a wealthy business man, sup- | Company - to enable that concern to|tuted immediately, it was announced MARY GARDEN HAS “GOWN 2 = 7 and in enforcing: h:slll)l’vltla]{rxlvon by OF A THOUSAND MIRRORS* Wilson might be asked during the re. the Lodge resolution was 41 for adop-| poSed to have died from indigestion,|reémove whiskey from’bond. The oth- lonfs ht by Commissioner of Internal{the’ use of available military re- i D i 4 DUk o 7o vt 1he ot owers 58 e president verties the Srjeonis | tion and 51 against, less than the re- | oday was disinterred after hie father|€r Was appealed by Jacob Ruppjert, a | Revenue Roper. The alleged irregu- | sources. , New York. Nov. 19 —The “gown ot lo_thelr attitude on reservations with|and an appeal asain was taken. - |duifite two-thirds and also less than|had charged his son had been pojson-|New York brewer, after the lower | larities, s e N i BBITO AR R R s # |2 majority. ed.. An analysis of thi tant: court’s refusal to restrain internal e '3 ncome . # % o R R ey - P sehaie. ‘wguin "overmiid _ the Thirty-four. republicans and seven|the vital organs. ie being made but|revenue officials from interfering with ) e¥cess Profleror; the corporation Charles F. Monroe. vl b e SRR o 2 s democrats, Gors vers, Owen, Pome- | th It i d »' an-|his manufacture of beer containing 7 and 1918. " 3 2 e i ot o oy | SRR T o 8 et e Sromreiny o e, eoulE le Rot sxpacten, o P, e nehalt. of one por cenc| . Tho gommissioner's announcement| Meriden, Cunn, Nov. rles ¥ brought i, and the steamer La France ratification resolution was made pos- | that amendments to the. Lodge reser. Z:mth of Massachusetts voted for in% to Prosecutor: Joseph E. Stricker, |2icohol. 2 K%’.‘k'{,‘,“;ai“éhn,r,;Z‘,;‘“;F“‘{fi;"‘é’;.,?;;; f,?fe'"u;nfi F 4 in this| Mis ”?;';,,K;f-’; 223‘ " drege 15, B okt uible by the mild resetvation Hara option. yerson was buried without a per- : Cx ; e e et St 2 gl e S - T gy Rty o piing Mo e Yo %’,’11':: The oanosing democrats, were join-| mit on Apcil 19 lat. Three days later| VATICAN CONSIDERING B b i, e o i thas I evaie | Lo sl ans She e measure before the senaté and thus|voted with the demoerate to sastaln|ed by thirteen republicans, Borah,|the body war exhumed and Dr. J. L. APPLICATIONS FOR DIVORCE | 55 Gitn " the pvernment's plan o] Lynhotd te Monroe well| East. ndiane for ovieinat porerii an opportunitr for any eleventh|the vice president, and Senators Gore, | Brandegee, Fernald, France, Gronna,|Suydam, county physician, said death = b prosecute the .‘fi’,w,fl offendefs, Mr.|known - in ircles, hayvinz 1 idea of it. It is based our compromise proposition. Once | Reed-and Shields voted with the re.|Jobnson (California); Knox, Lafol-|had been due to indigestion. Rome, Noy. -19.—Three: American | piiifioe Ui Steged: oflenders - reen at one time ber of the N 4 s 5 that had been accomplished, how- | publicans against it. : lette, McCormick, Moses = Nugent, P s L women ‘are concerned in_applications| ' [KINSon expained that hehad faken | Gech 47 O30 < one of the foun- e ever, the mi) group held out against| Senator McCumber moved to strike|Poindexter and Sherman. WAR-TIME PROHIBITION IN for annulment of marriage now being| .14 that when he lenrned the govern.|dors of. th v Bedford Yacht club|prima donna exelaimed all efforts of the democrats to put in|out the requirement that the reserva-| As soon.as the Lodge resolution was EFFECT IN RHODE ISLAND|considered by the authorities at the|p .l ot when he learned the sovern-i o008 o mmodore of the Pequot PR e ke their substiute reservations, so that|tions must be accepted by other pow- | voted down tht second time the senate Vatican. s oainEaX - 8! & tions of the company’s books he fm-|Y: when the resoend vote was reached|ers. 'Senator Lodge made a. point of | began voting on an unreserved rati- {5 " Duke ' Heinrich-Borwyn Von Meck hi club of New ) Providence, R. I, Nov. 19.—War-|, Duke Lenrieh-Borwyn Ven Meck-|megiately tendered Mr. Ros afier several hours of sparring, the sit- | order, which Vice President Marshall|fication resolution presented by Sen- a ven. He was a|cloth!” elntich-Borwyn_ r his co-{former owner of the “SyIf,” one of the| Other members of the Chicaga sum time prohibition again went into ef- l;f,?,‘,’:fl 0,“;:",;,‘;,_:‘;" e"“:‘gefhcu"fii;’t' operation. The company has made|finest schooner yachts on the Atlantic|nary who mi“ed on La I uation virt:#1ly was unchanged. overruled, and another appeal to the|ator Underwood, democrat. Alabama. | fect hero today. Manufacture _and | Mo ment, Cisauet T oo e a8 90w | payment of all taxes found to be due, | coast. ctor Dufranne and The resolution for ratification with- | senate was taken. Unreserved ratification also was de-| sale of 4 per cent. beer was suddenly | mery Mise Flisabors Prat o vave| Mr. Wilkinson said. - baritones: Bdouard out reservations was put in by Sena-|{ With the game lineun as before, the|feated, the mild reservation republi-|stopped by the issue in Boston of a| pery 4 > RS es ELEVEN NATIVES K'LLED bass, and Mue. Cotreuil. tor Underwood, demoerat, Alabama,|senate agaln -overturned the vice|cans voting ipains( : g stay against the' execution of Judge wfter the second defeat of the other|Dresident’s ruling, thus cutting off the The vote rejecteq unqualified rati-{Arthur L. Brown's injunction forbid- measure. It was held in order and|McCumber motion. The vote was 50 £ ot th, - HOUSE ADJOURNS AFTER The Princeds Radziwill, former’ BY BRITISH IN CAIRO. ” iss Dorothy Deac . : SESSION OF SIX MONTHS GEN, ANGELES, A VILLA R e, 5 e Sette ondke %84 ath feation was 30 for adontion und 53| ding the enforcement of the Volstead o bt S Fostons bag . : Catro, Nor. 1 LEADER, CAPTUREL: , but when 3 gainst. lvocates of unqualified rat- | act. i e “ashington, Nov. 19. ix months| tives were killed and © wounded Senator Pittman, democrat, Nevada, Brandeges Assails Treaty. ification included 37 her marrjage to the Russian priice on om, . No = S - were nd wounde; democrats and| The board of police commissioners o o to the sought 10 get action on another resolu- | Bitterly adsalling the treaty, Senator| One republican, Senator McCumber. o SO YR foneliinty ¢ after the congress con-|yesterday by British tr vs who open-| F1 Paso, Texas, Nov. i3.—Generas stated. that they would assist federal| (", marriage vened in’ special session, the house|ed firc on a crowd which besiezed the |Felipe Angeles, known 2s the intellee tion contaNing interpretive reserva-|Brandegee, republican, of‘Connecticut,| Seven democrats, Gore, Reed,|officials in the enforcement of the na-| Mr Dorothy = McCombs, former.y | formaily adiourned at' 4.02 p. m. to-{ nolice station during the course of a| t ader of the "Villa. rebel. u tions. the treaty consideration was cut|deciared he could not vote for such a|Shields, Smith (Georgia); Thomas,| tional prohibition act. Miss Williams -of Washington, has vc-| day afier receiving word from Pres-|demonstration. Ten of the wounded has been captured near. ] sbort by a peint of order by Repub- |league plan even “with all the reserva- | Trammell and Walsh, Massachusetts,| Must of the breweries and ‘saloons|quested the annulment of hier marriage|ident Wilson that he did not object!are reported to be in a se condi- | according fo a despaich receivi lickn Leader Lodge. Vice President|tions that wit could deyise.” . voted with the republicans in opposi-| closed their doors as -soon as they|to the former chairman of the: dem. | to this action. The adjournment res-| tion. The denfonstrations were con-| nicht from Governor Andres Artis Warshall held that previous declsions Senator Brandegee put into the ree- | tion. were informed of the decision of thocratic national committes, William F.)olution was adopted by & vote of 33 tinueq today. but in an orderly man-|Chihuahua by Andres G. g 7 the cenate in evarsiding his rul- ord the famous round robin agaimst® At 10.90 tonight the peace treaty was' circult court. 2 UeCom ba to & e ~u zeneral hete. $ ~*_ %

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