Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 9, 1920, Page 1

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3 ey Yo Lu—he. @ POPULATION29819 NORWICH, CONN, TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 1920 TWELVE PAGES—92 COLUMNS " PRICE TWO CENTS | PRESOENT WLSON REMANS INFLEXBLE _ isukti sipieloss =tz RTE SLAND NS FRE I S, ATTTUDE TOWARD. ARTICLE 10,5 e i 2 [ FEDERAL PROWBITIN Mile. Andre Spinsily arrived at New | N ' York on the Baltic to begin a singing | North Are Snowbound: at | —Schooner Eva B. Douglass | Jiiohine i Gickacias” & SCher | i i All| ot hat it s possible to accomplizh Concord, N. H. Abandoned. Review. Writes Senator Hitchcock, Administration Leader, That for humanity rather than in the light N Nev A Anti-Saloon League, in a statement of special national interests. 3 Concord, N. H, March 8—Nearly| New York, March 8.—Reports of |, Westorvallie, Ohio, the Reservations He Had Heard Suggested Would Weak-| it I have been truly informed con- | 300 travelers, bound north, were waits e b Westarveliis = Attorney General Rice Assailed the Amendment as Revolu- + N 3y . . - 300 travelers, were wail | macine disasters redening here today | ECotary G Yarchase 3l i tionary and an Invasion of State’s nghh—Wflth. L cerning the desire of some of your|ing here today for opportunity 10| indicated that the ‘gale of last weel = = - - f Article Ten—Declares That to Re- | colleaguea ‘to. know rfnyaovi(\cws in ‘this | continue journeys, with _destination | which prevailed all along the north | St0CKS in bond. Frierson, Assistant Attorney General of th 5 Inited 5 en the Full Force of Article matter. 1 would be Vers glad if you|us Montreal in some cases. Little| Atlantic coust, added materially 0 the | “rhg house on Hangry Hill, Storling i tained the Court Had No Jufisdiction Over icle Would Leave Us Without |should show this letter tothem. hope was held out for throush trains| shipping losscs-of.a winter which al- | e house on Hungry Hill, Sterling, States, Maintaine % ject or Weaken the Article Wo . | Cordially and sincerely yours, before Wednesday. The Boston & | ready had placed a heavy burden on | Sorr OWhed by Newson Bennett Was Other Arguments Wil be Heard To- = tion of Justice and Peace— WOOD WILSON, |Maine iine was opened to Franklin | insurance compani® and owners. loss was $4,000. S the Amendment—! er AT Any Vision or New Conception * Lbut it took six hours for the first train | Sinister reports received today in- 000, 5 Is F Massachusetts and Kentucky— o iff Between a Nullifier and R to cover the eighteen miles from this| cluded one that the tanker Cubadist, | Fire of unknown origin destroyed day, Also Appeals From Unable to Discern the Difference CLAIMS TRANSPORTATION IS city. Drifts along the line north of | four days overdue from Matanzas (0 | 4 hiregof ) unknown origin destroyed the Sessii £ the Court to Hear the . ‘Was Written in Response to a RUSSIA’S GREATEST PROBLEM | Franklin were described as topping| Baltimore, had failed to respond to | v il o o f, O8O0 S0 B Throngs Attended the Sessica of ' X a Mild Nullifier—Letter Was Written the telegraph poles. A single line of | wiraless calls. Ter owners expressed | TISIOUSE i€ 1Y, Koot ate Moscow, March 5—(By The A, P.)|track was open for traflic between | the fear that she had met with disas- Ykl H Request That a Conference be Held Between Senate| Moscow March 5.—(By The & Py | rack was open the gum: Shevig departments of trade and com- The schooner Eva B. Douglass, a | The appointment of G M. Wood as-| o\ oion March 8.—Rhode Isl-| “There is no power in_the United Leaders for a Compromise. merce and transportation will be a|A BIG COLLECTION OF staunch vessel which has weathered in . LAt > P ibiti States constitution to make such a . e ki G era} freight agent was announced by | and’s lezal attack on the prohibition i DA e - done DY March 8. President | 0ld pretensions of political conquest {*gflf&lfi%;}g&erg( ;fliufiom&"“fi" MAMMALS FROM MONGOLIA {¥ears nest i‘:fi;c?of '::’ea *;ea;‘fl‘;;“za‘;’;: the N, Y. N. H. & H. R. R. Co. amendment to the federal constitution ;::’;f;n‘;‘;‘?::n;‘em O i ata i st shington, Mare sdcratic 8 e ial aggrandizement. It is i Dl S . i eC E i was argued in supreme court today. f the United States,” Mr. Wilson re-stated for democratic sen- |and tertuoritl SRETICTINAR" rairs | obening of trade with Soviet Russla| New York, March $—The biggest [abandoned 180 miles east o Cape Mas. | Surgeon. General of the United| The amendment was assailed by the | Mad wng “Thers is mo power and ators today his opposition fo any|a mew GoCHNe b L a or there is no | tHrouEW the co-operative socicties. de- | collection of mammals ever taken out [« The steamer ' Guliford reported {giates warned port health inspectors| compiainant a8 revolutionary and an g peace treaty reservations \\mg-h_r-:;uh A ely for the peace which the | clared ‘today that the burning ques- | of Mongolia—1,300 specimens, weigh- | Abandoned off XNantucket with the there was mever intended 1o be such : ¢ to be on the Jookout for immigrants | invas . o510 so longingly desires and | tion in Russia was the solution of the| ing more than eight tons—has been | 0ast guard cutter Acushnet attempt- & Slm e materially impair the pro- | whole world so longingly desies And|ioneportation probiem. and defend- state’s rights, uffering from Sleeping sick: et | power for encroachment by the federal i i S Sleeping sickness. ed ‘by the government as a legitimal overnment upon the powers of e ¢ so desperatel = lon problem (i - o |brought from that country by thesec: e t0itow her il 0L ; addition to the nation’s basic law over | Spe 3 vigions of the league covenanl” .| ot adopted and acted upon. the gov- 2, Nged the immediate help of|ond Asiatic expedition of the Ameri- il R ks ey | Vice President Marshall declared he| which the court held no jurisdiction. et vty CuBDOrtel: e Without saying = specifically | Wt | iment which rejects it will, I think, | western Burope by the delivery of lo- | can Museum of Natural History, it | Dropelier. was Anchored Canscrousl|was not considered 'a'candidate for| ~ Throngs attended the Session of the | nolice power of the states?”, Justice qualification he would or wouk be guilty of had faith to their people '5“1‘;!0(1"“!; repair material. equipment| was announced here today by Roy ;,Dl%“ el “““r o °h_ Sians |the democratic nomination for pr court to hear the arguments on one | \l.Reynolds asked. A g Eo e sminisricion | whom they induced to make the in- | &3 “Veel;flr: :Pflcl;fliemlfl(f :;'d‘“f,‘\’ 9 s@xd‘: Chapman i\nure\?a, associate curator fi:‘nfghfflhi*;{fi“":flf‘ li;"emm;"l‘ir Man {dent. When his term expires he Will| of the burning questions of the day.| ™ “Yes” raglied Mr. Rice, “but it was t Hitcheoc! g e i acrifices var by the| X 3 c ar| of mammalogy of the museum and 3 <3 | retire. 5 s wai side the door e e o By <. va- | finite sacrifices of the war % 4 ¥ Many persons waited outside the doors | 5 pojice power to regulate: fer that almost all of 1he U5 ! pledge that the would be fighting to | have contributed to the work. of|chief of the expedition. St vl heride S : : throushout the morning to obtain ad- | > 3fr “Rice told the court that the d heard A P eem ‘the world from the old order | destruction, not only of cars and lo-| A world's record group of big horn | t©, ftaqel e - Alibis of ncgligence will not be ac-| mittance. , rtial nultiicaions of o s g o comotives, but - shops, tracks, signal| sheep, including the largest sheep| The Cape Breton, a collier, was treaty articles to witica they appiiel. |of force and ¢ a E systems, bridges, and the entire equip- 1 hear of reservations a E thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth s 5 4 s abandoned a8 a wreck o S iatay | cepted as excuses to escape penalty mild Should Welcome Responsibilities. et ofEeanEpoTtation s Thet srueres |0 SooWs, and ey sneclmens of i Herbert A. Rice, attorney general of | zmendments “were written into the Mongolian mammals that ~undonbted: | ISEnd: for failure to file income tax re turns; Rhode Isiand, cpened for the obposi- | constitution by force” and not with § § , 4 Mongolian ma. s “undoubted- S > or 1919, the Bureau of Internal Rev- Fiflia - ,“assigt- ¢ ¢ r ations.” the le sdded. “but T mpey will be acting also in bad faith | ment is now engaged in the recon- | iy will prove new o selonce are mums | Other ships reported in distress tn- | LoF 190, the B ““{‘-,1:‘“ Al 311521”7;1 P("?erf}:’: assist-| the voluntary assent of the southern o retand the difference be-lig the opinion of the world at large | struction of trackage and 3,000 bridg- | hered in the collection assembled dur- | cluded the Norwegian tanker Henrik SL S e : t state: 3 n r and a mild nullifier.™ 5 which they appealed for support in | es have been rebuilt. i : T Lund, a shore in Halifax harbor: the = States, replied for the government,| Assistant Attorney General Friersen i een & o Which Hiey Rppeuiea. €0t WARpOc W liee Ve et b o e U iy the Jadt two yeibs Ll i Hane | . Orders were issued to farm hands at| (ther arzuments will be heard tomor- | argued there was nothing revolution- »aciss Article Ten part concerted stand against the aggres | e of personnel. coal and naptha | Besides the coliection,' Mr. Andrews | NOTfOLE, Range, at anchor near Ifa‘l® | Piombins, Savona and liva. Italy, 101 row, as well as appeals from Kentucky | ary in the adoption of an amendment 3 sident wrote that there was sions and pretensfons of Germany. Ifjand the use of wood fuel are a serious | prought the message that Mongolia is | [AX With a crippled. propeller shaft, | sirike nmmediately upon receipt of | and’ Massachusetts involving the same | bne he moral obligations | we were to reject Article X or so to | handicap. -We shall keep up the mili-| one of the “coming countries of the |And the Buckhannon, from Messina to ; 2 3 wh T Xpressed in positive terms|weaken it as to take its full force|tary transportation necessary until Word that the union demands twere : that lays down a “fundamental rule of e | New York, is being towed into Ber- 2 questions. law” that applies to all states. ! world” In natural resources rejected by employers. ; e =~ : R rsh there could be|out of it, it would mark us as de- | peace has been restored on ail fronts. SE e AieTI oY Mr. Rice charged thace was In pros 1 cattle, spruce, minin e muda short of fuel and provisions. %o explaining in an inter- | siring to return to the old world of | Then our first duty will be the -dis- ) & and furs. The = there was In pros- | |, The case does involve a question as 2 r f fuel 1 ress a ‘“constitution: v o whether a state can come into 2 h 3 b | e e ,The | " The steamer Wisconsin Bridge. from | Judge H N Wasnalof - the 5 . Conetitailinal methods | Jealous rivalry ad misunderstandings . tribution of food fo hungry Russia | Sastined o e ennof fonTond: I8 | Hango, Finland. for New Tork, also 18 | comasn e Court: pllaciphie | I0ugh amendments. i the-doctrine | oaeral court andienfoin the enforee- . Gch an oblization would | from which our gallant soldiers have | with the available transportation fa- | greatest fur markets. he said. win | disabled several hundred miles at sea | g 3 dead Ak The S MercAntile.| Lot ‘moreidanger: fn (NEIOEIUAE | Mnentiof & Criminal DENITR STOH fhe “very heart” | rfescued us, and would leave us with- ! cilities. ntil then th s € AL fix uarkets, who sald il e v of h i i ropped = dead = at the Mercantile | yrged by the governmient than any | the law is unconstitutional,” he added. -1 illed. The “very h e e Svcebtion of | of Wiking ceoorie . "hcte lo'no U8 | satlle. erming, fox; jmanirrel and meb-1 20 4PN 2T S0l tenimip W‘;‘a“ an- | Club of that city as he finished & ggctrine urged by the demago=ues| ‘T have never understood this court, nant reiterated. w out any vision or new conception of | of talking exports. e t in abundance. G s a | s hier wireless distress cayl. . He was 49 years old. e T id. ] i - JOESNES ek . justice and pence. We would have| <Realizing this. Russia s preparcd Tol & jhnifence Grazing and gert | Nt S el Mall kgt Chignacto, | o Lo ivoe 49 years ol e Y Fhe e otance e T d president’s letter, written ned no lesson from the war but|to pay for good locomotives, machin- | ° ap St which ®ailed from St. John Saturday il = TS ansHEed 3 5 0, B S Or U e oot (6 & baiient. that he o gained only the regret that it had in- | ery and repair material. American lo- | jnta 'A{‘(‘:,‘;f;?);,:,"f,‘;'dA“n;,',‘:“E:”,,:‘;gria‘ SRecn@ i Tor HAlMAwihas not arsiveds| oo e sand Railchedipassenn: tenth amendment were never Intended | dehate the respctive political rights Sih Semator Simmoas of North Car- | volved us in its maelstrom of suf-|comotives are desirable, but _other | \Tho higzest business opporcunities | The usual time for the trip Is about | New York Central were reported| \Ome token awayr ¢ th hibition | e fwo governments. If that ig the o in charge for the democratic | tebi It America has zwakened, as | types, especially the French, offer 10| 1nq° enfernrises of the enct or wees | t¥enty hours snowbound.’ ‘The ~ passenger. trains| skt o er oo o | case, any state can come in sad do 24" of ‘the semate in current negotia- | the rest of the world has, to the vi- | difficulties of adoption. Efforts will be | 255, Rl i9 O the eact of west| Mopolareoxie, a new shinming board | have over 1,000 persons abard. amendment ‘reeulfed: Trom @ IIisoon Hshalibelore tHE piopertyit ORI . Compromise, follows in|sion of a new day in which the mis- | made {o facilitate exportation, the | & veking with the Phinsee therriiol | steamer, Is $1id to be leaking and : cention’ of fhe AW, by consess 70 [dixidual cilistns have: beed™in ety iakes of the past are to be corrected, | government pledging the assignment | 3 longing the wag:” . b o " | storm damaged 400 miles cast of New | James J. Flannery, prominently| iat the federal government had no | We have here the bald question as to President’s Latter. Shave.the ‘responsinities of Article X.| {0 fines In the redions where. ghoda] g THe frst load of wireless ctlograpn | Yrky identified with the _Vanadium ~ Steel | 51" “conctitution ns the amandment | diction of a court o protect s eiti- My Dear Mr. Hitchcock: 1 under-]®0 v R | S i 1ere g00ds| squipment already has started by car- interest of the United States and|provides. Declaring that “amend- | zens, who are also citizen: ¢ the ] wand that one or two of your col-| It must not be forgotten. senator, (o caportarclotated - |avan—on the backs of 1,500 cameis. | DIVIDENDS IN STOCK NOT South America is dead at his home in | ment” mears a correction, he said the | United States, who have violated an eagues do me the honor of desicing |t this article consiitutes s TR, | 4o ot avaitabic, ut there are. large | (o, Peking to Urumtsl 2200 miles,| - SUBJECT TO ;NCO':'ET";AX Pittburgh, of nervous ailments. ferms of the pronibition amendment | act of conaress, from orderly prosecn o s % ot the of | of_powerful nations with whom e |quantitles of hemp, flax, wool, wheat, | Chingse radio system throughont Men: |aiviasads Ciriibated. 1o the: sore Of| During the: recont fashion show in| e ciearly optside the purview of the | ton in the courts ence B vazie | web associated in the war. It is by | Dutter and eggs, besides other commo. | ShITCS £ ot Mans ) fipiiond S s e L in o form o copstitution. e e i proposed | no means certain that without this ar- | dities, The harvests of 1815 and 1916 | B2 e 4 nisel stock do mot constitute “income” and|Berlin, only a few daring gowns were; ~ “ywhat ahout the thirteenth amend- lhrhglinzur;f a{:?::d ;’5““.’-».53{;, ’;;r are in part untouched, there- has consequently are not subject to fed- dlSl)l{‘!yolil, the gn{f?mm}l (o TN | ment abollshing slavery? inquired | Hughes on behalf of twenty-four any light 1]{place. Militaristic am and im- ‘ been no export since the war, Clothes, | WALL STREET DEMORALIZED eral income taxes, the supreme court :3:: _flr.hgi‘:“:;m -motg:i;ewfl: Wo- Justice Pitney. states and by Wayne B. Wheeler, zen- A has Dba- | petiatistic. polipie. are o means | Shoes, medicines and manufactured BY 'ERRONEOUA HEedaT|decided o8y B2 5 to 1 decislon. ks it That was a compromise amend- | eral counsel for the Anti- Stoudsd dead even in the counsels of the na- | articles are needed in large quanti-| New York, March 8.—Wall Street| Lrovisions of the 1916 federal in- je.. 1 welcome | ticle any such renunciation will take Toon | T e ment and corrected an_error in the |league of America, supporting thae ] i ; Faspseded ing laves ad : g AR AR k| Will H. Hays, chairman of the Re- stitution. anawered M Bi i R " terpret tions whom we most trust and with | es ~The basis of payment for each | wag thrown into a state of demerali- | Some 19X 1w levying taxes on stock| ;)i National Committee. was asked | “Faction Brandtrs aoned Wi amendment, and by Elihu Root in op whom we mos re to be associated | article must be worked out pending|zation today and many hundreds of! . E Bision 3 “ . the moral ob-|in the tasks of peace. Throughout | the economic rehabilitation of Rus- ittee, TJustice Brandeis asked whnt nower | position to the amend: or tional. The ddbision also null'fied|for a formal repudiation in behalf of 2 iment oo e n ot . hout | Lhe thousands of dollars were lost and the sessions of the conference in Par- | Sid. * T el could bring abont the conditions im- | of the United States Brewers' asso- housands. of s 1 similar provisiods of the present law|the party of the action of the As-|josed by the eighteenth amendment. ! cfation. B i | “We have no illusions with q|Won within a few minutes When Newsjang will involveé great loss in reve- |Sembly to unseat the five Socialist i it Twas ovidont that s millarelle | 1o Wit i L eEN | agencles. which. sere the “Muanewit 00 TR SHIE R (N8, SN [members. . - Teadarship, was seeking to gain ascen- | Will make few promises, but are { district misstated the decision of the|idotions and also. refunds of such Ao 3 IMPROVED ZONDITION ON BRITISH AMBASSADOR TO . ARG L I nited States supreme court in the| gooC already collected. Large finan.| French Premier Millorand is report- S it dency in the counsels of France. They | HH 0 ntract, - Kome ap sations wel stock tax case and declared . that)dial intereats Mewise. will be affecteq | ed: ready o accept . Allied. economic NEW ENGLAND RAILROADS | GET £20,000 YEARLY batile, beeauye the op e ot o 8 "cil ¢ arguments ad- | tries with the exception of certaiy |00k dividends were taxable: and numetoull stock ' dividends of | Proposais. including. @ loan fo Ger-| o . Ml t ST vuen improve-| Lomdon. March 5—th wiiole World swung to our support and | trol n s o P inery > s Dhatwervie : it many, and measures to bolter up Teu- 34 , Ma .- ve- | London, March 8—The British dm~ he supflort ot the nations associated | vanced in Paris in support of the Ttal- { mé Biery vr}\‘-x.}nln Ty The meivige of “‘{?;‘r){“;:;éi“‘__‘:&}’flf‘ encrous proifitions are expected to; FEMY 200 TN o Officially - de- | Ment in conditien-on-the snow and fee- | bassador at Washington will i.ereaftor : the great s gl did | ian claims on the Adriatic, . were | O e help, otably urate in_e 5 ;S with ug In the Kreal oiuREl ttasion | stratesic Argnmenty that 18 to say ‘Tw’i\v SOl Souns ot 6o tor Tts - refowt Sreacheds the - sirept; he? i . “ 5 vi o i kes wai o e stocks which had broken two to ten nd Dragiis ¢ T omt 10 estab- { military arguments, which had at,ROW in Turkestan awaiting transpo- | St0C and promise that we meant 10 estab. | ¥ cir back the thotght of naval si-|tation and the wool supply closer at rts under an avalanche of selling et taernn that the eom- | premacy in that sea. For my own|hand is sufeient for the factorics to steadied_and began to climb, s oot e HAP would | pa i e remainder of the session ned power of free nations ¢ B g » : s ¥ lared in Paria. ; bound railroads of northern New Eng- | receive 20,000 pounds sterling yearly. J“l:;i:-t(Ahépf?:g;?‘ghggd§f:fic?u\‘\'h3z S {1and resulted from the combined efforts | His salary will be-2,500 pounds sterling and Justices McKenna, Van Devanter | M: Michelin, = president of the | of raiircad men and thousands of vol- | anid entartainment aliowance 17,500 ipa’ Boleynlas Goncuzen, /00 the| Mrench SAetos Club. declired: that ‘the lIiEE WOSERRBO0SY oW York end/ipounds’stetlive. Premier Liovd Lieydl four, dissenting members of the court,|invention of a turbine engine by M.!Boston trains worked their I am as intolerant of imperialis- j ensure production. X every invasion of right and | tic designs on the par & i pEedl | Fay | George made this announcemen: in taa P W o ¢ 3 e - v i 3 o ateau, wi ake possible a speed of | through to Portland, Maine, and traf- | house of commons this afterrcon. rt other n carding concessions to foreign _continued .to strengthen, final| Justice Hoimes read a_brief opinion | RAteau, will make j A Gar raitarad - J iy ¥ i ke peace and Ststice the | tions as T was of such designs on the | “inital the zovernment is prepared to | Quotations for leading sharcs 'mak-|in which he was joined by Justice 250 miles an hour. Toints restoleibetwcen Rortiond Bod ap-?wx:xu‘ckuxnha_ Geddes was. resently e g ording a definite} part of Germany. | adopt a liberal policy, providing ihe | ing substantial gains, I Day.and Jus Brandeis delivered a 5 ZA ey < peinted to this post. Ee e all mast Clibios Bstween - Tiwo - Ideals. | Sovie! Jaws regarding labor are ob-| During the violent declines which|lengthy opinions . in. which Justice|, SPecial reports from London = said| Tie Grand Trunk lines in Mune and| The premier's statement reveals the nd by which every interna-| e % ye oy 'smerved. Foreign firms will be given |foliowed the misleading report,| Clarke concurred. the Supreme Council decided to ;‘;ki. ew Hampshire remained fact that the government has arrang- T adjusiment that cannot bl o oe Hoics ib between two ideals; the right to export a definite part of | frightened traders sold almost re-| In holdingthat stock - distributions [Holland what precautions will be tak- | vice together with many par:s cf cheled the fi s of the office on.thd by greed gpon by the neoples | ey T ane hand, the ideal of democs: their output. No concessions will be | gardless of value. The hundreds offare not dividends, on account of mo|Sh (0, Prevent Amerongen former B saud iainsani (MalnfHE A ng itsel? of incoms tax rectly concerned sha¥ he =a s Deonies e here o B ryaery | Elven to industries now fully develop- | thousands of dollars forfeited by separation of corporate ets heing\\“"sm s residence. from becoming the | rvads. The White Mountains division | in order to give the ambassailor an ad i This promise and assurance | (nom DIOPICS O OTRere 0 b iha|ed and nationalized. There are op- | them were captured on the rebound|invoived, Justice Pitney in behalf of |CUtre if monarchistic intrigue. ¢i the:Boston and Maine was cleared | equate income. The salary heretofor were written inis the preliminaries of | ldeal of amerio e walh Seohy g | Portunities for foreign capital in new | by others who had refused to sell on|the majority declared that stock = AT h as Plymout] wits 10,000 pounds sterling with a com= e armistice and into the dominate by force and unjuse pawer | (uroad lines, foundries, by-products | the strength of the first and false re- | shares “are nothing except paper |, Word was received at New Vork| il southern division to Fr ; | allowance. Tha: sal- s e ¥ vt | o idear which 1s b no theans Aend | oL the coal industry. salt, chemicals, | ports or ‘Who Were in ignorance of | certificates” in undistributed assets, fFOM Newport, that the United|lontreal trains were unable to pass eaten up by the in- ne of the most sacred obliEations |and which Is earnestly held in many };:;‘et sugar and cotton plantations. | what was happening. are not realized profits and, therefore «‘(; l" ;l““]{ = i ©| these two points in either direction. British officiaic must tver assumed by aay nation or body | aut Wi 18 SocTestly held in many | Thers.are 50.000 hectares (a hectare neral M was the star per-|are not taxable. L heg | On several trains which had _ieen |pay like others. of nations. It is unthinkable that|fuence in Europe was hostile to (hpifl;\lmlsfz.h acres) o ~-uged land avail- | former, gaining 15 points before fzfinogfl e et i‘}-«“_;.‘l"“’ x had | stalled at different points since Satur- |~ An increase in the ambassador's sal- America should set the example of Ig- | embodiment of Article X in the cov- ol for eultivation with modern| noon, reacting 11 points on receipt of | FOUR MORE RESERVATIONS day Bishtpind were Teleass o, jary il noring such a solemn moral engage- | anant of the League of Nations and its LY the ‘erroneous: report and then rising nent h it was recognized, was nec~ v under the present living condi- tions, would have meant that an even larger proportion must be returncd to supplied | the tr ion for The question of compen defeat now would mark ihe complete | jogeas. suotat T on | Foe myself, 1 feel that 1 could 10t | congumation of their offorts (0 DULLY | et ot e et o lE2 | capital| points. ook the woldiers of our gallant armies | the treaty, 1 hold the doctrine of Ar- [ peo A°F Y€t heen setfled but as we B S T Sghin 1t 1 GHEARE 0K | oo X 1o Do the cxamba e he of AL alitt (William | tacut rverything In my power td _remave Washington, March 8.—Limiting de- | charged with murder, enters upon itS} . i;jes of small town hoteis and res- bate by unanimous consent, the senate | fifth day in superior court at New ants to keep thems; today to reduce its |Haven today S x ble Steel wa featur another spe T ning 30 points af- | moved switt the court will rulei2¥ through the graduated moved : Fengtan b will | rulel i food. tax. Hence Sir Auckland Geddes has ism. We cannot repudite it or weak. | o Duiitt. an American ter having shown an actual loss of|fight over' the peace treaty to basic|against the admission of spectators| ™y, ."as little internrban street |been granted a total of 20,000 pounds, satacle that lies in the way correspondent who v 10 polnts. Many other industrial | iSsues. beyond the seating capacity of the| %LCTe : a svery obstacle U 1 e Way | en | hout at the same time repu- | orp; Tona points. Many industrial | issu | raiiway traffic in northern and wesiern | of which only 2,500 pounds is taxable. 5t the adoption of . thix particular ar- | Giating our own principles. iy st B oloacd o, 10/ potitts oyl 1 F ol gnore of tHes reBliblican femes. | CONE, Too: Now England and in many’ cities trol- ticle of the a because we st : week’s final prices. vations awere re-adopted, two of them il o e ried 5 s 7 m“v ‘I’“,;':,"‘_“ S Atei 88 W“I Imperialist Wants No League. R“Tr_.e grf{at potential strength aof L | without thange, while negotiations for “,Newcnmlh (Carl{fiq. pregvdmé of the|ley tracks were still buried in ice. MINERS AGAIN TO MAKE e hen e vori and it was| The imperialist wants.no league of | Russlih industry lies. in the fact tha a_compromise on the keystone problem | Western Union Telegraph Co., ar-| e CXEANEIE INCREASED WAGE DEMANDS . s canee they deemed themselves | nations, but if, in response to the uni- | it belongs to the workingmen. They | REPUBLICAN LEADERS MEET of Article Ten were pressed toward a |rived in New York from London on DANIELS ASKS EXPANSION New York, March S—Demands Savmted I @ spirit of rusaders, 1|versal cry of the masses everywhere, | Will Work as ome man to brinz ahout IN CHICAGO TODAY ! conclusion, apparently unaffected by |the Raltic. In an interview he de- OF NAVY IN THE PACIFIC } ¢ 15 ze increases for various ciassés swild be forever anfaitaul to them | there is to hr'n‘;w‘. h;» is interested te | Russia's econo: rehabilitation.” —_—— the renewed declaration of President|clared every man in Bngland 'was do-| - Fs 8 2 U 124 not do my utmost ‘s fulfill the | secure one suited fo his own purposes, vgh purpose for which thev teught.|one that will permit him to continue Chicago, March 8.—Officers ' of the | Wilson againt any mnterial weakening | ing his bit"” to restore the empire to| W HEARING CLOSED ON THE republican convention, including the|Of the treaty’s provisions. normal conditions. |and extensive enlargement of maval vOrking of: the mines ik ‘g’:m,m_u; e 5y Bear s-vator, we e | the historic game of pawns and peo- Eeptn el temporary chairman, who will sound | The president’s letter, coming at a 4 s docking and basing facilities on ~the [ no%CHE ot BEOTR, o coal opo dismiss from ot minds the idea that | plea—the juggling of provinces. the ACKERS | ine keynote of the 1820 campaign, will | tiie when the article ten negotiations | Following a ht of darkness|Puacific and legislation to provide a|erators of Pennsylvania here tomor- it ignecessary to stipulate in connec- | ol alances of power and the ine- X % 3 tlon with Article X the constitutional | vitable wars attendant upon these| Washington, March 8. to col-fnaval reserve force of at least 200,000 SOTE to have brought the two sides!lapse of the Richmond Light & Power : { row by the union representatives of hinste - Vention comurtie e 10, ATEA trained men were advocated t0day be- Lint porg coal diezeds o methods wa should use in fulfilling our | these things. The reservation propos- | Of legislation for regulation of the |y "of Kentucky, cha);:v@no ofthe! “ery near together” was given wide- | Co s plant, the Staten Island Civicl g holuse naval commities By | g e e jgations under it. We gan noth-|ed would perpetuate the old / order.| PAcKIng Industry —today —concluded| ,mpyitiee made this arin L4 ¢ [1¥ differing interpretations. But the | League, in behalf of 110,000 residents. | secretary Daniels. {tion of miners in Wilkesbarre last ing_but such stipulations and secure | Does anyone really want to see the old | Prestntation of thelr testimony before | yo,0n; atter a meeting at wh democratic senators working for a|began& a movement for home rule| The sccretary asked authority to| 3 = — nothing which is not already secured. | kame played again? Can anyone real- | {he Rouse agriculture committee, hav- | ( (M8 000U 0 0n ware luid, the ‘Sear | CURPromise continued their efforts, i i 1 was umderstood as a matter of |ly venture to take part in reviving the | NS consumed the time allotted to RN, selected at a meeti were” declared by one of thei 2| throughout Staten Isiand. due Supporters | Pe_selected at a meeting of the come ed by one of their spon E : d i August and r- rna- and secession from New York city. | start construction of a new navai base | i , ) | con : A telling their colleagues they felt| free —— . e e e < R e G o . ; Inning arrang L s t San Franci ¥ below Mare Is- | Se rme i the tonferenee i Paris that| ol order? The enemies of 1 lengue of TR e T O D T approvedsaad the- fo act since (he executlve had not| NOT TO RENEW ANGLO- | Tatind-iid vread that TSNS Dol St o aods fherasibade Lokl i er obligations any government | nations ha ¥y _every true instinct| ‘% yad ¥ 3 i s g Seen fit to say he woul ocket the il e £ i i . = L agr e e o whatever dutics it under- | centered their efforts against Article | législation immediaiely began pres- flt}[«’}&hLé;e}tledb 7 Froat e 1 came Bha 1o R wth FRENCH LOAN IN THE U. S. L‘v’dlxdv\h lable at once Dnm esti- | sixty per cent, increase in wages for "ok tmder the treaty would of course|X, for it is undoubtedly the foundation | ePtation of their case. e Chicago Coliseum will be re- | compromise reservations. e g eah e gt AL have 16 ba fulfilled by its usual and|of the whole structure. It is the bul- | Howard Leonard, president of the|modeled to seat 13,187 delegates and £, 000 but lat- | contract miners. 8.—J. Aus “ham- | er said i ght be done for $40.000,000. e on the senate floot | , London, March S.—J. Austen Cham- | er said it might be done for $40.000,000 rlain, el exchequer, | Twi w S ne and des fourteen " repuphosy } berlain, chancellor of the Two new submarine and de a two dodar raise ¥ the day, a six hour Ahlished constitutional methods of | wark. and «the only bulwark, of the |I1linois Agricultural Association, the|spectators, approxi In the day’s wo setion. Once or twice in meetings of | rising democracy of tihe world against | 128t of the witnesses favoring regu- 1,100 more | the last of than were accommodated at the can- o oe for men paid T R % : a trover | day and a five day week. Fuil rec- t s I iscussing in the house of commons |bases on the northwest coast, one at|ognition of the union aiso is asked, Ue Cinterence, when the treaty was|the forces of imperialism and reac- |Jation, said enactment of the proposed | venttion four years ago. Artele X ang iigenose relating 10| today the decision ngt to renew Ihe | Dot Angeics, Washn, and the other at | with demands (hat whorever practie: inder sooiEten, . (i Feapemisons” | tion. cislation was desired to end “agita-| After providing forithe 984idelegates, | were swept out of the way and debate | ANSIC French loan:sin the = United|Astoria, Oregon, were urged as well | ibie coal be paid for on the legal ton were made W that effect by the rep- | Either we should cnter the league | tion that has been detrimental to all | the alternates and convention attaches, | on the voting power provision was be- | Statey; stated that Great Britaln wu fas extensive developments at Hawaii | basis and thut all dockage be elimi- “erutatices @R individual powers. and | fearlessly, accepting the responsibili- | divisions of the livestock producing | the remainder of the seats will be di- |gun. The four adopted related to | ProViding her half had no infenti j and Guam. nated. those “reserdlitions were invariably |ty and not fearing the role of leader- anfmmarkeung industry. ... |vided among the state committees on | armaments, the economic hoycott, | [COOTTOWINg olitside the Unite en | The miners will ask that these s e Way in which men |Ship which we now enjoy, contributing |, ‘Farmers ‘desire ' a _ condition | the basis of representation on the floor. | alien property and the labor section, | 10T ANY part of the sum required. %0 | nepa|l ED TRAIN BLOCKED things be incorporated in the mew “hn hate mekfor business and not for |oUr efforts towards cstablishing a | brought about which will assure them | Under the same plan, the appoint. | the Jatter being hrought to a roll cal }.“?‘ .w”“{;‘ 'hhfl_ 1nm& e repaid) Creat ROAD AT MILL RIVER | W3g€ agreement that is to be drawn talk always Peceive acts of scrupu- | Dermanent peace or we should retire! S8 r_’dl,u{ a p;‘nm in productian of ‘ment of 2500 sergeant-at-arms, 400 (Wwithout a word of debate. Sritain will have reduce (‘“roc\ m—n; up to become effective when the pres- ‘ s Sumerceokation—istened to Wih|Aa gracefuily ns possibic from ' the|commidities” he aid, “and. we be-| doorkeepers. 200 53 : e debt by more than 30000000 pounds| L et four year contract expircs March ndifterent silence. as such men list- Ereat concert of powers by which the |lleve this law will help to. doit: and other convention. H. S. GRAVES RESIGNS AS b icincellor added. Rt Rt e e a1 Wit i matter of couse and | World was saved. For my own part. T| Representative Wilson, repubiican, | fivided. g ’ SR s BRI e shall_employ for the purpose | press train derailment on the - Ne was not neeessary to say. am not willing to trust 1o the counsel | Chicago, asked what working people | *Phe entire o8 : CE | resources aiready available in the | York, New Haven and Hartford Rail- No Objection to Explanatory Nots. |0f diplomats the working out of my | in the cities and the country gener< save Ralph E. salvation of the world from the things |ally would do-if laws assured cost : There can be no objection which it has suffered. © PHN8%) pius production in all producing lines. | % EES A& plataing again what our T believe that when the full sig-|. “We think they will not object,” Mr. | Was Drésen 3l method is and that S TUnited .States and to the extent to | road at Mill River Junction, just north | F- D: DIMMICK & CO. SEEK J Washington, March S.—Henry S.| which they are not sufficient we shall |of here, delayed several hundred pas- THE REMOVAL OF RECEIVERS Graves, head of the federal forestry| ship gold. We have already made a |sengers tonight and tied up the lines| s " "l.slrenre— service since Gifford Pinchot, has re- | beginning by buying Anglo-French |for a short tme. The locomotive and | ~New York, March §. nificance of this great question has|leonard responded, “when they un-|% f St ating of Indian- | signed to return to private life. Mr.|bonds in the market at a considerable | five cars of Train No. 60, New York|& Co., steams sone can declare war been generally apprehended, obstacles | derstand that farmers will cease to | 2POUS: B Graves headed the Yale forestry | discount below par.” to Bosto jeft | last week w the causes or ocasions will seem Insignificant before the op- | Produce unless they zet it.” i school before entering government hat it alone can authord ) D. Dimmick pperators, which express via Springtield 3 thrown into involuntary grea Resoluti dopted by the F: : = service and was at the head of th the rails, wkile the four rear cars re- z«;'n"krgl;lrg B theit nited States ships e ! o w e eyl Sine s a as z e T Many passeng- | Ping board emergency fleet corpora= R S D rmisy. e oy, ETMAS 09 | e Netidnial Council catting for an TUR:ETRH::OTAOI:'E’:‘%JOTROOPS lumber operations conducted by the WO%IR%:\;WRE:::&\IIEER!E:XPQQI: e o e e ey B | tion on a claim of $1,500,000 alleged te g n land or on the sea. whelming moral and material forcs to | Pervision of packers by a commission | yk American . expeditionary forces in ers were siichtly shaken up, but only | L9808 & SLI, o 8200000 stieced e e the establishment of an Internation- | And for government ~ownership of & rance. » work of supererogal i3 al regime in which our own Weals of | branch houses and marketing facili- { am sorry (o say that justice and right may be made to|ties were presented by George P, jone that have come under ms Drevail and the mafions of the world | Hampton, managing director of the ice are almost without exeaption not|pe allowed a peaceful development | council DA O o e ricle8 0 awhich | under conditions of order and safety t e . . r Wteet virtudl nullifications of those | Mltherto impossible. $50,000 FOR THE WOMEN articles. Our Responsibility as a Nation. 'AND GIRLS OF POLAND ng. £ = = today obtai al court a %] i The poor pay of scientific men in the| New York, March 2—Police Com- |of tbre cars derailed were parlor cars. aeram\?:-::{fig ‘\"\ffiflfijafmi,‘. dv;h?‘r' ay that the recent sailing|government service was given by Mr, | missioner Enright announced today | The passengers were crowded imto} .. Fopi®al [ SnetiO o, SIOW troops on the steamer Aus- | Graves as the necessity compelling him | that the department was considering | the four cars not derailed and ~were | CUE8 WOV IS BECCOR On which re- i for the Near East has no con-|ro leave the position of chief forester, | Sussestion that policemen, especial- | hauled back to the New Haven siaiion, | (00" ciqa. - 5 tion whatever With the recent ! iis letter announcing his intention te |1y those on night duty, he permitted | where five coaches were attached to| SCRERACS, L fevents in Turkey. The troops were | tonder later his formal tesignation weg | 10 carry their revolvers outside their |replace the derailed cars. The train, | o &farTS op Which the orler was parily soldiers rejoining their regi-{ eaq today by Secrotary Mereqith oo | C0AtS in the manmer of soldiers. The | which is due in Loston at 10.05, then [ Soraned et forth that the flect cor- ments in the army of ocCUpALion after | foe sanars anricniies pomeiLy 10| sugzestion was made by Chief Magis- | lett here one hour and 0 mimutes lace, | POTAtION Wis & ereditor to the com- Any reservation which seeks to de-| I need not say, Senator, that I have i leave. of absence, the announcement | o SUECE SETOVINEC COmMMItee 101 ¢trade MeAdon. who had in mind the A fothe CrioHC OLoRnSAREE prive the League of Nations of the|given a great deal of thought to the| New York, March 8—Fifty thousand fadds, While the others were replace-| moni would have to offer m_fme; murder recently of Patrolman Henry: o oppOSITION TO ISSUE Ao b g ‘_m] - ! 'vn\- fores of Article X cute at the very|whole matter of reservations propos- |dollars to be expended for work among |ment troops such as are constantly | el NOWS, NES I3 SFCL Erealer | mmen in the Bronx. The magis- OF 'BONDS BYNAH.(ROAD | Tinsls witharavwn ' tarwe S of' s neart and iife of the covemant jtself.|ed in connection with the ratification | the women and girls of Poland h o replace sick and otherwise | AANCCTIERIS I 1L Wish and | traie said he thought Immen could - H. ey Y Any leagiie of nations which does not|of the treaty, and particularly that|been voted by the continuation soldiers. g vt o rmoyesid s ibitelates nkd _ fusrantes as a matter of inconstesta- | portion of the treaty which contains|mittee of the national board of f= fizht the political _independence | the covenant of the League of Nations, | Women’s Christian Association, it w his, revolver been In position for| Hartford, Conn, March S.—There = : LE OF SWEET CIDER Changes in ltalian Cabinet. quick action. ‘In a letter to Magis. | was no opposition to the pel&tl?{n_ szr GERMANY 7O ASK FOR integrity of each of its members|and I have been struck by the fact|announced today. Action was take Paris, March 8.—(Havas.)—A des- | trade McAdoo, Commissioer Enright|the New York, New Haven an art- LOAN OF 45,000,000.000 MARKS it e hardly more than a futila| that practically every so-called reser- |after a report had been made by Mia USED AT EAUNcHING| - Tazis, March B-o(Hamt) ke | e e e e paation. AR L Srap of paper. as ineffective in oper- | vation was in effect a rather sweep- [Lois Downs, an association secretary,|; Wirers el RNitti' Wil make some ohAesint e o \uiie Aohen tate bOTANTED (HE STDEE \tion jas the agreement between Bel-|ing nullification of the terms of the frecetly returned from Poland. ath, Me,, March 8.—A bottle of e Gene pnds to the amount | _ paris, March 8 (Havas)—A dos- ; 3 8 Italian cabinet because of differences Happen Occaslonally. of $4,813,000 at a hearing before the vium'and Germany which the Ger-|treaty itself. 1 hear of reservation-| It is planned to work along foun[@weet cider was used by Miss Sallie Dans violated in 1914, Artivie X as|ists and mild reservationists, but I|general lines: First, opening of . a5 patch to Le Journal from Berlin says AWM. Tucker of New York to christen the | [C&2rding the internal policy of the; It has been said that the day of x_;‘xi\‘bliru-;.u‘l)ls‘;eift:‘erxsil::d:t"rse lX:d:")': ;hald vl.tm‘h(_‘.orlrlnnnmg\nlvernm(m: will e e treaty of Verssillos | cannot understand the diference be- | camp where girle in industry can re-{ torpedo boat destroyer Preble, which | E/¥ernment miracles 8.4 thing of dhe past, vet|The purpose of these bonds Is to en | nand. o the ailics in May mest mema Spresents the renunciation by Great| tween a nullifier and o mild nullifier. | cover their health and learn, to play; | was launched at the'yards of the Bath | =7 oo T occasionally one hears of a package & s Siiain and Japan which before the|Our responsibility as a nation in this| second, nurses’ rest and _recreation | Iron works today. The destrover is| Harvar ersity offi var had begin to find 8o many in- | turning point of history is an over-|ciub to be taken over eventually by als an- |<hipped by express which reaches its | Unitcd States government for equip- | granting to Germany a loan of £5,000.« named for Commodore Edward Preble | nounced last night the a.ppolmmem'clpf d:gflaefllm;. \'Farion Star. ment ‘a!lot;‘zt;;d N;!l:eu c:‘:np:::c el:lm;l;: 3'.’35“"&3.?‘::5';,, u’((“l(\;cn:;amm‘:}n; Y:;Pm"\;’{‘: . fi st in common in the Pacific; by | whelming one and if 1 had the oppor- | the Polish Red Cross; and fourth of | of Portland, who served in the navy | A. Kingsley Porter, assistant professor federal co ation p by ltaly—by all the t' tunity I would beg everyone concern-|a training school for women social powers of tbe woold_of Ge_ in the Civil war, Miss Tucker is his | of history of art at Yale, as professor| A lot of men go broke just before | commission will f‘m‘m;‘nly approve the guverrlu:g the allied occupation, thé ad to sonsider the matter in the light workers. great-granddaughter. 3 of fine arts at Harvard. the day breaks. petition within a few days. Gespateh adds \ :

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