Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 8, 1920, Page 1

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has abandoned _his projected trip to Athens, according to a Cairo. despatch to the Exchange Telegraph company. ~He wass embark at Alexandria on Ap! 17 for Mar- seilles. ¥ INVESTIGATING FEDERAL - 'RAIDS ON RADICALS c Citi S he G oops Are With- | , Bost ril 7—The authority un-| ted, 2 e .~ 2 W “"x"?“n"“‘t::“&’“ adicals o‘:i::l?lar:; Wuhl:lmn April T—Tinal d ‘Washington, April 7.—Bearing ban: . 2 o t iny % I+ 3 inal le- | ] e drawn From the Rubhr District—Six Germans Were Kill- rryaag Geportation last January, | termination Was reached today by re- | ners inscribed said ith quotations . and the number of agents and the publican leaders in the house to bring|to be taken from a recent speech by ed and 38 Wounded in an Affray at Frankfort—French ! ead tak ‘ethods employed Were subjécts of | {0 a Vote in that body late Friday the | Secretary Colby, the Irish pickets to-|° tion. S P 5 = BRI inquicy in the. federal district court |Tesolution to declare the state of war|day transferred their activities from ders of the harbor strikers of Troops Finally Restored 0'*"-—'-"”‘ Organizations togl.v by counsel for Mr. and Mrs. | With Germany at an end. A special{the British embassy to the state de- N:-:. Yo:koziflod Samuel Gompers 10 o ) the Ger- | William T. Collyer of Wellesley, and | rule reportéd today by the rules com- | partment. P i - g e and Independent Socialists Present Demands to e O O o 1y obtaiy the |mittee provides for six hours' debate| DUTINg the busiest hour of the af- ; PRI . Hlease by habeas corpus of their cli-|on Thursday and five hours on Fri- | ternoon, the pickets presenteq to the| AR attempt to poison Bela Kun and man Government. : ‘ents now awaiting deportation. day, after which opponents of the res- | gaze’ of homeward boung war workers 3 other communist interned at Steinhof| Chicago, April 7—An unauthorized . George E. Kelleher ,superintendent | 0lution may offer only a motion to re- | banners bearing the quoted inscrip-|was made. strike of . railroad ~employes, which April 7.—Premier Millerand, | the earlier atrocities, notably the cold [ ;¢ po ‘jocal Gureau of investigation of{ commit. 3 tions: ST prices, fuel buying of | started a week 2 the conference of ambassadors this | blooded murder of a lieutenant and |, gepartment of justice, refused at ompletion today of the minority| “There is not even a scintilla of le- | Owing to high prices, fuel 'K't"' =, a week ago in the Chicago Evening. explained the French atti- | tweny men who hoisted a white lag| 5. (0’ say how many agents were | FSPOTt presenting views of democratic | gality in England's claim to rule Ire-| railroads will be put off until late switching district by the discharge of s Cate ny. He reviewed|after tenaciously defending the pump- | pioioo2a™ Yy "Oe Tinvestigation and members of the foreign affairs com- | land.” the summer. a.yard conductor, tonight had spread | railroads. the events that led up to the occupa- | ing station. Taids, but by agreement. with the|™Mittee on the resolution cleared the| “The death of your martyrs has Bar gold was quoted at 103s an|until it had affecied 25 raiiroads, tnd' W. J. Trost, vice president : t Fra d. the other Ger-| According to the Lokal Anaieger the information in confi- | 7aY for the long debate. Representa- | called into existence millions of Irish in Chig had thrown more. than 30,- ~out- small g R e ot the Russian Bolshevists Radek and Gl e Yot Ui tive Flood of Vicginia, Fanking demo: | by, principie, and bunce in London, compared with 1058 cago had th re 50,- | union. held " ou small hope of The premier made no reference to 5’:::«':71 :tltg-“?_i:i“ unth'u o&t:dy i a:?mex- thority, he said, was contained in or- c. member of the committee, pre- 000 men out of work, either directly or | the men back to The senting the minority report, chall e it indirectly. = Y O | ioke bad, he sald. . ~Our most . ond Telté- g t Wedh: port, challeng- | sionfess while these votive offerings| g More than 10,000 ha i et the oncuped chies would hotted the Redsto fight to tho bitter oo Con spaicr oo M o1 the power of congress to bring the | are Jaid UpOR the. alar of DAoL | g Sk leaders of last years genersl S isnates oo g gy < Be eyacuated as soon as the German | end, the resu bbb . men n strike was sentence dto jail at winui-{in Chicago and. several hundred at|don’t seem able to hold them. ° e vt g 3 Buffalo and at Champaign, Ill, were|hope that by tomorrow they will listen: : on strike. Many hundreds of men in |to reason, but I doubt it e b war legally to an end and character- | ism.” troops “were completely withdrawn | ing of villages, where the workingmen sio{:ae'x?est ‘i;nf..‘iglin'.‘;nf’i‘égi." 2;‘“‘;} ized section five of the resolution as| The banner beareys said the state- from the Rubr district fercely turned upon the Reds. Many | Soner, of FRMERS0R B0, "ela at | 27 attempt fo preserve something | ments attributed to Secretary Colby| U, 8. Shipping Board steamer Kear- |Chicago packing. houses.were thrown | Strike ieaders expressed confidence The' Earl of Derby, British am. |Dersons on both sides were killed or|p 0 %y, 3" wag asked why be Set|Sriich h‘ e '{fefl( of American rights| were taken from his address at Car-|ney’is disabed at sea, according to|out of work for lack of livestock. today as,reports were received.of. bassador to France: Hugh C. Wallace, "‘;‘g‘f”&ue’ of the Reichswehr up|the bail for the Collyers at $10.000. Tonfared b ;:;n s "!Tc!;:g‘:mlty L nefiie Eau, New York, May “'11913' wireless reports. Two “outlaw” organizations, .- | walkouts at Buffalo and Cham ::I'A“Tnfil‘(‘:'n afl:n;"u:;or.n;:g‘:\-dfinl to Sunday are given ak 170 killed, 346 | He said he did so to assure their pres- t the end of an hour the pickets b i3 —_— ed by the established brotherhoods as |and of plans to organize bran of ) resolution.” 3 withdrew t i llar was quoted at 14| rump” uni had i B e i ence. a3 | Wounded and 123 missing. ence when wanted. Mrs. Collyers’ bail | "““From whatever angle this resolu- ew to thei headquarters. A| American dolla q p” unions, f poli ed thy € | frs. 62 mpared with = 14 frs. 72¢ 10 the right of gfll;l"” up to g‘: yn;zmg'. m)( ll:ucm in St. Louis, g ot A o squaq of police appeared on the scene | frs. 62c, co! challenge of the r heads st uis, Milwaukee and other Was also the -Ttalian ambassador,| According to Die Ereihelt, the work: bbb i ot e e e - e tion is viewed” he continued, “it pre-{as soon as the anners were erected |at last close in Patis. : to_lead their men. railroad centers. -. Neme of them made any remarks|insmen at Eiverfeld have organized |of her WUNNC U 8L TUEOR, G | sente 3{" as a proposition not only | but no effort was made to interfere I In the face.of this opposition from | “Five dollars a day is the minimum hich might be construed as either | Frmed !;afdflflflxfly""},l e | | Judge George W, .Anderson inter- | ea puesee in achieving its pociim- | with the picketing. Nomination of Hampson Gary within the brotherhoods of enginecrs, | wiieh will support a man and his Anproving or disapproving the | Red bands -~ Hundreds of the disinic- | IucEe, Geotbe ey seom to be| canhurpose, but s a sure method of | Resumption of the patrol in tront of | Texas to be minister t0 Switzerland | railway trainmen, firemen and engine- | fam'ly,” the strikers said in a state= French attitude on behalt of the gov- | Sratn R o Liniaiat acte s dameais:. roalie Py foreign relations, in-|the British embassy has been defi- |was confirmed by the semate. men and the Switchmen's union _of |[ment. ' Demands they made to the ernments they represent. SEROF) * DOOR iretiibe T i e Moee e mbnd | decting new and complicated 'ques- | nitely - postponed ‘until after the trial et ives from|North America pledged their support | gercral managers' association were: . © 88 L. - % 4] = i i e = . - ez g $IX GERMANS WERE that several executions by the Reich- | have them in; clear out the divorce|can rights ‘gna ar{""r‘n ;:i :‘ge:tmergf :alfleS!; L:rres( ’Ar_rm‘gned het_o;e %nu- fi‘;h": "Mflm Abroad for raw cotton{ Walkout and to that end. union rail- (66 2-3 cents: switchmen &5 cents an - KILLED AT FRANKFORT |swehr continue, notwithstanding the|courts.” 3 riles “Commissloner. | Richardeon, D d d men-throughout the country have | hour, present scale 62 1-2 cgptss American prestige and honor. i d: Vo 4 . 2 St t i e X the quartet was released on $1,000 bail | 500ds. 2 been u 6. Chicage to | switch tenders $5 a day, present wage = agreement to the contrary. Special Assiftant Attorney General! The minority report i ol i i s » " wtet 3 3 Frankfort, April 7.—(Havas), Six A S J. Hoover, an authority on procedure| exception . in .lh: Ds{&!:g?el;tpar‘t;cul!fi: e'gglh‘ after pleading not guilty to a William D. Pennell agent of the Hill | serve a% strikebreakers. 50 cents an hour. i Germans were killea and 35 wounded | GERMANS KILLED IN against radicals, arrived from Wash- | violation of ~Section 4062, revise i i Managers of 25 railroads in the Chi- resolution’s premable that - mill, Lewiston, Me., since 1890, died in. an affray here today. Order finally AFFRAYS WITH FRENCH | ington today to assist the government b3 RoADAL HRDreR was restored. 2 E statutes, in having “feloniously men- . ~ He was | €380 district affected. by the strike | EMBARGO ON FREIGHT - bt e Rdat or s gqormed.congress that. the | aced botllly and by violence the per- |SASACTY, 5 his home fhere today agreed to. give brotherhood offi- TOUCHING BUFFALD e Frankfort, April 7.—(By The A. P) et i e SN ERS son of His Excellency, the Counsellor t cers at least ‘another day in which to = ; COLORED FRENCH TROOPS —Affrays with the Fench troops oc- | ADMIRAL RODMAN TOOK circum- } of the Embassy and Charge D'Affaires D stances. has th, CLASHED WITH CIVILIANS | curred at difterent points in the city DIRECT ISSUE WITH SIMS o B e R — i Assemblyman Louis A. Cuvillier, of | restore normal conditions and de- Buffalo. N. Y., April 7.—An y ’I this afternoon, which resulted in such -a Aes Ny of Great Britain, tue Hon. Ronald C.|Manhattan, announced. his candidacy |clared themselves confident that the [on all freight entering, leaving oe et Sl T thhe, Bt s, Sostls SR riathey, for the democratic nomination for at- | unions would succeed. passing through PBuffalo was an~ Berlin, April 7—(By The A. P) A|members of the German population| Washington .April T—Testitying to-|armistice, the Prestdent, in_ the couneg] 0ne Of the four prisoners was pro- |{orney-general ccsome union leaders voleed the eame | nounced late tonight afier o confere: private telephone message reaching|being killed or wounded. day at his own request before = the!of an addre: 2 = nounceg “indisposed” after her re- . o * decl the | ence of officials of the seven rallroads’ Berlin late this afternoon reports a| At eight o'clock this evening order| senate committee investigating the | words ‘the wsasr :‘l"lu:o:g'rne:;vtou;:der‘mdf. lc:‘\f'e from detention. . | Two airplanes fly‘mfl zvlcrp::;:h:‘g:f :l:rellt‘; :;t"c'n :u 13 the air,” that even k'th?koe ’t"d. were tied up today by & serlous clash between colored French | was restored in the city streets, which | Sims-Daniels row, Admiral Rodman,| But he spoke of actual hostilities. ok ust an attack of woman's nerves,” | carried on a wireless tele o servative men were quit- | Strike of switchmen. Milk shi - troops and crowds of civillans in|rere frequently patroiled by troops.| commander-in-chief of the Pacific|evervone knew, and not of the tech. | D¢L, Colleamies sai versation with nfembers of the staff|ting, and that the task of keeping the front of the main postoffice in Frank- | At 9 o'clock Frankfort was absolute- | fleet, took direct issue with Admiral J trains moving appeared difficult. ) nical state of th, v None of the woman offered any|of Patchogue st n 2 ap) 3 maintatnng’ tort, 3 iy tranquil, by reason of” the rule | Simi' charges and criticisms. frents 1o end o war, \ | | ‘%K°% | complaint against the food and I s R with | g0 dilerelicea of opinion <xisted [as far as possible, ft was suid after S Pl e @ ey et | Ehcond after thar Rus o crlly The charge. that the vy cater- | the merpere ot tre. mrenarion and | tentlon.” Plenty of e o o | Prmice. Millerand# LAtor the premier | Charles.-Riley, Vios iomt of he | . Strike leaders tonight clatmed that v y vds, h - 3 - - y 3 embers of i . Loes, = 2 . - - jeered at them, whereupon| The trouble this afternoon had ita|ed the war without plans or policies; [eign affairs who fi,‘f&f‘fl;lgfiee“nnkf&; they sald, were offered them besides | received Hugh C. Waliace, the Ameri sfi'fi"&“m jon, which |2.700 men had joined the they openeq fire, killing seven per- |Origin In a rumor which had spread’that it was unprepared to fight, or|that this was the case. By quoting | LiUnsarian goulash and New Englandgcan &mbassador. e original sons and wounding many others, in-|about the city that as a .result of e, said 14,000 | Which was denounced as fllegal »fi that it was a mistake to attempt to e e 3 tamily dlgner, - switchmen and 3,000 engineers were | Frank J. Sheehan, vice president of T v oit Been bressure on' the part ‘of the allies the | Airect naval operations from Wasing. | basls for this Soscicticoiacht a8 the | “mne’ tate department - refused to| A call for the democratic: New Vork|idle, but railroad officers and brother- | the Switchmen's’ union o North- The message said the feeling of re- | French troops had received orders to|ton. The admiral said he appeared|of the resolutions lay themselves open | COMUReNt upon the new situation re- ot rbocker at New York, April 18 f'M heads scouted his figures as too | America. Railroad officials said sentment among the civilian popula- | evacuate Frankfort. The feeling Was| through a sense of duty and “to de-|to the charge of insincerify and shaep| SULtNg from the transfer of the patrol | Kickerbocker o by 2 tion was visibly increasing as 4 re. | heightened ‘when students in automo- ! feny the good name of the na the | practice. \ : ; They admitted, however, they | their fizures showed about 18§00 men from the embassy to the doors of the |Was issued from Albany. lggudmn; figurss "on which_ to h itk ?eyina-uma. however, i work of which in the war he praised.| “The supreme court rec = received from Sofia, Bul- Jaismia . > & 4 at the situation is senfous.- . Miny rumars are current in Berlin|Cited them agains the French troops.|" Aqmiral Rodman declated that nev- | clared what the president Mol dese P —— e b iR B syl Trost, vice- president of the | Engincers and firemen employed. 1o the effect that the United States.is o e er in his more than forty years of|did not announce the legal termipa- | -ATEST RETURNS FROM B i the Bulgarian - clections, 30- | suya imen's unlon of North America, the yards of Buffalo voted today #ddressing a note to France demand- | FRENCH TROOPS SUBDUED service had the fleot been in a better| tion of the war.” the report feclac. MICHIGAN PRIMARIES | cialists, 25 and the peasants, 113. Toroximately 2,000 of that or- |Support the switchmen in ing the withdrawal of the Fremch| DISTURBANCE IN -FRANKFORT |state of preparedness than i) ol bt the incident. Dbiles harangued the crowds and ex- department. in. the | ed, citing the decision in the Kentuck: = ganizttion’s members liad struch, and | 4Dd many of them faled to report | fi forces from Frankfort. . . | spring of 1917. Some fypes of vessels | distilleries case. i o troit, Mich., April 7.—Less than] w York an-;that the Soo_ 1! the only rajlrond | WOTK tonight. It was said No newspapers are yet appearing | Mayence, April (By The A. PJ|ywere lacking, -cn%aded. notably| Representative Flood asserted that {O7e hundred precincis reported today ‘openis Branches at Ma- 0 union had |at strike meetings that the in Frankfort, and the city is entirely | Disturbances broke gut.dn f0rt i battle cruisers and scolit cruisers. but|sections o' the resolution restricting | 9% Monday's presidential primary, and “Spum-and L tal A > would ol ha out without Information regarding the| t0d&Y, but energeic intervention’by| generally the” ndvy “was | trade wiin Jermany.or ‘seeking té.resgi e8¢ Teturns fatied . t0 . change th RAIL "ROUBLE cont. ihe. notes exshanged by « | 1he ITench,-groops - restoreq otder.{ ready to fight). - , peal war timé legislation wer - Standing of the candidates or announced aft, ROAD TROUBLE HAS twe and Patis ang other|¥rom German sources it is flearned| Without any attempt to avold per-|th power of congress but cited many g pping ! SPREAD TO KANSAS CITY events conmected with the French oc- | that six Germans were killed and 35 | sonalities, Admiral Rodman charac-,atherities 6 sustain his contention |£or Hifam W. Johnson in the lead on led to increase freight rates very sub- = T cpuation of German towns, wounded. < g terized as “very indiscreet.” the Sims| that “so far as it seeks to/direct the |LP¢ Trepublican ticket and gave Her- |stantially from the United Kingdom |, 8 ¢ 4nsas City, Mo. April 7. = e It is reported that the manifesta- |letter tp Secretary.: Daniels, which;president to issue a proclamation to |Pert Hoover a 4,400 lead over Governor | to-North America as from April T h_a; e("'hl' °§7‘~ unjon. men_imported | SWitéhing crews in the Kansas NOTICEABLE CHANGE IN ' tions which gave rise to thiesé inci- [ brought- about the present investiga- | the German government, it entrenches|cdward L Edwards of New Jersey for N s e AR e e: l;' ivisions. nad office clerks | Southern yards here, and part af thoss - FRENCH PUBLIC OPINION | 8ents Were dut' to an_order. originat- |.tion, and declared that Sims commit- | Upon the treaty-making powers and | democratic endorsement. Federal Judge "Killits ordered ¢ gufi!cl y to service wgm, tenders. | in the Wabash yards, struck tonight in " N | ing“in" Berlin. * tea & breach of confidence in making|1s not Within the power of congress.” | The six hundred precincts vet to re- | Toledo. Raiways and Light Co. to re-| CITRIC EXNE. 10 o About 300 | syTpathy with ihe Chicago sthike. ol Pasis, April T—(By The A. P. — public “an intimate and _confidential BB o - oY port are largely in_sparsely settled | store street car service, thréatening to| (FORIHIves had recruited in the | Wabash switchmen who Jeft Much reaction was noticeable today| SHOPS IN ESSEN WERE .| conversation which should have been|ASKED HOOVER IF HE WOULD rural districts and probably will not be | iame a receiver if the company refus go area, he said. work said members of the late o in French public opinion which was _PLUNDERED BY THE REDS | held sacred.” He was referring to b - unanimously favorable yesterday re- —— ; ¢ . : E The brotherhood of heard from until the official canvass, | ed. ? engjnec 4 and ' shift would not appear for - Sims' statement that Admiral Benson ACCEPT DEM. NOMINATION | which must be made within tin ‘dln?- the advisedness of the occu-| The Hague. April 7.—The Nieuwe ; had told him just before leaving for| Doston, April _7.—Chandlér = dr|8fter the clection. In some of the | Secrstary Daniels e ¥ of the Rhine cities, OMelal clr- Cour‘n‘t;r describing the plundering of | London “not to let the British pull the t. Essen - - i hat WAGES 3 Wood, chai M-I missing precincts the ballots were |naval committee that he hoped ¢ ASKS HIGH! ES FOR THRILLING SPORT HUNTI < atten the-reds before the occupa-| wool over your. eyes.” committos. of the democratis - siagfiocked up today to await the canvass, | “in two years of less we will “‘"‘h‘ p.A‘c'kmq HOUSE LABORERS / GEESE wrmu;g::'.”..' z tallore of the Americin am. | tion of the eity by government troops, ot committee, made public tonight a letfl} The latest figures available on the | machine that has'flown across the ek L% — i amiseader %V:E!‘l-‘ce;‘mi)‘nm. Pact. ot the retreating red troops N ter which he had sent to Herbert @F|Lchublican candidates were from 1,735 | Pacific. Chicago, April 7—A plea for high-| Atlantic City, N. J., April 7—A flock. | , the *Earl of rby; i CHARLES E. HUGH Hoover askin, heth out of the 2,421 precincts and gave: Chicas .| er wages for laborers Chicago geese pursued seap] , from Baron Matsui, representing Japan, | Sathered during the morning in Kssen. O e oy hether M. Hoover | Jonnson 128,316, Wood S3.843, Low- | Reperts from Chicago state that ev. | 10 inZ™S oises was made today by | which shats were peins. fred . 1000 and Count Bonin-Longare, Italy. . to|captured al ithe arms which they had | New York, . April 7_Charles E.|tion for president if it were offered to]den 44457, Hoover 43,879, Pérshing |ldnce said to the corn market | Dennis Lane, secretary of the Inter-|feet over Absecon Inlet, held the ‘at- an opinion concerning = Pre- | alread ydelivered, plundered the shops | Hughes has been retained by the Unit- | him, 11,558, Poindexter 2,01 w“w"‘;fl' O ea 'to the Federal | national Meat Cuiters and Butchers | tention today of Game Warden P. L Mier Millerand’s note s not inter.|and finally left the town in automo-|ed Mine Workers of America as chief| In the letter Mr. Wood said that he|. The democratic vote, tabujated from | Would be presen union, at a hearing before Judge Als- | Hilliard. A few minutes later he ars. | Preted ag untavorabie, but as merely |Piles, Sring at the inhabitants. The|counsel to defend the 43 union of-had assisted In the erganisation of|Li72 Precincts, was:' H o3, | SR SEs chuler. He read ajvertisements of-|rested Kenneth Jaquith, aviator, and POInting 1o the fact that nome of them |Ted army commander ordered that the | ficials sinder fcceral indjctment in | the Hoover Democratic Club of Mass- |LavArds 18196, McAdoo 12441,| pietro Masgani and. Giacomo Puc- |fering $4.40 to §6 a day of eight hours | his mechamician, Bennet E. Se Uas yet received instructions concery (Mines be blown up, but the mine|Indianapolis on charges of conspiring | achusetts and added: Bryan 11,645, Palmer 9,833, e mpogers, will be. elected to| for_unskilled iaborers. Ing the attitude of their respective | 5uards succeeded in-repulsing the reds | o raise (coal prices. This announce- e QU Severs, when their plane alighted to pick up o s Former Governor Fred M. Warner ing of| “Somle laborers with families 10|a dead goose that had fallen near Ine tho atttude ot thelr e sl cocsubled - epuiaing.the fude | fo Tl loonl prices. . Thie snnounoe- nce the formation of our club 1 the Ttalian senate before reopening o e S ans dhe ta; was given a plurality by the incom- Teobening Off port are paid 4 a day In the stock | meaens et e e The attitude of the goverminent of. |the mines. 3 - | Tewis, internationsi president of tie | emanate from you o whim € 84 plete returns fo 11500 over his near. | L, bariament, Sogoraine: vards,” he-said. “They cannod be | from shore. * fckule, however, is one of expectancy,| BOtTD in the Reckiinghausen dis. | union. 4 Sou would accopt the nominaiion Se'afest opponent for: the nomination for i Classed as common laborers since ex- | * Warden Hilliard told United mz 2 and there is even some anxiety re.|trict is also in the hands of the gov-| Mr. Lewis said that Mr. Hughes | republican convention. I feel that the|lcPublican national committeeman. | = Snator McLean, chairman of * the|perience is required. Commissioner Lewis. before whom the . garding the probable course to be|¢rnment troops.’ .\ |would haVe complete charge of t democrats who are active participants William ‘F. Connelly, incumbent, was | Snate Cominittee on Banking and| Mr.Lane said the bonus system for | prisoners were arraigned that Jaguith ! adopted by the allied governm o case and would be assisted by the en- | in th £ unopposed for that office on the demo- rably reported the | Wage earners was a failure. not_knowing his identity, had relat Great initerest is dup‘.”!'d . el:;le FIERCE FIGHTING IN BOCHUM e Mbeal mart ot iy Latnd onn:|in the movement for your nomination | oratie ticket, ‘Currency, fayorably po! oven I ‘minti ing on the bonus system|ed to him all the thrills of the sport.; 5 . of upon their ticket are entitleq to know measure authorizing the minting of a| Comment! % i o Desat,Jrtereat s displayed : B Sy ol e Hnted LMY pen | n ; Judge Alschuler said: “Working men FOW, a8 thete s much aooiiior, | AS REICHSWEHR APPROACHED 5 ey oo eturmante ‘at Indianapolls | Bmmeesror pok Tou will. accept . thy SR wo-cent coin. Whereupon, the warden said, he in- democratic nomination if offered you.| N0 SUFFRAGE EFFORT 5 - 1do not seem to regard bonus as|formed the-aviator he was under .:J to_Washington's officidl expression. Berlin, Apfl 7—Fierce fighting toiok | May 4. At that time ali the indicted = IN DELAWARE HOUSE| Complete Detroit returns show that|a’part of their pay and I honestly be- | rest for violating a federal game law Banking, financial and business cir- |Place n the town hall square at Bo- |union officials will appear and enter | DAMAGE DONE BY FOREST e th voters decided in favor of bonding |lieve the employes do mot get credit|which carries a penalty of $508 fk'r are more outapoken, the opinion chum when as the Reichswehr- ap- | Pleas of not guiit; s freely expressed that 3 Dover, Del., April 7.—No effort was and six months in fail intervention | Proached, the citizens took the execu- | “We approach the trial wirh serena FIRES IN CONNECTICUT | made in the lower house of the Dela- |striction of municipally-owned street ask one of the men from the yards Jaquith, who is sai T cintimely and detrimental . to "vdng of 'getm(g efi?&a plxu‘;n;r,nnn ;’;,’::;’1,“: [sut&hd Mr. kLewx- num t1e| Harttord, Conn, April T.—Fires in| SPT% leg'll‘z;llntx%n for a_reconsideration | railway system. ot l:?::‘i‘xf;‘e h&es":n:,, bour he willjof a Chlcago banker, Intere: a des) 0 e A A eitung. 11 ence o e workers vill be 2s- 2, p of last ursday's vote on th - L The Red Guard attempied i hor| tal B 2 the woods' and fields of Comnecticut|fution to ratify the woman suffrage| Sixty-five thousand naval reserve| . Mr. Lane asked that a raise of three p LABOR UNIONS PRESENT ate their leaders and in the fighting| “The officers of the United Mine|ZCF_the Pericd from 1810 to 1919 in-|federal amendment foday, the last day |men in New York district are offered | cents an hour be granted eighty per == DEMANDS TO GERMAN GOV-T | Which ensued seven Rids were shot. | Workers have always tried to conform | gee wearach. mamborer 500 comress for such . action. Representative % ;‘mu. Increased ey 4554 thicty {cent. of all packing house employ- | TO CELEBRATE FOUNDATION & | 3 cans plundered the farms, in | With every canon of the law in co 417 togi g sloyd, republican -anti-suffragist, who |da: furlough as an induce OF FREE INSTITUTIONS ..2"""' April 7—The labor organi- | the vicinity of Bochum, slaughtered | ducting the organization’s. business | 30 2T** eg{m:;;;‘a"" T 50:’;;10 did | last week ‘introduced a resolutiop de- | reenlist in the navy. | _— —_— — ons which participated in the | cattle and invaded Castle Bester- | he continued. “Our action during the AP 40 ESTEDOTh 1apued: toda ,;fi signed to gain control of the suffrage e ncrease for | T WO SETS OF REP. DELEGATES New York, April ves of the g n at has prevailed for e p his [kt goclalist and independent so- | forced to cook and serve meals to the | more than thirty years in our organi- e N s e measure, asked leave today, to with- Teldiol, Wkt V;:fl‘i‘&:":";‘x E‘:”,‘_‘;’;"’n Atlanta, Ga., April 7—Two sets of R b i, L Nantng yeu | SIS SR IR ot womum- afel ~ Sparks from railroad engines or from | oatendan " rhy omuert war Eriouse | County Coal association. |Georgia_delegites were elected today it ecided to present certain | ber of low class women, who are de-| Summons for ithelr appearance in | gharts O rallroac em Bt .. Tho teqyuest waa.cranted FCORIY 3 to the republican national convention ;‘::-:d- to m.r.l.x,vemmem_ The de- | scribed as having been “veritable fu- |court have not yet been served on a DEBDELLY Call A : | unanimously. are as follows: ries’ who are v hunters were held responsi 3 v New York, |and will make a contest there for ies” and are said to have de- | number of the indictde officials of the Y i ible for 153| The only hope of the suffragists| Representative Magee, of - First: the withdrawal of regular |Mmolished furniture and art works. i o ition. chairman of the board of governors ¥ s and fishermen 17. To brush burning{now lies in favorable action by introduced a bill providing for the ap- | recognition. - B of ) roops from the neutral zone and the | Before quitting Dortmund the Reds, ;:e‘:euv:a{,e"' Helgting Hknelt My was attributeq 2,350 fires not other-|senate. A ratification rwfiu?&n'h‘i pointment of a committee to’inquire The break came after a turmoil in |the Sulgrave Institution: George B maintenance of public order by local |2ccOrding to the same source, took the city for $15,000,000 to begin con- | for all the money they pay out. If you . . and mechanician each were held in bail for a hearing later. wise enumerateq and as it was pos- e in the hands of a senate confmittes, | Into the depreciation of the market |which Folice Chiet HESrers e | Foniion Tt o defense bodies. from the branch of the Reichsbank [ PESSIMISTIC VIEW OF sible to definitely trace the origin of|but no indication has _been ~ givep [Vaius of Liberty Bonds. state capitol, where the meeting was | Churches and schools will be Second: no advance to be made by |one million marks. They also ap- PRINT PAPER OUT! Hicasitn’ (he SEiizs Sy Tha 0 LNTEa 5 $oul e regirted out. i American minister to |held. One of the factions, beaded by [to hold exercises duping the amivare. regular troops south of the Ruhr re. | Propriated 750,000 marks from private ) LOOK | each instance “someone was negli- Loty Hagh: Glbsen: Aswirisan minister to|held One of the facions. headed by | hold exerises durtg the o gion. persons and also took ffty foreign| Cleveland, Ohio, April 7T.—American|8€nt.” Many spring fires were caused | RUM AND COGNAC SEIZED Polsnd, -left. Warsww for o 8 % Third. the formation of & defensé | PASSPOTts. + L ¢ newspapers will be without print pa- | DY carelessness of picnic parties. body in the mhca outside the® neutral e via Berlin and Paris. John Campbel |ed four delegates-at-large imstructed | has been asked to issue a series of . t the d of 7~ sone occupied by regulars, whereupaa | WOULD SET ASIDE DIVORCE per at.fhe end. of ten years, unless| cRACOW-BOUND CARS ON SUGAR SHIPS FROM CUBA |\yhite, secretary of legfajon, is in|for Major General Leonard Wood. The | stamps depicting J = « ded by Henry Lincoln John- | the hist f th Jiiscel 15 sogpervation ul aluertibne New York, April 7.—Eighteen cases|Charge during his absence. e T ety S ] e e . GRANTED MARY PICKFORD |space, declared Jason Rogers, pub- CONTAINED MUNITIONS |of rum and cognac were seized by ps were sent by - the Saxony [ternal revenue here, and C. P. Goree, punishment of untrust- lisher of the New York Globe, at a worthy officers and the st Reho, Nev., T.—A suit to set aside supplies of ammunition o erunter, | the decree of divorce granted to Mary revolutionary formations like @en. | Pickford. now Mrs. Douglas _Fair- eral Erhardt's Baltic' brigade. federal inspectors today during a search of three sugar ships from Cuba ~—the Munamar and Munairies of lbel TO TAKE UP REPORT OF t to capture Max Hoelz, thela lawyer of Atlanta, elected unin- 3 m:’;’: hrl‘ll\l:‘ who was recently | structed delegates. ANDUSTRIAL COMMISSION | holding up towns with the aid of an meeti b Vienna, April 7.—Twenty-nine cars, Cieing of the: Cleveland Advertising | .,,;0ced to contain machinery, bound “The output of print paper is|from Vienna to Cracow, which were Washington, April . o v Munson Line, and the Lake Louise, 3 on. e oo banks, will ba filed mext week by the | dwindling rapidly.” me said” ‘aed the |being convoyed by the military police, | moored at Fagewater, N, J. Aecord. | > co S<18 1 Bve Kacifies. IMPROVEMENT IN ":"::; 138 on, of the senaie labor = Fifth: the present goyernment re.|2ttorney general of Nevada, accord- | outlook in all the pulp mills of the|Were stopped by Czechs at Mahrisch-|ing to the inspectors. five cases of the |- Employment of union men to fight SERVICE | d :;il e e e the security guard by means| N8 (0 -4 statement made today by |United States and Canada will not be|Ostrau Moravia. The cars were found | liquor were hidden in a false bulk- |the unauthorized strike of members of S 08 ‘would take up, touu s Robert Richards, deputy . attorney |adequate to meet the demand, even if |0 contain hand grenades and other o head on the Lake Louise. ntly formed Chicago Yard- ew York, April 7.—Much improve- | report of President Wilson's were signed by |E°heral, who has heen investigating | the supply of spruce timber holds |munitions, Ttalian officers appeared Faithan the recently = ’s Assoc! ves hope of near-|ment in the situation created by the | industrial commission with a view Richard Molkenbuhr, of the the circumstances under which the | out. and claimed the contents of the cars| ADVISED CONDITIONS IN T A eient taftic In’ Chicago. | strike of ferry, tug and steam lighte: | dratting log n designed 1o @ men's and soldiers' executive councll,| 9ecree Was granted. el as Italian promérty. but the traln is DENMARK ARE NORMAL e { | emploves of raifoad-owned harbor |out such recommendations of Carl Rudolph Legien, president of the | ,, The Suit will be based on allegations | WATERBURY DOMESTIC beinz held at the border pending in- piii Chairman Jones, of the Senate Com? | equipment was reported by J. J. Man- | commission as the committee €e 2 German Federation of Trade Unhn’ that collusion and conspiracy were HELD AS ARSON SUSPECT | Structions from Prague. ‘Washifigton, April 7.—Conditions in|merce Committee, - introduced an|tell of the general managers' associ. |advisable. W. J. Lau X 0 A and others. 8| resorted to in conducting the case and AR Ve A Denmark now“are normal, the Danish | amendment to the pending House bill | ation today. The ferries he said. were | With the war labor board. will be i3 e that - because of ‘the insufficiency of |' Waterbury, Conn., April 7.—Adeline | CANADIAN CUSTOMS TAX Jegation was advised today, both the|to regulate Pan-ma Canal charges | running on “practically normal sched- | first witness heard by the commit -~ GOVERNMENT TRODOPS the residence of the other party to| Mikelskas, 15 vears old, a servant FOR FISCAL YEAR $40580,316 | labor cohflict and the polifical crisis|providing .exem; §m “from * tolls for |ule” and there was an increased o e — IN CONTROL AT Essen | {he case. the court failed to acquire|employed in the ousehold, was de-| G\, 0, ot April 7.—The Canadi. |DAVINE been defuitely ended. In view | Amrican. coastwise vessels, number of tugs and lights in commis- | HOUSE TENANTS OF MADRID v A tained ton b e police in connec- 4 . e ~ Eesen, April T—(By The A. P)—|. "AS & result of the examination I|tion witn 4 fire sarly this morning ia |an Fovernment collected $40580316 | 2f the seltleriele which has been ston. Thomas W: Lawson, recently ar- rding” to Thomas Healy, of the The last important Red center fell in- | have made of the files and reécords in | the home of Attorney and Mrs. Fran- | through the 7 1-2 per cent. customs B e e Arine. eng IN GREAT DEMONSTRA’ ested in connection with charges of ineers’ benefit associatio . 10 the hands of the government troens | the Pickford case,” said Deputy Al |cis: P, Guilfolle. The girl is said to |{ax during the fiscal year ending|Su® any further Somminiigues; 3 - ; marine engi g M4diid, April T—A great | d i —= — illegality in advertising Stocks, ap- |mpioyes of the independent tuzhnats. | gieaiion Suse trints ORI y#aterday afternoon after severs | torney General Richards, “T am satis- | have sdmitted enough to the police to | March 31 it was announced today in|PALMER TO CANTINUE ¢ e S lalor T ale MUFEY T the | s wackini (ahy howe WHl Skt Torran |t b e i Ieh Bt fighting in the suburbs, The Reds|fied that the decree is not valid be- |cause them ot hoid her for further ex- | the house tflf comnions. It the preced- HIS SPEAKING SCHEDULE | Municipal Court, Boston. .His case|eight hour.day,when. their —preseut|morming. - A procession of the made their last stand on the canal | CUSe the court had not acquired ju-|amination. The house was fired in {ing year, the war tax revenue totall- Snt was postponed until April 14. working agreement expires. will' pdss through the prificipal but when the Reichsmehr charged on | risdiction and ‘because coflusion and!many piaces on the first floor, a path- | ¢4 $56,177.508. Liquor duties during | Atlanta, Ga. April T.—Attorney Gen- ‘ - . 91 tha apital ah % probest bath flanks the Reds broke ani fled | sonspiracy were rosor(ed to. A sult|way. of oll-soaked rags marking the the last fiscal vear totalled $8461289 |oral Palmer, who was stricken at| Tony Stafford, foemer national er-| .. o peor 1s TO PAY the possibility of the Cortes a - of them surrendered their arms | !0 set aside the decree will be filed | course, which soon choked the interior [2n dtobacco duties $21510,249. Gainesville Vesterday with an attack | ganizer of the United Mine Workers’ (G CxE For. coi!| Insiitaoe: Aol at the city hall during the retreat b-y Atm;my !generu Fowler about the | in smoke. b T OBITUARY. of acute indigestion, arrived here to- |Of America, was sentenced to five H S ! iddle ‘wee] ' \ e |ONLY ONE LANDLORD IN TEN IN BAY STATE UNRZASONABLE 7.—Only one land- or at Jeast Sving guarantees that present rentals will remain fixed. others i them e ig] arently” Fecovered, years in the penitentiary on eonviction —_— Tas. malorions DAYLIGHT SAVING BILL Brig.-Gen. Jonathan P. D e i e L | ¢ Raving led & band of arined men in Washington, April 1—Bituminous was : PASSED BY R. |. HOUSE| Rockland, Me., April 7. Georgia. the shooting up.-of the mine of the coal pri quoted navy depart- ERRNANIA AnRTvE W g ) of Brigadier General Jonathan P. Cil- | _— mine of the White Coal Co. at’Glen | ment in bids opered today showed in< R: L. April 7—The jey, of Rockland, who had been iiving [BOARD OF AGRICULTURE . -|White, W.Va.. ¥ ereases ranging Up ‘to $142 per ton $10,020,000 IN GOLD BULI bill passed the house s —_ 3 7 |over the government maxfmum prico S D I epid the ey pion several : mnéx;iln;!wi'm_ .""..&t‘ii’;’é"» | OPPOSES DAYLIGHT SAVING | g qi Lucibelio.of New Haven, held | in cftect untii April 1. The bids eov-| - New Yok April 7.—The Cunand 64 to 14, was amended so as to(in a‘ :telegram recetved here today.| Hartford, Conn., April 7—The state |in jail on a r .charge : in fercd less than. one-fifth of the 2.300.- fer Carmania arrived here & make the summier schedule end on the | He was horn 1835 and was'a graduate fboard of ‘agriculfure,” at s monthly feonnection with the Christmas weel 000 tons requested for, delivery quring| from Liverpogl G oy of ki | last Sunday in October, to conform to | of Béwdoin" college. He wis the first fmeeting today, went on record as op- jwm;? alcotiol poisonings that resulted | the year ing next March 31. ActionlS, with $10.600600 in goll the Massachusetis law. Strong oppo- | ta enlist.in the Maine cavalry i the|posed to davight saving and sent.a|in 42 deaths in the vicinity of Spring- |on the bids was deferred. Among the cabin to the measure is . cxpected | Civil war, was twice severely wound- [telegram to Governor ~Coolidge of |field, Mass., was Teleasel ‘on $10,000| The navy for the past year has|Willlam Wiseman, of it comes .up in the senate for|ed and for distinguished bravery wasjMassachusetts asking him to veto the [bonls furnished by a New York cas- | been comman: 1ts coal under In coneurremce. . promoted to brigadier general. ~ - fameasure in that state. ualty 1 authority of & H -

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