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VOL. LXI—NO.. 87 . POPULATION 29,919 g MORE. HOPEFUL OUTLOOK FOR RAILROAD SERVICE The Strikers Whe Have Acted in Defiance of the Brother-| hoods Are Returning to Work—Normal Passenger Ser-| vice Has Been Restored on Many Systems—Substantial Progress is Being Made Moving the Vast Amount of Freight That Has Accumulated Throughout the Country — Industries Are Feeling the Result of the Temporary Blockade of Freight. NORWICH, CONN. MONDA APRIL 19, 1920 CABLED PARAGRAPHS i King Gustave in Paris { Paris, April 1. (Havas)—President | Deschanel gave a luncheon Saturday in honor of King Gustave of Sweden, who is in Paris on his way to the Riviera. During their conversation which preced- ed the luncheon, the king bestowed upon President Deschanel the insignia of the order of the Seraphim, the most illustri- ous of the Swedish orders. Vietory for Turkish Nationalist Constantinople, April 18.—A communi- @ution issued today by Mustapha Kemal, igader of the nationalist forces in Asla- tic Turkey, says the nationalists have occupied the town of Hadjin, which lies a short distance northwest of Marash. Warfare Against Denim For'Men Matched by Gingham and Calico For Women—Clothier Says it is “a Fool Idea.” Tampa, Fla., April 18.—Whether the wearing of the overalls and calico in- stead of blue serges, native Palb beach- es, humspuns, voiles and other expen- sive clothing will bring down the high cost of dressing is an experiment first started here and now spreading through- out the nation. The whole country now knows of it and has characterized it as “the Tampa idea.” Mayors of cities, judges; bankers, doc- FRONTIERS OF POLAND CLOSED BY ORDER OF GOVERNMENT Warsaw, April 11—(By The A. P.) Poland was shut off from the world to- day. All the frontiers have been closed | for ten days by government order while | tors, lawyers, business men and others The nationwide railroad strike r- nouneed the strike on that Toad Was OVer. | {uqiun crowns are exchanged and | from Maine fo Callifornia joined “Over- i e sothapd The men who went out, it stated, will be | G209 10" revent crowds from being | all Clubs” and appeared in public in biue xcept in a few isolated sec re- d to their old duties and) ) louepCto Poland by speculators during | OF Khaki dfhim as a protest against the road offi last 7 freight would be moved tomorrow. Pas-| p. evchange period, railroad trafiic to|high cost of clothing. ~Many women moet of n who follo senger traflic was reported as normal and from other countries has been sus-|Jjoined the crusade by wearing gingham ership of p Grunan a ( Pen and LackaWamma| . i.q. the transport of commodities|and calico gowns. Broadway and Fifth man, had returned to wo railroads alzo reported many of . thelr p B0l Teorpidden and all post, tele- javenue, in New Yory city, have been passenge virtua . g = York | raphic and telephonic communication [ invaded by wearers of denim and even they nt I nger service on the New Ok | Ras been suspended in the case of pri- |Staid United States senators have dis- been mad ) Contral was said to be mnormal, with | 25 % U cussed the possibility of donning it. of freight that has bee | feturning at Ashtabula, Tuffale| “When the process is completed marks| The new style movement, its origina- CHARTER OF FOUR LOCAL REVOKED 11 ITHERHOOD tomorrow in Chicago by snmidered. Grunau said Warrants for the Grunau, P. V were issued toda men nent in had | t- en after they en released on promise t otake no further part in the strike movement en other alleged strike leaders were aken before Commissioner Mason today by dep marshals. Al but one were released on their own reeognizance unti omorrow i £ to obtain bonds, after promising that they would attend no un- on meetings in the meantime. CONTINUED IMPROVEMENT IN NEW YORK DISTRICT pril 18.—J. neral atement greater pere: railroad employes metropolitan district had reported today for duty. The railroads proceeded at noon to Al permanently, he said. the places of men who had failed to report Mr. Mantell declared further that there was “a substantial improvement in the general situation.” that “the backbone of the strike is broken.” All the roads, of the striking row Individual reports from various lines were more optimistic than heretofore. ¥he Central Railroad of New Jersey an- | BALTINORE - | toda App in any o New York newsprint paper are en tors say, is dictated in the spirit of pub- lic duty and necessity and does not in- dicate any lessening of degire on the part of either men or women for good and stylish apparel. They think, how- and crowds will be of the same value. Heretofore the crown has been worth 30 pfennig more than the Polish mark. GENERAL DENIKINE H < had arrived at the Mott Hav e £ ever, that it is worth while to try to which was said to be hetter t _ BEACHED LONDON | ), larize overalls for men and calico and Sd o ouk Falnto gy :l[fi,“f,‘f" London, April 18.—General Denikine, | Singhams for women and it is no se- KN e and Hartfond | orner commander of the anti-bojsnevik | et that the feminine experimenters are b \tened out in 48 |Army in South Russia, reached London >,t;ndi:s‘1fi”"‘!~'l ‘T‘ “?’\_ ”‘l “r:‘h°l_5‘ Lfv_’"" wnnounced last night from Constantinople. He | Sandles and the like to the lnitatigns : vanna railroad | told interviewers that he was tired and b emen and e and the E the night to go back ginemen on e today 4 small minor- strike. It So it came about that Hafford Jones, ecretary of an insurance company, started the Overalls’ club of Tampa. Each member pledged to wear overalls as a regular thing until clothing prices tumbled. Hundreds have joined and worn out, and that he would like to find a little house where he could rest | for three months or so. With him were the son and the daughter of General is | Korniloff, former Russian commander- | “u.“ hese roads will report at e .’n ln{ e B = keeping the pledge just as faithfully als tomorrow mornine. o early 1917 by taking advantage of the clause which 5 General Denikine's visit to England is | ) gt i & ON10 MEN T0 RETURN THIS MORNING allows them to wear old clothes in lieu of overalls—just so they don't buy any new stuff. - an unofficial one. PRIZES FOR ESSAYS ON S 1 A | When the men organized the women urgh, Pa. April 18 .s[n'm)\g{ BENEFITS OF THE NAVY | ook up the battle, the New Thought 1 Ohio troad nmen of ey Unity club, headed by Mrs. Clara Law- ashingtos April 18.—Donald TL.| UF ea it 5 b division met | e AP avhasl st | ton Metcalf, pledging its membership to Connelisy -4,“”—"\ ”“"rby\m"»:\m\(;,fl::‘-_ A ot Catin . Towh Sl ATHouRe cn'}v(l-_o (lrle;.cs. All of th srhad its jmt ot 1 o an. ofeial. - an.|ed today asifirstiprize_ winters in ithe [ROblic “demonstration Con FNEtek, | Stng e ARt an L army national school contest for the best | 4a¥ Loy c on the henefits of enlistment in the | Men and women. correctly garbed to hundred men are af-| L harmonize with the new idea, gathered 5 ccond prize w harmonize With the new idea, gal iy Beid. Chillicothe, Misaouri. and fhord | in the court house sauare. ' Addresses t of the Connells-! owen Fason. Olive Branch, | Were made. new pledges received and pe- ) vion men will be Medals will he awarded the win. | titions sizned asking city, state and na- ser Commaneniis 4o | mers. o will got u free trin to Wasi- | lenal, officials, fo; take -notich .and. gire conioeviiie 2041 ington, by Secretary Baker. Al Menhanls : ayfrown.. b aecording o e | "Honorable mention_inciuded the fol- | ¢d. and later announced that their sales o 5 cts. with | lowing: William J. Waldron. Trenton, 1‘\"“ "r’\"'\‘ l":.’:‘flh: hn.lr ::9‘»:’_”;‘ "0: L Bitt i |N: J. and Mary A. Ferguson, Schanton,|the only oges who smile knowingly af its terminal's | 3 - & e CRATTOM | he movement and predict that just as a fow will have 52 RSN S the foregoing of the luscious porterhouse tome morning, NEW COMPANY FORMED TO stead ‘and choice rib roasts increased the it cral chairman of the MAKE ARTIFICIAL SILK cod of Railroad Trainmen of the i Z and Ohio system, addressed Wilmington, Del.. 7 18.—The Du- eting at Connellsville today. Pont Company and the Comptoir Des |} CHANGES NECESSITATED yximately 33,000 men have been TMW‘»S ,\nnlfir|(‘-|snnf ’Y’;\(ns 1‘\;:\-.-{4»m4»r. BY NEWSPRINT SHORTAGE t C ellsville coke region for LS 2gtetmer ik B it Sy ka5 result of, the, tllseCaks tion of & new company for the manufac: if—Guwing-to-the-nowsprint-shortage, cont Ure of "drtificfal ellk. it was ~announc- Foand the “aggravation thereof = by 1 strike was de- | ;" here today. The mew concern. to be |§ transportation troubles, The Bul- : 3 o leading opera- ! kriown as ‘tre ‘1\1'““(?‘ e 00, | §ietin is obliged to appear in smaller a few cars were placed at the . s, SRR PRADY A0S ype rd Sa VY aper a a iy [ Yew ok ware] sl i e aen clontad nrea. |l type in order to save paper and at 1 RAIROADING IS NORMAL the same time 1 news as possible. The smaller type, t of the company, feert SR have here whic! in full expeets to | on the cut in de- 2 Against VestrymanShot While Expensive Clothing| | stitution. Taking Up Offering [~z . quor dealers in Boston. Dr. James Markoe Killed by an Insane Man in St. George’s P. E. Church, New York City. New York, April 18.—Dr. James Mar- koe, a well known surgeon, was shot and killed today ' while takini up the offering of the morning service in the fashionable St. George's Protestant Episcopal church, Fifteenth Street and Stuyvesant Place, in the old aristocratic district of New York. His assailant was captured after x' short, chase by a group of parishioners headed by William Fellowes Morgan, president of the Merchants’ Associaiton of New York; Dr. George E. Brewer and J. Morgon Jones. At the East Twenty- second Street police station the prison- er gave his name first as Thomas W, Shelley and later as Thomas W. Simp- kin. The police said he told them he had escaped Thursday "from the Eastern State Hospital for the Insane at Wil- liamsburg, Virginia. John Reed, an American Dr. Markoe, a wealthy vestryman of | writer, who was reported the church, was a friend and personal have been executed physician to J. Pierpont Morgan, a0 @ |jail at Abo, parishioner there. He was 56 years|smuggling. old. The church was crowded with parish- joners, many of them representatives of the weaithiest families in New Yorl when the shooting took place. Dr. Mar- koe was walking down the left aisle taking up the collection while the choir 16 frs, 90 centimes at last close. of law. died in New York after tionist. William K. Vanderbilt, who Auteeil, covering. France, of the treasury, Wilson accepted it. ton mill workers was broken up a settlement. in Finland, A whisky still, with bridie, Mass. Germ government was singing an anthem. As he reached n troops were the twelfth pew from the rear and|Mmassed in the center of Berlin follow- leaned over to pass the plate, Shelley, |ing the return of Herr Severing, Prus- cho ‘was sea % ‘hin. | Sian minister of the interior, from the|ed it was considered officially as a pure- |in that direction by Carranza forces. -1t Tk Bt & vy e AR "he | Rur district. Iy local uprising. The remainder of the|was stated that 1560 trbops wers ey an. b1 k hi ' state is reported to a . rom Hermosillo toda; e e K I tng | Messages received at Constantinople| A despatch to E. Universal from its|Manzo to reinforce General Flores. . . 5 il ot from Aintab area, in northern Syria, say | correspondent at Morelia claims that| Private telegrams from Hermosilio said @ISl ol women soreamed and men|the Turks nad Armenians are engaged | Coloncl Obregon is i that town. It is stat- | word had been received there from Mem- e o o ab o the aia|in heavy fighting. Thirteen Americans |ed that he is open revolt. This is no con-|ico that General Pablo Gonzales, & can- D e o hons. o b are’cadangeren: firmed officially, however. ?r::::x for ¢ u.:mmu"m?"x mll:-“.m.“ul n{!his qssu‘immh s:w!l)e_v. :’\fl;‘;l:e l’:; Three bandits held up oyes of [ FORMER CARRANZA SOLDIERS demh‘c-rrlun “dt put in hap\lq-. volver in his hand, leaped ov the Atlantic Lithographing Co. at 10th ¢ WITH REVOLUTIONISTS |provisional president who would guarah- body of the physician and started to|avenue and 37th street, New York. The SOLE MATS tee fair election in July. The movement run out of the church. The choir, led | pavroll estimaged between $4,000 and |ing state of Sianloa, yesterday morning, |it was said has been endorsed by north- by Safford, continued singing in an ef-{ 5§00 was taken. Angel Flores, with 5,000 Scnora troops, |ern Mexico states. Leaders here said fort to quiet the congregation. —_— captured Culiacan, capital of the adjoin-!that if Carranza were reomved, the So- Shelley continued sheoth‘; H:r Be: During debate on the new budget |according to official announcement from nora movement would cease immediatelyy ond shot, directed at members the cvongregation who were pursuing him, went wild. John C. Tiedman, the sex- ton, dropped to the floor in time to es- cape being hid by the third bullet, which grazed the cheek of J. Morgan Jones. Shelley then ran from the church into Stuyvesant square. Dr. Brewer was. the first man to reach him. He grabbed the an’s arm but Shelley managed to wrig- uties, a tax on capital. at Mountjoy Prison, Treland. prisoners, both convicted and fuse to take food. gle himself loose long enough to fire another shot, which grazed Dr. Brew-| N8vy department autherized ofgani- ore thigh. By that time several other|Zation of an overall club of civilians at Norfolk navy vard and the roads base. The navy will denim garments at cost price. members of the congregation had thrown Shelly to the ground and were hold- ing him down when a -policeman ar- rived, handeuffed the prisoner and took him to the police station. Meanwhile Dr. Markoe had been car- ried out of the church and placed in an automobile. As he was being lifted in- to.the ear he regained consciousness long enough to say: _“I will be all right” and then collapsed. He was rushed to the Lying-In hospital at Bighteenth street and Second ~avenue but was dead when brought into that in- Earl, Curzon, British forelgn tary, communicated with the government in Moscow, came into Boston which was found suits of in. an to contain men’s clothing and burglar's kit. n the church w. the time were George ‘Wickersham, former Launching of the cargo carried ‘Inde- pendence Hall, completed Hog Island's e Hope of relief from prohibitien re- quirements is still manifested by 'the li- American dollar was _quoted st 16 frs. 45 centimes in Paris, compared with Harvey A. Baker resigned as United States district attorney for the district of Rhode Island to resume the practice The Rev. Hlias Frederick Schaue: sixty-four years in the priesthood as a Redemp- became suddenly ill while attending the races at is reported rapidly re- R. C. Leffingwell, assistant secretary tendered his resigna- tion to enter private business. President Conference of Manchester, Eng., cot- hout Government arbitration in ‘wage dispute was rejected by operators. magazine recently is in Finland, on a charge of ingredients producing the liquor, was found by fire- men in the ruins of an unoccupied ten- ement block destroyed by fire in Cam- measure in the French chamber of dep- the chamber voted 402 to 201 to reject the socialist counter proposal for Another hunger strike reported begun Political uncon- victed who are still detained there re- Hapton sell necre- soviet appealing for amnesty for General Denikine and the Russian,_volunteer army in the Crimea. The police detained three men who automobile 40 new articles which the authorities said constitute a ~ PRICE TWO CENTS REVOLT INMEXICO SPREADS TOTHE STATE OF MICHOACAN Started by Governor Rubio, a Strong Supporter of Ubregon=— General Flores, With 5,000 Sonora Troops, Has Captur« d the Capital of the Adjoining State dreds of Former Carranza Soldiers Are lutionists. ¥ cording to official announcement Sonora military headquarters at sitlo. The Sonora revolutionists immediately to march on Muzatian, & important port on the Sinalox comst. After occupying Mazatian, it wus an- nounced, the Somora troops wiil marech on the state of Nayarit, with Tepico, I8 capital, as their objective. Large num- bers of troops for the revolutionars movement against the Carranza govern- ment were expected to be obtained:im Nayarit. — Hundreds of former Carranza soldiers have joined General Flores since he vaded Sinaloa, last Tuesday, it was joining the revolutionists, brought With them full equipment, including arms, aifi= munition and food supplies. The forces when they entered Sinaloa said then to number fewer than men. 38, trom Merico City, April 18.—A revolt in the state of Michoacan. engineered by Gen- eral Pasqual Ortiz Rubio, governor of the state and a strong supporter of Lieuten- ant Colonel Alvaro Obregon, is an- nounced in the government's second war bulletin issued early today. Governor Rubio, the bulletin states, has fled from Morelia, the state capital. with 100 men. General De La Torre, who came to the capital to confer With President Car- ranza, has been ordered to procsed jm- mediately to Acambaro and report to General Bruno Neiro. who has been sub- stituted in the Acambaro region for Gen- eral Jose Rentera Luviano, sent to take charge of the Sonora campaign. According to the bulletin, Gésernor Rubio has fled to the hills, taking with him the contents of thé state treasury. It adds that General Neiro has arriv- ed at Morelia to take charge of military operations there and- that a detachment of state troops had left the capital for Acambaro to pursue the outlaw govern- or and reinforce the Moreiia garrison. While the revolt of pro-obregon au- thorities in Michoacan had been expect- to for Aguirre to reinforce the garrison at Agua Prieta and other troops concentrating GAMBLING AND DISORDERLY REISCHWEHR OFFICERS HOUSES IN BRIDGEPORT RAIDED Bridgeport, Conn., April 18.—Approxi- mately 200 men and women, arrested here last night in the biggest raid on gambling and disorderly houses ever made in any Connecticut city, are sched- uled to be arraigned in city court tomor- row morning. The exact number taken in the roundup was not given out, but Berlin, April 17.—An official state« ing the arrest on Friday of three wehr officers and three civilians charge of conspiracy against the ernment gives the circumstances arrest and adds that the examination S the men_ disclosed nothing - directly thy all' except one were released in bonds of | criminating them. The ® | $50 and $100 each. Mary Wilson, 27, is | ajainst the military men who took part held without bail for the present, the|in the meeting which gave rise to the police say. arrest is so grave, however, it is stated, Mayor Clifford B. Wilson personally | that it cannot be dismissed until”the o directed the raiders when they started|nocence of. the men is clearly proved. out, furnishing them with a list of 26| mThe statements made by the : alleged gambling houses and 22 alleged - diserderly houses. Whether all these places were visited is not known. The raids were made by 150 agents of a New York detective agency. Mayor Wilson, taking into his confidence only the police commissioners, hired the de- tective agency to “clehn up” Bridgeport. All varieties of automébiles were used in adds it has been ascertained that tain-Lieutenants Von Viebahn, the officers taken into custody, viously informed his superior the purpose of the meeting Joining the Reves: Five hundred troops were sent gmt from here today under Colonel Jesus there against any invasion of the state HELD FOE CONSPIBACY ment given to the press today regard- K ¥ quiry has been ordered. The statement U The agency men, many of IN PENNSYLVANIA DISTRICT = S partments and the reduced size of 3 : United States| Twenty-two barrels of liquor. valued ::Zm"::x::«’fm‘ nfi w’en sworn in as|duly sranted permission to hold it. | FARMER SAVES LIFE OF the paper are emergency measures | ALloTneY meneral: Herbert L. Satterlee, |at $40,000, were seized at the home of | hem WME WILL SRS Sl (O T, | investigation will now be extended to P tad April 1%—Virtually | ¥ = . rhich it is hoped will be required || rother-in- o~ I Piemnont Morgan, | jeremiah J. Sullivan, a former liquor | SPecial ©H¥ BN SUFCTE g0, Vop | character of meetings held previous-ts A copditions were restored | AN AEBIAY ML RILOTI R i hort tirma fand Mrs. Satterlee; R. Fulton Cutting.|gealer ,at Worcester, Mass. This is | FEORSTIR (2 (100 1ot e Jarned. Some | the Thursday evening ~meeting, whish 1 rodd frei and pa Bedlefonta, (Pa. " April TR 05T afge. president of ihe vureau of Municipal | beljeved to be part of stock stolen from | i o phernalia was brought in. | WaS followed by the arrests. « s and shops in the Philadel- | phy, who came here from Cloveland sev. | S ————— ( Rescarch and many !other —prominent | prighton last Sunday. ‘Rumors of impending action by the phia distriet at majority of theleral days ago to pilot an airplane over | — gEings o s Monjan | 0 e S uaEnes mayor and the. police commissioners | INDEFENDENT REFUBLICANS = It 0 had been on strike for a week, | the aerial route, s seriously { A of the church and whose father Was 2| (Colonel Coombs, director of the|Ziriici “the heads of the police depart- WIN IN SUSSEX COUNTY, DELy wrned to work on the assur- | today when h ne went int cost of brisket chuck and rump, the |vestryman there, was not present when|American commission for relfef in the | TR0 'L . irrent today, but mo infor- > seniority rights would be | spin and fell a distance of four hundrea 2PAndonment of beautiful silks and all | the shooting occurred. Near East, is on the way from Con- | mest e "given out. The mavor has| Wilmington, Del, April 18—Governer Tt e ot e v L TR NS Te matnine ey, hundred ool garments will raise the cost of den-| Shelley freely admitted that he had |gtantinople to Adana, from which Place | T omey dissatisfaction With the con- |JObn G. Townsend, candidate for dele- H fhotieat tak leanionen oy intg | ims and calicoes. % shot Dr. Markoe, according to the Do-|he will endeavor to communicate With |guct of the police in regard to an alleged | 8ai# to the national convention, received ; PO RF TS Ll trom | . This overails business is only a fool |lice. “There are a lot more who are|adjin, Oufra and Aintab. e Tiw Tate® Thky e assd: a crushing defeat at the hands of the in- college students and other vol- | being burned to death hy ampsel. s one of the leading 1]0!1‘\10,!’5 |'moing ((.x get it too* he is renol_‘ted to ‘We are determined to break up the dependent republicans of Sussex county were relieved today by the|a farmer, who cut the straps holding | .oust A8 long as folks who work forhave said when questioned by police de-| A Earopean corporation. the Tabize | vice ring’ here. Bridgeport will be kept | at the state primary yesterday for the ' wnin Railroad, which also re-|Murphy and pulled hom out of the burn- | 1yafes demand fitteen dorral silk shirts, | tectives L Co., #closed a deal in Petersburgh, Va.|clean from now on. election of delegates to the state conven= v the embarzo on westbound machine. Sampsen was also painful- v"-'l,”“":/”, s ‘klknevkw- and two and | Shelley told detectives he had been | gor' s part of the Du Pont Co.'s powder tion to be held Tuesday. Only sixteen off i from this city to points on its |1y burned B ehalf, dollar sillk socks they will get|given the literature by a man named |piant at Hopewelll. Installations of ma-|. 0 oo o r e wrnionr the 42 delegates elected from the countyy cast of Pittsburgh by the Penmsyl | — hem. And while they're buying that sort | “Miller” who first name he couldn't |chinery for an artificial silk mill will 031 are accredited to the state executive. o ehipments et | DECISTION 0N PROmIBITION Z;- .I’.'(l"w:x{oxy.‘.:;\ml;‘\,\ ;\lm.xrhlv«i\neéfl h:‘; remember. 3 £ beiin immediately. The company is RIDE OF WILLIAM DAWES, JR. 3 With the aam.;_mw-—l & Yofk And the Dittabysetodis AMENDMENT PROBABLE TODAY | clothing the markot aftordsr . > © y memory Is very bad” he sald. |capitalized at $7,000,000. < Traskon: Nostl” TETTHe ianight o] e s o s Ot N trict all espress restrictions were-Hfied. | < wiiwiion’ NI 18, e mapreme |y THE-ovSrall club, however, insists that | - uamen” e e, 1 P e Haces G. MMl sevstant superintend. | Of WiliAm Dawes, Jr.. who with Paul | feres °f the organization forces, also st~ Teccived oy show - simies | COUrt Wil reconsene tomorrow: after & | ey ar a5 NIy begun and that thevll|y W, W. becauss they dom't give | ent of Armour & Con Brookiyn, was ar- | FeVere rode from Bostoh to Lexinglon | aywine Hundred and other portions sf 2 ihe eastern rogion | tree Weeks Tecess. ' The feeling pre- | pooahes BAIning recrults in leredit to the brains of the country.” | egted by members of the Federal “Fly- | on Tie M S ey Coats are com- | Non g county, are incomplete and the ryatom. excent | Yalled in some quarters today, that an | R movement ia being taken up ail] Shelles said one of the thinga he was| o Squaaron” in a charge of “unfair. | e aky he commemorated for the frmt | Satus of some of the delogaies i mnest- Jersey « trict. where the yard | °Piion on the validity of the prohibition | over tne state, ~ Clubs have beem or-|CCTtAin about was that he had never |unjust and unreasonable prices” Sam: | i v tomorrow morning when Cap-| biicans ot e ine crews continne to resume | {MeRdment might be rendered tomorrow. | il q *af Jacksonville, Lakeville Cen. |S¢°n Dr. Markoe hefore. He told & |uel Gordon, jobber in groceries, was ar- | tain Fred B. Humneman. a state guard | Sone mencier 1 Horm Bt b Unitedf siowly, and at the Morrisville, Pa. | & feiion In the government's sult to| ter ‘Hill, and other places n‘sn..w.}m*’”?; story of his movements cov-|rested for profiteering in sular. avalry. trooperiwill doave' Boston' 60 7106 | nrrman s 14 Tetster TR N house, whero the normal for e 50-ca anthracite coal o 7 i ering the seven years he 3 o ot et revmned fang, T fO7CC8 | rust “arguien” Tust. October, aise 1s ‘. | 210Ul come along with & carload of| 51100" o e "Titea States. | He | pus vxNEs To IMFORTANT over the Dawes route. ¢ his fa.| delewaies 1o atiend the mational cenven= e conditions at Y City neces. | PeCeld oL 4ny time by officials of the de- | revenze on the boot-sellers, e e BATTLEFIELDS IN FRANCE |mous ride mention & -Mr. ~ Wilkam YO0 0 0 e t e sitated annuimer © passenger A part of ‘the Easter Sunday pro- |!and. where he was born. - Dawes” who joined him at Lexington. i trains on the New York divislon, two A e gramme was for the denims and calicoes| He said he had been at St George'S| New York, April 18.—Motor 'bus lines | Dawes is said to have taken the all-land astbound and three westbound, | T o TANKER HOTHAM to pair off and go to church. Only a |Church on a previous visit to New York|from the principal railway centers in|route through Roxbury, while Revere Otherwise, the statement said, the regu- NEWTON HAS FOUNDERED | few couples had the nerve to stick it out |00 February 18, 1919. After =2rriving | prance to all the important battlefields | was riding by way of Charlestown. lar Sun: nger service was ren- e L and they presented odd Darby and Joan |here this morning from Richmond, Vir-|,nq American cemeteries there have been| A feature of the annual observance of dered between New York and Philadel- | 1-0ndon, April 18—The British tank| contrast to beilked and fefeathered wo- |®inia. he said, he breakfasted and Went | osiablished by the American Red Cross|the Concord and Lexingtén batties has phia. On all other divisions the serviee | Stcamer Hotham Newton, which yester-!men and tailor-moulded men. to the church. for the benefit of soldiers’ relatives and | been the ride of a horseman jmperson- was normal day was reported to be in distress, foun- Hiinie L S L Search of a suit case Shelley had | githtceers, it was announced here to-|ating Paul Revere but until ‘this vear P Yt mervice on fhe Teading| 9€Ted today. The crew of the vessel pre- R e checked at the Pennsylvania Terminal | nicne. DaWes ride has mot heen commemorat- railway also was ren s morialitos [ on o D20 beell tHken on hoata Ryt e e o revealed the police say, several radical| 'Red Cross barracks where visitors may | ed. rapidly. Most of the Reading’s men wh 9 2 aos e e draft card showing he hae i nd ref hi Ve . ® e on L Rellopd e Wi | souana: San Remo, April 18.—(By che A. P.) | Seoptember 12, 1918, under the mame of | een procdes . At Romagne. the Tug, | FACTIONAL FIGHTS BETWEEN BoaitiBns o iy s 7\1‘)10\-"‘ ‘-u':ll‘lkjs"" ;",;Y:‘:l_f'"?c:‘{?lfl‘ ‘:;::m‘_::; P°<“;‘~e Thomas W. Simpkin. :ngrh Fourth S'{ est American’ cemetery in France, the UNIONISTS AND SINN FEINERS Nearly all of the Baltimore and Ohi S e 4 A = Sauk City. Wisconsin. ere were al-| Red Cross has erected a hotel for the ac- §55 e e YACe hon it ey INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC HEALTH | hrov, PUSiness (0 be taken up by the Su-{ny several business ~cards reading | commodation of the scores of visitors ex- e A o e £aid that conditions o ad- | — Premme e o as W. Simpkin,” i - 3 used said that conditions on that road New Haven Comn, April 18.—Dr.|{Ormal session here tomorrow. This | o waramy | Rf‘;;';;‘},;;‘,.,,;";‘w\’,‘t s | pested] thareiCusing yihe umingr. ver shots were exchanged in a five hour ; Richard P. Strong, who is SIMPL Pars a fathe drred Interment was preceded by services at Presbyterian meeting house with the Re¥. N, ol in Geneva | W8S dediced upon at a conference today with the American Red Cross, will rep. |in the Duvachan palace, where the ses- LICITY MARKED FUNERAL t Yale University at the Royal In-|Sions are to held, attended by OF THEODORE N. VAIL|stitute of Public Health, which is to | Eremiers Nitti of Ttaly: Lloyd George of 3 = meet in Brussels, it was announced to- | (Teat Britain, and Millerand of France, ippany. N. J.. April 1S.—Simplicity | night. President Arthur L. Hadley of | (o7 the arrangement of the official proce- ! the funeral hiere today of Theo- | Yale will serve as an honorary vice pres- | Wure: .With the premiers were Foreign 1il, former head of the Am ident of the institute, i b lolaof Italy; Earl Cur¥on, ‘,n,.n. and Telegraph company = s B e e the British foreign secretary, and Gen- ittle cemetery here where his | MARRIAGE : T eral Berthelot, the French chief of stag. mother and ancestors were in- 5 AGE TAW 1 SWEDEN It was agreed that daily communques before him. MORE FAVORABLE TO WOMEN | should be issued, as upon the occasion of orge (. Stockholm, Aprd vrevious sessions of the council. 18.—Both chambers vesterday passed by substantial major- e Houghton, of “The Li Tt A e Chnn A e w Lttle | ities the new marriage law, insuring | WHEAT CROP MAY MEET York, officiating. Dr. Houghton was for | SToRteT é‘f((u';\li\y of the sex... The pro- THE WORLDWIDE DEMAND many years a close friend of Mr. Vail. | nirore of the law abolish the husband’s As a mark of respect for the former personal guardianship and deprive him| Washington, April 18.—Indication of a head of the great wire systes ol of the legal right to dispose of his wife’s v a we %; g R "\V ire system, g(:nh,. Dermanal property, i el wv:‘)rld ‘ot' \\heatv this year and a world- on all Bell telephones in the country was | FEl008 - Brobesty imoraererally | wide increase in demand, was reported aded for a period of one minute at ¥hd ¢ -wife's matrimonial inde-|by the American Agricultural Trade stern standird time. Pengence. STRIKING ELEVATOR MEN FORM “FLYING SQUADRONS" Commissioner at London, who said bread selling in England at what was gen- erally considered the highest -price the workingman would tolerate Without grave disorders. APPEALED TO JAPAN FOR PROTECTION OF RUSSIANS e & g 2 With Russia still in a New York, April 18.—Striking' elev: Tokio, April 13.—The foreien office | chaotic state, there is little to be expect- tor men said today they had organized | 2nPOunCed today that General Semen-|ed from that country in the way of ine apindions 3500 strikers under | Of; SIS himself the “successor to the | wheat exports and Europe naturally 15 cantains who will canvass the ity to. | OT1Y leitimate Russian authority.” had | turns to the United States. Canada, Aus. morrow from the Battery to Bighty- | Sveried (:’".‘;nrpi;r: rg)r the protection of | tralia, India and Argentina. xth ur leave ed the CHARGED WITH HAVING RECEIVED STOLEN CLOTH Prov! in the d a ceived $27.000, which Was stolen from interstate. A RAE AR i ke st on elevator men to join the union and their posts. The stri union’s demands. idence, R. I, April 1 arrest woman, charged with having 54,000 yards of cloth, valued et in an effort to induce non- rs claimed that about 1500 operators had re- turned to work after having been grant- —Suspicions he [of a negro truck driver, related to the added, will move freight trains tomor- [ police and federal offfcers, resulted today in this city of four men Hh s dat & Sihsitimalilc L e “legitimate those in the ter- tern Railway. STEAMSHIP SINKING 300 MILES OFF SANDY HOOK government,” especiall ritory of the Chi IRISH CONSTABLES KILLED EETURNING FROM MESS Dublin, April 18.—Sergeant Carol was killed and Constable Collins seriously wounded today while returning from mass at the Kilmihill church in Kilmi- nill” West Clare. The men were shot from behind. Carol's heart was pierced by a revolver bullet. Constable Marty Carol and Collins, returned the fire of Stephen Breen, the New York, April 18.—The Shipping Board_steamship E. A. Morse, bound from New York to Genoa, reported hy wireless Jate teday that she was in a sinking _condition 300 miles east of andy Hook and in immediate need of ssistance. The message, timed about # p. m., which was received here by the naval communication service, said the vessel might be able to keep miiat two or three hours. who was with s not wounded. He the assassins, killing son of a farmer, or three other per- Te- at and wounding two sons. Z LR o Printing Company” and Kerkhoven Ban- mer. A letter addressed to him and found in the suit case hmad the address 51i3 Peabody Street, Duluth, Minnesota. The wolice believe it was from his wife. Shelley later told the police he brought his wife and two children to Canada seven vears ago. He enlisted in the Ca- nadian army and was about to sail over- seas, he sald, when he learned his wife had become a mother. He asked, for a transfer to an organization stitioned near his wife’s home, but was refused as being “too valuable a man,” he said. “T figured,” he explained, “that it T was too good a man for the outfit to lose, T was teo good for my wife to lose. I jumped the outfit and entered the United States and later brought my wife and children over.” About two years, Shelley aded, he es- caped from the insane asylum at Fer- zus Falls, Minn., after three unsuccess- ful attempts. Six months later he went to Gary. Indiana, he.said, and there bought a revolver which he has carrier ever since with which he did the shoot- ing. i “They say there is a physical cause for every mental reaction.” said Shelley. “T was tubercular and they cured me. Then T got cancer and 1 was operated on for that. So 1 guess those are the causes.” “The preacher in his sermon at the church " he continued, “told them to be Zood to strangers. but one spoke to me and T resented it.” Rev. Dr. Karl Relland, rector of St. George's, in part of his sermon, had urged the wealth congregation to be- friend strangers and show Christian courtesy. HAD BEEN INMATE Tuth. sion was recaptured. ous here, having a cheerful ious leaning. SIMPRIN WAS A MEMBER OF Duluth, Min: ta in September, 1916. local job printing plants. Duluth Typographical Union, organization. year later and the = British subject. OF MINNESOTA ASYLUM|ley, which was his wife’ as W. Simpkin, ‘also known as Thomas talked continnally on religion. W. Shelley, who shot Dr. James Markoe in a New York church today, had been an inmate for some time of the Minne- sota state insane asylum here, up to two vears ago, when he made his escape. He was committed to the asylum from Du- He had a wife and two children in Duluth, who returned to England af- ter Simpkin's committal to the asylum. Before he succeeded jn escaping, which was accomplished by knotting bedcloth- ing together and lowering himself from a third story window, he had made two attempts to get away, but on each occa- Simpkin was not regarded as danger- disposition. While here he claimed to be in commu- nication with spirits and showed a relig- DULUTH TYPOGRAPHICAL UNION April 18.—Thomas W. Simpkin came to Duluth with his wifc and three children from Calgary, Alber- He made home here and was employed in several He joined tir No. and is still carried on the rolls of thc 126. In April, 1917, he was adjudged in sane in a court here and sent to th state insane asylum at Fergus Falls. H made his estape from that institution asylum authoritie: failed to locate him. His wife continue to live here until April, 1919, when sh was deported to England as a dependen Simpkin went under the alias of She' maiden nam 5 Persons in Duluth who knew Simpki Fergus Falls, Minn., April 18—Thom- " said he took good care of his family. He melee at Londonderry last evening. Three separate attacks on soldiers were made by civilans and factional fights oc- curred between Unionists and Sinn Fein- ers. These necessitated frequent charg- es by the police and military, in which twelve persons were injured. Their wounds were treated at the local infirm- ary. The police barracks at Rossville were considerably damaged by a mob. Two arrests ere made in this connection. meeting said it was hoped that sonia strikers. A few brass workers FRANCE HAS WITHDRAWN TROOPS FROM WIESBADEN | has declared that production has The hall was crowded with strikers. Strike leaders claim 3,500 emploves-o® the local brass mills are out, of 2 total 4,400 workers. The company Bis made no counter-claim. Speakers at the the walkout of the company’s mills in Wa- terbury would be extended to aid the Ang on strike in Waterbury. but the compansy nor Frankfort, April 18.—(By The A. P.) The French announced this morning that the withdrawal of the 37th division to Wiesbaden had been completed with the exception of staft officers, who are leaving this afternoon. So quietly was the withdrawal carried out that the peo- le of Frankfort are still unaware tha half the French occupation forces ar 3one. The division included _the. Moroccas and Algerian troops, whbse presence in Frankfort was greatly resented by tir populace. No colored soldiers are aow. General De Metz and his staff attended mass in the Frankfort ecathedral this mornin order in connection with the strike. '~ MYSTERIOUS SHOOTINGS Charles Gagino. 6. and La: hi a lower East Side. Gamuic Iying on the sidewalk BOLSHEVIKI ATTACKED BY POLISH AIR SQUADRON With the Polish Army at the Front April 15.—(By The A. P.) ‘In an ‘acti rervice flight today the Kosciusko Squas out’gaining consclousness. ihe street in First avenue. street. He was taken where his condition is reported as sus. near ‘on, the American air unit operati = ¥ith the Polish forces, flew ninety mi A ~hind the bolshevik lines and raided i) Henry Hyde. tomir Railroad junction southwes: o iev. The Americans flew low and at acked the railroad yards crowded wi troop trains, dropping bombs and using their machine sune Martford. Com April Iyde. prominent lawyer of this city ‘ormer major of the First overnor's Foot Guard, died at his SRS e T been interrupted. There has been no dise ON THE EAST SIDE, NEW YORE New York, April 15 —Three mysterls ous shootings on the Fast Side during the last 24 hours, all of them apparsntii ‘he work of an unidentified Sniper, o night puzzied the police who were withe out 2 clue to\the Mentity of the slavem- nto Oris 22, were each fount in a dying coms re | dition early today on the strects of the was found. . in Goerek straet with a bullet through his head and Orllio| was. found In a similar condition on 8, Mark's Place. Both of them died with- } Patrick Hayes, 32. was found lying &n X 2R i