Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 26, 1920, Page 1

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- Safi‘Remo, APl 25 (By the A. P.).—[treaty when, niot hooessary tement-to the house of . The \sitpreme council today decided to :‘r:‘uv clear. My view is that Ger- ikers returned to work to- r"‘? vemeént of live- mt‘gqan 1,052 workers | May 10 ty, a ‘statement/ to- said, and 840 em- | been laid off, mmt Wilson to arbitrate the | ony’ ghould not bé prevented from re- B4 of w republic of AT-|gioring order in Germany. 'Thel samie N, .Il‘xnt happened in France in 1871; when couneil awarded a mandate for|{@Germany proposed to put down the Com= and Palestine to @reatipune Thiers objected because the. inter- rmfil and a mandate for Syria 10| ontion of for 'u;‘:. Wo“;;lnfi 1.: :fl“ .- Commy ‘popular, ‘:I:M ts‘li'y,'e are not_prepared to use military force to enforce the treaty. It is understood from quite another source than -MF. Lioyd George that one extremely important point in the agree- \ —_— REQUEST THAT U. 8, TAKE MANDATE FOR ARMENIA San Remo, April 25 (By the A. P.).— v sending & formal|yent between the British and - French | iThe eupeyma counc! s . the | premiers- defimes it 0 -be in the- interest fequest to President Wilson that s Fovernment take the man-| of Prance o fix, at & meeting to be held date for Armenta. The council 18 1eaVINg | early in May in o Belgian oity, ‘where 1o President Wilson the arbitration of the | representatives of the "allies will meet rences e boundaries of AT-|representatives of Germahy. a global :::u. e o Germany must pay the allies immedial There seems to be division on the partijy It is even said that the allies-have of the council ms to whether the region| tentatively fixed an annual payment of of Ergerum and its vieinity should be in- | three billion -marks, ~preswar e,{chm,t cluded In the territory of the Armenian|for thirty years,-as a suitable pay:l-nmb‘ republic. The Turkish nationalists are|but that the ngn government will strongly claiming Erzerum for them- |asked in the meantime to make the pro- welves. ] poeal of a lump sum. ALLIES ARE TO SEND VEBY FAVORS WILSON'S PLAN STIFF NOTE TO GERMANY OF ADRIATIC EETTLEMENT emo, April 25 (By the A. P.).—| San Remo, April 25 (By the A. P.).— 'n:‘nnc‘r‘vflmt b‘vt’wu(n yl’remln’l Mil- | The Adriatic question was brought before ferand and Lloyd George concerning (Ger-|the supreme council this afternoor. The many/ was presented to = the eupreme | Italian premier, Signor Nitti, proposed a pounell late this afterndon and will form | settlement- that followed generally Presi- he basis of & very stiff rote to Germany.{ dent Wilson's note of Dec. 9. It varies, wh et will he ready for sisnature tomor- | however. to include a constitution for the ow by _Ureat Eritain, France, | Italy.| buffer state of Fiume, to which both-the Jaran and Belgium. . The United ‘States | Prench and British premiers objected on will not slgn the note. the ground that it limited too greatly. the Either the declaration or an apthotita- j.character of the new st=te. tive condensation will be made publie to- | Premier Nitti pointed mprrow, Mr. Lioyd George announced to- | Italian pronoesel was almost identical gDt : with that of Pros'dent Wilson. Neverthe- “The ‘dostment {8 the result of private {less, after considerable discussion.. bath out . that. the cpnversations betseen Premier Millerand [he French and_Pritish delezations said, ) Ited in comnlepé agree- | they could not accept it. They declared b g o g B mmfil said | that, Italy should either take President the British prime minister. ‘“The docu- | Wilson's nlan-or abide'hy that of the mert will he communicated to the i rm ot of Tondon, which: gives Fiume to tomorsow and the public can then Joe T Bl Lo Le B 1.ohh easions.” 3 Premier Nittl promised to give his des Mg, Tloyd George, replying to ques- | cision. tomorrow. ; ‘The geperal hatiet /g1 tions, also sei: “We have dircouraged |that he will nrefer . Prosident M i 10 the pact of Londo the use of military means to enforce the settlement b00 A8 A PRIVATE OITIZEN" | CONFLIOTING WEPORTS AEOREELIBS 70 RCRHONNAUE | Or ATYATES 1 ) 1 25.—Replylng as ‘ai 3, JApril 2 o : sued to el ~eandidates for 1| Bome reports to the government, appears 0 lwe National Hoard of |ed to be.in sharp -conflict with the sum. '::'mpw.:u;:. Formet Secretary | mary of the sitw his position on | revolutionary various - "‘fi::m::ln: agitated lnlMe!lcn City. 't the tion campaign. are studying " the - situation beyong the tax -laws, Mr. MecAdoo de- | border were firm in - declaring their clared, should be simplified and the bur- | epimion based on.the government advices, e of taxation “re-disttibuted #0- that | that the revolution was. more ‘ serious {he en who earn their incomes by the | hin ‘the Carranza, oficlals were willing Sweat of their brows' and with their |{o admit. ol e el s shill nof bo requiréd to gy 88|} 'These ‘oficers, attached much -fmport- P taxes ns those who liye in idle-|shoe to the-southward drive of Genera mvv’lnd drawk.incomsa. {rom safe in-, Angél ' Flor _Tevolutionary forces '::t‘unn" He declared himself oppos- | thrBugh ‘the state of . ed to ajl tax gree bonds. . o 3 ént made - public Army -officers w] $aW -no- probability fromw their advices : A 2 re\:;!l'utlondarly forces in Sopora itself, eopering the rafiroad ques- | & This ay. in’moving against ‘the o mr:d t:r “a fair trial” ‘of | Sonora rebels was rej rded ':n apt to 3% d law but declated it | prove costly to the fedbral ]e'i:, To the ..:l“’t e ‘(he iroad problem be- | move the forces avsilable in stat annot oh hnd.mu:ul‘l.r ::l CMhulhule.-(thm‘h the-easily defend- it declared himsel 0} passes ‘into Sonora, it was said, M7, ‘.‘x\:fi.:ny for operation of the iwould be dangerous not only because of 'M‘m Joan system: for means to DADS |the size of the force at hand, byt be- ueers and eonsmers closer ; for reb- | cause of the increfising activity of Villa ::n ot agriculture -on boards and | 2long the government's exposed lines of tation ns *when consistent with pub- | communication. comnitssions for a secretary of agricul-| Reports of defections hy féderal lic weltare derstands actual farm con- | at widely separted points, for teduction of farm tenant-| which have been concedell by the Mex- the same service and supplies | joan City authorities, have been supple- organizations in interstate | mented by claims of General Salvadore S to_private enterprie- | Alvarado, Sonora agent here, that ‘many e pe-org Mireurnstances ; for rég* | leaders who have been in. revolt for of monopolistic control of cor-|years have joined the rebel cause, Np- fir interstate commerce and a8 | tablée among them, was Genevevo De-Ta s to any abridgment !0, one of the unconquered Zapatista Ml"""d“ free speech, free Press OF | groun, who was said to have furnished iy the escort. which enabled General Ben~ e B —— jamin Hill to escape from Mexico City MASS. DELEGATES-AT-LAEGE s :mée:ih’f ummaeuen:&obuzon dis- 8. 3 2 PLED! rom the capi ;' Or BOTH PA:"” b 2o ::urgfljt Cnnt.re;lh‘l.] a - ,—None of the can ity, with e Hill was bein; - Botem, Apkil 2 1o the repub- | passed through the lines. and .:as,fql‘- - | lowed, it was said, by ‘an attack by la G lorée-pt:l;l:}fil.vm PRt s the place, ac- ""II the capital, { A ‘new. ravolt - {n- southern Vera Giruz urb. * The rebels cording {o -advices hers, looted a few Biguses and retreated into the hills about are | 4180 was mentioned: ived. road from ' Eroups some of ditions ;' ay; for ‘o Tuesday next * particular Ajusco, 5 e THE OITY OF GUAYMAS fi'l;n".Amln'CI{fl.; pril - 25, : = roops commianded by Genersl An- ; from W/ , |,y y 8% NSON AT _UIL mfl!fi N F ;-r—.'!.‘;q.'~ B at -uu?fix, DECREASE 1N ‘Washington, = Ap: imified_action m.& ifieq 80 ag to the Sonora | naloa. “They also | the old ‘yv‘q(egm?} that. overlooks | pe Sonora, ont the Gulf of I raignment - yéSterday ' with' 41. other strike leaders before United States Com- “the | missioner Mason, sald mo more meetings | would he called and no further attempts ade to end the strike. - ; »'m"me ztflkm'womd be content to “it tight af homg”, he said, ‘until their de- %:: mmore and Ohio, - Chicago Términéil railroad has announ that | strikers who do not return by Monday will ‘lose. seniority rights. “At a meeting representatives of 36,000 rafiroad clerks and freight handlers de- cide dto” await action by the railroad la- ‘bigrd board on their demands for ‘wage increases. | RAILROAD SERVICE IN y NEW YORK ABOUT NORMAL New York, April 25.—Service .. the various, railroads operating in the metro- pouian district was about normal today, 2ecerding to officials of the roads, who declared they had been able to handle ths Sunday suburban traffic without dif- ficvlly, feeling no effects of the waning unauthorized strike. It was said that sontg 0f ' the roads now have all the men they need, but it will be a day or two befcre everything: is- running smoothly. Offcjals declared that a full complement | of “men soon would be available for all rezds. ¢ Luward A McHugh, chairman of the siri] T9° executive committee, Whe an-| o o il sale by nounced yesterday that the.engineers of i'the Lackawanna railroad would go on | strike: tomorrow . morning, declared to- {'might that he had heard nothing more of " Commenting upon the ac- ti of rotherhood o 'l;hfinlnméh ‘;n "dgv' ing ‘more than forty Tocals @8 4. tesult of the strike, McHugh said that in all probabilit ‘whase, charters were revoked _ganize a union of their own ry of the seditious activiers i varlous 'séctions of the republic since the northern state broke with the Car- zanzs administration. together /with. the x,mm of. the government’s military ‘measures, has been issued by war 4 pariment officials two eeks affer ihe |8etts, has been” missing since | His parents have ne i e pen. ‘break ; between . -the. . '‘Obregenistas and' the 'administration, and is cited proof’ tHat the government's official state- ment characterizing. .the Sonora out- hreak merelmqml is’ well founded. , | Asidé from. Sonora state govern- ‘ment,-only two state executives have re- pudiated- the present _administration, these ‘being (eneral Enrigye Estrada, in the state of Zacatecas, and Pascual Or- tiz Rubio, in the statecof Michoacar The state legislature in Zacatecas has Tepudiated the attituds of Estrada and eited him for treason, while the Michoa- can Jegislature -has" unseated- Ortiz- Ru-’ Ipb and named his siccessor. The present whereabouts. of General Alvaro . Obregon, - the former war minis- ter, who is elated for the presidency of Mexico by the Sonora rebels, and Gen- eral Benjamin Hill, his campalgn lead- er, is uncertain. ‘ The - general belief "is that-both re feaders, who left Mexico City two weeks ago upon- receint of reliable advices that Sonora had' rebelled, fled toward the Pacific coast. % April 21 | */ 'The crushing’ deffat infl by General Francisco Murghia’s ' troops upon. the rebellious . forces headed by General 'Arnulfo Gomez . which attacked .Tuxpam. cil center, 'eliminated the| only danger to the: central - governrent | outside of Sonora, rding. fo_the war " Who -~ with' about .joined forees with General szuue‘l ‘Pelace, is’ said to have @pffered about 300 casuaities, failing the city and was forced to retrbat to” the Jungle. | % b | The attitude assumed by the presi- dential a,glldatas has been ihe subfect of congra! £ditorials by. the pa- | érs su; Ygnacio Bonillas .. and - General . Pai }annu' ‘have .denounced Sonora’s ac- tituted “government. o IWhile: the _belief is “that the govern- will bring ‘abeut the subjugation of [ Sonora by forces: advancing from Casy randes, Ch hua, another .army ' by | Way of Sinaloa) and by sea by’ way of the possibility- of 1 Flores, according to Captain ' N. K. | carried out o surround Sonora and ‘campaign against that + 1. |state will be inaugurated immediately. GATHOL! uémm oLD | CONFERENCE IN CHICAGO MAY 8| —_—l i oril, 25.—Plans ' looking tion by~ national organiza of Catholic men- on . sul ; ey hicago * discussed M'a i 4 <A furtheér Lathm of rairoad. men: Was announced the government. S Both !|' ‘have iterdted their loyalty to the. inty prevails regarding 4 Twelve hundred employes of es" made: the raid. - Aft- Graphophone Co. I -tWo went "out By a vote of 18 to 58 the Fowler bill repealing daylight saving was passed by4 lon the, asa:mb!y. A J D " ‘Armenin was formally re urday as an indep<ndent rep United States,! ¢ . . . went on - strike., et * Three bandits secured. $550. i up in a private * banking. Bridgeport. | an. crease in pay 70,000 Workers in nt. apt knocked. The two ¥ within,” thinking their brother ad Yeturned for the -prisoners, % :* Pistols were' thrust in the sixteen men in the “The bible as liternture* is the title a new -elective course to’ be 'offered “'in Yale college mnmw B TN Robert U. Johnson, mew American am: bassador -to Italy, presented his creden: tials to King Victor Bmmanuel. e Governor Coolidge of Massachusetts observed Arbor Day by planting a Linden tree. in.the state house: grounds. ' n, the officers drew his ‘A fusiliade of shots sctives pursuied the gunmen to but® they escaped in an auto- of the 3 : announced" tubes. | Eight negroes at Camp 'Grant, Iii,, | lem were convicted of assault ipon'a young |- white woman. Some were given death | ¥ seritence. ' <* e s 2 ' © C. 8. Klumpp, general superintendent Hudson, he!&re ‘thise occurrence, five bélieved to be the same rob- ‘rllb another card. game in Har- ‘and ‘got away with $1,000. e s tk, April 25—An “educational for the Near . East is fore-| that Attorney 5 . in the organization of a com- Waiya ofIron Counity. = , President’ Wilson signed . the' sesoft partmerit ‘of 1 trate, ? paid. VARD MEMORIAL SERVICE stocks - occurred n i 25. Coetfics, G commemorative celebration at raity -in-honor of the--350 who gave their lives in the ~Sunddy-afternoon; May 30. Mem- Louls Phelan, 15, son of Congre Michael - Franels -Bhelan, by representatives of the striking switch-{; men -in. Chicago. New York and Cleve-, tand. < ” £ . Laneashire "cotton ‘aperatives 'who wepe Athreatening to -strike for an increase of wbout 60 per cent. i wagass the Jabor ‘ministry’s invitation for'a ference. ¥ = ~@ity, 'N. .J., April 25.—Prob- ms of finaflce and commerce, with ‘particular attention to the increasing cost of production. and ‘distribution of necessi- n Jtant high prices to con- President Wilson has signed the annual will be dealt with by the United post office appropriation bill,. which car-{States Chamber' of Commerce at its ries provision for an .air . service - P .anfual roeéting- which opens here tween New York and San Franciscov 'ia{ tomorrow. ) e ¥ Chicago. ¥ . B Representatives i of commercial . organ- i 3 i i - “lizations in yictually every, state will be Shipping conditions in New York. har~ ‘presént and’disoussions will cover ques- r are reported improving.: @it s pre- dicted that within another week enough ‘accounting, and general business effi- freight arriving by rail will give cargo|ciency..and propesals for remedial legis- ships a fair supply. S - ~[lation affecting these activities. William Morris s of Philadelphis, the widely known geographer, has been: awarded the Yeza medal, the. highesti decoration of the Swedish anthropological and. geographical society. CENTS FOR EACH $100 mgflm April 25.—Collection - of taxes last year eost the gov- 3 _cents for each $100.in reve- X mept tonight by «of “internal revenue. Total for. the year were $3,850,150,- tal ‘expenditures ‘in collecting t -$20,573,000, the statement _2dding that reports that the bu- xpended as high as: 60. per cent. itax.collected for adminis- e8 were untrue. TFour perso: were - slightly | injured | nu¢ when the Pennsylvania rafifoad fei 1 hoat . Cincinnati was ‘carried’ out ~of its o) course and str&c:( a' bulkheadl ~ terminal in Jersey City. \ R | _Judge Towe ‘in. the ~ U. 8." Dist: Court ‘of - New - York 'fined ~ Joseph ' Newman $2,500° and . senitenced “him to 30 days in:prison for smuggling 15 dia- monds, valued at $4,950, in this goq; . . Indictments a; gents Armour | Swift and Wilson companies, charging them with violation «of ithe . Lever Yers reported by the fedesal grand «J to Judge,Garvin in. the Brooklyn U- district_court. - - ey g Bk According to reports.at . .San; Remo, Tloyd George declared an " intervies at the British . government : does ; not| Germany. ) ADVANCED IN AFRICA Aprit: 15.—Lord Dewar, who st Teturried from Centrdl Afriea, in an jaecount of his -travels there, e sed, cost of living in the fe: cost four spearheads in pre- She now costs’ eight spear- | made | posed.the and ‘The- other’ four men went" to | American Legiop pests, the fam-'| ‘Hafvard tipns~of, railrodds, shipping,. finance, cost : . | they rémaided: on" stril It Has Failed the Nation “With Com- and Welfare of Qur People”—Says an Action Congress. ‘Washington, April 25.—(By The A. P.) —Sweeping charges th;t the present cof- gress has failed the nation “with com-. Dleteness -and “abandon,” are’. made hy Samuel Goropers, president ofthe: Amer-| ican Federation of Labor, in the current issue of. the American Federatic iis:. “America must get rid of its veto con- Eress and elect an action congress,’ he says. “The ‘mo’ congress must give piace’ to the ‘yes' congress.” The labor: leader asserts that congress ::nkuod on the' peace treaty, in recon- tion, and " the high cost of lving and that it also has “failéd us in intelli- gent n Of very great ques- livés and welfare of Ppeopie. The “sins_of the present congress” he adds, were a commission as’ well as ommission, as there had been “almost an eagerness to do the wrong ‘things” the ““There must be a congress which will turn its face to the task confronting the American _ citizenship . in the true . spirit of American institutions.”” Mr. Gompers says. "A - constant genius for accom- plishment must replace all ill-considéred mania for restriction and coercion. “Anfefica. cannot play forever the part of .a.peevish child. in international re- lations. - - The affairs of the world are the concern” of the United States. There may be proper limits to which this con- cern may go, but there is no longer any such thing as absolute divorcemesnt from Wwhat transpires elsewhere. o - States to mani- e proper_ concern in” these affairs. “On’'our’ own' continent there is the same need. - For weeks a senatorial sub- committée Iids been going up and down the country gathering . ‘the evi- dent purpose- of which- can be but to in- flame the minds. of those who think lit- ‘)qv;é Bas accepted -an-invitation to| portw: n of the masses. It m domjnation by a select ruling class or WILL NOT FIGHT DUEL Montevideo, « April The - duel to “{ Which President Baltasar Brum chal- lenged Dr. -Rodriguez’ Larreta, directof of El Pais,-following attacks in that news- paper against: the president in connec- {tion with his lecture of Wednesday on inter-American ‘affairs" before the stu- dents of . the’ University of Montevideo, probably will not be fought. _ . Dr. ‘Larreta was quoted today as say- ing that ‘he ‘woull fight only if the duel were held in a foreign country, alleging that there .would be trouble with the po- lice if President, Brum should be wound- ed in a. duel in--Montevideo. It was learned this afternoon that President Brum will, not send his seconds:to Dr. Larreta again. . . .. The article in El Pais to which Presi- dent Brum took. exception asserted among other things 'yt certain recent acts of the president constituted flagrant viola- tions of justice. Paig with the Jate Washington Beltran, who was recently killed in a - duel by Former President Jose Batlle y Ordonez. PRI e TR NO HEARING TO BE GERANTED STRIKING RAILROAD EMPLOYES ‘Washington, Aprél 25.—Members of the "Railway “Tabor Board reiterated to- night the poliey 'of “the board that' no hearing or consideration” would be grand- ed to striking ‘railway employes while : The situdtion in’ the Pittsburgh ‘region prompted the statement, . it was ‘explained, " it having been stated to the board 4 L ‘in the unauthorized strike move- ment’ tliére wére urging their men to held | out as- tlie ‘board ‘would hear their com- { plaints tomorrow: .’ - » . Such reports were without foundation, the | board members: said, ‘as: there had been no . ‘charge “in rule. one adopted by the board: which’ éutlined ‘the - pdlicy « that complaints “would- be - received only through regular’chanhels: 53 DICT NORTH CAROLINA 4 WILL RATIFY SUFFRAGE Washington, April 25. —, Prediction flut.‘ihe ,-ui;:;ln. amendment would be ratified by the North. Carolina legisla- ture - at, its special sessiohi in July was re, tonight. by: the. nav.{:bne,l LWO- man's party after a canvass of mem- bers of the hq!lg are.. - Thirty-eight -of sixty legislators Who replied: to a-ques- tionnaire ~ pi . themselves for ratifi- 'cation,. While ,eleven were definitely op- recently,. was 1 afternoon. F. Lewis delivered the rd " spoke for Get Rid of lts Veto Congress and 1 < : it I8 better t 1" lose enactment of the railroad bill being cit-| to havé m;(;fm‘;g(p'flo-f " ed as ‘a “shining example.” Dr. Larreta was a co-director of Bl |2l Elect caste of clique. L has done ich " in reoént nths to 'indicate hos%lu' to" - these principles. Powerful forees in the Unit- ed States are seeking to wound and erip- ple democracy. They want of opportunity. - They. want an unfair ad- vantage in the industry of the nation, in the legislatures of the nation amd in the courts of “the mation. 2 “When - the labor movement protests agalnst the pressure of those who would turp backward the tide of progress and deny the sunlight. to lives, but just emerging from the dark, it’ speaks with muthority. @ _“The labor movement of America does speak and it must be heartd. Whers the effort is made.in industry to crowd. men and women backward and. dowa verl, Wwe will resist and resist - Yort made in the halls of congress imd leg- islatures, wé will resist and rewist and resist. “We will resist-with all our power the Te-election of those who have been false :: the. trust whicl humanity placed i em.” SAMUEL GOMPERS ASSAILS INDEPENDENT LABOR PARTY Cleyeland, Ohio, * April —Pointing out that all of the federati victories have been won without a party and that party rule will spell - iimstar o future needs, Samuel Gompe-s, president of tne American Federa of Lanor, ‘reassert- ed_ the. federation non-nar-isan political partisan political policies, ia an address here today. He assailed independant lnhor parties fhat have sprung up and urged the fed- eration membership to abide Ly its ~us- tomary p: of dissegarl of po- litical parties ‘and def21t all cajdidates Who are enemies of Amerwan working- men. J 1 “The Americln Federation of Labor.” said pers, “asstiipes no role of dic- . Anly. selection of men who Are to”represent ru In the governmeat's néxt election is feft to the judment of each member and he cin vote as he pleases.” . Mr. Gompers branded the ove-all pro- gramme /as ‘ostentatious poverty” and the’ “eat cheap meat cuts”. pa'icv as sn ihsult To American cifizens. mpulsive, unwarrasted and untime'y strikes denounced by Mr. Gompers, Ohss that “rio matter what luw 21 ever it resolves that a strit) isthe oniy means of securing worth d:mands. The fact that men must remam &t work te- fore they can be hearl. get redress ur consideration, is an nf-ingemen: on the rights. of ' every citizén 4 a conflict With the thirteenth amendment.” 2,000 N. Y. RAILROAD MEN EXPELLED FROM BROTHERHOOD New York, April 25.—More than 2,000 local railroad workers were expelled to- day from the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen. for the.part they have taken in the unauf strike in this distriet, according to' Edward McHugh, -chairman of the strikers’ eyecutive committee. The charters of nine local unions were re- voked, he said.. The announcement was made at.a meeting in Jersey City attend- ed by men employed in a large assort- ment of crafts and was received with ml;:hfl cheers and jeers. : e locals losing their brotherhood charters, he asserted, were: No. 99 of Jersey City, of which MecHugh is vice president ; No. 879 of Jersey City, whieh is presided over by Irving G. Hunt, leader of the Hudson and anhattan tube trainmen ; No. 146 of Jes 'y _City, com- vprising. Erie railroad men; No. 119 of Jersey City; No. 309 of Perth Amboy, and No. 323 'of Trenton, an Tvania employes; No. 508 of Jerse: City.” to which - more Erie. men belon‘y: No. 333 of Jersey City, which is made up :i; I“’el;l&h ;’a;hy trainmen, and No. 592 No: udson, to which Wi hore ni}l\rud men belong. £ committee of six strikers, hea D. B. Bolan, tonight went to W::.:Inbx’- ton.in an effort, it was said, to gain the interbession of the federal labor board. :;ll:h the railroad managements to have e men reinstated without Lhe, Xeur selugt Joss of their AN AN Ui MRS. ELIZABRETH CADY STANTON 18 LISTED FOR HALL OF FAME New York, April 25.—Public nomisa. tions for ‘the hall'of fame of New York University will closs May 1, it: was ane nounced here today ‘y Mrs. William Vanamee, acting director of tlie hill The university senate then will begin consid- eration of the names sent in.. Among the names. endorsed by the Senate last week was that of Fthan Al: len, °-revolutionary war hero; Bawins Booth, the famous actor, and M: zabeth Cady Stanton, ane of .the rw in the woman suffrage movemengs - 58 esiM HAVE DEFINITELXY 5 i 1 el Madrid, Apri) 25.—The -Spahis “dodiar jsts definitely split yeslerdli' and_hence... forth.the party will be diviGea to fwo sections, one of communi d { the introduction of’ bois: other .moderate socialistsiVAvise: low ‘the old political lines, i S ah e MEXICAN REVOLUZION e 2l pre MENACE " MANZA : —<sboilicd YI09H 21 . Agua. Prieta, Songme, SPANISH SOCIALISTS 7, JAprit 79553An.7 other Pacific, coast dumm Mexieb, Man-* ‘zanillo, staté of Cblima, imusenkosyspylo revolutionary forces:iaccending #o sa ficial bulletin issue@T'bylthE Somora<iis itary officials hergstamight.nifioD) COLLAR AND SEMRY nmfi:"‘flmxfim . Chicago; April ' 25iaxA hoogollabl ot . - Ririke., - tmedng alieyed A ¥

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