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156 u OPULATION 29,685 NORWICH, CONN., SATURDAY, JUNE ?6; 1920 14 PAGES—98 COLUMNS PRICE TWD FARVARD VARSTYCREWCEADS FRON START o W S0 sl 5 52 .y SONAN DENOLRS© ANDDEFETS YALE Y NEARLYSELENGTHS - o e o AR HOLDNG WP 100 s 3 1 the stage in Paris and a numoer its Bet¥een Colonia and Ise-| May 1 — Avertr:l A};L Dlll; of theatres are producing American plays. 2 lin — Truckmen Kept Un-| ger of a Gene ilroad| i, ctatement of the Bamk ot PR 4 HOLCOMB LOOKS OVER STRIKE « B Appear in Com) )l ‘Crimson Crew Showed Superiority Both in Blade Work and situario 1y warexsvey| der Guard. Strike. i i ot g “t; Bl;em i lo;e Cof:trol ol-f t!m P.c PR Stamina—'"Twas a Good Race Until the Two Mile Pen-| waterbury, conn, une 25.—Governor| Woodbridge, N. 7., June 25.—A motor| _Chicago, Tis., June 25.<A' decision on| June’ 23. S mocratic Party in Pre g Marcus H. tioicomb of Conmecticut, to- h " truck loaded with $20,000 worth of yarn nds of railroad employes for . 4 o o 4 . A nants Were Reached—At the Three Mile Posts Harvard | seuer with sajor General Lucien Ved it an S MerlseSmith, of Oyster Bay, Convention—Anti-Administration Forces / ¥.|was stolen today by three masked ban-|wage increases will be made on or hefore Are Lac i New York, inted third assistant . o surpee paid this city a visit * today 1o | dits on the state road between Colonia|july 20 by the Railway Labor Board,|New York, was appo Led by Three Lengths—In the Last Eighth Mile Peters, u fook over e sirike situation, and to ?:L:x.iyylé?{c :%cfr;*’.‘:fik"}_ “:;c(r;‘g‘;:; siven Judge R. :\lx.ls?:éoa-:: chgri:;nz‘r:_nflmwm"; :f;;ug“;r state, succeeding Brecken- Organization and Lndguh,? =L h_npg-:;g_c is C the Yale Stroke and Captain, Collapsed and Dropped His| i wiich ‘nave et poes hers rhonin | o and chauffeur of the tradk, and is | o otensctive to. May 1, the Statement B e e Ground That the -Conventlon Will Vo i Oar Three Times—Driscoll, in the Bow, Also Went | i i, (o weeks The srike of 20,000 h“r’;:tr{. ghibarat i S S ording to W. O, Lee, president of HodeStnes ;;“‘S“i,,;fiaflxi'.m;?:::x‘: Bone-Dry and Anti-Bone Dry Resoluticns That [/ 2- Down at the Finish—Harvard’s Victory Ties the Score, | iticd 1is tueth week and apparenuy batn | £1100 9% 11505 Wory, | They Gocleres (oo the Brotherhood o8 o Jeaders. who | departments. Presented. = < 5 * . : e bills and automobile license. After two| gathered here today, the board's declar- t Eilis Tsland are| Sa Each College Having Won 26 Since the First Race in| [ClL, "0 5, Qoay than M was )| of the highwaymen had driven off with| ation would end all danger of a general| Detention quarters a B a g i e ] June 25.—So far| The Georzia ¢ o ; ded it has been necessar: s surface indications were concerned, at|w on t 5 " : - the truck the third kept them under | railroad strike. Ll it O LAnI= ¢ deaht." the Trlents of ooy | 1855—Time: Harvard, 23 Minutes 11 Seconds: Yale, | 57 ey Wil hold out tor a year it} guarq for three hours, ahey said. 3 Lo said that secret plans had been | ab0IE hip % Iarge o ‘ , the friends of bresident - essary. £ made by a disaffected union element to Hy & complete control of the political machin 23 Minutes 46 Seconds. st tous comb today conducted 2N | HARDING CONTINUES TO CONFER | spread the strike throughout the coun-| — p .. i will be disteibuted 1o New|ery of the democroris wato il machio- Fephmeer ekl S e L WITH REPUBLICAN LEADERS| try because of the continued delay in an-|y xS 00 Tiis summer. Contracts have | actual prefiminarics of th New London, Conn., June 25.—Leadingwent info an immédiate lead. stroking 45 'oe Giffercut placts, the municipal nouncing the wage ruling. from the initial dip of their oars, Har- t Wilson | is whether and his administration appeared in | ponent . " | been made for delivery of 80 tons daily, | vention began - : gt fow garage, power house and armory. The! waghi = gL i yonxl! have ault at mid- e 2 n bedts to the minute for the first few hun- 5 XN e | Washington, June 25. Conferences The men Woul 5 expected to benefit, 40,000 people. Thate. Aeparaaiic 00 4 vard's varsity crew defeated Yale in @ |dred feet. Yale, rowing one stroke high- | EOVCFIOr explaingd (o the men Why Rey | with republican leaders were continued | night tomorrow might” Mr. Lee said, “It oo fon was not wi; spectacular four-mile race late today by |er. appeared to get less drive into its|1ad been calied out saying that condi- ¥ six lengths, thus compl the stigma of complement of grum Shel L today by Senator Harding the candidate|was impossible to hold them longer. Men| Geperal Enrigue Fstrada has been g ely wiping | blade work. PBoth had droped to a steady | UIONS Were such that the police needed of tFe republican party for president, with! of my organization have been waiting pa- ouble vietory of | 26 named military commander of *he states| e . tire half mile flags, where Harvard | Belb In case or an emergency. No furth- | William Boyee Thompson, chairman of| tiently for nearly a vear.” of Colima, Suanajuato, Jaliscv, Aguas- anti-administration forces not | L S B R B R two vielininAoy favas leantng by i full nellloncth: er trouble was expected he said, but in|the Ways and Means committee of the| The railway board's statement declared| Jjientes and Zacatecas, Mexico. " the anti-administration forces not| has Leen named " faces held early in the day There was almost no change in stroke | the interests of law and order, it was|republican national committee, and The-! that a nagreement on a method of work- = a|lacking in org: “and leadership. | - Rowing In magnificent form from the|or separating distance until the two-mile | B€Cessary to maintain adequate protec- | ordore Roosevelt, son of the former presi-|ing out the wage problems had been ar-| Professor William Sehofield, hea o con — g very of the long up-stream battle, | p 1ta were reached, and here the Yale | tion. dent as conferees. rived at and that no time would be | of the department of comparative lit- the oarsmen coached by Rill Haines early | oarsmen made their bid for victo Arrangements have been completed, | The meeting between the nominee and demonst lost in reaching a conclusion. ted their ers showed itself In in Sl 1 f in striking biade work and stamina erature at Harvard Universit @ Drogranime for: the o Lee and other representatives of thel o'yt K6 Fpl i borough, N. H. 8 D Aning fon fihe s u Thompson an-| organized railroad brotherhoods who met LA delegates. Many committee m of the state guard will begin fto|nounced after the conference that on | heretoday to discuss the railroad Wagel yu. semate of London Universty |nreiied the enimion hes 11 seconds after receiving the starting|was only momentary, for the Crimson | mobilize within five minutés in the event | Mr. Harding's recommendation the poll-|situation, said there was no doubt the| goncq o resolution accepting the . signal, while their ancient Yale rivals|blades dug deeper nd ster into the| the 300 men on duty prove insufficient. * + | Rockefeller Foundation gift of £1,205,- tralled in 35 seconds later in a state of | waters of the Thampes and rapidly shot| Governor Holcomb assured the mayor shysieal exhaustion which was little short [ away until, periority both in | Coached Dby Coxswain Carson, Stroke | the governor announced later at Mayor | Mr. Thompson related largely to cam- and swent across | Peters raised his beat and gradually ent| William Sandland’s office, whereby the|Daisn finances and Mr. between the finish flags 23 minutes and | down the lead of Harvard, but the gain | res tomorrow w or . the Misso 000 for medical and research work. been reached that t e the turee-mile posts, Har- | that the entire state and its troops wers —_—— in those cases would be shaped to keep R of pitiful vard was fully three lengths ahead and| behind Waterbury in the interests law Attorney General C. L. Hilton of Min-lout of the convention nator Reed of . C. Poters of Seattle, the Yale stroke | was conceded an easy winner, barring ac- | and order. 5 e nesota apparently has been r:;mmmal:_d .\Irwacnuri and former Senator Hardwick suffering from the effects of a recent ill-| Both Stroke Peters and Bow Oar Dris- | the governor had considered the advisa- e rvice at ats em Sullivan of St. Paul, nan-partisan league |of the Wilson policies Jess ompletely collapsed in the last|coll were showing the effccts of the strain | bility of placing the city under martial candidate. Another development pointing in the - sighth mi ad thrice dropped his oar,|and, as I ard dontinued to pull a B 1f ma law were necessary, the —_— same direction was the apparent col- which was caught and restored to him by | the race became n rout so far as Yale| mayor contniued “it would be necessary It was announced at the State De-|lapse of a fight against Sen ass of Coxswain Carson. Bow B. G. Driscoll| was concerned. The Lli stroke dropped he mayor to surrender the city to At a gathering of bank representatives there was under discus- partment that the United States had re-| Virginia in his_candidacy for rman | Also went down at the finish, while the |below 70 and there was neither rhythm | military adihoritics, Mayor Sandland sion among other things the question of advertising. There was point- cognized the Herrera government In|of the resolutions committer, a for remainder of the eight had difficulty in|nor power in the swing of the blades, while | he had no-intention of doing this Ediout s hehiinity aPiaavertiging for te businitesiana! for increasing Guatemala which succeeded that of Dr.|which he is commonly reported ve stting erec Harvard lifted the ke to 35 and cros “even though the New York papers would = & R B, Estrada Cabrera. been selected by the presiden o The Crimson crowds were celel a the finisk, scoring an victory, | have it soor the business of the bank. Such an institution requires it as much as S Na Rt theds Nar the conquest here tonight in which again tied the score of va “We are going to keep law and order | any other and it was the déclaration of an advertising manager of a Sherift William Brown of Missaukee | idence that William J. Bryan would find CENR. « Bk v Wins. Both Harvard and Yale have won | in the city of Waterbury 1id the New York bank that “of all forms of advertising that in the news- county, mear Lake City, Mich. reported | onn e o b sique of céaching. there was a —_— purpose than to assist in acomplishin That opinion is founded upon experience, and experience similar A At 4 views, and a prohibition en-| ' the C YALE CAPTAIN PRONOUNCES this object. * 1 am here with Major 3 ¢ : delphia draft dodger. tank . 1on for the elation of the Cam General Lot and 'R E sy to that of others who have tested out the various forms of publicity. a5 plank framed without the s - iegians. for ot in years has Harve: IT A CLEAN DEFEAT|jiiic trip and getting the air, that is the The newspaper is the best medium because it reaches the most . “r’:n':“,':n:‘::a:f\":s;":,‘:’ ;:',:,{','f‘m‘,.m,,, 7 ,"I,‘,:",,'; e bntasige defeat to a Flue crew than that which| Gales Ferry. Conn.. June 25.—Stephen | ehtire purpose of my visit to the Brass people, and it is getting in touch with the people that is aimed at. This ::, Fourteenth Centry Sforza Palace |umtion remained in a state of consid- ‘ marked the close of the fifty-second dual| Y. Hord, of Terre Haute, Ind., tonight| i 15 the very service that The Bulletin performes in Norwich and vicinity Park, Milan. An infantry lieutenant |erabic mncertainty with the trend ay ‘ inter-varsity regatta was elected captain of the Yale varsity| Amporyatice e aloled: through its thorough and extensive cireulation Was among those killed. ently toward exclusion from the The victory of the Harvard eight came | crew for next year. Hord rowed No. 4 to the meeting of machin- i Sty 2 " e form entirel; Those who want a . R e & & Bk o R TS mcebinelt tor vl 1o Be held 5t the S Ceniraliiatns During the past week the following items appeared in The Bulletin's Secretary of War Baker announced | eralization plan® continued an act 5 was a favorite at odds of 10 to 7 In the i1y Tnion hail tomorrow morning in spite of columns, all for two cents a day : that @i teraten, non-English spsaking efti: T e e ates AT e K e e o made the| rumors to the contrary. Following the | ot s Toier e A ae Tonight the Crimson cohorts are col- 0 fter the race: ar- meeting \r;r w,he employees of vlznlw‘ Bulletin Telegraph Local General Total tion to hecome American citizens, will be | carry their fight to tne floor of the c RIS eetively singing the nraises of their ‘Harvard is to ed on a| Machine Co., ~a closed " § a | itseif, but a feel ained head-| NEW HAVEN 1 ~ Bte ek, S Srvard S Sl vistoky: whish: wae wel N | o 140 for thethiroose of se- || | Satupday, June 19.. 167 162 403 732, i admitted into the army teogro- il ) iy iy anit and -particu trol Jenney, | ed.” 2 iy |1 mmittee to meet the general Monday, June 21. 144 99 244 487 Bishops G. I, Kinsolving of Texns a‘:!fl‘lm:w—dr\ deciaration andthat’ the antl- T he lightest oarsman vhe ever stroked a| Captain Peters, of the Yale varsity of the plant. Rumo:s 5 ! George A. Beecher of western braska. | bone drys would be voted down. New Jarvard crew over the four-nflle course | crew, said pany contemplates transfer- Tuesday, o Z Log L4 = 528 {of "h6 Protestant Episcopal church. sail-| * Just where President Wilson stands on | > or wn the Thames. Weighing loss than 140[ "t was a good hard race. They jump- contracts to z Providence, plan: || ~Wedrisday, June 23.. 165 105 305 575§ from New York to attend the Lambeth | that subject has not been made clear. but | oy "] sounds, Jenney set the p lifting and [ed us at the start. We rowed a hard re’ ridiculed by workérs as “propu- Thursday, June 24,....... 147 151 342 640 conference of the church at London. , |increasing significance was attached P g S it s owert stroke s the oreasion de- | atroke, but they beat us clea Luizi Scalmana, president of |§ Friday, June 25.., 168 138 298 604 the day’s conferences fo the absence of | mn 00 o nanded. and e ally swept the Crim- England Workers' associaticry 4 The demoeratic - national committes | ;. rotorance. to. prohibition in the Vir-| = o 4 wn combination home a vietor in as per- | HARVARD COACH SAYS had no statement concefning the situa- | . 3 Rciie g e s — unanlmovaly” dgreed to send a ielesTaM| ginia ‘democratic pltform. unqualifiediy | i © ectly mtroked race as this histaric rowing YALE WAS A WORTHY FOE/! tion. — Totals . .. % Ty 79 1879 3593 to the~gpyernor of “Tennessee Urging Aa|injorspd by the ite House. Sa ek = Wonrse has ever seer ¥ — | Threats of violence were said tomight special session of the legislature to rati- Neither has the administration tipped| - . Poth erews were =* ‘e gtarting line| TRed Top, Conn., June 35.—Touls B.|to have followed Albine Ribas, tenant at | 1y the federal suffrage amendment. its hand in regard to presidential can-|,c."0 r the rajlrond bridge a few minutes | McCagg, of New York, tonight was| o3 1.2 Raflroad Hill street. whers & didates and tonight the relative standinz | _ stion” ¢ P m 1| were se:it away chosen as captain of next yar's Harvard|loml wrought havoe early this morning. General Pershing beeame M at Cam- | ¢ aonirante remained apparently ORAT B 10 . ong row at 5.16. Weat varsity crew. He prepared at St. Paul's| Ribas moved family and belgnging | C¥ inausurated several vears ago of lime | men would be satisfled with the promise | bridge, Mass, while attending the Har-| changed rney General Palmer ar-} e water conditions were ideal, for the ol and rowed No. 4 he race to-| from the wrecked temement fo another|iting campaizn contributions to $1,000 of a dec Two long observation trains followed the ion to relieve their impatience, | vard commenceriént. He was attacked | rived today to take personal charge of : ; | part of the city. The police tonignt | would be followed this year. “Was the decision the result of by indigestion which caused him to re-|his campaign, and by tomorrow the & the paralleling riverbanks. both m Haines coarl vietorlous | Cia they. have been warned that @ new | “Through my department,” sald Mr.!warning of a probable strike brought by| frain from marching with the procession. | ning of candidates and thelr managers apacity with cheering. color- ard oarsmen, | ¢ r Jooms ahend of the man who hag | Thompson, “there has been no contribu- ‘you and your associates to the board? — among the uninstructed delegates is ex- g} § the competing universi- eased by . the, result |’ ncy TN rierst tarika tion to the republican natonal organiza-|Lee was asked. The French Foreign Office has re-|nected to be at its height. race. YVal @ 500d erew oy © e are convineed that fhe ex. | ton in excess of $1,000 and we mean to| “You can draw your own conclusions| cejved, information of the arrest by the | Harvard caught the water first andland proved a worthy foe SloRfor work of strikers. Michele | 80 0n with that limitation. ‘The senatoras to that,” Lee answered. Prefect of Police of Aleppo, Syria. on | WILLIAM J. BRYAN NAS NO s SRS Titee, 2 Russian swho, robms. o Rafiread | SBent the leastiof it ;; ‘,‘,'f c!n]fli?il‘:e: il June 12, of Emir Ahm;fl );ukhlxr:rwn of THOUGHT OF WET PLANK e > Rl | convention period and takes ALIS: A : 3 d Muwtar Pasha, former Turkish - MISSING BLAKELY . COUGHLIN ENGLAND GROWS WORSE! the sccre of the wreckize grinning. Uist oo wartion oot s led Sty : T A péotitosee MNINy. PiSHX pihe Bamocratie | pre The city coums 1n serve | came through small contributions from 1 E Frederick Gimbel, vice president Jo- | platform.” said William J. Bryan on his| Norristown. 25.—A baby : was sentenced in the city court 1o serve | poizhhors and friends in his home town,| Chicago, June 25.—Seymour Stedman Dowdell, general manager, _and |arrival here tonight, “I have no thought ! istows. 1 vty Coughiin.| Boston, Mass. June e state- | six months on the charge of intincdation. ] * [fiarest was expressed in political eir{Of Chicago, candidate for vice president|SePh Dowdell. & in the men's | that a wet plank can be put into it” e idnapped from | ment that the bituminous coal situation | Ball was fixed ot $500. The police aro | cles hers in the announcement from Bos.|on the socialist ticket, has challenged| Charles D. Slawter. buyer. in the mens| that a wet Dant €28 B0 MO s home In Norrisiown has been Jocated | in New England was rapidly growing | BUntnig for another man who is said o ton today of the conference mext Weds | Governor Calvin Coolidge of Massachu-| Olothing. department of Gimbel Wroe. | He fefusel fo SHITTL 0 (L0 T2 5 i v the polics. Thit{ worse was made by James J. Storrows| V0 threatened (0 use an axe 01 Ribas | nesdny hetween Semator Harding and | Setts, republican viee presidential nomi.|pleaded not guilty when arraiened be | B0 WOTC TR MR ot H. Coughlin. father of | [ = 0 o isteat e 71 it he continued to work. . | Governor Coolidge of Massachusetts, the! Dee, to a debate on the issues of the| fore William L G | added that he cared to wa r C. Townley Laze fuel administrator, tonig! e republican vice presidential nominee. | Dresidential campaign, it was announced | Profiteering. i ment on the League of Nation: been N motored to Scranton to| “There is not coal emough in Xew | DEFINITE STEPS TAREN Arrangements for the meeting of the|tonight at socialist national headquar-| 4 gead lock Is belloved to have re-|nor as to the candidacy of the ind i iy 1d England now,” he said, “to mest the TO END YARDME two nominecs were made by National; ters. sulted in the series of conferences be-| “Platform first,” he added. seen at a Serantod| ;.. ;0048 The coal that has iaa Committeeman ‘Hays at Senator Hard-| The time and place of the debate would | S e sentatives of America8 oil | “If the wet forces in this conventi & am Jennings, a friend of | SAY needs The conl that has arrived | ppgagcinhia, Peana, June ing's suggestion that an_exchange . of | be decided by mutual agreement, Jetter| LYCN FEPreseRtatives of Americtd ol adl a single wote to spare” he s, ~thes | » got In touch with Cap-| 20 0 s o e nstand is Nt} roaq officials ere tonight took definite on the campaign would be profita- | despatched to Governor Coolidge said. | Jrayino ® The ofl men asked Trevino to|would force in a wet plank even though 4 2 ves 3 F. Savitts of Scran-| Sa¥Where near sufficient for their own gteps to end the yardmen's strike, which The letter said that “a public discussion | ~reer decrocs made. during the Car-|it would dissolve the democratic party.” : g nicated with Mr. Cough- | dally consumption, and about the only |ror o week has seriously interfered with £ would aid the public to grasp more clearly | C21°¢! decrees made during the He said he hoped Georgia and North|pmenanees | fris. aaking for &| ¥a7 some of the are keeping trains | sosement of freight. + tpag | OFFER MADE To ToRONTO'S our differences in purpose.” - o R e Carolina leplatures would ratify the | ween ee. . of the missing child. Pelim? sl s A laltimore and Ohio announced that e % i . ten, who before | suffrage amendment to the CONSHUtON | corvice ag nore Thie was forwarded and when it was| ey call commercial coal right and left. | employes of that company who waly- STREET RAILWAY EMPLOYES| Coolidge Not Aware of Challense. hpyn:-ar::::“:;s e uartha, Striexidnd | kbefore the convention got under way. e out weeived this afternoon by Captain Sa ‘The situation today is far more seri- | ed out and have failed to return to work & e Boston, June 25.—Henry F. Long. sec-| of Springfield, M: and known as Fedia e e asked the ather 10 come at oncd! ous than it was du the summer we |have been discharged and their places|, 1Oronto. Ont, Jume 25.—A five cent| . r.rv to Gove Coolidge, sald tor of Bpringfield, Pan TPONE HEARING ON LOUISIANA REQUEST Seranton to try to identify the child.|entered the war. We are going back. |are being filled by new men, while Ag. |iNcrease over the present maximum rate| ot % %ad nermawiennate, Said tonight | Delia Rocca, American prima _donna, i FOSTEOY o LOOS TEAT T ®.The baby | Captain Savitts, “an-| ward fast. Jt is_about the mott seri.|new T. Dice, president of he Reading|Of 79 Cents an hour was offered 3Toron- | \hat o had acknowledged receipt of Sev- | was awarded the “Medaille d'Honnuer” GEORGIA AND MISSOURI OOSENING 01 » Act swers_the description of Bikkely Cough-| tered its tenth week and apparently both | Railway, mbtified the strikers they | (08 SIKIng street railway employes here Stedman’s challenge to a debate on| by the French government for services nThe youngster is thirteen or four- : In white the campaign issues, but £ i oup conl ituation we have ever faced” | Would have to remme worls immediately | [SRY. IMORIP & ConfErees Detwosh | 45" o republican nomingo. for ihe. vies | & 2 CUrinE the var g ? 2 : ‘or leave the service. i | re 2 ers, com- v o t Mr. Storrow said that o far as.an- | 0y 1% the service | Officials of these pyny oficials and the ‘Ontario Railway|Presidency is busy this week with sev- Uhee 82 o Brought to a Scranton | thracite coal for use in the homes was o ST Auditorium, San Francisco, Calif., June .—The democratic national committes G today decided to postpone consideration w , as we Sl S eral college commencements in New Eng-| YWEXICO I8 HAV of Georgia and Missouri contests until to- rought to & Seranton | concerned, there was nothing at pressnr o | YARI2 5aid many new men already have| Bo3rd: ThE offe: me’”sl'r’fkffs"i“’""d 811800, thers Bas® been mo: opportanity. s TROUBLE WITH STRIKERS | morrow morning, after clearing aw: Sotel abo same tine as i PRy been employed and that the freight sit-| % TS meeting OMOFTOW, | bring the letter to his attention, Gover e the, DeuliabkGPE ToCAING CUAEHOE (e ®as kidn: Aqman and a_woman, iphioiders. uation was showing a steady improve-|'t Was sai i =+ | Cooliilge leaves tomorrow for Burlington,| ,, MeXico City, Mex.. June 25.—Four|naiional convemtion next Monday. It| - hout “hirty years old, came With { ment nditions on the Baitimore and| =T Vt, (o attend the commencement exer. | {housand members of the Society for|wag the plan of some of the leaders to R bk o6 Wik v .« |Ohio are rapidly approaching normal, it| STATE OF INDIANA MAY cises of the University of Vermont, Proletarian Defense of San Pedro de Las | pave the contests heard by sub-commit- - ot it \he. iad gt \ Elihu Root stated. OPERATE A COAL MINE £L Colonias have gone on strike for higher|ioes. Sentiment, however, was strong - I he has not In his notice to employes, Mr. Dice — e e % wages, according to newspaper despatch-| for consideration by the full eommities v neare | he <haa "t 5 called attention to the railroad labor| Indianapolis, Ind., June 25.—Purchase i DUSTORING es. and a roll call was demanded on the ques <in- sioce. “The ‘woman, st boards announcement that an early de-| and operation by the stats of a coal ming OEDER IN LONDONDERRY| The president of the society telegraph- | tion. The vote resulted 25 o 20 to iave ating the child we have tried cision would be reached in the men's!in order to insure state institutions of an ed General P. Elins Calles, the war min- | the full committes hear the case. RES 1o excite the ses- erievances and that it would be retroac- | gdequate supply of coal was approved by| °Londonderry, June 25.—The situation | ister, that fari®™®% and soldiers had ar- - o exclte, the sur- tive to May 1 to emploves who remained | Governor James P. Goodrich today, This|1n Londonderry following the week of | rested the presidents of the jabor groups o B in the serviee. “Nothing can be accom-|action was recommended by the state]civil warfare showed further improve- |and sent them to Torreon. General Calles about the botel plished by endeavoring to continue or| purchasing committee. Money to carry|ment'today, when business again started wrtainiv a ringer for him, 3s the ordered the commander 1t Torreon to in- Prime Ministe: g0- extend the present strike,” thes states| out the project will be asked of the|Up. A Deace conference is now in session igate, adding the “right to strike is i i of Ju ment added, “except to encourage 1. W.|state legislature which Governor Good-|largely with a view to Betting refugees | sacred Slavia W. and radicalism, and to endanger the!rich has announced he will call in spe- | back to their homes. It is being attended| Union workers at Puerto Mexico, in the health, safety and comfort of the pub-|cial session soon. by the Protestant and Cathoiic bishops, | State of Vera Cruz, gave declared a gen- {:i.in:r’\'d to further Increase the cost of gonne state’s coal contracts expire June| the magistrates and Irish under-secretary. | eral strike in sympathy with the petro- : th. y 1 have scription tallies closer than any I -y . The facts certainly warrant bringing the father here.” Not Baby Coughlin General Carter Campbell, commander |leum strikers, and the trainmen-on the & Y& Seranton, Pa. June 25.—The hab; z 'l_'hl:ce lodges of the Brotherhood of of the government troops, today reiterat- | Mexican railway at Orizaba, Vera Cruz rail P i supposed to be the 13 months’ old Blakel Railway Trainmen, expelled from that| MEXICAN 60 YEARS OLD ed his guarantee to protect all the routes | State, have called a strike for back pay, Ty Coughlin kidnapped from his home in order for alleged participation in the Norristown is not her baby according to strike of last April, were FATHER OF 35 CHILDREN |leading to the shipyards and factories, | according to Excelsior. e R LD R l;m‘poraprny & thus Insuring a resumption of work in als day by order of Judge Pat-; El Centra, Calif., J —] the s, C i e S I Centra, Calif., Junc 25—Frank Val- | these plants. Colonel Chaplin of the = 0 3 o =0 MEXICAN POLITICAL PARTIES , o le, 60 years old, a native of Mexico, be-| Scottish Rifles is in charge of the der is to continue only until tmhere can|came a father for the thirty fifth time t 3 S $386.000,000 1. Mrs. Coughlin who saw the boy here late tonight. o Y T4*r TO TAKE STUMP FOR ity ARE UNITED FOR OBREGON e e d be & final hearing in the case and speci-| day when his second wife, whom he et S R e St *==———""HABDING AND COOLIDGE ed that the grand lodge may prefer|married in 1900, gave birth to her sey-| Augustus Austin, a former soldier. wh S S10aTdhe SE_ALl the volllical = charges against the three lodges. enteenth child, an eleven pound boy.|was killed while crossing a street, the| L27UeS have agreed on the presidential < ers o -y ¥ = Si Valle's ile fi SinE 8 CaLTert, candidacy of General Alvaro Obregon, contentic 1 X S T:dfi’f'wm.‘ ESTES SNEDECOR PRESIDENT T o ValeE TG Aok s T promised 1o Eive AuStN's widow | gocording to the El Democrata today. value ; 2 T 3 y the perosn 3 # : ey ewars that be would take the stump for OF L A. DF ROTARY CLUBS Senweod | Thisags Who slew her husband. The coroner said | giemr e o I . Baraing any . 5 e o P M irinfnid Atlantic City, N. J. June 25— Fstes| A sea grass that grows abundantly [ 10 resarded all such cases as that of | minister of communications and publie repul Snedecor, Portland, Ore.. was elected [2bout the shores of Japan has been | 41Stn 2s mothing less than wilful mur-| works to resume the governorship of the LETTERS 1 Mr. Taft predicted that the democratic president of the International Association|f0und to vield fiber, which, properly 5 state of Michoacan during the local elec- VICTIMIZED N O . g of Rotary Clubs at its closing session | Mixed with cotton, forms a' thread = ‘tions to be held July 4, EI Democrata : : SNDVSRIS. woull sot adopt & wet 3 here today. He defeated John Dyer |much cheaper and stronger than -one | VLSTER UNIONIST COUNCIL says. i New ¥ z mm—‘ BANDITS MAKE Vincennes, Ind., on the third ballot, 253 |°f "‘,‘,;“’“.03- ;rh; Pruc:js of remov- CALLS FOR PROTECTION | Tpe chamber of deputies today ratified ters from inves { votes to ing the rind of the weed, which has —— ; the dates for the general elections, Aug. serted they hal i SN U S 1N BX. FALL Sdinburgh, Seotland, probably will be|DPecn Patented by its Japaneses inven-| Belfast, June 25 The standing com-|1 for the congressional and Sept. 5 for the Sorief hey hud bes St Paul, Minn, June 25.—Five un- selected for the 1921 convention, tor, is to dry the plant, boil it in lye | mittee of the Ulster unionist council has | presidential elections. Tnited masked bandita held up employes of the Before adjournment the international | [OF tW0 hours and cool slowly. decided to el on'the government tb pro- flood of w-res Great Northern State Baak here late to- trophies were awarded. The Houston at-| WAashing it In water then separates | fect the lives and property of loval In*| yeyicAN 1ABGRERS NoT Ing yesteraay of f Bty Sesaged Cathl iaranoe thortiy. ik tver to) 10 most of the coverings and the rest | habitants of the province wWith the forces : 4 il b day probably fatally er e DR e e e oo this protect ALLOWED TO LFAVE COUNTRY s, Victor Redman and escaped in an au- fuegos club of Cuba; the ladies' attend. | COMES t is soaked in water crown. Falling protection, tomoblle with 35,000 in cash and $5,000 ance trophy to the Washingten, "D G |cOntaining rice bran and brought to|the committee decided that, it should rec. club; the vocational section trophy to lf;e hmilin;: point. The resuiting fiber, | ognize and utilize the service of the Ulster | _Juarez, Mexico. June 2 the Men's Clothing Retail, and the Gotg| 2{teT_Tinsing, resembles cotton and i | lovalists. paniés. the in Liberty bonds and a quantity of non- negotiable paper. —Mexican im- migration officials today were ordered to . TR - dy for use. The grass is harvested forbid Mexican laborers crossing into the trophy to Gill Tiffany of the Amsterdam, | [°% » HARDING x it r {4 the'fall and the fiber ea o 2 United States to accent work in that TIN PLATE AND STEEL u Root is now in Europe ‘; N. Y., Rotary club. ed by fishermen, It is :x‘;c‘::f,m{o PENN. PASSENGFR TRAIN country. The orders were said to have CONFER IN WASHING UNE 20 OFFICIALS ARERESTED | Serve as president of a court whic! T e el e have a marked effect on the price’ of CRASHED INTO FREIGHT CAR/|been given by the governor of Chihua- - —— will arbitrate the ownership ot|TO bl e cheap clothing and to improve the dur-| . i ad hua. Boston, S i cheat and defvaat iy | | ChUTCh lands seized by the Portu- FEOM OMAHA TO NEW YORK ability of fishing nets—Detroit News. | Thiadelphia, Pa, June 25—A passen-| Thousands of laborers during the past ¢ oonnection with the sale of Pittsburgh, Buese. during the revolution in that ger_train on the Pennsylvania railroad iy fe wmonths have crossed into the United Omaha, Neb., June 25.—John M. Lar- P, crashed into a freight car being pushed | States to accept work on farms and rail- #nd Steel corporation stock, L. | country twelve years ago. He will|sen, owner of the all-metal nlane which ‘vening Up Things on-to a siding at Stevens station, near|roads at high rates of pay with the re- T:p" C. Watkins, said to be | also serve on the American commit, | brought a party of wedding guests here| Carrying coals to Newcastle is an an- Burlington, N. ., late today, killing a|sult it was said, of seriously injuring corupany, were arrested by | tee to formulate plans for a per-|from New York, said today that the pro- | cient stuff—but now we hear that Chi- | brakeman and derailing one car. No|the labor supply of Mexico. Three hun- late today on a warrant | posed non-stop return to New York will | cago is- eating frozen meat from New | passengers were hurt. The v s J¢ | manent court of the League of Na vitation today on that date an Prime Minister Protitch, of Jugo- |} Dis accepta dred crossed into the United States yes- . inee said he wa rward e . 5 be undertaken Sunday. The flight will) Zealand. Why can't we ship Detfoit, a{ Edward Lawrence, Bordentown. Traflic|terday, completing a movement of 1,000| STavia. Early ia 1919 he held the |neting Governor Cooliss wiin great | donk start an hour before sunrise. few flivvers?—Cleveland Plain Dealers. - wa sdelayed several hours. through this port-in a week. same position. .- - - -~ satisfaction. g \ = . A) e e R S Sl 2 i a Tt e i S e A e i e e SRR S SRR AR