Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 5, 1920, Page 1

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VOL. LXII—NO. 200 ‘ 2 ORWICH, CONN., THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1920 10 PAGES—T78 COLfiMNS FVE ESTROVERS ORDERED T0 PREVENT ke frbms sy 1 22 | ITIE GONDTIONS OF LANDING OF CABLE LAID FROM BARBADDS s, Y o PPt == ™ SONIET T0 BE INPEROLS CABLED PARAGRAPHS | Ate Increased—New Haven | o Davton, 0. was wiped out by fire, st L 5 Mexican Envey to Great Britain lity in America Than Com- Under Orders From President Wilson, the Destroyers Are Pa- mand the International E:hn:d“l;;:paring New Rate “f::c: ‘:‘:“:5—: G::::q“ auoted a; | ¥erms to Be Submitted to Poland Will Be For the F urtherance e ; P o W dottar : trolling the Entrance to the Harbor at Miami, Fla.—Brit-| exicas i Peace of the World. 13 francs 2 centimes, us against 13 of the Bolshsvik Campaign—Disclosure Made by an In- & P g ¢ B For P ., | -Mexico City, Aug 4.—Provisional Pres-| Marion, 0. Aug. 4.—Striking at Article| 'New York, Aug. 4—Schedules for in-| f20CS 4 centimes at l2st: close. 3 ish Company Had Failed to File'Application For Permit | aon: . 1 siuera foaay appuinted 3| zen"s"s menace ‘o ‘tranaui reiations | eosom ‘prsiemsst s ts b0t | suantion ot o mor mmprorea > - i d Sl & ster, | among American citizens, Senator Hard- | fective August 26 are being prepared by | .. on st Galicia v B —Western Union Telegraph is Having the Cable Laid— | cver to Great Briin, Jose fnocent| i cciared in & ront porch Sheceh toc | ihe New ok Conival and New .| Crench, (roops defeated Syrians i e- $3 Sy Eee Pote § han - ary ay that if he had to choose he “would |en railroad systemsg, it was announced , Kitiitis 4uv i e cuemy. No Significance Attached to Fact That British Ship ischarse of the ministry of the interior. rather have industrial and social peace at (oday. Commatation _tickets, uSed b¥| zttau, In Saxony,is in the hands of subs ites, 2ol 2 4 % l‘ . t]ncable To Sign Turkish Treaty Friday. ome than command the international |thousands of suburbanites, Wwill ying 2 Paris, Aug 4—jignature of o Deace of the world.” Fodin 20 ‘e et i piice st the saisi= ERSEL-COMIES oF (b WIS de- — e “It is folly,” he said, “to think of blend- [ time other rates are increased, al-| sk Washington, Auz. 4—(By The A. P)|parfment requested that a copy of the|Urealy of peace with furkey has been|ing Greek and Bulgarian, Mtalian and|thovgh It will not be mecessary fo_ use ~Five destroyers are patrolling the ‘en-| contract Wwith the British cable concern|POstPoRec Wil Friday, it was an-| Slovak, of making any of them rejoicingly | these commutation tickets until Sep- trance to the Miami, Florida, harbor un-|also be filed and that the company had|nounced today. American, when the land of adoption sits | tember 1. der orders from President’ Wilson 10 | refused to comply. N oin formation as| . b0 Tomres—o—ry in judgment on the land from which he| Rate schedules will be filed with the prevent, by force if necessary, the land-|to this was obtainable at the department. . No ACE came. public service commissiones of the vari- ing of a cable the Western Union Tele-| The orders from the president Which OF MISSING BABY COUGHLIN| “We need to be rescued from the visin- |ous states for approval as the authori-| yyiam s, Culbertson, of Kansas, was graph Company is having laid from Bar-|resulted in :the destroyers being as- 5 3 2%y and fruitless pursuit of pence through |zation for increases granted by the INn-| .;poointed by President Wilson as a |the Soviet regime only to forward the|for @ two weeks stay the quarani Bados. a Dritish possession in the West|signed to patrol the three mile limit off | ‘Philadelphia, Aug. 4 —Postal inspec:|super-government. I do not want Amer- | terstate Commerce Commisstion _does R MO 10 SO (Pl (Ot | good. of the bowhovik campaion. e |camp on the: Tonin fties an aae Indies. Miami were issued, it was said. after re-|ors announced today that a search of, icans of foreign birth making their party (not directly apply to intrastate business.| T H cording to an order said to have been|covdance with the regulations imposed | A British cable ship, the Colonia, has|ports had reached the government thatthe house where “The:Crank” under ar-| alignments on what we mean fo o for| Other railroads operating in this state Isgued: July. 9 By the sovist silitiry|upem’ all persons Tarigorsas been chartered by the Western Union|the company planned to complete con-|Iest in connection with the kidnapping|some nation in the Old World. Our need |are also expected to file schedules 10 be-| yyign 20 members of the communist |staff on the notthwestern front, inter-| Seventeen months ago while leading 8 company to land the American end of |nection of the line. Secretary Danicls|of the thirteen months old son of Mr.|is concord, mot the antipathies of long |tome effective August 26. party under sentence for anarchy, 126|cepted by Polish agents and forwarded | pacrol through frozen north. Russia the cable which would connect With A |was advised of the orders upon his re-jand Mrs George H. Coughlin of Norris- | inheritance.” - - A more-radicals witl be placed on trial in |today to the Polish legation here. 250 versts southeast of Archangel over Britisp cable line from the Barbados to|turn from Alaska. 1In amnouncing to-|iown. Fa. said he resided revealed mo| The speech was delivered to a delega-| RULING ON EETURN TICKETS Chicago. Addressed to Comrade Kranklis, [a snowshoe trail four feet deep I South America. At the state depart|gay that the five destrovers had been |trace of ‘the missing child. What elso| tion from Wayne counte, 0, whe weemid AND MILEAGE BOOKS e commissioner of the Twelfth Army, the|snow, eight American were anibuscaded ment it was stated today that the Brit-| assigned to the pat-ol duty, he said that|Was found in the place that might lead | the candidate with eheces ond Iméompta President WAlson and Secretary of |order was signed by Skalin, member of|by the bolsheviki. Prince was hit in ish embassy had been asked to inform|ihe instructions from the president were|to the recovery of the baby or connect | frequently with handclapping as he deliv-| Washington, Aug. 4.—Return tickets | g oo tloine T8 expected to take up the |the revolutionary committee of the so-/the knee and his leg was broken at the master of the ship that sueh a land-|to use any means to prevent the landlngl fhe Crank” with the actual kidnap-|cred his thrusts at the league and pleaded | and mileage books bought before the | poic ColY 7S SXIIE weekly cabinet | Viet front, northwest, and read 2s fol-|the hip while another™bullet struck him ing would be in violation of American [of the cable. Pping, George A. Leonard, chief postal| for the preservation of mationality. higher fares allowed railroads last Sat-|p 0 5 low: 5 iu the side as he was crawing to- Jaw. Officials explained that there was ‘“i"“il°f'T;3‘d_h¢ Wwas not at liberty to| In conference wWith another group of |urday become effective Will not be valid 2 We shall put forward the armistice! ward the American line. The corp- | no significance in the fact that the vess8l LAYING CABLE WITHOUT reveal. e inspector added that the| callers earlier in the day, the nominec|When the new schedules go into effect,| envoy ftrom Wi Mexican federal | conditions to Poland only to forward|oral was captured and placed on @ - that she orobably was the | apPmOvAL OF UNITED STATES|URL 'Mer atesl who e Ponneyl | declared his steadfast adhierence (o the |t was said today at the Interstate Com- | o il SN (U 1 TSNS Gur good. Until o formal order is I |sleigh. which. started on a 250 versts oniy cable croft available to the 2 - 1 a i o = = f S R ol IR R Cantu of Lower California In an effort |sued by the military staff, yeu can fight | trip, requiring five days in ero Weather, ¢ when she was chartered. 5 ities say the believe is the man wanted, o y. Tow \the | donimizsion. will hantles the |/C: L ued by ihe m af, ea: : can company when she was chartered | Miami, Fla, Aus. —4—While United (% TY the believe s the man wanted, | ed that he expected to make no speeches e iifoe, | 1o avala war. the Poles. Pay no attention to the|to Kotlas, without knowledze of the — mphm o S i away from Marion until October. He de- [Problem of tickets 1 i obligatory conditions of the armistice. people who had made him prisoner or dos was besun last summer. Some time tercepted Order—All Americans Have Been Ordered to Leave Warsaw—Panic Prevails in Polish Capital and the Wealthy People Are Flesing—Great Britain Sends Note to Soviet Government Calling For Halt of Advance Inta Poland—Lutheran Demand For th: Evacuation of Vilna Has Been Agreed to By the Government of Sovist Russia. _ Washington, Aug. 4.—Armistice con- teen months of scant diet in Russiaz ditions will be submitted to Poland by |hospitals, Corporal Prince has entered According to reports from Moscow, a provisional soviet was formed in parts of Poland that were occupied by soviet troops. States destroyers lay off this port t0daY | municy where ne said he lived. ago the Western Union comvany applied to the state devartment for an eXecu- tive permit to land the wire at Miami, but officials said action on it had been delayed pemding the holding of the in- ternational communications congress call- *d to meet in Washington September 15. A British cable company, it was ex- plained, now has a mononoly of cable rights in Brazilian waters. An American concern desires to construct a direct cable line from the United States to Bragil and it was stated that the Ameri- 2an movernment desired to know before Issuing the permit to the Western Union tompany whether the arrangement enter- 3d into by that company with the Brit- sk concern, the Western Cable Company, sontrolling the line from Barhzd‘os_ to 2i] wosld add to this monodoly. Br‘l"he‘rg were reports today that after the Western Unmion company filed its application for 2 permit the state de- der orders to prevent tha British ca- :{‘e layer Colonia from landing on :\‘mer» jcan territory, the Barbados-1Miami ca- ble, Instructions from the British em- bassy at Washington were recex\'ed_ by British Vice Consul Hubbard to direct the eaptain of the Colonia upon her ar- rival to disrégard his orders from the Western Union Telegraph Company 2a the landing of the cable. mThe (‘ulon!g is expected to arrive here from Newport News tomorrow and or- ders issued to her captain are under- stood to dircct the beginning of W_ork at once on landing the cable, working at first beyond the three mile territorfal lim- it. The Colonia is sald here to be car also equipment for a submarine tele- phone cable to be laid between Key West and Havana. This project. it is stat- ed here, also has not received the ap- | proval of the United States government. It was reported tonight that he was a ent of New Gretna, N. J., where he recently purchased a house and an au- tomobile. His name is said to indicate that he Was foreign born. Leonard de- clared he believes the child is in-charge of persons in Philadelphia who do not know it is the kidnapped baby. Until the authorities complete their examination of the prisoner and inves- tigate the story he telis, his name will not be made public nor will be the place where he is being held will be re- vealed. He was arrested in Egg Ha bor, N. J., Monday and is believed to be under detention in a South New. Jer- sey town. To the public the prisoner is known as “The Crank” because he is suspected of being the man who wrote letters sign- ed “The Crank” to Coughlin demanding $12.000 for the return of the child. Coughlin plaged the money where des- address the West Virginia republican con- vention on Aug. 12. 1t was said at his headquarters that his position would not suspend tentative plans under consideration for speaking trips later in the campaign, and that some definite decision might be expected at the conference of republican chiefs to be held in New York tomorrow. Besides making his front porch address and receiving the West Virginia delega- tion, ator Harding saw many callers during the day. Among them were Mrs. v Scott Bakef of the national wom- n's party, who asked for more heljp to ecure ratification of the suffrage amend- ment, and Wayne Wheeler, general counsel of the Anti-Saloon league, who said he only came to pay a personal call. Mrs. Baker said she was well pleased with her talk with the nominee and had been promised definite action toward se- after their effective date is now being worked out, it was said. NEW YORK DEMOCRATS FAVOR BEER AND LIGHT WINES Saratoga Springs, ticket of state officers determined upon by party leaders was, with one &xception, the only slate rsuggested” for the guid- ance of the electors at the final ion of the unofficial democratic state convention here today. Delegations from three of the coun in the Adirondack region, Clinton, Issex and Franklin, notified the convention that if former Lieutenant Governor Thomas F. Conway of Plattsburgh should decide to enter the primaries for the nomination of United States senator he woyld receive their undivided support. It was explain- ed by the Clinton cdunty spokesman that . Y., Aug: 4—The | | Dome: | eign. 3-8 cent. increas clined ay invitation® brought by them to [neW fares are made operative for USC| e jeague of nation's council, meeting at San Sebastian, Spain, decided to call a meeting of the league assembly in Geneva on Nov. 1. With the danger period past and cut- ting started in soveral western are; the grain crop situation of Canada is in excellent condition. Bar silver quotations fn New York: unchanged at 99 1-2 cents; for- e to 93 3-4 cents. London was quoted at 57d. muel T. A. Loftis, head of the jew- elry housy bearing his name, met his dedth from a violent fall, a coroner's jjury decided in Chicago. Francis J. Fennelly, 66, famous short- ston of Cincinnati and the Philadelphia | thletics thirty vears ago, died suddenly | RUSSIAN SOVIE CF VILNA Copenhagen, soviet government has huanian demand for the evacuation; to private advices This agreement condition that the Lithuanians place evacuation at the risposal I mander of the soviet fourth army. REPORTS REACH PARIS POLISH S GONE TO PIECES 4—(By The A. P.—The bolshevik forces apparently have scored a great military victory over the Poles, who are reported to have been forced to abandon the Bug River line and poss their languags. IR Americans knew of his presence in Russia until more than a year later, when Prince ered sufficiently to go to the bolShevilk foreign office and ask how to get home. When the American in Moscow learned of his presence they cared for him un- - til permission was recgived for him to take the refugee train 'to the border. In middle Russia, Prince underwent, seven months of intense suffering and three operagons necessitated by - the attempts of the Russian surgeons to treat his broken leg, the tendons of which had become taut as a resuit of improper attention on. the long journey from the front. [ On September 28 last Prince was discharged from a hospital and sent as a prisoner to a concentration camp. Here after ten Jays his wounds sup- purated afresh, necessitating his aagin going into a hospital. ‘There he re- will be compelled to relinquish War-|mained for a month when e wat ated on June 17, fifteen days of the|curing a favorable vote by the Tennessee | M. Conway had the matter under con- er, aged 60 = ! c saw. transferred to Moscow. —— ————— |ienafed on June 1T, fiteen days of tholcaringa t M CH e i o . : e R e G > o s POLITICAL HOWAT REFUSES TO ABIDE second floor of the Coughlin nome by| Those in charge of the Wayne county| While the convention did not actually| Reports that HMugo Stinnes, in addi- | ACOMIRE o U iest TePorts Tehch | At Moscow Prince says he experienc- FREE SPEECH POLITICA Seidahisti WIS | means : : o ; © PRay AT b Tt ETA any e rats | Mlori s Il s o PHAthSr Rotals. theatise | N8 t y, for th ed the worst suffering of his entire W 'Y SUE OF ORGANIZED LABOR BY INSTRUCTIONS ¥RO LEWIS means of a ladder. The money disap-| delegation said it contained about 400, | designate or recommend any candidate| tion to buin hip Tinen . Has | being at least, has gone to pieces and |in Russia The hompital - was hom et I8ST 5 Gasgclh peared without any clue to the child be-|many of them farmers. for any position, the ecladers’ ticket was|and coastwise steamship lines, has sia. o Alexander | ing re tantic City, N. J., Aug. 4—Orgen- HAIX:;,.- has decided to make the right of free speech and assembly for “union labor organizers in the steel manufac- “uring territories of Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana, 2 political issue in every congressional district | affected during jgn this fall O nis movement will be in the nature of a prelude to a campaign to extend Pittsburgh, Kas., Aug. 4 M. Howat(, president of the Kansas Mine Workers' Union, tonight sent a telegram to John L. Lewis, president of the International Union, refusing to abide by . instructions received from Lewis to return to work immediately. In the reply Howat said: “The cowardly insinuation you have made that I have called the miners on semblance of truth. Had you stood as gmion activities throughout _the r?pe]-mke at this time is without the least steel-mAXME centers of - the count; announced at the close of a set sion of the executive council of the American Federation of Labor here firmly in defense of the mine workers of the country last winter When they were making such a noble fight to obtain jus- [tice at the hands of the coal corpora- Postal inspectors leonard confirmed the dramatic story of the methods used in trapping and capturing the man su pected of being the kidnapper. Accord- ing to Leonard, the Coughlins recently received more letters. demanding $10 000 for the return of the child. Correspond- ence with the writer was carried on through newspaper advertisements and it was arranged that Coughlin should drop the money in a box from a rail- road train between Camden and At- lantic City, when he saw a white sheet flying from a tree. The Pennsylvania state police and Judge Frank Taggart, who told Senator Harding that employers and laborers, business men and farmers were united in Wayne county in his support. After his response. Senator Harding presented Senator Watson of Indiana and Senator Sutherland of West Virginia, who made short talks to the crowd praising the nominee and predicting republican success. A half hour of haudshaking concluded the program. Tomorrow Senator Harding will revet: 2 delegation from Ohio State university, but he does not intend to make a speech. Besides this delegation, only two others place, and no other candidate was gested for the consideration of the dele- gates with the single exception of Mr. Conway. The proceedings were unusually har- monious. The only serious objection to te program prepared by the leaders of ‘fammany Hall and the upstate organiza- tion came from Mayor George R. Lunn of Schenectady, an avowed candidate for the nominationl for United States senator, who left the convention before it had finished its business today. Undaunted by his crushing defeat of_last night. when the convention by a vote of 434 to 16 bowled Unfilled orders on the books of the Independent Sheet and Tin Plate Com- panies of the country on August 1 amourited to §re than 800,000 tons, The anthracite commission appointed by President Wilson to adjust wages in that industry met in Washington and started at once on the preparation of its reports. Senator Boise Penrose left his Phila- | delphia home for a short automobile ride are enveloping War- saw simultaneously from the north and Poland's Marne, gone almost without a fight, pelling the Poles to make a rapid re- treat and shorten their front. Which some experts believe e Poles cnto_the Vis- Tivers and abandonment of half the country to the likely to bring POLES AGRE in |the Dolsheviki columns, advancing in|oniy ity Jou aled. A short sneech of grecting was made by | Placed before the convention, place by}houzm 54 nowspapers, is denied in|ihe Dol ‘e“flcwmflncc Ers 5 only two hours daily in the November erman technique, weather; there were untrained nurses and only a few doctors in the hospital and also a shortage of medicine. The food conditions were bad. Through the friendship of an English Jew bol- shevik soldier who had been wounded while fighting on the southern front, Prince learned of an international hos- pital maintained by Hungarians in Moscow, where conditions were Treported better. Permission was obtained for his trans- fer to this hospital, but in three Wweeks the hopital authorities had not . been, able to furnish transportation for him BOLSHEVIKI AT MINS K |across the city of Moscow. Finally the Englishman, whose wounds did not Warsaw, Aug. 4—(By The A. P.)—|prevent him from walking, went to the 5 ¢ ¢ i gree| tions as you are standing in defense of |the postal authorities cooperated. One | fer. : over his motion that no sucgestion of en |£0 the first time in two months. He was s that the aReton O | e operatory”at this time there Would|hunired and ten’ polioenin. o ciViies SIeenotds ann oot and todad | SR Heine it the Eeastiat o [appeared to be Tyell; thoukiorlewiat zquarely up to the presi-|have been no occasion for the Tilinois|clothes covered the railroad from Cam:|from East Liverpool, O., postoned its| ecutive retirned to the fray with renew. |reduced in weight The Polish government today replied to| hosiital officials and told them that e e e oaa. "fom to Afiantl Ciy, 3 distancs 1t 36| cieugement Bécaues of Mability: th seourk { &4 Vigor il aftorngen and battled val-| yugprssment ‘of e ehallshgen to the |the Tasslat Noviet Ensamoent. sevee [l Lad &t 5is Hee - AEEEENN steel.mak- | (o secure another Ioredse I e ow | ics The ‘distance was divided info]reduced railway: rates. The remaining | {antly but vainly for the elimination from | xew York:Yacht olub will not be made ing to meet representatives of the bolshe-|and that he would kill four Russians e e e i cue otehitaeas Siven & wnp shoumoeref. | date is Sept. 25, when a speech will be o o of & Dlank declaring for 2 |by the Royal Nova Scotia Yacht Squad- (ki at Minsk as coin as is feasible. land then himsele unless conveyance Frani| yourself. If you were as much con-|sections and was instructed to dieplay | 205 from the front porch to. the Ameri- | modification of the Volstead prohibition }ron until further information on A. C. decision was reached after an all-|was obtained for himself and Prince. : | can Defense society. enforcement act that would define intoxi- | pou ey o - ¢ the council of defense and |The transportation was secured. federation, | cerned about the welfare of the miners|from the -car window the number of the Gl e e e e o | Romst Tildua 6 reccived. aay sitting of the council o » wou'd be jut Gential nomivees &s well as gressional candid; upon to declare Morrison, secreta: there was ossibility of a|as vou appear to be about the coal op- |section when he threw out the box. He rmit the traffic in beer of 2.75 mer cent. | it me 5 S - PRt e declared there Was meident with the|erators the condition of the mine works | boarded the train, saw the white sheet| GOY. COX TO ASSTME B Eol ot et B e e S U h delegation will| cOL, HUNT EXONERATED rtat Ok v s of the country would be a great deal | flying a short distance fr Egg Har- N STV v - . : S » |ings Bank Moline, Iil., loc! 2 ~ s T mot say that alers of the country [ ying ce from Egg OFFENSIVE IN CA: N ( ains Yl _ OF NEGLECT OF DUTY CHABGE %aid Mr. Mor- | better than they are today. bor, threw out the box and displayed ST [N CAMEATG) ;’;‘;a‘,"‘e being 406 to 34 against his pro-| sficials in the vault and escaped With | WEALTHY PEOPLE ARE : . etter to say that; “Your action in sending a committee|the figure 13, which were seen by state Dayton, O.. Aug. 4—A fighting mes- g = 10 $20.000, after a running revolver fight FLEEING FROM WARSAW| New York, Aug. 4.—Colonel John 1. O rhoroush organization is the ob-|of the international executive board here |policemen along the railroad. They jsage to democrats and republicans was | TESTIMONIAL IN DANBURY N tiettizensi ot iunl e L o e and your statement that you will take|immediately went to that section. A[given by Governor Coy, the former's % % % London, Aug. 5.—A wireless despatch|Jay military prison, has been acquitted e charge of the district and depose me|man was o R o S MAREIE rved coming from the| presidential nominee, in’an address today | « something from ' the | at a local democratic track and disapear. He was traced Republican national = committeemen, | ¢ Boriin says the Russians have now [of a charze of neglect of duty In com- ning [ Past and present, will sit in Chicago|,qeanced to within sixty miles of War-|nection with the escape of Grover C. with Congressmen as an advisory board |,y on the east and to within about [ BX:gdoll, wealthy Philadelphia draft _ picnic. Danbury, oCnn., Aug. 4.—Campai Speaking from a roped arena. for box- (for the presidential election was begun from office, shall not influence me in the|woods, pick u MILFORD WOMAN AMONG feast” 2 THOSE RELEASED FEOM ADANA = throush the timber and captured in Egz|ing ev#nts on the picnic program. Gover-|by the republicans this afternoon at a|t0 help dircct the campaien of Senator |goriy miles east of Lemberg. dodger, it was announced late tolay. - = 4 _Seventeen Ameri-| SENSATIONAL SMASH IN Harbor. Bloodhounds were put on the|nor Cox. avoiding defipite issues, declared | testimonial gathering for Congressman |Harding and Governor Coolidge. The’ despatch adds that there is panic| Colonel Hunt was fully exoiwgated of B, ATt g Y PRICES IN WHEAT MARKET|(rail to prove the man was the right|he would carry the offensive in - consid- | Sehuy erritt_of the Fourth Connec- = in Warsaw and that all the wealthy peo-{blame in the approval of the court's ac- and ome lnglish women, e one and they carried the scent to the|erable fight" for which he predicted suc- | ticut district. The occasion was termed 'i"'“,"“:‘;',',‘;'mf“,f‘:LNé.','ffl:“;m,:f:’:,‘: virtual priss n the| Chicago, Aug. = 4—Excited general (SPot Where he was captured. State po-|cess. Incidentally, he promised that his|“Merritt Day” but the speakers direct- f"“ % °wh Sehite o the deueioE s city of Adana for over |selling brought about a sensational|licemen, Who traveled on a special trainaddress next Saturday accepting the pres-{ed the attention of their hearers almost|oF & 8 = : t smash ¥ : ; ar- | Dreceding the regular train, also fig- | identis o ¥ A e : e oSt |tions iwith Representative Simon Fes: by theismash in wheat prices today. The mar idential standard could be understood |exclusively to national ue nator| epublican, of Ohio, in Franklin, Ohio, ple are fleeing. quittal Dby DMajor General Bullard, the department of the AMERICANS REQUESTED east. TO LEACE WARSAW | The specific charge afkinst Colomel : h despateh | ket opened 8 to 13 cents lower with|ured in the capture. 2 “even by school children.” Harding sent a letter Which was read| 5 — Hunt was that he had not provided suf~ Fgaes 2 December $2.26 to $2.21 and March $2.-1 The prisoner, Chief Leonard said, had| “Boys, I'm ready for the fight.” he de-|and United States Senator F. B. Bran- | Saturday. Warsaw, Aug. 3.—(By The A. P.)—All| ficient guards for Berzdoll who eluded received T 21. Most of the selling was said to|more than $100 in his clothes. He is|clared to the cheering plaudits of several | degee discussed administration affairs b - ¢ the | Americans cept officials and welfare!two serceants of nearly twenty' years' - orted on the |come from country holders —anxious to|described as a man of good education. | hundred members of the Gem City Demo- |and his own attitude towards the League| Major R. W. Schroeder, holder of the | URNG Ry, CREC Pl 0oiiq by the | experience when he escaped from his “dward Mills |turn their wheat into cash. In, a few % —== cratic club of this city. of Nations. worjd’s Jarfeay ‘;h"""‘h “';“l ‘"_»"["‘}_ American legation to leave Warsaw on|Philadelphia home May 20. He was out Near Fast|minutes the market rebounded as much|TRUE BILLS AGAINST 41 “We need make no defense,” the gover-| Preceding the gathering fhe state com-|about the head when the fast racing|iv.gnesqay night. The legation has e-|of prison on special permission from ths s aeroplane [as 11 cents in some cases. LEADERS OF RAIROAD STRIKE nor continued. “Ours will be the of-|mittee selected Tlartford and September Plihe he wus iwsiii; crushed 1nto ah du | cured - accommodations for them on|war department, ostensibly to recover @ e sit- For the first time since trading in fu- fensive fight from the be ng to the|S and 9 as the place and time for the |tomohile mnear the BE2TS Y2 MEMY | trains leaving at that time for Danzig. |large sum of gold he said he previously ’ vi icago, Aug. 4—True bills against Lo it A Field, Dayton, Ohio. their Ar-|tures was resumed, the pit was , filled| Chicago, Aug. gz end, and it will be a considerable fight, |State convention. A chicken dinner was | Flying 1d, y It messages giv-|with traders. Business wa= on a big|forty-one leaders in the recent strike of|yriyo'no mistake about that, I have the |Served by the women's auxiliary of the — tions had fail-|scale. The rush to sell appeared based |rail employes, understood ‘to have been| e ;oo Bt there will be triumnh of | 24th senatorial district committee, which| William Green, of the United Mine ide world. largely on unfavorable financial reports, ) voted by a federal grand Jury, were held | rient principles this fall, which will serve | had charge of the o A count of | Workers, delivered a message to the eX-|eq for several hundred emigrants WhO|in his trip to Philadelphia and Hagers- cans who have been|especially from the southwest. In_sheyance today by Judse Samuelinotice to republican leaders for years to |heads showed approximately 1100 per-|ecutive council of the American Fede- |nave relatives in America. Most of these to o0 P 19 Fh/AdE Tont Tad SRS Miss Nan Olive| There had been a severe fresh break ?eff{:x(i;n“m':\n:] em’l‘:ri\oweg:?tc::an:r: come. T was about to say that it would S0NS Dresent. a fourth of whom were |ration of Labor charging 'umon-‘r “"filarn women and_children who have had |y orders that Bergdolls mission was. d Mrs. Edward [in sterling exchange, and contrary fo|vestisation to find out how afternooon | ;. " g mocratic trimmph. | T will net he | Women. Few republicans of prominence | not responsibie for any shortage of coal, | thelr Polish passports vised @uring the | “confidentinl,” the colonel sid. Hands 5 N. 7. Rev. |expectations the Bx\;flenslzmm)%“:fm;;; T he Indlements ton U poan 8CcORLS! that. It will not.be a vietory In the par- | Wer ;!res(\n[‘.r ; A 3 as it was due to shortage of cars. last few days. % cuffs would have made g2 his par- and Mrs. W. E Rambo, West Philadel- |sion was sald to be stil al By we Fooatadits s Soles tisan sense. It will be a triumph of the [, fSenalor Harvey P. Bissell of Ridge- & i overninent | . Sritieh women, andiehlidren inoti iy dconmplconis His RineA: paia, Pa_: Miss Clara L. Bissell. Milford. |the export market. Foa T Jutee ey L rient. feld presided. Henry Guyler, special (Sovernment | paving urgent businesss <in Warsaw are Conn. ; MMiss L Assertions that domestic millers were| “UCRe oo e out mews of the| “The opposition has been good to us,| Governor Holcomb remarked paren-|prosecutor. brought in the fedéral dis-|urged by the British legatiol to leave = Pa, and Byron Noans, Haworth, N. |active buyers helped to strengthen the ! and the advantages that it has given will | thetically as he greeted the women that|trict court an anti-trust suit under the |immediately. Several cars secured for| PRESIDENT COMMENDS is expected that about one hundred|had cached in the hills near Hagars- persons will leave. 7 town, Md. Transportation is also being arrang-| "No handcuffs were used on Bergdoll % accounts of loc; 5 Ca-|indictments as an anarchist and declar- E 2 “he was gladder to see t ha b- ¢ agzainst the Consolidated |their use have already departed. 5 market later. So did_reports of C : e - be recounted in the stirring days ahead of | .1° WaS gladder to see them than prob-|Sherman law against the Conmolidated | their use have already departed. PROMPT ACTION OF MINERS e e nadian crop damage. Despaiches telling ;r‘lmies»hergmi'egal | s jumanad ot ably they were to see him.” He had no|Musle Cor~wti™>. ot No e West —— ma < 1 MEASTRE TO RELIEVE of increased gravity of the D Reporters will b subpoenaed, he said,| e the course of doing what we farmers | 42Ut that when the women obtained the | Thirty-seventh street, New York. BEITISH HAVE SNT A ndianapolis, Ind., Aug. {.—President TERMINAL CONGESTION Washington.. Aug. 4—An embargo on all classes of railroad equipment in in- tracity movement as a means of re- lieving terminal congestion was recom- mended today to the railroad manage- ments by the commission on car ser- vice of the American Railroad Associa- n. Y a circular to the railroads the commission on car service pointed out that such an embargo would eliminate switching and increase the car supply diplomatic and military outlook were also influential toward a reversal of sentiment. - The market closed nervous at about yesterdayl's finish, 1-2¢ net lower to lc advance with December $2.29 $2.30 and March $2.32. K. OF C. RECOGNIZE RIGHT OF IRELAND TO FREEDOM New York, Aug. 4—The Knights of Columbus, in annual convention here, adopted resolutions today stating they be- lieve “that Ireland has the right and The judge instructed the jury to find out if the law had been violated and ask- ed “each one individually if “he had been responsible for the leak.” Meantime John Grunau, president of the Chicago Yardmen's Assoctaiion, which was formed by railroad men who quit work with the announcement that they “were taking a vacation until granted higher pay” and other said to have been indicted prepared for court actiop. Mr. Grunau and others expressed surprise at the alleged indictments and used to do—Jof plowing around the stump, of seeking to avoid the things that perplex. “It is with the opposition expediency pure and simple. They attempt to appeal to this group. that group and other roups, without the slightest considera- tion of the great menace thereby to the perpetuity of our government. Our course is the straight course:” PRESIDENT WILSON SET DEC. 21 AS PILGRIM'S DAY franchise in a legal and harmonious way they would use it to advantaze to them- selves and the country. He only briefly referred to political matters. The other speakers were Congressman Merritt, Miss Helen Boswell and Con- gressman W. H. Chandler, both of New York. None paid more than passing no- tice to state politics or referred to a contests which aie expected to be set- tled in the state and district conven- tions. PONZIE OFFERS TO SHOW ASSETS JAPAN WORKING FOR WELFARE OF KOREANS Seoul, Kgrea, July' 23—(Delaved)— Japan has no intentions of changing its policy of Japaniation of the Korean people and believes that assimilatipn will promote the welfare of the Kore- ans, it is declared in the semi-official press here today in comnection with tri- als of Korean independence leaders. LECTURES BY KOREAN THREATING NOTE TO RUSSIA .—According to Premier Liloyd George vith Mm. Krassin and presented an ultima- tum to the bolshevik representatives de- unconditional, cessation of into Poland, his conversati Kameneff yesterday Russian advance before signing an armistice or otherwise Great Britain would declare war. The newspaper British note sent to Russia threatening nature, Wilson has expressed to John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers' of America, his gratification over the prompt action taken by Mr. Lewis in directing the strikings coal miners of Illinois and Indiana. to return to work. 1\<p\\'is received a letter from President W action in response to my statement urging the striking miners to return to work has gratified me wvery deeply indeed. It is the action of a pa- triotic citizen and a man of vision apd prescience.” for road-haul shipments =~ A Permit|ough tto be a free and independent ma- |GroBt 2,0 8 AUTEE BHCTRENS & GhEN i on ¥ STUDENTS SUPPRESSED system should be inaugurated, the oir-liion” The resolutions were adopted a|micit Sore “concerted action. . Conneel Washington, August 4.—President cular continued, to protect the Mmave | ghort time prior to the receipt of a letter | Cod'emploved by many of the men nam-|Wilkon in a proclamation today “sug-| Boston. Augf 4—Charles Ponzi [« gooul,. Korea, July 23.—(Delaved)— SOVIET RUSS™S | L T ment of such freight as cannot be|frm Eamonn De Valera, “president of |1 gested and requested” that Dec. 21 be|Whose offer of 50 per O o ey "t | Korean " students from Japan who have e, 'o’nf:‘km‘%fi:ord‘;i to Mr. :‘ewl;x( 3,488 handled by truck. % the Irish republic,” appealing for the or-|° j inted 5 a|celebrated throughout the United States|Ments in ninety days, has reusulted in|y onlecturing in Korean cities avowed-| _ mine strike in the Kansas The embargo should, %o far a8 BFAC.| ders support in an efort to £ain OMCal | several pinee Mamiers ot ihe® yor|as the ‘tercentenary of the landing of |federal and state investigations, de-| oee g0t O entrbuting. (o pYibors. Fipland, Aus. 1-—(By the A.ifeld ; : ticable be absolule aasinst the use of| recognition by the United States of the | mane. association. mers arrestod o] the Pilerims at Plymouth in 1620, and|clined today the suggestion of Attorney | ihe “Oruention ot their fellow comatry.| P —After seven montha in soviet Rus:| Mr. Lewis also sont a telegram to coal cars in cross-town movement, the| zi0E L 00 BY the U fime ago in connection with the recent|2ppeinted Samuel W. McCall and Rich-|General Allen that the state conduct|min “have heen suppressed by Japan.|Sit Where he was lwice wounded and|Alexander Howat sharply taking him to circalar gald De Valera said in his letter that private | sporadic. rail strikes but said the fact|ard Hooker of Massachusetts, and Geo.|an investigation fo determine his assets. | o™ puthorities here on charges that|c2ptured by the bolsheviki on the Areh|task for fostering the irouble in the NTROL despatches he has received show that|(hat their case had twice been postpon-|Foster Peabody of New York as mem-|The audit now being made by federal| e lecturers violated an agreement |An€el front on Merch 1, S8, CorporaldKansas field. In his messge Lewin da- PR L e . sthroughout the greater part of Ireland, |cd, the last time indefinitely, had led[Ders of the Pilgrim Tercentenary Com-| &uthorities is for the purpose of disclos-|(nat they would not refer to Korean in- [Arthur Feince of the 53ith United|clared the president of the Kansas min- OF FARMER-LABOR PABTY| pritish rule now is little more than a|them to believe Tederal officials were |Mission. ML sunw § | dependence. i lontien Cyeatiiayt cvemingy OB b e TACF BB/ AeEt SO N N Sait Lake City, Utah, Aug. 4—Two|System of licensing the shooting up of |satisfled they had in mo way violated| In the prodlamation, = the president| “There is no law which can force oo i e et Tn Trihies Eoh P st e " Jeaders In Utah activities of the Farm-| Peaceful towns and villages and the mur-] the law. e e i S i Ly | ed. “Show me my. liabilities and Ili| GREATER PRODUCTION OF SUGAR |Diroir, some 3% French, Danish and S AR W T _Labor party tonight made public a|der of unarmed Irish citizens by roving At airiot, o 7 i M SUGAR BEETS THIS YEAR |Swedish refugees from Russia who are|C B Fehd: % Joint letter e o2 P aorgn | bands of irresponsible British militars | SPEED REGORD MADE and patriotic lessons may be drawn|ShOW enough cash to cover them. FRO; 1 5 ; COVERING HIS LIABILITIES Today President Lewis sent telegrams {to thirty local unions in Kansas order- ing the striking miners there to return| EXPERIENCE OF CORPORAL PRINCE I " id i rom the itude, 9 s urities Exchai -— being repatriated by the respective gov- STEAMER FROM HAVANA rosby, State chairman of the party,|marauders” He said it was hard to be- BY NAVAL TANK STEAMER :h:rv;flqvm o;o&:u;dgr{;::s:\emncc and cofn";fa.‘,’;m:;n&’.’,c{i‘i s;epmml continng? | Washington, Auz. 4.—Sugar produc- lernments. Sl exx<d i tharging Industrial Workers of the|lieve that America that had to endure A 3 throughout the day fo honor all notes|tion from sugar beets this vear is fore-| Prince was one of four Americans|, New York, Aug (—The stesmship | Waorld were in control of the party|Similar conditions in it searly struggles| Rockland, Maine, Aus. 4.—What nav- 5 Dresented by an ever-diminishing line |Cast at 2,007,000000 pounds by the de-|cent out on this refugee train by the|Morto Castie arrivire from Havana was | & Whey were H. A McCollem, state vice|2 Sa Tepublic “can continue to give coun-|a) men said was a new speed record | CANADA TO REORGANIZE Of investors. At the end of the eighth|partment of agriculture basing its estl- bolshevs autherities at Moscow. | dgtained at cuarantine today when a case chairman, and Charles A. Weaver, as-| tenance to this British terror in Ireland.” | for naval vessels of the tanker or collier IMMIGRATION AGENCIES |day, the run on Ponzi, caused by in-|mate on the condition of the crop July | Among the other Americans who ar-|Of Mallpos was discovered among: the. i — % it . % e mong 1 2 oho | Steerage possengers. The first and sec- sistant secretary of the state organi- type was made today when the navapl —— vestigations and published criticisms-of{1. It will be a record crop. Last year |rived were two correspondents, who . wtion. e T e M tank steamer Lraoss carry a full car-| Ottaws, Ont, Aug. 4—J. A. Calder, |his business methods appeared to have|1453,000,000 pounds were produced from crossed Russia from Viadivostok, and|7d cabin vassengers were vaccinated be- ANY MAN BUT HUERTA |go of fuel oil, covered a mile at the rate|minister of immigration and colonization, | reached the end. sugar beets and the average production |Mrs. Emily Sarman of New York city,| 0r¢ beéing permitted to lea ship, OBITUARY. - of 14.66 knots an hour in her standard-|soon will go to Europe to reorganize ; - o and the steerage passengers Were trans- for the five vears, 1914-18, was 1,577, |a refugee from Samara. Thirty other |l ’5:‘;'. Americans who have gathered at Mos-|Térfed ‘to Hoftman Island for ten 1 cow from various points in Russia and T oo, Siberia_ are waiting in . the bolshevik | CLADIED ESTATE AFTER capital for permission of the sovist am.|SISTH ANNIVERSARY OF GREAT : H o ABSENCE OF FORTY YEARS ! thorities to leave the country all anx- BRITAIN'S ENTRY INTO WAB Mexico City, Aug. 4.—Before offering| iztaion trial on the Rockland course. |Canadian immigration agencies there, it | TALE OF THE THEFT OF s Jumh to surrender to the provisional gov- | The average of her five top Speed |was recently ammounced mere o ey b Hartford, Conn, Aug. &—Col. Charles|ernment of Mexico, Francisco Villa, the|runs was 14.32 knots. Except for inspection of British war g 3 M. Joslyn, one ott::r 1:&“ Mfi: bandit leader told his followers that| The steamer's displacement was 14-|veterans for land settlement and the| Cleveland, Ohig, Aug. 4—A fortune o m.:h =t Ty o ot | Provisional President De La Huerta|500 tons, T mastngd *;:flew“'r de- | bringing in of domestics, little has been |of $53,000 in Liberty bonds, stolen from bous “ToBERablinarioen . t mmr-n‘ X mu"“m‘ g e o ;x:d only man to vl'g he had ever|veloped was “*" ‘H maximum | done to procure new settlers from Eu-|the First National bank here, for the New Haven, Conn., Aug. 4.—Torty|take steps to nl;iah?\ mefi-m 1“len ¥ the deadlock over the governorship when :x:mxi(n., 2‘«""3‘1’:&“. ::-fl m::.;‘ lf‘:gl; qns“ Eber nfitnuf:m lor revolutions Wa |rope since the war began. Immigrants |theft of which two young employes of | years absent with her address unknown, tt o SR Buiiey heid the ofice sEatiot| o s icie i e, a8 Bees 9914 4 5 now.mus have $250 or produce proof | the bank are in custody, lay for two |Mrs, Mary McVittie Cassidy of Cleveland, . = that they i to k i iy Buried 1 v i bis democratic contestant. In political |ta, Bl Democrata states. Colonel Rios| The poltical whitewash brush | e (1% #06 Eoing o work before being | days and nights Turied in a vacant lot | 0., appeared in probate court today and =m1e-1mx life ¥~ had been honored | was accompanied by Captain Isaae Al-|covers a multitude of freckled reputa- many offices. varez, Villa's nephew. - ltions. 200,000 pounds. ~ & New York, Aug. 4.—Greetings on In tattered clothing and worn shoes|sixth anniversary of Great Britain's given him bys Americans in Moscow, a:try into the World War today were 3 cripple from his wound and a broken|bled to Field Marshal Earl. reorganization | in Lakewood, before they were taken 1o | claimed a small estate which was about |leg impropbrly treated, convales({ng | Admiral Sir David Deatty by plan’ especial effort will be made to ob- | Chicago and so.d tor $12,000, it was|to be distributed by final decree among|fr ma Kidney discase and suffering; D'Olier, national commander - © tain farm and domestic help, it was said. ' learned today. e five first cousins of her brother Joseph. !from loss of weight as a reswit of four- American Legiop

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