Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 7, 1920, Page 1

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Norwich: VOL. LXII—NO. 228 POPULATION 29,685 NORWICH BULLETIN, }UESD EPTEMBER 7, 1920 - TEN PAGES—70 COLS., . PRICE TWO CENTS. ONON OFFICALS ENDORSE AARDING'S VIEWS ON LABOR Republican Presidential Nominee Advocates a Closer F{ela- . tionship Between Employers and Employes—Behieves in Unionism, But is Opposed to Labors” Domination of Business or Government—Senator Harding Further Elaborated His Views on the League of Nations. Marion, O., Sept. 6.— views on the league of n issues we the eve of his departure for Minnesota to make his first campa 1 am in £ O in Persia, in Tu § end )n or reconstruc- |the governor's reply s through joint ad- rd voluntary arbitra- tle 1 asserted that although he Le- [efnor.to h prerequisite na eved rvion e opposed *labor's |Pre! E on of business or government.” | It is the I ree 1 lator provisions of t and declared | eating 1 . of living could be reduced only |denouncing ' rers gave homest effort in return | Which Sena nt high wage clared, advocates ews were voiced as a | Governor 1 lay celebration in a speech {Ness W . rt after the chairman of |the senator St At on republ elaborated today on [“will you recogn tween em- |external aggression— s pleas trying to elect the candi nator Harding's ,from a man in his audience. : tions and labor | “If elected president,” he was asked, ze the Irish republi favor of the application of the \ speech outside | principle of self-determination in Japan, and in Ireland,” was after several pas- ing attacks of Q tions,” he said league was advocated by the gov- is Auditorium audience as a to world re; stment. » salvation of France, Austria, England and Germany,” he declared, re- ¢’ disarmament and peace with Germany tor Harding, the governor de- n words. Cox declared that “big busi- e of ial oligarchy,” and commented separa 4 him he was (on local newspaper criticism of his attack an campaign contributions. s o o ting that the paper had excepted to yrsing his st Y made pub- | getting a little rough,” ernor hbadt |added 3 remarding | “Who is it that's squealing? The same o tonight in |crowd that's fgusht a sick man on a sic b ik rday |bed in the Wifte House for a year. This W, v A .m. former repub- | I8 not going to bea pink tea fight nor a Bey getian After his confer- | Pillow contest. I intend to deal in plain - no Mr. Wickersham | Words and no tin the meaningless ‘and n qer | aMbiguous words that have characterized hally ot | the senatorial up to the pres- ) \ ralEs he |€nt.” ¥o Candi The governor reiterated that he was W Statorien not making a partisar campaign t ke The governor was welcomed with fre- Bind quent applause during his address and pr i ot state buildings Be onfe 1 around the track ot ¢ whie v Nash., a thor the n of one spokesman.” | chestnut pa T! r y ind d that he |ernor sw eht ¥ 1y n for a new as- | Lop speed | grandstand. » further in emphasized his elie Iy wou mpos- | GOMPERS ging cond | If to any Columbus speech here the senator’s jthe Amerigz { Cox for pr to have almost n t ny r form speech- | Senator Har king nderst to feel that it ja “nice respectable x t to acvid some modification | Gompers, who ecriticiz t everything constructi Tr train, the sena-| Gompers gave tor and e party y e Marion early. omorrow HERITETERT WL HHANE o mla e b Shetidan near ¢ o, on the labor vote nson, eceneral presi- |than 1.”:sail arpen to a e 5 ohn H alL» e Powers. | ity or : | 3 St | 2 S "1 Constanti 1 P.” Ain €OX MAKES ADDRESS AT Tiles 1o everal mo Armenians French tro MINNESOTA FAIR GROUNDS | " rash, 37 m from Turl counters be rounds wh auestions were pt dowun the home stre assertion _made recently to Ses Wiltiam J. Bur - General Wood at | Pennsylvania congres |leader, that no one could “déliver” t -TAKEN BY FRE | two Turkish ench forces are meeting w ans during the past few m CONDUCTOR O’BRI Greenwich cer. in a while cheers rang from the CHAMPIONS COX FOR THE PRESIDENCY O.. Sept. 6.—In a Labor day Sarnuel Gompers. president of i Federation of Labor, today the candidacy of Governor sident. = was characterized as rited answer to an or Hard: e, Pittsburgh, man and labor 0 one knows that better d Gompe “I have no votes I control my own. That's AINT: B HAS BE CH TROOPS nople Sept. 6.—(By The A. Asia_Minor 58 , and the scene massacre of taken by held by n b il of obstinate re h nation: istance list troops. Marash has been the scene of a number of en- tween the Turks and Armen- n ILLED BY A BOSTON EXPRESS h, 6.—Frank subjects at the |O'Brien, 30, New r gr of nations | York, New rail- : here tonight. |road, was killed t hen he ored applicatidn | struck by a Bos train while ermination to | walking over a bridge in Port Chester, the latter meeting | N, to a question | house in th N. Y., on his way railraad round- is tow George H. White New Chalrman of the Demoeratic National S N T T SN A D TOOPYRIGHT HARAR & EWiNG WASN.: Committee, Labor Day Marred | _BRIEF TE Ten workmen were Killed and ten in- Jjured in the explosion of a railroad en- L] o gine at La Pallice, France. tobacco factery ‘employes in Mesico City and the federal district has end:i. Ffl.“ Of Rock in the Cave Of A Lugerne, Switzerland dispatch says, Premier Tioyd George of Great Britain Winds Under Niag.'“ Falls | will leave for London Wednesday. Killed Three Persons. Admiral Viscount Jehi owas ointed gov-:1). Buffalo, N. Y.. Sept. 6.—Three persons|-21! has wiived were killed 4nd two injured this after- : noon by a fall of rock in the Case of the| The old commercial treaties hetween Winds under o alin: Austria and Germany have been renew- The party was on one of the bridges|ed. With the addition of favorad rations when a slide of shale rock fell upon |C'ause who 1cc nt- of New Zon- Papama canal them. The bodies of the dead have not 2 been recovered. The victims were from| _Profe b} Raymond. MpFarland. of Brooklyn, Pittsburgh and Detroit. Middlebur¥ college was appointed prin- lcipal of Vermont Academy at Saxions TEN DEATHS IN COLLISION ON River, Vt. k: DENVER INTERBERBAN R. R. Denver, Colo., Sept. 6.—The death late | 2rchbishop of Pari or rev : today of two of the injured brought the)day. were celebrated in the catliedral O T O e he declared, | sages with his inquisitor and a. prelim- | toll sof casualties resulting from a head.|Saturday. baohe Ak sibilities to be statement. The reply drew loud ap- | on collision between two electric trains on g : - when the time came to frame [plause and ended interruptions. The gov- | the Denver and Interurban Railway to| Folice of Newark, N. J., are on the look- rosram . for international jernor preceded his reply With a statement | ten dead tonight. out for a new kind of rent profiteer he 1 reconstruction, he add- |that the armistice was based on Presi- | kind who accepts deposits but has noth- pe 3 hation to lead {dent Wilson's “fourteen points,” including { AT FOREST HILLS, N. T. |ing to rent that of self-determination, and that Arti- 70 AVEAmORS vEns Erirnn i s labor he advo- |cle Ten would protect weak nations from e The Tennessee house of representatives Forest Hills. N. Y., Sept. 6.—Two avi-|rejected the biil r quiring women to pay (September 24. The aviators had been circling over the courts when their engine sudde ped, and the plane dropped, to the ground just stop-| Rear Admiral Bristdl. American com- nging in-{missioner at Constantinople. reported railroad | that there was no fighting in progress at tracks from .the tennis courts. _ Adana, Anatolia. The bodies were ident as Lleuten- ant J. H. Grier, U. S. N,, and Sergeant axe of the army, both stationed at of the army. Th Miss Cecclin Frances Mullen of Wal- tham was married to Colonel Edward L left the field| [ogan, commander of the 101st infantry this afternoon to take aerial PhOtORTADhS | ramiment overses: of the tennis matches. Sergeant Saxes| body was pinned down by the wrecl and it required some time to remov France has begun shipments of gold to It New York to provide partial payment of her share of tha Franco- loan ma- LOED MAYOR MACSWINEX | turing in October. IS GROWING WEAKER | — A new wage schedule affecting about London, Sept. 6.—At nine o'clock to-|75.000 navy yard employes probably will night Lord Mayor MacSwiney was still|be put into effect on the first pay day living, but his weakne s increasing|after September 1 and the prison doctor suggested that h be not aliow of his ters spent se today. On leaving this gver said : “Our only hope now is in for American financiers to w money from Engl ently labor in “Eng] for sus. On leaving the prison tonight Father| The because of the| Two clashes at the polls at the re- lis wife and; publican women's county primary in Kan- in the prison|sas C Mo., furnished amusement for iing, his wife| male poiltics there. America, and| Whiskey valued at approximately thdraw their{$250,000 was s h securities. Appar-|while it was geing illegally transported nd can do nothing|through New England industrial situation in Milan has Dominic reported: “Lord Mayor Mac-|become more serious and no steps have Swiney is fading away. The alteration|been taken to evacuate factories occupied in his countenance since my visit this by the workers in Turin. The American Knights of Columbus, HUNGER STRIKERS DESIRE TO who are touring Europe. on their arrival BE ALLOWED TO DIE IN PEACE|at Lourdes yesterday, visited the famou: . S, grotto and were welcomed by the bishop pt. 6.—The deputy lord may-|of Lourdes. or Corq today said the eleven hunge * strikers in the Cork jail, who are on f Government offices were closed and th day of their abstinence from food,|business generai was, suspended in had expressed the wish that th no more its by the p They desired to be allowed peace, they afternoon was ver; noticeable Cork, S to die 1 on doator. lul:a_\- The palfce annous ed that 100,000 po- Titical weré living in Viennw. NCE ~ The majority of them are Ukranians and VARIOUS PARTS OF IRELAND |Russians, with many Italians and Hun- garians vioL Belfast, §ept. 6.—A military lorry con- ———— taining an armed escort which broke| Larceny of $10,000 worth of furs, which down today near Ballymaykéra, Coun-|had been stripped from ma ty Cork, was atiacked by a large body|windows of Gilchrist cor of civilians. The escort, however, drove|ment store, Boston, was off the assailants, two of whom were kill- | four men. > wounded. The military suf- ins in any's depart- ged 23ainst ed and thre fered no casualties. . | Jack Johnson is receiving no liberty at the Kane County jail at Geneva, T, Blew Tp Munitions Car. Sheriff Claude Poole declared in a de { Berlin. Se —A train, loaded with|Of charges that the former heivyw | food and muntiigus for the inter-allied |Champion having too much freedom. N e At Brtart oy el WaS| qWe Scandinavian premiers at a recent the munitions car, which they blew up |JOneS navigation act and will seék m- They permitted the remainder of the trar | formation from Washington as to the ef- to proceed. The minister of Frankfert|feCt Of the measure on Scandinavian discharged the guilty persons. shipping. | = imposed by Finland against the e T g . |tence imposed by Finland ag "\D“d“f\- :O‘l" f; r'\sch"gdaof Jon dis-| Ajand Island delegation leaders, Sund- [ I’,Pi'co!»ecgan:\- Pegdy UPON|klom and Bjoerkman, who were impi i bhE e e if‘“‘“"if‘r‘fg- oned at hard labor for eighteen months lice barracks, held up the police witn|with 1058 of clvic rights for three years revolvers, locked them in an outhouse,|O" the charge of treason captured all their arms_and burned the|.,. By T oo 2 barracks. Several of the police were at-| 123000 BOLSHEVIK SOLDIERS | tending_church services at the time and bl oD EREA detachment of the raiders fastened the “The Soet lloos IeRn e i Paris, Sept. 6.—The foreign office dn- ol ':1:"r;r:j‘rnln”aqns‘l::c:o?‘i‘;za:;‘?;In?uncetl today that 128,000 Russian so. idnin viet soldiers are refugees in East Prus 5 sEies sia. The allies are Hot satisfied with the = Stath conditions of their internment, the an- Donsral Coastgstation A ttacuiil nouncement said, and have asked {heir Donegal, Ireland, Sept. 6.—A large|ambassadors in Berlin to demand that party of men, armed with rifles and|Germany intern the Russians according fbombs, made a night attack last night|io international usage. The allies par- upon the Fanad head coast guard station | tjcularly demand that the refugees be on the Donegal coast, overcame the gar- |disarmed and kept within internment rison and carried off all its firearms, | camps gquipment and ammunition. The fight| The American commissioner in Ber- between the garrison and the r ; : lin has bee asked to join the allied pro- Ested by ol Tiouss test and has asked Washington® for in- = truttions. One of complaints of the o e struttions. One of the complaints of th allies is that several hundred soviet sol- UPRISING IN SIBERIA |diers left East Prussia, attacked the = fortress of Ossowiec and then returned Harbin, Manchuria, Sept. 6.—(By The {to internment. A. P)—The Soviet are rushing all available East Siberian troops, largely Austro-German war prisoners, to west BELIEVE SUBMARINE S-5 Siberia in an effort to quell the grow- O RENNALY B SALVAGED, ing uprisings. The Petrograd _ and s fee=—i o Perm districts likewise, are. mobilizing | ,_Washington, Sept. 6—Naval officers for Siberia, according fo reports receiv. |here expressed the opinion today that | ed here. The defection has spread to the | e suzmken submarine S-5 could readily Ural and Orenburg Cossacks and tne [0° salvaged. ~The boat from which 3% southern Urals who have joined the Bash- [ M€% ere Tescted [8 at ths DOUom & 3 aad artacs) 3 Gepth of 130 fest, off the Delaware e : Cnkolaievek. in | Capes with only a floating buoy to in- s;r,,},‘:mm;;f.f‘tc':n - s;‘,\r';};‘(’l'ag“k'mr“; dicate the spot. The submarine tender alone the Volga because of lack of har-|BeAVer s staling by, o o o vests, harsh requisitions and mobiliza- de shatueisn. oh, ¥ i tions, submarine broke away when an attempt Reports regarding the crop failures in|Was being made to tow her to shallow Russia forecast a worse famine than that| Water Saturday, has returned to Hamp- ctiiton ton Roads. i 14TH BOLSHEVIST ARMY s IR LEING - DRIVEN ACROSS THE DNIEPER N O L RN Sebastopol, Crimea, Sept. 5.—(By The | Constantinople Sept. 6.—A Greek di- A. P.) The fourteenth bolshevist army |Viison is being landed on the Bigck Sea, has been driven aeross the Dnieper af- |DProbably at Ineboli, Asia Minor,¥for An- ter suffering severe losses as a result | 8ora, and possibly will establish a Pon- of General Wrangel's successful coun- {tus republic. The Greeks also are re- ter-attacks. ‘The bolshevist forces, com- |lieving the British at Ismid. manded by Commissary Eideman, wcre Gecimated and forced to take cover un- Pontus is in the northeastern corner der their big guns Tacross the river. of Asia Minor bordering on the Black The bolshevists are making a stronger | Sea. The Kingdom of Pontus was found- stand on the Taman peninsula, between |ed about the beginning of the third cen- the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov |tury. where an expedition landed by General ‘Wrangel was driven out. M. G. HAIGHT, SHEEP RAISER, Lo, <o FOUND DEAD IN WOODS SUGAR PLANTATION WAS PROFITABLE INVESTMENT | Springfield, Mass., Sept. 6.—Monroe G. Haight, 41, proprietor of Elkauah Farms, Napoleonville, La., Sept. 6.—One ex- |who was endeavoring by his own demon- ample of the effect of the increased |stration and the development of @ success- price of sugar was shown here. recently |ful breed to revive sheep raising in New when the Himalaya company's planta-|England, was found dead in the woods tion holdings were sold for $350,000. |early this morning 2tout half a mile from The plantation was bought 11 years agoe |his home in a remote portion of the town for $20,000. of Blandford. INTE Funeral services for Cardinal Amette, | = who died®last Sun- | nce as Russia, has vield v a new| a i ators were killed this afternon when a|poll taxes before being eligible to vote|#2C% 2% E‘.‘:;,,,‘,‘; st Moo \ | naval seaplanc in Which they were fying |in Tennessec. N . . nrouEnt e 3 crashed into the ground a short ais- e RSt RHORG of psece 70 miilions g | London, Sept tance from the Forest Hills tennis courts| Germany has asked the allies to post-{ oo Toundations of peace to 470 mifors Lroieln the - he | ing _statements | and within view of the crowd watching|pone the reparations conference arranged | 12 failed before the Fussial BrONOTC Sujias, Is faks n Poiand the National All Comers Tennis Title|at Spa to be held in Geneva besinming |, & Hioicion of upimion Amons free peo- us_comy tournament. e zed during last week | | obre v he liberal con- be paid | Washington for the observance of Labor,ODregon. a candidate of 4 ers. The railroad workers uncoupled|Tieeting in Copemhagen ~discussed * the | Burned Police Barracks, The Swedish press denounced the sen- | et FOLES HAVE SENT PROTEST AR 70 THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS pulse of Germans at Figst Battle of the Marne. Acainst Attacks by Lithuanian Troops—Point Out That & N Point. N T AR e State of War Does Not Exist Between the Two Coun- and French dignitaries celebrated Laf- 2 2 A avette-Marne day here foday commen- tries—Official Announcement Says Russian Bolshe- orating the birth of Lafayette and the decisive repulse of the Germans out- viki Are Supporting the Lithuanians—Hostilities Indi- side of Paris at the first batde of the 5 2 : 5 i Marne . cate Serious Complications in the Peace Negotiations. Messages from the premier of France and the great marshals of French armies| yyu | acclaiming the day were read. Herbert| prog, Hoover spoke in the name of Liberty and aw, to t attacks by Lithu Poles north of St by the Po £ e of ons agains troops u; Lithuan! in repl the Polist f 1 cross The A. P.)[army con x| Col. Roosevelt. M. 1 > withon pecial envoy of the Fren out that a e L o nance, spoke for his country-|petween t. the pengridft] ome 180 million people are still at|fithuanians % g | Lt war and no peace can come to the world|puied region in hesstr Poki S s uftil there have been cstabiished in Ru and Turkey these institutions which give liberty and justice to their own peoples, said Mr. Hoover. So far liberty, in a population of so great ignor- earing down statement rted- by tiations, a Pofand to reac Russian soviet the northeast ples in their failure to recognize that Rus- sia must find herself—that this finding} could mot come through military - pres-| sure. Today Russia is a menace, it im- boundari country without ha an unde poses upon us caution in readiness for|jno o huania 1 that tyranny fall it is,| 1n qiplomatic circles a menace to free DMa-|yithyania generaliy fave | lations with Polar _— Recently | MERIDEN WOMAN DIES she desired 1o e OF AUTO INJURIES ”.""p of ailfer e e Poles . 6.—Mrs Conn bid the use of the Grodn W. H of 70 Lindsey street, Mer-|o etrtating Do den when the au-lthdaniike desert. they tomobi ding skidded | soviet troops who have 2 jon Ma an embank-|thuania from Pruss ment and turned turtle. An ambulance took her to Hartford, but she died be- = 2 % fore reachinw the hospital. Her hus- 5 )and who was driving the mach'ne, and 4 £ BALLOON RACE EXPECTED a son and a daukhter-in-law, excaped PROBE RESUMES BODAY B ey e St CAMPAIGN EXPE wihout injury i3 ptember 6.—Senatorial in- 6.—T STRIEE SYMEATHIZERS IN g { presidential campaign ex- i to TRIRE X2 penditures will be resumed r BROOKLYN CLASH WITH POLICE | o= (0" 7 6 P sentative Govye New York, Sept. 6.—Brooklyn Rapid| ;..."C0 T -Cox, C ‘u Transit Company strike svmpathizers, re-{ " Moore last Thursd nr set. mew ! turning from a.Labor Day celebration in Foss dan T annou . | Prospect Park, Brooklyn late today at- SR “would prove th on the | tempted to rush a car manned by strike- rs had openly boasted alioons | breakers ad clashed with the police. One . devis; n ¢ { striker was shot, arrested and taken to h would 1 a hospit; nd several were injffured. "']"\ljn-‘x or :(.\ o | Two hundred ‘police reserves were rus As a_specific ed to the scene and quickly Wdispersed|0f money being the crowd, using theim—night stick can d, Mr Thirteen arrests were made. wou | “one " ré 0 LECTED | $100,000 PRE EN F-MEXICO | JUora P el Mr. Upham in b Mexico City, Sept. 6.—General Alvarocommittee was only | GEN. OBRE More than a do: stitutionalist party, won a decisive vic- |Subpoended t tory in;the elections held throughout thelof documen Tepublic .yesterday for the warpose ofihands of the coinmittee choosinz @ president of the Mexican re-! Repub | public, according to seattering unofficial | somnye: UNDER NEW KULES IN MONTEVIDEO can leaders toj on’ th ment Montevid advices. His opponent was Alfredo RO-ilast night by Governor Cox okt i o —Julie bles Dominguez, who was nominated by |asked if the republicans R SRS the national republican party. G iancoaterenns Hald : v ugh | "The vote is reported to have bgen ex-|which Chicago coal dealers 3 1 Ja. ely light, and no- reports of disor-|eq $50.000. e v have been received ISt Sineatin Bl e it s o] B == day denied p i | was 1 Sesa BRYAN MORE INTERESTED also sayinz beeu [ : IN PROHIBITION TH2X POLITICS “'lp-"‘=1rvu to round 1 | BEVOLUTION IN SERBIA — dealers pr. money . b i Rike oot. 6—W. J. Bryan,|campaign fund obtatned $18.000 to | REPORTED IMMINENT jarriving shington _today for his|$20,000 in this way, he added, Mr. Dear-| . o ST | first visit since the national conventions,ing €aid he turn s monty over to Mr. | Ganrtra . 86— indicated that he was going to be far!Upham. but latter today to discuss | rom more interested during the presidential|the matter {campaign in strengthening the cause of prohibition than in fighting for the elec-| TRADES UNION CONGRE: tion of any candidate. Mr. Bryan refused to talk of the con- {est for the presidency, adding. however, hat he saw no inconsistency in his atti- tude. AT PORTSMOUTH, ENG. Trades Union| WRANGEL HAS EVACUATED 950 THE TAMAN PENINSULA 10,000 WORKERS IN LABOR DAY i pr. iresl PARADE 1IN BROOKLYN yment's y New York, Sept, 6.—The principal La- s | Sk bor day celebration in Greater New OBITUARY. et piee S { York was held in Brooklyn, where ti : r | was a_parade of more than 10,000 wor ers. Striking employes of the Bro =Hew pid Transit Company were given a |liarley Moore: Ghiar 1 place of honor in the line. %v"_‘_ ew York, New The parade terminated at the Latay-|ford railroad ng exye William Harley Moore. William | EDITOR SYRACUSE POST STANDARD DIES SUDDENLY w Haven, Conn., Sen ette statte in Prospect Park, where ap-|omploy of that cor enly | Yorke propriate exercises were held. Franklin foahams heks 60. The |cu | D. Roosevelt tvas the principal speaker.|2%% RSB sS.. t0-|among newspapermen in ti The socialits stlected the day forjday Where ice teld tomor- | sudd; Rt following holding a series of protest meetings. |TO%- The wil t lacute indigestion. SUDDAY PASSED WITHOCUT DISTURBANCES IN ITALY Newton D. Baker me, Sept. 6.—The newspapers to- | t Sunday passed everywhere without disturbances in Italy. The Epoca reports that at Turin two airmen drop- ped socialist leaflets over the city, but at on pearance of government airplanes they fled. The police during the day took ener- measure to protect s in Turin and placed about te roval palace there. that the workers at Genoa are tiring of the struggle. PLYMOUTH, ENG., CELEBRATES SAILING OF THE PILGRIMS Plymouth, England, Sept. 6 —(By The A. P.) Three hundred years of his- tory were recounted here today in speech, song and symbol. Never have the people of the west country of Eng- land, say old residents, turned out as they did today for the’ ceremonies con- nected with the 300th anniversary of the sailing . of the Pilgrim Fathers. The keynote of each address was Anglo- American friendship. ANTHRACITE MINERS ARE TO RESUME WORK TODAY Scranton, Pa, Sept. 6.—Excepting the Pennsylvania Coal Company’s mines in the Pittston district, where insurgent miners have been on sirike since early in July against the contract miner sys- tem, all the anthracite mines in the Lackawanna and Wyoming valleys are expected to resume work tomorrow. It also anticipated that the complete suspension in the Lehigh and Schuylkill regions will come to an end. ARMY AVIATOR KILLED WHILE PESRFORMING ACROBATICS Detrolt, Sept. 6.—Msron L. Tinney. former army aviator. fell 500 feet to his death late today while performing aerjal acrobatics at the state fair grounds. In an attempt to“catch a rope ladder on which, he wad o tclimb from one plans to another flving above him, he missed his hold 2nd plunged from the top of his machine. A crowd &stimated at Epssly 200,000 witnessed the accida=a-

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