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. DNEMPLOVNENT IGREASES *ssetowbckar e e et o FORMER GERNUANCHANCELLOR N DECLNE N PROESe S5 BETHMANN HOLLHES S DEA Rouwas, X, X, WE 2 —me min T i o Originator of the Famous Reference to Treaty With Belgium ing navy huafln;tA-;s‘z:!_F;::gg_‘og Sepiles B F : ; as a “Scrap of Paper’—Had Asked the Allied and As- e B e 2 i Foe gy st | reachE & totat ¢ 3108 10 ke yeus SoTH : a “ sociated Powers to Place Him on Trial Instead of the : 5 w S, 1 as ‘a8 | trading llrt:t:t:::mg and there were 30 resulting fatalities,’ © Formes Kai -=WuForced0flof0fiulylfln' arists Headed by Hindenburg and Ludendorff. Berlin, Jan. 2~Dr. Theobald - Von ) flank, which would prove fatai. ‘ Marshal Foch has submitted. ¢ the N. Y., Jan. 2—Moose Factory, where [ CoUncil of ambassadors his report on -the ;a’ b:‘no;y:. landel, 'is locatec vn James m‘ffi by Germany. toward :disarmas 46 per /cznt. to 75 per cent. of normal|and is .huuwu:u;t d!l::‘n:fl;vn r\i‘:fi - Bethmann-Hollweg, former German “Sp_we were forced to disregard the , | '9hd - brought accompanying unemploy- ‘dir line. Th x;hce The wreck of the . Danish ‘freightes perial chancelior, died last night after a |protests of the Luxembourg and Belgium c . gl Fiens ihe, sitpinkage af.cdmmauds. the and outpory of the | Kentucky on Duncansby-Head in the 1 . brief iliness on his estate at Hohenfinow, | governments. We shall try to make good pldyment, accompanied the country's con-| g g . eported, also was rapdeeiblé for mpaay; ney Islands was reported to the m:’z Elaborate preparations, had near Berlin. the injustice we have committed ag.8000 tinted ¢ss i business readjustment| wage cuts rtunning as high as 25 per| News of the aeromauts safety way re- | the vessel [ , Yo Pt N Was Stuar: | i GEURTIY SIS Boa repaen. Aabing Debémber, atcording to the month-| cent. in- some lines. celved in the following telegram from : e ] :’;’g" s 3 g : D S e e . Ty I Sevle?. ot - Géndral busitens andSOuk| - FANkiog power, ob/tie otter hiand, was| them- from Mattice; Optatio: falf of the city of East Chizaxo, Tndl.| ily, but contracted a cold which develc 41 | July 14, 1917: He was succeeded in the Eonditions - fesa€d. tonight by the| Well ‘maintained, “the board :_ asserted,| “Driven by storm Monday 12-13,. west|20d. Was under quarantine as the result into acute pneumonia. His condition ue- | office ¥y Dr. George Michaelis, an ap- 1 rescrve board. pormal agedit accommodation. extended, by’ north, ‘at lower Hudson Bay; forced | Of an epidesiic of smiallpox Seventy-fout came steadily worse 52 his private phy. | pointes of the former kaiser. 1t was said i ook e h”“’:&‘ S’m"?m‘: g s Byl e o e it ‘"",}“ gen miléy | OEH WeFe repurted. 2 a ey, | sician was summoned from Berlin but the | that Vo 'Bethmann-Hollweg was foreed piced at 8 1-2 per cent. by 5 3 nor! y east of Mous: Faeiory, On- A — it s arrival Podrd whieh added the observation that| borrowing in part liquidated. ; tarlo. ~Latitude 5150; longiture $1.00.| A penal statute Por €he onfercsment of ix o] ot 2t et Rt e | At At . et asa thé decresse in_prices wus malnly con-| Stronger bankiag cinditions weres re-|Lost in forest fout days. Crew safe it |the Woman's suffrage amendment;ts the s W, forces were fired oh bY | ness, dying late Saturday might, Latistork. ity bossuse ot 5t fined o commodities which had shown & | ported by the Boston district where the| Hudson Company pest. . Wil leave on | constitution is proposed in bmmzdu whil gting men wanted. " His wife dlea in 1514 and he lost his | of r"m’«'fl, t and_his -Amn:: i l?n- previously rathier than an exten- | liquidation in commodities, while drastic,| first avsilable means uf “traisportation |ed by Jones, .., 'e?: w|They returned ‘thefire, ‘Killing one and |eidest son In the w bas s e s 8 sion of price cutting to_other -jndus- -sa1d to have been on the whole or- BT Y 2 ; eldest s0n in the war. o r1y. h to rairoad, which Is by dog-sled, and ® % He is survived by | that the German invasion of Belgium was The decline was reported as most marks| ' Lasier_money rates were reported' by WIR OGN ANopl Wne dAyk | Tgeviky. Cas fl'"'fl-(lm pre . : | wounéling ‘two who were captured and |a daughter, Countess Zech, wife of the |unjust. The former chancellor had en s Rere Stonacy D g TSNS S | e e T, e o e Ao lucts, -textiles, | the Neéw Yorw district together with the et N cotton mill co; of 2 E unich, a son, Felix, a student at |ing 'or the war, ep- RIS Ciier o s auagekal i g Bl el degiines of the - present| TR A58 feft here wiurtly after Kall River amounted o §1,532,035, an |MBS. DE VALERA DECLINES 7. |Bertin Beacing 18 1910 mad 1917, il B o Jutts, white coal, petroliuh, Fasoline, pa: | movement, reduced manufacturing volume | 2008 Monday, December 13, No definite | average of 2.7 per,centy - = }:1 . < TO'ANSWER QUESTIONS | On the last of his frequent visits to | two years previous he had frequently de- ¢, brick and cement remain largely un-| an dexport trade,-but an adeguate supply | {5+ ‘.""nw blow'; m'rm‘:m o ‘“:“_ ¢ — v S el : a 3 ions were peport:| of baiikiny accommodations. O tas o I e da Win] . B €. Whryant; drotostiy; g’ *~ Dublin; Jan. 2.—Mrs. De Valera refuses | mann-Hollweg was seen walking in Unter | ble. e sarket in the latter| The Philadelphia district: reported lit-| & 8 EHCRE SOMENTers 1 o8 baloon | Y3le school of forestry, has been re-elects 6 say whether her husband, Eamonn De | Den Linden, the onck stalwart figure | Dr. Von Bethmann-Hollweg received sragn. of -cwnmodities, the board sald,|tle change in corditions from the pre-|!Ne excepton of A rPport that the 1a1oon | g president of the Soclety ‘of -Amerioan | VAlera, Whose whereabouts s a.matter |was no longer Wpright. ' Few . pedestrians | prominent attention throughout the world Tut eontract prices agpeared to ‘be.at| c-ding month, manufacturing and whole-| WS seen passing over Wells, New Yo ‘ Berlin, ia mid-November, Dr. Von Beth- |clared that England alone was i Foresters for the year 1921. 3 7 joned by | recognized in the stooped figure and care- | In June, 1919, when he formally ashed the meme level as in earlier ‘moriths. sale lines beng -uiet while the retail|late that samt right, no definite word e’ o N et she merely | worn face the former imperial chancellor. | the allied and associated powers to place ueed business activity, the board|tiade Wwak destribed la g for Die-§ Wasirecalsed ere of 1hs progrem,0f the )y o i < X 3 head. Von Betimann-Hollweg recently con- | him on tria linstead of the former kaisnr. stated, cut operatigns in many lines from | cember of 131! it e communistic. propagaade T reesed _ and| “ul sgreed when I left New York.” she |cluded the revision of the final proofs of | The supreme council decided to ignore The ‘ballogn cacricd 2 crew of three Diobaganda vreventsd n|erplained, “mot to 82y anything to news- |the second, volume of his War diary, | request. #8 was often mentioned _as men’ Lieutenant Walter Hinton. of | Jusoslavia unt "‘.‘e’:m‘;“ Dbeen tuken in [Gzpermen= - y which is announced for early publication. | &mong those who might be tried by the CONGRESS IS CONFRONTED BY Belle. Harbor. New York, a_plot under | 1] 7 _ Asked it it was true that Professor De N allies for political offenses in connection T : with 3 SR e g1 ; y Among the latest prominent activities | With the origin of the war. . purchased, the : of Dr. ¥on Bethmann-Hollweg in interna- | His national activities before 191§ were :vl::llr:omu llfl:lt the t ning 9"-1% “and r not answer that question.” : - X e the two papers with the| The corresponde: De Gazette as its evening edition. - : - e EXCHANGE OF PRISONERS : n 4 2 he NC- BEING MADE AT FIUME LA “”y"’“", PROGRAM L Commander Albert C. Read, on the B at 's trans-Atlantic ‘flight. was in cg\rz:. 5 o 5 Ll His companions weref Lieutenants Step Jan. 2 (By the A. P.).— £ R P m e o “of _prison: Wasbington, Jan.' 2.—Congress tomor-|en A. Farrell, a line officer, of this city, tghting B ems bl \0tat 3 row_will start its New Year's work with|and Louis A. Kloor..Jr.. of New Orleans. \ard being Surrende; % and 100 len a‘formidable programme for the fifty-two | naval re erve force. pilot. Derdr ‘y working days remaining before sine dle| The three offic ‘were supplied with # y b adjournment, March 3. Congestion, as{normal rations for three days. which it tional affairs and n" pational life | marked by his strong opposition to demso- ‘'was hie testimony in 1919 as a witness | cratization of Germany. At times he was fValera in a big red stucco house among |before national assembly committees in- | sharply outspoken in his defiance of so- e e the he vijlas, occupied by retired |vestignting responsibility for the war. | clalism and he rejected any move to make oo 0. Tussall, an’ o . megnenger, | Dublfp merchants in). the fashionable | His testimony brought out that he had |hiself and the ether German ministers as burned to death in a Wiich de- | sammer seaside 'resort, Greystones, twen- |originally opposed the subarine warfare | responsible to the reichstag. In the early ty ‘mles. from Dublin. and bad issued warnings not to under- | stages of the war, however, he became She had just returned from a walk with |estimate America’s strength in the con- | known as a_moderate. Late in 1919 re- S 3 -+, [#1x ehildren and ared to be in radi- | flict. ports from Geneva sald he was credited 16 ified man catersd she. Iee- ant spirits, indleating that she felt no | One of the most famous utterances dur- | in diplomatic circles there as being at the pies it Springfield, Tenn., and. mak- | anxiety fof her husband's 'safety. She |ing the war was that concerning “a scrap | bottom of a monarchist movement in fa- ing his way unobserved tu tin bank vault, e helped nignself to §50,000 in bonds. - usual, is on the senate side, house ac-|was sald would serve them for ten days e o cmat ’,‘,:‘. e atges | tivitics belng concentrated on - comple| it an émergency. They had far Iincd “detail of seldiers shoyld their ser-| tiOn Of \the annual appropriation bills,|garments and electrically heated warin-rs (icé be required. with the sundry c./il budget under- de-|to make their voyage more comortable. provisional government of Fiume | P3¢ and the post ofiice bill on the wait-| = Ninefy-3.x hours after the bafon's de- Yegun the disarmament of. the legionaries | "5 1St A parturs. when feats were first fele for 160ky, and the regutars will'enter the city | . [oTif Tevision i o be an jmportant!the rafety of'the aronauts. wirexss sta- + todight to collect the arms taken from | Mot eN\fhis week before hoth senate and|tio.s and furest rngers in morthora New thessoldicis. All the poet's shipse will ouse. Senator Penrose. of Pennsylva-| York atd southeastern Canada (were potf- ieage the harbor of Fiutie tomorrow, 'dhdt "mli“'t;h"‘";':n““lglrmr:ml:h:hfinanc;‘com- fied to be.on the lookout for th: ba- 1 i . 2 e senate to-|Joon. < ”:« '.?2‘;1‘3."&‘:,,.".’3&‘?‘11&'.?,“:3: morrow after a year's absence, and with| . A few dave later twn army irolanss m-.. in the city will be turned over :""'“}""" of his committee begin consid-|ware sent from Mitchel” Field to Al- Aegionarics will begin 10 | 5r romerls by piE iy, taTUT bill pass-|hary to bewin an meromantical s€ireh ute the {owh on-Jan. 5, and will travel | 20, (SR b7, [he house. Heacings.on|over”the Adirofdack. mountaius. One of stroyed the Mansion hotel, Fort Worth, Tex,, a landmgrk of frontier days. . #poke _glowingly of her all too short visit | of papcr” as regarded the treaty guaran- | vor of both the Fohénsollerns and Haps- to the United States, a's she described it, | teeing the neutrality of Belgium. This | burgs, the nucleus of which was said to I i Lo |saying: _became quickly attached to |trenty was so characterized by Von {be under way in Switzerland. On several arked progress in the develofmint ptlyour people. I have never met any peo- | Bethmann-Hollwez during an interview |occasions during his tenure of offige Dr. the American dye industry is gnown o e a report made public by the tore generous and kindly. Please re- | which the then chaneellor had with Sir | Von Bethmann-Heliweg threw out peace States tariff commissfon. .» member me to the home of the free’ Edward Goschen, the British ambassador | feelers, particularly in 1916, when he in- g 4 X v iflxfiv’v‘ tion, the chancellor expressed his inabil- |of his overtures, contained only the The League of Women Vfln“vflgld- the 0 ity to understand Great Britain's attitude | vaguest indications regarding the AClev: i : sy cm“‘," & . hefs With regard'to Germany's attack on Bel- | attitude on & peace settiement and they - *‘”_. of three hundred each on special S'enerz! tariff revision planned during the tha machines ne twith a mishan an th annual comvention - in arayeting ) Seopbies, R0t 18 il G A : q ghum. e ch 4 will begin| piont from Athany to Giens Falla thor [APFI 11106, o 500 oy 3 . eamma the’ Sion ‘Fein 1oli- | ~ 3 found the ehancellor very much agl |ure of his peace efforts in December, 1916, ? T eculars Who — will -~ conduct -thE | raii oYy betore lhi ouse ways and | remsmosed: base t of operations, anl. t St © 753 £ ;3*,'1& ] tated.” sald Sir Edward afterwards, writ- | thaf he endorsed unlimited submarine itiaion %, 8¢ . DrAnmingio’s * - armed.| mer edmmitted and continue indefin- other .ot w=a” the seareh aload butf, Tobert /Geatyas:” N miy - have X ng of the interview. “His excellency at|warfare will-work s quickly as npessible; Aelr. A e DR 2 withaut sicegss . - L e"de-':(lv"“‘"“ """“M K .. a onee began a harangue which lasted | Dr. Von mat n-Hollweg was bern - { ‘establis!: the independent. Staie | coe oy Tate tareign relations commil-| " (ymadion offinn's wan were wopaise| SENS of Theodors 2 fnd s, b, still- | great pow ahout twenty minutes. Fle maid the-step | in 1356, the son of Maibias A. Ven Beth- &t once. The Provisional gov- | (o cahsider Micomaiioinl | M0 O nf - the sBiehtisficss advanced. the. ihe : . though taken. by his majesty’s government was|mano-Hollweg, professor of eivil law at et 18 expee <4 10"hold a new elec- | will take up i %, ‘worl— | Botn, &nd member of the e s { the afronguts tetrible to a degree. Just for a o ag s%on 3§ has been testortd | Borar, ’:’u the gesolution. of Senrtor! ramsts #étion ard Drobabiy would make ‘neutrality’—a word which in war g1e |Jewish banking Von Bethmana Iéglona Hfave left the # . 1daho, proposing a re-| guate way to-a lumber camp. or trading 41y {had so often been disregarded—just fur a |of Frankfort He was educated st the ‘post. i s quest upon th4 président to initiate ne- ‘Scrap of paper—Oreat Britain was going | Pfofta gymnasium and at the universities still isclated from f rising ; p of pa dpd .y.."m,u_'_.._r:{ s .';:eu:.mfi,. Eotiations withf Great Britain-and Japan 10 make war on a Kindred nation, which | of Strasbutk, Leipsic and Berlin. Enter- ik closedt wurséiilance on those. trying B ot onent for & Sy, per st desired nothing more than to be friends |ing the Administrative service 1o nued to deny |to Germany. Speaking with great irrita- | vited the allies to enter negotiations. All s o g in'naval building for a term of years | BISHOP LAWEENCE PAYS e A o AT ; with her.” 1882, he to the position_of president SRUOE A Rabator et & sy IR 10 CARPINAL GREROND 1 e oites : | 3 - . Sir Fdward renlied fn efect that he un- | of the p of Brandenburg in 167 » = Aid o # 3 ., at, i to com- | In TRANSPORT WORKERS OF - . | ontana, proposiiy that the president be| oston Jan.,2.—A glowing tribute to ,‘.::?3 &".‘;521:‘.‘:‘1‘:‘.’.’;.!?‘%.“ K.fo:-: "' LONDON TO AMALGAMATE |25ked to-appoint an American represents- |Cardinal Gibbons and & Warning to re- Pritain attached importance to the “serap - = tive to meet with the disarmament com-|formers to cepe with present day prob- 2 of paver” because it bore her signature |and vice president of the Prussian minis- lLonden, Jan. 2—Uncnimous support of Q::&; "Jf{ «her 1\-;;"“‘:! ;2 mmfx’xl Senator | lems in = -practical ahd )mmyhlc fashion At ) A as well a8 that of Germany. try of state, of which the chancellor was a2 preject to amalgamate ail the efent ; * ek, of o ng demo- contatned in the New Year's mes- & George, M in 1 2 % 2 succeed Prince V' - njins of mé‘wnrk,n_em;fi; the? >rat on the committee, ask to have :’:gr: defivw by Bishop William Law- | NOuse of commons said hmwk Mgwfl the fact immedi- “Our troops have occupied Luxembourg | president. He ed 'on Buye- . Aréaty of - men into orie buge orwmzation |enator Walsh appear béfore the com-|rence, Episcopal, at St. Paul's cathedra) | P38ty action in nitering oF render 5 S gl i e L K e g A g i e LWoted in a res.iuion adopted to--littee. Démocrats . are disposed to fa- 2 Sevres In favor of the Turks, as ig: n ; ; . today. - urks, as dgminst ug. 4. 1914 “That is contrary to inter- | Following his retirement from office. day at a me 4 “”o"'l ‘,“,; sinntohr }ngushs ap, but have not! +The idea that supreme Christiane must | the Greeks. - A :u?on-l law. We know, however, that |Dr. Von Bethmann Mollweg took up his of the transport workers in Lendor : / | (10 o4 hostilities - to of Senator|pe Puritanical-and supremely serious, an- only ¢ Mt ¥ 2 Tt s aleo ‘forbidden France was ready to invade Belgium. |residence at Hohenfinow, the estate mear SRS T were TR LT tagonising and stirring\ up things, s | = ORL wo bids were submified tor the hers S - » ing| France could wait; we could not. as|Eberswalde, twenty-seven miles north of Open hearifizs by the committee are|wrong” said Bishop Lawremce. “Christ | PUIChase of the comfortable, - six-rcom ekl any. way, providing | 0 ce could invade our ~lower Rhine ' Berlin, where his death occurred. fot cnrtempiated and early action i8 ex-Lwon nis way full of trutl and grace. Let | iEhthouse keeper's dwelling that. perches | them. £004, “clothing, . ¥¥iicles. or pesteda s et 7 us work out our Christian problems in |9 F4€ Tlock at the entrancs ‘o Nahant . The, ordet is f“““.:“""’:i - ( merkeney iminigration legislation 18| humble, impersonal acts” : v, Mass, X T s o D ey s T st | L ABOR. WEN FROTEST THE o be taken up te ;:!ero\vhll)y m‘ senate| Referring to the illness of Cardimal{ .. s g s avy e b ;"{‘mm o testdela: TRADE 4 into small unions when the virtually, a1 Homigration Tor o montar | . Fle represents a great Christian chupeh | o Migleter, Torelie, the 4 Colby, | altsrnatiye, the notice states, adding that| New York, Jan. 2.—Protests against| New York Jan. 2 _Domestic exports were banded into a single great|gwme’ committee has a lons et of wit.|2Rd has s e = for | spent Sundax .quietly at his hote) i|an Attitude of .neutrality inconsistent | the trade blockade of Russia, the depor.|valued at §3,119,580,884 flowed through Bation. Ernest Bevins, of the | yecles. but plans to comiade. 15 heae ma‘:hum\_ t;o&ghmllb )ealm; do_ sreat | pienos Aires, | with with the_ position of .the_locality is | tation of Ludwig C. A. K. Martens, “wo- | the report of New York during the past maion. said the estimated | {ngy within a week or teh daye. It Fas | yan, Pty national and interna REY.L Pt g { punishable it declares that persons who | viet ‘ambassador” to the United States|Year bound for foreign markets. During P of the mew amalgamatiof | pending several' bills to establish per- |of senes ud trite. fie pas amer il | No more Sunday famerals wifl s hetd| 40 not do their utmost to prevent dam-,and a demand for opening of commeroin] | the same period ‘mports valued at §2,833. b€ 2 half million. . | eentage reductions in immigration as a Z_n fface‘l“ Fr Vg h* 2MONZ |-in McKeesport, Pa., - if age to government property Wwill' be dealt | relations with his government wero ex-| 384,471 arrived in this port for distribu- 6 scheme - unites hcmr:‘e;:u a mt;:m.taétor complete”prohibition. e i ‘I;:ss‘f;‘ e launched by the McKeespore: Mimuterial| With, meverely in person and. estate. pressed in resolutions passed at a mass | tion over the United States. hicle workers, ores Spos: % £ 5 3 7 S ¥ % - < 3 , GO Bt facliifts. the talWay e, e ox;lythelpmsh::“:lh::g 1::( 1&; ‘:e:’ yond, he will always live in our memory tion is ‘approved by residents of of code telegrams without per-| meeting in Madison Square Jerden this| A comparison of the figures of 1919 as o man of grace and truth.” that town. . mission of_the police. inspector is banned | afternoon. Shows that the export trade showed a de the bill to suspend operation of that por- —_— * _v|and the use.of Wireless or carrier pigeons| The meeting was held under the joint | decrease of approximately $231,000,000 -.up. FRENCH AND tion of the Clayton anti-trust law re- A oA Records kept by the Wartford ‘water | RS’ prohibitéd. . All. théetings and assem- | auspices of the American Labor Alli-| While the import trade increased 8, . _ITALIAN PEEMIERS TO MEET | ftricting in a measure railroad purchases | GABRIELE D’ANNUNZIO *. [department show that rhin' fell on the ] blles are Six adults being, ance for trade relations with uRssia, the | 009,000 % % it of materials from concerns in which their WILL NOT REMAIN IN ITALY | Watershed ia_Northwestern ' omnéstieut | considered a metting. - o | American Women's Emergency Commit- |, Forelgn exports, which reached the to- Jan. 2—Ths meoting - between | Officers are interested. The bill I8 Iving - : in 1920, was 56.95 inches, theA5p. Tigure | - notice today. s in addition | tee, the Civil Liberties Union and the|tal of $117,97 in 1919, were shad- Leéygues, Lioyd George and Gi- | on the 'vice president’s desk and Sen-| Triest, Jan. 1—Captain Gabriele D‘An- |for 50 years. L Bl tly announced re- | Soviet Russia Medical Relief Committee. | ®d down to $31,965,715 during the past ‘whicli has been prominently an-| #tor Lafoletie, republican, .Wisconsin,|nunzio will not. remain in Italy, follow- i A ants of houses affix | Timothy - Healy, president of the Inter- | Y¢aT- - ted “in_ receat discussions, will be|8Nd other opponents are prepared for|ing his retirement as head . of the “re-| Harry Cutbill the “fying Parson: w ts ‘on the ‘inner side of | national Brotherheod of Stationary and| CG0ld and silver imports in 1920 eclipsed Patis nest, week, Gaulols ap-| & Vigorous foray when the veto message|gency of Quarnero,’ it is agserted here. | 3PPointed captain ‘of ‘the Béton ‘A, A. | the dgbr and-hoiding them responsible of | Eccentric Firemen, presided. the 1919 record over ten-fold, the figures today, Ko condeiiatien wes ob.{ /e taken up. < |Tn well-tnformed circles 1t is * deciared | UFack icam succceding Tom Halpth wits | oon conduct of such 1isted persons. United States Senator Joseph I France, | V*Ing, 1920, 3343,292,616 against $32.- 'at -the foreign Office. -+ Another spiritcd senate struggle, .serlhe will go to Rome, where he will place {128 hung up his running shoes afier — of Maryland, Framk P. Walsh, lawyer, |33%216 in the year 1919, s recelved last Thursday announ- | tentatively for Monday, January 10, is|in. the hands of the kifig all medals | decade of competition, . Mrs. Harriet Stanton Blatch, of the| FOreign commerce yielded duties * in an éarly meeting of the French, | Drewing over the Poifdexter anti-strike ¢ the war. including : MILITARY NEAR CORK | “Mergency committee and William H.| 1320 Which totaled $223 686,570, which - bill which passed the senate without de- Tho Wester: ‘clegraph com- Assoc v Italian prime ministers would the. gold medal of valor, the highest Ital- 'stern Union. . T¢ registera a substantial gain over the col- . iy bate and with only a féw senators pres- | lan decrrations, fnd then lea\‘egthe coun- | PanY was ordered by.the interstate com- | By th —S ii’"i‘x".é’é‘m‘ifi."llli‘ I:EII(.:: 3 181108 | Jections in 1913, which amounted to $172,- ent. Secnator Lafollette expects to call up | try, : merce commission to' sxtent credit 0| resars B e rir ton e Arg Boooren | % Completo. and: unrestricted” relations | 279:527. Miscellaneous custom: house re- hls motion for reconsideration &~ week| Deleghtes from the Fiume councli d | 10lls on mesrages transforred ty’ it from | toa wors mesriy by the military - 1as | With Russia, removal of all obstacles to | “SIPs akETegated §4.682,596. In the past lrm”r';“’{:t’;' P Y their -utmost to_induce General Caviglia, | "¢ Fostal Telegraph Co. 77| night s vesult of -an ambiish of the w_!zfide with her, the establishment of | YS3T a5 compared with $1,649,333 of the sumed. This weak by the reconstrmstio: in command of Lialian government troo0s |y o\ oy Govermar = lice mear, Middigton, * It was - announced | Cble, post and wirelees communieation e e y : imatia, ‘o allow the poet-soldier | " crner Channing. M. .Cox, | nere~toddy. The story of the incident | and the right to travel between the Unit- e gt M Senator Galder, re-| to lcave Fiume at-the head of his leglon- governor-elect of Massachusetts o St hn alaiehtt Seopad ent| &d States and Russia wers demanded fa| MARSHAL FOCH REFORTS Eovernment officials in coal sales to the| 1% Dut the gencral sternly refused. m’:“‘r':’: :m’!u lnul!_ain 2| morning by ‘the military suthorities in | the resolutions. ~ ON GEEMANY'S DISARMAMENT R % army, shipping Board and othe agencles | .- who stood terror-stricken I \héir g | COBK ’ REDUCTION OF WAGES BY ;. are to be tnider special investigation. NEGOTIATING ARMENIAY, — “As a result of an ambush on the po- e BETHLENEM STEEL C0.| Development of the government mi-| ° AND TURKISH -mn;-n‘ Gas esrapiup from stivet math éa: | Hic Tooion and hear Glebehouse,” it iy trate plant_at M Shoals, Alamaba, S e— tered a six-family i €2 ) stated, “the military maor decided| . Jan. 32— 10 to 20 promises lively debafle this week in both | Constantinope, Dec. 23—The' new peace | Bickford street in mm’, that.certain houses in ‘the vinicnity of{ o = o o 2. Cabi int 41,000 cannon, 29 of wages, branciies of congrees in connection with | treaty being.negotiated between the Ar- | Boston, six persons we; prostrated and the -ourage should be destroyed as the : on, O., 1;:5 o’ b-i Pf""] d'v‘l’“"‘; mounted canfion barrels, 163,000 machine of employes at the Sparrows Point | the pending senate bill proposing a gov-|menian soviets and the Turkish nation- | a score of others affected-bi:the ‘Tummes ' Inhabitanis were bound to have known ‘l‘;"‘ a!x Wery ‘I‘ . d""" YI . e'; -elect { guns and barrel 800,000 rifies, 16,000 of the Bethlehem Steél company, | erRment corporation to \A:perlte the plant. | alists- will prescribe the pre-war from- > g sefmething of the ambush. N S BN (UORY. in a long con! "eb"‘* airplanes and 25,000 airplane motors. Announced last night The decrease | Soldiers' bonus legislation Is to bé giv- |tlers of Armenia, it was intimated today | Colonel Sylvester B, Partiott, aged Each resident was given an hour tof ¥ith Harry M. Daugherty, of Colum us. | The German delinquencies in execating ctive Jan. 18, and is sald by com-|®n further consideration this week by|by the government of the former at Er- |died of heart disease on 4 sttsct cur aj | THOVE Valuable' but mot furniture and | Nis pre-convention manager and one ‘officials to be due to “business con. | the senate finance committee. More hear-|ivan. The Hafienalists are saidgto be in- g B the disarmament clauses of the treaty oty ma e ee s were then destroyed. Nothing | is principal advisers in shaping the pol- | ang the Spa agreement are said to be- and & decrease In prices of steel | INES are tdbe held and cpponents given|sisting upon_application of the Brest-Li | the United States fsharice: eormeiamy % Trom the bouses and the furniture | e O B AN e, and there | SFiAEiPAlly the maintenance of _eivic ] - + jan opportunity to testify. tovsk treaty leaving Kars and: Ardahan | sinc 1877 and was a v ot ‘the cfi: Was :‘ 7 15 nothing to indicate how scon definite the plan the resources of the would be pooled and a central rry Gosiing, | EXPORTS VALUED AT $3,119.580.804 TROUGH POBT OF NEW YORK 45 a proelamation ‘qtilving that the 1 WOUSES BURNED BY —_— . HADRING TALKED OVER Parls, Jan. 2—Marshal Foch's report on German:; rma; acco! CABINET APPOINTMENTS g rirrop vy o e ‘thpusand men will be affected. | The recount of votes in the Michigan | outside Armenia. 2 2 war. Lo e e T e S e cure BEW Sobo Sy !‘:e“g:t:;lzal}:nr or“:cfy'nf;‘ r:m{;?.:;; . St AT morsht senatorjal conten: betweéen Senator New-| The, boundaries favored by President RNING REPRISAL FOR selections to Mr. Harding's official fam- | failure to destroy the required amount of ‘eompany employs in. imes A — ily would be made. Th eral indica- 6,000 men, althiough the working 4 berry and Henry Foard will be begun on| Wison, who recently accepted the posi-| _The Central Maine Pawer ‘cempafiny. ABUSH OF POLICE | v "Il T® MU nat the artillery in the eastern and southern fron- s been reduced somewhaf In_the | U842y by the serate privileges and| tion of mediator, are Pot yet known here.| Was uathorized by, the, public e PEDT tion here has been that the names of | tier fortresses. . ' * QT | election committss with a prospect of e Xk e Al b g commission to take o\'vvr’nehi.t utilivien | rpyin Jin! 3.-A géneral headquart.|t¥o OF three of the cabinet members| ‘The report recites the details of the of an Impendirig reduction in | Se¥eral weeks' wok. FINANCIAL CRISIS IN light and power companies M:::‘H: ofs Sheport: today. the first communiéa. '?ld ::er made known very early in the | Germans' request that they be allowed ¢ of employes of the Bethlehem Ship- BARCELONIA ALLAYED | SomPined capitalization of more, than $a,. | U0 Of it Kind ever issued. explains that |™F YOm0, | Teain 841 cannon in the foriresses, but ‘orporation had been received | INDIAN NATIONAL CONGRESS > 000,000, - Tt s R T LT ther harningh At “Midletons And near Glen- | 4t il continue his canvass of the leg. | Gy Lies bave approved the retention of and none was known to be ¥ % | house wer# the resuit of an ambush of o8- only 20 guns at Koenisberg, 3¢ at Pil- o IN SYMPATHY WITH IRISH | ' Madrid, Jan. 2—Although the financial | mne Penneyivanin = ' 313 police patrol in Midieton by armed ol- hl-:;e ;:m;‘hm» with > particular view | jay gnd 32 at Sinemuende, z < crisis is allayed .in Barcelonia, follow- railrosd > p 1 ucing the army and ‘navy appropri- S : - Nagpur, Thdia, Jan. 2—A beycot, on |ing, suspension .of the bark of Barce- | lar it Bas concluded a th villans Iagts Wediiesday night, when ations to the lowest point consistent with STUDIED SLEEPING the proposed vistt of the Duke of Con- |lonfa last week, the city is reported still :g’ez“m:l':‘: :lllt;l lthe representatives, of | PONCEMAN W: A b a safe defepse policy. Among his cof- SICKNES IN CONGO [ haught to the east and a tribute to the | sufferinz from the effects of the recent | regarding the sef l;'“" service: emgloyes| * S o, the f ~ .| ferees of tomorrow will be Senator Cur- gz memory of the late Lord Mayor. of |fiutter In the money situation. The bank AT ttiement ,of futare Jubwr € hy: burning In tis of Kansas, republican whip of the . Jan. 2—Dr. Lotise Pearce [ Cork were voted in resolitions adopted | of Spain under orders of the governmert 2 3 $ % etpe w.n'u,,,.,,..‘ Jan. 2.—Expectation that senate. v, Elizabeth Bowen of New York | by the Indian national congress in ses- |is doing everything possible to relieve the =A% ety eres 8 have the United States will grant their request returned here after six months' |Sion here. A mu-sg Canadian Northwest e g e pe—— that it superyise the forthcoming 1 of sympathy to the [situation. Paner f-1lin= Ane at the end |are still sconring tue 5:!:2‘ m a FOURTEEN PERSONS KILLED BY elections in Cub: petitton the sleeping sickness in the Con- | Irish In their strugsle “for independence |of December wifl be rediscounted by ! |woods for a trace of the A-nn"a:...;‘ L e e e gy EARTHQUAKE IN ALBANIA [Of the "Mll;c lfi:: m.mr-m:":a’;: < 3 mmr;uR: \;y the queen .hlt “"__lw nfl dispatched. bank of Spain, it is announced. and ibajloon A-5593 which has. been - milash 5 i 5 presidential election” of last November wade o pracical (e of & new rem: | In London st August, 2 ths Feive|conlemce o (fim the Reckiway air statien sluee Dec: e300k naurod vid 30000 pebdured | Bere today by Dr. Fermabte Oria vice #dy Which it is hoped will greatly dimin- |of Wales would not visit India this win-| .- 3 4 o e ey T IS e ish-thé fatalities from this disease. WANT U. 8. SUPERVISION OF COMING ELECTIONS IN CUBA IN CONDITION coF _(flnll GIBBONS Jan. *—Cardinal Gibbons’ *Es 80 far improved today that | the mprovement continue they ywill tomorrow consider the ad- of removing him to his home he ter to inaugtirate reform legislation but | NEGRO SHOT TO DEATH that the Dmke of Connaught, -former governor-general of Canada, would un- dertake these duties._ . X The condition of unrest among certain sections of the natlves and the Mkhnmnn sproclaiming T h@;m’fi-v to hb:i—lfl_nk"un theis BY FAEMERS IN GEORGIA Camills, Ga., Jan. 2—Jim Roland, a ‘was shot to death last night by | tarmers ef Mitchell, Decatur and Grady counties, who were hunting him in con- nection with the shooting Saturday of Ji Harrell, white farmer. Harrell is stilf alive dn @ hospital at Pelham, but ‘The three counties were quiet tonight and no fear of further race tropble was " Lerd cI homeless by an earthquake which nearly obliterated the city of Elbassan, Albania, according to an undated despatch received here today from the American Red Cross at Tirana. The only Americans in the: city were two Junior Red Cross nurses, Miss Norah Ruddy -of St. Louis »nd Miss Winifred ‘Warren of Chicago. Both were feported safe. They immediately took charge of relief work and the American Red Cross is sending supplies from the Adriatic coast. The organization also is furnish- ing tents which are urgently needed be- cause of the severe weatler. president of the Cuban house of reper- sentatives, and Dr. Julio De L& Torre, prominent attorney of Havana, both members of the Cuban liberal party. The present Cuban administratien, the statement said, “eannot be trusted” in its promises to the Cuban people of a fair and, just election, adding that their “e fective soverelgnty” could be guarantec only by electoral supervision b this cour:- try. This\ was declared tn be essentisl also to the “untangling ¢f Cuba's chaotic financial affairs” as establishment of & scttied political state would. insure tie success of negotiations for a foreirn