Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 3, 1921, Page 1

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VOL. LXIII—NO. POPULATION 29,655 Chairman Benson Maintains That Economic Conditions Fully Justify 15 Per Cent Wage Reduction—Calls Upon “All Loyal Citizens to Rally to the Support of the Flag”— Promises Full Protection Both Now and After the Con- troversy is Settled—‘Walk All Ports Are in Progress in Response to the Calls of the Union Leaders—Instructions Have Been Sent to New London Directing Men to Quit Towboats—President Brown of the Marine Engineers Predicts That the Ship Owners “Will Come to Terms” in a Few Days, " of Marine Workers in —Announcing Association, ques- | 18lana Souna harge operator. the towing of coal, grain and d the Long Todd also hinted at the pos workers would tughoat men intentionally own an interest, down wages in_order to American marine A meeting to discuss this sub- NO AMERICA FROM BALTIMORE director of the United States » from Washing- acknowledging the union has| to a reduction of 15 their monthly telegraphers’ dent of the organization said today remainder of the 200 members of the lo- TANK STEAMER STANDARD MANNED BY STRIKEBREAKERS the labor secretar: Standard is owned by company which about its plant hree to cope with possi- extra guards. conference tomor- CREWS OF STEAMSHIPS OUT IN BOSTON Transportation freighier Lake Jucksonville s the ship- STEAMSHIP OWNERS REJECT SUBMISSION TO ARBITRATION UED FOR STRIKE OF PHILADELPHIA of engineers —Representatives was reiected here erican Steam to business judgment, © majority of the men Were cxpected to quit tonight, FORCES CAPTURE POSITION OF SINN FEINERS| —In an. encounter between crown forces and Sinn| Mitchelstows dead and two wounded, made prisoner, ur others were PO Owiecy. soldier was of the engineers i Two auxiliary policemen were shot and| County Longford, while| killed in Fyhor: n the trans-Atlantic NEW HAVEN BRICKLAYERS ACCEPT 95 €ENTS AN The Mallory, Southern Pa-| from many of their men that they New Haven, Connecticut des Council anprox mate Builders Ex- wis stated the_ building trades | state are in n flaz tonnage was idle—due men would e con- controversy. the number at |The committee’s letter, it w of referendums taken of threa men fol Was received taken on it. A wage compromise between the mas- ter builders of New Haven and the union | was ratified awners today maximum waze and working conditios They had been zetting $1.12 an At the office of the Marine the contractors t was announced hy Thomas Atlantic and u¥ econference of operating f nanzig, and_two ATTEMPTS IN THE SENATE TO AMEND IMMIGRATION BILL passenger ships ines of freight steam- « out of Norfolk. had signed an agree- ment with the union. ‘Washington, the emergency failed in the senate today but delayed a adjournment leaders said the bill passed tomorrow. fered were rejected except one by Sena. tor Johnson, exempt from exclusion aliens who prove are subjects of “relizous or pomii- A vote was not reach- ed on this amendment, but it Will be act- ed on early tomorrow, The Bill which has already been passed would restrict aliens {o three per cent. of each na § n- ality resident In the United States #5 of the 1910 census, and would be effective for fourteen months, beginning 15 days after enactment. He added that the organizations 24 by rerefendum vote declined to ac- a wage cut and would remain out Aiftieany was satistactorily ad- —Attempts migration bill amendments of- Todd. secretary of the Atlan- Conference of the Marine Engineers Beneficlal Association, the resumption of the Gult Coast cal” persecution. miled & month ago. truce had been declared pending he outcome of negotiations with American Steamship Owners Association m ot eneral deep sea snipping wage > men had been reductions of pay by the hous angis from "‘!.r"‘frw sald word had been received ‘rom Norfolk tonight that ing tngs at that port had been tled up. ‘nstructions have heen sent to New Lon- men to quit tow- that port aiso, affected thers are owned by the New England Barge death. A workman in a Utah mining eamp threw a bucket of water on a sputtering The electricity back” over the stream to the bucket in causing his instant electric wire, the man’s hands, members of SHIPPING BOARD SAYS “NO COMPROMISE”™ AS MARINE WORKERS ARE “WALKING 0UT" PRINTERS STRIKE FOR 44-HOUR WEEK Indianapolis, Ind., May 2.-Officials of the International Typographical unién, after checking their reports received to- day on the inauguration of strikes in a humber of cities to enforce demands for the forty-four hour week in job and hook printing offices, predicted that less than ten thousand woyld be idle as the results of the walkouts. ' Johp McParland, pre: dent, and other uniofl officials expressed satisfaction with developments of the strike for the shorter work week. Mr. McParland said that few news- papers would be affected. The strike will not affect newspaper orinting plants, un- less an effert is made to employ non- union printers in offices where newspaper and job printing plants are combined. he sa; Union officials declared that the spor- adic strikes thronzhout the country cguld only be brought to an end by local agfee- ments. Local unions were all instructed, they said, to call strikes in offices where | the forty-four Mgur we made effective May 1. had not beem Glens Falls, N. Y., Paper Suspends, Glens Falls, N. Y., May and jo bdepartments of the Glens Falls Times caused the suspension of publica- tion this afternoon. The Post-Star. in ‘which plant a strike was declared Sunday, succeedd in issuing two small pages thi morning containing a statement of the situation, Three Plants ldle In Harrisburg. Harrisburg, Pa., May 2.—Fewer than one hundred job printers struck in Har- risburg toda Three plants were idle. A number of commercial joh printing houses were idle at Reading, Pa. 90 Per Cent. on Strike in Philadelphia. Philadelphia, May 2.—Leaders repre- senting the employers and employes in, the printing trade. today differed on the| number of men on strike as a result of ng to grant the 44-! hour week. Typothetae officials said fir.i the emnloyers refu: ty-five per cent. of the union men walk ed_out. while officials of the typograph cal Union No. 2 said ninety per cent. of| their members were on strike. All Tnion Printers in Easton, Pa., Quit. Easton, Pa, May 2—All union print-| for the 44-hour week. Those employed on| ers in Ea on were on strike today the two local afternoon napers, also ! walked out. News men were emploved by the papers and they expected to issuc their usual afternoon editions. Chicago TUnion Job Offices Close. Chicago, May 2.—Union job yprinting houses in Chicago were closed down to- Sifected more’ than ffty cities in ;all parts of the country. It apnli {hook ani job printing industry The issue, according to the employ was the forty-four hour week and what rate should be paid where it is installed. In Chicago the shorter week went Into | effect today in the union ‘shops, accord- |ing to asrcement. The emplovers post- ed notices Saturday that pay would be at_the old hourly rate. In Chicago it was estimated that be- {tween 4,000 and 4300 job printers | struck. The emnloyers sai | out t. John's Papers Unable to Publish. Johns, N. F., May 2.—T 0 eve- hecause of a striké of printers in an ef- entorce d The Daily News nz anda The FEvening Telegram, h operates on the open shop plan, appeared this . afternoon. SET OF CHIMES TO OLD FIRST CHURCI OF PLYMOUTH | New York, May 2—President Hard-| ing has approved 2 project whereby New England societies. throughout ghe coun-| try would prseent a sct of chimes to the old First church of Plymouth, Mass, in connection with the Pilgrim Tercenten ary celebration Th nedy, chairman of a gommitice on ar- ringements appointed by the New Eng- land Society of Brookiyn. The committee plans to iffvi dent Harding to play the chimes W he v part in the Pi im celebration. 1 want to express 1o you my inter-| est in your project for instailing an ap-| propriate chimes or bells in the old First! church -of Plymouth,” said the presid in a letter to Mr. Kennedy. nt “It s a particula American vy appealing to all patriotic distant trin to able to hear the chime LIST OF DRAFT EVADERS Washington, May 2.—A final appeal to former service men to assure them- selves that their names were not car- s list of draft evaders and deserters to be made public this | weel has been issued by the war de- by both sides} ried in the arm. partment. “Men who are not actually deserters but who believe themselve: status should follow the same course.” AWARDS MADE ON UPPER SILESIAN PLEBISCITE Tondon, May 2.—Tt Wwas announced unofficially in Berlin today that the re- port of the inter-allied commission on ian plebiscite had been upreme council, rec- ommending that the districts of Pless and Rybnik and part of Kattowitz be awarded to Poland and the remainder of the area to Germany, says the Berlin the Upper Siles forwarded to the correspondent of the London Times. BANDITS ROB CUSTOMS HOUSE PAYMASTER IN BUENOS AIRES Buenos Aires, May 2.—Automobile ban- dits today robbed the customs house pay- master of a valise containing 620,000 pesos. The paymaster afid three guards were assaulted by the robbers as they were on their way fo the customs house “played | from the national bank. Silver from seawater is often found de- posited on the copper sheathing of ships, | several books, : NORWICH, CONN. Corrupt Practi Act Unconstitutio a..pm.; Court So Holds in|Unless Panama Acts Vohune| i’ o5 stroms it 700 Setting Aside the Convic-| tarily Within “a Reasona-| = """ tion of Senator Newber- Washington, May 2.—Setting aside the| Washington, May 2—Unless Panama| eral Miguel Alleman is reported in the conviction of Senater Truman H. New- {acts voluntarily within *a berry of Michizan, and sixteen others, for violation of the federal corrupt practices act, the supreme court held today that the act was unconstitutional. The court was unanimous in reversing the conviction but divided fiv to the validity of the law. Chief Jusiice White and Clark and Brandeis dissented from the court’s findings that congress was with- out power to regulate state primaries, but the reversal which, they|claims for adjoining territory which | Senate and. chamber of deputies. rman IhttheCounter-Pme thought, ehould have been based on the|mIENt be. advanced by memsrg\'emme?: ot Ge ” error of the trial judge's instruction to|of Panama, no matter what the opinion| MAY day passed ‘without diserder in Justice McKenna, while concurring in the majority oninion “as applied to the statute under consideraton.” reserved the | disputed territory had been unchallenged| Uncenditional evacuation of Thrace and | ! will_be attgnd- Fatute miden coidsrytonre mand of General £imon, in ffteen trains | worrow's meeting, which be 2 he seventeeth amendment—ywhich nro- N0 Way “entitling the government of | TUrkish government of Constantinople. vides for direct election of senators—to|Panama to demand the occupation of ter- = supervise primarie: Opinion was divided in the senate as to| 0f Panama and has heew conclusively ad- any new demand had been sent tn soviet the effect of the decision unon future ac-|judged o belong to Costa Rica. the election committee with| *T! regard to the Michigan elect in which Henry Ford, as the democratic| Public of Costa Rica, candidate. opposed Mr. senatorship. X =t printers and pressmen in the neswpaper v '« “ht e tablis! vy e ! Senator Dillingham, chair-| the republic of Panama had formaily| (1."@ has been established by navy wire-| man of the committee, said that since the | declared clear.and indisputable. . “still re. | the government haa not yet issued any h a possible naval demomstration on Corrumt Jractices law had been held un-| mains in the opinion of the American| i ol 4icd wp at the wharves In|Order for such movement int6 the Ruhr|(he Dart o {the British, willibs eastied constitutional it appeared that the com-|8overnment the territory of Costa Itica, | v | mittee would have no further jurisdic-|and is to/be respected as such On the other hand, chairman of the sub-committee wh been considering the Ford. despite inquiry would be continued to determine, Senator Snencer.| TAKES RESPONSIBILITY FOR s by v to the chiefs of % ras THE RELEAS) OF BERGDOLL| President Arthur J. Robers of Colhy | ALLIED SUPREME COUNCIL Mas | 5 BT (0 the chets £e e o ) 3 — college will deliver the commencement| .pyuosST*® REACHED AGREEMENT|nancial experts present at . - '*| Washington, May 2—Major General | oration at University of Maine on June s - 0% | ing. Robert Stevenson Horme, Was electod and ay i e | Peter C. Harris, adjutant general of the |6 London. May 2 (By the A. P.).—The! pritish chancellor of the exchequer, 3 Rt army, told u house investizating commit- Newberry ha senate *affairs has and sentenced to serve two years in the| docRer (0 80 out Leavenworth federal prison $10 000 fine. He was in Detroit toda 3 o1 ‘ %! Briand telephoned orders for Paris that and representatives of the tremsury. e i itted to reconstruct the devastated regions of The court's decision was that the direet| B¢FEG0IL was permitted to start on the | o reconstru election amendment had not affected ave congress the power to resu 1 V! va s1ON manner of helding Pl(‘cilfl“;’ d‘l’; ‘l‘\ol con- DoN AR Sotence for S, e’ 3 fer on it authority to control party Polloc S e } g g : € uiinnGy 2o oo usn‘:‘—qc:‘l;\)"l i It was on the plea of Samuél T. An- the Pollock Rip lightship. of War Barthou this evening issued Xt NO BASIS FOR llllc‘ . candidates for federal offices. s iy Domestic affairs of the states would he | ¢ 2rM¥: Gen. Harris testified, that th interfered with and liberties reserved to the people would Chict Justice White, in his dissentinge| 000 35 he had climbed the hills for his favored reversal ‘of | against Senator NéWberry and i without nrejudice fo a new trial | FC1UeSt himself, but because of “because of the grave misapprehes and zrievous misannlication of the statute apon _which the convietion and sentence below. was based.” the result of a strike which also| d to thel The dissenting oninion of Tustice pit.|ACtUally hidden about $150000 in eold, said: “It would be tragic if| "ordS to that effect. i the constitution which | g has proved the sure defense_of every out- | 17SeY: described as the man power should fall tne | Placed Woodrow Wilson in nomination o i e the Baltimore and St. Louls conventicns. declared as untenahle | %35 hFousht into the hearing as one of | ninition agent are dead as a that conzress” could not | or=00 d that’ it was| gineers’ union claim-ia walkout, the union that it was a lock- ad struck on fourteen harbor, but did not specify the contention have been given nower {they were not known shen the con- | lat7rs Were Dreparing o appeal from | Knoxville, Tenn. and the telegraph, which have develoned since colonial .;.,\-,,{ retary of war would remember Mr. West- | plant of the Boston and M ning newsvavers, hafh. The Star and The cht within the scope of | ¢Ot" 28 he had nomin | Advocate, were wnffble to publish today | federal laws, he a mands for a 44-hour | as issued\ this | scount. Talbot, the [ New York. May 2. and governor gen- of Ireland, arrived here today. Two | fraudulent use of the mails — Photozrapners and the | tirned in the federal cour: hers foday venerable keeper of the news: it has been ‘for nea ury to welcome visi lord Tientenant ians permitted on' the station ‘plat. | 1o0 and Soringfield, Ma form to witness Viscount Talbot's arriv- | COND-+ and Provid where Viscount Talbot formal reception. s~ _announcement | was made here today by Elijah R. Ken-| be hastened e Presi-| ren | its Plymouth August 1 to take| cAn candidates. in Blackrock, and seized election litersture. 1 bervagion of the German revenues. TT T e at the rate of $10 a share to investors, | Bliss. Texas, several men were injured. | observayion of the Gierman revenues. T oject worthy of bopular support and MONDAY TO MINOR ME 1 hope you will be altogeth- er successful, and that on some mot too ew England I will be Washington, aside its'major problems long enough. to — calendar of east v X : : don and at the state department it JReaeurey INbIL RoR L0, Mo ol the World were forfeited today by the|comoinpanying changes in working condi- | minimum requirements, but in difference = e senate passed a number of | i 1 r day by the| the following: To create an additional federal judge- s i) oty i ibe dioiciiorore penitentiiiy: int ) Leavenwarth,! Kagiwfo | One Mexicanile repoctod fo Rave hewm |y SUpport oocupation us World war trophies| Serve senten ¢ atioh officers on the Amer-|people and parliament attach gzreat im- of men furnished for the army| The bond of William (Big Rill) Hay.|States immisr: tioh TS the war department to| Was not forfeited, surplus foodstuffs To provide free transportation home| tive.” Those whose bonds were forfeited | ®1o8 for ' discharzed *: charged America nsoldiers and | were George Andrevech with desertion upon the records,” the| appeal said, “should communicate imme- diately with this office (the adjutant general) setting forth all the facts in their cases. Those in doubt of their Hartford, May —Frederic Knapp, one BY A FIRING sqQUAp |bnd. Rufus J. Fellows, proprietor of an of Hartford's oidest and best known citi- died at his home here toda: wag_the father of Rear Admiral Harry| rick Casey was executed by a firing | P Ignosy pay 100,000.000 pounds yearly, pius 25 s (retired) of the United States|squaa at Mitchelstown, Coun at s per_cent. on her exports. e Dublin, May 2.—Announcement Mr. Knapp had been confined to| haif past six o'clock this evening. Less| All Inrze construction jobs in Previ This obligation on the part of Ger.|made today by John J. Farrell the house aboul t<o years. He was horn| than twenty- 3 ; many shall be acknowledged by the is- in New Milford 34 years ago. He was| ticipated in an attack on créwn forces |Crafts struck to resist a wage readjust- |y, by Germany of bonds bearing § per| f°T Was postmaster of New Britain shortly before | Sunday night. ment_proposed by the master builders During the Civil war hel During an ambuscade at M served in the provost marshal's offices in, Casey was séen to fire at an officer who | 15 per cent. | Bridgeport and Hartford. He was ap-| was only forty yards aka pointed first assistant provost marshal Df‘, Connecticut in 1881 and later served as| court which tried him today. The mili- | which union help had been employed, chief clerk. Charles E. Beénnatt, department case at his home here oday. He was|anese freight steamer Tokuyo Maru is| London, May 2—Rear Admiral Henry| When the German 65 vears old and a graduate of Brown |afire at sea and sinking fast, said a wire-| Montagu Doughty died Sunday. Rear Professor Bennett American Philological | Sage gave the steamer's position as lat Coinage of silver has been anthorized by the Russian soviet government. al Pressure on Panama - o wecc o v | ufacturing piants in Manchester, N. H., has been settled. e ble Time” in Dis- | injurea when a freignt trai eck- 3 iy Boundary Dis-| ot W i | France Has Calfed the . o An uprising under leadership of Gen- Region—Germany | Have Until May 12 pw&-m{_fi reasonable | State of Vera Cruz, Mexico. time.” the United States will take meas- —i> ures to compel her to transfer jurisdic-| Tt was estimated in Londom the Brit- tion of the disputed Coto territory to[ish coal strike now in its fifth week has Costa Rica, Secretary Hughes says in a| COst the industry $30,000,000, Tecent note to the Panama ‘government, e i especting : r {c four as| The text of the document was made pub-| Price In milk will remain the same lies R the Payment of lic today at the state department. for May in New York. Farmers wiil Justices Pitney, “This government believes that it| Feceive one-half cent a qiart more. | would be inadmissible to interpret its ob- ligations io the republic of Panama as| Fremeh hudzet earrring 26.450.805.000 cmbrdcing an obligation to support any|francs was finally adopted by both the of this government might be as to the|VIeANa. the observance of the day bei&| French Military Headquarters, May-|paz. 4 validity of these claims,” the note says. |COMfined to parades and demonstrations.|ence, Germany, May 2 (Ey the A. P.)—| The drafting sommittes is stifl ut work he Panaman claim that its title to the | b o One division of black Moroccan infaniry|on the details of the . but and one division of eavalry, under com- {to conclude its report in for to- the | under | since colonial times, the note holds, as in| JOn3 Will be demanded of Greece b. left_this eveninz for th arrive in Du orf Tuesday morning.|The protracted meeting teday s State department denied reports that iy stood to have been due to the' : o GOV'T HAS NOT ORDERED cussion over the guarantees: to Dbe de 4 authorities hela prisoners in Sovist Rus- T INTO RUMR/|manded of Germany for payment of rep- aratons. Firglly an agreement May 2—The ministry of war it Gencaeama R u tonight, with reference to advices| Should Germ: a < o T e 1% | terme within: the! stk ¥ from Mayence into the Kuhr, that | French plans for occupation of the Ruhr, Ruhr. They will|«d by the military and maval te. ritory whie is not a part of the republic| 1 4 it MOVEME be That territory which was adjudged to] % a porti e territory e re- ion of 1918,/ be a portion of the territory of tne re Conmerdialt o iiatiin. sniisuntcation the note declares, |, o0 " 0" United States and Indo- ewberry for the | in accordance with a boundary line which | " kS 2 less evstem. jos John's, N. F.. a® a result of a_ strike | region. The military autherities in May-|oUt and the proceeds of German rekes . efice 5 Y have nue. Such as customs, will be ¥ of lonshoremen in protest against a wage | ence, however, it was added, may have 2 s corialg deemed it advisable to start the troons,|Priated towards payment of the s : - | allied supreme council sat for four hours |uhsent, but M. Briand. Count Sforsh taken o part in | [c¢ [00aY that he alonc was resonsibie | Three Mexiean handits, charged with|ihis atternoon and then adjourned until| Foreign Minister Jaspar. were Part M| for the release under guard of Gr: . not been in his| (eyel as: nina‘?n\r of three -‘m"\"’;"’-* :-’“""‘; 11 o'clock tomorrow morning. Fremier|panied by their finance ministerss sea = i 7| Clevi d Bergd , convicted dra American Azwi vere execute Pria he conferee: 1 - ayas! y K seat in the senate'since he was convicted s L B s SR g e | Briand said that W rees had “al-| Hayashl by Kogo Mor, Japanese eome pot of West V! £ most” reached an agreement | missioner in London, and Mr. buried gold in the mountains <f TN | _After the conference adjourned Premier | George ndlpay e g France has spent §0.000.000,000 feanes| . ALler the conference adjourned Pr | Georze by Winston ' Spencer nS Of! the class of 1919 be mobilized. M. Briand announced this evenimg that ect| golden chase, but never returned, escap. | that country. according to a statement | he must return to Paris Tuesday. o the constitution, |.\n5, ¢ Philadelphia. where he had siop- | by Andre Tardien. FRANCE HAS CA > THE % the meeting tomorrow is E VWhich it maton tr suii Wi I'ped over on his way from Fort Jay, X. o o be final. " oY oninion eaid. while It Y. {5 the mountains to visic his mother, | _The death of Manuel Rarnos, & seaman. CLASS OF 1919 TO THE COLORS : struck hy a winch handle, caused nlaying of siznals of distress from| pa Ly 8. DECIDES PROFOSALS ARE aid in evading the draft. theid May 2 (By the A. P.).—Minister g S S {order calling the class of 191 sell, formerly acting adjutant general o I Cah e AT el OB en Times: aazs Do, Valora: s t Premier Lloyn (eorze on the I to F | colors, with the exception of men who| Washington, May 2—The Germad have served in the Orient and in Morocco | reparations counter nroposals are uRac- i B i ¢ m prisoners was let out. The said v let: e general maid | 0 T S LC e Temnl€ ot the: recent v 1 e Bad Men' sanred by el and men belonging to the auxiliary ser-|ceptable as a basis for discussion, Sec- e infringed upon ig| 7 Nad been assured T pdnsell 1| ot Lora Derby to Ireland. Vichat retary Hughes informed Dr. ‘tbe COnErcons nder existing liwn wdSUHCI o TG s e tar a T Mobilization will be ecarried out bLy|German foreign minister, in to- Stateq. COntrol over primaries, the opinion 1% wouiq be sent back to Fort jay r| Nine members of the erew of the | means of a letter sent to each man. As|night. vesse! Antonita were drowned when the oo ship broke in tow after its hoilers had | "t exploided in Corunna harbor, Spain. soon as detachments have been formed| The secretary at the same time urged they will be sent toward the Rhine in|the German government fo um:‘ such a manner as not lo interfere with | ther proposals directly 1o the a - Tesular Taliway fraffie ernments. He also expressed again the carnest desire of the American govern- TIL {ment for a_ prompt sertiement of” “this vital question.” The text of Secretary W.‘ dispa munjeation.. which W the lower potirts| . Under ordinary circumstances General sintoen | HArris said he would ‘have ac don the| . w. Toiman and 3. Watson fed-| J ral prohibition agents, were seriously | — rodnaed in & Rzt with alieed Mexican | GERMANY WILL HAVE U2 fiquor smugglecs near Anthony, N. M. MAY 12 TO ACCEPT ULTIMATAM | blicity given to th.eprisoner's he showed the Ansell letter 5 Maren, the chiel of steff; . “ako only glanced at | ion Members of the three socialist parties| London, May 2.—(Iy the A. P.)—Ger- A 3 E E night at 11 o'clock to Loring L'the The chief justice made the prediction| General March asked me if T knew of | in Borlin turned ont in larre numbers for| many wiil have until May 1z to accept |\ 200 O 0 Sy 00 i ioner fn %> slation would be enacted to give | 'Y obJection to granting the request.” | sunday’s labor demonstration. but the | the ultimatum of the allies respecting | g ol power over primaries, other-|L1¢ Witness testified, “and I replied that|gay was auiet throughout Greater Berlin.|payment of reparations, and guarantees | .. oo omment of the iinited States “zovernment cannot live~ | Ansell thought that Berze had 3 e binding her to fulfill her obligations; , + i |has received the memorandum Invitntions have been sent out to|otner wise the Ruhr district will be oc- | io8 SERCEE il Bl by of or | 600 col'ege and umiversity presidents to|cupied by allied troops. the United States under date of “April attend a series of lectures to b ziven | The supreme council today decided the |%y" o Biet ST Uil Mt gttt by Dr. Finstein at Princeton univer: action to be taken against Tmany, | (i povernment states that it finds 7o had | beginning May 3. should she fail to accept, but a decision | oo P LG S conclusion that the was not reached on the nature of uwlw,.,_,,__,r,,,or,, a basis for discussion A deputy sheriff and a fedaral pro- | suarantees she will be required to give. aceeptable to the allied governments and ult of a|° The preamble of the agreement will |\ ypoct O L€ oo “he entertainels fizht over the possession of 50 gailons cite that Germany hav failed to fu This government, therefore, again ex= escape the | of corn whiskey seized in a raid at| g the treaty of ersailles with respect | roccine jtaearnest desire for & prompe - to reparations, disarmament and punish- | Locon € (ST Guestion, strong= ment of war criminals, and having vi- 10 utre e German government at ones: cc-| Tt was annonnced that half the repalr | ;1004 various other articies of the treaty |, make directly to the allied goverss ne railroad be. cited by number—the al- | mante clear, definite and adequate Justices Brandeiq|2nd General March said ‘Go ahead The name ¢f John W. Westeott, of New i s lawyers. {1 “Previous to over prima Other amencie, | the fire vear sentence.” General Harris —_ o opencien | oHfled. “Me “Ansell told e that —which wil H.. would be closed next d President Wil- | in Concorf, 2 cl lied government have decided 10 0CCUPY |jncaie whieh would fn all respects meet o week in pursuance of the railroads re-| p. pune its just obMzations’ —_— r — trenchment policy. In this event British and Belgian forc- | o communieation was made publie LORD LIEUTENANT TALBOT BROKERS INDICTED FOR ———;“' «d . Han of|°S 07 the Rhine will join with the Frcdm-n by the seeretary without comment And e ki re hods of Mrs. all of | eir march into the district. Orders | ofmcial the 4 2% | for the mobilization of the- 1319 class | gituation. found vesterday in the Blackstone river in| . o o Gispatched to Paris tonight. A joint | tnofficially the opinion was Miilbury by an employe of the Worcester | ;1o French naval council has been call- | that develonments at London, wh wer department. ed to meeting Londoni tomorrow, in which | allied sunreme councll is in esssion, iral Beatty for the British, and Ad- | cysein eparations, would soen give Avpelntment. of . Senater Mondill Me-| Admiral Deatty Tt —Tndictments charg- o defraud investors by were re- ne consniracy and, whose | 382inst_Durell Grezory & Co.. Du Incorpor- Pelatment ol Bemmins et (ol mICUIC for the ¥rench will partic- | explanation of the American goyern . half a a;"* Wall Street stockbrokers, and | C! ";"I"‘ of ‘“‘x"";a-!*"r'm‘m rman of th®lipate. The French admiral was summon- | action “"henmro;ht“g -louludal rate = rovalits about 70 other representatives of tne | Tepublican senatort ties mas 1 tonight at the stand of the United States sovaltiba-ana o oNt 10 offer. representatives of the | TeBOBIICAN Bo ior Todge, . majority |, to Lenden tonigh et ’ to her fall abil were the only | fifm in this city, Buffalo, Svracuse, Bos. | NOUNce: The reparations commission will noti- [ payment by Germany to o . New Haven, | leader of the senate. I The names fy Germany within four days of the sum | but not to a degre to retard unduly: rce, R. 15 per cent, |Pavable, and the conditions of payment. | economiv recuperation, had been met, Wi al Newspaper men also were excluded | 9f the ont of town representatives of tye | A waze ewt sameing from 15 pev S | Gormany's reply must be acceptance. a subject upon which no light was Shed Dublin Castle, | Durell Gresory Company. Incorporated,|up was put i cftect [0 e o owell | Without reservations or discussion. 1t | tonizht " vere no se shops oundry o Bdsod ch offirma eply is not received e Ame - nnderstood BT R | o o lexed that the mals | Wethine. So. n Fiddeford, Me. About |uch ofirmative reply is mot received by | ‘The American position s 5 e indictmen ezed that the ma chine So. s the evening of May 12 the cecupation o have G ¥ With the coming of the new wjceroy | Were used to distribute erroneous inform- | 1.800 hands are affected. begin without further notice. or counter-proposals that 2 %fi he approachinz elec- | 211N to prospective investors relative = 1 The question of guaraniees is a per- | should be achieved if possible E The first clec | {0 the outout and fiancial standing of | Five fons of gold insots, from Fevel | oioring ‘one. The council was engagd for | sion and that even in the face of S8 RIS been put, up, ex- | the American Tire Corporation of Defa- | worth $2.5 ixhter Grenen at Boulogne,|four hours in tryng to harmo the | lied advance into German territory the = he plectors to vote for republi-) Ware It was a part of the conepiracy. | Spanish freighter Grenen =% L0/ TS ciews on thé precise form of guarantees, | United States would mot cease {0 Three men posting eieo- | the indictments recited, that Durell Greg.| and since its it has been iost which will include the establishment of | for such a settiement. At the same SN night were. ar- | Or¥ Company, Incornorated, obtain an|to Paris all trace of it ha SRisaY a commission of debt. On the same zen- | it was emphasized that the American A a_suhurh of Dub- | OPtion on the capital stock of tne tire . Tt ia an ai-| AL T ag control | ernment would stand with the allieny il 5 hete crown forces: raided a house.| COTPOTAtion at prices 032 | munition - dump. i the eamp at Fort|This commission w charged with | demanding proper reparations. o 9 a share. an his stock | munition du t S DEYOTED SESSION regardless of the market price. Fire followed the blast, and for a time |aliies will also ask for participation In |y (cuINGTON IS WITHOUT i i = — — threatened to destroy the entire eamp. lhr‘-rumm; of fir{rmz‘n»mhl A ot ADvacEs i gt i, hout 1.800 paper workers in New Fng- | garded e French delegation as 2GS = zovernment was without official ads | 10day from the allied meeting at Lem= her have occupied Ruhr first ar informed Germany of the aliies sal to accent wage reductions | r: to 30 per cent. and ac-| the Chicags, May 2.—The bonds of eight|(heir ref a number of mi-| J 9 now o to the|members of the Industrial Workers of | ranging from indicated that complete t willf bject of German reparations would omany taa | MAintained until formal notification i huc Jazh be. | been given another chance,” M. Briand | d¢cisions reached by the suprem for hindering wartime |Killed this afternoon during a clash be- [: " M. P : = e €l had been reesived | tween Mexican- line raulers and United | yielded the point. to which the French | "2 beeh weestitde o o called at the state department today it was said reparations was not di At the same time it was, made that the Americau sovernment has been in communicalon with the supjreme council or with Germany fn i to Mr. Lloyd George's cinviction tha United States circuit court of appeals| tonS- i o when they failed to appear at the federal Bciteh puplic; sumion. wodld the basis of the|ACtivitics cf the governmen: d ed i S v. ican side of the border about one mile portance. But her probably obtained RCAHEE SR L T T e S o British nayal co-operation to the extent oL oo T ChaelEd of u demonstration befors Hamburg, fo S forelan SEDv. Y 5 e na haare i The bod. it jet A, Del: thought not an actual blockad : : i e 7 of Miss Harriet A, Delancey, | (hought not 3 Jockade. said he expected to hear from the fuisi- R e e e e, J. H. Byer,|¥as a sophomore at Smith college, wWas|QUTLINE OF TERMS TO spect to the controversy. tute circumstances in Europe. |sieff, Herbert McCutcheon, Grover H.|jear, the collese pusEn b was emphasized, is Just what Perry and Charles Rothfisher. e’ London, May 2.—(By The A. P.) The|before tne allied council met and OBITUARY. T — supreme coun day reached a sub-|unty The trial of Mrs. Mary J.. Fellews,| i,njy] agreement on the terms to be|London. : Frederic Knapp. SINN FEINER EXECUTED charged with the murder of her imposed on Germany ; L is agreed that Germany is under obli- inn in Johnston, R. L. was postponed | zution 1o pay to the allies 6,600,000.000 | TEACE OFFER MADE To IRISHS . 00 2 (By The A. P.)—pat. | when called in the superior court in |po 0 ‘0 FEN. 10 I SeT 660000000 REPUBLICAN PA In principle, it — He| Dublin, Ma four hours after he had par-|dence were tied up when the building | lord mayor of Dublin, that & cent. interest. Of thesa a certain amount | Pub’ican par] shall be issued immediately; a second| his informant Iot in Névember, and thereafter ax many | PeT of parliament for Yo more ax she hay ability to pas. How|!he authority of the Irish the bonds are to be paid off fs stil a| ol the British zovernment matter of discussion. to grant dominion home tchelstown | Carrying an average reduction in pay of . according e to the testimony adduced at the military | Building operations of every. sort on tary court condemned him to deagh. were at a standstill in Taunton. Mass.. | Tnece terms woull be incorporated fn|Subject to Great Britain Prof. Charles E. Bennatt. —_— owing to failure of master carpenters.|sn. yiimatum, which expires on May| {0l over the army and e feaaon IVAPAN FREIGHT STEAMER plumbers and mascns and m';lr employes [ 12" and which will be sent to Germany head of the Latin AFIBRE' AT SEA AND SINKING|!0 8Sree on ‘&:mew wage scale as soon as the detalls of the terms are of Comell univensity for N R definitely decided upon, probably at the many years, diéd suddenly of heart dis-| 'Marshfield, Oregon, May 2.—The Jap-| Resr Admiral H. M. Doughty Dead. |meeting of the council tomarrow. Payments amount to more than the sum required to pay less message 'to the naval communica- | Admiral Doughty Wgs born in 1870. He| the intercet on the honds airesdy 'ai| Tesnoks, was a formet | tion service here late today. The mes-|served in the late®war in command of ready issued. the renarations commission | were Witied the battleshin Royal Sovereign in thelwill be entitleq to require the jssue of | late toda a former meniber of the facul-| tude 45.40 and longitude 12459 west. | first battle squadrom. further bonds. The .intention of the| er train, university and’ the' uni-, The steamer Horace K. Baxter fwas an. agoording to a Iyitish official. fis| Tue Wo of Nebraska, and the author of rted as golng to the Japanese ship's| The Atlantic coast of Labrader Is em-|to proportion the German obleations | care on assistance. tirely destitute of vegetation. after a certan fizure, to her ability to' & Western et v - -

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