Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 12, 1921, Page 1

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VOL. LXII—NO. POPULATION 29,685 NORWICH, CONN., THURSDA CERMANY'S COMPLIANCE TO ALLIED DEMANDS COMPLETE Text of Acceptance by German Government Opens With! Reduced 50 Per Cent. Promise “to Carry Out Without Reserve or Condition Its Obligations as Defined by the Reparations Commis- sion”—Lloyd George in Giving the Terms in theHouse of Commons Said: “There is Complete Acceptance of Every Demand.” London, May 11 unconditional reparations (By the A. P.).~~Ger-yinto a co-ordinate ministry. The post of foreign minister, which Dr. himself assumed still seeking a likely Gossip in the temporarily, German minister to Great Brit- sbbies today was wholly ‘ to whether the only a parlia- ment minority, would be able to carry out constructive precarious bicking. ay's complete acceptance of all the al- announcement was eeted with prolonged cheering. the German Yeply 11 o'clock this Lloyd Geor, telegraphed the nesw to nments concerned. The strongest doubts in this direction are expressed among the who freely ministry will soon undergo recon- signing cabinet” has been disposed Local Union No. | ginee: coastwise lines were foreign lines. However, he sa expeoted, when the strike began, that 1s delivered to an as follows: accordance The liberals ins German people’s party if only for the reason of nul- opposition from the right side of As the majority fundamentally the Streseman part econe conclusion | estenq the present cabinet's party struc- would promptly precipitate t upon the inclus nstructions socialists are | and with refe to the resolutions | attempt to German government, zovernment is only able to rely reserve or| assuming that ts obligations as defined by 216 out of 469 votes, the democrats vote solidly with the to gecept and carry out with-|a provisional manner only. Although the liberal press genc.ally is sympathetic s is not over-¢ of the circumstasces which brought it into obligations preseribed | reparations commission without reserve or measures of military disarmament government tute a s carely apichored in pa those overdue eted at once REACH DU the prescribed date SSELDORF ut reserve Duesseldor! r criminals and (o posed calling for repeal c commander taxes and substitution of a sales tax. They claim that the sales tax wouid not place the burden of taxation upon | the workers but would add materially to the cost of living. With the excise or luxury tax repealed, the trial of w staff—fifteen rive here from Mayence arrangement made days irrespective velopments, ninety—will ar- e of the aflied governments of ago will be ad- to take note immediately Hennocque's the occupation of trict extremely to the commons aceeptance of every demand.” aid: “There ESSEN BELIEVES FRANCE WILL NOT BE CHSTAG RES®, AFTER SATISFIED TUESDAY'S LONG SESSION announcement of the acceptance by Germany of all the ultimatum was re- rather mild The general impressiin in Essen js| atisfied with | e members appar- The council has condemned the statute an act establishing “involuntary servitude for the workers of Kansa: tection for the interests of tl midnight session of yesterd coalition parties Chancelior Wirth signature hy the district as a guaran- expense of the emplo; eration take steps to have a an its drive IN THE § POSTMASTER APPOINTMENTS NO LIQUOR SALES BOARD VESSELS Washington Washington, May 11.—Recent reports characterized Bensen as the resuit liberate propaganda” by foreign competi- by James Kads How of S ed before the council today and he has re- masiers and Wilson order put- from New Huron which was reported to hav Montevideo with United States. it might be well to have a was reached.” was received, | that in Denmark, Belgium, Germany and d, an investization would be made. | England. Furthermore, ! ranch of the government charged the enforcement republican, 1e record the number of dem- prohibition postmasters tion Commissioner Kramer received no the number of A FAREWELL LU postmasters from New prohibition defined by the department of justice rul- two orders FRENCH TANK DISPERSED AMERICAY POLISH INSURGENT ADVANCE | cyiomistic priests of Ireland and a! The archbishop in replying to the ad- ]!dress said he never would be prouder of | " !being an Irishman than on the | was returning to tell the Australians that | nothing stood in the way of peace be- | IN BUENOS AIRES ENDS esia, May 11—(By The| stationed in the Kattowitz market square today dispers advance guard controversy which arose of the boycott a settlement acceptanhle tes and the Argentine govern- right to rule A S declared. If Irel, rute have not vet heen made public, but of Finance the Martha Washington now as other port diffi- two machine guns The column broke, dashed away; their rifles nona remained. The British and French soldiers gath- five hundred Washington unisad her or permit non-unionists to do | DEPORTED FROM PERU FOR POLITICAL REASONS CONDEMNS THE POLICIES Peru, May 1l.—Several promi- 0OF SAMUEL GOMPERS |nent persons who were detained recently Huntington, W. Va 11.—A reso- liner Paita, for deportation, cording to this morning's newspapers. It reported General convention. was taken into custody last week for al- leged complicity in a revolutionary plot, to be deported. resolution cha Gompers as is among tho: timate destination the newspapers the Federation was ship without AND HAIL STORM IN SOUTHERN ELECTION OF OFF STATE MASTER PLUMBERS CENTRAL ICERS BY 11.—A wind of unusual over portions of Georgia, Alabama, M and Tennesses Hartford, Conn., 11—The Mas- | ter Plumbers Association of Connecticut and buildings. | President, O. A. Peterson, New Bri vice president, Waterbury ; second vice president, windows being broken and trees! urer, Charles Neuman, West Haven; del- egates to mnational convention, Harry J. and Thomas P. SCAPED UNINJURED Jacksonville, Fla., hoat Vietor FIRST FOOD T! SENT TO UPPER SILESIA . bound from Mi; of Mantanzas rscaped without ey received here. Wiebe and his ¢ according to ad- Captain Charles R. w of seven Oppeln, May 11.—The first food train to be sent to the relief of the towns in 1 districts was due to leave Rallroad strike In Cubs has beem set- containing a blue cross on a white back- PR Owners Claim That Saiings Are Normal | Seamen Maintain That Depar-! tures of Coastwise Vessels New York, May 1l.—Denying state- ments by marine union representatives, that departures of coastwise vessels have been reduced 50 per cent, officiais of the Mallory, Clyde and Souther: companies tolay declared s continued at nearly normal sj Sailings have continued with but short; Pacific ngs had delays of a few hours, the steamship companies asserted. The freight steamers El Valle and El Alba, of the Southern Pacific company, are on their way to Galveston, and the passenger ship Comus is New Orleans, offic: said. At the offices of the Clyde and Mallory lines has left for Galveston and three for on the way to Is of that company was stated one teamer Charleston and Jacksonville since the trike started. Sailings of two shipping board freighters operated by the Mallory line between New York and Mobile were cancelled. Clearances today at the United States custom house showed the names of eight American shiy { ports. for foreign and coast Bert L. Todd, business manager of the Marine ociation ng better th , it w Beneficial would take about three weeks to tie up coastwise traffic. A. ¥. OF L. TO OPPOSE REPEAL OF THE LUXURY TAX Cincinnati, M 11.—The Amer nt This policy was decided upon, by the executive council of the federation in ses- ion here today. While no eflicial understood, regards any effort to substi- sules tax for the excise tax as an attemptto shift tae burden of taxation from capital to labor. Labor efficials explained that organized labor believes that the present system of taxation is more equitable than the pro- labor officials said, the manufacturer. merchant and other big interests of the country would be given a renewed oppor- tunity to g ofiteer. The stand of the be incorporated in the counci Kansas court of industrial relations law. public utilities and all industries "The council also w -labor legislation repealed and renew Brotherhood Welfare it take steps to urze upon congress the 000 and 5.000.000 unemr cheme of ur employed insurance in this country President Samuel Gompers of the fed- eration said the council had to consider Mr. How's proposals and sug-: gestions. CHEOY TO ARCHBISHOP MA London, May 11.—Archbishop Mann! of Australia, who gwill leave “for home a few day: farewell luncheon at which he received a addry from the bishops and so valuable gif s, day he tween Great Britain and Ireland, British crime and British aggression The Irish people should be granted the that was her business. and until t right was acknowledged there would no peace hetween England and Ireland. The Irish people, Archbishop Mannix said, stood heart and soul behind Eamonn De Valera. He was the only man cap- able of talking for the w people, and the British government showld wanted negotlate with him if it really peace. HOSTILE RECEPTION FOR BRITISH LABOR LEADER | New York, May 11.—, of Railwaymen of Great Britain, arrival here today on the Olympic. Men and women, who styled them- selves as representatives of ths Irish American Labor League, assembled at the pier bearing banners criticising Thomas for his action in the settlement of the threatened strike of the Triple Alliance in England last month when he urged the miners to accept a resumption of me- gotiations with Premier Lloyd Withdrawal of the railwaymen was first break. Police reserves were called as 5 pre- caution, but they were not needed. Mr. Thomas and his daughter. who accomp- erved in a anied him left the pier un closed taxicab through a freight exit. PATIENT MISSING WITH RADIUM VALUED AT $3,000 Oklahoma City, Okla., May 11.—Treat- ment of a charity patient has resulted in the loss of radium valued at between $3.800 and $3.500 by a well known firm of dootors of this city, it was announced today by a member of the firm. The pa- tient disappeared with the radium on 8 and police investigation hag failed to reveal any trace of him. The radium, in two needles, had been placed in a cancerous growth and the Jpatient instructed to rewurn te have it removed, . BRIEF TEL Stockyards State Kan., was robbed of Liberty bonds. Esteban Gil Bor, of foreign affairs, city of Boston. elan minister guest of the New York city. proved by Go Swiss Federal arbitrate the boundar: Venzuela and Colmobia. dispute between Railroads in an abent New York city lose $1.000.000 a year through misuse of commutation tickets, according to General Passenber Agent P. H. Woodward. i nce May 1§ Mrs. Jacob Lenchner, wife of 3 Water- bury restaurant proprietor, attempted su- icide by ingaling illuminating gas. Bert P, Herzog, in charge of prohibition enforcement in Milwaukee, on a charge of s was arrested ng intoxicating liquor. A measure cretaing a form of morateri- was introduced in the senate, I of Jeannie Laflin Comch of i a trust fund of $25.000 for the Berkshire { Animal Rescue League. vice president of the Stanley Work, New Britain, aged 35 at the Roosevelt Memorial hospital in New Gov. Stevens of California, signed the or urvires or the acceptance of a bribe It was reported in San Jose, Costa Riea, that there is valuable oil and gas territory near Fuerta Limon on the western coast of Costa Rica. Franklin K. Lane. former secretary of e 1nterior, is greatly improved following n last week for gallstones, at chester, Mina. can Federation of Labor will oppose any at- tempt to repeal the pres excise or “luxury” tax ang substituie a | sales tax. rstem of An aftempt to escape by two military rifle fire from the provost guard. an- nouncement was made, the council, it is The status of Ben Franklin, which Is ting a number of New England cities bury, was in Providence \Wednesday. ace, president of the Beth- in a statement said the company was not considering re- ducing wages lehem Steel Corporation, the excise The Cerro De Pasco Copper Company dividend of 30 cents per share because of unsettled conditizns in the market. Samuel Untermeyer, chief comneil of committee, charged that fire insurance costs in New York are exorbitant. cutive councii will report to the annual convention of the federation to be held in Denver in June. The council today also decided to carry on the fight to obtain the repeal of the ipvestigating Berzdoll case was informed a formal de- mand on Germany will be made after the declaration of peace. super-dreadnaught commanded by Captain Richard C. Leigh, from Boston Tennessee, s yesterday in readine " and a. “pro-| Yesterds ardiza‘ion trial on the Rockland course. = owners of | at the Daniel W. Lawrence, ninety, last of the the Medford amous before prohibition home in Medford, 1l urge that the fed- | Makers -of ti-strike and to prevent the passage of further anti-labor legisiation in the states. A delegation from the International| ociation, headed Louis, appear- | ced that| An explosion of a powder magazine In quarry at Thornton, II south of Chicago, rocked towns south of the city. * various The appointment of Professor Henry P. Talbot, department Massachusetts Ins acting dean was committee. ¢ of taking care of the unemploy.- | He said he was especially interested | the welfare of the hoboes. Mr. How estimated that there were between of Technology, a 1,000,- | loyed in the| Mr. How suggested that Gold ingots valued at £11,000,000, oon- an hankers. ar- ved in New York on the steamship Unit- ed States from Sweden. like | er-in-chief of the Atlantic fleet, superintendent t promised i gates naval academy at Annapolis = ! from which the prisoner esca Directors of the National City bank of voted to absorh the Commer- nge National be submitted to the stockhold- The 450 employes of the Continen'al | today was tendered a | | chewing tot in wages when expired and walked out. mill was closed. teban Gill Borges, minister of for- of Venezuela, Charles W. ent emeditus of Harvard uni- “but | Wheeling Steel & Tron Co.s plant ag Benwood W, 1.400 men returned to work. borers accepted cents an hour. themselves, the archbishop | nd wanted a republic | at be operations. | leased in cu As the result probably of a gang fend severa] assaults| Dominic Fal- cone of Cambridge was shot and fatally | while passing Watertown, Mass of the Irish burn street, An iceberg fhat had survived the sums of a year and still stood mountain high | seven miles northeast of Cape Race, was the steamer Lexington w! Boston from Glasgow. . _H. Thomas, Beartivedsat general secretary of the National Union en- ing h ested countered a hostil edemonstration on ‘his | ,, s acnt Harding has reauest torney-General Daugherty charges of profiteering purchases made by the war department | during the w: to investigate in contracts Monthly tonnage report of the United Corporation showed unfilled orders on hand April 30 totaled 5.845,224 compared with the previous month. States Steel George. the Pointed by President Harding as his per- representative on rc-nrclan!zing branch of the government. the commission President Harding contributed $25 the American Legion fund for the deco- American graves in Europe, sons of the gave their lives in the World war.” Attorney General Daugherty announced he is considering a plan to reclaim younz prisoners in federal penidentiaries, .espe- cially first cffenders by placing them in vocational institutions to be taught trades. Asking 1,000 more enforce the new state prohibition act, Po- lice Commissioner Enright of New York petitioned the Board of Estimate for an appropriation of $1,031,870 in special rev- enue bonds to pay one year the new men. salaries of. MAY 12, 1921 TEN PAGES—70 COLUMNS ; PRICE TWO CENTS. oW i SENATE PAGSFT) TARIFF AND Iconsecrated Bishop e e AN DUMPING BILL 63 T0 28 Cathedral of St. John the Washington, May 11.—The senate late ) jeo. mousht to have the hili include hides today passed the emergency tariff and | within the scope of its protection snd anti-dumping biil. retaining all amend-|drew forth the jarzest: vote favorng the ments recommended by the finance com-| change that was recorded on any amend- mittee, but rejecting those individually | ment. It was defeated, however, 36 %o Divine, New York. All Amendments Recommended by the Finance Committes T_\'nl‘ York, May 11.—Rev. Dr. William today was cot crated tenth bishop of the Protestant li i i i & t Episcopal Dio- ublicans in Passing the Bill—Senator Was the cese of New York and today outlined his p n B o Charles Sumner Burch, Mln the morning, before an assemblage Pregates from m i vv Ili i m the m—!'.' as elevated to his new station with ly From the Fo - Ch ‘t P H a‘ colorful ceremony in the Cathedral nfl John the Divine, and later today, at Goes to Conference. York diocese, del ered his first address On assuming the bishopric. “I.believe that the Christ n church is !\;m:xy in all its history said Bishopn Manning. “And nowhere in the church | hroposed throughout all the world is this oppor-| ' anosco: 5 L e Seven democrats, Senators Broussard,| port 5 - Louisiana; Jones, New Mexico; Ken- Outlining the church’s attitude toward K, Wy . industrial and social problems, the mea | Grick: Wyoming: Myers. Mont M-mé\c(:.nning. rector of Historie Trinity wen Rmined——seven DM VM w..& 'h b. Charies Sumeccisor of the late Bishop Only Republican to Vote Negative—Bill Differs Radical- 5 L all parts of the land, the 138t annuai nvention of the New now confronted with the greatest oppor- tunity greater than in the diocese of e iecwRk 85 to3h TheiJomes amenduwit, s o bishop s: gl ‘n wap- by Renator Bursum, reposlican. ai- %0 of New Mexico, whe, his malden Pitt-] speach in the senate dec! 1 that eat*ls Nevada ; Ransdell, Louisiana, and id the: church must be, “not st S - i hides were seliing for “a dollar & phee & mere sympathetic on-looker, but al | heppard, ;1'\::”. lf"ml “i:u:::r ':;v””"‘ and it take a wagon load of :hem ta pay great loving influence and power."” - e . for a pair of shoes.™ Senator Harrison, democrat. Miswinsir- was announced as a orter . Only one | pi. in a final onslaught on the ¥l republ Senator Moses, of New | challenged iis republican sunps=aes ae Hampshire, voted against the bill z 1o the sincerity of their desiz: te he > As passed by the senate the measure | ipe ers. He then offsred - orer and the wage earnér It o i by, An “ e ot e miten ke~ o he | differs radically from the form in which | ment which would have exempted from bt S 220 tho problems of the| s ‘way passel by the house early In the| (ke apstication of the et b all unonall equally for honesty, for | XA S€stion, and now goes to confer- | tion all farming impiements and ether Hizh dealing, for the, spit of e won | €ce. Only the tarift features of th , Ari who was ab the church must inculde all *oni: vathy,” he continued, *and must mi to all alike. She must sympathize wity the problems of the | % e he | equipment used by the farmmers. The and brotherhood, bill were kept .m:n-t] 4‘%h~ ann:inur:m;'.fi Miasissippi senator contendod that sucn “Wherever there is proved wrong ana|2"d urrency re-valuation eections a change would materially aid the farm- injustice, the ch urch of conrse mar. ami| g entirely” re-written and the provi- hor course may, and} gion added for continuation of the war. ut the church is not com- { ers. His proposition was rejected with- out a record vote. mu. speak. siomed nor endowed with special wis-| {/Me Testrictions an imports of dye- | Tme following were selected ‘o repre- dom, to pronounce unon specific political | StUTS f ¢ the end | 77t the senate in the conference wilh and economic prozrammes.” Action by the senate came at the end | 1, pouge: Among his recommendations for en-| of five hours of driving attack by demo-| ., L0 po larged activities in the diocese was one | CTAtic leaders. The latter, however, wert| g, L "ong that two suffragan bishops be elected to | N0t alone. in thei e rrebi kot d assist in chureh work in raral districts, | the weamre, for severm republicans | Dakola. and Sorth Carelina in colleges. and universities, among me- | Made efforts to broaden its scope only to| (I FUEE L M . Rt . groes and “among our citizens of foreign | %°¢ their amendments meet the same fate | 'AmS. SThiety s Juaf. ks e hirth." He also recommended the raia.| a8 those offered from the minority side | demed uniikely that stiemots to iren bi e also recommended the rais- hose % ore swept aside | @ut the differences between t InE of an endawment fand. for. ine aac|of the chamber. Al were swept % fivHa Mt k , th ese Keep_ of Sunod Fall. which was ‘aadod | by, practically the same vote. ks pame by The’ supats ks MK W'To to the cathedral group of buildings by | Laté in the day democrats concentrat. | AT FEREC (0 TS SCORRe the I 800 the late J. Piersont Morgan and William [ ¢ on the commitiee addition to the DL | et i 5 aionl -t Tmetehiant who had served as chief conseerator of | frequently that the amendment. which | ways A tiae tats e '1‘1“ e Fhi iist Germha st Mndt he | Was submitted to th ecommitte¥ M n- E'v”; ]:‘j""‘““"“':l': :;" h:":_' ”:‘.".7"' has attended durins his life, was p ator Ijox. republican. _Pennsylvania, | T ¥ ¢ of the firance e MoCumber, Nopth Utah, republiean Sy e Thratved i oTR o d oo-| the dye industry and turn over the con- e . - Tentlon (:Hs recetvedianovition and oo | L T o fie kg il w1 Ul o | ARAOL manufacturers. surar. ik, ;;" E S o man. A roll call left it as a part of the -Ta‘:\-' and filler tobaceo an o fare - 1 by th te of 2 products. In a short address eculogizing bill by the v f 61 to 26 | o tart . Manning, he called attention to the fact Senator King, democrat, Utah, was net wl‘n -:;1':.10': M';‘jl .n‘-;:«:"::nz: ‘_t. rosti e e e shop | content, however, and made another ef-| Il carries an anci-damuing section & in 1867 there were only 22 dioceses in | fort to stri O e R tatred ghelle s made America, whereas there mow were 69.|prior to the vote on passag: o [rromgrrimgatoot i o i o ' onke 1o dete . o hers Nec ey THE ESCAPE OF BERGDOLL | Meacure T i C enate 800n to fnvesti-| ent war time contrsl of importations af . SR srst- | Fate the monopo'y which he said existed | dyestuffs is continisl and t1e war .m: Washington, May 11. B a first- | o had not been permanently intrengch-| board section of he 1 - hand account of the escape of Grover and T b Aeparsment now Ganding that wark | v the senate Cleveland Bergdoll, the Philadelphia dratt | €4 ¥ the SERAES FOGE. (e by | transterrad to the ‘reasury doger, Sergeant John O'Hare, who was ! i : -rats who favorel the Provision is male far the revalmarion command of the escort which started out| fome of the democrate who fA¥ersl UG | LTIl foreigm curracy.on the bask o with Bergdoll from Governor's lsiand for | MeASUre t0 o emes X O emocrit. | "buying rates” of -xchanzs as auitel e 1 fixht | on the daie ‘e The New York o b Bil Tn 20 | the agency to determine the “Buying Hin o mendment was rejestel. 74| rates” and to certify them 1o the Seere- Senator Jones, democrat, New Mex- | tary of the treasury. the mountains of Mary'and, told the house investigating committee today tha he had never heard a word about the| buried pot of gold until long after the| prisoner had fled. | O'Hare was positive in the assertion| that when he arted out for the moun- tains the only instructions he received | from Colonel John E. H his superior officer, was to proceed with the prisoner | to Hagerstown. Md., get sorne money from a bank, take it to another bank in Phila- delphia, and return to the barracks. There was no written orders except stop off at North Philadelphia. meet late D. Clarence Gibboney, Bergdoll's l.\v\-" yer, and thereaiter be guided by what Gibboney said, the witness D ] MADAME MARIE CURIE ABOR AND COMPETITION ‘ , 3 i UNDOING OF RVLROADS HAS ARRIVED IN NEW YORK v . — of hepe cashington, May 1L —D rect exam'na-| New York, May 11.—A message e Ara 162 smits cadirman of |and fortitude for those affiicted with cas- rd of the Sou'nera I'a Con r was Lrought fo Amefica today by was conciudad 1o te commerce commi y by the sci-|Madame Marie Curie, discoverer of ra- s | dium and the world's most foremost wem.- an scientist She arrived on the Olymp however, be reca her two daughters 1o receive from -questioalig. | President Harding, in bebajf of the wem- clared with come emphasis in relating his part in the | 107, €TSS »E 8508 of the United States, one gramme of whole affair. O'Hare declared he wanted | o SICOGER CORICL 0T gy dium which she sald was desired for to_ handeuff his prisoner, but that Hunt| 2% 0 T8 Fo0rr e ine tis anidi- | yee in cancer research. Asked if radism refused. : ps which, he sal ds from mak were preve quate Tetu ¥ a cure, Madame It was by Gibboney's order. he s t the a Philad investment, or even meeling expen | it i That is, if it is applied went .for a I automobile Mr. Kruttschnitt complained of compe- 4 Bergdo! 2 1 a burlesque | \jion “favo: government subsi- | guished scientist, whe has show and stopped at the F rgdoil home ich the trans ped rly inental lines pas- | e 4 ihe Nobel prize and is the first Consiant =1 ot her sex to occupy a chair as professor nter-coastal traffic throush W€}, 410 Sorbonne. was greeted at the pier canal, in part “fluancel b: Ly representatives of Marle Curie years, was s t from the nd in the Board out of the radium fund and leading scientific orga! full uniform of an n, with a | Cnited s treasury” was & Prime [T e e Mot and wemion hat cord indicating that belonged to| factor, he sid, while a second was \xe} frome Pollali’ scciatits ot” Mew' Yerk. € the infantry branch of fhe service; how | *automobile irachs on hig i |cago and Pittsburgh. carrying ags and he had sat in the train from New York 10| maintained by the siate fil ey ""* ‘w,_n‘ zathered 10 honmor her as a fellow Philadelphia without uttering a word and | government which th>y desiro; plabisleien. Aty cco all the while. out making day" W The sergeant had evaded the draft for a couple of who payment.” i “s fesquently inter-| In contrast to mro h-nodu-l; :mr-] ‘-nl Step by step he told of various moves. Commit { s B . Aetaes, up to the moment when Bergdoli w rupted the witn “.x 'u'l‘ g _pasines sl s m"_ nto a bathroom to answer the teleph |.both these points. Tra A Fu r The almost ashen whiteness of skin, e Was eT See te at, and to this| by way of Panama be ra b i nd AW ne oo b m,;‘ "l. i l'\.“l ’,_. es had been made ex: ashen hair |nfxrhod rlml .-lny fhl‘::’ W he got out. Except for that sing:e | byg ses g moment, he declared, th ral raic iev- | taffeta hat, combined to make her appar- never out of his sight fense of the present ¥ No amount of cross-examination could| ed. e budge the witness from his statement| Although “propasa that he w n entire ignorance of any | Fates,” Mr. Krutischn Tl " o plan to zo out and dig up the buried gold. | traneportatiat JER g i g “but my laboratory work and my chil- the object for which the prisoner was ry e der oty el Aecreans in fre and passenger | gren have made this impossible before tody of O'Hare and York,| the decrease in frelfl, 00 Jion | n & e- | her simple lored suit and little | unched into a Je- | her simple black tailored suit an erted, and he launched i prisoner was | he asserted, an | ently the science.” “1 have for years wished te visit America,” her formal statemen tsaid, passionless spirit of pure tor said the | business was now. 1 am hapny to bring my daugnters AnilEceraent VI IR RIS L the ate ¢ was responsible. | to see your country, and m-ylr‘ r‘h.;n my Sl To st e R 200 e - el [Eratitude to American women for the man who was sent to Washington to get| APPEAL FOR UNITED ST - L EA | site to thank them through the press. $105.000 in gold from the treasury, were RECOGNITION OF KORRA|sifs to thank them thmash the Bessmey, around the Bergdoll home all the time the | jtors the courtesies usually reserved for party was there, O'Hare said. Washington, May 1L—An appeal o7} (00 0 e eliminating all- possibie When Mrs. Bergdoll learned that her|recognition by the United States of 'AS| L (o (ol ™ rrom the pier she was n had gone she was greatly excited,independence of Korta was made to@a¥| JCU0T Ml yome”or Mrs. William said O'Hare, “putting her hands above by Soon Hyun, as -diviomatic “BSTF|o oLy yojoney, chairman of the Marie her head as she walked about getting|and representative of Korea” in a come) (R Gl ROl TGO o panied Ber supper.” The woman and Romig, he add- | munication _addressed = to SCCReiiil o Noyvage ed, tried to persuade him not to worry.| Hughes. The plea was “jm historic Until Madame Curle salls for Bureps, assuring him that Bergdoll would be back | “hereditary and "":l“'fi‘“"";‘(‘_mi of 1882 |on June 25. her visit will be marked by after a while. right” of Korea and the : Iy activity. The Tinerary includes vise O'Hare was not subjected to a grilling | between that country and the ‘""""?.a.li..acr.!ruo. Washington, Philadelphin, except by one member of the committee, | States. X . 4| Pitisburgh, Buffalo, the Carnotite mines in an effort to bring out that he did not| Declaring that the United States had| ‘" e in Colorado, Harvard and Yale universi- understand the brief order given him by |bound itseif under eror:; l.;:‘a;‘fl‘;‘” il Sinierd’ and okl Wy sl Colonel funt. ts good services in : ot po S g el fiunt : . case” another power dealt “unjustly z:"“o:c.\i:Q:"‘\’;‘mm-m Harding will pre AMBASSADOR HARVEY HAS oppressively” with her, the communic y DTy " The American. gov- | sent the gramme of radium. TED HIS CREDENTIALS ernment issue a proclamation recogniz- ) P | London, May 11 y the A. P.)—Col- | ing Korean md-*rwn'l'fl";’ 'a"dm'c"m',‘";; JUSTICE MeGANNON TO SE & sl o e direct diplom: onel Geroge Harvey, the new United |diately resume dir P ; BE TRIED FOR PERJURY sia] relations” with her. States ambassador ~ to Great Britain, { commercial relatiofis = W e g o g Sy Presented his credentiale to Earl Curzon, | The history of the TeltORs Fo CCll leveland, O.. May 11L—Former Chief the foreizn minister, at the foreign of- | With Korea was review Justice of Municipal Court Willlam “H. 4 e th latter had “never - s fice this afternoon. He will be received |tion made ‘w’:\’:i"’nr“(_ e endEret Mcfi;nno: m'us‘ & or‘:’um'::u':t:nz i ¢ King Ge cing- | voluntaril ) S ey fon the charge of perjury ;'Lm“"g’a'»:ii 2: e}l‘a]\r!:n P 'g\uucx;:a';\ rights as an independent and SOVErelEM | o,y ingiciaq in connection with his twe morning and will make his first public ; hation. hall- continue | trials for the murder of Harold G. Kagy. appearance at the dinner to be given by| “We bave refused, ‘and shall* continue| oy "y bt L it s 0gay Hollowe (B Eehiet snciety-on May 10 to refuse’ the communication said. 101,07, Coonrarence between Common Pleas Meanwhile, Ambassador Harvey has an- |Fecognize or acknowledge any authority oé UThority | Judge Florence E. Allen and nounced that he will refrain from grant- |Or TiEht on the part of ihe government Prosecutor Edward C. Stanton. ng interviews and from any discussion of | Of the empire of Japan to have or assume - z ¢ to exercise sovereignty over any part of 3 3 international affairs. the Kingdom of Korea. * * ¢ e CANADA TO FURTHER RESTRICT - e We declared that Japan is wholly | - IMMIGRATION OF CHINESE EXCHANGE STUDENTS FOR unfitted fo act as the sponsor’ fof Kored BELGIAN INSTITUTIONS New York, May 11L—The commission | validity of its contention to a superior| Ottawa, Ont. May 11.—A bill design- for relief in Belglum educational foun-|eiv jon that is warthy of imita- |ed further o restrict Chinese immigra: dation tonight announced appointment) of tion was ‘ntroduced today in the hewse 18 of the 24 echange graduate fellows n. closed with a promise|of commons. from American universities who will at- |that K would assume in its foreign | - Chinese merchants now are admitted tend Belgian institutions of learning policy full share of responsibility for| without a head (ax on production of & next year. and the Korean people, and we deny the the promotion of the principles of justice | certificate of identity issued by the Chin- The appointees, include Miss Laura T.]and fair dealing in all relations between'ese government and vised by British Cannon and Hastings Ells, Yale. nations.” consular agents, _ )

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