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L i ol SR L /] s Q B woner />, ’ VOL. LXI—NO. 131 POPULATION p 29,685 ! , CONN. TUESDAY, MAY 31, 1921 : TEN PAGES—70 COLUMNS PRICE TWO CENTS. MEMORIAL DAY IN ENGLAND AND FRANCE in St. Paul's Cathedral, London a Bust of George Wash- ington Was Unveiled as a Gift From the American Peo- ple—A Message From President Harding Was Read at the Ceremony—Grave of Every American Soldier Buried in the British Isles Was Specially Decorated— Memorial Exercises Were Held in Every American Cemetery in France. American soldier buried specially dec in the British rated by living viay in observance of Ameri- day. while in St. Paul's afternoon a bust * Washington unveiled as a from the American people. A mes- z rem President Harding read at the axpressed the hope that the 14 might pire a continued recipro- edtablished friendship of people for the British na- Memorial was bust was placed In the erypt of the ral near the resting plac- =~ of the ashes of Nelson and Welling- d amidst he effiges of hundreds England’s noted dead. It was do- ated by the Sulgrave institution, which the Washington ancestral home grave Manor, and some seventy American organizations. Ite un- owed memorial services for the soldiers, = rs and marines ng buried in Engiish soil. at which Diean Inge paid tribute to their services hose of eir ing comrades to the Tiritish and American nations and to the Sl1. These services wers under the the London post of the Amer- he n London. e was atiended Rear Admiral American em- societies mony ¥ Ambassador Harvey, r of other Amer- the conclusion n the crypi of the Hary the mes- held Ambassado q wresentation address, President Harding and mes- Mr. Lioyd George, the prime r. Gemeral Pershing, Ambaseador Davis and others were read the day members of l.egion placed wreaths on the craves throughout the British © Maior Oscar N. Solbert. mil- attache of the American embas- the an . smmander of the navy laid a biue and white flowers on the ay n Whitehall and a similar of the British known warrier,” in Westminster Abb: r tribute to their Rritish com- S wreaths also were placed n =ome twenty Englieh cemeteries. ‘“To r Alled Dead.” was the inseription on wreathe placed on an American grave o cemetery at A zol. where a detachment of guards paraded and eounded the *ast post” Premier Liavd George, in his message read at the cathedral ceremony. regret- | his inability to be present, but sent word that “in commen with all of King ‘ rge's snhiects today 1 am glad to w tha: Washingion's name and fea- = are now enshrined forever amonst t dead in the erypt of St. message said it was of friendship al- the two English- should in a measure gifts appropriate to the existing between by fwn conntries e confiymed Foarmer Arm ader vas Davis in his mes sage pointed ont how fitting It was that £ 14 stand “in monument- " frn il from which ful o s aree Wakefield, annonnced as y Mavor of London, proposed nation of busts of Chatam and ke to America on behalf of the An- to be placed where authorities should deter- s Sulgrave nze in his address eaid the as- . s henored the gallant Amerl- whe had ‘coms to fight “for the b= rties of the nations of the earth,” Bng- sxhausted and burdened from the , e, continued Dean Inge, look- e understanding and sym- + from her kinsmen across the At- Providenes” said the dean, “has re- i for America a preponderating part man affaire ip future, There can he no splendld iselation for a natien such power and such high respon- ties The cause of freedom and rmational peace mnst he increasingly nd up with the attitude of the Amer- and their government. Anoth- or great war in ihis century would mean ~ suicide our common civiilzation. eannot doubt but that the Ameri- n people will throw their influence in- o any really workable scheme to end war and the fears of war among the eiv- red nations ™ Ambassador Harvey, hefore the unveil- ~z of the bust characterized Washington as “brave your Great Nelson, as as aring as our great admiral.” with a nod Admiral Sime. The ambassador de- sred America wae not ashamed of be- ing called a meiting pot. “As a melting pot we have never lost eur prospective.” e added, remarking that only twe pres- dents of the Tnited States were not of nclish Adescent. Washington. sald the ambassador, was a prudent, far-sesing, thoughtfnl and man. and President Harding, he 4, “has many of Washington's at- tributes.” k'ndly HONOR FOR FIRST U, SOLDIER KILLED IN FRANCE Bathelemont, France, May 30.—Presi- Harding's wreath, symbolizing his iribute to the American dead in France, ‘or the purchase of which he sent a sum ¢ money tn the Paris poat of the Ameri- ean Legion, today was placed on the grave of Frank T. Frasham, who fell here Nov. 2 117, the first American soldier to be ¥illed in Franee after the United States entered the world war 40,000 AMERICAN SOLTTER DEAD REMAIN IN FRANCE May 120 (Ry the A. P.).—Little ean flage and poppy-dotted wreaths ked e of every one of the forty 6d2 thousand American soldier dead remaining in France and the few hun- irods scattered througheut the Furopean continent. Even te the single mound on Gibraltar. Ameriea remembered her dead. The Americans, eomparatively few in numbers. shared with the French their #ad task of honoring those who had died the great cause. The French took part n every ceremony. and in places where perhaps there was only a single grave, and the American committes was able te #nd only one representative, Frenoh pa- rutic socicties orzanized services Paris, “un- | 30.—The zrave of every| There were seventy-seven greups of of | | fourth annual convention ef the National SERVED Zraves where formal memorial programs were carried out in France, but there were others, more picturesque. where a French priest led the school children to an isolated American grave, which they had guarded and cared for as if their own, or where a village mayor presided over the services. with here and there an American resident or visitor taking part. EXERCISES IN AMERICAN CEMETERIES IN FRANCE Paris. May 30. — Memorial exercises were held today in every American cem- etery France, and even on isolated graves of Americans who died in this country during the war, Wreaths were lapeed. The French government exeri- &d every effort to make sure that not a mingle American hern was forgotten. At the suggestion of the government, there were guards of honor at the prin- cipal Gemeteries. and wherever Ameri- cans were unable to send delegations to conduct services, the French offered to lead the exercises, as well as to partici- pate in the programmes. The cemetery at Romagne-Sou s-Mont- faucon, where 20,000 Americans who fell in the battles of the Argonne were buried, s how cloded to the public be- cause of the removal of the bodies of the Americans. The ripncipal programme for | the day, therefore, was given at the Sur-| nesn cemetery, near this city, where addresses were made by Hugh C. Wal-| Jace, America nambassador : Major Gen- eral Henry T. Allen, commander of the American troops at Cobienz, anu mur- shal Petain. DEVELOPMENT OF ELECTRIC LIGHT AND POWER | Chicago. May 30 —Plans for the launch- ing of a gigantic electric light and power development program, nation-wide in scope, will be unfolded at the fort Kleetric Light association te be held here beginning tomorrow and lasting until June 3 I Development plans will be discussed which call for the expansion of the indus- try and the expenditure of millions of | dollars for the purpose of extending lhfli service of electrical energy to American induetry. Electrification of steam railroads, na- tional water power development, plans for | super-power development. which means the connecting of the clectric resources of | thé nation into powerful distributing sys- | tems, and scores of other subjects, will! occupy the attention of the delegates dur- | ing the four days' session. More than 3.000 delegates and their] wives are expected and they will include | the leading men of the electrical industry ! from all parts of the country. General sessions will be held every morning and in the afternoon the convention will split up into sections at which various phases | of the industry's problems will be dis- cussed. Martin J. Insull of Chicago, president| of the National Electric Light association, | will deliver the opening address. One of the most important speeches will be the address by James E. Davidson of Omaha, who is chairman of the public relations national section. Mr. Davidson will out- line the work of his committee in pro- moting a better understanding between the utilities industry and the public. legis- lative bodies, public utilities commissions and federal’ authorities. At the same session David Darlington of New York will discuss the development of company employes' organizations, a| movement. aimed to resuit in closer rela- tions between employes and the com- panies. Among the other speakers will be James A. Perry of Atlanta, president of the National Association of Railway and Utility Commissioners ; R. H. Ballard ‘of Los Angeles, a member of the public policy sub-committee, and Alex Dow of Detroit. e ——— CENTENNIAL CELEBEATION OF UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINTA Charlottesville, Va, May 30.—This| gray old college town was crowded to- | night with visitors and returning alumni who are lo attend the centennial celebra- tion of the University of Virginia, which begins temorrow and continues through Friday. Graduates from as far back as the class of 1870 paraded the streeis while prominent educators from all parts of this country and from abroad wers guests at the university. Exercises in Cabel hall commemorating the influence of the university in the re- ligious life of the nation will mark the opening of the centennial tomorrow. Dr.| William Alexander Barr, dean of Christ church cathedral, New Orleans, will be | the principal speaker. Governor Davis of | Virginia and Dr. Edwain A. Alderman, president of the university, will welcome the visitors and Dr. Henry Van Dyke of Princeton university will preach at vesper services. In the evening the new Mclntire Greek amphitheatre will be dedicated. The am- phitheatre, a gift of Paul Goodloe McIn- tire of Charlottesville and New York, brings the total number of out-of-door | Greek theatres in this country up to seven. ' The others are located at Berke- ley, Point Loma, Bakersfield and Clare- mont, Cal., Cranbrook, Mich., and Gar- field park, Chicago. COUNCIL OF FEDERATION OF WOMEN'S CLUBS Salt Lake City, Utah, May 30.—Ap- proximatety 3,000 club women from all parts of the United States are expectsd to attend the Great Sait Lake eouncil or national convention of the General Fed- eration of Women's clubs to be held here June 13-18, incluaive. Among speakers at the council will de Mrs. Mary C. C. Bradford of Colorado, former president of the Nationsl Educa- tional association’ Prof, Levl BEdgar Young_of the DUniversity of Utah and Dean Byron Cumminge of the Univerwity of Arisona. Reporta from state federations will be Lenine Pronounce Gommunism Failre Advocates the Return of Cap- talism and Recall of Poli- tical Parties. Riga, Letvia, May 30 (By the A. P.).— Nikolai Lenine, the soviet Russian pre- mier, has declared that communism is in complete bankruptcy. and has asked the presiding officers of the all-Russian cen- tral executive committee to approve the unlimited return of capitalism and the recall to Russia of the constitutionai- democrats and other parties to aid in re- building the state, according to a dircct Moscow despatch received today from in- dependent sources. The statemen! contained in the des- patch, said to have been made yesterday, have not been carried in any official hol- shevik advices, nor has anything tending to confirm them been received from any other source. The Moscow despatch says that Lenine has submitted the foliowing written pro- position : “Whereas, in the realization that com- munism has came to complete bankrupt- ey, and in order to save the idea of com- munism for the future and find without took big a change of policy the way out of the abyss into which communism has thrust the country, it is recognized that unlimited freedom must be allowed cap- italism and that the cc uional demo- | crats and representatives of the ‘reall politik’ shall he summoned to resume the | work of rebuilding the state.”” The despatch asserts that thie propesi- tion caused tremendous exciteme but does not say whether it was adopted JAPAN TO BE REPRESENTED AT WORLD PRESS CONGRESS Columbia. Mo.. May be represented at the world in a delegation 30.—Japan will the press congress of Honolulu next October by of distinguished Journalists headed by K. Sugimura, editor of the Tokio Asahi Shimbun, according to ca- bled advices just received here by Dean Walter Williams, head of the school of | journalism of the University of Missou-| Ti and president of the congress Mr. Sugimura, who is one of the fore- most journalists of Japan, is a member of the executive committee of the press! congress and helped to organize it San Francisco in 1915. He will have a prominent place on the program in Hon- olul Representation countries wherein congress is Honoluln by ranzements. as| | | | of all the forty-three reside members of t exnected at the sessions those in charge of the ar. Will Wilke, editor of the Grev Fagle, Minn.. Gazette. and former president nf the National Editorial Association. is ar- ranging for special accommodations te ecarry the from the United States to the He is the chairman of the org transportation committes, tralns and steamship delegates | meeting. anization's STUDENTS OF TRINITY IN THE MAIN SELF RELIANT| Hartford, Conn.. May 30.—The nollogs student of tradition. who spent his sum-| mer helidays idling on the verandas of the summer hotels or supported by his, father on the farm or in the country homes has hecome rare these days. All| the students of Trinity Colleze here. with the exception of 10 men. have made their plans to work during their summer va- cations. These fizures are ziven out hy | . T. Hersey, director of the student em- plovment bureau. Some of the methods by which Trin- ity men will earn their ‘own money this| | | summer will be by working as ridine in- structors, hotel “bell hons* hakers. | chauffeurs. stewards on shins. reporters &nd in banks and insurance offices, Some | will go back to the farm to work. not to| loaf. they eay: while others will tri tn- toring. selling and enelneering, Several will have recourse to hook-selling as their fathe Thera plenty of work they are willing t4 sell ha cutter: mans. underwear and 1imit- ed editlons, says the director. AMERICAN SCHOONER FOUNDERED OF COBLE ISLAND for stndents | peanuts. soan, AN Halifax, N. S, May : can schooner Esperanto, Captain To Benham, foundered today 1 1-2 mfes south of Sable Island. A radio message received tonight zy the department of ma- rine and fisheries said the schooner El- sie IT stood by the Esperanto but did not mention if her crew had been taken off. The meesage, which was sent by one of the department's patrol boats, said the peranto was submerged to her cross trees. “We turned over her does nad found the name,” it added. “Captain Geel of | the \Eisie IT left before we rezched here.’ The department is endeavoring to learn by wireless if Captain Geel tcok off the Esperanto’s crew. —The Amer; ESPERANTO WON THE FISHING VESSEL RACE | Gloucester, Mass., May 30.—Gloucester mariners were stuned whe nthey learn- ed tonight that the schooner Esperanto of this port which won the international | fishing vessei race off Halifax last fall, had foundered near Sable Island. Cap- tain Tom Benham had previously sent | word to the owners, the Gorton-Pew Ves- sels Company that he had a full fare of fish and was aWout ready to start home after eight weeks on the banks, There was much anxiety as to the fate of the crew of about 25 men. The Es-| peranto was the pride of the Gloucester fleet. The Esperanto was chosen last year as the fittiest representative of the New England fishing fleets to uphold American supremacy of the North Atlantic against the Lunenburg, N. S. fisherman Dela- wanna. Captain Martin Welch, known along the coast as “Cap'n Marty,’ w given command for the eeries of contests off the Nova Scotia coast and he return- ed the schooner a winner in twe straight races on October 30 and November 1. Built at Besex in 1306 the Esperanto registered 140 tons gross " OBITUARY Alexis I. DuPent g Wilmington, Del, May 30.—Alexis L Du Pont, secretary and director of the E. 1. Du Pont De Nemours and company dled today after an illness of ten days. Mr, Du Pent was a son of the late Eu- gene and Amelia E. Du Pont and was born in Wilmingten in 1869. He gradu- ated from Harvard in 1892 and poined the Du Pont company. A brother and three sisters survly, FEugene Du Pont, Miss Amella Du Pont, Mrs, Willlam C. Pey- ton and Mrs, James N. Andrews, The funaral will be held Wednesday afternoon Eiven by the state presidemts, Ameng them will be Mre, Walter B. Oflil. New York M, Frank Gfwen, Rhade island | Mra. W, R, Alvord, MoCi Fioride | Mm. J. B. Choveh, from the home of Miss Du Pont, Mr, Du Pont was president of the Wil | extortio | were warned not BRIEF TELEGRAMS Contrary to expectations no date has yet been fixed for the meeting of the ai- lied supreme council at Boulogne. An examination of the ruins of the Dublin customs house, part of which sii.l are smouldering, revealed that all the safes were unharmed. The allied couneil of ambassadors has virtually approved a plan to establish a neutral zone between the German and the Polisn forces in Upper Silesta. Dr. Milenke R. Vesnitch, former Jugo- Slav premier and minister of foreign af- tairs anda lately Jugo-Slave minister to/ France, died in Paris. Meriden on Wednesday, dune 1, will entertain delezates to the annual con- vention of the Connecticut Hospital as- sociation. The Very Rev. Dr. Andrew Morrissey, adjutor general of the congregation of Holy Cross and formerly president of University of Notre Dame, died in Paris, France. e the Gasoline larze bures tocks on April 30 were the in the history of the country. the u of mines announced. There were 000,000 gallons in stock, a net in- crease of 42,000,000 in a month. Mustapha Sachier, a British Indian subject. who was formerly a member of the Turkish delegation in London, was publicly hanged in Parliament Square, in Angora. \ sh Some letters and documents signed by | personages of former cen‘uries brought only §1 to $14 each in an auctin sale in Philadelphia, but Benjamin Frank % hygrometers brought $270. n of Silesia nto three zones, one sh authority, another under iction of Germa and the be governed by the allies was discussed by the council of ambassadors. Two Morocean sharpshooters members f French forces in the Rhineland, have been convicted by the French war coun- of murdering a German engincers at Hoechest, near rankfort, - The memorial building at Choate scheal, Wallingford, erected in honor of Choa the world w was dec afternoon in & ment exercis r James C ig. premier designate for er, is in London to arrange the de- ails of the ceremony attending the open- of the new northern parliament on June 7. Former Governor Simeon who was operated upon at the week, is in e E. Baldw New Haven cellent condi- tion, according to the bulletin issued by the staff. A light smow fall was reported Satur- urday over Montana. I wid w ta ctions. Billin; crature of 34 degrees. Sale {o a syndicate of New Yorkers for $1,000,000 of a Jarge part of the equip- ent formerly operated on tha New York e harze canal was announced by the war department. st A $100,000 defense fund for union labor of leaders have been ind “ted on ed by hicago bu charge ass i of members unions. bein; of wenty-seven alleged members of the W Ve ere placed e Col., after they had to com- mandeer a Union Paci train and run it to Denver from Cheyenne. Members of with the railrond Amerfcan Feder: union jon afri of ted Labor to vote in the election of cmploye representatives under the new plan of representation by officials of the Pennsylvania raiiroad. A note from Great Britain, received in reply to President Briand’s recent | communication with regard to the meet- | ing of the allied supreme council, in- sists upon the desirability of a mesting this week. The country gradually is hecoming dri and the Volstead law John F. amer ment easier prombition ssioner, told the senate ap- propr committee in requesting a de ficiency appropriation. Federal administ; tion of the child la- | bor law has bro nto view the “vi- cious circle of child labor, iliiteracy. bod- ily feeblesness and poverty,” according te a report issued by the children's bureau of the department of lat Major General R. L. Ballard, who is sixty years old, will play with the Gov- | ernor's Island polo team mext Thursday when it opposes Squadron A, known the millionaires’ team of the New National Guard. as York Josephine Howard, n telephone operat: was shot and killed in Philadelphia le w g with a college student. The man who did the shooting jumped from a scaffold erected In front of a house, fired twice at close range and escaped. Father John F. Ryan, rector of Peter's church, Danbury, yesterday observed the 25th anniversary of his ordi. Rev. St. nation. He was presented with a purse of more than $4,000. Father Ryan went to Danbury from Hartford in 1919. David H. Blair took up his duties o commissioner of internal revenue with a | conference with Prohibition Commiseion- ‘2 board of three officers of he army air er Kramer at which reorganization of the prohibition force is understood to have been discussed. Forty-five days from Cape Verde wih sixty-nine passengers and out of provi- sions, the New Bedford schooner Senator, bound for her home port, was picked up about 300 miles east of Cape Henry by the coast guard cutter Manning. Recommendations to governments throughout th€ world relative to steps to be taken in the financial readjustment nee- essary to economic recovery were includ- ed in resolutions paseed in Lisbon by the international commercial conference. George T. Summerlin, American charge d'affaires in Mexico City had a confer- ence with President Obregon, and it i said he handed to the president a memeo- randum from the state department in ‘Washington. Japan, according to the best avallable information in Tokio, has not sent a formal communication to Washington as an answer to Secretary of State Hughes' note on the mandate question, but will Inaugurate an exchange of memoranda. The eable layer Robert C. Clowry, held at Mlam{, Fla., for months by the West- mingion Club and a member of the Wil of Philadeiphia and the Harvard Clubs of New York and Philadelphia, ern Unlon Telegraph company with the hepe that the United States government Mishigan | M. J. W. | mingtan Csuntry Club, the Tnien League | might consent to the landing of the com- pany'as Barhadoes aable here, steamed out of the harbor and headed north, Airplane Accident Generally Conceded That . Lieut.Ames Had Not Lost His Head. ‘Washington, May 30.—Appointment of Service to investizate the cumstances eurrounding. the accident in which five army men and two civilians lost their lives when a big army Curtiss-Eagle ambulance crashed to the earth in a severe storm near Morganstown, Md, Saturday even was announced today by Major M Scanlon, commandant at Bolling Ficld. Captain W, ¢'. Ocker, who was caught in Seaking Cause of MULTITUDES PARTICIPATED INMEMORIAL DAY EXERGISE In New York Tens of Thousands of Veterans of the Civil Spanish and World Wars Marched in Parades—Nurses in Uniforms Featured the Paradss—Special Honor Was Paid the Gold Star Mothers—Flowers Were Cast Upon the Waters of the Hudson River, While Warship Fired a Memorial Salute. storm himself while flving here New York. May 30.—Tens of thous-| auspices of the Beta Zeta Tau fratepnit: from Langley Field in an SE-5 single seat|ands of veterans o fthe Civil. Spanish!and included addresses by Representa plane senfor member of the board. |and World wars marched today in po-| tives Burton of.Onin, Kahn of Califernia The othiers are Lieutenant P. C. Wilkins, |Fades throughout Greater New York in|and Stiness of Rhode Isiand. was the t army officer to go out {honor of the dead they had left behind Presentation of the memorial wreatt to the e B oyl and take |them on the crimsoned soil of battlefields| by Ambassador Geddes w not a par charge bodies, Licytenant [and under the white-flecked Waters of | of the pre-arrangel prozramme for (e Lero Tt feavor to |the sea. | Arlinzton ceremon his request for mine, whether | Joining hande with them benecath the! permission to make the offering havins the crash was defect |Stars and Stripes were allied patriots| reached officials in charge just before in design or equ rplane, |Who during the recent conflict went 10| the president besan aking. The Ma or of any mistake or m anagement on |th efront in the khaki of Canada, the| 1 on the platform. rend- the part of the pilot, Lieutenant S. Ames, [kilts of Scotland and the horizon blue of the King,” when the and whether the five army men met | France. l came forward to speak. death in line of duty. The nurses who cared for the wound-| ssador of my king, King Flying officers stationed In the city |¢d and weifare workers who lent and said Sir Aucklang, “as rep and at Bolling Field erted emphatic- | comfort to weary and hungry fighters| resentative in s republic of his gov- ally today their belief that Lieuten v donnied their uniforms and trod | ernments throuzhout the werid: in the Ames had not “lost his h along behind the countless bands which name of the sle of the ®nited King- storm and therefore been in played martial music all the d | dom. of the British dominions and de- at least, responsible for the accident. Everywhere in the city flags flew at| pendencies, of the pire of India. of was one of the best and coolest half mast. From each of the zr ! British communities on every continent in the servic was familiar w forts guardin: e harbor the Memorial|and on islands of all the s in big ¢ they decla Day salute of 21 guns boomed forth ! token of their admiration for the gal- were to discred |noon. Out in the Hudson river the fla antry and devotion of America’'s sona that the wrec machine w defective | ¥hip of seventy destr s joined in the| and daughters in the great war: in evi- in design. M anlon declared that he | choru | dence of their sympathy for America, had piloted a ar plane, without the Hundreds of grey-haired warriors who| who t arns and glorifies her asmulance equipments, to New Yorw, |defended the Union in ‘61 headed this! dead: and ned memory of the with eizht passengers recently and found zea which for three hours passed . sacrifices America has made for it eatisfactory in every wi | beneath the elms and maples that shel-| individual liberty, with your permission The board of investization visited the|ter fashionable Riverside Drive. Age | Mr. President, I this wreath upon scene of the wreck today and took the |had bent low the shoulders of many of | the ffaz of America.” testimony of ) ‘were nearby | Ihese heroes of Gettysburg and Bull | . SHan e 3 ey made a|Run. but they dressed their ranks and | wirLp SCENES IN DUBLIN car. stuc ze and aft- |Sipiritedly obeyed th command es | SESORE FHE CURNEW JOER erwards had it burned, as it was con- |eft” a8 they passed the reviewing stand. | eredTarRanD I ry t of the plane | The guard of honor for Major Gen-| L .. yoo 20 (1 the A P.)—Wiié was salvageable, officlals said, adding |°ral Robert Tee Bullard, who reviewed| . . . \ere witnessed here last evening Riatcarme s would mot fly in a |the parade. comprised the veteran corps|Shenet “ere WHECERC ol O e ne carrying any equipment taken from | ©f artillery and the old guard. | Stone throwing and shooting when the wrecked jine anyway. It seemed| Fluttering in the various parades ware | We7 Toted o ekbir it Sl from gt Broluie ails of the accident |0ld war flags some torn In the conflict Tl 0, © coveral combatants were mever be known, aa every man in | between soll and atlil others tattered in 0o ;0 e was killed. An examination of | France. With each group of veterans| ™ T, ,i.ea street a grocer's assistant 1 effects of the viet Sligw. SAmSc band X} jue-uniformed man | L " ot in the chest and died shortly seven watches had |°f ‘61 kept sten fo “Marching Through | ¥n® *hot | fxingi thoxexact [Geotsial el Tankee: Doodie As a result of these disturbances there was believed, he-| “Hot Time in the Old Time Tonight™| " o o0 ginaryd activity by-police and g seventh watch stop. | 1ared {rom the band that marched at-the| . y.is 0n 0'Connell street and the O'Con- 6.25. The board was cxpected to (head of the Spanish War Veterans imi, " iqze auxiliaries jumped from sev- its inquory tonight and report te |lheir blue campaign shirts and khaki|7e "ROES AT ATEE ST ored cat canlon tomorrow. A number of jPrecches. | and hustled along the young men founc ographs were taken of the wrecked | And then the veterans of a later and| ", " ccene. Women and children ran ol e e Ty et & wenEHime. | oway sereaming from the locality. The wdier General William M fiet many e Thovivors of & World €ON-| i ects were cleared a half hour before SR e flict—many of them with emtpy sleeves, | 11718 W reiterated the statement that Saturd of them =0 gravely injured that s air accident furmished s aramatic had o ride—marched bands that | = e for fasn yed the ayncopated music that had|$80,000 SUIT OUTCOME o irol of aeronautics, properly marked air TN out on the battiefields of Farnce OF AUTOMOBILE COLLISION ways. frequent landing fields. direetional | VelY. cheerful notes for an army of gal- lant lads who had mocked death, wireless communication with planes in| i Stamford, May 30.—Four suits eact the air and hourly weather reports are| 0 all the narades special honor was|ciaiming $20.000 allezed damages have Ihe oistanding needs of aviation today, |PAid gold star mothers. One of ‘thess|heen entered here agaimst the M. & S he asserted Zro —those whose sone had died at)Trucking company ef eason avenue, the They can only be obfained throughout | Se8——Cast flowers upon the waters of the| Bronx. as the outcome of the automobile e he said, by placing all avi-| Hndson. while warcraft fired a memor- | collision Saturday in which Mrs. Carrie atlon and sinzle control. The United |18l salute. P Beyer of Stratford was killed and several States i only forty per cent. map-| The dead of three centurles who sleep|of those with her were injured. The plain- ped aer he- added. {in historic Trinity churchyard were not|tiffs are among those who were hurt The e | forgotten. " Over ihe graves of those who | irucks of the company have heen attached BALTIMORE POLICE RHOOT {died in the Revolutfonary war—the first|One is that which crushed the touring car AND CAPTURE THIEF | . B¢ many who have made the supreme|on the Main street bridge and the o i . ‘<51"‘1hm‘ for America—were placed tha | s the one sent here to salti e X | thirteen starred Betsy Rose flags. of groeceries which the other Baltimore, May 30.—Said to have ad-| "pogl Gr'he Amarican” Lesion, vet-| astmotine ] mitted to detectives that he was the PA-| erans of forelgn wars and other organi-| John B. Archer, driver of the truck, has s rafe the 1ast SiX| zations planted memgrial trees in each|been heid in $2.000 by the local court for Jesks \nach AIrors 3 of the horoughs. many churches observed |a hearing June 6th. In evidence giver g CEe TR e the holiday with special services. hefore Coroner Phelan the driver claimec was " reSSary \"r‘\‘" h v"},.‘{nr,» } 4 Ten thousand persoms vilsted the.re his truck brakes were not in good condi- et s : : |ing place of Theodore Roosevelt at Ovs-|tion and would not hold in taking a curve subdued and he iS in a serious condition er Ray and as many more fiiad in and at a loc: : out of Grant's Tombh. 3 ; He reci g hotels as an| Harbor craft was crowded with thons. | AMERICAN WOMEN ARE 5 ""']"'Y"' e Sl .‘l‘.”“"",amh who steamed down the hay tn view ADOPTING BRITISH BABIES and at nig ere robbed. Thore! the " fmmense. neratn iere ¥iows who saw the thief all reported he was|shoulders of m»rn},d“ L :.»:,‘:’" .r':q New York, May 30.—Orders for at leas! clad in pajamas. |hundred electric bulbe were shining fo.|On® hundred babies, some being wanted = night among the popies and evergreens|SINEIY and others in twin and triplet lots, BUENOS AIRES LONGSHOREMEN comnosing the wreath. Above them the|DNave been placed with the National Adep- HAVE DECIDED UPON WALKOUT [torch of liberty showed ite | tion Society of Britain, it was announced Puenos Aires, May 30 (By the A, P.).— toda the shoulders of the gzoddess. 0 many s & women desirons of adopting The Longshoremen’s union has decided | MEMORIAL DAY EXFRCISES the fifteen British youngsters who arrive upon a walkout for an indefinite period as | ks recently on the.steamer Aquitania flocked 1903 ; IN ARLINGTON ¢ % th headquariers "} ¢ a sign of protest against the admission of 3 to the society eadquarters here non-union labor to the nort zone The Miss Josephine Plow-Day, who helped in Employ association, which Inaugurated | . L ASHington, May 30.—The caring for the children, announced that work by free laborers within the zone last | C°P/1aI'S memorrial ceremonies for Amer-|ghe would go to nd and select an- week, decided N renew its operations to- | joumy wp (oA Were colored by a new |other quota to be placed in Americar day with the same class of employes. touch of international ci-nificance today | homes. She hopes to bring them here by 3 me 5. At services heid in AMgton cemetery |the last of June. o 3 ,lunder the lead of President Harding gk Greenwich.—Herbert T. Andrews, of Packbex ke AT Jersey City appeared in the Greenwich | thetre to veterans of thies mnre Ti | TOTAL OF $404,049,233 HAS ongh court the other day on charg- ans o e wars and to Dorongh, court the otheriday o ehars: |y Histings tahed omnany. oF SEICIE aag BEEN PAID TO RAILROADS ex of bigamy and perfury. A demurrer | gi;fma the e Lo cyagandauat the nation to the cause of freedom and | Wasrhington, May 30.—Payments so far = at $1,700, vhic, s gt rd 5 fxed at $1.800. which was furnished. | jvfifzation and promised that It mever |made to the raiiroads by the treasury un- wonld fail 10 measure up to every de- |der terms of the iransportation act cover. iet Di mand presented to it in behalf of civiliza- | ing reimbursements of deficits during fed- Soviet Diplomat tion. By striking across the sea fn the |eral control and as guaranty payments world _war: he deciared, America had | total $404.949,233, according 10 a treasury sanctified again her faith in free insti- | statement made public today. In addition tutions for peonles everywhe to this sum, $196.503,820 has been paid “Wherever men are free,” sald the |to the roads for loans from the $300,000, . vresident, “they are wan't to give | 000 revolving fund provided by the act. though Leonid Krassin, who plans to vis- it the U. 8. and Canada in Jume. He will establish a Soviet Embassy In Canada, where he would first confine his activities. He belleves that America is the most important country affecting Russia’s future, It was Krassin who arranged the Brit- Ish eommercial treaty between his country and England. an internationa y wwi 00 preme.” He added that the troubled state |PNY swam out 400 3 fed.” background of flag draned craves, Nglson A. Miles. was reviewed by the steps of the executive offices and many thousands ©ther cemeteries bute vo1 pald to Roger Willlams in a ceremony rellgioun freedom and tolerance on the 10 our country's services in free-| Amounts paid include New York Cen- dom’s cauze. Today the sons and daugh- |tral, $26.775.000: New York, New Haven ters of other lands are placing with lov- |and Hartford, $8.130,000; Doston and ing hands their laurels on American | Maine, $11.656.479. . ETaves, Our Memorial day is becoming nccasion.” THREE R SCUES FROM At the conclusion of the address, Sir - o Auckland (eddes. the British ambas- ol o sador, seconded the sentiment by n Sridgeport. May 30 - . ing on the American flag heside the pres. | Bridgero - Thrés. pereoy e rescued from drowning Ment a wreath of rases presented by | TG Cong "zrw:w‘r:-- A I\Am‘.lr{:l the people of the United Kinzdo e O -7 . people of th Kin: m an ar N i of B meport nd Miss Ruth her dominions “in nndimned memory of | LA AR s o palons Y McCoy of New York overturned their ca- the sacrifices that America has made for A B St Sl g indi¥idual liberty.” e BN 53 it e In special reference to the world war, | ¥°7¢ @ mile from shore. their cries for - » ox: 2 elp brough couple i the; - President Harding declared America had | NIl brousht a couple in another comoe opened the door to free In the countries and the latter managed to pull the other s “Tin | couple into their craf against which she % fought, and had =iven opportunity “of ”:u‘ls;":’d(h;‘::‘_“; lf;’_‘ri':ld":‘“:" 2 planting democracies where. absolution | - > 24 ~ him that her mother was ddrowning. Mur- and rescued the had held sway, of making the people su- | of conditions abroad still made it donbt- | FOMaN: ful whether the vanauished peoples woud accept that opportunity and wonld “pay the price required to maintain the free- dom to which the door has been open- MACHINE GUN UNITS GUARD BUILDINGS IN MEXICO CITY Mexico City. May —Machine gun units were placed on guard at the mumici pal ‘palace, the cathedral and the ma plaza of the city of Puebla vestemday, Ihe exercises at Arlington. with their form- the capital’s Memorial ed the center of day ceremonies, though various smaller | the authorities having learned that radi. gatherings were held in other parts of | cals intended to break up the national the city. Durlng the dav a parade of | convention of the Knights of Columbus, veterans, headed by Lieutenant General|row in session there. Soldiers patrolled " COPYRIGHT KEYSTOKE VIEW CO. NEW YORK the streets, but the day passed without President and Mrs. Harding from the |incident. journeyed to Ariington and to pay their tribute to STEAMER SUSQUERANNA HAS DOCKED AT BOSTON the dead. In Statuary hall. at the tri- capitel, Reston, May 30.—The steamer Susque- hanna of the United States Mnil steam- ship lines, from Dremen, which was aground on The Graves, off Hosion har- bor, for A time early today, docked late today, Bhe was slightly damaged. commemorating his fight for American continent. The services which are tn be an ennual Memorial day fea ture Fereafter, wero bheld under the