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LXIlI--NO. BILLS FORSALARY INCREASES WERE REJEGTED BY HOUSE Among Them Those Providing For Increases For Sheriffs of New London Middlesex, Tolland and Windham Coun- ties—House Added Five Amendments to Senate Bill to Create a State Athletic Commission—Senate Adopted Amendments Made by the House to Workmen’s Com- pensation Law. for \ pensation law which in | went through the senate after nearly two and {hours lebote and after four of five amend- it had been accepted. ments offered to amendments enator Brooks makes the most s last week had |ant salaries are |out cases which shail be contracted during as found that ame is used in said he associate h is due to cause peculiar communicable or senate amendments make on the measure. The senate adopted house bills amend- aw which consolidates the of Norwalk and South Norwalk and the into the city for repairs at the Willimantic Nor- ppropriations committee reported agricultural marketing bureau. mgner of domesti fary_commikoe for appoint- rthur F. Libby for judge of the R DYTODTia ] dent bill to give the board tickets of admission y from the box office or Traction Company to tric lines west h side of a rai ped an amendmen e wording of an automohile hill e motor vehicle STILL HELD OUT i TO REHABILITATE FOR CREW OF ESPERANTO THE COTTON INDUSTRY New York, May growers, manufacturers and affiliated in t at their national conference to- | federal government on of the cotton American cotton overnment was wal expansion of cred in excess of uct the war finance corporation AGAINST BASEBALL POOLS | ; on and other American raw pro- to stimulate the movement 1 of such commodities as nterles threatsn nd consumptic public morals of the Me: of credits and for the stampi; resolution sz for farmers e a normal cotton crop in 1921 and ndications were thrat the cotton acreage rendered it im- are known to | n more than the statement towns and cities anges hands vased mainly on box scores over a period » one week or Jess. Harding's message to convention pledging the co-operation of administration in the cotton indusi | ed to be one of statesmanship and trus the ry was declar- XEGRO FARM FOUND GUILTY OF MURDER world cotton conference in Eneland were at that zathering. A message was sent to the president thank- him for his urged to presen: of murder b The American delegates to the world cotton econference, Manchester from June 2 to ructed to urze the adoption of grades in the international marketing of American cotton between American ex- and foreizn purchasers of the|held at Edinburgh, MEMBERSHIP OF SHIPPING “Ab o BOARD DECIDED TPOX bout twe hundred representatives of tomorrow to at- tend th eworld conference, Washington, May 31.—President Hard- e reached a defi- understood to 50 POLES AND 15 GERMANS WERE KILLED IN CONFLICT st oh the Bosrd 20 to the senate| Annaberg, Silesia, May 31.—(By The and fifteen R total of about | timony 175 were wounded, when Polish insurg- | M enis attemnted today to take Annabers, a briet shejling by Ger- ! mans were killed SOLDIERS KILLED BY Pol N 0N THE STREETS 0¥ comi | oletTasee feoulsglian 100 3o and drove them out o A. P.)—Three | by Annaberg and engaged the German gar- rison of three hundred, with rifies and | The Germans replied with steady volleying for two hours and | then counter-attacked. The fighting became hand to hand, aft- er an hour and the Poles broke and fled, leaving their dead and wounded in the wounded and others n mines were exploded this morning ! der 3 party of soll mg from the Youghal barracks here 4 by th emilitary authorities this ev- The men who exploded the mines an off after firing them. Germans buried the Polish dead and placed the wounded in the houses | here and removed their own: casualties to SHIP OWNERS TO HOLD FOR 15 PER CENT. WAGE CUT Now York, M: Steamship Owners' Asso oday, approved the action of its commit- in the nation-wide in standing out for a 15- ut and no more signed the sea-going unions. GERMAN REVENUES EXCEEDED THE ESTIMATES represanting St Sudia, Berlin My 31.—The for the year ending March 48,000,000,000 marks, being 5,400,000,000 in excess of the esti mates and 000 marks as compared with the previ- ous financial year. Simsbury.—John Flanagan, 42, employ- ed on the tobaceo farm of State Senator Ferlin, May 31.—(By the A. P.)—The | Richard B. Eno, was unloading grain at sinistry of finance announced today that | the farm when the stacks fell. forther fifty million goid marks onds would be presented to the repara- Ions commission Parte some time-today. drem. = . gTeements with Drekimatkly in & formel statement i rrike appeared virtually 0 ncrne to have ended. SERMANY PATD 50,000, GOLD MARKS YESTERDAY He was caught and smothered to death before help arrived. He leaves his wife and twe chil- POPULATION 29,685 CABLED PARAGRA New Election in Viadivestok Viadivostok, May 30.—(By the A. P.) —The temporary government announced : today that it would dissolve the popular assembly within twenty days when its terms of office expires because the elec- tions to the assembly were carried outiun- der non-democratic conditions because it has been dominated by com- munist influences. A new election will be held &0 as to enable the assembly to meet on July 1. P Crown Prince Hirohito in Paris Paris, May 31.—(By the A. P.)—Crown Prince Hirohito arrived here today from disposal by the French government. The reception room in the railway station was hung with gorgeous fabrics of red and gold. The government was represented by Minister of Marine Guisthau and Minis- ter-of the Interior Morraud, who received the prince without special formality and accompanied him in an automobile to the Japanese embassy, where he will reside while here, German and Anstrian Tariffs Vienna, May 31.—A convention has been signed by Germany and Austria, restoring the pre-war customs tariffs, it wae announced here today. Anstrian Miners Strike Settled. an cording to informatior received in ficial eircles here today from Vienna. Tt a twenty per cent. increase in wages. TWO MEN KILLED BEY BOMB AT PROVING GROUNDS Washington., May 31.—Two probably fatally, bomb at the merdeen, Md., army pro plain_ bombing experiments, to official reports telephoned | department tonizh Borden and .Captain | Roberts, svecial inves the Claudius H. the_explosion, mer, ‘Fourteenth Stuadron, aif ganization. New Havea. Conn. expected to live. was sald to be He was wounded nort said. was expected to recover. ust ahove the hi cutenant Lewis R, Reese er corps of Gwynnbrook S0 was expected to recover. Md |and attn finger of the right hand had | men of 18 to 20 venrs ot e, "y o been removed, he .ad;"l:esi said, and it|ceive a monthly salary of 36750 for the was probable thag he fouvth fiuger |first six monthy $7250/ %07 the sec: d a’so have to he amputated sae for the ‘sec- ing Privates L. S and was not expee ed fo recover. Nite of the 14th Senad P. W. F ns 'of the same organization ron, air service, Privates S. P. Maa company. L. I. Titlow, of Fourth Ordange company Raymond Bohle of the the and men was or Major available Borden nor to fix the re | They would make a thorough in: fore returning here. ed by iams, chief or ordance, to submit upon the ncident Aberdeen fcom here by airplane | receipt of first reports of sion. According to other reports, plosion. BISHOP MANNING ADDRESSES New York, May 3 T. Manning of the Ej day reiteratedl his bel 1 that it all suitable occasions nations that fought with us Bishop Manning was the speaker al York Rotary Club in honor of t steamers Caronia Great Britain. The delegates resent the Associated Rotary America at the twelfth tion of international and will Clubs Rotarians tions. tend the luncheon. He asked of his sincere ion. t seems to me that there tunity for every great service cause of good .international relaf your visit to Europe at this time, President Harding. “It cannot but the great English speaking their understanding of each other, “The burden of obligations 5 not be borne shirked and that patience among us all. Kingdom. world so greatly needs now. SHOT SALESMAN DEAD at her bedroom a0t held. > and also} Havre on a special train placed at his | Paris. May 31.—The strike of Austri- lignite miners has been settled, ac- of- is understood the miners are to receive en were killed and thirteen others injured, four by the explosion of & ing grounds during preparations for alr- according. war | t by Major William A. M. igators sent from Rere to renort and ascertain the cause of The dead were Privates Allen A. Sher- ery | vice 2nd E. H. Grinnel of the same or- Captain Joseph E. Hall, air service, of not se- | verely about the oves and face. Lieutenant ‘Carl C. Eliason, air service, of Hagerstown, Md.. the re- He a deen muscular wound on the |fice hove quar- al- His thumb vate Samuel Weinstock, of the 34th ance company, suffered a punctured |ceive $120 1. M. D. Blez- : Charles J. of the 34th Ordance company and | said to be suffering from the shock of the explosion and it was possible that one | lez would be amputated 47th Ordance same organ- zation. were less severcly wounded and, the reports said, were expected to re- cover. None of the home addresses of the en- here tonight. mpted in oral reports tonight onsibility for the explosion. said they had been unable to as- certain the full facts of the disaster but igation he- They were direct- Major General Clarence C. Will- all information *hat might throw any light He ordered them to upon the explo- however, | a fifty pound homb rolled from the air- plane and was struck by the rudder as the plane swung around causing the ex- —Bishop William | iscopal church to- | e il : Will Reduce Nation’s Work- ingWage Bill About $400,- 000,000 Annually. Chicago, May 31.—(By The A. P.) An estimated four hundred million dollars will be slashed from the nation's rail- way wage bill when an order cutting wages an average of twelve per cent. to be handed down tomorrow by the United States railroad labor board, becomes ef- fective July 1. The order affects mem- Ders of 31 labor organizations, employ- ed_on 104 railroads. While the decrease is specifically ap- plied only to the roads whose cases have been heard by the board <the decision says it may later be applied to any other road asking a hearing under the provis- fons of the Bsch-Cummins transportation act. The decision grants reductions vary- ing from 5 to 14 cents an hour, or from 5 to 10 per cent, and in the case of section laborers, completely wipes out the increase granted that class of em- ploves by the $600,000.000 wage award of July 20, 1920, reduction was approximately 18 per cent Switchmen and shop crafts were given a nine per cent. reduction while the train service men were cut approximate- Iy seven per cent. Car repairers were cut_about ten per cent. Common over which the railroads made their hardest fight, ting freight truckers average wages to $97.10 and track 7711 an_eight hour day. Shop crafts employes senger service, an hour. Passenger and freight were given increases of 10 and 13 6 and § cents an hour respect; ely. ceived increases of 12 in 1920 are cut 7 1-2 spectively by the new schedule. w":'l:‘r;hnm:"j?".ch»rt and yardmas rage $260 to $27 hou, The smallest redn and other emplo; s are reclassified s that clerks, usually voung ond ix monthe of service. less than one yvear's experience, A new monthly schedule for equipment emploves on ferries, steam lighters gives i ®ineers $190: firemen On lizhte cantains, and $200; : and barges, o 3 ward Jarry. of the same orzanization, |ceive §1ag (,.d, > sy Jiires all wefe wounded and recovery was re-|$160 and mates $106, oS40 to poraed to be doubiful. B el ; ude of the rait ; Herman M. Herr. a civilian emploved |ward the decreases. orqins’ porons to- as proof direstor at the grounds, was remains 1o be determined. The hig br xpected to mest here ; the board's dec that date. Claming they were hard hit by |¥inter slumn in business, rafiroaq m; i [Sral months for lower wages. and in, decision tomorrow will mack (s t relief granted by t s the advanced scale the cos and “the scale of w. of Work in other eral heen decreased Were the chief con Toads before the ho Testimony Which began {16, to show cent in ndustri tentions of the ra ard. was offered in April 18 reduc the cost the hagr and ‘ endeq 50 per and clothing, ns of 20"ty of fod in wage: Tabor, were at Varying reductions common carriers ted by ~ 'NORWICH, CONN. WEDNESDAY, JUNE ‘l, 1921 Average Wage Cut on Railroads 12 Per Cent erator, For section men the is to be reduced 6 to 8 1-2 cents an hour, cut- monthly labarers to This new schedule gives section men an average daily wage of $3.02 for T : and train and engine.service men, excenty those in pas- are reduced eight cents Construetion and section fore- {men are reduced to ten cents an hour. engineers who cents an hour by the 1920 award, are to be cut)| Pas- senger and freight conductors, who ra- 1-2 and 13 cents and 8 cents re- ors rarnings at present ave- 0 are cut eight cents an action will apply to of-| under 13 five cents | enter- Clerks with now re- floating | tues and | en- oilers $140, otherhoods are ere July 1 to consider n which is effective on the first he hoard since it et more than ten months | | azo. | The decisi " | ision tomorrow {sinca the 1920 same Wil say that il age award, “there been a decrease fn ng mostly for the SocialistNewspapers| BKIEF TELEGRANS as Second Class Mail s Postal Privileges Restored to Milwaukee Leader and the New York Call Washington, May 31.—Postal prohi- bitions against the Milwaukee Leader and the New York Call, two socialist newspapers, were withdrawn todav by Postmaster General Hays who restored them to second class mailing privileges. The action was in line with that re- cently taken in the case of The Lib- a. periodical published in New York city. Orders cancelling the mailing privileges of the second class publications eson late in 1917 after an inquiry which Mr. Burleson had shown that through articles published each of them had violated ipryivinsfMizaroMhaoinfi had violated, provisions of the spionage act, The Liberator—a successor to The Masses—ceased publication soon after- wards, the publishers announcing they were unable to bear the additional bur- den imposed by the third class rates. Both The Leader and The Call car- ried the fight to the courts. The Mil- waukee paper, upon refusal of the su- preme court of the District of Columbia to issue a writ of mandamus to com- Pel the pestmaster general to restore the ‘canceled privilexes, appealed to the supreme court of the United States, Where the lower court was upheld. The Call won in the lower courts of the Di: trict of Columbia, where upon the post- was adjudged to have heen decided by that involving The Leader. No formal order was issued by Mr. ing carried out by master - General Hays previous admimstration ment had erred in Withdrawing low distriputed. 1f barred at il said to have decided. voluntarily refund the exce stated today. erator. Mr. Hays s ordered, the amount due to that lication being estimated at more 511,000, |GAYLORD WINE NEW HAVEN COUNTY COMMISSIONERSHIP Hartford, Conn. Ma er Frederick L. row. Last taken and six were added figures were: today. withdrew his name. The twentieth and final Gaylord 24; Potten 22, and on Both Col. Faton Wilkinson the nomination ballot was hasd Unanimous. ¢ of Iltving” ages for similar kinds es has In gen. These two points STEAMER GEORGE WASHINGTON Hoboken N. J., May steamer (George Washington, which twi carried former President Wilson France and back. dock here undergoing repairs. ricane deck, was extinguished loss “The hoard beliey. “that, shown, the decrea, and_requireq. Whatever may gin or contriby been and dustry o based on the o SEW YORK ROTARY CLUB|some > 1 a financial losses have heen and many is right for Americans to carry and display on[of all the flags of those [ing power hy in the war. # principal | a luncheon given by the New 1,100 | Rotarians who will sail tomorrow on the | Cameronia for rep- of | annual conven- to be Scotland, June 13- 16. hop Manning praised the overseas ion of the Rotarians and said it un- doubtedly would have a great influence in cementing the friendship of the na- A letter from President Harding ex- pressed his regret at his inability to at- the dele- gates to accept a brief message in tes- interest in their is oppor- in the | altogether desirable that the peoples of countries shall establish more and more intimate social relations and constantly improve which s upon these peoples in the present juncture of world affairs is one that ean. can only be there is the fullest sympathy and earnest purposes of cooperation and “As your splendid delegation of rep- resentative Americans goes away on this mission of amity and international good will [ want every eme of you tn knew {now earnestly I hope for good and help- ful results from your visit té the United “I know the mission will do credit to our country and am sure it will make for that fuller understanding which all the AT HER BEDROOM WINDOW Texarkana, Ark., May 31.—Clande A. Dunigan, 30 a salesman, last night was hundreds of thoy ployment anq and this loss of them h general depression b mand for the products Tiee have purchaced. arsued that the far; ces has reached 1o any’ Jarge cxtent o sumer, 1t has withont qnect; astrously reached and affeoreg "ot 4 especially some finas facture and agricultural clas thrown ‘out of e Wwages, i reducing classes e TR FRENCH SENATE voTms CONFIDENCE IN PEMIER Paris, May 31.—(By the A. mier Briand this evening wae vote of confidence in the senate given was 217 to 3. to obtain arations commission had awarded. do it. a ery of amazement.” $100,000,000 FARMERS’ EXPIRT \ ‘Washington, May ancing corporation to L §- of $7,500 and be anthorized shot and killed hy a fourteen year oid -tural exports, the de- lements § ses fixed are fustified | deprived accelerated the the de. they would other- While it has been not | ed the pro. of manu- P.)—Pre- t : when it rejected 5 motion to submit the london agTeement to a commission. The vote M. Briend, in asking for a vote of confidence, said he would not be the one to alopt a poicy which disregarded the agreement the allies had reached at Lon- ns in|don and which sought I trom wrote | Germary a gzreater amount than the rep- If the Ruhr were occupied in an at- | tempt to collect more from Germany, the premier declared, France must be colled to arms, and he would not be the one to ‘Suppose euch a poliey were accept- he said, “then there would no longer either treaty or. reparations com- mission, anl the entire world must utter FINANCING CORPORATION 31.—Creation of a $100,000,000 federal farmers' export fin- farm products in the United States and sell them abroad is proposed in a bill introduced today by Senator Norris, of Nebraska, chairman of the agriculture committee. The corpora- tion would be composed of the mecretary nour after its discovery. Dry als said paired within two days. always borne the same nams in ten days, will cost $250,-000. COURT DECISION AGAINST France, May Toulouse, ion of the civil court in St. 000 bequeathed him by insane. The appeals court held that the wi pene money to King Alfonso. DESIRE INVESTIGATION OF 3L—The Curtiss A Corporation New York, |roplane and May Motor inves into the character of igation ed near Morgantown, Md., night, killing seven persons. ment that the accident occurred had there been a Mcharted route and been functioning. ARRESTED FOR MURDER Atlantie, City, N. Berthe, Frederick Rueckert, who - arrived with a warrant to Berthe back with them. of agriculture and four other directors to be appointed by the president with the consent of the.semate at annual salaries to- issue bonds up to ten times its paid-in capital. The proposed new government agency would sell American farm products to na- girl, who according to the police, said |tions or individuals, act as the agent for she fired at Dunigan when he appeared |any producers or dealer in farm products windew. The girl was!and aleo make zdvances to assist agricul- LOGAN T. 8. DBSERVEK OF GUARANTEES COMMITEEE Paris, May 31.—(By the A. P.)—James observer tates in the meeting of mittee of the prepara- tions commission, as the representatives of Roland: W. Boyden. who has resumed his_seat‘on the reparations commiesion in “sonformity with orders from Washington. A. Logan will sit as unofficial for the United the guarantees ens to resisn maintain his self-protection troops arm- ed with rifles, bor Yacht ciub. Greenwich, one of excel- }lent appon dations, was formaily opened. were issued by Postmaster General Budi- | and Globe the admiraity has sold to T. W. Ward & Company of Sheeffild obsolete warships for about £750,000. office department appealed and the case Hays today, the department's action be- zn informal notifica- tion to the newspapers interested and instructions to the postmasters in the respective cities of publication. Post- is undérstood te have proceeded on the theory that the of the depart- rates and vet permitting the papers to be | they | should have been barred entirely, he is Whether the post office department will charges | occasioned by the Burleson order was not | In the case of The Lib-| id a refund would be pub- than [by "a | 31.—Commission- | Millin, of Center college was killsd when Gaylord f Ansonia was | struck by an automobile in Fort Worth, | Texes. reniominated for New Haven county com- missioner by the republican coucus t day, The resolution of appointment will { put through by Senator Drew tomor- | week fourteen ballots were | ment The 15—Potter, 17; Gaylord 21; Wilkinson, : R .E. Baldwin, 1. i 16——Ratten, 18: Gaylord, 21; Wil- Kkinson, 8: R. E. Baldwin 1. 17,—Patten, 19; Gaylord 20; Wilkin- son 8 : 15.—4Patten 21; Gaylord 21; Wilkin- son 5. 19.—Patten 19; Gaylord 23; Wilkinson Mr. Wilkinson rose at this point and thanking all his friends for their support was: motion of and Representative made SLIGHTLY DAMAGED BY FIBE 3L—A small fire ct unknown origin siightly damaged the » The steamer is in dry The blaze, which broke out on the hur- than dock the damage couid be re- The George Washington was a former North German Llovd liner taken over by the government during the war ond has Her re- pairs, which were to have been completed approximately KING ALFONSO OF SPAIN 31.—The court of appeals here today reversed the decis- Gaudens, rendered in July, 1913, under which King Alfonso of Spain was awarded $500.- Albert Sapene, formerly mayor of a small town near Toulon, who died in an asylum for the was invalid and decreed that the entire estate should go to a sister of M. Sa- it was because he was an ardenmt royalist that M. Sapene bequeathed the WRECKED AKMY AIRPLANE nounced today that it had notified gov- ernment officials o fits desire for a full the Curtiss Eagle army airplane that ecrash- Saturday Glenn H. Curtiss declared in a state- would not have properly sufficient emergency landing fields, or if, lacking these, prop- erly centralized machinery for gathering and disseminating storm warnings had COMMITTED A YEAR AGO May 31—Harry detained for two weeks in the cuonty jail at Mays Landing for carry- ing a concegled weapon, today was ar- rested there on a charge of murdering wealthy manufac- turer, in Hoboken a year ago. The ar- rest was made by Hoboken detectives take Paris police searched 40 buildings In raid on socialists. Anti-soviets are still im control Viadivostok. - The city is gaily beflaggei with old Russian colors. A bil] for the abelition of the federal sugar commission has been introduced in the lower house of the Cuban congress. Charles Ponsi’s trial in Massachusetts state courts on charges of Jarceny was postponed indefinitely. War eriminals’ court, Berlin, sen- tenced Captain Emil Muelier, former German army. officer, to six months' im- prisonment for crueity. Premier von Kahr, of Ba unless he ria, threat- is allowed to The nmew olubhouse of the Indian Har- ments and ample accommo- According “te the Pall Mall Garette The Amerieam Chl:de Company de- ferred actiqn on its ‘quarterly 'di{- dend of 1 1-2 per cemt. on preferred stock. Jolin O'Connmell, & prominemt Queens- town resident. was shot dead in Har- bour Row, one of the principal streets of Queenstown, A radie dispatch from Moscow smid that the port of Petrograd had been opened and that a Lettish vessel had sailed from the port. Jugo-Slavia is declared to be seeking to ‘nullify the resuit of the plebiscite heid in the Kiangfurt area of Carinthfa last October. Persons whose properts was stelen during the night of September 9, 1919, when the Bostn police force went n strike cannt recover from the city. A million and a quarter pounds of fish, one-fifth of which comprised the first catches of mackerel landed at this part this season, was brought to Boston. An encunter with a meose which ditch- ed the automobile in which they were riding, was related by Mr. and Mrs. Wal- ter Case of Easton, Me. More than 500 American Realty forest fire between Hanford meres of land of the Co.. had heen damaged which started Sunday and Blackstone, Me. Mrs. Mattle R. MeMillin, 70, mother of the famus footbayl ea: in (Bo) Me- Anti-bolshevik le tabjished the new: Via have extended their authcrity to the northwestward, being in control the cities of Spassk and Grodekovo. Efferts to promote interest in the cotton industry were indorsed by Presi- dent Hardinz in a telephone message opening the meeting of the merican Cot- ton Association in New York eity . A five weeks shut down of the former Barney and Berry skate factory in Springfield, owned an doperated by the Winchester Company of New Haven, be- gan yesterday, causing a lay-off of about 150 speratives. Payment of a dividend of 33 13 cent. to depositors in -the -savings de- partment of the Prudential Trust eom- pany in Boston. which has been closed for ‘severoy months, was authorized by the superior court. General Gy d, Fromch Migh com- missioner at Beirut, has refused to dis- cuss the Turkish nationalist proposals for a revision of the Franco-Turkish ac- | cora wth a nationalist mission sent to him. per Rear Admiral William S. Sims and the Prince of Wales received the degre of Doctor of Laws at the University of Cambridge. Bolh were given an en- thusiastic reception by the undergrad- uates. The mamagement o the Hotel Ambas- sador, New York's Ilatest fashionable hostelrs, reported to the police that jew- eiry worth $7.000 had been stolen from a room on the 13th floor occupied by Mre. Duncan McMartin, Monsignor Emmannrl Jules Marbe Bishop of Meaux, died in Paris. While the Germans were advancing and threat- ening Paris in 1918, he took.the place of the mayor of Meaux and in full vest- ments faced the Germans. He was 77 years old. Jehn Goldem, presidemt of the Umit- ed Textile Workers of America, was re- ported in a critical condition at his home in Brooklyn. He had a sinking | spell and little hope was entertaimed for his recovery. Deninl of American press reperts that Princess Anatasia, of Greece, formerly Mrs. William R. leeds, has undergone a new operation in the American hospital in Paris, and is in a “sinking condition,” was made by Dr. R. H. Turner. Maurice Casemave, French high com- missioner in the United States, returned on the Lafayette after having removed the body of his son from a grave on the battlefield to the family cemetery near Paris. Leaders of political parties in Flume have agreed to form a coalition govern- ment which will comprise members of tne two ‘factions in which which Captain Gabriele D’Annunzio’s adherents have di- vided, savs a despatch to the Tribuma. Greek government advices from Smyrna asserts that tumultuous scenes attended a secrst conference of a com- mittee of the Turkish National Assem- bly at Angora on Saturday and that blood was spilled. Tmmigrants coming te America are patriotic as were the Pllgrim Commissioner of = Immigration Wallis declared In addressing_the con- vention of the Federation of Hunmgarian Jews of America. Captaln Holme Newcombe of the Ca- nadian fisheries’ cruiser i nied by wireless a despatch Prince Rupert, B. C. Jast Friday to the effect that his ship had captured and de- stroved a Japanese schooner canght sealing on the Canadian coast. eannot be regulated adequately by law. wag advocated by United States Senmator Thomas J. Hefiin, of Alabama, in an address before a national consultation of American cotton growers, manufacturers and’ afMliated interests ‘in-New - York. - ‘MRS, NOTT CRIED “You L ~ AND RUSHED AT WI posture—Witness Testified That Wade Had Pro Him $200 If He Would Beat Up Nott. the witness contin been ziven to him by Mrs. Nott. A week hefore the murder, testified, he went to the ) Wade and was given a witness said stairs waitin _=for and was awakered about 12.30 a. Mre. Nett who told him that she aid think her husband was coming home thi He left the house. Rooney &ai and the next evening returned. ,Aftes on_the stairs for & Wade came n and Then he left the scene, continued, and saw or Mrs. Nott until some time (rial. Rooney Bridgeport, Conn., May 31—The trial of Mrs. Ethel H. Nott, charged with the murder of her busband, was interrupted this afternoon for 45 minutes as a re- sult_of the defendant becoming hysteri- cai when William (Bo) Rooney testified that he waited two mizhts with a hatchet for George B. Nott. “You lie. Don't yo ever jumping from her seat and the witness. her seat, Mrs. Nott said: ing so. I can't stand She was carried room and court gained her composure. The state placed that he sat om Nott. to come. say that you were rushing to- wurd back t are 2 into the sheriff's recessed until no mere of At the Wade that he left th =Nott home and. } more to do with the case foll with Wade in which murder tioned. Up to that time. he had the proposal merely was to “beat in evidence today more than 50 letters alleged to have been written to Elwod B. Nott. kept by pfison previoua o his ewcution for the murder turned over to Wade's widow who gave them to State’s Atiorney Cumm! Under cross-examination today Henry F. Shannon. of counsel for the Rooney sald Wade promised. $200 if he would beat up Nott. T ‘Would vou hire yourself out te beaf up anybody for $200," called to the stand and of the letters as son fram were read, however, journed for the day. Rooney. an employ of the Bridzeport Iselation hospita Wade and Mrs identified many those received one of the let- as eourt ad- asked the sttore Natarally,” sai1 Rooner. The witness said it was five weeks er the murder before he told am: of his connection with the case. Other witnesses were Daniel O. Fere former partner of Nott; Margarer Bopko, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Arvidson and Veronics Durick, all r e rneighbors of Mrs. Nott. the street about two weeks hefore the murder. Wade told husband and would like some Wade showed pim a rev ECONOMISTS IN SENATE ARE MEETING DEFEAR SET AFIRE IN BUENOS Puenos Alres, May mer Martha Wi which broke out here today in the cers’ quarters, is believed to have of incendiary origin. sei's firemen among those to be 1 the United States under terms of the boycott settiement are ined by the police pending investigation, fire Swas extinguished barely ol e to save the life of one officer | was 'mprisoned by the flames in Another officer escaped crawling through a porthole. The age 1o the stegmer is not mfficient prevent her sailing. probably uniess prevented by further labor Loading operations on the Washington by union labor seased the port strike was resumed, but Munson Line, which operates the has engaged nom-unfon labor te plets Inading. Although for more than m menth of the boyeott protection for free refused by the government for tha Washington, —The senate ap- in reporting to- | appropriation bill re- | Washington. propriations the deficiency £30.000 over the $190,000,000 Tweivaet iR the measure as pamed by increase was hipping board. recommended : bureaus at New York, San Chicazo, Seattle and New Or- water system. Scho- $600,000; for air- of $50.000.000 for the fleld barracks, Hawa and San Francisco, penses 3f delegates to the Pan-Ame: Postal Consress at Buenos Aire: for the immigration service $485.830. Ap- opriations made S stations re New York. timore and Boston were decre 000,000 zrant- + The appropriation of 84 the shipping board for completion of vessels now under construction by the hill as passed by the house was stricken out by the senate committes whis amendment providing for a te- 000.000 for shipping board ex- uding maintenance and oper- ation of vessels and for the completion now under construction. This the shipping board in appropria The bill as reported by the senate com- house appropriation of $200,000, for enforcement of the pro- hibition enforcement reported also carries an $425.000 for the inter-departmental social the government the American d'affaires here that nom-union will be accorded the same ‘mearure protection for the Martha W; as for other shipe. sinee the iseuanes A government decree permits all fabore ers to work in the Port ares without ARMY ORDERS INVESTIGATION OR AIRPLANE AC Washington, vestigation of the plane crash Sgturday at Maryland, in which seven men were kille ed will be made by the inspector geme eral of the army under orders issued toe day by .Secretary of War Weeks. The Investigation will be independent of tha§ made by a special board of inquiry of the air service and will of the disaster, particularly fn to design and control of the machine wrecked. In this conpection it was infieated cognizance would be taken of the states ment by Captain De Levergme, air at= embassy, whe made the trip to Langley Field in the machine but who declined to make the Captain De Levergms stated that on the trip down he had mo- ticed lack of balance of the plane and that at times it appeared out of of the pilot. “The air service board made day its findings in the im it Lieutenant Starfey M. Ames, lot. was absoived, of any biabe crash and the report said thers was nmo evidence of defect in the desizn of The accident in the opin was absoiutely unavoidable and was due entirely o the severs storm into which the big plane ran while ve- turning to Washington from Langley e FORD—NEWBURY HEARINGS M ARE TO BEGIN ON JUNE & Washington, May 31.—Hearings in the Ford—Newberry election contest will bs begun on June § the senate sub-commities. ine rmy rgbulance aire Morganton. propriation bill for buildifig program failed tday in the sen- The vote “was 35 to 2 licans and ten democrats voting to reduce the building fund and ts voting with the majority of the republi- cans to stand by the committee recom- mendations. RITCH IN SETTLEM STRIKE OF MAR seven democrats 31.—Demands of the marine engineers for a clause in the proposed agreement ing for the re-instaliment of the men who left their ships during the marine wage controversy, ettlement of the shipping Secretary Davis announced after a series of conferences with both parties. Washington, return flight in it. prevented a was made concerning his die- cussion with the pres: The secretary will confer with the en- gineers again nounced, but tonight he said he felt that he had exhausted every m dispute and unless the present ten- tative agreement was signed. he would time to the matter. vestigation. ns of settling shipping board offi- cials today and also kept in the American Association, He later announced e in xession that the association would tomorrow and that there wa: chance of their agreeing 1o the proposed In such an event, ha added, in his“opinion, yet be on _election decided today. agreement would, The committee conference with coumsel for Mr. Newberry and Henry Ford . veloped several clashes over Demand for restrictions against evidence was made by James G. the Newberry attorney. who aiso to have the committes order - Lucking. Ford's counsel to turn ever names of ail witnesses he. will prase Mr. Lucking objected vigorously, - buf was decided that of should be communicated to Mr. immediately after each had beea RECENT ORDERS OF PEKING MILITARISTS CRITICISED Washington. May 31.—Recent orders “the militarists for the arrest of Dr. Sun Yat- Sen, head of the Canton government in were characterized as in a statement issued by Ma Soo, Sun’s personal representative here, “To order Dr. knowing full well that it could net be the statement said wa sion of “utter impotence. iy to the order it added was to telegraph President Hsu Shih-Chang of the Peking government from.office “so a8 not to stand in the way of early unification of the Chinese repub- TO INVESTIGATE AFFAIRS OF PUBLIC HEALTH Washington, May 31— rose of the senate finance o nounced the appoiniment of the mittee which is to investigate the public health service, on some time 3g0 by the full Senator Smoot. republican, asked for the inquiry, Senators Watson, ‘republican, ' Ind and Reed. democrat, Missouri, Dr. Sun's re- GERMAN PARTY BALKS IN FINANCIAL RELIEF PLAN nna. May 31.—(By the A. P.))—The so-called Great German party today de- to refuse to support relief plan of the allies wherever it im- poses restrictions upon the country not provided In the treaty of St Germain. This decision was taken because of the in some quarters here that the government's weakness enables the entente to. continue against the country’ vice and at his promotion in 1 up. Senator nominations to make threats | commitree - until indevendence.