Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 29, 1921, Page 1

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VOL. LXili—N0. 156 7 NORWICH, CONN —E=¥ A COMPROMISE RESOLY Skefrington, ‘widow of «an Irish leader, o o | who was executed following. the Easter Rrn i p § Monday riots in 1916, has played a DI U New York refining companies, the lowes. ; pru:nl:ellt‘ part in hl:lg(ng‘ about re- price in five years. ’ 4 cent develops re o peace in - Ireland, it Isl said in lut:menu printed -_— Records of the hfoo‘k o«fin“‘wn;.n‘u!; in the Graphic and Sketch. Mrs. SKeff- o . tate Board say that 8,000 apal e AL Beh, Mo v | Introduced an Ay nent | While Seeking a Conference! Ciicago's Salipe fof Pazioan DY Valgts Jaar :ii; For Beer Up to 5 P&’ Cent Completed by Senate and House Republican Conferees—Act- Lo Srmiater Tiova George, "™ ™™\ and Wine Up to 14 Per Cent x % i BRITISH COAL STEIKE ‘Washington, June 28.—While prohibi- i the Compromise Resolution Today is Planned . tion leaders in the senate prepared to- tion Upon /. WILL END MONDAX| v 15 tighten the nation’s liquos laws in the House—Its Adoption by the Senate is Expected| rondon, june 25—(By The A. P,)—|throush enactment of the Willis-Camp- . o o aue . dustry will end Monday by a settle- [ ic i % Thursday—Overwhelming Republican Majorities in Both | 710, 0L, Gty Wher the soversment | rated by Senator Broussard, demoerat, of the D agreed to renew its offer of a subsidary ln;ls!an- e 1 raft— | of £10,000,000 to avert the hardships of enator Broussard atta the eigh Branches Leave No Doubt of Adoption of the the next three months because of nec- | eenth amendment as “an act of a minor- . . . . . essary wage reductions, thereby conced- | ity, leclared the Volstead enforcement Objective is to Have Declaration of Peace Signed by the| in; e one ‘condition required by the| a great factor in the creation of diseon. | miners and mine-owners. By the terms|tent and unrest. and characterized - tns of the new arrangement a new wage | Willis-Campbell bill as “merely the fore. President Before the Fourth of July. basis will come into effect for the next{runner of the Volstead act, junlor, (the § < eighteen months, whereby the miners re-| proposed supplemental enforcement act) Vashngton, June 28.—Establishment | fession,trade, navigation, commerce and | ¢/&hteen T supplemental k 4 :‘ s« e mdl:!:‘mf pmp""“t;s rights, and until the| €ive 20 per cent. above pre-war scale| which will violate every principle upon “its tinal stage today Wwhen sen-| imperial Gefman government and the ;::um‘!“:’n b2 ::re:gd‘;’é’r‘:::“:‘;‘z"m_‘:: which the government was founded.” " house re o crecs imperial and royal Austro-Hungarian a8 3 At the close of his speech, he intro- e ooy somreryen | government; "of Cineir uucdsesor. or suc-| WhIEH Wl be Tegulated bY the creation|duced an amendment to the enforcement i Ag'e hanas Jate (S Wbek. """ to the United States of America all thef &77, CEECEE Boatds. light modi-| O USe, .sale and transportation for B b fines, foreitures, penalties and seizures 4 ! ¥, SEAPant beverage purpeses of beer, ale and por- compromise embodies the house fication of the terms the miners’ rejected Somuromise embodics the house | fmposed or mads by the United States of| feation of the terms the miners redected | ior "ty Yhve per oent. aiconalls coniant At e e s | America, during the war, whether in re-| DY (heirlast ballot, and covers the be-| ing wine wp to 14 per cent. alooholiin mate provios seseneins Amerioan | SDECt 10 the property or the imperial Ger- | £1%9 8D 1o Seplember 10, 1922 but elth | suon States as ro deoide by referendum < » 5 2 by _— man government or German nationals or| o _ Aesti o o tarmifiate oo vote. . d othe . : = greement, dm, other TGt e, Senator| e mperial and roval Austro-Hunga-| % % deste to terminate the agreement| "ryl, winis.camphien bill was recelved v - rian government or ~ Austro-Hungarian| "l0H from the house just prior to Semator k of Nebraska, and Representa-| ;.iionale, and shall have waived any and o 3 Bro ¢ T ot Neptasetita- | nationals, 8¢ (vaived any a7 Announcing the settlement in the|Broussard’s speech and referred to the MR Sy afti the republi-| S Seaiary aiaima aceiny house of/commons today, Premier Lioyd | Judiciary committee,'a eub-committee of 4d previously arranged their com- | Seetion fonothing hereln contained| George justified the granting of thé sub-| hich will meet tomorrow to take action nise resolution, refused to sign the snail b comstrued ip repeal, modify or|5idY On the ground that the coal ex-|On It. Senator Sterling, republican, of Bl with other dommo- A 3 2 ot resoln.| Porting districts were so hard \hit by|South Dakota, chalrman of the sub-com- - A to the end. Overwhelm- | gress, joint resolutions and proclamations | \f economic conditions had full play there[be in the president's hands before the republican maforities in both senate | ghail be construed as if the war had end:| Would be unsupportable reduction in wag- | end of the week ! house, Mowever, were said to leave| ed and the Ing emergency)| °5, i - T e i to leays r:r‘~;"}“_‘_"flj"’:"‘?:’l' e Sy The setticment, he sald was a great| DIFFICULTIES CAUSED BY drate assport control provisions of an act en- 3;‘“6‘1;:::“;;"; LT, ’;;gz"; ARMY APPROPRIATION BILL " the promiss resolut titled “an ac aking avpropriatios for 1 x . LmOtTOR D T e T e e e Beiwice for | OF/BUENL WSt scalo 1A the Iuf uatuy SHE |- Washington, Juns 35 Althotgh Bread p B Skl Trireatsy. Ths o Bl enr ending June 30, 1822 approv-| Was hepetul that it would inaugurate| ident Harding is expected to. sixm the . roport Tas presemicd 10, both | ¢4 Murch . 1921: mor to be effective to| €W relations between capital and labor,| army appropriation bill reducing the W oty o Ll it, fllare Loty ot ‘e Tper: no:l only in coal but other industries, | standing army to one hunmdred fifty » leadere on both sides s son now in desertion from the military | 8nd he believed that if it was sincerely | thousand, he probably will call the atten- ¢ Aiseassion would not be| or raval service of the United States, nor | ¢arried out with good will it would re-| tion of congress to certain provisions of 't kaid thes | to terminate che liability to prosecution | PAY the nation for all the damage suf-| the measure which he is understood to {5 e 18 repub my:w,”l '-lnm 104 el et UNAGh tha seluctivases (erl:d li:mul:h lhedd)sp_nle. consider will require modification at the by Friday, in expec- | Vice law. Approved May 18, 1917, of, any| & hatlonal board, with district boards,| next session. e siemature by the president| person who failed to comply with 'the e created presenflnl equally the The measure, which has been referred o Tonrin af Jue et D ovislons of said act, or of acts amenaa-| Miners and mine-owners, to Tekulate the | by the White House to the war depart- T T R, e L rather complex system of profit shar-| ment, was discussed at & conference late ad by Both senate and hovss res| ] Drocerds, afler the' Dayment o sands| Spsker el enty Seetetary Wiorn sed_ b and houte re.| 2o Faghe stand-| Speaker Gillett and Republican Leader toaders. | Chafrman Porter, of | ANGLO-JAPANESE -“«}"z‘:mzwn ard charges, will go to the miners in the | Mondell of the house, Representative gl "v;',-')':?q‘y«,:z “n-:: SUBJECT OF CON N shape of wages, and the remaining 17| Greene of Vermont, a republican member per_cent. to theowners. of the house military committee - an ond had heen acoented instead | London, June 28 (By the A. P.).—The| ~Tne British coal industry will have| ator Borah, republican, Idahe. ;tm:as::. of the Emox resolntion renealing the war [subject of the Anglo-Japanese alliance| been jdle 94 days when the.miners re-| derstood that i Kt g - a provision of the bill dociaratioms. Semator Knox. however. | was taken up today by the imperial con-| sume Monday. While:in point of dura- | adopted at the sugmestion of Senator Fave out m statement declaring that both | ference, Lord Curzom, secretary for for-| tion this closely approaches the record Borah and affecti ? ne acenmplished the same. result elgn affairs, explaining in a lucid manner| for a British mine stoppage In 1897, | sonnel becusies most etieore heor Pery Foth the senats and house formulas” | all the asnects of the alliance. He ShoW-| when the strike lasted sixteen weeks, its | the president explained why he coneia. Eemato: Wanx sald, “effect the repeal (of {ed no tendency to influence the premiers | effect upon the nation's industrial and | ered that this provision might meed mod- the war Asclarations) desired.” of the overseas dominions in elther direc-| economic life admittedly has been far ic ification later. Senator Borah sald semate conferees in making eon-{tion, but confined himsell to giving the| more disasterous. Through the enforced ['also to have explained his posttion franic. jessions gave awas nothing of substance | facts, political and otherwise, needful fof | closing of steel mills and the curtailment | j3. B / b their fambructions. he sald, adding reciation of the position s it| of rail services and other . industriea [ Ay it has come from conference the v reeotution of coneress that a | exists today. closely allied with or dependent upom| appropriation measure provides « of war fa at an end “neceesarily ro.| The foreign secretary was followed by | mining the ranks of the unemployed have i ks hopeats: reduction to lone hundred fifty thousand peais the peor (war) resolution.” A, J. Baifour, who approaciied the eub-| béen enormously swelled and the re-| men must be: accommiished by Oetober The taxt of the conference agreement|ject from the standpoint of his position| sultant hardships have been incréastfigly | I War department officials say-this as renresentative of the league of ma: felt by owners, investors, workers and | require the discharge of sevein: thonsead Section 1. That the #ats of war de~|tions, and therefore laid stress upon the| all classes of the population. men by arbitrary means. Under the Bo- t1ared tn welet hotwaen 'tHe foPRIA) Gar: (uucersity of bringing the alliance into| The present strike is probably régetded | rah provision the department is pro- man zowernment amd tha United Statas|lfMe with the league requirements rather|as the most injurious the tounitry" has [ pibited from exceeding the mctual amount Amesden_br the folnt reeciution of | than insisting upon any smecial British | ever suffered. appropriated, a stipulation which Secre- “onsTess apmeoved Aneil 8, 1917, i here. | interest or emphasizing its imperial as- E tary Weeks is understood to feel might S ey here- | Dot JATANESE DELEGATION force the Feovernment, in ita efforts'to Soctiom %p-That in making thie Aec.| It is understood the British government VISITS WHITE HOTUSE | reduce the enlisted strength, to break its 7 as A pArt of it thers are|NAS suggested to Japan a postponement enlistment contracts with Some of the pressly romerved to the United States|of the date for renewal of the alliance| ~ Washington, June 28.—The visiting del-| men to be discharged. s natfonals, any and|from Julv to October, in order to permit! egation from the Japanese dict accom- rights, priviliges, Indemnitics, repar-| full discussion here and an opportunity| panied hy Baron Shideharra, thé Japan-| HOUSE DEVOTED DAY To ne. ar advantages, together with the|to consult the United States, and that the| ese ambassador, were received at the e 5t o enforce the same, to which it or|Japanese government has agreed to this| White House late today by ° President NAVAL AFPROFRIATION BILL = ther Bawe hecoms entit d under the | course. Harding and Secretary Hughes. terms of the armistice signed November After presentation to the chief execu-| Washington, June i 11 1918, or anv extensions or modifica- v : STRAITS WHEN tive, the Japanese representatives were|Yoted today entirely to the ednference thersol: or Which were acquired| | o Lo BT = shown over the White House. There was | feport on the naval appropriation bill or are In the possession of the United | AWARDED PRIZE FOR SKETCH| " i ccs by the president who con- | but did not reach the Borah disarmament ool 5 Q"‘q;:fl..';'n:'f:"‘:h”:‘, 15,725 New York, June 28.—When Frank « have therrby hecome rlghifully| SCAWATtz got oat of the camouflage sec- 4: or which upder. the treair op|tion of the army he kept the wolf away “sailles, have been stipuiated for i1y| (rom his §12 a month room on the East wir hemefit s or tn whien 1t ot®| Side by going down to Greenwich Village 3 as one of the principal allies and | ted rooms and drawing sketches of the ncinted powers: or 1o which It i em.| conventional who wanted' a souvenir of e virtme of an aet or acts of | themselves in a Bohemian atmosphere. fined himself to informal conversations|amendment, thé last of thirty-three sen- with those who spoke, English. ate additions to the measure which, un- Earlier in the day the delegation vis-|der house rules, must be voted on sep- ited Mount Vernon where they:laid a|arately. wreath upon the tomb of Washington.| In the hope that the Borah proposal Tenight they were the guests at a dinner | might be disposed of tomorrow, agree- of the Japaneese ambassador, together |ment was reached to dispense with bus- with about thirty members of congressiness on the Wednesday calendar and n d who last year visited Japan and the | continue discussion of the mavy budget. nzress or otherwise. Then he began work on a canvas to be| Orient. © | Several hours today were spent in dis- tion 3—That the state of war de.|entered into competition for the annual| ~momorrow they will leave for Philadel- del- | cussing the advisabllity of Increasing the t0 exist betwaen the imperial and | Prix de Rome offered by the American| pnia and afterwards will go to Pitts-| appropriation - for aviation. the house Austro-fTangarian government and| academy in Rome. This took all of his| pyagh, voting finally $3.323.000 appropriations nited States of America by the joint | time. and he went broke. for new aircraft in libu of $6,125,750 an- tion of congress approved Decem.| Yesterday the landlord sent him a dis-| LATEST RULINGS BY THE thorized by the, sanate. ol 1917 s hereby declared at an | possess threat. He sat on the stoop RAILROAD LABOE BOARD e brooding over heing put out on the street Section 4—That in making this dee-| when who ehould arrive but the postman THREE YACHT! TIED Chicago, June 28.—All rules under the| ™™ CHTS ARE n, and as Part of it there are|With a letter siving his painting, “Hero-| ,acional agreements in effect during fed- FOR MANHASSET TROPHY ressly reserved to the TUnited Statesism,” had won the Prix de Rome. S ei1/Coh ot GEWINE Ealtwass and which ¢ \merica and ite nationals any and all| He expects to live happy ever after-|poi (ORRE Bt M he individual| Greenwicn, Conn., June 28.—A three- =tts. privileges, indemnities, reparations | wards, for in September he goes to Italy | pong, | btk cornered tle for the Manhasset Bay htages, together With the rizht tn| with a three-year fellowship in the | omerenoes O O e i "wers uitW€ | challenge trophy resulted today when force the swme, to which it or they|Academy of Architecture and Sculpture. | ye % MeRe P FEEL ACC WL O Gard | the yacht Hayseed IV., of the New Ro- ccome entitled under the terms | - today until these rules can be considered | chelle Yacht Club, won the second race armistics signed November 3, 1915, | xpw ST AR ot e by s board. over a 15-mile triangular coyrse of Long ny extensions or modifications there- = 2 WEER| The board also ruled that all overtime| Island sound. The Hayseed IV. is tied E R e o are ey in excess o the established hours of ser- | at elght points with the defending yacht passession of the United States of | 28 Jnd vice shall be paid for at the pro rata|Nahma of the Indian Harbor Yacht club, *rica by peason of lia participation in| Pangor, Maine, June 28 Hn orsement | @, Drovided ‘that this does not affect|and the Hayseed V of the Corinthian reiy Daemme . Fghttully entitled " e| %cale for printers throughout New Eng. |classes of employes Which have reached | Yacht club of Marblehead, Mass. The infer e treaty of Trianes. hacr| land, trade school training for apprea-|an agreement as to overtime rates. This | trophy will go to the winner of tomor- *tigeinted for its or their behents and favorable action on a resolutio: | means that, pending further action by |Tow’s race. wateh 1t 1t entitied ae oar mei® | tavoring freeom for any mation that as-|the board, the roads will pay the same| In the race today, safled in varlable | allind and associated powers| Dires fo freedom were among the mat. | rate for ten hours' labor that they do for | weather, the Hayseed IV. finished 3% “hich it 1a entitled by vieme of| ters of business disposed of at the final|eight, instead of time and one-half after | Seconds ahead of the Nahma while the act or Scts of congress or other.| session today of the annual convention of | eight hours. Hayseed V was 10 minutes and 57 see- G et el onds astern the winmer. The elapsed on B—ATl property of the impe.| The resolution on the {recdom of nations | WARD LINEE SIGHTED A times were: Hayseed IV. 3.09.26; Nah- rmen government, or its successor| as originally presented specifically asked BURNING VESSEL AT SEA Ma, 3.10.04; Hayseed V, 3.20.23. ors, and of all German nationas| for favorable action ofi the question of ] "y on April 8, 19 1 freedom for Ireland but after a spirited New York, June 28.—The Ward liner | UNENOWN PERSON SHOOTS as, pril 8, 1917, in, or has ; : A =+ that date come into the possession| d¢bate in which the opposition was led | Mexico, Which arrived here'today from 4 VIRGINIA STATE TROOPER r der the control af, or has been| by John F. Murphy, of Providence, the | Havana, reported sighting a burning ves- hy been po s subject of a demand by the agente, | resolution was tabled and later amend d, | gel at 1 p. m. Sunday in latitude 29.07, + cmployss, from any source or by any| favorable action then beinz recorded. | longitude 79.53. . McMillion, a’ state trooner, died in the gency whatsoever, an 1 property ot William E. Sullivan of Worcester was The Mexico bore down on the craft,| wini; ] bateo: and ail prop : v lliamson hospital tonizht from a bullet npertal and royal Austro-Hungarian | elected president of the union. New Bed-| put after circling her several times Cap- | wound suffered today when he and thres g ernment, or s successor or suc-| ford was chosen as the place of the 1922 | tain Jones said he falled to discern any | otnér state policemen were fired on’ by +. and of ail Austro-Hungarian na.| convention. signs of life. unknown persons between Watewan and which was on December 7, 1817, - Appareatly the vessel had been &|Tynn. W. Va The state troooers had T e inge, Cate ome inlo| LOBSTER LADEN SMACK schooner of composite Ruild. ~She Was|been sent to investigate reported trouble possession or under control of or has Williamson, Va., [June 28 —William % burned to the water's edge and there Was|in the Williamson coal fields near Lynn, n the gubject of demand by the Unit- SUNK BY SCHOONER | oining left to give any clue to her iden- | according to Capt. J. R. Brockus, com. ates of America or any of its of- e g tity. ” Lo g AR P e A manding state police east of Williamson. res or by any agency whatsoever shall | f00t lobster smack, Dorothy G, which| (oo o S m s retained by the United States of| left here vesterday with ten thousand 3 it OBITUARY . America and no Adisposition thereof made, | POUNds of lobsters for E. Jameson & Son, IN PERSONAL ENCOUNTER Ohnalel '3, Rantaaris. scept as shall have been heretofore or| her owners, at Portsmouth, N. H|, was| fda" Chat Baltimore, June 28,—Charles J. B y hereafter shall be provided by | Struck amidships and sank by the 100-|. New York, June 28.—YVice Chairman e i s b time a8 the imperial Gee.| ton schooner Douglas B. Conrad, four| William P. Kenneally of the board of | Parte, attorney general during the Roose- i Sed ‘e . 1] miles eastof Portland Lightship last | aldermen, democrat, and Bruce M. Fal-| velt administration, dled at Belle Vista, 4 """\fl';’;l - o "‘“F"m”{ 0] e thick fog. coner, a republican member of the board, | his country home near here, today, e earsern il navn| | Captain Cleveland T. Lewls, of Pema-|Jjust argued and argued and arfued to-| He had been in poor health for 4 year iy made suttanle nrovisions for| auid and Riph Crocker comprising the|day while the board was in session, and |from a heart affection which became vat stactlon of all claims against the| crew of the Dorothy G., jumped into the|after it had adjourned. Then, 'tis said, | complicatea with kidney trouble. He a4 eovernments respectivaly, of all per.| headgear of the schooner when the col-| Falconer landed first on his oppoment's| was seventy years old. His widow, who sars whepesever domieilied, who owe| lision occurred and were brousht into|jaw, and Kenneally replied with three| has been an invaild for many years, sur- manent allegisnes o the United States | Pemaquid beach early today. They lost|wallops that sent Falconer sprawling un- | vives. ¢ Ameriea and whe have suffered,| all personal belongings. der a desk. A sergeant-at-arms finally| Upon his return to privite life t the Jizh the @cts of the Imperial German| The schoomer was hound from Portland | separated the pair. Falconer had con-|end of the second administration of Pres- vo.ernment oF its pents, of the imperial| to Lockport, N. S. her home port. The | tended that Kenneally had discriminated | ident Roosevelt, Mr. Bonaparte résumed oval Austro-Hungarian government,| Cargo of lohsters of the Dorothy G.. was |against him in & ruling from the chair.| the practice of law in which he continued r i+ agents sinee July 31, 1914, loss,| valued at two thousand eight hundred 5 active until his - health began failing gamage & MRMEY ta their persons ot dollars 3 WARSHIPS ORDERED TO PERU Sbonti 2 e o erty, direetly or Indirectly, whether — ——— FOR CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION | At that time he suffered an acute rough the ewnership of shares of stock | LIQUOR BRIBERY CHARGE 5 heart attack which was followed By sev. © German, Anstro-Hungarian, American; AGAINST N. H. PATROLMAN| Washington, June 28.—The battleships | eral others of a less severe nature. While other o §orations, or in consequence —— Oklahoma and Arizona wWere designated | he was known to be in indifferent heglth nostilities or of any operations of war,| New Haven, Conn, June 28.—Patrol-|today by Secretary Denby to represent| his death came as a great surprize. o otherwise, and also shall have grant-| man Clarence J. Smith of the local |the American navy at the centennial cele-| . Charles Jerome Bonaparte wag bom *4 to person pwing permanent allegiance police force was v tiwo po-| bration=of thé independence of Peru be-| June 9, 1851. His paternal grandparent s the United Btates of Amerlea most| lice detectives tonight on charges of have| ginning in July.. Rear Admiral Hugh|was ‘Jerome, king of Westphalia, who favored nation treatment, whether the | ing accepted a bribe of $100 from a sa- | lRodman has been designated as llle]m-rflgd Betsy Patterson of Maryland. of pame be national or otherwise, in all| loonkeeper. Smith was locked up in de- fnaval - representative on the American | The great Napoleon was Charles J. Bona- paciers aflagiing residence, business, pros’ fault-of bomds of $2,000, commission to. the cebration. . . 4 # G BRI e v v 8 i VEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1921 TION | s oo el e Valra s | s _ | JAGES 70 NAKE STATEME 10 PAGES—78 COLUMNS - PRICE TW Definite. Answer Political Minority. Dublin, June 25 (By the A. P. nviting him to a conference for an Irish ® p : 3 settlement. Ho has briefly replied o the | the Knox-Porter peace Tesolution were System of “Rewards and Punishments” For Those Who premier, however, expressing the earnest |settled, republican leaders said. desire for a lasting peace, but deems unity of Ireland esential to that end. The Irish Bulletin, organ of the Dail |manitarian, died suddenly Tuesday at Eiraenn, in a speial issue, publishes Mr. |his home in Tom's River, De Valera's reply to the British prime minister. It is as follows: “1 am comsulting with such of the principal representatives of our nation as| are available. We most earnestly desire to help in bringing about a lasting peace between the peonles of these two ielands, but see no avenue by which it can be reached if you deny Ireland es|PaFis in advance of the main body, who sential unity. letter, I am seeking a conference with certain representatives of the political minority in this country.” Mr. De Valera has written to Sir James Craig, the Ulster premier, Earl|With approval of the government. Middleton, who in 1920 advocated one A With Representatives of the| xing ceorse presented to the America: Bamonn De Valera, the Irish republican |gress entertained the delegation from the ader, is not yet ready to zive a definite | Japanese parliament touring this counitry. - 7oy o erican History—] Establish : ;mswer to Premier Lloyd George's letter . S F“’t Of lu K.nd e Am t M.y a “Before replying more fully to your Sugar was quoted at 5.30 cent sby two Chicago ‘are vacang. - . polo team the cup they won in the inter- | Before a Conference of All Executive and Administrative OFf national matches at Hurlingham. Secretary of State Hughes and con- cials of the Government Today—Meeting Will Be the Terms of a compromise agreement on s S e Submit the Estimates—Departments Must Keep Within N, 32 Their Appropriations. 3 > President Harding requested Secre- | Washington, Jume 25.—The first stepjand reclassification of the employes. He tarfes Mellon and Hoover and Eugene | toward the making “of a federal budget|said he personally was ready to Work Meyer, Jr., to investigate oottom credit | Will be taken tomorrow at what is be- ad-in-hand with all congressional situaticn. eved to be the first meeting of its kind! in American history, a conference of all exccutive and administrative officia cted to use the results of such labors Many American Hotarians srrived % |the zovernment, Director Dawes of s @ basis for. further economies in the ct had prepared toda ment | governmental machinery. which he will make to the officials and| With the beginning of the budgét Fri- it was understood, will sct forth|day, all executive and administrative e director’s views of the ma-|heads in the government will start & Dew chinery and co-ordination necessary 10|set of estimates deemed necessary to success. of a federal budget system. It carry on their work. But that will not was submitted for cabinet approval to- be the last, for it was said at the treas- aa President Harding is expe to] ury Mr. Dawes will issuc orders soon in- ization Guestion, and added that he ex- are expected to arrive Friday or Sat- urday. A mew Dill for regulation of old age pensions, combining insurance features, was introduced in French parliament preside at the meeting. structing those officials to revise their parliament for southern Ireland, with the| Bureau of mines announced that stocks six Ulster counties under the imperial|of gasoline on hand at the refineries of | ready parliament, Sir Maurice Dockrell, M. P. for the Rathmines division of Dublin|to 803, county, who was returned as a unionist supporter of the coalition government except as to its Irish policy of home rule, Sir Robert Henry Woods, member of v et y | directo: parliament for Dublin university and for. | Ui, 0¢% created post of under secretary wards and mér president of the Royal College %ot |°F ‘B¢ freasury: Surgeons in Ireland, and Andrew Jame- Associates of the director said he al-|estimates constantly so that where a say= had begun rounding up the loose | ing can be accomplished it will be dome Dreparatory to e news |immediately. He was represented as 1,519 gallons, 2 new high record. | to all officials that once the budget is in | taking the stand that the reduction of ex- the amount. it carries at any given time| penses must be a continuing cyele from S. Parker Gilbert, Jr., of New Jersey, |is the maximum which can be spent. To| month to month and not from year to | was nominated by President Harding for | encourage the paring of cstimates, the| year. has in mind a system of “re-| Only accredited officials and members nishments” for those who | of the press will be admitted to the con- —_— submit the estimates. The results of |ference tomorrow, Mr. Dawes said. He the United States on May 31 amounted | ends’ - their individual work will be laid before [ added that he“wanted i son, asking them to meet him at the| New force to the movement for reduc- e‘wanted all officials there people they represent. HLLOYD GEORGE RECEIVED TELEGRAM FROM CRAIG|"2S Probated in-Portsmouth, R. L The Mansion house, Dublin, for a conference.|tion ¢f rmaments is believed to have He wishes to learn from them at firat | been furnished by the deliberations of tie hand the views of certain sections of the the president for his actlon. ®ho had anything to do with spending Mr. Dawes made it » n today t|the government's money, but would have 3 G of Japan. | the heads of the budzet were prepared to|to depend upon them to spread nis doc- natlonal’ chamber of commerce of JaPan. |, ;i3"5 clash with congress in the mat- | trine “down to the last measenger in the The will of Hemry Colt Taylor, finan- | 67 Of Teorzanization of the government|government service.” cier, who died in New York last mor petition set forth that the personal es- | EXPLANATION OF RULING UNABLE TO BLOCK WOMEN i o 5,000,000." IN STILLMAN DIVORCE CASE FEOM KABER MUEDER ¥ London, June 28— Premier Lioyd|tt® “Would not exceed $15,000,000. JUR George, in announcing in the house of Poughkeepsie commons late tonight the receipt of a| Poland will celebrafe July 4 this year| FOUSHRCCDSIC . telegram from' Sir James Craig, the Ul-| 3 a mational holiday in order to show | CXWRRATON OF & ster premier. expressing the willingness| the gratitude of that country toward| fe SCUTER CTAFCe of himself and colleagues to attend a con-| America, says an official announcement | FVCT SERITSE 5 ference in London on the Irish question, added that he had rot yet received a re- ply from Eamonn De Valera. FORMAL OPENING OF THE SOUTHERN IRISH PARLIAMENT |ed permission to enter Russia, where he Dublin, June 28 (By the A. P.).—The A opening of the southern parliament this| Henry Lincoln Johnson, republican na- afternoon lasted less than ten minutes. |tional cemmitteeman of Georgia, a negro, The function was purely a formal one, called to satisfy the statutory conditions|Harding to be recorder of deeds fir the |, of the home rule act. Lord Chief Justice Moloney and Charles O'Connor. master of rolls, repre-| Charles E. Hamlin, for many ¥ sented the viceroy and read the procla- |editor of - “School, summoning the assembly. Only a|voted to teachers’ interests dropped de %e‘ppen were present. These in-|of heart disease in bis cffice in cltided four fmperialistic members of the|York. ’ ¢ avegyone sixteen m" senate from Trinit~ coliege and fifteen R TLBLIAAN LA S D.%flefi:u to remove womea others elected to that body. Nearly l“ J. Raymond MeCarl, of McCook, Neb., 3 C 2 the members of the lower houst cre Sinn secretary of the republican congressionai | €Ok Junc = Feiners. They ignored the summons to|campaign committee, was nominated by | Ph¥ of the Mid-Cork brigade of the lrish| o) B FGS ol (PO as little public interest | President Harding t5 be comptroller gen- | FePublican army was shot dead today in oo attend. There . June 28—Detail-| Cleveland, 0., June 28—Women may ng rejecting from | Beld to decide the fate of Mrs. Ex% Cath- < ¢|erine Kaber, charged with plotting the assassination of her busband, Daniel ¥. path, of Kaber, in their Lakewood home two falo, is expected tomorrow from Ieferee |Years agu. At her trial Yor first degrée Daniel J ason when hearings in the |mur ich opened here this morning. suit are resumed her: A motion by her attorneys to have a Outerbridge Horsey, of counsel special venire of 42 prospective jurors James A. Stillman, the New York ban ,‘mulled Lecause five women were amuag conferred |them, on the ground that constitutional and it was|Tigot to sit on a jury has mot beem ex- cree to explain [tended to women by Judge Maurice more _fully his- decision yesterday, | Judge Maurice Bernon without argument which not only cast out Dr. Russe by the state. timony but likewise a letter As a result of the court's ruling one Ve been written to Mrs: woman. - Mrs. Cora K. Burg, now sits in ed Beauvis, Indian guide, named by|the jury box tentativeiy. With her, when Mr. Stillman as co-respondent. The ref-|Court adjourned for the day, wers two eree, ® was learned, agreed to amplify |men, Bdwin L. Ford, a clerk, and Frank received here from Warsaw.. Dr. Hugh L. Russ oy Tnited States Senotor Joseph I France, accompanied by his secretary, Mr. Wat- son, left Berlin for Riga, having receiv- is t study general conditions. d he .| was nominated yesterday by President District of Columbia. a weekly paper de- his decision tomorrow. W. Evans. a railrcad electrician. Mrs. Kaber's chiel counsel, Francis W. COMMANDANT OF IRISH Poulson, has decl L if necessary, Comandant’ Leo+ Mur=|from ury. ork brigade of the Irish| - Indicating that temporary Inssaity pexel . e Kaber, her counsel questioned pros- in the inauguration of the parliament. _|eral of the United States. hereForty-five sepunlioans wers cap|Pective jurars closely Sarte, thalt mik The proclamation said the réason for nired i ""ltude on ‘such a plea and whether or mot the king having summoned the parlia-| Flogging with a rawhide was the pun- | (1°0 ment would be announced when a suff clent number of ™ members were sworn | Ana, Cal Sapping, ¢The' m in. It added that lafger numbers of quest when he pleaded guilty to beating |NADDInE. 1The =mib members of the lower house were neces- |his wie. et Bt Than bepabll sary for the election of a a speaker, but that a chairman should be chosen to di-| The et rect the time a7 manner for the taking | Ol Company on Tssex street, Swamp- | 100" of the oath. . continuance of the par-| scott, i liament ‘could not be assured, it said, un-| cash and $300 in checke stolen. e e e less the oath was taken by one-half the total membership within a fortnight. ¥ was wanted on charges in con-|!f€Y were prejudiced against such plea n with several deaths and a kid-|D¢ing made. Defense counsel also asked tary surrounded a|Whelger they would consilér 1 recom- hy was presiding|mendation for mercy in confection whka over an Irish republican army battalion |® Verdict-of first degree murder. meeting. He escaped through the back | killed after he had gone a|TO ARBITRATE TROUBLE IN THE PAPER INDUSTEY anta | A to Juan Torres at his own re- | " ishment meted out in open court at fe In the office of the Texas . was broken and $150 in|Pundred yar was seized. Albany, N. Y., June 28.—A committee Orders suspending vacations of ob- of three rejresenting striking employes of - = - “ = il = Paper mills 1n this country and Canada, Gill Fitzgibbon was clected chairman| Servers in fire towers throughout Massa- [ MASH FROM “STILL Des s d S of the house of commons, and Sir Nugent | chusetts were announced by the state| ¥ PROVED FATAL TO cows | ¢¥clusive of the International Paper Co. Everard, former lord lieutenant of Coun-| d€Partment of conservation because of ty Meath, chairman of the senate. The senators present consisted of a| drouth. portion of the viceroy's seventeen nomi- nees. ‘The remainder _represented the| Shop crafts employes on the leading Protestant churches. Men belonging to | Tailre o 3 public bodies who had declined nomina-| M€arly 7 to 1 against accepting the re-] tions accorded them and the lord mayor's| ¢ent wage cup ordered by the railroad senators and former officers did not at-| labor board, cuiting their,pay from $3 tend. After the inauguration parliament ad- journed to July 13. REPUBLICANS IN HOUSE TO will meet a committee of three repre- A o 25— Weird an.{ScCnting the manufacturers tomorrow at om pasture and the subsequent death|iir, (0 STve on the committee which will veral of them led dairymen near |0 rate the wage dispute which caused e emmation Wlch ar| the shut-down of the plants. A large ma- o heen mtine | dority of the employes voted in favor of 1 moonshine whiskey |arbitration it was resorted to a_meeting sis of the mash showed | P° ‘"llcrdl;lwnll officers and delegates concentrated Iye had been mixed with|®q¢ today. Traffic through the Panama 'canal in|iD€ EYain. apparently to hasten fermen- .]x;4culx:-!p;2?::ln 'fx.'.'.'.:';f:'.‘:'.;m May was the lightest for any month since | tation. The added “kick” proved fataily, . to (o [FORIE IS SEORYeS Sad & June, 1920, according to the Panama | !0 some of the cows. A former locationd,p, joa¢ the meeting, o 3 Canal Record. Commercial ships passing | ©f the still was found, but it had recent~ the fire menace resuiting from long oads of the country have voted to 77 cents an hour. . The three men to represent the em- HOLD CONFERENCE TONIGHT | through last month totalled 210, an av- | l¥ becn moved. ‘Washington, June 28.—First term re- e publicans were urged in a call issued Condition provision for a snitable today by ‘eleven of their colleagues, to |building in Boston “to commemora attend a conference tomorrow night at|lives and deeds of the founders of New [ which, it is expected, plans will be for-|Engiand” is contained in the will of | pavia R. mulated 5y which new members hope to |former Mayor James P. Baxter of Pert- | non-stop flight exert more Influence in house proceed- land. I New York was halted here late ings and to speed up the legislative pro- gram. Representative Mondell, republi- ca nleader, has been invited to address|the Fnglish and cotch Woolen company the meeting. i ssi) o Gordon W. Expressing the hope that closer co-|ada. has made assignment to Gor mepxion between omp and new members | Scott, authorized trustee under the bank- would result, Representative Ansorge, of |FUPtey act. New York, who took the initiative in is- = 4 suing the call, declaréd the conference| A plen for "m"»?? ;:ln;lt;nm'; was not being held fn a spirit of re.|Versy. acceptable to both U olish an volt. New republican members, whe | Lithuanian Tepresentatives. w: ployes -t tomorrow’y conference will ba Jeremiah T. Carey, president of NOTHER HALT IN T ternational Brotherrood of P-pq-mx::: PROJECTED NON-STOP FLIGHT |crs: John P. Burke, president of the In- ternational Brothernood of Pulp, Bul- Paso, Tex., June 2S—Aviators|bhite and Paper Mill Workers: and J. Davis and Eric Springer, whose: erage of 6.8 per day. te1 | FOstet ait officer of the Dominion Trades from Riverside, Cal, to|and Labor conference and representing ester-{ihe workers in the Canadian paper mill ¥, When enzine trouble forced them to | plants. aréan. conducting busienss as | jund, were unable to continue the journey | Labor leaders tonight expressed the opinion that work would be resumed in the planis of tie companies to be rep- resented at tomorrow’s conference within ten days. The personnel of the com- mittée 10 represent the manufacturers was not known here tonigh ROAD REACHES S TR MENT WITH EMPLOYES | OVERTIME WORK ON RAILWAYS L. A. and operating 37 stores throughout Can- = submit- AGRE tions councll in St TO BE AT PRO BATA number approximately one hundréd, feit, {14 2 the league of mations council | ass however, he said, that' they should have greater influence in party deliberations. Although it has been in session nearly three months, congress has accomplish- ed none of the objects for Which it was called, Mr. Ansorge declared, adding that there was a growing demand for action spelled with a capftal “A." adel; s ¢ Paul Hymans, Belgium's | P had ified the Unit States Jabor{ Will be pald for all overtims work n ex- A move to set neide the will of William | board of an agreement reached between |CeSS of eight hours daily at the pro-rata Penn Snyder, pig ircn magnate, Involving | the company and the representatives of |Tate, instead of receiving tme and ome- an estate of thirty million dollars was | its employes in engine and train service|half, under a temporary decision of the filed in court at Pittshurzh on behalf of ;on regulations and working conditions |railroad labor board today. Mrs. Mary Black Snyder Drew, his only | affecting these classes of employes. More| . The order, effective July 1st, applies to June 28.—The Pennsyl- daughter. than fe workers, including |A¥ employes except those who have - engineers, hostlers, conductors, | Feached agreements with ths reads re- NOTE FOUND WITH BODY Legislative action on the Curtis-Nelson | trainmen and switch-tenders, are con-|Sardiog payment for overtime, or those, TELLS OF DOUBLE MURDER|bill to add $25,000,000 to the capital of | cerned. mostly in the south, who were being paid the Federal Farm lLoan banks for long time and one-:alf after eight hours be- Lafayette, Ind., June 28.—An incoher- |term loans to farmers was completed, the | NEW HAVEN ROAD ASKS forthfeder‘fl control. ent note found foday with the body of |Senate agreeing to the house —reduetion APPROVAL OF $8,000,000 LoAN| The ruling was made vending settle- Harrison Davis, a farmer, 63 vears old, | from $50,000,000 to $25,000,000. ment of numerous disputes before the told of the murder last night of Josic — Washington, June 25.—The New York, | 203rd and if it is later decided that the Medaris, age 59 years, and Charles Fox, age 45. The man and woman Were mur- |manager of tre Interborough Rapid | the .| Prank Hedles, president and gemeral | New Haven and Hartford railroad asked |PEn/UVe rate for overtime s justifisd interstate commerce commission to- | e 70848 will be directed t> nay back to dered in a small farmhouse three miles|Transit Co., announced that if current |day to approve a loan from the govern.|“MPioyes:the amount to be delucted aft- north of Independence, i Warren coun-|earnings of the company continued it|ment of $5.000,000, of which $4,000,000| Ju¥ L ty. Davis committed suicide this morn-|would be able ¢ pay interest on Its 5 per is t0 be used to pay interest on long time S, Sy ing at the home of his daughter, Mrs.|cent bonds, due on July 1. obligations, $2.399,000 to meet indebted- | TO MAKE NEW START Leéonard Smith, seven miles west of La- e ess maturing before the end of 1922 and FOR NON-STOP FLIG! fayette. Ameriean participation In the Interna- | 51 400 to be used for improvement of the - Autliorities said Davis apparently shot |tional exposition to be held at Rio de|road and purchase of equipment. the counle and dragged their bodies into|Janeiro in the fall of 1922 in celebration a cellar beneath the farmhouse. The|of the centennial of Brazilian independ- | xEw HAVEN note declared that to commit the deed. FPRMER ASS'T “DRY” CHIEF EGAN HELD FOR BRIBERY |he was struck by an automobile drives Washinigton, June 28.—William P. Ezan formerly assistant chiel of the lec |anied by & leensed instructor. dcivers, Srcmen and brakemen tothe'tac) QIS EEAIne, g7 back o Len eI al division of the pronibition bureau in ARt kst 2 = 2 the bureau of internal revenue, who was| Alexandre Gustave Fiffel, whe in 188 2 E . arrested here today charged with brob-|built the Eiffel tower for the Paris ex- | ECCHARISTIC CONGRESS TO LEHIGH VALLEY ROAD : ery in connection with the issuance of | position, Tuesday gave an “aerial tea” in BE HELD IN QUEBEC IN 1922) - . ... . TO START UP FROG SHOP liquor permits, was released in twenty- | his apartment in the top of the tower to _— El Paso, Tex., June 28—Lieutenants David R. Davis and Eric Springer, avia- ot 1o o N ROAD PUTS tors attempting a non-stop flight from e had beem “driven |ence. was recomm i ON MORE EMPLOYES | Riverside, Cal. to New York, and who President Harding and Secretary Hughes. were forced to land in El Paso yester- New Haven, June 28.—Additional help | day, wjil return to Los Angeles by train Carmine Fransa, three and one-half < it e . s vears old, was killed in Bridgeport when | 138 been called ip by the New Haven|!o" prépare for a new flight, they an- or | today. This is the first recall of help in|damaged plane is in a hangar. They zfl.‘fi‘.‘;‘:—:"&h:?';}\-:‘::dl‘mfh:e»‘::‘pt geveral months and Tt embraced engine|plan to return here with new parts for agencles giving attention to the reorgan- road. for its local service, it was reported | nounced today at Fort Bliss, where their o R SR F sl five hundred dollars bond after arraign-|fifty delegates to the international wire- | Quebec, June 28.—Announcement that| Hazelton, Pa. June 25 —Announcement ment before United States Commissioner |less conference and their wives. this city has been chosen by the Catholic|was made today by the Lehigh Valley Mason-R. Richardson: He waived exam- ination before the commissioner. Other| RBefore marriage a girl is very near|hold th arrests on simllar charges may be ex-|and very dear to a.man; after m pected Wwithin a few days, according to|riage she is nearer and desarer st those In charge of the investagation. -, | hierarchy of Nerth America in which to | railroad that its frog shop at Weatherly, r-|was today. Cardinal J— | municated the information to all ehurch-' plant turns out frogs for the entire ays- to his pocket book. es in the diocese of Quebee. tem. ucharistic congress in 1922 was | fear here, will resume operations July §, n has com-|after having been idle since April 8. The

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