Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 7, 1921, Page 1

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e VOL. LXII—NO. 218 L PRESIDENT PLEASED WITH ACHIEVEMENTS OF CONGRESS Letter to Senator McCormick Is Considered by Republican Leaders As a Reply to Attacks Made on Republican Con- gress Made by Democratic Leaders—President Harding Asserts “We Are Working Our Way Out of a Welter of Waste and Prodigal Spending At a Most Impressive Rate” —Progress Toward Retrenchment and Efficiency a Man- umental Accomplishment—Sees NORWICH, CONN., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1921 Greeks Take Angora, Open Door in All G the Turkish Capita] Mandate Territories e . | Turkish Troops Fought Stub- ' PRICE TWO CENTS. DE VALERA UNEXPECTEDLY ISSUES STATEMENT TOPRE: CABLED PARAGRAPHS | Four Killed in Alrplane Landing. Paris, Sept. 6.—Four passengers were killed outright this evening when the Strasbourg-Paris express airplane crashed whie making a landing at Le BRIEF TELEGRAMS Wholesale resumption of work in the Tampico oil district is reported in dis- patches from that city. Forest fires tha thave burmed for sev- eral days in Milford, Bradley and Old Town, Me., have been checked by rains. Plan Submitted by U. S. Gov- Thomas Skullen of Medford, driver of Austrians and Hungarians Clash. 5 an Aiitomobile’ which "W et : Vienn, Sept. 6—Clasnes _between | bornly in Defense of the| e¢rnment to Assembly of | scituate, dgied at a nospital at Boston. — Austrian gendarmes and Hungarian snipers in Burgenland are continuing. Hungarian artillery fired on the village of Binmesdorf b caused no damage. Mayor Fehring of Binmesdorf has been arrested on suspicion of spying in fa- vor of Hungary. Nationalist Capital. London, Sept. 6.—The fall of Angora, the Turkish nationalist capital, to the Greeks was reported in a Reuter dis- patch from Symrna today, League of Nations. ‘Washington, Sept. 6—The position of the American government on the ques- tion of mandated has been set forth more completely than heretofore and es- pecially in reference to those of class A and B in a new note to Great Brit- ain, France, Italy and Japan, and through some of them, it is understood, has been submitted to the meeting of the assem- . Dbly of the League of Nations at Geneva [CIMiest, covering the ii-mrie € r.b in 17 for consideration. 7 [mircies 39 15 seconds. A lnirscr was Annou:gement was made ‘f the state |3-¢¢nd and a Lexington department today that the note was dis- P — patched last week but no intimation was | The discevery of a gemerally unknown given as to when It would be made pub- | Rembrandt, “Birth of Christ, Two persons were killed in an ex- plosion and fire that destroyed a two- story building on the upper east side of Detroit. Irish Republican Leader Declares England Has No Basis irf Right For a Single Demand She Is Making on Ireland— e s o foee s gt | States Ireland is “Calling For Butter and Englosié fs St e Mo o bk Ser fering Margarine”—Reply of British Cabinet to Dail Eir< \ “ eann Is Likely to be Made Public Before the End of the Week. Dublin, Sept. 6.—(By the A. P.)—On Cider Used to Fight Fice, L'Orient, France, Sept. 6 (by the A. P.)—Hogsheads and tanks of cider pumped by firdmen on burning huildings today saved the village of Moustoir-Re- mungol from_destruction. The fire al-| ready had destroyed eight houses and was communicating to others When the water supply became exhausted and tne firemen . requisitioned the cider A Smyrna dispatch received Monday sald the Greek urmy was only forty miles stant from Angora. Musta Pasha, the | Turkish nationalist leader, the dispatch id. was fighting stubbornly azainst the entigr Greek army in a last attempt to save the nationalist capital. A Ford won the Pikay Peak ¢“mbing CELEBRATE BATTLE OF MARNE . . Never before have the ministers been Time Approaching cstimated | the eve of a meeting of the Pritish cab-| called upon to take such a journey to AND BIRTH OF LAFAYETTE |FI'e7 25 (0 o be worth more than $50,000, i re-| et at Inverness to take action on the |attend a councll unded such umusual cirs . . . . =i ; ported Notti Trish problem, Famon De YValera, the | cumstances. Because pf the presence When Debtor Countries Will Begin Paying Interest on e Mot Vernon Vi Sent. §—ravs | AlhOUER offcals woud mot dlcus from Nottingham, =England. Ish pfoblem. Famon De Valers, the |cimstunces Because’pt the Steseogis Thei Baadl UNEMPLOYMENT CONFERENCE| [OWOTies that have woven o fabric of{ oo, TSiter, It o mdersteod har (00 ational Guard wnits of St Paul St.|°Xpectedly iseued a statement to the |vance nf the meeting of Viscount Fitza- eir Obligations. 3 liberty loving friendship around French |p2f To8, (OWETNEE CCE ¢ the powers | Clair, Milaca and Duluth have been call. | Press. in which, after reiterating Ire-|jan, Sir Hamar Greenwond, chief secre- p Washington, Sept. 6.—Data for use in|3nd American hearts string were stir- | 227 TREVIC (OB SHOS O T0C nd the | €d out by Gov. Preus to take charge of | 1and’s earnest desire for peace, declared |tary for Ireland, Winston Spencer Vashington, Sept. 5—President Hard-!provided for in the h:ms? e B e ‘;‘:dfi:“r;?wsg:da; ‘-!m& SEe rm; two |9 104" B mandates for their-guidance in | the forest fire situation in Minnesota. (ha; peace could never be founded on|Churchill, secretary for the colonies, a fewing the achieve- | Chairman Penrose said today in an- g 2 27 N gathered at the tomb of George . ek make-believe. and General MacReady, there have nts ican admin- | nouncing that the committee expected to | ference CZ“'E(Z-h}s;ifi:;‘tari{ag{:fi\ncrw;:i“‘"’“"‘“:“’" to celebrate the joint an- [POSSIDIY * considering the i"""“flfl! o1 George L. Connor, formerly passenger| ‘Lt us lay aside the camoufiage and Tetn rs” ot tateret il ation refer to | complete tomorrow preliminary consider- | iae reduebt of Fresder. SHCINE PO niversary of the birth of Tafavette and |SSTe. Of the former smemy territory at| T N ew York, New | Put away the hypocrisy,” sald Mr. De|tending to the ldea that the time Mad - evin - |ation of the house measure. being gathered today st Labor,| (he beginning of the first batfie of the|NS Geneva meeting. ' - Haven and Hartford Railroad, died in| Valera. “If England is issuing an ulti-|arrived to put an end to the protracted al = as a whole it is plain| It is understood that Secretary Mel.|0f Statistics of Department of 14b0% | farne.” The ceremonies -ywere ~under |, AS €ATly as May 12, 1020, the Amer-| %, o0 " P FE B U 0AG 00, (0 matum, let it be an ultimatum.” negrotisttons. Nothing. 1s positively i %o are working our way out of a|lon will suggest retroactive repeal of|Which was requested especially to SUPPIY | tno ausnices of the Lafavette Day Na.|lcan Eovernment had taken a strong | T.yi* War, not peace. would be the outcome | known to this effect, however, but thers. L Shaing Tax ‘when he. apbears’, ibefore | the | coaE ot Niving)Agurce. for| tional Committee “with : Jamen ‘M. Back, |2fand agaias the sétting up of any oec- of the imposition of England’s proposals|is good ground to beleve that many’ committee tomorrow to submit a written| While Yfl‘";fl_’“;"*i éf’“{h'\‘l O hirty | SOlicitor general of the United States s _";‘j’“*’“"‘ e ’“; "’5"‘;;“" sl “You will find the reason for my act|Dy force, according to Mr. DeValera. who | members of the cabine¢ favor placing & today, was|statement as to future _government | enCS il be limited probably to MMITLY|presidinz. " and messages of -friendship e “‘;“‘:E S of| in bureau drawer,” read a note the| Went on to assert that England had no|time limit on further discussions. Tt is under date of | money needs. Such repeal was provided "Z,’i’;.,‘w.}}“ée Ya‘r?ml\ed Eifelin were read from Presidents Harding ang | Mesopotamia _=r‘- the cable privileges of | ;ocket of Goetano Franco, 25, who com- | basis in righ® for a single demand she | fikely that everything will depend wpon: svet 29 ¢ wor M rmjck of | for in the tax bill as originally drawn |bresident will be furnis g | Millerand, Marshal Joffre, victor of the |the Paclfic island of Yap, the latter| ey guicide by shooting in a field, at|¥as making on ireland, and would not|the decision of the premiler. himeelf, stood also will be | by the houise ways and means committee, | Persons considerably .in excess of Marne, Marshal Foch. General Pershing, |C'aimed as a C mandate by Japan. In|yihyen, Mass. dare to make such demand upon “a pow-|and the general impression is that n New Mexico. | but republican members of the house | umber Who Will measure up to his, fe-| premicy Briand and Secretaries Hughes |2 N0t of February 21 last Secretary er_even nearly as strong as hersell.” |strongly opposes any precipitate break- 8 appointed to fill [ voted in conference o postpone the date| JUeSt for representatives of “key in-|and Denby, {Colby gave explicit warning that the ap-| preparations for advancing upwards of| The text of Mr. De Valera's state-|ing of negotfations. ¢ Secretzry of |to January 1, 1922, Caoirics” from different sections of the| Tme journey from Washington 'was |Proval of the United States was neces- |, hijjjon dollars in agricultural and live | ment follows: Whether Eamon Da Valera's smdden ol a candidate for elrction. | Members of the senate committec ure | COURIEY. £ £ tne|Made by steamer and as the procession |SarY to valldate any mandate 4 sanc-|siock credits under recent legisiation| “It seems that it is a grievous political | decision ftoday to unbosom himself fto - rstood, is con- | understood to take the position that the| , SITUCH Compers. pesident of - fhe| wound up over the aulet lawn to the|tion which he contended had neter been|have viriuaily been completed by the Wat | Sin these days to keep one's eyes open. |the press in such frank’ fashion was £ ters as a_re- | republican party made a definite promise | AMe et ot sabor tn ins | tombi the Milos of /France and: the |Bl¥eD Jn the case of Tap. I mubsequentipymance Corporation: Plain common sense is sneered at as|due to the idea that he might influence a tive record | to repeal this tax immediately and that|Pose Lo cnontatives of lapor.in the! French: tricolur, ‘carmiea b an. American | 1018 by Secrefary Hughes this position rhetoric and logic. The British imperial | tha premier to prevent premature break- Chairman | this is a settled pledge in the public mind. | YATious cra ts from “|~1 P ?"‘“‘(““";\Mn» jacket and a khaki-clad soldler | W23 Strensthened the proposition being| gy, gegtroyed the garage of Smit statesmen are trying to sell Ireland | ing off of the negotiations was the sub- ational com-|The same position was taken by most | (v While the United States chamber of) headed the column flanked by American [12id Gown that notwithstanding her re-|g Freeman at 59 Front street, Brooklyn, | %econd rate political margarine and are | ject of speculation in London. Mr. Lioyd . democrats republican members of the house com- [ (HNTIERCE BAS Submitted fve = names|edors fn the hands of French and |fusal to motify the Versailles Treaty the |iwenty-five automobiles and trucks were| Y*I¥ angry becanse we Ao not accept!George will meet the king at Moy Ve ha ress toward | mittee, but western representatives led a| DUhr assocations and - orga Amrefcan marines. At the tomb a |United States as a victor in :he Wrc|iog in the Llaze. Damage is estimated | the butter label they put o Hall, where the king is staying, on his a ef- | successful fighi for retention of the tax | {*¥e: Subs "e‘ SR L e | wreath was placed in the vault with |could not be deprived of a full f“ eduallat more than $§100,000. all the advertising stuff th | way tomorrow morning to join his cof- - res for this calendar year. Fr’"m~ ”"’““v . s : simple ceremony and the party trooped |Voice in the disposition of all former P st printed abount it. If it weve real but-| jeagnes at Inverness. - | experts have estimated that| - From these lists. it is g erstood the | uy to the wide lawn to tell again of |German-owned territories. | The American Chemical Soclety began| '€ it Would not need ali this advertis: w Tetroactive repeal f this levy would cut | President will make his »‘9;‘,“" the Frenchman born one hundred and | In this most recent note Secretary|, oonvention at New York. which is ex.| Ment. DEMONSTRATION IN CORK . site $430.000,000 from the revenue total i | MNAtnE as far as practieab four years ago today with the |Hughes 0 e Hioey aq | Pected to develop into one of the great-| “The Trish people know that the arti- BY TRANSPORT WORKERS : the next_ calendar year, making te - | L 0 e o ering amensis | C1IL of human liberty eilering wicn hix | cauality of treament. of all natlons 4n¢ | eat Infernational Conferencen in the his-| €16 pointed out In” the shop as the artl | _ s 5. & » Mr. Harding come on the basis of the house bill §2.- S Eahesing a irst pulse and of the 1 se 8 sHgenc y cience and i y. cle being =0ld is very unilkely to be g 2 o ey idipetd. il 49,000,000 for 1922, The house commit. | Serted, probably would be born Sestalapy Bhin s e ‘:;':‘Mssrn& in all mandate territories, not | 'Y ©f the science and industry. he article ‘hat wifl faally. reacn them | Cork. Sept. § (by Bte A. P)—A dem: p s. af o and be- | toe alto proposed Istroactive repeal oIS f;gr‘;l‘:{\im Tr;.‘il ey ?:m“).x;v'-r of France and Fingland to stem the re,:u’iruni the ‘:,laim sty n‘frllflu'l'z\; Directors of the Hercules Powder|17¢1and wants butter and the Irish peo- "'::lr;-::nc:r;m:h::;!‘:;‘lyhe‘mmmm p e & inary e income sur-tax brackets in excess| 5 data for theltide of German advance and draw a |class such as Mesopotamia or Yap, Dut| oompany declared the resular Ger | ple will mot be deceived into thinking | ¥ i nd taxa. | Of 32 per cent estimated to cut an ad.|MCSHNE hasiTot as yet been et but it| nee rromtice oy Ta anp! it to the three classes o = SUIAT QUAT- | hey have got it until they see It actually | "ATPOr board because of a refusal of that alons with heee | Altional $30000.000 from the yearly rese- | DEOPRDIY WIIl be around September 15 o | " The mains ARdTers o oot h |pracine. those like former Turkin cxtra ANIdend of one. per cemt. on soms | Aelivered. “The Ensiisn press asks have | the board to authorize & minimum wage . to pefmnit funding|Due., This matter has not yet been taken John H. Firey, of New York. ¥\ [ritory which can be provisionally recos- | mon"stoex payable September 24tk we a will to peace, Yes. we have—and | for the Workers, ended as enddeniy foreign governments. | UP bY the senate committce, however. | o —— “This Wil forever he Lafavette's |nized as independent; B including those e G an ardent desire. It is for that very | thiS evening as it arose by reference of ot A ‘new feature in revenue legislation | SEARCHING FOR FUGITIVE aay sald. “It has been purchased |like central. Africa to be administered | Three hundred recruits for the Span-|Teason that we refuse to see things as | the dispute to an arbitration conference. - followed 1 ange- | Under consideration by the senate com- TOLEDO P. 0. ROBBERS [ for him by what he did for America |under conditions providing equal aopor- |ith forces in Morocco will leave Havana | other than they are. Peace wili mever |On the conference there will be repre- ader the debtor countries | Mittee would make nossible speedy re- | and his own land, France.. But i had |tunities for trade; and C those like|on the steamer Antonio Lopez, which | b founded on make-belicve. Let us tear | Sentatives of the harbor board and the i toref on their obliza- | funding of taxes improperly paid. Treas.| Toledo, O. Sept. 6—VWith federal and|a celcbration in 1914 which will ever |southwest Africa and the southern Paci-|will touch at New York and fake on | aside t -amouflage and put away xhlz:""‘s"’fl“ workers. The presiding offi e 1 am conf\lent that|UrY experts have been asked to draft|Sheriff's deputies searching the country | associate With his hirthday the first siz.{fie islands to me administered as integ-|several hundred additional recruits. hyprocisy. [ e B o e e T . faciiitating the funding of the debt | uch a provision, Chairman Penrose said, | {0f more than fifty miles around To- |nificant trivmph of the zreat world wap, [ral portions of the territory of the man- o “I4 England Is ning an ultimatum, | flr' ¥of the Dail Eireann. - oo ates will | adding that the government had been| ledo for the three convicted post of- “What France did for America In |date country. Twelve armed bandits held up the|!°t it be an ultimatum. Brute force. It is undersood that the men will ve- v e extraordinary |N0Ming funds due tax-pavers for two | fice robers who escaped from the coun- | the person of . his youth. France now| In making its claim for the open door [night manager, cashier and a score of |Naked and unabashed, has been used SuMe Work immediately. a large and im- | OT three years and that no interest was| ¥ Jail, Judse John M. Killits of United | hac done for the world in her abiding|in. all mandate territories the Amer-|patrons in Child's restaurant at Atlan-|‘gainst small nations before. Our e [ . mand fr employment of men | allowed or credit given on future taxes. | States district court today issuéd an or- | spirit of youth.” an government .is understond to have |tic Cit; They were driven off by the| !ion has known for lonz. Even our | SINN FEIN LEADERS Other matters. considered today’by the | 4T DArring other post office pri; s | in mind the providing cf sufficient safe- |arrival of police before obtaining loot. little children have experienced and MAY GET SHORT LIMIT R mning his latter | COMmMittee included house provisions for | Neld in the j isitors. ruards for American missionaries as well no pretense will hide the threat of ks to Semator MeCormick | 12Xing insurance companies; administra- | , TP three men, Joe Uriay Charles | BODIES OF AMERICAN-ZR-2 as American business men. The euit of Earl - Fitzhugh, against| {07ce; it is best recognized for what it| Tondon. Sept. T—The Dally Maf's po- tor's coneratulations | UV Provisions of the income tax; repeal| SChultz and George Lew 5 Rog- VICTIMS ON WAY TO THE T, 8. officers of the Grand Trunk and Central | ! jshments of the administra- | °f the transportation taxes an? an ad- | ¢°% Who beat twi deputies h a jail g et aadvease | ditional tax of §4.20 a cot buckle attached to a st gallon on alcoholic liquors withdraw for non-beverage poses and diverted to beverage use. Iitical correspondent at Inverness learns from a person in closs ‘touch with Premier Lioyd George ¢hat the Sinn Fein o ng yesterday made their escape, the officers being una. ble 1o obtain a trace or the whereabouts Tull. England, Sept. - P.)—The bodics tims of the ZR. CHILEAN-BOLIVIAN CONFLICT BEFORE L. OF N. ASSEMBLY Vermont Railways, was marked for hear- ing at the October term when presented of August 6.—(By The A. “Fngland has no Masle In risht for of the -Ameriean vie | a sinzle one of the demands she is mak- pur- So T : to tho state supreme court at Concord,|Ime on Ireland. ~She would mot dare|lcadcrs will be sives shors fime Mt i isaster wes - 2 e them fo.a powar ev ear'y as el ¥ er they " ongress’ preceding the |TAT 28 Was made known no Toema) dén |0 the thres, ed for Pivmontn foday on. thelr way| Geneva, Sent. § (bv the A. P.)—The |- H. e e D e e . ond Tre | enter a;confersit we it e th et D n ¥ Administration is|SON Was reached on any of these fea.| RO SHtuart, county prosecuting at-|to the United States for burial. Thous. |alr was charged with electricity when| e 3 ok e e in the government's offer. . .3 g e et of B torney, today ssued a call for a Special | ands of Deople lined the streets as the |the delegates to the league assembly | Not a single employe on the New|lind too wenk o resist successtully.| WU TUCERCES QU 0 0, gy esidunusly labcred to re-| After heading Secretary Mellon the | 56500 of the grand jury to iny caskets containing the bodies conveyed | athered thi smorning. The storm cen- £ iaven and Hartford Rail-| That ts % s 5 Fein to arange an accommodation™ sars dhuits committee expects to get down to the| FAl° (N’ escape. SheMff Tavior today | on motorcars, passed the Royal Infirm- |tered around the Chilean delegation. a|70ad was Kkilled during the month of |less attemnting to hie it. =~ = | the correspondent, “are being considered o i ha statement that 1 | Teal Work of dratting a Mill for precenta;| OETed & reward ‘of $500 for the arrest|ary fo the railroad station. number of. the leaders engaxing in ear- | AUEUSt, according to an official state-| “For peace secured in thess drewml| ;" coneuitatiop with: the Irish viceroy . v ccal year | 0N 10 the senate after congress recon.| °f 1% fugitives dead or alive. A memorial service, conducted by the | nest diseussion with Augustin Fdwards, | Ment isued by C. L. Bardo, general man- | stances no one would ?;L“-, oA | and General MacReady™ o Siaats feur sad r billion | YoNes September . Police, the sheriff and government in- | chaplain of the Howden Air Base, was|head of the delezation, regarding the | 38°T et eIy R nremene thus ar.| The correspondent:points that the gew : . hree quarters| The Dresent plan is to call in the de.| SCSLEAtors denied today a despatch from | held this afternoon in the grounds of the | Tacna-Arica question. el bound by any arrangement thusS 47| ernment would refer the gquestion t# “ than the sxpenditures | MOCTANC members of the committes| CICLC1aN that the fugitives had been | Roval Infirmary, where the caskets were | It had been renorted on good author-| Establishment of n minimum wage| Vo4 at. B e | parliament befora reintroducing the: poli- - R 1. | while the bill is belng drafied, On surrounded in a house in Toledo. Th covered by the stars and stripes and ity that the Chileans would leave the |scale under which workmen are to he| “With this backeround of ‘mn 7| ey of repression in Ireland and might » i e ik as x| PERTON explafiing sthat iho ,,‘,f‘,:f,"m"l declared that the “men got away with-| surroun by beautiful Jeaves and flow- | assembly if this quesion was placed | paid sufficient money to enaMe them to|h¥ foree, war. not peace. would Ture’% | submit the issue to the country, thus 4 et e ox i Dartipated in the framing of e igin| Ot leaving a trace of where they | ers, They had been Iving in a special-| on the agenda as requested by Bolivia | buy necessary food supplies has been|bs (he ontcome. Treland and Great | creating the possibility of a general slecs - % 2 - jo). | FeVenue law when the democra Facipsnt. ly arranged chapel pending thelr re-|for revision of the treaty of 1904. The |decided upon by the Russian Soviet gov-|Pritaln are neishi The Sm tion, but adds that the premler retains n N o SO SHIEST OF Tho nepate oD e moval. remort was mersistent. desnite tha refu- |ernment | forces of mutual interests and common | tha sincere hope that the Sinn Fein wild aiferaft, ar BODIES OF TWO MINEES The procession to the station was|sal of the ddegation to confirm it, until purposes wou d 1 realize the dangers of further delay and - + berween one| TRIENNTAL CONGRESS OF BROUGHT TO CHARLESTON | 71050 by representatives of the Roval | Senor Edwards gave out a fiat denial Raymond P. aged 9, and Peter L.|Peonles tozether lonz 2 the! esmential oo AR compsigna P R b i Air Torce and included British and| The ascembly. nevertheless, remained |aged six, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Peter;'m voluntary co-oncration g 2 i r M L DESCENDANTS | Charleston, W. Va, Sept. 6, — The | American mitary and naval detad-|agitated, and conferences continued on | Deschene of Salem, Mass, were prob-|Tulers and O = COTTON INDUSTRY FEELS e bodies of two coal miners, said (o have | TCNLS and Tepresentatives of the Tord | the floor untll'President Van Kamebeek |ably fatally burned today while playing |meddling and : al contrivances in- bt fving 1o be able to say.| nial congress ot the iinets Te trien- | been Killed tn last week's firing In the | T2YOT, the sherift and other leading cit- | caNed the amembly to order, half an|with matches in a shed in the yard of|ferroted insunerable = barrlers which | - e E to : 4l congreas of the General Society of | vicinity of the Boone.Logan oot ine, | 17¢ns. he pall bearers included both | nour late. He osed that, instead |their home. the S poveryments proposals secik X . ¢ provavly no other gov- | Mavflower Descendants opened its. es: | wete o 0 s sty e | fi¥tica). and | BHUAN: offlokra, aTiOnE | Lo Al in e i e [ hele lto e ad Derpetanted Atlanta. Ga., Sept. 6.—Recent advances world has during a s sions here today with 200 of P o them being ic Vi . 2 e representatives of the Brit-| in the price of ! NE el e ey, with, 200,01t 2 Members of a committee in charge of [ i°m beine Alr Viee Marshal Vsvyam.|cluded the subject of Tacna-Arica. the | The sinking of the former German sub- Tepresent o the B e e o an r covernment of the | eral hundrid ciher . Aftendance. Sev-|the bodies gave the names of dead as|TePresenting the RBritish Air Councll | iseembly complete its organization. This | marine U-111 while she was being to- ne at their recent confe o mclfiesins Destness Somsiiond & r ! n her members also were el k I b 2 Floral tributes included a large repre- 1 x e 1o bind hy form: 4 central- | throughout the United States, Joseph g the past two ars | Present making ‘he congress ! T‘!éw y Bryant, Lynchburg, Va. and S ettatio i erin i occupied- all the morning and afternoon | wed to a ation off Lynnhaven, Va., for| e by, e, S Ryt | A. McCord. chairman of the board of the rence of the republican con- | IATEely attended Tx o Eres® tne most | Keener Williamson, Henrictta, Ky. A . 7 airship bearlng the let- | gascions. In the meantime the delema- |the bombing tests last June, was made | amachinery_ tha. 1 Great | Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank, sald in ra. W v 1 i DAy seure | Organization. Calitornias tan g | . Vest Virginas coal fields were report- | 103 ZR2L | tions named their representatives on six | the subject of investigation by a maval|¢Xtx between these states 2 e ] 2 dtateaent TEEAMEES siministrative. depariments | 29 delegates wag on aaq [ QUOta of | ed quiet tonight at the offices of Gov.| Tt was stated today that during thel yunittees which met in the afterncon |board of inquiry. | Britain they would have disrurced thelr | & SCormER R e ~ g The o and. ernor Morgan. It was deciared that no | YOV2ge to America on the British cruls- 13" 1 cfca their chalrmen, Wisely for the empire th e . 2 * in sympathy with the pro- o opening address was made by Ass | : e er Dauntless, the body of Lieutenant- ; 3 foligadt U | eft the farmers. the merchants and the ¢ rous and u ting econ- | P. French of Boston, deputv Y Indications of renewed rifle firing in the | ¥ - oEyICAIl oMt et a O Efforts at concliation in the Chilean-| A group of American engineers have | V¥ el L w4 | interior banker” maid the statement *1 4 hich, 1 believe, we will | E*Reral who presided in the absence of | Focor iy, Jisturbed regions had been re- | Lo e at sea in accordance with |Folvian conflict were continued |-opceed a $100,000,000 projec. for har.| “Tt Pitt had been as wiee T et | Hiave no doubt thmt 36 iitieiiretn it Sl . nE the next year to convey | MaJor General Leonard Wood, who iu | civcd. during the day. Quiet has like-| % f 0 L O wish, throughout the day by Lerd Robert Ce- | ness.ng the tide in the | t SaintiP® no Trish problem and Tre- | by fernishing s et it - < treasury so large a mum | EOVETNOT general of the society. Offfcers | M FoLutued i _i‘,“:‘e"_ Sounty, whers clle. who represents South Africa, and|Mclel to the Chamber of Comme ce of )and wovl have been saved @ century | farmers of the' south, our largest Se gate of taxation may be | Will be elected tomorrow, M) ariug saccons’ the Jtughpiper, from Kefis w400 et e others,.but without success. The un-|the town of Granvilis, Defartment of [and a quarter of misery and Tred? o southern class of consumers, have.mot 2 00,000,000 a year e R N R '"“c‘lfi side took piace last week, it was | INCENDIARY FIRE DESTROYS casiness caused by this ineident in- che, France. Al okite ('M a qu o ond | been able to buy on account 6f the des h tothr aabudl galc. . LLAG N creased during the afierno s —— | § . work: must gt A wression of Hy 5 = TFROM WEST VIRGINIA |3t the headquarters of Brigadier Gen-| yrgram Minn., Sept. 6.—Mors than |determined to maintain thelr demand, |rived at Inverness, Scotland, for a pre.|datlon for a real and natural “We must have ar burdens are imposed i e et i Sl o | : - C Rrttatn. we | a market for textfle yers of other countries,| Washington, & e e e e res | seventy refugees from the fire-swept [and intended to ask instructlons from |liminary conference with Premier Lioya (¢™een Ireland and T nia. | Products in order that the manufactur- well-nigh universal protest against | graphed late tome o o8 moraers tele i Hm of Hhe tn e e son Tumic larea in the vieinity of Solana and | their government In case the assembly |George. Sir Neville Macreacr and Chief |Are struggkng to get to that founda- | TEOCRR o M oge oy e repetition of gigantic confic: | Read, commanding. the Fitth Arme mores | Squadron was ikewise ordered to ~re. | Whitepine are wiped out, ~are ' befms | rejected . Secretary Hamar Greenwood will be pre. | fion: we know exactly what we are do. | &7 W28 0l E. S0, O VOCiRg . e B R i as | e iy rmy Corps S djiiee o Jmg|cared for by the National Guard con-| The Bolivians declined to state eat- |sent at the conference. ne and all who desire to see Great| on e O s e O e ten the | for . o e mu, Indianayots, | M0 Teaxley Tiekl, Viminla, lewing Lol oS uiatlonsd at s ‘plko gorcially whether they would leave the B e e nandn | products which in turn creates a de rence en th removal of arm: " v only two planes to act as messengers in s e 5 e: Y, 3 wou ce will le helping hand. e = s gt e <=l alied R My Farossitroiiie | ool Craloins & Many of the Tefugees are penniless | Atsembly, but expressed the fear that| Polleemen with riot guns, summaned PYCt Wil lend a heling wand® | mand for the raw cotton. There is ev- aly for this but for other lands. “Return the following troops now in and are at a loss Where fo seek finan- | Publo opinion in Bolivia would de- |by a radio messaze telling of mutiny. | 1\ W43 announced waric Ure AI7| demce hat the mamutacturers of cotton e thout e tion the gove Fest Virgi 7 i i A mand their with the 1¥ | tos broke up a ficht betwee: o el | 0F, Laet DA CIE. e h “re Wo%! are keen to buy” o other conmtsite ave faosd i | 26ih Tntmtey, ‘Gacinlr Jroper siations: | 15,000 CASES OF WHISKEY e T e Ceata the urton el s moers L Al oog Bt (R Ep | DOtLIAE. 1o commmn eeiysmotid| Gefciti W ML met cweaNe- | Sewadten, sk iwo mussigir oy i SELLED 0N NEW, YOUK EIERS| . Al the tuvdings mn’ Whitepine: were vians said *hey were wXling to mub- | ping board freighter Chester Kiwanis, |2 % call and 2, (WRARSEEE BEHAREL o0 pvrrrve vo mEEP AmMY r zood fortune gnd the prudence | such maintenance, personnel and oo e 3 2 destroyed except one dwelling, and the |mit tha question to the international | anchored off Staten Island. g R g e o o e 3 ® congrin. Skl fts us to|as may be required f d supp New York, Sept. 6.—Fifteen thous- | cchoolhouse. court, but the Chileans declined to do e Gt e UP TO AUTHORIZE 150,000 MEN nen ‘Tevimue and expendltures at a | to Langley Field: chemica wactoii'c™ |and cases of whiskey valued at ome | Agjutant General W. F. Rhinow said | 5o, . moted a1 doe A Wher deficits are the rule through- | tachment, Edgewood Arsenal. Yoy s |Tillon dollars were ssized by federal | ne was of the opinion that the fire was | The sinking off the Maine comss ax ¥he | ture of the POt moment 3. be.| , Weshington. Sept €—Mecruiting i he world. We shall be greatly aid. | duthorized to retain Gemeral Bandhots | Pfoniibtion agents today =t cevera!|of incendlary orlgin. COTTON ADVANCES 318 BALE B ST N e rer rew, | lieved here to add to the gravity of the| the army. which was ordered discom- Poliey of progressively re in command until e piers along the North river. This was|® win the fira swept aren s i cape of the six members of her crew,|lieved h a E | tnued last month, was resumed toda: e T T A ool e the largest single seizure of liquor In| tha village and tne wing Blowing e on IN NEW ORLEANS MARKET |arter a collision with the steamer City | situation R e n. design. enactment and execu- | FORD INVITED TO DIS New York since the Volstead act be-|omosite direction from that in which | ! of Rickland, bound from Maine ports| A commun vl WY T department dexigned to keep the enlisted in, detign. enactment and exect- > 1scUss cama effective. : the forest fires.are burning, it was im- | g1n n oricons, Sept. 6.—Advances of |for Boston, became known at Glouces-| today from AT Snn | ctrength—at 150,000 men, the number s R T i ath e LEASE OF MUSCLE SHOALS| Most of the liquor, it was said, came | possible, in his opinion. for the fire | 310 2 bale were scored in the cotton |ter Mas. Fein courier, 1 arried the Dail Eire-| o ithirized by congress, The regulations - g e gl from distilieries and Warehouses in | have started hy sparks from the forest | Mokt foda¥. on both contracts and —_— ann's reply to Premier Lloyd George.! .1 for rejection of all applicants ~whe % 5 e Bttty 3 i ashington, Sept. §.—Henry Ford was | Kentucky and was obtained through the | fire area, as first reported spota. In the contract market the Robert 0,|and s still in Scotland. forcasting the | 201 0 Co gt ST ot rter o who T e (e Eren: | invited today by Secretary of War Weeks | use of forged permits. Some 500 per-| The fire whish today caused eva close was strong at the highest of the - Collertor of Tnternal Bovne o O | possible result of the cabinet meetine. | 100 o Sumcient edueation to give T e masent e ts only ome amonk | veniencs t demerigion at his con-|mit blanks wers stolen a few weeks 20 | ton of Sofana and Arthvdes, a vhiage | 0% qith, all tradime months 200 potnts |Eaton snnounced WAt Be has TSt 2| and it le suggested that Mr. De Valeras | jronie,"of becoming good soldiers withe 3" measares 'of the Srst importance | felals hie propess) o EoeTIment of-| from the office of Federal Prohibitlon | numoering apout twelve: familes, was | T3 (he full lmit of fuctuations avow- |}tter | from BroRiior ComuTEIN istatement was made in consequence of | 0" ‘pecéasity or Instruction ordin mea l1 s =t Fk“:vl; m'«d clals :X: s"’v?ulehw‘ purchase and | pirector Hart and an investigation dis- | checked late tonight when the wind eflounder the cotton exchange rifles. m’“; st 2:”,” e e ande orng | Information contained in. Mr. Barton's | Ty "0 cen® SN Ioul ocoiem + enacted. It was quickly followed | lease the Muscle Shoals, Ala, nitrate | D) gl e ctober closed at 19.49 and May at |3 r o -made wine| ociage. The newspapers’ suggestion of | Grersiary Weoks recruttin, . ment of the immigration | plant and water power project. closed that anany_ of these sppcarediia’tidien’ down. B0TOE ert e ;2 lare subject to seizure in this state BY | 1o jranosition by the premier of a. ti Sec eeks sajd no " recruiting 1 | plan . e 2 i ents a pound, the highest prices : e imposi T of & time| yration would &8 and'ng el calciiated both to limit the inflow | Notlce that another bid would be mae | SetiliErios and warehouses spparently | e reported sinee early last winter. Mid. | federal agents. limit has been badly received. Arthur | hoe Getachonte v b et pulation daring a period of depres- | for the private operation of Muscle | e dout property, The permits called| Xpw ENGLAND NEWSPAPERS dling spots were 200 points up at 18.00 Griffith and others resent any attempt| (o camvas for Pecralts. Az to hasten the Qa7 when we|Shoals was received by the secrstary to- | IO Mo releaso of between 35,010 sl OPPOSED TO 44 HOUR WEEK | cents, Terd Reading, victory of Indin. in & o force peace. There is mo sizm,| "Tme enlisted Siength of the srmy 7ay effect ihe irue Americanization of | day trom C. . James, of Chattanoogs, | 20.000 cases of whiskey with 5 The strength of Liverpoo! during the |spesch at a joint sitting of the council of | however. the Sinn Fein leaders re-| 3¢ prdeent was il t o o ol e o g o Salention e i Rl o oo i i Worcester, Mass., Sept. 6.—The hoard | American hollday yesterday and agaln |stite and legislative assembly. at Simia.|zard the position as critical; they talk| 15200 men, ¥ beimg dacreased from . O o i of fhs Al e the char- TE of governors of the New England Dally | today, and reports of much larger bus- | !ndia, declared rising of Mrrians in|as if they had months of argument le-| 220000 since last March by resignations imelioration of conditions in_the great e Dftr Be would make, aay- [MISS GEEYEUDE BUTLER Newspaper Association went o . i istrict was not symptorittic of | fore them and as though there was no | d id ther | ing merely that it was being f L Lided nt on record | Iness among American mills Were the | Ma.abar district aitural industries would in other | ing mer ing forwarded HYSTERICAL ON BTAND | in a resolution passed at a meeting here s have constituted a striking iegis-| by mail. approved and discharges made as enlist- main features back of the buying. tne whole of India, as that dis.mict had | possibilty of the termination of the| ments expired, v a king. legts o | {hiS, afternoon a5 emphatically opposed | always been a storm center. truce. = ative product of a year's session. e = Barnstable, Mass., Sept. 6.—Miss Ger- | to the 44 hour week in the printing In- _ The British reply is expected to be de ide the law for control of the pack- | TOBACCO MARKETS OPEN IN trude Butler, who charges that she was | dustry. They also expressed opposition | T CCTLY ERSHIP FOR THE K. L industry, the aft for the regulation EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA | assaulted by three Cape Verde negroes|to any incre: grain exchanges, and the law for the > = ¢ the Fanit- | livered tomorrow night to Mr. T gl e by TROLLEY LINES TERMINATED | Alvin W. Krech, president of the Fan | SCHOONER MAKES PORT rton at . ™ ppoinited | Inverness. and. in that event, it is likely WITH MAIN MAST GONE while returning from a dance at Buz- | hours in the printing trades while t — able Trust Company, was appointed |Inverness. and in that event, it : stension of credits to farmers througn| Winston Salem, N. C., Sept. 6.—Tobac- | zards Bay about three weeks ago, be- | present industrial conditions exiat " | Providence, R T, Sept. 6—The re. |chairman of a S o kg T i e « war flnance corporation fo enable | ;o markets in eastern North Carolina |came hysterical today. while testifying | The New Englan/ Daily Newspapers | Ceivership of the Rhode sland Com- |tect the Interests of s B e Boston, Sept. 6.—The two-masted m 10 carry their crops until the mar-| opened today with considerabe demand!at a hearing in the case of Joseph An-| Assoclation is composed of representa- | PANY was ordered terminated by a decree |Manhattan Railway Oompany. whos auxilfary ‘schooner . Matthow 8. Cheasrs tis will absorb them. The establish- | reported for the crop. The market at|drews, ome of her alleged assaants. | tives of practically all of the daily news- | ehtered In the suprior court today by |propetties are Jeased by the Interboroush | MEETING CONCERY men' of a veteran's burean insures A | Wilson reported a sale of 300,000 Dounds | She made an effort to reach the pris- | pabers in the New England states, presiding Justice Tanner. The decreee | Rapid Transit Company. Seintien hose reforms in caring | at an average price of 15 fo 20 cemts G | owned in New Bedford, is safely st an- THE FATE OF IRELAND oner but was restrained by court at- * our disabled men which were inaugu- taches and Miss Butler was removed by executive order. We have es per pound and Kinston 15 cents. at better than Prices were R iter than an- directs the receivers to deliver $1,070,000 CHIEFS 0T NEW ARMY in. cash and all their hooks and ae- Minority delegates to the convention of chor off Second Beach, Newport, R. 1. With her main mast gone, & message to the United Electric Rail 5 London, Szot. § (by he A. P)—Lord | night aal "‘“"::..., m’ v 1 v. c counts to the United Electric Railway |the Jewish Soelalist Federation, in New London, Sgnf ¥ he A. —Lord | night sald. Earier ahlished peace and are sesking to ex- | ticipated by zrowers. ";:p“:n;fl:'r:pe'alt::g!o::: ‘1’,‘1‘::‘“3,' the LA NEeELEg Comuany, The Rhode Island Company. | York, which last night voted to with-| Birkenhead, “lord high chancellor, and | that coas; guardsmen from the Pice's ahlish the generous production and prof- c » scort, Wil- < t 5 ‘| which was organized to take over the|qraw its support from the American so-|six other ministers ara traveling seven | Neck Stati to 4 + exchange of foodstuffs and eom. | CONSIGNMENT OF AMERICAN Tinmn Fidrodge, stnen.she. e e dem: | e inton, Sepl. 6-—Selection of the | largest pert of' the trolley lines in this | ciavise party, organised today as the | hundred miles tonEht 10 Join the prime | assistance. to. an asbdentied semeelhutl rodities under tha conditions of Deace FOON REACHES PETROGRAD | onstration. Eldredgs followed her as a | coar stoft. ao s;cm‘,‘;’:‘(f:d"';""'{‘;"m?;; state went Into a receivership January | jewish Soclalist Verband and announced |minister and the rest of the cahinet, | apneared to be in distress about 4 corallary assorance of good wages| - witness. They had told their story in | Pershing, were announced today at the| o ~ 1% el fepntianed. gt o e o | e et I T | T i@ general employment Riga, Sept. 6 (by the A. P.)—The|court previously last week when John | war department. oy party. df Gegeral, St evir, MAcH! cdm-| Tonizht's communieation which American steamship Phoenix has taken | Dies and Benjamin Gomez, two other | Brigadier General James H. McRae, . i e | ops in Ireland, in IMARGES IN HOUSE REVENTE into Petrograd the first consignment of | negroes alleged to have been concerned | is to be chief of the personnel division : Mrx, NSwOa I Bakers Lemuel Bolles, wational adjutant of | What.-may Prove a most critical counc: BILL UNDER CONSIDERATION | American food for the starving children | in the attack, were held for the grand| Brigadier General William Lassler, of | (Yeveland, Sep* 6.—Mrs. Newton D.|the American Legion, is in Ottawa, | meeting concerning the fate of lre- of Russia, says a despatch to the Let- | jury. the operations and tmaining division; | Baker, 78, mother of former Secretary |Canada, for conference with R. B. Max- |land. Washington, Sent. 6—~There s a grow- | vian Telegraph Agency from Moscow. | It was In connection with this case »g sentiment in the sema Brigadier- Genersl William D. Connor, of | of War Baker, finance com- | The vessel salled from Hamburg. died bere today after | well, president of the Great War Vet-| No specia salon was provided. the that Cape Cod residents severa weeks | the supply aivis\sn; Co'onel Briant H.|eight weeks' fllness. erans’_ Association of Canada, with a|ministerial party taking ordinary sleep- ] " o make repeal of the sxcess pro-| The American Relief Administration [ago made a demonstration against the [ Wells of the war vlane division, and| The body will be sent to Martinsburg, |view of bringing closer relations between | ers in the regular train. Earl Curzon. |teen passengers, tax retrouetive to last January 1,|on Monday semt its first train direct to prisoners that threatened to develop in- Licutenant Colone! Stuart Heintzelman | West Virginia, and the funeral natead of effective next Januagy & ¢~ ‘mara from Mascow. held to a lynching. the American and Canadlan veterans or- there Thursdey. ;. of the military intel} secretary fro foreign affairs, was in- | children, in addition to igence division. 4 . dsanizations. disposed and unable to go.

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