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& ‘ VOL. LXIil—NO. 229 t POPULATION 29,685 Bulletin NORWICH, CONN. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1921 TEN PAGES—70 COLUMNS = —— PRICE TWO CENTS. London, Sept. 19.—(By The A. P.)— Famonn De Valera telegraphed to Pre- mier Lloyd George today in response to the premier's last message, the republican ader asking whether Mr. Lloyd George's ctter of September 7 was intended as a demand for a surrender on our part, eor an invitation to a conference free on Loth sides and without 1#-ejudice should an agreement not be reached.” Mr. De Valera says that if the latter meant the Sinn Fein confirms its ac- ance of the invitation to a conference its delegates will he ready to meet British representatives at any time mediate future. Mr. Valera in beginning his note leclared that the Sinn Fein at no time had theught of asking the acceptance of v conditions for the conference. He expressed the helief that a “treaty of accommodation and association™ prop- neluded hetw Great Britain and 1 th tes making up the commonwe: h wonld end the dis- enabling both British and le down in peace and work nd n 4he De 1 r in friendly co-operation in “af- falrs of agreed common concern.” nature of the message from Mr. alera itates a further ex- thange of ams, unless some sort of matum is forthcoming. Many of the London papers have com- men on the danger of the “onen di- plom nvolved in this nublic ex-| rhange of messages, which they point ont, makes it exceedingly difficuit for | ether side to recede from the position of Mr. De Valera's telegram to accept anv condi- to aconference. We wi pght it a< unreasonable to ex- 1. as a preliminary, to recognize republic formaily or inform- 1 should exnect us, form- nformally, to surrender our na- position. It is precisely because side accepts the position of the that < a dispute at all and a conference Is necessary to search 4 discnss such adjustments as compose H#. treaty of accommodation and as- “iation, properly conelided between the jie of these two isjands and between nd and the group of states in the monwealth, would, we believe, mute forever and enable the ons to settle down in peace, rening its’own individual develop- and contributing its own quota to zation_but working together in free| friendly co-operation in affairs of d common concern. “To ate such a treaty the respec- of asking yvou eden oty | ment nego E VALERA'S OBJECT WITHOUT [Defines His Position in Response to Premier Lloyd George’s Last Message—States That the Sinn Fein Has Had No Thought of Asking British Cabinet to Accept Any Pre- 1 liminary Condih‘on;, and Believes it Unreasonable That Any Should Be Exacted From Sinn Fein—Asserts That a Conference is Necessary to Search For and Discuss Such Adjustments As Might Lead to a Friendly Cooperation in “Affairs of Agreed Common Concern.” | ALCH “Your last telegram makes it clear that misunderstandings are more likely to in- creace than diminish and the cause of peace is more likely to be retarded than advanced by the continuance of the pres- ent correspondence. “We request you, therefore, to state whether your letter of September 7 is intended to be a demand for surrender on our part or an invitation to a confer- ence free on both sides and withehit prejudice should an agreement not be reached. “If the latter, we readily confirm our acceptance of the invitation, and our ap- pointed delegates will meet your govern- ment’s representatives at an; e in the immediate future that you designate. “I am, sir, yours faithfully, ‘DE VALERA.” Premier Lloyd George's letter of Sep- tember 7 was the one in which he asked Mr. De Valera for a definite reply as tof whether he was “prepared to enter a con- ference :0 ascertain how the associa- nations known as the Brit best he reconciled with Irish nat parations.” To this Mr. De Valera re- plied in the affirmative, but added to his reply the paragraph now in dis- pute, saying: “In this final note we deem it our duty to reaffirm that our position is and only can be as we have defined it throughout this correspondance. Our nation has formally declared its inde- pendence and recognizes itself as a sov creign state. Tt is only as representa- tives of that stefe and as its chosen guar- dians that we have authority or powers to act on behalf of our people. IRISH SITUATION REVIEWED BY THE DAIL EIREANN Dublin, Sept. 19.—The members of the Dail Eireann cabinet. reviewed the sit- uation this affternoon. ng particular attention to Premier Lloyd George's tel- egrams. At the conclusion of the se sion of the session a renly to the Brit- ish premier was drafted and dispatched immediately by Mr. De Valera. So far as the Sinn Fein position is concerned, it did not appear to change it in any way. At the same time, it is announced that Mr. De Valera's deeire for a con- ference is. strong, as is that of his col- leagues. The members of the Dall Eireann do not believe that the ‘motes forwarded to Mr. Llosd Georze\ were open to the construction that they claim-| ed recognition as a sovereizn state. Asj some of them express it, their idea of a conference is one Which may lead to ociation with the British common- wealth, and, if that failed, would leave them in noworse position morally than ves of tha two mations| when they entered it. but i¢ you seek to impose| The general impression among the . conditions which we must re-| members and their supporters seen at volving the surrender of our| the Mansion House today was that a tion, they cannot meet. conterence would be held. $350 ALIMONY AND DIVORCE NEW YORK GRANTED WIFE XNO. 1 Sept, 19.—The city today| Trenton, N. J., Sept. 19.—Finding Her- find jobs for the unemployed. rial Aid Bureau, work: ity of the mavor and department formally dquarters the op- where many ap- for work were received and ons filled. Mora than 300 men, many of them w ng their old army uniforms, were nd when the doors swung open and P t 1000 were registered during e day. Thirty of the applicants were #ent to work in the first few hours, and johs wero promised many others. Before the week end, when the activities of the bureau become better known, it is expect- el many firms will apply for men. Regstration of applications will be re- stricted to men ind women wi> have dents of New York for at least WATERBURY AN SHOT BY UNENOWN ASSATLANT aterbury, Con Sept. 19.—Tony nriano of this eity died in St. Mary's wpital Sht, ten minutes after he was shot by an unknown assailant. The thooting, which took place on & owded Main street, is said to have jllowed an argument over the collec- 1 of a bill of ninety cents. The mur- | but the police are work- | received from friends of and an arrest is expected hours, EUICIDED AFTER KILLING HI§ SISTER-IN-LAW Linenburg, Vt., Sept. 19.—Jason Ken- ney died early today, a suicide, after killing Mrs. Clara Kenney, his sister-in- law, as ghe lay in bed with an infant child at the home of her father, Vilas| Johmson, here last night. Mrs. Kenney| bad applied for a divorce from her hus- band, William Kenney. Jealousy is as- cribed as the motive. PLOT TO BLOW UP WALL OF LEAVENWORTH PENITENTIARY Leavenworth, Kans., Sept. 19.—A plot 0 blow up a section of the main wall or the gate at the federa! peitentiary has been been frustrated, Warden W. L. Bid- dle and other prison officials announced today. They sald that sceven prisoners who were leaders in the plan had been | placed in solitary confinement. | COMPETING BALLOONS OVER THE BRITISH ISLES Londen, Sept. 13.—Ten of the ballons competing in the Gordon Bennett Cup!| face had been reportcd over the Brit- Ish Isles up to midnight tonight. The American Van Orm nded ucar Exe- ter. A French balloon came down at n Brighton, and six others descended in Wales. The other two of the ten were seen proceeding toward “Jreland, bert T. Andrew: guilty of infidel timony of his W a New York broker, and accepting the tes- e, Mrs. Maud Augusta drews, that Andrews introduced Miss Esther Tatnall, of Pittsburgh, into his home in Jersey City as his second wife, | after having gone through ceremony with her in Connect Master in Chancery John M. E Jersey City, today filed his report recom- mending a divorce for Mrs. Andrcws No. She was also awarded $350 monthly alimony and the custody of the two An-| drews children | Mrs. Andrews testified tha® when Ler husband brought home Miss Tatnall she would have shot them both with a re- volver she held in her hand, but that she believed “God impressed on me the need of protection for the little boys, one of whom is a cripple, and prevented me from staining my soul for some one else's sake.” — DROPPED DEAD AFTER RECEIVING BLOW ON JAW Bangor, Maine, Sept. 19.—Edward Francis Prout, of Hampden, 21 years old, feil dead after receiving a blow on the jaw in the fourth round of a box- ing bout with Frank Langley, of Wa- terville, here tonight. Physicians pro- nounced death due to heart failure, but Langley wag arrested. The men, who had weighed in at 156 pounds, had been pronounced physi- cally fit by the club physicians before entering the ring. e C. 8. HOGUE LEADS IN CAMP PERRY RIFLE MATCH Camp Perry, Ohio, Sept. 19.—C. . Hogue, of Philadelphia, wag leading to- night in the Camp Perry all-around championship match of the National Rifle Association tournament with a score of 923 out of a possible 1,000. Hogue had 530 points with the rifie, 2 h the pistol and 136 with the shot gun aptain A. H. Hardy, of Denver, was second with a total of 917 and Lieuten- ant John F. Houch, Fort Wayne, third, with 914 SESSION OF THE EASTERN MISSIONARY ASSOCIATION Bridgeport, Conn., Sept. 19.—The first day's session of the Eastern Mission- ary Association, composed of Swedish churches in New York, New Jersey and the New England states, resulted in the foliowing elections: Chairman, Rev. G. E. Pihl, New Britain; vice chair- man, Rev. G. W. Palmgrene, Hartford; secretary, Rev. Carl Peterson, East Orange, N. J.; vice secretary, Rev. G. A. Lund, Auburn, R. I; treasurer, E. Jeerpe, New Britain. City people complain of noise, but when a man habitually slams his door: NFERENGE CONDITIONS BRIEF TELEGRAMS Manufacturers of cement have reduced prices 10 1-2 per cent. z The Bronx agency of the Fleischman Yeast Co. was robbed of §1,000. Daylight saving time will end next Sun- day morning. According to the American Legion, more than 600,000 veterans of the World war are out of worlk. Democratic Nstional Chairman White will run for governor of Ohio next year it is reported. A statement was issued by Chief of Police Fitzmorris of Chicago forbidding a parade of the Ku Kiux Klan. French notes ca for 50 centimes, 1 franc and 2 francs wiil be retired and be replaced by silver coins. Canadian revenue cutters are co-ope- rating with American cutters in an effort to run down rum smugglers on the At- Inatic coast. Lee I¥e Farrest, wireless promoter, who arrived in New York on the Beren- garia, predicts opera by radio within a short tme Twenty-one persons were injured when a Smith street car crashed into' rear of a Bergen street car on an incline on the Brooklyn Bridge. British coal production for seven months ended July totaled - 7,947,000 tons, compared with 142,408,900 tons in corresponding months of 1920. Prices charged by drug stores for li- guor sold for medicinal purposes in Massachusetts are not subject to inves tigation py the state commission on n cessaries of Governor of all six New England re guests at the opening of the £ #cs Agricultural and xposition at Springfield, Street traffic in the vicinity of the orth Union station, Boston, w tied up and the station enveloped in heav; smoke during a fire in a five story build- ing, directly opposits the depot. Mrs. Frederick A. Brown, an invalid, was carried to safety by’ firemen over an outside stairway during a fire which destroyed a building at @ast Holis and Denham streets, Nashua. A, The treaty with Germany probably will be submitted to the senate by Pres. ident Harding soon after congress reas- sembles on Wednesday. for August totaled ,000,000, compared with $40,000,-000 in July. and imports amounted to $63,- 000,000, against $55,000,000 month. Japan’s exports Officials of the Eagle Lodge of paper makers, Holyoke, Mass, agreed to ac- cept under protest a wage reduction of 10 per cent. effective today. The cut affects more than 7,000 workers. In the coundil of state at Simla, Brit- ish India, the home secretary said that the situation in Malabarz still was s rious and that the spirit of the rebel lion had not been broken. By agreement with the Czecho-Slova- kia government, a British company will handle for 15 vears the output of radium of the Joachimthal mines. The radium will not be sold. Commereial Attache Dennis in London reports to the department of commerce that the British government has sold to a syndicate all textiles remaining over frem the war for three million pounds Steamship Nutmeg State, sister ship of the Hawkeye state called the costliest ! vessel ever built, was launched at the 3altimore plant of the Bethlehem Ship- building Co. Monthly statement of the Treasury expenditures of the government decl $30,600,000 during August, Total running expenses were last month. The principle of taxing whiskey and all distilled spirits, except those used for manufacturing purposes, at $6.40 a gal lon was adopted as an amendment to the revenue bill. $291,157,847 The National Woman’s Party has open- ed @ campaign in Louisiana for enact- ment of a law like the one passed in Wisconsin giving women legal equality with men. The party of ten American farmers who recently left Lima, Peru, to estabe lish a farm colony in the Pampa del Sac. ramento Valley, along the eastern head. waters of the Amazon river, abandoned the project and returned to Lima, . About forty of the fancy weav, the Cabot cotton mill, Brunswick?“M:{, walked out, claiming they were over, worked. They were obliged to operate six Jooms, which were too many, the: said. e A despatch to the Rosta Agency from Moscow anncunces the arrival In the bolshevik capitol of “a representative of the American forkmen, Pelman, who has brought for the starving people in the Volga region, a half million doilars.” James W. Ashton of New Haven, held In bonds of $5,000 for appearance in the federal court for alleged vio'ation of the white-slave act, will be present=l in court at the September term, opening at New Haven on the 27t fault of bail the five men were taken to month, B of this| iy Fairfield county Yail in Bridgeport. Men, women and children, safferers ! from hay fever, from Wisconsin, Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma and Minne- sota atttended the annual convention of National Hay Fever Association at Du- luth. Resolutions were adopted to fight the objectionable “eed. ASE INVESTIGATION OF K. OF C. OATHS AND RITUAL Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 19.—The city coun- cil today by a vote of 11 to 8, adopted a resolution requesting that “the New York World and other daily papers, es- pecially the Columbus (Ga.) n, now engaged in the Inve and cxposure of what they cla unpatr and un-Ameri institu- for lude in their investigation and there’s one who. doesn't—St. Louis Globe Democrat . xitual of the Knights of Columbus.” L e Ipdus- in previous | No Labor “Auctiun”' In New York City Police Dealt Summarily With “Mr. Zero”, Who Then Abandoned Plan—Crowds Were Dispersed. ‘ New York, Sept. 19.—Urbain Ledoux, alias “Mr. Zero,” announced abandon- ment of his plan to hold a “slave auc- tion” of the unemployed tonight after the police had dispersed a crowd of his fol- lowers in Bryant Park and prevented him from distributing food to tre jobless. He said his auction would not now te necessary, because the *“high handed in- terference of the police will cause the wrath of public opinion to make rigit the present system in New York:city.” He appeared first at Cooper Square With a wagon load of buns for hungry unemployed, but the police ordered him to move on. He returned the buns to the j bakery at the police oriers, hut charged that he could riot get his nonsy back. Walking to Bryant Park he was ed by scores of men who accompanied him across the street to a hall, wh'ch re had rented. The police barred the way and told him to move along. A crowd of more than 5000 persons was soon gat'- ered. Many of them who make the park their headquarters were unemployed. Mounted police \and patrolmen dispers- hte crowd. There was some resist- ance but Ledoux wa shustled away and the stree:s c. ed POLICE USED CLUBS TO DISPERSE MEN AND WOMEN New York, Sept. 19.—Police reserves were forced to use their clubs to dis- peérse a crowd of curious men and wo- jmen who gathered in Bryant Park and |around the public library tonight ex- | ing to Urban Ledoux hold an auction sale of jobess men and women. The crowd had assembled so rapidly early in the evening that 100 policemen were unable to control them. The crowd hissed and booed the police When nformed the auction had been called off in the day. ant Park was jammed with peo- nd Fifth avenue and 42nd street mpassable to traffic as the crowd zed and eddied through the streets. | Two hundred more reserve policemen and detectives were sent for and with their -arnival the hissing and booing in_ |ereased. Clubs were free'y used on men who showed ary resentment at be- ing ordered to move on. Several ar- Tests were made. DISREGARD OF VIRTUES MENACE IN PHYSICIANS Boston, Sept. 19.—Soundness of moral fibre to insure the proper use of medical learning was declared by the supreme ourt today to be as essential to the pub- lic health as medical learning itself. Mere intellectual power and scientific hievement without uprightness of char- acter may be more harmful than igno- rance,” the court asserted in overruling exceptions of Dr Arthur A. Lawrence of Boston, who had been requested to ap- {pear before the state Board of registra- tion in medicine and show cause why his certificate showld not be*revoked for al- leged “g onduct in the practice of his profession” A lower court had dismissed veution 1o have the board prohibited from requiring his presence. Dr. Lawrence claimed that as he had been 'a physician many years before the Yoard eame into existence he had acquir- ed vested rights which could not be taken from him unless he were found guilty by | & jury of hav committed a crime. ‘wri Chief Justice Rugg, said tn 1;.‘1-?“ f “Highly retained inteiligence comhmed The opinion-of the court, Wwith disregard of the fundamental virtues s a me A physician, however, | skillfu’ who is guilty of decei*, malprac- tice or © or gross misconduct in the practice of his profession even though not amoun-. ng to an offense against the criminal {laws, well may be thought to be perni- { cious in relation to the health of hte com- munity. circumstance that the petitioner ¥ had been registered and given a | cate to practice medicine gave him | no immunity against future legislation,” Sl e S g | ror THIRD TONE SENTHNCED TO LIFE IMPRISONMENT Point Pleasant, W. Va., Sept. 19.—] the third time within four _\',;r!r.ts\\‘.Ff(‘t‘ ':Hrl"\" ffith has been sentenced to { life imprisonment in the Staten peniten.. { tiary at Moundsville. The jury in his trial for the killing January 13, last, of Ira Roush, a riverman, today returned i & verdict of guilty of first degree mur. der with a recommendation that the pris- oner be given a life sentence with one Yyear's solitary confinement. Judge W. H. Brien pronounced the life sen- tnce but ignored the solitary confinement recommendation. Griffith, who was serving a life term after being convicted of murder, es- caped from the state prison in January. The night he escaped another prisoner was killed, and when capturd, Gr‘ifiilh! was tried and adjudged guilty in connec- tion with his death. The second life sen- tence was passed upon him at that time. In the last case the prosecution con- tended that Griffith, after his escape, came to this region and killed Roush. FIVE MEN BOUND OVER FOR BURGLARY AT BRISTOL Pethel, Conn, Serd. 19.—Five men were hound over to the superior court today by Justice of the Peace Haines on | | charzes of burglary. They were accus-| ed of breaking into the Shepard-Hecht Corporation’s tannery here on August 27 and stealing leather valued at $2,000. The prisoners are Frank Izzo, John Grado, Thomas L. Sherwood and Glovan- ni De Negris, all of Bridgeport, and Jo- seph Sgro, of Danbury. Bail was fixed at $500 and $1,000 each for the Bridge- port men and $4,000 for Sero. In de- GROCERS ALARMED OVER ATTITUDE OF PACKERS ‘Washington, Sept. 19.—Application for leave to intervene in the case of the TUnited States against Swift and others, known as the packers case, was filed in the District of Columbia, supreme court today by the National Wholesale Groc- (rs association of New York. Apprehen- | sion Is expressed by the applicant that the packers may seex a modification of south had shown a tendency to with- draw their offerings on the gdecline, iseemed to revive confidence values o nthe basis of small crop fizures. The comparatively small volume of Vocal hedge selling and the appearance of buying orders from the trade encour- aged the bullish view of spot market conditims. An advance in the late af- advances of 125 to 142 [day. Local brokers attributed the ad- vance chiefly to the fact that specn'a- Conessed Paring |38 AGGEPT NVITATION 10 More Than 60 Bombs William G. Smith, Arrested With Five Other Men in | UNEMPLOYMENT CONFERENCE Chicago—Explosives Seiz-| List Made Public by Secretary Hoover Includes Three Women ed. Chicago, Sept. 19.—A confession that he had planted and exploded more than sixty bombs during the past year was ob- tained, according to the police, from Wil- liam G. Smith, one of five men arrested today in the act of bombing the fhoe repair shop of David kremen. Fourteen hundred sticks of lyrzmite, three inches in diameter and ten inches long, nhd 100 sticks of TNT, said by Chief ,of Detectives Hughes to be suf- ficient to blow up much of the city of Chicago, was secized by the police fol- lowing the capture of the The bombing was said to have been the result of rivalry between Inter- national Brotherhood of Shoe iepairmen and the United Sfoe Repairmen. Krem- en is a member of the former organiza- tion. Police had received a tip that K-cmen's place was to be bomoed and nad sur- rounded it. The five men approac: ed the €hop, ene of fhem carrying a bomb. The police ordered them to surrender. In- stead, Richard Burke, the man carrying the bomb, hurled it and the explosion tore the front from the shop, threw Kremen | and his family from their beds and broke windows for blocks around. In an attempt to escave, shot in the side. His companions sur- rendered They are Sm Michael Bench. John Barry and Charles Young. Byke is said to havé told the pol.ce that he supplied bombs for seve<1l labor unions and also the men to throw them. Police say he made a detailed sta‘a- ment of bomb outrages undertaken for the shoe repzirmen's and janitors' u In his alle confession, Smi Burke hired him to aid in bomb window smashing. Burke was His silary was set at | $50 a week, but he had not been ajle to | collect it, he said. 8 In the alleged confessi clared he-had condu a man named Levinson, an official of the U'nited Shoe , Smith also Ge- sociation of Tllinois. 1 I the offices of the association, Levinson and sezad and record None of the officers of the association was present at the time of | the raid. MAYOR FITZGERAID OF NEW HAVEN RENOMINATED New FHaven, Sept. 19.—Mayor David E. \FitzGerald was renominated by democratic city convention tonizht head the ticket for the city elec month. The republican convention nam- ed Frederick L. Ford, a member of the state legislature, as the republican ecan-| idate for renomination, with the excep- tion of tvm can lates for constable and| one for the bhoard of selectmen. There Were no contests the chief places on the demacratic ticket. On an informal baliot in the republican| convention Mr. Ford received 81 votes,| State Senator James H. MacDonald got! 25 and Franklin I. Homan 12. Mr. Ho-| man’s name i and on thei formal ballot nominated, with 88 votes agal for Mp. Mac- Donald. The other candidates named by the republicans are: Con An- thony J. Verdi: Redfield ; city cle tax collector, A. L. Samuel ington : Charlott . Lof's Knollmever. The remainder of the democratic ticket is as follows: Controller, Arthur D. Maullen ; treasure y Frank C. Mi m H. Hackett Palmieri; town clerk, istrar of vital statistic istrar of voters, ms ; city shtriff, town clerk, Luzerne Lud- al statistics, Mr ; registrar of vot res ice tax collector, city sheriff, F. A. E. Doughan ; Andrew P. Thomas E. Cahill. MARKEET SHOWS BETURN OF CONFIDENCE COTTON New York, Sept. 19.—The cotton market today recovered from the de- cline of last week. Offerings were much smaller, and re- ports that holders of spot cotton in the ternoon was accompanied by reports 'hat some of the larzer Wall Street op- erators were replacing along lines upon which they had taken profits recently The price of January contracts ad- 7anced to 19.80 or §$7.00 per bale above the closing quotations of Saturday and the general market closed tive long lines had been liquidated last week, combined with a growing belief that holders of spots in the south would market their cotton gradually. HEAVY BUYING IN COTTON MARKET IN NEW ORLEANS New Orleans, Sept. 19.—Bulges of bout $7.50 a bale in cotton today car- tied the market back up over much of the groung lost in the slumps of last week, durine which the October posi- tion fost $16 a ba'e. October was ad- vanced 144 points above the level of Saturday’s close to 19.34 cents a pound; the March position advanced 157 points. Buying was heavy from the start and ‘was encouraged partly by a better Liv_ erpool demand than was due, reports from the belt that farmers were refus- ing to sell their cotton At prevalling prices and the rumor that a brokerage house was coming out with a report on the crop, showing a condition of but 35 per cent. of normal, the lowest condi- tion ever talked of In connection with the cotton erap. TNIDENTIFIED WOMAN SWEPT OVER NIAGARA FALLS Niagara Falls, N. Y., Sept. 19.—While a gcore of men and women ran along the mainland shore of the pner river he- tween Goat Island bridge and the Amer- jcan Falls trying in vain to find some means of rescuing her, an unidentified ane' injunction order of February 27, 1920, by which the packers are enjoined from engaging in business not allied with the meat industry. JThe association declares that any les- sening of the restraint imposed by the consent decree of injunction would re- ! sult in the packers obtaining a large dealing, in food prodmects - woman was born throught the upper rap- jds and over the falls at 1.15 o'clock this afternoon. The body appeared al-| most immediately in the river below on the Canadian side and efforts are being of the names of 35 men and three wo- man who Harding’s invitation to take national unemployment conference here beginning next Monday was made to- Tarbell of New York, Mary Van Kleeck of New York, Connected with the Rus- sell Christman of Chicago, an officer of the| ( gue. | ence which it was said would at once for the formulation of the definite plan | a whole. operation from other representatives of | made now to recover it. The name Mrs. Wyant, seribbled on a plece of paper ticked into 2 purse found on the shore, with, the address—No. 354 ations, oaths and degree of controi of -the business ~of | East Utica street, Buffalo, may lead to ;;mlmran of the industrial committee | here. _the identification of the bedv. Py —An Economic Advisory Committee of Twenty Has Collected Unemployment Data and Is Preparing a Work- ing Program For the Conference—Men of Experience in Industries Where Largest Degree of Unemployment Pre- vails Have Been Called Upon in Large Proportion— Personnel Includes Eminent Educators and Economists, Prominent Financiers and Leaders of Organized Labor —Other Names Are to Be Announced Whzn Accept- ances Have Been Received. ‘Washington, Sept 19—Announcement Raymond A. Pearson, Ames, Jowa, president lowa State College of Agr: culture; e stant secretary of agri- cuiture. AMayor Andrew former assistant secret have accepted President t in a Peters, Boston, ary of the trea- night by Secretary Hoover. Other|sury; mayor since 1918. names will be announced later, he said, . M. Posten, Columbus, Ohio, presi- when all the replies have been receiv-|dent New York Coal Company. ed. W. C. Procta ati, president The list includes Secretaries Hoover | Proctor and ( and Davis, Julius Barnes, Samuel; Harry S. Robir Los Gompers, Charles M. Schwab and John | member Unite hippin L. Lewis. The three women are Ida|in 1917; m side man of tke coal sion in 1 rie bituminous Sage Foundation, and Elizabeth ew York, ch teel Corporation hipbuildir National Women's Trade Union Lea-| Mr. Hoover has been appointed b; the president chairman of the confer dissolve itself into special committees for subm ion to the conference as| These committees, Mr. Hoo- | ver asserted, would no doubt seck co- trial confere Federation of Construction Mary Va Kleeck tor Women in In United States Dep. director of ce; presider labor, employes and civic bodies in the! formulation of their views. “In naming the.members of the con- ference,” Mr. Hoover said, “it has been thew president the desire of the president to secure' Internationa s’ Union geographic representation and at thejof North America; e sident of same time have regard t6 the differ-| American Federation of Labor, ent elements of the community who| Evans Woolen, Indianapolis, mem- are interested ani can be helpful ber economic policy committee of the without any attempt at proportional| American Association. numbers or particular groups. Those Clarence Moit Wooley, Detroit, pr of experience in those industries where | ident Amer Radis Compan there is the largest degree of unem-|member wa ployment have been called upon in| Colonel Ar larger proportion than from trad former police where there is less unemployment dif-| York; lieute ficulty. It was impossibie to include | sistant representation of the whole of some| 50 trade groups in the conference and hold its size within workable limits. An economic advisory committee of 20 was appointed in advance of the conference and, Mr. Hoover, has been | at work on the préparation of unem- ployment data and upon a working| program for the conference. i Secretary Davis, he said, has been directing a renewed survey of unem- ployment throughout the country for the use of the conferees The conference, Mr. sus, president of Coricord, F N. H Andrew, exec secreta- an Association for Labor leg- York. arnet John Hoover, con- , professor of sta- tinued, was expected to get to work Hopk 'A‘\Fz Al m;fler‘i 1\'{“_ quickly in order that the administra-| /= ° g tistician, New tion might be in a position to combat | “fhcy N Voo . unemployment before winter. Bailey B. Burrage, executive secre- = tary assoc In arriving at a policy for provid- | Hr¥ @ ing employment. Mr. Hoover declared | the conference would avoid any charity arrangements such as have been put into eifect by a number of foreign gov- ernments. A partial list of the members of the unemployment conference was made public tonight as follows: cretary of Commerce Hoover. on for im s of the poor, ) Henry S. Dennis Mass. Davis R. Dew omics, Massachuss Cambridge, Mass. Caroll W. Doten, prof nomics, Mass. Institute Y. Edwin F. Guy, president New Yi Evening Post, New Yo Graduate School of istration, Harvard Clyde L. King, of political science, 1 nsyivania, Philadelphia. amuel A. Lewisohn, 7t vania State Industrial Board, Philadel- | o professor of Econ- ts of Technolog) or of Eco- of Technolo- B. Ayer, Portland, Oregon,| president Eastern and Western Lum- ber Compan former member com- mission on minimum wages and indus- trial conditions in Oregon. Julius H. Barnes, Duiluth, Minn, president United States Food Ad- ministration Grain corporation, 1917 to 1919; United State Wheat direct Chairman iastitute for public service. “hairm; Samuel McCune Lin member New York. or gal egtalaticn. G William M. Butler, Boston, manufac- | bro'eiscr of social legisladi g turer; president Butler Mills, New|(nig Tabor Commiseio e Ledford Cotton Mills, Hoosias Cotton| “wogev ¢, Mitchell professor of ec. Mills. onomics, New School for Soci < W. S. Carter, Cleveland, president of | Storen Now wor 0! for Social Re- the brotherhood of Locomotive Fire-|* ; - Henry R. Seagar, professor of ec- onomics, Columbi University, New Edward R. A. igman, professor of men and Enginemen. = Elizabeth Christman, Chicago, sec: retary of the International Glove Wor- economics, mbi. “niverst New kers' Union; secretary treasurer of | oo cw Columbia University, Ne the National Women's Trade Union nford E. Thompson, s £ League. D professor o economics and statistics, Cornell Uni- versity, Ithaca, N. Y, ieo Wolman, New York. Allyn A. Young, Harvard 1 Cambridge, sion of econom erican commission to n 1918+1919 Edgar E. Clark, ex-president order of Railway Conductors; Member Roo- sevelt Anthracite Commission in 1902; former chairman Interstate Commerce Commiss/on. John T. Connery, Chicago, president Miami Coal Company. Mayor James Couzens, Detroit, for- mer vice president Ford Motor Car Company; mayor since 1919, Joseph H. De Frees, Chicago, pres- ident Lebanon Woolen Mills, president National Manufacturers’ Association. W. K. Field, Pittsburgh, President of the Pittsburgh Coal Company; re- presented the Western Pennsylvania Coal Opeartors in Central Competitive ROSCOE ARBUCKLE HAS REUNION WITH WIFE he wife from whom he has been separated for more than four vears, had a reunion today in the wisit- ors' room at the city pri on, where Ar- coal fields agreements. buckle is awaltling on a murder Mortimer Fleischacker, San Francis- ccused causing the co, banker; mediator of labor disputes inia Rappe through an in shipping during the war. Samuel Gompers, Washington, D. C. president American Federation of La- bor, Jackson Johnson, St. Louis, chair- man the International Shoe Company. John K. Kirby, Houston, Texas, pres- jdent Kirby Lumber Company. ode at a drinking party in his euite ped Mrs. Minta Durfee arms, then affectionately Fiora Durfee. the prisoner's brother, en sat for a haif Arbuckle greeted her mother, Mrs in his The three, with A. C. Arbuckle, t hour of conversatic William Kelley, Vulcan, Michigan, The grand Y resumed its investiga- president Cleveland Cliffs Iron Com-|!ion of the Arbuckle aiair t sub- o poenas having been sent out for Dr. M. ‘W. M. Leiserson, Rochester, Imparti- al chairman Men's and Boys' Cloth- City. John L. Lewis, president of the Un- | th¢ varty. ited Mine Workers of America. ‘A‘"J Sherman, of Los Angeles, also Bascom Little, Claveland, Ohio, con- | Subpoenacd, is enrou: tractor, head of the Cleveland Com-)trict Attorney Brady said, and no leg: munity Chest. means exist to bring him back & C. H. Markham, Chicago, president; U Was an occupant of the Arbuckle Illinois Central Raiiroad. L wus.Dresent st party from Major General Richard C. Marshall | Which the death of Miss Rappe resulted. Jr., Washington, D. C., formerly chief of the construction division of the ar- my. Charles P. Neill, Washington, D, C, former United States commissioner of labor statistics; umpire anthracite con-| Miami, Fla, Sept. 19—A wireless ciliation board; manager Southeastern|message from the submarine R- sy Railways Association. ing she was in distress at a point 100 Thomas V. O'Conner, Buffalo, presi-!miles northeast of fi. was recel dent Longshoremen’s Union: member|ed today by Ensisn W. IL Kiapproth, United -States Shipping Board and the |commanding the sub chaser 154, lying The message was sent broadcast, _ ‘% was thousht E. Rumwell, the attending physic: n most of Miss Rappe's iliness,” and Miss Joyce Clark, one of the participants in the party. ago, Dis- SUBMARINE IN DISTRESS NORTHEAST OF NASSAU the board.