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VOL. LXIlI—NO. 240 POPULATION 29,685 - NORWICH, CONN., MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1921 8 PAGES—64 COLUMNS ' PRICETWO CENTS. TEDSTATES TRBUTET) | S22 psednts o T . 255225 SEATHRESILTS RON FIRAT | DFAD SOLDERS OF FRANE ===, 272 " b = 4 GREEK CHLRGA NEW YORK i H Eight familles were driven to the serve to hinder the development of the Heavily Armed Police and De- street by a fire which damaged . three wishes of the people. His abdication, Were Wounded Incliding| tectives Guarded Trucks|tenement houses on D and Eolton streets : ALl along with that of many other German A = |in the South Boston district Saturday. . - go o Jmpressive Ceremony For Unknown Poilu Under the Arch of | rulers, was a tircet utcome of the war. Sheriff—Three Perhaps Fa-| Through Broadway, New Nicholas Varzakakos, a Wealthy Greek Fig Merchant, Died pe He had reigned since 1891. b“‘{ Y k Pnyln: Je:leg ll-e: SI.!;II o dry (l:l:“:;nl y : : (3 L = . v < Salvation Army in Ch 20 CJ ] Triumph in Paris—General Laid Congressional Medal of | worxivé ror rrrvestion oL g ; ork. . Lo e o niioe During a Free-For-All Fight—Son of the Dead Man : OF INVOLUNTARY IDLENESS o 2 . during the past few days. 5 B A iy 5 Honor Upon the Tomb-—The General’s Speech Made a Waco, 4Ex% B_£= 2 =County Attormiey | “New York, uet 5="Tfe usaal Sanday Claims Priest Hit His Father Over the Head With a Can- ‘Washington, Oct. 2.—Study of the [F. B. Tierey here late today refused the |Slumber of lower 1:roml\\ay was Dbroken| Collection of funds In this country for Profound lmpreuionandBrought Tears to Many Eye!— economic factors responsible for recur-|demand of a committee of one hundred |today by the rumble of motor trucks|Ireland will be stopped until Novemb A A ivided I e ring business Ceoresslon with conse- | brominent Lorena citizens that he file |and the tread of heavily armed police | when a campaign for $20,000,000 will be dlestick—Congregation of 250 Divided Into Two F o . .y, quent varfation in the numbers of |complaints against Sheriff Bob Buchan- |and detectives who guarded for a short |opened. * Picked Force of American Troops Led.a Military Re-|workers is to be undertaken this week [an and Deputy Sheriff Burton in connec. | journey through the s(reet, the trans- tions and Used Bibles, Hymn Bocks and Candlesticks As by the sub-committees of the nattonal|tion with last night's fight at Lorena be- | fer of more than three billion dollars A general strike has been called at M ll U nl P ll R 5 d D' . P HARE T -| conference on unemployment in an ef-!tween parading Knights of the Ku Kiux |cash, stocks, bonds and other collateral. |Trieste, Italy, because of the govern- feas - ice Reser Quieted the Disturbance. view That Approached in Size the Historic Victory Pa fort to arrive at a permanent policy for |Klan and a sheriff’s posse, in which ten | It Was moving day for the New York |ment's withdrawal of censtruction of 24 Assues- U olic aves \{the prevention of involuntary idleness.|men were wounded, three perhaps fatally, | Trust Company, consolidated last spring {ships. rade. The full conference is to convene Oc-| The county attorney declared that the | With the Liberty National Bank, from New York, Oct. 2—Services in the| Members of the congrezation told the 3 Orohtdox church =zt 155 Ceda 1 h i been at | tober 10 to recelve reports of its com-|grand jury here would be called to inves- | its old home in the Standard Oil bulld-| Jane Addams, of Chicago, who trect this noon were broken up by & | gncC n I D G o 1 Paris Oct. 2 (By The A. P)—The|war, out your work will not be com-|mittees’ deliberations and to frame the|tigate the incident and that pending its |iN& at 26 Broadway, to its own sky-|returned from Europe says the juv et e R s Tnited States today paid its highest| pleted until the burdens which the prep-|general program for permanent econ- X 1l fight among the congrega- action he would take no steps in the mat. | Scraper at 100 Broadway. crime wave spreading in certa rt of church, including Varkakakos, ute to the dead soldiers of France |arations for war imposes are lifted from |omic and employment stabilization. As a8 mak- 2 2 2 ch resulted in the death of O ‘vaunl Sonlag i dxisoniiatie D t on. As|ter beyond an investigation by his de- | EXtraordinary polics precautlons were|Europe was due to “empty st B akakos, 40, 'a ' wealtny |INS the usual Sunday announcements neral John J. Pershing, the shoulders of all peoples. You gave [a starting point for their investigations | partment for cvidence for submission o |taken during the transfer. The finan- 1 e ¥ |when the trouble occurred. The priest sence of an immense throng, your all for peace but your gift Will be | the committees have before them a com-|the grand jury clal district below the “dear line” estab-| Ten thousand megro employes in South- B +|had deciared that the church woula bs - President Millerand and other high | barren unless a gencrous spirit of unsel-|prehensive set of suggestions prepared | 1 D Willi, local attorney acting as|liShed by Insnector Byrme was subject-|ern railway shop centers were ordered to v et SN e closed orrow, owing to debi, Whe s of the republic, laid the con-|fish co-operation arises to tak: the | by the economic advisory committee of spokesman for the Lorena _ delegation, |°0 to unusual vigilance for the presence | organ 1 o honmor upon the |place of hatred. Unknown soldier, 1o !the conference composed of §xpert econ- 2 S 2 ; e immediately and affiliate with - o charged that the sherift and hi of any criminal whose photograph fhe st known noila tmder the | you of whom thousands of mothers ask.|omists from different sections of the 8 it ‘agd hisideputies Varzakakos started up the the altar, shouting b George Varzakakos, the dead shop crafts pmicn. 18-year-old son, told the e ae 5 e adorns the Rogue's Gallery. : I %om; o B with what the clerzyma 1 y 5 2 g st B precipitated a “promiscuous shooting and A g AR B | of the chu priest, gocording to w h of The ceremony was| Ts it my son? to vour tomb, 2 3 cutting affray which endangered the lives | 1" 2ddition to the close scrutiny Turkish nationalists forees which have riest, s ressive expression of | for France the altar of the country, I| Permanent ° preventive measures | iy08 PRy WhiCh endangsret the HYes|an who entered the finaneial district. [aitempted to attack the Greek lines offys Varzakakos awa cr-Ameriean unity since the United |bring the love and affection of _thie |agalnst unemployment suggested by the | ® p 8 MCR FONMEn 00 € deen Ihoth bulldings were under heavy gaard |domminications in Asia Minor have been |3 can P tried to continue \ war on Germany {n|American soldiers who fought heside [advisory committee include, in broad| . o OIS HE TECHAE A (he € V1ot uniformed policemen. The route |y in g “Ciy grave losses. SR i e e s in h vou and the vallant soldfers of France | terms, ‘compilation of essential informa- | 20TeY: the Lorens cfiaens (ew up 2 lalong Broadway was lined with plain |* kit it el e D e e ew, second in size only | Barthou Accepts in Nome of France, |UON, long range planning of publle; Tesoluton, sl 2 clothes men, while other, dctachments | srembers of the oot R s SR B R $ato twn 2astioni "Gl U i . TOEWeY . works, mitigation of seasomal irregu- | o : accompanied each truck oh irs journey. |, o 1l fosa ithe s Hin e i % . X N eied maitalion of | Louis Barthou minister of war, aC|jarities of emnloyment, permanent bet-| “In order @hat the world ~may|only two boxes of securlties wers placed | fonarinent WL feed the hom 1d | belief “that _may poss . troops. iNpiigmttive. of el S g decoration in the mame Of|terment of cyelicil unemployment, and|know the facts,” the resolution said “we |on one. truck for cach trin. which made |39DleSs men and boys who apply eachfiom a heart attack brought Tepoee “rance, said: g an forces unemployment and depression insurance. desire to make public the following Under these heads ahe suggestions Statement: arters for We have confidence in the govern- ment and in the people of America who the task an all day joh. Each box was |DiEht at police heada 2 . which was < double locked and " moned and quelled < Ve ieve i An assoelatio for the m: vriest and eizht members of the |zakakog was knocked Presid Gen. || a cover practically the entire economfe| 1 We do not believe that the mem-|times over the short route. dors b s ol ' police stn | pled” mpes the exeit S B ir-vi 1:4 in 1917, after calm delfberation and rea-| ppqi o Sh Y e gering the | bers of the Ku Klux Klan who staged a | The sian deviced by the police and |IoWa farm produets in I 2 n were taken t0 a7 st 1];“ o S n o W antlcon, threw themselves into the furious|yerious yactors of prices, freight rates, | parade violated any law or that they had | bank officials was described as ‘“crook |Bas been formed with and questioned but all wer s was carried to | ¢ oy ? pres|strusgle in which civilization was men-|foreizn trade, production’ and consump- |any intention of violating any law. Dproof and air tight.” Dest Mones, Jowa. and sexton, how- |wife and others tried T o et e [aced. The madal with which vou haveliion and the position of the federal gov-| “2 We attempted to prevail upon the . h summonzes to|revive Mm. Then he v et of enthusinem | JUSt decorated the unknown poilut e Ac-|ernment during recurrent depressions. | sheriff of this county and his deputies | JUDGE PETER S. GROSSCUP It was announced in Roston that Fisk attomey's ofice |the sidewalk: and an ambals e 0t Parieians whe |CePt 2s proof of your admirationy butyelyme of emnloyment, according to the | through the medium of dozens of repre- OF CHICAGO DIED AT SEA |Rubber Co. has contracted t on-|woned but he was dead bel ar- e Champs Fiysers| e, 150 see therein the token of your|economic experts, follows seasonal flue-| sentative citizens to permit the parade to s equipment requirements of Durant Mo- rived. Piace D'Etofle, where the arch | eraship. We have fought —together|tuations of, business and a policy 1s|be held, guarantceing that it would be| Liverpool, Oct. 2—The steamer Caro-|tors Production in 192 R R 4 il for the same deals Rl ol Mors | S0UENt for. regularizing employment both | law abiding and orderly. nia_ arrived here today with the body of = ] Be. aiediog ek RacRtE IS I et unless VICtOTY | at the bottom of the down curve and| 3. We induced the leaders of the |Judge Peter S, - Grosscup, formerly of | American Red Cross says rellef opera- | €000,000 MEN IN ARMIES OF 14 PRESIDENT REVIEWED MARINES " eoldier's tomb, General | X ooy DN bassador Herricis | th,top of the upswing. parade to accede to the sheriff’s demands | Chicago, who died two days out from |tons among the 17,060 destitute Russiun MOST IMPORTANT NATION AT WILDERNESS RUN, W. VA. s e o aemeiall Referring to Ambassador Ferrlek's| Tyt i just where the screws must be | that two of the paraders should be un. | New rorlt. Death was due o heart. dis. |Tefugees concentrated at Comstantin e A otee ehak. |fpeech which was a reaffirmation of the |pyt ‘wpon fnflation that citizen educa- | masked. - . n @ voice Shak-|feeling of friendship that America has = se, arcording. o the annouhcement, [can only be continued a little longer be- Hon on eycles will Jo %s best service™] “4 We impiored the sheriff not to | The body will be sent back to New York. |eause funds are running short. ° SFDES ennmiien. . FORGE: said. | jeopardize the livi a1 Chicago, Oct. 2—Verification of re- “Congress will he temnted to inflationist 2500 e et 2B 2 ST : The Wilderness Run, for teen most |the Virginia hills, w Va., Oct. 2—On re once the Union coldiers of France who died defending thelr country against an un- nt and of ates as a = 2 et TF 14 today in-land O:cnfederate armies A in the col i " i 4 children. ports received vesferday that Peter S. it was announce 7 Mgy, | Ml aly | o, six mi men ac- le of the Wilderness, President Hard- 3 = S i b g::::r‘;"‘]"_ invasion Monsieur Barthou | measures. Bankers will need even more | L5 unequivocally place the blame | Grosscup, former United States would join with other aliied powers in f o figures obtained here and re-|ing today reviewed a field force of m: o Tor wheh | e h e Artaroaomi e oAL cotragRE ichat oint than dun‘?_;: for the shedding of blood on the sheriff, |Who presided in many nationally f: mediating between Hungary and Austria| g;rieq as reasonably correct. With the | rines and voiced his pride In them as an s et 4nd | having. 4a1a hers, - canectally hers, . that | oo rcouragement of depression. Wel . “Gn We admilre’and we honor ithe spirs d died at sea while en route to |for settlement of the dispute over Bur- 1 armaments in the agena | effective factor in the defense of a re- = countrs- | tho seourity of France is the basis for | mums oomimine aud certataly sesce fo|it Of the individual that kept the Ameri- | England, was obtained tonight by mem- |genland (West Hungary.) Fence on- MARSE | ettt natin: - P Medal [ the peace of the world.” M i e can flag*from being trampled to the earth, | Ders of his family. A tion of armament are the fiz-| Infentry, artillery and many special 3 4 et Sar b Y et s !":‘he i fiiea L We conclude by affirming our be-| AS United States circuit court judge 1593"‘:“ nl'l L?brr' Dnlv‘l_‘n< n?:;-oun‘tfi ures with which i units were represented among the 5,000 ! American e band fcerted Ambassador Herrlck, - “and ours | aorrective interest flow is checked for [l€f in the preservation of America for for nineteen vears, Judge Grosscup be-|the department of labir has e labor | gampled cos men who marched in formal parade be- . oo © Mar- |is now no problem for the sword. We . American: b, e bl T |came a national some, years to come, offers a peculiar | Suericans and by offering tribute to the | gy ® PG RME (S 7o appeals |ment, than at any other time since the | fempfation to a false boom which would | little band of men who last night show- | GndNE of the cireuit court of appeals|ment, th: set us back In international trade and | ed Dy their calm and determined action | ¥hen It reverscl the 539,240,000 fine im- |armistice. bring on a quick and deadly depres- | thal thelr lives supported this prinelple.” | J050; Kenesaw 1. Land . | The deer hunting season in Aroostook. slon. e third statement in the above res- e o i = | _oaso A cok, “To eftect a distribution of labor more | alution repudiates the assertion of Sherit T e o [Peichg R i Sl in acecord With the need for it and to|Buchanan last night when brought to a | " 2o WORO S St by 5 L n first hand information as to em-|hospital here to the ffect that the masked | s ha'n oerrict tee Hlivence o SEn /iR Dy an e S ovment conditions a federal co-ordi- |men would not unmask. . e deli a wo months. re. He wrote the |troubles despite widespread unemploy- Star Spangied Ban- |p, While C ar whisperings of selfish greed hid In the stolen cloak of sleening commerce. We behold puny nlottings for some picce rehing’ eneech made a|of earth which mocks the name of rev- n the assem-loln‘ion or desires the epithet of pa- . ronght tears tn many eves |triotism. Our souls are weary with Corripr unknown as ‘“‘soldier lings, with bickerings and with riend and my com- monetary manoeuvre ‘What we need fore the president at the conclu week-end visit here to witness neuoveres of the marine ea: peditionary force. A half hour earlier, at the conel of the church services in a matural ampat- tWheatre on the maneuvere grounds, g had voiced strong prals General Perihing's Speech. | strite The a tinue for | i 2 2 S th 740,500 and German; aevil doga? At th i néral £a o hes e m-re ringing througt dxded el PSR S S senting opinion which was sustained by 100,000, " The United States stands thirs | oatory o ttis SR t i mieal iz 0|, hear emce mre rincing throughout ¢t state Isbor exchanges fa es-| Physiclans sitending Sherilt Bunchan- | 50 Ui c Suates supreme court e g EU R S e B T T R e - th yoi who haye become| “In.1914 .a mighty crime:was plan: R i 0,' b !nr‘_:‘“sflcg:di‘:“":t";; In 1844 Ne attracted nutional cttention|swest norih through Central Vermont ¥, exceeding only "Germany,” whi ounted "it: anilita i ’ st 8 - 0 Spcotmitic JEel - by telegraphing President Cleveland a re- | Friday evening h hind it dar e th hr ip Thour-anpiaas o i1 an immortal scmbol of de-|ned and exeentod azuinst this countrs. [PRESIDENT MIBBENS ADDRESS did not make a formal statement last | yest e ey ,‘,‘,’fll:-',",!11;‘;“‘?‘f\\“mg"afiade\?f:;lb;;‘:‘fi,d x‘x Ao [ty haw 35,010/ antiapsn G0N as d as the chaplai e leals of man- [but by the very strenzth of her'exam- AT OPENING OF PRINCETON |night, s U8 to quell a railroad strike lage estima seve ndred thou- | tive troops. o - P il By hEe v i 4 NI 0 and on another occasion he sent Eugene | sz 1 e S B 2 E gt LU TR L The fight took place when Sherilt Bu- | Debs, the Socidiist, to jail for contampt | o 0w = e . N - e Berolemt of tNeir bwit |universe and it wag. thess forces, anio| D o the studenls of Amercil WV |itembiedy to) prlsperse - the ‘marching||l “In 1899 President MecKinley).promoted | ioany foritho tewnl elcction from . 152,000~ Gaecho Sioy our lot to serve together and I have o o fess i s Ml Bl B | aitiss inftake & finm stand for world | Klansmen who were masked and robed, | him to the circuit bench and later he was | o g 6 s S : HoE nly taken the platform to say how muca 3 tee romember with | HaginE he StrOnE Nt arms of the al- | disarmament and to form an undergrad- | after, according to the sheriff, they had | appointed to the court of appeals. He|™ ** ¢ P e abed o been fnspired this e e ored tuom ae|victors. 1 belleve the. fubtne G ihe|isie sssociation to further the work of |refused to. divilge fheir ;identify. He|was best known in'the mlddle west 10r| Golonel Aviar E. Clark, propristor of | athomod cetton o somed forces | motting‘In wirship, and to say e r B st | - oTd i Boond e e —of | e conference ST the L Tuimtion’. ~0f |1iad ‘agreed th permit;them to varade, Tie /i havdling of Union Traction liti-{pe Clarke Publishing house, and form- el el greatly our joy Is in being In car new fheir vows of | France. She is the color guard of the | nove tadas \“; x‘:“f‘&‘;’l“‘l“’l’(‘m““éjmh;;’\‘)“— said, if they would allow him to identify | gation in Chicazo and widely critic- | e publisher of the Manchester, N. . | fidpieaands oo you. y Cnciples for which | Army of Hope and as she stands or | oo Rlcee vax P st 3 zed for making Marshall Sampsell, hi ben of Princeton university in the open- ¥ his vour hattle is|falls. the battls we are now waging will Mirror, dropped dead on Muckett's | take into cons “I shall not exacgerate a single word, : D) After a conference with two masked | $3,500 a Year secretary, receiver for the|pca “Naren Sit Ol 0n 2 hunting trip. | taee’ t from 2 amid the nolsy | be lost or won.” ”“if'"'“’“ °§ ‘{‘em“““"‘ 3“{-"\ worla | leaders at a house on the outskirts of | Unon Traction company at $18,000 al™" s i 5 N i reii present hour, I have ai i e o (] BT Do vl o e cclaring that the peace of the World| oy where he tried to pursuade the | year. T i [ S Sogrk o found regard for th the { 1 _warmis and the coninued progress of civilization | oy RS BY SEC to pucsuade A o bpa in.| The supreme court of Massachusctts | quick mobilization apd th £ tates Warines and T, ani’ lesrtac Gk won ga vour lastigratulated by French military leaders | rests upon the outcome of the Washing- | . ‘] e VioatinE iwhabli o BRI, both were In-|,nnounced the removal from office of | taining they have received would be re- | m leavir 2 riy and infon the excellent appearance of the|ion conference, President Hibben urged he interpreted as the law against un- |dicted in connection with an interurban £y vouth was ! American bat ! lion. The sol. nd. |new uniforms with brightly t attorney of | viewe athan A, Tufts, di today, with my regard strencsthened and B = known maski ing - | tr TS Wore | princeton to lead the way and show the S g arching in o/ pubs (i lley line ccident in which nine were it S ! ! = a genuine affec ded. No command- : & ] o : : ok B lesex county. Its finding, was| In‘many cou s some form of uni chief ¥ . 14" covld Kag polished | otrer American universities how the ma- | ¢ _demonstration, the sheriff declared |killed, but the indictments were quashed | a00q "wag “for the public | versal mil o e = g™ el adind e ounz hen ean create. conditions | (here would be no parade, according to | after considerable court proceedings. The § o bt i r pride in, or affection for an arm for a < A luncheon in honor of General Per- | which will tend to make war an un- | ‘itnesses. Chicago Wederation: of Tator Captain Alvin Slmms, in the employ of | Francs, ( of national defense t I have coms to . n {shing at the ministry of war, which was | {pinkable thing.” Immediately afterward, the throng of (@ resolution introduced in o Boaton Yarmouth st %5 CoL 40 Tan - B ve for you in this more nate oo i pations {attended by all the marshals of France,| I may be wrong” he said, “but it |™Or than 3,000 people gathered to wi- |Manding Judge Gro ’s_impeac Seiios dlad on i rlage! of his vasesl of | fores site} e 3 t the calamity of ended the day's céremonfes. seoms 1o me that there is a general atti- |1ess the parade saw the column of white | The judge at that = anc gt had-plloted 1t into| on ad and| “My pleasure is genuine that I could tude of the American people towards this ¢/ad fizures begin their march toward |Nounced that he might eventually resign | A flar enactments. d camp cn > = S e e o hieh” 'ex-]| Lorena, down' the road leading i from | Put that ho would not do So under fire. : nated to have beyond her rican : ANOTHER CHANGE IN THE TO ASK PROTECTION FOR presses itself in a sort of cynical pessis- | Waco. HvArosiL'nr[d quSCuiphen el il ¥ Bangtls ‘el s aaall cartier batwaen'| Mrs, Harding, who ECONOMIC POLICY OF RUSSIA IMPRISONED MINERS IN W. VA.|ism, that the conference is inevitably | - A the marchers advanced, cheers from Rt ors Semate investigating| . ierville and Bush, IIL, and escaped | under ca By destined to end in another chapter of [ the crowds which lined the road greeted | ommittce in 1018 by A. Bruce Bielaski| G " ® D00 "rirae o fihe Western president c he A. P).—An-| Indianapolis, Ind., Oct. 2.—Bearing an | diplomatic futility. . |them. e e e e e e P bt P SR e bt aton by sg ¢ economic policy | appeal from the union coal miners of | - “There is hope, however, if the con-| When the jeader of the column bearing g:"““ e n lscnssing il aed Do | e e §Ac:000. 0 accompnaled by Sk sion of the eco- | the country, & commiitee appointed at |science of America is awakened. an American flag reached a point a block | o jan activities of certain persons, but co-operative or- | convention of the United Mine Work-| “The conference at Washington is big | from the main business street of the town, | th¢_judge ¥ Wallace but Brigadier | 4 sibilities Sheri 5 s T serious] concessionaires to buy | ers of America left here tonight for | With possibilities both for the present and | Sheriff Buchanan followed the president's physician, and orously denied that he was implicated in such activi.| Frederick T. Chandler, Jr., and Earl, in G equal state o 1 s by his two | oo Mendenhall, member of the broxerage | Japan's 300,000 by a | Secretary Roosevelt of the n; nd raw materi® abroad n-| Washing ton to ask President Harding|future. ts decisions largely depend upon |deputies and a crowd of curious spectat- = firm of Chandler Bros, & Co.,, which fail- | 845,000 trained a return trip to the capital t of the govermment. Only | to give protection to 138 miners who are | Whether America takes a decided and in- | ors halted the standard bearer and grap- ¥ | fie sariat of trade will | state prisoners in West Virginia jails. |sistent stand for réfuction of armaments | pled with him The committes was said to have no speci- | and si willing to lead the way. America’ socicties will also bejfic plan to suggest to the president, but | decision can be determined no ation in the soviet Despite the inconveniences has at present noth- |Mr. and Mrs. Harding slept well in the zed reserves by | specially constructed tent. which served as an overnight White House and ke GRIEVANCES OF “OUTLAW" ed on July 25, were held in $1,500 ba Philadelphia on warrants charging em- bezzlement, conspiracy and fraudulent | aders of the 6.-|Conversion- in an attempt to snatch AN e ey STRIKING LONGSHOREM a % , as in Other marchers then came to the as- = was pointed out that federal troops | the bast, if the peopie speak and urge ! sistance of their leader and in the meles | New York, Oct. 2.—] A8 : . the move: for organiza- | zood soldier?, appea 1 allowed to export | are in Mingo and Logan coufities, which | With importunate demand what they all | which followed the sherift was knocked ongshoremen, who went on strike at Tlor WWirth and Forelgn | tlor of a volun.ary reserve having just |the bugles blew mess call, at articles with the| were the the seat of the recent mine | desire but so far have only feebly ex-|down. the trans-Atla steamship plers ye: _‘YT‘°W"}"~:Q'€’:"‘;\‘:": 4‘ &"rfls"d Porelen | peies warion? bre At e ssariat of trade war. pressed. £ A single plstol shot was heard and as |19743Y in Drotest agzainst the nmew wage | MIMISer Hosen wveried a reo ¥ y these |and eges, at ed to enable con-| Besides being authorlzed to give in- he one thing that will awaken the|the sheriff fought his way to his feet, fif declated Fihat iHeirs grlev- scale, tod: already taken| formation directly to Presldent Harding, | conscience of America is the united voice ! ¢ e i l was that {stell down the fers camp teen or twenty v in {ance concerned not only reduced wages|have delaved) ratification of the peace ates alone among the victor | street and then walked o Cliireh s ssary for the resumption | from President John L. Lewis of the | Who would be the first to volunteer and | “ngheathing his knife after he was | UL the fact that their overtime pay had |Feichstas: The rezular army to-| Just before his departure « generally and s regarded | union, who sald it explained the West|do their part if war should ever come |hoard to exclaim: been abolished on Saturdays Sevoral ! Harrisani: Tongahokemen > stronger in numbers than 1t inston Mr. Harding svent step toward complete free-| Virginia situation wits a view of show- | USon us, but who can be as equally de-| ‘Somebody got my gun while T was|, Tho Walkout, according to Joseh Ry |, ‘S nccs out tn New York in p fore the mobitization In 1917. The | watching the marine vt and fmport trade, WHich | ing that the lives of the prisoners are |ermined 1o do their Dart moW in OTET | souwn," Sherift Buchanan quickly cleared | 2 VIS @4* ot the Internationa) |checkers walked out in * suard, due to reorganization aft-) ine silhoactte of him 3 en mopopoiised by the | in" jeopardy and that protection canor | (0 remove those present conditions which | 3%, S1ohnd i ot soon attoe e awes | LOMESHorements Asgociation, was partie. | 65t aUIIS: gy workT AT, is actually weaker. Sl g il e, aiiie ek hiattt ;‘;w::‘:;ec::m[fimm:;:‘ilsa:x:::'p :\1; “I feel that this 1S particularly true of |Sren 10 totter and fall =~ Robed figures |ynio, 1y mine of the 23 local| hip operators and ‘the Internatior S a Fravesione marking st be butchered in Eovern- | lio, but among other thinge it wis wn:|the: youns men in our universities. I :}‘fe‘"“‘;g“‘;‘: “’:ei‘rh‘u;’g:‘r“‘l’;‘:t‘i;‘m:fifl 2nd| ‘The extra working hours on Saturda, | Longshoremen's Association. MAKING EFFORT TO SAVE an arm of G ghetr houses ver cent. of | derstood to have alleged that Dan Crafin, | WiSh to urge upon your serious consid- : ‘ S strki eleaders sai; son, amputated because ot T were of profit to the amputat au products be: s ot 3 MURD! SEixif b Yogin connt lted the | eration, therefore, the possibility of or- | (PS a8 their signal, the marchers quickly RER OF HER SON Jhad i : - ! steamship companics in clearing ships| Fforts on the part of the Mexlean goy- shortly before his death in 1563 The ent tax. Minzo county jail and taunted the pris. | 8anizing a movement here wiifch, with f"l‘v:’;“;‘ia‘r':;‘; ‘;erg;‘r‘,‘lfi"’,“:@““‘; °"(’- later {at the earliest possible hour but work- | ernment forednos e as (onq decrease | Ossining, N. Y./ Oct. 2—Asserting her | F "m:‘d‘ “‘;“’“:md i‘:""‘f:’w," g oy exchange rates are an-| oners with suggestions om aa attempt to | the co-operation the representatives of | T TRIEITE B8 B i o é" ness. |ed hardships for the lonzshoremen Wl | e s axpens s 4 e tven 1y [ belief in the innocexze of Rutzar Warder, |) o0 et et iy contodi ke b thomie follows: A dollar is worth | preak jail. other universities throughout our coun- | Several bystanders who seized and held | frequently labored throughout the lunch|President Obrezon at a dinner gi¥en | convicted of the murder of her son, 7 £ s vound 221,600 | Many of the prisoners are charged with | T¥» Might give expression to the convie- | JePLLY Burton early in the fight, aided | hour. ! At the old rates the men were |honor of ofreign delegates to the Mexican Linus Werner of Ilion is making in a farm house a few hundred yarés nc! frane, 4,400; German murder, among these being C. F. Keeney, | tions upon this subject which I am sure | Sheriff. Buchanan to his feet. pald double overtime durk All of the wounded i Bheart mn s the lunch | centennial. effort to save Warder from the death [2WaY- sh mark, 15 and Fred Mooney, president and sec. YU must hold. a . o | oun and overtmeNan iBaturasy, atfer- b xchange value of the silver ruble | retary respectively of the miners union, | 'Princeton is in a position to take the |Chanan were reported to have been in- | noon. 10,000 paper rubles. Ceremonies In celebration of the cen- | X ¢ : - nocent bystanders and today could giv O e BL " |1ead without being misunderstood. Our give g Sl l:ub:r:t;:, :nwle:: e | record In the movement for preparedness [no Information as to their assailants. > ’ d actual participation in the world war 4 Y as a result of the troubl a TO COUNT STRIKE BALLOTS ot Ahbsamiheey union: citert g:g“’;‘:@"lx makes our stand for peace all the more | The polls will be open in all districts yemisd 19 New York, Oct. 2—By almost unant- OF FGUR RAILROAD UNIONS | 1o southern West Virginla coal fields. g}:;u:;}i wTeh;‘:d":: ::;femf ;ei::awms today for the town election from 5.30 a,| New York. Oct. party of young |ing the past few days. glnnj:c-“_;r(“‘?v::: 'fm\“j‘:;"x:;: (Vanser | mous vote about 1,500 members of Tr- e In naming the committee Presid . - | m. to 6 p. m. . B . Mrs. e . ‘Warde A < . Chicago, Oct. 2—Counting of the strike | Lowls declared the miners. wished e out thought either of the present or the T Sl A I ) DS e e e [ R had killed her husband Y’:!-’"I':lcfll Unlon No. § endorsed today 9.000 members <f ourf rail- S " = uture. 2 e i o % = but she was acquitted. the order of jnternational officers to prevent any massacre” but did not djs- | "t 5 e so- Hijaxiom ea v 1 t i me Wil begin here tomorrow | Prevey S1Y, Mastacre” but 4id not is- | “.prire 1a now a call for ‘the same|STATE POLICE womkING o ety 5o alenrats the anpiyersary’ of the | of Mot Goncy's famine rellet commic. |, Mr2: Werner, who is 60 years old, re-| bitrate s wazeisieale an wi possibllity of a general strike | ginla that were the basis for alarm. A | P/ ' Of Dreparedness for peace and not | THEORY OF FEUD IN NEW BRITAIN | Poet Dante, returned today on the ship- | tee will be banishment from Moscow, ac- | (used to disclose the nature of the.new with the Employing Printers' assoc ore than 300,000 raitway mem, i | it Team e Sroonet for alarm. A | for confict, & preparedness . that will ) et 3 o vatier{ evidence which the said she was going | for the year beginning October 1 might ¥ against th 12 per cent. wage | Moo o, M. Mooney, who 18 t. the | creats national 'and internationai condl- & to give to an attorney to bring before | be based. The agreement that expired ordered by the raliroad labor Werner sald {hings ehe has learn- | NEW YORK PRINTERS EXNDORSE ce her son’s death make her be- tenary of the death of Admiral Brion, |ed s COLLEGE WOMEN RETURN principal cooperator with Simon Bolivar | lieve Warder guiltless. Warder and the ARBITRATION OF WAGE SCAL® 3 NTE 5 g |in South America’s war of independent wife of the dead man were implicated in FROM DANTE CELEBRATION | f e been held in Curaco, D. W. L, dur- | the murder. Warder protested his inno- ping board steamship Centennial State, |cording to American relief as i Hartford, Oct. 2.—The state i .| after a tour of Central Europe. The|advices from the Russian capital. told of actions which made the prisoners | LoN% Which will tend to make war an Polloe 12 3 the courts in an endeavor to free Warder. | Saturday called for a wage stale of $20 depending somewhat on the result | feartul unthinkable thing.” MEH mxd o lof Mt New Srfiatn ionse tns | Dattylwass Cliaperopsd, by s B GH Neither would she disclose the Where-| 2 week. The printers asked a new seala Do SRMINENE o Thiss ¥otie. 2w ek & mo;"f t;;g“ a:fx M;';,S‘l;uxmer. auto- Mf;;l of this ]C‘:]Y;F ation numbered 160 | YEFTY Tell, 10, and Matthew Croke, 13, | abouts of her daughter-in-law. She s of $55 a week and the employers propos on leaders began arriving here to-| FIVE ARRESTS FOR SHOOTING R = SRERMTY, St subalip o oTe e held on charges tf juvenile banditry | that while her appeal for Warder might| ed a decrease of £1) weekly, An azrac turned today tow: f it =, senting 24 American col- |1 o, 7 = S . Bt n preparation of the count of the IN A BUM RUNNING AFFRAY OF LEAGUE OF NATIONS |leged ’“"""'y"ehid:r?»m::;.!b:hn::"0; o lc:;:!m;; e e ey 20 At ol e T D e :gg...;;:u:u:lmir;e";::se !:[c‘;‘l;l?il:elll'l;:“;i ment was reached to keep the ‘present 2 cast by active members of the! — = : R Geneya, Oct.2 (by the A. P.)—The | lieved to Fat 7 ent officlals ‘stopping place |Old Strauss, “an eight ¥ g, o d % - scale in effect until December 1. Brotherhood of Locomotive Englnsers, the | _ ¥onkers, N. Y. Oct. 2—Four men and | assembly of the" league of natlons will| haw Toske v e S WEDEave thiox ZULUE] bim OEiH70, im0 el Sholomidste s Order of Raliway Conductors, the Broth. | ® WOman were arrested tonight on com- A ey. e state| on the 2 = : begin the final week of its second ses- | police ure working on the theory that| The Centennial State, a new twin-screw S iy CONTEADICTING REPORTS OF rhood of Locomotive Firemen and En. f D87t of the Bridgeport. Conm, police |sion in better spirits than have prevail- | & foud botw e by the United States Line, | Daniel Breen, student, was indicted = = = 2 = s Aa8 e SUlliauas Ohibo of ;:.ze:h:ymv:;rem:::me;;‘ea in the shoot- | ed since the opening of the deliberations. | the New Br?:an!nmselt\'::t?nng ‘a‘%f:ulif::s?: ::13'3 mxlfiftxevgvgom:r;\:"Lnnden, Foul- |at Chicago on a charge of extortion, |STATE CONVENTION FRIENDS UEALTH OF KING ALEXANDER North America. It is Delleved that the . i€ °f & ™ + Jine Drisoners were | Uy, to this time It has been welghed | the arrest of Detective Sergeant Andrew | gnone and Queenstown in mine days. charged with attempting te obtain 6,000 OF iRISH FREEDOM E ount will be completed before the énd of | o MIPURE 10 earry lauor in an auto-}down by the depressing Influence of the|J. Richardson, his two f\'s and Jacoh i from Mrs. Charles W. Love, wife of a Parls, Oct. 8.—Mystery continues ta the week. g:’“ »;',’T“_,gm:afe::r:r :he D‘t:;x.ce charge, | Bolivian-Chilean dispute, the Greco-Al- |Winkle. ~These four remained In the | FEARS AUSTRALIA WILL BE broker, under threat that he wouid re-| New Haven, Oct. 2.—Resolutions |surround the condition of the health of 5 Two other railway organizations al-| me gov :-nommg‘x mn:mgh @ returned | banlan trouble, the Albanian-Jugo Slav|Martford county jail today, unable to SWAMPED BY ASIATICS |veal alleged activities of her husband in pledzing support to Eamonn De Valera|King Alexander of Jugo Slavia. He was ready have wied overwhelmingly In fav. | Lo 7 SHOOUIE & man who gave has|question and by disappointment, not |und bondsmen. They are ehifred with R 1 to|in the Kp Klux Klan. condemning England’s course in the|recently reported to have suffered a ro= o7 of & strike rather than accept the Waze | ware Jonn betue) T s ose SrTested | concealed by most of the delegations, | concealing stolen antomobiles. London, Oci. 2.—An urgent appeal to ol d Irish situation and urging free tolls far |lapse, following an operation, and it sollithis But Vhil Tondies Nave RhbouRé fkol, his wife, Eleanor, his | over the meagre results of the league's ralia a white Superintend 2 . | Australians to keep Au: T that thers would be mo walhout un. | (¥ Drotbers, Julius and Frank, and Wal- [ efforts siuce the last assembly. Tice pmnfnrredpmmflfhr:e};a‘fil e e o | country, and a strong Toks the other organisations Jomed I the | '°F JoB™ all of Yonkers. e T me rench and Drit-| Winkle, but declined to comment on the | 1658 immigration was encourased (he |\ manoaz Indiags will be observed on g Y TO OBEY ORI sh to join their voices on the speaker's | meeting. 1| country was likély to be swamped by g strike. HUNGARY T0 OBEY ORDER T aE e e . eYsteriay Hurley and State's American ships through the Panama|was said he' wa b LA e’ was unable to return to rning that un- ‘_‘;‘i':'°m’“u‘ass;::“":'l;z :;‘c}?e"m P;:"l‘h"; Canal were adopted at the stite conven- | Belgrad e for his coronation. It was.of~ . tion of the Friends of Irish Freedom |ficlally announced at the Jugo Slav les v - here today. The following officers i . Attorney Alcorn visited Sergeant Rich. | Asiatics, whether tho Australians were | November 7.at Barringlon, Anclent So- |glecteds Y % T e e e TO EVACUATE BURGENLAND |Eramme of disarmament to revive thelardson in the jail. willing or not, was issued by ~Lord |Wame, BY 00 © ane the Darsingten | Dresident, Thomas J. Blewitt, Bridge-| On Friday night, it Is declared by tha OBITUARY Midsie, Ok hopes of the assembly of practical re-| Ecdward Cotter, one of the ten persons| Northliffe at Sydney when he left there 'A’"g“.fi:i"gfif"{' and the Barrington |port; vice president, Michael F. Dwyer, |Journal Kifg Alexander was riding Harry G. Dodge passed by the. cabinet counch 1omay oy | FUlts fn that direction. There has been |arrested in the New Britain investiga-| Saturday for fho Philippines. o |Aatid ST Fatanston; sccretary, Miss Dulsy Lord, | along the Champs Elysses when his aus e, Sk % & ] e s T At thuo«!-e i} ool oomment ‘onthe epesches ‘of (M. |ition, ‘whs raleassn last:nighit by order| Remarking ihat Anstralia had/ineyer 56, for 19 years head of H. G. Dodge & | cil of ambastadors issued in Paris Sep- Company, shoe dealers, died at’his home | tember 23 “inviting” Hungary to evac- | ere today after a brief fliness. Ie was | uate Burgenland. The counci] expressed | descended from one of the earliest England families. He wife and three children. Waterbury; treasurer, James P. Lan- | tomobil car owned b Noblemaire, of France, committing his|of the state's attorney. Three others are | Kiown war on her soll, he told the Aus-| A brass cylinder filled with anclent |ers, New Haven; state council, Jonn|Count ;"s‘o‘}‘]g‘e‘:’“‘:’% falfln Srtasea: country to the programme, including |out on bail In connection with the sup-| trallans that they might forever prevent | British soverelgns was discovered in the | Donnelly, Pristol; Thomas Casey, New |dor to France. The king's motor was limitation of armaments for the next |posed murder of Louls Winkle in New| that experience if they acted wisely, |front yard of Col John W. Homan's home, | London; Rev. T. J. Murray, Branford:|so badly damaged that he was foreed B | =te Butpmiant i the: two years to the figures of this years| Britain, one man is locked un om a Il quickly and unselfishly {n promoting im. | Staten Island. A one carat dizmond was |Rev. Joseph Byrne., Norwall: Mrs. Fii | to roturn to Versailles, where ho i stay= g o Bl vr e extent to which | budget argl H. A. L. Fisher's address|quor charge and another is held as a| migration in sufficient numbers to make |also found among the coins. The house |zabeth Ahearn, Winsted; Mrs. Ella |ing, in a taxicab. The Italian ambs survived by a it would be able to deal with the insurg- | giving Great Britain's hearty support to material witness in the Richardson | safe from invasion, Which they certain- | was built in 1725 and was used as a Prit- | Brannagan, Naugatuck, and Patrick o~ 5o " 'n West Hungary. the same program. _: =5 - cass, ly were mot DOW. _- lish headquarters during the rewolution. Sullivan, Derby, ,vA.i,