Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 12, 1921, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Norwich VOL. LXIll—NO. 275 NORWICH, CONN., -SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1921 12 PAGES—88 COLS. PRICE TWO CENTS ——— President Harding and General Pershing Walked Behind the Casket as the Cortege Moved Along the Streets —Soldiers, Sailors and Marines Added to the Thrilling Spectacle—Crowds Lined the Long Road From the Cap- itol to the Cemetery—Notables From Many Foreign Countries Participated in Ceremonies—Flags and Em- blems Were Placed Above the Breast of the Sleeping Soldier—Burial Ritual Was Said by Bishop Brent—Sa- lute to the Dead Closed the Exercises. ~o By the A. P) his own — | tered bulidings dead who have People in thot the great circle skies ¢ home- home Unknown Dea onight, a soldi en in the sacre % 1he , guards arrow body cel bu that his s is held close s nonor and the g ign £h endeavor po is nameless one of fam ¥ Americans America. Wheraver liberty Down below king and guard them came the full keep thet o4 across the marble arch of the and aised -to American soldier Bis tomb, runs this| resolve that these Abové whose Briand, Foch Diaz and place and powe others, Baron Italian notables from a for tomorrow’s of the older fig old t neral Faint and d a military & bowl of the cade: nd neral march and mutte the names T s were spoken by the mar- Gettys- e strong with wih deep sed that the soldier | e and ringing e coffin © . world's affairs heard | reiterated the man | merican | gather in in the shad tberty talk of peace; war at | and name and | of all nations ands. And in eet must ring declaration today | honor-laden France & At the arc hero co: casket era des down al and st to the pl { the whi e robed Carefully above the by and play moment th stepped to ket; then Throngs Out to Do Honor. ng the nat 15 poured | its | d r the Rameless he first crash of the | for the dead ngton monu- the great ones to whom places folk who trudged the long way just glimpse the page ing their places, uniform of his ‘rank, tributes from overseas against that hour. Gathering of Notable Men. others statesmen and the admirals him from the capitol e crashing, and monuments to great gone before, usands. were moving about of the amphitheatre. The had been giv- d enclosure, and the plain to ant from afar, were find- Wreaths and Garlands. the platform placed for for all | the casket, in a stome vault, lay wreaths and garlands brought from England's éd by British soldiers. To British ambasador in the to bid them safe platform gathered ring through eBatty, Balfour, in a brilliant Th Kato men history. Jacques, array of v were followed by from Japan, the officers, by the 1l countries gathercd here conference, and by some res in American life, too side the approaching fu- tant the sflvery strains of i stole into the big amphith The mourning notes gf a fu- ew clearer and the roi the muffled drums. White Robed Singers. i where the choir waited, the of nd, the dead lifted followed by th who had his gen- walked was car- Anhead movea chanting solemn- ket was placed and the marine melodies until the sident and Mrs. Harding r places beside the riumphant chords Banner swept the he » of honor. gers, pangled > elatm him hair B W0 it= feet, again. " ut o do him Mnor, § Prayer Followed by Bugle Call. 0ad from the eapitol | < A W steeps foniehe:| A prayer, carried out ‘over the crowd g 6 on Slopes ¥ amplifiers, so that no word was » Phe missed, took a moment or two, then th clear of tention!" and for tw tion stood at pause for t - fgh noon. No sound broke the quiet as all stood with bowe Then the and_sounded and in a us rolled up the words of m = the hosts within and wi open hall of valor. President Harding steppi forward Te- s'de the coffin to say for America the thing that today was nearsst to the 1a- tion's heart. that sacrifices such as this aps be made esponse th: nameless man, fa n in battle; m.ght ve unnecessary down ih.uga the coming years, Every word :hat President Harding spoke reached cvery person through the amplifiers reach- ed other thousands upon thousards New York and San. Franci Harding showed strong emotion as | lips formed the last w dress aused, t went riod back to thousands he faced, from the other Corteze Thrilling Spectacle. usands out over the slopes beyoni, " sallors and marinés al from still other thousaals nway he thrilling sp he Pacific, or close vacke? in the rolied along. And |heart of the natlon’s greatest sity rose xith its faded |like a chant. The marble e lom- . n the draped flag walked |™°d With the soelmn sound o ader of a hun-| (President’s Address is Printed In Ful] ns “hose name he was on Page Bight.) g e Mg g A Emblems Placed Upon Bi-r. b ot i Wencs mn_} Then the forelgn officers who stand %, wearing as his onty dec. |NiEhest among the soldiers or sai n " of vietory that|'heir flags came one by one to the bier e Lt o place gold and jeweled emolame foi » row came the men who |th® brave above the hreast of the sieeper. n today, or have guided its|Already, as the great prayer cndsd, the . They were all there,|DPresident had set the American seal of with age and frailities | Rdmiration for the valiant, th> nat on'e gotien. Judges, senatore, | OV fOF brave deeds and the cou ags thet ghest officers of every | 0cfes death, upon the casket. Sila Ly bl sovernment and a | S he 1ald the Medal of Honor 224 the e gr of the nation's most tinguished Service Cross. And below, —ihe medal of homor men.|"¢t In Dlace With reverent hands, grew g nd bent, and drooping | U1 1008 line of foreign honors, tae so- is torla Cross, n some trim and erect as to fame. won th way Poin 4 the English fla r o Wilson, also strick- | F0/and nfirmities as he served in of France. and Belglum, and Ttaly, and Roumania, a nd ever laid before on the breast of any but those who had served &; all the highest honma Czecho-Slovakia, and To General Jacques of Belgium it remained to add his own toueh t t, these S MRt by ot A, Tt as :unr:.“"‘lcle‘;':re“lr?:yl\ the breast of hia - hta Tillas & o ¥ Medal of “%ai> pirmeq s e T P s bu”:f there by the Belgian :ing, toro it with st dem sake the former |3 SWeeDIng gesture, ani tsnlarly Lestrwr. —an . e his dread oficd it on the unknown Americin war; parad physical weakness Body Placed in Crypt. ealth, perhaps life. to appear | Through the religious services that fol- re fo rthe fallen.|lowed and the prayers, the criwd sat was % and a cheer | motionlaes until it rose to join in the o1 there for the man in the car-|consoling words of “Rock of Ages" ard age. a tribute to the spirit that brought | the last rite for the dead was at hand. m o ation's nameless hero | Lifted by his hero bearers, the Uningwn r-in-chief he had been, Headed by Soldiers and Saile race. Atier President Harding and_most of | 7% e « high dignitaries of governrient had |229VS the ervpt a little of the ® at the White House, the pro- eaded by solid blocks of sol- battalions of sailor com- on with Pershing, now Secretaries Weeks and Denby, ong road to the tomb. It march- always between the human bor- of vietory the nation jelf of the great avenue; bridge that spans the | the long Il to Fort last to the gate of the great beyond, where soldier and or folk sieep by the thousands. Thers the lumbering guns of the artillery swung de. avalry drew their horses out ne and left to the foot sol- hy. the way wers laid in er 13 America, Chiet Potomac. on up Myer and a hy such blood he lald the cou diers and : e sailors afid marines the last | O%n head. Then the casket with siage of the journey. weight of honors was lowered nfo the ! Ahead. the whité marble of the amphi- | CTIPt. theatre gleamed throv the trees. It Salute to the Dead. stands crowning the slow slope of the| A rocking blast of gunfire rang from - i upwards from the river, | the woods. st acr s was Washington, its clus- nets stiffened S o B3 A e was carrled In his flag-wrapped, coffin out to tha wide sweey The bearers lald the steerer down The glittering circle of ba simple p of tha ter- in which hal beea paced sofl of France. The dust s blood helped redeem from al »r hands will mingle with his dust as tims marclcs Burial Ritnal by Bishop Breut. The simple words of the buria: ritaal were said by Bishop Br: war mothers of America and England t, flowers from lace. For the Indians ot Plenty Coos came to cal! upon the Great pirit of the red men with gesture and chant and tribal tongua that the dead should not have died in vain, that war might end, peace be 1 hased as this, Upon ‘La carket p stick of his trikal office and the feathered war bonnet from his| o- to a saluts to the dead. R e R AT T T,y Again the guns shouted their message of honor and farewell, again they boomed out; a loyal comrade was being laid to his last, long rest. High and clear and true in the echoes of the guns, a bugle lifted the old. old notes of taps, the lullaby for the living soldier, in death his requiem.. Long ago some forgotten soldier poet caught its meaning clear and set it down that sol- diers everywhere might know its message as they sink to rest: “Fade the light; And afar Goeth day, cometh night, And a star, Leadeth al!, speedeth all, To thelr re The gnns roared out again in the na- tional salute. He was home, the Un- known, to sleep forever among his own TRAFFIC JAM IN WASHINGTON WORST SEEN IN MANY YEARS Washington, 11.—While thou- sands were paying their tribute to the Unknown American at Arlington today, almost as many more were fighting hope- lessly to make their way to the amph theatre through the worst traffic fam the national capital has seen in many years. The tie-up, which reached its greatest density on Highway bridge across the Potomac, compelled cabinet members and major generals to go part of the way on foot, and almost prevented President Harding from reaching the amphitheatre in time to take part in the two minutes of silent tribute, Twice before it reach- ed the bridge the presidents’ limousine had to mount the curb and circle through the grass plots of Potomac park and the needle’s eye of the bridge itself was threaded only by the assistance of a fly- ing squadron of special policemen. Police offiicals blamed the army had nominal charge of the Armi il ice day ogram, and the army in turn blamed the police. As a result of the argum: not only many of the general public but some high officials and foreign digy- taries missed the amphitheatre services ntirely and sat in the utomobiles f or hours, unable to proceed or turn bacl Along with ma others, Sceretary Hughes deserted his automobile at the brilge, made his way forward en foot throagh the neck of the bottle and was picked up on the fortunate motor f almost equal Virginia side by a more t. Meantime, a £ roportions was on at Aqueduct bridge. the only other means of travel betwecn Washington and Ar- lington. Boathouses and canoe clubs at the Aqueduct crossing were besieged those who had despaired of getting through the bridee and were battling for an opportunity to beg or buy a way over by water. Stalled _electrlc cars complicated th jam at the Highway bridge, and a ha dozen sightseeing ‘buses 1 cks b to make the u more difficult. Railway officials eatmated fromy 9 o'clock upward of 10,000 tickets had been sold for p sage over t but it was nearly noon before the cars began moving. The troubles of those who were to get fverybody in his on were muitiplied by an lieutena who had been given charge of a | tant entrance fo the amphitheatre | White House secret servica men, | wavs g0 in advanmce of were unable o get past t a ambling process arn The who al- after they had shown all their tials, and only the intervention of Secre- tar. Wecks prevented some of the distin- guished guests from beinz turned away. A quartette which was to help furnish music was kept out by the lieutenant un- til after the services were under way. s | PLANS TOR RECEPTION OF MARSHAL FOCH IN NEW HAVEN New Haven, Nov. 11 for the recention to M he confe farshal Foch ana university in Wols given out today The guest w hall tomorr | arrive here from Wash- ngton by special train at 9 a. m. Three companies of the 169th infantry and Troop A, cavalry, will be on duty from 8 o'clock at the railroad yards the train will be sidetracked. At 815 a welcome will Marshal Foch by Governor Lake, in be- haif of t of the city and a representative of the university, The parade' will be along Meadow street, to Chureh, to Elm, to College, to Wall street, and to Woodbridge hall, wheer a company of infantry will be on duty. The marshal will leave Woodbri: hall at 10.25 for Woolsey hall, where ri;g\: convocation will be held. No tickets will be honored after 10.25. The exereites will be coneluded at 11.15. At 11.30 Marshal Foch and his party | will leave Woodbridge hall for Prestd Angell's houss In Prospect street. Lun con will be zerved at 11. At 1 p. m. the pirade wi: Icavalry escort for the Bo through Prospect, house avenue, Grove, t6 Church, to Ch. street and thence to the Bowl. No formal plans have been made he marshal for Saturday evening Sunday morning. 3 11 leava under WL proceeding apel for and AUTO PLUNGED INTO THE HOUSATONIC RIVER Bridgeport, Conn., Nov. 11—An auto- mobile containing four women ana a man plunged down a twenty-foot bankment and sunk in deep water in tne Housatonic river, this afternoon off the river road four miles west of Shelton Center. lhert Birks, of Bridgeport, driver of the car, lost control when a passing car struck the left front wheel of ais - car, jolting the steering gear out of his gra: He and his wife, two daughters and Mrs, Martha A. Sherwood were rescued from the water by George and Leroy Frye of Bridgeport. = Birks and Mrs. Sherwond were taken to the Griffiths hospital, in Derby, where their condition is mot so- rious. The car has not been recoversd. em- PRONOUNCED FARTHQUAKES RECORDED A% GEORGETOWN ‘Washington, ov. 11—Two pro- nounced earthauakes were recorded on the selsmograph at Georgetown Univer- sity this afternoon, the first being-at an {estimated distance of 2,500 miles and the second 1.600 miles from Washingto The first disturbance was said prohably to be in South Americ§ but the location of the second was less certain The first shock began at 1.: P. m. and | was -continuing When the second hesan at 254 o'clock. The disturbance ended at t which | tie-up | The final plans | ing upon him of the honorary degree of doctor of laws, at a speical conveation of the corporation of Yale W, were | 3 in which Dbe extended e state, and by a representative | Sachem streets, Hill- |the streets, post offices and terminals of Peace Treaty With Wirth, Wirth, chancellor and minister of fcreig: affairs --The cercmony which means a re- turn of friendly relations between Ger- many and the United States, took place at 6.30 o'clock this afternoon. It con- med less than five minutes. The ex- change of ratifications was to have oc- curred at noon, but, owing to numer- ous other appointments of Chancellor Wicth, Mr. Dresel was compelled to awalt a summons to the foreign office, Article three of the peace treaty w'th Germany provides that - 4 treat saall take effect immediately on the exchange of ratifications.” Article three reads “The present treaty shall be ratified in of the high contracting parties, and skall take effect immediately on the exchanzs of ratifications, which shall take plaze as soon as possible at Berlin. PRESIDENT WILL ISSUE PROCLAMATION OF PEACE Washington, Nov. 11.—(By The A. P.) —The exchange of rafffications of the German-American peace treaties follow- ed similar action on the Austrian treaty in Vienna and had been expected momen- tarily for several davs by the state de- partment. President Harding, it is now expected, will fssue his proclamation of peace which wrll operate to bring the terms of the two treaties Into effect in 5 i a national sa'ute from a Yale battery this country. Dosted at Wall and_flieh stroet The exchanges complete the Immediate (P10 25 VAT AT TORQ SreLE |steps of bringing about a state of peace | " “FUS At CEEISER ERTEIEL | with the former enemy powers, although | mcenty-seven men of the university gave |a Hungarian-Amerlcan treaty js vet to | goeq qocc g qief O Ghe WA ST |be completely accepted 4 Budapest. The | ;om0 (158 08 L8 o undergrad- administration iz understood to be pre- |, 2i0c gtood at attention In Memorlal |pared next to move toward establishing |7nanat at noon. Two minutes later thi full diplomatice relatlons with Germany |cntmes In the tower of old South C: {and Austria. lege plaved America, a floral wreath — was placed at the hase of the Weslevan NEW HAVEN OVERCROWDED «taff which hears the serclea flaz with FOR THE FOOTBALL GAME 27 golden stars. A tmz'e syinded “Taps.' ~ President William Arnold New Haven, Nov. 11—1If some jok r Shanklin presided and the a should hang a sign “To Let” os New | hv Dr. Stephen H. Olin. '§6. of | Haven green tonignt, it proua’v weuld York city. Townspeople had heen be the only such sign m th2 city on the these ' Germany Exchanged By American Commiuloner!Services and Exercises Were Dresel and Chancellor Karl olerlin, Nov. 11 (By the A. P.).—Rati- cations of the German-American eace i i treaty were exchanged. here mnig{]‘[ ac|20d With bowed head all Connecticat to- the foreign office with Ellis Loring Dresel, the American commissioner, and Dr. Karl accordance with the constitutional forms | 'Comnecticut Honored the Unknown Soldier Held in Many Cities and Towns. New Haven, Conn., Nov. 11.—Silently day honored the Unknown Soldier, who was placed in his last resting tlace at noon. In city and town there were ser- vices or exercises to mark the day, the hour and the minutes. In some places the program was considerable length and detail and was carried out with even more impressiveness than has marked Memorial Da The municipal observance in New Ha- ven was a parade which ended at tke Central Green just before the nnon hour. Within a roped enclosure on the Green were the families of men who had died In the service and the high schoo! chor- us of five hundred voices which sang hymns. For two minutes after the stroke of noon on the city hall tower bell close by there was silence. The throng was numbered by the (housand. The "address for the city was by Acting Mayor John W. Murphy In absence of Mayor FitzGerald, who has been ill, and the address for the day was by Rey. Dr. Orville Petty, the former chaplain of the 102nd Infautry. The service at Unlversity was simple but impressive. Major D. A. Davidson and_Captains C. H. Tate, W. \H. Hale and E. L. Lord of the Yale Re- serve Officers Trafming Corps placed wreaths slmu'taneously at noon on taur {memortal tablets In Memorial hall. These tablets bear the names of men of Yala who died In the service. President James Rowland Angell of the unlver- slty, and the several deans were amons those offlcially nresent. T%a twa minutes silence was followed hy the booming of attended exerclzes. ed and [ed an B e e ) ‘ Business News Is Important The first tell of happenings 'near a cidents, marriages, deaths, rreat m: The advertising eolumins tell {§ things vou have to buy—things th: and friends in Your own town. The news rolumns keep you is of great importance. Thi: But it's just as important tha buy, when to buy—that you keep |§ @and clothe vou and your family and make you and that you learn where to get them at the best advantage. Advertising is an essential ne: advertiser ali During the past week the foll The Bulletin's columns : ! Bulletin Tel Saturday, November Monday, ~ November Tuesday, November Wednesday, November Thursday, November Friday, November Totals. The Bulletin has its news columns and its advertising columns. Make good use of The Bulletin's column nd far—of fire, spor en and great events. of things you eat, wear and use— at are being sold to your neighbors elections, ac- up to date in the worl of events, t you know how to bu where to posted on things necessary to feed comfortable and happy, ws service— ential to reader and owing news matter has appeared in egraph Lozal eneral Total 130 366 532 o8 278 516 125 240 453 92 318 492 112 237 423 12 255 478 669 1694 2959 eve of the Yale-Princeton football rame. i by | Foch arrive tomorrow morning. they, the distinguishe his forenoon tri there will be the day. ttle opport later IMARINES ARE GUARDING | MAILS IN NEW YORK New York, Nov. | rines today began arding the ma n | New York, prepared to use war-like measures toprevent repetitions of last {month's $2.000,000 truck robhery. The | torce was expected to be angmented to- morrow by the arrival of 200 more sea The' marines detailed here are com- imanded by Captain Norman C. Bates, who conferred todayv Morgan. are to assist him. {—A surprise was sprung in the |court here today when Henri Tandru, the alleged modern “Blueheard.” on trial for the murder of ten women and the son of one of them. produced two let- ters bearing the allezed Madame Desirer Guillin, one of his al- lezed vietims, dated November and De- cember, 1915, respectivel tion nz that Madame Guillin, a + 1815, The Iatters were addressed to the Rank of Fraie-. instructing that institution to alspose of her securities denosited in the signatures were forgeries, { Everything in the way of rooms apveais |chapel shortly after 11 o'clock, the fac- to have been taken. Today's fine waather ulty being in acadeniic gowns. Dr. Olin br ugit thousands of visito s herc and jfinished his address just before noon hotel and private home ac-»minodaticns|The wreath Was placed in position b; some time ago had been rese-ved. The|alton L. Muter, 23, of Kingston, Pa., overflow wiil go to nearby s and H towns 2 football crowd is being au~-mented thousands who wish to see M:rehal hey had figured it out that traffic wi'i be <o heavy by train and machine that unless g guest amring through the city sireets n 11.—Sixty-five ma- | 1. b restraining the strikers from any act I:n] VVY."P‘= from the barracks at Quantico, of violence] announced that they ex- reinfa ey e 7o s o ed to. |PeCt to restore normal delivery service Ml trucke w Tf,dh?v‘n'l:— f\;':“_:‘r_:':‘ without the aid of their striking employ e p"h““’,“ nofl” guards_ accempanten | €5 DY early mext week. Deliveries to | andiaapecial SIS WENOELILaCD °q | stores and stations already have reach- |1otter carrlers distributing registerea | 507°S and stations already ’; by |l ed 80 per cent. of normal, they assert- ma with Postmaster Three marine corps lieutenans SURPRISE SPRUNG IN TRIATL Prohibition and cieP ms officers in a mo- OF “BLUEBEARD” LANDRU | tor launch twenty mi'es at sea, the twol masted auxiliary schooner “C. C., Jr. Versailles, Nov. 11—(By The A. P) |¥as seized after a chase today and Assizes sienatures of The prosecu- birth, was murdered in Au- bank by her. The bank, satisfird that the signatures were genuine, followed her instrnctions, Tha prosecution today called in a ndwri expert, who swore that the . . [Wesleyan college body marcned into the| (Continued on Page 3, Column 3) SETTLEMENT OF NEW YORK MILK STRIKE HOPELESS | New York, Nov. 11.—Health Commis- sioner Copeland today gave up hope of effecting an amicable settlement of the milk handlers' strike, and announced that the efforts of his oftice henceforth will be turned toward insuring consum- ers pure, fresh milk. He warned of criminal action awaiting any distributing company purveying stale, or impure milk. 1 can see no use of further efforts to get the companies to meet their men, Dr. Copeland said. “The controversy has gone by the hope of adjustment.” The distributors, on the other hand armed with a supreme court injunction ed. 3,210 QUARTS OF WHISKEY SEIZED N MOTOR LAUNCH Tampa, Fla. 11.—Overtaken by brought to this port with a cargo, the officers stated, of 3,210 quarts of Whis- key and gin valued at $30,000, The mas- ter of the ship gave name as Robert Burns of N:w Orleans. There were four other men in the crew. DEATH RESULTS FROM EXPOSURE IN WOODS Utiea, N. Y., Nov. 11.—His legs frozen to the knees, as the result of two days' exposure to the winter cold deep in the woods north of Forestport,” Charles Tur- ner, 47, of Fayetteville, died in a Utica hospital today when blood transfusion, resorted to in a desperate effort to save his life failed. He went into the woods Tuesday to hunt and took the wronmg trail and be- came lost. A T 1 e e e 18 g o g g T e o] o __@onoring the Tnknown Dead Ameri- BRIEF TELEGRAMS ing is Reports to London say that fight In progress between Jugo-Siav and Al- banian trops south of Scutari. Traffle on rallronds and highways in | - Northern New York is seriously hamper- ed by snowfall of one foot. Ukrainian troops who are advancing on Kiev and Odessa were reinforced by a cavalry division of the Red army. Charles T. Neal, sixty, prominent grain man of Omaha, died suddenly of gastritis at his home. 1 Five hundred nattve gendarmes and officers were massacred by Kurds, follow- ing the occupation of the town of Sujbu- lak. Seven persons were killed and 24 in- jured in railway accident at Alemtajo, Southern Portugal, according to report to London. William Kouwenhoven Voorhees, 83 years, Civil War veteran and ch member of the New York Produce Ex- ciange, died at his home in Brooklyn. aged Dana D. Bernum. of Boston, was elect- ed president of the American (ias associa- tion at Chicage convention, Atlantic Cicy was selected for 1922 convention. MADISON SQUARE GARDEN IN EAR-SHOT WITH ARLINGTON Telephenic Amplifying Devices Carried Voices Over the Wird to Audience in New York—Vast Concourse of Peopld Became Imbued With the Spirit of the Services Being Conducted at the National Cemetery—A Thunderoug Murmur Joined President Harding in His Recitation of the Lord’s Prayer—Vast Americanization Parade Was Led by Veterans of the World War and Othzr Wars. 11.—(By the A. P.)— ing h “We are confronted the difficaltics ths Wa are by clashing ica rests. We are beset upon the difference be tation of armam = : armament. All of tapsa Temporary lease of power plant No. 2|y’ yast crowd In and around Madison | culated in some measure 0 of the Muscle Shoals, Alabama. project 10 | uare Garden, et Eone ] e s the Alabama Power company, Was ab- | jor ey = th L e . nounced by Secretary Weeks. Arlington at noon, #t00d | oriy do not want an exc with bowy b [ They do not even wa A blg buck deer got in the way of a|minutes, offering pravers for the dead at | oo pqney 7007 © - motor bus at the northern edge of White | for perpetuation of the peace he died 10,0 looking toward Was! Plains, N. Y., and his hind legs were | win, Sbvicps Hapchuief) broken. A policeman then shot B4l ke marne.: somemnen profound hace and they was 3 — | wheels of aroned Into sl oo g et ANl the battlefields in France and | iraneportation ceased ; tugs P b Flanders have been systematically | jdled in the ey e o searched at least six times for bodies of { wag suspende Emplltaceran oo, - soldiers killed in the war. ceased thei b e Al B e | their offices, in'the | ranizeq for peace. Dan Cupld's hafts flew thick and fast | croat raiiroad nals, even : on. thel T 4 during last summer among New, Yo S reil oo a v ith (Bacah be in | _"We have been urged no schoolma’ams to the deadly total of s cctation, no or one for every day in the year. ple 100 ¢ moment cen- e ¢ Mrs. Livingston Rowe Schuyler, of itk Gara ere | ° e pec New York was elected president generai | e D s ice he expee no of the United Daushters of the Confed- | e diies failure and a eracy, in convention at St Loujs. i) with unfulfi = f 15,00, “Those who see Miss Mary E. W. Risteau, democrat, the | ey it be faling in their only one of the three women nominers | g e | ure impenaing ana for the Maryland legislature elected last over th world what they Tuesday is a farmer. | Board of directors of the Berlin Bours: passed a rule prohibiting brokers from accepting orders. for less than 5,000 marks par, or the usual equivalent of five | sharcs. can hero, Vassar students today planted | a memorial tree mear the lake on the campus with appropriate ceremonies. | President Henry N. McCracken presided. Post office department announced proximately §500,000 was saved railway mail service throug’ spection and reorgani: ap- the in careful of the you that for mys= fident as I am, ent and Mrs. 11 it failu: comes amphitheatre. and 1 shall proc untit ¢ truth as 1 see it ¢ “died away, tutions nor persc n spirit, with the va Pleading for n 4 . rlington. Every wor | “which we owe to our fellow men and 0 : every hymn that was sunc: | e e g L ription: of et with falg of eizht nations an he miit- Wi ) securel held In the the services that when President ng his oration, began the “The aim with w conference meets is . recitation of the Lord’s Praver, its myt- | practica sserted 75 ~ flay, pervice, 4 voices blendad, fn a thunderous mur- | sate 1 and ot § = of “Our Father Who Art in Teaven disarmament is 1 stones valued at between $30.000 and | i R NGt Kaowk £60,000 were stolen from a jewelry stor S e e ensnens in the world we & A at 718 Sansom street, Phiiadelphia by [, 7 ] Do g fiod naciow/as polien o me il Tamien three young bandits who escap ménsured tones of the i 1 s s placed the Conyres 1 Medal of Honor [ reductios A BIII to prohibit the transmission, pub- [ "'7°70 10 Comeressional Medal of Honor f r fnstion ication ‘of dissemination of information Hieari ol the & THaown. S THen el o £ defeated in the Louisiana i et R el T Lo e resentatives, by a vote of ey o tioar Loaser ol | e e e e an 4 doe e t main Américas Dnknownsbere: | oeva o b et % Rev. John Punett Peters, pastor em- ' 17UAINS Of Amerio s SRR A6 [ Seeatedt 2 ou eritus of St. Michael's Episcopal church, |, o8 170 procession g Sl D8 atle omi New Yor e piocemion) tiam ew om- aeologist and historian of n Sl iy g | manderiof the American Lagién 1 s the age of 69. pot g g e e gt Ged 1 | ontion to eorecal semmiutions adapiel g8 T e spot where the Unknown will | 3img and purposes of the conference - Important documents were seized and e - ima and purposes of the conference were: millions of Romanoff rubles tozether with oy ndoceed. , considerable French and Britis et But the v were discovered by interallied p i ere will be no m raid on the offices mission at Constantinopl: the Russian trade | E e once more and m Judge Frank W. Burton called embez- e x“' < farm and his fireside. He zlement case agdinst Lieutenant Governor {4 hat the millennium is ¢ Fred Sterling for trial’ at Springfi L But he i1t going 10 « Il Attorney for Sterling obtained R SO .y | "%, any_conference, any court’s consent to con e e Y |nations which has o rne Tt the marti: was rum- e Steamship Pallas broke line shaft while : /105 Sl S i v a: & L proceeding from Buenos A o/ ‘gani|E4E s oy e . e forefr Fracnisco, six_miles nort - & 8o with Island The El Dorado, bound from Nex | P - s ca Orleans for San Francisco, respond d that followsd the Arllng" | The grest conference ‘in W her call for help. A - i not be suffered to dez: ' nds. But the crowd that {to an ~interna = de was even greater. was the warning soun Between 3,000 and 5,000 bales of cot- | $2% ‘1 pariie 1 th pro leipe sl ton were burned or badly damaged e e st e I on S Wise, of the Free Sy fire which destroyed a storage t g g Nk Se Witk 4 ‘What A<"1‘M . the plant of the Bolivar Cotton Compress | ol o e asked. hat Company at Cleveland, was estimated at approxi The mately §500, Dr. C. Yloyd Haviland, superintendent of the stale hospital for the insane at| Middletown, has offered h's resignation to accept the appointment as chairman of the state hospital commission New York state, of | The Serbian and Albanian governments have been invited to send representat to the meeting of the exccutiv the league of nations in Pari: i vember 18, when the Jugoslav invasion of Albania will be considered, wit GO Twe armed men entered the jewelry store of Edward J. Gallant in the do tow section of St. Lou me New York, Nov. 11.—The pe Boston, Nev. 1 employes Into a_rear room and i | world expect success from th loccupy the pulpls o with jewelry valued at from $33,000 to |conference at Washington near Boston next S $50,000, excuse or a reason for a workingmen's sermo s, president ol in industrial re'ations.” The monthly tonnage report of on of Labor, told the The Cegtral Labor Un United States Steel Corporation s peeting in Madison Square ( 4,286)829 tons of unfilled orders on han October 31. This Is a dec . the crash he nation s pa peakin; ed. “He is not sure yet ik o called upon to don his Failure would b notice teatures Armistice Da¥ | armaments must go o and pr: disarmament in { yiee upon it 50 motor cars carrying women | oniy chasie, e -l . ves of nearly every chance of the statesmen amd 2 women in the city. If they fail to * to ‘make peace The J. Rankin Drew will not fail to ‘unmake' them. If the made up chiefly of Actors | eonference fails, the people will mot fail held memorial exerciscs | 1o ‘unmake them? If the conference faile e center of | the people will “tak e ma P 0 their own hands.™ nessed by a cro LABOR LEADERS TO 0CCUPY PULPITS IN BOSTON SUNDAY MPERS VOICES PEOPLE'S DEMAND FOR DISARMAMENT ing assignments of night {churches, included I was w s the high climax of f [Congregational, Universalist and Ba filled orders on September 3 c test between the old and the new.” | tist sasiorstes and & ey e ooy i said phi The_invitation tp union heads to ade 4,560,670, i ' | force, by fyranny, by dress church congregations came from PROPOSITION TO AVERT militarism, has been sw : {the Greater * Boston Fes = c |world. That is the param a5t/ of |Churchas ~ Bovals Sl CARMENT WORKEES' STRIKE | . ime. A aystein has been siain, Un-|neaiay scoepted B reciore: | less those who are to be engaged in those | from the union. doffed 3 Nov. 11.—A proposition to | le=s ¢ i | , a\'?:('t::fl:'hre:(’l\m strike of §0,000 | £reat labors shall comprehend this fact |for overalls and wielded workmen garment workers here next Monday was | and shall build upon it, we may weil ha on construction jcis. oftered by Benjamin Schiessinger, pres- [ fears for the future. If stateemen do ik ident of the International Ladies' Gar- ?;:g"'::&:::-’::" 1t mas well e doubied |TROHIBITION AGEMIS SEIZE ;::h"x:c“t:;::rr\: o I tee mita | whether the world €an persist under the 5,556 BARKELS OF WINN States senators who had made efforts |needless burden which their actions will today to prevent the strike. impose. New York, Nov. 11.—Wina suppossdly After reviewing the oration of a bi-| With the threat and the ehallenge of |imangroctured for sacramenta: parnosed partisan commissioner to conseder means great strongh of ilitarism 2 and vaiued at more than & ossible for the nations of the ¢ million of increasing production In the trade and | gone, it is e T Yeport Noverber 1, he wroto: world to organize for peace and unless | g eral prohibition agenis “If the employers’ association con- | they do so- organtze they may face ca- |upon a winery in East Th sent before November 14 to continue op- | tasirophe. There is today throushout the | goott g '§ 356 barrels of erations under the terms of the existing [ world a revulsion of feeling and a re- agreemernit upon the understanding that ; sen: the jolnf commission resume its work |of manhood and womanhood and of | E ¢, Yellowler. 73ing fede and repofts definite recommendations by | waalth. There is in the tide of the day | fon director, $ai, a5, had the 15th'day of next January, the union |a great current wlich runs toward peace. | vestigating the Ly will call off the strike immediately. “But £ the manufacturers will not |to recede from their unreasonable autocratie | the position and merely consent to defer ac- | the tion' to a_date more convenlent for them, | of the workers will be forced to take up |cur the fight for their rights without delay.” | ail 4§ el We must take th liquor, and arrested six men fo tment against further criminal w: fng the Volitead Act cffrrent as it serves, reduce the armamen's of the world to last possible degree, 10 make secure large quantities cf to illggai channels. sacramental liquor. The trafl, led him & the East Third street winery. where 1 peace of the people of all the nations |of his agents, he s bought a galom earth. 1 fwe fail (o take this |or “sacramental wine' for a small sus rent as it runs we shall, I fear, Jose |and paid a deposit on a barrel, our ventures. was to be caled for later.

Other pages from this issue: