Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 7, 1921, Page 1

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Frm— VOL. LXIII—NO. 296 POPU LATION 29,685 10 PAGES—78 COLUMNS ARTICLES OF AGREEMENT FOR THE “TREATY,- m. BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND" “Irish Free State” to Have Dominion Form of Government— To Become One of the Group of Nations Forming the British Commonwealth of Nations—Members of Irish Parliament Must Swear to Be Faithful to King of Great Britain—Neither Parliament of Ireland Shall Endow or Restrict Any Religion—Irish Free State Her Own Costal Defense, Defense by Sea to be by Great Britain—Military Force is to be Proportionate to Force | Maintained by Great Britain—British Parliamaznt will | Devote Session December 14 Exclusively to the Irish| Settlement Question—The Treaty Has Y=t to Come Be- fore the Ulster Government. By The A. P.)—The 7 the “treaty be- Ireland,” as'the | Article IV that the ers of the - & Aoe, DRih i e Irish | f His Majesty | nd hid 1 sue- her a [ member- e ng the won ¢ natlons, Sy OF1ial Agrecment | e agreement | « Unio South . « e position of the - . 0 the re- nash e representa v perial par . n of Canada shall Liability For Pablic Debt. i Article V: The Irish F ' 1 and Sen Defense 4 Kinpdom a i exis proportion a having regard of I heing determ. reement. by the a sdensndent per- fhe British Em- an arrangement T for at this shall Irish I Ports Open te Either Country. The ports of IX g and Pay Article X oh F To itary Trish » payment of the custom- dues, ether ™ ges, Officials, ice foress and ment eftactive in pursuance of the here- ¢ paragraph Provided that this agresment shall 3% apply to members of the auxiliery police foree or persons recrulted in | ireat Britain for the Roya! Irish Con- stabulary during the two veads next pre. seding the & hereof. The British gov- srament will assume respongbility for such compensation > payable to one, an: government ! (b) in tim and other fes | detense as | | Defensive Fore ir Compensation. e State agrees to pay falr com- terms not ar. those accorded by ther publy charged by it = eonsequence of the change of govern- or pensions as may of Provisions of Tnt om the X “Article we month » parl nstrament e e U N nent for the the powers of the parliament th a view principle { armament o securing of interna- it the gov- Free State estab- military defense | thereof shall not | roportion of the maintained in h the populs he population of reat Bri- Free State shall be ships of the other government of the =8 favorab! the aet of 1920, members of the po- servants or who retire these cxcepted per- Government. the expiration of passing of the act ification of this @ presented, a commission consisting ‘n'A n the event of no such address as is herein mentloned heing presented, and | DEFEAT OF GOVERNMENT {those provisions may include: (a) safe- LT e e guards with remard to patromage In | Northern Treland: (h) safegrauds with Ottawa, Dec. 6.—Premicr Meighen was rezard to the collection of revenue in | gefeated in his home constituensy, Por- Northern Ireland: (e) safeguards with re- | tage La Prairle, Man., in_the Tunadian £ard to imnort and export duties aftecting | general election togax, ~His opponent | the trade and Industry of Northern Tre- | was Harry Leader, progicssive. Jand: (d4) sapeguards for the minorities Returns received tonight indicated de- in Northern Treland: (e) sottlement of | feat of the Meighen government and a | financial relations hetween Northern T is to Undertake nified In writing his or her acceptance of this instrument. But this arrange- ment shall not continue in force beyond the expiration of twelve months from the date hereof. “Article XVIII: This Sastrument shall he submitted forthwith by his majesty government for the approval of parlia- ment and by the Irish signatories to a meeting summoned for the purpose of members elected fo sit in the house of commons of Southern Treland, and if ap- proved it shall be ratified by the nec- essary leglslation. ned on behalf of the British del- egation: “Lloyd George. “Austen Chamberlain. . Birkenhead. “Winston Churchill. “Worthington Evans. “Hamar Greenwood. “Gordon Hewart. “On ‘behalf of the Irish delegzation: “Are of Grioththa (Arthur Griffith) fichael O. O. Sileain (Michael .Col- lins “Richard Bartun (Robert C. Barton). “E. S. Dugan (Eamon J. Dugan) “Seorsa Ghabgain Ui Dhubhthaizh * (George Gavan Duffy). 2 e 1| “Dated the sixth ot December, 1021” Northern 1ran el e An Annex to Treaty. the government of Ireland act of 192 An anmex is attacheli to the treaty. <hall so far as they relate to Northern | Clause I specifies that admiralty property Ireland rematn of full force and effect, | and rights at the dockyard of and no clection shali be held for the re- | Berehaven are to be retained a n of members to serve In the parlia- | 2ot date and the harbor ment of the Irlsh Free fhr the | facilities for coastal defense at constitutencles of o eland un. | Queenstown, Belfast, Lough and Loughs- less a resolution is nassed by both hous. | Willy to remain under British care, es of parliament of Northern Treland In | vision also being made for oil, fuel 2 favor of holding such elections before | Storage. ; i 6 ot S e v e PELOe L e ot that a convention Mk Shinrti s shall be made petw re two govern- : Fihien Jpeiamd. ments to give effect to the following con- | L “Article XIT: Tt before the exira- | ditions: tion of =ald month an address is pre-| That submarine cables shall not be sented tohis male by bo ouses of | janded or wireless stations for communi- parliament of Northern Ireland to that | cation with places outside of Ireland es-; effect, the powers of the parliament and | tablished, except by agreement with the government of the Free Trish State shall [ British government; that existing cable no longer cxtend to Northern Treland, | rights and wireless ~oncessions shall not {and the provisions of the zovernment of | he withdrawn except by agreement with {Treland act of 1320 (includinx those re- | the British government. .and that the ating to the council of Treland) shall | British government shall be entitled to %0 far a thev relate to Northern Treland | land additional submarine cables or es- continue o be of full force and effect, | tabiish additional wireless and this instrument shall have effect, sub. | communication with places fect to‘the necessary modifications Ireland; that lighthous “Provided that If such an address I | cons, etc., shall be maintained of | Irish_government and ot he re. | landslide for the liberals led by W. L. land and the Trish Free State: (f) estab- | MacKenzie King. Seven members of the shment of a loczl militia in Northern | cabinet were defeated Ireland and the relation of the defence | Premler Meighen issued the following forces pf the Trish Free State and of | statement at 11.30 tonight, admitting_the Northern ‘Treland, respectively and it at = fall of his government: any such meeting nrovisions are agreed | “I accept the verdict of the people, to. the same shall have effect as if they | have no further comment to make." were Included amongst the provisions subfect to which the mowers of parlin- ment and of the government of the Trish Free State are to he exercleable Northern Ireland under Article 14 here- CRUSHED BETWEEN TWO in ELECTEIC LOCOMOTIVES ) New Haven, Dec. 6.—As the State of | “Article XVT: Nefther the parllament | Maine Express sped through Bridgeport of the Irish Fres State nor the parlla- |tonight a towerman saw what appeared ment "\ Northern Treland shall make any | to be & man caught on the coupling be- S & ok shiber Weilly or Todivach tween the two clectric locomotives of endow any religions or prohfhit or re- [ the train. Word was sent to this city strict the free exeroisethereof or glve |and when the train reached the local any preference or imposs anv dlsabllity | station the body of Michael O'Day, firc on’ the acconnt of relizious helief or re- | man, of this city, was found hanging liglous status, or affect prepfudicially | from the counling. It is believed he fell the rizht of any child to nttend schonl | While passing between the ‘ocomotives. receiving publlc menev. withont atte: ing the religious Instruction of the sch nd- 001, His head and chest had been crushed, O'Day had been in the employ of the or make anv dlscrimination as respects | New Haven road for 12 years. wstate ald between schools under rhe management of different. religlous de- [ 3 T nominations. or divert anv religious de- | ONE BANK ROBBER KILLED nomination or any educational institut anv of fts Dropertr exeent utillty puroses and on compensation. the payment Administratton of Southern Treland. “Article XVIT: arrangement for Southern Treland during By way of provisio tha administration the of and the constiftution of n accordance therewith, s taken forthwith for su; o5 shall for the constitutencies 1ana stnee the passing of the governm of Trland act in 192 ing a provistonal government. And British government shall take steps n eseary to transfer to such provisiol guvernment the powers and maching requisite for the discharge of its tes, provided that every member of such snd goverament of the Irish Free State . provisional government shall have slg- MREPDIE tor public | interval which must elapse hetween the date here- a parfliament and a government of the Trish Free Stata aoning a meet. ing of the memhers of parlinment slected in Southern Tre- 0 and for constitut fon AND ANOTHER CAPTURED of | Portland, Ore., Dec. §.—One bank rob- ber was shot and Rilled and H. H. New- all, president of tne Bank of Fast Port- land, was shot in thg stomach in,a hold- up of the bank late today. Another robber was captured after a chase. A third man escaped. F. W. Alt, cashier, shot the robber who was killed Police reported the money taken b: the robbers was recovered. The amount was not announced. nal of be STATE POLICE CLOSE THEATRE IN ent NEW HAVEN the | New Haven, Dec. 6.—The Globe thea- | tre, & moving picture house in Chapel - street, was closed this afternoon by the ery | state police. Patrons In the theatre were Qu- | ordered out. The action was taken on the grounds that alterations were made in the theatre without a building permit. Violence Develops In Packers’ Strike At Fort Worth Two Strike Sympathizers Were Shot— National Guard Called Out in St. Paul. Chicago, Dec. § (By the A. P.) - Vio- lence marked the second day of the trike of packing house workers in sev- eral cities of the middle west and resuit- ed in the calling out of national guard troops tonight to patrol the packing plant district in south St. Paul. At Fort Worth, Tex., two strike sym- pathizers were shot and wounded and a negro who, it is said, did the shooting severely beaten. At Omaha, Neb., missiles were thrown by various persons, including women, in clashes between strike sympathizers and workmen, Policemen with drawn revolvers held a crowd of three hundred persons at bay here today until reserves arrived, after arresting strike sympathizers said to have beaten a workman as he boarded a street car. A man and his daughter, packing plant emploves, were twice at- tacked hy strike sympathizers as they arted to leave a packing several arrest turbances, The calling out of troops at south St. nt and were made for minor dis- Paul followed attempts of the packing companles to bring workers to the planis to take the place of the strikers, lahor e lm s refusing to discontinue the pick- ‘,”j' ion men In an address defied the | Kansas court of industrial relations to sto; the strike, asserting he would | rather go to jall than give up. Troops Out in St. Paul. | St Paul, Minn, Dec. 6—National | utard troops have been called out to patrol-the packing phant district in south | where close picketing by strik- | ing employes has prevented the use of strikebreakers, it was announced tonight | Adjutant General W. F: Rhine had conferred over the telephone with Gov. J, A O Preus who is in Washington, Calling out of the troops followed un- 1l attempts of both the Swift and | our companies to bring in men to the place of strikers, and afier con- ces with iabor leaders nad failed to ffect an agreement for a discontinuance of the picketing. i after threa persons, one to be annointed by the | 3 M'-d' to except by agrecment with the; MORSE MAY BE TAKEN INTO government of the Trisy Free Stats, one | British government; that war signal stz s Cgniadabaii i T ampninied by e poverament_of | tions shall be cosed down and left SENNNN IR raNDy Northern Treland, and one. who shall be | charge of care and maintenance pa Washington, Dec. 6.—Charles W. airman, to be apneinted hv the Brit- | the government of the Irish Morse of New York, who has bee ah zovernment, shall determine in nc. | being offered the option of taking them | ooyt g PGt W AT \“ 188 oo Xet cordance with the wishes of the inhab. | over and working them for commercial | po o fhom Erance by Attorney General unts. so far a8 may be compatible with | purposes, mubjoct to admiralty inspection; | SUSEETLY In connectlon with a federal momic and geasraphic conditions, the | and_guaranteeing the upkeep of existing | (MesERUon of transactions with the soundaries hefween Northern Treland | telegranhic communication th o DaYe S S Rl and the rest of Treland. and for the pur-| Clause ITI provides that s fin S e nds in New York, gov- poses of tha government of Treland act | Shal be made between the two govern. | “riment offic tonight. 9€ 1020 and of fhis Inairament the hound. | ments for the fegulation of civil com- | ston L& the - coxernmenile OF 1988 knd of ity insusimshi B bovacs| RS (Or kD iy joourse ot action when Morse, who is ary_of No Treland ‘alallhe: ufcr | Sl e R Y | now at sea, arrives in this country, will »s s e . e | Po_Teached’ by officials of fhe shipping 8 Arrangements are already being made {hoara and Jjustice departmen Was Powers of Southcrn Parllament. | oxiarangrs Lot ‘haakssing =t e aig. = event of Morse indicat- “Artigls JCHT: For the purhose of the iQh“\‘WS of England. Cardinal Bourne |ing % \il'ingness to come to Washington ast foregoing article the powers of the |NAs arranged for a service in Westmin- )y, stops may be necessary jarent of Southern Ireland under 'h".i'{r"‘:'fia‘:"rv\"r“.rnT‘ji"g«:‘fiiym:“ ’\1:\'- Heas | concerned with the case de- vernment of Ireland, act of 1920, to | 9f the Tmmaculate Conception. when warrant charging Morse with memiera of the council of Treland, | Vascount Fitzalan, viceroy of ~ Treland, | Eud e s S e e o 90 on [ cided to hold special services on Sunday | "4 be hecessary for a new warrant “Artiele XIV: After the expiration of | M e m s o G b e B James Craig received the terms of | '° 58 (OKCL, N0 CHROET o\ Mon tioned in Article XTI hereof is 'vrrsflnvrdf..“:r"‘m‘"‘ while the morthern parliamentiy oy or sy Seane v Sl pacaen o et (hn parliatent of the government of { : 5 5 n) | Which had any connection with the rthern Treland shall continue to exer- | (Continued on Page F"'ef‘ S e ol tion ot hls e s ciee a8 respects Northern Treland the | ety board, “all information data owers conferred unon them by the gov- | MAY EXTEND PERIOD OF without reservation of im- ent of Ireland act of 1920, but the | IMMIGRANT RESTRICTION | 3 . J. Lambert. his counsel, as- ament of the zovernment of The | { serted tonight in a letter to United Free State shall in Nerthern Ire- [ \yashington, Dec. ot District Attorney Gordon. Mr. have. in relation to matters in re- | extending the life of the 3 . im s sons now hold themselves ch the partfament of North-| migratiov restriction act beyond next|in readiness, the letter said, to appear ern Ireland has not the power to make | June 20, the date set for its expiration, | before any proper offiefa) or tribunal for aws that act (tneluding matters | wiil be considered by the house immigra- | urpose of glving this information ! which. under said act, ar> within the|iion committee at hearings beginning called will walve immunity. jurisdiction of the council of Treland),| rext Tuesday. W. W. Husband, com-| ‘“These gentemen feel” Mr. Lambert © same powers as in the rest of Ire- | missioner general of immigration; Rob-|added, “that as civil litization is pend- tand. subject to such other provisions as E. Tod, immigration commissioner at | ing touching the amounts due from the may be agreed to in the manner herein- | the port of New York, a1l representa- | zovernment that certainly for a square after appearng. tives of steamship companies are among | deal Mr. Morse should have the chance Relations of North and Senth. those who will be heard. {to physically land in America and be il % AL oo i afte | T Some miembers 'of committee are | enabled thereby to defend himself before Jate hereof the sovernment of Northers | S2id_to favor strongly continuation of {an ex varte indictment is obtained.” Tretand and the e Rovemmer® | the present jaw with slight wmodification,| In the event of an indictment being T Ronthern Trelamd. mereinatier soment, | while others, who have opposed it Ttom | returned while he is on the high se futed, may mees for the wieanee of aia. | the outset, are reported to be preparing ithe letter concluded. “Mr. Morse will Cursine provislons. sublect 1o which the | 'O, ChamPion new leglslation s a perma | voluntarily come at’ onco to Washing- oy nny et | e e | ment. immigration policy |ton. will " furnish appropriate bafl and prepare the presentation of his defense.’ | FREIGHT TRAI KILLS TWO MEN NEAR DEEP RIVER | Deep River, Conn., Dec, 6.—Ambrose | | K. Miner, aged 52, “and Louis E. Rey~ nolds, aged 64, were Killed by a freigit |train at Pratt’s Cove Crossing, late this { forenoon. They were in an automobile | returning after a shopping trip in this | village. ~They lived on what is known as the River road. The train which struck the machine was on the Valle | line of the New York, ~New Haven and Hartford railroad. Reynolds was driving the machine and as they approached the crossing a pile {of ties on each side of the road ob- scured clear observation of the tracks. The cow catcher of the engine caught the machine. Reynolds was _thrown about 150 feet up the track and his body was againet a pile of ties. Miner was | thrown about ha'f the distance. Miner was a Civil war veteran and {leaves a widow and five daughters and two sons. Reynolds leaves two sons, one in. South Norwalk and the other in New Britain, e | OFFICERS ELECTED BY THE ANTI-SALOON LEAGUE Washington, ~Dec. 6.—Right Rev. Thomas C. Nicholson of Chicago, bishop of the Methodist Episcopal church, today was elected president of the Anti-Saloon league for the next two years. He suc- ceeds Bishop Luther B. Wiison of New York. Josephus Daniels of Raleigh, N. C., for- mer secretary of the navy, Bishop W. Ainsworth of Macon, Ga., Bishop A. R. Clippinger of Dayton, O., and Rev. 8. H. Brooks of Waco, Tex,. were elect- ed vice presidents, In addition to other incumbents re-elected. DEMOCRATIC MAYOR ELECTED IN MERIDEN Meriden, Conn., Dec. 6.—In the bien- nial city election held here today, Judge Henry T. King, democrat, was e'ected over Lioyd E. Jennings, his republican opponent by 8§71 votes. King carried in- to office with him all the democrats on | the city ticket and carried three of the five wards for the court 'of | common council, thereby electing nine of the 13 voted for today. This will the next council 18 republicans ana 12 demoerats. {Substitute For Anglo- 1922 budget, calling for $35 Japanese Alliance: Is Absorbing the Attention of the Arms Delegates—De- Washington, Dec. 6 (By the A. P.).— The effort to find an acceptable substi- tute for the Anglo-Japanese alliance has so diverted the attention of many of the arms delegates as to throw even the question of the naval ratio temperarily into the background. Both the Japanese and the British have shown a desire to include the United M aquadruple France, What may ha arrangement, also including been the attitude of gates who desire to have the Unitad may be glven in the near future by the senate itself. to what course the negotiations may take is grow- inz among sen come to- gether for tha on, and several have indicated might seek in a _genate debate to bring the que: fon of before the an entente more conspicuow public. Whilo this phase of the Washington conforenca is developing. the maval ratio negotiations still are a ta standstill while the Japanese delemates wait for word from Tokio. It may he sevéral days ba- fore thoy are in a position to resume the naval disc The full committee of the whole on Far East will meet again tomorrow, however, after a recess |7 of five davs, and will Aroceed with its discussions of Chinese problems. In the five day interim closing tonight the for- mal activities of the conference have heen confined to meetings of the sub-commt- tee on draft of r-=oluticns and te con- versations of ihe Japancse and Chinese regarding Shantunz. Both the draft commlittee and the Shantung zroup met | today. but neither reported material progress. JUDGE TO DECIDE PATERNITY o OF BABY GUY STILLMAN Poughkeepste, N. Y. in hospitai to inguire as to the condition of “his wife” she added. show girl took un light housekeeping in Sixty-fifth street, New York., e the weighty hand of the Canadian rev: Republican Victors in Springfleld. |nue ofticials. 2 Springfield, Mass., Dec. 6-—All of the e Middletown, Dec. sixteen republican candidates for munici- | “C-1" s big elgar shaped navy “blimp* | today started an val offices, three of whom had the in- |proved the value of helium, the new non. | robbery of $2,000 worth of lobiceo dorsement of the democrats, were elected | inflammable gas discovered during tho | the sheds of Adam here today. In the chief contest Ralph |war. The great gas bag with its endant | Gardoski, in West Crom W. Ellis, Jr. republican, defeated J. M. |car droned its way t) Washington from | The Bdwards, . demoerat, by a mejority of | Hampton oads, Virginia, and back again, | in bundles, was discov 1,491 In 4 contest for the sehaol commit- | making an actual demonsiration of the | tng. Motor fruck ir: tee. There wag no mayoralty contest. - lifting power of the new gas. is the only clue found, homes in Watkinsville, while another negro was shot and killed. i ited in fie in the busincss district of Yum sire to Include United States o s in New Entente. $250,000, quet in Berlin, declared Germany i ing to fulfill her obl must bear the consequences. weeks ago, States in any ‘entente that may repiace = the alllance, and a tentative treaty ilraft | Comgressman Mott introduced a hill in under consideration by some of the gov. | the houss providing adjusted eomp:nsa- ernments concerned would provide for 4 [tion for world war vetcrans fund tc raised by 1 per cent sales James J. Johnston. prize fight promoter, $130,830,000, nermitted which voters approval under a bill irtr duced by Representative Hill Maryland. peutic agent and its medicine. has been sicians American Medical Association. teur middle ing him from his home in Fordham his New York officy known restaurantséin New York |arrested on federal | violation of the Volstead lice sent a letter to the convent Association of Moving Picture F “speclal safety officer” In every ists composing the conference s mittee on' the laws of warfare. fllooded the Nova Scotian coast with car- goes of contraband, have begun to feel BRIEF TELEGRAMS New York board of aldermen passed th 233,,420. Supreme court upheld Virginia law reg ulating the planting of oyster bels ,u waters of the state. Two negroes were taken Ga. from and their hed One man was Kiiled and several hurt Chancellor Wirth, In a speech at ations, but Henry P. Davison. rgan, who was partner aperated recuperating le, Ga. tax. the American delegates in the behind-the- [ Was sentenced to sixty cays ingpr scenes developments having to do with | fined $500 for failure to pay war tax the proposal remains a mystery. Taking | OB Eate Teceipts. the position that no entente suggestion is = “formally” before them, the American | K. L. Agassiz of Boston wa representatives Steadfastly retuse to is. | President of the mewly organized Copper cuss publicly in any way the possibility | and Brass Research association at the| of American participation in a political [ @Bnual meeting in New York resterday. . greement regarding the Far East. et In the absence of an authoritative ex-| Albanin of the Cunard line, arrived at planation of the American viewpoint, the | NeW ¥ork with 79 boxes of British bar ipression s gained by the delegates of (E0ld, valued at $2,370,000, consignad tc other powers that the American plenipo- | Kubn, Locb & Co ries are feeling their way very cau- — as they s to ascertain what | WAr department granted fhe req: course would be in accord with Arerican | 0f Brigadier General Treat for retireme i TubIe opratin from active service, effective April cognizing the senate's elaim to part- | 1923 nership in haping of internationa S o=t ping of intermational| yu, German cutrency eutput duriag th colicagues are said to be solicitous that | 125t Week in November, as shown by fis te sentiment of the treaty ratifylng |ires, avallable, increased 4750,000.0 branch of the government, as well as | 2T that of the executive, shall be take ey Sl ket Pleketing in connection with a senate opinion cowld be made in the |Stike 1s unjustifiable If carried midst of the negotiations, however, pre. | Joint “f “importunity and dogging.” th sents still another puzzle sHoceme courtismiel. A “gentleman’s agreement” or “ - g Eontlemsniajagreemont” of “unders | rromcstake Minieg Go. af Teadsiil, 5. | e i he Place of a treaty, would |jniyyication among employes, it will not _require senate confirmation, but | o ioation among employes, it his administration have indicated repeat- | 2" di#miss them on secon edly that they do mot ose to take = iznoring the senate's o artic b St S in international polictes. | Lo {CPA(® |threo commission ‘houses. ' Pol n alimolicies {; hey suspected it was the cesuit All of these considel < being |} 2 L ane it L e o Pring [black hand feud. No one was inj S I Mrs. i Vi dervon concert of nations. There have been Aistara Cata at SRk “, iod Dpies dications that the other nowers concerned | preq v, Tnderw: od, Sr., in Birmingham, | plan £ would prefer that the eoment be put f oy ot ol .| P to be seen how far they will press the — 2 at riddl, ¢ 30 totaled $350,374,358, while assets wer Sale of beer and light wine wonld he in conzressional aistric: Tepubl A questionnaire on aleohol as a thera- empl yment as sent to 40,000 p United in the Charles H. Kilpatrick, a famous ama- distances runner of tw ars ago, died suddenly on a train bring AN APPEAL FORNOR IN PRESIDENT'S | Securities—Urges Enactment of a [/i=2 the Allied Debt—Of the Armament C- ident Says “A Most Gratifying Wo is Not Improbable”—Sces Need For | Distribution and Mark=ting of Farm Prod { Reccommends a Flexible Tariff, an Indus Constitutional Amendinent to Stop th= T ¥ kv slative Assistance to Cooperative M Labor Organizations act Unfair Terms of Employment or to Actual Di nzton, of seed gr of stress” volume w ad s for a tribu a “ Jor organizations s 0 d to “exact un s more The manager anl anley's, one of two employes of SENA’ the Tenderlo! warrants act. Superintendent Hurles of the state po- n of Boston, urging the apnoint theatre. A statewlde strike of all labor nnions Kansas may be called if Governor Al- b-com- TE COMMITTEE DISCU The comparison of pass ceipts is made with the last SES Fi OREIGN DEE over the vatern 3 len interferes in thecstrike af b z - Stillman came to an end here today but | emploves at Kansas City, W. E. Freeman, it will be several weeks hefore Supreme i president of the State Federation of La- upset Court Justice Morschauser decides | bor, said yesterday. of comm d Whether or not the child is legitimate. ——ns senate at once n ¢ John E. Mack. annointed guardian-at-| Samuel Untermever, counsel to the asure. law for the younester when James A.|Lockwood Investigating commitice, sa was under: Stillman. ire New York banker. | mre than 10,000 business coneorns e e impugnedl his vaternity upon suing Mrs. | United States are violating Anne T ivorce, announced | laws withont anw interferenc at the close of *s proceedings that | state or loeal authorities. he had rested his case in defense of [ Guy's good mame. Tle reserved the right, | Wiliam €, Webster of Newburyport however, to question any witnesses who | went to Boston seeking a market for a Simmon ! might he calleq by Mrs. Stillman’s coun-| chunk of ambergris valued at $1.200 to ; North Carolina sel at a hearing in Poushkeensle Jan-|$1,500 which he had found on the heach |meeting of the nary 17. at Plum Island, near the mouth of the | tomorrow. at w Meanwhile the divorce issue still wi'l| Merrimack river. {have them decide on unite be contested. Counsel for both sides Sre have agroed to Montreal, January 11, to| A porcelain statuette of the voung Stmmons’ vro hear testimony of witnesses called by | Mozart with his n. presented to the : Mrs. Stillman to defend her against the| Harvard Glee club by the French banker's charges that she was guilty of | ernment in appreciation of the c > inter. misconduct in Canada with Fred Beau-| visit to France last summer. was ayments must not b vals, Tndian guide. named as co-respond-| on exhibition at Harvard university. an_July of next year. The am ent. Their testimony, it was said.| {ment provides further that t 1 wonld have no bearing on tie paternity! otto H. Kahn and others lost appeal fo | States shall not nermit intcrchans of bahy Guy. After the hearing Here | supreme court fo recover lagacy taxes ool | Ponds of the debtor powers in pavment In Tanuary, the case wil me to Referee|lected under the Soanish-American war | f ‘) Fations excent in thn case o Danfel 1. Gleason and Justice Morschau- | revenue act of 1902 on ai estate whicy |N°WI¥ created governments. The com- ser for decision. they clalmed they did not come into pos. | T/=<I0 nv be left discretionary now- The only testimony In opposition to | session prior to July 1 vf that ers in dealing with gover s Mr. Stilman’s Indictment of Gi pa- = except as to the cancellation or remis- ternity today was that of Mary J. Sul-| Grinding of the mew sugar crop was | 5107 Of the debt. ‘tvan, who told of Mr. Stillman's visits | started at tCentral. Fla. in one of the | =y to his wife at Pocantico Hills durinz |three mills of the Punta Alegre Sugar | FIVE CENT FARE SHOWS Janaury and February. Guy was born|Co. It is estimated the Punta, San Jua LOSS IN BRIDGEPORT the November following, and Trinidad mills will start around Two other witnesses supported Mrs. | Christmas time. Hartford, Dec. §.—In the first v Stillman's counter charges that her the five " cent fare “test hushand intimate with Florence M.| Copper & Brass Research Assoctation | lines of the GOt areinkin Leeds, former Broadway show girl. and|says an annual saving of $400,000 wi | Connecticut company fhere was an in- was the father of her son, Jay Ward|pe effecoted in upkeép of the proposed | crease of more than 100,000 in the num- Leeds, horn in September, 1918. Mary | Hudson River bridge by weather pr.of- | ber of passengers carried. said the r t Farney related her exnerience as nurse|ing the bridge with bronze. of President Luctus. §. Storrs o com- to Mrs. Leeds from June 1918 until af- : pany, which was submitted to Chairman ter the birth of Jay at which, she w The task of forecasting devices which | Richard T. ITizzine of the o reported to have said, Mr. Stillman was|would be,used fn “the next war” is the | commission today. In spite o s in “excited, mervous” attendance. Af- |assignment which nas develapad upon | CT°ase in passengers, the receipts on terward he freauently telephoned to the|the sub-committee of distinguished jur- | !ines showed a decrease of S5 461 s and re- week of the The banker visited Mrs. Leeds at her — ten cent fare. During the fir: X of Long Island residence several times a| The slx Amerlcan battle crulsers mow | the five cent fare 406650 five cent f: week and was known to the nurse as|under comstruction but which may be | DASSengers were carried, alth | Frankiyn Harold Leeds, she testified, af- | scrapped under the limitation wf arms | actual count of passengers would be lees ter identifying a photograph of Mr.|program could be converted Into fast | the report says, because of the payment Sti'lman as Leeds. passenger . vessels, Joseph W. Powell, | Of an extra fare by those passenzers who Mabel Younz, who sald Florence | president of the Emergeicy Flect corpor- | Cross the zone limit in the center of ihe TLeeds employed her as mald for three |ation, satd. city. weeks in November 1917, declared she _— _“I hope to see a better showing.” wos | knew Mr. Stillman by his proper name| The rum runmers of St. Plerre and dri. | the only ~comment Chairman His and recounted how he and the former|queln, N. §., who for months have | Would make on the repo: INVESTIGATING ROBBERY $2,000 WORTH OF TOBACCO §.—The s investigation oF loss of the tobacco, which was ticd ered this E near the sheds | HENRY Should No t w N | county wit L {manvamn ) AL 27

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