Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
POPULATION 29,685 10 PAGES—78 COLUMNS PRICE TWO CENTS DAIL EIREANN CABINET - AT NOON TODAY Meeting Called by President De Valera to Consider the Agree- ment For An Irish Settlement—Members in London Summoned to Report Immediately—Royal Proclanfation . Has Been Issued Libérating More Than 3,000 Prisoners Interned in Ireland—British Premier is Being Showered With Telegrams of Congratulation From All Over the World—Premier Craig of Ulster Sees Peace in Sight, With the Exercise of Patience and Good Will, P.)—An'rbup eually enthusia ieith tried to STONEET his thanks from | the window of the car, but his words were fening cheers. e a brief statement ress this evening, But made no di rect comment himself tc. remar The | lost in th he agreement for | n the possivle influ- the proposed Ireland as a separate n would natumily be more restive un neighiboring cually willing to ¢ -op- {tien, but would b of common concorn to twe nations liv prociamation ca of parfiament ne: memhers to attend for co week orcers REJOICING sideration of ROUND CONGRATULATIONS Slnnatty ave heretofore disrezar ed the summoning of the h ¢ take their seats. Valera, Michael Col- 1 oiher prominent members of the ¢ cabinet resimed considera- tion of the proposals thig afternoon Mr. is awaiting at but this is cer to be delayed in view nvestigate the details ament and the Sinn Fein del-gates. , there is no aus to trade and commerce one of the most prom conviction that i t7 hgton conference. odueine count be direction bave be:n conditions” of has weailed things which o trade zemerally 1s exnected he confidence following upcn the ro- £ one of the most difficult n uestions from the path of the gov PREMIER CRAIG OF U SEES PEAC A. P)—In a e from Sir James Craig received t end with p ence and good = hand of time outstanding sumbitted to us by the froedom of choosing salned under divine as their leader. anavated of that to make ans with regard to the there were ambiguitl the document. ATUSTRALIA REJOICES FOR IRELAND Meibourne, Australia. Dec. 7 (By the ritish prime the members of epresentatives when a ca- Lioyd George was read newspaners the | chgering was renewed when Mr. Hughes ‘our new sister do- whom we heariily welcome and to whom we wish prosperity The newspaper comment is a chorus of T. P. 0'CONNOR REJOICES STTLEMENT ~—T. P. O'‘Connor, na- membér of parliament for Liv- ‘as bringing with it commonwealth peace of the world disappearance sole arbiter between na- < one of the Triniy of war as the government un*| JEws FOR WELFARE OF has been e THE IRISH FREE STATE 7.—The chief rabbi he was over- whelmed with joy at the conclusion of +s sigmed tonight by the R e oats Dublin said ould unceasingly work for the success, prosperity and ad- Trade umion walidariis. | vancement of the Irish Free Stat-. »n leaving London = ad a wildly i-off frem thousands of London gathered in Euston ! POPE CONGRATULATES KING GEORGE AND DE and women London, Dee. 7.—(By The A. P.) sages of congratulation Pope Benedict Eamenn De played in the Anglo-Irish azreemert, ac- cording to a dispatch from Rome today to the Central News Agency. rge foree of police present tried ave been sent to King George and ne ewpacially was besiegod welve policemen at in the proc NT CREATED IMPRESSION IN BERLIN Arthur Griffith and less bois'erous Berlin, Deg. 7.—The successful issue of CABLED PARAGRAPHS Troops Fire Ppon Mobs of Cretons. Campa, Island of Crete, Dec. 7—Roy- al troops today fired upon mobs of Cre- tans who had refused to serve in the Greek army and had gathered and were threatening the city. To Form Belglan Cabinet. Brussels, Dez. 7.—Colonel Jasper Theu- neys, minister, of finance in the cabinet May Dissalve Anglo- A Proposed New Four Power Treaty is Being Discussed of "H. Carton De Wiart, which has re 7 . signed, was reccived thla evening Dy | as a Substitute. King Albert ahd accepted the task of % * Iomfxng acncw ministry. ‘Washington, Dec, 7. (By the A. P.y— A mutual pledge not to go to war over disputes in the Pacific without a “cool- od” of discussion is the basix Says Assassin Was Armenian. 158 ot 5E Rome, Dec. 7—(By The ‘A. P)—Tha | of assassin of the former Turkish —2rand |as u substituie for the Anglo-Japanese vizler, sald ~Ali Pash, who was shot |aiiiance. - dead yesterday on the street here, 18 | Discussions of the proposal among the believed by his secretary, who was with ms delegates have reached a well ad him at the time, to have been an AT-|.anceq stage, ‘a:though none of the gov- menian. ' The assassin is still at I ernments concerned—the United States, —_—_— “| Great Britain, Japan and Frange—has DR. LORENZ TO CONTINUE give nits final approval. A suggestion that the Anglo-Jananese pact be revoked i has gone to London and Tokio. over the Pacific isl- FREE CLINICS FOR CRIPPLES —Although keenly | Dle _controversies New York, Dec. i | ands alone, hurt by the cold shoulder which he | eroup and Yap, would come under the the medical profession of this country ¥ ¥ cons 158 had turned toward him, Dr. AdolphProvisions of the mew [geomentt (¥e | Lorenz, famous Austrian surgeon, i s to tasmsimtioct DG sepuxts S kR cated tonight that he would probably | negotiations for which. 5 oarry on his free clinics for cripples | completion, and Hawaii is to be cons here, He had announced earlier in the|ered for purposes of the agreement as part of the American mainland. The problems of China or other por- tions of the Asiatic mainland are not to day that he would abandon them and re turn to Vienna. < “I'll stay, if they don’t throw me oyt he said tonight. {be touched Dby the proposed treaty, nor Tr. Lorenz attributed the feeling | Will it\contain provisions relating to Pa- against to animosities bred by the war | cific fortifications or the naval reduction and said it was general within the med- | program. Tt 1s ne le, however, |h:|‘t ical profestion of the United States. ‘The | all of these questions may come stmul- people as a whole, though, had been wos taneous’y ‘\n the point of a decision. ‘ derful beyvond description in their recep-|the American rlf\nzn'}n! lhe‘ project is tion of his work, the surgeon added. rezarded as establishing neither an’ al- “Whether 1 go home to Vienna or st liance nor an entente P:VH ‘merely as ap- and do what I can'is entirely up to t plying to the Pacific islands, the prin- health commissioner of New Yo" b cinles of the thirty ':d.d being peace trea- declared tonight. ties to which the United States already " 3 blic statement sotting When Health Commissioner Copeland | is a party. A public statemen was told of this, he said he would see to forth that position probably —will be it tomorrow that Dr. Lorenz remained. |made in the near future,~hy Secretary He said he would call td a group ‘fushes. of orthopedic surgeon up out a| For the present, the anthorized Amer- channel for the Austr tivi- | ican spoKesmen prefer to say mnothing ties that would shield him from exploita- | about their conversations on the subject tion and ensure warm and proper co- | which have heen proceeding entirelv be- operation. -urtain of “executive sessio Ih a statement made public at the| Apnarently the negotiations so far have health department, Dr. Lorenz said on|bheen kent within afvery narrow circle one should imagine that orthopec |centertng in tife has anything in common with the | Balfeur and Kato. Three"—Hughes, hods of “spine and bone masscurs” | An ev of the ontimism with e declared thousands of sufferers | n n officials who are in on have not had the benefit ¥ tuation in uld | theasecret view the.general have received “from the splendid cxem ‘ms conferchce was given today, plars of orthopedic surgery In this coun- | however, hy President Harding who de- ury, because they e unfortmyutely | clared in a nub’le address that the n fallen into the hands of practitia of various types of massage applicd to Lones and spines.” 3 “These cases, many of them, would no | doubt have recovered.” he added, “if they had been treated according to the meth- | ods which are so capably put into prac- | promtsed tn “succeed beyond our " Without making direct nee to the nromosed four power cment he redicted that the Wash- nzton conferenes would usher In a new in international smity. All the outward indications point to a fondest hone: tice by your American orthopedic sur|mereing of the Pacifc question whth geons. 1 have found that alveady some | fhe naval ratio problemi, so far as the of the great arfy of ffose v ave | final Aecisions of some of the forelen tried to develop massage in one form or |nations are concerned. No reply from another, to e the place of the precise | Toklo regarding the naval plan now I methods of medicine and surgery, have!expectad, until the. Japanese govern- sought to capitailze my presence here as ! ment s also readv to make some ex- a_means of advertising their methods | pressich on the four newer nronosal. Tt Nothing could he more dangerous to the | is n Welfare of the many unfortunates.” 12 FIREMEN OVERCOME ocsihle that in the final analvsis the ns of Shantunz and China gen- also hecome. interwnven in scheme hefore a spectfic and e seftlement of any of these ele- erally may BY GAS IN SPRINGFIELD |imentq ia reached. would not surprise close ob- Springfield, Mass., Dec. T.—Twelve fire- | coppn o if the whols range of con- men, including Deputy Chief E. ball and District Chiefs H J. R. Graves, were taken overcome wit illuminating A. Kim- Root and < Mnder con eration were ga- 4 in the end under one blanket un- andinz. to he translated then | i | Thus it | | | nerty in the leased territory of sveral formal instruments of agree- sult of a fire in the basement of the | mant. clothing store of Kennedy, Inc., ear | Poth Tapanese and Chinese reflected day. Al but three were later | ontimism over the Shantung . negotia- A gas pipe was cut off when the . |tions fonieht after another meeting In working in dense smoke and ove % | which Janan offered to give un the puh- a door, were battering their way (I lie 1 | | a 12 inch brick wall to et at the fire. | Kiaocho another step toward meet- Damage by smoke and water will amount | ing the Chinese position. In the com- 1o some thousands of dol ttee of the whole of the nine nations. TWENTIETH CENTURY EXPRERS respect for China’s neutrality STRUCK AN AUTOMOBILE and another restricting foreign radio facilities on the uses o Chinese soil, is a subject Springfield. Mass, Dec. —The east- [ hound Twentieth Century Fxnress on the | Boston & Albany Railroad was delayed an hour when. the locomotive was dis: bled by strikinz an automobile ck at off” treafy—may all move ! Huntington, west of this city, today. Ben urrently so that none of them Leveton, of this i | ¥, driver of the truck, | reaches definite settlement until all are stalled his engine on & oross fi(g,w: | rea | eneral fecling that all of the Chinese questions, these g, the naval ratio and the new 2 cor | dy to be lumped into a final pro- the approaching express, he jurfiped and m of accomplishment. escaped with an Injured knee. A s far Great Britain alone has | der cock on the locomotive was broken :givenl an “acceptance in principle” of the off by the impact, putting the englne out | new plan, but her delegates :ike those of commission. of Joaan have cabled home for further | |instructions before going fnto. a more ELECTIONS STMULTANEOUSLY &dcfin'me discussion of atreaty draft. T GLAND AND IRELAND ,The Japanese and American delegates | s jare proceeding slowly, apparently tak- London, Dec. 8.—A glneral election in ing into account the special requirements | England may he expected simultaneonsly | 0f thir respective governmental systems With the creation of the Trish parliament, and the French are said to have taken "in consequence of the alteration of the ; very e part In the conversations. constitntion of the imverial house of | It was at a meeting of the commons, through fhe removal of the!Three" nearly a week ago that the pri Trish members of Westminster, according | ject is understood to have taken such to the parliamentary correspondent of | form as to permit of its transmission to the Tondon Times. In the event of T7- ster's acquiescence in the settlement there Wwill be a reduction in the numbet of the { members of the house of commons of 105, otherwise 73, “Big (Continued on Page 7, Column 5.) “WET NEWSPAPERS” OBSTACLE TO “DRY” INFORCEM DUDLEY FIFLD MALONE TO MARRY MISS DORIS STEVENS Washington, Dec. 7—"Wet newspap- were deseribed to the Anti-Saloan SERS oy o 1e today as the first obstacle to the XNew York. Dec. 7.—Dudley Tield Ma- {complcte enforcement of prohibition in an lone, assistant secretary of state during | zadress by Geperal Superintendent P. A. TIeie e Gt v and former | Baker, behind this obstable. he sald, ‘are collecto e rort of New York, an ; . . udges, sheriffs, prosecuting attornevs, Miss Doris Stevens of Omaha. Neb., suf- | FIUBCS SRETEh FIOtCctine siorpeys frage leade:, will be manrled Satirday |nor o have 1ohines. thog the T8t moecm: and eail immediately thereafter for |71 1% 12E leArnel el hers of the bride’s famil 2 IREY i T 'y d Northcliffe, during his _ o\ "when does prohibition a< “impudent” . publisher PICTURE ACTOR HART WEDS 5 begin_in this country MISS WINFRED WESTOVER |1 qecares that the B I returned | on the subject. liclsts of the Northeliffe type.” he “will greatly add to the recent vis Los Angeles, Hart, motion pleture actor, was married | ., here “tonight -to Mss Winfred Woestover, | ;11 Wwho has been in his company for some | - time, at an Episcopal church in Holly- | wood. home. Fe puts himself on a level with the worst of our home product. ~ L S IR 1 . |MEDAL FOR HIALMAR 6. 1 £ created a profound impression here - CARLS N 0K OB UEATER: The Tageblatt says every friend of hu-| o, K, Dec. 7—The gol manity must heartily congratulate both |, Ny York, Rec: T-=The zotd medal of " ah ~ American Soclety of Mechanical En- the ‘Eritish and‘the Irish. This news-|ihe American Sociely of Creelan c nr paper considers that Premier Lioyd | &%) ‘1’“” W orocater Masa: A an George won a great personal triumph. |- CATISOTd of MToreesten Toass. o 3 oo e forward 1n the Solublon | 5 p " cnabied American- oveEsksy farned € Priahes mart Ml domeatis TN L Semito, st st problems. e at_a critical moment. Tilness prevented Carlson from attend- ing the gathering at which the award was announced. Dr. Tra N. Hollis, pres- = ident of the Worcester Polytech Tnsti- ondon, Dec. 7 (By the A.-P.)—The|tute, told how Carlson had come to the Archbishop of Canterbury writes: “Tens | Unifed States at the age of 13, and, aft- ot thpusands of Christian folk today are |er, attending public school, had learned thanking God for the nearer approach of the machinists trade. pEAEe A good will among the people of | George F. Rockwood, of Warcester, reland E manufacture ceived the certificate of “Much has still to be examired .and |awarg for Carldson. tested ere we Tezch firm ground, and &e ask for the spirit of wise counsel and ' French ehamber of depnfles adopted the strength.” % naval budget iy a Vote®df 347 to 203 MESSAGE OF THANKS BY &2 ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY Japanese Alliance | expressed by President he new four-power treaty proposed | i National Possi- | exclusive of the Hawaiian | +Passnort into | tion was adopted during the day | NT | home “to publish false stric. { | when the of moral | standards of this reublic by staving at | Harding Has Faith In Arms Conference President Says: “We Are Go- ing to Succeed Beyond Our Fondest Hopes”. Washington, Dec. 7.—(By The A. P.) —Decided optimism with respect to the results of the armament conference was Harding today in two brief addresses, one t0 a delega- tion of farmers and the other at ghe an- nual meeting of the American Refi Cross. Speaking to a delegation from the Na- tional Board of Farm Organizations, the Farmers' Union and affiliated organizations which called at the White House, the president said: “This conference wiil demonstrate the wisdom of internationally coming to- gether—nations facing, each other and settling problems - wiMout arms.” = Several hours later Mr. Hardipg in £ the anniad meeting of the Red referring to the conference de- are going to succeed hevond our fondest hopes; it is zetting to' be plea: ing to be able to say that thingg never “T know whereof T speak.” Whether significant or not It was not- head of the chairman of visited the White ed that Secretary Hugh American ) delegation - and the conference, had House and held a somewhat lengthy con- férence with the president before the Red Cross address. 18 LIVES LOST IN STORM \ OFF NEWFO St. Johns, N. terrific northwest storm off foundland coast that swent vessels from the sea on Tuesday. slow #ong the coast would reach at $230,000. Nine men, a woman and a child are down with the at Bay Verde. The schooner Jean and Mary parted from her P. Ingraham. near Penguin h her crew of ed war, was d near the lighthouse wreck, but her crew reported to have gone schooner Passport tug, the D. Island, and was lost seven men. The tug. which was a Uni States gunboat in the Civil driven on the and became a tota was saved, Sixteen ‘schooners have heen reported lost. Watchers on the cliffs of Concep- tion bay saw the schfuner believed to be the Passport driven on the rocks. Wreck- age that floated ashore hore the name Through the driving mist they re ahle to discern the fizures of the nine men and the woman with the child, but bafore a lifelire could be shot over fhe schooner was smashed to pieces and all on hoard were swallowed the wrec! up by the roa ing sea DISASTROUS, HURRICANE OFF COAST OF NEWFOUNDLAND St. Johns, N hurricane yesterday brought disaster to this- coast. Reports Conception Ba woman and a chi rthern sett hing vessel n and Mary D. P. Island. The storm began on Monday and rag- ging down telegraph lines, and as a result it will be days before the full toll of the hurri- From the facts at hand it was estimated that the property dam- ed vesterday at its height br cane is known. e was in excess of $100,000. The D. P. Inzraham, a gunboat tok at Fogo. The tow- has not heen heard from since. and tos guin Island, Philadelphia in 1864. BLOOD TRANSFUSION FATLED TO SAVE PROVIDENCE MAN Providence, R. Dec. In the cabin of a sloop at River last night tle Compton, also asphyxlated as he slept in the cabin, has not recovered con- where it _is said that he will probably recover. The stack of a coal stove in the cabin blew off while the men were sleening and the poured into the Goodwin and Yard ware found unconscious and hardly breathing in the morning. ,A pulmotor falled to re- vive them and Senator Bodington volun- { teered ;o give his blood In order that the sclousness at fhe hospi‘al fumes from the fire small enclozure. men might be saved. BANDITS ROBBED GRAND RAPIDS SAVINGS BANK Grand Rapids, bandits who robbed Grand Rapids Saving today, shot and killed and seriously wounded another tonight cers broke into a_house in the outskirts of the city in which they were hiding. Following the shooting the bandits, accompanied” by a woman, e: caped in an automobile. Part of the loot, which consisted of currency and bands, wag found fn the house. ). The bandits are reported to have aban- doned their automobile outside the ‘clty and boarded an interurban train. Mich., Dec. bank of $14,000 MORE THAN 100. DEAD IN DYNAMITE PLANT OIL TANKS Berlin, Dec. 7.—(By The A. P.)—The bodies of only thirteen of the more than one hundred persons Killed in the ex- plosion yesterday at the Nobel dynamite works at Saariouis, Rhenish Prussia, have been recovered. The number of in. jured has not been ascertained. The explosion, which occurred in an ofl tank destroved the greater part of the factory. Houses in the neighborhood suf- fered -hadly, roofs being biown off and the walls collapsing. Fire which start- ed in the ruins spread to the surround- ing forest. e Sl s Those Who marry for love are just as Hkely to bump into disappointment as eran crew comch at Colunia universi: those who marry for money. sesort to NDLAND COAST F.. Dec. 7T—Eighteen lives are known to have been lost in the the New- a score of Monday and Detafls of the disaster were filtering into this port tonight, due to the demoralization of communication service, but a check-up of the facts at hand showed that the proverty damags least , Dec. 7.—A northwest | ang by American Leglon representativ death and today brought word of a large loss of life at including nine men, a 1 who went down with the schooner Passiport at Bay Verde. A score of schooners carring supplies to ments were wrecked. Five were broken up, the ship is missing and the tug Ingraham is & wreck at Penguin United States during the Civil war, which in recent vears has been tow-boating on this coast, had the ship Jean and Mary in ine parted in the | commerce for a pos storm, the ship was carrled away, and |trade relations with Russia at The tug itself was hlown across Hamilton Seund ed ashore, a total wreck, on Pan. The Ingraham was built at 7.—Although three half pints of blood were transfus- ed from the arm of State Senator Frank A. H. Rodington of Little Compton into the hody of Howard Goodwin, of Canso. S., overcome by coal gas as he slept Seaconnet Point, Goodwin died at a hospital in Fall Mathew Yard, of Lit- 1.—Six a branch of the one police officer BRIEF TELEGRAMS Members of New York cotion exchanze UNS anT IN -oted In t1avor of ceclaring Saturda. 24 and 31, extra holidays. E Nathar Kahn, of New York, Crark Dean, of (Hicazo, meznbers of the Chicago boarl cf Sald Halim Pasha, former Grand Vi of Turkey, was assassinated in Rome. cording to dispatch received in Lond n. * Thirty-five cent breakfasts and dol'ar dinners ‘on dining cars of the Chicazs Great Western railroad were announced. The Itallan chamber of deputies gave a vote of confidence in favar of the zov- ernment of 251 to 105, Arthur® J. Balfeur, head of the British delegation to the arms conference was the guest tf honor at an informal lun- chean at the India House, New York The international joint commission convened at Washington to complete its final report on the Great Lakes-St. Law- rence waterways project. A movement Is on foct in Egypt to form an_independent party to work for Bayp tian independence while following str constitutional lincs. Fire cansed damage to the extent of about $30,000, to the. tobacco, cizar and cigarette stock of Sam Seott, wholesale tobaccoist, of Lowell, Mass. Federal forces captured 500 bardits in Santa Cruz, Argentina, together with 3,000 horses, arms, ammunicion and 000 pesos. Twelve bandits were Killed. Representative Shaw, republican, Is en- titlad to retain his seat in congress irom the Twentieth Illinois district. accordinz to a house elections cemmittee report. The Unmited States senate committee investigating the vecupation of Haiti and the Domenican Republic by American troops arrived at Cape Hatien. Disbursements for pensions growing ont of war prior to the world war totalicd $258,715.842 during the fiscal ¥ end- ed last June. Names of more than 11.000 mén listrd Dby the war department as dra‘t ecade were published in the Congressional Re cord. Gov. Scott C. Bonme, of Ala<ka, in a report to the interior department ray: more . Iiberal Jaws with an administr co-ordinated and brought neaver b the paramount need of Alask2 Charles §. Wilson, American minister. presented his credentials to IKing Boris of Bulgaria, restoring fuil dislomatic re- lations between Bulgaria and this coun try. tabor bogrd be- norezard ons of affect United States railro: gan consideration of disputes to the rules and working cond! maintenanse -of-Way 500,000 men on 35 ralirads. Telle wid A. Brajl 28, his wefe, e Bn";s 29, and their three children, ranz- from 5 e vere ba iny 2 to 5 vears, were ; o in ' fire at their home In Lawrence, Mass. Mrs. Mary E. McCudden, the British Gold Star Mother in Boston vesterday was welcomed by state and city offic Termination of the state of war «_m' Hungary Js provided in a joint resolution adopted by the house of representatives of Cuba, when the measure i by, the senate, Cuba will be a peace Wit all natlons. Pollce Commissioner Curtls of Bos- ton filed with the secretary of state a bill seeking to extend the law requiring the licensing of public dance halls to nd clude dances in hotel dining roo cafes. 1 Shioners and travelers om the New. York Central railroad will save approx. fmately $12,000,000 in 1 through the elimination of federal taxes under the law which becomes effective Janua 1 3 Preparations by he department of ible resumption the next fiscal year, submitted to co gress. Senator MeCumber of North Dakota, chief senate advocate of the compensation measure announced that passage of soldier bonus law may be the senate Christmas gift to ex-service men Preaident Harding Is understood to have aceepted the conclusfons and recom- mendations of the Wood-Forbes mission which studied conditions In the Philip- pines and recently submitted the report Exnerts at port of New York durinc Ovisher amounted to $84,990.000. $10.6)0 - €20 more than in October, 1J13. Imreri for October were $108,00000) an increase £37,000,800 over preceding month Publie Natlonal bank of New York will distribute 25 per cent. bonus to all em- ployes who were with the bank over thre years. All other employes will receive 20 per cent. Tsetlmony that Electrical Workers Tnion No. 3 had extorted “blood m-nay” trom non-union workers in New York was given the Lockwood legislative com- mittee. The Swiss federal councll has granted permission for former Empress Zita of Austria-Hungary to come tp Switzerland t> attend her son. Robert, during an 0p- eration fo appendicitis. Both the French senate and the cham. ber of deputles gave votes of confidence t Premier Briand on his first appearance before them sinre his return from the Washington conference. The 8.300 ton tanker Santa Rita. of the American Fuel Oil & Transno+ation Co.. which sailed from New Orleanh on Oct. 20 is reported 22 days overdue a* Spe: and $1,500,000 cargo of oil. Nearly 200 criminal cases are on the docket of the United States @istrict court. Judge Thomas announced. Ha said the court may sit six days a week and that he might ask for another judge to come into the Hartford district. Hownrd Abel. controller of the P. Tt T. testified before Transit Commission. that four quarterly dividends of 1 12 per cent each were declared in 1917 when the company oved over §$6,000,000 and had ondy $1,307,555 in bank. Eye econservation training, beginning in the slementary schools, 18 necessary to prevent a decrease of efficiency he physical make v of youth, Jim Rice, vet eald. AL Many Others Were Injured in Clashes Between Packing Chicago, Dec, 7 (By the A. P.)—call out before the trouble ended, Legal proceedings to restrain the stfik- ing packing hous eworkers from infer- fecing . with the plants by picketing or molesting employes were either pending or in effect in five cities in the middle west tonight, As the third day of the strike came to a close, quiet prevailed-at most packing house centers, but in Cnicago. ti us disorders in connection with the e occurred tonight when several per- were shot and slugged in clashes een strike sympathizers, ers and police patroling the stock- shot and a sco; injured in the clashes. ed when strike sympathizers accosted the workmen as the; iles were thrown and policemen used their clubs and gui se the crowds. CHICAGO PACKING DISTRICT House Workers, Strike Sympathizers l.lll Police Reserves E —One Woman and Four Policemen Are Among the In- jured—Legal Proceedings to Restrain Picketing of Pack- § ing Plants Are Either Pending or in Effect in Five Cities 1 in the Middle West. All will Tecover, it was thought by §eoe tors tonight. Four policemen were among those injured. The woman who was hurg was Struck by a brick. The independent plants and Swift & company today requested an injunction restraining the union from interfering with the operation of twenty-two plants through picketing. i At South St. Paul five hundred nation-' al guardsmen patrolled the packing plants today after the unions refured to discon- tinue picketing. A At Fort Worth an injunction restrain- ing picketing of the packing plants was granted today, while at Omeha an opin- ion was rendered by the city attorney that the anti-picketing law passed by the lazt Nebraska legislature wag inopera tive. At Kanes Chy strike sympathizers were restrained from picketing plants by the threat that troops would be called out if the practice continued. operation of packing first ockyard n men are known tg have been of men andfone woman The trouble start- left the packifg plants. in an cffort to d: Police reserves were SPECULATIN Ottawa. Ont.. Dee. control of the yesterd consarvative ea went down to defeat, liberals tnight were speculating on the make-up of the mext stry. elapse before Prem ballated places his resiznation in the hands of Governor Gen make his selections. out of town and the present cabin as business to Qlean up before retiring nto history, The consery the ranking position in”parliament, now Yukon sea. When oher the Tiberals £4, progre dents 4. vacant seats 13 Fallure of telegraph lines In the snows certainty as to when results of the dog approved | | PreTene | involving 1 | chairmansh master General Wi less than $100,0: « New York World, kor. president of one of the larg ng | =ociation . makers and distributors of films. me fu-| “There is such a plan o ture date are indicated In estimates for | four or five men n mind to invite to head hat drastic act erationship, |to have a man of nation-wide renute at the helm—ane who can impress unon the duction of pletures of unassail Authority for the announcement said, was draWwn from a letter sent o the Na weeks ago, announcing that a move: for reorganization wag to be taken ang tlons and hundreds of small film com- panies—wlth the necessity le motifications were ter was signed by five big film makers. TWO NAUGATUCK MEN INJURED Waterbury, Dec. George Lawlu {Naugatuck. are in a local hospital suffer- ng from injurf tomobile in which they were riding turn- of the sku scalp wound and pos: The accldent happened when one of the front wheels of the automobfle hecame Iodged in a trolley track cross-over. The e turmed completely over throwing both men clear of the maching to the macadam pavement. The tanker Is carrying a crew of 22 mN {54 pANESE APPROVE THE Honlulu, Dec. matic council formally approved the pro- posed four power treaty for settlement of Pacific differences & meeting at Premfer Takahashi clal residence, according to a Tokio ca- blegram to the Nippn Jiji, a Japanese lapguaze fewspaper here. JOSEPH COHN OF HARTFORD Hartford, Dec. city committed swicide tonight by jump- ing from a veranda of his home to the ground four stories Dbelow. and their six children were on-the porch at the time, to a nervous breakdown. ON MAKE-UP OF CANADIAN PARLIAMENT —Having captured Canadian parliament in s general election, when the net and anti-recipro CHINESE AND JAPANESE | PLEASED WITH PROSPECY Washington. Dec. 7 (By the A. P.).— Optimism prevailed in both Chinese and Japanese circles tonight over the pros< pect of a satisfactory solution of Far Eastern questions at the Washington con- ference as a result of meetings today a{ which many of the involved problemg were discussed. The important develope ments of the day included: Adoption of a resolution involving the B . * | preservation of the territorial integrity Most ‘mln vz, foreign wireless stations on Chinese soil. < Adoption of a resolution providing for the neutrality of China in future wars to which China is not a party. Agreement by the Japanese delegation, subject in part to approval by Tokio, that all public property in the Kiaochow leasehold of the Chantung province be transferred to China. . A tentative agreement by the Japanese delegation to delay no longer than Sate urday forther discussion of control of et was Glasormeat 15t :a;tkhoehw-“mh railway in Shane anking ‘3‘7 Conservatives Somewhat offsetting the progress mads ves 14, Indepen- | toward matistactory settlement of poinig of contentlon between China 'and Japa: were assertions and denials of resignations and dissensions within the Chinese delegation_ Dr. Alfred Sze, Chinese minister ta Washington and one of China's deie~ gates, denied that there had been any resigmations of high officials othe- than that of Dr. Philip K. C. Tyau. as general cretary. which was announced Monday. “I cannot emphasize oo strongly.” he £ald, “that the thres Chinese dejegates are pulling together. There is no Sissen- sion among us.” Dr. Sze said that resignations fhrough dismatisfaction with the rmfimdc must not be confused with possible d partures of Chinese officials through the need of cutting down the size of the deles gation because of imsufficient funds for their retention. In other Chiness mources, however, it s probable that ome little time or Meizhen, out- his home district in Manitoba, ers are t still ves, instead of holding | rd place. with the progressives established as offictal opposition. ires zive the p: standing progressives £2, conserva- labor and independents 2. The 1l to be heard from. Yukon today heightened the un. ce for the territory’s one seat In nt will become known, lete returns from the 207,076 of frozen territory cannot for weeks, owing to the fact have to collect re- ated mining camps. two candidates, F. 0. fajor George aveled severa! hun- sled during the cam- INDUSTRY TO WAVE NATIONAL ORGANIZATION Dec. 7.—Reorganization of Assoclatiop of the Motio: ry is under war, the plan | Was insisted that Admiral Tsal, Chow tendering of the genera) | Tzu-Chi and General Huang Fu. superior new board te Post- Havs at a salary of " a year, according advisers. had rdsigned through displeas- ure with the manner in which the Shan- tung controversy was being treated. Ef- forts to obtain direct statements from these officlals, however, were without avail. At the meeting of the Far Eastern com- mittee today, when it resumed its session afte ra three-day rest, Dr. Wellington Koo, on behalf of China, made a state. ment concerning Manchuria and other lsased territories in China in response o the Japenese position taken at the meet- ing last week that it would “mot at this time” withdraw from that province. Dr. Koo in his presentation of China's case regarding Manchuria dd not accept the Japaness view of Japan's right te remain in Port Arthur and Dalney, mor the British view concerning that natien's occupation of Kowloon, on the mainland, opposite Hong Kong. Replying to the Japanese statement “that assurance was given by the Amer- ican, British and, French governments a the time of the Tormation of the interna- > tional consortium that the vital interests of Japan in Manchuria be safeguarded.” Dr. Koo told the committee that his dele- gation, because China had not been con- sulted a tthe time, was not in a position 10 express an opinjon on “the question of the accu As to “vital intercsts.” Dr. Koo main- tained that China has “such truly wital Interests in Manchuria that the interests of any forelgn power therein. however important they may be in themselvés. cannot compare with them,” Dr. Koo's reference to the Japaness Interpretation of the comsortium and America’s assurance regarding Manchu- ria brought from Secretary Hughes the statement that the position of the United States when the consortium was arranged was clearly set forth in the full corre- spondence ‘made public several months ago, and that it spoke for itself. _This, it was recalled, stated that the consortium should not be used to the detriment of’ the single nation’s interests in China. When the Japanese and Chinese dele— Kations met late today to continue their “conversations” looking to 2 settlement of the Shantung eontroversy, Mr. Hani- hara, for Japau, agreed that all public properties in the former German lease- hold would be transferres:o China, sub- ject ‘to the refunding Ty China of an monies spent by Japan under Japanese tenure. China’s refusal to pay Japan for the properties developed under the Ger- man regime must, however, be referred to Tokio. The Japanese delegation ac- cepted the Chinese refusal. it, was sald, after China agreed as to the refunding for expenditures on improvements made newspaner states that Adolph Zu- pro- anies, admitted tonight that plan was contemplated. The as- embraces the largest produc- foot™ Mr. “but we have nothing definite the paper savs, leaders in e world have realized n alone would win back fferent and deserting publie and what Is considered a fatal fed- They have decideq that the essential thing to the the existence, ple prosnerit of the tndustry is the leaders' desire for the pro. able qual- it was tional Assoclation several 1 im- S the publica- recipients—trade for secrecy nending. The WHEN AUTO TURNED OVER T.—John, Malone, 34, Toll street, Naugatuck, and . of 203 Meadow street B s received when an an e at Naugatuck late thie after- Talone has a fracture at the base !l and Lewlus has a severs ble Injuries to the was broken off and “the autn- " FOURTH TREATY POWER 7.—The Japaness diplo- this evening at of HUGHES SENT LETTER TO PAPAL SECRETARY Rome, Dec. 7.—Pope Benedict today expressced_gratification over a letter re- ceived by Cardinal Gasparri, the papal secretary of state, from Charles E. Hughes, the American seoretary of state. The letter said that among the many messagos of praise regarding the cen- ference on iimitation of armament one of the most weicome had been (%at from the Pontiff, who sent his sympathy wishes. JUMPED TO HIS DEATH | oseph Cohn of this His wife His aftion was attributed