Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 5, 1922, Page 1

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VOL. LXIV—NO. 4 POPULATION 29,685 " NORWICH, CONN., DF VALERA HAS SUBMITTED ALTE PROPOSALS FOR' ANGLD Jf Permitted, He Will Today Move Them as an Amendment to the Resolutions Approving the Treaty—Proposals Were Made Public in a Asking 'Them Not to be Treaty—-Differs From the Agreement Reached by the h Envoys Only in That the Sole Source of Authority in Ireland Would Rest With the Irish People, While in the Treaty It is Derived Through the King—New Pro- posals Led to a Heated Controversy Between De Valera and Griffith. 4—(Bs alera The when A the P)— Dait rnafive fortnight proposa the them resolution ap w hz;:\ :” ners n i Mr ng addressed hem not to*he he trea differs trowt '$he ne t ow the tollows n Ireland reste with the treaty igh the ains no oath recognition of Nt 4t Ehe ' es in the British com- - N which Ireiand extern- e proposals et of proposals. Vigprous speech . for and against tha v sion of the session there n ation of any change in the £ the members, and best in- nues to incline to aty will be approv- lera’s announce. * tomorrow as Fiffith'e_motion own altérnative immaliately to a Griffith, who, d a “Are we to iment, or doc. De Valera reference has M. d said “You Dotuheat three gla of seventeen. Six number ontraversy rofe re- cther Mr. De '« propos- moved ag an amendment at have heen the One the new proposals sm- Asscribsd on r as a separate motion follow on the rejection amendment eoing to oeadure now.” nee of Mr Da ~ was not De Valera Erieann was a m and rator nwn towill Mr. decide,” n then adfournsl until tomerrow merning. when g are sxpected to take the ssion on the - rules of or- Mr. De Va- as _an mntil the Dail vote on the the speaker's ten- given a dires miing an amendment may not 2 hout the consent of the . ® possible that a eritical - really ocenr on the mo- 1o emable Mr. De Valera + proposals An his own way. De Valera's Manifesto. = De Valera's manitesto to cople e zens: You are in danger. frfuences more deadly to the mation faced by an enemy than a plague im the anks of its army dre at work amongst ¥ou. The instinet in you for peace and *eposs. as natural after the period of ou have passed through as the for fond in the famished, is be- € played uwpon. 1f you give way, you ase undone: all you have gained .will he lost 1 all the sacrifices you have = will be iIn vain “The ery of peace, peace, will not bring o1 pemce. not mow any more than a vear amn and those who shout it will not to peace, but to Another Leraval fave vou already forgotten that n the hand’ home rule on the stat- boek? The embers of bonfires are hlack_on the slopes of Errigal. is not those who would hold you ranks calm and firm, whilet you take your bearings and see Whither you zoinm or are being led, who would > chace. but those who hysterically #50ut 1t and try to make you all as pan- icatricken as themselves. It is easy to duce rout, it is hard to check it once has Begun If you had a national ww it would warn you, but your press * & press that when the wnemy was ac- tvely making war upon you obeved .its ates and alowed itse!f to be used in "2 work of sapping your morale from fay te day, a press that during the re- ent negotistions was quoted in Lomdon ‘o8t the delegates of the mation when > tried to represent your true asoira- v ¥ s evening, producd for | Manifesto to the Irish People Stampeded in Support of the | der an agreemert re Christmas -recess and ‘tion, a press that last July, when the British proposals were made, would have hroken your discipline, a discipline that {had brought you safe through every per- |7, and led to rout even then, had it | dzred. | “Today, availing of the opportunity and under the shelter of honored names, 'his press, insteml of bidding you be ¥ care. Verons as it 11ampede pres< you to a stampede, as dan- would Be disgraceful, a that would expose you to the tack of an enemy no less to than the bty or contemnt of the world whose ad- Iniration your heroism has just won. 1 “Oh, do not alow yourselves to be {yushed into reglstering inconsiderely a Vecision which you yourselves will Hve denlore and which generations to ne Wil curss you for. “To not pretend 1o set the seal of your approval on a settlement that you know annot be a settlement. Do not for the 1 vt time in her history allow Ireland to * put in the wrong as regards England. not impalr the moral foundation of and’s fight for her freedom. Do not Viler won a commact which i your " you know can mever he kent in tincerity and in trust, mo matter how Fvorthy | “They are nefther gdod friends to Tre- nor to England. nor to humanity. ' i rte ho advise yeu to take that course. Be| 11010 enough to say ‘No' to those that ¥ou to misrepresent vourselves, It there were not & gun nor an ounce of vead in Ireland you should say it. i “You are being asked to mive vour oneent and aporoval to_a treats estah- |#iehing Britieh aufhority in Ireland. not as vou were asked formerly to work an act of the Pritish parliament thrust up- on you. You are heing asked to binl yourselves with your own hands. Do | not forget it—von are asked to ghve your parole. Refuse. us In honor you must, | f vou do not mean to keep It |' “A combination of circumstances such Pas ocure but once fn the relations of {warring peorles~has created an opportu- {mits af genuine reconciliation hetween |fIreland and Fngland. Save irom he- ne lost (hrongh the short sighted ex- diency of politicfans. Tt Is not politiy who must come to an agreemcnt peonles “Reconelling Politicians does recone These cannot reconciled so long as the old grounds for | fear and distrust between, them remain, | ou know that they will remain under the | tarms of the treaf® that It is now pro- Posed to yon. Do net plunge the peoples of these isiands into another 120 vears | ©of hatred and bitterness such ae tHaf Which has passed since a former so-call- ed treaty of unjoh was made. “To the utmost limit to which they | conld gh our delegates have gone to ar- | Tive ai an agreement such as thic nation L eomd freely accent, gone voluntarily and willingly in & genuine desire for peace and in full ampreciation of the govern- \'V‘! conditions. Py the threat of war they were dragzed Levond that Mmit, { | £l not | the e the nemvles. be ! | | and the deed and elrénmetances will ever he remembered by Irishmen as the] crowning act of Infamy of England's rul- ers against Ireland. Peace of good wilt; was set aside, and a neace, that canmot | be peace. shamelessly imposed. i “Tt i& not thus that enduring compacts and “lasting peace are made. You, the Deonle. can retrfeve the-position even at this eleventh homr. The pofley vou stand by. that will alwavs be practical poli- ties; your standing by it will make it so, It i you that peace must ultimately be made. ~ “Do not yourselves be misled by In- nuendo, and safeguard your declaration of independence Instead of subverting It = it a shadow that would remova the authority of the British king, the British cabinet and the Pritish parfament un- equivocally from Ireland, that would re- move from Trefand the Pritish governor zeneral, with his sar to the Downing Street telephone, that would rid you of British occunation, that would lsave Trishmen and Trish women their identity as Irish citicens and not make British subjects of them, that would leave hon- #st men and womo nthelr self respect when engaging in thelr country’s ser- vice? “Thesa are represanted tn vou as shad- ows, and In the mme breath vou are| 10 that Mr. Llovd George will wage an immediate and terrible upon you Tather than acknowlsdge vour right to them. ou do Ynot need very close an- alvsis to ‘show that It canmot be both wayx “Stand fast): feMow citl You know to be right. Do not allow Yourselves to be temoted from the straight and honorable path. Jf you quail At the consequences, what will thev not @sk you to surrender neft to this lg- mobie fear?’ war ns, by what DE VALERA HAS ALTERNATIVE PROPOSALS ¥OR PEACE TREATY Dublin, Jan. 4 (by the A. P.)—The Sinn _Feln publicity department, imme- diately after adjournment of the Dail Eireany lats this 2f*ernoon issued a long manifesto to the Irish people in the name of Eamonn De Valera, accompanded by his” aiternative proposais to replace the Anglo-Trish treaty, now being considered by the Dail. nfluences more deadly to the natiou faced by an enemy than plague In the ranks of its army are at work among you" declares Mr. De Valera in the manifemto, He-urges that there is opportunity for general reconcillations between Ireland and England, and acks the Irish_people | 10 save reconeiliaticn from being lost through the “short sighted sxpediency of politicians.”™ The manifesto deciares that those who shoutsd for peace would lead the Irish people not to peace, hut to another be- trayal. S Mr, De Valera's alternative proposals contain sevemteen heady with detalled (Comtinued on Page Thres, Last Cel.) publican, JRISH TREAT [FORD-NEWBERRY CASE COMES BEFORE THE Washington, Jan, ‘today girded !themse] fight In the Ford-New) ition contest from Michigan. The case will be taken up T Tution declaring Truman H. New! incumpent, is expected next weel. Senator the republican ‘elected * senator, His colleague, Michigan, that he would 200, Mich., league of would support Mr. Newberry. A close vote, with ©of a vote favoring Senator Newberry, is conceded generally by Mr, Newberry’s supporters expect a m: jority of from trhee though a half dozen Tepublcans atill are listed as doubtful with thefr action said to depend in part on whether Senator Newberry decides to Tight. ' Some close friends today they had assurances that he would come hecg and speal week. & Administration to have determined plete record vote and an apoointment to fill the Penns; wacancy caused by the death Penrose would be made hefore the roll This phase of the contest zot into call: the open senate late statements by ‘bama and Car: crats, to the o ing or some admlinist urging haste in fillin Senatars Curtis of worth of New York and the former the r sponded with 2 istration has had. or anything to do with a new Pennsylvania Senator Heflin said he had-haced his on newspaper stories and Mr. Curtis interjected that thare statement of guessing goin gon ther declared ‘he had the man to be berry. “T think.” broke in” Senator Curt! “that going that side of the stata from my posi row for consideration hands of mobs. for a number of Mr. Iynchings, engender race hatred, rights and devoted much of discussion of the of the question. speak -, Saturd; Townsend also informed the Kalama- Teaders, n today regarding the sifuation, were said Senators Heflin of. Ala- ay of Arka ect that President Hard- denial that the “admin-! named t agree in advance to vote for New- on arourid here. the administratio nor anvone s not participati ]Lfl aylight SENATE FRIDAY Of Truck in New York Hold Up —Senate factions! mand. =5 102 ie, 0 w York, Ja n. 4—A daylight hold. senator A theft of an aut, = T n ot T ts contents had a vote on th v, ly | had been held the legall et ey, | Bromx, bund Townsend, announcad To- toda: e, | nortiy The truck was women voters, he present indications | SUrrent séries of senate leaders. | The prisoner, it burglaries in Ri er fashionable than $50,000 in to seven votes, a eak In his own ik record, having st burglaries, Thon'd s f the menator said 2 Rou k probably next four hundred $387.89 carried Roulston compan of $5,000 yester fn discussions to insure a com- were_hopaful that X vania nator £ S current crifes offenders out cn-. sentences. He u meted out by eri SHANTUNG N NE. In the day through demo- ration leaders were £ _the vacancy. Kansas and Wads- . both republicans, epublican whin. re- The Washing: Shantung apnar clusion, but wh be a settlement question conflicting evide! is going to have" | the appointment of senator. night, had resumed the subject, tha: doned its forme; troublesome 4= a lot Mr. Heflin fur- heen informed thar in Pennsyleania chow-Tsinanfu German leaseholy everiheless; sued by the tw meeting said “completed” tom: ion T know what's 1 want to say = in of the treasury € $40,000 worth of il he police late foday, after th Charles Fritz, driver of the truck, told the police that he and his two assistuna: into the robbers’ car and taken to a woods near park, where they were ordered to “walk under pain of being shot. where it had been placed in dead storage.. An important step toward checking the today in the arrest of Adolph Gisterar. verpetration of nearly a score of recent Gisterer is sald to have made a special- ty.of flat silverware. grocers, announced today that one of their stores was entered Saturday aight and a Magistrate Corrigan dec'ared ferson Market Court today that half the Washington, Jan. 4 (By the A. P.).— obscured by many There was no outward after the Japanese and Chinese cue that T the mode.of payment for the Kiao- the discussions would be: by the state department shortly ombile truck contain- | cused, in dramatic fashion, faced each k was regorted by e jruck and been recovered. by motor bandits in the 116th Infantry, overseas, went on stand to enter emphatic denial of chas by former seryice men that he hal down some of his:own soldiers fn blcod on the battlefield. Van Cortlandk found later in a garage burglaries was reported him, meanwhile being given the was asserted, admitted charges wern taken up, Gravson ver Side Drive ‘and oth- sections in_which more lpot was taken. fled that he saw the officer geize a from a private and fire at a man in Te has a criminal | sommand. cived time for several ment, but Withrow swore that from 1ston Tetreat In a shell hole he peeped out saw the man fall as the major's marked. But he could not Opie had killed him, declaring the 1o standing out In the open, was commany, chain pound safe containing off. A collector for the ¥y was held up and robbed day. the shot was fired. As Withrow left the stand. William John, a young man from Lynchburs, soffering from from sérviee overscas, in Zef- were committed by old probation or suspended reed that less leniency be iminal judg~ accused the cront. because he failed -to thrice beifiz ordersd fo halt heed EGOTIATIONS RING A €O NCLUSION lto gie their names, on the gronmd ton negotiations over ently are nearing a con- ether the outcome is Lo or another deadlock s a elements of d that it woulT not be just to should_appear and “not back One of tham. ha = cold feet” “develop: to come. Reminded Hy Chairman Brandezee the names must he submitted, St. | complied. mentioning first the cous one of Major Opie's eounsel, across the table. It was while S was being cross-examined by Cutchins of Richmond, Vt.. Majr O counsel, that he lost control of his sha: ed nerves and dramatically shouted he was dealinz with & bunch of fan who “are tryinz to prove T am mut Mr. Cutchins promvtly disclaimel an_intention. and was onwi nce. indlcation ‘to- their “conversations” t either side r position reg has on had aban- rding the developed oad in the former e joint communique is- o delegations after their orrow and there was ap- after 3 TuunsbAfi JMARY. 5, 1922 Dramatic Scene M Watson Hearing $40,000 Worth | When Soldier Testified That Fire at a Man in His Com- er today before a senate committes inwes- tigating charges that American soldiers had been hanged without trial In France. Near the close of a seven hour session, Major lierome L. Ople, of Staurton, Vir- ginia, commander of the Third Battalion, He was asked, | however, to step aside until other witness- es than In the room could testify again right through counsel-to cross-examine them. _Responding to his name whon ths Opie Withrow, of Baltimore, still in his early twenties, stepped to the front and testi- Shells were falling overhead, he said, and there was tremendous excite- sav whether within arm’s reach of half a dczen officers when nervous troubles resulting ginian of shooting"down a “runner”’ at the after Four other men saw the Killing he de- lctared, but he refused of his own srcord he had not been able to eonfer with them . had John Jond John Seeing that the younz man was worn Canada s to have & new five-cent plece, similar to the American nickel. 3 i, | Unoffictal reports piace the total of the 1 tranés. Federal Reserve board at Washingten announces the closing of the First Guar- anty State bank of Colilnsvilie Tex. Four persons were e during the New Year | Honolulu. 922 Frenoh budge t at 24,606,286,000 and 18 injur- celebration at Physklans attending John Kendrick Bangs, noted humorist, at Atlantic City, ath- Trecovery. A mew Boston-Hav vice was> opened when . the Steamsht, s, Ltd., left Boston for Havana, the rges. shot trict attorney. Pre cold ness Is the reason given. tawa, Canada, for Denver, 0 visit his brother, Dr. D>MacDougall King, who is critically ill. H. Turkish nationalists, gun Washington, Jan. 4—Accuser and ac- | aio 3oy hiad given up hope for his A steamship! ser- Britisr steamer Sicilian of the Canadian Pacific Fawara ¥. Daly of Hartford Has re- elgned as assistant United States dis- sure of private busi- Premier King of Canada has leit Ot- s Colerado, to Deportation of Greeks from Anatolir by which has been con- finedo hitherto to’ the Samsun area, has i OF PROHIBIT Startling Exposures Made in Indictment of ¥ Formerly Prohibition Director of the State —Hart Heads the List of a Score €o-Defe ed With Conspiracy to Defraud the ror Through liquor Withdrawals—Other Indictments clude Two Other High Enforcement Officials, Three Politicians and a Number of “Drug” Concerns and Their Officers. % New York, Jan 4—A bombshell was, ‘ng vastly the amounts shwes sny ene federal grand jury investigating enforce- | UPOn conviction. the defendants” would ment of the \jlstead act in this city re- | face three-vear prison terms. e |Deen extended to Trcbizond. !\-»;‘\m the fact that Harold L. Hart, a| The ‘:av:‘kunun m‘t:h. \-t‘n- b prominent Binghamton attorney. who f. over-taxes in suppart of the Armouncement of the selectiom ©off o " 1l g T Geral prohihit charge. As in the case of money orders, U0 | ronry P, Fletcher, under secretacy Tector for the state of New York, headed | the withdrawal permita are made out i s ctate, as ambassador to Belsinm, ~ was | Tectur for the state of Xow York, heatded | i R 40 | ninted ‘as imminent in ofticial quarters, | T, O o e O s the govcrn- | OrF, Lynch and Duffy appeared bafors 2 e et whichy have | Ment throush figuor withdraswais. Federal Judge Knox fate today and ene ter, || Units of the At o York navy |, Immedigteiy pubiic _attention, which | {eFing tentative pleas of not gullty were their whter hasn New Yo ¥ vard sailed for Guantanamo, their annual target pragtice. n St Va. Tracey's Pond after they had Vir- | hrough the fce while Ashing for bait. Tn the six years the compensation ha heen in effec: in Pennsylvania, more than 59,000,000 in workmen's has been awarded or agreed upon. Six sleepers on the Royal Palm T. e the Southern Railway from Jacksonvik were deraited near Macon, Ga., 10 One W: injured. that him up" f ilinz advances for agrienl (nat | Approval of & Te. wa; week ended by the $13,056,000 during the cemher 31, was announced finance corporation. The bureau of officiency has menéed to Bricadier General president of the board of hospitalization the return of zesorve cfficers in the pub. ic heaith s economy me n ot tiin A ) T- that aties tey.” e’ recom t t re. A bronze tab'et in memory of forme from Canada to New Yor Cuba, for Louls Dumschott and John Penfka of Waterbury were saved from drowning at broken 1 compensation ‘ tural and livestnek purposes agerezating Sawver, viee to civil status as an - osevelt will be unveiled Fri- f | parentin many quarters a confidence by excitement, Senator Watson. de- Preslognt; Roosevelt wil e the Pennsylvania situation. I want to Pare 3 nfid cut by excftement, Sena atson. 4 day afternoon in the room in polics head: say further that no attempt has been | (hat a final means of settlement would be | ocrat, George, iose nh:r;:ulr( ;\.r}gas Ty rlars which he used in 1595 as head ade to impose condltions on the ap- | found. executions are under investigation declin- | TIaTte s e LR :‘,,‘;,:(m'm,’f‘ ot ie & At the mesting both delegations enter-{cq 1o tion him. Tomorrow jor | of the department in -_" X 4 3 d directly into a discussion of the three e will testifv in hia own behalf. o e ent for former alternativ@pians of pavment for the dis-| *'A farm hoy from G-oraia who frankly | Ffferta te find empleyment for TOUVCF FILIBUSTER DEVELOPED 0} | puted rafivoad, but® adjourned ‘after a [hut pathetically announced ho coull mesy SeTvice men will be ",',; fhe ‘congarence. on DYER ANTI-LYNCH! DALL | rocsic g more thah (WS’ hOUTS|read. or write. cloared wo his recent Pureau a® & roewlt bl IRe COLCTRCE O withont definite action heing taken. staiement concernin ng of » | eaucational . re s et & gy Washington. Jan. 4.—Debate ‘on the | mhe Jupanese -delegation was sald to | qi Tecuun. e 1T oy [nela in Washington last week. Dyer/anii-lynching bill got underway-to- | navereasserted jts demand for payment :; ¥ < st & ¥ ; 12 : tom HI% comiand to cnenely his thirst at = vinz representatives of day _inghe house despite & determined |y Joans 5 (e Chincse government {n wie sne 10 derelped | th A e ‘aad Pilots Amvie: o ergon’ the part of democratie 0)- | (hrouh the Jananne bankers, whith (%e |2 rimand was trylna (o conceal-i(s pod- | the Masters, Mates and Bilatt Aevill meniffof. the measure. Three hours | Chinecs dgelied to consider. The Chi- | [ feom the: smeme and. th tion, Tne., urtll January 10 to sign 2 new were mpent in roll..cally demanded by | nese_then ‘anrounced to the Japanese|li peen warned that the first men L ey ey . : Representative Garrett, Tennesse¢, dem- | that they had not receded from their W01 {onting to walk ont In the open would ba | York Towboat Excians neratic leader, in a futile attempt to|alternative propositions: Payment |t The. sojdfar watked BiF 3 3 e ro)djer walked v 4 Russell, soclalist wri HAIE of tuat time later was given aver over a péripd oftwelvelyenrd wilhan | ohoins” vna thieyiahot, him Yn his tracks. | . SN JecluEep NS 8 QR to debate by Representative Dyer, re-|option permitting China to take up the Hardy Kind of ploture of the impasc= oublican, Missouri, author of the bill, | remaining notes at the end of th e A O e ~ahite "and DIapk. and Representative Sumners, democrat, | years. 2 2 STATE POLICEMEN ARE abla guif ;»“ skt g g s, one of the leaders in the fiznt| The first move today for acthal re- WEARING NEW UNITORMs |races which he sa : 2zainst it, who reiterated arzuments ad- | sumption of the joint meeting came from 2 3 r 7 o le, eizhteen them in_the majority and mi- | the Japanese. when they notified Messrs. | HartGord, Jw1. 4.—Several members |\ Selzure of 137 = sutomeblle. clehis Wews of jodiclary committes|Paliour and Highes that they had heard | of " the. state police .devartment . made | bivse drasm VenICER B oty 10 oo ing members when the bill was favored re- m Tokio and were ready again to|their appearance today in the mew and jauer marke clals at Rouse's Point, N Y., | ported, - meet with the Chinese. attractive uniforms of whipcord of a |customs officla 10 break up the illega The measure is to be set aside tomor-| An invitation to the meeting, sent out!gark color which have been adopted ae |in their attemit ey K has been focused on poison liquor con- sumed during the holidass. which claimed its nineteenth vietim, switc to the flood of feal alcoholics which were alleged to have heen lgosed through pita- tive fake drug goncersis. Indicted with”Hart wer enforcement officials, three polit and a number of the “drug” cor their officers. released in $5/000_bail each. Counsel aiso entered not guilty for the drug companies indicted. K:kl: ditional bail wa eset in these cases, as all were under bail in connection with, other charges. Judge Knox granted a postponement: uniil tomorrow in the arraignment of Reddy, Murphy and former Director' Hart. I e < The indictments followed am fnvesti- Thomas Reddy, formerly allied with | Zation of several momths, which started the postoffice department and the de- | With the seizure of a truckioad of liquor partment of justice, and who r served | O the road between Philadelphia and as Hart's assi before latter's | Daltimore, consigned to the Centra} resien c tion last fa 1 J, Ayneh company. Agents who made the seizure noted that the permit was of the series! a clerk In Ha office. with a k » the cabinet cq of 247.000. At that time the legal per- ing_the serially numbered withdrawal |Mit number for Hart's office was 131,000, s Sy Hart is alleged 10 have countersigned William A. Orr, the bogus permits, private secretary to £ 3 A Charles S. Whitman when the latteg oc-| N0 figufes have’been issued as to the cupied the gubernatorial chair, and now |GUantity of liquor obtained i engaged in the insurance business. hut the missing permits number about Owen P. Murphy, treasurer of the | =50 and cail for an average of 250 cases Bronx county democratic committee. ?';. :“mm'fl’-l_”’d Thomas F. D nx nolitician. ormer Director “Hart denled tonight The follo rg” concerns and (that any bogus liquor permits wers their officers Drug eompdny. S.|*igned or approved by him, or that he & B. Drug company. Aips | Mad any knowledge befors hand that Drug company, Reliance Distributing H ,-“:-4 :*-.n inmied. company, Herman Levin, Max Gordon “When 1 learned,” he sald, “that thers Barney Brauston. Louis Billoon. John |had been found in Philadelphia permita= Gorinl. Charles J. Steinberg. Bo o|Oearing the serial number 247,000 T had Venusti, John A. Penna, Nathan Feld [%n inventory of bur biank permits made. 430’ Arthur Keass "Wa found its 247.001 to 247300, The indictment, returned- after an Inissing from the cabinet whers fthey vestigation of several montl’s conductcd |'Were kept, Imimediately upon this dis- by Assistant United States Attorney (“overy 1 wired the commissioner at| Maxwell 8. Mattuck, followed cofnplaints | "Washington asking him to put & 4 of lax enforcement of the Volstead act |%ll digtilieries and prohibition iy and frequent shift federal prohibi- | oMces against withdrawals bearing tion_headquarters. “hose serial numbers, When Federal Judge Knox this after-| “Pursuant to that request mads byl noon ordered ihe seals broken it was|ime, the commissioner did put much & Btop found that the defendants” had been|o nand as a result thereof practically charged with defrauding the zovernment |nil of the liquor covered by those permite by iseuing false and frauduient with-|%was stooped before it ever reached thel drawal permits, whereby liquor excecd- |‘onsignee” ! MENT REACHED AT FIVE POWER NAVAL TREATY PAPER WAGE CONFERENCE 1S NEARING COMPLETION Washington, Jan. 4—(By The A. P.) —The five power naval limitation treaty | which win explicitly define the agree- ment reachgd by the Washington confer- @ aridg dompletior an ‘soon | Will be ready for presentation to each of the signatory powers for approval. When approved, it will be submitted to York, Jan. 4.—Settlement of the even wage large manuf; nd amitration na proposals nt of the St. Regis 7 | the ofticlal sarh for that force. It wil [liquor traffic fcon member of the ar- |8 special plenary session of the confer. | appropriation bill, which will have right | o'clock lh‘;‘affemoen- took the Chinese | not be possible or desirable for all the |state during 1321 gaid the terms of the|ence for public adoption. of way until it is sent to the senate. *hat by surprise, as only yesterday | members to wear their uniforms at 2 % - an eighticent an hos In its present form the covenant com- Mr. Dyer, in opening debate on his|the ese had approached Mr. Balfour |times as the state police are frequent ol wanl: of oedite "‘!‘_“;"Q;“";’,‘f,":";\.,, ® Muskillad o Prisss a number of sections, esch treat. measure, declared it was dmperative that | and Secretary Huhes With a view (o engaged tn work where their identity is |€ent mothers done b3, " thel t there would be no ng with one’ aspect of the maval ques- the federa; government afford protection | NAVIng them renew their /“good offices” (Lept a secret but the department can |been cfficially 12 i the German wages of some 5,000 skilied w tion as it fas come before the confer- to persons liable to suffer violence at the | t0 effect a settlement. completely equin every man If necessary, r;:m?f l“;m‘:x" Is assured sufficient sw>- | ers. | ence. It is understood they includs the - with the exception of overcoats, some |committes YRR 8 TOR TEC, o they. will | TH® new scale for unskilled workers, | following: Mr, Sumhers, attacking the authority | TO INESTIGATE THE HOUSE 0f which have mot vet arrived. L e e he said, will be 32 cents an hour, whis| 1 (a) Agreement for scrapping capital Dyer's statistics on FURNISHING GOODS INDUSTRY —_— be zep sy : the skilled ‘men will continue to + | ships, detalling time iperiods within declared passage of the bill — . g ¥ - stered sat- | cents and upwa L |w h vessels must be rendered unfit for - would increase rather than decraase mob| Washington, Jan. 4.—Investigation by DIy R N Xou York's Gwclety, Mt eB e e o ag akient (18 ametiver Tan. 3 Wil b oaY A vlolence and would have a tendency to|the federal irade commission of (he Celiot s"°“;""‘;| Pl b Aot Snechenyhad | will ‘remaln tn fores untl May 1, he|.(h) Agreement for eventual limitation He assafled the |house furnishing goods industry was| Tacoma, Washn., Jan. 4.—Col. C. dapest tha hzarian minister to the | said. 3 |of capital ship fleets under 5-5.3-16 measure on constitutional ‘grounds, con- |Alirected in a resolution adopted late to- | Snowden, formerly editor of the Chicago |been “\”’;f"“ <0 Ty s :‘"h',; Amer'can | On the final ballot the three répre-{1.66 ratio. tending it would be an invasion of states|day by the senate. The resolution, spon- | Times, and the Tacoma “Ledger, died '""lhr’mm'rfi':“' ladys M. ~Vanderbiit | sgntatives of the m: turers votedNg | (c) Agreement for limitation of'indi- his time to|Sored by Senator Kenyon, republican, | day, aged T4. wife, A {ic Washing- | f&vor of the reductions and the labon rep- | vidual capital ships in size and guns. constitutional phase |H0Wa, provides that the inquiry shall | One of his journalistic feats was pub-|would boid sway in diflomatic 5 | rescntatives’ unanimousiy . againet: them, | - (1): Apresent aa-simtint S embrace “the cause of factory, whole-|lishing in the Chicago Times of the full jton. ; the deciding vote Judge [ tional unit for measurement of tonmage. sale and retail price conditions” In the fext of the revised version of the New| iam P, Brines, former University of | Frauk Irvine of Ithaca as final arbiter. | Attached will be a replacement chart wet- ndustry. Testament, received by cable from L ¢ 47 BOOKMAKERS' UNDER ARREST 1 New ' Orleans, seven bookmalkers, forty.seven cashiers, Fair Grounds race track were technieal- racing card by being directed to rep. the eheriff's office on warrants to sued on information trict Attorney Marr, of the Locke antl-g was fixed in each ca: The action of the causing the arrests of all the bookmak- ers marked the resumption of the fight he started against gambling at last winter’s meet. number of suits then pending In the state The bookmakers, motors of racing secured an La., together with N NEW ORLEANS Jan. 4 —Forty- <ions trall their s k) he debate which preceded its adop- tion was characterized by a general ut- tack on profiteers, trusts and combina- ing assaults on the federal don, Masonry, in.which he held the nt of trade and soatter- trade tory of Washington state. He was a natlonal authority thirty- | third degree and was the author of a his- anla student, who was acqu nuary of the charge of killin Dfewes. a Dartmouth x| Bimer r San Diego, Cali Sun acquit = collgze |.<n.« ent, lost his life in an attqmobile dc- cident 1 1 - tine forth dates for replacement and dates of commissioning of new ships. PERMIT F"" B"'“-“; OF ! | 2—(a) Agreement for limitation of in- SENATOR FPENROSE TODAYX | g vidual aircraft carriers in size and gun: operdting at the com- Mrs. A. DMitehell Palmer. o @ FMiadelptia, Pa, Jan. f—Pormit for | * () Agreement for limitation of indi- Toesions The latter was defended, how-| washington, Jan. 4—Mrs. A. Mitchel [ ¥ \ e Burh g of Botes I vidual auxillary craft in size and guns. Iy arrested at the concluslon of today's | rcr BY Several senators who comdenied | paimer, wife of the former attorney.| e stills, two barrels of Tauor ana|lte Unitel States senator from T Rulextor sy albmatt a8 Kt ot v could Dever be “a DOpular” gov-| general of the United States. dled sud-'|pine barrels of mash wore found by the | $Ylvania, was issued today ernment agency bscause of the nature of Iy at her home here tonight Dolice In the fire swept ruins of the Beech | feau of _“’ 4" e ¥ “-| 4—Regulations fixing the status of furnished e ek e, Palmer, who was Miss Roberta | T1SE Gountry oy at White Store, N. | Ment of the Nour or other arransements | merchant vessels in war times and cov= charging viola ot 2 donen senators ureed that the | partiett Dixon, 7 Easton, Md., had been |y which had been leasod as fraiding }Tor the services were madepby x {erinz their possible conversion into arme ambling law. Bond | oo Of the Inquiry be broadened, con- i for some time but her death was un-{anq sleening auarters by Jop and Frank | Of the family. =~ Pl g tending that o should include trusts | bxponted. Welling, professional puglists. SERa been permitted to v 5 Recuiations Loovering « bulltic: T district attorney fn |2Nd combinations in other commodities| "She was married in 1898 to Mr. Pal- £ ety it was browght hae private’ yartir ot bl sitory SRR ; @nd /in other lines of industry Wherever | mer, who was attorney general during hree robbers who had evidently trafled | Washington Sunday—not even ‘the o thelr o e o A tthey could be reached. the last two years of the second Wilson |yeyjjizm Stmmone, collector for a chain of | #10r's personal {riends and serva abroad, of warships destined for other alleged race track |} Prosecuting officers of the state £ov-|agministration. She is survived in ad- | srocery steres, held him up when he made | N heen with his family for . | powers alther of those signing the treaty A large |Thments were assailed by. Senator King, | gition to Mr. Palmer by~a daughter. Ris twelfth stop in Fifth avenue; Brook pluring the atternoon i s L.|or the non-signatory powers: institiited are stin] |'Utah, demoorat, and Senator Heflin, John Thomas Johnson. While the manageg walted on custom enrose, a brother, was adm » the | §—Regulations for the use of subma- ) e e ST IR o bers led their vietim to a rear | house. But scores of men higa in politi- vines. 3 working _with pro. | Oflelals appeared to haVe sat “with fold | New Haven, fan. A—tomn Thomas| T o iook $6,000 and escaved cal gircles Jgho came to Philddelphia to- | T Reguiationis broadly defining _con- injunctian | ¢4 hands” and to have made no effort to | Johnson, aged 64, who had served as ay learnéd that they could not even|dnct of signatory pewers in case of check combinations and trusts within | Dereonal messenger to six presidents ot = restraining the district arrrney and oth- interfering with the s: er officials of tem of laving wager: under this injunction ted to compléts the meoting undisturbed. FIVE YEAR SENTENCE FOR & TMPERSONATING DETECTIVE New Haven, Jan. chette, of Bridgeport, pleaded gullty in superior court today personating a railroad detective and a prohibition agent. Judge Keeler sentenced him to the state pr to five years. BOY SKATER DROWNED IN ST, Sumford, Jan. harbor through the fce reaching a hospital, accompanied them in the private car - _ but Stanley is not the farmers, was cailed tonight by See-| when Ithe head of the !.\'Slempmadg trips. New Hi n, Conn., Jan. 4.—Miss Eva in serious condition. retary. Wallace to meet in Washington | He was a familiar figure in escorting the | M. Led. £ school teacher, was rescued X £id January 23. president of the road to and from the | from Mill river today into which she had (EESIGNS A8 OFNIGEAY, v The agricultural secrefar yin announc- | station, assuming care and carriage of | jumped ~while mentally ill At the ho i OF THE KU/KLUJ KLAN | Inc the call said it was expected that | their personal effects. pital her recovery was expeoted, and it ! %z Hardhg would onen tf® conterenc Mr. Johnson began raliroading in 1881 | was stated that the patient had been un- Atlanta, Ga,, Jan. 4—Mrs. Flizaheth { Seccetary Wallace has rot fixed a limit|as a Wagner car portex, and President | der observation which she eluded this Tyler, of this “clty, tonight announced | to the rwmber of delezates but is gon-|C. P. Clark In 1387 appointed him as a |morning. Men Who took Miss Lee from here resignation as assistant to T . |gernad chiefiy with making sure that the | persona. messenge He served under | \he water said that a fragmen:t gf 'cef Clarke, Imperfal Kleagle and head of the | donferenca b2 thoroushiy represen- | President Hi Mellen, Eiliote, Pearsan propagation department of the Ku Klux Kian, 4—Chester Ogiba, years oid, was drowned this afternoon whil brother Stanley, aged 11, tried to save him. -Both wers dragged from the water by other skaters. Chester died. before the state which dederal authorit, s at the track, and they wers perrit- ka, charged th were doing b tention had state or federal 4—Michael Mar- on charges of im- | Senator Nels: ison Y8 from four | &lon, but he sa fhe. ? inquiry could d AMFORD HARBOR |2 little good. 7| CALL ISSUED in Stamford | wher ho brokn o \skating. His rieultural confe days ago by P sider means of . The' nu sndicated, will Senator Norrig, ®ince the war and that little, ¥ any at- heen federal trade commission, the Nebraska senator said sometimes If had not func- itioned up to expectation. ta, sald he hed “little if any faith” in ithe results of an inquiry by the commis- application ‘paregoric” to the situation. He soid the ,AGRICULTURAL CONFERENCE Washington, Jan, 4.—The national ag- view the body of their former leader. " % s ts 4 aiready worn out by the rigors 2 future wars, and especially in cases of could not e Teached Ty | e New Jork New Haven and Hartford o atian winter, Mrs Anona U,| Spencer Penrose, another brother of |wars with on-signatory powers. 1 b e, Qe O O r® meocs | Stillman has abandoned her intention of | the senator, was expeoted to arrive S—Regulations defining _the exact . rqpublican, MNebras- ,f’“m‘”';‘“”;fi,“’:“!;y" an‘_h:c: n(! the| tramping 30 miles on snow shoes to her r"l:‘r:i\mc(::rm fCo;‘:rzdu Springs, status of “rfitting” a capital ship: at these combinations 1:.“11‘1,1%: ATk m""‘e“’:m offices of the | summer home at Grand Anse to collact ev s of the permit led to the be- | whether installation of new ard later iness “at the old stand” 5 company, there was sadness_today iven them by elther inis. Discussing the | Service than Mr. Johnson. “Mr. Johnson ; name for him. He was the embodi of dignity and courtesy, and at the on, republican, - Minneso- the executive within, and if the d he had no ebjection to of “the homeopathie | depended upon to reply dlscernment to any whereahouts of the president. with care 0 no harm and might do e blood, intensely, religious, active in school in his contact with newspape: who sought out the president, an h culturist, and a good story-teller. was the bearer of many ments for the presi rence, suggested several cesident Harding to con- relieving distress among. ber of delegates, it was|and Buckland and agat be between 150 and 300. His last liln=ss was one week. are there today who had been longer in To all he was no one cofned a familiar of the president he stood almost in the capacity of a persénal representative of Jatter was away Mr. Johnson could always be inquiries as to ‘the | Mr. Johnson was a negro, a man of standing in the city among those of his day school work, a gentleman of the old Tmen horti- He under Pearson. jdence with which to fight James A. Sti man's divorce suit. A Reuter dispatch from Riga amotes Few ment Moot | saying that the central oommitiee of th communist party has ordered the mobil zation of all communists Russia who were Born in the years 1599 and 1900. and 16 Pacific Mail blished a service that first was evoke by the discovery zold in Califor and that formed the motive for Sun, setts, April: 12, 1848, NEW HAVEN TEACHER ATTEMPTED SUICID! dress alone savel 1- Moscow wireless despatch received there o i throughout 9 With the departure of the steamer .Ynl. for New York from Sah Franciser, teamship ‘comrany re- a the in- corperation of the company in Massachu- her g befors her plight was ne- lief that Senator Pearose would be. bur- fed in South Laure side his father. guns will be permitted, for instance, or wheter old guns may only be re-bored. 9—Agreement as to Pacific fortifica- tions. Mill cemetery be- —_— DANRYMEN'S REQUEST i b TO SENATOR »rLEAx |WILL HAYS 380,000 DIRECTOR OF MOTION PICTURE INDUSTRY Hartford, Jan. 4—A resolution re- questing Senator McLeaw to give his Dest_efforts towards™ securin ga fav ‘able report on the amendment to the ex- isting federal banking law as offered by the agricuitural bloc in the senate— ‘Which provides that at least #ne m.m- ber of the central board of the national federal banking system be a farmer, was adopted by the Connecticut Dairymen's assoclation” assembled in is annual con- ventfon at Unity hall today.\ The res lution wad offered by R. S. Baldwin of Woodbury. PR L N A. B. SMITH RESIGNS FROM NEW HAVEN ROAD New York, Jan. 4 —Postmaster Gen- eral Wil Hays has signed a contract to become director generai of the National. Assoclation jof the Motion Plcture In-. dustry at a salary of $150,000 a year, according to The New York World. The. contract which runs for three years, the paper says, was ’tned more than a week ago. ' 24 Mr. Hays, the World added, has ranged a conference Wwith tih leaders of the motion pleture in Washington on January 14 at time he will make public on his ows account his decision to | < Boston, Jan. 4.—The resiZnation of A. B. Smith, general passenger agent of the New YorkMNew Haven and Hartford railroadl effective Jam. 15, was an- nounced tonight. He has accepted a po- sition with a_western line. He will 3 succeeded by F. C. Coley. assistant gen- Point. The erai passenger agent, whose headquarters horses when will be at New Haven. o

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