Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
|ConictedinHartord n last season. Admission Made by Robber Caught in $60,000 Daylight York. New York, April 3.—Police Commis- sioner Enright today asserted that a A strike of employes of the Nashua | former butler was the brains of the $60,- Gummed and Coated Paper company at|000 jeweiry robbery in Washington Nashua, N. H., began as a protest against | Square yesterday. a wage reduction of 15 per cent. This man, according -to the commis- Easte! service VOTES OF CONFIDENCE GIVEN Mexeotobeatist | 1L0YDGEORGE ANDPOINGARE " el et is Coming to New York i May For Conference Wi g 1., 375 men failed to g ‘work yesterday and granite d cutting plants were closed. == = se of smallpox in mild form was by Dr. Jobn . state commissioner, after a visit {o N7 House of Commons Approves Government’s Policy For Gen- oa Economic Conference by a Vote of 372 to 94—Brit- ish Prime Minister Defended Stand France is Taking on Russia and Reparations—French Chamber of Deputies Voted 484 to 78 Confidence in the Foreign Policy of Bank ohn T. Russell, president. of the Na- ers. \ tional Association of Meat Cutters, said % that” meat proces soon will dro; the New York, April 3.—Readjustment of { 1913 level. s ot the external debt of the republic of Mex- - ico will be considered here the latter part of May at a conference between Se- nor Adolpho De La Huerta, Mexican min- ister of finance, and representatives of. Tells the House Labor Committee That the Anthracite Work- efs Are Out Merely to Await Results of Peaceful Nego- tiations With Employers Over a New Wage Scale—Bi- tuminous Miners Are Out Indefinitely, If Need be, to — e oL ik A (epishenin v of sfoner” Tobti” Albert R Shettuck, ra- Obtain the Signing of a Basic Wage Scale—Does Admit o ek on Mexico. Se to the number of 85,200 have | tifed banker, in 1917, and returned again i T the Poincare Ministry. Acoordiug’ to " Intereated” Amesican i| e tatier - s far:-this: weamon’ by tife | 10/robli THis thaetit was u boldee desn That “the Public Will Have to Foot the Bill”, . bankers, the Mexican government is now | Newfoundland sealing- fleet, aocording to | 0T bigger game, and before the jewels S London, April 3.—(By The A. P.)— mize, a5 a test of her fitness for enter- | in default on the interest on a direct debt | ¥ircless roports recetved at Sydney, N. S.| Were whisked from the house, Mr. and (By the Associated Press) declarcd The ouse of commons tonight after |Ing the community of natlons, ail the lof 3322000000 goid. There is also a : ;‘3- Shattuck and their elght servants( Both gperators and miners stand firm iy | River iy \'vta:;"i::ou'::??aa‘: w“:l:‘ i an unexciting debate, adopted by the | 30 1“(&71'1“ jmposed upon ahd expected | default on the interest of $250,000,000 | Tope Plus sent a telegram to former | 3¢ fo be imprisoned in a wine valut, |the country-wide strike which has cioscd | enlisted before the endl of they wesk in substantial majority of 278 Premler | Ot CiVillzed communities, Mr. Lloyd | of railway and other debts not guaran- | Empress- Zita - of Austria-Hungary at|"1€r® they were saved from the danger imore than six thousand 'mines, leaving |the union's nationtwide suspension of Lioyd George's resolution. calling m—!fi""“ conceded that this was a ques- by the Mexican government. Debts | Funchal extending his condolences over | °f Suffocation by the ingenuity of Mr.|over 500,00 idle. Operators claim many | Work. confidence In the governmenV's policy | UOR i which legitimate prejudices Yot the smaller Mexican states will bring | the death of the ex-emperor, which oc. | MI: Shattuck in unserewing the bolts |non-unfon men who. were idle Saturday in | Aside from Mr. Dwyer's statements, the would perhaps cloud reason—a. situation in which the docfrines and demeanor of the bolsheviki had caused the just anger, making excecdingly difficult the exercise of a composed Judgment. Dealing with the constant rumors that Russia was preparing huge armies to overrun Europe, etc., Mr. Lloyd George argued that it was impossible to learn what was happening in “that inpenetrable jungle,” but that if trade vere opened with Russian traders' there would know :.nd would not stay if the rumors were rue. Moreover, he continued, these wild ru- With a penknife and dime. “We have arrested one of the robbers and hope to have them all in custody in a short while,” declared the com- ‘missfoner. There were indications that the po- lice, convinced that the job was en- gineered by a master robber with the technique of a Parisian Apache, might sift New England for a trace of a band operating against the houses of ° the wealthy in various states. The New Bngland angle was introduc- ed by Major Osborne Field of Fifth av- enue, who called at molice headquarters the total external indebtedness to about £600,000,000. The defaulted Interest on the direct debt amounts to $111,000,000 and on the indirect debt, nbt guaranteed by the government to $71,000,000. Refunding of these external debts by. the flotation of ‘a Mexican government loan probably will be the outcome ot the conference. The Mexjcan government, through its local financial agency, today announced that plans for a meeting between Adol- pho De La Huerta, Mexican minister of finance, and the representatives of the on the coming economic ‘conference at Genoa. The vote was 372sto 94. or to this the house by a vote of 3 to $4 rejected an amendment pro- posed by John Robert Clynes, laborite, which, while approving an international economic and financial conference, de- clared that the government was mot competent to represent the coumtry at su a conference and did mot have the conference of the country. If Mr. Lloyd George has tired of of- as his son announced Saturday, cer- he appeared in fighting mood ds u tered the house admidst a storm of cheering. curred there Saturday. b observance of the anniversary of the bour day have returned to work. - Both sides agree. however, that ihe strike is practically 100 per cent. perfec in the great central competitive field uf Iliinois, Indlana, Ohio and Western Penn- s¥ivania. . Operators assert that many pits are i operation -In West Virginia, Virgin Kentucky, Tennessee and Alabama. Kan- sa8 operators yesterday agreed (o rerurn to the wage scale of May, 1917, pro for $3.60 a day instead of the named in the present agreement. Union leaders claim viotory for striking only report reaching headquarters her came from Kansas where union officinis’ declared ali union men were idle although the state mdustrial clurt ordered a teinporary continuance of the old wags of the union’s executive by union emploves to ex- hi- The railroad labor board will not bar- gain away the nation’s railroad wages for lower rates, Vice Chairman Ben W. Hooper. deciared during the wage hear- ing before the board in Chicago. [— The strike of the granite cutters has not been feit in North Jay, Me., as the Maine and New Hampshire Granite com- pany's plant has been shut down for some time. ~ mates of 690,000 the walk-out. In-the New R en as having jolned er field of West Vieginia itory. but receatiy More than 500 men were placed in jobs He strode to the ministerial | MOTS Were used as an excuse and jus- | international committee of ‘bankers on ] n jobs | With the information that last vear the |anthraclte miners through the ofter of scale Withous uni sch with a somewhat deflant attitude, | tifcation forfhuge armies of other coun-| Mexico have fpractloafly —completed. |bY, the department of public charitics in | summer home of his fatherdn-law at|several independent companies to grent or asserted 11,009 m- Whois bearing that of a man enter- | (FleS, Which would never be' reduced un- | Questions with reference to the Mexi- | Bridgeport and given emplysyment in the | Lenox, Mass.. had heen robbed by a |the miners’ wage demands if the men jom, wl] of til there was European peage. The conditions lald down at Cannes meant that Russia must recognize all the conditions imposéd and.accepted by civ- flized communities as a. test of fitness for entering the community or nations, be- cause a country which repudiated its obligations because it changed its gov- érnment was a country with which one could not deal. , 2 parks, on streets and other city decart- ments. upon a great fight with every de- on to win and with confidence in n powers. The house was crowded, interest be- g accentuated by conflicting reports can government's external indebtedness will be discussed. A meeting of the British and French sections of the committee will be held in Paris upon the arrival there on April 18 of Thomas W. Lamont. chairman of the: American section of the committee. The British and French delegates will re- turn to New York with Mr. Lamont for the meeting here with Senor De La. Heurta, the latfer part of May. Upon receipt of advices from Mr. La- mont that he has returned to this coun- try with the Yoreign degelates, Senor De La Heurta, in a telegram said he would leave for New York immediately, in ac- cordance with instructions from the pres. ident of the Mexican republic. “I may add.” he said, “that our re- lations with Mr. Lamont and with the othar members of the internatiorgl com- mbteeNhave continued withall cordialit and since the conferences that were in tiated last October in the city of Mexico, progress has been accomplished in that French butler who never had been ap- prehended: His own home at Stock- - bridge, Mass., had been entered March Seventy cases of gold colns minted | 22 and the allered robber arrested .in in Germany, and vaiued at $2,700,000, | Sprinzfield, he said. have been recelved by the Irving Nationai Another reference to New England was bank in a shipment from Sweden. made by Eugene Diaset, a French sallor, Yo was grilled after his arrest as Acocording to figures complled for the |One of the robber, band. According to Fur Dressers’ and Fur Dyers' “assocla- | the police~Diaset admitted he himself tion, New York-city is now the center | recently had come from Connecticut, of that industry, having passed Leipsic | Where he RBad served a term after hav- in the most Tecent report. ing been jcted in Hartford of carry- ing a pistol. Diaset's " s was that he had been induced to join in the Shattuck robbery by a mysterious Frenchman named Hen- ri, whom he had met in XMadison Square park and who the police believe was the former Shattuck butler. . Mr. Shattuck showed up at police David Zulkanm, bus driver, who was | headquarters bright and early and was arrested on a manslaughter charge in|assured the best detectives were being connection with the death of Robert B.!put on the case. He was taken to the r, | Rogue's Gallery to see if he could dls- would return to wer d wouhi not roturn to work. President John L. Lewls of tho told the house labor committee vesig day that miners were prepared to “sia out indefinitely if need be, until the op- erators sign up a basic wage contract ful the central competitive fleld.” termin non-uior —would quit hough he sail he had no definite reports on the situitios today, he Qeclared that he had assurance before leaving West Virginia that most of te 21.000 men would not quit work to- day. The New River field, he sald, war closed by the suspension. on whether the premier would demand a vote of confidece in connection with the Genoa resolution, or whether, in view of the delicage political situhtion, he would sidestep the issue. Among the dis- sished persons present was the nambassador, Mr. Harvey, who tly emiled at the premier's quaint ting humor. he premier began in a commonplace er, and then after a few moments ddenly hurled into the house his mes- age of deflance—if the Genoa resolution was defeated it meant a'vote of no con- fidence in the government. He delivered his address in measured tomes, _ with head erect, iron gray hair thrown' back and eyes flashing. word was followed amidst im- flence. It was a moment that PRESIDENT LEWIS APPEARS ° BEFOKE MOUS ECOMMITTEE POINCARE SUSTAINED BY CHAMBER OF DEPUTIES TRAIN CREWS LAID OFF BECAUSE OF COAL STRIKE Washington, Aprfl 3.—Discussing befor; the house labor committee today reasons why 600,000 anthracite and dituminon coal miners stopped work last Saturdas ‘n the United States and Canada, Joun L. Lewis, president of the United Min Workers of America, nad official lead of the strike, declared that the anthracl ! workers had gone out merely to await the results of a feaceful negotiation with their employers over a new wage scal but that the bituminous workers werc out indefinitely, if ned be. to obtain the Paris, April 3—(By The A. P.)—The chamber of deputies, after discussion of the interpellation on_ the government's foreign policy, tonight . voted- confidence in the Poincare ministry. Th& vpte was 874 to 78. - The vote of confidence, which wasfthe first real test of strength Premier Poin- eare's government has had since it as- sumed power In succession to former Premier Briand, came after three ses- Because of reductions made possible in the lower cost of materials and care in awarding contracts, New York will save $759,866 in paying bills for Man- hattan and Brooklyn, according to offi- cial reports, Scranton, Pa., April 3.—AH of the an- thracite mines in District No. 1 of the United Mine Workers, wers idle agdis togay. None of the operators madé any attapt to operate and there was no dis- créer of any kind reported to the authori- ties As a result of the tie-up the raliroade today laid off a rumber of traln crews. Roosevelt, in New York, was re- i REOK e ; = e v ract. —_ . rilled _even his opponents—the little | . 5 it his brought us nearer to a good under- | leased in $5,000 ball yesterday, pending | cover there a picture of the butler. signing of & c ‘wage -cont - e 3 - s P = " cov. | Slons of interpellations, embracing the 2 o X 3 - G ot ” The bituminous workers, Mr. Lewis d2- | MARGOT ASQUITH'S VERDICT ON sh Napoleon thus throwing his €0V- | sencral foreign molicy, with especial | St2nding, either by corfespondence or by | further examination Wednesday. Tt was the most outrageous and high laras beers the BRI eb, WhiCh s con ment and perhaps his own career in- the balance. There were no jronical ots, as so often greet a ministerial special envoys that from “both parties have been commissioned to communicate our points of view.® —_— heard of, com- “especially when handed crime I ever AMERICA AND AMERICANS mented Mr. Shattuc] one considers that there were 2,000 per- stress laid on the Washington confer- ence, | The Washington gathering many times sigering the Bland resolution to direst Imi A Elmirio Lombardi and Primo Masi “of ol By 1A Soealiéot of 3 Sowm- Naugatuck were bound over to the su- tion r ition. y 3 cers. | pert 1 ¢ = ” | mission to investigate the coal industr. New Yosk, April 3.—More than # ,a:-(ao{x 'h-f Z:?,-;é‘: bk oo ";’ ‘;"""“ 1‘1‘ t'"‘“""":“”‘"l‘ for F"‘“;'" inT,,he;;g’an::mr?nt{oconanlflmrmni‘:;uluma cu( bup‘nl‘z‘i;ce ;u:l:; Fconuxrulk OAT% Seac mrsrguw;: fmou‘:lrg e;mbv;. i?{;’ ,ZZ‘L‘;I,,,L“ ,}hemfa:;km: T R are out to “stay indefinitely, if nsedl b (hous;x:ldl ;as n;\)l; l.\ew \'o(rkmh whe hen ¢ P cally, 1 The interpe ors - strongly urgi the o e i i MR & until the operators of .the Central com- |crowde: o gran allreom of the Wa hen_calm, analytically, tie byiit up | THe, THEPEIAtCTE Ok dek‘wo“”‘m e { ot an. invitation to join the conference, | able cause at a hearing in borough court| The former banker sald his wife now petitivé ‘field of Ohio, Indiana,” Ilffnoi ennsylvania sign up 2 basic .- wege “eontraet; acck ¢ to their pledge, on’ whitlt thé ‘other coal mining districts of the United States can settle. Tn reply fo questions: by” Representatl Plack, . &emotrat, Texas.” as to why U union would ot “aettle with operators states and districts where work could be-resumned under “satisfactory conditions Mr. Lewls insisted that competition woull not permit: the: operators to fixe wag: locally, without 2 knowledge of the wage scales ‘their comipetitors would have. “Fven ¥ the operators of “Ilinois, for instance.” hge added, “are willing to sisn up & new scale-for themselves, ‘witho regard: to- their - competitors «the. United Mine Workers are unwilling_to have its members .in Ohlo, Western -Pennsylvania bis argument, leaning in confiden- tritude against the deck, and again standing back and thrusting home some wih cienched fists a8 his voice vi- 1w emotion. Peace was necessary for, the re-estab- t of Europe; the Genoa confer- © was necessery for {he re-establish- t of peace, and interlocked with this the fate of the present British gov- | declared: - “It is hoped that such a cénference, participated In by all the interesty con late yesterday. was under a physician's care, having ¢ been -prostrated ; with fright during the Clarence Mathewson and Willlam M. |time ‘she was imprisoned in the smail, Tomikins, constables of Woodbridge, | air-tight, sound-proof wine vault while charged with manslaughter in causing-the | her husband worked desperately to es- | death of Anthony Sabia, wers held for | cape. v trial in the higher court, and their bonds continued at $5,000 each. Genioa. conference must not be placed in a, position similar to that which they, %’,‘:fign,f:”" the French delegation at |iorneq, will go far in workinguout a-so- Premior. Poincare :won the French del. | lution of pending ouestions Awith refer- egation to the Genoa conference the solld ;:‘::fl“;fi ;:‘mag, ican “govermment’s ex- support of the chamber, except the dls« |’ - senting socialists and communists, in’the Mc""‘!‘l“::g‘.! on the conference J. P. vote of confidence, which practically | MOTE®! 5 e carries with it a mandate to the delega- “’:‘ 2.8 m:“fl_:’:r:';! :J";a _*_‘\;O:evsvg) tion_to- insure full recognition of Frenen | WaTt8 10 DAY { oM IERC 8 AIFAZS 5 WAV rights and- the adoption of a firmer pol- “l mt';‘v 5 o ot :- Lo jey towards reparations hefore Framce | W1¥ the sam oes pply collaborates wholezhearfedly in the res- | Cse- toration of the rights of other coun- tries. quith’s fina! verdict Americans were. surprised to find thit after all, she thought America a finn country, and Americans a8 ‘a whole mighty nice folks, . The noted Briton—wife of a former prime minister, and auther of one of the frankest series of pen pictures of em! nent Britishers that country has ever read, poked a little fun at Americah ‘culture chasers” and dollar chasers; twitted them a bit about prohibition laws that do not prohibit,.and spoke a ‘bit of her mind‘ about messy factories and out- door billboards that clutter up Ame: scene! . h a fervid tributs to America—to “America’s great president; her fine — RUSSIA 1S REQUISITIONING ALL CHURCH TREASURES According to a statement from the state department of health, the. present smallpox - enidemic has teen more fatal than any since 1901-03 when there were 20 .deaths -in. 72- cases. This year there have been 283 cases and three deaths. Moscow., April 3 (By the A, P. ‘The requisitioning of - church treasures is in full swing throughout Russia, but under the temsest circumstances. From ten provinces there already have been col- lected 70 pounds of gold and 17,820 pounds of siiver. From six churches in the outlying dis- tricts oi Moscow requisitioning parties on d that his resolution had been 1 the original and” weakened differences in the cabinet. referred to predictions about . of his government, and jokingly gave some advice as “a dying minister.”” the midst of his reference to Rus- e took a ely jibe at Mr. Churohill, TRIED 0508 DONR Mrs. Ellen Conlin who lives with b g o . 5 n who lives with her ON ITS OPENING DAY | ;o ugiter, Mrs, Martin in Greenwich. re- ported to the police that thieves who got into the house while memibers of the INDICTMERTS AGAINST “DRY” Washington, Alril 3.—The Merchints b 1 G : rch? : r overnment ;_her vital, generous St St ot e aN P aE AND. IMMIGRATION OFEICIALS | Bank and fenst company, 2 ue 'n3th- |nousehold wers away probably took $acb | Sundey secured 3,132 pounds of silver, 2| jndiana. and Virginia dragged -into the | citizenry"—and urged the nuituring of I e b T ot ot ARl SCs Ty ey T | WCE Was it g burdau! drawer. quantity of gold and 24 diamonds. Wwo | sufering of a long strike while the Iil- | stronger bonds between the two nation tude. y New York, April 3.— 2 2 —_— Bsynagogue: nois mine owners take the markets.” “What uld we n .ood shed that Mr. Churchill differed | wers returned by a federgl grand jury | vite the publlc to make an inspection of | oo o oo g S o Hand two goiden articles. In one syna- Colic e SIOL G075 WIS SOOI Sl Although holding that a national wa; gether,” she exclaimed. scale was the first essential, Mr, Lewis tolu its quarters. Four hours after the doors “One thing we could prohibition’_enforcement swung open, an unidentified man entered, with accepting today charging agents in this district tly with the premier on the policy Grace church New York, was still the |BoBue the custodians were arrested be- ial recognition of the soviet. The i do—we leading . candidate for bishop coadjutor | Cause 10 valuable articles that had been could frma; h committee, very in drawing a parallel with the | bribes for the issuance of liquor wita- |joined thebgmder gues;s,_‘butt ‘:fi‘gec;}r‘: of the Massachusetts Episcopal dlocese | listed were missing. fih:ang::‘suN:rh:n;;o?; dlos Gonld get. “a make it very difficult to have another revolution, cited how Pitt had |drawal permits to seilers of lilegal g;gl:;s a;g_og :s g:cp‘:a;eg the paying | WheR clersy and laymen met in Boston| UR to March 13, churches in the gOV-| representative number of operators fro: rgot that bade New York fare- te make peace with the revolu- | liquor. -ning again yesterday. ernment of Viatka had yielded 2 1-3|,]] the central fields into a conference, well tonight was a different Margot from the one who made her bow before & crit- lcal, growingly hostile audience upon her arrival for a whirlwind lecture tour Jan- uary 20, Then she seemed to sense an stmos- teller's wirtiow. % The paying teller leaped from beaind the counter and wil pistol pursued the hold-t) man up Fifteenth street shooting in the air as he went. Hundreds of government clerks, out for the non hour A second federal grand jury returned indictments against four inspectors at the immigration station’at Elis Island. They were charged with accepting bribes from immigrants in payment for permit- ting aliens to enter this country illégally. pounds, or about 4,500 carats, of dia- monds, and nearly 10 pounds of pearls and other jewels. The central committee of the Moscow province communist party has ordered all communists to surrender aH thelr gold, s Thousands of Canadian women who are not admitted to the franchise under ex- isting laws will be entitled to vote under | an amendment to the dominion elections nd, after a slight pause, added those controlling a substantial tonnage, mean, I shall advise - the United Minc Workers—and I think they will take m advice—to negotiate with them for a n contract.” .« laughter at his expense, : act promised by Premier Mackenzie King Short of this step, he added. miners an | phere of uniriendiiness: Tonight she ra- wae remewed wheq Mr. Liloyd | Government officlals declared that these |pursued the fleeing bandit'and a pedestri- | 03, B0 (5o (o % | stiver and jewels, with the exception of | ooerators, conferring by districts would { g, = remarked “fortunatély, 1 have | ind‘ctments were but the first of a series|an walking casnally along heard the tu- b2 ssjon of parliament. bobRaviIE decorstions: Tor 4Hie Sbeneit Gr ] ng by diated confidence of her reception, and “just be talking—doing n ogood.” Mr. Lewis said that although the Unit- ed Mine Workers “stood for nationaliza- tion of coal mines, with adequate assur- ance to property owners involved,” he classed “govermment ownership as impos- sible at this time.” Miners know _that they cannot hope o get more than 215 days work a year as mult, saw the running man coming and grabbed him. He held him until the tell- er_and police arrived and the $5.000 was recovergd and the uninvited guest at the hank’s opening was sent to police head- quarters. The prisoner told the police he was Fd- ward Royton, aged 28, New York ci formerly of Brockton, Mass. smiled brightly as she curtsied in ack- nowledgment of the applause that greet- el her appearance. American porters, she regarded as re- markable, and hotel managers “different I had seen before.” s she explained, hey came to me and offered me things that were fore on. under investigation. The grand jury in the liquor cases be- gan the sessions which culminated in the indictments handed. down teday following a controversy in which Herbert C. Cat- row, former assistant prohibition direc- tor, Tesigned after an aitercation with his chief, Director Ralph A. Day. The controversy grew out of 'the withdrawal such opposition,” and turned to Mr. 1 as he spoke. [ premier sat down amid another of applause, and the debate was Two hundred union employes of the | the famime-stricken people. Fletcher Granite company ~ at West| The soviet government has begun, in Chelmsford, Mass,, struck fa response to | the Presence of Bishop Amtonin, to smelt the general order from union headquar- ;‘hgmgoéd ‘;‘,‘:w"‘(‘;i;h::h“:hm:’:;&i? cl‘::; ers, w scated. e en the company declared an open | S2H" 5 govermment o advance: 1,000 - 000 gold rubles against the valuables a ready secured in order that it may im- This result in regarded as exceeding- satisfactory for the prime minister as e e ned laborites and independent The drowning of two West Newton rals ber about one hundred and 4 (Mass.) high school boys, cousins, in|mediately purchase bread abroad. things stand, he declared, “and that part h thal #* s “dfe hards” about fifty, all of whom |Of 1.000 cases of whiskey from a Man- = Foster's pond became known when thely| There has been some rioting, but gen-|yime operation tends to Increase year aft- | ey pne . 'h",‘\”" A houss rmits issucd | FARM DEDICATED AS A 5 i nto the prohibition question. & been expected {o oppose the | hattan warehouss on permi 3 young .companlon, Patrick . Ready, who | €T2lly no active resistance to actualler year.. If private Industry canmot wors | «\yhen I came over, I thought T would remicr's resolution. through the local prohibition enforce- MEMORIAL TO BURROUGHS |53 cpent the night in a lonely camp, | Selzures has occurred. The Izvestia says|out this problem, regularize employmen: - P < find everybody happy and sober. Happy 1 find them, but—" an expressive shrugy finished the sentence. “The prohibition idea is fine.” she con- tinued, “but I don’t think it is working out as was expected. It may help the poor; certainly it is fine to be rid of the, corner saloon—but I doubt it it won't! have to be modified. The “culture chasers” came hext. 'n$ phrase, she said, was that of a membe: of one of her middle western audiences,’ who wanted to know what she thought of *“American cfiture chasers™ ment offices. i The indicted ~immigration inspectors are specifically accured of having en- gaged in a conspiracy with others to per- mit ailens to enter the country iflegally. Bribes pald by immigrants are alleged to have run from $20 to $150. - Federal officidls declaréd other indict- ments would follow. The nvestigation, they sald, revealed a oconspiracy in “im- migrant running” embracing employes of various steamship companies as well as federal immigration officers. Lloyd George said at the outsst ing the enforced rest which he endeavoring to enjoy he had i with crises.” llea the reasons for summon. ¢ the Genoa conference, the purposes ad_principles of which ware set forth n the Cannes doeuments. He sald the two great questions affect- & the economic position of Europe were question of boundaries and .that of -eparation. He expressed the conviction at no section of the house would de- came to Andover, Mass., and reported the | t0Gay that a collision between a requisi- accident. tioning party and church members has taken piace at Smolensk, and that there Wwere some casualties. Another Téwspaper reports a mear-riot between “oid women and .raiders” at one. of .the. Moscow churches Sunday. The government's theory is that a great majority of the pasishioners, and most of .the minor clergy, approve the humanitarian aims of the requisitions, and that it is only the princes of the church who, for purely political purposes, and stabilize outi;uts, it may be necessary for the government to assume the bur- den T belleve congress could well set up a tribunal or a_bureau to imvestigate. at leas:, and give the facts which might d= termine a polcy.” is pald his respects to what h od general financial demand for liquidation of labor and defiation of was- es” by declaring that there was nothin: constructive In the business viewpoint to- day, and depression cannot be overcome lowerin: Roxbury, N. Y., Aprit 3.—The home- stead farm in the Catskills. the lifelong home of John Burroughs, was dedicated today as a national memorial to him n 2 simple ceremony attended by several hundred of those who. knew ‘or admired the naturalist. Assembled around the rustic fence that guards the last resting place of the nat- uralist and the “boyhood rock” that is his tombstone, they read poems by Bur- roughs, by his friend, Walt Whitman, and others who wrote of nature's wonders. Eugene and Jane, aged 2 years and He 1 months. twin children of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Sutter, were killed by a special train on the Bangor and Arooftook rail- road at Presque Island, Me. They were walking on the track, having strayed away from home. Brigadier Gemeral Charies G. Dawes, federal budget. director, has been invited ¥ G ruiioes Alsabe b dabein s a fo ride on horseback into exington,|&T¢ UTEIng resistance. The newspapers B . ne thing” ermany, to disrupt the new Poland, or | SCORES' SEE BANDITS KILL His_grandchildren, Ursala and Johm | Mags ‘‘on’ Patrlote’ day. Apirl 19, ag an | 2nd posters which cmblaze on the bin-| “Ba sure that If this do-nothing polley [~ 7k, culture is iy leprive Czesho-Slovakia or Jugo Slavia Burroughs, unveiled a bronze memorial| escort to the impersonator of Willlam | P9ards of Moscow protest against the|of business leaves the issues to be fought |5 . o' ¥ titenendehct, ~ Therefore. it fwas POLICEMAN IN CHICAGO | tabiet, imbedded In the “boyhood rook.” | Dawes, his ancestor of American Revolu. | attitude . of. the Most Rev. Dr. Tikhom, |out” he said, “with the government stand. | 5°7 CUture Ly chasing ¥ Landscape spe se the —— picturing : the naturalist looking into the ARt ol st Lar rs came next. ) Griticine ihe treaties of Ver-| Cpicago, ‘April 3—_While scores of per- | distance, one hand shading his eves. It]'°" 2™ e v S o At tho aiparon L e AsHIS An o Bo M ke (TP “When T wens to Buffaio to ses Nla- prenared to say they made an un. | 005, heiplessly watched, five automobile, bears these two lines from Burroughs| Nespit ' Andellah escaped from the| OCOUDYIng thirteen large rooms, has re-| The induatry itsclf was “tremendousty | 5774 Falle: she said, “I thought we t distribution In Europe. Obvipusly, | ooit® tonisht shot and kiiled @ patrol- | poem, *“Wahdering": Cliarlestown (Mass.) state prison vester- | {uSed to surrender two of them (o house | wasteful” he asserted, in its fntermittent | SO00, QU B COOE ATCUR | TONG > G 1ed, Genoa was not the place to b, DECUADIY <TRtally. s ons 2 bank | .y grang amid the eternal ways, > = 100 orphaps” froom thé famine districts. | orieration and Ifkewise “operators got usel day. The man, who had less than a year 1 > z to large.margins of profits during messenger and escaped with.a satchei to serve of.a revoked sentence for break- and trame, T began to wonder when we containing $20,000 which the.two were would get to the lonely wild country. i these boundaries, And what is mine shal’ know my face” e war After pointing out that the treaties pro- | o Wiid/ flowers gathered from the fields | Ing and entering, was with an officer and | BELIEVE JAMES GLASS IS and want to retain”them.” * ¢ “Sudder noticsd we F | led for reparations because therg. wasi| g RSB S B htly | 2nd the Hills of states near by were|G¥e men at a storshouse oulside the HELD BY BAND OF GYPSIEs| Profits In rocent years, in some mines |, (SUSCHE, T Moert we v o el cmething to repair and declaring that | jighted strect in fromt of the Calmut Na,|Placed upon the grave. There were juni- | Prison walls. e e he sa’d. i’ some cases exceeded the total [ (e bean! = ! ¢ viteration of the treaty of Versailles | tional bank. fn the heart of the South | pers. piucked from the resting place of 3 Jersey City, N. J. April 3.—Informa- |mine cost of production of coal. = ““Oh’ he sald. ‘I thought yow'd wan® on's transfer the Durden from | Chickgo business district. Thefobbers| Walt Whitman at Camden, N. J., and | ..Malfeasance, misfoasance and mem-|tion given several days ago in Philadel.| Asked to outline the degree of regula-}, 'y {1 " 0ior ctation” El . to France, Mr. Lioyd George [ made mo effort at conééaiment and paid | lowers grown beside the cottage at La | feasance were charged against Bank|phia by John Cruse, so-cailed “King of |tion he thought the government might - “You are inclined Lttle too much. Your men are so ‘They run about so. They are just the movies—always on the move. “You. do.not seem to vaiue lelsurs, to value meney = ply to ‘he industry, Mr. Lewls sharply opposed the setting up of wage fixing fri- bunals. and likelise said Fig was not sug- gesting that the government fix prices Commissioner Joseph C. Allen of Massa-| the Gypsies” led police authorities Here chusetts by Edmund D. Codman and |today to belleve that James Giass, who Conrad W. Croker at a hearing before|in May, 1915. disappeared at -Greely, the governor's council on the reappoint-|\Pa., is heid by a gypsy band in Argen- ment of Mr, Allen. JoMa, Calif., where Burroughs lived a year ago just -before -starting toward home—a trip in the midst of which he died. ; < | 1o, attention to the crowds. > y Will be transferring the burdén | %he two victims, Patrolman Ernest FL. 60,000,000 who are responsible | Cassidy and P! ons to the 40,000,000 who il'p Sommers, were taking the week’s collections of the . Royal ver fms of the devasta Building and Loan asSociati ®ther floral tokens eame from Henry ting. > The' question was mot finfshed when ho | -¥ou do not seem 1o " c useless to say - that gif- |bank - SoOCHALIoN 10 T1e by be; who racenily bofeht the Busrobkhs Captain James J. Rooney reported to |left the stand for the day to resume to- | Whew vou fan =cb It ¥our Fames, base | YosiiousiE1sf for e | farm, that it might be preserved as a| The body of Joseph E. Ramer, princi-|the commissioner of public safety that|MOrTOw. ¥ Everything seems rathes » on of Europe | (e memorial; and from Thomas A. Edisen | Pl of the West Main street school, Spen | Cruse toid him he only recently returned | Representative Bland, rdjublican, Tnd- » ¥ 1 ratiie Ko wial) OBITUARY “ e cer, Mass, who disappeared shortly be |from the Argentine, where his son, with |2na, author of the bill 'before the comm Mrs. Anclth: silis for Hiis Somciig . SEd os guhe Trederick Doolittle OPEN SHOP CONDITIONS IN fore Christmas, was found there in Whit-| two youths, ons adopted and _the other e ;:"M‘:Mm he | - Rauretanta. A - llin oy Cheabine ABGE B st ittle, 2 L g adia re pond. is believed that he went | kidnapped, were living. - 2 i P ) whici. | 1897, died today from illnell which began | Stonington, Maine, April .—The threc}Pearance. 3 : Greely when “Jimmy" Glass disappeared, | ¥il! be compel " Lewls responded. | PREMIER LENINE OF SOVIET {in January. He many - years -hell score’ men ‘working in ‘the granite ‘quar- was born lers and fo : ere, which er-oloy nearly 500 when town offices and ered a warn- g eds us” that they |dt one time on the state board of agric <5< is good, “wefe ‘unaffected today. further conferehices neces- jlure. He was long secrctary of Temy!e | by strike conditions prevaillng at. guai- resioration of .Kurops dge of Masons. Mrs. Doolittle and a |ries in some other sections. ‘' The’open of inducing the.|%ON, surviv s shop plan- went into effect 'here three budgets as ons Dr. Cyrus R..Northrop weeks ago. LE change, he de-i Minncapolis. Minn., April 3.—Dr, Cyrus =i = It was cssential R. Northrc:, president emeritus of the - real peace amonz the na- Prince Sixtug Leaves For Funchal. University” of Minnesota, died suddenly Paris, April 3.—(By The "A. P.)— . - £ + | from hear disease tod=y. Prince Sixtus of Boourbon De Parma, This leads me® the premier went Northrop was sitting in an easy | brother to former Emvress Zita, of “to k2 controversial — issue at home when he disd. He had beet ria Hungary, left ‘e - foday" for 1 wil come hefore the Gemou con-{ feclivm: well all day PL 190 an-atta al, Madeira, where former. -Em- peace in R and peace with |of ‘mi!gcski ~.] r lunch at n 'p»‘rm‘ Charles «fed Saturday. Prince unt!l the fatal s ten minutey & Sixtus plans ring Zita and i P e e LA T e utes us plans to bring Zita and the chil cren bhack with him. . Ex-Mayor William A. Johnson of New- buryport, Mase:, 75 Worcester “while visiting his daughter, Mrs. Howard Sargent, of that city. - He ber of the Masonic fraternity. —_— ite Cutters’ International association, at and in deglaring that the men would not resume work until a contract had been ars old, died in| when, Cruse said, he and several others . James Duncan, president of the Gran-|for the missing boy. Quincy, Mass.. said that 5,000 union em- | -was visiting on a farm at Greely in 1915. pioyes,in elghteen New England granite | She left James on the walk one day cehters - were affected- by the organiza-| while she went into the Greely postoffice. tian’s action last Saturday in rejecting a | and: when she came out he had disap- working asreement vroviding a wage cut |'peared. and was kept under surveillance for sev- eral years. They wandered nto Mexico moved to the Argentine. Commissioner of Public Safety John was a native of Newburyport and & mem- | Bentley sadi today that he would re- auest federal authorities to conduct a search in the South American republic Mrs. Glass, whose home is In the city, A'search for him, lasting several years, took .liis parents to all corners of the: country, ' “to recognize the obligation assumed in their old contract - to confer with the United Mine Workers for a new central recognize equally the desir- scale, and fo ability of such a I cannot concelve that. they can.long-withstand i Indianapolis, power of public opinion in this matter.” < N lnlJl’l’fl W. VA. NON-UNION MINERS IN BIG COAL STRIRE Ind., Aprfl 3.—First defi- nite reports from t imiportant coal fleldy of West Virginia were brought tonight tc the headquarters here, of the United Min» Workers ¢f America by Lawrence Dyer, of Beckley, W. Va., 2 member of the in- tetnational union’ executive board who = RUSSIA NOT SERIJUSLY s1cH Riga, April 3 (By the A. P.).—Premier Lenine of soviet Russia is sick but not seriously so, sald Dr. Felix Kiemperer, the Beriin specialist. today upon his ar- rival here from Moscow, where he war called recently to diagnose Lenine's mal- ady. Dr. Klemperer would not designate hia patient’s ailment, saying he did not wish to vioiate a patfent's confidence. Hi said, howeyer, Lenne’'s trouble would respond to treatment. . The opinion prévails in soviet elrclés here that the soviet premier is Hkeiy & go to Genoa if his presence is deemed necessary in furtherance of Russia's case, .