Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 7, 1922, Page 1

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VOL. LXI—NO. 85 ~ POPULATION 29,685 " To Take Referendum On Prohibition, | &0 X : : i | war contracts sndited by the war ae- | §- "N IRIN . 3 | B Stockholm, April 7.—The upper cham- Lo 3 partment to date show lm)ruxlml.:elyl B ' A ber of parliament today ratified a bil ; $45,000,000 due ihe government. members of the boards of guardians 1w | Was Applauded — Defend-| Matter With the Police— |, Foemere, N. Y. was,sentenced to 4 Union Was Breaking the Contract, Becauss Its Leaders | ™" ™2 Palloted for ly. Sily ohe coupl decided {3 marey daring a Worker Came Out Past Their Lines—Police i $1,000,000 LOSS TO INVESTOKS Stone, who shot and killed Ellis B. Kin- | nor Miiler to make Now York' a safe said to Javoive the loss of 1,000,000 3 | QUltted of murder by a jury in the Brovk- | unied today to make things iively for | [POTCS Tecelved during the past ten day: . During the Afternoon—Of 2,500 Normally w ¢ P. Day's st of the kil f sire to “Break the Organization of the United Mine | U7, 2as 2oblie the numes of eighicen | [T hCh, the ventlr wap an | coneeded tho newsaper orarges that the | 1 Siicnar Colonsi ok N 5 in favor of a consultative referends : = & next autumn cn the quen‘x’:n :u ;::M‘;T § | The resignation of Thomas A Le Brit- ; [0 | tion. The moasure was passed by the 1 ‘Y |, Argentine minister to the United B k 3 A . ’ lower house yesterday. i ] 3 " States, was announced in Buencs Alres. 3 X K L Labor Candidutes Defeated in London. | Announcement of Verdict|Governor B e e A e e Moy - . in federal erison. s 5 : Hiak London today resulted in a great, defeat s = s L vear. 5 5 T. H. Walters, Before House Labor Committee, Maintained | @ ihe lator "cunditniee” who socurca | ant Received Verdict Calm-| Talk of Arming Citizens 10| ssgeten, 5. - siorns to ve tne s | EiCKELS 8t Pacific Mills Declare That at the Closing Hour Cope With Bandits. ; : .| . ed That the Workers Were Determined to Fix Scales Only For Certain Dis- kead, former corporation counsel of Cin-| city to live in, Police Coinmissioner En- | o Cmployment conditions througliout the f Had Been Sent Home at o} Iyn supreme dourt. fed - by the president’s conference on unem- 3 x R , investors here and poesibly missions i e oriminals whose daring deeds re- ) of Power” in Calling the National Strike—Has No De- | other parts of e country wae dlsebosey | | Hundreds of men and women who had | cently have startied the citizenry, isRicge ther, Ba0h valllc $he names of wiehinen | ohioes, irie shass in e o o e onaess that e | ieticnant Colonsd “Paul Wa-1 meck T gardless of Number of Workers Reporting. o Lawrence, Mass., April 6.—Striking | workers leaving the mill. One of d London, April 6—The elections of Miller - Takes Up | dodging the aratt, Adoih . Deutsch, 2, only 128 out of the nearly 700 seats elorts paradise. Of its 15,000 pobulation ALLEGED OIL FRAUD WiTH ' New York, April §.—Miss Olivia M, P.}” New York, April 6—Urged by Gover- — ; i tinue to improve, according to 1 2 . 5 T o innati, Aug. 5, 1921, tonight was ac-| right and District At Banton | cOUntry cont tricts—Accused the Union Leaders of “Autocratic Abuss | ,,550%, Al £—An aflegea ol traud ’ e i oy 4 s ; Only 28 Went to Work—Mills to Keep Gates Open Re< Dby federal attorneys here ~today when | S3thered outside the court room cheered | Aithough the -commissioner never has 3 g s in Oklahoma | Holyoke who have been ndictay o224 | room also applauded. S an_unotacial record of 93 homcides and ' : Workers, Because It Might be Replaced by an Organiza- | by the feteral grand jory tor frauautens |, 112, defendart, in contrast to her high-| 103 hoid-ups. sines Jan. 1, 3 became | ., c2uly, Tuesdayl will b told at the : = e | ooronc:’s inquest tomorrow, textile workers claimed a signal viet workers was injured. b o€ o ity : |1y nervous condition throughout 'the| known tonight that orders had been is- fdstd o oY | ™ About 5,000 strike N % 5 S 3 g 5 Charles”M. Ludden, an attorney, and | itk Teceived the verdict calmiy. miod st hoadquarters: which, by substi- over the mill owners today, the cleventh X sympathizers gat tion More Violent”—Union Leader Predicts Bituminous | oon 5 aisrene on: 4o attorney, and s o ey e MUEjieiabe b tuflag the nine platoon wystem Lo -the Panty of Pramier Stambuaitsky n ne re; |since the inception of the strike. Sttay closiig tate kitaches oo SRl I T change, Trust company, both of this city, g : S NEL anake sabonb600: morn; poliee comm is| W o Coal Faitine in Six Weeksi and Frederick 1. Hersey, president of tig| . Then she turned and shook hands with | men avaiiable for patrol duty dafly. The | Cont ey Buloeis 4 e astig = e at the|were seen to leave the plant about 6.30 claimed by the government on complete | Pacific ¥nills, the principal objective of | ©'clock. In the excitement that fol returns from the communes. b the picketing during the past few days,|ll° Police were called and rescued Motor Specialty company of Waltham | Lc% S0y, Idward J. Reilly, and re- | order " giving the uniformed ' force 32 Washington, April 6.—A Jefense of the lon's leaders were “grossly ignorant of | Were arrested on the charges which con- ary N hours off once every nine days instead of iminous coml operators position in | €00NOMic law." The union felds had | OSFA the activities of the Petroleum cor. | 1o e iy occh dischargel by Jus- | every seven becomes effeciive at mid-| Aigred olman, pablisher of the Argo- |0t 3 Worker came out past’ the plekel | nation uniomn® £ ity ol ; s been constantly losing business to the |POMation of America. - All pleaded not | LIt Aspinail, Miss Stohe was.led to an|night. ; naut, o San Francisca weekly, confirmed |lines. Police explained that mill offi- | Keeping. o H oW v | the uni n had b The federal authorities gave out the ail. Sne | office promptiy accepted the responsibili 4 5 orkers home in o kine. 8 molkesman tor Pennsyl-| nos o ledve their organisations and go | folowtng adaitional names of those in: | I°CKed ten years rounger than she did |ty placed upon it by the governor of sec-| i, oSt If minister to Greece. 'He said |ne atternoon at intervals so ax to avoid | BATTLE IN B. L SENATE ania prodacers, betore the house labor | 1537, 0 [E00< finls OnEemeations & Eo) Glokaa: Jacet - Segty 3, Wl;en she appeared on @he witness stand | ing. that criminals were whipped up SR e o R KL ign a repetition of last night's Aisorgers, | OVER 48-HOUR BILH e e _ 1 ‘mos Mettler, Franc : . i sm - f Ne conl strie and at the same time an | Other districts outaide the central com | Foley, Framk W. Bemnard, Edward A.| i, 028 befo e e VIn o Ok b cf s g shon e Dol et o e Lt e Mimation was giver by Attorney Gen.| Petitive field, he added, his associates had | Clark, all of Boston; Edward H. Bush- e ey The New England department, mili- bie after they were elutehed by the po- | 11 erators took this action because not| Providence; R. L, April 6.—The battie : y order of the world war at its an- it | L. been refused 3 nell of Holyoke; Aiwyn Bell, Jr., Bdwin| & 5y, lice. Measures signed by the governor, 5 enough workers appeared this morning to | to get the Lavander 48-hour bill out of Daugherty through a letter from | 5020 Fefused an opportunity o negotiate | Rell of Hotyoke; Aivyn Boll -V(;ewfl"h':‘ Tm the happiest woman in the| providing for six more assistant district | Moo Gamb it 3 Sunn ot baston oy | Permit them to run any department. the senate judiciary committes and on to m wiich was read Into the record trat 5 Gudebrod, Boland H. Biaisdell, Clarence| WOrid:" she sald. “I'm a fres woman |attorneys and additional courts, would “:::“%‘;'r“” - Swan, of Boston, 251" When the lower Pacific mills opened in | the floor for @ vote broke out anew thim Sine Penecs it they 56 prosect | pruproTS e D. Inman, Burt H. Clements, Raymond :‘::’w:p::‘: g0 where 4 please. At last | do much to clear the calendars, Mr. Ban- . o the morning only 28 workers of the 3,-| afterncon. After a brief but sharp de< again saw fit to fix national wages in COAL FAMINE IN SIX WEEKS | o, Fuller, John A. Sheilite and James L. § Tt iy, o The matron then turned over her per-| So datimg has banditry becomo in this| FATOrable report of the semate bl |X SO SHPITAL ene 200" had Sior Bangy of Wairenico tike e * Industry by such an agreement. i c e, Yok ity =onal belongings. Miss Stone told mews- | city that the chamber ot ¢ | Providing for the appointment of @ farm- |},con working at these milly daring the | ure away from committes and make it & Other developments today included a| Now York, April 6—Predicting that the | | ;m“;‘;‘::;lafiflfide‘fih‘:'}fl;“’? papermen she Wwae going o a hotel in | the state of New York taday direoted a | T 22¢@ member of the e TS e | Past few daya. - special order for next Tuesday afterncona statement by Secretary Hoover upon his | Bation will be in the midst of & bituminous | S°TP . °f L New York. 7 & board was ordered vesterday by the || g t turn from the weit hat reponts, pre- | CoAl famine In six weeks ~unless _the apaieation mos Se0sureny; Tt M) U am not tived” she added. “T am | sotaeding smole poice. mtecsin, s | house banking committee. RiCnt thak they.woula. mot slose-the wiina| - Erevdemt Thomes ¥. MeMehon of thel mably from non-union fields, showed | Present strike is settled, Philip Murray, b 4 only happy. But my fri i 4 2 s o e M bituminous coal mined on Monday, | vee president of the Tnited Mine Work- | Standard Off company was intercsted 1n| T'ruct zot some sieon. s s b e B e s | A aletant’ catinauake, yromably. ws ahe |12, VOO Reen, the sniex open fopard: | B O e s B | afier the strike had been called, amount. | oF8 of America, declared “congress must | i that t cons His Hokilig ‘com-{ i Toitie Batrsmnnd dtvect 1L g o h o s ] zearys. and s Maghitrats | oot ‘Tales wan registercd st the Do- | 1688:0f the number of workers reporting | aky fof Hees fhants S S ", lo 512000 tons and on Tuesday to|be blind not to see what the country s w Dot ottt g aencerns; that i | tew nours aleep, and then £0. 10) pomie] EMGBAAHIS 1n eute tashors Seoka i Goos | MiNion-~duservatory in i S dic- | piant today. ment this mornifg in which he 0 tons. He declared, however, that | against.” & . inconspicuous, ine 0 Prets tance to the epicentre was figured by sci- o Ay e time was mwaficlent to justity any| Mr. Murray's statement was made | D2 propectics pedgelas 120,000 Massels |y Tomome?ev%f‘hgo‘:y‘:r;: f.‘("n:”"""';ffx”’“mw"“ rich harvest| oniists as about §,000 miles. Conditions at “the other milly affected | that Sénator Herbert M. Stierwood being drawn from these fig. | shortly after John L. Lewls, president of | 9f Oil daily, with an annual income of les reaped from speedaters. e h ey L e ; s by the strike were unchanged, only a | Provilence ajone was blocking action ok Domible. Baring ou th. |the mihe workers thtiknatiocal. Asbiess | $59000,069 T have zone Shbouen” feartul experlences | = Commissioner Entight today advocated| ¢ 1 ¢ wnofficial retarns on the city | SMall Dercentage of operatives answer- | the 45-hour act by refusing to cast question of sufficiency of supply. that the refusal of operators in the central = is & 2004 world and that God 1o quer " 1t | passdge of a law by New Jersey similar | o tion in” Kansas City. Mo., €ave Frank | N the whistles, vote which would bring it out of commit< hairman competitive fleld to confer with the work- | ILLIAN EUSSELL ADVOCATES o ey .. a Ly in s ‘stete phich o 2 Ve tor | Joseph L. Marcoux, who, the police| tee. j _— Cromwell, democrat, 63,302 votos [oF |, . e a siriker, was stabbed here late| The last of the 500,000 yards of this afternoon. Marcoux was standing | left in process at the Pontic bl before the approach to the Patchogue-|of B. B. & R. Knight, Inc, when gating committes algo made public tele. | men, at the Invitation of the house labor AN “DMMIGRATION HOLIDAY”|DEFENSE RESTS ITS CASE e DTt A “hic messages from representative | ommittee, meant tho strike would become | IN AEDUCKLE'S THIBD wRIAY|Dresent, he said, it was easy for & New B T ik C:f\g?;n-fl a:.dop;:fl = m“‘:.‘mfifiri":: :’l‘:?%mcmn of a tainine, | tion l;m‘fisa‘;,-"oz”f’:gn“&n:?o n‘fl"‘;i’.i; York gunman & to purchase a Weapon| pguara F. Doree, Thiladelrhla 1, W. |Piymouth mill when attacked. His as-| Workers struck nearly eleven weeks “r refusal to accede to the committee’s | Mr. Murray asserted that the stock piles | Was recommended to the house immigra- |, o0 Francisco, April 6—Introduetion | across the Hudson. leader, released from the f-dcral prison | sailant escaped. e S e Aea O request to renew interstate negotiations |of the country contain only sixty million |tion committee today by Mrs. Lillian|Or SYeral witnesses by the prosecution| At the same time the commissioner |,k Leavenworth, Mansas to go| The Pacific Print Works was the| Wil thén be closed for an indefinite with the umion. tons of bituminous Goal, of which 20,000,- [ Russell Moore, who recently made an|' Present testimony in robuttal follow- |Teferred to ccent nowspaper —articles ffo (e bedside Gt his son, arrived in Phil- [5cene of a small disorder at six o'clock | Acoording ¢o a statement today by They did indicate” he stated, “a |00 already are in the bins of the consum. | inspection, of conditions in France, Eng- |57 | ;flf‘;;“’l‘,‘:&*:g‘:d"é!“:‘:“?'gfl to- fl:‘p‘e‘:‘:‘g el il (:“;:;;‘;t adelphia. Rt o e Macray NEBS. A R S e ik T :‘I;hlAl:ll‘llinn 4y ‘l.ii”ffi:‘":’!fl,‘,";fi’ P 1‘{‘-‘:‘3’1:::“’" & commission BY| Arbuckle’s third trial on a mansiaughter | themseives while working in the financial Art O'Brien, president of tho Gaelic Mr. Watkins, in appearing before the |llon tons will suffice for only another five [ ASs a result of her trip, she said, the fv“:;;te;“‘fn ‘f;”‘"“:': b offered, it :‘ll'l};::; "h;" daily large ¢ imounts of |jeqgue in London, said that there still | A DAY OF UNUSUAL REPRESENTATIVE BLANTON nuse committee, aitacked the United weeks according to Mr. Murray's figures. |conviction tat “America should 'care|giol Yib® ', "0 Hhe detense eomten | STreRey and securities are taken throush | were forty méh in jalls in Ensland who ACTIVITY IN STOCK MARKET |- DENOUNCED BY Mimo Workers of America as “setting| Clalms of the operators that the produc- | for Americans first” had assumed first|gcr ' or Mise Virginia Rarpe T8t Anva wntter of fict the coniisaionte | 250 CuHkIBA tp ba jrogarded. . as politiea ) S matte St arsiox weta- [Then B desition ninse” winld. pebjiie "l’:""m"‘;el:: her mind among all other| 3y *Winitred Burkholder ~of New|said, 35,100 permits have been lssaed o] PO TS /7w with breach-ef contract. The union | the nation's supply to cight wecks wers |Phases of immigration problems, s Bl ) elf. he said, was breaking the con- |dented by the union leader. Latest re- | Other recommendations by Mrs, Moore 7o' 21 Mot Katherine Fax of Chica| date This namber, he added, was about| wimiam Vineeat Astor han accepted | 1iliihze S0ay amounted to about ie |Into an uproas today with #cl, Decause it refused to meet with{lports from the non-jnion stromgholds, |included compulsory blood tests of immi with “Mins Rappe fhey mever had ini tgsued, “Ie ! the guardianship of his nine L';;“' "m s 000 shares, the largest total of any | Blanton, democrat, Tgxas, the dbject of , TPTR, " the Ereat producing dis- | he sald, indleate that 75 per cont of tho | grants, mads beforo they saled, authori |10 Y SRR 100 . 5 i brother, John Sacob Astor, wn the W0 | seciion Sincs 1920, when marist varues | 8ek. of the countcy outside of Ohio, | non-union miners would have waiked out |zation of American consuls to refuse to A ¢ et slication of his mother, were subjected to considerabls depres.| In a flery ten minute spesch, o, Indiana uniI mestern Pennayl- | with the strikers before the weelend. vise passports ot objectionable perdons en”:;"l;:“:if:‘:hf.""‘fi:':: “{:‘& elv: ““’Kv‘n::\“:;‘“ BY Dick. o g ative Garner, dean of the Texas Galega~ anla to Ax scales. It would be “finan- | Fifty per cent. have already done so, he |and requirement of all immigrants to 2 2 ioago, NKERS AND BROKERS fre=— The number of stocks traded in to- | tion, declared that Mr. Banton 1 sulside,” he added, for the group he | he sald. read, write and speak the English lan-|nirse: Who sald she had attended Miss Secretary Denby served blunt warning - day, mostly at extreme gai 1t common allar as ever spoke a % : ated to continue making its wages| “The normal productian of non-union | guage. T e ok o imews dur'| New York, April 7.—Wall streef 1aon officers and men of the navy to suard | [0, MOSC B TEIGEE SAER of 1 to § basis of the Interstate agreement | mines in all flelds was 158,000,000 tons a The problem of distribution of immi- £s,4 mayor against 50,686 cast for M A. Foster, republican. New York, April 6.—Dealings in all | Washington, April 6—For the classes of stocks on the New York Stock | time within a year the houss was — ints, English in this country.” Mr. tre ehilabirth. . preparing to ‘beat bandits and hold-up |themselves ‘ashore and afloat from t:g s :m:::l:'m{:dl;;"::::n';fllfi: e 2 =5, o i “ s rae W In the Tnited States. cuid 084 gaes . puilheider sald -hat -t idert T g SSObSl SO s o ths futueg, . f ooeashingg of sovictism, commURISD €0 py racord-made-iast March. qeterization for he left the chamber at used the anion leaders of { now has boen cut in half, gnd. with forth- | partly sotved, Mrs. Moore said, by PIac-|knowlsdge Miss Rappe never gave birdh squad of “trus confidential” | anarchy. . Quotations were higher by fractions | Outset of te attack, after shouting that setoeratlc UBLES G power' in callingor walk-duts in sympathy with our men. |ing American “teachers’ on incoming o n ehii 1 employes of bankers, brokers and other i i to 13 points at the very autset and |Would ‘hoid the gentleman personally re< “The sttunty giaerate seatamest of| oAl be oot to e s 5000000 Tons- s | Soumts; Son’ hore Thcoh T aben e = rerateed pretioe Somient o e aioean | commmen st " omgleting | aome - lterary | Sains_ were” extended i aimost every | SPonsile (6 me, If he cals ma & e~ e ¢ " 3 e g Frdshirs Y | INCREASED EMPOLYMENT, ead | quanter in the enormous turnover of | Standing six feet away, Mr. poaition was contained In @ jetter to Rep- | week—oue fourth of the mational con- |might expect to find the greatest advan- BOT NOT 1N MEW ENGLAND | I, 3t police headquarters. work, Bis:;wflGacicl::cgl Ji‘é.’é’ifr‘ffiefiflz e first and secned Boure T Breeia | nela s Ris et tho - QU resentative Pland, republican, Indlana. | sumption. tages of life. AOLIN - > mploves, especialy those engaged in [of the natio: equipments, of's and many of the minor | asking for order and requesting Mr. Bian who bad referred to epeatsd statements| “T estimate that, when the present | Larger alstribution facilities at other = transporting money in the down-town |Episcopal church announced that he operators that imterstate Wage agree- i stocks are exhausted,.the non-union mines will practice nightly. will not be- a candidate for re-election. v clash of the speaker’s gavel, ments possibly constftated vioiations of | will have piled up sufficient fuel for one Aol activity. of the A Sherman law. Mr. Daugherty stated, {more week. Then will come an actual the preceding month was.reported today | HOLD TP NEAR TTE Anuthorities at Camp Dix, N. J., stated | --Realizing sales or profit-taking ""'l ;;";’,;:3 ;e“:'hd£,";,:::",'hm - swever, that he considersd at a “guty | shortars which will crippte basic indus- L to the employment service of the de- GRAND CENTRAL STATION |that they are investigating 'n series of | came) effentive in the final hour on call | FEPRC 2 08 S8 Cpel, PRl WPR0 of operators and miers to hoM sucu |crise throughout the country.” COOLIDGE CONCLUDES HIS partment of labor from 43 to 65 rep- % N | thefts from army warehouses, which in- | moneys rise from 41 to 5 per fl..m 1‘“‘ v |on the front row started ‘toward Mr. egoiation.” and he asked If after taking| Mr, Murray cited that the United States VISIT To MICHIGAN |ISSentative cities for the month ending | . now york. April 6Holding up the |Volve more than a score df soldiers and | encouraged shorts to resume operations, | o8 To ©O POF SERC fowsed M 1At position it was “Thkely that the de-|Ste-1 corporation and its subsidiaries in ~|March 31. The automotive and allled |, rocer Samuel Funt, at the Ppoint of a | ex-service men, and loot valued at more whough sugr cfimml(rr;’rw 'S were tenta- dat tment of justice would undertake a|the Pittsburgh district now have only sul- | petroit, April 6—Vice President Cool- | Mdustries, iron and steel and their pro- | un “an unidentified bandit tonight robbed | than $20,000. A o o h The trouble started while Mr. osecution.” ficient coal for 72 hours. A shutdown Of | 1az ™ coni 00n 1e tavo day isit to Mi.| GUcts and lumber headed the trades | §1 28 UECCHINCT DAL topight robbed _— In_sereval noOllarinsances suol 58| i) Geouiiic Srastaptsis SSANC T For central Pennsylvania operators,| the mills due to lack of coal will throw | pic t*osa g s luncheon guest at the | SHOWINg Improved activity. The met | or rere o 3135 and made tio tocuy | Malor Fredorick J. Breckbill, national {United States Steel and ° Independent | dchouncio a newspaper report of i who employed 43,000 of the striking min- | 200,000 men out of work, he said. Detrolt Afhletic club where~ he ' spoke | CTeases for the country, figured on re- | iy tne crowd near Grand Central station | commander in chief of the Naval and MiL | shares of the same eroun. gains were | Coor o W0 Sl WO oF defenne! Watkins said there was no dis-| Before the end of the week. he said, 15.- | briefiy in praise of the Harding admin- por;s from 1428 firms, Was 25 Der |perore an alarm could*be turned in itary Order of t‘he lunlte!nimSt?}t;ad,gfl::_\: mfhp lmxlaa(cr:-“;“:r'a:t:g;t::: ‘c'a::e:;'}- “these measly itémhs of petty grith® NS 000 other men, in the railroad shop crafts cent. pelrelieraalalions O superintendent of malls at the » % s 1+ | rine 1 » encty, it [ will have been thrown ide by the suspen- “’;’},fi;fl;‘;m,ng on n tour of an automo.| Meny of the 22 cities reporting, de- | cyyrny KILLED BY THE Dost oftice, died suddenly at his home from | anced, howeser, by the more vigorous ad- | Fng to ":")";,Gm."’fzr’“::m pe- | an organization | sion of coal hauling trains through the an- | e plant here fn his speech, the vice | CTCASeS were in the New England sfates, EXPLOSION OF A STILY | At troudle. = Sasios” o GifL) SREiKily i el O | maney | bot he declared the un- | thracite regions of Pennsylvania. Dresinent sald he had: “eeeelied ot tie | thelr reports reflecting the results of the X L —_— vision, Mexican Petrolenm rose over G |SUDP - t the Dan- | noir & ‘hich was held and | Starting with the statement that the: i organization and efficlency shown” apd | (°Xtile strikes mow in progress. Leath Investigation by officials of the points, nearly all of which was ports were suggested to relieve congest-| Washington, April §.—Increased em-| gistrict, &d conditions at the Ellis Island, New |Dloyment ranging up to 2§ per cent. over York, receiving station. or low-grade rails were the center of Jton not to leave. But responding to New York, £pril 6.—A 'still which ex- : York. New Ha g i1y coal 2 Texas and | world is full of “all kinds of llars, the ar=| © er, chemicals and food products also em- bury division of the New York. ralls, especially coalers and Tex q i or s o G AL aRE he Continued “we are trylng at Wash-| jov.;"fewer in March than in Febru.|Ploded today in the Ninth avenue apart- |en 'anq Hartford of the derailment of the | Pacifi, added substantially -to their [titic Mar, the inartisir liar and the M o M+ s SOVIET DELEGATES Ington to get the sume organization and | 7' ; ment of Desmostoni Katsanio, killed one | by ieneld New York express near Canaan | early improvement common ordinary liar,” Garner, his facs POSSESSING LIQUOR SUN-BATHING IN ITALY zfrflemr:{g ;:::‘nifi;:;; rlx,fl;gm:x;ng“t: T e el the i tteai mith an m s children, aged 3, and So seriously aiscloses what appear to havo been 3 de- | Prices werc somewhat Irregular at 'r:;';‘l';"’,;"{j‘fl‘;'g‘:fl‘:':; ‘;}: - ’,‘:m“,f;’ 4 & R i % te| indrease in emplayment In Marely of Im 2nd his two other children |yorate attempt to wreck the train. the feverishly active close, but gains )™ Philadeiphia, April §—Federal war-| Santa Marcherita, Ttaly, April 6 (By ‘::i'.fp Yr‘r);remf: g\:n;fgv;l;:c:{m;ln e{glvat_gmz per cent., Memphis belng second | that it was feared tonight all would oAt predominated, partigularly in specula- :??nes'n:or:rfl':‘a"'fi:m":“:mfi° Hacs 18 wWers fssued late todlay for Biste |t A. P.).—The soviet deldgatedity the| Do w0 the B 3 with 18.1, and Seattle third witn 11.3 | die. < A ‘special time table to cover all trains | {iis industrials and rafls. A o k panis L. stor Georgs Gray and his partner, | Genoa conference pussed their firgt day |are maving progresa’ . |per cent. Paterson, N. I, reported a| A £uard was placed over the father | pecteq by change in time on Sunda¥. | Trading in bonds was more orderly, [POIRL" And then spesking, ws he sic, i Flemn, charging them with pos- |1l Itaiy in sun-bathing and resting on| RO Of (e SCmS COC Clents Woee} decrease of 17.2 per cent’, Manchester, | after he was taken to a hospltal, ar-|spril 30 when davlight time.becomes ef- | pye 5 great many issues in that 10- | o hang our’heads in shame and humii-] sing and ‘seling Intoxicating lquor in | e verandas of the Ymperial Palace ho- | Brelfed, by, the wiee president who ety TR, o Towall iass, 117, - |Tésted on a chiarge of violating the state |feetive in many places. will be izmed by hiuqing Libertw 4% and several of the | e NN ourtheads in shame and - on_of the prohibition law. Prohi. (el Chitcherin, Livitinoff, Joffe end the | Gared the four-power tresty hiad remey gyl prohibition law. the New York, New Haven and Hartford |'isg'and 4%s moved up to higher ground, | 210 when Blanton of Teas is re erred to; - ;”n,.“‘n‘d ;,,h hi"'.:’!:‘:d'?: uxriated th the tropleal gardens of the |DUrden from American taxpayers. e L EEEAT opvecd vorsdr hurlel‘:xg lhrou":): the. tw‘i:: With a camp as the most important flo’rr’::lo.?' extraordinary bougandy | e declared that “we look upon him as B 2. 3 74 . President Haral dministration, he s r E y inary ¥ e = sallons’ of moonshine whiskey 5 Ee ity At ab et dibomer 2 s e mmfl‘(‘; Queenstown, Ireland, April §.—Four| 3% into the rear yard of a building |ciue, police were secking two men who | anq activity again was predicated on t;_b‘ iy, G54 & CTULEE: MoRey"to S Senator Gray declared the liquor aia| Nothing lem than an aerlal ettack |Sotcies. British torpedo boat destrovers have:ar-| Lire® doors away. The noise attracted |engaged in a pistol fight {n Chicago with | ingications that general economic o~ | iry 1 0014 not offend the rutes ot thel e ot . Bl adthar A e okt 'TF ol Tt et Fived here, supposediy to protect govern- | o Policemen. who rushed into the Kat- | geteotives and then murdered VWWAW | gitions throughout the country —are fy .. o 3y Garner said, as he moved o) yon was sald fo have admitted the | delegation. o sl While a1| PERFECTLY FOXMED BABY ment supplies against another republi- z:::“b?"‘:‘;,‘l‘r’r:‘ u‘;"f’;" “:”‘i“ over- | parlovg of Roston, an innocent by: Worklng back to mormal This, in the |house:) Me. Garner mid, as he moved to} o o the whiskey, declaring that | L e "and. briidges leading. into the| BOY WEIGHS BUT-2 1-168 POUNDS |can coup, such as that when raiders last | ST bY . ‘they found the chil- |er in their fiight. Opinion of observers, seems to find its | WArd Wi seb UL wodld Sy What i SRS AT, P BN DR of B8 | © S s batioNB 1 ks o soral week seized explosives on board an ad-| TS g e ters have re. | Clearest refiection in’ the recent expan- YEF PUT NEL TR TR0® T I BEC nployes to become exhausted and that s ¥ . o ! = " i o 2 i 3 atsaniso was discovered when | quested Foreign nist 'y Ve ble railroad earnings and the con- p i - his Belfast, April 6.—A nine-year-old child - x aue: 2 sa | favorable T ton'of Texas I¥ & dligrade to tih Kows There are also many detectives on duty | in the Lincoln hospital. The child, which | Lodge road. A swarm of children were WWO DESPONDENT MEN Amleflca“o“nmt‘::md wool. trom “eon- | & out. DEFENSE HMAS OPENED IN in that neighborhood. The hotel grounds | is the tiniest ever born in & local fospital | Playing in the street when .a rifie shot SR i cents a D R ILis oksnro: for AL - % After Representative Mondell of Wi- TRIAL OF FRANK JANCARES | are complersly sealed, and admission is | and believed o be one af the smalest |Tang out and the child fel dead, There SUICIDE IN NEW YORK |stituting a prohibit DEDICATION OF MEMORIAL ofhing the vpiiticen. JAASAr, il mie i o 0 TRTTAEER Gented to all. Even felephone communi- | perfectly: normal infants born anywhere, | S 1o clue to the assassin. g gentiné " exportatio; TO ADMIBAL PEARY | general reply to Blanton's charges as fo : ¢ cation has been severed. responded to respiration immediateiy. Belfast, April 6.—A bomb was thrown| New York, April 6.—Two men tired JEht attire forty guests - “petty graft” with the declaration that he| Morritown. N J. Aprl 8.—The de-| o i N apers ave remarking hu-| “There is mo reason to believe he will [today Into a house in Spamount street.|of life—one old, the other young—com- | Clad in their pe e Firis, flad through | Washington, AHI 6 —Amemorial 19 | could count on ine finger of one hand thal se 1 of FFank Jancarek, morously on the slight interest Italians|not live and grow up normally,” declared | TWo women were injured. mitted suicide here today. including t\'emsl'hi ‘: llison hotel in Niles, | Rear Admiral Robert E. Peary. discoverer | number of house members ‘who ould! [0 rih amacking and sabbing to | SOOI Ol ve taken In the arrival of | Dr. Samuel. Nitebers, resident physician.| London, ‘April G—Five ~dishanded| Melville M Wilson, 12, barricaded | windows from the Janette Lawrence, 12 year old . . v Artitg: ft, petty or otherwise,” the ex-' In the base. | of the North Pole was dedicated in ot 14 Frafe Gilly o e e spherold made of white granite from his { ' five | memhers of the Royal Irish Constabulary | himself in the room where he had lived tF), dast October, was be-| 080, ISR Wt MAhoe oWDSre beon o e O L o | Were “smot. dead today. accordifg o thelas u hewmit. for 22, years. thesed oo Bbaat seiia Tately mmorioss donite e Dol b8 | welght for her Size. The father,.a bani | Dublin correspondent ' of the Morning| the gas and sent a bullet fnto his 3 produced sev- —_— native state of Maine was unveiled at his y s i i Post. Two of the men were killed in|brain. . place. The ceremonies werc | I8 STEALING MATERIAL > Witneases who testified o “strangs | 23 b the Russians about the Ganger they sl i Tf.i°c‘§fl1:“$’;§:n‘3;’§' to respira- | Kerry and three in Clare. Another was| He left a note saying he wanted no | Oue persor wams iustantts Lilled and ) :fl;:‘:vflmce Tt g - on’ the part of “ MeGrory, | ©XPected to encounter in Ttaiy. tion immediately and hopes were enter- | Wounded in Kerry. funeral services—“churches ars to keep |SIX othea 1 fl: ct:r«. P .\.;1; T e e ararors 1 dvernmeitl . witness for the prosecution. who al- | oo <o vy T e s tained that it would live, It later prov- — thelr hands oft.” J Vi 21 ian cue st & i fn | nd other bigh oficlale of (8 SVGMI | gy gons, cat 2 §—Somewhers ; ek confessed the crime | CONTINUE s ble to assimilat ishment and | BURGLARY OF JEWELRY Raymond B. Rice, 23, scrawlea a |the hrart of tue business distiiot of 1o | a5 W0 88 (O G (orecented the 5 |in Pasadena is & thief who loves & ——— T IS M T O RO ::=:nu:ll; e ke o e AND YURS IN NEW HAVEN | note saying he was ill, jobless and with- | 0200 5 o e uer and & | morial, Arctic explorers and scientists. [ home €0 much that he is stealing to get! Sk, R 4 prit h L LR i ks The unvelling was gn the 13th anniversary | one, | OBITUARY. Okiahoma Ciy, OKla., April §—County | e mother, Mrs. Tuolle Georse Ha3| | yocen, April 6—Jewelry and| throush his head. Papers in his Foom in {1120 Of Sulemiaties of the discovery of the pole. For weeks he has been collecting {hs i o R g ] TR furs valued at $4,000 were stolen this| dicated that he formerly lved in Bridge- Sate comporation hae adopted & res- | A cold rain fell during the coromontes | component. pa ‘ Cartls R. Hathawsy. day of the shooting to death of Lieuten- 3 L Eicrmoon feom the norie OF HATolt Wat: | Port, Cond. A" Tester from & watnn | . The Yele coporalion has adapied o rex- || & 016 St B Ot ventencs thoss | For sometsse hardiy & night 3 astor §—According to ad- |5t Colnel Paul Ward Beck by Jean-P.| o ,\xryrRORIBITION son, superintendent of a manufacturing|named “Nettic” who gave her address | Olution £Xvr - re tonight Curtis R.|Day. attormey and oil man, .in the jat-|AN AX o Rassell T. Chittenden, whose res. | attending, Secretary Denby, Assistant | that some small quantity of building: B O M B v hotosiNbtes, DRy ALY Do e MEETING IN CARNEGIE HALY, [Plant here. Mr. Watson said the burg-|as 506 Whitney avenue, New Haven, al i h i cevelt. 3 ibert Grosven- | material—a door, & window or a bath Hirector of the Sheffield Sci- | Secretary Roosevelt and Gil Y or & ot it il g i lary occurred while the members of hisj so. was found. I‘f,:fi?“;:m W become_effectiva_in | or, president of the National Geographic | tub—was not stolen from some Bouss e ' .| Gounty, NSy B ot o New . York, -April 6.—Antiprohibition. | {2mily ‘were away.. Polics susplelon lsj . o erammn— ' [¥one. He hasteen head of Sheffield sice { society delivering addresses, bare-hesded | under constructio ! rs. Corporation snd thel = oo e e |“‘fi Hughes an- {hta. clamered ut & mestiuy i Oxtsicgic centéred on an unidentified young man|CAT TURNED UP AFTE 1898, while others stod under the pi Then—indicating, the police”sald, that. Lievrol dled of pneumo- | TOWICEE n'sl'.m”r'w'l‘f“‘fi"‘fi‘d“ e | Ball toniehe. Tor. the: vanest: atithie sigic | 10 va2 scen A ieuta dTRE Shattnent JUMPING 150 FEET INTO GORGE S shelter of umbrellas. o~ his house was built, and he was putting 3 P . N. €., Wednesday ev- party at the Day ;"flmp m: 'Mmgo{ :n: Saente amishtiieht. deslaving il meatiis ‘house and who is believed .to have un- . The largest illicit liquor plant yet en- Accompanying the presient -zreu “:; in his sidewalk and driveway—came was born in Suftield, |4YIE. Day, however, declared that no| tions - adopted by a_spontaneous vote | COKd the apartment door with a skele- Niagara Falls N. ¥ April §—ig, b | countered by the federal pronibition en | Harding. he chict, Justice of the Unite] | series of thefta of coment. } s born in 3 1 + g i £ 5 x pet cat of customs and immigrauon of- |forcement force in this state was - 3 last shrube s ! |state official or others not named in the | that it is “at variance with the spirit of - i Westport when | state and Mrs. Hughes and the French | and plants have been stolen. : oifver Eraduat | fiesc list made public were present. Othe | our institutiors, with the genius of our | prpoRTS OF ACTIVITIES OF flelals at the American end of the lower | covered last Saturday in ort when | state e | ssern ) He be. | €7 members of the party substantiated | history, and ths character of our peo- steel arch bridge, jumped 150 feet into |10 stills actively working and one 200- | ambassador~ anl Madame Ju A EXAGGERATED v v] ction were ong the explorers present were Rold e Mioc | 20 Vot emant, 7 b . s T e e, | o e L D e eur of the | Arpunisen, Qlzsovered of.the South Pols; | MANUAL OB Srigtrr : retired from that posi- | SEerill Ben Dancy, said his inspection| The association, ¥t was amnounced ] v oiingfon, April 6—Possibility of | fur, but otherwise little the worse.for tne | Saugatuck button factory. Vilhjalmur Stefanson, Captain Robert A. OF PATROLMEN IN SEATTLE, on account of iil heaith, [ 0f 3-Tay pictures of Beck's head led him | from the stage, has more than 300,000 | ., weq radical activities throughbut the | adventure. Bartlett and Matt Henson who accom- s vears later he re-entered |0, the Delief that Beck was shot from | members and gaining at the rate of more | univy was minimized today by Attor-| After the cat plunged into the gorge |goUND STEAMEES WERE anied Peary to the nole. Seattls, Washn., Aprfl &—M' 5 Biestey & stmpmber of | g )7, Geffatedthis o perinipes. | than1 0008 week ney_Generai Daugherty, who said recent |men employed on the bridge saw her REFLOATED AT HELL GATE s for the patro'man, as set forth in the omoblle company. (s R reports of increased activity were mostly | cral about on'the rocks belonw and try oSy RECEIVERSHIP FOR L B, T. new police manual, provides among oth- Mr. Hathaway is survived by a wife PP s g1 e CONRREID NS AN IREEA “exaggerated.” t0_climb up the steel beams of-the arch. | . youc April 6.—The Long Island . HAS BEEN AVERTED |er things that while on duty he must r childrey, Catherine, Curtis, | VALUE OF yEWELRY STOLEN FROM FEATURED IN LONDON PAPERS | “Some - people” Mr. Daugherty said, | Efforts to rescue her were unsuccesstul. | ¢ B8 000 L0000 "0na” Gity of not: e b f Sizabeth and Winifred. Funeral | GALLI-CURCI VALUED AT $100,000| London, April 7.—The London Times| “sce danger cvery time they see a woman|but today she appeared, dragemng nersert | BOURE SSORG OO Tng oo Sunk- | New York, April S —Receivership fof| “Puft cigars. ] vices will be held in Litchfleld, Conn. and Dally Mail give first place today to|with a red hat walk down the street.” |un the edge of the. precipics .near. the | Brogkton ot o o e e | the Interborough Rapid Transit com-| “Munch gum. Los Angelea, April §.—While her. hus- | conditions in Ireland. They emphasize| The attorney general il mot think |bridge. - Meary T. Blake. band, Homer Samuels, placed the value a fog early today, were refloated by | pany, which was threatened because of |-~ “Induige in {dle gosstp.” wer::ekjnl;‘ tugs. tonight and proceeded to | the default onApFil 1 in the payment of | New Members of the force will the question whether it will be possible | there was any more- likelihcod of May b their plers. Neither vessel was' serious-|the seven per cent. rental on the lease | quired to attend a school of police to pold elections in view of the republi- | day disturbances this year than last year, | CUBA NOT INCLINED TO raduate living in New Eng. | lita Galll-Curci today at $45,000 L. E.|can activities. The Dublin correspondent | when May 1 passed quietly. % X fmed New Haven, April 6.—Henry T. Blake, | of the jewelry stolen from Mme. Ame- dest Ya STOP SHIPMENT OF LIQUOR ||y damaged. of the elevated lines, has been averted, | struction. 1 at his home here tonight at | Dehymer, under whose direction she is | of the Times asserts that the authority of ———— Havana, April 6.—It is not an offense| One hundred passengers were taken|Federal Judge Mayer indicated tonight. . of 84 He was graduated from | appearing In conmcerts in this section, | Arthur Grifith and Michael Collins is|MRS. JULIA COPPERTHITE, to. place alcoholic liquor aboard a vessel | off the Concord by police boats shortly {by the agreement of counsel represent- | MORAL AND FINANCIAL 1848, e practiced law for | said tonight a proper figure would be |waning and that the mass of the people, MERIDEN, DEAD AT 104 | bound for the United States. The court|after the accident happemed and landed(ing the varlous interests involved upon SUPPORT FOR MIN « years in Bridgeport and served as | “nearer £100,000.” The diva had intend- | failing to get @ lead from them, is be- of the superior wourt of Fairfleld | ed wearing the jewels at a concert in 5 of Instruction of the central district has|nearby, making the trip to New York|a plan of voluntary readjustment. J coming angry and impatient. Meriden, Conn., April 6.—Mrs. Julia| o decided and today it ordered the re- |by train. Onlz a slight jar was felt as| The plan, which involves the lssuance| New York, April 6—Bight fy. He was active in building up.| Saf’ Diego tcnight. The correspondent says there is alCopperthite, the oldest resident of-this|lease of seven men arreste last Week |the steamer struck bottom and there|of $7,000,000 worth of mew Interborough | delegates of the Central Trades and New Haven park system and was a | A special uf motoreycle officers were | growing tendency in the last few days|city, died this afterncon at.the age of | while attempting to turn over 189 bottles | Was no confusion aboard. The City of |notes and is predicated upon the contin- ember of the loeal park commission [on duty on highways throughout South- | for public men and public bodies to de- d a hundred and four vears, from injuries| of whiskey. to a member of the crew of | Brockton struck about the same time,|uance of the five cent fare. will be sub- 760,000 somight v 22 years, ern Californla tonight In an effort to clare that if the provisional government|sustained In a fall last week. She was|the steamer Monterey, bound for New |not more than 25 feet away. ~The fog |mitted to the directors of the interested n :_);W e mrl He s survived by one son, Henry W.|apprehend the two “blonde girls” sup- |cannot save.the treaty settlement the!born fn England and came to Meriden 87} York, -while the vessel 1ay at anchor:in|was one of the heaylest recorded here in g‘ e 2'ake of Englewood, N. J. posed to have taken the jewels, (1 people mult)uke action, years ago, . , g A here, - - years. . - 7 5 A 7

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