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VOL. LXIV—NO. - 138" tial payment <f $400,000 as inherit-1 Such Charge is Made by the Presidents of the Six Chicago Roads—Claim There is No Talk of Strike Among the Men—Declare That the Employes Are Sincerely Inter: ested in Taking Care of Their Jobs—Maintain That All Threats of a Walk-Out Emanate From Union Leaders. Chicago, June 7.—Declaring that there is no talk of a strike among railway workers, the presidents of six Chicago roads tlonight issued a joint statement charging that all threats of a walkout were being inspired by union leaders. The statement, whieh was signed by POPULATION 29,685 = ' NORWICH, CQ IS SI RIKE 7 B[ING |NSP|| kED . B SR ¥ . & ¢ taxes on the ecstate of the fate E. = b3 Lo g P e . v‘c : Convérse of Greenwich. 7 i ] : frd "0 France gained 786,000,000 francs in her | ¥ 4 f ) NN trade balance with the United States dur- AERE i = ing the first quarter of this year, accord- Ak Supreme Court of New York|ine to officlal statistics = " Finds Exchange Has Bee A bill designating the dalsy as the = Ay - = T o o atios e ey 2 s Hawaii Would Authorize d“v B T i e ks et ) dEnE the Tracks—The Badly Mangled Body of a Man Was New Yomk, June 7.—The American|the country for everybody for the eurrent| <w,.pingion June 7.—Henry A. Bald- F d-Li . T HOSINR = White House. win, congressional delegate from Hawait ound Lying Beside the Track—Suspicion is Entertain charge of buckéting orders by a su- wppearing today before the senate im- Preme court jury late today. The jur-| Three persons were killed and three in- | train hit a truck near the Binghamton |tion of the Dillingham resolution, which . Sentence will be pronounced tomorrow (% Ty state hospltdl water worka would -authortze -suspension by “the pres- . Attempt to Wreck the Train. morning, Justice Marcus announced. Af- Ident; for_ five, yeacs: of ks, kmmilgration ; ot $60,000,000 wage cut ordered yesterday|change, directors of the organization|called cement cases will be undertaken Danielson, Junie 7.——A torthbound ex-|Several railrcad police and Coroner by the railroad labor ‘board goes into|who have. been'indicted on charges grow-|as ;u d?ly ‘as possible, the department of | V6I0PS from a labor shortage. thur G. Bill of Windham county ait n ; ; lage at 10.10 tonight crashed iInto @ pile|an Bour after it happened. Investiga- Following the release of the * ballots Py } resolution was designed to- relieve the k crashed into & p » by {hi cosubive: aeumeil. o the et o |y Sl he R present Jabor shortage by enabling the | of seven fies that were wired s the don showed heel prints exactly the sasne fon of Chi ack on a curve two and a half miles|as would be made by the heecls o e the vice president ® . Ran-|the creation of a new division . of ac- |President to permit immigrat s HE Byram of the Snicae, Mimeui |Pational headquarters of the: six unions|delph Rose, Sr., and the seereiary, G, | coanting. Investization of the wan Sauss [Tiese under certain restrictions, its prin-|SOUtk of Danielton mear tho scatherls |shoss of the dtad man sbout & pile Of r - A were instructed to send out a letter. to " The duts’ " 1 o : ; - i Erowth of what he described as the men- | Which was rot’ deralled, was waickly |the track. oy FOL S NMERNNE) 5 etices. St ol G S e R I o dce’ of Japanese industrial and political | stopped andtralnmen who hurrled back| -The assumption from this was that ooy ’ N “This is time for action and not talk|y pa ? o | > v . i v 2 T id the Japanese were not assimi- body of a man; 50 to 55 years of age,|upon the track and sumehow asn been Chicago Great Western. foll in Or ' unnecessary delay,” ‘the letter Téad.|gare two .indictments, one: of them un-|War veterans were being abused at. vari. He sal : = b . v g . Theeits of. o stilke m‘:d‘:';’ m"”dm‘ very ballot'is desired to be in Chica-|Ger which the exchange today was con-|ous hospitals was announced by District|lated into the Americanized population |I¥ing besidé the trdck. Up to 2’ v'clock | caught and killed in his own tefh - ‘Guilty of Bucketing Or- |introducea by Representative Kissel, e-| Syspension by the Presis|Freight Train Crashed Into a Pile of Ties That Were Wired to - v publican, New York. 2 > Cotton Exchangs was convicted of a|MONtD at least, it was declared at the S el st g ed That the Dead Man May Have Been Responsible for ors deliberated just one hour. jured when an Erle Railroad express 3 G ve W. E. Jackson of Willlmantia the deck for action before the shopmen's|ter sentence has been passed on the Tie-trinl of the castorn group of the se- |JAT0 (07 five years of ine mmigraton (Special to The Bulletin.) Detective J tra freight No, 780 that left Centra! V7 Ve i $ftect on Julyits ing_out of the alleged bucketing prac- | fustice announced. Mr. Baldwin declared that, while the were at the scene of the accldent with! Six i ik 1 D rt) érated’ ehop crafts here today, inter- are under( indictment, including Attorney General Daugherty anmounced the!end of Quinnabaug lake. The ‘tra'n,|discardsd railroad ties corded up beside and St. Pa - W. Pratt. defendants, | sections and the appojntment-of. James | cipal effect’ would be to: check % wnd St. Paul, Hale Heiden of the Burling- f o))" PO gl 18 ealRbe 4t kit i ra The four. other defendants, pojs ham, Ilithots Central, -and. §. L. Patton and Raymond Palmer, There| Investigation of charges that disablsd [cOntrol i the island to investizate found the badly manglcd|the déad man had himself piled the ties of the raliroad labar unions, are appear. |5° &t the earlicst possfble momerit, and | vicred, ‘which charges the six directors|Attorney O'Brien in Boston. of Hawali but.that all, {ncluding .even|Thursday morning the identity cf the| On the other hand there is desp circu- P 4 A 10’ 16 chso | Jatét-ithan Jume $0. . WiNlo - v 1 s e those who were born there, maintained|man had not beén established 2nd “his|iar abrasion around the dea: man's t! | als aking > 354 . a T . g L’fm:'n" such f"fl‘“encr THRLIANS" time | oy O are marked: returaable” Juiie “":::" hi?"‘f‘nxn feroesen sales tbl;‘e T |- Ths plssepal L haek ok tho - Vsttoa L 0ie - rinbtduanly: face. is. battered -beyond all recos neck, takem by some®as an indication T TREtE 1otk rponing. thP | 30, - every local : lodge - should rush .the| corrntes o P soundness of hgr p r juotation without intending to buy any |States cabled a protest to Premier Lenine S5 resen rut:-r;::nn?m;;o}:h:r VoY | refurn of the ballots as soon as the vote|dope " ™ . of the Russian soviet government against men themselves, that is, the railroad em. |!8 taken, and if &t is humanly possible, |\ one’ other ‘indictment was 'returncd |the imprisonment of Patriarch . Tikhon, ¢s, really are in eympathy with re.|3ll ballots' should be in Chicago before| agy i *pation and: Jennings, accusing|head of the Russian church. ce tn ‘he decisions of the United [JUN® 25, 1922, thus making ‘it possible; oy gf “permitting -and inducing the “Once Japanese, alwjys Japanese,” There wi an - undoubted attempt Senator Johnson, republican, California,|wreck the train but whether.tns dead |wire, murdered and his body then a ‘member of the committee, interjected,|man was responsible for the attempt.-as|placed on tup of the pile of ties that adding that .in- his opinion no four-;some of the stale police investigators|were found on the ralls. One of the power . treaty nor anything else would | believe, or whether the dead m. was hat the man had been strangled by a afutate s dpad man's hands was cut of, in ey s TS i he minister of finance of Jugoslavia, nt the Japanese from remainingfirst murdered and then lashed by wire|gouged out and his face battersd to a ates raliroad labor board. moment, and in no case later than June|puciring of orders in that on October| T : avis, | reve: e : 2 “The truth is that the men have been|30: While the ballots are marked re-|3. 192 they ‘made a contract between|Signed 2 contract with the Blair syndi-| Japanese. to the obstruction on the track has ¥ He was of medium hel expecting a reduction in their wages and |turnable June 30, every locdt lodge|in,mgeives to purchase 390 bales of eot-|°ate o New York afitrzvg ;tm; Ly ;‘:\'{dfi The Bonus methods of the sugar plan-{to be determined. Tha biz :ocomotive have made, or are making, preparations | Should rush the return of the ballots as| ron ¢ the market -quotation . without [ TR dOTAr loBn 4t elEAt P oen 10 meet the new. scale. There I8 no talk | 300N 8s the vote is taken. and .if it iS{,py jntention of making a purchase or : 5 of strike among the men. The disturbing | Pumanly possible, all ballots should be|gei rol statements read by the public are pre.|in Chicago before June 25 1922, thus \ pared by leaders of the unions, whose |MaKIng it possible to -advise the mem- Viewpoint has been distorted by months | Pership before July 1. - This ‘can- and of effort before the board (o resist the|Will be done if the membership will do inevitable downward trend of wages. Tae | their Part as herein requested.” employes, on the other hand, are in the| The letter was regarded as a certain main sincerely interested In taking care | fOTecast of a walk-out on July 1 if the|cpgries S, Schéinmén of New York, were of their jobs and homes, apd few em-|Vote of the membership favors &) harged with theft, of .an automobile -in ployes in” an industry have-more good|Strike. To facilifate taking the vote,!Neo“Vork ‘and Plainville ' and Thomas reasons for doing e " |every local lodge was instructed to call|Yyoods, of Derby with theft of an automo- | four B. M. Jewell. snomesman for these|2 special meeting immediately on re-|pjle in Hartford. The first two entered making as much headway in that as in raliroad labor unions, has severely crit-|ccipt of the printed ballots, which are|pleas of nolo contendre, and Woods plead- | genry Ford is prepared to begin work | the pineapple and eoffee industries. ing the progress of the cor~ersations be- | jailed as a material witness in the Ward icised the decision of the raliroad labor |nOW on the presses In Chicago. ed guilty. - State's Attorney Alcorn sald | on the development of the Muscle Shoals | “The Japanese are increasing their|tween Anhur Griffith, president of the|shooting case, today failed in his secr board awarding the reduction ‘n wages of | The locals were urged by the execu-;Segal and Scheinman were members of a | power and nitrate plants upon a few |land holdings in Hawali” he declared.| Dajl Eireann, and the British ministers | ond attempt to obtain his liberty. thop employes. Jewell says the decision | tive council to make ‘“special effort lo|gang of New .York automobile thieves|hours' notice should his offer to - take | “and as their control extends conditions|at London, inferest in the session of the| Maurice McCarthy, his stiornsy, wiil ¢ empioves to belleve the board |have every man.cligible to vote cast his|which had stolen twelve cais in New |ang operate the project be accepted. become such that Americans are driven| Dail, which begins at 3 o'clock tomorrow |brought him before Supreme Court Jus- rtial court created to help | ballot.” The letter was signed by theYork and brought them to Connecticut for . away.” afternoon, centers on the status of the De | tice Seeger on a writ of habeas corpus, roads carry oul thelr labor poli- |®ix internationals head, Willlam H.|sale. Judge Malibie sentenced :Woods t0| Sun Yat Sen, president of the mepublic | The recent elections in the islands|Valera-Collins pact and the Dprospective | but ‘the court reserved decision on .no- He attacks the wage awaed aiso on | Johnston, of machinists; J. A. Frank-isix months in jail but put him on proba-|of South China will refuse to resign and | were interpreted by the delegate as an! elections contests. 7% tions either to free him or raduce the the ground that the proposed scales are |lin, boiler-makes James 'Kline, - black-(tion; Segal o 10 months in jail, andfthus clear the way for Wu Pel-Fel's | endorsement of the Dillingham resolu-| In Mr. Griffith’s absence, the task of | §5,000 bail which the witness has 1een lower than the minimum required to sup. | smiths; J. J. Hynes, sheet metal work-|Scheinman to one to three years in state | plan to reunite China under one govern- |tion. He said the only opposition aside|leading the house falls on Michael Col- unable to provide. The court directed vort the average family -according to |ers; James P. Noonan, electrical work- | prison. ment. from that of the Japanese came from|lins, aad in the present state of national | McCarthy fo file briefs. ¥ n standards ers Martin E, Ryan, carmen. and B.| Isase Sanderson, colored, of Suffield, the American Federation of Labor.| affairs the people will concentrate on the | MeCarihy stated that his client was Nt overlook the | M. Jewell, president of the railway em.|Dleaded guilty to bigamy. T declaration of the leaders and the debate | sager fo help the authoritles uncover Mary Fames, was still ving"and 1ot dis | was aomraes o Taasen, :the explorér, | which had.what he deacribed is & small . : B b o ot Ehar. The. action of tne | vorced.: when i- | was awarded the degree of doctor of 1aws | grganization in Honolulu composed of| among the rpak and file in the assemily | ine. plackmall plot which Walter 8. of these employeS. ‘malntenance of way | Federation of Labor. The action of the ‘orch, w]::en hebemar;ud Floren;ehhogké by his alma mater, the State University [ government employes at Pearl Harbor.|in order to find some light on the situa- \\’:nl claims led up to his shocting of and shop, the “labor board, which is & |shop crafts follows a decision yesterday|ett, Jast November. It appeared he ha no RS s e o ) 2 1 of Iowa, in’ recognition of hi swork in|ip did not represent, he insisted, the government Hody, said after-the reduc- |by all the railway unions affected by|Married an Eva White, in Worcester, | Arctic exploration. views of the farm laborers or the peo-| Mr. Collins is expécted to review the | fers’ mysterious companions, known e general relations between the north and | ward as “Charles Ross,” and “Jack, weight, - partly . bald, apparently a for tations were described by Delegate Bald- | plowed through the pile of ties on the|eizner, and probably between 50 and 33 win to emphasize that efforts were be-|track and ran along a distanca of 150 |years of age. - ing made by the employers to attract|feet, carrying along the budy of the man'| The body. was taken in charge by Un- farm. labor. - So far, he -sald, -all such|before the train was brougct to a stand- | dertake L. E. Kennedy and brought te efforts have failed. - Filipinos attracte st Danielson.. to the islahds by high wages, he assert-| Several state police officers, Sheriff| The state and rallroaa poice worked ed, return to their homes as soon as|Charles A. Gates of Willimantic, County |all night on the case. they have accumulated enough money to purchase farms of their own in the Philippines. - INTEREST IN SESSION OF THE The Japanese, Mr. Baldwin continued, DAL WHICH: DB Fooas are, seeking control of the sugar planta- 3 tions through purchase, but are not President Harding’s -views on the sub- ject of a constitutional amendment deal- ing with child labor legislation are ex- pected to.be submitted shortly to cone gress. SEITENCES IMPOSED BY it " SUPERIOR CRIMINAL COUET Hartford, June 7.—In superior criminal court today, Herman Segal of Bristol and Discovers of additional survivars from the wreck of the steamship Villa Franca on the Parana river has brought the es- jtimated death list from eighty to thirty- “DETECTIVE” CUNNINGHAM FAILED TO OBTAIN RELEASE Dublin, June 7 (By the A. P.).—With| White Plains, N. Y., June 7.—James little or no information given out regard- |J. Cunningham, ace track detective, or i Mas rv; Mary and nade under this decision, these em. | wage reductions. issied and pending | Mass, in the interval between ¢ Io-of the: Iilapds: = on the ral'roads wi|l still bé re.{from the railroad labor boari. to call|Florénce, and served a year there in fail pleof Credit for a reduction in the number 5 : i 2 Objection of the federation to the res-|.south, With special reference to the Pet-|pue whose real names are alcged by celving 2s a rule a wage Jh _excess of |an immediats strike vote cu the. new :g; I’;‘;’fi&i“-’;d’:’:fl?fi:"b" sent Ander- 1 of deaths caused by motor vehicles in|qtion was set forth by Edgar Wallace| tigos affair, but it is understood that the E‘Lmfi.,‘..m 1o be Jackeon and Rogers thal paid -to similar Mtmilayes.in other |pay cuts. > May was given largely to Boston police of the legislative committee of that or-|topic of most ardent appeal will be that MecCarthy said: The board held in {t5 opinion | The triple-barrélled strike ballot -of A T in a report by Framk A. Goodwin, state | iiiation. He. told the committee that|of observance of the coalition pact in the | o hances are that it Cunningham measy ; ADVOCATES OF MODIFICATION registrar-of mator veMiak £l “The cha: asured” by the present cost of |the shopmen resjlted from notification OF THE VOLSTEAD AcT| ° DS when Hawsil was given the protection|coming elections. Opnosition to the pane! | wars aliowed to go now, Jackson and TIng the average hourly Wages of'ma- | teday from the laber board that it had ¥ THE o 7 t agreed to adapt|candidates, as shown in yesterday's mom- st for instance. after July I will|declined to order resteration of wages| - | p A dos which bit Pode offcer Wemey |t 1" U ;:«m'h‘w&nfll"'"r (= inations, cams s a fistinet surprise, and —_— ! have 13 per cent. more purchasing|and working conditions declared o have| Stamford, June 7.—The State Personai|De Rocher and Thomas Ireland, a boy, in on the advantages of free aécess to!the greatzst umbrage seems to have been ed that the palr would be ¢r than-im Decefiber, 1317} those of | been iegany ehanges on certain roads.|LDErty League which advocstes modifi | Wakefeld, Mass, was declared to, have | ELV4T, he advantages of frme atecss 0 (he Erestest umbrass seems to mave He. intimat White Plains, it thé carmen 45 per cont. miore purchasing | Two ballots, recently authorized by the |$4USH of the Volstead Act, and which been rabid, As & result thase bitten were [nI0STCAT, PN M, 3% o0 %ume Dermit- | tain candidates, in viotation of the panel| TN {0 Come b0 N ol guarantel power, an - PR 5 ¥ Py aced under obsel 3 £ R st v fabpri 48 1.3 | shop cratts convention in Chica%o. B3¢ Inere-today, voted to try and get nominat- | o ted to import Chinese in bond, ~whichsrrangement. " them protection. G the cost ot Ttre toerepicasured | never sent out, were immediately o%|eq for political office next fail, only men| The bedy of Mrs. Jemes J. Corsoran|WOUld In efect mead aldveryTs 1| When, the busimg o s con-] With the grand jury investigation io thinds, R tb s e dered put in the mails. e YO saal.|Who favor the sale of light wines and | o East Brookficid, Mass.. was recovereq|, Fope of Americanizing the nmflr{:_ et e i s not expected 10 {1, resumed tomorrow, detectives o et A%, SIRD Gt tharetore. be on. fiese . thres' Dromosicligen:i¢iOffioars for: the TIAxt YeAts were|#:orm T hica Tmahbwass ftor i tote aving |in Hawali is_entirely futile:” according | meet again, ut will be repiaced by the| uhout mysteriously dhecking w tions: J elected as: follows President, C. J.|she would be found in the lake had bee |10 Walter F. Dillingham. of Hawall, who pe | now ifl the course of election. | gonce presented at yesterday's se 1. Seven unsatisfactory rules Te-|Schurtz, Hartford; vice presidents, Karl discovered in her house. caid the Japanese in the islands num-|The date of summoning the mew body | mpe district attorney, it was learned cently . promulgated by the labor board,|yange, Bridgeport; F. L. Neebe, Meri- % ber four times as many as any other|has been fixed for July 1. Confirmation would- be—in-this county very STRIKE BALLOTS SENT TO o 5 tonight, hcs taken steps to round up ev- 400,000 RAILWAY SHO! N | including five rules wiping out time and)den; Willlam Buckley, New London; Senator Pepper of P 1 nationality. He quoted Japanese news-|of this arrangement will be asked at to- ery person belleved to have some knowl- I = one-half pay for overtime. August Butler, Waterbury, and Gustave | nounced yesterday that :;n{:a;uul.n— papers to show the activity of| morrow's meeting. e el pict, aad will, st . inei nna‘LL June 7 (Ry.the A, P.)— 2. “Farming out” of shop work to|Bachler of New Havem; organizer, John candidate for republican nauon.l""cnml Japanese officials in maintaining| In seven constituencies in the coming |mon them to appear before the grand ree strike % ballots were ordered dis-|outside firms; alleged illegal installation|Riley, Danbury ; secretary-treasurer, it patched to the 400,000 railway shopmen|of piece work; and allesed arbitrary|John Carrick, Danbury. ?e,.‘ffi,"e’afiné"si'f;“ii‘it g? :lhlc:: hfe:“or of the country today, with an trgent ap-|and unauthorized reduction of wages by [ADD BYS— ... ... ... .. ........... loction’ might el Dot aete b i returned to union [several roads. Morr 2 solidarity among their nationals in Ha- elections panel candidates numbering 34 wali, and declared that Japanese there|Will be returned unopnosed; haif of these who did not patronize their own people | are in favor of the treaty and the other and industries were considered traitors.|half ooposed to it. Of the 90 panel can- didates who will go to the polls, 48 are for the treaty and 41 against the treaty, ury. : Mrs. Ward is to be called again and ¢hs new witnesses, it was sald, will include several newspapersmen. {-a' that . I Segal, ‘merchant, of Hnrtfotr!l. sk 5 eadquarters in Chicago by ~June 25,| 3. The $60,000,000 pay cut, effective a bankruptcy petition giving hls| g, %aving a margin of five days to clea: |July 1. lebts at $10,050 and assets at $1,127. Boise:rf;a::nfl'u’cont‘e‘sseg"ac"cur'g&g :: > pniAe——— HEALTH MEN TO EXAMINE CONTRACT SUIT INVOLVING ; |Bo : while one has been selected by both AN OIL PROPEETIES —————— ———=———= | AMMUNITION IN BARRELS z'e‘:sc;ul"’z:f:;f;)'t;h:; l‘(‘fil";fl‘e x‘n";‘[’h:rm‘“::; MES. HANNAH CHAFLIN sides. The total nominations yesterday e aoaee < o COCHRAN-WALSKA DIVORCE TO |STRIKE LEADERS HELP TO SHIPPED FOR “OLD CLIENT” | putting poison in tea and coffee intended| Washington, ”June 7.—Federal health|of 124 seats number 271. The candl-| wewark, N. J., June 7.—An injunction d: BECOME EFFECTIVE AUG. 14 KEEP OEDER IN MANCHESTER for her. iaite raecmating a1l sictins golig 10 joesy to halt prosecution of a breach of con- t b e s Zfi:'io';ai‘i’,‘.fl:?‘i'f.’;m%“’cmun. the polls number 137. Nominations for|raet suit involving Mexican oil proper- Paris, June 7 (By the A. P.)—A Paris Manchester, N. H., June 7.—Two ar-|Presidént of the Barr Shipping com-t The annual convention of the National mother of Charlie Chaplin, comedian, to dl: tov“r seats for Dublin university are ties valued at over $5,000,000, was court decree divorcing Alexander Smith [rests were made in minor disturbances|Pany, today sent Chairman Lasker of|Cigar Leaf Tobacco assoclation in At- | getermine it her mental and physical| 2 Tomomrow. B e AosTlee oAl 30 Cochran. wealthy American manufac-|in connection with the textile strike here[the Shipping board the name of thejlantic City adopted a resolution declar |cordition §s such as to permit her to Backes here today by the World Com< turer. and Madame Ganna Waiska will[today. One of those arrested was a|client for whom he acted as broker in|ing that if a soldiers' bonus measure | Sorurn to her home in England. merce corporation of Boise, 1daho, de- automatically become final August 14,|woman who is alleged to have thrown a|the shipment on the Seattle Spirit of | Was passed. it should be financed by 2 | “Tyii action was taken today by As- fendants in an acilon brought by the It was announced today. box of snuff into the face of a woman|fOfty barrels of munitions disguised as|Sales tax. T e e i b L Fndanie 4 2cn ] Tho preliminary decres was granted|worker coming out of the Coolidge miil|lard. : 2 sotant Secrsary” of ,:O,my, | e m st me ooy | e Pegeen Sty S last Friday, when it was decided that it|of the Amoskeas Manufacturing com-| Mr. Barr declared he had no knowl-| Provislon in the administration ship | (o OWINE (0% ©0 08 0 MESTIEL B0 i | ing, who will leave Washington fomorrow |the Metropolitan _company to s would become final within sixty. days|pany. The other was a man who was|€d8¢ of the contents of the supposed |Subsidy bill that fifty per cent. of the im- er's condition had improved greatly |morning for Princeton, N. J., to attend |cause, next Tuesday why they ';.uu unless some protest is entered in the|one of a group that followed a worker |lard barrels, and acted only in the ca- "(‘1‘5"5“‘5 to the United States be requir-{ &8 P00 ion o year ago by the|commencement exercises and the unvell- | not be enjoined from ting ac- meantime. 1t s considered improbable!to his home and threw stones at thc|Pacity of broker “for an old client.” He|d to take passage on American ships, prosecu PRESIDENT TO ATTEND PRINCETON COMMENCEMENT 3 ing of the Princeton battle monument vas elimi tion authorities into the United ument | tion. by gy o 2 i : SRR e e e was eliminated by republican members of | Immigral order | Friday, is expected to arrive here to- equest of the petitioners Vice Witt detns TR Sler iy 2oy Loxt|Roune,. OmS TEvolver ahot Flaoimwax-frcd | uiEn ulge the mame of thelin. nouse merchant marine committes. |States. for treatment, but that an order| TCCRV, '8 exbected to arrive h OIE 5 | e s acieed tiao, cxSicetithe WO by Syl resemed'fi;“}h“ both par- |through @ window. No one was aurt. | client. R s L e Ly directing her departure from lh? SO | iTead 56 (he Sant et Gt oo Yerk concern to cease circulating re- 43 3 i Court's ation war Loken 13 clonders were ralased on bonds odav;| TOT, B0 25 he Shipper of (he ber |, Oders for o rediirbution f she repv | at tie tme would ctuse & s | i perty wii gu lo Bownd. Brook| Lotk SE"acl st ana L ¢ Tee x = D 2 v - on peci ihe agreement that the sixty-day pertod|Strike leaders through an agreement[Tels, does not appear in trade or tele-| 20, 5™y, trocth (1 HNew Fagiand were | Pl siates for one - year for, g train and | z)jeged threats to bring action be exclusive of Sundays, legal Bolidays| with the police co-operated in maintain- | Phone directories. from there will go by automobile to “The persons said to have had business con- N ; riod has . training center will be reduced to a small | medical treatment and as the pe: Hills,” the home of Senator Frelinghuy- - ration. and court adjournments, making ths di-|ing ordir among the crowds of strike 0 TSRS IR L must under the law either 4 V- | nections with the Boite corpo! vorce. final August 11, (sympathizers that athered near the|TWO DEATHS FROM HEAT group of officers and men, and the 15th | expired she sen. - Before leaving for Princeton Fri-| “mpe suit to enforce the alleged con- he divoree is en leave the country or be granted permis- sion to remain longer by the labor de- partment. She has been suffering from i infantry brigade will be constituted. the financlal settlement previously an- nounced in America. This settlement mill gates morning and nignt. REPORTED IN BOST Amoskeag officials claimed that 25 per cent. more looms were in operation to- day morning, the president will play a second round on the Somerset course. tract was brougat n a federal district court in Pennsvlvana. Boston, June 7.—Two deaths from| cenrs, Fronk Busdon reslsted firemen tn 3| ; e i : Central Falls, R. L, until sh " | shell shock- received during an air raid asrecd upon but the papers|day than yesterday. The mill, one of the|heat and a score of prostrations were guo o CRNS B b uniil ::':c‘::,' from | in England during the war. CONSIDERAELE MILITARY KU KLUX ELAN INDICTMENTS - t yet been signed. units of the great Amoskeag plant was|reported hero tonight at the close of thel oy byurming home without her . trauk Assistant Secretary. Henning said ACTIVITY IN ENNISKILLEN BY LOS ANGELES GRAND JUB _Dudiey Field Malone, Madame Wal-|re-opened on Monday after a shutdown|hottest June. day in the annals of the 2 < 4 that as soon as health officials had .com- S torney, in asserting today that|of the plant since February, Boston weather bureau since 1884, The |l . C/. contained her money and other s valuables. pleted their examination and reported to he divorce was not yet final, sald there| No appreciable change was reported | highest temperature officially recorded The department he would render a de- Wyas no truth in the reported statement|in the situation at mills in other parts|was ninety degrees at 4 o'clock. Unoffi- St 1 atten - | clston. ' (hat Mr. Cochran was granted the di-|of the state which also re-opened on|cial thermometers ranged several de-|car poinimaberts ding the Ameri- | clsion. Belfast, June 7—(By the A. P.)—| Los Angeles, al, June 7—Three high There was considerable military activity | officials and _thirty-four alleged mem- this evening in Enniskillen. Infantry de-|bers of the Ku Klux Klan were indicted tachments “in ®lorries and artillery. wern [by the Los Angeles county grand jury at can Psychiartic assoclation convention at RS SRRS BS R move, z irection | to coun charfes vorce, Monday with small forces of workers.|grees higher. Quebec will be asked to come: to Mon- | RESULT OF DEMOCRATIO SprihacigRe, apparently . ty-thie<al e ":cu‘:: ez rfiatex‘?!yndnwl. S 2 Louis R. Wagner, sixty years old, of|(real and examine Rev. Adelard Delorme, PRIMARY IN FLORIDA| “Enniskillen ‘is crowded with rétugess |neas. heve. on April 22. FIREMAN KILLED WHEN FORTY YEARS IN SING SING :l::eauz:gndidel;t;{;tfie :::ledtzk:: 7 Olh: trl.: priest scheduled to stand trial begin- 5 from the Belleek district, but 2 majority | - The Klan officers were Willlam 8. PENN TRAIN LEFT RAILS FOR EOBBING A FOREMAN |, .iea) 'An unidentified r:ln R Wt :mfhg:n;:mfir the murder of his half-| Jacksonville, ‘Fla., June '7.—The first| of those who rushed into-town from Pet- > rihbou : v 5 Cobutn, grand goblin of the Pacific do- : 35,000 votes from yesterday’ democratic | tigoe ret; to their homes. in a re attor of the order; York, Pa. Juns 7.—The northbound| New York, Juns T.—A forty-year term |Diched UD 8t & dowmctown street corner) - L rimary, tabulated late today by ‘the e =3 ey express on the ~Pennsylvania raliroad | In Sing Sing for robbing a foreman of a BRI Sl n - Gettyshurg's G. W. Price, king kieagle for the state of b 4 historle battlefield, | Jocksonville ‘Journal, gave for United| DR. HELEN McNTCHOL ENGLISH California,.and N. A. Baker, kiagle or from Baltimore due here-at-9.10 o'clock, | work-gang of $450 in cash and a $300 veterans of General Francls Barlow's left the rails at Brillharts, three miiles|dlamond. was imposed on Frank Mosca, r Park M. Trammell (in- - - NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF command which held -the right of the i::;:;n:;u::;u Klbert W. Gichrist, ZOUNDIEA NGING) XN AN ATTIO °"‘“B.x'§,“1§°f.§§5:°‘l"n"1°§frf'$'uf“c‘& fouth of here about 8 o'clock. The fige- |35, today, by Judge Humphreys in Ty LA NI G BRSO e battie, wrvelleg o o obel 10564, “The Journial estimated that the| = Burlington, N. T, June T—Dr. Heled | burn and Price were understood to be n - . V. 1! ) Vi . > Represent ive Fra al east. :—Z:.::l-‘ }“‘:fi z::g“ rnn':il lhe“c pbes, of °"-?{-§T s tKi m:rr: o warning to| Soringfield, Mass\ June 7.—Lawson |Of their old commander, heroic in size and :Mj&r:ws::gnde%mflct- would be 5,000 :‘r:yfl:rnoxln 5“5:.'.'.’&.5"53{‘."3..‘ xp"m;m‘ b other persons were indicted, each St wite Wifand T O i men whe. rome o Queens. Srom | Purdy of New York was re-clected pres- | mounted on 2 large granite pedestal. and that Representative Smithwick, of|today hanging by a bath rene sirdle 1 Ghn. Doe”: The charges dre. ek ) s s o i ominated : h o Thiadelphia, June 7T—The train that|Manhattan and other places” said the gf“;:n;f‘ o Natong lg:"clzz’,‘:; O x| W. D. Hamilton, of Boston, = state ed- | th¥ """;‘,;’,’&"‘”.,‘f ot S3E0D: | B ‘E&L.{‘T;fi’&"fi"’." e T N s left the track tonlght at Brillharts, near | judge. ; : of the- three days' meeting here tonight, | UCStOr, Who has been commissioned by (0¥ & ATy OF ECL BEC Sy 0 EENSh, & Temt " atly, ohte| omtdt Torade. dis eiEnt; il AL lh:’h“:’::fl["""“" ey e e s ot 1071 Tt was. voted to hold the nest annaai|the State of Massachusetts to make a| 8000 “HERNCETC 0, pected to have | was ischarged from 4 ssnitacium whors — L Hiees} y 3 y o study of industrial schools abroad, sailed A of the Pennsylvania railroad said the|frst degres robbery and grand larceny(mesting st Baltimore Md. & prest. | for Hamburg vesterday on the St Paul. |majorlty of at least 5000, Crig ";fis":ve‘: it bt L ETATLS OF " DN MRS v 5 s : g £ ; S el ks of tho injured was seriously. hirt, a¢ | BOVINE TUBERCULOSIS treasurer and secretary, Flavell Shurc. |Bei8ium, France and England. | MARINES ESCORTING BODY OF Washington, June 7.—Attorney-Gen- 3 DEMAND A STEIEE VOTE E tordinz to these adwices. ERADICATION CONFERENCE |!Sff of Bostori; directors for three y : MRS. LILLIAN RUSSELL MOORE | eral* Daugherty was notified todey by The locomotive and three cars left:the it Alfred - Biitman, Cincinantl; A W. ledo, O. June 7.—Delegates attend- o long” @istance telephone of the completed* rafls, the engine turming over um its| Hartford, June 7.—Advocacy of ex-|Crawford, Philadelphia; H. Cheeney, :nzothe ‘convention- of the Federated| Pittsburgh, Pa, June 7.—Borne by a|plans for the merger of the repubile side. The cause of the accident has not |penditure by state legislatures of funds |Lons Beach, Cal.; Frederick Law Olm B8 o Cratts of the Wabash rallroad sys- | detachment of United States marines, her | Midvale and Inland Steel companies i been determined. ~“-“+ |in research work for boyine tuberculosis | St¢2%: B"",":‘“" Bertram H. Saunders, While proceeding in an automoblle for Palermo, where he was to take part in the commencement of the new York harbor work, King Victor Emmanuel of Italy had a narrow escape from death. s R tem; in session here, today adopted a|comrades by virtue of her rank as ser- | accordance with a promise made the ate : eradication was one of the most interest. | £ 2LerSSOn. J.; L. V. Sheriden, In-|The automobile was barely missed by a | resolution demanding that a strike vote|Eeant during the world war, the body of | torney-general May 24 that no merger SRILL AND IS RRIERS Ing points Lrought out at the eradica- |31anapolls;'J. W Bhirley, Baltimore. |passing train on a grade crossing near |pe taken at once on wage cuts an-|Mre Alexander P. Moore, known to all | would be consummated without giving AN T tion conference in the capitol today. The oo sterday by the railroad labor the world as Lillian, will start from the [ him full details. ::‘::ed Xe copy of the resolution was|home tomorrow afternoon on the way to| In a formal announcement of the re-. sent to B. M. Jewell, president of rail- f resting place in Allegheny cemetery. | ceipt of this information, the department. road division of the American Federa-|f Private service Zor the family will bé |of justice, said “this agreed upon plan s 18 at the home at 130 o'clock, RevV.|of proposed merger will be carefully on diseased cattle, while the other side—. |Biven to delegates to the 39th annual con- | nesday, a million dollars in United States | 1o °f e Dr. Edward S. Travers officlating. teh dogs this afte 4 ralled a|that of eradicati véntion of the New Haven County Wo- | Victory loan 3 3-4 pes t. bonds, h g Py el s e A watch dogs this afternoon and ralfied a|that, of eradication—was not being 8o |Vvéntion of the New Haven County Wo- v loan 3 3-4 per cent. bonds, has —_— ment of - stll on top of - Watérvile [earnestly treated. ® % | man's. Christian Temperance Union. here | made another gift of half a milllon dol. | PAUGHERTY CAL!;!]:EVT mamping | COVEENMENT HAS WORKED FoR i n. sezng 350 gallons* of mash —_— today, by Mrs. Mary B. Wilson, of Plants- | lars to the Society of the New York hos- 3 ON PRE! > COAL STRIKE SETTLEMENT | GLOTZBACH FIGURED IN a thoroughly —modern«-distilling|U. 8. ENATOR REED TAKEN ville, against the so-called “box ballot” | pital. — 5 ; gy ipparatus, and arrestings Joseph Sanda ILL WHILE MAKING spmecm|Which is being used to get opinion on Bl Washington, June 7.—Attorney-Gen-| <woinington, Jame 7—Efiorts of-the] A PUGILISTIC ENCOUNTER ¢ BY PROHIBITION AGENTS |meeting is attended by delegates from ali | W+ O T-'U. WARNS AGAINST 5 over the east. It was brought dut that SO-CALLED “BALLOT BOX”| George F. Baker, financler and philan- Waterbury, June 7.—Federal prohibl-|huge sums were being expended for Y thropist, of New York, who gave the ton agents Edward Sabmi and Charles| practical work and. in paying indemnities | ‘Naugatuck, June 7.—A warning was | Metropolitan Museum of Art, last Wed- Turner slipped past ‘lookéut and twh t n harge of -violating th more Itberal laws She said that this| Two firemen were hurt aad Dr. Fred. | eral Daugherty called on President|govarnment to bring operators - and| Carmel, Cal, June 7.—Floyd Giots- @ charge ot violating: the Volstead Caruthersville, Mo, June 7.—Uniteq|P2llot, or method of taking a vote, was | érick Brown, a dentist, was rescued from | Harding today about a matter of officlal| miners together with a view to seftling | bach, chauffeur-husband of Msdame Sanda’s place commanded a view of | States Senator James A. Reed betams|7Ot 2 f2ir Way of getting at public [ the third floor by being taken down a lad- | detail, and was asked when he came out 5 3 p the coal stirke now In progress were dig- | Margaret Matzenauer, he approach for miles and -with the aid | suddenly 11l here tonigut whtle making opinion, or even a fair test. der by firemen when flames, originating | for his view upon various reports that Mrs. Alta” Downs, of Bethany, county | from an undetermined cause in the bot- | he would resign. > -4 i h’:"_'c‘;“p: ot l‘;"':;:_‘ 4 - b :‘;’Z“;‘m::;n:go:“m“&t'“‘J’;“':‘; Semo- | vice president, presided_at: the session | tom of an clevator shaft,did $35,000 | “You can say.” he.told mewspapermen, | senate in compliance with a Tesolution ot | Peter Hannah, scion of & weaithy nolested. The agente reached Banda's|senate. Mr. Reed was hasaly ani cs|Beld in the Congregationil church parish | damage to the Commercial block on Front | “that there mever was a time when 1| inquiry X e troduccd recently by Senator | Francisco family, at the home of a. Brsk by scalinprhe thd Sh6 | tall whisi Jié; begah Tis. sobesrd s ouse. - Mrs. Hatch of Ansonia reported | street, Worcester. would have -given thirty cents to get ‘Walsh, | crat, Massachusetts. ar. Sanda's assistant escaped by ond of the day. He was taken to a ho- tel. ‘tual Mrs.: Lottie Fraites, a cash balance of $134. Mrs. Cook of the office of attorney-general but that I —_— learned today. He was released % g " Waterbury, superintendent of Sunday| It worrles a woman 1f she can't- get take _2-million -dollars- for it| The eight-day clock is 2 hard worker|bail. Hannah is In & ovs_a. forty: footgollfts . THrp +— 8chool work made an address. Some-man -to warrk: about-hez, - © s land o chromicldcker- - JHractured > -~ 11