Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 12, 1922, Page 1

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VOL. 'LXIV—NO. 141 POPULATION' 29,685 smammusmuanwumsur fomr? 2T Bhtians Slounbi Wetke: dds ok ke 05 : ; ley coal mine and the Kern Coal . Com-| Recovery From Depres- Cyclonic Wind Storm Capsized Scores of Small Fleasure S o T Haute, Ind.f oo ST eated in Busi Craft Off City Island—Eight Bodies Have Been Re- posed in 1917. CU I pete, Ja’?.i'u“:fi“n: glection | TiESS and Finance. | . t H Peking, June 11.—Li Yuu -Hung, the | party will eontinue ‘in.-control of the low-| New York, June 11.—(By the A. P.)— covered and Thirty More Persons Are Reported Miss: | sresident’ deposed by the miiitarisis ‘in | er. house ‘of the legislatire. ~ | Continued indications of industrial im- $ 1917, arrived-in- Peking today, and_as- s provement signs of a renewed easing ix ing—Central New York State Suffered Heavy Loss |5 ths presidence. Li came trom Tien | Thomas Tomasik; 38. » textile striker l A Gradual But Fairly Steady More l‘hml-‘ortmeImwed—FiftyPumeaeRd- mgonflnWhealmBmeukaenthBuSfiw ture Collapsed During a Terrific Cloudburst and Wind Storm—Half of the Structure Was Blown Into Long money rates and diverse testimony as ta Tsin in answer to an . invitation to suc- from Manchester, , ‘committed sui- | crop conditions are the features fh bus- % g ¢eed Hau Shih Chang. resigned. Presi-|gide in Lowell,. Mass., by’ inhalf ineés and fi f the t week. Com- ani i i 3 ng gas nd finance of the past week. SO\M'—P From Heavy Wind and Rain. dent Li Yuan-Hung issued his first man- | o ino Home of his brothes. modity prices still show a firmer tone, Te- Island So anic Ensued Among the Hundreds ate shortly after assuming office to- { - tail trade is about what might be expect- New Tork, June 11.—Thirty-elght per- )der the Erle 6anal, for a distance of half | day, appointing as premier. Wu Ting- Men, Women and Children at the Resort. i - |ed at this time of year, and the labor aoms Are reported to have been drowned |& mile. This streich was like a torrent. | Fang, former minister to the United Swiss pankers ate requesting. flio'fed ¥ Train Number 59, the western New York | States and since’ 1911 ons of the strong- | T3l Eovermment (o ask * that' they be |situation shows no declded chanse AL . oy’ wirk, Jane 11—The fury of the wreckage of the whedl they were placet off City lsland Sound when the mad} o oqs comprising ten cars appeared just | €St supporters of the Canton govern- ‘;fi{:fi;‘;:u:;&::;t:& e I e e | adual but Tairly steady recovery from | lectrical. storm that swept New York([on the bathing pier. More than forty storm that hit the city late today ¢ad- [when the rainfall was heaviest. It haited | Ment's struggle against what it termed exjea siad scores of small pleasure craft. Kighs |amid the rising waters, which soon reach- | the militarism of the north. bodies have been recovered and thirty |ed the flooring of the cars. Porters rous- o ?. late today destroying property andlife, |persons had been exuicated. Five were depression—a recovery, in fact, which o y S 5 The Prince of Monaco was mqud on | the whole exceeds expectations entertain . | Proke. suddenly over a little amusement |dead and a number of others were saié R Lo S e Bl e park at Clason’s Point, the Bronx, lash-|to be dying. more are reported missing. ed passengers and informed them of the | ¢ENERAL LI YUAN-HUNG 12 :;;;:n’c':fi:‘;? f;’?,‘:;’,’; ‘:«i‘;;l;wi:;fi From the industrial field, recent reports | ®d into a Ferris wheel crowded with| Members of the crew operating the Twenty thousand holiday makers went | situation. Police, ~fire apparatus and! - DENOUNCED AS A! TRAITOR |, o L n WhS -sticcesseul. ¢ show that the steel plants are still op-|YOUDg people, cryshed it to the ground|ypew) declared the storm came so sud- to City Isiand today and hundreds wcnt |raflroad crews were upon - the scenc 4 o ; BRI RN frating at rates which compare favorably'|2Nd -passed on, leaving five -dead and|genly that it was impossible to remove out on the waters of Pelham Bay. It|quickly and aided in the rescue of the| -Lomdon, June A dispatch to the | 4 yiyar of 18,825 Frepch war prisoners |With full capacity operations before thy|MOre than forty, injured. . passengers. They said about sixty per- was jammed with boats of every de-|iravelers, many of whom lost their bag- | Times. from . Honk Kong says that the | 40 0% 00 2hC0%0 Toepsl et pteofiess | o P TERRE S Pt rrespond t+| Shrieks of mirth broke from the ste®l| ong were in the cars. scription when the storm hit it. Few |gage tand clothes. | so-callgd. parliament &t Canton has re-| 3= 0 =2 stically By War- ,,i,,,i,l,, only 75 per cent. of present capacity. |C3F of the wheel &3 it carried its carfo| Under one huge plece of steel, lyimg had opportunity to get ashore. The| At no time was there any sign of panic. | Guesied Sun Yat Sen, as president of the Maginot. Steel . prices are firm and most of the|°f youths ligh into-the air.. Then thefy " depression in thd ground, lay & boy known casualties occurred off Execution | geveral passengers made their way | republic, (o issue a manifesto denouncing 4 b companies appear to be making modest’| StOrM, an1 maddened cries of fear and Light, which is about six miles east of | (hrough windows and crawled over Im-|Gtneral Li Yuan-Hung as a traitor: to of 14 and his ten-year-old s'ster. As ths City Island; Rat JIsland, about three miles east, and another island nearby. It is estimated by Lieutenant Joseph Reilly of the City Island detectives that provised bridges to high land, where they f o Bl o dressed. When the last had left the |Teinstatement as presideat-of the republic. :::rf).m’:g:::w:l vhvuwhom::;i ?;.;ev;:l: :Je:ml?g l)\‘;:;"t}seste‘:nnewnhlgh Fecad The :"““'l the water e 5"‘&_“"‘ "::P- b'flz: rai - et vt He was 37 inches In he/ght. - all time and was six times greater thaw g A 2 ravelers were transferred to automol ED. TO “DEVELOPMENT" S e e s :m';: R . tot e R s OF PORT GF NEW YORK " Automobile production during May-als. broke. After it had passed and the siy (Weré Pprovided for. ¥ exceeded all previous records, while thn . ‘the waters of Pelham Bay and New York, June 11.—Mayorf Hylan steel companies report increased deman ) Island Sound were dotted with |CAMP OF TRAMPS WAS made public today a letter to Iresident from manufacturers of agricultural im- - 3 : 2 o ; d child brushed aside in| “Are we in a tunnel, Bobbie? overturned rowboats, launches, qanoes STRUCE BY LIGHTNING |Harding asking him to withhold approval plements. Railroad car loadings rose i) |5na CRUGreR were Brus and yachis. ogs of the bill just passed ‘'by congress frantic efforts to'reach shelter. * - The wheel, 100 feet in diameter, w ; the week ending May 27 to a level com- e e o Bo Fto™ tdebiions - foP e pgpn o . _The polics Immediately started the | Guiltord, Conn., June 11—Lightning | "which seeks to ratify and confirm the |\ Roman Catnlie i "ot orrioy | Parable to that prevailing before the coal it s ool outy cocautly, Jary (S of rescue. Al nine o'clock tonight | struck a camp of tramps in ‘the rocks|action of the states of New York and |5 were ordained fo tne pfles!ho‘:d '8 | strike, and the movement of merchandise | ioe were down. . Men in commandeer- . nu Hodles had been recovered, and |near a bridge over the New Haven rail- | New Jersey in agreeing upon the so-called Bishop Thomas I. O'Leary in St. Michael's | Jo5 16 per cent. greater than in the sams Lisutenant Reilly said that he was mak- | road tracks here late today. One man, | comprehensive plan for the develepmcm B = 5 ed’ automobiles were Sent -to -mearest 5 S o 4 week a year ago. Orders for raflroad [po % tlR Paul Simon. owner and operator o A ; 3 ospitals two miles- away ‘for aid. Four ing 3 conservative estimate when he put |identified as William Sullivan, whose | of the port of New York.” Sethomal Seturday morning o - L the bodies to be recovered at thirty. Fol- - » ¥ g ildi ¢ agony as l‘hfi uvm half broke away and steel was removed the: stood up un- the constitution and protesting asainst his | 4 - n0r” Louls .Davis, retired circus | profits.” The alue of building contracts | 3297 B TIE B into .the shallow waters 2 b of Long lsland sound. The lower half :;‘n': ;fm’l:“ O PIULIY S buckled apd fell, a fwisted . mass of |"E PIE L stecl,_wooden girders. and. human . bod- |, T8 bo S5id, ey, wOrE 7 8 8% Y ot | thing happened the next thing he knew A ";:m::m:n;mz;:“,d::: ",',',"d";,f' rof| was when his sister clutched him by the sort. Women fainted and men - fought|arm and asked: Government and pr of Newfound- land express alarm at the heavy emigra- tion of young men from the colony lo New England nad Canada. . said, and was considered one of the best in the country. equipment continued,to be placed in 5al | ampulances responded and they worked |the wheel was arrested upon the order A home was said to be in Fall River,| “So serious are the questions and mat- Eom 3 isfactory volue. removing the injured. of - Assistant District Attorney Quingley lowing the tragedy City Island became |\jage was killed and four others were|ters involved,” the letter said, “that 1| _ E8rk Kalburn, a farmer near Carthage, | Latest reports from the morthwest in- bodics were taken from the|and held on a charge of homi R scene of panic. Many of the meh Who | giyunnig Medical ~ Examiner - Smith|take the liberty of writing to you, ask-| XS Was shot and killed and his wife | dicate, meanwhile, that the prospects ars had gone out to fish had left their Wives |yjaweq § ¢ body and ordered it taken to|that and children there to picnic. As soon before you approve the bill, you |Seriously wounded by a negro, Zack King. | for a good wheat crop. Although late in | —m———m @ ——————— as knowledge of the drownings became a local undertaking establishment, give the municipal authorities of the city | AT™ed men are scouring the country for | starting, recent exceedingly favorabl: Eve tie g e King e ) | BREITIS RBPLY 70, THE STATISTICAL LIBRARY . — i New York an opport8nity to present to - : ; . ~ YALE COLLEGE f;n:::‘nr;:“?:“ncde: u;a?;:(le!::, ?:-n]id";: $500,000 DAMAGE CAUSED BY ¥ou cogent facts and which I think ought | (om0 rapidly. The showing is amply confirmei ! FRENCH HAGUE NOTE o e g S CLOUDBURST AT ONEIDA, N. Y. {10 have the effect of causing the return of ve Colgate University students |ar-|by the government crop reports as of T N ne 11.—The Yale cor- g e :5"1'529}?352”\'\“:{1 e [ the measure to congress with your disap..|Fested at Hamilton, following.a series of | june 1, which indicates a yield of 855, |, F2rit, Jume 11 (By the A. P.).—The| New Haven Ju the istland was eut off by the sasing of | Onelda, N. Y. June 11.—Damage esti- | proval, fires are out on $1,000 bail eich follow- : - Dritish reply to Premier Poincare's mem- S Smete el Spring and winter wheat | orandum setting forth the Frenck attitude | university by the Kingaley Trust asso- B T e O o wous] | 287¢cs that The Hague conference. should | clation (Scroll and Key society 3 = be a consultation of experts and should | college), of a large statistical {brary production last lear of 795,000,000 bush. | ¢ & REANTT L 0T A iong | krown &s the Willlam H. Brown cofiec- ey 2 ory | Great Britain aisagrees, however, regard- | lection, the scouisition of which has Prices of wheat for future delivery | Srar Bltain dleagrees, howerer roma e L long been desired by the department o have, to be sure, declined sharply in the % ot TG G 2 its memorandum of | cconomics. s E last few weeks, but this is attributed i | ST RS SnCWER ¥ PUDIECRE V| e coltection, which 1 a 1 1o be most. quarters to the Collapse of the &t-| g’ sovier's later deciarations, and that | One of the most complete in the financla) {empted speculation for the rise in U |in’ any case~ roucst. for ithdrawai | difiict of New York, and a_duplica [ay option rather an to anyl ng 8- poration today announced a gift to the wires and telephone poles, and this hamp- | Mated at $500,000 resulted today from the ered the police. They improvised a |fiooding of Oneida and Cowashelon creeks morgue in one of the bathing pavilions |in this city after a clcud-turst last night. #nd as rapidly as the bodies were re- |The entire eastern section of the city povered they wers taken there for iden-- | was under five feet of water. tification Persons living in tie flooded districts The mayor stated that approval of the |18 thelr arrangement. They will appear \plan would “work serious injury to the [£°F eXamination toda roperty and é‘ny" B {.‘;’;‘;fi?’cm L Aiiolsex Sl e h> atiknstareie da® He expressed the opinion that the plan to the insurgent Hottentots in tne recent violated the commerce clause of the con- |UP Fising in southwest Africa than the S were taken from their homes in truck and | stitution as well as the fourteenth amend- | W10l Of the volunteer forces engaged In BTORM CAUSED SIXTEEN motor cars. No liyes were lost, but many | men, and “will bring. into existence .a |QUellinE the rebels. PROWNINGS IN L. L. S0UND }narrow escapes were reported. plan directly antagonistic to the interstate FHigwe: commerce law. Portland, (Me.) verchants are accept- New York. June 11.—Sixteen boaters | ELECTRICAL STORM WITH 11 3 e firm, com- : 5 should have been made before the Rus- |Of Weli-known stock exchang: d 4 q T Taliin e g L;nazhnfi“::w o P:"» ‘:‘:‘flt 10| turbing in the general situation.. In anv | gians were invited to The Hague. Ly be;;;:n .ry.rooc ‘.:id zsp,::_nlcp;«;- were reported drowned in Long Islan o ¢ ‘ 2 ;. e reduction in the rate of exchange to|event a liberal supply of grain ata fair 4 phlets co! ing of railr . Bousde during the mad storm that rag- S ATIONPRILE A GO less than one per cent. at the banks, the | arises 15 considered fo MOl OUt Better | (o e e e bams | ity and industriai_corporation mortgag: *8 oyer the city today. Eight bodies have | oo o0 yune 11X severe electrical AT MOEEIS AND NAUGATUCK chamber of commerce announced. - i I“lfi:"d"f"'-bex;e e atien, & | storm accompanied by hall, a torren of Jag to identif the dead or seeking miss. |FAin and a high wind, swept. this city 4 Kkin and friends. and its suburbs today, causing much|taily when an automobile overturned voe AR damage in the market gardening sections | on o hill #n the town of Moseis todar. POY KILLED. TEN PERSONS and smashing windows in greenhouses, | The injured. who. were . brought to ‘the INJURED IN OH1o'SToma |dWellings and trolley cars. For an houn |Chariotte Hungerford hospital hes, ar it was almost as dark as night.| Carl® Wellnitz, whose neck may ark, Oblo. June 11.—One boy was | Most of the damage was caused by the {broken; Mrs. Wellnit and their son Ot-! An henorkry dégree is to be conferred Riiied. and probably a score of persons |URusually large hail stones. An official)io. Two others in the .machine were |on Secretary of Agriculture Waliace by Injured, ten of whom according to re- | Of the weather bureau who measured one !unhurt, Iowa State college, Ames, Towa, today, ports probably fatally. when a .violent {hall stone which fell in Melrose found it| Naugatuck, Conn., June 11.—Cather-|when he will give the commencement ad- wind storm swept Buckeye Lake, sum. |to be one and one half inches in diameter. | ins Papano, aged 7, was mortilly hurt|dress at the graduation exercises of that mer resort near here, late this afternoon. | Arlington, Everett and other plices in the | when struck by an automobile driven |institution, of which he is an alumnus. The drad boy and most of the injured | Mystic river valley also were heavily by Dennis J. Conroy of Torrington this 2 $ were in a bath house, toppled into the |bombarded by hall. afternoon. According to Chief of Po- !rlke lh\hrhe wind. T;mse Iv;r;o;;::' be “D'rr;e westl;m feczion of Evere(dt slopting lice William Morris. who was in a ma- t.,fi,,:'&,&'{;f’ o‘\::\:ihul:; u:e‘ Dmoc‘:; ratally hurt are near drownl 5 rom the river was exposed to full |chine following Conroy, the child ran . force of the elements. Hardlv a window RUIARE 4 the - SeuthBoston ) mundoie - out into the street and in front of the|[Stores, was déstriyed by fi 1 g KILLED WHILE DINING with .a western exposure was left un-|machine. A procession of Odd Fellows u,.d:;’f A large ;:.mn;' Srfee i ymf::a IN THE RED LION INN |broken over an area of two square miles. |was coming from the cemetery and In Medford the flood in the main streets | Chief Morrls said Conroy was stowly |O ¢ frst three floors, was burned. Mamaroneck, N. Y., June [”'{‘2" gl: where repairs were in process made traf- | picking his way| through the crowded trae, blown through the roof of the Red |fic impossible. Cellars of more than 25 |street. Conroy placed the child in Chicf Lion inn, on Boston post eoad, at the stores were flooded and half of the city's ; Morris' machine and she was taken to a fi,‘;‘;fi'ifi:‘;‘;},‘f&:‘;’m,';K}"ml'é’fiw'.’li‘- Beight of today's storm, carried a stone eleciric lights were put out of commis- | physiclan's office, where she died. Con-|mastern Dawn, Antwerp for Philadelphia, mney into the crowded dining room, |sion. roy was released on his own recogniz- 5 # Mrs. Abram Wrana of Brooklyn | Market gardens in Arlington and Lex- |ance. B e and her 7 year o daughter. Several!ington suffered severe losses whon ing R e — G5 Tl i ers were frijured |heavy hail smashed green house windows | THREE PERSONS KILLED IN 5 Mrs Wrana, hm: daughter and siste€-}ang beat down newly growing crops. MOTORCYCLE-AUTO CRASH in-law were ses!e.; alt a t:‘bm ‘l;‘y U:! In Winchester, situated largely on a chimney when it fell, crushing them to pjjgige, the wat. p the floor. Mr. Wrana had left the inn a| S e et oo et A NN 4 [lower ground that most of the man-hole moment before to button storm curtains |jqs in the Jower section ow the city were i & prospects for general business than 1 |of the prosram and asserts tbat private leases, reorganization plans an short crop at high prices. property in Kussia should be restored 1o|AStesments. subscription Sgresments SO On this basis cottori prospects are not | its owners or that they should be fully "““p '4",""“';::“‘-"! g T = o] 4 80 encouraging. Floods have washed out | compensated, but _that Russia’s sove- | °f Poore magua’s PoiCl SOCUCE U in a bBill introduced by Chairmiin An-|ymportant growing areas in the south- | reignty should be respected. and no pro-|‘he ~TURited Tietes Conevl SOPUR T drews, of the house committee on elec- | wegt while ‘the mild winter and wet|zram along that line be imposed upon he “°"‘; ot - the Dl States” Sépmrt- tion of president, vice-president and mem- | spring have atded the boll weevil and de- | in advance, if her indispensable co-opera- | T os®f #00 PRC FUIGR o C T p Bl R Of congoeks. layed planting. Further rains during th | tion was to be exnected. Tathering of the collection fts formes past week in many parts of the belt caus-| Great Britain considers it necessacy | ERUISFINE, S0 R, S in Bl Genares ed something resembling a crop scare. Ay | that Russia’s war debt suould be reduced | o0 P00 o a result, prices jumped to the highest | in part. o commenting on the gift, which hs since last October, the leading futures| The private interesits that must be| g orpd WO E on aicome addition crossing 22 cents. counted on to open credits o the SOViet, |t tne economic sectfon of our library.” Whether prices will rise further on dis- | 5ays the reply, will need guarantees, and | 0 -0 “Kagugh, librarian of Yale uni courage consumption remains to be seen. | the governments can <id them to secure| .. ity said: It is clear, however, that the conse- | these guarantees. There is no question of “The only library collection compara- quences of a short crop will be mitigated | “capitulation” by Europe, the note CON- |y, with this one are those at Harvard by the effect on the carryover, which has | tinues, for the statesmen taking part in| princeton and the library of congress been reduced to approximately normal |the attempt to restore Russia are quite|rhere are of course, many similar col- proportions. Liquidation of this carry- | capable of protecting their own interests. | jjections in the offices of banking houser over at existing higher prices should cre- | In view of the British contention that|ang corporation lawyers, but such col- ate a considerable added volume of pur. | the preliminary conferente at The Hague | jactions are at a distance and can be chasing power. shall onl§ be routine preparation, the|ysed only by special introduction.™ A relaxation of money rates at New | French government . may abandon its York during the week suggests that the | Plan to have M. Benoist, the French min- tightening occasloned by the transactiony | ister at The Hague, renresent F"““E centering around June 1 has passed and |®nd may foliow the British example o that there is no change as yet in the|SeROing only experts =—who WALS S0 general money situation.. Call money oa | throushout ail the sessions. the stock exchange dropped ‘back ‘to ¥ CHARGES OF LAWLESSNESS IN per cent. and in renewing at this figure on # to death late today in South Richmond by the exchange set a new low record since “’”‘"'1‘1“ COAL FIELDR | eral unidentified negroes foflowing his April, 1915. 3 . attempt to eject a disorderly negro from The prices for other forms of money | NeW York, Jume 11.—Complaints alleg- pr s Torrington, Conn., June 11.—Three persons were injured, one probably fa- Sweeping regulatiens for publicity of campaign contributions, are provided for The shipping Board steamship Ala, CONDUCTOR STABBED BY NEGROES IN RICHMOND, VA Richmond, Va., June 11.—H. L. Burle- son, a conductor in the empfoy of the local street raiiway company, was stabbed Sixteen shoe and boot manufacturers in Cincinnati, whose plants have been closed for several weeks by a sthike of 6,000 workers against a ten per cent. wage re- Philadelphia, June 11.—Three persons were killed and two injured, one believed the street car which he was operating. i B i ing lawlessness in the Pennsylvania coal on his automobile. The sister-in-law was | ;o | fatally, in a collision today between a mo- | quction, announced they would open thelr ';’nf““ - "\f;:l“ ;;r:::;'bl‘,’,:vm;x fields have been referred by Governor |The slayers made theic ccape iy only silghtly injared. oo 3 torcycle and an automobile on the Roose- |factories June 14, paying the reduced | org oyt op (o Sproul to the attorney general of Penn- | arrival of the police, who reported tia aly silghtly injured. = Haven, Conn,| The Weather bureau reported that fn |veit boulevard. e the major part of the decline in rates is | SProul to the st Ertendent of tha| thels search nud been impeded by ihe who was meated at the 1able next fo the | ton minutes SHeRel tneh oL raln fall (7] - THS Victima ware Seceseiboms naitve: gver; but the better trade @ whclt oa?Lstate;polics, -acoording. to. correspondence | CTowd of negroes who swiftly gathered ta g i = n apparen lurin e Wrana party, was painfully hurt, 'l:;s;‘:; z:a:szlh:;fx :;‘ecézzal rainfall during |year-old daughter and Charles Eckstron,| The monthly tonnage report of the| - L P B made public today by the American Civil | the vicinity. brother-in-law of Prinz. A three-year-old is making but slight demands on the 4 it ht by his slayers on Inited Sta o . Tiortisitiion: Burleson was caug W0 M SRR Five bovs were rescued from the harbor |daughter of Eckstron suffered a fractured It il;f,‘né'l?:go :::l::'oihm:g eyl papteert - d’“:;“ 12 Dot eX | ~ samuel Untermyer. who made the com- | the Tunning board of an SutGmbie. S - y Vi j " o 3, ase during e ear] sum- LIVE WIRES IN NEWARK |near Deer Island light by the police boat |skull and was injured internally and a |May 31. This is an Increase from |Pccted to incre e 2 Guardlan after their rowboat had been |Seven year old son of Prinz piaints as_special counsel for the union,| Which he had sought safety when men- 7. June 11—Two men were | Svamped and they had been thrown, into tbadly hurt. showed “an ‘ndescribably shocking situa- | aced by several of his negro passengers. also was e April's unfilled orders which totalled 5,- Newark, Reductions in wages for additional S ting to & virtual uecpation | The automobile was procteding alongside ; the water. Prinze and Eckstron had taken the ehil- | oo classes of workers by the rallroad labor | by gy mewr N8 (0 & VI USHPALON | the street car at the time and befors the i PHVE WSS ase- smieusiy ¥ prop- P e Lo dren for a ride to visit felativ s board have called forth protests from 1a- | cianv"of the machinery of justice, by the | driver could get under way the conductor damage was caused by a severe elec | gpyyy PEREONS INJURED IN anther section of the city and s in| Genevieve Paddicford, who claims to be | by jeaders. 1t has been indicated how- | iy O e e et o b | Was qulled down and stabbed repeatedly. a1 st T TRREIRSHE-SVEF Mewatk and ¥ Gl = fhe way home whon tha aeend Were on fthe wife of a wealthy Californla ofl trad- | [0 %ot railway executives do mot take | sk ot viniondale) districtr " "®“| " The\murder gas committed in what ie surrounding territory shortiy before 6 COLLISION OF TROLLEY CARS ; “:) ;)me when the accident accur- [er, is under arrest in Vienna inc onnectior atrike threats serlously . and |the, wisw ough of Virtondale) district. known as the “black belt” of Richmond. ociock this, evening. e red. An electrical storm threatened and |with a number of fradulent operations in He asked . the. gavernor 1o revoke the The high wind, accompanied by light-| Orange, N. J., June 11.—Seven per- they were hurrying to avold it. t In mak- aing, rain and hail, blef down wires and | Sons were injured tonight when two trol- [ilg 2 sharp turn onto the boulevard, the sprooted trees in all sectlons, making |ley cars collided when the brakes on ons | MOtorcycycle and automobile collided many sireets impassable and crushing |Of the cars failed to hold. The first car | Read-on. roofs In their fall. had stopped to discharge passenger when & iR Tl A turret on the ~oof of St Patrick’s |the second, following close behind, crash- | PETECTIVES ARE GUAKDING cathedral was blown away at the height |ed into it, throwing tie passengers to the BRITISH CABINET MEMBERS of the gale and skylights in numerous of- | floor and also throwing with glass./ fice bulidings were torn oft or smashed | The injured are Mrs. John McCormick, | London, June 11.—Several members of by t stones. Lincoln park and Mill-lof Irvington, internal injuries; her |the British cabinet are being closely park in the center of the city are|daughter, Elizabeth, bruises and possible | uarded by special detectives from Scot- ed with fallen trees. internal ight f gains ground that the roads will be able issions of coal and iron police who | FOUr negroes were under arrest tonig Wh‘;':{‘,x business men of Lucerne, Parls|i. operate successfully /under the new |gare aleged o have aeanite Arinur ] on suspicion of being implicated in the A1 Vienna,wero the Miotm, rate and wage schedules. i the | G2¥fcld Hays, a Xew York lawyer and BEAST Almost no change is apparent in the|an investizator for the Civil Liberties un- ot amtroduced In the French parlla- | coal strike situation. A long suspension | fon, during his receft visit to Vinton- S At el n:c”fi:": okt “‘m”"““ was anticipated by the operators, whose | daie. T e favorable actlon of the SN | policy seems to be a waiting one. ‘Due to| Governor Sproul replied that the mat- A e e om SiXipe large stocks accumulated befor: | ter has been referred to the attorney finj; ot mme!i’n e 2 “‘?o:‘;"'“'““°' 2| April 1, the reduction in output has had | general and the superintendent of state ot persc“:e w:fl“ct vk ':‘;‘“op:n“:s little effect on production in other indus- | police, adding: mail not addressed to them. tries. It has, however, stiffened the T shall be glad to apprise you as to the U JAPAN TO CARRY OUT WASHINGTON AGREEMENTS Toklo, June 11.—(By the A. P.)—Ad- miral Baron Kato today accepted the premfership. His non-party cabinet i <ai : comes into power with the avowed in- injuries; Catherine Norman, |land Yard, as a presumed result of re- D;k"s :{ St;"e‘ grm“:ms D a0 te :;;':"u“(fl{m’ "',""ce I?I‘::l e “’;'::‘ y:: tention of carrying out the agreements of g struck the roof of St. Peter's| Newark, back and legs injured; Olive |newed activity on the part of Irish ex-| John H. Suherbarne was appotnted re. | 05 Of coal and coke. b gt s Ccommissioned | the Washington conference in spirit and a1 school, le, doing consid- | Cook, Arlington, injuries to back; Mr#g- | tremists, said the Illustrated Sunday Her- | ceiver for the Miller Candy company, of > bt S 2l 2 420 dmm,db*,n“ e omplainit, | to_the letter. damage, bt uring no one. aret Dasser, Newark, injuries to head and | ald today, Winston _Spencer _Churchil), | Roxbury, Mass., by.Judge Morton of the | A F- OF L. OPENS TODAY 4 Rests ot peviisl vt 15 Wapt Oricias 3 n B p The one condition on which Kato ae i eps vest them A 1 t internal injurles; Edward Hill, Newark, | Secretary of state for the colonies, was | United States District court. In the vol- CONVENTION IN CINCINNATI| \o. shall take steps to divest them of au were struck by f. g trees cepted the premiership was agreement of 5 injuries to legs; and Matilda Cooper, |declared to be one placed on the “protec. | Untary. petitionary in bankruptcy filed by i s n‘,:::,"."'" in their belng prop- | o leaders to reduce the estimated eter Kiliian of 108 Tyler street was|gumone ‘Toniel (o boay, tion lists.” B R CihMARA IR T (D) fus AV T y pu e e BTG A WhtD he Logrup S Shlen live/f . Some ministers, the- newspaper assert- |of $767,298, and assets of $738,513; were | Confronted by many issucs—social, eco- | prorURE THEATRE OWNERS % sl voliky of reireddiibint: e ttn e som during the storm. Tne | TETILE STRIEERS VOTE T0 ed, have received anonymous letters mak.. | admitted. nomic and poiitical—the Americ®n Fed- Eg oy R e b Sy ot (N ey dicad o Bl il S i CONTINCE THEIR STRUGGLE |18 serious threats against them, if the —— - eration of Labor was ready tonight for To MEET wiLy mmAYs | Kato sl Bave (h o the Kenyakal, r::. “:;‘:hm:'u fi;n‘x‘angam ear p;':s‘le :i Irish negotiations do not result favorably. “Seth May,’ federal prohibition entoree- | ODening its forty-second annual conven- Notw Yotk - JORAr 11, Dilagates ' teps the largest group of peers in the house water, but in doing so 8e came in contact| Pawtucket, R. I, - June 11.—Striking = == ment director, in a resume of the opera-|tion here tomorrow. For a week the| I Ty l5 060 members of the mo- | °f 1ords. with it and was instantiy killed. The |eémployes of the Lonsdale mills voted | FLIZABETH, . J., POLICE CHIEF tions of his department in Maine since | labor chiefs amd w"““"m" delegates | o e Theatre Owners of Ameries | 1t 18 understood that Shidehara has the i man Killed was identified as Walter | unanimously today to - continue their BECOMES VIOLENT IN DENVER | /25t August, said there have been seiz- | have been gathering here, coming for the By o C WG, Mo Miavs Siector of |Fefusal of the forelgn office portfolio fu Dunn of Newack. struggle for a 48-hour week with no re- ed 3,500 quarts of whiskey ; 800 quarts of | depacument meetings that eu ed yester- . 3 Kato's cabinet: r 5 he moti: t and distrib- So numerous are the fallen live wires |duction of wages. The vote came after | Denver, Colo, June 11.—M. J. Mulcahy, | % 376 gallons: of wine and 138" gal- d?&'hmlega-mdh e col:e;h:‘ :":;r:m:fo:;rflzclmf‘l:;HOf the first that firemen and poilcemen have been |2 lengthy consideration ®f a proposition |chief -of police of Elizabeth, N. wag | 1ons of alcohol, also & Zozen automoblle, of the convention, which is expected to 3 3 reforms in | ELEVEX YOUNG WOMEN WERE® ad to zuard each one. made by former Governor L. C. F. Garv- [taken to the county hospital “for ob- PRI ::::;“,T:.es;:“ Ytk e iermatetyto ?::‘(x:;:::y 'ffi'fifli ;?x:‘l‘na‘dheby iumi,-: PINNED UNDER AUTO BUS in and others last week that a settlement |Servation” the - polics announced = this | THe Montiert state bank at Monttort, o IO A S Questions effecting the kind in an effort YORRENTIAL RAINS IN of the strike in the Lonsdale, Berkeley [morning, following an alleged attack on | WiS: Was closed ".{ "‘§ N i L lh ianes o% to further diversify the product of .the| West Orange, N. J., June 11.—Eleven CENTRAL NEW YORK STATW |&nd Ashton mills be effected on the com- | Several other- police chiefs.in a room at |COMMissiover, pending investigation *ord- studios, the elimination of objectionable |of twenty-six young women, members of Bt promise basis of a 43-hour week and a |2 hotél where they were. . stopping en |C7°0 following. the disappearance. two WAR OFFENSES CONVICTS | o piects with the intent of producing a {the Young Women's Hebrew association, Syracuse, N, Y., June 11.—Torrential |ten per cent. cut in wages. route to & convention of pollce huds at | 4ays ago of Clyde Stephens, cashier, who vains swept Syracuse and central New | The Goddard Brothers, who control [San Francisco. : F Cledr, wholesome and-edifying screen pro- | of Elizabeth, N. J.. who were pinned be- left a rote saying: “This is my last day | New York, June 11 —Appointment of a gromme will be considersd at the confer- neath an auto 'bus when it overturned to- on ‘earth. I may have betrayed others, | “genera] amnesty committee which will end day at Spotts-Wood Quarry, were taken (By {he A.P)-- mated s g e the exhibitors here for the conference in- | ment. Belfast Saturday night experienced an. Loss estimates -t about three quarters | reiease of all prisoners serving terms for Tork early today, reached the proportions | these mills, also rejected the proposition, _ 5 a cloudburst in the eastern section of | Informing Mr. Garvin and his associates More Incendlarism in Belfast his city, trapped a west bound New |that they must adhere to the 20 per cent.| Relfast, June 1 Fork Central passenger trains with 200 | Wage reduction which led to the strike. passengers in its swirling waters. all of 7. . T.| 'The 'bus, in which the party was ridin S et of a million dollars was caused by a fire | wartime offenses today was announced by | Soe ": Q;:’_}‘;g;’“”m""“ e oNas Mant Hohm el g FAMILY OF FIVE KILLED IN 2 eak of ‘incendiarism. Siz |that destroyed two business blocks an¢ |the American Civil Liberties union. Or- el kR Gtha staepést TondS 15 thie OF bin whom were rescued, washed out railroad 53 res were reported.” Friday night the {damaged two others in the center o, | ganiaztions represented on the committee g o e 2 tracks and highways, destroyed machin GHADE CROSSING ACCIDENT |houses of Isabella McKenna and Patrick 2 ery in factories, flooded basements of bus- Woonsocket, R. I., busin " | inciude the Amaigamated Clothing Work. | AVIATOR RICKENBACKER'S O'Nelll, near Mather Alset, Countey Der. ess district -Sat- | incll g tain, when the engine stopped and the urday. The Woonsocket ers of America, the Federal Council of PLANE HAS ANOTHER MISHAP Iy, were set on fire and destroved, Prior Y- Call’ Publishing car bgan to roll bact down the hill. houses and cellars of residences and Atlantic City, N. J.,, June 11.—The en-: : 2 5 e brakes failed to hold and the automobile caused damage roughly estimated atn |tire family of John H. Stratton, includ- |[to the first at O'Neill's house, O'Neill Sfi?&fiym‘:&‘?z’og'&% ;::::;[:;;1“ &k S::rilx‘x:is'mteh;rfi::lnflg%lr ! _E'aueco::l“n“. Omaha, Neb., June 11.—Bddie Ricken-|8dined momentum rapidly. It left the $250.,000 ing himself, his wife and four children, |had been dragged from his - bed ud principal sufferer. - S ion. One million signatures are to bg|backer's around-the-country filght ended road a short was\from the bottom, struck The rain storm, accompanied by a high |was wiped out in the grade crossing ac- |threatened with death. TR sought. 3 abruptly early today when his large all- {2 ditch and overturned. The driver was wind, broke shortly after three o'clock, |cldent at Absecon yesterday when an ex- —_—— < Children of the Hutten settlement, metal plane crashed while attempting. to | uninjured. rd continued three Hours. the deluge co | press train crashed into Siration's auto- Egypt Honors Prines af Wal large orphange near Spokané, Wakit, | WEEK-END IN BELFAST take off from the air mail fleld here, for «ring business and residential districts | mobile. e father, mother and two chil- 7 > . Denver. .. None ‘of the Rickenbacker par-{TWO AIR SERVICE MEN with water from six to a foot deep. It |dren were killed almost instantly and the et L Lk i B s pitost mercfl Al one Ryl WAR: COMPRNARIIEEY GULRS f 4 conferred the order of Mohammed Al |as the result of the resignation ~of i : «as the greatest fall in the history of the | other two children died ‘today. on the Prince of Wales. This is the high- | physicians said they. woulfimnnt be ::' Belfast,’ June 11.—No shootings or ocal weather bureau, Similar conditions| The six bodies are at-an undertaking|est Egyptian honer, and'the Prince of |entire medical ‘staff Friday night, The|serious outrages occurred in Belfast dur- """""u ;re\‘lfled\ln Central New York eities and | establishment and will be buried at the | Wales is the first recipfent of it. he | sponsible for the health of the childrén‘if | ing the week-end, and the city was com- ard, marine corps officer, and Lieutenant E::z“r:r ; nr:‘_;"nv:‘r 1:“1[:“1:‘ s r:!‘::\flr?fi:;u: :::::d :iyma _;r;' r:!:e ,‘:;:,fi:“;m' ;u_smt:ery prince leaves for Port Said tomight an. Christian_Science treatments by attend: | paratively quiet. A number of incendiary June “11.—Joseph A.|R.T. Aldworth of the air service, narrow- 1 7 nvestigations | wi : > e i vi emocra f {ENE. MEEDied i £10 LR T A1 GDbR | o1 e Aeildent Ware, Teg oy an. us to:v :e::l; :n board thp- Renown tomm- ants were allowed. 7 fires were reported, including the. burning | Wi chairman’ of “the :d tic |1y escaped death when' a De Haviland the truck he was driving. the county authorities, another by ths ty was injured. INJURED AT CAMP HANCOCE Rugusta, Ga., June 11.—Major Brain- = of hva“::ufi in Dock Lane which previ- | town committee of . East Handin.” diad {Scplans in wmé: they were traveling to . Eighty- 19 states ‘are | ousl: ' looted. suddenly at his home Hers toda: the ground at Cangs Hancock landig fisld. The water covered the New Tork Cen- !state pelice and the third by nmm., fl A ‘that- i included - in .the. lfst. ‘of mmdm S trom Free State uae - | 67 3 r . wat b ““‘ ot'h “wmr o A2 mafl:.er sln:‘jnwnom.u W ‘etfi nl’inta: t&‘ fl. _years. Hehuhddmh-A late today. Meflm;mfll!'

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