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VOL. LXIN—NO. 158 POPULATION 29,685 1L SHOPMEN 70 STRIKE 10 A. M. TODAY; MAINTENANCE EPLOYES DEFER WALKGUT: V'TTOSTANDSQUARELYWITHLABORBOARD B. M. Jewell, Head of Shop Crafts Union,Aand Six Internation- al Heads Refused to Appear Before the Labor Board— CABLED PARAGRAPYS Another Rathenu Assassin Arrested erhood, Postponed Strike Order Pending Meeting of the | ¥°reisn Minister Rathenau. Executive Council in Chicago )uly 310 Consier ASSIE- |- 1ier bt S e ~—Labor Board Will Make No Further Efforts to Prevent |2n? several srandchildren Actual Walkout of Shopmen. A Chicago, June 30 (By the A, P.)—|have decided to quit work at 10 a. m. Federal intervention by the United| tomorrow. rgrmph! e e 'u:iw faileq| , The administration’s view _set forth the NEW ENGLAND' today. . according to Chair-|Mment dealing with disputes beétiween thel "y “oxnectation that miany lines -of railroads and their employes and there- to effect appear for an official Inv the strike by the board. to forestall the stri B. W. Hooper journing the federal adding that this view held whether ths board's decisions drew the protest of la- the past two months, aithough there ha: ut! wage: whethe; ere pro- 5 cuts in wages, or whether they were Pro-| ;o heen a corresponding increase in ca tested by the railroads, Decause they re quired the managements to desist in con- o T tracting out repair work tos private| duction and shipTiente—seem to have op rike of 400,000 railway o of i s i f President Harding -summoned to devise o 3¢S Was at|enops. ‘The determination of the board,| 20Sie fenémeles. the migber of checks st g s b y the board's! i, aaministration further was asserted th. by individuatsiand icorpora ervention. The ke of this group, was made just a few minutes before to the announcement of Pry there occurred In Chicago what Chair- 1 - board. Whether the ~administration| DeCOMIng less. T] has flouted a govéernment «d Chairman Hooper, » duty and responsibil- ter, not only tion was therefore, a question left open for the time being. The general belief, Berlin, June 30.—At the request cf the All the Railroads Were Represented at the Hearing—E. g:flm police, the Austrian’ atthorities at in the Tyrol, today arrestad a Saxon industrialist named Kuezheinmuis F. Grable, President of the Maintenance of Way Broth. |ter. whose automobile, the police allege, was used in the assassination last week Liege, Belgium, June 30.—Licge set a new fashion in its annual beauty con- ance of the Board That Present Wages Would be Increas- | test this vear, crowning as “queen of queen”_ neither a young -blonde nor a . ) brunette, but a white-haired woman. ed at Any Time That Increased Living Costs Warranted | The new queen is Madame Pirard, aged eighty years, the mother of five children GOOD BUT IRREGULAR Boston, June :m.—kaus'méss In New rmaten I SR o ? fl?fi.l,::'}l\ o "';r;’:m‘:fik Yerage. | were friends ot fe Fire, s Mexico City newspapers that Bie- | plant in Bridgeport, for a price sald to in language as forceable as the spokes- y Nould-be at the trial today, resulted in |1aski connived in his own abduction, of- | exceed $3,300,000. ke of 400,000 railwa¥|man could command, was that the labor| S¥idént, says the monthly review issued whatever to say. e : 2 a large cordon of policemen being |ficials had nothing shop men called for 10 o'clock tomorrow | board is the one.agency of the govern-| DY the Federal Reserve bank of Boston| i, ~O7® 100 3% e county court house. | It Was pointed out, however, that of- ficlal information on the Bielaski Busi i 2 dent was confined to the few brief mes- fore its decrées must and would be| DUSiness will soon be quiefer, due to the ew England manufacturing activity bor organizations because they involve| Ias been increasing at a nominal rate for to hold, are by the delegated authority| ons), which is ordinarily a good index ad been exp to paraliel that ey ey be announced| marked out in the law of the land. S vas monh thaa I Mede nt. but will await further action| ™ ed 00 F L IC R O S eement] ¢ “The voXme of goods _distributed the organization's executive couneil, through retail channels was good during : the first two weeks of June, but it has |PIOYers were still unselected Grable before the board to- ‘leclared | sufered a decline since the middle ‘of ‘the T e ot 2 wovermment. body | month. because of the inclement weather, elr's fatiura to attend| o p i Temeit. heads of the vailway] 50 that the total for the month will dure- e brought severe-con-| 4 in . Iy equal that of May. g P department of the American Federation| 1Y equal that of May. tro e chairman of thel o™ Yabor. namely, the refusal of Mrp.| -Tmployment offices report that the 1 closing the inqulrs de-| Joiell and some of his éolleagues to ap-| Call for workers continues & grow and rall union chief’s blood was pear in answer to a summons of the|the number of peonle applying for jobs is Lead. - od can be at least part- : > . "| Iy accounted for by the seasonal demand View went wo far as-To HIke fusther Meol ot nrvinann 1n fhe hullotug trades: wnd work of a simflar nature, although it is | however, was that as the transportation | 2PParent that the call for employes to fill - | as folows: eight to ten years; Antonio Ruggiero, 14 s r settlement no, the Leader, |Mexico City Newspapers St,ate That A. Bruce Bielaski _Connived in His Own Ab- BRIEF TELEGRAMS- Sent to State Prison for Nine to Ten Years—Five New Haven, June 30.—Heavy sentenc- es were imposed by Judge C. L. Avery. on six men who'took part in the hold- up of the Orange Dramatic club in West Haver on Avril 9, in the superfor court today. Five men who had pleaded guil- ty to charges of Tobbery were sentenced after ' jury returned a verdict of guil- ty against Biagio Gargano of this city, who had pieaded not guilty. of Gargano, known as occupied three days and state witnesses Robert Santaniello, Springfield, Mass Salvatore Santanie, Springficld, Mass., [seven to ten years; The trial “Big Benny,” ncesFor | Mexican Bandits nHold-Up| Release Americans| ” duction. ed that about half a dozen citizens of America_were included in this group and new representations that they be pro- [ tected were sent to Mexico City by the OUR COUF The Massachusetts stats convention Washington, June, = 30.—Americans | Will be held in Boston on September Z2. working for ofl companies in the Tam- = pico region all had been released from | A large force of Tripolitan rebels wi restraint by bandits, who had held them | defeated by Italian troops in a sanguiz- for ransom on the face of full inform- | ary battle near Azizian on Wednesdiy. ation as to what had occurred -at the two camps raided by the marauders. Consul Snow at Tampico merely re- |Patrick J. Bogls, Jr, 18, a ‘Thorat ported today that the eighty-five,per- | Acadey, Biddeford, Me.,. student, wa: sons held by the raiders at Pecera camp | drown®d at the mouth of the Saco River. of La Carona company were “no long- \ told of the raid on the club in West Hac |oT held” He had previously estimat- ven by nine men in which more than $1,000 was said ‘to have beem taken fron_ club members. argano was given the heaviest penal- , ty, being sentenced to the stats prison | deTartment. for from mine: to ten years. The oth- ers were sentenced to the state prison Swept out to wea by a strang tids Two mine tipples were burned. one mine flooded and two railway bridges burned in Colorado coal fields in Doulder aud Huerfano counties. Consul ‘Shaw was asked for a more | T, Onfoed Bradiey Cev sqmpeny, detailed report of the most recent In-{500,000 order from the Argentine state cidents in theoil flelds. It was mot{ oo for 53 all steel cars known whethor the bandits had been - bought ,off 1yrough | el oflhby'{’,’,':’:;p:{,;df“;, Hundreds of vacationists bound for New York, five. te | federal forces. In view of the dearth of |POInts in the White Mountains and seven years; Albert Esposito. New- York, four to six years; Raffaele Cippolla, New Haven, three to five years. Many in the crowd were refused admit- tance .to the court room, and a num- Washington, June 30.—All parties to 3 the bituminous coal strike and to the SCOFFS AT ABDUCTION —_— suspension of work in anthracite regions |~ : loadings. While these two factors—pro- | Postponed. action in the situation today Mexico City, June 30.—(By The _ | awaiting the conference tomorrow which Of the fifty men who will attend the committee of anthracite operators. The delegates of the bituminqQus em- 2 ber were searched fop weapons, o |sages sent by Charge Summlerin 85369} Dacked 1. by hasgByErament. usual summer siackening ,added to_ the eare i e 2 !M.xgm City. There has been no sug- ¢ took place, B.| “rhe labor board “is the government|SFOWINg rRalization of the seriousmess of gestion in any of these advices, it was shop crafts union| when it spenkes was the way ine spakes:| i€ coal steike. is serving o check a ma.| HABDING TO ADDRESS THE mteraational union Aeads,|men summed up fhe aiministration view,{ *c1e! Improvement (n. the allndtios at COAL CONFHRENCE TODAY cion around the abduction. MEXICO CITY PRESS P.)—Reviving memories of the kidnan- ping case of William O. Jenkins, form- er American consular agent at Puebla, to years ago, several local newspapers, 5 # conference here, half are miners' union | claiminz to receive their insplration of congress and in"a fleld definitely| 9f the volume of business. was larges In| Cfricizls agd three speak for the gencral information officlals here continued the | Canada were delayed by washouts caus: silence. that has characterized their at-|ed by heavy rains. titude since the report of the capture = of A, Bruce Bielagki near Cuernavaca. The Generai Electric company has O e T i | With regard to the statement made |purchased the Remington Army company The Japanese privy council passed the inci- | naval treaty adopted at the Washington arms conference and submitted it to the in | prince regent for ratification. Eaid, that tended to throw any suspi. | -Comservative jazz” will be the popular motif in men’s clothing for next year, ac- cording to an edict of the International Association of Clothing Designers, in eon- vention in Philadelphia. President Alvaro Obregon of Mexico in a telegram to the San Francisco Chronicls aserted that news from Tampico of Amer- icans held captive by bandits was abso- lutely baseless. A. from official sources, now declare with-| The Geo. E. Keith Co., ghoe manufnc- out equivocation that the abduction last | turers, Brockton, Mass.,” announced i «i. | that beginning July 10, its men’s saoce Sunday of A. Bruce Bielaski by Mexi- | ¢ Jogti e oy, | can bandits was accomplished at his own | factories would operate on a schedule of 43 hours a week. A Guide to What’s Good to Get. Somie one has said that if bread and butter were new inventions, they would have to be advertised before people would accept them as standard artieles of food. In what is said to have been the worst rain storm ever known in Tunbridge, Vt., ! roads were torn up, one cemont bridge | washed out, other bridges wrecked and crops injured. 2 The tug Bathgade, which went ashore joff Block Island Thursday with the barge Tenas in town, sank yesterday. ‘The barge was reported as still ashore jand badly damaged. A DESTROVED BY ter Wall, on Which the Dome Rests—Rebel Officers and Their Forces Are Prisoners in the Hands of the Irish Provisional Government—Between 25 and 30 Regular Soldiers Are Wounded—There Were No Casualties Among the Irregular Troops—The Explosion Resulted in’M_onTIx_nnmty Casualties to the Government Troops—Fire is Still Raging Among the Ruins of the Court House—Irregular Forces in Cork Are Preparing for a Siege. Dublin, June 30 (By the A. P.)—Rory flagration which coneumed the veiaiig O’Connor, Liam Mellowes and the other | and uitimately cau the irregul leaders of the dissentient republican army | SUrTender. In mo instance wete asiifiery - pieces beyond 18-pounders used. troops at 4 o'ciock this afternoon surren-| “On Thursday 25 prisoners were taken, dered the Four Courts building. which|ana 110 surrendered today at the Courts” had been the scene of a siege carried out | An official proclamation issued tomight by forces of the Free State army sinee | prorogues the meeting of the provisionsl last Wednesday morning. parliament until July 15. All those inside were made prisoners _— by the provisional government - forces. | ACTIVITY AMONG THE - ined up four deep along the quays_the p: onK prisoners were marched away under R T S5 guard; there were 150 of them. One of —There them waved the repubiican tri-color whiie "‘;"‘;‘,‘I'u"',‘:“.:a,g’ (%:‘) the day many others woce singing the “Soldier !yt (ST T Vel oy Rere in She. i ot in madiate SHAck wpm NS Father Albert, a Capuchian monk, who| “50 & &% (LS, b coliecting pro- was jailed when General MacReady, the | 2SN Fo 0 oY e tion for British commander, was fighting the Sina ({70 Fein, moved among the prisoners, shaking | * J06% 10y were greatly hands with them. v when they heard the news of the fall of Licutehant General O'Connell, assistant | 11/ =¥ SRS 6 SRNE 90ra” earing chief of staff of the government forces,| oie quwn positions would be attacked by to the kidnapping of whom by the O'Con-{ prol ‘goo Proone® SN o8 Drepare for norites is attributed the attack of thelr defense, They occully the Sehi sovernment on the Four Courts, was|i % {‘military bareacks in Ireland and among those who came out of the building | 715700 [o)ice barracks of the county. after the surrender. He had been im-| 2!, BONCe S ot o tiary reisoned in a cellar out of reach of the |, 2o, 00 SR NN Y newspaper shot and shell which had raked the bufid- | r 8 € T COERE T Cind that the ing since hostilitles began Wednesday | "0 o "o being used for Free State morning. The surrender was made to| PRVCRS TO0 Brigadier General O'Daly. It had been | 7% preceded by negotiations for a truce,| oxrv cENTER WALL OF made by sonfe of the leaders of the dis-| ' £ " sentient troops at the instance uf a priest FOUR COURTS STANDING who was with them inside the bui'ding Some time prior to the capitulation| London, June 30.—The Four Courts there were deafen’ng explosions that|building in Dublin has been complotely shook the center of the city: The detona- | destroyed by fire and an expiosion, says tions sent up a huge cloud of bizck smoke | & despatch to the Central News from filled with debris and portions cf burning | Dublin. Nothing remains but the center documents. ortions of the papers picked | #all on Which rested the dome, the up in the streets showed that they once | Patch adds. Even in this progressive age, folks. Some t reary of leav: e IRREGULAR FORCES SEIZE e g e g 3 -4 ) ,_folks. ate vhat £ G registry and the registry of deeas. ’ e D ut n the | act clothed the labor board with-no pow-~| PefRanent positions Is also better. ing the beaten path. - They stick MEetty ilode fo. the Hings they know, e, hoad ot Tasslice Josspisycd whbi1| " Tho Gud beisuda: prneonty thendd out, A BLOCK OF BUILDINGS ¢ the carriers and the railway|crS to enforce fts. decision.. there were| o ClS Seginaing e ikt C‘;l r;‘m::- when these things come up to. their expegtations. | the strike began in the Arctic mill of [ and on the understanding that the firemen om of this toantry. | B0 steps left for lhe'gv\'ernmem"to s{:.k: e ed troinier Enx’lfld B This ‘is 'why alert merchants and manufacturers strive to tell about B. B. and = R. Knight, Inc, met|would not be fired.on by either side, voi-{ Dublin, June 30.—Irregular forces to- s Bty 2% this stago except to maintainfts stand | C2€5 B0 e Baant manstactur. |} ipeir- pre and_their;, MW ” g0t Tiomoepn thaty eilioner Sudvoitd<to-ratuns 146 usmered Ju-emoying’thE Wound- | night seized 2 Bloek of buildings, the, board's decisions. thetr Taetodies ,,hlb‘"w“mu!""'r ist l‘] letin. They want you to know what they have ‘er, in the be- work next Wednesday. 5 ed from the building. < Every availabie | ing the postoffice and two hotels, in one "‘{m"wdfl' lmv(ea:gd Sooh Bad '&‘h ,35 unless relief 1514 fef that when you do know, you will be interested, and perhaps in- ambulance in the city was cequisition®d, | of the main thoroughfares of Dublin, o outing of tae . board's aithorlty tMin they were over - . ing. storm clouds in railroad labor quar- S \:u:dan:firx‘rrr"."‘!":"; g ‘thf“ ters; but as it grew more and more ap-| TAteS on almo s k e v Qe o Pt pu result In{ arent that the strike-would be held io| loWer now thap at any time since tht SEfcist SN Sortecy Stiike.moYE | the shop crateh, with' possibly-the-main-|.COBNtEY entered the War lIn<1s17. & horitative control and| ., ance of way and some“other workers = N = E s o joining, but with the train operating| WARD’S ATTORNEYS TO READ r e £ '“| forces remaining out of the strike, a GR feeling of rellef has been expressed. The strike at the outset,'at least, willl White Plains, not stop the operation of trains and that, neys for Walter S. Ward will be permit. in the vibw of the administrative officials| ted Monday morning to inspect the min. B0 - both jof the government, is the important| utes of the grand jury which indicted Saturday, e ® point. Leaders in congress seem to tako|him for the murder of Clarence Pefers Monday, e of the session,| the same view and except in one or two|on May 15, District Attorney Weeks an- Fussde < ok found. and it was | instances there has been no move to In-| nounced tonight uesday, <z left the city until after | trvene: Earlier in the day, Mr. Weeks tried Wednesday, he R the GRS o his men unsuccesstully to obfain from Justice Thursday, 2 TRAINS WILL CONTINUE TO Kelly, of the appellate division of the || Frigay “ast to the complets failure to RUYN, STRIEE OR NO STRIKE|SUPreme court in Brook a stay of L4 f S mei's. strike, the labor| Chichgo, June. 30 (By the k. B2y -rhal CXtcution. ‘of Justico ‘Morschanser's” or- "met with marked suc-| trains will continue to Tun, strike or 0| the Bimmiee " On T rera s Wree ~Totals . of the maintenance of | strike,” railway executives united in de- 5 3 it nd s of| claring fonight after the efforts of the ree raliroads. aiso cited | United States railroad labor board to today’s investigation. halt a strike of 400,000 shopmen, set for allroad representatives turn-!tomorrow, had met with apparent fail- session into a testimonial meeting | ure, ose. one after another, and| Neither the maintenance of way em- their willingness to cancel all| pi the defense. who also have been taking a|have the fndictment for contracts for the performance|strike vote, but who have decided not|murder dismissed. k by outside firms. Prac-|to walk out tomorrow. mor the maintained that it was their| crafts mechanics, who are scheduled exa . The credit situation In- New Bngland “the | - ; g e "for| during June continuedto become. more ki Went a fetter| he hopmen's h;:’_‘;;’;‘:c Md"':‘::gma‘;_ favorable to the borrower. ‘There is an ining the TIEAE of the shop men abundarice of funds available and interest rates on almost all classes of loans are D JURY MINUTES . Y. June 30.—Attor- Plains this evening, Mr. Weeks sald he would make no fuprther attempt to withhold the grand jury minutes from The district attorney, however, 1s ex- pected to make a determined fight in court when Ward's counsel moves to first degree s spired with some of their own enthusiasm. Thrifty men and women find that it pavs to read the advertisements. 1t enables them to rest assured that they are not overlooking anything. 1t lets them know where to locate some desired product or service; where to go to get “this” or “that” to best advantage. tion they would overlook much and consequently lose much. would live in ignorance of many things that might add materially to their wealth, health and happiness. Make 'advertising such as appears in The Builetin your guide to what's good to get. The following news matter has appeared in The Bulletin's columns for the past week : Telegraph Local General Tatal June 24... June 26.. June 27.. June 28. June 29. June, 30. 135 144 334 633 162 100 262 524 127 124 255 508 97 314 535 83 320 513 S 405 634 844 645 1911 3400 Without its direc. They present. ght to ccatract such work. but! throw down their tools at 10 o'clock to-| T B YIER LENINE OF RUSSIA today that,it was sxpressed” 2 desire to comply with morrow, have anything to do with the HAS STARTED FARMING ocard’s rulings. if. thereby, the strike| actual operation of the trains, the rail- & . t be relfeved wav managers explained. Riga; ;June 30-—By. The A, P.)— wer unjon heads. In adaition| That work, it was explained, is car-| Premier Lenine of Soviet Russia has to President Grable, president of thelried out by the “big four” brotherhoods,|Started farming and in the next few maintenance of way brotherhood. gave|whose international presidents fssued or.|MOonths will devote his endeavors exclu- sssurance to the board, that -although| ders yesterday that their members should | SiVely to reorganizing a community farm : 2 organizations were taking strike| continue to carry out their usual duties,|©f 200 acres near Moscow. sance of way strike call, wh! e P 3 - - Leonid Krassin, in Riga. on his way < 7m0 call 1o quit work would be is-| irrespective of any strike action on the ued immediately part of the other unions, The mainte.|t0 The Hague Jomfefente, Yoling B e The announced delay of the mainte-|nance of way men comprise the track|Premicr's farming activities, said he has had been | repair_gangs and other semiis-kilied la- | Deon Prohibited from all intercourse with compulsion. “xpected tonight from {he hendquarters|bor. The shop erafts workers. who are|POliticlans and government officials and | them to consider. In Detroit, came after a l°ngthy d : < cusslon betwesn Mr. G and Chair-|a road, make repairs on rolling stock, | 0%CO¥ Of Write any letters pertain man Hooper. Mr. Grable told the board| Railway managers said, however, ihat| "% 1o Soveriment sffaire. hat more than half of the 223.000 Votes| their present cquipment would be ade- 1ad already been canvassed, the results|quate for several months and that hus far showing “a big majority” in repairs might be made in out- tavor of a strike They estimated that it would fice cares and lead an outdoor life aft. »4. included the $50.000.000 pay cut|out of shop crafts employes would ‘se- more. vital to the efficient operation ot|tPat he was forbldden to telephone to Lenine had agreed to bandon his of- er the German and Russian specialists insisted this was absolutely necessary. i ofessor will_remain The employes, grievances. he explaln-| be at least thres, months before a Walk-| ars gorn oa sin rear the Lbmine beos ordres. The only visitors will be art- which goes into effect under a board impair the efficlency of either|j e writers, chess players and person- decision tomorrow, the contracting of | passenger or freight transportation. b friends. irack labor and removal of the eight- —— sour ‘day‘ mrn’uxh‘ r"‘h‘"lfllbful'a r"d'":;; THE NEW HAVEN ROAD HOUSE ADJOURNED LAST recently issued oy the labor board. 3 ! he men could have some assurance of | HAS TAREN NO ACTIOXN NICHT DRYTL AUGEAT 15| of tha bn1. % pe-hearing on these grievance: Grable said. he volunteered to * n, . Jur Influence” to prevent a strike, waiting attitude tonight with regard to|fePresentatives adjourned tonight at 9.4 Mr.| Boston, June 30.—Officials of the rail- el il Aug. 15, thus giving mem- The power to sanction a walk-out. the | the strike of shopmen called for tomor-| 0'clock until union chief confinued, lien in his eecu.|Tow. The New York, New Haven and|bers opnortunity te return to Jook apter| Washington, \ive committes of five men. A mecting| Hartford and the Boston and Albany| their campigns while the senate. still is ¥ that committee will be heid in <Chi-|did not follow the lead of the Bostno| &t Work on the tarift. 1ago July 3, he sald, and at that timeland Maine in advertising for men to re-| Democrals opposing adjournment al- \ thorough reconsideration of the situa-| Place strikers. o =i, forced 5 Toll Al e o jon will be made. At the’offices of the New Haven road| |2 8t Touching on the wage cut, Mr. Grable| it was said that nothing would be done| “Present- - 1] In opposing adjournment democrats in- Seclared that the cost of llving, as{until 10 a. m. tomorrow, thé hour set: . 3 {hown by government statistics, had act.| for the strike, and that the company|SiSted the house ought to stay in session e I the face of the lmpend:| anticipated that many of the shommen| Rd act on Henry Ford's offer for lease of rally 2 mg wage cut. Chairman Hooper imme-| Would Tefuse to obey the call to walk-| Muscie Shoals. . On objection by Representative Mon- var- t. —_— DR T Sty vt s e s tague, democrat, Virginia, Mr. Mondell | PRESIDENT HAS SIGNED titions. nly upon this assurance of STATION FORCES SIGN renewed consideration of his men's wages, Mr. Grajle agreed that no strike :all Would be issued tonight and that sis own efforts would be directed toward Averting a strike. Chicago, June 30.—Approximately 5,- 500 clerical and station forces of the|lation. Northwestern region of the Pennsylva- nia railroad today signed an agreement| WOULD-BE BANK ROBBER on a reduction of wages, it was an- nounced tonight by T. B, Hamilton, gén- VT TO STAND SQUARELY eral manager of the region. The agree- . WITH THE LABOR BOARD| Ment was reached between elocted rep- 4 resentatives of the employes and officials of the road. man entered the Somerville Trust com- pany today and levelled a revolvelver at |- Washington, June 30.—The admins- ration speaking today through the strike of 400,000 union rallroad shop|tion of wages to become effective -July 10. | alarm arrested Ernest E. Seranton, workers, declared its determination to|The company manufactures a fine grade | years old, of Hamilton, stand squarely behind the railroad:labor|of cotton cloth and is at present employ- | told the police Board. 1t is because of the decisions of | ing about 1230 operatives although its|He was woun = Aabor board that the shop craftsmen normal complement is 3,000, with the Canadlan army. T 5 vas 171 to 43, with two vesifig extend their remarks in the Congressional Record on any, subject relating to legis- ARRESTED IN SOMERVILLE, MASS. Somerville, Mass, June 30.—A young the assistant treasurer, Frederick T.{ Wamington, Driscoll, who promptly stepped on {he | Mrs. Emma G. The Merrimack Manufacturing com- | burglar alarm and then. drew his own | agai] White House on the eve of the called|pany, Lowell, Mass. announced a reduc- | revolver. Patrolmen responding 1o the | ret e E new fiscal year. Atriet of Cotumbia President Harding will address, it was said, at the opening of the conference welcoming his guests and describing issues which he has However, A. M. Ogle, president of the |instization National Coal association, to whom the | revealed later. responsibility for making up bituminous representation was delegated by Pr dent Harding, announced that an ade- ! Jenkins, quate and open-minded group would be | A high government official reiterated| The the administration” purpose to Yet the-participants themselves | ican government attempt to work out a settlement in the conference. If progress is not made some other course may be adopted by President instigated abduction.” Harding.and his advisers, but it was de- clared today that the government's efforts | has ma will be based on persuasion and not cn |fect in i DYER ANTI-LYNCHING BILL 15 FAVORABLY REPORTED Washington, June 30.—The Dyer antl- Isnching bill, providing for imposition e penaities by the federal government or mob-action, was reported favorabl with amendments today by the senate [ A°SOCATES SAY BIELASKI jsudicilry committee by a vote of 8 to NOT THAT KIND OF ) piljEht rdpublicans, inchiding enator illingham, Vermont, and ~ Senater | an official of the Brandegee, Conneaticut, voted in fayor [and Company, of which A. Bruce Bielas. % denied the assertions of certain Mexican newspa- pers that the former head of the Bu- Investigation of the department of justice himself framed his capture his | roads centering in Boston maintained ai vashington June 30.—The house of | REQUESTS INFORMATION FOR FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD |rua of June 30.—The senat late today agreed to a resolution by Senator Heflin, democrat, Alabama, re- que:;mgbinlc;mzuon from the resedve board and the reserve i i concerning distribution of coples hofl:k; SR e speech by Senator Glass, democrat, Virginia, in which the latter made a defense of the reserve system and erit- icised Senator Heflin’s frequ on the reserve board. e s BERGDOLL SUIT FOR RETURN OF PROPERTY DISMISSED June $).—The sy smma G, Bersdoll of Phitadelphia, pst the -alien property custodian for | the basement, where they forced him, |eral board of hospitalization to review the he return of about $200,000 worth of prop- |at the point of guns.to bind the arms |selections of the Great Lakes naval |Charge of the port of embarkationsat Ho- 23] erty seized _as belonging to her son, Ont. Seranton | Grover C. Bergdoll, the. draft evader, was short of money. | was dismissed today without prejudice in service in France |by Justice Jennings Bailey in the Dis supreme. court. make a brief called federal his case failed to0 sub.Aaniiate [ charge. Mr. Blelaskl’s abductors. kidnapped.” ki s president, today hot e [ by bandits. Radert accused papers publi responsibllity for the affair. of Goldberg and a companion. and made their escape. the | enniless and friendless was a vi Spcelsior says today it has been The newspaper says the foreign office Tepresentations to this answer to the note from the United States department of state asking | S2TS: for the apprehension and punishment of Several inewspayers quote Searetary New Yorg, JuneP 30.—A. E. Radert, hmond Leveriig “He is mot that sort of fellow,” de- clared Radert, “he fights in the open. He would not go through that suffering hing the charge of\ seeking to discredit Bielaski and absolve the Mexican government of Dlolaskile associntes. 1oiny resefveq a |Hibition Director Elmer. C. Pottér long cablegram from him referring to business matters, thanking his friends for offers of assistance, but adding ELEVATOR AND ROBBED OF $1,400 PALROLL democrat, Texas. a4 late today, held up Meyer Goldberg, the concern’s cashier, and robbed him of a |ference. of |$1,400 payroll. They then chmelied Herding Dr. Harold W. Hersey, who bas been the head of the New Havem hospital, has resigned, to go to the administrative iboard of Columdia University and the Presbyterian hospital in New York. The three children of Mrs. Mabel Hunt | Slater, of Webster, Mass, have notified | the selectmen that they. will give 2,000 for | fireworks display, July 4, for the benefit of the children of Webster. Approval of four applications for loans to assist in financing the orderly ma. ing of cotton and wheat aggregating §.6.- 1500,000 was announced by the war finance | eorporation. Authoritles in Springfield are investi- | gating the appearance of $10 and $20 bank counterfeit certificates that have i by customers, who believed them genu- | ine. Selection of Edwin G. Dexter, Calais, for purposes which may be | Virtually decided upon by the veterans’ bureau. This same charge, it was recalled to- —— day, was made against Consular Agent will_be 13 cents per quart. responded for the homicife, Glen Cove, L. L nounced. no nappings and captures of American eit- Mexico, was proposed in a resolution in- troduced by ~Representative Mrs. Elizabeth Kahn, who died of pel- | implicated in the murder of John although an investization of | Son in a Paris hospital, where she arrivcd | sere, at Chnaan on August 3, 1921, wis | known to the police as ““The King of | m cof |taken from jail this afterncon on a |the Bootleggers.” following his trial on | Apache gangs, who-had plied ner with |bench warrant and ,presented before)a charge of violating the Volstead act. drugs and robbed her of thousands of | Judge George E. Hinman, who held him s |informef by a department of the Mex- |dollars in jewelry and money. ci that “there is suffi- = cient data {6 cause the belief that the from Owen Moore, both motion picture BETWEEN CANADA AND U. 8. | the prosecuticn and declari Retail milk prices one cent per quart in Bridgeport, July 1, it was announced of War Serrano as saying that the cace | Py Mitchells Dairy Company, Farmers' E g 1'3-4 per cent. | gp p of War Serrano ax saying that the case L campany: end . Besdus * ity July 1 to July 14 will be pe | RUSSIA WANTS CREDITS OF mysterious incldents” and that a com- | ComPany. The price for grade B nulk plete investigation has been ordered. El Heraldo, in discussing the case, de- S h clares: “Neither the authorities nor the people of Morelos believe Blelaski was Sidpey G. Ward who shot and killed Mrs. Flora Louise Benediet; aged 81, at her home near Kent Mountain, in South OBITUARY Kent, May 17, was held by €oroner Sam- uel X. Herman in Winsted, as criminally An advance of one cent. per quart for |Years old, son of Colonel John L. Chat- milk has been given to farmers who ship to Boston and Providence markets ovir the Providence and Willimantic, and of Mrs. Irene Robinson, of New Ro:helle, Colonel Chatfield was born in Derby, N. Y., was found in Long Island Sound, | March 11, 1852, and was educated in the five miles west of Stamford lignt, by |Waterbury Grammar and High schoois | Manchester, N. H., June 30—Thomat Stephen and Jack Albro, fishermen of |and at Cheshire academy. Following his | F. McMahon, president of the United Tex- Appointment of a Jolnt eongressional | fan‘shed Sy loest details to the story of his caplurs anq | COmMittee to investigate the alieged kid- | yecond lleutenant. In 1590 he received a | Bonds of §500 were funished Sy los Washington, June 30.—The army ap- | escape. propriation bill earrying approximately | $271,000,000 and providing for an . en. listment andd “alanguagt thtoughtme | BPLD TP T ed personnel of 125,000 and an officer strength of 12,000, was signed by Pres- ident ‘Harding ‘today, the last before the Between 25 and 30 wounded soldiers | Sackville street. were awaiting medical attention when the | According to newspaper reports. the doctors from the nearest hospital and the | commandee of the national troops regarde ambulance men hurried to the. scene. the situation’ tonight as satisfactory. Sniping persisted tonight. but it had | Three rebel outposts hive offered to sur- notably decreased, with the exception of | render. outbursts when lorries or armored cars P~ were traversing the streets. SOUTH IRELAND ISOLATED Theoughout the evening flames were is- FROM OTHER SECTIONS suing from the Four Courts, which had Cork, June 30.—(By the A. P)— lbecn entirely destroved. It was officially nnounded that there had been no fatali- | south ireland is now completely isolated from other parts of the country, so far ties among the irregular troovs in the as transportation is concerned. No Courts. An official statement issued tonight |trgins are running beyond Charlesville, from miiitary headquarters says: nea rhere, on the main line to Dublin. “There were no sixty-pounders used at| There s great activity among repabe any time in the bombardment of the Four | lican insurgent forces in this locality. Courts.,, When the situation became hope- | They commandeered several commercial less tife trregulars exploded some ground | lorries today, presumably with the in- been turned in to a local trust company mines, causing a detonation which resuit- | tention of proceeding to Dublin, Several ed in casuaities to over thirty national|southern postoffices also are in the troopers. This explosion caused the con- | hands of the insurgents. Maine, as president of the Chillicoth>, | MIKE LAURIA HELD FOR |“KING OF THE BOOTLEGGERS™ Ohio, vocational school, for disabled MURDER OF JOHN SCISSERE GIVEN HEAVY SENTENCH soldiers, was understood to have been —_ / Winsted, Conn., June 30.—Mike Lauria | New York, June 30. — Afier four who was brought here from Newark, N. | hours' deliberations, a federal court jury J.. to stand trial on the charge of in Brookiyn- late today returned a ver- s- | diet of guilty against John T. Vamatts, Federal Judge Chatfield imposed a sen- without bonds for the October session of | tence of 15 months' impriscnment in the the Litchfield superior court on the | Atlanta penitentiary and a $5,000 fine. The state supreme court in Névada at|charge of murder. Louis Lauria is In|Vanatta's jawyers announced they would Bielaski case has the earmarks of scif. | Carson City, yesterday denied a petition | jail awaiting trial on a like charge. agmeal from the verdict. of Attorney Genersl eLonard B. Fowler for a_rehearing of his action attacking = & |the divorce granted to Mary Pickford | FREIGHT SHIPMENT RATE PR Witnesses testified that Vanatta had “bootlegged” on a wholesale scale, his sieter yesterday taking the stand for he had BT given her more than $142,000 the past Ottawa, Ont. June 30.—The rate of | Yéar. to be deposited 13 her own ac< exchange on shipments of freight -be- | count. tween Canada and the United States from and the surcharge one per cent., it Wwas announced today. The rate of surcharge on international passenger business will a < . exchange. The Hague, June 30.—(By The A. P.) be based on two per cent. exchange, | The Hague June 30o-(By The A is the total amount of credits the centraj coviet government would like the powers ol e o CRutaail: to inaugurate the immense task of re- Waterbury, Conn.,, June 30.—Colonel ??Efi“rf;g“:",:‘“.::,mrm 5 i Walter H. Chatfleld, U. S. A., retired, 70 | E<Presions, B a2l Mmete b7 nen Maxim Litvinoff, Rassian sphkesman, announced the figure today. Further o talls were asked by the experts and these will be presented later In 1,613000,000 GOLD DOLLARS fiefd of Civil war fame after whom Com- pany A, Second Connecticut Infantry was named the Chatfield Guards, died this Worcester and New London branches of | afternoon in Walter Reed hospital, Wash- | USF0 the New Haven road. g “llngum. D. C., following a Lrief iliness, | ¥7 08" according to information received here ".'_"‘ — R wrmonis: bedy ihowuyht dobe sat | OB PRESIDENT TEXTILE WORKERS ARRESTED FOR CONTEMPT graduation from the academy he served |tile Workers of America, was arrested at an enlistment in Company 3, Second Con. |a local hotel here today by Deputy Sherif® The permits of two Massachasstts | nectcut infantry. When he term of ser- |R. M. O'Dowd on & superior court war- breweries were revoked yesterday and a |vice was up he enlisted in the Seventh|rant fo ralleged contempt in not com- third was recommended for revocation to | Cavalry, regular army, in 1878, at the | plylng with an ordér of the court in the Prohibition Commissioner Haynes, Pro- |age of 26 and remained in the army un- | injuention secured by the A moskeag an-|til he was retired May 11, 1816 with | Manufacturing company azainst the rank of colonel. tile strikers. McMahon was mot Two years after his enlistment in the | With papers before as e was not within regular army he was commissioned a |the court's jurisdiction. first lieutenant’s commission ; in 1898, a | Property owners for McMahon's Appear- izens and their property by bandits in | captaincy; in 1905, a majority, and in |2nce In court here when the court #0 1911, a colonelcy. During his army ca- | ordered. Connelly, | reer he served with Major General Leon- s T ard Wood, Major General Hunter Lig- k. INDICTED gett and other celebrated sodiers fh the | i eorgd The senate passed the mavy “serap-!Inai th ppin FIBST DEGREE ASSAULY New: Fork:Juhe 30-—Tw men entared:|piria’ bill providhis. foo Ameritasobseye | s T ye: (o L ERNIOPASSS L an elevator of a lower Broadway build. |ance of the army conference treaty in re- zel ing housing the Neptune Raincoat Co.,|ducing capital ships. Minor ~ senate | In 1917, Colonel Chatfleld was recalled | Hirsh was indicted for first degres assaul amendments sent the house bill to con- |0 the service and was placed in charge | by the Nassau county grand : AL gubal Mineola, N. Y. June 30—Mrs Hasel of the recruiting for the World war in |today in conmection with hooting a8 New York city. Whonmdnnk-mml:mc..;& rioal the clevator operator 10 rnw the car to| President Harding has asked the gen-|Went into effect and recruiting was stop- | contractor, late ped, Colonel Chatfield was placed in [jawn of the home of Reine 'y, training station, near Chicago,-as n site | POKen:~ their captives into a corner of the base. [for one 6f the new service men's hos-| Funeral services will be held in Wash- ment, they ran (he car to the first floor | pitals to be established by the veterans' |ing Sunday