Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 7, 1922, Page 1

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LXIV—NO. 163 VoL BLAEFREEXTHCUSHERS | ooy | day declined the invitation gxfended to PEg S B B e o it 5 ther Side at Cloe of|. Death in 150 Foot Fall at 500 Persons Trapped in Subway Tunnel, ‘Reeking With fi&%fififi?flfi ProlongedSuu::—Pur&«- a;lfi'*‘« Field — Victim Smoke and Fumed, 75 Feet Below Streét—Narrow Exits o 1 sersive vl ub befng v | 1000 o000 10 ZOMEn) TS, A% Jammed by Frenzied Mob FW"_WH to Safety— t:a:.::*,,-‘;:;g;;ag;fi;,?flm ashington,. guly 8ot prolonsedses-| Dutrot, Jul sptain 5 Vr : and Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen—Railway Cir- Many, Crawl Along Tracks on Hands and Knees, Fearing i e S SO R 3 > Dublln, July 6 (By the A. P.)—-;lm-, up. mtzdns:fi’ e Al it :hm;nwfih:*mm of 150 feet, and | Chicago. m‘l_w Day “'WM Marked by u 1 Fire Extinguisher Thrown, on Tiny Blaze Seot Fuumea| ek St 5 200 r 5 'St i v o Tt o oo s o i - 1 0 (Fensl e lon 0| 1) nthred Sactiaie Two Met Beatens of New Mash co—Pumping Station at Madrid, lows, Put Out of Com: i % - 5 o b MANY unifon representatives called to Washing-{an 'overseas veterams was killed at Sel- mas “Jack” Plek Ex . 3 Settlement of Shop 3 ARE RESFONDING union representat o ik [ vimeck viiorpas il st . X v cles Express Strong Hopes for Quick of : . ¥ : d . ). o b 0 * . 03 v g P 4 o - 3 2 . . ol cue Victims Through Ventilation Grating—Contents of | visionai sovernment's cail o arms, ‘and | 23 aent, b¥ particloants to meet again| | He was 26 joars old. Mis mother | 0ooler Mone: on cotoated by ths G U""‘" Except for Few Sporadic Outbreaks in Wide: dS ke Swirli Tt h H ily l': dod Ten Cad “; ’:;: i:"e being segregated into their | wouig: be continued tomorrow was given BULE APPEARS CEBTAIN the beginning of July it is estimated A to Tndicate the ‘trend” of opinion among e that 195 furnaces x Bes| . x were in blast through. e i ,,,1,,""‘!;:;;';",’:;‘ ;e ""m““" of | anchracite negotiators. Secretary Fall| Washington, July 6—Defeat of the |out Phis country as compared with 175 on Train. numbers of ordinary citizens for Tecrut pasticipated in the meeting, But left be-|republican motion for cloture on tne ad- |June Tv,. o MENt" 1y the’ voluntesy” Yoress,: 48 tore_its_conclusion. \ | miinistration tarift bill appearsd to be ] —_— 4 g . . 2 b Iiminary to a transter to the actual Pee:|D: Warriner, chairman ‘of ~the general| virtually certain tonight on the eve of | Pastponement ot the hearing n the val- | norica8% July. §—(By the A.IP)—Anight and put out of commission. Accord o sion_between' anthraclte operators and | Tinsley of the' avlation corps, and Deadly Third Rail—Police, Firemen and Volunteers Res- Was & great responise today to the pro. Ing been accomplished, but = with an|burst into flames, (" Taox fall, Jong lines stood waiting to join, | Gnic" the motification that sessions | DEFEAT OF CLOTUBE New York, July .—(By the A. P.)—|Newark, N. J., who declined to give his s me, denfed that Pyrene gave oft | Mminan AL O sttiisalte ResALOMI. W . % thréatened extension of the of rail- | ing ‘to raiiroad officiel 4 h”'.‘l’,b:"":;:.‘]" o "':';h""_: E:uqny fumes,” though he admitted the | %% 1" Fsshinod totiet anki. tnL|I0RUS FV.L, Clnall ::; LA e S e e ;flaz:ufigfifl“flfl: Rapid | way shopmen (o include 12,000 signalmen of e, bt e e fumés and amoke, nearly 500 men, wo-]STtnsulsher ‘produced e gas which, in ards represented the emplovers in to-| Democratic leaders claimed and repub- | to the company. L2 Was prevented today by membérs of (he |and stolen. - sStock exchange will 4 . s a closed-place, might cause “fainting and | p,77C Xchange will cpen E‘n:’:nfilmE}II day’s -conference, while. Philip Murray, | lican leaders concedéd. that it would not 5 ‘ > 1|% o ; g o D. W. Helt, head of the Brotherhood Sig- | ROAD! Sifle train of the Interborough Rapid leave tonlght with almost mormal far:|iico president of thie United = Mine|be possibie.to obtain for the motion the|During lsst month fallittes in this ; S HIRING MEN Transit company today Became s frenzied |, Freoident Frask Hediey of the Inter- | oot HO8EHE ! Workers of Amerlca, and William Bren- | two-thirds majority nécessery to invoke (try totaled 1656, an incasase of 19 per | Haim o aiicl has been taking o strike TO EEFLACE STRIKERS mob, &nd almost a third of thelr number | SOuSh Ier b e There is still no definite news of Ea- 0% Thomas Kennedy-ard Christ I. Gol-|ihe existing rule, which wou'> limit dé-|cent: over the same monfh™last year, ac- | yoe ‘pend e 2 irs ‘overcome belors they could fgat |NEich he denid the use of the Pyzene |, T 0 e e elogrash | den, presidents of - Pemsylvania. dis- | bate on the bill and its amerients to |cording to Bradstree e Quo pending. further conferences. Tottek Ity 0Tk nb g I eav tb tabiy: S At gaocs wian flied the |5AYS it was frecly rumored in Bray, -a|Cricis Of the organization, spoke for'the one hopr for cach eenator. Leaders on 5 v it was the second time that Interven- |in passérer or frelght trafic the Three probably will die, police ofticlals | oy ® “re axtinguisher, he said, %ad |SUburb of Dublin, last night,. that De “ns;“- i B aiaeeationy sttt both' sides were hopeful, however, that{ New regulations covering stamp taxes "{‘lm°r board members has vareted an|day of the shopmen’s strike found sid it was a mitacle many wera not |pce ooy oS T N been ap- | Valera had been wounded. Credencel,. YME e airme mriation s Hech | 2ui-of the move.would coms a unanimotsfan docurests tn: conformity with the rev- | SCAnsioh. of the; walkéuli o threatsned | cli’s of the Boston & Alesy, trampled to death. proved by the Fire Underwriters and the | W28 given by the fact that Father Domi- | i DM s SIEe WUZEon FEvE DEC0 | consent agreement for the limiting of de- | enue act of 1921 were issued by the treds- strike of maintenance of way men having |and Maine and the New Haven A worse spot for such an accldeat|Bied gltey zovernment, as one of the | BiC: Chaplain of the republican guard,{dcferred unt O e P ren e[ bate, at least-onthe less Mportant lury. 3 % i been prevented Tuesday. tirough the ef- |claiming satisfactory headway in scurcely could have been picked that | og“emective in putting out fires similer | Passed thraugh ‘the military lines. in Harding's return, sovermzh views offitems in the measure. Negotiations . forts of Chairman Ben W. Hooper and |plans to cope with the walk-out. Reports Lexington ayenue, at Sixtieth . strest, | o thas of today: Bray Tuesday night in a motor car fiy-|{he matter were made available in part|lookmg to such an agreement are under| Semator Borah introduced » Bill to re- |V L McMenimen, lahor member of the |showed that new men wers being e where the train came to a sudden halt.| g o4ded that the company already |ing the Red Cross flag. ~Father Domi- “"?:’l‘h "nnt.komfllfilw seuu SR b, 8 duce the numbér of shipping board com- it X 3 gnged to fill the places made There i3 no express station between [piy jnstructed its engineers. to seek |MIC IS reported to have visited De Va-|Ialcr of e a1 bl S¥r| i The. bill: received ittle - consideration | missioner from seven -to_three, declar- | - o / catt Grand Central Terminal, at Forty-second | yreyovements that would prevent . the |lera’s house at Greystones, ‘pinces” have developed, e | today, practically the entire session being|ing it is a waste to pay $12,000 a year settlement of the | districts officials maintained that street, and S6th street. The, express |remur t S A T L LY The same paper ‘says that reports from | One in the northwest to which, a ‘-":' devoted to discussien of the cloture rute, | while losing money. B. M. Jewell, head of | Dloyes were returning to thelr fom tracks are three tlers down—beneath the the provinces show that over the greater | POrtion of coal is usually transported bY| with leaders on- both sides announcing s the shopriien, today reiterated former | positions. local tube of the I R. T.—and the cross | gsvs’ MOVIE PRODUOEES part of the twenty-six-county area com-|he Great Lakes ‘;; s DR 1 whencs | they hoped w final vote could be obtain-| Tt was sald in the shipping district of | Satements thdl the shopmen were willing | Union strike Jeaders, however, town tumnel of the Brookiyn Rapld|™ [ o pry o nane (o pugy |Plete calm prevails, although here and er in -morthern New England, 0Ce | o4 ‘fn the mot distant future. ‘| New York that because of better demand |10 consider a sftgjement proposition sub- | ed that they were satisfied with the Transit Sompany, and the only exits are o % there some fighting has occurred, but ;:‘;;‘m‘“, s borne by coastwise shib-| pepate on the cloture was enlivened |here for refined sugar, shippers of that|™Mittéd by any authoritative body. gress of the strike and that if the narrow little spiral stalrways at Fifty- 3 United. States railroad labor board, when men ang children passengers on an _East | ¢ © oot BT TN O b; enator Harrison, demo-|com: serted The situation is improving had returned to work ‘number third, Fifty-elghth and Sixty-third. These | Boston, July 6.—The co-operation of T::m:‘;'vw{:pf,f'%:bfi:, the magnitude of| "5 these areas are considered to be ‘:,’.¢°“§a?;'«‘,.‘lm,s~“?mf Senator Smoot, exv:th:grxh:e iy B | the strike s concernefl, Mr. opeil aaid, | fow ad mnlbomed‘ht:'m were jammed with fugitives from the |(h8 motion picture producers with the |0 SIEE 8 DIRIL o | developing a umore “of less immediate|yiah ranking republican .on the finance ot = asserting that he had mecelved reports |the pension age. e scene below. National mavcatib Msscition: ln Wid-] 8 ol hed o drrerniats In tha Bedig 2210 for sbivthelts. = committee, had_written to Major Gen-| The estimated ultimate cost of the new | FOM Several points that few men| The New York. New Haven and Hart: The contents of & fire extinguisher of a | \NE & Way to make pedagogle pictures | ol n ML C Ol ring thirty pe them|, 1t Was' aiso authoritatively Intimated| sy Crowder, ‘the American government|terminal of the Illinols Central Raflroad |that did remain at work Sat ford rallroad announced that it . widely advertised type, which when used | Vhich are scientifically, ‘pechylogically | FUPUR U0, COPEOE Er kY O & | that the government' had .susgestéd to| epresentative in Ouba, with a view to|Co. in Chicago Is $83.801,662, of which |2nd Monday;Joined the Wi taken on 251 men today {o Teplace s & tiny blaze in & motorman's control |37 Dedegomicaliy sound’ wad oftered |0 b 000 tipment. The main body|Dituminous miners and operators in thelinqucing the Cuban sugar planters to|$78,057,616 Is chargeable to capital ac- | 987" . = ing shopmer. Of this mumber, the pée , box. sent fumes of smoke swirling |7V piure broducers’ and Distribu. | Of Irregulars was driven in the difsction [SOnferences now adjourned, a ‘sehems of| restrict” their production of sugar to 2| count. : : Mr. Jewsll he had recelved 'a|port added, fifty per cent. were unakille through the tunnel, was blamed by police of Blessington. ' The Ieader of these in-|&volding the. seeming impasse rafsed by | 509,000 tons a year:in return for a less e I F. Vi of Cincip- |¢d workers It was further wnd fire officlals for the gravity of the |iors of America, dn an address tonlent | O BesdinRton, e o ave, been had.|the: employers’ insistence upon district| quey' on sugar than would be imposed| According to department, ot commerse | RAtl, head of the' Internationa] Moulders | that the railroad has just closed & tisaster. orgaisation. ¥ Iy wounded, while the Free Staters lost|¥age scale negotiations, and the min-|,pjegs some such agreement was Teach-|statistics for May, the tide, of prosperity | union, autborizing a 'walk-out of 2,500 |tract with a Massachusetts firm for More than three score of thoss over- | “Xo T Ul uirved ‘the delegates that | one dead and tiwo seriously wounded. ers" demand for & national wage scale}py ? s rising steadily. ' Of 42 industries tabu- | moulders employed ‘on raiiroads. He al- |Tebullding of 6,000 “bad ordec™ tome were in 5o serious & condition a8 10 | e motion picture industry accepted the | It is offclally announced that the rep-|The lan involves the setting up of| “genator Smoot denled that there was|lated for May , 35 of these showed in. |80 exhibited telegrams. from heads of |C&TS. require hospital treatment, while the .. e lels at Curraghtown, Navan, have eurren-| ©lght Tegions each consisting of severallg,, oftort to “put over any deal” He|cerases in production over April, | “This wini heip to provide sumber treated on the streets #nd in | Siugeres ot FRRL AR OE TR Q0 B O Y S coners " being | Of, the exiting coal district. organiza-| pyciniced that he would read the letter . X smergency hospitals set up at the scene | Loy CF otion pictures shall be de- |taken. Fourtein irregulars were eap-| onS of sperators and union miners With|(, ne renate when the sugar schedule| The Standard OIl Co. of Indlans fore- | the women were doing picket duty. statement said. “There are & lerge zume WS- Disced &% Rbout 199. | veloped and used.” O | firéd today at Maynogth with field arms. | SeParate negotiations in each - Little|\l oyen’ up and added that when tho|casts the heaviest demand for petroleum| Mr. Jewell did not reply today to the |ber of additional cars awaiting The train—a ten-car Jerome avenue ! 'myc .ddress shared fnterest on the| A -crisis appears to be prepared at|SUPport hasbeen evidenced in the Indls | country found out how the sugar refiners|products this year the nation has ever ’ Ben: W, Hooper, of the | 50 that the contract will mot aftect +xpress. heavily loaded—was crashing | goy's convestion programme with the | Enniscorthy, Wexford county, irregulars|tf¥, it was declared, for the proposition|,ng the New York bankers, who had |kmown and“has keyed its entire organi- Which was. considered con- | running of this company's shops vong beneath Lexington Avenue shortly | aetion of delegates In emphaticaly en- |have taken possession of a hotel, the|a% made. - advanced money to Cuban sugar pro-|zation to meet it. “but 8aid he ex- | TOTmal basis and the giving of uter 11 o'clock when padsengers In the | qorsing the Towner-Stérling bill Only | tahnical school and the Protestant| The miners' spokesmen, it was also|gucers had sought to infure the Ameri- S & “studying it |ious employment to those now bird coach were startléd by an explo- | yuo votes were recorded in opposition to | ehureh, the belfry -of which they have)indicated. were inclined to be resentful| .. ‘migar industry, -thers would de an| The Shipping Board frelght . steamer ‘Hooper, those who may be taken into’ th don which blew open the door of the | (his measure, The convention's gttitude | tortified, as well as’several houses. in the meeting concerning the present| . ciy different sentiment in the senate| West Caruth that was operated by the friver’s compartment, A short circult |way made known after the presentatfon | National troops occupy the police bar-|Semi-governmental plan controlled ' bY|ang in the country, toward ‘the domestic|Bull Lines in West African _trade. has 384 oceurred. of the report of the aksociation’s legis- |racks and castle. Intense, but intermit: | Secretary. Hoover, °Vh°‘:"“ ;"““'"‘; industry, = : been sold'to F. C. Strick Co., -of London, Tonnel Chokel With Fumes Jative commission, which declared that |tent fighting has been in' progress for|Drices for the non-union bitum| s o, |- “Thers: ia. nothing. to conceal” said{for $70,000. : 5 Patrolman Fred/Norman, who was oreation of 2 ‘department of education |eome days. There has'been a ‘whalesale | RO NEIE 5 2 ost dis: | sen oot: refer to. s letter. |, - “ding in the car séized a fire extinguish- | Was justified on the hasls of the pres- |exodus from the town, busmess ix prace y 3 it to the i from its rack and, as the train ground | ®nt edycational activities of -the na-j|tically at a standsti)l, all the roads.aro} © a sudden halt, rushed b compart- | tomat wovernment, & x:!:flna:ym:{;' blocked Lua ‘M'WM::‘M. AT =S ment and shot the contents of tie exting- | Keneral welfare provision, - | boen ars; believed: to: ... /AMONG REPUBLICA sisher on the spitting flames, which ver. |tution and the historical evelopment. of | tne wiy to reinforce the nat s S i ik ) :ating the Infulation. from the control |the hational government A lorry carrying national troops” Wi Coluthbus, 0., July 6.—President Hard- | NEW. YORK y 50x wires. lustead of checking them, he ~ |[fired at near O'Connell.bridge this eve-|ing, in an address here tonight, made a “RESERVE. BANK STATEMENT feclared, the /extinguisher served only to | IRISH INSURRECTION ning,* The nationals returned the fire, | vigorous appeal’ for ~harmony & in the|.- - « e sk % wread them/ and in a moment the car, * - COMPLETELY CRUSHED |causing @ panic in the street: and snip-|ranks of the republican party. To many | New York, July 6.—The statement of el wnd ‘soon the entire tunnel, were choked ers were active for a haif hour. who profess to be republicans, he declar- | conditions of the Federal Reserve bank of | Past fiscal year for 133 years, according *ith smoke and fumes. London, July 6.—(By'The A. P)—| A national force has gone to -attack |ed, are attempting to “attract attention | New York at the:close of business July 5 {0 2 statement issued by Assistant. Sec- Bullylng the panic-stricken passengers | Both Winston Churchill, the colonial | 300 rebels under Robert C. Baston and [to themselves,” istead of working for the | show: R ‘| retary of the Treasury Eimer Dover. nto some semblance of onder, Patrol-|secretary and Lord Chancelior Birken- | Haffy Boland in the' western part of [ goof of their party and country. Total gold reserves, $1,091,195 547.40. rallway water pumping station at Madrid, | roads in the'country affected by & near Perry, lowa, was-broken into Iutlent ordered by the railway labor man Norihan seized a woman who had | head gave it as their opinion in.parlia- | Wickiow. sresident said he did mot care.to| Total reserves, $1,118,379,863. 2 Frank J. Dowling “was sentenced to seen ovescome, clambered dowp into the |ment today that the Irish insurrection | National troops have captured & rebel |be a “soloist,” but added that some one| ‘Bills discounted, secured by govern-|ten vears in Sing Sing prison by Supreme farkness of the tunnel and commanded | had been completely .crushed- “I am |post at Crooksling, taking thirty prison-|had to act as director, otherwise there | ment wer ‘obligations, for members, $63,- | Court Justice Tompkins at Poughkeepsie, sther male passengers to follow his ex- |bold enough to believe, the lord chancel- | ers and a qudntity of arms and stores. | would bé no harmony. He spoke at an | 295109.99; aif others $40,200,043.73. N. Y. 'Dowling was convicted of abduct- - 3 umple. lor sald, “that the situation is more hope- %1“ ha!r h‘l.nquet wlr:lcmh eéle‘b!i;ed ;au Bills bought in open market, $46923,- lvnv'. uH;rbm Barnhart, a chauffeur of |[PRESIDENT HARDING STARTS INVESTIGATION He groped his way with his burden to | ful than it has been since the treaty was eth anniversary of the Columbus Re- | 963.75. = rbury. *ausl S Rt Aag e (e refugees up a|signed.” 5 um“‘“fl;fi::"_.f_::‘i’by pEFINED | PUblican Glee club, of which tonight he | Total bills on hand, $155,419 117.36. prty A Uy MAN QU ong winding emergency sairway to the| - He rejoiced that the task of upholding " | was made a life member. Total earning assets, $326,097,867.36. Thirty courses through the agency of | Columbus, 0., July 6.=—(By The A. P.) New York, July 6.—Districsl street. the treaty, painful, costly and bloody as | oo opo o S IETE gl o Uncollected items, $119.444.351.55. the K. of C. national correspondence | President Harding on his way by au- | ney Banton's offie today began & Then he sent in alarms, which brought &mfi“&"fifl{ ‘le.fx,;:";ffiffp - | peogram E the present sesion of con. | BRIDGEPORT WOMAN Due members, reserve account, $724,-|School with headquarters at New Haven, | tomobile from Marion to Washington, |ing investigation into the fimaneial Al ayailable firs aparatus, ambulances wnd police reserves in the vicinity rush- Ing o the scene, and plunged back down | Dublin. but there renffined the task of the Stairs to rescue other victims. He |enforcing law and order In the country : ill be -furnished to veterans of the war i £ gress was said today by enpublican sena- LEFT OVER HALF MILLION |2V%.09538. = 2 storped off_here today to play goft and |actions of E. M. Fuller and fell. ‘The movement had, been crrushed in | 758 Wa9 S214 teday by enpublic i oy ;o?‘l de‘posfu,‘ :"}M,!;G,‘}oi?t i who live in small towns. 10 s indr tangest - MLk Silig: o ‘r Srokers, who tatied Suns TR as a result of the dinner conference last|. Bridgeport, Conn., Jul An inyen. | ,_F- R. notes in actual circulation, $642,- his honor. He will resume his journey |liabilities of $5,000,000. while night at the home of Senator Lodge of | tory of the gstate af the 1ate Alice C. L. | 354:426. The Arralgnment of Gevernor J. B. A.|tomorrow morning, intent on arriving at |servers sought Eimore D. Dier, head o worked until he dropped, and was sent |as a whole. e Watsor Ratio of total Teserves to deposits and | Robgrtson of Oklahoma on & charge Of |the White. House soms {ime Saturday. |E. D. Dier and Company, another broks Yorse in Mayor Hylan's private limousine, | The ~grovisional | government i “E;::"—;‘m e e . Waton, widow of Gen. T. L. Watson, | o '3" fotes llabilities combinea §0.1 per sccepting & bribe, was postponed until | Gn arriving in Colshits, the presi- |erage firm which fatied, with warrants In the meantime, passengers in oter | Birkenhesd declared, mas arare ofa'or |01y of the soldiers' ~bonus measure |Of $28,585. The will leaves about $210. | cent. August 28 by Judge Mark L. Bozarth in |@ential party went to the Scioto Coun- |for his arfest on an indlctmod; charg- T e e, morant At | mithless must b the weapons eme | ¥ouid constitute the major part of the|000 to members of the family and the| try club. After hincheon the president [ing bucketing of orders and grand st of (he cause of the delay, wers |how rithless must be the Weapons on- | program bofore adjonenment in the opin. |Femainder to Grace Norton Dudley, a | VAME GENERAL WU ¥OR e & e taed off for eighteen,holes of golf, with [cency. Evidence against the Fuller ::::n":;‘::’;vf.‘:: ::‘.;‘::r:;:p:.",? fr::’ Tuturs that the provisional govern-|i0n Of the republican leaders, with the |lfe-long companion of Mrs. Watson. A _ 'CHINESE PRESIDENT a8 Joyoe ered, holder of the |Charles G. Dawes, former budget bureau | Will be laid before the grand jury e British women's golf champlonship has | director, and (R H. Jeffrey and W. O.|week, it was stated f 0 of ‘good- | Capper-Tincher grain future trading’bil:, | clause in the will provided that a con- ! : . and Y AT 3 Sl . Smoke and f:n:el dveurtd_ in as the 'Mm!wmm‘-r:fielh{ T T Boved | the Liberian loan measure.and the rivers |test by any of those mentioned in the | Peking, July § (By the A. P)—A muyu:’:go::r; nrv»ondm - lr‘lpl:o this coun- | Henderson, .Columbus friends, as other | Subponeas were issued today for mewe loora were opened and _they dropped [ Wil to S gener |:and_harbors development . bill inciuded | Wl Would serve ds a bar to a bequest, | movement has been started to slect Gen-| irY: According ormation reaching | members of the foursome. eral brokers with whiom the il K. frantically to the trécks and began mak- ponse e o among measures which might go through. | It s understood that Grace Norton Dud. | eral Wu-Pie-Fu president of China. Gen- : . From whe.golf links the president went |pany did business. The books of BORS i Sraway et The republi . ley has waived Mr. “Jeftrey's home -in a suburb of | company, ordinarily needed in the publican leaders, it was reported, pley has waived her right to the remaind- | eral Wu, who is the outstanding military : to Mr. “Jeftrey's home in a subur pan pé 0ok 48 :::"leh-.d’::'u::: ;.-::e:‘ "ovi | CHARGES DELEGATES HINDER did not include the adminstration ship | °F Of the estate and that an agreement | figure of the nerth; deciares he would not| The soviet government's flrst imtern-!tne city, where tondght's banquet, ar-|jury action, are not available because : . 3 i al loan is a. success, according to the | ranged the - Columbus~ _Republican | stipulation was made when O Tty alendas (ot | Try to-hor mas beon ade. Mo waen: | Setbee. vans Coina aeets & sroms. ap | RUsSian nesapapers, the {en million pood | Gles. cluby waa hek. Mr. “apd. Mra |lurned over to the receiver that - opposition because of its subsidy ‘featutes | tion- of ‘this,"however, was made in pro- | at the helm, and-that General 'Wu is that | Pfead 10an having already meen subscrib- | Harding” remained ‘et the Jeftrey homs | Would not b> used for a prosecution. ssfety - started; a south-bound express| The Hague, July 6.—(By The A. P i ey ™ (2Rl 00 OOV TR 0] bate court procsedings today. . - man ed: s for .the night. district attorhey, therefore, hms roared in on the opposite ~track and |—A charge made today by M. Sokolni- | rouet an amendment prohibi ‘l‘”‘ i i President L A Hine an HouneEd oo - Two membeérs of the presidential par- | the brokers with whom the firm did sround to & §udden halt as train lights |Kov, the soviet assistant commissar of | hEY S SMCIINERL PIOBbIURE SIS OF | 0L PO TR G ad o el s oranote from | SIx persams were illed in Bghiing be- | ty—General Pershing and Mr. Dawes— | iness, and hopes to reach the Fuller and tunnel lights went dark. | Power had | finance that some-of the delegates were |3 TI00 OUAMErican ships lort considerable ESSYE OR the majority of Cantonese members of the | Leen civilians.and French troopsat Pels- | jeft it today, General Pershing going to | Iness methods by questioning them been shut oft to save the passengers from | delibgritely sesking to hinder an so- | o0n o 1% ot s djournment, bIicans HARTFORD TIMES DEAD | (00 o0 o O parliament that they had | Kretscham. near Oppeln, Upper Silesia.|make a quick motor trip back to Wash- | studying their records. possible electrocution. But the darkness | cord” with the Russians at The Hague, | -t s FepubTCanS S ¥ E withdrawn ' their support from Sun Yat| rb® French were marching through the | ington, Mr.'Dwes to-go by raii“to Chi- | Subpoenas also were fsmied for snly added o the panic, and the passen- |caused a ripple of excitement in confer- |0 1 C o ¥ . Hartford, Conn.'July 6—Frank F.|3UnGramn ther Soomor o O eing | town when a shot was at the column. | cago. . Attorney General Daugherty, who |books of H. G. Mandevill and C: trs 03 this train smasked thelr way out | ence ofrcles. - il to e conud bill, however, -Was| Heusster,. supérintendent " of 'The -Times | S and had declded to 3 | This caused the troops to:halt and open |joined the. president at Marion yester- |another firm which failed with of the cars and joined in the scramble l:u was discussed {n(nml::; - today's | %20 “Tm!fi z*:lul ::l;nw!:: ;LB::;;Z; mlfll‘:\s d:nmn: g;; &,’.;‘.qc years, | Sovernment. A E fire. % day, will -mot.return. to. Washington | ties of $2,500,000. for the exists. meetings of the non-Russ elegates, . 3 K member of the<Burr ‘Prin ompany, e A . Tn the meantime, Lexington avenue had | While preparing their programme for to- | &t Some length at the Loige dinner but | whick publishes The Hariged Times, | MORSE HEARING I8 WU the . SHIOERORNE . DRCAEST et T Nl literally crawled to safety. ACCORD WITH RUSSIANS A moment after the general push for t : tar 3 make the trip by train. NEED TO LIVE IN been choked with ambulances and fire | morsow's meecting with the Russians, | Without definite conclusions other than'for | and the oldest-employe of that mewspa. AGAIN CONTINUED : - trucks and polies reserves fréh thras| When the bolshevikl may submit thelr | Soneulation by senate leaders with Presi: | per in polnt of service, died today at| ==t it i o yd ACCORD WiTH LAWS | siations were drawing a cordon to hold | long-awalted list of concessions. dent Harding when he returns {rom Mari- | the Home. of his sister, Mrs. -A. L | Bridgeport, July 6.—At the réquest of with the president both In Marion and i Back the thousands thet were attracted to | -“It 48 quite clear” said M. Sokolni-|OD. It Was said to have been decided, if [Schneider, in New Haven: He had been |attornéys for Henry F. Motss, son of hert. | Mr. Harding is said- 1o have re- | Fredericksburg, Va, July & the scene. Xov, addressing the newspaper corres- | bussibie, to obtain from the president a (il for a year with Hodgkins disease, an |Charles W..Morse, indicted ‘shipbuilding. Ilis, - July: 6.—Followlrgs | celved an up-to-date report-on the status | ETesident Coolidge, speaking here g - Physicians, in whose neighborhood the | Pondents, “that thers are currents amopg | definite statement of his.position on ‘the | affection -of - the: neck and" throat, and |magnate who was arrested at his home!repopfs from Decatur that an. outbreak |of affairs, which suppismented informa. | 9eclared “it is not a cicage that & sceldent occurred, came hufrying with | the delezations at The Hagus which do | Ferdney-McCumber bill. ' 1f Me. Harding hed been -unable to work for several|ln”Greonwich over a month ago on a|(hreatened as the resuit of the Wabssh |tion on the subject he had recelved from |Needed in our constitution and laws @8 Ihelr oOffice nurses, while calls to the |70t adimit the possibility of an agree- ;should oppose the pending bill it was said | months. : bench warrant, the hearing before Unit-{ghopmen's strike. Adjutant General Car- | Washington since leaving thers Satur- |Much as there is need of living m See Red Cross brought additional workers. |ment. This is sabothge, not collabora- | that an effort would -be made to reach ¢d States Commissioner Hugh J. Lav-Fios E. Black, ordered two troops of calf- | day. cordance with them.* b2 Y Polics, firemen and voluntsers then |ton We are here to talk business: we | Some compromise aceptable to the execu- | NON STOP FLIGHT Qs ery was again continued foday, this time [y and five companies of Infantry to| 1t was stated authoritatively, that the | M. Coolidge, who spoke at the s plunged down Into the subway and|Want credits: and are ready to maks |tive. Leaders were sald to be virtuaily AFRICA TO FRANCE |until July 10. The case was continued|asemble at their armories prepered to |president had mot determined » what | Uration of a campaign to purchase “Keme Srought out vietim after victim, using |Concessions and sacrifices. _|uanimous that the president’s plan for a some time-ago for a hearing today. but|move at a moment's notice, - oourse of aetioh he would pursus in re. |MOre” the home of Betty Washimgte the emergercy exits at Fifty-third, Fif ‘Rulsia will be stronger economicaily | 8ales tax to pay the bonus had no chance| Pparss, Fuly ‘6.—Lisutenant _(Pellotier ; OWing to the inability of the government g s #ard to the strike on his retumn to the |LeWis, the only sister of the first presis ty-elehth and Sixty-third streets, and |NeXt vear and will be less disposed tu .. were uopelul thal later conferences|poisy efteoted a mon-stop flight today | PTOSECUloF to reach this city in time a|TINY SAILING SHIP ‘White House. ~ 16 was indicated, however, | 9¢nt, and to preserve the house us & Soeking by adders through the ventila, | Make concessions.” . ik the vresident would develop some | from Tunis, northern Africa, to Le Bour- | Postponement was ' granted. HEADED TOWARDS IRELAND |that he would' confer with Secretaries | {fiotic shrine. emphasized the valus i4 tidn, grating at Sixty-Arst street. R e e Solution by Which & bonus measure would | get, nearParis, a distance of about 1. 3 Hoover and- Davis, who are familiar | America of such relics of the o Those least injured were laid in rows | ™ ' e e I 2 form acchptable to both 000 miles, in ten hours, 55 minutes. in | BRAZILIAN “REVOLT 18 Boston; July ‘6.—A four-foot model of | With the situation; * befors 'taking any |CIATing that “a peopls hwo on the sidewalks to recelve first aid, ON HOMICODE CHARGE |U em“vng the White House. spite of high winds. He started at 7 COMPLETELY STAMPED OUT |a full-rigged ship, -with all sail set is|&ction in ‘the matter. . the shrine of true greatness will whils the graver cases were taken to ¢ Dyer anti-lynching: bill and the|o'clock this morning. flying over Sar- — heading across the Atlantic in the gen-| The president plans to stop at New |Selves be truly great™ fmprovized hospitals in Bloomingdale's| Dem River, Conn, July 6.—James | Muscle Shoals matter seemed doomed 1o, dina Corsica. He then followed the | Rio Janeiro, duiy 6.—(By the A. P.)— | eral directl ¢ Irelans, according to|Comicord, ONlo, Where an homorary de.| Paying tribute to the great men | Rt wione and'the YorribIsles | Niheatigrwria, Wanted by ihe mpolice of | 50 OVEr to the next session, leaders said. | yaiies Nr IheRhBRe th mail e | R e s by i wemarm Cantain Thomas B. Jagb. nt the Leviand | &res of Doctor of Laws wiil-be eonferred | duced by Virginia, the vica "o Christian association, later to be removed | Freehoid, N. Y., on a charge of homi- =i ed at Le Bourget at 5.55 p. m. ment that the last rasistance of the In- [iiner Cals 3 on him by Muskingum collegé at 11 a. |clared “the eloquence of Patrick Henr 10 Tt Bisbichia cide, ‘was taken off the steamer Middle. | FREE STATE TROOPS £ic8 e e el Surgents 18 Fortress Copacabana. ceased | Ane: from Manihontan. sd - Liverpoot,| M. after which he will have noon funch. | the confidence in the peopls of Them At one time fourtesn pulmotor operat- | town from New York, when it touched CONTROL SLIGO cITy | ESCAPED PRISONER $ at 345 oclock this afternoon, federal|Captain Jago reported -that he sighted|eon. Tomorrow might he will will spend |Jefferson, the inspired judgment of Job 6r% wers bendipg over prostrate figures |8t the Connectisut river landing here LR B . BACK IN CELL |forees entering the fort'a few minutes |tne - strange craft Tuesday morning |3t Uniontown,’Pa. Marshall, and the incomparable patrio the sidewalk” last night The state polcs %ad 1e- | Beiast, July 6.—(By The A. P)—Ra-l 1ater, & elghty-five miles oft Sable Isiand. X ism of George Washington w'il all be 4 Fire Extinguisher Blamed o publicans in. Sligo have beat a hasty| Bridgeport, Cond, July 6—Framk the vessel and fnding a man asleep in Hilame for {hé seflousness of the acel- |the cabin they took him off, He made no | CUI®at end established their headquar- |Martin, sentenced from. Greenwich last :“The revolt, says {he government, has| The model was making about five| oSER WELL LIKED no avall unless we shall make the dent was laifl on the Pyrene firs exting- | resistance. ters in a large mansion belonging) to | Winter ‘and escaped from the Fairfield | 3 now Dbeen completely stamped out, knots an-hour, with a &panking wester- sary sacrifices to live up 1o the standar —_—————— Ty 3onf on her quarles, Caplain’ Jago 1N SWITZERLAND | which they acclaimed.” ¥ et T X Sir Josslyn Gore-Booth, brother of the |county jail here by scaling a 30 feot | BELD ON CHARGE OF lula. “ He_examined it.through his glass- . ::A‘ e 39, s ae e St TAFT HONORED BY Countess Markievicz. Free State troops |Wall, was caught vesterday and foday’| RECEIVING STOLEN GOODS | es. but could not discover any identify- |, CBicaso. July €—Max Oser Swiss|\nssron cuaPELS LooTED St the Bee: Elrecisd by Seayat, Hy. g 2 are now in contro] of Sligo City. was locked up again. He had his free- ing marks. The Caledonlan’s officers be- | N7somal WhoST impending marriage to IN cRiNReS e R e . My CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY | A bulletin issued this evening at the G aipch arch 15— As 3 ‘trustie” he | New York, July 6—Detectives from | ileved that the little vessel was being . o """"u" wm:,‘:.u;r: - 3 ) * ¥ 5 —— eneral head a5 “terd| ‘ teenati Harvester comoa has uly T8 s At ety a A AFSS | Al ety 65 s | B quarters of the Irish re- £ the boiler just before es- | Hartford, Conn., invaded the steerage of |used in some sort of ocean. experiment. | 2P of the executive comities o Shanehal, Chind, Juty & man's point. of view. 1 found employes| s *p). William Howard - Taft added | rave ars por ceos: the Italian liner, Conte Rosso, just as “We are holding - Shannon bridge, she was ‘about to sail late today, and ar- | BROOKLYN BRIDGE NOW caused wide discussion was praised by a | F-)—Three Methodist of the Isteshorough fighting the fire with | another title today to the long list of | Kings county. The irregulars have been | PRISON SENTENCE FOR - rested Francisco Roberto, of Torrington, countryman here tday. Or. Robert Her- s o oxs alide Py, |honors already acquired when ' Cam- |cleared from Boyle, County Rosscom- ASSAULT ON GIRL jConn, on a charge of having criminally MERE SECOND EATER | cod, Swiss editor. in°Ameriea to- investi- rene gul 3 remult of | bridgs university carlerred upon him |mon, excent for odd snipers.. Thees var received stolen goods. A valuable dla-| < New Tork: July 8- Brookiyn bridge, | 5aie Prohibition, described a lguid from these extingtlshers striking | the degree of LLD at a ceremony in the | racks-have been burned b: 4 y the irregulars the firé deadly fumes were created. This | anclent Senate Hall of the university. |in Siigo City, The irregulars have clear. Oser as : : 3 “fine man.” New Haven. Conn., July 6.—Michdel | mond’ ring found on him, was 5ald t0| onee the showplees of New York, today | o ~ s Perry. alias Perrello, 50, for assault up- | have been taken from John Burr, of Tor-| dropped back to the position of a mers 1 can't see why. thers should be so Pyrens ext! is & widely adver-) The Duke of York, who sat With theled to the ‘wountr: ] much excitement . - his g 5, their loca) leader, |on a ten-year as sent - | rington, in t hold-up. Teported en- tand arice and whil i e s offctive | i ustie, it receved in LD, The | encgan, e setionkly wousdsd b St ey e L S iV Y er of piant| ESEement (o Maihiide McCormick: said sasoline fires, adly mendcs |Barl of Balfour, chancellor of the uni- | Coumtics Horeiously o . commixsioner of nlant | T’ Feresd. - “Oser-is-well known and in & closed place.” versity, was presented with an illumin- | yo, W‘::u):c on, ~ ongford, X.a-|three yoars by Judge ‘Avery today. . |CHAMBER OF DEPUTIES g and structures, {ssued an jee Testri i e ol SUPPORTS PREMIER POINCARE | ing the rq!:ld'" ot ihe fasioes structare | "ol 1iked in ove countrs e ~ | to slow-moving _horse-drawn. - veh'clos. MASTER AT STAMFORD | Paris, July 6.—(By the A. P.)—Prem- | Manhattan bridge, ~Brookiyn bridge's G 2 "7 | ter Poincare tonight received the support | younger sister, was ~restricted. -by - the. Hartford, Conn., July 6. — Governor | of the chamber of deputies by a vote of | same order to the. faster moving motor Lake today appointed John J. Ryle, ir., | 532 to 65. Thisexpression of confidence | trafe, - Aoy ’ . of Stamford, to be harbor master of thut |in ;the government was given after. the ! Both bridges will contimiie; {o carry | journed h, and Sligo may ral-| . Firs Commissioner Drennan later sald {uted address on behalf of the university, |1y be taken as completely in. our hands. | APPOINTED HARBOR a preliminary investigation indicated | japding his services at the. Washington |Rovi m‘i"m;' “noxlous tumes” were caused |canference and congraulating him upon el el o L y rning of insulation and {his evelation to the Peerage. “The national troops ad Muliingar ar- party by the use of Pyrens extinguishers. — rested two) nurses and found quantities A formal investigation will be started | BetheL—LeRoy M. Webb of 20 Taylor |of ammunition in.their possesson’” tomorrow to fix the blame for the acel- | avenue has been granted a radio trans-| - > g St B it wttion. wpn apeetlons b | e z - 3 ~ ity for a three year period-to'aucceed |close of. the debate:on the question of | their present quotas of e, cars, L "An dzscutive of the Pyrens company gt | having passed necemary sxamisationer | &k:n;fl;um x:-:‘m aworld 1s | the'jate Edward B. Palmer. The ap-| ::mm::m the war” initiated yytmm-. subway trains and . pedestcians, e

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