Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 3, 1922, Page 1

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~vm_ LXIV—NO. 186- velq:menb of Clnnu Made by the Ma.nuemenb ‘of | . Austraitan motse Bétiten, Treastcs. “Mélbourne, Avg: 2. entered into at. 'the Feceat Washicgton |tion for Unit mlerenm. 2 Votés® on returns from. 3,080 vu: of 5,548 {and that she has, a. right to ask for pay- , Practically 21l of {ment, has thrown wide open the most tati o ificd” the ~treaties | énridge Longfor:the democratic nomina- | ain's allies:in- the great war; remindidg : . B . . 5 EoX Railroad Operation Without ‘the Meni on I o vashin them (hat they owe Great Britaln' money — is Determined to Provide Coal for the State’s Institu- Minm; Should be Flvon bletoHlm. St,lmh.Aul . P Lendon, Aug.2—(By the ‘Ai P)—The 2 £ men Have Been Sent Into the Coal Fields—Governor Senitor James A. Reed is<t:ading-Breck- | British governments hiofe 1o Great Brit- | Sapinent: Garlos- Schanzer remains for. agers Claim Strikers Are Asking for Their Old Jobs— |’ ; > prectricts in the state. Trish Troops Attacked -by Rebels. | the missifig precincts Free “States drove'.them' “into the open ulars finally surrendefing. Tney “nam- P % Off—Their Half Holiday ALEXANDER GRAHAM BEL ally ;all of the remaining precincts 1o bably Declared L Has INVENTOR OF TELEPHONE, DEAD | D¢ heard from are fi Been Ordered Restored by the Rfllm'd Labor BOII‘d €ydney, N. ) - Alander wasigngton, Aug. 2 (By the ‘A. P.)—|pany's creation to prevent its. men Te| died at Baddeck, near hefe at 2" ¢'clock Further government action in the rail-|turning to work under the ‘president's|ijis morning. R. R.. Brewster, of the lead in the bered “twelve, and included - General [P.'m. today, 2,637 princincts of of 3,848 ened Strike of the Clerks on the New Haven Road Will | Gt ‘Wao ecentty was pasoled. - |In the state gave Brewster 668753 Wil- Ham Sacks of St. Loul Louis.: The rural di 2 exceptional strength fe Granam Bel, inventor of the télephone, | S5 00" i rths Read g vice of yesterday’s primary, featare event. road =iiks was heid in abeyance today,| proposals as’ of -thefr former semiority.| Alexander GriNam_ Beli” lived ‘to see |Brobably; will not be ough ratlroad T 5 ; : riien: Harding's suggestions for set-|érn has been imvited to confer on this|man’s ear less {han fifty- years ago re- ¢ yesterday were understood to| basis . sult in a means of commumicution for tlem have apprisad administration agencies — that the door was still open for negotla-| gaLp HOLIDAY ORDERED versations daily. in -all parts.of the. werld, RESTORED -TO- N.' H. CLERKS | The: Possibllity. of' tatking’ ovir-u Wire, New Haven, -Aug. 2.—The threatened strike of clerks.: freight handlers.. ex- press and station employes ct th- N. T., N. H. and H. Railroad and the Cen- tral New England Railway will proba- bly be dealared off if the railroad com- pany carriés out the terms of , atele- &ram said to have been ment C. L. 1t protection in seniority status ac- uirad by shopmen who have continued fte of the strike couid be guaranteed, any basis of settlement, the president might nd would-be favor: ably acasidered by the managements said. Tentative negotiations dur- the day. it was added. bad brought no immediate tangible results The president was said ‘to be await- ng the text of the which union eaders at Chicago were drafting to.his propasals. Seert Hoover, | the sessic the roadi New York. saw the pres-! erybody except Bell, bécame duriag his litetime * a_reality, - commonplace- and marvelous. The Bell basic patent, known in the records at Washington'at' No. 174,466 Las been called tht ‘most valuable single pat- ent ever® issued in.the whole Ristory of fnvention. There. are. today over thir- AT teen million © teléphone instruments Bardo: general manager of the New' Ha- |iprough which billions of, telephone -con- vén road- by TU. S. labor board ordering | versyiions are. carried on .each vear. the company to restore to the employes | “URtISS 2 SHIECE QR EOR e the. Saturday half-holiday. vacation an® | ¢eging. his instrumens in his new. uart- slck - leave priviléges that were in ef- ers in Boston. Thomas - A. Watson, to work in s fect February 1. Bells assistant, had _ gtruck: a ;clock dent but said that no immediate The news was. glven out by R. G gk ) re to o s ¥ spring-at’ one of tife,wiré and Bell governmental steps were to be expected | g pin, " chairman of the system board | T "8 sag was electrified to hear the soind in an- other room. For.forty weeks the in- strument. struggléd, as it were, for hu- man speech: ‘Then on’Afarsh 19, 1576, Watson became almost insane’ with. o when ~heé heard over the . wire -Bell volce saying: . “Mr., Walson, come heré, I waht you." On his 29th birthday, Béll -eceive] his patént.: It was at the Centennfal Lxposi- tion " held at Philadelphia, -two-~months ater, where men of science tme world over who had come to examine and study the numerous inventions exhibi‘ed, Prof. Bell vige a.practicaly.demonstra- tion_of the transmission ~of tne , human tvoice by electriclty. While Dr. Bell will be best rem: béred as the inventér of the telepione poijce, a clafm that has been jsustained Other cabinet members who saw the| ¢% i mant, who said that he was in president for discussion of s(n:&e m.l‘; rectipt of a‘ message to Wis effect from s indicated the feeling that claims of| U737 ‘paryer ~secretary of -the labor railroad manageménts as to their ability |y o,0q" 4 meéfing will probably be: held to maintain transportation would get 2| omorrow by the committee of three rep- thst during the next few days. These of-To coroing the clerks and the manage- 1s left the inference. that _if the ment of the road when it is-expected strike demonstrated symptoms of diss0-| pae the decision of ‘the: companv Wl Jution the president might not move |y, yade xnown. | “n an interview tonight Mr. Stearns was emphasized ‘that the nation'sfg,j that the tabulation’ of the strike a minimum coallnte taken by the clerks had been com vupply had largely governed the prefi-fpiened but the résult will-be withheld dant's action to date. and would con-| pending the result “of: thy ‘meetirg” to- tifue to do so. was most {mport- | morrow ant ‘n the prospect it held out that coal Railroad men declars ‘Ws to he a vie. carrying roads of the district south of [ ¢4ry for the clerks 104 express i be- the Ohin riyer might draw particular!yief that other points ask-d for will. be government attention. or_even.. control| given favorabe e0gsiharitidy by - tes unless betterment of their _transvorta-|abor’ poard. thro r < s ugh many legel contests. he alsy be- tion canacity is- soon aecomplished. e came noted for other inventions. ke was These lines serve the larger nop-union | LEADERS OF SROEMEN ACCEPT - & . i A b i joint inventor of the graphaphone with: :'an:' :\: ’»nt_an,“ ‘_xhwf'h‘;: “:L:;;.';: ::; - PRESIDENT'S PROPOSALS | Sumner Taintor. He invented an -in- tion of the Upited Mates =ty genious method of lithography, & photo- The definite answe ¢ the strike lead.| CRicago.-Aug.-2-(By the A."P.)—Ful|pnsne, and “an induction Balance. - He R eeidoms's settlament propa. | 2cceptance of the peace proposals sub-|invented a telephone probe which he uscd p : s Teach the White | fitted by Preé den® Harding wAs votéd |io locate. the bullet that killed Prasident - oo By g1 ye 4o e | tonight by leaders of the striking rail-|Garfield. He spent 15 years and. over Foure jate tonight, and to h‘- ma :‘\:hj way shopmen, who, however. gave th&ir($200,000 in testing his famous tetrahe- g et o e their, an.| 0% interpretdtion of ‘each of the three|dral kite,-and established a_principle in o) suggestions. | architecture, the use of tetrahedral cells et forwarded: to" the pres "We accept reluctantly, it 1s true, but[or-units: ent commit. ourselves to carry out the Throughout his life, -Dr. 'Béll - main- térms of settlement _in utmost good Ftainéd hi& interest and labors for deaf- PREDICTS STRIKE OF N. Y. C. faith and in aid of the general welfare,” | mutes, He founded, became prasident MAINTENANCE OF WAY MEN|gaid the message of acceptance which!and contributed $230,000 to the American e i was ment to President Harding tonight.| Association to Promote =~ Teaching of New York, Aug. 2.—A atrike of 45.000] «1¢ these proposals fail to bring .about|Speech to'the Deaf. He was a member maintenance of way men on the New|the results which vou desire, the re-|of many of ‘the leading American. learn- Tork Central “within a week” was pre-| eponaibility of failure will not rest upon|ed sociefies. dicted here today by W. M. Parker|representatives of the organized em- chalrman of the system organization,’aspioyes." MOSQUITOES ‘INDIRECTLY “he result of the road's refusal to Ae-| On the propesal to restore unimpaired R cept President Harding’s plan for sel-{senjority rights to the strikers, ~which i Liement of the shop crafts strike was rejocted by railway executives at a| pagsaie, N. I, AU 2.Mosquitoes, Conditions among workmen at the Sy-| meeting vesterday in New York, the|ingirectly, were held responsible for tae racuse shops were reported “very grave” |message deciared: death of Frank Schoenbrob, vice pres- by Mr. Parker, who asserted he had dis- “It would ‘certainly be a wholésale in-|{dent and- general manager, of the (vif- patched several union officials there to-| justice of unparalleled extent if hun-|(on Textile company, whe was . found #ar “to try to quell the uneasiness which | dreds: of thousands of experienced men geaq today in his bed from an over- becama manifest when the action of the|who have given four to forty vears' ser-|dose of sieep-inducing powder. Association of Railway Executives be-ivice and whose value to the transporta-| He took. the bowder; mémbers of his same known." tion fndustry. is proportioned to .the|family said. ‘to- Seek - relief from mos- 1 dowbt whether we can prevent our|length of their service. should be placed | quitoas which prevented' his gofng to men along the whoie New York Centraltin a position of inferiority to a limited|icep Tuesday night. system from joining the strikers” he de-i number of men who have been emplo¥-| " Iia was born in Germany and cime to red. “Indications Are that ail of our|ed as. substitutes for these experlenced|tne United States in~1907 fo become gen- 900 men will Le on strike within a| rajlread workers: eral manager of the Van -Raalte Corm- week.” Timothy Flealy. president of the Fire-ipany's silk veil manufacturing plant in men and Oilers’ uynion. ‘which is also on| Paterson, N. J. ‘A vear ago he assisted The raliroads’ rejection ‘of President Hardings plan for settlement of the | striké, sigmed the shopmen’s acceptance|in forming the Clifton Textlle company. wirike served to send hundreds of me- |of the president’s pronosal. stating that|and 'ater becams it vice presidsnt. . He Sanies to companv emplorment agencies [ his union would ahide by the.susees-|is sarvived by his:widow and two daugh. n search of iobs under the roads’ tions "and would “follow the shopmen.” | ters. parance of senlority rights and protsc. [ The message read as fol'low \om o these who he'ped kees (rain min- | “The represénitatives of the smploves|SWOT TWIN BROTHER ning. officials of several eastern lines | feel themiselves under. obligation to sup- - - tlaimed tonig Port vers proper effort on the part of | NELT T aaNnre ew Tork Central sxscntives assertsd |the government to bring about or to pre- hev hired more men todar than they |sarve the uninterrupted operation of the A4 been able to récruit in the last ten| traneportatioh industry. The stubborn; el refusal of the railway executives to es- E. M Rine general manager of the | tablish a board of- adjustment, as con- Lackawanna. declared that strikers, who | templated by law. in order to settle: ef- joined the walk-out 33 davs azo. {oday | ficlently disputes over rules and working Asked for their +id jobs on the basis\of | conditions between the carriers and their “eadjusted senlority rights employes: the- continued refusal of rail-| The Jersey Central asseried many of | ways. represeniing over a quarter of 4 fts men “who had (ayed on srike | miieage of class one rallroads, to com-| Ho i ‘hrough fear of the consequences of re- | ply with the decisions of the rafiroad la- sko“pp::gfleflnr 'Zri‘cfi“:fu Ta o e arming,” today “mw the light break-|bor hoard against the practice of con-|houss as best. he.could: . He Was found " and retrned to the shons. Similar | tracting out wotk and shos: the persits(huddisd in a cellar, some-distanes Soas reporta were made by the Lehigh Valle. | tont campalgn to deny to the railway| ASRnonyis i RN s s he New Haven, Pennsylvania and the | employes just and reasonable wages. tdlin the’ coudtry, . dnd ho 'had farna cbs Erie impose upon ‘them unfair working con:|revolver in_a- bureau dratwer. he. was At headquerters of the eastern strike | ditions and to disintegrate. their organ. | searching, While his; father, slept. . committes, however, union officials ré- | izations: all In cumuldtive. effect"render:| i Sado = 53 2 g ported that the action of the Ameridan | ed. servige by, raillway employss under| DROWNED WHILE awimmMISe Association of Railway Executives in-|the terms and conditions to be sffective ow‘!,'? :;:“"' AU Aefinitely refusing reinstatement of their | July 1. 1922, intolerable-to over 95 per 1NoTHE QUINNITIAC, BIVER rity righta mereiy caused the men |cent of .thess ‘employes, who, therefare,| n their beits for a long, hard | voted to suspend work. NewarkeN.~).,; Aug;-2:—Antheny Shi- vensky, 12-vear-old boy 'who had only one leg, hopped inté.the room where his father was dozing and his twin brother, Stephen, sat reading tonight. JThrow up_your ‘hands," (he crippled lad shouted. ‘Thére was a flash and a report. and Stephen fell from- the chair, a. ‘bullet | wounid in - his -sheuider. . - New Haven, ‘Coni., - Aug’ -2.—Jjoha fEhe “It in i now prapoed that they réturn | Briaseth, . 1 e T Strke officlale characterized wester- | to work. temporarily, accenting wages|cer by. the Gr 'uem Chemih oSy day’s action of the railway association | and: working conditions' whith- they feel| o7 (hie > g e = as “a huge bR oredicting that the | to be unjust. with relince upon the fol- continued decrease in supply locomo- | lawing program for redress of grie cives and care will sooh result in & |ances: ty, was drownéd last. might le swimming. in “the ‘Quinipiac. river ‘néar the Ferry Street' bridge.Bor- 3 o . : % ... .| den_who,was a- of the roads “which no one| * Flrst, rallway managers and work'| sank eithos ‘m‘;;‘}fig‘“_‘:;‘_"’f‘;l:':‘““";z will be able to ignore. men are fo aErse to recognize the valid-|lcaves a wife-and five small phud’,\ it T O TR ity of all deciglone;of the railroad.labor| glizabeth The, body. had bt been .1e- AOUTHERN ®AILWAY EXTENDS board. and to faithtully carry out such|covered at an €arly *héur this morning. OLIVE BRANCH TO STRIKE®Ss|decisions as contemplated by law.’ iidallod 3 s “The emplores have'alwys fakén the|vINDICATED OF MURDEW OF H . A position that as long as thev continued e g Washington AU = 2—Committees ' (" render service they should abide by| B AND MRs, ¥ representing striking empl he | .’JAcnso.\' e 4 2 ol oyes on the ¥ i H ¥ =8 Bouthern railway system were INVIted | Shears the wagen nevert: atn oy pncd. Netw ' Tork..-Aug” C ridic today by Henry W. Miller, vice president|ar nagotiation. or- determined by the Ta- X % way s in charge of operation, o confer With bor hoard after a hearings of a dispute | o ted onight o6 man- the management on & Broposition to met- |t " any of thess’ matters: - Thes. jer| SAUENteD in the. adebnldearen, in con- Us the strike on the basin of Presidént ] rpacttully point ot gain: ihat ‘violh.; ECHON With the depkyxiauion of Mr. Harding's proposal which the railway|tions of law, and retusals to.comply. with i u g remont, A facksna i executives turned down. yesterdty. | eniuions: ot e, board Tve Dean canib. | BOtSL ZADAL: 26. 77 Ihe. Jury "ruivrmad *lis In amnouncing that the shop crafts|ited only by. the rallway managements. iy ¥ Mate ol el committee of the Southern raflway had and that it has been wniversally ‘admit- | 5 been invited to confer, Mr. Miller issued | teq that the emmloyes: In exercising their = this stafement : right to suspend work under.non-accept- “The policy of the management of the| ahia conditions. wore - neither violatimg Southern rallway eystem has been 10| the Jaw ‘nor the decisions of the board. + o conditions Dendine a termina-! | eroe understand Ahat. the recommition] Uaiohtown, P tion of the strike that. would embarrass{ae the valldity of all. decisions by the | Senator Willlam. E. Crow the company. its employes. or the public. | railroad _labor board—as - contemvlated and with this end in view no uitima-|by the law means. for sxample.. that-in xacutiv o ed | The afts committee on the South- 2 ad | complete Yoté has' been tabulated. cutives who refused | The shop crafts c experiments which he began with a de U LR RS e T e the rural districts milfions- of long distance teféphons con- | Béed’s lead over Lonj With 3,308 of the. ing precincts were in LATE RETURNS I LEAD Charleston, ‘W. Vi creased the lead of The totad: ~Sutherla: 40,571, * Twenty-two New York, Aug. was acquired today srust Company, whi of Allan. A. Ryan, for $18,000,000. The a2’ share. Another bl of Stutz stock was pire Trust Company, lateral against bank ~ /Directors ~of the cently made public the: available/ suppl: tle for $350 a share, 600,000. . of that year. The volutary petition in cenly. filed. ~ ADMINISTRATIO ministration . forees at the, fortieth annu greater part of the The. first victory defeated Wiltiam J. Hart is a lawyer O'Néill, Jersey City, son‘county : Wiliiam George H. Boivin, Gi mons ; Patrick H. John: H. Reddin, | William, C.. Prout, Gy Ui addréés the convemu winner of. the' K. o New York.” Aug. n-Urban found there, The, woman she,..countéd - £200- esty: The.reward RECAPTURED PRI SENTE Manmoyth . county i n‘ “Ruel He was — ROUNDHOUSE BAT -Des ‘Moines, Iai. ! Moines at 830 ]ed in the :shop: New York, -Aug. tum has been issued to the ~men. 10| the sase of the Pennsylyanin railroad all|S€rVices will be at the home, interment | operators in: New stomises haye been made. no mew men|amployes will. return to work. under: the| WilL:De in Oak:Grove cemetery here. Da- | strike : Septerber 1. iave been empioyed. and no writs or. in- g vid A.° Réed, a Pittsburgh have been invoked. There -is' 2 mwummusmmrm-' ~mow -.Mdm«uy -(w-mlu-.no.nm AT 5 States senator- by 11,464 ,288 and Long’ 163,324. Sutherland, cahdidate for repubilcaa re- nomination ovér H. C. Ogl:n. Wieeling. ported complete returns.. Thr:e coun- ties had not beén heard from. GUARANTEE TRUST CO. CONTEOLS STUTZ MOTOR Stutz- Motor Car Compa 714" of the outstanding 200,000 shares at a public auction of the colateral Only approximatély $3,615,000 was realized from the sale of Ryan's secufi- ucs, which ‘had . peen pledged as col- the: bulk of which were with-the Gust- anty Trust Company. . ' of June 30, 1922, showing a surplus of $4473352. - Liabilities showed -the 200.- 000 shares of- common stock of no par value, declared at $5.a share. | ‘I the spring of 1920, Stuaz was quot- | €d on the Now York stock. exchange. at about $110 achare. . When Ryan cornered ed to $391 a share, which represented the 1ast’ sale on the“big ‘board.” A’ few days later, some shares wi lic -auction .for §701. The stock . was stricken from the list by the exchange and the “shorts” were required to set- ting Ryan an immediate profit of $1,- The corner proved. a boomerang for Ryan, who . was. unable to. protect his investments and was forced to put him- self in the hands of trustees in the fall difficult to .liquidate his affairs, and a WON K. OF C. ELECTION Atlantic City. NX. J, Aug. 2.—The ad- Columus won a victory in the elections order today. The elections consumed the istratioh, when Tuke Fin=t ~¢ "t Tawic, was elected suprems advocate In succes- sion: of Joseph-Pellets ton district: atorney, sopville; Conni, 1651 fo_ 154, inent ‘in the natlonal executive body of the order for several years. The “directors ‘elected are: John F. ber of the Canadian house of coms ty_of Massachusetts. The Principal businéss now before the cdnvention is. action on the Knights of Columbus ~American history movement. Jlard. Hunt, chlef. archivist of the ited States’ state department,. will LOSER OF $200 GAVE CHILD .25 CENT REWARD FOR RETURN was (hi name, of a woman stopping.at a local:ho 41 todav. She.tooy the package handed: Helen, her reward for her hon- CED 14 TO 20 YEARS Freehold, N..J. <Aue. 2.—James Avres, one; gf the. three men who escaped from recaplured yesterday . after ra state-wide jury of charges of breakink and entering hebittle . §ilver. post. office and- of- at- tampting to kill County Detective Jacob BYSTRIEE SYMPATHIZERS strike. sympathizers Taided- the - Chicago Great Western roundhouse In South ‘Des | tacked moce thin sixty workers employ- A0l - - = MOTION PICTURE OPERATORS IN NEW YORK TO STRIKE By the A. P.)— ‘are in country dis- | dsiicate tobic: in, -international ! “ Dublin, Aug. 2.—National army troops | tricts where Long .has been ‘runtiing|The discussion of debts owed’ to Great ¢ Drumkéen, County Donegal, | ahead. :«T:a“:t‘-;‘m today by’ lmzms, v&o]’ Returhs ‘from the 3,080 precincts give had_concentrated.'{n farm ‘houses. The [Reed .17, fom_counties other istricts havs, shown or Brewster. Clear Next Week. - knowrn - untll - the | conference _ between . Premiers 8 was cut to 5,931 OF SUTHERLAND | strong = |since it is believed there . is consider- .. Aug. 2.—Returns | able difference of opinion in the cabinet. SR here tomorrow to formulats p from 1,508 out of 2,093 West Virginia | Also there is curiosity as to how far the | _Trafffc on the main line of the New |ihe prifoary “election precincts tonight in-|advice of Sif Auckland Geddes, Hioward | 4mbassador to the United States, Sena! nd Oxden George_and Poincare—the policle: both Great drifted in Senator | be made clear. tributed to the framing of the of 35 counties re- |the American debt. ~~Control of the ¥ of America by the Guaranty ch purchased 133,- who recently failed stock sold for $20 ock of 1.600 shares bought by the Em- at the game price. Toans of $14,000,000, Stutz company © S e nor s tae price had soar- e sold at pub- this transaction met- banks also found it bankruptey was re- FORCER of .the Knights of al convention of the day. came to the admin- L orier 1o who resigned. He Muiligan. of Tho; and has bsen pro supervisor of Hud- D. Dwyer, St. Paul; ranby, Quebec, mem: Rice. Augusta, Ga.; Denv j Colok and Boston, _state depu- on and announce the 2 C. history contest. 2.—Twalve-year-old 4 package on which opened. it. Carefully in/bills.. Then. she was: 25 ‘cents. , ISONER il Sundayahd was v. By a immedlately entenced in state's ‘prison. Aug. 2.—ighty. rail jock tonight and at- 2.—Motion. picture York today voted .to today. There is no information Pl RZPARATIONS COMMISSION LOOK FOR STATEMENT FROM Paris, AW#2.—(Byi the A tary, concerning ; anxiously awaited in. reparations note was a “trial balloon sc the purpose of placing respons a solution of the debts ques: cussion at the coming London me American policy. POLICE SAVE NEGRO FROM of shooting with intenc to kill. when he was hailed by Daley, gust Schoepfer, with ‘two men, turned the_fire, * hitting_ - Boland up: FIRST DISTURBANCE FROM first_excltement safd to’ haye ‘been about 1,000 roughly licemen_following, the ,arrest 'of ' the railroad-shops. here. - : - 4nd were walting for a.patrel™: brought to the station. Sominomis DECLINED THE INVITATION Coal Exchange, foday saiu the The men “will walk ddwyer, ' will | out rather. than accept the: 10 per cent. [ i) o == 1 pTECTONOF RS France Should be . Made politics. Britain: had. been studiously. A¥0Ied bY | o o Luined ot 495,070 has beem bution of Coal in New England Have Been Completed. all concerned, apparently: with a view on | the part of the creditor nation.that the !;‘aimu City, \opl; question imgm convanl:nuy be postpon- R “he. irreg- republican senatorial | od, Hearing of Maintenance Men August 28—The Threats |2 = utning e, et (S SR EC R e e Sy RO S IO the Earl of Balfour’s note discoverable today was- that 1t will afford an_under- | 557 is, 62,081. Practic-|standing all round of what are the poli- citles of the gbovernments concerned. It is considered that next to repudiation, or than' “Jackson “(Kansas City) ~and St.|an equivalent plea of inability 1o, pay. uncertainty is probtb'y the worst dam- age which Europe and the world of bus- iness could continue to suffer. Within- a few days—after next “f\gklu The Camadias gaseline schobmer ENl- | 2NNUAl Summer training period at Camp! Provision has been made for the es- by Britain and France should | ar apecon, The French. position_in : s, el > el special arr nts for e one vital respect aiready Is plain—that| ‘rhe ‘Eive L. Sparling, an amxiliary | MiNes Seized by the state. He appealed Great Lakes section. Detaile ) M8 precincta In | all . European _post-war iridebtedness 15 | fiening. vessel carrving’ a. erew of 1¢ |10 the miners to return to work in thetions were drawn up today for the states the state reported, Reed had: 132203 | linked together and any: solution of the - 2 ; ridiculed then as a dream by almost cv- | B82INSE 173,277 for Towmg. the outstund- | situation must depend upon what Ger-[Caps God, by the collier Lake Flournoy | scale. Lo | the rural districts, | many may be willing orbe forced L do. = ‘ which Long claims favorable to him. the INTERSTATE GQONFERENCE committee. 2 : 2 _ Former TUnited States Senator Frank public-as to-what important ‘members of : CREASE the cabinet were responsible for the | S, White of Birmingham, Ala.. died there line Lord Balfour's note' takes, | Of FReupmenia at the age of 75. He was There is much curiosity- among ‘British | York Central Raliread w: con- | tween five and six hour: note, | ®Feck, seven miles north of Hudson, N. | since ‘Sir Auckland’s visit home was sup- posed to be mainly for a conference on This ‘year's cott®n erop vas placed at| non-union cperators of southern West|railway groups. George Harvey, the American ampas- [11,443.000 hales of 500 pounds sross | Virginia and Pennsylvania will be de-| State fuel committees are to report at ° sador, in his speed recently welcoming | weight in the second forcast of the sea- | manded, it was said. once the consumntion of coal In their Ambassador Geddes at the Pilgrims din- |son announced by the department of il territories hy utilities. household us ner, drew a plcture of Great Britain's |agricuiture, PLANS FOR DISTRIBUTION an1 flosteten {nuther: SO0 2 het of returning prosperity - which - in somo —_— . ~ thee who should receive orinrities. quarters was .translated as a very gen-| Franklin D'Olier, promiment cotton OF COAL IN NEW ENGLAND| ™ hrough the federal fuel distributor, tle, diplomatic hint that ‘Great Britain now was in a position to meet American |of the American claims. Mr.” Harvey went to Scoiland;was elected presi as whether the “American. governiant will Dbe represented outside the doors of the!' Tielve aticks of dynamite. bound te- coming conference between the British|gethar with wire and covered and French premiers by an observer to)foil, were found v the same part that Ambassador | Railway Company's tracks in Buffalo, N. Chiid fulfilled &t ths Genoa confarence. u. P.)— | invention,” by the Russian trad. dele- | Hoover and . ti Some statement by the American goveru-|gation in London. { ment dealing with the noté of th: Earl 5 of Balfour, @etig British foreign secrc- | “Assurmce that France would pay her €d war _debts, - com-|ment dictated by Ambassador Jusserand mission-. circles, where it was sald to-|before he salled from New Yors on the night that the British communication on{Jarls for a vacation. = v inter-allied debts would not have the ef- —— - F T NEW YORKEES AVOIDED £3 HARBOR TUG BLOWN UP. A 8 A fect of preventing a Franco-British rep-| ~Présideat Harding yesterday signed & & P arations settlement, an executive order affording the same FIVE OF HER CREW KILLED PIE AT, MOGH G S Information is sald to hive reached | Préference to Spanish-American war vet. | . o tug ew York, Aug. 2—Ple, the better reparations headquarters from an au-|erans that is now enfoyed by veterans | N°W York. Auz 2—The harbor tus| s o el thorltative source that Lord Balfour's|of the World war in connection with | EGward was blown to pieces today and \half of the noon-time meal of thoubs at the door of the United States.” If the ' balloon~bursts tarougn a re-|Bfter the rejection, 35 of 22, of an fusal of the United States to devart from |amendment by Senator Sheppard, demo- its already established policy, tite repa- | crat, Texas, to cut the rate to 45 per rations experts have been informed tlat |cent. Great Britain wiil proceed to general dis- ing ot| Bobbed M the French debts, regarliess of LYNCHING AT CEDAR HILL, New Haven, Aug. 2—David Boland; | jjoin Marrls, negro. was taken from | in&s colored, of Morrison, Va., was sereiously wounded and narrowly escaped Iynching at the hands of a crowd of about 500 citizens near the Cedat Hill yards of the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad carly tonight after he had shot and wounded John Daley. . a _stelking railroad shopman doing picket duty, fired half a dozen shots at a constable and two men who tried 16 arest him. The Il'm!\) arrival of the local poiice prevent- ed the crowd from carrying out its pur- pose and Boland is now at the New Ha- en hospital with three bullet wounds in his body. He is under arrest on a chargs Bo'and is a laborer in the Davis brick rards here and was crossing a vacant lot Joseph Nixon and Peter McKenzie, who wera doing picket duty for the strikers’ stead of answering the challenge, Boland is said to have drawn a revolver and fired one shot, the bullet lodging Daley’s right shoulder. “Boland ran. pur- sued by a crowd attracted by the shoot- ing, who cornered him in-a house near Dby, where he took refuge. Constable Au- Tecarad ojeng | cey shore, when the ac Botand in the basement after & fearen of | Lot ™Y a8 In camp at Richmond 4 *c¥ shore; when th the house, but in ceply to their demand e :“;‘“(‘hzr ?;L‘e:d é‘;‘“}‘;‘s"i;‘;::f: Tillam Youlden. 72, o iceret shos FOREIGN EXCHANGE REVERSAL | jeath of Edward W. O'Brien of this town," nons of which took effect, " Schioepfer re- | sty & Of, Brosiion Mass. died thiree | 3 times, after which tHe megro gave hlmself ~When he was brought qut of the house the crowd, “augmented by several hun- dred, “started - toward the man threats of lynching; which were frustrat- ed by the arrival of the Tocal police, who | yagsa, held the crowd at bay. Boland was weak St from loss. of blood when ke <arrived. at poiice headquarters and was imediately taken to-the hospital after being- booker A Snesia ote extended to the Dbond marint. § pense = Al ‘special commission of the Grand | "7t X ' Torted e Cat e Daley is at his home under the.care: of &' 3 e R X where foreizn securities declived from 3t physician. His wound:is Dot serious. | roonsy o alasons in-New Tork state. Chicage polie. that a oas Rygthenuiichs RAIL STRIKE IN zw HAVEN " New. Haven, Conn., ‘Aug: 2.The ‘first | /. 1. - S FOR T2 ‘caus- | AN vacatlons for membe) Ne Torme y ed by strikers in_this city = ocourred i e 1ast’ night. whén'-a crowd estimated- at| Chiet<of" Police” PFillip . T. Smitn. Al-|fred Sze. the m handled .two. PO-|though no reason for the action was gl ihreeen; it was understood*that the nossbil- | mini men, 5aid {o: be striking shopmier; for, an | ity ‘for -disturbances ' in the ra assault on_Anthony Saéro, a_worker in {shop-strike was. the cause. Hu The policémen had-arrestéd’ the' threé | Representatives of Coincidental with the assembiy of par- | through Leroy in his arge touring car. mén after the alleged ‘asanlt on. SAero | e, apmeet " mho :na'héwc"r;:,"'&f" Lia 4 1, & group of progressive Chinese | When overtaken by an officer he was said WAEON, | yesterday In- an atempt to yol | women ‘has published demands T when the ‘crowd gathered. . The pelice: Tocannciat Settiing. the. t:xfllevop‘t:!kszo"i‘: olause in the constitution providing for | While the speed limit is fifteen miles. men were jeered” and @an -attempt ‘was | Tawrence, made to take the prisoriers away from them. The latter, however, wefe fnmlly | oction before next Tuesday. . TO CLEVELAND CONFERENCE!tc work yesterday after being nn strike o o1 and PRICE TWO CENTS [ ot e INDIANATOMINE COAL UNDER road nead Baldwinville, Mass. the .Pathological department of the Uni- versity of Toronto, died a victim of his -experiments. . .Lulgl ' De Facts, former Itallan premier, succeeded in forming a new eign.minister. Despondent since - the death of his wife last fall, Carl Schwirz, 81 years cld, . . N e ended his life ar'y this afternoon by tions and Essential Industries—Federal Plans for Distri- hanging at his home.in Hartford. acquired by Yale umiversity, it was te-| Ingianapolis, Ind, Aug. 2 (Ey the A. governors of the states will handle local vealed by. deeds. filed in .he town clerk's | p)_Governor MoCray foday fook the' Suppiy. office in New Haven. first step in promised effort to p.uhdé' Vending completion of the federal or- coal for Indiana’s public institutions|ganization, Mr. Spencer said, three in~ William R. Talbot, for many years €On- ang essential industries by sending 250 | termediate stages will easus—frst—the nected. with New York banking houses, | National Guardsmen into the coal fields' continuation of their normal business by home in Greenwich. Conl.|in the southwestern part of the state.|the operators, then priority buyers under yesterday, at the age of 65 .years. The governor proclaimed martigl law in|the interstate commerce commission ser- ot the district in which it is proposed to!vice order No. 23 will gradually en- Canadian railway shopmen threaten- | ;5. o2l wunder protection of the)croach upon operators business and 8- ed to call a ‘strike unless railroads with- troops. | na ly, coal orders placed throngh the B e e e COMCHlalOR | Tne first and second battalions of the! federal fuel distributor will absord the o s 151st Infantry were called from their: entire output of the mines. 3 - Cut Knox, Ky., for duty in the coal fields. »mb:lshmcn: of district committees -to Sl Lo s ;:e"kmm Cptter:| The governor issued a statement ad-| represent the federal distribution ad- e dressed to the miners of Indiana callinz, ministration in the producing fields, with for volunteer workers to operate thel special arrangements for supplying the instruc- Suset | state-operated mines under the old wage which included the fixing of the respom- i bility for the payment of all coal ship- ped into a state upon the governors men, was run down and sunk off IN CLEVELAND TODAY| District committees set up in the cosl —_— |mms a to consist of a naval officer, Vi Cleveland. O.. Aug. 2.—The Pittsburgh | representing the .ederll fuel distributer. i pousieduie var velefan, YVeln Operators' association will meet|a representative of the interstate com= s for merce commission, a representative of interstate joint wage conference of |the railroads and representatives of the held up be- | miners and operators to be held here|coal operators. by a freight | next Monday. it was anniounced toda: Distribution of fuel for the raliroads 4s . N. | The operators are prepared to resist de.|to be gradually concentrated in the T mands for the old wage scale. A scale hands of a railway coal committes com- that will permit them to compete with|pored of coal buyers from the different the governor's committee will become re- sponsible for pavment of all coal shise merchant and first national commander | Washington, Aug. 2.—Plan r the Legion. Philadelphia. | immediate operation of coa ent of the Sesqui-|conirol organization. tribu- | Ped into that =v-» and will, put 1o ag= to | Centennial Exhibition association | tion of fuel to the raiiroads. ru\. o utlli- | Yance: bank: denn=tuilh SeoNsrlEENI, s il Governar's co—mitere were made en- vention of tirelv recponsi™'a for the profiteering and estertion. {and Great Lakes sections were complet- | with tinied today at a conference of Secretary | on the International| Hoover with Fuel Distributor Spencer| 1 the various central committee mem- LEWIS RECEIVED REPLIES i bers FROM COAL OPERATORS - Government plans for distributlon of The report that the soviet govern- | coal during the existing emergen v“rrn\ Phil; §.| ment was preparing to authorize the sale | announced tonight of vodka was characterized as a X delphid. Aug. 2.—John L. Lew:s. nternational president of the United Spencer after conference wi Mine rkers, toda: received repMes e central commitiee, ap-|from coal operators in response to his pointed by President Harding. The fed-|invitation to the mige owners to mest eral organization Washington, he|the mine workers in’ joint wage confes- |said. will cover the distribution of aval-]ens veland next Monda:. He de- |abie supplies among the railwavs. fed-|clinéd tn make any of the telegrams |eral institut and states while the|public at present. is ['War debts was ‘given in aforma; :tate- v ~ ha core killed |ands of New York workers, today was - Sipolintmiahts Phs. moki it the five men of her crew wers killed |ands of New Yi t P s as postmasters, when her boiler exploded while the craft |an almost uncalied for article in tH® of | Greater City's restaurants. jay in her siip on the Brookiyn side ez the East river, three blocks upstream | Fear, caused by the deaths of six per- from Manhattan bridge, sons who ate poisoned huckleberry pie There was a heavy Puft of smoke and | Monday in a Broadway restaurant, was clouds of steam, and through this was | 8iven U\'x r(st‘:uflmeurs as the cause of shot hizh into the air hundreds of feet | Pic market slump. the entire superstructure, the hboiler, | aiters in the lunch emporiums in the + x ol " Broadway shopping and manufacturing by ~a. | tubes. and eversthing above deck. When vy i be i tional Hair Dressers’ aszo- mnn:":l St, | the steam floated away only oil was to | T rk-‘ls]'mdh;;l lr :‘,'f'" today. nu:duu Louis. The edict, however, states bob. |D® scen floating where the tug had been. | P Tabelvey hardly been touched. bed hair may he tolersted fa- <ot wear, | The hull. shattered into pleces, had gone | -he district attorney s.n-cmm.m but as a coiffure with evening dress, it |f0 the bottom. The explosion hurled | 035 10 ,‘";' the ey o will not do. mud from the river bed far into the air, | 7T in which poison got into the food 4 es of nearby build- |t the Shelburne restaurant on Broad- way early this week. resulting in the ofticers at Hot Springs, Ark.. and hang. | FOur men working neashy were injured ‘d“‘ h""' i ‘;"s';"’ (w"“’,,;“"":" e ed.in o public square following the deatn | P¥ Aving dcbris and wood. Others were | 283 Ilnese of almost 104 others.” For of Maurice Connelly, an insurance so. |SliEhtly hurt and many were spiattered | TIEh! Mo definite conclusions licltor, wi v o | with mud and water. the captain of a | FeaChe - ho was shot by a negro burz- | MG AR A from the Edward | Most of the sufferers ate ple at the was Knoeked down. but none of the |Shelburne. but one who died, it was Stephen Hen™y Olin. (max of 1866, hag | #7ockage fell upon him lsnl;]‘d'-lm"o"k v Mge T By b been appolnted acting president of Wes, | Several snectators told of having seen | While two men were made ill by lunche lean university for one year by the|® body fvinz throuzh the air. The i€ on Soup. tols B4 lee cteam The executive committee of the boas1 Af trap | mansled remains of the skipper. Captain | district attogey said he Moped (he tees, it was announced. “5° | Charles McCaffrey, were found floating a |2Ralysis of the stomach contents of thos: binck fram whore his tug biew up. One | Who died would show what food contain- Both east bOund tracks © the matn line | Other body was recovered. The remain- ::‘ ":\'f‘ POS ";‘_ T;“fl:;fl"’";;i ‘;:: :l‘::mdm of the New York. New Haven & Hart. |ing three still were missing tonight. A |10 the St Y. t- ¥ : | beinc taken to the hospital |ford railroad were blocked for sev | diver. who found the hull broken in many N ta 2 hours yvesterday morning mm:\m; ',r:.! parts, sald he saw no bodies under the w;‘:f“;v';;‘wfi!:urt::‘lzem;:rfl_r‘; Pl ot AR S s e T e o & per e stored there. Thie ProptlH B reight train west of Woodmont T e e e o A T &' | counsel announced a reward of $:000 Arnonncement that Reeretary of tae |POTEr DPlANt 20 equal Aistanes from e e o _A tarlff of 55 per cent. ad valoTsm on silk cloth was approved by the senate s | plastering the s Treasury Mellon ‘had lease | Aviion. & | {he i0p. and other b and hrosen sec- | would lead to c'n;‘\!;z;?;nf:t;ne person 10- | cummer estate : near Taide's rrersing. |UonS of wood and ros wers s Mase., and would possession at once, was | APt the immediate neigntiorkcal e made by a real estate dealer at Beverly, | TN cause of the blast had not heen de- | CONFESSES MANTA FOR in | Mass. termined tonight. The tuz had inst ar- vived from another seciion ¢f the Jewelrs valued st §2,000 belonging to | FTOCKIYN waterfront to take the barge | oo gue Conn. Aug. 2.—Admitti Mrs. Willam T. Butler, of Dittefield |Putch Boy in tow and pad her way uE. ing | Jow and e Yoy [that he has a mania for Feno-ting pers Mass., was ‘stolén from her home while | 2r0und the Batterv and over ‘(')Cflu”;'j’ sons kiiled by being cut in hal.® vhenever | he is under the influence of liquor, Jos. 5 seph Conley of Hartford today cleared ug DRSO PE GALOER. |the mystery surrounding the p) REPORTING PERSONS EILLED Pond. ) i who was cenorted killed by a frelght ruddenly of Hieart u:sesse at St. Stephen, | New York. Aus. 2. —Publicetion of {4rgin in the Cedar Hill raliroad yards a , ‘where ‘he ‘was passing his amnu. | Great Britain's note relataing to cancelia- | Xow Haven Monday night. Conley al vacation at his native uome. , |tion of international indebtness caused | ypon \William J. Reagan, a tobaceo plasta; 5 a sharp reversal in foreign exchange to- | or pare brother-in-law of O'Brien, and Contracts ‘recelved at the office of the | 42v. German marks falling to the new | ;qceq nis forgiveness. He sald he way Connectleut - Valley Tobacco Association | 10w figure of 11% cents a hundred. but | yne man who reported . the death of total -more. than 22.000- acres. ‘The total | Tallying stightly latef. Steriing droD- | O'Brien to the Hartford police, but ad stalk cut acreage in_ Connecticu: and{Ped '2_a cent and cont'nental '4%°S 3 |mitied that the stccy was entirely fmag: 1s '27:595 and the rere-|10-10 noints in cearly dealings. but inary. | Sgreren thets-Jusae uring ‘the da He told Reagan that he was cbsessed. closed wi <. ! with these hallucinations whenever The - depressing effect of the British|grany jiquor. At one time he said he rhe: ith Te- and quired -75 ‘per cent. of that amcun: 20,021 acres. 5 points o X R headed by Supreme Court Jus 13 to 5 points. French government and | & Tompkins,grand- master. sailed from | municipal bonds a:\'l Caecho-Slovakian N&w Tork on the Frederiek VIII to con. | IsSues suffered the greatest reactions tute ‘the first” Masonie lodze in the | - = Républic of Firland S CHINESE WOMEN OUT VERSAL SUFFRAGE iee Arthur Chicago police that a man had been cut in twain by a trolley car and stll ane other time be reported a man killed in the same manner by an aufomobile. - HENRY FORD WAS Haven police force were cancelled by | Peking. Aus. Z—(By The A P)—Al- FINED §30 FOR SFEEDING nister to shington, = has been offered the portfolio of foreign Leroy N. Y.. Aug. 2.—Henry Ford, thé R Detroit automobile manufacturer, paid &' oad | Comnietion of President Li Yuan- | fine of $30 into the village treasury yes-* s new cabinet iz—expected next | terday afternoon as a penalty for violat- e ing .the speed ordinance when passing ral for a|to be making forty-three miles an hour;, Were. Informed by “the gov. |universal suffrage with equai rights to| Mr. Ford remained in his car whils higs B : i luding membership in |driver and secretary went before th ernor that he thought. it wis to. take n. ]r;::‘l‘m:""l‘“ ! - justice and paid the fine. “Beetlors employed at the Lincoln | JUMPED UNDER WHEELS OF HARTFORD WOMAN TOOK - < leechery In Lonsdale, R. T. returned SUBWAY TBAIN IN NEW YOEK POISON IN BOSTON HOTEL over. six menths. Labor leaders = New York., Aug. 2—James W. Levings| Boston, Aug. 2—A woman who regls- Cotumbus, Ohlo, ‘Aug: 2-—~W. D. Mc-|the men have gone back to finish wha: | jumped beneath the wheels of a subway |tered at a local hotel Tuesday under Kinney, secretary. ot.tne “Southern Ohio|was lsft unbleached when the men walk- | train tonight in an p. to tnd his|the neme of Mrs. Louis Lowenberg, of rgani-| ed out. . life. The thongs of w poiceman's club, | Hartford, Conn., was in a serious condi- zation has declined ‘the invitation of{ President Lewis, of tne ‘mine workers,| 'Any degree of cold or warm air is|to stop the flow of blood, saved him from |a result of drinking peison in Jer -oom. Teduction: which' was -the mubjoct of -the | io the ‘wage ‘conferenc st - Claveland ] tarnished b ya receritly invented el- | almost immediate death. He will peoba-| She left a note %“‘ % applied to Levings icgs, as lwsimyuets, [tion at the Relief hospital tonight ..‘} actric blower apd heater. iy live, but will be legiees.

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