Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 28, 1922, Page 1

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| Fulda, Germany, Aug. 27.—(By, the VAL P)—Anothiny’ H. G. TFokker, the Dutch airplane inventor, ‘teday estab- lished 2 new_ world record in motorless aviation by remaining.in the air thir- teen minutes with a passenger-in & bi- Dlane ‘constructed by himself. Fokker made evolutions in the air during his test as dering as those made in a power | driven machine. Preparation For Legislative and Executive Action is Near- o~y Measures, AM }{m Inchaskrial Pm' San Francisco, Aug. 27.—Details of & i is Gi when on sesemd imminent were L ,,muuzmw? :m ,,.,,.,@,WFM e T T S - Senate This Week—Maintenance of Way Men to be|“D sorct mete ssven ious naicea men Solomon Islands, was tow=d into port to- i h y comprising the crew,: Cap‘ain . Nels Peter HARDSHIPS AND PR(VATIONS ° . : Jensen and ‘the skipper's . wifs ‘and fouh Given a Wage Hearing Today. E | chitdren, the youngest a six monthe old Washington. Auz. 27.—(By A. P.) —ywage increase pleas ‘of -approximately DRt Food taken on at Sydney, Australia, s of way men tomor- d, The exact scope of the adminssiration's | 100008 TANENIE Ol BT, G T | was foind ol betnl. slow rsgresin policy ¢n dealing with the rall and coal|pogra was declared tonight by E. F. “lmdfl:frma?‘i;gn; lsxrhun:rysn:nuths strikes s expected to reveal itaelt with- | Grable, head of the trackmen.'to be one | PO f Wt PRERE VA B it In the mext few dave as & result of pre-| of the most important matters which has | —auch s the unoficlal 1o a8 pitoed parations for legislative and executive|ever come before the board. L i STant il e pes e o FhY Zotlon “which appeared tonlght {0 B4 “The maintonance of way emPIOTeA |, ' lgo Shen the motor. shin Anle D O, mergency legialation| July 1 uhdet the expestation and sctual Jotnsin aEaeht wotd of tavioy overalc to be definiiely Wrged upon congress| assurance.by the original framers of the | b er in mi N e will énclude & presidential authorisa- | transportataion act that they would be | wants of e capiail. ftne TAWG TS thn to take over and operate rail and|able to secire a living wage under pro: | Ihe ore iy coal properties was a question that sill| visions of the existing law. | The procesd: | "l ot ne crew halled as a hera- pemained unznewefed. but it was. Indi-| ings tomorrow Wil determine this point |, Members of The Frev BRCRE AT L, L Taied that administration officials prob-| “Ever since the board was established yine the wife of the captan. " Holding 2 able would make a final decsion on|T have endeavored to secure & decision | bliio-eyed flaxtnihaired baby, born Whe | he point én the very near future. which Wil _practically apply the ‘lving | the ‘schoonier, was 1} fays ot of Sydney, o some muarisrs it was believed that|wage svinciple to our members, or, in|and named Sydney Smith in i st sl i ‘acm the executive with | other words which would permit them to | of the port and of the vessel, Jrs. e e e awere would be finatly |live In modest comfort and decency. Up |sen tonight summed up her emotions in hreshed. aver among the leaders. who|to this time the labor board has mot in- | these words: SR ST are with President Harding on his| dicated its acceptance of the living wage more7sea. foc: et b i B e o o™ "'Jl.i"ufi'ie."if.’.‘,‘l'nf oot important | ever. taken, < It ‘was the just Lord's will Psiavheiay yacht T ower. tomorrow | case that ever has come before the board | that my children were not séck from our moming. 5 Zierefore’is that in the St of u;es; ur;;lmewmpvxsu:;,.sm“h gk hose . fiden: thé board must face and, e iam H. weid vatehe e lett gt P Dhtak, ceept the principle’ot the Jivin o copea=Vgtetty unpaleSicImalel ad . i ollow out the intent of rs. Jensen put it. “‘Some of v fenig m‘“:‘.“."éfifi"n." e e T it its_déciatons are t0.be | in the orew {risd mixing the .copra With Tt s esart fo government operation, | equitable and s and meet the human [flour bupt did not not work out very be was inclined to fesl that as a pre-|needs of the railway workers. well,” she said. jonary measure he should be given = Tull Auihorits 1o act befors congress| GOMPERS PRAISES SPIRIT TOWNS RECAPTURED BY begins its contemplated recess. OF ORGANIZED LABOR SAN. SALVADOR TEOOPS Washington, Aug. 27.—In addition to it ! seéracary Hoover and Attorney General| <wosnington, Aug. 27.—Organized 1a-| San Salvador, Republic of Salvador, Doughterty. two of the cabinet mem-|yo: groups have every reason to con- | August 27—(By the -A. P.)—An ofticial bers who have been particularly active|graiylate their memberships with the | déspatch from Guatamala City ‘says that & shaping out the government's €ourse | coming of Labor Day in 1832, because of | goyernment .forces have recaptured the during the strige period, the president|y, wingustrial and political solidarity of Itowns and villages recently taken by rev- wAs accompanied on the Mavflower BY| n, werking people, because of the “fail- | olutionists, who before being éjected mas- Chairman Cummins of the senate In-|,;.ov of employers “to bring about wage | sacred twenty-two adults and. two chil- terstate commerce committee, Who - @l-| raqyctions, and bacause ‘of determination | dren, leaving their bodies in the bar- ready has drafted for introduction .in|\cithin themselves -to pupsh - forward. | racks. the senate a bill authorizing the ex-|gumuel Gompers; president of the Ames- Twelve rebels were - simmarily exa- ecutive 1o take over and operate any|ican Federation of Labor, declared In an |cyted after being convietéd by eourt mar- individual rafiroad which does not ade-|address published in the forthcoming is- | tial of murder and various crimes. Their quately perform its functions as a com-|sue of the American Federationist. There | noads were exhibited to the-people as & mon carrier. Before “he want abroad|pas heen a gemeral “fesistance of Amer- [repellion. : e Mayflowsr, Senator Cummins had | jean 1abor to the programme of W3g€ Te- | warning against further attempts . &t ndicated that his measure and & simi-|quction and union smashing.” and it bas | I is declared that complete lar one relating to coal mines would belpeen: .be asserted. . . {been. g “that- 3 tormally introduced early this week, mmfij that"the full volumde’; on without interruption. Majority leaders say they are confid- | or wage reductions -sitice the: armistice otk snt that such législation could be passed | i gveraged up and spread over the Work- | Racent despatches from < Mexieo'” City throush both sanate and house, if theing. population, would amount to 1688 {1 porreq that the Unionists in Guatamala pfemdent definitely requested it. but atlinan 5 per centi”. Mr. Gompers sald. |yogoConr, oSy O S BUSEIAR Se same time they concede that con-| adding that this is a'stark defeat foT |jjont Orenalla and that the president was gressional approval would bBe by no | employers. It is' a magnificent VACOTY | floging the . country. < The deport, how- méans unanimous. Although many | for the workers, he continued. There are vas. officially dénied: by Guatamalan members in both bodies ars demanding | no terms too strong.to describe the Im- | opricaty in Mexico City, who declared. that g o B g g g p:‘:'“flu * .28 | portdnes of this great victory for Labo-t the Orenalla government dominated the | the situation in the most e 3 . o S situation. ner possible. there is a Pecognized els-| e ori A CHAIRMAN e BT ¥ P e Ml OF A STRIKE COMMITTEE | FIRE DESTROYS BUSINESS ret . v - SECTION N1 P st et e BOVerRMeNt | ew . York, -August 27.—Investigation O MAE Paricular attentions was glven in éon-| Of+ the: Association .Rallway Exeoutives; MountVernon, Malne, Aug. 27.—The gressons] cireles tod2y o the publio| by the T. & Senate.as directly respon | entire businesé section of Mount Vernon watement made last night by Chair- | Sible for-the fallure to end the radlroad | village, was’ destroyed by fire last night man Winsiow, of the house. interestate| ShOpmen's. strike —committee of the |with an estimatéd loss of $40,000 to ommerce committes, deolaring that in|metropolan dietrict, to Albert B. Cum-|$50,000. his opinion. the ocoal . factfinding and|Mins, chairman of the Interstate. Com-, The town Is without fire-fighting ap- #stribution bills aiready pehding would | merce Committee -of the Senate. paratus of any kind and a buket bri-: werie as a sufficlent warning to the in.| After suggesting that the committee Sustrios involved. and that more dras.|Nvestigate the association. ‘in the re i legislation could safely be withheld|lation: to the mresent- shopmen's strike fom the present. It was pointed out also| and of its organization and actlvities!started in a dective chimney. €38t Presdent Hardings recommenda. |in_general” -the telegram :continued :— L e top for a ool purchasing and -seliing| “This group of individauis. has el |FIVE OF CREW OF WRECKED Sgtncy had thus far not even resulted | fctuslly prevented a 'settlenlent of the SEAPLANE ARRIVE IN HAVANA in any effort to bring in blls for carry-| Fallroad strike, even when. such a settle- : Ing it ifito effect. and that even ‘the fact.| MeNt was urgently requested by the finding and distribution bills proposed | President of the U. S. and agreed upon|ihe crew of. the American seapline Sam- had not encountered perfect eailing) by the Union involved." paio Correia, which was wrecked weather either in the senats or the uo‘;-m,&“b';‘e t;:"iz‘;:_ :y‘ ‘;‘x‘l‘: :u;! week off the island of Haiti, arrived ouse n Hav . s The senate having 1ald aside the! tives did not represent the opinion of a|op s:u;rnlc;:?;:; d;::::-dhg‘i ":1::‘::3 i l?}ti Borah fact-finding bill entirely untfl|Majority of the members of the a0-|Gyantanamo naval station. They will sail the middle of the week becauss of pro. #};"“» :‘\'gd::;w:" o:{::d;lmln‘ that | 1oMOFTOw for Pensacola, Fla.; where St longed s n 1 e ;- o other R SRl wh e e Sroblem &t potn | the' Procsedings of this astoclation have, | fiec asae) zf:e ;gxl:in fi?.‘v’;’;fira{m ends of the capitol tomorrow will be| fOf the past vear, been manfulated e e E sonfined to committes consideration of ::‘rdm";’";’”"t‘::- o fld"‘;e";’;b?i': FOUR MEN HELD FOR :‘:fi by Chatiman Cn::’m:‘m Chair.)by T. Dewltt Cuyler and LIAF. Loree. MICNIGAN OENTRAL WRECK man Winslow. | An examination of individual members Chie: Woraeans In the house committes the Winslow|©f thia associalon on the witness stand|, 'R /G80: “HE M —Four mene were be- Bill will be made the subject o a five|WOUd reveal a situation that would} ! ::unn o 5‘ v kxe police in con- Sour public hearing. at which ali per, | Startle the country and prove of inestim- | 1ection with the wrecking of a Michigan Sonis interested wil ba permitted to ADle benefit both'to the american road-|CeRIral expdess tarin at Gary, Ind. present their views ;nad industry and to the public at ";ner :end “;‘;:mxnt .’cfofi’x'.g"';é"i;“’ It has besn agreed that the commit-| larEe" : right story printed by i 4 . 3 the -Chicago Her- ish will remam in session tomorrow| Commenting on the tslegram, Chatr-{7 SN, oY Printed -Chicago ¢ B fehmire and hotse | “There never can be peace in the B el 0| railroad Industry while the Fellorapipes o The senats committes, with the Cum.|Of Failway execufves continus to exist. ON THE M. K. & T. RAILROAD mins' distribution measure befors it, has| A FT® i8 & unfon more dangerous than = adepted no definite program or pro.|ADY labor union -could ever be. - This| .Dennison, Texas, Aug. ~27.—Eighteen sedure, but It is expected thatwhen| A8Sociation is a union of 100%or so men, ! persons were inured, three serlously last lomorrow's mesting is called o order|Clothed with. prodigious power, and sb.|night by a fraight’train crashing. into In an efort will be mads by some mem.| "Utely controls, by its small inner |the rear:end of the Katy Flyer on the bars 1o delay action unl there has|CiTCle Of half a dozen men, more power|Missouri, Kansas and Texas railroad at been time for a mors comprenensive 10 all the other members puttogeth.| Beils, 14 miles east of here, Nearly all ks @t the madbure, er. of the passengers in the rear coach were Tt % posible that this somméttes. too,| The members of this inner circle are!thrown out of their berths. The injured will decide to hold hears metore |0t to establish the open shop on Amer-| +gusta, Monmouth, Livermore and Farm- ington. The flames are believed to hive 18 PERSONS INJURED IN WRECK ] ware. strucy by fiving glass and bruised foan rafiroads. by the jolt. of: the impact. Ass 1ts approval or disapproval, ;e DL —_— fon’defied the nation. -Since then it has| PIPE LINE-COMPANIES - SENATOR PEFPER To MEET . closed the door ‘upon any possibillty ANNOUN ANTHRACITE OPERATORS | ot peace. It ds this one. union that os bl b o d beyond all public control.” Philadeiphia, Aug. 27.—Tacuel D, War. Railr exbou viner, president of the Lehigh Coal and ey e el iz (sen following the filing of Charman Dowd's| United States Cast -Iron Pae ivigation company and chairman of the | telegram declined. to make any oom. | errmoss “onight that notices would be anthracite operators policies’ commit- | ment, posted at_ their plants tomorrow of a ‘10 tes, arrived here tonight from his sum- per cent. increase-in pay. 2 mer Rome in Montrose. Pr., simultancous- | proToGRAPHIC LIKENESS OF ; g Iv. # was learned that United States Burlington, N. J., Aug. 27.—The Flor. ence Pipe and Machine company and the Senator Pepper, of Pennsylvania, had MURDERED GIRL ON MIREOR | FORMER ‘GOV. FERGURON come from Devon, Pa. to meet the A 2 LOSES°TEXAS PRIMARY spokesman of the emplovers to discuss| Natchitoche, La., Aug. 27.—Much curi- (S méthods of bringing peace in the hard | O%ity Has been aroused at Campti, near | . Temple, Texas, Aug. 27.—Former Gov- ot repiiis: here, by the appearance of a photo- ernor James -E. Ferguson, tonight con- The meeting place was kept secret, jt | S7Taphic likeness of a mulatto girl on a | ceded-the election of his opponent,’ Earle wis understood the the question of gov- MITTOT in a room in which she was kiil- | B tiayfield, in:the run-off primary yes- ernment selzure of the minés would be |°d nine months ago. The girl was .a ! terday for the democratic nomination Ehensted. member of a family named Trichel. All | for United States semator. Jdohn L. Lewls. president and Philip J. | #fOFts to effact the ploture, (8 inches| _“On the face of . returns ‘it appears Murray. vics president of the United | 1ONE, and covering uie mirror have prov- jthat T am defeated,” he-sald in a state- Mine Workers, remained in Philadelphia | ®d unavailing. i ment to The Associated Press. over Sunday. and will stay through to- = | - — moerow, according to the latter. WEST VIRGINIA FARMER le'fld‘lOlllfl‘lansTs ARE In some quarters the optimistic view DIES ‘AT AGE OF 126 YEARS LEADING IN SWEDEN was taken that they had tarried because (hare was a chance of early resumption | Clarksburg, W. Va . Aug 2T.—John, 'Stockholm, Aug. 27— (By The A. Py ©f_the negotiations between operators 't ; Drysdale, a farmer, eaid, to be 12 years | With half the returns having been count- and miners, broken off abruptly last week ©0d, died at his home: near Craigsville, | ed. the total shows the vote of ' 550753 the miners fiatly refused to con- : n " gade was reinforced by help from Au-i The only break in the strike was the Havana, Aug. 27.—The five members of | " Decided to Del e Meeting Wednesday. OF A SCHOONEE'S CEEW | - Parls, Aug. 2T.—(By.the A. P)—In| Dublin, Aug. 27.—(By A P)—With imposing. military. honor the body of Michael Collins, Ireland's warrior states. man, was " borne “.this- evening through this. morning found a pretext for further | the streets of Dublin and placed on a delay by resolving to :inwite Germany| catafalque before the main altar of the again to-be heard before the commission | great Cathedral. Here tomorrow morn-f .., . recentiy. on Wednesday. ~Meanwhile the mem-|ing a solemn requiem mass will be cel- ; ; Peking-Hankow line has been won by the icut Amounted to $27,238,000, a Percentage De- bers of {he commiesion will coneult to-| erbrated for the repese of his soul | GCERE-HA necticut $2 b T a strong desire to reach an unanimous decision on Germany's wequest for a moratorium, the reparations -commission | gether /in the ‘hope' of avoiding a vote point that the present uncertainty-should M6t “be . prolongéd - and' that ‘a’ dectsion rendered at’ the earliest moment, Wed-|choked Dublin's strééts. Yet without dis- I ; order formed in line, awaitng the'r turn After the meeting a communique ‘was|to enter the cathedral and passed before the coffin of their comrane who had @iven his life in the cause of Irish free-; .o ./ operty, died denly of heart o 3 b to render 2 decision before ‘Wednesday | dom, - They knelt before that - coffin,| of, MLl Property, died suddenly o each $100 the year before. ‘oh the request of Germany for a mora- | beneath .the flickering candles, prayed. nesday, if -possible. issued to the effect that’ the commis- slon’s considers itself notin' a position torium. It added ‘that “the commiscirn had informed Germany that if she de- the. commisston will ‘Jisten to her rep-| resentatives during Wednesday. Thus the commisston row has two clear days before it for unnfficial efforts to find a formula upon which it = can agree unanimously. ~ The representa- accept the commissfon's invitaifion; will be heard Wednesday, $o that a decision be orthcoming -from - the commission Wednesday evening at the ‘earliest. Sir John Bradbury, the British -member ‘of the ‘commission. does mot expect a deci- sion to be handed down ‘before :Thurs- day, i R s A FIGHTING BETWEEN STRIKERS AND TROOPS AT HAVEE Havre, Aug. 27.—(By A. P.)—There was further fighting today between strikers and troops, when strikers mads an attack on mounted . gendarmes. and mounted police in the Rue Clovis, near the Franklin club, about 5:30. o'clock this afternoon. 3 Numerous persons on both sides ware wounded, but the fichting was.not as serious as that of Saturday night, when at least two persons were killed and many others . injured. . Saturday . night the: strikers dug trenches fn the Avenue Cours De Lal| Republique, wieh the _soldiers bicousic- & few hundred yards away. Ad- Y regelied the oity. and General Decliene arrived and took command of the' troops. Prior to. today's fighting 20,000 strik- ers marched _to. -the forests .of Mont- slon, two miles from the city hall, whers they-pledged themselves to continue the strike and demand the release of their leaders who are under anrest. Six per- ons were taken into_custody. last night and sixteen this morning. They include Quesnel, seérétary of the metal work- €Ts union. and: three representatives of | the recently formed general labor fed- eration. As. the original general lahor federation was found ‘to be too con- servative, a member of the Communist committee from Metz has come here to follow. the strike .mavement.- The strike fs now resarded officially &s. having. be. come ‘a political instéad of a trades un- ion question, ‘and the government has decided to suppress {t at all costs. Teturn of the printers last nizht, which anaAblgd the local newspapers to make their anpearance this morning. The ship owners are attempting to get the dock workers to return io their jobs, They have offered. to guarantee them their present soale of ‘wages for three months. All vessels which twers comi to { Havre have been diverted to other ports, With the exception of the French line and landed her. passengers. The com- ny. expects to be able to unload the ship, although tke crew mas joined the sympathy strike, ' THIRD DRAFT OF PLAN FOR ° H ARMY ORGANIZATION washington. Aug. 27—Another recor- ganization plan for the regular army, the third to be drafted in n!|‘el last \Tayr and a half as a result of cuts in strength ordered by congress, has been comAmted and the war department today in a state- ment showed just what had been done With the regaular forces to carry out successive’ laws. ,"This completes,” the statement said, "a reduction which has been virtually i continuous -for eighteen months, totall- ing approximately 100,000 men or 45 per cent. of thé actual strength.” . - The departmest's statement said the Dlans: were now being carried into effect but that redistribution of the ‘troops in permanent posts, which the project contemplates, was being delayed “in or- der not to interfere with the training of the civilian components of the army during the. summer camps.t Explaining. the. dificultiesencountéred in planning a reorganization to conform to the ‘enlisted strength of 125,000 as fixed .in the last appropriation acts, the statement -pointed. out-that no changs had been made in the missions assigned to the regulars in the National Defense act of 1920 under which on an._authorized strength of 255,000 was déclared neces- sary in the judgment of congressto car- Iy out the military poucy. then = laid down. INJURED WHILE ‘SAVING HIS WIFE AND CHILDREN Lake Placid, N. 5. 27.—Dr. Her- bert McAdams Gibbohs, author, - of Princeton, N. J., today saved his wife and three children, but was himself in- jured in a runaway ‘automobile - crash near here. Dr. Gibbons and"family were on' the way- in . their automobile to visit, Dr. Charles. R.. Erdman, deéan. of” Princeton university, when they. stopped to ask di- rections. The chauffeur, ordered to make inquiry, had barely left his seat, when Gibbons' car started down a steen grade. Unable to reach the brakes, Dr. Gib+ bons dropped, one by one, over. the side of the rapidly. moving car ‘his wife and according to a despatch received here {o- | against prohibition and 432,663 in ' fa- arbitration in any form. day. Drysdale was born in Scotland and | vor-of it. o a family record gives 1796 as the year of & WAGE HEARING TODAY FOR his birth. - 5 y The French dreadnought France las | MAINTENANCE OF WAY MEN | The centenarfan is surtived by several capsized and sank in ten fathoms of wat- | ing, his shoulder.and causing lacerations. |and two were wounded when national|ported to the war department by William | other children. relatives. ~Those who reside on his farm | er in' Quiberon bay, aft -y ter striking a rock. three. children, Christine. 12, Lloyd 11, which - will. divide it. < activities permitted the people to render The, members -of ‘the commission, ‘wfth | unrestrictedly the homage tney so wis! Colonel ‘James A. Loga acting as Amer-|ed to render to the ‘fpemory. of theéir ican observer, met ‘at eleven o'clock fo-|beloved leader. Not from tne metroplis{ poyriary day and sat until one p. m. The dele-| alone, but from the country districts gats expressed their views on Ger-|nearby there streamed to the’ City Hall, many’s. request of July 12 for a_thes|where the body lay in ‘state ‘countless vears' moratoum. ¢ Semi-official. de-|thousands to gaze upon the features of olarations ‘later chowed that' unanimity|{the man. to whom. more than a~vone| jne from her right nand and fled. had not.yet been reached. except on the|els the people had looked for a pedce- ful’ settlement of Ireland's. w sires to exercise her Tight to be heard,|Today's newspapers reproduce a 'strik- ing portra’t of Collins from a painting made by Sir John Lavery as a member to the signing to the treaty : Between Ireland and England. He 18 seen sii- ting ‘with folded arms, s handsome, okt e e W intellectual ifage in o hli:te:mn:“elr oty he ves of Geérm: s decided fo|debonair. Underneath aré pr com- : i lete details ‘of what tne news editors|; A 4 b | situations erising from the strikes L SSubiine latest snocking-‘sensa. | 2Pt the Pacific Mills offer of the form-| Maine amount $10.988,000;/ gercent ton. {radegdy of the Yellow Lahe, a peace- prayer and then were held against the stone pilla te. . Their cap- tors .drew revolvers. 30 through _the ‘head” and: heart. Killed when the automobile in which they This is what little Trish children saw | "0 THS8 W0 BHCROLS N e o Je the, whole nation mourn-| yagiern Iljinois at Haubstadt, 1md., ted. ana 000 whereln civilians.. Including ‘women, are wounded, and some killed. DE VABERA SAID TO BE De .Valera is convalescing from wounds in a house near Bandon, acconding fo: what is considered autheritic informa- | tion. He was recuperating _in a house at Bealnablath, a few ‘miles from Mac- room. the scene of the Collins ambush, but later shifted his quarters. the Blarney district, following ~ upon bomb and rifle attacks against the na- tionals positions in two hotels i the village and the famed Blarney castle grounds. The nationals suffered dinor casualties. g ported to have lost twelve killed and manywounded in repeated; attacks in this area. . T 8. FEARODY :SERERN — and 1 do mot believe Cline ever gave with State's Attorney Delos Duty, come WHILE HDEB_EIACK _RIDING Announcement was made by the Gilbert Tresident of the Peabody Coal Company. During the war he" was chairman of the coal committee of the national coun- cil of ‘defense. He had been active in democratic_polities for many years and|Barre, Pa, a in 1920 was a candidate for the homin- atfon “of the United States senate. | all LAWEENCE TO HAVE SPECIAL rence Centhal Labor Union voted today | cotton mill to nay special attenFon to the celebration | that full itime iles b Brownsviile Friday | wih him, end give assisance to twa of-Labor Day fhls year “becauss of the |d at thé plant Tuesday at the wage rate | [oUrteen miles below Br A victory of the textile workers.” in effect before the textile strike. were called 22 weeks ago, following an- nouncments g duction, have agreed to restore the form- er scale.. It was said at the meeting of | Land a- year the labor organizations today that sat- isfactory adiustments in two of the oth- ers—the Methuen and. Pemberton plants | Me., by his si —were . expected , and that . negotfations | ‘ were under way for conferences leading to asettlement at the plant of the, Pat- chogue-Plymouth company. 3 DEMAND PUNISHMENT OF —War or the surrender of the Armen- of the plot aimed -at .the assassination. Gf a number of former Turkish states-! sion - at- Sari Kamish, and Mimi 3. “He had barely deposited of Mimi_in-the roadwai. when the machine crashed into. a .boulder. The impact threy. Dr..Gibhons into, a ditch, sprai Mrs/ Gibbons and -the children were but /)ghtly bruised. : curry, County Sligo, Saturday.. Iy, e x The Spanish Albany, N. ¥ Prime_Minister China’s first Sunday’s - total suspension of. civie 4 Dr. Stephen from a deorwa. They came by train, by donkey-eart, Sunday. Edmund - B. threughout the and trouble -at hig The war’ of hate &nd ambush goes no. Loom fixers Textile Operati er wage scale Flere is the incident in brief. ‘It is a the year 1922 more than dau it was $22.50, Carl Gant: against Anne They were give a ew moments oriy ., h " four other me: ‘and”snipping, | TIeS south of Because her Ty oAt kB Eig A0’ the Neld In cver koL c0; Arond, ! !dead. She died. spital in CI P e it on Bantry. soutn!dead- She died.in a hospital in Cleve west of Cork, on Friday by a force of | % So-called irregulars shows that the re-iifursday nigh volution éx still in progress and _that Richard Mulcahy, the new commander- e to disnose of ajl ther avail g e e ot a0 petore T amn el Willlam B. Chatman, ana 18 year old | able to disnose of all thexr avaiiable pro. sald that peace and order have been o e 5 s s it Bl g Friza - o B il responsibility for a fira which did damage ich is reinforee: the land, from a kitten when it | boy, is said by estimated at a down “town se N.C RECOVERING FROM WOUNDS ou ~ The body of Cork. Aug.. 27.—(By -A. P.)—Eamonn| gon’of the late Honolulu, Intense fighting has taken place fn| 3 Doree, who is Since Thursday the ifregulars are re- act, has been vears old con, & Barker Chicago, Aug. 27.—F. S. Peabody, .one!Springfield, Mags., makers of the country's lafgest coal oparators, jdied today after suffering a - stroke wiille horseback riding on his farm near | will be put inf Hinsdale. ‘His ‘horse was found stand- ing. over the body which was on the| Willlam M. ground where it had ' fallen from the| American Yo saddle. Mr. Peabody was 63 years|Mass., offered old. Mr. -Peabody was_the -founder and the latter Wwas engulfed ‘it to % 3 , . 27 t I« building toppled slightly forward as It OBREGON GOV'T IN MEXICO “_r\:n"" e ‘"{‘;m = ”"‘ LABOR DAY CELEBRATION |subsided. Tt was valud at §250,000. Sox Lawrence, Ma: w;-flitv_ltb deciin-. A gambling casino rivalling the famous Monte Carlo casino in magnitude of play has been opened in Moscow. : £ went ‘aground on a bar off Shady Heck Pgint, New York. . “complete cquipment for a beswery |Returns for Fiscal Year 1922 Reflect Business with @ production capacity of 300 harrels 3 of beer a week was found in a rai in James M. Cox, former democrétic can- didate for president, was, the guss: Of at breakfast Saturday. died at Montour Falls, near Elmira, N. Y. He would-have been 100 years old next Eight persons were killed. and. more volume, of freight comparing favorably. v than 150 injured in automobile accidents red with $4.595,000,000 In 1921 " the of: the reparations commison should Dbe| by ‘jaunting car and _on foot: theylin\ioccachusetts last Saturday and |were reported in April and a Statamny | TR the best perfcemances of year. He was 66 years’ oid. mune from Germany’s wave uf rismg|per cent. more than 1921. prices.. The most modest editions, such as sold -for fifteen to. twenty marks at the close of 1921, now cost sixty to sevenfy. Then Assessor Schofleld, of Oxford, | percentage decrease 48. ace”| Mass, announced that the tax rate for | New Jersey amount $87.735,000; ful suburb ‘of Dublin, where last even- ing young_people and’ children were playing. Suddently from the city ap- peared a large open automoblle travel- ling swifty. Seven or elght men’ wer passengers; some of them seemed to be strugeling. The car stopped & few hundred feet Gown the lame and a man got out and went to a gate leading to a field. © The struggle in the car becams vio- Jent. Two men were trying ¢o get awa: but were held and were' carried to the gate. They were moaning and pro- testing. One was heard by witnesses to cry out “but what is it for?" singer and now a motion picture actor, | age decrease 33. filed suit in Los Angeles for divorce — whom he charged - BUSINESS AND FINANCE | marked lack of unifcrmity. Shortages Eleven Japanise studeats, who are just comple'iag a tour of i States, were guests of tha Y. M. C. A. Satuzdax and > a trip through Yzle univers.y aad J. W. Purris of Henderson, K; of Saratoga Springs and New York city, is on the way to a point in Rhode Is- land for interment following his death in | CALLS KILLL The killing of one prisoner and the cap- | Hackensack, capture- of ' threee others who escaped from the Sioux City Falls (S. D.) peni- tentiary August 17 was accomplished through 2 boatman at Pedro and a tele- phone * operator at Creighton. For the second time this year, story of Cline that pistol duel had been-| reached Carbondale Sunday morning and enworth for violation of the espimage to visit Philadeiphia to se> his A dying of peridcarditis. of gasoline {of a first degree murder. He tells of a | Sheriff Melvin Thaxton and the state'd tanks and pumps, that owing proved business conditions a night shift voted. The grand fury. it was announced retirn of 'a pocketbood and it contents | three feet. cdrried 'by, William M. Wood, Jr., whe cident mear. Reading on. August 15. Larksville high high school, Wilkes- | I have them to the grand jury next Tues- 5 accommodations for 600 children, practic- y 'was destroyed by a mine cave in that | “departmen: ot commerce barkentine G Which Swept Over the Country—Costs of e, V5%t ery $100—Government Paid $1.30 for Each $100 Gath- ered, or a Total of $41,435,000—Collections in Con- “extensive rallroad strike tied up all traftic on the crease of 45. ‘Washington, Aug. ~TInternal rev- énue collections t.‘" oft $1,398,000,000 in the fiscal year 1922 as compared with Smith, aged 99 years, already touched scarcity levels and some observers anticipate, a decline 28 the. scarerty is relfeved. - : s far as the railroad strike is concern- ‘While Miss Mary Hurley was waiting jthe vear Uefore, reflecting the business P fof a street car in Boston a man stepped ed. financial querters have not entirely depression which swept over the coun-|zyo qonlh®y (UFCED L ement and d try. Costs to the govérnment Of col-| ot geem alarmed over the prospscts of lecting the taxes went up 43 cents for |, fnun fight. Car-joading satistics show every §100. that the roads are continuing to move a Total collections of *$3.197.000.000 as y, -wrenched a diomand oth, d. it is recognized that & fottind today Ty Tntetnatlonal Ravenne | o Lo ather han car shortage during the fall is h:::bh Commissioner Blair. The cost of gath-1" Arguing Mm: increase in s ering this sum was $41.435.000, or $1.30] e ooal and steel industries, which are for each $100 as against 87 cents 10| gymptomatic of a ehortage of \mg abor, higher prices f home in Lawrence, Mass.| Only the District of Columbia. of all Sapot ;,':,’,“';:‘ ,fi:,e o inedionyicers the states and territories. showed an|inat the couniry is emtering a period bf increase in income and rrofits tax and - Conant, widely known country as an auctioneer term vary considerably, what is probably theant is that something ke a boom: short-lived or otherwise, is to be bred of 2 general rise in commodity prices.. * Opinion on' the matter is, however, diz vided. Thoee who refuse to subscribe te | the theory point out that the present in- creases in prices are due to abnormal The amounts' paid in (neomes and pro- fits taxes and the percentage of de- crease compared with 1921 for the . - England states and New York and of Lawrence, Mass., affili- | Jersey. . American Federation of | Connecticut amount $27,238,000; per- ives voted last night to ac- | centage decrease 45. ¥ 3 ~inflammetion.” While definitions of this. Even the Blble has not been kept im-..paid, its total being $9.713,000, or zll o : that as such the hizher prices are likely eftective. October 2. age decrease 24. to.,be Yempuriiry: Such: critics i EBe New Hampehire amsunt $4,312.000; | phagize the fact that certain commodiz ties, such as rubber, are cheap and are Per-| likely to remasf so. In addition. they maintain that with grain prices at exist- ing low levels, the farmers' purchasing. is set at 52,10 a thousand, | centage decrease 30. ble that of last year when| New York amount $529,972,000; per- , the inhabitants were | centage decrease 35, 7 power will remain moderate. and cofi- struck dumb with amazement. Rhode Island amount $19,990.000; clude that no rrect boom-is poseible until > percentage decrease 4 the farmer can take part in the move- rt, former grand opera| Vermont amount $2,997.000; percent-|ment. They also mont to Europe's low purchasing power and the zeneral come sumers’ resistance to hih rrices: / © According to this, view. then, the site uatlon is to con‘inue to ehow ‘@ Gantvoort, an actress, —_— ith desertion. WEEKLY REVIEW OF — and hizh drices in some commodities and he Dnited] New York, Aug. 27 (By the A. P.).—|industries are expected to exist alongside Both indications as to the trend of busi-|of quiet markets and moderate prices ness and finance and opinions as to fall |The consermus of prospects, have shown marked diversity | formed cuarters is, perhaps, that the fall ¥ 58 dring the nast week. Settlement of thel|is I ely to bring a continuation of ofi? soft coal strike is ~enerally expected to|somewhat “snotty” business revival on a B » and | be reflected in a sharp gain in production, | moderate scale. > were | a figure as high as 9.000.000 tons a week | Sentiment in the srain and cotton mar* | being mentioned as likely to be cealized | kets has been affected somewhat during {in the immediate future. On the other|the pes: week by the adverse develops hand, it is painted out-that the govern- | ments in the Europess situstion and“she ‘Prmcetor, Ind: ment's scheme of priorities must remaim | resuitant weakness in the exchanges f {in force for some {ime, part'cuiarly until| Germany and the continental ailies.’ husband kicked her pet, the needs of the northwest have been | Wheat has hovered just above the dollar Mrs. Rose Sipos. 37, is | taken care of, so that.the steel industry | mark, aith weather conditions and crog is likely to feel the restriction imposed Ly | prospects little ehanged. 1In cotton, hot, - buliet wound self-inflicted | fuel shortage for some weeksk to come. | dry,weather in the southwest and boll t. Sipog was fondling the | The 20 ver cent. increase in steel wages | weevil damare in the other growing areds scratehed him. meanwhile is interpreted ae indicating | have induced wrivate cron estimaters te that steel manufacturers expect to be|place the condition at about 80 per cent. and tge probable yield at about 11,000, bales, which is some 500,000 bales below the last government estimate. The mext half million dollars in the | present restricted scale of operations as | government report will be published om ction of Winston-Salem, | compared with the rate of activity dur-|Sept. 1. - |ing the spring and early summer.| Little if an¥ chanze has been apparent Whether or not steel rrices will rise ma- | in the money market. Rates continue at : terlally above present ievels, howevce, | aprroximately the low levels of the year B Temains to be seen, since coal prices have |and no sudden chanre is anticipated. mbers of his famil; police to have confessed | duction this fall at favorable prices. a Howard D. Canfield, 23,/ Richard Canfield, gambler. —— e G OF BERGEN NO MINERS OR OPERATORS ON % ' FIRST DEGREE MUEDER HERRIN MASSACEE JURY 35 J. Aug. 2T—“First| Marion, Lls.. Aug’ 27.—(By The A. degree murder” was the characterization | P.)—The Williamson county grand jury, given today by Prosecutor A. C. Hart|which will jnvestigate the Herrin massa< of Bergen county to the shooting of John | cre has neither union coal miners mo¥ Bergen, motion picture “dare .devil” in | coai operators among its members, sald the home of George Cline, movie locatiou | Attorney General Erward J. Brundage, finder, Friday night. who, accompanied by Assistant U. S, E. F Prosecutor Hart said he disbelieved the | Attorney General C. W. Middlekaug, serving ten years fa Leav- agreed upon between Cline and Bergen | then made the trip to Marion by way of granted 1save of dbsence|and that the latter was shot and kil ed | Herrin, the scene of .the massacre of var |in a struggle for possession of Cline's|June 21 and 22 ,last where 26 miners d | pistol. were killed or fatally wounded. “There was no evidenca of a struggle He spent the afternoon in conference Lec Fred, who is o Bergen a pistol,” stid Mr. Hart. “Cline's | paring his evidence, that obtained by Manufacturing company, | ow £tatements diselose the commission | federal operatives, and that collscted. by to im- | struggle so close together he is not sure | attorney's office. who puiled the trigger. Examinatiof of | M, to operation. Bergen's body and clothes shows that | ppinion the evidence was conclusive —— neither his skin nor the clothes wore | shoyld lead to the issuance of - indict= Wood, president of the | Dears the slightest trace of powder burh. | ments. County officlals predicted thag olen company,” . Andover, | The shot that killed Bergen must have | upward of 100 'indictments would be a‘reward of $500 for the|been fired from a distance of at least Brundage announced that in this_evening had already been sworn in “To me it looks as though Bergen was |py Sheriff Thaston but the names of ths politely invited to come from New Yotk | jurorsavill not be made known till Judze to Edgwater to be shot to death, and 1|D). . Hartwell calls this body, into sess e am prepared to present all the facts as |sion tomorrow :forenoon. killed in an automobile . DEOWNING CAUSED BY 3 DERTOW AT CONEY ISLAND three story structure th | day - —_—— ADIING TO OVERTHROW -3 % a depth of 25 feet. The San Antonio, Tex., Aug. 27.—Acoced- | eicy salesman. of Brooklyn, was W ing to reports here, General Francisco|in the surf at Coney Island today, whils 27.—The Law- lllam D. Twiss, agent of the Everett 1 L we armed ai ly . > cotton mill, Lawrence, Mass, announced | Murguia and a staff of cight, well three life guards battled successfully te ‘operation swould be yesum. | a1d_vrovisioned, crossed the Rio Grande | resoue his two children, wno were bathing night, and_were joined by 587 men with | women who were being carried out to sea s oWt PurpOoS Ve i the timy - Tive of the efght mills, in which strikes | u))the(M zfiymaffilMat leo e’ avowel vimwess. of ovethrowing: (e | as fhe mie ik ASSASSINS .OF DJEMAL PAsSHA|12 by -hoqfln Constantinople, Aug. 27.—(By A. P.)| Jehn Alkm: ians, alleged to be implicated in the|Turst compan: assassination of Djemal Pasha, former|Abraham Lincoln'and friend of John D, | (13t bandis aave made attacks on the|to be a world record. minister of marine in the Turkish gov-|Rockefeller, : crnment and chief of staff of the Afg- 3 B han army, at Tiflis last July, is the!phyhical condition is good. HAS NOT SWALLOWED plane was made by Sadf,Lecointe, eynote of -an ultimatum presented by £ the Angora. government to the federation| _Captaln Noeman MacMillan and Capt. of.the Caucasus The note demands the|Malllins, who immediate punishment of the authors|tempt to fly ai men. S e The Turks have concentratéd ons divi-!two. nights. i rty left San An- Samnel dl Stazo, 38 years old, of New. | It 12 said Ukt the party o et %‘z}"":g. ‘;‘r-“f"’l""c‘)w"!‘:"'g; poles alongside the car, posing as-lour- g el ey & S ! R second degree murder of Antonio Man- | S ATERAN XImp AT ducco iof Boston, on the night of June board of trustees of 'the Unitel S 100th’ anniversary of his _birtn. His begun by. Maj Obregon government. Harry Muilin of Newark, who was General Mursuia is eaid to have left| paying teller ir. the New . Jersey. Titi 3. 20 per cent. wage re- | Domald B. MacMillan, the Arctlo ex- P, S y by coom- 3 plorer who headed'an expedition to Bamriy | Sa0 Ancoilo Thursday by auto a Guarantee and Tvust company, is. bes ago off the schoonsr Bow. | Panied by his secretary and several high | leved to have been drowned at Coneyon 1 h B h din, is’ on ‘his way home, according to officers. five doctors, fourteen telegraph| Saturday.. His clothes, which he placed a radio message received at Freeport, operators and #xee wireless onerators|in a locker at the, Manhattan baths om and a. complete radio - receiving and|that day: wefe still unclaimed today. Na broadeasting - station. one reported eceing him in difficulty in the water. - He was a war. veteran and tonio with camping equipment and fishing | served two years in France. ster, Mrs. Letitia N. Fogs. & Nt . Troop Movements in Justes. SN NIRRT El Paso, Tex., Aug. 2 —T;oon mo‘\,'e- Turin, Italy, Aug. 27. — um-gn' 4 ment sare taking place in Juarez.' but| Brakpapa today ¢n an airplane flew. n Btewart. chaleman of tho| Lol o v authorities vefuse to give their | at a' spéed of 336 1-2 Xilometres . (abotis destination. Current goesip, however, is| 203.09 miles) msr hour. - This s eaid ¥ of New Y , advis: Saturday - eelebratad ~the | Sierra Madre raflroad. . e e T The previous speed record for an French aviator, September. EIGHE YEARS | /05223 miles per hour. ueuT:. recently continuer- the a 7 a 300 horsepower machine. rouad the worid which wzs was made in Paris, ? T. Plake, wre | not swallowed a bit of food in the past fepron Lo 2+ jor W ‘brought to Chirtagung, British Inlla aft- | eight years. Her esophagus is entirely | ELECTRIC TROUBLE HALTED er having been aficat for three days aud | closed at the th When she was three NEW YORK nacnmg yoars old she underwent an overation for tonsilitis, and since then she has not| New York, Aug. 27.—Every Reorganization of a movement amang | been able to swallow. She takes all her |and elevated train in the borough . IRISH REBELS CONTINUE TO ... |Pan American vations to provi AMBUSH HA‘HON% TROOPS | able miemorial «nd final resting food in Hquid form through a cubber tube | Manhattan and apartion of Brookiym in an incision in her stomach. was at a -standstill for P Christopher. Tolumbus, the man w-c gave | The trouble with her throat does mot |late today when' the 50,000 kilows Dublin, Ayg. .27.—One man was. killed | “the new world to the old,” has been re- | affect her breathing and she plays iike | generator in “the * house of the Interborough Raoid ‘T troops_ were ambuscaded near Tobber: | E. Pilliam, receiver general of Dominican | Physicians recently deemed it danger- sit. e “Feustoms.

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