Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 5, 1922, Page 1

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Action to be Consuminated Government Has Ordered General Mobilization of the | AGAINST BRANCH BANKIN AhoOppond_htheEshHhhmentoannchOffiusbyBoth State and National Banks in Any Form—Are to Form an A e bilt Whitngy'il “That Coni- :o::‘m.h:w still' much belcw sbip- Sister, Miss Mary ‘L.wwn I L, 5 Was -3 s B The American steamship Quaker ,Clty, ,__Whe',e.bo“h Has NOt Time of Alleged Promise. | Been Disclosed. Coal dealers « Waterbury last might agreed upon a ‘maximum price of $17.40 per ton for anthracite coal. Within Thirty Days—Greek with a cargo of pig iron, whica ran ashore on the rocks near Cruden, Aber- Schenectady, N.. Y, Oct. 4.—The de-‘deemln, on Sunday during a heavy Harbor, Me., Oct. 4—Thom- PR . > 3 SE S lius Vanderbilt Whitney, | storm o 110 foty iation of National and State Banks and Trust 1917 and 1918 Classes—Has Also Cancelled All Leaves| a2 Som!is, Varietls, Wainey,tstorm, was refloatod. as W. Lawson, for whom some anx Assoc Com: ‘was expressed by close friends in Boston, i a milli breach 11, according to word re- Stat t' by M:i Veiiizelos' Sk That He Disap- :‘ “d""’-“";“ m‘ug‘m‘;"‘b‘;w reach| Xorest fires raging throughout morthern | is safe and e Hold Thrace. panies to Work For Minnesota the past two weeks are bamg | ceived from him today by Miss Mary nies Opposed to Branch Banking Legis- rows Fontaine, a dancer, was indicated fanned by a 20 mile wind. More than a |Lawson, his. sister, residing at Somer- 2 . A P > proved Greek Campaign in Asia Minor, But Would| s S T oot nors. 1o | do3en villages are endangersd. The towns fvile, = lation and Conduct & National Campaign. ; L i 5 ~ | day. Counsel for young Whitney ‘de- T, S s’ffl”d Taimer whereabouts of the financier, who is be-| New York, Oct. 4—The American, by the anti-branch forces later to bave B 3 clared, that there was no basis for &c-{ ar., sammel A. Prentice, vice chair-|lieved to have gone into seclusion pend- v ic vold, his man of the republican ‘state central com-{ing the auction sale of Dreamwold, ; Gonstantinople, Oct. 4—(By the A. P.) | ious documents dealing with alleged ex- | Marri edat the time the defendant is at-{ il 0 S8 WEREGHAL SO0 CO0TRT CO"00 | outh Shore estate in Massachusetts, al- | proximately 3 to 1, as.being oppos:d to —The Mudania conference, it is under- cesses by the Greeks i Thrace. General Yl 1 hars et ity e his 8t00d this evening, will probably reach [Hartngton declared that he considere 3 G Rebi an agreement on all points of the Tur-|the charges unfounded. 1t was brought out during today’s pro- g':fl,,,‘f,‘,?’::},',,‘;"“&,:{‘,‘”‘h‘fg_‘.,"p,‘;fl; accept any condjtion, nor any conference, | married to- Sterling B Adair, a ailot | nionary Kield of Phillips, Ma. had twon | erville, one of the villages comprising the| pressing this epposition, steps were to suspend military movements during |until assured of the fate of Thrace, and,; and.that the marriage lhifl Beer‘;fl:nnl\ll‘“ L the negotiations, with the exception -of |above ‘all; of the situation of the Turks,|cd. Whitney's counse e Sbcanzs | Ship.” cstablished ‘last winter. the provision relating to the occupation | in that region. the punuliment was; not \Isnding fhecans = ’ he said, ané of the western line of the Marltza river| “Thanks to the moderation of Generals | it had been obtained through faise dha : T TS state banks and trust companiss cppos- | wholly a business question, said, by Allied troops. “The aliles have agreed | Charpy.and Mompbelli and the concilia- | fraudulent representations, he‘allesctci<}s[,t,s is blamed for the recsnt reyolr of | Peen n the service o y 1o turn over Thrace to the Turkish army | tory attitude of General Harington,” the {In seeking to have her marriage to in thirty days. conflict. . 2 he official [ Fontaine had lived as man and wife atlyrariford are leaving today on their jour- Constantinople, Oct. 4—General Mom- | S00 had any news beyend the offielal), B a Now York, Newporc News and ® ol hell, Ttaly, presided over the session to- g & statement issued by the Msaxican embas- 2 g News received this evening that M.}18:20 o'clock, leaving in general a most |to have declared that they:parted imme- MOTHER AND DAUGHT: Franklin-Bouillon, the French envoy, and Hamid Bey, nationalist representatives, . A z e had decided to return to C‘;nluntmovle LONDON HAS: ‘ 7 Rappleve as superintendent of the New | Paris, Oct. 4—Mme. Jacques lebaudy, | Chicago, was elected chairman of th for Mudania immediately, strengthened OF SIGNATURE OF PROTOCOL | Ne¥'s counsel, introduced as _evidence the hope of the successtul issue of the conference. The delegates agreed this i afternon to establish & definite line of Patrick J. Darcey, of Winated! was|in 1919, and Mme. Lebaudy’s daughter, | Chicago in the near future, it was demarkation between the British and|.oontinonie giving definite information | 4nd Were produced for the purpose off TALISE J- DRresy. of Windteds wasl o elin, had a double wedding het |nounced, to plan a national campaign. Kemalist forces in the Chanak one. The| oty S BV AR i oom o O otocol | Showing that Miss Fontaine's allegations | fon " space between the opposing forces will | 0: o cleement at Mudania, or the results|that she had never lived with the sailor be sutficient to plac them out of rifie shot, | ¢ 104,y meeting of the confernce. None { Were false. Mr. Leary also presented hus lessening the danger of immediate 3 Bankers' association, in convention here tion Inasmuch as Miss Fontaine was the resolution adopted by the national went on record today by a vate of ap- bank division failed. A Frank 4. Munsey addressed the cdn- vention on the problem of hour and sad that the operations of tiie republican and democratic parties werc being car- ried on with small attention to the fate- Tests of the government oc-the peopla. The figat of the two partles over the tariff, he said, was carried on o the shame “of the American people. it 1 Hartfor though yesterday she said shé thought|branch banking or the establisim i:hfix v:e‘c,l:f:.';‘” o S, o e gone to Boston or New York. branch. offices by Loth state and na* Mr. Lawson who had ‘been spending | banks in any fcrm. Tsmet then said that Turkey could not | ceedings that Miss Fontaine had Deenj g . ..y university annsunesd that | the summer at his sister's place in Som-| After the passage of a resolution ex- - e o Jtown of Mount Desert, as has been his|gaken by bankers from e Ly eorawford memurial scholar-| stom for several years, left there hur- | Wisconsin, New Jersey riedly Monday no‘gnbm an z’uto:mb!xle.,m form an association of national and g v v who has | ‘Propaganda originating in the Uniteq |Iic W% accompanid by a ma b LTl ed to branch banking to undertal should be treated as such. i the .Mexican garfison at Juares in .a |30y years and usually travels with him. | campaign for the passage of 1 federal account continues, “the conference roce at | Adair annuiled, Miss Fontaine is alleged Germany can pay her war d the statute p-ohibiting national banks fiom |Right Honorabie Reginald McKenna naving branches or mors than one ofice | former chancellor of the British WED FATHER AND §ON |in any state, Murray McLeon, bankers, but such a ident of the Irving Park National tank, ent w be possible if ali other, demands are postponed for a period organization and a committee compcs2d | which, would permit the stabilization of of three delegates from each of the 43 |the mark. Such postponement state bankers’ associations will mo be extended to all European cow an- | with the exception of England, dir a sl Messages from President Harding and| “Indeed,” said Mr. Munses Henri Sudreau, ‘a French detective, and | Secretary of the Treasury Andrew W.| wcratic and' republican parties have be- Jacquelin. married Roger Sudreau, the|Mellon were read by President Taomas|come so strongly organized, have become twenty-year old son of Henri B. McAdams. In his letter to the bank-|so thoroughly entrenched that it is £y at Washington. satisfactory impression.” diately alter the wedding ceremony and o St = had never lived “together. R 0T LEARNED Attorney James' A, Leary, of Whit-|, T1e Sppointment of Dr. Willar j ; 4 ol | Widow of Jacques Lebaudy, the self-styl- 1otters aildend o heys besnwiliten o g.vmr::;m::;m;zd e anmanens | 4 “Emperor of Sahara” who was kllied Adair by Miss Fontaine. The missives| "’ g ) by her in their Long Island, X. Y., hom: Wweresof an extremely amorous hature London, Oct, 4.—(By the A. P.)—Late tonight there was still no news from Con- orial district by the democratic com-|this morning. Mme. Lebaudy married mittee, for the district. of the government departments in Lon-|affidavits to show that Adair anll Miss| 5. ang Mre. Sydney V. Kibby of West érs, Secretary Mellon wrote that a fou_ - | question if tney hi ‘becom: our ney to Tokio, Japan, where Dr. Kibby Jacquelin Lebaudy and Roger Sudreau | gation {or_an early and healthfal masters, not our se X but in offielal circles great satisfaction | Hoboken. . is to take up the Xx-ray work in St.|were marrfed in Southern France last|al of business had been established he sald, has sufficient fay in accordance with the arrangement | oo gy prdfeed at the evident concilia-| Justice Borst roserved decision in to- by which the allied generals will rotate in oecupying the chair. ; ioq | ence, which is considercd as distincily | Miss Fontaine's attorneys to compel ac- M. L gt s pan ooeedingS | fovorable to peace, more especially the | ceptance of service by the defendant ~f : ace.” The only serious hitch was comall @ writ_in order that suit may be be- on the question of the occupation of | Statement that the Kemalist had adopted Y “hrace by allied detachments. Ismet Pasha, the Turkish nationalist representative, insisted on this protection against a Greek flank attack on the Tark- ish occupying forces. The allird relire- entatives pointed out the difftsalty of helr acquicscence because of the small forees at their command. The Furks withdrew their demand for the evacuation of Thrace in eigiit davs. The attitude of Greece and the.Greek Army as represented by Colonel Plastiras was the only cloud to peate in the eky. Plastiras let, everybody kuow that the Greek army was a real factor and that new chiefs were determined to resist every attsmpt to reinstate the Turks In Thrace. The allied leadsrs wera ircline ed to share Ismet Pasha's apprehension that Greece stlll was to be reckoned with, The Turkish conditions referred to in connection with the probable agresment in the Mudania conference are -are fol- lows: {—Formal guarantecs concerping uation of Thrace. | { tablishment of allied garrisons in the larger towns of Thrace. ~Occuption of Thrace by tionalist gendarmerie. 4—Transfer of the civil administration of Thrace to Kemallst functionarles, 5 ation of Thrace within oight days by the Greek army. §—Occupation of. the westerly line’ of the Maritza river by allied troops. Turkigh. na- TURKS TO LEAVE NEUTRAL ZONES IN ASIA MINOR »t. 4.—A speclal despatch from Angora says that orders have been ssued to the Turkish military comman evacuate the neutral zones in Asla Minor {mmediately. The Turkish cavalry has, already begun to withdraw from the Dar- danelles scction CONFERENCE BETWEEN ALLIED GENERALS AND TURKISH ENVOYS Constantinople, Oct. 4.—(By the A. P.)=Conelliation thus far has marked the' conference between the allled gen- erals and the Turkish representatives at Mudania. Ismet Pasha, who speaks for Mustapha Kemal Pasha, leader of the nationalists, and also for the Angora gov- ernment, has arnounced tRat the govern- ment accepted the allied * proposals in principle, and he took occasion to ex- plain at the opening of the. sessions that the Turks “had no intention of creating Incidents with the English.” The absence of the Greek representa- tives from Tuesday's meeting made lttle difference, because the matters under discussion were of 2 general nature and Rad no Immediate connection with the attitude which the Greeks might assume, At today's meeting Ismet asked for a settlement of the Turkish administration of Thrace and requested that —Thrace should be freed from all allied control; but he felt that at least one month would be required to effect the transfer. He wlso suggested that there should be an allied covering force on the Maritza river and that a neutral zone should be created west of that river. The allied generals explained that the proposed administrative measures must all be subject to the approval of the governments concerned. Ismet then ex- pressed a willingness to meet the Greek delegates. 7 At the opening of the proceedings on Tuesday, General Harington, command- er in chief of the allied forces, sald that the objects of the conference were three- fold; First, to obtain a cessation of hos- ‘llities ; second. to fix = line in Thrace behind which the Greek troops would be invited to withdraw, to arrange the de- tails of evacuation and to transfer the administration to the Turks, the plans of which would be submitted to the pow- ers; third, to pave the way for a future peace conference. The Turks at first showed apathy with regard to the detalls of the administra- tion of Thrace until they had tested the sincerity of the allies’ desire to restore Thrace to them. It was then pointed out that restoration depended upon the ac- septance by the Turks of the joint allied nsote from Paris. Ismet Pasha declared definitely that the note had been accepted. in principte by the Angora government. It . was therefore thought best to consider ad- ministrative arrangements without dela; General Charpy thereupon drafted a pro- posal on which the -discussion began. The Smyrna correspondent of the Oriental News Bureau, an official 3 of Mustapha Kemal publishes a despatch from Mudania saying that according to official information obtained during Tuesday's conference General Harington riised from the beginning the question of the stralts and the concentration of Tur- Tamet Pasha replied that that the Turks had no intention of credt- ing incidents with the English and that orders to avold incidents had been given, and had been repeated. mqmll_onolhnnmmfl\m taken up, for two hours Ismet explained U“g:lhn position. He submitted var- ds to | 3 ; lLukc'l hospital in that city. January. The couple returned to Paris tory disposition revealed in the confer-|day's action. which was brought by through the response of the bankers to|margin of safety to justify it in forget- and in March Jacquelin disappeared. She |the treasury offerings of the short-term |tng for a minute the vote home. More than 32,000 persons were arrested | was found in 'a private nursing home inlnotes issued during the past eighieen While “political jockeying” has been Philadelphia police during -the first|St. Cloud. The young husband was re- | months to retire Victory notes and other | going on Mr. Munsey continued, “a new - nine months of this voar for violations| fused permission to sce Jacquelin, and |carly maturing obligations. Issue has developed that mow divided ali in principle the allied note and ordered|gun. The defense sought to avoid ac-|of the prohibition laws, ‘according to a|the following day Mme. Lebaudy and Jac-| President Harding’s message was & plea | America into two political camps, as ,\-:l their troops to avoid contdct with the|ceptance of service on the contention|report made by James B. Cortelyon,|quelin left by automobile for «n unknown | to the bankers that they “lead in resom- | without political names. They are the Britich that there Js no ground for action. Jus-|director of public safety. destination. 3 mitting our people to sane expendituras, |radical camp and the conservalive The view expressed in official quarters|tice Borst gave no intimation regardinz e Mme. Lebaudy said the marriage was | to ways of -economy and thrift t camp.” tonight is that if the Turkish commander | the dale on which his ruling would bu| Mre. Johanna Eyan, of Tacoma, Waeh.,| purely formal ‘arrangement, ‘entered into | consideration of municipal and Abolition of these oid party laoels, he orders withdrawal. in the Chanak zone,|handed down. 2 has spent her tenth day in jail for refus-|to smooth over difficulties in connection | problems in that conscience W said, would enable veters of like sympse thus securing effective separation of the % P ing to slgn her name to certain papers | with the Lebaudy fortune, which Jacque- | the temple of confidence.” thies, bellefs and political tendencles, 16 British and Turkish troops, there will| MOUNTAINOUS SEAS AND A thaf wonld jeffect’ all SetHErmaIIL: DL CoT be no “disposition on the part of the lip was to inherit on attaining her major-| TIn the election of officers John H. Pue- {realign with a new party which expressed 100 MILE AN HOUR HUREICANE | munity property between ~herself and|ity or when she married. Jacquelin at|licher, of Milwaukee was chossn presi- | cheir desires—conservative or ralical allies to stand out for complete retire- s the busband from whom siic obtamned a|the time was 17 years old. dent, Walter W. Head, of Ormaha, Neb. The tariff has not place in our poiitics, ment from the present neutral zone or.in-| ew York, Oct. 4.—Bearing scars of | divorce in July. Later Mme. Lebaudy filed a suit in|first vice president; and William W.{Ar sist upon terms humiliating to the Turks. { 4 pattle with mountajnous seas and a 100 Y Munsey declared, “it is whoily # | Knox, second vice president business question and should be sc The resolution ofiposing the establish-!(reated. Standing out. however, as the ment of branch banks was placed befor | iriginal issue between the two parties, it the ~onvention by Samuel B. Jeffrics. viee | is still the fighting ground between them o— sards, while both were helpless in the|saying: “Love to all the family and|sudreau had requested the French coaris | president of the National City bank, of | o the shame of the American people, London, Oct, 4-—In another letter to|storm, the Red Cross liner Gothland|to my sweetheart for whom I did not{(y grant him a divorce. In July when |St. Touis Waldo Newcomer, prasident|sho permit these two parties to keed this The Times, M. Venizelos sends a copy |reached port today two and a half days|shoot myself, but for somsoae elsc.” l a 2 foniy i Heank Ciaks e s Paris to annull the marriage. charging Loy .nile an hour - hurricane, in which coili- ran man, aged 21, of Passalice, { that Henri Sudreau was making effor: VENIZELOS DISAPPROVED sion with the Atlantic transport ‘iner J., shot and killed himself’undor 2n o obtain control of the lebaudy fortune. INVASION OF ASIA MINOR | afenominec was averted only by a few|oak tree in Clifton, N. I, icaving a ncte {In June advices from Paris said you the application for an administrator for | of the National Exchange bank, of Bal- | great economic question under the sordid of g-lacter hé. wrote (o General Danglis, [1ate. e the Lebaudy estate came up the conrt |timore, led the opposition. An at>mpt | hecl of politics” former Greek commander-in-chict and| Captajn Rene Bastin, .the Gothland's| TRebert F... Herrick, «of Boster. a|rulog. that: the Aaction must .await the president of the Venizelos league, in July| sislpper attributed the miraculous cscave |lawyer and banker, and chairman of the | outcome of the marriage annullmerit pro- of last year, which he contends proves, from a seasiragedy to the uss of oil. ~At|Harvard graduate rowing he did ngt come to' London as “a fiend S committee, and war monger.” he hoight of his storp September 25, his |and Mrs. George T. Ric a ulg SondineEs i | A DRNESRLON. SO 7 g b ey . Rice, widow ¢ In August Paul E. De Frere, a New e ship was drifting and rolling and pitching { Boston banker, were muTia1 n West-| vork aftorney..said.. 1o he __,_,G.} ZAE NG IN NEW JOEE The letter, which has boen reproduced |§i g o e ~MosseEhey 184~ 0n-®" 3u-0pEan | v a 4 % .otBoint Goct-: e Hhenys Mme. Lebaudy was - declaréd 1t New ‘Tork, Oct. 4.—A 2 1-2 year old| Chicago, Oct. 4—Although the police e e i ot | et SIEBed bearlng down on st Rering edimeenn, & SFRAduiacs’ of /% Torkiid snapuncod. fhat Yhey WS, ShTeed e BFe- stated that he had been advised that Jac- ‘ land. uelin and young Sudreau had withdrawn 10 ASerICA/ AORT: | tors T OF tED: et 2 Whood Boot- e ytured skl Shehr and AfUn] " “Botn ships were at the mercy of the o fentence of two and a hill vears in The AuINEnE s ANarse proceedings | i B R N e T ey Bine T ored the stieres ey ") waves” Captaln Bastin related. “I re-|the federal penitentiary was imposed. on = i ther in 1 . & 3 pedition” Against Angora whs undertak-f JUUC8 o it i oottt motrad | ToarDh B e or N ok S vere ke TR s oRaig S50 Stfiohgn e wICHS Wanly MIEA} o0 Alo HIell” for the past fuw: nlehts, en. At that period, when the war fever | (S0 Y SRS B O Red B e e e Sttor. ho o prera (Pasls. by Mrs. Wendell Phillips, & wealthy New | crowds of amateur ghost hunters contin- J e GR helght in Athens, ho explatns, |0 *Tlt i3 past ‘each other-with | sullty to a eharse of havins cain RARL S A A s “'xld“'r she will retain her formid- pete il :-;m;lh the “";’3,“."’“"'; “I was advocating the. evacuation of ¥ i 3 ¥ i 2 able title. i y recrurence larm: Asla-Minor and the autonomy of Smyrna, | '°52 than seven R e 2 fucetot’s bRnicdle HAD SWITCHED BABIES| -The name is O O e s el | AL wmoRERd. o g e 5 Lo il Zon s ex- | terrori o rtlvlohfilc‘a into mé’-&’.'i"iml“a“f f:;eil:&ahl:fi In their quarters and all necessary pre-| Sixty-four sults to recover $32.000! 1. .oy City, Oct. 4—Standing hand in §f;‘;§§“;"nfi‘fl?; it Hinss P - THo ’:m thickened today when, after and were marching from success 1o suc. | C2utlons were taken in event of & crash. | from bondsmen who have fai hand before a baby Incubator at Moth- cess without a single reverse.” Lifeboats could not have lived ia such|duce defendants for trial CHICAGO SPOOK STLENT B - AS.GHOST. HGNTERS GATHER the d > pro- M dent Polk arrived with the tiny refugee. i another night of alarms, Miss Lillan d z - ere filed in|erg' Institute, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rich | I do not wish it to be Jost through her. | Maloney, one of the oocupants, was haled 5 a sea, however, the ship's officers said. superlor court in Boston by the district | foa. "looked upon little *Dorothy Helen" | masgos it conditions. are. property ad- |into court and ot s e TALL FOR VOLUNTEEES i None of the passengers many of them |attorney’s office. Most of tie bonds ¥ g s tamily” foul and defled authorities to make them ac- | justed again in Russia, and she comes ng about a $150,000 estate. After cept her as their' baby, reiterating their |into her own, she will be one of the|she had accused her sister and brother- 3 contention that the child born to Mrs.|weaithiest persons in her country.” in-law of a conspiracy to obtain absolute Major Alden L. McMuretrs of Green-|pich at Bergen sanatorium five weekS| fThis little girl escaped the red tape of wich tendered his resignation as consuit- . | women and chlldren suffered injuries, | were for small amounts. IN THE GRLEE ARMY!,)nough tossed about for two days and — : Athens, Oct. ‘4. (By the A. P.)—The|™80t8- minister of ‘war today fssued a procla- control of her aged father's fortuna, she ¢ 3 i lips, armed |was sent to the psychopathic hospital for mation calling upon all able-bodied citi- | ABCHIBALD McXNEIL, JR. Ing engineer and inspector of the stats | “60 788 2 b‘zisuke," they declared. ::fixn! :l:zlfl:r: rf:mug:-shr:;tcgn. was on | examination. o ¥ zens who do not belong to the mobilized NOMINATED FOB CoNGREss | molor vehicles department. His s | gomaons has switched babies. Our was |and to mest the chil. brought overseas | ies Msloney told the court that the forces, to volunteer in the Greek army 5 . : et | 4 boy—just as we had wished It 1o be.” |py n Gowans, head of a hos- | rappings, hideous scresches, growlings until the end of the present conflict with| Bridgeport, Conn.. Oct. 4.—Archibald|Robbins B. Stoeckel. They won't, take “Dorothy Helen” a3 | pital in Woolwich, England. Consequent- | and moanings and other uncanny molses Turkey. The war minister pointed out :Lg:;“'bf' s %’e‘;’?c"’_mc“‘:n';‘;g;:;fi . L. G. Hohenthal, chairman of the | theIT unlcss the courts'decide they must, |iv o speclal board of inquiry hastiily | which frightencd the neighborhood were the enlistment of new recruits would v the XS5 ot stimulate patriotism among the soldiers g = n the couple announced through their at-|yae assembled at the immigrant station convention for congress form, the fourth | prohibition state central committoe an- | (b 0 T3 ‘restrictions besriug on the ‘entry of Connecticut district. T;e numl{\atlon nounged thlatmbecauslc ofmthe :rzms“"f “Whercupon George Murray, Poormast- 3 minor alien without parents or guardian was unanimous, Mayor Fred Atwater | members of the party througitous the X Y6 Thale” ADDERE e F presenting the name of Mr. McNell to|state, there was a likelihood of a ve-|°f Produced warrants for U T Gl ety mers s made by her brother-in-law in an effort to frighten her out of thé house o he might supplant her in the affections of her father, for whom she has cared for at the.front. GREERS TO MOBILIZE THE p c tomorrow on | Mrs. Phi ho visited the Mondesse | several vears. v 2 the convention. There wers no other | convening of the prohibition state,conven- | 43¢0 In eriminal court o ey hen: it noRIULy, THkED] . Amotber.aslatntion of AP Bt CLASSES OF 1917 AND 1918 | names presented. tion to select candidates t oppuse the | CHTEeS ©f e 50 better in Rumsia, sald that the child's|was offered by, an electrician sent out by _— Mr. McNefl served two terms in the|two major partles in the fall elections. = s ” Constantinople, Get. 4. — A message | Connectiout senate and was metrements| = 0T P % CASE5S DEFORE LITCHFIELD g Bl Bl s ot Mo avemdoton s i = Dok, from Athens says that the Greck govern-fal in passing the workingmen's compen-| The joint New Fngland ralirond com- s AT 4 e ] ';’,:“;‘m | o i b et e bt e ment has: ordered general mobi sation law and the public utilitles act. |mittee, appointed by' the governors of ZOFEL Ite et e . of ‘the classes of 1917 and 1915. In his speech of acceptance, Mr. Mc- also cancelled all leave t R 5 - ir-| ing and beeaking of a grounded current - v, . Litchfield, Conn, Oct. 4—Evidesce| The mother, Countess Clauds, was sp | that the wool schedule was 100 high and| sts second meeting In Boston and décided | With the killing of Mrs. Flora L. Bene |child in England. Leaving the child in| But the trowds of curious took ne AWAITING COURT DECISION the work of republican senators who had|ts procssd at once with an intencive | dict at her home Lnt Noynh }\end! s; 22',{',”.,1",',:}”‘}‘«”"",";;‘%4‘1?; ‘;:t';" 1921 | “haunt” tonight, but up until a ate hour ON STILLMAN DIVORCE CASE/|vast Interest in the sheep raising indus- t H 5y May, . was presentsd to the grand jur her health, n 192 nt . : White Plaine, N. Y., Oct. 4 (By the|try. He declared himself in favor of ‘a A e in ths .Litchfield county superior court|died of influenza in Mrs. Fhillips’ homs ::;'ru .hm been no repetition of the A P,i—Counsfl‘ for Mrs. Anne U, Still- | soldiers’ bonus, asserting the United The Trish marliament is mnking umex-|today. ‘The jury reserved dsclsion watil ha'r;. EIR ARt man tonight awaited Supreme Court|States should call in the loans due from( p,ctedly smooth and rapld progress in|tomorrow. n he: Aost the child and rear | MYSTERY .CAR wow FIOURES ice Morechauser's last a the | Buropean governments to pay the bills|in, gsbate in comimittes on the draft of | The evidencs against Louis and M:ke | Mrs. Phillips to adopt the child an g‘:fi'{:::n ivorce cass, confident that the |for adjusted compensation to ex-service the constltution. The drift is going|Ludia of Waterbury charzed with the|her as her own. Mrs. Phillips promised | IN HALL-MILLS DOUBLE MURDER court would clinch with a’decrec the|Men- He also declared himselt in favor | yniough with very slight amendment in | murder of John Slesserl at Xorth Canaan | Today, after the first Kisses. the little sweeping _victory she won last week|Of @ reduction of the income tax. Neil attacked the new tariff; charging nsantsd but | Russian noblewomsn began addressing| New Brunswick, N. J, Oct. 4—A it d doubtl vill be acopted | in August 1921 also was prasanted bu ‘. ot e S Referse Danlel J. Gleason recommend- == e S iioct GeraY iesations: P*¢% | Was not completed. The jury will recon- | Mrs. Philiips as e i e ke L o . ed dismissal of the divorce sult brought | BALI'H A. DAY RESIGNS AS o vene tomorrbw to finish the hearing. rr;'m m“ n‘wa —v\l:' e_.many 0 by James A. Stillman, her rich banker N. Y. PROHIBITION DIRECTOB| Men are barred from holding office or > e JULIA SANDERSON IS NOT A O . oS clews among hueband, and afiirmation of the legiti 3 which Middlesex and Somerset county BEING SUED FOR DIVORCE |, orities are groping in thétr efforts Boston, Oct.. 4-—A despatch sent from | t0 4pprehend the slayers of the Rev. Ed- Brookline, Mass, Oct. 4—Captain Wil-| this clty under date of September 12,|¥ard Wheeler Hall and Wie choir leaer, liam Winder. U. S. N., retired, committed | saying that divorce proceedings had been | * ': E ‘s"“’ el otived. Huiali ¢ ; suiclde by shooting through the head to- | pegun agalnst Julla Sanderson. star of | WA B. Sopet, rotired business man of cision to the appellate divislon of the| The New York prohibition director, in| Three firshermen of Blg Barachix, Pla- | day. His body was found in an aban- | “Tangerine” now playing here, has proved e “'7\!‘ thln, car. . Moty thilas Kby eupreme court or glving up his fight o accepting appointment as chief of the|centla Bay, N. F. Edward, Philip and|doned pathway with a revolver beside it.|to be untrue. The story said that Miss Y. 0 hls, oar. Mo T prove Fred Beauvals, Indian gulde, the|federal enforcement agents of that state, | Bamund Keefe, laim to have discovared | Born in Portsmouth, N. H. Captain Win= | Sanderspn had received official notifica- o ther e beitieg. B DA O sy [, and the father of| Mr. Haynes #1%. made it a condition | the submerged hull of the Caps Breton | der was graduated from Annapolls, was|tion from the supreme court of New o L the asthoities, he passed i~ sedan G\ufild :!ll: cou:;el 3 a;:rg;z‘;:d Stillman | that his term of e;vica should expire at | steamer Morien which left Louisburg on{ on the Raleigh at the butl: o!hnh.nll:i :‘ofl)(l uuht s::nldudm :"ude:r fvrB ;l.lr;;:: :h!”r:::; bl{,d o e‘," r: ot:m ‘w o spot. would fight to the the end of a yeal Trom his a; 9 wveral years was in charge of by her hus! S Srx, Stilitmdn ‘cold. ave had her fif o e o 1923]'_ ppointment | November 16, 1912, and was never heard | and for several y. position of any kind or ~reseiving any | CAPTAIN WILLIAM WINDER. macy of her youngest child, Baby Guy,| Washington, Oct. 4—The resignation|salary in the national woman’s party, V. 8, N.,, COMMITTED SUICIDE four, The decision is expected tomor-|of Ralph A. Day as federal prohibition according to the terms of deed for the row, director of New York, effective Nov. Ist, | party’s headquarters signed by Mrs. O. Stilman then will have the alterna-|was announced today by Commissioner |H. P. Belmont, of New York. tive of taking an appeal from the de-| Haynes. i > b feeed chas - | ed his searchlight on the car, he sald, 4 erwar recruiting in New England. PBaronette, U. 8. N., on rges of mis. nal decision’ from Justice Morschauser| A suocessor to Mr. Day, the commis.|°F 2Ttermards. & et i : conduct with Frark Crumit, her lead-| and observed that it contained ;;uh: today. The justice -announced himself{sioner declared, has practically been de- RY: ing man. a woman. ugh he ready to enter an order confirming. the | cided upon for some thme buy e oo.| Téward F. Dowd, widely knswn in|FELL FEOM THIED STORY; referee’s report, and it was only on.in- M Nt e ot of B i ST T SOOI Investigation shows (‘r:ol.l ‘::d dl\'c;n:: reeoml:: &:{ :;‘{ m% (rlo."\:."nld. he assachuse! an organizer . ASKEED: * g proceedings have been instituted against | observe: e woman a light sistencs of her counsel that he corisent- Hrmbem A, et he m,'“ for = 1opinya. ing trades‘unions, former alderman and Miss Sanderson by Commander Barmette, | coat. ed to take the motion for confirmation o former candidate for mayor of Holyoke, | Minneapolls, Oct. While a crowd|gng no charges have been made against| Mrs.'Hall is known to have worn a under advisement and personally study|STX PEOHIBITION AGENTS died. He was at one time president olll ]n,u by watched a world series bulletin 4N | . Crumit. / polo coat of light gray on that might the evidence on which it was based. IN NEW YORK SUSPENDED | the Holyoke Building’ - Trades ecouBeil| hoard here today, Lester Gdrceau, 35| nfigs Sanderson said today that al- The justice said that as he understood and {ts first business agent. 3 | ¥hen, according to her story, she left her \ years: 018, 'a window washér, fell from a|though her repudiation of the report was| home after midnight to seek her mi the law, the court was required to study| New York, Oct. 4—Prior to his depar- third stody ledge to ths sidewalk. Horrl- | gent out promptiy she had been greatly |husband in his study at the reh the récerds of a divorce case only when | ture for Washington, yesterday, Ralph A.{ Robert Gunder, 15-year-old youth of|fled spectators thought he had been Killed. the referee recommended the granting of| Day, whose resignation as prohibition r b C, | disturbed d'-‘!'l\-“e °°"‘“fl“°dl Teod r’;"‘ 3: St John. the Evangelist. Mrd. Hall has Toystoy, is dead ‘and six persons are|But he was unhurt. “What's the score?” |jetters and telegrams from loyal ends | 1o]q the investigators she was accompe & decree. As Glason's report recom-|director for the state of New York was |burncd, one probably fatally as the Were his first words as he came out of & | gll over:the country, mdl»:.ngln‘lflL that h:r anted by her brother, “Willie” Stevens, mended . no’ divorce for Stillman, and as|announced today, received a telegram |sult of a prairie fire which swept nefl’: daze. - denial had not entirely overtaken the Mrs. Stillman had not even asked a de-|from the acting commissioner of internal ‘ward from ' Hoven, across Potter county, cree,, he could‘er;flrm the report with-|revenue ordering the suspension.of six|S. D., on a four-mile front, out study, he said, agents of the New York staff, prohibition| — g ¥ CHABGE OF John ¥. Erennan: and Isaac N. Mils,|officials announced tonight, The troops ‘ocoupying the Rflnelamd| - —_— AT IR MPTING TO FLIRT | N® §3rage when he went to what of counsel for Mrs, Stillman, and Joh The suspension of the men followed a | consumed 118,777,684 -marks worth -Of| ifinneapolis, Oct. 4.—That ~the Rev.| ATTE e to his:death tryse. i1 E. Mack, guardian of Guy, united, how- | secret investigation by federal’authorities | German wines during the flscal year of|velerian J. Schatz, former parlsh priest|” - ” ever, in a request that he study the rec- |into the alleged looting of bonded ware- | 1921.. In- addition they used 124,733 at’ Gibbons, Minn.; was murdered instead| New Haven, Oct. 4—Robert T. O'Con-| gpapy AxEs ARE OPERATING ord, 'They cited ‘decisions in’ which re-|houses of large quantities of liquor. bottles of German champagne. . of. having committeed * suicide was [ nell, an oil_ salesman, of Hamden, 'm; IN THE BOOTLEG TEADE ports conflrmed without etudy, had been| Mr. Day's resignation was dus o the . chacged slate fofay when . an, autioay Re Soodte b ot atve Mary e P upset, and told the courC they were anx- | pressure of outside business, according to| ' Fifty persons returning from the Dan-|signed by Otfo L. Marx, coj = o vl Washi , Oct. 4.—Land ea- ioua to avold the possibility of a reversal | Zone Chief John D. Appleby. - ® 2 | bury Talr had ‘marrow escapes from in-|saur county &nd Dr. Jossph O. McKean, | ins, New Haven's only police-woman, was aghington, O« and sea in the higher court on this gorund. an eccentric New Brunswick charaster. original mis-statement. Witnesses who saw her re-enter her home say she returned alone. The Halls own a sedan car, which the minister left fn AUTOPS Y SHOWS REV. V. J. SCHATZ WAS MURDERED i plases equipped with trap bottoms so as e 3 jury when s trolley car Jumped the|and James 1. McKean, of St..Poul, stat- |acquitted today in the court of common | P'2% quickly of their Justice Morschauser immediately re-| FROM MOTHER'S DEATH BED. . |tracks and ran fifty feet across the ties,|ing-that the priest met .death. at. the[pleas to which he had appealed. ) lmh A illegal cargoes tired into chambers and began delving TO nx’r’LAc‘s N STAGE |Crashing ‘through a fence and plunging hands of an unknown assailant was made| O'Connell was arraigned on & technical | of lquor event of detection, are op- into the voluminous records in the case, g down an'embankment. - | public. He was still hard at it late tonight. ey : charge of breach of the peace following ) ®T3ting In the bootieg trade ; s WL S W e meqt July 21, oh the request of Mrs ; Montreal and New:York and between ‘Willilam A. Rand, of counsel for Sthi.| New . York, Oct. - 4—Miss TFlorence| wyyo vear-0ld Richard Dérby, Jr., the| GOVEENOE CLOSES THE Nevins who said he handed her his card | ships at sea and Montauk Point and man, contested every step of the pro-|Shirley watched: at the bedside of her ] 1 Rockaway, L. L. Prohibition Director Day first and favorite grandchild of Theodore SNTING SEASON IN MAINE |2Rd invited her to ride in his automobile eeedings before Justice Morschauser to-|mother until she dled yesterday -morn- | Roogevelt, who died last Monday in a Hparino e ting {00 the evening of July 13. She, said,of New York today lnlormed' Commis- L ‘ling, then .arranged for burlal services, | septic poisoning,| August, Ms., Oct. 4.—3fain NG | he ' drove off when she showed. her police | sloner Haymes during a conference on gl ’il‘,i'i“”_"'_ and: Jess than an hour afterward walked w:: 15:“:9“::::‘;1, .°§.,.,.,’f um season which opened Monday came to an lyo4ge. He was fned in city court Aug- | brohibition enforcement in New York. : OBITUARY onto the stage of the Morosco theatr?|cemetery, Oyster Bay, N. Y., near the|«brupt close today: when Governor Per-|ys Director Day said it had been asoer- R Fe Rt Fhs Shokitias and delighted a matinee audience by her € ltustrious grandfather. cival P. Baxter - issued 2 proclamation | The hearing today was devoted to es-|tained that the landplanes were trans- light-hearted interpretation’ of the role tombothin g o 3 suspending the open season for hunting,|tablishing an alibi for ,O'Conmell, who|porting large cargoes of whiskey and Wheeling, W. Va, Oct. 4. —Right Bev.|of the frivolous profiigate wife in the| The ‘democratic probate convention held |and prohibiting the carrying of firearms | said he was in a fire-house at the time | other liquors from Monteral to New York Patrick James Donahue, bishop of the|comedy, “Why Men Leave Home.” |in Winsted yesterdny, endarsed the can-|in the woods. This.action was taken be-|he was alleged to have been talking to|city. and that in case of contact with Roman Catholic diocese of Whéeling, It ‘was learned today that Miss Shir-|didacy of Judge Frank W. Seymour, the|cause of a serious outbreak of forest|Mre. Nevins, Mrs. Nevins became in-| prohibition enforcement officials the trap since 1894, died here tonight after a ling- | ley refused to allow an understudy ‘to|presént incumbent for judge of te pro-|fires, and the ban on hunting will be hft- | volved-in the inticacles of m:d bottoms are sprung and the cargoes dis- ering, {llness.- Ho .was born in Bngland | takeé her role and played through boti|bate. court in. this district.. Judge Sey- it, was ~ announced should heavy |daylight saving time and so ed? appear. He estimated th: in 1843 and cams to America In 1873. ! matinee and evening performances, . |mour is the regular republican nominee, § rains drench out the fires. the alibl. e s bootleg planes - & R

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