Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 7, 1922, Page 1

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- OVERGENT O TOAYS < VOL. LXIV—NO. ‘270 I New York- State: Sized Pluralities—Neutsal Observers Look for Close Contest—Both Partics Express Belief of Spccess in York, Nov. 6.—Close comtedts tonight in several of the sen- aforial, congressional and staté elections i8 $astern states tomorrow, notwithstand. ifg confident claims of yictory. in hoth the republichn and democratic campa. the sénatorial/fights, interest e New ; York, land. Nbw Hampshire does not hold a sena- and Maine had its on the lively .campaigns Missashusetts, New Jersey, ieut, Rhodo Island and. Ma! 18#1&) election this 3 eléetlon it by | last Seplember. The Aight in the Bay State has attract e wieapread. ifteréat because the vet efin_Semator Hemry- Cabot Lodge, républican senate ‘leader, s @ candidat for re-slection. *His democratic opppon oft is Willlam A. Gaston, a Boston bank- ‘&\a ¢ontest in New Jersey, where Sen. ? 8, Frelinghuysen is a can for. re-eleetion against Governor 1. Edwards, hak been enlivemed Bééaase of {hé wel and dry issue, the ? favoring the wets. or Willlam M. CaMer of i H § 1 8. New York, with isgue. has re-election with Thomas. J. Island Senator P. G. Gerry, 3 : LF George P. McLean, e t . Bruce in\s vigofous ia will elect twy ‘republican B E candidates, for re-e is_filling the ‘unexpired Penrose ‘and ‘Mr. expired gubernatorial and interest. Ja the Epire state, Nathan L. Miller, Tepublican, fiEdhd | i ing {65000 in Philadelphia. confl- plorali- minierally - agreed ihe result for (M8 two most Hmpor cofitests+United States senator gévernor—would be. close. "Both sides - dgreed_ Uiat _the ‘republl- | cpns would carry yp-state countles, with few exceptions, and- both the republicans predicted .that U. -8. Senstor Willlam M. Cafder and Gov- erfor Nathan L. Miller- would - come down o the metropolis with a plur: ity of 340,000, but he would not- al 1émpt to estimate the vote in this city. W0 years ago: ex-Governor Al p of - néarly 320,000. R The democratic managers claim tha Mr. Smith will sweep the city by, a greater plurality than in 1920, some of e official predietions running .as “high s, 500,000, The democrats also claim gt they will cut into' the republican majority| up-state, a claim that is Vig: orsusly The democratic clats for Dr. Royal S. “ogeland’ for United States senator ‘are w6t §o emphatjc, as in the' cage for gov- o#héf, merely’ that he would be olect- ¥, Casidy. the sogi r hia poaaking taivpaion, to. th4 addressing a rally’ at Comey tonight. ' Socialist Icaders - pre- alist and last. that their candidate wocld re- _pétween 300,000 and 400,000 votes. / eléctrical R filpuu‘l candidato /for state , Will run well ahead of his . Bteinméts, ** the pigty lesders predicted. * MASSACHUSETTS. " Nov. 6.—At ldst minute ral- F. Fitagerald, demo- for governor, the New been through a spirited campalgn Copeland, health commis- the tariff’ as ‘ngaged in a strenuous it Spellacy, ) campaign. senatars, cumbents, Pefiper and David A. Mr, ot Reed is term of the late campaigns—New Ivania—have attracted o for' re-election, his oppon- rlant {States -senator- and ‘the- state -ticket to- agreed thie: New York ciiy! would go , demo- State Chairman George K. Morris of ed “E. | senator, Smih, who is rumning again agafst the sovergor. carried the city by & phirality disputed “by * the republicans. Bulletin STS OF RESILTS Confidence of Victory by Good| Maryland. : ‘ success in the voting in this state to- morrow. Many of the contradictgry forecasts dealt with the hotly contest- ed campaign in the \first congressional district for a successor to Congressman Burroughs, republican. VEREMONT. Montghlier, Vt, Nov. 6.—Vermont re- publican leaders awaited tonight _ with equanimity the outcome of the polling tomorrow. intimating that their only in- terest lay, in the size of their majorities n a state which always has gone re- publican, - The democrats = maintained that they had a chance of elegting pne congreseman, e e 7 OHIO. Columbus, Ohio, Nov. 6.—As Ohio to- night saw the close of ome of the most strenuous political campaigns In Years, both major parties -were claiming com- plete success for their tickets by large majorities. Democratic headquarters predicted that Senator Atice Pomcrene, seeking re-election, would lead the’tick- et with one of the largest majorities ever. given a_candidate for that office, and that A. V. Danahey would be elect- ed governor by only a slightly smaller majority. - i Ripublican headquarters authorized the statement that Congressman D. Fess would defeat Senator Vomerene by more than 126,000 voi3é and that Carmie A. Thompson, candidate for governor, and the entire republican ticket would be elected as-an endorsement -of President Harding and the present state adminis- tration, . * Sgeretary of State Smith tonight es- timated tomorrow’s jJote at 1,600,000 compared with more “than 2,000,000 two years ago. * . . PENNSYLVANIA. Philadlephia, Nov. 6—Widely diver- gent claims of vidtory* in tomorrow’s election were adhered to today by re- publican and democratic managers of candidates in Pennsylvania. W. Harry Baker, .republican Hate chairman, said he_expected a_plurality_df 300,000 for | Gifford Pinehot, -gubernatorial candidate and ‘about the-same vote for the rest of the .ticket. » ¥ A.'E. McCulloigh, democratic state chairman, stuck to hif claim that the interior of Pennsylvania vt cast a vote for: John A. - MgSparran large enough, to dvercome the: majority . Pin- ¢hot will- reseive m ‘Philadelphia. Chair- "I man Lank of' the democratig city com- mittee concéded Pinchol a majority of ! Chairgnan Wat- son, of -the republican city committee, e Qut estimate of a 195,000 ‘ma- ity in Philadelphia for” Pinchot. 1 DELAWAEE. ‘Wilinington, Del., Nov. 6.—Final sur- veys . of the .probable &utcome -of tomor- row's election in Delaware for United ¥ | ddy led republican and democratic lead- ers to make .confient claims- of victory. No-formal figures’ were given out by either side:” -It’ i3~ generaily = expected that the vote will be a close one. ‘s .7 " MICHIGAN. Detroit>Mieh., Nov. 6. Predictions of fair “wedthen; for. tomorrow led - political ‘observers throughout Michigan, today to estimate that approximately - 709,000 votes _would. ,Be _ cast :on_ tomorrow's itate-wide election. The most ‘import- .|ant contest s that for United: States in which Senator Charles E. Townsend, republican, is opposed = by fofméF Governof- Woodbridge® N. Ferris, emocrat.. Governor Alex J. Groesbeck, republican, has as his opponent Alva M. Cummins, of £ e |~ The voters also will decids tomorrow 'whether t6 amuthorize “thie ‘stato -legisiat ture to pass state income tax legisi k "X ILLINOIS. Chicago, Nov. 6.—Blection eve indica- tions in. Illinels tonight are [Ahat an ay- erage off year Voté will be cast tomor- fow. -In-the state 4s a whole, with state treasurer the Siighest office fo be elected, enthusiasm Nas been noticeably absent. Republican leaders .are Watching: the congressional battle in the Bighteenth distriet, v‘bf;'-:flfllm P. Holaday of G:ar-flfl party nominee to: suce o “Uncle” Joe” Cannon, who is !‘etlr-{ ing u.ur forty years of service. Mr. Holaddy, woh won the nomipation. by 17, e opposed by Andrew B. Dennis,. democrat, Vi 1 EENIUCKY. } ¥ . Louisville, Ky., Nov. §.—An appeal to the white women of Kentueky. to cast their ballots in - the elections tomorrow today by Mrs. Herbert Otten- heim of Loulsville, president of the Ken- tucky League of Women Voters. | “Let mot the election tomorrow 'be a confirmation of the argumert proffered by those southern who said .at time of the passage of the mingteenth amendment that ‘the nesro women.would |- the | all vote and the white wemen of southt wourd decline to accept this respon- 5 e appenl igaid. . . ptg:qutw‘ and & judge of the court of ap= 5 ‘wiscoNsry. . - . Mitwaukee, Wis..' Nov. § (By the A. P.).—The .re-electioni.of U. §. Robert M. Lafollette; following his b*: Ay election, as well e republican. con- # (Continied on’Page Nine, No. Four) - STAY-GRANTED IN CASE v OF_ MES.. MABEL; CHAMPIQN- 1 £ C 8 —Mrs. el Champion, {22, — years in the M last week, - following - iry manslaughter, jn - connection appeals iy i permit to prepare and file a argue his plea for | te ‘Gourt. No_ astizite-tim Limit fixed - in mu.vm ‘expected the case v. ‘command - sentenced . to . twenty{ment. He,described-the. idea.: atysville- “reformatory |elliance as -wholly..fantastic. er,. conviction. by . = of execution | CABLED PARAGH..f5 | Allies Eejoct Turkish Demsuds. Constantinople, Nov. 6 By the A. P.) —The allieds commissioners _ refuse to discuss the demapd-of the Angora gov- ernment that onfy one warship at a time enter Turkish ports and’ then only 'Txm the consent of the Turkish:author- ities: : ! The pelis .will open inall districts this morning at 6 o'slock asd close at 5 o'clock. Ry 53 AME :;g Washington, Nov. 6.—(By The A."P.) —Applications for, the” declaration by \President Harding of American valuation as the basis for assessing import duties are beginning to reach the tariff com- mission. The pumber thus far reached 4s five and all' deal, with, chemiicals other than dyes. The requests’ will be subjected to'a preliminary inquiry befcre' therc is a de- cision a5 to-a formal investigation, it was stated today-at the commision’s of- fices. In any even American valuation could not be invoketl under the provisions of the - Fordney-McCumber act until it had been demonstrated that z2n. increaso of as miuch as 50sper cent' in the duties fixed by congress was imeffectual in pro- tecting the domestic industry. Including the Amcrican valuation re- quests the commission to date has re- ceived 52 applications far changes in,im- port rates. Of these, 29 deal with pro- poscd decreases and 23 with proposed inereases. Most. of the applications deal with chemical and agricuitural products and have come from both producers and importers. From the public viewpoint, however, the_artifles that would be af- feted are relatively unimportant. Thus far there has been mo request for a change in any of the rates which furnished the big storm centers in cony gress, such as those on wool and sugar. Also it is stated that no big corpora: tion has come forwara seeking relief nor has there been any indication of any movement of groups or blocks for gem- eral rate adjustments. N VALUATION ED FOR DUTIES ON DYES SUGGESTIONS CONCEENING ALLIED WAR DEBT TQ U. 8. Washington, Nov, 6.—Suggestions for settling the questions of the allled war time indebtedness to the . United. States have been pouring into the treasury since President Harding recently expressed a willingness to award a prize for any practical concrete suggestign for its col- lection. The . president, it was. explain- ed at thé White House at the. time, cofisidered. ipteresting suggestions, by numerous individuals that the 'debt should be collected but he had foynd 2 unanimoys disinclination to make _con- crete proposals as to how collection was to_be accepted. . Evidently, it was said by high officials | at’ the treasury today, many persons had taken the reported offer of a prize by the president ligerally and, daily sugges- tions as to how the various foreign debts might be . liqdidated are . reaching the treasury. Ome man wrote that he had'a plan but wished to know more goncerning the peize before he made known its de- tails. % However, nofie of “the debt lquidation. suggestions otz ‘nature for the of the- probleft. S BILL FOR REGULATION OF & MARRIAGE AND DIVOI(_JE ‘Washington, *Nov. §.—Préparations of a bill , establish¥.g - national . marriage ana divorce regulations for iptroduction in the next.congress.was-announced tod: by the gemeral federation of women's clubs which has authorized Mrs. Edward Franklin. White, -deputy, attoraey general of ‘Indiana, to draft the bill and'a reso- lution amending the - constitution of the United States if such' a course is neces- sary- to make possible -a federal martial Provisions b the Wil would make mar- only ve gfiroufids, enimierated a5 follows: | Infidelity, incurable - insanity, abandon- ment. for one year, cruel and inhuman treatment, jor conviction df an infamous crime, Orice- granted, such a ~ divorce Would be valid fn cvery.state, “hut nejtiter Temarry until onc vear after the inter- jocutory “decree was granted. *The_bill- would Provide also that 'applications far. marriagy licenses be posted two ‘wecks priof to 'the- ceremony. ol {:my, 10 a @ivorce would be. permited. ta GOV'T EXPENSES $500,000,000 LESS THAN LAST YEAE Evanston, Tlis, Nov. 6.—Government expenditures fduring the’: present fiscal year will ‘be 450,000,000 less than last Yyears, Assistant - Secretary @lifford of the treasusy declared tonight in an a dress here, ot 70 For this fiscal year, 1923, he safd, we expect to Tun the .government off less ‘than -33,500,000° a Teduction of $2,- 000,000 from the cost of government in 1921, and nearly. §500,000,800 less than in the last fiscal year. ; “It is,going to be hard to make furth: er_reductions owing to the fact that the t of the public debt and sinking tund, relief of veterans of -the' World war, and pensions for _vetsrans of the Civil war total almost one and three- quarter billions a year; that is fitty per cent, of our taxes for the present year 0 to pay for these things alone.” TR ST S BEITISH CABINET TO CONSIST OF 16 MEMBEES London, Nov. & (By the' A, P.)_Pre.| miet ,Bonar Law today announced the. appointment of the remaining minor of- ficigls in, his government. ~He has dc- cided. that his” cabinet, including, him- selt, sball consist of -sixteen members. This will'be the smallest cabinetaof ro- cent . years, exoept war . cabinet, which was king’ o W otexu.-r cabinet, ‘The - cabinet “incliides- the minister-of labor, which is-a plain intimation that there .18 no_ intention ‘to abolish-the la- tween | the Asquithian” liberals and tms| conservatives..in - the . eyent .the . conser-, vatives fajl to secure enoych seats to “majFity in (L% new.parlia- of ‘such an IS8 MARY MACSWINEY. ON - HUNGER STRIKE IN PRISON Dublin, . Nov. Bx (By the A P)—A bulletim issued by the republicans stafes it Miss. Maty. hlgyfl-flmy, who was| arrested” by the Fre State military Saturday, has béen' } ‘since’‘shie ‘was, taken-into A letter said ut, it they do, 2y be as brave as ‘before. me ” - sists )t the » lord mayor ‘uf to high Mflu‘mu} so far reulv-‘i\/hnvo‘.oflmfl.infi(ngl/ ? NORWICH, CONN., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1922 10 PAGES—76 COLUMNS TRICE TWO CENTS Morgan . Bulkeley Dead at Agg of 86 {Had Been Sick Three Weeks ~ —Was .Governor 1889-93 —U. S. Senator 1905-11. Hartford, Nov. 6.—Morgan G. Bulkeley, president of the Actna Lifc Ipsurance Company since 1879, mavor of. Hartford from 1880 to 1888, governor of Connecti- cut.from 1889 to 1893 and U. S. scnator from 1905 to 1911, died at his home here tonight, after-an illness of three weeks. He was bor in Bast Haddam, December 26, 1837, Morgan G. Bulkeley was formerly Unit- ed States senator, governor of Connecti- cut for four years and. since 1879, pres- ident of the Aetna Life Insurance Com- pany. His passing recalls the famous legislative deadlock of 1591 when he forced his way into the executive cham- ber at Hartford with a crowbar. The term of office (o which- Mr. Bulke- ley "had been clected as governor ex- pired in January, 1891. Under the state constitution as it stood at that time, a majority of all the votes cast was nec- essary to elect a governor and, where there was no such majarity, the eléction fell to the general assembly. There was a_dispute as to the legality of rejecting about 1,300 so-called “specked” ballots case i 1890 which had lLeen thrown out by the counters at the polls. Luzon B. Morris, the democratic candidate for governor, had about 4,000 mode than Samuel E. Merwin, republican, but, it theso rejected ' votes were included in the (otal, he would still lack a’ majority. The republican house insisted on can- vassing the vote and the democratic sen- ate refused, so that it was Impossible to declare any one governor. Governor Bulkeley “held the fort” for two years after his own term had expired but ‘the democratic senate refused to recognize his authority, state appropria- tions were held up, Governor. Hill of New. York declined to honor Bulkéley's requisi- tions fer the extradition of criminals and there were other complications but Bulke- | MORGAN/G: BULKEL Jey:did not'weaken and he seryed until the year follewing the Cleveland land- slide -in* 1892. The deadlock episode 16d ) nal amendment . that pro- n_of state officers by a plugality . of “ the * votes. < Born |in Bast Haddam, Conn., Dec. 126, . 1837, ‘young ' Bufkeley left: school at an early age and-became an errand boy in' Brooklyn, N. Y., later; becoming a member-of the firm by which he was employed. * -, : When the ‘Civil war started he enlist- ed-in the-13th New.York Volunteers and scrved under General McClellan. Rg- turning ‘to Hartford in 1872, ‘upon the death of his father who had been one of the directofs of the Actna, he was, chosen *five ‘vears:later head of the in- surance company and subsequently of its two affiliated concerns. He also organ-| ized- the United States Bank of Connee- ticut and became a director in several other. Hartford institu In 1876 Mr. Bulkeley took an active pert in baseball and was the first pres- ident of the National League. For more than 30 years he was an official of the National Trotting _asociation. Yale conferred upop him the degree of Master of “ATts in 1889 and in 1917 Trinify col- lege honored him with the dtnb ot L L D._ In 1860 Mr. Bulkeley' was . elected mayor of Hartford and gave his salary to the city’s poor fund. He was. chosen govenor in 1885 and served in the TUnited States senate from 1385 to 1911. He was a_member of the Society of the Cincinnati. Sons of -the American Revo- lution, Society of Foreign Wars, Soelety of Mayfloyer Descendanis, Society of Co- lonial Wars, /Society of. the War of 1812, the G. A. R., and Loyal Legion. . Mr. Bulkeley ‘married Miss Fannie Briggs ,Boughton of “San Franciseo in 11885. They had three children, Morgan G, Bulkeley,» Jr., Houghton Bulkeley und Ars. John Avery Tngersoll. . JOSEPH KOWALSKI SENTENCED % © _TO ATLANTA PENITENTIARY New York, Noy. 6.—Joseph Kowalski, alleged radical and secret agent of the soviet. spy system “Cheka” today w: convicted by.a jury on charges of gain- ing: false ‘entry to {his country, after he had been deported in :March, 1921. On the jury’s recomtendation of clem- ency, Federal Judge Mack sentenced Ko- walski to a year and a day.in ‘Atlanta itentiary. = The- defe endany” first ‘was. adjiidged an undesirable -When, . after operating -under the names of “Ullman”. and_“Stefano grers of the min i, 's standing in the o saviet was Tevealed by Bmmett Kil- n | American: soldier.- -who, ),34 ‘| Conspienous were. two Roman’ Many Fatalities in “Explosion in Mine Of 94 Miners in the Mine 55 Are Missing—25 Probably Have -Been Killed. Spangler, Pa., Nov. 6—(By The A. P.)—Fifty-five of the 94 miners who went down into the Reilly mine of the Reilly Coal company here’ this morning, a fe minutes before the workings were torn by an explosion, were unaceounted for, when the rescue crews came up the shaft at 6 o'clock tonight. Twenty-five they said had probably been -killed and fourteen had been taken to a hospital badly hurt. Hope that some of the missing men were still alive was reflected in reports which came to the surface that a brat- tice, built of old timbers by ‘the miners after the explosion cut off a part of No. 8 heading to the left of the main entry. - “Look behind this wall,” had ‘been burned in a smootn place on a timber by an acetylene lamp. But no attempt was made to tear down the brattice, for the main entries were filled with gas. and United States Bureau of mine epgineers feared that such a course would send the deadly where the men aircady eakened by hours of anxiety and unprotected by oxy- gen helmets were hidden. . ‘They hoped in- a short time to have the entries cleared of gas when they said the brattice would be deuH!hed.’ They detegmined upon this course after one of their canary birds, taken with | them from Pittsburgh, had died in the; foul air. i At another point In the mine a heavy fall ‘of slate from the roof had com pletely clogi the entry. Back of it rescuers declared, they could hear voices, andthey attacked it vigorously in the hope of finding some of the entombed men alive, although they received no answer to Tepeated calls. Rescue forces were made up of skill; ed miners from Spangler and vicinity in charge” of engineers from the U. S: Bureau of Mines and the mine rescue crew of the Cambria Steel company which arrived here early - this afternoon. They worked unceasingly in short relays, brat- “cing the: workings so-as to control the <4as and admit the pure air from above. They gave %10° intimation as to when the work would be completed but each relay, as it came to the surface, said they were making progress near the bot- tom. Other. volunteers gathered the dead and injured” which, were scattered in the workings not far from the foot of the shaft. The dead were piaced In . sub- terranean room and the Injupéd, swathed in blankets, were- taken to lthe surface. There a first aid station had been es-| tablished. The crowd which assembled almost immediately after the explosion, contin- ugd to grow until nightfall when almost the entire 'population of Spangler and surfounding willages had assembled there. The drizzling rain- which fell dur- ing the day, had no effect upon’ the crowd which included the wives . and chifldren of many of the entombed miners, Some of them wept almost day long, but others stood in-stolid silence closely watching the -edge every time it came up ‘the. shaft ‘and occasionally _thinking. they recognized the outlines of a fa- maliar form. They were sa far away however, and the bodies weye 8o carefully covered - that recognitionf was impossi- ble. But it gave rise to the lelief, among the people, that all, of the closely, wrap- ped forms were bodies, of e dead. Mingling in the crowd were the min- isters from all .the chyrches of Spang- ler and a number from ncarby towns. Catho priests, Father James Pauling and Fath- er J.-D. Cochran, who -wearing raincdats and.. rubber , boots, over their clothing sought to comfort the weeping wo- men. .They were among the first to reach the mine after the explosion, and in a short " time’ were taken' down ' the: shaft to give absolution to five men-near the bottom. 5 o ‘Max® Whelen, a cager, was- working with his couples, a lad named Cavendish, at’ the wottoni of the shaft, when .the explosion’ occurred. Seizing the . boy, | Whalen put 1)1 on his back and started hand-over-hand on a water pipe for the surface. When almost half way up some one- at the top started the’ cage from the: bottom-and waiting his oppor- tunity, Whalen jumped to the top of the cage and rode with the boy to safety J. 3. Bourquin, in charge of the bu- reau o mines forces, took over the rescue work upon his_ arrival here. this afternoon. . The fan_house, which had been wrecked by the explosion,: was quickly repaired and the fans starfed to clear the workings of black damp. Mules were #ent down on the cage to assist in the distribution of quantities of Jumbér used in the building of brat- ‘tices. - FoR N Many of the rescuers suffered from gas and numbers of them were brought to the surface, where, after receiving first aid, they insisted on returning. to the worl kings. 3 Three of the Cambria Steel/company’s crew were among those most seriously affected, “but H. W. . in command of the Cambria car, said that all would Spangler les it the Allegheny/ Mgun. es gqun- tatns In Cambria county, some 20 miles morth of Johnstown, and is the ‘center of an important bituminous coal producing ‘@istrict. The Reilly mine was closed down last summer by the strike, but resumed ‘early in - September. Normally it employes 150 men, but Monday is usnally the miners term a siow. day. -There. are many American-born miners in the working force, numbers of whom:, were: caught - in - the - B SOKER -HAD® LIABILITIES - -, : OF $125,850 WITH $500 ASSET! poison to [ BRIEF TELEGRAMS Scveral persoms arc reporied dead injured in consequence of an explosion board the American steamer Mexico Tampico Saturday. The New York cotton exchange suspend business for two minutes at o'clock pext Saturday, in celebration Armistice day. The landing of allied or American sail- ors from the warships in_ Constantinople will_not be permitted_unless by_special permission of the Angora goyernment. For the first time. since.-its organiza- tion in 1319, the World League Against Alcoholism wilt meet in conventivn in Toronto, November 2¢ 10 329. Charles Beers, former selectman in Newtown, and a well known farmer ‘n this district, died at his home here yes- terday in his 80th year. He leaves his widow. - Kit Meeown, a prominent republican leader, was shot dead Monday while he, with others, was attacking the new civic guard at Moate, near Athlone, County Westmeath, Ireland. The Atlantic’ and Pacific . flects . will combine “for joint battle maneuvres im| the Pacific next February, Admiral R.| BE. Coontz, chief of naval operations an- nounced/ An sllied extgpordinary council at Constantinople decided to refuse cat gorically the nationalist demand for the | allied military evacuation of Constan- tinople. On Armistice November 11, & he- roic statue of General Pershing, picturing him as if watching troops in battle, wiil be unveiled in the Golden Gate Park, in San Francisco. A special meeting of directors of ‘tho, Stewart Warner Speedometer Corpora- tion has been called for November in Chicago, to consider declariig an ex tra cash dividend. Vice President Coolidge, arriving Northampton, - Mass.,, late yesterday, from his western speaking tour, Rpredict-( ed a possible increased republican ma- | jority in the senate as a result of to-| day's voting. A writ of attachment for $1,000 is fa- vor of A:W. Clauder, a Bridgeport cus-| tomer, was made by Deputy .Sherilt] Kiernan, upon the brokerage- office managed by James H. Havens, -for a, New . York concern, A warrant charging James H. Ha-| vens, stock broker in Bridgeport, with embezzlement, was issued by -Prosecut- ing -Attorney Vincent L. Keating on the complaint of Attorney George F. Mara, ! representing a number of Havens' cred- itors. Earle B. Malone, a saller who been attached to the U. S. S. Chewink, at the Portsmouth, N. H., navy yard was thrown from -a motorcycle while, coasting . down & hill in the suburbs of New Haven, and died at the hospital two hours later from his injuries. A Paris dispaich. says:. Thieves en- tered the sacristy of Rheims cathedral some time Saturday and stole Cardinal Lucon’s priceless gold chalice. The edp_ is richly engraved and set with pearls. Developments in the seizuré by the police -of a ‘quor-laden truck in West- port early Sunday,/have been of such a character as to ‘stfengiten a belief that it the first-place ‘the truck was held up by, six armed ‘men while it was passing through ' Norwalk at s a. m. | Alsin Owsley,” mational commander of the Amerfcan . Legion, yesterday in- dorsed - thé call of the American Red Cross, for new.members and urged all members of the leégion to aid in making the annual membership roll-call of the ol"s‘n(ution a’ success. 5 3 Bix persons were killed and ‘more than thirty injured, seven' seriously, per- sons-are homeless, and more ‘than -§500,- 000 worth ‘of property- was dest: €d in the tornado which -struck the -oil- field, southeast of ‘Drumright, Okla.,: Saturday evening. > g b ok A woman was“arrested Sundsy in the poultry ‘market .in Budapest.while trying to.sell her six months: old baby. Ev déntly in-the- deepest.of despalr, she, of- fered the child on her arm for the price of a goose,” 3 “Theodore Reosevelt, Roughrifler,” 1s the inscription on a heroic cquestrian statue of the former president, to be un- veiled in‘ Portland,« Ore,, Armistice day with ceremonies in which many thousands {the mails asking voters to w {P. McLean, New Haven, Nov. 6.—Two incidents in the wind-up of the campaign in Con- necticut today were the discovery of ir- Tegularity in the arrangement of names in the voting and the “warning” of J. Henr back, chairman of the republican stat central commuttee, against “elevent™ hour propasanda Mr. Rorabacl ued a statemeat which he divected ttention to let a name of United States Senator Geors republican, and that of George Carey of Cheshire. Roraback said these letters bore names of clergymen and others, some whom had already repudiated (F ratures. r. Carey is not aie on any ticket and the placi name in nominat¥§n agamnst McLean has complicated the situation. The discovery that name ing machines in Br.dgepc the order required by caused a flurry in that city General' Frank E. Healy, howe that while the present arrangement names was in violation of the law, doubted whether any court would in- validate the election because of it. The r. th Senator political in the were n statute law Attorney. vo REPUBLICANS ARE WARNED OF POLITICAL TRICKERY Chairman Roraback Announces That Parties Working to De- feat Senator McLean Are Asking Voters to Substitute * the Name of George Carcy—Such Action is Deliberate Deception, as Mr. Carey is Not a Candidate on Any Tick- et—Roraback Predicts Republican Victory by 50,000, Votes—Spellacy a Democratic Victory, by 17,0 % 0 Bridgeport ¢ candidate substitute | | statutes. | BOTH PARTIES Co or FIDENT #CTORY IN CONNECTICUT | New Haven, Nov. 6 lana_demoe: of the lof victory with the jngsuccess by a ponen :n of the repubi tee, predicted 50,000 pe democratic ¢ :»d States senator, pred victory by 17,000. Eoth re fina: ublicans tages vor Thomas J. date for Unit- ted a democratie FORMER KAISER AND BRIDE WALKING AEM IN ARM Doorn, Holland, Nov. 6 (By the A P.)—William Hohenzollern's walks, sol- itary no longer, were continued around the castle grounds today. With his new wife, arm in arm, he visited the rose pavillon. where he not &is proposal of marriage. Soon the dal couple retirea indoors, as it ramed heavily. and later ham saw his sis- ter-in-law, Princess Ida of Stolberg, to Amersfoort station, w ‘rederick William, the erstwhile crown prince, took his new mother—whom, however, he does not call mother—for drive. This little Dutch communi ially the feminine section of it, wagging tongues over the disturbanc of the Sabbath calm occasioned by the former emperor's wedding but -at - the same time there is righteous indigna- tion among the women that no chance was afforded them of seeing the bride. Her serene highness” Hermine, as she is designated officially and by her husband, has not yet taken up the reins of the household, but those acquainted -| with her ‘$ay she intends to assume full control frau, immediately as a thrifty haus- |DB. JOHN T. BLACK RESIGNS AS STATE HEALTH COMMISSIONER Hartford, Nov. 6.—Dr. John T. Black, resignation to Governor Lake to take effect November 30. He€ is to take a po- sition ,with the Aectna Life Insurance Company. Governor Lake this afternoom ap- pointed Dr. Stanley S. Osbern, of Hart- ford, to succeed Dr. Black as state commissioner ‘of health, the appoint- ment having the approval of the pu hedlth councll. ,Dr. Osborn was ®pointed epidemiologist in M. 1920, the bureau’ of preventable - diseases the statc department of health to suc cced Dr. T. Eben Recks, of New Brit- ‘an, He is, a graduate of Tufts Medical Colieg# and Harvaml Graduate Schao! and serv “deoverscas as a medical offi- cer during the war. ap- n n OBITUARY. Trof. Robert Louls Sandersos. New Haven, Nov. 6.—Prof. Robert Louls .Sanderson, for twenty-iwo vears in the academic-department of Yale university, and retired two years ago, died in- Duxbury, Mass, today, accord- i to word reaching here. He a of perzons are to participate, ‘More than 100,000 barrels of crus oil in the Smackover field near Eldo- rado, Ark., which escaped from bur: ing stcrage tanks,”are on fire last night and Smackover creek, - which runs through the Section, is & roarinz fur- nacé for several miles. Miss Annio Peck, mountain _eclimber suffrage worker, salled on the Van Dyék from New York for Brasil, to keep a promise made ten years ago. At that time, Miss Peck announced that when suffrage became universal in the U, S. she would plant the suffrage flag on Mount Carbovado, tn Lpexil. i Ward line oficials said yosterday the? still were without news of an explosion aboard their steamer Mexico at Tam= pico, reported Sunday in a despatch from Mexico City. They said the Mex- Ico. arrived” at Vera Saturday and New: York on noted French scholar and a professor of that language in Yale. Prior to eoming here he” was a professor in Harvard uni vésity. Since his retirement Professor Sar- dorson had'made his winter home in Brookline, Mass., and his summer hom¢ xt Duxbury. Me was 61 years of .agZ, wWas born in_Fraice and received his education in- ceuntry. He came o the United States in 1872, and married seven years later. Miss Marianne Gaines of Duxbury. Besides his professorial duties he had written' text and other pozh. His widow, two sons and two! daughters survive. The sons are R. J. Sanderson of Madison, and Lieut. Ger- ald Sanderson, on duty at Ngshville, Tenn., and the daughters are Mizs San- | derson of Brookline, Mass., and Krs. W. L. Cross, Jr., of Scranton, Pa, Brig. Gen. Lucius A. Barbour. Harttord, Conn, Nov. $.—Brigadier General Lucius A. Barbour, promineni long ago made| bri- | state heaith commissioner, has sent his| % 1\RS. GIBSON'S STORY OF HALL- MILLS MURDERS CORROBORATED New Brunswick. P.)—The story told son, woman of considerable e self-styled eye-witness of er of the Rev. E and Mrs. Eleanor tember 14 last, has be y roborated, authorities said tonight It aiso was unofficially reported thal {the grand jury would be asked to re- turn indictments against a woman ani two men. An att has fizured prominently in tigation said that legal preparations aiready were being made to combat the indictment. The corroborating witness of Mrs. Gibson's story that she saw the Tectos and the choir singer slain while she was searching for farm looters on the Phillips homestead, Special _Detective James Mason announced is Mrs A. C. Fraley, who lives near the sceme where the two bodies were found. Sigourney Smith. grave digger, who boards at the Fraley house, , has been questioned by state troopers, and the substance of his testimony is being closely guarded. When approached by newspaper writers. 10 talk-and has repeated {the detectives have wa: discuss the Jouble murd In preparation for prese tire case to the grand ju lities today bezan a gener ng of all persons who have p {been mentioned jn connection with case. mystery, e double ward Wheeler ENTENTE TO RETAIN MILITARY AUTHORITY IN CONSTANTINOPLE A. PY power it e cntente cnt at least tary author- France are 3m Constantinople, Nov. § (By the ~—Though the nationalist vil antinopl does not intend for U to lose its grip on U ity. Great Britain and accord on the point that the urks must live up to the convention drawn up at Mudania, and it is not doubted that th cther interested coun s 1 fall line_with' this policy. There 1s every desire, however, te meet Turkish aspirations within proper limit, and to this cnd the jed come missioners™ today itsucd the ' following statement : “The inter-allied high commissioners are firmly resolved (o observe strict fm- pariality with regard to cvents _whiei concern the internal policy of Turkey, The allied generals will continue to“aps ply .the clauses of the Mudania conven- tion and maintain order and security in allicd ar- ing fo the last communication from Angora concerning the Lausanng conference, the commissioners, while. va- nouncing the wish to interfere Turkish~ policy, express the hope that ' there will be only®one Turkish delegms & tion to the conference. * b | EEITH'S NEW THEATRE THE _ 1 FINEST IN THE WORLD Cleveland, Nov. 6.—Pronounced b ¥ & and dramatic critics who are here |attend the premier performance to the finest in the United States if mot i | the world, Keith's new palace . the mew 22 story Keith office ¥ constructed at a cost of more ‘than $h . 000,000, was formally opened bere fto- night with several hundred | personages and social leaders from | York, Pittsburgh, Cincinnaty, {Indanapolis, Louis ville, Syracuse, » 1 i . Albee, ot Bostom, 1ok the B. F. Keith circalt of-t

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