The evening world. Newspaper, June 4, 1919, Page 2

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Sn a ea eae ae, ' POR OATS MUSE OMAR. Sean Has set 2A ANY ARRESTS ‘MADE SEARCH Peete), 9 "OR pomeroe BOMB PLOTTER: R. with the Federal authori- iin peerveting eet these whe oooh to ® this blight upon Pittsburgh,” he Under, the direction of Director Was scant time for either to ques- tion all the men under arrest. One rh yl ahe fd was taken to De- headquarters and qoeationed brieny. For monthe 4 record bas been kept of all leaders and organisers of ta archists or men of . leant) The agents and “gotoctives oom directly to the men's homes, where of | they fornd them. inefiaertag — jgat have organized a volunteer | bed with his trousers _) poay for “home protection.” plained that he kept the wales ~ Bxtra precautions have been taken | open and feared neighbors would be “wy the police to guard public build- | shocked unless he slept in his clothes, ig ngs ‘and the homes of city officials | Another suspect is a man whom the and wealthy citizens. police have prevented from making Hagar K. Speer, head of the local “office of the Department of Justice, fas irected Secret Service agents work- ang in this city. He consulted Public “°@afety Director Pritchard yesterday "and it was decided to arrest all per- in any way under suspicion. ‘When the bouse was raided assortment ‘of Bolahovikt and 1. Ate was found, The iiter- ited in foreign lan- U.S. DEPORTING REDS AS FAST AS LAW PERMITS Commissioner Caminetti Expel More as Soon as Courts Decide Cases. (Special to ‘The Evening Work.) WASHINGTON, June 4—A large number of deportations have been* ade in recent months by the immi- fration authorities, according to to ee enn WHO SAW aT FORTY BEFORE BOMB E BX Harry L. FORTY-FIVE REDS. -N CLEVELAND UNDER ARREST. Most of Those Ta Taken After. Attack on Mayor’s Home. Are Foreignéts. i CLEVELAND, June 4.—Forty-five men suspected of being implicated in ths dynamiting of the bome of Mayor Davis were arrested by the municipal police here to-day. The WANTS GERMANS TO WORK EXTRA: HOUR A DAY’ GIVE PROCEEDS T0 GOVERNMENT Dr. Dernburg, Finance Minister Figures That ‘This Would Be 7,000,000,000: Marks a Year. BERLIN, June 4 (Associated Press) ry BERNHARD DERNBURG, | the Ministef of Minance, has evolved a plan to raise for the Government 7,000,000,0¢9 marks a@ year by means of a “Government working hour.” Herr Dernburg’s scheme pro- | vides thet each worker in Ger- many shall labor an extra hour each @ay for which the employers * will pay @ proportionate wage pins 1 mark overime. The extra mark PEOPLE'S HOUSE WHERE RADICAL ORGANIZATIONS MEET NEARLY EVERY NIGHT WOMAN ON WINDOW SILL 9 STORIES UP DEFIES RESCUERS (Continued From First Page.) the window if gnybody undertook to | enter her room. A moment later she appeared on the window sill of the bathroom, which. opens on an inside court, and sat with her back to the court The manager of the hotel appealed to Fire Headquarters and Deputy Chief Martin took charge of the effort pons * @o busy were both officers that there m” ~ PRINTER OF RED “CIRCULARS majority of the men were foreigners and #0 far as known only two ever applied for citizenship papers, Chief of Police Smith sali to-day that the | Commissioner Caminetti of the Immi- | sration Bureau, and other Anarchists nd Bolshevists will be deported as | will go to the Government. Dera- burg estimates that there are 21,- 000,000 workers and that the pian will bring in more than 7,000,000,- to save Mrs, Canda. He stationed the | men of Engine Company No. 224 in | the court beneath the window with a life net, and then brofight in Hook IS DISCOVERED IN CHICAGO quickly 4# court decisions are handed / down in the habeas corpus proceed. | ings. “The Immigration Bureau is pro- | ceoding as rapidly as possible under , the circumstances,” said Commis- sioner Caminetti to-day. “Some of © "Radicals Rounded Up There—Dynamite Found - Near Wrecked Auto. a + CHICAGO, June 4.—Federal agents) large automobile was wrens: Seite " know! .| sticks of dynamite and fifty feet o ey ae tig! mre" | fuse were found in a vacant lot within several hundred feet of the! wrecked motor car, No trace of the occupants of the car could be found. | The police declared that the license | tag om the car had been issued to Cornelius T. Shea, former President of the Chicago Teamsters’ Union and Prominent in organized labor circles ten years ago. Shea is being aay by the police. From Daniel Colsin, arrested sev- @ral days ago, it was said that a partial confession had been obtained indicating connection of Chicago radicals with others in the east in a bomb plot of wide ramifications. Colsin, said to be an Italian, speaks seven languages and is a bookkeeper. According to the police he admits being an Anarchist for four years, coming here from New York and @uring his leisure hours aiding in the propaganda work of the extremists with whom he is affiliated, Throughout yesterday and last night the police detaila established Monday night as the result of the Bastern bomb explosions were main- tained at th cngy's oy elty Lage buildings, Sarge. jubs and homes of Government, State _ city officials who have been in the suppres- sion of radical groups. IE FOR TWO WOMEN ; ‘SEN ON STOOP OF NOTT HOME (nnn Frm Ft Pes MONDAY’S BOMBS SET OFF ON ANNIVERSARY OF DAY HERR MOST WAS SENTENCED Singular Coincidence Between Such Dates and the Occasion of Fresh Outrages. NARCHISTS always select the anniversary of some oo- currence directly relating to the claim that they are oppressed ‘by the ruling classes as the oc. casion for one of their demon- strations, and tt has been rather puzzling to figure out what anni- versary they celebrated by the bomb explosions in eight cities last Monday night—the night of with the wholesale mur- ‘The suspect also other literature of the same the curiosity that would have ) attracted by men on such an and also because there was @ imental reason for allowing the friends. of Arbano.agd Car- to make the “demonstration” Judge Nott, examination of the remains ‘William Boehner, the night watch- who was blown to pieces by the brought to light a plece of tubing which was undoubtedly Ole jthe Seattle offenders were. offered | their liberty on pledg ‘| No, 133 Bast 15th Street, searched of future good conduct prior to being brought East, but they ‘did not accept this offer, Latr, during the habeas corpus pro- | ceedings at New York, the offer was repeated, and this time some of them accepted it and were given their lib- erty on thelr own recognizance, Hl “We have a large number of these | persons at Kills Island and I have, called on the authorities there for report on the exact number, with a ‘history of their cases. No action can be taken in some of the cases pend- ing court decisions.” r. Caminetti denied reports that Commissioner Howe had protested againet the deportation of the sisters. He said that Mr. Howe had merely transmitted the records in these cases to Washington and the women had been deported. JOHNSON NOT KNOWN UNDER THAT NAME AT - ‘PEOPLE'S HOUSE’ HERE Secretary Says Man Held in Pitts- burgh Might, Belong to Radical, __, ‘Organizations Meeting There. > aire Sergius Youmshanoff, Secretary of the Executive Committee of the “Sec- ond Russian Al’ Colonial Convention,” which manages the “People's House” at the t t records to-day for a “John Jonnason,” “The nearest we have to such a per- son,” he said, “ie Ivan Ivanoff, which means John Johnson in the Russian language. But he cannot be the man you Mean because he is here now. “It is possible, however, that the Johnson you mentioned was a member of one of the severai radical organiza- tions which meet here. You know we are only one organisation, chiefly oc- cupled with the school that we conduct for Russian immigrants, But we pay the expenses of the school by renting meeting rooms to other organizations, auch as the I. W. W. Johnson might be in that.” ‘The “People’s House” is a large old four-story building where meetings are held on every floor almost every night. The so-called “New xork Soviet” meets there, as does also the Russian Dock Workers’ International Association. It was there that Mollie Steiner, sentenced to fifteen years for violation of the ¢s- pionage act, was arrested in the specs tacular raid on the night of March 12, when sixty-four were solzed. ‘The place hes been known and watched a» the headquarters of revotu- onary Bolshevism, the souree of radi- cal Mterature. The secretary volun- teered the opinion that the recent bomb i June 2. It was discovered to-day _ that om June 2, 1886, Herr John Most, the leading Anarchist of New York at that time, was sen- which ‘night in order to study the effects of the explosions and look over such clues as the authorities have col- lected. Detectives from Washington, Boston and Philadelphia are in New. York on a similar mission, PLOT MAY HAVE BEEN HATCHED IN PHILADELPHIA, A secret meeting of radicals from many parts of the country was held at Philadelphia om May 24, accord- img to information obtained by Post- Office Department offitials, who say there is evidencé that the nation- ‘Wide terrorist conspiracy was hatched at that meeting. “Important arrests could be made mow,” said one of the investigating officials, “but a more thorough job ean be done by waiting for some time.” ‘There was no intimation that ar- rests would be made in connection with the Philadelphia meeting with- im @ fixed period, It might be o matter of hours or days or even weeks, it was said. “The men who attended the Phila- tenced to serve two years in Prison and pay a fine of $1,500 for incendiary remarks made at a meeting of Anarchists held in April of that year, Most was sentenced by Re- corder Smyth. Two other Anarch- ists, Brangwen and Shuoh, were sentenced to serve six months at the same time. The explosions on June 2 marked the thirty-third anniversary of the punishment of Herr Most, who died several years ago, His co-worker, Emma Gold- man, is now serving a term in the Missouri State Prison at Jeffers son City. BITTER POLITICAL ROW IN ENGLAND OVER WAR Asquith's Criticism of Lord French Brings Demand for Full Inquiry. who “hoped to get more drastic legisia- {Hon against us in the hope of retaining the Kepionage Law. We believe in the Government, but not in bomb- eet are decorated with pictures ft Lenine and Trotaky. WHEN HANSON'S AWAY SEATTLE REDS PLAY; FEAST SEDITIONISTS Acting Mayor at Banquet to Pair Bound for Prison—Union Banner Hides Flag. SEATTLE, June 4. OUNCILMAN W. D, LANE, Acting Mayor during Mayor Ole Hanson’e* recent ab- sence in the East, and 300 men and women prominent in labor circles attended a banquet last night in honor of Hulet M. Wells and Sam Sadler on the eve of their departure for the Federal Penitentiary to serve a two-year sentence for sedition, Pepers to-day Prominence to the latest bomb plot in Federal authority, and in no connected with the labor movement, States Govérnmepp may be led to act News. step toward consolidating the de- structive forces throughout the North American continent.” back for labor from the excesses of the anarchists. rages in the eastern part of United States Ukely to be connected with the west- ern I. W. @ hard problem in rooting out the peril to the lives of American citi- zens,” the Telegraph said, “but stamp- they can handle even greater diffi- culties effectively when roused.” i) ficials is an incident in the general Bolshevik movement,” the Graphic. It the ceeded in capturing bery to advance their cause, What is happening in the United States and Canada should enable the most slug- gieh Englishman to understand the grave peril threatening the civilized MRS. J. &. MUCKENSTUERM, LABOR FROM ANY PART IN BOMB PLOT HERE U. S, Proved Ability to Handle: Outbreak by Stamping Out Ger- man Intrigue, Says Telegraph. | LONDON, June 4.—London news gave = considerable he United States. They pointed out hat it was a@ terrorist attack against way “The danger in that the United TET that all protests Coline i that all agitation is ates to the red terror,” said the "To do this would be a long The Telegraph similarly sees a set- It deems the out- the significant and not W.'s. “The United States authorities have ng out the German war plots proves “The bombing of United Btates of- according to “It has its counterpart n the spirit of anarchy in Canada, British Soctalists had suc- the police, as they hoped, they would not have hesitated to employ murder and rob- world.” BOSTON JUDGE ORDERS ELEVEN ANARCHISTS HELD IN HIS STATE DEPORTED ‘Bomb Exploded in Roxbury District ” Believed Sent From Buffalo, BOSTON, June 4—Judge Aldrich of the United States District Court here to-day ordered that ¢leven anarchists recently apprehended in this State be deported. The men to be deported admit they are anarchists, it was stated, but declared they did not advocate violence. Judge Aldirch declared that the fact that the men are anarchists was suf: ficient reason for deportation. The circulars entitled “Plain Words,” found scattered about the houses wrecked by dynamiters Mon- day night, were printed in according to an announ vent to-day by the police who asserted thet they had the printing plant under sur- velllance. The bomb which damaged the house ot Municipal Judge Albert F. Haydea |quarters to-day to endeavor to iden- police dragnet bad been flung. to the four corners of the olty and nothing to rid the city of the Red peril would be left undone. | Chief Smith has learned that two) Prominent Il. W. W. agitators arrived | in Cleveland In the last forty. eight | hours, having left Philadelphia after! spending several days in that city. Every Federal and municipal opera- tive In Cleveland is searobing for them. i The local Authorities raided a ren- dezvous of the radicals last night and much inflammatory literature and) several pictures of prominent Russjan| revolt. will be Berlin with the Chan- cellor’s office and the Foreign Office as the chief points of attack. cautionary plans for protecting these buildings already have been lald. Reds. An automobile motor was found bye in the place and was seized. @ men arrested said that they were ieaseue at an automobile school and at the motor was part of the para- | phernalia of the institution. It became known to-day that Mayor, Davis had received more than a score { of threatening letters since the May Day outbreaks. Mayor Davis and Mra. Davis called at Police Head- at tity some of the prisoners taken in the raids. Two men had been seen skulking @bout the Davis home be- fore the explosion. YOUNGEST CHILD WITNESS Would Punish Her” if She Told Untruth. The youngest star witness that ever at in a chair before judge and jury in the Supreme Court is Marion Collins, | aged ten, of No. 96 Clymer Street, Brooklyn, She testified to~day before Justice MoAvoy, in a suit for $10,000 damages brought by her six-year-old brother Francis against Morris Solomon, real estate operator of No. 217 Have- meyer Street, Brooklyn, Francis was run down y Solomon's touring car and suffered a broken leg. Before Marion was permitted to de- wcribe the accident, Justice McAvoy asked her if she knew what would hap- pen to little boys and girls if they told @n untruth upon the witness stand, yhy I know that God will punish , “and the judge would put me In jail.” She was then sworn. ‘The child then described the accident and said her brother was anxious to get home to pi WOMAN SLAYER FAINTS WHEN CALLED FOR SENTENCE Mrs. Wansker Should Have Been Convicted of ‘Murder, Says Judge, Refusing to Quash Verdict, Mra, Rebecea Wansker, convicted of manslaughter in the first degree for killing Samuel Silverberg, a tenant, in her home at No, 2809 West 17th Street, Coney Imand, April 7, fainted to-day when she was taken before Justice Cropsey in Brooklyn for sentence. She was carried to a chair in the court room and remained apparently uncon- scious while her counsel made the usual motions to set aside the verdict as against the weight of evidence. “Motion denied," said Justice Crop- wey. “The verdict should have been murder and would have been except for the ‘influence on the Jury of the sex of the defendant: She is not help- t all by her present con- duet rhe case “ia adjourned until to- a mT wan or was carried from the court ‘room by a BLOW TO GOVERNMENT IN COASTWISE LUMBER CASE Judge Thomas Decides That Books and Papers of Company Were Mlegally Seized, ‘The Government, officers and employ wise Lumber and Supply Geseeny, who are on trial in the Federal Court, Brooklyn, on charges of conspiracy te dotreua the Government, was dealt —The Government is said to be plan-| } Ring to combat a violeht Spartacan | seized more than a dozen men. ‘The! up —— police also confiscated a red banner,’ tempt to overthrow the Government. LONDON PRESS ABSOLVES = escape of officers convicted of con- nection with the Liebknecht murder. It was learned on good authority that not only cape from prison by means of a false Telease order and get to Holland with @ false passport, but that Capt. Heits von Pflug-Hurtung and Lieut. ‘Man, convicted in the same case, also escaped at the same time and in the sar’ TESTIFIES FOR BROTHER \ten-Year-Ol G Girl Knows “God Pd Hwee a i. NEW SPART SPARTACAN PLOT UNEARTHED IN BERLIN Government Prepares to Meet At- | tacks at Office of Chancellor and Foreign Minister. BERLIN, June 4 (Associated Press). a ing, which will be anovher at- It ts expected that the centre of the Pre- One excuse for the uprising is the did Lieut. Kurt Vogel es- Lieh way News of the escape of the laat two officers has been suppressed in the German newspapers, because of fear that it might cause @ serious uprising against the Goyernment. Sentiment e ment at the Jaxness which enabled Vogel to escape, “WET” SAYS SENATOR SCOUTED “DRY” LAW Simmons Told New Yorker Last November Not to Worry, Latter Testifies. WASHINGTON, June 4.—Appealing to-day to the House Judiciary Commit- tee for repea! of the Wartime Prohibi- tion Law, Adolph Neurad, Chairman of the Legislative Committee of the Fam- ily Wine ond Liquor Dealers’ Associa- tlon, declared Senator Simmons, Chair- man of the Finance Committee of the last Senate, told him last November the law would take care of itself July 1, and that he might as well “return to New York and not worry.” Questioned by Representative Reavis, Republican, of Nebraska, and other members, Netrad said the conversation took place in Senator Simmons’s office. Mark Goldberg, counsel for the as- sociation, #aid he had heard it said that President Wilson wanted to “pass the buck” to Congress in the matter of war-time Prohibtlon repes “It is too serious @ matte: old the committee, “for you to get us in this ‘jam: by saying ‘it is up to the Preaiuent. 200 GERMAN cITTES APPEAL TO. AMERIGA Magistrates Representing 30,000,000 Ask for “A Peace of Justice.” BERLIN, June. 4 (Associated Press). —The Magistrates of 200 German mun!- cipalities, with populations totalling 30,000,000, have signed an appeal on be- ot. the German cities to the Ameri- can people, protesting against the peace terms i demanding “A peace of ju: tle such a8 was promised on the bere ft President Wilson's principles, number of American-korn women ae have become German ‘subjects by marcione ary signing a similar appeal to the Ameri This appeal ko. sae at ontinuance of ~~ ei Daniels Doubts Landing of Force ta Costa Rica, WASHINGTON, June 4.—No informa- tion regarding the reported landing of American naval forces in Costa Rica has reached either the Navy or State Departments and Secretary Daniels said to-day we doubted any landing had been made. If any men were dent ashore they were sailors. —————_———E= ‘moieo. protest EY Gl eer ae HOSPITAL PATIENT BEATEN WITH RUBBER CLUB, HE SAYS Charge Against Brooklyn Attendant | Changed From Misdemeanor to Felony by Order of Court. Charged with beating a patient at the Brooklyn State Hospital with a tightly rolled rubber sheet on May 7, a! man giving the name of Thomas F. Scollon, a former attendant, was ar- raigned to-day in the Flatbush Court, Brooklyn, The complainant is Albert J. Coffey, another attendant, who says that Scol- lon wound up a rubber sheet into a and Ladder No. 118's ladders and made a demonstration as though the ladders were to be raised to the win- dow. Chief Martin called for a volunteer to jump from the tenth floor to the ninth floor, protected by a rope about his waist, to force Mrs, Canda back into the room, Three men stepped forward and Chief Martin selected Engineer Timothy Fitspatrick of En- gine No. 224, a slight young athlete who served through the war as a Second Lieutenant of the Quarter- master Corps. feet of rope, the exact distance from the tenth floor window sill to the ninth were measured off. One enu was tied about Fitzpatrick’s waist and a squad of firemen took the other, Chief Martin blew a whistle and Fitgpatrick floor the length of the rope, He swung violently back to the window ledge on which Mrs, Canda sat, and striking her with his feet, knocked her to the floor of the room inside, As he struck her he blew a whistle which was held between his teeth and a | squad of firemen stationed outside the door with axes and erowbars—- Mrs. Canda had blocked the ase of a passkey by leaving her key in the look ingide—burst into the room. Mrs, Canda was quickly secured. club and beat Antonio L. Aporilo, a patient, about the head and ody. Scollon fled after the alleged assault. | He was arrested yesterday at Mama-| roneck, N, Y., where he was traced through a letter he sent to the hospital | asking for beck salary. | After Magistrate Dale had heard the | complaint, he said the alleged crime | was most atrocious and ordered that! the complaint be changed from assault, third degree, which Is » misdemeanor, to assault, second degree, a felony. He| held Scolion in $1,600 bail for examina- tion on June 6, SENTIMENT IN GERMANY FOR AMERICAN CONTROL: He Effort to Bring About Some Sort of Alliance or Protectorate Is Widely Discussed. BERLIN, June 4 (Associated Press). —There seems to be a widespread de- mand on the part of Germans that efforts be made to induce America to enter into a sort of limited alliance with Germany or take @ protecto over this country, giving Germany fi- nancial aid amd protection and taking in return the lion's share of the profits of the country’s indusirial activities, Privy Councillor Bergmann, former- in the German Edison and one of the largest a Chief Martin, who refused to let Fitzpatrick make the attempt until Mr. Canda had signed a release, free- ing the Fire Department from blame if Mrs. Canda fell Arom the window, said he had never seen a braver piece of work. Mrs. Canda has been unbalanced since getting letters last summer from her son, who was with the army in France, describing his hardships. She had delusions that he had been sent to France to keep her separated f rom him, her husband told the police. phe eae Sn a Snyder Elected Low Angeles May LOS ANGELES, June 4.—Former ayor Meredith P. Snyder was elected Mayor DY plurality of more t) 00 over Frederick T. Woodmai nt Mayor, according to partial na from ‘yesterday's municipal élection. Mayor Woodman was ri cently acquitied of a charge of r ceiving money to protect vice. Twelve and a halt’ leaped from the tenth’ 0 PER DAY RENTS $00 High-Class Electric VACUUM CLEANER \ For Two‘Days Rental Dept. Phone Vacuum Cleaner Speci 131 West 42d St. LOFT family. 1, just as it has personally know QUALITY AND CLEANLINESS of LOFT candy. when they were of the LOFT family still own thi CANDY is our slogan at # penny a pound profit and under the same management in the past. No change ther QUALITY, PURIT’ || CLEANLINESS ‘or MAN: AGEMENT. Springtime Rumors HIS is not the first time that announcements have been made through the New York press that the LOFT Candy stores have passed from the control of the ‘Trade Mark. business is still under that con- een for the past fifty y: and I customers of ours who have been patrons of the LOFT stores from childhood who fully realize that the same old standards prev: il as regards in the manufacture and distribution I also wish to say that, with the exception of the stock held by our employees, which was purchased rs ago, of artners, the members coming concern, MORE AND BETTER Gelphia meeting,” said the official sb A Banner Special for Tomorrow, Thursday, J 5th e The banner of the electrical |in the Roxbury district Is now © blow this afternoon. RLEY—~On day, J 3, JOHN ’ y, June quoted above, “were of all sorte—| LONDON, June 4—The controversy! orers was hung over the face |Heved to have come from Buffalo, ork rneents Srere ilegsily® solse PER mayen teeter ia Riohawa.” Mioneet OLATE, COVERED MALLOWS—A delleagr of distinctive, charm and Russian, irish, negroes and some |between Herbert Asquith, former Pre- where the police say the “Reds” have one of rich Suxar Cream mprised of of a large American flag used ai we ptiperbiy. Mende a decoration. Red carnations were used as table decorations and worn by many of the ban- queters. Welle was @ former President of the Centra) Labor Council, aan tlc at the Constitutional, rights of jarehm Patrick and Biisabe! Marea Funeral from his late residence, 241 Bast 824 m., Friday at 9.30 A. M. thence to St, Stephen's Roman Catholic Church, where a solemn requiem mass will be offered for the repose of his} Interment Calva: | Tae bye Americans. They came as delegates Tepresenting local groups. They spent in Philadelphia and may ‘have held one or more public meet- ings for purposes of camouflage— miler, and Lord French, former British commander in chief, over the latter's charges against the Government in the first year of the war was developing to-day a bitter political fight. The press was demanding the fullest inquiry. Liberal organs were urking & bomb factory. It is thought to have been brought here packed In cotton by | messenger who later placed it under the Hayden house. Ernest Graudet, who was arrested yesterday in connection with the in- vestigation of the bombing of the thi detendante were invaded when the articles were taken. taken. PETROGAAD NEAR FALL, PREMIER LENINE ADMITS “nN 29¢ DUN WOX LONDON BUTTER TOF~ FEE—This is the old fashion delicious Enatish yn ceca dainty, tooteoune ra tablets, mad character. Hut the plot was|irench’s resignation, while the North-| Pope May Hayden residence, was arraigned be- Chewing Candy, made World” famous cliffe press declared that Asquith'’s| KOMI, June 4—In Vatician circles|fore Judge Hayden in the Roxbury| Bolshevik Leader Telegraphs That rich and buttery, which ‘Cheeoint consideration is being given to the proj-|Court to-day charged with taking part in the May Day riots. No in- terpretor being avaliable, and Graudet not being represented by counsel, the court continued the case until to- morrow. Graudet demied any con- neotion with the May Day trouble or never falls to oleuse fl candy lovers of all axes, Each plece ls wrapped in tien, 49e “pouND: BOK Shoregs, New, Yorke Tit are pido rst For exact location see telephone directory, ‘The specified weight includes the container. speech yesterday failed to disprove tl charges in French's book, Early Capture Is Inevitable. BASLE, June 4.—The Europa Press| orted to-day Premier Lenine had after that meeting to go back homes and perpetrate the the entarprise of yesterday or not is 4 oft the conspiracy is one cen-| an open question. It may have taken the in also the projects threatened for oo as ia Bay ¥ aig

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