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2 the machine gunners and other de- fenders of the building, made a rush against the police lines, trying to dis- arm the guards and disable the’ ma- chine guns. When it was seen the mob could not be checked in other way, fire was opened on it. SHOOTING AT CLOSE RANGE NEAR REICHSTAG BUILDING. The shooting was at close tered with d most severe casualties were inflicted on the crowd which approached from the Simonstrasse side of the struc- ture. Provocation for firing wallding. fronting the south side of the edifice, soldiers stationed there suspected they would be attacked and immedi- ately opened a fusillade. Six slightly wounded civilians were carried into the Reichstag building, a dozen others ‘were transferred to the guard bouse mear the Brandenburg gate and a number were carried off by members of the Sanitary Corps. The Reichstag tempomrily ad- jJourned amid great confusion, Preai- dent Febrenbach, being obliged to leave the Chair, as he was unable to control the situation. Members of Various parties engaged in violent Teeriminations and members of the “Cabinet left the Chamber. OFFICER OF GUARD BEATEN BY THE MOB. When the troops dispersed the ‘crowd outside the building they ex- tended their cordon in the direction of Unter den Linden, where throngs filled the ‘street. An officer who chanced along was severely beaten by the crowd. , Aftér a short receas the house quiet- #4 down, amt Provident Fehrenbach, ‘yising from Mis seat, told the Deputies the day's casualties had reached a total which would occasion profound regret, and that further deliberations could, under the circumstances, hard- ly be expected to continue with the necessary calm. Ho suggested an ad- journment until Wednesday moming at 10 o'clock. The Deputies received the announcement standing, and then left the chamber. Independent Socialist leaders plan to continue demonstrations whenever the Industria! Councils Bin is up for debate, and it is expected the climax ‘will be reached on Thursday, which is the anniversary of the deaths of Dr. Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxem- burg, radical leaders, who were slain ile being taken to Moabit Prison. ITENTE MISSIONS CALL FOR PROTECTION. _ The Entente missions arriving here to-day are reported to have indi- cated their intention to call upon their Governments for military pro- tection if demonstrations here are ‘threatening. Plundering on-a large scale oc- curred in the occupied town of Ober- hhausen. Men stormed the Town Hall, seized arms, threw the archives into the street jand stripped the shops, The disturbances epread to the vil- 1 of Marseboh and Bruckhausen, agains: the police. Oberhausen is a town of about 100,000 at the junction of the Cologne- Hamburg and Wesel-Emmerich lines. It is situated just to the north o® Mul- heim, Both Marseboh and Bruck- hausen are just east of the Rhine in the same region U.S. NAVAL. MAN any! range | the front of the building was lit- | 1 and wounded. The | upon the crowd was furnished by its attempts to storm thé west entrance of the A score of men attacked several guards and wrenched their rifles away from them just as soldiers Tushed up, and then general firing began. s be pany, Chicago meat packers, on! When the mob ran into the street] Charges of unfair competition and of | where the plunderers used flrearms |: "<8 ARMOUR Is CITED |As Charming as Girls Who Wear Them SENATE URED. FOR VIOLATION OF ANTITRUST LAW Packing Company Charged With Unfair Competition in Acquiring Southern Firms WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.—Tho Fed- eral Trade Commission to-day an- nounced it had cited Armour & Com- acquiring compoting firma ins viola- tion of the Clayton Anti-Trust Law, The company was given forty days to answer the citation, after which the caso will be sat for trial. While the Commission's charges were being made public, packers’ at- torneys and Department of Justice Officials were in conference over the carrying out of an agreement by the Packers to give up their side lines and confine their activities to the meat business. The Federal Trade Commission de- clared at the time the packers’ agree- ment with the Department of Justice was made public that the Commis- sion's fight on the packers would not be dropped even though the Depart- ment of Justice did not proceed with prosecutions under the Sherman anti- trust law. * ‘The complaint charges that Armour & Co. acquired the Lookout Refining Company of Chattanooga, Tenn., re= finers and dealers in cottonseed oil, Jani eubstitutes and cooking oil, and the Harres Tannery Company, which was later known as the Sylva 1 ning Company of Sylva, N.C alleged acquisition of "these com- panies by Armour, the commission charges, eliminated these concerns from competition with the Armour Company, = “rewtrained — interstate commerce in the commodities in which they dealt and tended to cre- ute Monopolistic conditions in favor o! Armour & Co. in the sections of the country in which these two fc mer competitors operuted.” Both companies, the commission charges, were taken over by corpo- rations whase stock was issed to eo cunnected with Armour Co. BAYLES SHIPYARD SOLD FOR $2,000,000 A, P. Alle of New York Buys Government Plant at Port Jefferson, WASHINGTON, Jan. 14, — Bayles Shipyard at Port Jefferson, L. 1, was sold by the Shipping Board to-day to A. P. Allen of New York, for $2,000,000. There are four uncompleted 6,000-ton cargo vessels on the stocks and tw substantially completed tugs, together with six other vessels, It was estimated that it would have cost the Government about $1,250,000 to finish these ships, WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.—Two thou- sand more allegel Reds are to be .ar- rested between now and the last of June, Commissioner 1 of Immigra- tion Caminetti has infJ§ned the House Appropriations Committee while making an appeal for $1,000,000 to handle the suspects dumped on the Bureau of Im- migration by the Department of Justice, ‘Tie new urreats, he said, will run the total tip to about 7,000, as approximately 5,000 have already been taken Into cus- tody, He explained that the axditional funds required ‘by his Dureau will be | can colony has dwind Federal ‘Troops & THE “EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14, Are These Youthful Costumes of 1920 ~ COMB: inom OF weirs Bas SFR ATS TAC ae EMBROIDERED RED bad wearer, Ta-Si, effectively used as trimm cae, Not in years has the debutante been the inspira- tion of such plans as this season, and these are in- deed the bud’s busy days, and if the clothes designed for her are charming they are no more so than the Above are three costumes designed for her which bear out both sides of the’contention. @ youthful and attractive week-end frock of Fan in which the brilliant wool embroidery is ing. or CREPE DE CHINE PLEATED SKIRT iM WHITE, OND OvVER- BLOUSE OF ORCHID, EMBROIDERY 15 oF DAK ANS SEAUS => Another extrer It is @ combinat 1920 Fan-Ta-Si, a) hat is of straw An effective chine is shown, in white with cont One is will be eagerly bought combined with Fan-Ta- cons FAN- TA: SIE WITH BRILLIANT Wool, eEmMBRAID: wee? tg TRIM G7 lely youthful style shown above for the summer wardrobe. jon of white Moon-Glo crepe and rtistically embroidered in red. The i. model of crepe de ting of smartly pleated skirt trasting overblouse of orchid. The Co-Ed" sports embroidery is done in silk and beads. ness Before Senate Cor Investigating: Conditi the » of Te pnmunity from a dozen old how t ried Carransa Campalen WASHINGTON, Jan. 14 he establish: American Colony Founder a Wit- | jGreene County Cuts Off Sheriff's mmittee ons, SAN ANTONIO, Jan. 14.—Accounts o and Shipping Board oMlcials decided i{|the hardships, indignities and losses | would be more profitable to sell. the| suffered by the small property owners | plant. ea in México since the overthrow of the | ~ E Madero Government were given to the | TO SEIZE 2,000 MQRE REDS. | senate su-committes whien began to-| ___— day taking testimony here regarding | Caminetti Reveals Plans in Asking | conditions in Mexico. | for $1,000,000 Fandn, G, KB. Walock, founder of an Ameri- | ‘amaulipas, Opposing | ¥ | 1 to th Mexican | * 8 are belng rushi | TELL OF SUFFERING PENNSYLVANIANS AND LOSS IN | MEXICO} GIVE COST OF LIVING A TERRIFIC SWAT Graft in Feeding Prisoners, WAYNESBURG, Pa. HE: County Commi: oners of Greene County to-day took an experimental swat at the cost of living, ‘The allowance of Sheriff J. KE, Adamso.., previously 50 cents a day for feeding prison- ers, has been reduced 40 10 cepts a meal. BAR COMMITTEE STATUS AT ALBANY HINGES ON RULES. Jan. 14 Sweet Sees Dangerous Precedent it | Neutral Position on Socialists SOCIALISTS DEMAND IMMEDIATE HEARING. BY ASSEMBLYMEN (Continued From First Page.) ection of the Bar Association -cou' al capital for the Socialists, Henry W. President Taft, opposed Mr, ham’s motion and it was withdrawn, | designated by Gov. te Rawars Tismigs 1 Germano. Nea been: Calais 60 Benin the Hughes resolution and lost, parade here next Tuesday, to-day ment Was said at the Department In opposing Mr. Guthrie, \ _| nounced the appointment of William F. | to-day . ppe Haley Nr) Ae) SOUnoey vie Geren cain is cachitant Diplomatic relations will nde be re- graham and others, Mr. Hughes ad-| rumed Waen he reaches Berlin, and can ted It was true ig Major Richard Stockton jr., | Av) not be until peac ce hed between | woe crue politics and bosses! i iso of Trenton, as Chict of Staff [the United States and Germany ied in Albany, but declared it ws he parade ig to start at 1.20 o'clock or evertheless the duty of the Bar As-[in «he afternoon, All participating or-| Brewery Dividends Paid in Beer. ly have would be to make po-| Taft, brother of former} Ingra- 1920. DORO THY HERRMAN DROPS HER $100,000 THIRTY-HOUR WEEK ALIENATION SUIT, BY 20,000,000 10 HASTEN TREATY Iepresentatives of 26 National Organizations Insist. on Ratification. WASHING 4 to-day that action looking to the has! Jan rON, Tt is evi-! dent ratification of the peace treaty eon expedited by the call made upon Senators Hitchcock and Lodge by the representatives of twenty-six power- ful associations representing 20,000,000 A post- waits the people of the United States, tive move, it is believed, election to-morrow by the Democrats DOROTHY GATES HERRMAN tot a minority leader. The demonstration, it is now | admitted, was the most significant yet made, both in numbers and Jinfluence, as indicating the trend of popular opinion in favor of jearly action, i viewpoint of the averag' everywhere in fi of | without standing on ceremony or any specific set of reser’ It J the culmination of weeks of bombard- ment by letter and telegram ‘The visit to the Capitol was preceded by a session at the Willard Hotel, man Fails to Appear in Court. Just Supreme Court ce Tierney It showed the general | cit as zen fication Bult for $100,000 Dorothy damages which Gates Herrman Against her father-in-law, Herrinan, cor ing her husband to api or ions was fections. san man, A manifesto was drawn up and | addressed to the President and Senate. These organizations were represented jat the meeting; American Rights Le Federation of Labor, here to have the ground thi Justice marriage. Mrs. against her father-in-law 1¢, American ation of Assoc 9 Col te eague to En- frce™ race, batrsnen's” Leaea, RICH CARD SHARP Chorus Girl Wife of Philip Herr- to-day dismissed the complaint fn the Mrs. brought James . charging alienat- She failed Mrs. Herrman was in the Winter Gar- man’s father sued in the Supreme Court marriage annulled on | his son was under age, thin n refused to annul the| Herrman then brought HIRES A LAWYER ASSURANCE ASKED BY COAL MINERS Inability to Get Work Reason for Demand of 60 Pe Cent. Increase. WASHINGTON, Jan. inabiltty of the mine 14, rs to get It is th regular | Work that makes thom require 60 pe “ inerease in wages,” Jolin Moore President of the Ohio district, to-day |told President Wilson’ sion, “Ne the mine sal Commis ner can tell whether s going to work the nex day or not." John 1. A resident of the United Mine Workers, in a state ment reiterated that the miners’ de mand for a thirty hour week only asked “assurance that they will have {not less than thirty hours of steady y coal Lewis, work ewch week in the year,” th “The public has sion on that sul: cause they | membe wrong impree ” Lewis said, “be ere led to believe’ that th. were opposed working {more than thirty hours Th fact is the conl miners*cannot earn a living for the whole year by wo ing only a part of the time, no matter how many hours a day he'may work But if he can be assured of les. than thuty hours a week throughout has s to a week, 3. not | den chorus when ried young|the year atom ; wantutivans oe we year a ewsonable and. fati where some forty representatives of pniip Herrman in 1915, while the lat-|wage he cun make a living for him the twenty-six organizations met and ter was a student at college. The follow-|self and his family.” |designated Oscar S, Straus as Chair- ing June he left her and the young | Lewis sald the miners could produc: all the coal the ¢ thirty-hour week bi B untry is. needed on i eliminury ument for the m aid a series of wage summaries for Iiinois fields, which he said ran from =| $74 for 1918 to $1,890 for 1918 h + he said, pn the peak earn Department of Superintendenc United yeiety of Christian En- -———- deavor, Federal Council of Churches’ Millionaire Will Carry Alleged | thirty-hour w of Christ in America, Church Peace treating eas lide OC former MueL Ad Union, World Alliance of Churches Cheating to Courts it Open reid net |for International Friendship Through Charge Is Made, re cent. increas uted! froin ace the Churches, Associated Advertising Gamblin, high kes ing Broad- id, adding that the JHinois unto bastante dar aitadegendlltanyid ited probably be aired within « few {had Kathered’ statistics from half, | Press of the United States, Nationai of the story of the rich {dozen mining camps which showed at d | Foaaha : He ‘/thut the actual incre ins living | Board of Farm Or anigatigns, Amer-| merchant who is charged, with having |Orer. Moe tong rane fon sie te jican School Citizenship League, Gen- nO with marke — | Order of Railway Conductors, Brotb- Gaye peat with the story | cial Workers, Women's Non-Partisan Committee for a League of Nations! alicced jand League of Free Nations Asso-!),,',"}¢ | lation, | ‘TRENTON PREPARES Carpenti harp, n made on the merchas has not been made ame has be nake no sta cha t j cards from a of the game on the face and frame of the | = aid that demands for restitution | which he mer- ed im the | cent. to 178 per cent. leral Federation of Women’s Club: » of millionaire magnates of the Yarrington told the commissior National Council of Women, Na- Stage, film and music pubUshing world |that one of its newly employed ax | tional Women’s Christian Tempers well as others less in the limelight, [fistants had been responsible for gtr : : , > Sunda tio ut with an equal amount of money ating stories that the miners’ de |ance Union, World I Foundation, | "7 oadway has been regaled for several |Mands were made solely through the influence of the fei ood of Locomotive Firemen andewhich took place in the home of of]. President Robinse: mptly asked ome! ‘armers’ Educational Maire movie met, andthe ond- {for the name of the man and said ee geet N fers id att hands for the | Farrington would be asked to discuss and Co-ope e Union, 2 bikineanaa bl sharper which ‘he could not wita- |the matter at an executive sessiot | Grange, National Conference of So- | the those of the | late 1 w in| Notice to Advertisers === to- Advertising copy and release or- | TO HONOR EDWARDS ders for either the week day Morn- | ate ener a ing World or The Evening World, If | ally Baral re received after 4 P. M. the day pre- ‘al Mayor Poni a nated ; a U. S. AGENT TO GO TO BERLIN ceding publication, can be inserted A Grand Marshal of Democratic | ww... presse Will Act Only as an |] Only as space may permit and ia Marchers at Inaugural. | Observe head of receipt at The World of- TRENTON, Jan. 1.—Mayor Frederic Ura ian tt aac borltie yc U Ne Advertising copy for the Supple- W. Donnelly of Trenton, who has been American Commisaic © HT plement Sections of The Sunday World must be received by 3 P. M. Thursday preceding publication, and releases must be received by 4 P.M, Friday. Advertising copy for the Main Sheet of The Sunday World must be received by 6 P. M, of the preceding Friday and releases must be received by 12 o'clock noon Saturday, used to defray the expenses of trials and sonora tu “suppress the popu j bigs sociation to take the action he recom. | ganizations, according orders issued, | DENCE, R, 1, Jan, 14,—0f- Copy or orders received later MISSING IN PARIS |eportauons. Bey p Ckikeron) CanaMnts s Taken. mended, mnurt be in line ty 1 O'clock or forfelt neha of brews wre were preparing Il ¢han as provided above will not —— a y, acconting (0: tnofil ALBANY, Jun, 14.—Thaddeus — ¢ An amendment to the resolution + places and fall in at the rear of! to-day to decla 7 ul dividend in serve to earn discounts of any % Speak wey aut Tan fey Bre d F F. P. Cuyler Leaps Into River ASKS $2,500 A YEAR winjces frou tho, boner eeived Sweet, Speaker of the Assimibiy, tondiy | was adopted making ie clear tho| ‘nk wa nisations to, take part in Yquit, The Tames Ianter rowing |] Character, costract or otherwise. A i i day, br # & candidate In declared he did not know What would |agsociation protests only agains varade are directed to repor' ve etch sigeKholer and other | E pene and 1s Seen’ No FOR CLOAKMAKERS, jereiail carranta nas Rho to pot) Ue the satus of the Committee which sxpuision of members who propose to | ical estat eemer ny BOE Hat ot aail dtribution “att thee THE WORLD, More, — the State under martial law |the Association of the Bar of the city) maxe government and social pied wan D'riday ne JAS ate aeo me cLA tHe ade to-day. ae 4 Lee Jof New York purposes to send to the . py o pyright, 1920, by The Prew Publish Si y No e ona litien! Opponent of Pen Goong. 1920, by The rem Fuviiania Ce. | Meyer London Says They N w Get NEW QUAKE RUINS Capitol to protest against the unseating nstitutional methods. Roittiont 9 at cl ite Strike of the Socialists ntime Morris Hillgylt, chi SCRAN PARIS, Jan. 14.—Mystery surrounds Much ‘Less, Despite Strike the Socialist a Hillayit, chiety ain Dimmick, former Mayor the disappearance in Paris of Floyd Agreement. | MEXICAN TOWN Whether tie, lawyers wilt be permit wel for tne five, and his col-| err time candid i iCuyler, junior yeoman in the| ’ } | sachs nil | to participate in the proceedings of |leagues, John Bi Gilbert] 8 8 ‘United Btates Navy, ho was on do. |, Commissioner Kaward ¥. Doyle, take | ycexico CITY, a Joaquin, {2% Judictary Committee will, in the| Roc, Walter Neeles and William . ing testimony regarding conditions ; opinion of Mr. Sweet, depend upon the; Korlin, are busy preparing their cage, tached service from bis ship. Wheth a Yown of 3,000 abitants in the v upon the (| ‘ . ether lin the cloak and suit induytry at the * tv, , ules of procedure whi ater They may ask the co-operation of| prise 7 Julapa district, State of Vera Cruz, Li ure wh will govern the 7 o priso Curler 12 dead or has aimply dimp-| direction ut Gov. Smith, to @vOid | yas destroyed yesterday by am earth; [tral He adie, howover, that if the ithe far Association Committee but | Strat peared is not known, Inquiries have | threatened strike, heard the side of the pe - s . 2 nis bas not not yet been decided, . 5 . H e wake, according to advices given out| Har Association Committee did not ap- Ke 5 , Strike Pickets I a heen made everywhere for him since | workers to-day from their counsel, for-|fy the Department of Apricalture which | pear as counsel fort Saline Ore ree ce ee RUNES He RO GIHAtAT | o ireeet of amine. dleorderly Our Big Daily Special for To-Morrow, Deo. 2. Even the French Morgue mer Congreaaman Meyer London, saye no details ax to casualties. ltupk the position of a neutral, it would!” "We shall ask first for the dis-|seven jewelry workers were fined In the Thursday, Jan. 15th hhas been requested to watch for Cuy-| Mr. London suid the workers were nema wore Seenred Ab ie MAIO" lestabiieh @ MANE edent missal of the charges on the ground|Nignt Court $2 each by Magistrate DEOLASEICOMENTET TRAP RNAI CARAMELAScAGe iin Jer'a body, for it is possible that he|entitied to an annual wage amounting | nomics! obeeryat aks bla jopening the way tw ns that there is no legal nor constt-| Levine. imho iaen were arrested an | |i traua ene ti of “delicious may have been drowned. to at least $2,500, He declared that for Lingeeh apie ante ons of a Vtutional warrant for such charges| YC 'se the Jewelry house of | Bl Cirameds ‘On the eve of Deo, 19, a witness a fifty-two-week year the actual av-|6§-DAY WEEK 1 To. RAIL CLERKS | vrner proc pas’ or such procedure. Starr & Prost, (sth Street a and Fitth with the f reports having seen Cuyler standing | erage wages in the trade were $27 for es oon “If our motion is denied we shat] Avenue, by Patrolman Mahe: as op the right bank of tho Seine un ; > oa prepared to go into the ent Py pieket. duty in connection | RERAEEE, ‘Vhen, iunp Moto the river. | rere’ Wr for Anishers. G0 108 | Himes Ales Amrose to Overtime for SWEET UPHEL of th i, which would mean. in| with @ strike there, | Cuyler had done dangerous coastal | P utters in spite o Othe® t D BY DAY. \fianraccince puttin the nocusare > | work during the war un convoys of |the fact that the strike agreement of | WASHING Direote tu the proof of their charges, and| John Dodge's Htton Unchonwed. || oT ocoTaaH COVnIE arimen, When he left the Naval |lagt June was made on minimum of |General Hines hi & nation Seat Soctniixts Juntiti«| finally we ball be prepared to prove|” ‘The condition of John i malt! | ey ROASTED. PEAS Reserve he e regular navy or operators, for Anishers, |agreement covering rules und working , Saye Chancel affirmatively. th the Socialist Party | mtionair automobile manufa NUTS—What is more from Bordeaux and was sent to Paris, | $36.50 for pressers and $39 for cutters.| conditions with the Hrotherhood of | SYRACUSE, N. Y., Jat Speaker [is and always 4 been regu itically Hl with pneumonia at the f petizing and tempt= ‘He has a ood record here. The cost of necessaries of life, he sald, |Ratiway and Steamship Clerks, Preight |Sweet did a perfectiy. juctifiat political party, entitled to the same! Carlton Hotel, wis ‘unc! unger ourly to Re ste: ——_>_ had risen 24 per cent. since June. Handlers and Express a ation Hm» | refusing: to neat ‘ je itutional and political rights as) jay, o Nei: PB . roasted Pea MVenlA Elave Gerry Service Re-| Representatives of the manutac-|pioyces, The agreement, it was an-|men ut Alban shal eids : ber partion and movin Sully With: | queegeeeen ' nil “these are the \ wed. turers took isaue with Mr. Tondon's| nounced to-day, Ia retroactive ww Jan.|clared Chancellor James R. Day ofl a mather conference on the legal an-| DIED. ete the figures. The Commissioner asked the ry Another com! wal a sid arate 2 One made by a auamer statiaticians of oth sides to try to tinue in force during the | Syracuse Un torda pects of the case will be held at Mr.) payis,-—on Tuesday, Jan. 138. " “Ole Viewinny, ‘Williamsburg business men to induce | get together on a state of facts yeas! rere T am surprised ut hoa HiNquit's home, 4 Kiverside| Capr, HARRIE loved husbend rousted to a turn, Waves: Milk Cho Annort= Grover Whalen, Commissioner of Plant —— Pe they death teas sian SABA HTT LBB GAG baat intry | Drive, at 4 P. | jeowita HM. (nee Carreras) Davia with our Pence nt is ised of 5 le prs we COURT J Tvety ‘apples, Bananas, Structures, to reopen the Grand | pritain to Make Ratlway Conces-|@Pplying to a! # wre er the tot: that Soc ine has Seen eee of Allen E, Day Te Aad nae || av oxee! dened ‘ a" Anh and Broadway ferries, the forme tain” workers whose employ ) ere | oie ast i c.f you like a nd ars) Grapes, Apples, cere ceepenvey, Sarrins, the, former slens, Here on intertolttante ant tan ousted in view of what and HAVANA ENTRIES. [* unera) sneeleee ie | | Jat ane inte EBQE | cis specisea verge in. | amtteeres, EOE Roosevelt Street, Manhattan, ‘The lines | LONDON, Jan. 14.—The Government | reat each week except where op |Rolsheviks have done in ited | ee ivookiym, on Fi 1u, at OUND HON SEY eeatteeetet tepid kel ATSC § sere Giscontinued a year ago. is prepared to make concessions to the | Of iteg NOIVitMal railroads would tates, If the Assembly had been near tai Guriong;| 8% \! " — ee |railway men on the wage question, but | i [ly evenly divided, and these five men ae eer toes at CAMPRET!. | Armentan Tro: bela Clash |is unwilling to give way on the general! albany BIL Would Mak rr. |¥° sminitted to sit in thelr own Vugacladdioe. 108 ! es : ad LONDON, Jan, 14.—Heavy fighting | principle upon which its recent. offer 7 Gay hema Hetidage (Judgment they could not render an im: | of a ca a ane 1 iat | Naan FUNERAL DIRECTORS. ! FUNERAL DIRECTORS, has broken out between Asmentan | ted by the men's, ronrepantatiy | ALBANY, N.Y. Jan, 14.--A bill de |PAPUal decision, Does anybody doubt Pigg oe mM iss! sa - - --— ” : | rmulated, “Sir Eric Geddes, ABANY, N.Y. Jan : vs : sa one ‘en, £—SALLIE Bess sitcs sacoaees oes ut Rapa, Uitortned dels | signed to. make good. Friday a loyal M2 Mey woould vote to tuRH the di Te caaurme resin. me Bureau announced. | The |gatlon of the railway holiday wax introduced in the Legis on) 2H thelp {a¥or "ihd| CHURCH, Broadway and Git “CAMPBELL SERVICE” IS NOT CON- ae been. under control of. Amarican of. oe lature to-day by Assemblyman t —_ 14: the | ergs "INE. ow Y aa . A the statement said, pending tinal | Waate eatination of State Penal | Fairfax Mclaughlin, Democrat, of the | Grorsia Firemen's Union Quite Na- Thorn, | Wednesday, 3 is ¥ FINED TO NEW YORK ciTy, deeiaion as to its flgpanition, by th Symtem, | Bronx The nations of the woild have tonal Body SLEIGHT,— IA REZ Anan A telephone call will bring our conference. ‘Tae Armenian army} ALBANY, Jan. 14.—Senator Loring | 34 ough their Calvary COLUMBUS, Ga.,,Jan, 14.— Members she CAMBRBLT ily psentative t rhereve soni BH sonthilading | ALI . Jan, ‘ |aaia AGI Mebaentin ei | COLUM At dy : representative to pou, wherever you é ‘f = et mea ald be aR oh naaae 1.9! y Firemen's Union to-day yer, 1 roadway an’ } : ; pearly & division of tie’ red be Huaey 8 Risckie Morey inves Date ie atest Onn aae tr Gukhs lauancnced withntaeas fan shee Mii inet: | Maiatedag: ce Be ak may be, with the least possible delay. radia Peds Ma cane San eat! { oy makin weed Withdrawal from the ni FHS, Hila 10 / Candidate |¢ion of the penal Inw, the code of Good Friday’ a’ Toral’ holiday jtional organization following the : Hoe utr ; We Fave peracnal representatives almost everywhere. ak “year Helle of Kl zabethtown, a Neh A OG a Eee [lon of the City Council in granting | gp! op'o’ the’ Mimingy tors Lanse LOST. FOUND AND REWARDS. | Call “Columbus 8260” Any Hour, Day or Night ; = nee Conte . th Lodge. them, $10 to $20 increase in pay and if pati a ae wt Tan 18 between Oath apd THER fle Tour N 4 “4 n — jor », | One day ot » five i ead of nine am upward me 7 diamond broach; lveral rev not relations, eppecially | may State Haucato An Ad. 14 Bator | ey Off 1a Bye tnaead pf tenant ian iv; SUnerdon, oh ca ssked, teturs te Udell and fallow, O16 FRANK E. CAMPBELL m rels Wood epent an hour at the Capitol} - i 18; ote, ths THE FUNERAL CHURCH” wee BOSTON, Jan. 14.—Richard ©. ere ferelcae Bie | SUNTAN TATE Atte and one-atximenth Bh BU ee to-day conferring with Senator Lodgu | Imerense Im State Malice Fay Aeked.| ou dim ant. seman ceimioes ni daa | IAL Tea (NON SEETARI AN) laurin, President of Meesachusetts In- jand Senator Knute Nelson. t also con ALBANY, Jan. 14.—Increases in ‘Wendghngh 14° asked ikon Broadway at GO"St _ 2a" Bireet at BY Ave a © ” atte © nake or in @ bil introduced to- ay mice wieanoe claw; werner clea, York auto ‘oparaiae’s licenge re + y f Walton, wacked” hae ‘ie. 4