The Evening Journal
FIRST
IN NEWS -,
CIRCULATION !
ADVERTISING»
THE WEATHER
Cloudy tonight. Friday partly cloudy
and colder, strong eouth shirting to
Meat winds.
CIRCULATION
YESTERDAY
20,545
"THE FIRST NEWSPAPER OF THE FIRST CITY OF THE FIRST STATE."
?
THIRTY-FIFTH YEAR. NO. 188
WILMINGTON. DELAWARE. THURSDAY. JANUARY 18. 1923
1Ö PAGES.
FINAL EDITION
TWO CENTS.
RUHR SITUATION GRAVE, FOOD SUPPLY LOW;
RUSSIAN RED ARMIES MOVE TOWARD DWINA
: MAY PROBE
CHARGES OF
CARS HELD OP
Rep. Brogan Wants Lejfis
lature to Quiz Railroad
Officials
MOVED PROMPTLY,
PENNSY ASSERTS
< Staff Corespondent.
STATE HOUSE.
•Ian. 18.— Repräsentativ# Brogan, of
. Wilmington. will probably offer a'
resolution in the House either this,
afternoon or tomorrow railing for
the appointment of a committee to
investigate the alleged holding by
ihe Pennsylvania Railroad of cars
oaded with coal and foodstuffs an
inneoessarlly long time In Ihe West
DOVER. Del.
Yard. Wilmington.
.Mr. Brogan is
i^hnr Committee, of the House. and
(Hit committee will hold a meeting
oday to di#trus* the matter.
chairman of the
At a
ecent meeting of the State Fédéra-,
ion of Labor, held in Dover, a res
•lutlon was
adopted charging the
railroad with delaying delivery of
oal and foodstuffs in Wilmington
i>y holding the cars for days at a
time without reasonable explanation
n West Yard and calling on the
Legislature to Investigate the matter.
A delegation representing the
Federation appeared before the
Ijhor committee early this week
md urged rliat some action be taken
'iong this line
Representative Brogan says he
bas heard complainte from others!
relative to the holding of cars. In 1
'•ne Instance, he said, he was in- j
formed cars of coal were hold !
:or eight days at the West Yard and
(Continued on Page Twelve.) 1
NEW MANAGER
HF GAS COMPANY
C. H. Quackenbush to Su
pervise Operation of Wil
mington Business
•MR. SCHUTT ACTIVE
IN GEIST CONCERNS
C. H. Quackenbush. formerly
manager of St Clair County Gas
and Electric Company, at East St.
Loulf. 111., supplying ca.« service to .
Ed ward «ville. Collinsville and East
St. Louts as well
gas and electric
-rrvice in B*!v|lle, HI., which prop
« rty is owned and controlled by the '
American Gas Company, of Phila
delphia. has been appointed mana- •
scr of the Wilmington Gas Co. j
Mr. Quackenbush ha* been In the
gas business for the paat twenty- »
« two years, having been connected j
with the Morion Gas Company, Ard
more. Pa.; Kansas City, (.Mo.) Gas
Sag j
Sag ;
nd t Fie Merlon and
# «'omp.iny, Kansas City.
Lighting
Mo;
I arbor
Company.
j
!
1
Harbor, L i
Radnor Gas and Electric Company
Ardmore, pa. His education and <x
I
business has
11 departments which
• make« him thoroughly conversant
with all th* d tails necessary icr
.»roperly » .inductrg the affairs of
, « ur local company.
He has been an officer of both the
perience in the gas
'.'•en
in
merce and the East Side Employ
er«* Association as well as the I Hi
nois Gas Association.
F
Mr. Quackenbush is married but
has n
children.
He will take
lis residence In this city as soon
a# sultihle quarter# are available.
. H. S. Schutt, who has been con
nected with thi# company, will re
main a resident of the city of Wil
minston and will be connected with
the local company In an executive
caparity, the details of the opera
t.on having been turned over to -Mr.
Juackenlnish.
mute between Wil
Mr. »Schutt will com
i#cton and Phil
delphia. ns he has been doing for
•veral years to hi.«* present office at
215 .South Broad street, where the
affairs of th number of gas and
• water companies of which he is an
officer, are conducted. Mr. Schutt
(Continued on Page Twelve.)
....41
TOIUVS TKMPFRATI RF
At The r
V.A0 A. M. .
10.0« AM.3 4
l.nSA.M.
x.4(i P. M.
-—j
Kveninc Journal O».«
.'•» 12.00 P. M.
1.00 p. M.
.37
six \m> rniF
.20 A. M.
.01 P. M.
Sun rises .
-un sets .
fiend of riirUtls
12.40 A. M.
8.00 A M.
41gh water
Dow water
LOST
I '?inî _ fî , om' l NT,: 'rs'hooMn T'o'u'h and
tl.irrU.nn RM I,.-aI raward If n
Hum»*) tn i2»4 W. fourth St |;.r. 18-11.
(Continued on 1 'age Fifteen.)
I
MARVEL WARNS
DELAWAREANS
Of SOCIALISM
Sees Tendency to Break
Down Government by
Liberalism
I
WOULD HAVE STATES
HOLD THEIR RIGHTS
"Wc Folks In
Marvel, the well-known
declared that Delaware, having tak
en the lead In the making of the
Federal Constitution. must now
continue to lead in protecting the
Instrument from the assaults of so
ciallats. communists and bolshevlst». !
He called upon ;he people of Del- j
aware to stand firmly for States' '
Addreseing the Hercules Club this
afternoon on the unusual subject of
Delaware,"
Josiah
attorney,
for individual civic responsibility.
right*, for local self-government and '
j
Mr. Marvel was the principal
speaker at the January luncheon
meeting of the club. h?ld in the
du-Barrv
room of the Hotel du
Pont. The luncheon was largely at
tended, and his address was fre
quently punctuated by applause. At
its close he was given a hearty hand j
and vote of thanks. j
Mr. Marvel said the language of |
the Federal Constitution and Its j
meaning was m the custody of the I
Supreme Court of the United States. |
where It could safely be left, but
th« spirit of the Constitution and
its meaning was In the keeping of
"we folks in Delaware along with
the citizens of earh of the common
wealths representing the Federal '
Union."
"This spirit a.« visioned by the j
makers of the Constitution and urged
(Continued on Page Twelve.)
SUSSEX ORANGES
ERR FR.ING FEE
Pomona Organization Ap
proves of State Budget
and Building Program
FAVOR STATE-WIDE
UTILITIES BOARD
Special to The Evening Journal.
GEORGETOWN*. Del.. Jan. 18.—
The Sussex County Pomona Grange
has placed itself on record as ap-i
proving the school budget which ha«
been submitted to the legislature
utility
py the State Board of Education: the
maintenance of the present supervi
sion of the rural schools; the re
commendation* of the State Board
of Education for a continuance of
the achool building program; the
creation of a State public
commission, and the continuance of
the $3 filing fee.
The Legislature will he asked to
appropriate sufficient fund* t
nish free serum to the farmers of the
{state for the
fur
next two years to çom
passed asking
Milford Grange to become a mem
ber of the Sussex County Pomona. ,
One of the surprising things about
the action of the Pomona Grange
which is causing considerable com
ment by the people of the county is
their action favoring tlie *3 filing
bat hog cholera.
A resolution was
fee.
ERLANGER SHUBERT
TO MERGE THEATRES
theatre#
NEW YORK, Jan, IS (United
Frees).—.Merger of more than 125
Erlanger. Shubert and Dillingham
throughout tfce country
into a single management controll
ed by a $50.000,000 corporation, is
;
»
being negotiated, it waa admitted
today, by Lee Shubert and A. L. Er
langer,
The combine is one of the largest
ever attempted in the amusement ;
world. Erlanger and Lee and J. J.
Shubert are o be th« principal far
tors, although Erlanger asserted
that Charles B. Dillingham is ex
pected to enter.
Shares in the corporafi
placed on the market it is said.
The merger would be In view of
placing the theatre on a paying
basis »o the owners, producers anl
players it was said. Complaints of
that
will he
*>»'•« been ''«roused" in town# wh*re •
'here wa# a big demand for use of
theatre» are e##erted to have been
I numerous recently.
.
they
road show producers
"Indep* ndent" houses for major,
n^dui-tlons »'111 be it. the minor
l v ,r ,hp ' "''p ritput. s.iid hv #on.e ;
in he near
J fected.
in pie. inn. Is finally cf
FAIR TRIAL OF
SCHOOL LAW
IS ADVOCATED
Meeting of Mt. Pleasant
District Protests Melson
Salary Cut plan
IS STEP BACKWARD,
REP. LITTLE IS TOLD
Mt. Pleasant Reboot District Par
«entert to the Legislature by Repre-•
«en ta live Melson of Sussex county,;
providing for a general slash In
salaries of ihe State Board of Krtu
cation officials and staff. President
C. Thorpe Martin of the Assocla
non presided over ;h- meeting
which was held in the Bollefonte
A resolution
bill, ex
ent-Teacher Association of Rrandy
wine hundred last night went on
record In opposition to the bill pre
.
Community House.
condemning the Melson
pressing the fullest confidence In
the State Board officials. .!«•■ taring
the propped »alary cut a glaring'
piece of effrontery and asserting that
the present school law should have
more than two years in which to I
prove its efficiency or inefficiency,!
was unanimously adopted,
The meeting was attended by!
many taxpayers of the Mt. Pleasant j
school district, which is one of the!
largest and most highly assessed
districts of the Slate. Représenta
tive Harry G Little, of the Sixth
Representative distrirt ( Rr; ndywrine
hundred), of which Mt. Pleasant
school district is a part, was pree
ent, he dceiring to hear expressions
of the sentiment of the taxpayers of
of the State superintendent and
The proposed cutting of salaries
(Continued on Page Twelve.»
his district.
SEES HIGH TAXES
WITHNEWSCROOI
I
'
' j
- --- J
i
McComb Writes to
Col.
Rep. Melson About Clay
mont Project
VOTERS ASK OPENING
OF VANDYKE SCHOOL
Staff Correspondent,
STATE HOUSE. Dover. Del.. Jan.
18—The following letter from James
P. McComb. of Cla.vmont. was read
in the House
his morning:
To the Hon. Representative .Melson:
"Honorable Sir; The article quot
ing pan« of your speech you mad*
on January 15. appeared in the Wil- !
mington Morning News, and was
read by me with the utmost interest. ,
Pleaae accept my sincere congratu-j
Iation.« on the stand you take with I
reference to unfair school taxations.
These as well as other high taxes
make it almost impossible for a prop
erty owner to live in the State of
Delaw.i re.
"The following problem confronts
me: The school hoard of Claymont.
Debt war?, with the approval of the
State Board, contemplates to build
school on the from part of my
farm, taking from me by right of
condemnation, ten
bordering
pike,
mated t
acres of land, ;
the Philadelphia
"The school completed is esti
cost $400,000. and It is
on
said it will take car? of about 600
student.«, most of them being chil-*
dren who arc attending the lower
grades, if the author!! ea succeed in
building such a high-priced school.
you can readily sec that the school
tax°s will be a great burden to the
property owners of this district. May
we ask for your kind protection
against such unfair treatment.'*
Representative Stant. of Townsend
presented :i petition to the House
this morning eig-ned by 24 residents
of the school district asking that
Vandyke sohool, about three miles •
from Townsend, which was closed
last year because of the condition
(Continued on Tage Twelve.)
I)R PppI) T()
HIjL/I/ Ul/lAJ 11/
R|7I I FVIIIT PAP
Ifrilitjlj T Uij
i
The Rev. David A. Reed, formerly ;
pastor of White Clay Creek Pres-,;
byterian Church, near Newark, has j
accepted a call to the pastorate
Church, at j
Pa. Dr. Reed with
Mrs. Reed, hn* been living with ;
relative« in Washington. 1). since
last Oetober when he resigned the :
.pastorate of While ('lav Creek;
that ;
of the Presbyterian
Rel lev
Gap.
Church.
of
He was pfl»tor
church about four year».
Fnr Clover Dairy Safe XI Ik phone
151<I-15I1.—Adv.
I IF
French May Face These Troops
m
■yr/A
* h i y It
h
fir
« r\
P
$
t
Ly
f 1
a a
/ ♦
JL
Concentration of the German Fl elchswehr to the number of 25.900 le reported a few mile* ahead of the
farthest French advance Into the Ruhr reg.on. Germany denle* th*s* reports.
MRS. 11 SMITH
HAS PNEUMONIA
Widow of Late University
Dean Better Today, Phy
sicians Say
Speeiel to The Evening Journal
NEWARK. Jan. 18.—Mrs. E. I.au
r ence Smith, wife of Dean Smith,
monia. I* now 111 with the same dis
lease.
LAY HUSBAND
TO REST TOMORROW
the University of Dtaware, who
died early Tuesday morning of pneu
Mrs. Smith had a severe cold
at the time of her husband's death
and shortly afterward* h« r condition
became such that she was ordered
to bed by her physician Plural
pneumonia developed yesterday
teruoon Drs. H O. H. Koiiock and
I
Charte* 11. Blake are in attendance
Mr*. Smith s condition I* much bet
ter today, her attending physicians
improved
Dean!"'
have
•Ith her
respiration,
funeral of
aftern
The original plans
being pleased w
temperature and
Plans for the
g n ,jth tomorrow
been completed.
were to allow friends to view the
remains at the home on Delaware
avenue from 10 o'clock tomorrow'
morning until 1 o'clock in the af
ternoon. but ow ing to Mrs. Smith's
(Continued on P.-igo Twelve.)
HEATER BLOWS;
MAN INJURED
Store Also Wrecked When
Hot Water Stove Lets
Go
FIREMEN HALT
TWO GRASS FIRES
Exploding with enough force to
be shattered into email pieces, «a hot I
'
were filled
He was taken |
water heater in the Domestic Manu
ternoon
damage,
enth street .and employe of the con
cern received a slight abrasion on
facturlng Company. yesterday af
did comparatively »»light
Nello Nd, 1914 West Scv
the face and hi« eyes
with «lust and a she*.
to the Physicians' and Surgeon*
Hospital and after treatment was
able to go home.
The force of the explosion blew,
rindows of the build
out the front
,n * an <* « number of glass electrical
dy$or os hanging
were damaged. It was considered
remarkable that no greater damage
was done with so much glassware
the ceiling
from
jbo,,î -
Nothin* remained of the
(Continued on Page Twelve.)
Get Hooch Now
From Tomatoes
During the past three weeks
grocers of New Castle have
been having difficulty in keeping
a stock of canned tomatoes on
hand. On investigating it wa«
found a number of persons
were using the canned product
for manufacturing home brews.
The tomatoes are poured Into a
. large receptacle and about one
gallon of water and five pounds
i of brown sugar added. It is
l| brought to a boil and then dis
j tilled. The beverage is said io
have
!| than
One of the home brewers «aid
today that It wa# impossible to
other fruit» out-of whieh to ;
]j manufacture a gratifying drink,
und this fad had caused resort
"kick"
"white
a stronger
proverbial
mule'* or "hooch."
even
the
I
!
ini io canned t
ml
f
J. B. BIRD IS
HOSPITAL HEAD
Benjamin F. Shaw Resigns
as President of Delaware
Institution
BEHIND $7,000
AFTER YEAR'S WORK
Benjamin F Shnw r*sign*d a«
president of the
of the Delaware Hospital.
Board of Trustee*
the
at
in
annual meeting of th*» board, hejd
he hosipta! building, yesterday
afternoon, if«' gave no special re*
on for resigning, other than he
would not have the time to devote
to th. duties of the office. Mr
^ h ** I h " 8 n " 1 be '" l * u ' 1 ' T " 1 | ,n
»• Bird was elect ad to take his
-rst vice-president. Other officer.
p
ITRAINED SFCRFTARY
I l\mnLU oCLIxE I r\f\ I
TO DIRECT AFFAIRS
, ' ,rv * 3
elected are _ Second vlce-prealdent.
j United States Senator Thomas
Bayard: treasurer, Townsend M.
Miller; sssisiani treasurer, T.lgh
jman Johnston: secretary, Charles
Bush; corresponding secretary,
I-Mrs. William c. Mendinhall.
The following trus-eea were elect
cd tn serve on ihe executive com
Charles R. Miller. Mr*. W. G. Coxo,
(Continued on Page Twelve.)
niittee which meets monthly at the
hospital with the superintendent:
Miss Caroline FT Sparrow. Mrs.
WOOED COMBINE
WELFARE WORK
Rep. Holcomb's Bill to
Merge Four Commissions
Into One
Staff Correspondent,
STATE HOU8B, DOVER. Del..
Jan. 18.—Consolidation of the
Welfare Commission. the
Pension Commission.
Tuberculosis Commission and
State Board of llenlth into the
State Health and Welfare Commis
**on. 1« provided for in a hill intro
duc°d in the House by Representa
tive Holcomb, of New Castle, this
All of the above commis
sions under the bill, should ft be
Child
Mothers*
, ,
Ul
morning,
fome a law. would be abo'ished «nd
the work would he taken over by
new commission named in the
a
Th* Ifolmmh hill provides that fce
ginning with the >*ar 1923 the Oov
^rnor shall appoint seven persons
who shall constitute the "State
bill.
.
Health and Welfare Co
Four of the members shall he physi- !
elans to he selected from a complete
list submitted hv the serrerarte* of
the Delaware Stale Medical Society
and tile Homeopathic Medical So
cieti of Delaware. One of the
m!s«ion.'
physician«. It is provided, shall live
ip Wilmington, one In rural New
(Continued on Page Twelve)
M FA SDKS OV I \ CH10A.SK.
Measles are still on the increase
in Wilmington. 109 new cases hav
ing been reported t
Health this
of 285 cj
the Board of
total
making a
s in the city.
•eek.
the Majestic und "Ebb
Tide." at the Queen. Friday night.
See page IS today.
12 FREE MOVIE TICK FT*
In the classified columns each day,
will be found the name« of six per
sons who are invited to see the
leading moving picture shows. Read
carefully and see if your name ap
"Orandma's
pears today.
Boy."
to
at
X. C. W M i l l s,
Nobis Cafeteria. !>th SI. Kn. ranee |
Wil. Saving» Fund Bldg,—Adv.
AFTHR PRAYER
Mrs. Susie E. Taylor Suffers
Paralysis While at West
Church Service
CONDITION IS
SERIOUS TODAY
Susie E Taylor. 45 *«4
Washington str*e-t. wa* str1*k*n with
paralysis *h;l* attending th* mid
week prayer nervire in Went Preahy
Church last evening. .Mr«,
had accompanied the
Women's Missionar Society, which
attended Ihr aerv.ee n a body and
wa« about to leave for her hom*
when the fell nenn -conscious to the
Member* of the church on reach
M re.
aj ' or
stricken woman heard her
lo be Tiken U^Horne^a,)."
Hospital, and <alf«d the police
ambulance. On the way to the
hospital ehe lost » onsciou«n**s and
ha* remained in that tondit ion since.
Her condition is considered serious.
Mrs. Taylor has been a member
of West Church since young woman
hood. and was .«aid by her pastor.
the Rev A W. Sonne, this morning,
to be one of the mo«t faithful at
tendants.
Taylor.
She is the widow of A. C. Taylor.
She and her son. Harold
live at the above addrt*>.
FLOG MORE STRIKERS,
HARRISON MORS DEFI lNT
other
points along ihr Missouri and Noch
Arkansas Railroad following out
thr#ats in which E. C Gregor was
lynched and twenty persons were
beaten and deported
The enure community was heavily
armed ready to enforce decrees of
rcitlxgns commTte«'' and "olil
in
1R—Uni-1
spread
HARRISON. Ark.. Jan
ted Pres*).— Mob
Northern Arkansas today.
Striking railroat
been flogged at Leslie
law
employes
have
and
the
zens* court" set up by the bueiness
nd farmers who amaseed here
paralysis
rnen
of
Mond ty t<» proven*
train service on the railroad. .Shoot
boldly carried on
and on son»** leather hoi
irons were
iiig
the streets
sters hung at their side#».
Everything was quiet on th? sur
face today as the "citiuens* com
niittee*' continued rounding up
strikers and questioning 'them
garding burned bridges and other
alleged acta of sabotage,
were flogged after the 'qui*'' «nd
re
Some
Wild rumors were heard on all
One was that armed mep
sides.
were coming over the hills to Mis
oust the strikers here.
souri
The .State Legislature has order
ed an investigation of the lynching
of Gregor ^nd floggings of strikers.
The Investigation waa expected to
B#t under way tomorrow.
A (frand jury Invosilcatinn mad*
under the eyes of the mob returned
16 indictments on charges of bridge
burning and other acts against the
railroad.
Sheriff Maddox and a corps of.
deputies before sunup began hunt-;
hills for the indicted men.
The "citizens court" and ''citizens j
he Circuit I
ing the
committee" were reported working
with the approval of
Court. The twelve fnen on "the
zens committee** were said to he un
der oath # aM officers of Boone county
and scores from the mm mit tee carry
Sheriff Maddox indi
LITTLE ROOK, Ark . Jan. 18
(United Press.)—"T^ie uprising" at
Harrison. Ark., is a "frame-up" of
railroad officials. J. P. Venable labor
leader who escaped from the mob
rhnrged In a statement here today,
The burning of eight bridges on
the Missouri and North Arkansas
commissions as special deputy sher
iffs. they said,
rated such an arrangement had been
made.
Railroad which resulted In
>h
rule at Harrison waa due to defec
IN WARLIKE
MOVEiKEMAL
SEES STRIFE
Martial law Declared in
Memel After Lithuanians
Wrest City From
French
SOVIETS MAY OPEN
ATTACK ON POLAND
BERI.1V. Jan II (United Preasl
—Martial law *u proclaimed in
Memel by Lithuanian troops who
seized the city Monday, according to
reports here.
Dlspatrhee yesterday reported a
French landing party ahaut to go to
the relief of the French troops de
feated by the Lithuanians at Memal.
CONSTANTINOPLE. Jan. II
(United Praia)—Turkish armies at
Darldxa and Herck marched In war
like review before Mustapha Kama!
Pasha today.
The Turks moved up to the fron
tier line ' draw n around Constantl
nople.
Mustapha Kemsl. head of the An
gora government and rommander in
chief of the army, der »red war In
(Continued on Pag# Two )
C/ilTtn
(jUULU, .IK.,
7
HAS LEFT WIFE
1
PARIS. Jan. 1* (United Pr#»»).—
George J. Gould. Jr., ha* separated
from hla wife, the
Colter, of New York and ha* gone
former T-aura
a long trip to Egypt, according
to the Monte Carlo correspondent of
ih# Pari* edition of the New Tork
Herald, which eavs the Gould fam
■ the separation
*!>* admit*
George .1 Gould end
re remaining at Monte Carlo.
Mrs.
the children
The
he the out
separation was said t
«orne of weeks of marital dufflsul
tie*.
Vsnahl# left h#r# after declaring
"unless the Stn'** tak«** some *f
.
^"'e '"T* P'» » »'"P <" »»>#
Harrison outrage» against my f-ll-w
strikers. 1 ant not going to stay in
Little Rock and do nothing " ,
His destination waa not known,
'Outlawry, murder, and ruin.
rule in Harrison. Venable charged
after a fruitless effort to have Gov
dilapidated engines
I used on the railroads, the statement
tive boxes on
•ntinued.
ervror Me Rea send troops,
'Homes have been violated and
i
(he
ves of strikers tortured and
rast into the streets."
FOR FAMILY ROW
Mrs. Titus Disagrees With
Judge. However, After
Husband Is Bonded
BEATEN WITH I AR
___ * '
BROTHER-IN-LAW
the belief that "too
Expressing
much liquor is evidently the cause
>*f the trouble wbout ihot house."
Judge Hasting», in Municipal Court
ibis morning, held Charles Titus,
408 Geddes street, charged with as -1
ult and battery on his brother-in-'
law. Joseph A Sharon, under a J300
t
keep the peace.
Upon recommendation of De
tective McDnnel. who mad* an
investigation of the ease.*' .Sharon
was dismissed on t charge of breach
of the peace, preferred by Titus.
The injuries suffered by Bharon
by being «truck «on the head with a
jar by Titus have become infected
and he is now in a hospital, the
court was told. v
The charge against Titus wa«
lodged against him at the instance
of the court after the man had tes
titled against Sharon in court last
week. It was charged by Titus that,
(Continued on Page Twelve.)
;
Mundy Bros Sell Furnitur» Adv.
AND CANALS
Rails. Mines to Be Worked
by Allies If Germans
Refuse to Co
operate
LOADED BARGES
ARE SEIZED TODAY
Dance ttifliracri further pnn
1 »Innen t npnn Germany today
for failure te deliver up Rnhr
The blflmuT" of Indu^rr
leading from the Rnhr
burred ; real bant»*« wen» sHzrd
and tMr Hargnes diverted to
F'renoh dfMtlnarloiM; coal cam
were ordered <'onfl«oated There
I ere
were reports officials of leading
coal rompante» had been ar
rest art.
More penalties are riprotad
to follow Belgium and Italy's
approval of a plan for France
to throw a cordon around Ihe
Rhine land. Rhine
are to he worked for Pranee
Herr Ttrraarn and other enal
railroad*
barons were orderest nnor more
the FYendi
(vmrniaiMW at Fawn
Minor iHanrtannei oorurred
today at several cities In the
valley. A German crowd
mt off a fraulctn s hair for at
tending a picture show mfh
French *ol*1l«r*; another crowd
demnlHlied a shop u here pic
ture post « Tirtf« depicting the
fncnp«i|on were for aale.
The tide of German temper
I* not likely to overflow Info
armed resistance, however. \
rejHirt to Paris .«ays the hand
ful of Reichmtehcr. whose
presence at «Muenster t'a used
fal.se rumors of concentration of
German troops to be circulated
by a press associai Inn. ban fled
from the city at the approach of
French troop*, taking the city
archives with
Resistance to France coot innen
adamant, although < ha miliar
f*uno failed in got a vote of dir
latnrtal power* for hU gn.em
inent.
. . ,
" h8nrt ,n
Ihr Ruhr game, it was Indicated
t n dlspatohew from Holland
wherp tho , n „. rn(l „ onill
executive decided to pngr Its
branche** on the subject of In
terrent Ion.
Item.
With fricdon in the Rhine
land a more tense alarm of war
from other parts of the »»Id
world Is heard; Hu««Jn Is report
<«d mo\ lug again-I the Pofe*.
Turkish troops wen» in review
lief ore Mu-tapli.i Krinnl near
Constantinople. Serbia lias «sk
ill more money for her armies.
Public dancing was forbidden
restoarants were ordered closed
at 11 p .m. Tlu* food situation
is cau«iur concern. The
fell to 23.000 to the dollar.
irk
m'SSKLDORF. Jan. 18. (Unttf*
I —German iml ii -I rin I ist*» of (In
Ku,ir - Including Frit/. Thys-en. **>n of
\ugu»Ht TliysM'ii. will be < «»urtmiu*
Ilaird, charged with dtsolN»dieiice of
military orders in the occupied xonr.
" announced this nficrnooé.
An unconfirmed dis|Hitch from
Dortmund said tho French
sinning their advance toward Hamm,
which Is also in the general direction
of Muenster.
Transport and thirty funks are
moving from Dortmund toward
Dorstfeld.
_
forces If the occu|>atlon of the Rnhr
va || e y j M extended
BERLIN. .Ian. 18. (Cniicd Pr*H->
I■etna il y today notified Dance
and Bolglum there is «langer of a
collision between allied and fàermsn
further toward
Muenster.
LONDON. .Inn, IN. (f.iiled Fre«#.
—The Germ nil embassy Imre inday
(Continued on fag# T«»al»a>
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