Eft.stprn Sow TorlL--l'Vilr lontoht and TncHilay; Mo rlMng«> In i< mp< r- nlilfp; Prpsh W«st<>rly winds.
DAILY REVIEW
Of Nassau G>unty
THE DAILY REVIEW
2c
¦I ¦yatat 'Stma' Stastt ar yt^lttmtme ai T«ar Hmk*
lie Per Week $S Per Tear
Offidal Paper, Villaffa of Fr««port
FREEP&RT, N. Y.. MONDAY, MAY 9, 1921
VqL XXIV, No. 65
I PLANT CASE WITNESS CONFESSES PERJURY
11I0S.H.0KEEFE ^'^'°<"'' ^- Dickerson of Lynbrook
AVUTORSIML BIG CROWDS MUl GREAT FLYING CIRCUS
POUCE ARREST AUTO DRIVER FOUND TO BE INTOXICATED SPENDS NIGHT IN CELL
Army Fliers At Mitchel Field Give Exhibition Of Aerial Stunts^ Parachute Jumping and Flight Formations Demonstrating Actual Work Of Country's Air Forces In Warfare—Major Ab¬ bey Comes Down In Crasfc But Is Unhurt— Lieut. Barksdale Startles Throng With Dare- Devil Flights
Prr-pport, Mny 9.—Unrry P. flaint'H -i local truck driver for ii nal<lwin ron- rorn w;i« .-irrfstod .''jitiiril.-iy nifflil by Officer Kcchtman for flrivins his c:ir whilp In .-in intoxicated condition.
After a nght in a cell, lie wnf ar¬ raigned Sund.'iy morning )>pfore- .rlld^'e JolinRon and pleaded not (tuilty. Tho oaflp w.'in adjourned and Oaines iinroleil in tlie cuHfody of Lieut. .Kliir.
Mitc-hol Kield. .May 9.—The aviators, offlcerM and cnli.'<tcd men of Ihe i'. S. Army PokX here riirni.shed a proKi-am of thrillM yesterday tUternoon that d«- llghtod ft large rrowd trhat came from fverywhern in thi.s end of .N'ew Vork Htnle to see whnt thft army flier.s were like, «n«l what they could do in actual I warfare. S<-venil thonnnnd jieople .saw the rtyiiiK circn.s as Mtji^i-d by tlie iiii-
STATE INCOME TAX RECEIPTS TO DATE EXCEED 31 MILLION
j Poor Buifneu Conditions Allef ed
Cause Of Decrease In Amounts
Subject To Collection
^
Major Henry W. Abbey furnished ono ot the Ihrlll.s not on the r>roKrain when lie made a forced landinu \vlth a Sop- with Kcout plane. Iloth of the win^.s of the |)lane were lirflken, the engine f^broken out (tf\ the .ship, and'^he plane pretty well ivrccUed. .Major .\bb»^y ts.- c.'ipled wUnout n .scratch. He hnd just nnixlied .second in .-t race with a Kokker niul II ItcHavlland plane. In landing It appeared that he came lather low over the line where Ihe .shipii Were I)ni'ked, and Heemingly to avoid them he turned on the power n.s if to go up I agnln. IhHtead he hit Ihe Riound hard nnd wrerked the ship.
The race wu.s won by [..ieutenant P. rioiillet 111 a DeHavlland plane. .Major Abbey wa.s second and Liciitcitant .\. E. Sinionln. In a Kokker, was thirtl.
The real thrills of the afternoon were provided by Lieutenant K. H. Uarks- dale, who did thci aerial .slant work, and the imrtichute Jumpers.
Lieut. • iJark.stlale, who is lookeil on by even his fellow fliers as a dare-devil niriiuin, kept the crowd on edge durinp tho tlintf he was jnoducinK his part of the great aerial cireu.s. Those who oame to see what the army air Her- vice was like, KOt a varied idea of it from what they saw Ueutenant llarks- dule do, and then tried lo reconcile il with what thoy had generally .sui>posed. wa« the fliers' part in warfare.
With his J. M. plane, he hopped oft the field at a dizzy pace and climbed like a wild thlnK to bank and circle over tho heads of the spectators. He dashed hither and yon, turned loopis, Ihe "leiif roll," and held lii.>i audience speech- IrsH with Immelman turns. He .showed how an aviator goe.s into battle, how he directs his machine gun tire at the enemy plane, and he darted back and forth ov(>r, above and below a iconi- panlon plane that servetl as the enemy for the purpo.se of the exhibition. His performance was truly an exhibition of fikill, courage and endurance, the feat of a man apparently devoid of nerve.s, said those who watche<l. KlrHt high, then low, he seemed fo be all but re.idy to hit the ground, when with a flirt of the tail. hl» ship waa directed upward to dizzy heights and more huir-raj.sins stunts.
It was a motor vehicle, fashionably dres.sed crowd that made up the greater part of the astsemblage, that rame out to the fleld. Ttiero were many thou.sands of dollurs worth of autos iMUked on the fleld and the filacM cIosb by, and tbey represented every .sort of car, from the lowly "rtivvfjr" to the Rolls Royc»<. and to thi.s crowd was added the equally en- thnsla.stlc trolley truvelersl.
Then* was morti smart apparet dis¬ played thnn In seen at i» fa.shinn nhow. and lovely woman blo.<uionted forth In nU, her spteiulor. This same lovely wo. mankind wii.s tho triost ambitious to ride in the plnnett tfhat were theiv for pa.sBcnger service. Those shlp.s that car-1 ried one pns.sengnr wefe t>e«legM with ' wo<iten who wanted to ride, and every , time the larger planes went up they ; carried more women ^ban men. IJucky j wns the good-looking girl wbo could I cuj^l a su.sceptlble airman into lakJuf h.r for a rid«, and many of th^ did
(Continu*^ on J»««e 6i i
MH« III .|i|lllli,'lW JUDll Mil fin 11 >' '
tl*. it..»n(l«fal« bwMehoM mttty tor Mr«| throat aDil. tnu.llttla kdwl convvnK^l f.r, It ri>MUlr>'ii ne tarmMna. A aundby that altiiuld b. Ul rwrv hAta.. 0*t m b<Mtl« »(.! your ilrUK .tor..—Adv. i
1 Albtiny. N. Y., May 9.—Receipts up . to .the close of business In payment of ' the 1920 State Income totalled j;il,500,- 000, from 77.'>,000 ta.x-payers, Stat»? PomptroMer Wendell announced today. ' "It Is e";iected un addltiona' $2,500.- I 000 will be coll«'<.ted for lOL'O," said .State ComptroUej' vVendell, "through the audit of rpturns. the activities of , the Inve.sligation of extensions of time ^ grunted In whioli to make returns, lle- ' celpts In payment of the 1919 tax tatol- ed 137,000,000 from 812,000 taxpayers. "Poor lousiness conditions in 1920 ' acounts for the falling off In Income receipts. The large Increase In the number of taxpayers is attributed to the tliousuiids of railroad employes who were ejempt under federal control of the railroads, but who paid this .vear, and the further Tact that wages in the ' labor group reacbed tho peak in 1920. Municipal employes, Includ¬ ing thousands of school teachn-.*. received Increases in salaries which brought them for the first time In the tax paying class.
"Persons who imve not paid their
• 1920 tax are warned that after .Iune 15, under the law, the bureau Is reciulred
j to Impose a double fine with an addi¬ tional charge of one ptM- cent for each , month, from the time the tar was due
• to the date of payment."
CARRYING LANTERNS IN^SEVET
VUlare Without Ufhts At Niflit
Durinf Transfer From Gas
To Electricity
Uoosevelt, Muy !t.—(Iwing in the ex¬ piration llf u. contract with the fias ('<im))any and the fact that the Klec- tric l.ight (V)mpaiiy have nol started to fulfill their new contract, the resi- dents of Uf«osevelt are going through dark days, or rather nights.
The streets of the town are alive with kIow worms as "the iiti'/.ens' go about with lanterns but the cold weath¬ er has k«pt the swains and the swans lndoors^^«o the diirkened highways lia\ e not been of any speci.'il advaii- taue to Danny t'upld.
The bold hiKhwaymen have not mo¬ lested the ihhabitaiits because of the darkness and it Is well thai they do not, because everyone Is stnyiiig at home guarding their pioperty.
The Xassau l.ight & Power tVimpany are working day and niglit to gi^t the lights installed and It is hope<l that Koosevelt will again be <>n„lbe CWeat Hrauyd, and tw White Way within a few days. .\ithiir an<l th
DIES AT HOME IN OYSTER BAY
Former State Senator Prominent in Nassau Politics, Servinf Eif ht Years As Postmaster III Oyster Bay, Gained State Wide Promi¬ nence In Sulzer Trial Fifrjiting Tammany Hall
Oyster Hay. May !).—Formt-r St.ite .Senator Thomas H. O'Keefe died al his home here this moi-nlng at 3;no o'cloi-U after a loni; illness, iflc came to this jilacf- from Greenland. Suffolk County
4 lonif illness, from (Jreenlaiid and has been a resident here for twen- t.vflve yeai's. .\lr. O'Keefe Is the fiwncr of the Oyster Hay Pilot, a newspaper published liere and has long been iden tilled with polities and the newspaper work.
Ho wus .State .Senator from H'l? to 1014. one term. It was during that lime that the Impeachment proceedings were taken «gaInst tSovernor Sulzer. Mr. O'Keefe voted the sustaining of Oovcr- nor Suly.er and in doing so fought the Tammany ori;anizntlon and Incurred enmity. Me has been jiostmaster in Oyster Pay for eight years.
Herbert H. Slsson. now State Com¬ missioner of lllRliways and foi-nierl;. .Stale K.Ncise ("ommissioner named liim as one of the Htate representatives tour .years ago to select those places to hold excise licen.ses. That was when the law became effective leBiilathiK th<' li¬ censes by )K>pulntlon.
Ill' is survived by a widow. Mary brothers, William nnd sisters.
Admits Perjury to District At¬ torney Weeks in Early Morning Confession—Justice Cropsey holds Him Under $5,000 Bail-Court Takes Prosecutor and Seven Jurors of Last Trial Into Grand Jury Room For Private Inquiry.
DRISCOLL IS UNDER INVESTIGATION
RECORDCROWDTHROWNINTORIOT OF LAUGHTER AT vets; SHOW
''Lotta Bunke/' Travesty On Old-Time Melo¬ drama, Wins Audience Of 800—Show Staged By L. W. Cook Said To Be Best Comedy Given In Rockville Centre
AUBREY PETTIT TRIAL STARTED THIS MORNING
Counsel Selecting Jury Before Jus¬ tice Cropsey at Mineola—Dis¬ trict Attorney Weeks Insists Up¬ on Knowing If Any Prospective Juror Ever Has Been Charged With Crime
Mineola. May 9.—Startling disclosures developed in the Plant case today, when it became known that Mervin L. Dickerson of Lynbrook, a witness in the first trial lor Plant, confessed to District Attorney Charles B. Weeks that he had committed perjury in his testimony at the instance of Plant, the defendent.
Carman Plant as former country detective is under indictment, charged with criminally receiving stolen goods. The specific charge against him is that he received a stolen Buick car from Matthew J. O'Neil and William Hoffman, the foraier a convict and the other still under indictment and awaiting sentence in the county jail.
Polll of these
liini
lilt testilled at aj when O'Neill wns being heard on
^
600 BOY SCOUTS CAN GO TO CAMP
Nassau and Snf olk GMUities To
Conduct Summer Camp at
Rocky Point
Hempstead, May 9.—The blggPBt lk>y Scout camp ever oondurted on Long Island will be opened by tba combined Scout organizations of Nassau and Suf¬ folk Countie's on July 16. The camp will be continued for six weeks, cr until August 27. and will accommodate 100 Scouta a week, a total of GOO daring the soa.<)on.
Nassau and Silffolk County will each send fifty scouts to the camp each week. Thet camp will be located at Rooky Point, on Long Island Sound.
east of Port Jefferson, where there if I erans have carried their performances a flne beaeh and other conditions Ideiliof this show through several nearby for a camp of this kind. .towns and vMlag«s it will without dot»»)<.
It is planned to 'erect a new mess j be produced on the professional stage, hall and maka otber < improvements i Oharles P. .Messenger was the hit of nee<led. The boys will live In tents, j the ptlrformanc* In the role of Lott«
The cost of e.ich »>oy will be one I Bunke. Hla Impersonation of the fair
Uoekviile Centre, May 9.—Poor old .Masonic Temple, formerly the Rock¬ ville Centre Club, rocked and trembled with the uproarious laughter of a rec- i ordbreaklng crowd during the perform¬ ance of the melodramatic travesty with ; music which was staged there Satur- j day evening by Lindley W. Cook for the I Veterans of l<\>reign Wars. Never has any local-talent show in Rockville Cen¬ tre brought such thunders of api>Iause, such delighted appeals of mob mirth, as from this audience of more than eight hundred. And today Rockville Centre'
folk, who were the fortunate witne.sses j Freeport, Mny 9.—Stephen T). O'Mara, of the "Lotta Hunke" premiere, are ; one of the mo.st prominent Catholic humming all they can remember of the j churchmen In Nas.sau County, died at catchy tunes to which the sonss of the ^^^ ^^^^ ^„^ Randall avenue, on Sat
,' urday, at the age of 6.3 years.
Mr. O'Mara was ^Well known the I length and breadth of the Island in ': church circles, nnd was a member of a
STEPHEN O'MARA PROMINENT CHURCH WORKER IS DEAD
Active In Catholic Church Circles
—Solemn Requiem Mass To Be
Held Wednesday Morning
Finhel and for the de-
show were act.
The book anil lyrics of "l^otta Bunke' wre written by J... W. Co<>k and the ex¬ cellent music which captivated the Vet¬ erans' large audience was ImjirovLsed by Dwight Conn, a composer and music \ Rreat many Catholic .societies. He was
publisher of New York. Atter the Vet-
' young tmilden of Trpy, N. V.. who goc.i i rullickln.g through u series of inlerna- I tional eacaimdes, was the funniest piece of acting we'lttive seen in many a day. , But Lotta Runke's trials and trailM i-un- not bj> appreciated without some idea of I What she had to go through.
Lotta. a nomad of the butlonholo ! works In Troy, spurns her true lover, i Per<;y Palefac*. for the glamorous prom- i Ises of one Ous Ootrocks. an alleged ' mllliotMlre plumber and globe-trotter. "~~"^ ' j aua gives her tickets and vows ho will
Waahlngton, May ».—Th« War De-¦ ,n|^t her to sail on th* Damttno. at partm«»nt will mak« piibUu apolo|7 If ^Vtuttsits Pier. t>ff Tvrenty third atreet. the oais« of any nun Is •rroneously j^t» goes to New tork; but ou board pubU«b«d in tbe n«t of «irmrt QvuMerc : t^e tUipttiyo 9bm Oudy aothjng ebm taa ttow belnc mata pubUc, 8ecr«Qir.v «t ' jde»tlfy «c^p^ « totteo ipfl}i ot sea. War Week« aano^ncwl tMujr. The : ^ioknAis tlnat u».«e tott tMiew ijecks. Stecrttary maid *\try rtfort b»4 been xbeo Tercy raJelaoe. the ardent Her- maa* to check tbe Kat. ijut that Jt w»s j iii«teDt «ov«»-, ou board tha DamSno; Ke penslble that errorsi mirht hava preirt la stopped by a hble stew»r<l upon whom >h. > (Continued on pk<e S).
dollar a day, which will include everj'- thlng. Roy Scouts who wish to go should send In thetr applications ul onre us only the capacity of the camp can b« taki^n. the fli*st ,come flrst served. ,
_-
WAR DEPARTMENT TO APOLOGIZE FOR ERRORS IN DRAFT EVADERS' UST
1
a native of Ireland and came to this country about ao years ago. going Into business in New York. At the time of his death he was the .senior partner of the trm of O'Mara and W.«i.scheibrink. wholesale furniture dealers in N. Y. City.
He was president of the Catholic Khights .Society No. 24-1. a member of the Ik>ard of Directors of Ihe Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum, the Catholic Knights of America, the St. Vincent So¬ ciety, the St. Vincent de Paul Kresh Air Home, the Holy Redeemer Council of the Knights of Columbus, and the Holy Name Society.
Services will be held Tuesday evening at his late home, at which the Knights of Columbus will attend in a body jind so will the Holy Name Society.
Oo Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock a solemn requiem nia.ss will be sdm at the Church of the Holy Redeemer by Father John O'Toole, and interment wtll follow in Holy Croaa Ceoittery.
M* is »ur\ived by his wife, .\nn B., • sen. Thomas, aod two daughters, Saftie aad Mrs. Mary Oallggher. Mr. 6'l(ara'8 lo»« to Ihe community U« keenly felt because his good works and yersooaiity were well known in the cemijnnntty where he had a host of friends.' '
Mineola. May !•.—The trial of Aubrey I'ettlt of Itoosevelt. Charged with crim¬ inally receiving stolen goods was taken Iw'foi'e .lustice James (". Cropsey In I'art I llf .Supreme Court here this mornlnu. Mr. Petllt Is charged with having had a stolen Hudson automobile which he is allesed to have sold to a woman.
it Is -alleged th.st he jiurchased llu- ear from Matthew J. O'.N'eill and Will iam Hoffman, who arc the two men who claim to have sold stolon cars to Carman Plant, former oOuntv d«»- tective. whose second trial last week resultetl In a disagreement.
J-'or tlui two hours o£ tht! mornins session the court has been engaged ill Ketting a Jury in this case. Dis trict Attorney Charles R. Weeks ap- liears for the Slate and .Mtorney (Jeorge Morion Levy, l.t" Peter Stephen P.eck apiiear fendant.
One of the qucHtlons that nislrlct .\ttorney Weeks has a.«(ked all of the Jury Is "had you had any <rlmlnal charge made against you at any time," and all ui» lo the jiresent have answered in the negative.
Up to noon today counsel was only able to Ket seven Jurors. They had nearly e.xhausted tlie panel, and Justice Ciopsey asked County Clerk t.'heshire, j Commission of Jurors Anderson and Sheriff C. W. Smith to diaw an adili- tional panel of tnlismen. After that he directed that the b«ok,s containing the list of Jurors be sealed.
The new tallsmen will report tomor- dow morning, when <ourt o|iens, and Ihe additioiuil four jurors reoiiiied will be taken then. The ca.se is off for the day, and the cotirl has directed that the defendant he committed to the jail until tomorrow. The seven jurors taken have been locked up In the C.arden City Hotel, where they will he kept until the trial is ende<l. un<ler tbe custody ot the court offlcers.
Diisi-oll was called bel'oie the bar In II criniinal charge in Freeport, that ' .lustice Cro|>se.\'s court this inoinlin; Plant lel't the court room with Hoff. " ^"•'> ¦l"--tice CiO|..sey said. "\..w Dii.--
¦ ^ ¦¦,, coll, lit me see your permit to can \
man and took lunch with him at ,l-,l- , , ,,,,,,.,
tliat revolver. DriscoII handed up a
li.son's Shore Uestaunint. ; ,,,j,,j.,. j,,^, „.„„ „„ „pi„ion from Atto,
This testimony was for llie purpose ; ney Oencial Chailes i>. Newton, wlm 'of .showing that Plant ami the two I s'ls forth tli.-it iin.ler the law a railroad men who confes.sed to iiian.x autoino¬ bile crimes wen; frlendlv. I'lnnt made a denial and swore that on the day
SHERIFF SMITH ARRESTS AUTO OWNER FOLLOWING COLUSION IN ROOSEVELT
Wantagh. May 9. -The sheriff's OflSce of.Nassau County has t.aken a hand in the auto colllHlon which occurred In Roofwvelt last Thursday night, when
The car of A ron was damaged, l>olh an automobile driven by Merle Post, aii- Kociated al the Wantagh Outage, was run into h.ead on hy a car t>«longinK to AulADio Oaatino of Tdjnin street, Kree¬ port. . ,
The four other njen In the car with Oastino eticaped serious injury. Post was Injured and hndsetl, and received medU'al attention.
the conviet said be w;is in Hllison's Ilestaurant with Hoffman, that he. Plant, was really taking lunch ut tbe Klks' Club in Kreeport in company with Thomas Barbutti. a former county Investigator and liiekerson.
During the trial llaibiiltj corroborated Plants statement as lo tlie time and place wheiP tliey bad lunch. alKl Dlek- ei>on also said that he was with I'lnnt and Haibutti at the KIk.s' Club on the day that (J'Nelll tind Hoffman .said that Plant was with Hoffman at Klli.son's.
Dickerson, conscious-stricken since the first trial of I'iant, now rccauls bis whole statement, tind says thai his con¬ science will not perniit him to rest with llie knowledge of perjury full upon him. He coiifes.ses that he Hod, testlfyini; and says he did .so becati.se I'iant had done something for him once, and he wanted to h<'lt> Plant when the latter asked him to.
.lustice Cropsey held Dickerson in lieu of a $5,000 ball, at the Instance of nistricl Attorney Weeks this morn¬ ing, anil Dickerson is now engaged in attempting to get that ball. He is p.iiT)letl In the custody of an oflicer until he can do so.
' Mr. Dickerson is a former trustee of the Village of Lynbrook. He lias been atl Insjicrtor or s(iottei- fof tiie .N'ew York and Long Island Railway ComiMiny.
William J. Prlscoll nf Rockvill.' Cen trc, the mun who hel<l out in the sec ond trial of Plant which ended la.«t T-'tldny and caused a disagreement. Is still under Investigation by the coitri and District Attorney Weeks.
Shortly after noon today Justic Cropsey took District Attorney Weeks and seven of the Jurors In the second Plant trial Into tho grand jury room, where they are conducting nn lnc|uir\- as to what took place during the jurors' deliliPTation In the Plant caw Ihe public Is excluded from this hear¬ ing, even the nrwspnper men being liar red.
DrlscoU. who was so Khar|>ly admon¬ ished by .lustice Cropsey last Friday bec3U.se he had Ciiirled a revolver into the jury room, c-ame into court this morning to show Ih-il he hnd a permit, as he .said he had. to carry the weapon. He was a detective for the Ixing Island flHllroad Company and explains the po-* se.ssion of the revolver on the ground^ that his duty required II.
Some of the jui-or« In the Plant Iria! complained that DriscoII had ilisplayed thi- revolver during dellberaliiSns. and oni* of theru said It was fnr the T>ur|H>»i« of intimidating the otlier Jurors-
.^t lea.st one other juror suid that ht ili<l not think that f>riM(OII bad meniK Intimi^a^r anyone by shon-ing thv rmvoi
lietective is a jieace oltl< er and is en titled to can:*' .irms. He :ilso showeil hi.s crcdenlials liuiii .Ma.jor liioi^e ,S, t'haniUer, Kiipeiintendent of the N'e\\
Vork State Police, who ceitiftoil lo In apiKiintinent as an ofllcer ol the Loiii; Island liallroad.
.lustice Cropsey .said after le.idiii^; tliu credentials, "This seems to !»• legillar on its face, bill il gives yoii
no llgllt t jury room.
"I am entin .s;iid DriscoII
".\lny hear me.
"1 will hear
(airy a revolver Into ill.
IliscOll. 1
y 1 say a Word'; ne." ^
¦lit rii' wroin;.
I i.ra>
yon i(
you," said .riistiie Cropsey, "bill I am going lo coiiiIik i all Investigation of you and your metle ods."
"Ill tell you anylliinn yon w.int to ask me. I will replv to any (niestion you want lo put to mi." said Drij^coll.
"I think you won't." relorled ihi- Judge.
"Am I excused'.'" asked DrlscoU.
"Thai's .'ill for torlny," said .Imk'e Croii!<ey slgniHcantly.
Following this .lustice Crotisey touk the proseciitor and the jnrors of the <jr»iond Plant trial Into the imiiiiry In privale.
HARVEY T.YOUNG DIES ATWANTAGH
Death Came Unexpectedly—Fu¬ neral Services To Be Held Wednesday
VVanta;;li. May 9.--Hnrve,\- Jackson VouiiK. biglily respected and beloved esiilent of Wantagh, died at Ills home on Wantagh avenue on Sunday ut Ihe age of sixty-two. His death was very unexpected, and came as a ureal shock- to Ills family and many friends.
.Mr. Young was a retired lumber m<i- cliunt of Ihis village, having been active in the firm ft Voung nrotliers for mnn.\ years, and he did much tn develop the town. He was a member of tlie (.jnoens County .Merchanls' Assistance A»so<-l;i tlon, and also of the local tire deixirt- m"nl.
Funeral sei-ylces will be , held Wed¬ nesday at 2.:J0 p.m., at his late home, following which there will be private in¬ terment in (Iteenfleld Cemetery.
He is survived by his wife, Mniiha, and a daughter, Klsle Lee, and one sis¬ ter. Mrs. P. Nostrand of Farmingdale.
fAN ME LABOR IMONS IX MA.S.S.
Boston, May ». -t;ov<rrnor ('banning Cox today signed the Voluntary Aju^i elation bill, under which laltor unionit can he/MiWl In couit. IjilHir leader- have tiirmmK^tbt bill which pfisMil both branches of the I.i«itlHlaturp, the "niot.r vlcioii\ blow against labor i»ver madU;."
J
m
iiiii
mM
^itaassaita
atiiaaiM
^iiiUWiliiiU
MMMgp