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0., WEDNESDAY, NOV. 19, 1919 we President Addresses Letter-to Administra- tion Senators Urging Them to Vote Against Resolution Carrying Foreign Relations Committee Reservations. ~ The Associated: Press) 19.—A letter. from President W (By WASHINGTON, Nov. ad-| SCENE IN THE with the foreign rélations committee reservations, was laid:before the. ; conference of administration senate forces by Democratic Lender! ASSASSINS FAIL Hitchcock today. The committee program, the president wrote, would XM provide not for-ratification “but rather for nullification of the treaty.” The confererice Was called to decide | 5 on final admirtistration tactics in.the; tions was affirmed at the conference of Democrats. Hitchcock said that enough for ratification which is expected 10 come ta. an é@nd today or tomorrow.| Democrats to insure /its defeat had KIL LODGE MAKES ANSWER T0 PRESIDENT’S PLEA with Republicans to. that end. Ne iv Democrats, Fie ong eaten the (scab | f ence, are not bound by! any conference SHINGTOS oN 3.—-Senator Agreement and’ said’ they were ‘willing | Hitcheoek ,made public the following | to accept many of. the majority's reser-| letter from the president: vations but could not acgept the’ pre-| “You were good enough to bring me!amble or those dealing h. Article X, word that the Democratic senators sup-|Shantung, equality of voting, and one porting the treaty would be glad to}or two others. If. possible a motion receive a word of counsel from me, I|to strike out ‘objectionable -ones will be! assume that they only desire my judg-|™ade. If majority declined to ‘compro-! ‘day by: wireless fron Hand grenades were thrown at him. Six soldiers ,were Killed and’ 12” wound- ment upon the all important questiqn of a final yote'on the resolution” con- taining the many reservations by Sen- ator Lodge. Thereon, I cannot hesi- ‘ute for in my opinion it does not pro- vide for ratification but rather for nul-| lifleation of the treaty. I sincerely hope my friends and sup- porters of the treaty will vote against the Lodge resolution. I understand that the door will probably then be open for a genuine resolution of ratifi- cation, I trust that all true friends of the treaty will refuse to support the ‘Lodge resolution." {considered atthe conference. Some of JENKINS STILL GIVEN LIBERTY mise it was. said that responsibility for the failure of the treaty would rest on that side of the chamber. “) | Various compromise measures were’ those present predicted a working agree-! ment based on a combination of the} Hitchcock and McCumber proposals, | modifying committee reseryations, could! pe veered. (By Asnocinted Prens. | MEXICO" CITY, "Nov. DEBATE OPENED WHEN mal ‘order’ for. the imprisonment SENATE IS CONVENED William’ Jenkins, on) charges of false By Associated Press.) ’ Noy. 19,—immedi-| in the case-in which they testified that RAIDS.ON RED HE ADQUARTERS—This particular picture vising administration senators to vote against ratification of the treaty | Yor: but it in typical forvevery city of importance, STRIKERS ARE koi SENT TO JAIL OF PUEBLA, MEX. (majority of those at Rock Springs are; } mt r that the posed obedience to the order that on y ei | for- | strikers should return to work, but that | declarations and threats against peons |° NT Sa 255° AU ODEO ee AUSTRALIA HIT _ BY EROUGHT, THB:DAILY TRIBUNE (By Axsocinted Prens.) LONDON. Nov. 19.—Australia, es- Pecially New South Wales, is suffer Member of the Associated Press, ing the most devastating drought and served by the United Press.[/| since white men Ines tended there | according t Sydney dispatch to the | Daily Mail. Stock and crops are be- | ing destroyed and it is doubtfyl if there will be enough seed wheat for next season, ' Cavalry Platoon trail of William Carli (Special to ; CHEYENNE, Wyo., Nov. bound Union Pacific Los Angel Rock River and Medicine Bow, leaped from the train and esc bullets at least one of which, to have struck him. of the special trains, among them 15 mined to run ‘has the best wishes of Wer of highly respectable, thoroughly law-abiding Wyoming citizens, ‘HOLD UP ANT BY THE UNION an amazing num- was taken in Rutgers Square, where raids on Reds have been taking place. New While armed were riding every passenger ed by the Union Pa nd i posse with bloodhounds him in the Red Desert, 1 to the west, Carlisle or his imitator boarded the Los and soon Angeles limited at Rock Riv Situation-Clears'in Kemmerer and Rock Springs Fields with Arrest of 19 Foreigners Who Started Trouble H (Special, to. The Tribune) | CHEYENNE, Wyo., Nov. 19.—Nineteen foreign strikers who were |interferring with the return to work of miners in the Kemmerer and | Rock Springs fields were arrested Tuesday, eight at Frontier and 11 | at Rock Springs, and are held for investigation as to their citizenship |status and ly for prosecution under the state criminal syndical- The trouble makers held at Kemmerer are Austrians. A 20,000 TROOPS DESERT FORCES | with tragic possthilities. ;slowly through the car the bandit col passengers in the train, He stopped at the rear door and warned his: v. tims not'to attempt to follow him into the next car. Just what then took place is not clear from the jumbled fragments of avail- able testimony, but the outlaw instead ‘of proceeding into the next car hastily opened a vestibule door and leaped from the train. He was followed to the door jand an instant later by a guard from the second car, who emptied his auto- matic at the form he dimly saw rolling jover and over down the embankment carrying the track. BANDIT LOSES HAT AND | 3UN IN LEAP FROM TRAIN Within a short distance of the scene! of the bandit's leap the train, which had begun to,slow down for the stop at | Medicine Bow, 20 miles west of Rock | River, and was traveling perhaps fif- |ism law. It is) charged that they not only violently op-| | Datmatians and Montenegrins. | the: threatened with death any miner ving the order. As a result of the arrests, and the famous train bandit who escaped tiary at Rawlins last Saturday concealed in a box of s some person emulating his exploits—last night celebrated his achievement of freedom by robbing pa: lected meney and valuables from the} took 2 prom | ri | WASHINGTON, personal efforts. of headquarters’ offi- cers of district No. 22, United Mine | Workers of America, the situation in lthe Rock Springs and Kemmerer fields improved and the mines today are working with good f Vice Presi: | dent George Young js at Kemmerer and | |President Martin Cahill is at Rock Senator Lodge replied in an inter- view: x “The senate has equal power and re- sponsibility with the president in mak- ing treaties. The senate will not, in | ately after the senate met today, Sen-| they saw him at Hacienda in company jator Lodge formally presented the res-| with Federico Cordova, bandit leader, | olution of ratification containing 15| was issued by Criminal Iudge Gonzalez |reservations adopted by a majority of| Franco, at- Puebla, according to ad- the senate. Altho the Democrats are vices received here. my opinion, obey orders of the presi-! declared in Republican quarters to have| Jenkins, however, is not yet in jail dent, who undertakes to command the |diminished ‘chances of compromise, it}and in statement to the press asserts senate to ratify «the treaty without | was Iearned that a proposal to FROOHEy it is_untrue that he is not allowed to|Springs., The latter yesterday after reservations adopted by large majority | the preamble reservation of the commit-| leave the city. _ |noon vigorously addressed u meeting of the senate and which would Ameri- | tee so, that the réservations would not} The assertion was also made at the} of the miners, condemning the attitude | canize it and make it safe for the Unit-| have to have affirmative acceptance by | foreign office that: no formal note had | of the radical element, and the majority | ed States. What he commands cannot| other powers was. under the serious | peen received from the United States !or the Men at the meeting voted to re-| he done,’ | eeomere tort GH pda ea ome is Sens: in Egy} of Beaks fl al-lturn to w f this Rporning: ; | rn -| Hitchcock said the Lg “| though its known t representations | The situation 4’t Hudsen, where radi- ccrats ee eee eae dean | red to wait until the Lodge remote | a made to the Mexican government have been causing ~ trouble, has} resolution in its entirety, a compromise | was voted on. Lodge then withdrew | regarding) his “molestatiah.”” ed up. Secretary Treasurer James resolution is improbable, according to | his request and the debate on the Lodge | Charges against Jenkins thus far ap-| an of district No. 22. is on the! senate leaders | resolution began. ;Pear to be based on the testimony of |xzround there, and asa result of his i : URS ae peons* who, it is alleged, saw him injefforts the order rescinding the. strike foals ch Miss Helen Burnette has’ returned! there. sion of Democratic friends of the trea-| of her sister, Mrs. R. Roland, on Wert ported that 20,000 troops Yudenitch’s army have gone over to the Bolshe- viki. ee | HERDER BEATEN OFF B temo, a Mex tacked Mrs. € last Apri woman af PLEDG! c ; ers |has been generally obeyed, altho defied | Mrs. George Cornell of Montana is company with Cordova, but newspapers | TO Hf L oo here from Thermopolis where she u:s| publish stories to the effect that coer-|for “two days. isha 1 ra$oevae € [Asnoctagaa Pres.) | neen taking treatments for the past|cion was used on both sides. _ | Governor aver ee ae f | | i gi J ponditior WASHINGTON Nov. 19.—The deci-| few weeks, and is now ill at the home oo last night to investigate ‘c OF YUDENITCH General northwestern Russian — SS WOMAN GIVEN &2 YEARS NEWCASTLE Nov. n sheepherder, ri John on a for Itho he slashed he ten off by the plucky ra desperate struggle, will » from 25 to 30 years in the state 19.—Cruz who at- road |teen miles an hour, was brought to a |stop in response to frantic signais from |the crew and the guard and the latter jand the trainmen hastened back along the track’ to where they found a hat! and @ revolver, both apparently stained with blood, which had heen! [dropped hy the outlaw, but the man had disappeared. ‘The supposed blood- stains on the hat and revolver were the {foundation for the assumption that one! jor more of the guard's bullets had struek the fugitive and the vicinity |was hastily searched in the hope that he might be Totind helpless or dead. The | |train then was run to Medicine Bow land from the t 8:10 o'clock, news of the robbery was flashed to division | |headquarters here and east and west. jAt once feverish prepdrations for the with {capture of the robber began at Chey-| Yesterday morning Jenne, Laramie-and levery way station and Rawlins. Rawlins between and at Laramie from Denver where she spent. about 'y to vote @gainst the ratification res-| School street. |two weeks ona pleasure trip. olution containing the Lodge reserva- PEOPLE WILL GET COAL, REGARDLESS ANY ACTION OF MINERS, OPERATORS So Says Fuel ‘Administrator Garfield in MAN FINED FOR Address to Wage Conference;Cabinet | Position Reflected in Statement | Charles Armstrong, who was --ar- rested the first of the week by Deputy |W. E. Kilgore of the sheriff's office, was fined $25 and sentenced to/30 days in jail following his trial in court yes- terday afternoon. Armstrong. ..was charged with stealing a watch and a pair of trousers from a rooming-house. i nt TO » Wy The Associated Press) i 4 WASHINGTON; -Nev:'19.—Speaking with the authority of the esident’s cabinet, Fuel Administrator Garfield today told represen- tatives of the bituminous coal operators and miners that “the people of the United States need, be ve and will have coal” and-as long 2s the government stands they will not be prevented from getting it by “auything the operators or miners may do. i Garlioid explained that’his purpose What wage advanc y the operators a \“s t@ fupuitsh ‘the conference with data} PY the opereinty i Whitt» he -weifid use in determining » —— |_R..N. Van Sant is expecting twa }Clydesdale and two F. W. D. trucks in {the very near future. Mr, Van Sayit es, if any, agreed. to Wersy “ on s nd miperswould be bes the agency here_and says that ~ ‘for motor trucks: at the’present “tite. |DELEGATION IN | PARIS TO SAIL | INJUNCTION TO LOCAL THEFTS) | PERMIT BOOZE { | eution of the preliminary~ injunction ‘is?an “unusually large demani| penitentiary for his crime.” He was con. |GREAT CORDON THROWN victed during the session of the dis- |\OULl BY ARMED SES | trict court just concluded here and was | Trains that were scheduled to reach| sentenced by Judge E. C. Raymond to|Medicine Bow or Rock River before the term stated. possemen could be rushed to those| a earLY IN DEC. GIRL STABS ASSAILANT | (By Associated Press.) | PARIS, Nov. 19.—The American | delegation to the peace conference | | will sail: for home December 5 or 6, it was learned today. WITH HAT PIN, D | Fees Are Seized from Behind but Superior | Strength and Sharp Pin Effect Release from Man Who Attacked Her A trusty hatpin and siperior strength are all that saved ; 5 Miss Hazel Weaver, employed by the Lukis Confectionery store, r SBOBTON, “Nov. 9 the.. United | from being the victim - a brutal assault as she was going home States Circuit Court» of “Appeals to- | fram her work last night. , ee Ee : day ‘issued-an order staying the. exe- Miss Weaver was off ‘duty at 11/0’clock, and was going to | the home of her sister, Mrs. H: Kennedy on North: Lincoln street. where she rooms, when she no-]and as she stepped to the sidewalk after | ticed that someone was following her.| crossing the railroad track, her armn As she turned north on Lincoln from] Were seized and at the same time her Second street the man gained upon her, assailant attempted to crowd a gag into grauted by Judge Arthur L. Brown restraining federal officials of Rhode Island from enforcing the. Volstead prohibition act. ATTEMPT AT O PAGE THREE SCAPE BY ROBBING TRAIN - MAN HUNT BEGINS IN _— GRoPS LOST EARNEST FOLLOWING _ HOLDUP OF LIMITED Great Cordon of ‘Armed Men, Including from Fort Russell, Thrown Around Region Where Escaped Bandit Jumped from Train Last Night (By The Associated Press) MEDICINE BOW, Wyo., Nov. 19.—Bloodhounds on the le, bandit who held up the Los Angeles Limited train on the Union Pacific near here last night, returned today from the scene of the robbery unable to follow the trail. The general belief prevailed that Carlisle wa picked up by a confederate in an automobile and effected h escape. Yhe Tribune) 19.—William L. Carlisle, the from the Wyoming peniten- ts—or ngers on ‘the west les limited train No. 19 between 95 miles west of Cheyenne. He aped, followed by a stream of and possibly two, are believed This morning the country in the neighborhood of the scene robbery swarms with possemen rushed to the scene on United States cavalrymen from Fort Russell carrying ten days’ emergency rations and deter- | down the fugitive. dead or alive, within a few hours is regarded as certain. Meanwhile, the hunted man, have the reckless criminal exploits gripped the public fancy—— The capture of the outlaw, if he be Carlisle—so strongly [points w ered to take sidings and wait further orders. freight ap proaching Ke and which jight, have y the fugitive Hin esvaping was met beyond the long snowsheds by men from the town, |flagged and se Within an hour special trains heavily armed ; bosses Were speeding from Rawlins {and Laramie to the scene of the out law's escay Three and one-lalf hours later a spe ‘i after the train resumed its western|cial train bear President and \fter the president's letter was read] @&Peed to- voto against the Lodge reso-| \ 2 4 Progress he appeared in the forward} General Manag 7. M. Jeffers, W there were Indications that unless a| lution. No compromise plan hasbeen | i |door of & tourist sleeper, revolver In| McClement and other Union Paci compromise could be effected, ‘admin-| drafted by the Democrats, but it was gen i jhand, and commanded “hands up.'|spectal agents, cavs nen and their istration senators would line up almost |Suggtsted that after the’ tive de- | Las ease | : ‘ ;The travelers obeyed with unanimous | mounts and a large selected posse with solidly against ratification, « jiflgat Of the - . Ey: a cpm; INDON, 4 : alacrity,. |The scene would haye heen |horses was on its-way from Cheyenne. rs ‘mittee ~ wor e: appointed tor! fer | | ludicrous had it not been so pregnant) A few hours later it was followed by a Walking second special bearing Superintendent fia. W. Woodruff, Charlie Trwin (rho nent part in running down the Edson tunnel holdup more horees, arms and Carlisle after in 1916), and ammunition. Before daylight poss: had spread into the ‘country from Rock River, Medicine Bow and the scene of the es. cape in every direction; posses had tak- en the field from Wheatland, 60 miles to the northeast and Saratoga, 80 ‘miles |to the southwest, to cut off the ban |dit’s flight either north or south and jthe posses and bloodhounds whom Car- | lisle had evaded in the Red Desert were on the way from Wamsutter fast as steam could drag them, RECORD ESTABLISHED IN MOBILIZING POSSES Only ouce before perhaps—after Car- lisle perpetrated his third holdup in j as 11916, 30 miles to the west of the scene of last night's exploit—in the history of the west had there occurred so rapid @ mobilization of pursuers. And as in 1916 the odds against the outlaw ap- Dear too great for there to be a possi bility of his avoiding capture. Reports of the amount secured by the bandit vary from little more than $100 to’ $1,000, Descriptions of him range from tall and rangy (as is Carlisle), to short and chunky. He was masked with a hand- kerchief or rag and his features wero indistinguishable. BANDIT MADE LONG JUMP TO ROCK RIVER If the No. 19 bandit is Carlisle the convict did some extended and daring traveling between the time he robbed # sheep camp near Wamsutter on Sun- day, securing warm clothing and arms, and that of the train robbery last night. pursuers in the Wamsutter district had lost all trace of the fugitive, On the theory that he had headed on +t north across the desert in an atter © reach the mountains to the north wthwest, or the central Wy ming rai,.vads to the northwest, or the (Continued on Page 6) — EFEATS UTRAGE her mouth, Miss Weaver had her hatpin in her hand, having become nervous when the tan followed her into | Lincoin street, and believes that she gave him a good jab, as she .wrenched herself from iis grasp. “T was frantic with ‘fear, and screamed until T had reached my sis- ter's home,” she said today, “I think he tried to cut me off as I ran, antl [ had the whole neighborhood aroused.’ Miss Weaver was at her work today, altho plainly su ing from neryous shock. A bruised:lip, and bruises upon her arms are the only ill effects of her iventure. Ss. nl other attacks upon women are said to have occurred within the it few days.