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RESOLUTE WINS THIRD ‘HEAT’ Che Casper Baily POLES ADVISED TO — FOR poe m ARMISTICE WITH BOLSHEVIKS AS REDS CONTINUE VICIOUS DRIVE! START OF RACE set neck cage = Evil UTE : ate LONDON, Jul: er ‘tii fas dvised Poland Kk Mie Uz Thursday, net h i i , July 21. at Britain has advised Pol to ask so- $ B proton Bg a ee phe ‘ viet Russia for an armistice. Fir’ od, Latvia and Lithuania decline Before ‘Halt Way the British invitation to a peace The soviet reply received by th _—_>ign office here is said to be ambiguous but holds promise of a soli »€ the Russian-Polish prob- lem. Great Britain answered Moscow’s . %, ‘ast night. _vence here. ‘Mark Is,Passed (By Associated Press) SANDY HOOK, July 21.—The CASPER, wro,, ‘A aha agal JULY 21, 1920. | | __ NUMBER 21 | vade territo.” shin the old. Polish | America’s cup today, but must re | today stated that | take two more straight victories the Reds had completely defeatea the: to prevent the Shamrock IV from | ABBE Boviel forces fare: sr ching) lifting the cup. After a bad start | | ola. German Positions at Baranoviteh,!the Resolute jumped into the ja ri ae,” “were seo4~d dead, The Shasnrock drew along- | 3 George told parliament | side a mile from the finish but the Premier Loy jtoday that the Polish premier was \m- deriaking to withdraw the Polish armies| Resolute, granted a time allow- within legitimate borders, Lioyd George | ance of seven minutes, was safe. characterized as “intolerable,” Moscow’ declaration that Russia would eonslder peace only with a Polish proletariat gov-| ernmidnt. Poland has raised 300,000 volunteers |within the last few days. Marshal! Foch probably will go to Warsaw short-! ly. BY BRITISH CABINET PROHIBITIONIST SAYS Conflicting Reports Say Independence Pos- (Original Dry Party Assembled to Select CHRISTENSEN sible and More Drastic Action Is Pro- | “Burial Lot,” Delegates Are Told by PROPOSES TO posed; Discussion Is Rife ; Chairman and Keynote Speaker | RELEASE DEBS (By Associated Press) SANDY HOOK, July 21.— With two victories to her credit, | Shamrock IV led across the start- ing line in today’s race for Amer- ica’s cup. She needs only one more victory to lift the cup. | SOVIET REPLY USED FOR HOME PROPAGANDA | | / * (By Associated Press) ae aan Awe ee oa wias | os LONDON, “July 21.—Premier Liloyda)the Reséfite shot ahead and at 1:5 (By ve Press) | (By Associated Press) | (By Associated Press) George, addressing the house of tab, was Veadiig by 200 yards. The wind | DENVER, July 21.—Parley mons, today, said the soviet answer to/ has breezed up to six knots. LONDON, July 21.—A proposal,for. virtual independence for Ire-| LINCOLN, Neb., July 21.—Calling the thirteenth quadrennial |} Christensen, Farmer-Labor party | the allies regarding peace with Poland| ‘The first leg of Me race, a 16-mile land with provisions against the interference of any foreign abet convention of the-Prohibition party to order here this morning, Vir- |] candidate for president, today tele-}| was incoherort and ambiguous, andj beat to windward, furnished a pretty bi Jd|| graphed Senator Warren G. Hard-| propaganda largely Intended for ‘home as the yachts headed in urttit ment in Irish affairs is understood ‘to’ be under consideration by the! gil G. Hinshaw, chairman of the Proihi ition national committee, told |} ini:, Republican nominee, and Gov- || consumption. So far aa he could un-| within a mile of the Jersey coast. ‘Phe British cabinet. The proposal includes the withdrawal of every ves-fthe delegates they had come together to “select a burial lot for John | Saniijata tatgrascigitnatlail Gel ts ngs is hein indicted] Shamrock crossed 19 seconds ahead.” ' rem " oat <i . . ’ as . * a is Po ‘ooting er, the Shamrock crep’ tige of British military and civil authority. This would mean leaving)Barleycorn.” The other political parties, he said, “‘out of respect to | In a demand upon Fresident Wilson | 1and direct, up ithreeelghihecee: a pillet diteetaan Irish factions to fight it out themselves. John’s relatives have voted that he shall Jie in state for another four | Rebs Baialtehmned: tron prison the Resolute but the defender workod On the other hand Andrew , Bonar |— years tg be viewed by the American|| as # “matter of simple justice.” Patten sto winemayen otis: Onell idee: ana otnee: Heh eevecdecand peoittes stood too far inshore and when they leaders intimate that measures are: be- | “The Democratic: platform is silent,| — came about on a series of short hitches ing ‘considered for strengthening the ‘the Republican platform is silent,” the! the Resolute led by 100 yards. This British military and civil structure in | Prohibition natignal chairman contin. | lead was gradually increased. tea m y ¢ |ned. “Harding ta-not a prohibitionist The Resolute was half a mile ahead reland. jat heart. Cox is wet. The future is! at the halfway mark. With a 12-knot oO - T iC K ee i = before us, the eatnpalgn is upon us. | FIRST ae on | C MEATS wind blowing both crafts were on 1, “We want to do the wisest thing,} thelr racing lines for the first time in Fee ne peers Fam tho best thing for the prohibition move: | | Alte ectoaeet ray RaIAraonel Laver oR Z 5 0 ‘3 ment for the country. It was our} two heats this was the do-or-die race (By Associated Press) fervent wish that every political party for the Resolute. LONDON, July 21.—Sinn — Feiners woukt this year fall in line with the (By Associated Press) and ghe British government are pre- Constitution of the United States. with | , WASHINGTON, duly 21.— par to. discuss, if they are not al- the Congress of the [nited States; with| j fos pada bncany nes Ppl eg ready discuasing a basis of probable Sends: up) ‘Ofthe United States.) | i ” =| seitlenionbede. Si tapi capettert a Commoner Notice of Refusal to Hea i and avowedly thel-~ copa sey tee ecenican te (doilars. worth of canied.| NAVAG©AERYSTATION, Rockaway, cording toa stateme today séttloment of this question. The othi Risdikaateesi alates weeil phere the ne on the pepe pad prleen below | July 21.—The naval blimp C-10, which by the Dafly Mail's Dublin correspond. Prohibitionists. As Party Assembles; [Parties “have failed, What ‘shall “wel tnitiat speaking forum of Governor | svanced today ANCHE AE NES ES'\ was observing the yacht races, came ent, who says that Trish “political cir- | dag’ | James M. Cox, Democratic standard | ese dt to grief today just as the yac cles where this report =e usual- Onl 300 Dele ates Attending | MISSION NOT ENDED bearer, according to tentative plans. | neared the line and fell into Jamacia ly are well, informed, y $24 | KEYNOTER DECLARES Afte this. notification, set for Aux- | bay near the air station. Five mem- ‘ARRESTS MADE e (By Associated Press) “We are still on t map and our| ust 7, Cox plans to spend the last bers of the crew and three newspaper j | mission is not ended,” Aaron S. Wat-| three weeks in August in these 4men abroad escaped with no worse \ TURK ‘CABINET _ LINCOLN, Neb., July 21.—Faced with -semi-official information Zi Keynote speaker at the Prohibl-| states, and then start on-a western | than. a ducking. tion party's convention, told the dele-| tour early in September. was als —_— $ that neither W. J. Bryan nor “Billy” Sunday would be available for) ee at its opening session here this| annou today that Franklin D. | (By Associ P their national ticket, the Prohibition party today forgot nominees and |inorning. ‘We must place in the field| Roosevelt probably will tour the west, | __ (By Associated Press) h I a t ‘a ticket of real presidential size and| including the sifie coast, while Cox SANDY HOOK, July 21.—Captain yf sweltered through two hours-of speech-making. It was made cer AlN = akevelcempaleniihatmeniitwin.therre:| de in theeast. | (iy -Aseotinthaggeeas Andrew Jackson Appelgate was aboard to the delegates that Bryan would not accept the nomination. spect of all thinking men and women ———- = € | CONSTANTINOPLE, duly 21.— | the Shamfock IV to direct Captain Y It became known today that efforts! Mr. Watkins said that’ the prohibition ee py LS 1. Thompon of, Wholesale arrests in conneetion with Burton on the tide and wind today, (By United Press) were being made by the natic com.| @uestion was not settled and would not Venta shy ox Se rarel ie alleged plot to promote’ a general cm LONDON, July °21.—The Turkish |mittee to find out if Dan A. Poling,!" “"ntil the machinery of government | Concordia, ‘Kar. 1 heeen oe tine| Uprising of the Moslems against for- CASING STOL! FROM CAR cabinet has resigned, it is reliably aating international president, of the 1 attached and =the: lawbreakers sur-| Vi) Une Wot nn cmpaon ar eign occupation are being made here. - reported here, - Christian Endeavor, would accept the| "heer unconditionally.” SEND hegaend ees tk re DPORL ETS. < | The confession of one plotter is sald T. M. Shambaugh on South Washing- ss , fiationwit ottered.<- Politi: tain he experiment of even partially en-| route to the Yellowstone National paik| ¢) implicate high officials of one of {ton street reports a new rim and a q nomfnation Otlerees eee ts orced prohibition,” he said, “hus been| Where they will spend two weeks. They) 4 § 4 fs su iin EA t . | New York. ee 5 is by 1 “i ea F the entente powe: in an alleged c casing stolen from his motor car whil® FORMER PRINCE 8 rae USS Is ninently satisfactory and the dem |Are making the trip overland in t | spiraey which directed chiefly nding in his garage Jast night, onstrations of moral and industrial jm-| Mercer motor car agaiust the British, The garage was locked. | (By United Press) provements so convincing that millions) BURIED TODAY, UP LONG CHASE Hoes A Oe Uaderele = | pepeeeesin en sanrioane: Bae Stn | 2s a sional SANG ntic n of the Pro. been aiegtatel beyond a shadow of al — sy United Press) , er doubt.” (By United Press) NEW yOuK. July 21.—Erwin Berg. | hibition party met ge ony itecath|., Mr. Watkins ran on the Prohibition | POTSDAM, July 21.—Prince Joachim//doll, alleged draft evader and brother brate the adoption of the Mlehtecnt ticket in 1908 and 1912 as its candi was buried today in the presence of! of Grover Cleveland Bergdoll, escaped|*mendment and perhaps nominate a aoe for the vice presidency. He is hundreds of the ‘old regime, including, slacker, surrendered himself tc at|national ticket. Today's work consist-),,oressor of English in a school at| Generals von Hindenburg and Ludeq! Gdvernors island. Erwin had been |¢d mainly of perfecting convention! Germantown, Ohio. dor. soughtttor over two years, machinery, hearing Watkin's” keynote)’ “The Prohibition keynote speaker em | —— |Address and listening to the addresses | phasized the interest of the Prohibition] jof several delegates, / There are Jabout 300 delegates. | W. J. Bryan and “Billy” Sunday ap-! |parently- constitute the most popular |nations,” and that it would finally be| | ticket. Bryan is silent on whether he adopted, but he characterized President would accept if nominated. Sunday in-| Wilson’s course in handling it as having only | party in other questions confronting the country. He declared that “the| whole country desires the league of} $4,000 IN DOPE SEIZED, TWO IN WAIL ON\ CHARGE Large Extent of Traffic Attempted Here Is _ Gained in Amount of Drugs and ACCEPT WAGE, BELIEF themselves as favorable to acceptance Favorable dicated that he would follow Bryan’s|“too much the flavor of autocracy"|Conservatives to Ratifying of the’ dectiion. ae aie Boat, | tena. Jand said his plan could not be adopted | |" All, reports, teeaeiaasrpbtines odin —_———— | “without radical revision.” |indjcated that comseryatives who «re disposed to accept the board's decision will prevail. Powerful heads of the “Big Four” brotherhoods are siding with the Conservative faction, although their men did not fare as liberally at the hands of the board a¥ some othérs. On prohibition Mr, Watkins said: | “When we inquire of the leaders of the two major parties why an iron clad prohibition plank was omitted from each of the party platforms, we are blandly informed that the question is settled! Years ago when we pleaded Board’s Award Prevail in Meeting Held to Discuss Wage Decision TURKS TO SIGN PEACE TREATY, (By United Press.) for such a plank, they said that it CHICAGO, July 21.—Leaders of the brotherhoods today requested a | RAILROADS TALK PLANS SAYS OFFICIAL never can be wettled, or at any rate, it] secret conference with the full membership of the labor board to discuss the |T0 INCREASE REVENUES R is too s make the fight. Now i a a 7 4 ee Ks | Paraphernalia at City Hall is too late to mention the subject! 1| Wage award. What the brotherhood leaders’ final verdict on award will be fs _ | Galen a at Sc uicee wonder. when would have heen the| unknown, but the whole question probably will be put to referendum vote | fistets: | psychological moment that the question executives met with passenger and 7, ’ . 5 of the membership. fi ht ere today ‘ Four thousand dollars’ worth of “dope”, representing the seizures (By' Associated Press) of prohibition would have been strict!\| 3 Rd ceva alle ee RE sider means of raising revenues to ‘ 3 peat i | SONSTANTIN' ©, July 2h— | UP to date. s > 26 by the city police department within a period of three weeks, is now, CONSTANTINOPLE, (any TU |" ornietis a. eubtertige of | course. (By Associated Press) {mask Seimeanar 900,000 walattnieaee. Yt resting in the, safe of Chief of Police E. H. Ellithorpe. Included with) jeace treaty, it was officially; | Merely setting down a group of figures CHICAGO, July 21.—Danger of an immediate railroad strike ap-| interstate: commeycs commission for the dope there are seven complete outfits for injecting. dope into the | nounced here today. The Turkish | io or war does not conquer ane, an incfeasé in passenger fares of half . parently was dissipated today when 2,000 representatives of 16 rail- way crafts resumed their conference to consider the $600,000,000 cit I vas advised that the | a cent a mil human body. There are. 150 to 200 grain tablets of dope as well as, Vanguard of the Greele army. hd in oe ae tion; ne'ther does the passage of a law,| vanguard of the Greek army {statutory or constitutional, settle any are i Y | 7 5 Arte SPECIAL ORDER GIVEN two sealed bo contaming eocaine and morphine. A little heroin entered Adrianople. ee enety nce guinition is not settled! wage increase granted by the railway labor board. Less dissatisfacijror HARVEST MOVEMENT was contained in the assortment of al v not be se un he ma-} pee) chinery of government is attached and, tion was apparent and a desire for a peaceful solution was manifest. lo, ey Laon has: saipedensy Two men are serving jail sentences) the lawbreakers surrender uncondition- | It is reported that locomotive engineers and shopmen expressed, ment of 25,000 additional box cars trem for vagrancy for their intentions to carry on @ traffic in the sale of oer between here and Lusk, Wyo. Be- cause one was a little too loud in talk- ing about {it early Sunday morning, Chief Bilithorpe overheard him. One is serving’an old sentence of six days and (wher he appears before ‘Judge Perry A. Morris for a third time next} week, ‘lié probably will be given a new sentence on which to start. The other man is serving the usual sentence of ten days for vagrancy. His friend had been paroled on promise to leave the city, it his visits back to Casper—he told jef Ellithorpe it was to get his Ohio, July 21.—! give prominence to the foreign policy dry—became too frequent. The 5 Pautt was Mia! acroat Gstclye joined issue between the two great political parties. E. §F 1 Bachell inént. law It is declared that Harding will make a declaration squaring with the BE. Pau lachellor a prominen ve ‘ - yer of Lusk, Wyo., is in the city for party platform and record and bridging successfully Republican difference a few days on business and visiting with friends. of opinic HARDING 10 FORGE MAIN ISSUES ACCEPTANCE SPEECH PREPARED (By Associated Press) Senator Warren G. Harding's speech of ac- ceptance, to be delivered here tomorrow, is expected by close associates to of Nations in such a way as to advance the campaign toward a squarely | which threatened a split at Chicago. ally. Every refusal to declare for law-en- =| eee simply encourages the wet j forces to believe that the present wave for enthusiasm will recede and that the people will soon forget. Then the fight can be renewed with some hope} @ of success. Hence the silence of these [of mace is a wet silence and will be |80 interpreted. Neutrality is now an impossibility. Qne side or the other |is defeated, and the parties that permit | Such @ result have simply refused to | take the oath of allegiance. | POLICIES OF PARTY | ALWAYS CONSTRUCTIVE | “There is but one \party in the field whose platforms hiive never been , weather-vanes and whose policy has al- | ways’ been @ constructive one. Our’ doctrines have been the political history} jof the United States, written prohibi (Continued on Page 6) j of President Wilson and the League WHITE TAKES DEMOCRATIC HELM CAMPAIGN CRAFT HOISTING SAILS (By Associ COLUMBUS, Ohio, July 21.—The der nearly full sail today with what “captain"—George White, new national committee chairman and campaign manager. White, a former Ohio cong Cox convention campaign, was selec | eastern and southeastern roads to west \erh lines to assist in handling the new grain crop was ordered today by the \icommission .on car service of the As Wgociation of Railway Executives. The | movement will begin July 25 and con- tinue for 30 days. a (MILITARY PARTY IN CHINA READY TO CAPITULATE (By Associated Press) PEK duly 21.—Peace terms amounting to complete capitulation of the Miltary y have been of- army ated Press) » Democrats’ campaign craft w: | un- Governor Cox characterizes as a new ressman and assistant manager of the pa fered by General Tuan Chi-Jui, commander. ted late yesterday, succeeding Homer