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o * PRESIDENT T0 TAKE WIFE VOTING NEWS Personally Will Carry to Mrs. Harding Returns From Election. PLANS TO STAY UP LATE With Friends Will Receive Tele- grams From All Over Country. Burrounded by a number of his inti- mate friends, President Harding will re- th + the group in bulletin form fron telegraph room the executive office where special arrangements have been made to ve the telegraphic com- ul over the ¢ Ty munications fre Becanse of Mrs. Harding's iliness, the <pecial wires lrading into the White House wi Lo used. The Fresident, owever, will personally carry the news o her bedroom until the hour set by rien. Sawyer for her v cived. It ix expected th wil remain a late hour. result is not by th norts. Be o +£ his p ested quaintance with hie will net care to vetire for the night itil he has w fairly defiuite idew how | the battle has gone.” Christinn to Be B Secre Christian will divide his e be n the Uresident's study and the egraph room. where he 1 superintend tne preparat i listributien of the bulletins W Smithers, superintendent of the (e graph foree of the White Hous i will be in pers charize of the wires, has had a lous experience in nishing election news to Presi- ents. He was one of the operators at the White House the nishi Grove Cleveland and his friends received he news of McKinley over Hryarn d he has s every icceeding P'resident with the elec tion news Many Telegrams to (ome. Besides the regular election rety 1t s expected that b rods of i dividual telegrams he stat will be received during evening telling of tha trend of ballots 1 their respective sections. There will be many spe messages from can- dtdates. nat itreem state Targe republicans & hationzl commitiee in the Munsey buildis Adams, republican 1 preside over Eada rters of the ign__committee, | will be a wat ocal 4 state republi lenders nd their friends to hear the tidings Final Democratic Rally. Election returns will h morrow night over w sp {emocratlc central com juarters, 1319 F stree Wright Johnson anneunced today Former Assistant Secretary La- vor Mahaney will speak tonight at a Anal rally to be conducted Ly the committee at the F street quarters TURKS FORBID ALLIED WARSHIPS PASSAGE THROUGH STRAITS ! {nued from to tha Chanak area, oc- British, and other neu- advancing | supied by t tral zones. Since noon «dministratio neen establi Saturday the nationalist declared hav. and in celebratl ,f thif masses of excited Turks hav been engaged in disord, udents marched against the palace and riotous mobs engaged in such mani- became vesary e to fire on them saveral of wounded. The the being killed or isit to Hamnld Kemalist ilfed and American warships and de- Bey deals with norts of eight clares that een instruc the port authorities have d not to permit a land- ng. In accordance twith maritime uws, the Turks request that these vassels salute the Turkish flag. The note sets up a claim for the mmediate handing over to the An- Fora governme t of the Turkish rail- ays in Europe and Asia. which are inder temporary allied ntrol An allied extraordinary council de “tded tonight to refuse categorically he nationalist demand for the allied military evacuation of Constantinople SEE TURK CHALLENGE. Warn Allies Against Moslem Onslaught. London Papers B7 the Associatel Press LONDON, Nove tireat Britain there is a strong opinton that rhe Kemalists, flushed by their recent :onquest and relying perbaps on the support of Russia, intend to challenge 6.—1In <he powers of Europe. They have suc ded in circumventing one impor- tant clause in the Mudania armistice, says the Times, and apparently are sngaged in infractions upon the re- malning clauses. “The allies are confronted with tresh challenge.” the Times contin- ues. “At W moments since the world war has need for united action by the allies been more urgently necessary than v o The Constantinople correspondent of the Daily News reports that 15000 Turkish ex-soldiers in Constantinople wre under orders to rejoin the colors n ten days. He understood their ob- ective western Thrace, Fear of bolshevist influence on the emalists pops out frequently in comment. There is much speculation E to the effect the action by the ationalists in declaring the ate at an end will have upon Moslems outside of Turkey, especially upor tens of thousands of Moslems in In- dfa. Some take the view that the An- gora action will possibly prove ad- vantageous to Great Britain's position n India, since leading Moslems are re- ported to be indignant at the Kemal- ist_decision against the sultan. It is predicted that this may lead to the truction of Moslem unity in the which has near east, menace to British power since the war. Those in India who object to the nationalist actions are said to re- zard w great disfavor the arro- gant way that Angora has treated them. —_— PLAN “ULTRA DANCES.” Miss Stuart and M. Jacques Lillard to Illustrate Waltz Rhythm, Miss Katherine Stuart and M. Jacques Lillard will give a serfes of “ultra ballroom dances” at the fourth annual ball of Charter 31, Greeters of America_at Wardman Park Hotel Friday night. The purpose, it was sald, is to illustrate the rhythm of the waltz and fox trot as contrasted with s36-called jazz dancing. Charter ‘31 1s the local branch of the Greoters, which is composed of hotel managers, proprietors and ulerks, 4 ] been a serious | the electic fs tOMOrTow n his private study in the White | of the will be earried | petition or maintaining prices within |cutting | pany. beto sultan- | | { Van L resident | \ | CALLS CONFERENCE - ONMURDER PROBE {McRan and Investigators to {Mills were found, brought to the conrthouss by state troopers today. Louise Geist, a maid in the { i iHend of Corporation Says Pitts :D. C. Boundary Virginia Shore’s trict of Columbia and the state of Virginia Is high-water mark on the Virginia side of the Potomac river nd the citizens of Virginia have no right to use seine to catch fish in he territory between the high and ow water marks of the river. The District Court of Appeals so *ld todav in an oplnion by Justice Orxdel, upholding a conviction Police Court of Normun Herold, a of Virginia caught flshing “ dip net 1 in i w | | 1 Rule if Grand Jurors Are | 'High-W ater Mark, The boundary line between the Dis- | THE EVE} SOUGHT TOO LATE - FORW.R.E. STOCK pany of Baltimore Bid Few Hours After Option Given. RUMORS RUNNING RIFE Buyers' Representative Denies Cn'p- ital Traction Bought 27,500 Shares. A second bidder for the 27,500 shares of the Washington Rallway and Electric Company entered the lists just a few hours too late, as the option to Messrs. Crane, Parris & Co. was glven on Thursday morning of laxt week, to be accepted or rejected within forty-eight hours. to Hear Mrs. Hall. | 1 Press NSWICK, N ference NEW BR . November e between Attorney | General McRan and all the inve gators of the Hall-Mills murder case | has been called, it was learned today, | t t the long chain of evidence | submitted to the grand later in the week, o perfe jury This conference will determine, it is said, whether Mrs, Franees Stevens Hal slain rector's wife, will be permitted appear bef grand § s requested. The authorities already have declared v effort to pre- as she ey would make eve vent Mrs. Hall ¢ & her story to the grand ji Saveral ‘of the members..of the Hall wouseha'd and close friends of Mrs. | Hall pre bly will be surnmoned before | the investigator during their conference. Mrs. A. C. Fraley. who lives in a house on De Russy’ lane overlooking the crub apple tree on Phillips’ farm, where the bodies of the rector and Mrs. was expected o questicning today. MRS. UPTON OPTIMISTIC. Harr b Taylor Upton, vice com- | man of the republican rationa mittee and in charge of republican organization work among throughout the country, o with President today and s that the outlook for republicar tor t the polls tomorrow is ot bright. She assu President that Ohio, whe DECLARES STEEL PRICE LEVEL NECESSARY burgh Quotation Serves Purposes of Trade. a iron products Il over the United States on of prices prevailing in merely because the indus- | eeds some method of making | ions, E. H. Gary of tha [nited eel Corporation testified t : day in an investigation into the prac- | tice conducted by the Federal Trade Commisston There is no purpose of lim | g com- he industry, Judge Gary insisted, de- aring that in periods of good bu ness the Pittsburgh base almost dis- appear i “This Pittsburgh base exists, o far | as I know, for the purpose of fixing ! quotation price” sald Judge Gary. ! It Wis adhered (o or not, depending | on whether business was good or bad. The seller of steel, like the buyer of | steel, had to have some level to de- | termine transactions. The price of | wheat, for instance. at Chicago, de- termines the price of wheat every- where, and in various other commodi- ties the same thing is true.” In their questions about competi-| ticn in the steel fleld the trade com- | mission examiners sought informa- ion 28 to whether the Carnegic com- - it was consolidated with | the United States Corporation did not | go into Illinois competing actively | With the Tilinois Steel Company, then | a an independent company, but now H unit of the corporat “In those early days the Carnegi went into any markets during de- pre: p sell at whatever price 1t{ could get,” Judge Gary said. Asked if there was now any active | competition between the Jllinois steel and the Carnegie, he sald: “There isn’t anvthing [ wouid call active competition. though there is! always good natured competition Since there is always the deadly par- | allel drawn which shows how good, comparatively, each company is. | “During recent periods of dull busi-; ness” Judge Gary said, “the Steel Corporation, though quoting Pitts- hiurgh prices, has absorbed all or part of the freight and its competitors have done the same thing." WHITAKER AND SISTER LOSE APPEAL FOR WRIT Couple Indicted Under Dyer Act in California Must Go There for Trial. Norman T. Whitaker, Washington patent attorney, and his sister, Dor- othy V. Whitaker, must go to Cali- fornia to answer an iIndictment charging them with violating the Dyer act in transporting a stolen aue tomobile from Ocean City, N. J., to Los Angeles. Calif., according to a decision of the Court of Appeals, ren- dered today by Justice Van Orsdel. The accused sued out a writ of habeas corpus to prevent their re- moval on the ground that the act is| unconstitutional, and when refused liberty by the local court noted an appeal. The appellate court decided that the points raised against the indictment must be presented to the demanding court and is not subject to decision by the courts of the District. Attorneys Paul B. Cromelin, Wil- liam J. Neale and Robert T. Scott will seek & writ of error to the United States Supreme Court. —_—— SHOOTS WIFE, KILLS SELF. ASHEVILLE, N. C. November 6— William H. Presley today fired four shots point-blank at his wife and then placed the revolyer to his own head and killed himself, according to Mrs. Presley’s statement to the police. She was bellevea to be fatally in- Jured. i The day before this option was given the Fidelity and Deposit Com- pany of Baltimore, acting for irself and other interests, held a meeting and decided to open negotiations for the big block of stock Baltimore bankers were instructed to conduct the negotiations, but found in their initial move that they we just too late It might have Washington had the 3 pbsit been successful. Owning hares of stock, had it been secure the 27,500 shares addi would have had practical contr the property, as there are but share 1,000 shares in one block could s swung control. Huge Project Seen. Back of their efforts to acquire the much Fidelity and De su stock was the Penn Power Company of Philadeiphia, owners of urban and interurban lines and power | This corporation recently the derick und Hagers buying £1L.500,000 of stock, i umberland not distant cities purch, Rai n ay and Electric and power com- an integral part of an im- ant interurban m. Bartram, Griscom Co. New York, mentioned some time ago as a ble purchaser of the big block of stoek. are said to be allied with this group of utility people. Denies Rumored Interest. Baltimor ew York interests express the opinion that the Capital Traction Company of this city ix the real interest back of th ot he big block of st This theory is definitely denied by E i who represented the 10n_of the 1 stock market 0f stock are stiil unknown sold they are rEai by Crane, Parris & Co., § It will take Several da, the matter, probably not 15th instant The new buyers will be represente on the directory of the company after the regular monthly meeting of the dfrectors, will be held late in November. Some of the present di- rectors will retire. while others in the group of bankers will probably remain. Poasible Meion Cutting. derstood that the new entirely agreeable nembers ot the ry It is just possible, but hardly prok able, thut local interests have acquir- ed the big block of stock for invest- ment, as stated by Mr. Thompsor. ha fact that there are 000.000 impounded in the electr: light case between the Potomac Elec tric Compa the Public Utilities | b SampAlEHInE. merently { the Capital Traction shares might brai e el s g will | Teadily be taken as ative of @ pos other s 4 close std | ble alifance e Wnton aidoe Nl ihet atien, | Capital Traction shares have been Mt Of nifastor fo molition chun {slow for some time around 101 befors and that the organization,¥hare. Today it opened at 102, sold work ameng them throughout the fo 103i: and closed with 104 asked. country has been highly efficient ai ,:'rr.o ommon stock of the Washing- il be a Ereat aid in bringing sue- |ton Railway opened eral points Cess o the party tomorrow [Righer at 8 bid and 63 asked; o ! —_— | eales made | Purchasers Not Diaclosed. | the not ba ers who who no check to bind the h and the was drawn 000, to ¢ before the {81 asts inter are ory. Commission,” which i« counted on as sure to be settled in favor of the| | comparry, with subsequent *melon v raflway common stock- holders, has not hee the buyers. The common stock of the Wa ton Railway Company has dividends f iness rece resumption ONE DEAD AS WARD FEUD BREAKS OUT IN CHICAGO ‘Wealthy Contractor Shot Down as Nineteenth Ward Row Is Renewed. ¥ the Assoclated Press. CHICAGO, November 6—A renewal of the nineteenth ward feud. which has cost a score of lives in the past two vears. was seen last night in the assussination of John Scully, a wealthy contractor. who was Shot down in the street by two men with sawed-off shotguns. The slayers es- caped. Souily. overlooked by hing- pald not £ the distribution. who was sixty years old tand who had been active in politics, was walking along the street near his home when neighbors heard a { fusillade of shots and found him, rid- | dled with bullets, lying on the side- walk. Beside him lay the shotguns. Scully’s name was originally John Scalzitt!, but he had changed It re- cently. ' The nineteenth ward feud followed dispute over an aldermanic elaction and resulted in numerous killings. HARRY WOLF CONVICTED. Found Guilty of Plot to Block Jus- tice in Holdup-Murder Trial. BALTIMORE, Md., November 6.— Harry B. Wolf, well known criminal llawyer and formeér representative, today was found gullty of conspiracy to obstruct justice In connection with the hold-up and murder of Willlam B. Norris, at Park avenue and Madison street, August 18 last. HEADQUARTERS FOR SAFETY FIRST WEEK AT FEDERAL BANK The Federal National Bank build- ing, at 14th and G streets, will be headquarters for the Safety First week, to b estaged i nWashington tfrom November 26 to December 1. This was announced today by the committee appointed by the Wash- ington public safety committee to ar- range for a seven-day driv eto re- duce accidents. Following the meeting, which was held in the offices of the telephone company, the committee went to the District building to lay plans before the Commissioners and to ask them to issue a safety week proclamation. The committee expects to open its headquarters within a few days and to begin immediately working out the details for what promises to be the most elaborate campaign of aduca- tion ever undertaken in Washington 30 make the streects safer. 4 Fidelity and Deposit Com- some $3,- 1 NG STAR, V The ambassadors of the United States to the call of Ambassador Houghton, to dixc: Aunstria; C: Had the plans matured g mall question but they would have | been hooked up with the Washingto uary on a charge of conspiracy to|wages of women constitutional and a | United States Shipping Hoard ves- | defraud the Shipping Board, today law fixing the wages of men unconsti- | “€! operated to South American ports| asked the District Supreme Court for | tlicnal The moral stimulus in the by the Munson line, on docking the | 4 "' one instunce is no greater than in the | skip vesterday, tive days late from {an tmmediate trial. Should the trial i, F i gher ‘wages are essential o P FO rday, fiv (,,'\,. ('( m not be granted at this time. Morse | (o preserve the morals of women, they | R0 Janeiro, charged that the de asks that the prosecution be required | are equally essential to preserve thel Was in @ Jurge part due to the dis- inst him | morais of men e 11 e |COUTIERY of purt oMicials at Bermuda { his leads to another angle. If the| cparped several « e pas- law is to be equitably enforced Teo | Charges thut several of the p Cites Government Action. | quires a most careful and judicious in. | SenRers were drunk and a member Morse refers to the recent action of | quiry by the board into living condi- | 0f the crew had been seen drinking the governmen: at the trial of the tions—the cost of rent, clothes, food und | Were made by Miss Hardynia K civil cases in Alexandrin, Va., between | recreation. If the power, therefore, ex- | Nordvilie of Montgomery, Ala the Shipping Board and the Morse ! iSts to fix wages in the interest of good | ATerican representative Shipbuilding Company, when the gov- | morals and the promotion of the general ¢ Christ Ten, Union, ernment asked permission to with. i Welfare, the power must likewise be|Who arrive nthern Cross. Araw its charges of fraud and con. | conceded to fix the prices of all com- | She said she would report the matter spira nd stated that it did not de- | modities entering into the determination | to the executives of the Munson line sire to press them. Morse says that | Of an equitable wage. In no other way |and the Shipping Board in Wi he has been put to great expense in | Can Jjustice be accorded. ’lhn_ wage | ton .)ll s Nordvilie ‘\.ud the preparing to defend the charges of:fixed for an employer fo pay his em-jern Cross was “dry.” but t Fraud in-the civil eases and that he | Ploves cannot be justifie? if based upon |sengers and members of the s dpresent in court with his sit. | (he unresirained ‘prices which the emi- brought large quantities of es and untants and that the | Ploye may have to pay the merchant faboard lon of the government in declining | fOF f00d and clothes or the landlord for| The vessel put in at to press the charge of fraud has d__lvmh The logical result of such a|was explained, to get an nied him the opportunity to clear him- course relegates the whole matter of [ supply of fuel oil Several e [ prices to the realm of legislation sengers said that an engineer, | government other ! Board has been oppressive and that | The three fundamental prlnciphs”n'“\\ s n-:u;uvg} md.~_. oot hie has been singled out as one agzinst | which underlie government are the RAIAST T T, Sheedy, a viee Whom funfoundedi charessiof fraud 1protection of life, liberty and proper- | conference with ofcers of the A Somelthat hin various companics 1V, and the chief of thesc, the courtlern Cross, said that o oil had Tave "heen financially embarrassed |Asserts, “is property.” “Not that any | Dumped from he ship, but that sult and his own business position affect- |amount of property,” says Justice |making it unfit for use and “Uife charges that the overnment | VAR Orsdel. “is more valuable than!sitating putting into Lermuda for 4 owes the various companies in which | the life or lberty of the citizen, but | RO =uphIV, = L : more than 20.000,000, { the history of civilization proves that!cials at Bermuda to permit the So at if this money were paid the | when the citizen is deprived of thelern Cross to tie up to the Adm. vency of his companies would be | free use and enjoyment of his LToD- |piers in the emergency and the fa immedi stablished lerty anarchy and revolution follow, vre of a quarantine doctor to respond He ol t throukh the Ship-|and life and liberty are without pro-|to a signal asking for permission 1o ping Board overnment has main- . tection 4 clear until twenty-four hours after! i a systematic effort to discredit| “The highest freedom co the vessel’ was ready toi leave: had d that he has been continually | ohedience to law and a stric augmented the delav, Capt unwarranted espionage. | ence to the limitations of the Const! | Heald szia. g SeRte oy a trial. he says. the abso- | tution n no way can the fr m : - (lute groundie: ss of the charges|of the citizen be more effectually R T e will be promptly shown. {curtailed and ultimately destroyed Morse i represented by Attorneys|than by a deprivation of those inher- J. Lambert, W. Bissell Thomas |ent richts safeguarded by our fun-| Nash Rockwood and idamenial law. The security of so-| New York. Hearings | ciety depends upon the extent of the| on the motion has been scheduled for | protection afforded the individual { r many months, but bus-! tly has pointed to an early | | { | C. W. MORSE ASKS 10 BE TRIED NOW {may by Accused Immediate Hearing or Dis- missal of Charges. Amswer Is “Yes” or “No." “The power of the | private individuals is cither con tutional or unconstitutional. leeway for leg A fundamental is involved; and it does not lie law fixing the wages,” says no Charles W. Morse, New Y. chip- | discretion, builder, who, With his three sons and | eight others, was Indicted last Jan-| courts to Morse avers that the action of the Property through the Shipping Friday in Criminal Division No. before Justice Stafford | next the government WOMAN, ILL, KILLS SELF. ““Tired of Life"” Is Dying Statement ddle Europe: conditions in middle stle, nttache of State Department at Washington; Brentano, Gibson, to Poland; Houghton, to Germany, and Gen. Allen, in charge at Coblenx. MINIMUM WAGE LAW FOR DISTRICT - DECLARED INVALID, the exerclse ! power establish the wages to be paid Shipbuilder Wants | men- declare ASHINGTON, D. ¢, MONDAY, NOVEMBER ! AMERICAN AMBASSADORS TO EUROPEAN COUNTRIES IN CONFERENCE of Congress IEL or lative @ Rights Vital citizen under the Constitution against demands and The citizenship of this republic need fear is from the government itself. Blocked by Bill of Right “The character and value of govern- incursions only tyras the principle 6, countries conferred in Berlin recently at Europe. Left to right: Ambassadors to Hungary; Grew, to - SHIP 3 DAYS CHARGES FL 1Drunkenness, Di Port Officials and e.) Shoelt same to fix ‘between Th jud i | i Bs tie A o ated Press NEW YORK, Nuven in the the Southern Cr from a storage tarn of th nny the Bert U. Heald of the Southern Cros had pumped 1922, Waxhburn, Switzerland; LATE; Y THICK scourteous Green En- gineer All Blamed. nber ©o—Capt the belief t SUIT UNDER CHARGES Arrested, With Prominent New%tlv York Woman, for Alleged of Mrs. Redhead. ment is measured by the security Ceing an old esionlal type 41.cati. | WNICh surrounds the individual in Statutory Offenses. sing an o o 3 call- : R ber pistol, Mrs Beuluh K. Redbead,|the use and enjovmept of his prop- forty-two' sears o1 age’ wife of jerty. These rights will only remain :f::f:fa’ A‘y”.;-‘"'y{s;n‘".'u':nl' ,0{?;"'1““‘_' secure 8o long as the bill of rights—| ATLANTA, Ga.. Noven Gen Street northwest, yesterday. De. | the first ten amendments of the Con- |lanta authorities last n spondency over ill health was the | stitution—are construed liberally in formed of the arrest of Mrs. 4 moment before she reason she s died. ihe ccupied 3 couch cf ! i con, Ga.. on indict- e e o dher huehand | *4T1Y adopted because ot s)idespreaails Dright dn Macon, Ga . on daatat | Mept.. The report of the pistol| aPbrehension that the time might [ments, charging statutory offenses Awhiened the husband, who found |Ome when the government would |returned by the Fulton county grand e ving from a bullet wound {n | assume to trespass. upon those in-|yo o nd Mrs. Pace re The mevc VHe immediately summoned | alienable tndividual rights announced | JUr¥: Both Bright and Mrs. Pace ; an Ambulance and the police, who | in the Declaration of Independence |side in New York, wiere they are took Mrs. Redhead's dying admission|and afterward incorporated in the|prominently connected, according to that she had shot herself because she | bill of rights. oesiais was “tired of life”” She died while | “Courts, therefore, should be slow to | e n ! being removed tc Emergency Hos-|lend aid to the government in thig| The investigation by Atlanta cfficers pital. R Nevitt fesued o | MOJETR tendency io invade individual fand the subscquent arrests were Coroner J. Ramsay Nevitt dssued a | property rights. “llegitimate and st of Mrs. Bright. cert:ficate of sulcide, unconatitutional practices ket their | T20° 21 the reauest of BEs s = WIFE LOVES ANOTHER, SAYS DIVORCE-SEEKER Takoma Park Man Asks Court Also to Award Him Custody of his can only strued. hildren. TR than 'in substance. Speciai patch to The Btar. ROCKVILLE, Md. November 6.— |tutional rights of Charging that the defendant has ad- mitted to him that she no longer loves him, is anxious to get rid of him and is infatuated with another man, Percy W. Michacl of Takoma Park. this county, a clerk in the Depart- ment of Agriculture, has filed suit in the circuit court here for a limited divorce from Mrs. Mary R. Michael, also of Takoma Park. He also asks the court to award him the custody of the couple’s two children, Lucile and Marjorie Michaels, aged six and three years, respectively. According to the bill, the couple were married in Washington on Janu- ary 30, 1915, and lived together until a few days ago. The plaintiff is repre- sented by Attorney John A. Garrett of Rockville. " —_—— Miss Mary Kidd and Miss M. Deer, two Australlan educators, arrived in Washington today on the last lap of a twelve-month tour of the world. They visited the Central High School, the Wilson Normal School and the Ross Elementary School. Miss Deer is @ lecturer in the Teachers’ College at Sydney, N.S. W., while Miss Kidd is a teacher of home economics in the schools of that city. Both have collected voluminous data on the schools they have visited in the United States and Europe. HANDS DOWN DECISIONS. Judge James Francis Smith of the United States Court of Customs Ap- peals handed down four decisions in District Court of Appeals cases, in which he recently participated under designation by Chief Justice Taft. He affirmed the findings of the District Supreme Court in all four cases. The opinions were written in the appeals of Edward C. Fletcher vs. Isalah 8. Coomes et al., Waters, administrator, vs. Taylor, Simpson vs. Stein and thereon.” were offered to geological survey-told scl graphic: display. be accepted. <1anvonowert Cohen vs. Becretary of the Interior Fall. hering to the rule that con: provisions for the security of person and property should be liberally con- survey. T favor of the individual and stri agaiust the government. Th first footing in that way. namely, by silent approaches and slight tions from legal modes of procedure. be obviated 1 “A close and literal construction de- prives them of half their efficacy and leads to gradual depreciation of the right, as if it consisted more in sound 1t is the courts to be watchful for the consti- citizen and against any stealthy encroachments the MAPS OFFERED TO SCHOOLS. Two hundred selected maps pre- pared for exhibition in San Francisco District public schools today by the United States geological 00l authorities that the maps will form an interesting geo- the The They probal JOHNSTOWN UMB in Jacksonville, Fla, ey were devia. | MACON, Ga. Novembe: by ad- tutional ing Mrs. York for $50.000 damag alienation of his affecti into custody on an Fulton county superior ing a misdemeanor. duty af Mrs. Bright is said | tomorrow. | | | | of Great Britain has reparations conference bly will | early in December. P— OTYRONE OALTOONA HARRISBURG ERLAND ind playing the role of detective. here a few daye ago, was in Jack- | sonville vesterday and expeeted to be at 141 West Peachtree street Atlanta, Belgian government that delegation will be ready to attend a ¥ and Lynwood Pace, r 6.—Lynwood L. Bright, said to be a former New York man, who is suing his wife for | divorce here, and she, in turn, i su- | Fredericka Pace, in New es for alieged s, was taken ctment from court, charg- Bright was later | released on & summons. to have been e left REPARATIONS PARLEY SOON. PARIS, November 6.—According to ! the Matin, Prime Minister Bonar Law | informed the a_ British in Brussels Where 95 May Have Lost Their Lives Scene of Pennsylvania Mine Tragedy the REDUCED TROLLEY FARES IMPROBABLE D. C. Heads Oppose Different Rates for Capital Trac- tion From W. R. E. BURNS UNDER AUTO AFTER FIRING GUN TO ATTRACT HELP By the Associated Press, SPRINGFIELD, Ohis, November 6. —Pinned beneath his Lurning auto- mobile, W. H. Smith of Zanesville fired a revolver and sounded the horn, near his hands, in an effort to attract attention. He was burned to death before any one could extricate him. The auto- mobile skidded and turned turtle into {a ditch. | LEASING OF LANDS SUBJECT OF RULING Railroads Required to Charge |DOUBT CHEAPER LIGHTS Public Hearing Decision on Cutting Phone Charges Due Within Few Days. { Although still the street car under consideratinn rate casol by i Puibl Utilities Commission, ! | Rentals Equal to Rates at the District butiding . 3 t there will not be a change i Maintained by Others. !, (. { ‘ The Federation of Cltizens' As i = ciations brought the matter b | Rafiroads which lease land along| e ”'Hr e & . “X?‘ ¢ thelrimights otiway 10 Dy URETS lower rate for the Capital Trac {must cliurge rentals equal to the| " {imaatact ! el 1 e | Compuny, which was earning appre sums which private owners would | 2 5 i 2 mately 9 per cent on its vaiuation |charge for similar property, or the | " grant the tion's petit {transactions hereafter will be con- !y o.1q5mean different rates of fare !sidered by the Interstate Commerce {the two companies, a step whic mmission as a form of rebating | commission has hesitated to take i . | fo: er heur { tlspiolavion.of Taw The oniy other plan that has bes Coneluding 0 investigation in- | suggested which the commigsic tituted by itself in 1917 into rail- | coyuld bring down the Capita ctia iroad practices in renting property | Company's ear without making in New' York (City. Fresno, Calif, s corresponding cut in the ince and Spokan Wash, the com S£10n [ of the Washington Ratiwa held today that some cases the | lactric Company is a zone fixing of a low rental charge S leases of lands to large shippers h Zome System Unpopular. i | been “in practical eff areductiond 4 oo Loy ‘o thn |of transportation clarges wmount-| 3 Zvue system would mean t ling to a refund payment of two fares to get to an:, i ‘acts Disclosed by Probe. of the suburbs of the city. The op nmission based its conciu- » such a plan has been = | siox ipon fa brought out nd so widespread that th byt anvestisation] of sconditions iars has mejec 0 a oty reduction in the u 4 the right of way |rate of fare on both systems v Pacitic, making the | bring down the earnings of tie “n the land of|ington Railway and Electric as others very valu- [pany to a Do where that for addi would probably apply th appears likely that the co instructing jre I i to fix rentuls mission will not disturb rates at t + valne of the time mission also fo Members of the commission are st lrases provisions re 1g that Congress will act en - st t to route traff tion as been pending f i iand s a merger of ti is ! raiiwavs and thereby reliev i ission's report, | the commission of the diffic Stronels general con- ! lem of fixing rates for two compani felusion ® hat railroad leascs | that have such widely different ear of land not used for railroad purposes | INg capacitie ten been a medium of unwar e commission will ot render it to shippers. street car cake umt been filed by Wiliiam s 4 Effective Supervision Diffic representing the Fe | “Effective public supervision in this | zens' Associations. matter we have difficult, but befleve that this publicity at- in themselves the practices of reason n rles . fcation of t ve i ra volunt h in rvice, the commission w have in past referred to & few days whe the Department of Jus fer ap- g ! propriate proceedings cases whi . seemed arrant such action. In Lower Light Rates. . {this connection shippers and crhers | i R {who believe th are subjected tol commission wants |undue prejudice and disadvantage can | OSt by its present investigatio {be of ‘assistarce by bringing fuch | whether tne crease reves | SitHationb oty 20 {which the telephone compat i ot ar rd should be taken ted subscribers or divide /7 rlephone users. At a mee ]t e Federation of Citizens Sat ’ LA yton in TOLL OF TORNADO $500.000 Estimated Prop-i. r "/ hehit B ok Supreme erty Loss, 125 Persons Made ; Homeless in Oklahoma. |, re Court 1f the con. now = oney being d, the BF the Assoviated Press 9, the DRUMRIGHT. Okl g i X commission 18 sustaine 10 worth of properts | destre the tornade which | [ stru feld coutheast of here [ HOG |SLAND FOR SALE. defir as been learned : 2oard decid { In addition to the propertr damage B e p ofl men estimated that loss of pro- et es T whieh P Included i the property loss were | built during the BE £ DY, 1123 wil rigs, thirty-one houses, & hulf | Such fame for tie sumber of v {dozen plants a rous other | launched DWAK DL | Sitailes ounlatnge: bids wiil be calicd for to he i The arc: Mr. and Mre, Joc | January S0. Jennings, Cieo Jennings. twelve; | prufcemint b 5 Wilfred Dobson, fifteen: Wess Walton, AR b S S rancher: Fred Fugate, seventeen R e S . The storm struck three miles north s {that this property w agamn for shipbuilding purposcs, { east of Shamrock and swept a patch {300 yards wids in a northeasterly | (i 3&310 ! Aot e T e e [direction "t within two miles of | At 118 Teal VAl WX E N et | Brumcight i site,”” Mr. Henry sa ' sposed of all the surplus RECOVERING FROM STORM. which were stored at this and is now prepare nd = . improvements Colorado and Rocky Mountain Area . Visited by Snow and Sleet. { JENVER, November & —Colora, B N & DENVEE Y, Siiventher mlico Entries and the Rocky mo n re [ Ihave partly recovered from th fects of Saturday's snow and sleet| Tuesd mber 7. 3, W r o wolatea | . First race e Steeplechas~ |storm, which for many hours isolated | FITpt Tace i s this section 1$2.000; two miles and & quarter | Wire communication has been only | Mustyl 132: (a)Cresthill, 140: Keltt i - restored. Reports fro o | 139; Overmatc ucky Find, 140 [partiy restored. Reports from Pueblo, | 13%; Dyrtmarcn, 1560 Lutny Find, far |Cole., were that a troop of eleven| (1L o Juveniles handicap Boy Scouts and their scout master | twn-yenr-olds: purse, $1 had returned to that city after being . six furlongs—Blue Hawk. 114 {caught in the storm Saturday in ajof Truce, 114; Ruddy. 1i7: {barn, where they had taken refuge.!{108: Heel Taps, 120; Swectheart, {Carl Racin Puello, eleven | Frank o, @ {old, is reported missing. 1le accom- | Tassel, 11 S anied two hunters and all werel (a) Three pounds claimed for ri aught in the storm. The men placed him in an arrovo and covered him {with brush und leaves when he be- jcame exhuusted. The men kept onlBoots, 11 ty Firty, 101; Toil, 116, # seeking shelter and were picked up|=Pluck: Arrow of Gold, 111: ‘Good in a serious condition nes, 1 *Polvthia. 114; Wraith H Dead Number Four, . The Almoner. 105; *(a) I “harlie, 100; *Brocklesby, Advices state that the number of dead as the ri 107 ing Along, Doughnut, ult of & severe storm |trous, 10! north and east of Sugar City, Colo.,|fare. 120; *Apex, 105, : S a (a) S. Louis entry. {Saturday had reached four. Mrs (&8 LOWR U o p | Frank Mossman and her baby dled”hl;‘::_‘f“:n?“];“ ning: o rfir!“nr;‘ mile—*Amar. from injuries suffered in a tornado.|gy.54 one a Hoey Mossman and another child were kill- 145" sGoajer. 110; Knight of the He e when the storm struck their home. {or'107; Occidental, X; *Hidder Advices from Laramie, Wyo. re-|jij. sCharles J. Cra:gmile, 10 port a train wreck yesterday morning|yell, 104: *Harmonious, 102 thirty-five miles east of there in{jjgule. 162; Sundial L 10 which a flagman was killed and a |y Cahalan, 110: Ira Wilson, 10: fireman was so severely scalded that he died. The accident resulted when Union Pacific passenger train No. 6, running double-header, plowed into a standing freight train, THOUGHT HE WAS A COP. Too Much Corn Whisky Makes John Imaginative. Too much corn whisky Saturday night caused John Thurman, colored, to believe he was & self-authorized I Mock Orange, 100; Sweepy, 100; Ver l‘lzt~|k|r. 102, ! Fifth race, the Pimlico Fut cup; for two-vear-olds: one Martingale, 122; Sall Alley, 116 Fair. 119: My Own, 122; Rialt . Donges, 119. Sixth race, the Bowle handicap; 1« | three-year-olds and up: $10,000 added, one and one-half miles— nator, 130; Mad Hatter, 12| { Jones. 101; Oceanic, 113; Capt. Alcocl., 1110; aExodus, 113; aNedna, 104; Thin ble, 104; Irish Kiss, 100. aGreentree i stable entry. {"'Seventh race, three-year-olds aunt lup; selling; purse, §1,549.45; one mil: c officer at a crossing in South!and one furlong—*Nightboat, 9X rem’ Washington: |*Dark Hill, 113; Jordan, *Dolly John armed himself with a red|C.. 100 *Betty J. 102; *Lad's Love. light, which he picked up at a new [108; Tom McTaggart, 113; Nortl butlding, and going into the middle ' Wales, 103; War Victor, 113; The Rol’ . of the street, had the time of his life, 1 Call, 103; *King John, 11 Pocko Waved the light and directed traffic|Jim, 108; *Balance Wheel, 106: Rour 113; *Dissolute, 110; *Gallivant, (One excluded.) eApprentice allowancs claimed for rider, five pounds. until a policeman asked, “Whassmat- ter, John? Judge McHahon in Police Court to- day imposed a $1 fine or fifteen davs at Uccu':ynn. Weather clear, track fast