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PRESIDENTIAL LURE DENIED BY MTADOO “No Office | Want Less,” He| Tells M. E. Conference in Dry Address. By the Associateq Pra HOLLYWOOD. (alif.. Octoher 22— William 6. McAdon, & membsr of President Wilson's cabinet. and twice | & candidate for the Democratic nomi natien for President. raid in an Ad dregs here yestarday that “theéra ia no office that 1 want less than that of | President of the 1'nitad States.” ! The declaration was made in a talk on prohibition befdie the Pacifie Con | ference of the Methodist Episcopal | Chureh | “N'o man has heen cloger to that of. | fice than I not to have heen Presi dent.” he gaid. 1 =av to you that there is no otfice tt I want less than that of President of tine | nited States, Let me 30l these things are con victicng that 1 have and T don't care a ‘continental’ if they desiroy me po litically apa physicallv. 1 put right eousnass shead of politice always,” he declared, in charging 1 enemi of prohibition we him of advocating strict enforcement of the v lawe 1o promote his candi President eing th charges that “the eighteenth amandment w slipped into the Constitution while onr boys sl ane MeAdon <aid 1 such o belief was a “libel against our . the implication baing that they would Fa e heen ag it It wonld have made no difference it thay had heen here.” <aid MeAdon, “T | @ of the cpinion that the fellowe who placed their lives in jeopardy for their country would have stond for any | praposition in which the matter of consing THE EVEXNING righteousness was fnvolved.” szsooo0.000 s WIFE DETERMINED MERGER UNDER WAYi m HUI.I] WR|GHT Chemical. Dyestuffs, Explosive and | Allied Industries Affected by Project. Ready to Prosecute Architect and Mme. Milanoff, But “Will Never Free Him.” Br the Acseociated Precs LONDON, October What prob. ably will he the largest Industrial com. | hine cver arranged in Gréat Rritain | in process of formation. The wmeerned are the Rrunner | the Nobel Industries, the Rritish Dvestuff Corporation and the | - Unitad Alkall (o I The combined capital fseuss of the S 1 K companies total betweesn £200.a00.000 | Will” help press charges against ana £a0.000.000, Bt aecording | Architect It her attorneys desire | gome of the newspapers. the merger | Mre. Wright's declaration was made | evantually will Involve nearly §300.|in Chierga while Wright and Mme. | 000,000 of chemical, dvestuffs, axnln.| %A Milanoff were held here on Fed- v and allied industrine affeciad L | ®F81 warrants charging conspiracy to | the plan. Aceording to an offle wnte. | Violate the Mann act. Hearing has | ment. the aims of the combinn sre | been =et for October 30. | “eavordinati and Asveloping the| The charges were filed late vester. | businesses and resources of the four, Fv following the couple’'s arrest | companies an broad imperial lines.” {1 enttage at Lake Minnetonka, nsar €ir Max Muspratt. chairman of ihe | haon. The CGovernment allezes that United Alkali Co., save the reason for | Wright transported Mme. Milanoff to the combination is “to enabls }’hfl cottage from Wisconsin Britain's chemical and allied indistrias i <he'll Tove Him Alw: to stand up againat the world | With tears trickling down her face, Mme. Milanoff declared . despi ARG TRBRE IR EREED | 4 e eed e, deenis OF LIQUOR LAW CHAF!GE | 'Wright alway le ie the greatest [man in the wor she said, “and Atsiztant Dietrict Attorney Exon- i€ now firm Mond inn., Octol ht “will never Weight as long | certainly | the Llovd 1 g muost {vet. me man and 1" | " Althoveh reputed o be wenlthy. | <omet'me. somehow! we shall he happy Arrast | Wrizht was unable to furnish bonds for the conple's release. aad he told i his counsel he could think of no ene | . 1Tvearald here wha eould he bronght into court SRR e SNt poet hail until today. f Ropresentative Rees of Ohlo, todav | “y\trjept and Mme. Milanoff were PR Assistant Distrlot g ienmd separntely and dld Attorney David } At T UL Wright first was taken from af the char illogal o s in." which was preferred acat ount o the Faderal Ruilding | 1 3 P 4 e VoAnswe: 1.A late sa v night. fallowiy ,‘ L e Y Faveite [raneh, fr.. United States dis. | in a Calumbia road restanrant iet attorney. 1e pleadad not gnilly Mr. Hart, atter a thornugh axamina- | me. Milanoff also pleaded not tion of the case, d e o o, L @ity and demanded an early henr ferred with hoth My and her '™ ” fom . iiled that there was nat rcidence | AS =he prepaved to leave the com- S nst s missioner's office. an attornex for He *quashed the ap [ Valdemar Hinzenherg of ¢hi erates Him Followin~ Saturday Night. James T. Regz an o <t hin his ieation for trial jsecond son of Fmperor William | marriage which had heen filed w Hee of the tenth pre hohim he net. who made divoreed hushand of Mme. Mils demanded immediate custody of Rvet. Hana, S-vearold daughter of the Hin | zenhergs. Whisked Back to Jal. Mme. Milanoff's attorney refused | she was whisked back to jail Svetlana and an &monthaold his {daughter. whom Wright claims is his | Hinzenherg has a conrt writ calling | | for Svetlana’s appearance in Superior {Conrt in Chicago and he was confident hat when he returns to Chicago the il wonld accompany him. Meanwhile. Mrs. Wright. who has | heen sned and who has brought coun- | ersuits for divoree from the avehiteet, decided. she “that her hus wnd wonld ba heiter off if he re. | = maifisd marrled than it divercead.” Mr. \Wright is hiding hehind a | an aveuses, «ich Ae hiz love for | his illegitimate child.”" <he “Why didnt he think of his his six children by his fira i the 1 Sergt. William tenth precinet, wh . filed information waners with Mr. | Hart Wednesdav, tat sesietant | Aletriet attorney wa Afdinka nod number of jury uid not 1\ concider the o until M. AMeDanald of the rrectod Mr. Regg, 186 fins Rites for Harlan Page. ENGE HILL. \a neral services were for Harlan Pace, &7 1. whn disd nday after an iilneze of mora than eight weaks He waz huried tn the family cemetery Mr. P wife Mre. Margarer ™ Marion H. Page, and a dausz N. O. Page Oty heta ¥u al love for wife? Kills Self in Office. NEW YORK . B win V. Ph > vears ald. manager of the New York hranch of Hall & 11s Raker, grain dealers of Kansas City. 14 ended his life with a pistel bullet today 108 in hie office. His hady wae found hy hic stenographer. Octoher 22 | Saming Alzo ahgiina 1 —Purse Yy oar 113 orward 18 103 118 +E. B. McLean ert un Term. series of six vitally subject of Aviation Matador 0060000000000 TEIRD RACE-—Purse * oden @ ton Handicav. ail azee b4 103 4T 1 sti wond for the U His topics will be: Mano 2. Mussolini on the 3. Lame Ducks and 5. The Yellow Ace cLean ent ey France | Pridons year vear: ng her wings the Tist, with ie £10.000 1 added ™ ACE--Purse and America 15 W Crusad: s Edith Gaffeman In a brozd. comprchensive hased on years of experience not and the Orient, Col. Davis tell aviat'on, £1.5300 [ Teante *Noveniand nine'a Alaiming o7 108 o 'l‘!&‘l P;rm’r 1 e "Man 111 Editorial Section of RACE_P Randioan 103 118 108 True Bor Whestiek Reimwanation e allowance claimed Qlear track good. fooi»oo{oooo00000Noooooooboooooooooooooooo | fused to divules 1he details. 030000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000, The World’s Wings By W. JEFFERSON DAVIS Lieutenant Colonel, O. R. C. Formerly legal adviser for the \War Department and conncel vited Stases at the Congress on International Aviation, 1. Economy in Destruction 4. The “Ho-Bird” Spreads Its Pin'ons 6. America’s Place in Air as 300 air squadrons and will have N England spent S100.0000600 on aircraft development last Russia is bhuilding 2000 ali-metal planes: than 3 plancs His first article will be published next Sunday in the Plane Takes Labor ) ¢ JEENTS (] (GF ON BANDITS TRAL For Sengtor Ernst | Two in Jersey Mail Hold-up Known as Residents of Passaic. A fiving trip t¥Rentucky. literal- Iy apeaking. was made today Se rv Davis of the Labor partment, who uked an airpl to go there to speak for the re. tion of Senator Krnst. blican. The Republican mittee wanted him t ings at Pineville and and found out he conid the schedule by train, chartered an_ airplane which flew to Bristol, Va. Tenn. and picked the secratary up s he left the train there and hopped off over to the mountains for Kentucky COURT FREES WIFE OF EITEL FRIEDRICH ddress meet Middlehoro not make 50 they At Knox- | By the Associated P NEWARK, N. I, October 22.- Knowledge that Federal authorities were close on the trafl of the eight men who last week slew a postal em plove in Elizabeth and escaped with £151.700 yesterddy added impetus to the war against banditry, which has cerwhelmed New Jersey in the past | few monthe, Postal inspectors working on the | Elizabsth crime announced that they | had identified two residents of Pas- | saic as members of the gang. It was | known that automebile plates stolen | from an automobile in Imssaiec were . ‘arried on one of the two cars used Princess Granted Freedom ib: the bandits when they spraved the streets of Elizabeth with machine gun | fir on Grounds of Cruelty. | ville "hree men who were Passnic were released after being questioned by postal inspectors in Slizabeth. Postmaster J, Hosey Ow horne of Passaic expressed the belief ‘Hva! the Elizabeth hold-up was car- arrested in By the Assaciated Press POTSDAM, Prussia, Octobher Princess Iitel Friedrich, wife of the has her | was Olden- vled out by the gang which he had observed oftering about the post office and which he suspected was planning a robbery there. The latest outhreak was executed hy two young men. whom police char- acterized A “merry-go-round ban- b | dita.” In rapid succession they raided e princess was given the divoree | homes in the wealthy residential sec- on grounds of iil treatment, neglect | tionk of Paterson, I'assalc and (len ndincompatibility of temperament. | ridge, obtaining a quantity of jewelry. toth parties. it Is reported, intend to | v i CHEKANG REVOLT Refor heen granted a divorce to the prince Sophie Charlotte Duichess re princess’ choice ix sald to he arald von Hedemann, aged 39, or ht vears her junior. a former cap. n in the Royal Dragoons and now ssdam police lieutenant. ‘et reports were that Hedemann was not of neble birth, but it is now learned he i the scion of a Rhenish noble family living at Cologne. Prince Kitel ix gaid to he planning to mar the Countess Mellin, belonging to the | Paltic nobility and now a resident of this el The dive ducted in seerot, Lendon Hears Hsia Chao, Rebel Leader. Has Fled in s el Frledricn brought China’s Tangied Warfare. iast month on ground of incompati = bl Whieh. she declared. i caused | oy e Asnriatad Pros her “mental snffering.” - s Bitell Folotich Gaid yenvaialasandi L0 S0, (Oftaber £ 23R teutce hiniformor! wife 4. Thex Were mar: | -patch from Shanghal save cien. Sun Hed I Bl Fabinary 1. 1908, Ne | Chuan-Fang's representative thera has hildrén were horn of the union | vecaived a telegram from Hankow iha thme of ihe fiing of the s stating that Hsin (han, eivil governor friend of the couple sald they of Chekiang and leader of the attempt quarreled frequently in recent ad revolt against Gen, Sun. has fled. and that the wife had named a co- | The dispateh adds that if (he report veapondant, frienn aaen RHAT | re e ot Vi colla eithe e prince nor the princess liapse of the netiher the prince nor the princess | (o o0 o8 SO0 L . pianned 10 ma again, Radlcals at Work in China, . Barbers Caritulate to Women. mmvmnfi October 22 (#).——Gov iy e -om. | FI8ia Chao is fecing from his hase af CHICAGO. Ocinher D) Wom. | Lo e with his. Cheilang, troope: leaving Gen. Sun Chuan-Fang unep. posed in his march on Hankchow, m: | sages from Hangchow state. Haia's destination and whereahouis are 1n- known here, Hsia, as rul provinces controlied lord Sun_ Chuan-Fang. | dicated his intention or | o with Chang Tso-Lin, one of the northern allies now in cantrol at | Peking. Chang was known fo he unfriendly to Sun, hut as the latter | wae engaged in fighting & common enemy. the Cantonese, it was uncer- tain whather Chang would attack or ald him, Sun Victory Reported. Hsia and his rehels threatened Shanghai, Sun_went (o meet them and was reported to have routed them near Keshing. 72 miles south of Shanghai, last Wednesday, fvidences of radical activity are increasing here. Farly today rails were torn up on the road heiween Shanghai and Woochow and rails fw kiang. temporarily interrupting traf- fic and causing 1wo minor wrecks. The damage has heen repaired. Chen-Yi Succeeds Hsia. is helieved thix Activity i that of guerilla radicals to the movement of Sun Chuan. fang's troops. Sun has appointed Gen. tn succeed Hsla (hao @ hesn commanding the Chekiang @ forces north of Nanking. He is re- :“\nrvkd proceeding to Hangchow, | o procecdings were con- and the attorneys re Princess suit fo n's conquest of the harber shop was complete taday. The National Par. | hers' Supply Dealers’ Association changed fte nams tn the National Reauty and Rarbers' Supply Deal- ' Association. < Nssagtadbny of one of the five by the war recently in- important articles on the Wing Eagles " merely hara M0 hy next Japan ‘s spread- S el down toward the bottom of Chen-Yi C‘hen 0000000000000 0000000000000000000000000007 study of the entire subject, onlvin America. but in Europe < what the world is doing in . Paris Delays Debt Talk. PARIS. October P).- Minister [ of the Interior Sarraut announced after a cabinet council today that. he. cause of the press of work in conne tion with the hudget it seemed tually impossible that the \Washing ton debt accord could b discussed in the Chamber of Deputies befere January. ¥ 09900000 0000900 OVER, SAYS REPORT has | BOIE 0F 2 SLAN * VARDENSFOUND Alleged Poacher Confesses and Leads Police to Victims in Harbor. By the Associated Preas. MARQUETTE. Mirh, Octoher 22.— Marquette Harbor on Lake Superior today yvielded up the hodies of Arvid Erickson and Emil 8koglund, State gAme wafdene, who R Nunn, ex- conviet ana suspected poacher, laat night confaseed <inying when the men Attempted to arrest him on Septem- ber 24, Nunn ‘wag taken to the harbor on the fange of the Michigan woode and pointed out the spat where he con- feased throwing the bodies, after plac- ing them in sacks. which were weighted down with stones. Shooting Follows Arrest. The slayings, according to Nunn's confession, police said, resulted when the wardens attempted to arrest him At 8ands Plaine, near here, for unlaw- ful posseasion of a gun. a technical charge on which It is helieved they intended to hold him while investigat- ing reports that he had heen “head- lighting” deer in the district. The officers had received numetou: reports that desr were heing killed by this method. which consiate of throw- ing a strong spotlight into the woods at night. The deer, which are at tracted to the light, fall easy prey to hunters, Nunn, according to police, sald he shot Erickson while the latter was queéstioning him. Skoglund, who was a short distance away At the time, wax | killed when he 10 the assistance of his partner, according to the con tession, Rearch In Widespread. A widespread search was conducted for thé wardens after their disappear- ance, under the supervision of the Michigan State police department, as- sisted by citigen posses, A few dava after the mv hegan, Nunn and Joseph Contols, a companion, were arrested. Contolr told officlals hé saw the wardens aues. tioning Nunn on the night they disap- veared. The latter admitted taiking to the wardens, but until last night main- tained innocence of any connection with thelr disappearance. After several hours: questioning last night. however, he admitted the slay- ings and led police to the place wher« he had deporited the hodles. After dragging the harhor for an hour, the rody of Erickson was brought to the <urface and a few minutes later that of Skoglund was found. Nunn. who has héén held on a tech nical complaint, will probably be for. | mallycharged with the slayings today & 5 |3 QUAKES TERRIFY | SAN FRANCISCO AND OTHER COAST CITIES (Continued from First Page.) tigation |had received reports from Ranta Rosa, north of San Francisco, and m Paso Robles. far to the South, hat the shocks had been felt there. Two sharp earthquakes that lasied several seconds were felt in Modesto, 100 mil e southeast of here, ear !today. The first came about 3:30 and | the second tremor around »:30. Inquiries developed the were not felt In the Northwestern tatex of Oregon and Washington. Fresno, Lox Angeles and Ban Diego Vxo eacaped them. Quake Lald to Ol Fault, | _The most violent shock felt in San | Francisco previously and the most i memorable n the city's histe - urred at 5 o'clock on the morning of April 18, 1906, when the ciiy was lafd in ruine mostly as a result of fires siarted by the quake. In that disaster 452 lives were lost, 1500 per- sons injured and 26 made home. | 1es The 1 ruperty was estl- | mated at £3.0,000,000. at quake, as today's 1 presumed to have heen, was along the San Andreas geologi- cal fault. Thisx fault éxténds along the coast.-rangé mountaine from a point on the northern California coast about 200 miles north of San Fran- cigeo to the Gulf of Lower California. Tt follows the coast line for a distance of 100 miles south of San Fran. cisco, where it swerves in approxi- mately 20 miles and gradually ex tends further eastward, traversing Los Angeles, Riverside and San Diego Countles. It was a slipping of the earth strata along this fault that caused the 1906 quake, scientisis said. The history of the Pacific Coast s replete with records of selsmic dis- turbances, the entire region being in a condition of unstable equilibrinm {And cut by long rifts in the surface | called “faull | “These have produced a seriex of long, narrow valleyve, The forcé which produces slevatlons and suhsidence of the surface also prodices stresses which finally overcome the adhesion of the opposing rift walle and earth- auakes take place in the slipping of these walle through a few inches or A few feet in an effart to adjust the stresses Prof. A. C. Lawson of the Univer- sity of California says the coast of | California 18 rising And | disturbancés whose record i found {in the rocks have heen produced hy | - movements in the process of up- | heaval and subsidence, of folding and | faulting, which Are, perhaps, greater along the coast of California than in any other part of the world. . K. | Gilhert of the United States feoloci |cal Rurvey says An earthquake ie a | iar occasioned by some tviolent rup- | ture caused by the rising of lava in a | voleano or by forces that make moun- {tain ranges or continents. The fa | mous San Francisco earthquaks of {1908 had ite origin in a rupture asso- | cinted with mountain-making forces. | Gen €. B. Blethen, publisher of [the Seattle Times, an Associated Press member. turned reporter when the firat temblor shook the city. He was stopping at the Palace Hotel and immediately telephoned the Assoclated | Press and described what happened at_that hostelry. The general said his bed rocked | more than it had ever rocked while | he was on an ocean liner, The wrench |of the quake. he sald. was from north |to =outh and ground some of the removed from a bridge at Chin- | large windows into fine fragmente|1hat he and |of glass. Plaster fell from cailings In unexpected places and small cracke | appeared in the lobhy. Four plate glasa windows, two of them large, suffered most. The twe larger were on the new Montgomery ktrest site and the lace curtaing hung At the windows wers torn to shréds apparently hy the broken glass, On the west side of the hotel one of the large piate glase windows was broken | into <mall pieces, | WOOD PLANS VACATION. | MANILA. October 22 ()1t in au. | thoritatively stated that Gov. Gen. Leonard Wood of the Philippines con- templates taking a leave of absence for several months, atarting early next vear. The general has heen in the islande 31, vears without visiting the United Stares. He Is now convaleseing from an o eration and plans to visit a mountsf resort soon for a brief rest. [ anakes | STAR. WASHINGTON. D. € iRIT)AY OCTOBER 22 were injured. A gaping hole in the side of a Washingte resulted when the bus hit a truck parked on Rallway and Electric Co. bus ladenshurg road. Four persons - DEMOCRATIC HO | | (Continued from First Pa%e) ,l'lxro that Governor Shoup maintained order in the miners’ stelke in Colo- rado with 30 rangers, and aid it ef. tectively when in the past it had heen necessary to call out regiments of Rtate militia. The 1wo newspapers of Denver, the | | Post, published by Bonfils, and the | Times, published by Shaffer, have | taken opposite sides fn the ‘guher- natorfal race, the former aupporting Shoup and the latter Adame. They are at it hammer and tongs. Pub-| lishing daily charges and counter- charges, the Post has sought to pin | {on Adama the Klan emblem. Tt has| !tried to make Sweet out a Klan can- | didaté for the Senate, too. Both Adams and Sweet have op- posed the Klan, the Times replies. calling on Shoup and Waterman, the | Republican nominee for the Senate, | 10 refute the “lies” of their supporter. | the Post. As a matter of fact. the| attAcks delivered hy the Post against | Adams are ecausing some 3 among the leaders of the Republican organization. They fear the renc- | tion among the peoplé who have a great vegard for Billy Adama. Report of $100 Gift. ek The Denver Post has published a | story to the effect that the late Gov. Alva Adams in 1917, contributed $100 {10 the Iellowship Forum, published in Washington, now as the organ of the Ku Kiux Klan. The charge ix | ihat Alva B. Adams. son of v | Adams. is campaign manager for Rilly Adams, and that the contribu- | {ion fo the Fellowship Forum ix a | aure indication of the connec the Adams family, including with the Kla Alva B, Adams. replving to this | charge, pointx out that when his| {ather contributed the $100, the publi- cation was being started as a Ma- <onfe organ, (hAt hisx father was the father of Maxonry in Colorado and that there wak no earthly reason why he should not contribute the mone: The Klan then had not come into| prominence. The Post, doesn't Billy Billy, asks, “\Why Adams denounce the Kian?" But Adams’ record against the Kian is known. and he does not have to denounce the Klan any more than President Coolidge had to de- nounce 1t in 1924, when La Follette | and Davig, hix opponents. had at- tacked the Klan and called upon Coolidgé 10 do the same. The Klan iz doubtless going to cast a large vote for Adams and for Sweet hecanse of its opposition to Shoup in reply, fon of L.* SIXARE INJURED N CRASHES N FOG | Bus Hits P_arked Truck, Auto Strikes Trolley Pole in Street Center. A heavy fog. making driving peril ous, aceounted for at least twn aute | mobile acetdents early this mernine, resulting in injuries to six persons, none of them serious. A northbound Washington Rallway | and Flactric Company hus procseding through the fog along the Riadens burg road at £:30 o'clock crashed fato a fiveton truek parked by’ the xide | of the road. smashing in the righ | side of the bus and Aamaging the front of the truck. The Aceident occurred about yards north of Yost place. and can four of the passengers on the hns ‘o he sent to Casualty FHospital -uffer Ing from cuts; inflicted by fiving giase, iand bruises. Bus Driver Uninjured. Those hurt were: Pat Adlex. 30 vears old, a Diatrict emplove, living |8t 109 Twentieth street. lacerated face; { Howard Pool. 17 vears old. Kast River dale. Md.. eut and brulsed: King Hall colored, old, lahorer, 310 | street. unconseious and ent about the mouth, and James Brooks, colored, 27 vears old. lahorer, Langdon, Md and bruised. Pool 100 PES MOUNTING IN WARM COLORADO CAMPAIGN shall not hecome effective until the sighteenth amendment to the Federat Constitution is repealed. The refer endum on the wet and dry question is ridiculed by the drys, because, they insist, it could have no possible effect on the law of the State. It har hesn brought forward by wéte in the State, however State on the llquor question. Spon Penrose. One of the s dum_{s Spencer | the late Senator e of Pennsy- vania, who transported himself and hir money to Colorado some yvears ago and has hecome owner of hotels in Colorado Springs. The drys charge he is trying {0 make Colorado Springs a center for the wealthy and sport- inclined giemlers of soclety. The dry organizations are working active- I¥ throughout the State. The wet organization has opened headquarters and is doing its best to get out a wet v The State law requires that a cer. tain proportion f the voters must aign a petition for a_referendum, and in thin cage ft was 27,000, The wets produeced 30,000 signatures. 4e, brother Prediction that the wets will be beaten in the referendum by from 2 to 1 all the way to 4 and 5 to 1 are made by politiciane whe have watched the dry development in the State. The referendum hax little to with the election or Nenator or ge ernor, for all the candidates for these offices are given an O. K. by the Anti- Saloon League. Nevertheless, there are dry leaders who predict a Demo- cratic. landslide, particularly for Sweet. who has heen more promi identified with prohibition in the State than anv other man who has held public office, Sweet supported by the Klan as he will he: supported by labor and by a large number of the farmers. and support ed by the drys. should win the elec. tion. notwithstunding defection of Cathelic Democrats, Charges Against Pastor. That the Klan and anti-Kian fight still lacks nothing in bitterness in Colorado is evidenced by an attempt to bring about criminal prosecution of Rev. Fred G. Arnold of Canon City grand dmgon of the State Klan, on nentlv A charge of “Inciting to riot and en. riot and discontent The maliate, an organ- orado to combat couraging so-ealled Constitut ization formed in | the Klan, has charged that Arnold at a meeting In Canon City for the pur ne f advancing the interests of Klan candidates forscounty offices de- livered an inflammatory epeech. part to teet the sentiment of the | The to-| 1al vote in State runs around 300.000. | of which is quoted In the charge as Waterman. It hates Shoup be- [ osd tollown: the selamie | cause of his attacke upon it, and Tt Qisliker Watermun because he de- featéd in the primaries Renator Rice W. Means, who has been a Klan | favorite. ‘There is no reason why the Democratie candidates should now | troth at the mouth hecause the R publican _Klan votes will he cast for them. Thelr record ‘on the Klan i< | straight, and if the Klan wishes to | take it but on the Republican organi- | zation, why ¢hould the Democrats | | worry? 1 Bid for Anti-Klan Vofe. . The affort of tHe Republicans and the Post {a to win antl-Klan votee for thelr candidates and against | Democratic nomineex. Tt fe direcied particularly toward the Demacratie Catholic vote, which is large. The Demoeratie Catholic leaders are more | | oppored to Swest, howsver, than they | | are to Adame. In fact. they person- | 2lly like Adams. Rut Sweei has fafl- | ed to make a statement favorahle to | the Catholice as a result of hie in- stigation, along with other mem hera of a Protestant commission. of the froublex hetween the Catholic | Church and the Meéxican government. | It in this that the Catholics are hold. | WK up agalnst Sweet more than the | alleged Klan designation, for they | know rhat Sweet tWo years age while | campaigning for governor denonnced the Klan and opposéd the Republican Klan candidate, Gov, Sweet hus %0 far taken no puh. lic gotice of the Catholic attacks| against him. He still hopes to get a | | third or half the Catholic votes in the | State hecause of hix hold on laber. But if the church eampalgn against 'him becomes very acti as it promises to do. Sweet may eut loose with A public demand to know if the | Catholic Church is to dictate who shall be Renator from Colorado and what views that Senator shall hold of affaira in Mexico. | Not Anxions for Row. If he does. another fanatical war may | Sweet {x not anxloua to start it I he can be pushed into it. religious and Aevelop. Gov. | hut | He insists | the eommission which went to México to Investigate condi- tiona has madeé no report, and that a prese dispatch quoting thres members | {of the commission. though net him. i elf. In which some of the things told | the commisaion by President Calles of Mexico were repeated. It the on thing which has emanated from a ‘member of the investigating hody. | Gov. Rweet feels that Catholic opposi- | tion to him ix Aue really to the fact | that he has pot sald anything about | the Mexican troubles in faver of the chureh, The Denver Post has make Adams out a wet, hut dry or- | ganization leaders have not taken to ! | this charge. holding that Adame will | strictly enforce the dry laws if he he. comes governor. Adams has a strong | | tollowing among the farmers who are | | church people and dry. ! Under the initiative and referendum | law, the people of Colorado are to vote on whether or not to repeal the Ary pravisiens ef the State constitu- tion with a proviso that the repeal sought to | Gov “IWe are not Democrats or Repub- lleana: we are Klansmen now and all time. Our husi is to put over the doctrines of order. If it costs dollare. and it will. we are going to spend them. If it coste lives, and It probably wiil, wr are willing fo sacri- | fica them. If we have to wade in hot blood to attaln the mims of our or- gAnizatior. we are willing to do that. “The Klan wae defeated in the pri maries, and by ite defeat the people of Colarado voted to flaod their homes and their country with liquor. Ret ter to flood it with blood than that this demoralizing traffic he resumed. Allegations Ahout Defeat. “Ry the defeat of our candidates the people of (‘olorado voted to have their daughters marry negroes, their sont wenches. They voted of America a race of mulattoes. They voted to ally this State with | the Catholic cursed. the liquor curged. priest cursed. Rome cursed. Al 8mith cursed, State of New Vork “Henceforth the war ery which must supersede all others is, Down with the Catholic Church! Al other iksues are secondary to this and it in time to come out in the open to prociaim oursélves on this issue With the help of God we are going to pass laws in this State that will opény the doors of convents and monaxteries and let in the iight of dav. allowing fheir foul stench 1o amell to high heavens. Rring ont the rope and cannister, hovs, and | zive them hell There ia a large independent vote in Colorado indicated o in the presidential votes cast for Wilkon in 1916 and Harding in_ 1920, carrfed the State by 75.000 and four vears later the Republican candidate won by 69,000, showing a complete turno The candidates of both parties are making a play for this independent vote, q ing an appeal to it now. He is ad. vertined, for example, to address a meeting where the public questions of the day are to he discussed, rather than to address Democratic party rallies. This ever, that hel fs not a party man. He has heen regular in ev cam- paign. even in 1920, when the Non. partisan Leagus candidate. Coilins, won the Demoeratic nomination for governor. It Is trie. however, that Sweet had less trouble swal lowing the league candidate and iie principles than did many other more | congervative Dem:crats BAND CONCERT. TOMORROW By the United States Soldiers’ Home Band Orchestra at Stanley Hall 5:45 o'clock. John 8. M. Zimmermann, lender: Emil A, Fenstad, second leader, . S0 many men have deserted the harbering trade in France that women are now being hired to take their places, to make | Wilson | i Sweet has heen strong in the | i past with this vote, and he I mak- | oes not mean, how- | |and Hall were admitted to the hospl | tal, while the other passengers were | given firat ald and dismissed. |7 Ray J. Camphell. operator of the | bus, living at*117 Sixth &treet narfh- | east, exeaped injury. Although the | glase on the right side of the hus | wAe shattersd. the windshield wase not damaged. Robert Moore, col- | ored, 1432 Carrollburg place south- weet, was in charge of the truck, | which Is owned by Kane's Trahefer | Co.. Fifth and V' streetk northsadt. | T'nahle to see through the fog until |t was ton late to avold an accident, Thomas L. Avant. Port Chester. N Y.. visiting at 130K T sirest, drove his | automablle agalnat a center roadway [ trolley pole In front of 518 Rhode Island avenue, damaging the car and injuring two of fts occupants, Mrs. Winfred Weston, 28 vears old. 935 1. atreet, and Frederick Snyder, & yvears old, of Port Chester. The accldent happened about 3 o'clock this morn- Mrs, the child wer assisted precinet police atation, from where they were taken to Casualty Hospital and treated for cuts and hruises. Policeman Ts Hurt. Motor Cyele Policeman Willlam MeFwan of No. 10 precinct recelved linjuriex to his left leg yesterday | nfternoon as A result of a collialon | hetween his motor evele and An anto- mobfle, Rurgeons at CGarfleld Hos- | pltal rendered firar aid. Theodare Taube, 17 years. 1725 | Riggs place, was cut and hrilsed last | night About 7 e'clock when bik motor cyele collided at Massachusetis ave- nue and Ninth street with the aute mobile of Xtephen Powenda. Rethesda, M. He was taken to Emergency Hos- bital. R colliston hetween the automobile | of Leonard Deans. colored, 82 vears {old, 807 Second street southeast. and la taxical parked near Rhode lsland |avenue and North Capitol street oc- urred about 1 'k This morning. Mrs. Cora vears old,. re. fused a slight injur | Drans was held by the police to & swer charges of driving while under the influence of liquor and having old tags on hix car. Children Are Vietims, | Abe Waolf. 1928 Pennsylvania ave nue, was driver of an automobile that collided with a motor truck driven by George ( egg. 19 vears old, 1620 Thirty-third street, at K street and Washington e abont 645 -lock last night. Wolf, ¥ vears A, received an injury te hie fore head that was dressed by Dr. K. 1. Walsh. Weston and | to No. 12 shirley Rutler, colored, 9 vears old, * 63 Q street, was knocked down by an antemobile at Keventh and @ streets ahout b o'clock vesterday aftérnnen and his right ankie sprained. He was reated at Freedmen's Hospital by Dr Christian. Walte rd, colored, 15 yvears old, 617 K str was knocked down hy {an automoblle owned and driven hy John F. Gravely, Lanham. Md.. nea venth and M streeis ahout 7 o'clock last night. He was only slightiy hurt. - |CHARGES AMBULANCE REFUSED TO MOVE MAN A report that the Emergénc. pital ambulancé refused to a sick man from the lawn of 3008 R street, adjacant 1o Montrose Park, on Monday afternoon and carry him the hospltal for treatment twas made to the United States park | police headauartera foday by Park | Policeman Themas Rell. who sum- | moned the assistance Rell_declarsd he found the man, 1. D. Kalinoski. Iving nneonscions on the grase in front of his residence. When the ambulance arrived. he continued, twe surgeons axamined the patient and. after giving him some smalling salts, declined o take him to the hoapital. The policeman said he asked them not to leave Kalinoski on the ground and Anally prevalléd on them to remave him to the seventh precinet police station, from whérs he wae thken in a patrel wagon 1o Gal- linger Hospital. Upon recovery, ha was released. | Supt. RB. R Sandidze of Emérganey | Hospital today dec'ared the am- bulance did net refuse tn re- move the man and that a report from the surgeon who answerad the ambulance call diagnosed the ea and atated that no emergency me | irer were needed. =o he was taken {10 the seventh precinct 16 he re- | ferred to Gallinger Hospital for | mental observation. ‘The sunerintendent added that the nature of the illness made it a Gal Jinger and not Fmergency Hospltal Tae. 2 | . ANSWERS IN $100.000 SUIT | Denving that she spoke the alleged | slanderons worde attributad to her | by Miss Norma Viehmever in her amfit | tor damages of $100.000. Mrs. Henry Lamar. 1744 Rigge place. today filed | her answer in the District ‘Suprems [ Conrt and at the same time, through her counssl, made a motion to atr out a part of the Viehmever suit. | The motlon to strike ont the frat | count of the declaration filed by Miss | Viehmeyer 1a based upon the claim of defendant’s counsel that Miss Vieh | mever has undertaken to combine a | number of alleged incidents of slander | in one sult. For a plea to the second | count of the daclaration it ia denied | by Mrs, Lamar, who is the wife of the former amateur light heavyweight | hoxing champlon, that she ever spoke disparagingly of Misa Viehmeyer 1o the parenta of Henry Lamar, hushand of the defendant. or to any one sise. Attorneys Raymond Neudeeker and Willlam C. Ashford appear fer Mrs. Lamar.