Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
As a ema we Smee, $PAGE TWO. GRAND RAPIDS HERALD-REVIEW TR EL LESIONS RETRY AN WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 24, 1913 . Tee eh a he a eT ORDER FLOWERS Thru local dealers or Agents when possible, but insist on DULUTH eateeteatpeteetonteatentreteatoetente dn FLORAL CO. goods and service—the best in Duluth without argu- = ment, when it comes to : Wedding Boquets or % Emblems for Funerals. WoestestosteateegeateetostestreteetontoeZeeoetosieeleetenioedoetestoetoetonte: WILSON AWAITS SEIZED BY GREEKS Missions for Education of Al- banian Girls Attacked. Vienna, Sept. 23—The Greek au- | thorities at Koritsa, in Albania, seized the American mission schools there where instruction is given to nearly 100 Albanian girls. The in- formation reached here in a telegram | from Avolna, the the principal sea- port of Albania on the Adriatic sea. The Greeks have also arrested and | persecuted a large number of Albani- THE TARIFF BILL Expects to Sign Completed. Measure This Week. FIGHT iS NEARING EN Disputed Points Between the Two Houses Narrowed Down to the In- come Tax, the Tax on Cotton Fu- tures and the General Administra- tive Provision. Washington, Sept. 23.—Disputed points between the senate and house in the tariff bill narrowed down to euch chief features as the income tax, the tax on cotton futures and the gen- eral administrative provision. Demo- cratic managers expected to send the conference report to the house by Thursday. President Wilson told callers that his conferences with leaders led him to believe all differences would be smoothed out and he would sign the bill this week. “I’ve got my pen sharpened,” said the president. Chairman Simmons of the senate finance committee and Senator Hoke Smith assured President Wilson that they expected the bill to be ready for his signature before the end of the week. The last moments of the pas- sage of a tariff measure, however, al- ways offer opportunity for rejection of a conference report and further delib- erations on points upon which either house may insist. Southern Leaders Agreed. Democratic leaders from the South are said to be agreed on the cotton futures tax compromise proposed by Representative Lever and endorsed by Postmaster General Burleson and Sen- ator Hoke Smith. Instead of the high Clarke tax it proposes a smaller tax on cotton for which the government has fixed standards. The cotton ex- change men, however, are protesting against it. Chairman Simmons said he had not discussed the cotton future tax with the president, but indicated the sen- ate managers will not yield to the house on their amendment. “It will be the Clarke amendment or nothing,” said the finance commit- tee chairman. With consideration of the income tax section the senate’s amendment lowering the minimum exemption from $4,000 to $3,000, allowances for de- pendent wives and children and larger taxes on great incomes came up for settlement. Old Paint. — Two parts of ammonia to one of tur- pentine will soften old paint or varnish and make its removal easy. oh ee ee te hh ob bh oe he oe ob Soatoatoshoeteetoaonteateatoatoatoetreeetoateetoe testo tiful dresses, FREE with each Underwear Purchase MUNSING UNION SUITS For Men at One Dollar and up to Five Dollars OD egtecdeectectectectecectectentteetent MUNSING UNION SUITS For Children at Fifty Cents and THIS STORE WILL BE CLOSED FRIDAY AFTERNOON You Will Like Them MUNSING UNION SUITS Give Complete Satisfaction Dainty Little Molly Munsing, with her seven beau- MUNSING is the most popular underwear in the world because of its perfect fit and its unusual 4 durability and washability. ang who recently returned to Koritsa | from America and other foreign coun- | tries. The British consul at Mona- | stir has entered a vigorous protest | with the Greek government on behalf | of the Americans. The whole affair forms part of the | Greek terrorization of the Albanian | population, with the object of com- pelling them to agree to the inclusion | of the whole of Southern Albania in | the kingdom of Greece. Last week Greek officials at Karit- sa endeavored to take forcible pos- session of the American mission school building, but the housekeeper in charge refused to hand over the keys. The Greek soldiers beat her mercilessly and then carried her off | to prison. EE eh eh ee MURDER VOW CARRIED OUT AFTER SIX YEARS. Logansport, Ind., Sept. 23.— Fulfilling a vow which he is said to have made six years ago, Tony Antonlin, a Sicilian, shot and fatally wounded An- tonio Carrabone, a quarryman. Antonlin came here from Seattle, Wash., to commit the deed. He escaped. EEE EERE EEE EE EE SEES EEE EEE TEES PATIENT AND NURSE KILLED Two Racine (Wis.) Women Asphyx- iated by Coal Gas, Racine, Wis., Sept. 23.—Mrs. Brid- get Ryan, a widow aged ninety-one years, and Mrs. Michael Feehney, aged sixty-eight, were found dead at the home of Mrs. Ryan, asphyxiated by coal gas escaping from the kitchen stove. Mrs. Ryan had been ill and Mrs. Feehney had volunteered to stay for the night and minister to her wants. Michael Feehney called at the Ryan home and discovered both women dead. BARON DE FRAYNE IS DEAD Irish Peer Succumbs After Long Me | ness Near Dublin. Dublin, Sept. 23——Baron de Frayne died at his country residence, French Park, Roscommon. He was fifty-six years old and had been ill a long time. The successor to the peerage is the Honorable Arthur Reginald French, | thirty-four years old, the baron’s only son by his first marriage. He served for several years as an officer in the Royal Fusiliers, resigning his com- mission to enlist as a private in the | Eighth United States infantry. He comes into possession of 30,000 acres in County Roscommon. | Four Killed in Explosion. Philadelphia, Sept. 23.—Four work- men were killed and one injured by an explosion in the gelatine mixing house of the Du Pont Powder works at Gibbstown, N. J., near here. The four men killed were simply ob- iterated. MUNSING UNION SUITS For Women at One Dollar and up to Three Fifty up to Two Dollars The Pioneer Store JOHN BECKFELT Grand Rapids, Minn. AMERICAN SCHOOLS STREETS LINED | Calumet Court’s Action Almost Elim- | O’Brien, on petition of the mine man- WITH MOURNERS: Funeral of Mayor Gaynor Viewed by Multitude, | ARMY OF PEOPLE IN LINE) Twenty Thousand Persons Represent-| ing All Classes Walk Behind His | Catafalque From the City Hall Down! Broadway to Trinity Church. | New York, Sept. 23.—William J. Gaynor, late mayor of New York, was given a public funeral which climaxed days of mourning such as the metrop- | olis has never before seen. In the streets 20,000 persons of all walks in life followed behind his catafalque from the black draped city | hall down Broadway to Trinity church, while thousands of other mourners | lined the pavements and stood uncov- ered in the rain as the remains of the} man who said “I have been mayor” passed by. Drawn by sixteen black | horses led by eight firemen and eight policemen the mayor’s coffin was perched ten feet above the roadway on a giant funeral car all draped in black, while the honorary pallbearers strode alongside. Among them were} Robert Adamson, the late mayor’s sec- retary; Police Commissioner Rhine lander Waldo, Jacob Schiff, Herman Ridder, James Coleman, Ardolph Kline, A. R. Smith, A. R. Watson, Jus- tice Keough, D. R. Crimmins and Ed-| ward M. Grout. { Immediately following the cortege, and pallbearers came various city oi-| ficials and committees from the legis- lature of New York. These were fol- lowed by justices of a score of courts, Major General Barry and his staff rep- resentating the army, Rear Admiral Cameron Winslow representing the) navy and representatives of the lord | mayor of Liverpool and of various | cities in the United States. Delegations from hundreds of clubs} and societies and representatives ot, the city, borough and county brought! up the rear. Hundreds of police afoot | and mounted lined the route of the funeral procession, which left the city | hall shortly after 10 o’clock. Every head along Broadway was bare as the coffin was borne within | the walls of the church. Honor was} paid to the dead mayor in the city in| many ways. From 11 to 11:05 every | school in the city was the scene of| memorial services, and for the same | time the bells of the Brooklyn bor-| ough hall and of hundreds of churches in the greater city tolled a requiem. All traffic was stopped from 11 to} 11:05 a. m. TO REMEDY STOCK SHORTAGE | American Meat Packers to Discuss Scarcity of Cattle. Chicago, Sept. 23.—Discussion of the scarcity of cattle throughout the | world will take up much of the time of members of the American Meat Packers’ association, who opened / their annual convention here. Sev-} eral of them will offer suggestions for relief. John T. Russell, president of the United Master Butchers of America, will read a paper on “Retail Butch- | ers’ Remedies for the Meat Shortage.” Mr. Russell said that he will point out that the New England states are | especially adaptable to the raising of live stock, while the Southern states can come forward as a _ constant | source of supply of live stock just as | soon as the cattle tick is eliminated. | STRIKERS OBEY INJUNCTION inates Disturbances. Calumet, Mich., Sept. 23.—The in- junction granted by Circuit Judge agers, prohibiting the copper miners on strike from picketing and parading while men are going to or coming from work and forbidding interfering in any way with workmen, apparent- ly had the desired effect. Only one disturbance occurred. One arrest of a striker who attacked a workman was made at the South Kearsarge mines. The state military force in the strike district was reduced to about 500 men, 120 departing for their homes. NEGRO SLAYER IS LYNCHED Kills Two Men and Wounds Another Following Dispute. Franklin, Tex., Sept. 23.—Will Davis, a negro, was lynched after he had shot and killed Rufus Hodge, thirty years old, and Tom Reussian, twenty-seven, and seriously wounded Will Maxwell on the Rushing farm ten miles north of Franklin. Hodge was killed first, following a dispute, and ussian and Maxwell were shot when they attempted to arrest Davis. Pardoned After Forty-three Years. | Columbus, O., Sept. 23.—After spend- | ing practically all of his life since reaching manhood inside the peniten- tiary walls, John Taborn, the oldest convict in the Ohio penitentiary, was pardoned by Governor Cox. Taborn has been a prisoner for forty-three CANDIDATE OF 6,0.P.IN 1916 Movement to Place Roose- velt at Head of Ticket. HAS COLONEL DESERTED? Leading Standpat Senator Assert- That President Did Not! | Give a Word of Encouragement to| Former Progressives in Recent Contest in| Maine, Chicago, Sept. 23.—According to a} dispatch from Washington, everybody | seems to be talking, speculating and | gossiping about Theodore Roosevelt | and the movement to make him the} candidate of the Republicans for presi- | dent in 1916—everybody except those Progressives who broke the old home| ties the last year with so much noise | in the breaking’ that they hardly dare | think of returning, even by way of the back gate. New York and Washington newspa- | pers in particular, regardless of their feeling toward Roosevelt, regard it as an undisputed fact that plans are be- ing made to capture the Republican nomination for Roosevelt, while some that are vigorously opposed to the for- mer president do not hesitate to indi- cate that even the standpat Repub- licans are looking to Roosevelt as their savior in the next national contest. Immediately on the heels of the original announcement of the “nation- al fusion” movement came an inter- view ‘with Senator Sutherland, wired across the continent from his home in Salt Lake City, in which the senator expressed his belief that Roosevelt would be a candidate for the Republic- an nomination next time. Among the reasons given for this and the added belief that the former president will win the nomination Senator Suther- land mentioned the dwindling Pro- gressive vote in recent elections. Says Colonel Has Deserted. Then he asserted that Roosevelt himself had virtually deserted the Progressives, not giving them even a word of encouragement in the late contest in Maine. Colonel Roosevelt, he said, will soon leave for South America to be gone until after the congressional election next year and | that without his personal leadership the Progressive party rapidly will disintegrate. The Sutherland interview created consternation among some of the con- servative Republicans in the senate, who, although inclined to believe Roosevelt would be a candidate for | the Republican nomination, express- ed disapproval of an open utterance from one who in the last contest at Chicago was one of the Taft leaders. They say the next campaign is a | long way off; that there is a chance the country will become disgusted with Democratic rule in the mean- time and that it will be possible not only to nominate but to elect a “regu- lar” ‘Republican. Atop the Sutherland interview come dispatches from Philadelphia saying that none other than Boies Pen- Tose was preparing to accept Roose- velt as the inevitable, and coupled with the information were stories that former Senator Crane, Senator Lodge and perhaps even Boss Barnes of New York would take up Roosevelt as the means of bringing the Pro- gressives back into the fold and en- able the Republicans to present a strong front against Wilson—or the Democratic candidate, whoever he may be. ENDORSES CURRENCY BILL Samuel Untermyer Supports Admin- istration Measure. Washington, Sept. 23—Samuel Un- termyer, counsel for the house money trust investigation of the last con- gress, gave his ideas on currency re- form to the senate banking commit- tee. Mr. Untermyer endorsed gener- ally the principles of the administra- tion currency bill passed by the house last week, but suggested a number of amendments. “{ wish it understood,” said Mr. Untermyer, “that I am an unqual- ified champion of the principles on which this bill is based—that is, an asset currency, issued through the banks as a government obligation and under the control of the government. But I believe the bill is overgenerous to the bankers in freeing them from complications.” Snow Driving in Campers. Superior, Wis., Sept. 23.—Nearly two inches of snow fell between Bennett and Solon Springs and in the vicinity of Winnebijou, according to reports brought in by Superior peo- ple who spent Sunday there. The snow remained on the ground all day. Many campers at resorts have returned to Superior and Duluth on account of the snow and inclement weather. Powers Warn Japan. St. Petersburg, Sept. 23.—] newspapers say that England, Ri and Germany have notified Jay that if troops are landed at Nan! the three powers named would constrained to do the ‘same. BE nee Bridging Space By Bell Telephone 218—MTC. | It seems easy to get a clear line and have a tele- phone talk with parties in cities a thousand miles away; but it’s no easy task for us. We must keep two tracks—two wires—clear all the way for each patron. Each subscriber must have the exclusive right-of-way. Like a Mighty Spider Web, Bell Lines Reach Out Nearly Everywhere. MESABA TELEPHONE COMPANY ‘ELECTRIC TRAINS IN FATAL CRASH Three Persons Killed and Twen- ty Injured, = New York, Sept. 23.—Three train- men were killed and twenty passen- gers injured when two steel electric | trains on the Long Island railroad met | in a headon collision at College Point, LL The inbound train was heavily load- | ed with passengers on their way to work in New York. The motormen of both trains were killed and one conductor lost his life Both trains were made up of all steel cars. There were four coaches to each train. The accident occurred on a single track on the stretch to College Point, where the electric system of the Long Island ends and the trains are trans- ferred to steam engines. The wrecked trains were No, 31, in- | bound for New York, and No. 208, | eastbound from New York. The in- bound train was several minutes late and was traveling at high speed when the accident occurred. The eastbound had just passed the station when the New York bound train was rushing on a block away. There was no time for either motor- man to bring his train to a stop. The engines were piled in a heap. When the ambulances reached the scene the | injured had been dragged from the | wreckage by other passengers. “Where’s my breakfast?” inquired the star boarder. “Well, sir.” replied the landlady, “I got a nice bit of fish for you, but. I’m sorry to say. sir, the cat”— “Confound the cat! Then let me have cold chicken.” “I regret to say, sir, the cat”— “Well, then, some eggs.” “There are no eggs in, cat”— “Hang it all then! Cook the cat and we'll have it all together.” sir, The GAYNOR’S CASKET. Remains of Former Mayor as They Lay in State at City Hall. @ 1913, by American Press Association. IS ARRESTED AFTER LEAP “Dare Devil” Murphy Uninjured by Jump From Brooklyn Bridge. New York, Sept. 23.—‘Dare Devil” Murphy, as Joseph P. Murphy is known because of high diving feats, took what he called a “practice” jump off Brooklyn bridge, was picked up unharmed by three friends in a row boat and afterwards went calmly to sleep in a police station cell, where he was placed on a charge of at- tempted suicide. Murphy made his 135-foot jump clad in a bathing suit, which he wore under his street clothes, discarding the latter on the bridge promenade. beer eed WHEREAS, provided her; therefore, be it RESOLVED, GEO. F. In a discussion as to ways and means of economizing time,and minimizing labor, RESOLVED, The time of our President being so taken up with her multitudinous household duties that any modern production that will save steps, thing where everything may be That we will, without turther delay, purchase for her an up-to-date ““SELLERS’’ Kitchen Cabinet. Furniture, Rugs, Linoleum and Undertaking OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE KITCHEN CABINET jacking A a place for every- ept in its place, should be KREMER