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VOL. LXI—NO. 214 EIGHT PAGES—56 COLS. PRICE TWO CENTS HAYS DEFENDS STAND - TAKENBY REP. SENATORS Chairman of the Republican National Committee Says Their Position On the Peace Treaty Is Actuated By Patriotism — Declares President Wilson Is Pounding Against a Stone Wall In Attempting to Have the Peace Treaty Ratified Without Reservations. n a statement is-{ Lamont, of J. P. Morgan and Com- Chicago, Sept. 7. sued here today, 1 H. Ma, chair-, pany, predicted in a statement issued man of the republican national com- | here tonight. mittee. declared that President Wil-| Mr. Lamont. who spent five months son was pounding sgainct a stone|abroad with the American peace com- in attempting o hiave th: 'elk’e) m ion, serving as a member of the treaty ratified witaoit resecvaions. | Supreme Economic Council, the inter- Chatrman Haye statemen | allied commission- and as ‘one of the| T agree with Presidcr. Wi | financ'al advisers to the United States| the treaty will e rotided. but { delegation. asserted that “the whole ratification will be accompanied by | World is crying for peace, for a chance absoiutely safezuarding| !0 renew its normal life and work. independence and freedom of| He added that this country,.“by con- rion of is republ That is the| tinued inaction, refuses to grant her Simple fact which the president may | CONS€nt to the settlements necessary.” as weil recognize first as last. At| Since it became evident to the com- present he is only pounding against a| Mercal world that the action of the stone wall of patriotism which has al-| Sénate might result in the nullifica- ready become impregnable and isdaily | 1iOn of the treaty, there has been an ‘alarming fall in the rates of foreign ncreasing in width. strength and| . opange Mr. Lamont said. ° ight. The committee reservation| “XpeRER, N CONONI PN, e onstitute the irreducible minimum of| o "KOF Tl he continued “no reme- the requirements of a substantial ma-| .,n¢inyesat Washington; no plan for. of senators who cannot'be CO-| (e extension of foreign credits, S0 erced or cajoled into violating their|necessary to maintain America's ex- oaths of office to hold America first-} ,ort trade. can be evolved. It is hard There is no partisanship in their po-| (o conceive the attitude of mind that sition. True, ev republican sena-| jnsists upon such calamitous fumbling tor without exception stands with the | with the most eritical Situation that ommittee, but because he is an Amer-{ the world has ever seen. The only ex- n—not because he is a republican.| planation that there is still almost in- 1 sincere fur an an ac-|credible lack of understanding, both tual majority of the democratic sena-!of the treaty provisions themselves s feel the same way and evidences|and of the manner in which the affairs when the time|of the yorld await America’s consent a considerable number will vote| to peace. republican padty, defending the course | to determine | h he made. The! of President Wilson in the negotia- eaty reported out this week | tions at Paris, asserting that he had anll n vote d as soon as it “played no politics” and had “acted can be reached under the rules unless| with moderation, common sense and is delayed by senators acting under, great patience.” ~Charges that he had he direciion of the president himself.| refused to consult with members of it is simply now up to the adminis- delegation were characterized as tration to de wheiher it will or will not accept at once these essential E—— zuarantees of American independence | pRESIDENT WILSON IN which will unqu ionably be promptl ccepted by the other nations. It isl THE NORTHWEST THIS WEEK imperative that this matter be settled 5 = right. It ought, by all means, to be| Des Moines, Towa, Sept. 7.—After a = promptly. The fuli responsi.|day’s rest in Des Molnes, President for am delav will rest upon the | Wilson will strike into the northwest president and him alone tomorrow for a week of speechmaking there in the interest of the peace trea- ty. RESERVATIONS AS ADOPTED | "His schedule for the six days will BY THE SENATE COMMITTEE |take him through every state that 3 = | borders Canada west of the laKes and Washington, Sej —The text of!\will end at the Pacific coast where the reservations to the treaty of peace!on Saturday afternoon he will review with Germa adopted by thelthe Pacific fleet. He will not reach sena oreign relations committee. | the extreme northern tier of states h the vole on each reservation | until Tuesday, however, tomorrow be- read ling occupied with addresses at Oma- Res (two-thirds of the sena-{ha Neb. and Sioux Falls; S. D. tors present concurring therein) that| The president and Mrs. Wilson senate advise and consent 1o the |rested most of the day in their suite ation of the treaty of peaceiat a Des Moines hotel where they with Germany, signed by the plenipo- had spent their first night off their tentiaries of the United States and|special train since leaving Washing- Germany. and by the plenipotentiaries|ton Wednesday. In the morning they of enty-seven and {attended services. however, at Central at v on Presbyterian church, and in the after the f reserva- noon went for an automobile ride. stan r The president seemed to enjoy the diti such ride immensely. On the way a small- . not to er car turned over into ‘the ditch nited States| within sight of the presidential party foliowing reservations ang Mr, Wilson ordered his driver to 1gs have been untiligrop and inquired whether anvone was ollowing reservations and hurt. He was assured that all those ngs have been accepted asijn the car had escaped injury and a condition of aid in- Dr. Gravson, the president's physi- of ratification at least cian, said Mr. Wilson had been much re the four principal allied andl!refreshed by h Sunday in Des associated powers, to wit. Great Bri-!j\oines and was in good trip fr the tain Japan strenuous week before him. FHe said 1 reserves 0| he would urge, however, that the pres uncond right to with-|jqent make few rear platform speeches the lLeague of Nations UP-|along the way. ice as provided in Article T With the exception of Tuesday, vir-| said treaty o ith Germany | yally all of which will be spent in St. ¥ Paul and Minneapolis, and_Saturday. tates declines 10|when the president will be in Tacoma provisions of Arti-1,nq Seatle, Washn. the presidential y other articie, any obli-|gpecial will be almost continuously on to preserve territorial in- | gho political independence of | “1n"the number of addresses deliv- any other country or to interfere ‘"1wr°d Mr. Wilson today had completed controverises between other nations|gne_fifth of his speaking tour, but in whether members of the league or not.| gistance travelled he had covered less| -3 employ the military and naval|than one-sixth of his ten thousand rces of the United States in such | piqd SR NT controversies o to adopt onomic | g - measures for the protection of any| other country, whether a member of | PRESIDENT CRITICISED BY league or not, against external ag- SENATOR REED OF OHIO gression, or for the purpose of coerc-| =t ing any other country or for the pur-| Akron, Ohio, Sept. 7. - President pose of intervention in the internal! Wilson in his defense before the coun- conflicts or other controversies which| try of the League of Nations coven- may arise in any other country, and|ant “is mistaking the visions of am no mandate shall be cepted b, bition for the inspiration of idealism, Tn d e unde Articie | § enator Reed, democrat of Missouri, part of the treaty of peace with| declared at a mass meeting here to- Germany, except by the action orjday. The Missouri senator asserted joint resolution of the congress of (h21 that in Mr. Wilson's utterances ‘“the nited States. ‘(‘alm onlooker will recognize only the (Vote 9 to 7.) vapors of anger and the intemperance 3. The U'nited States reserves to itself | auttocracy manifests at opposition.” exclusive! the right to decide what While the president ‘“talks much of auestions are within its domestic jur- | the duty of sacrifices” he rides “at isdie nd declares that all do-|Zovernment expense on special trains.’ 1 political questions relating | lives “in the palaces of princes” and including immigration, | accepts presents from foreign diplo- mats “worth hundreds of thousands of Reed. The coastw se traffic, the tarifi, commerce, | and ail other domestic questions, are| dollars” said Senator solely within the jurisdiction of the| ‘sacrifices” he added, are to be made Tnited States. and are not under this| PV “American boys to nerish in the snows of Siberia or to die beneath th. Mr. Lamont, who is a member of the| 1 | i i ] ! Dav Greet Gen. Pershing To Drop Messages On Board the Leviathan as She Enters New York Harbor This Morning. New York. Sept. 7.—The first wel-| come to General John J. Pershing, | commander of the American expedi tionary forces, as the steamship Levia- than, on which he is returning to_ his | home shores, approaches New York| harbor tomorrow morning will be ex- tended by a police hydroairplane which will drop messages of welcome on board the vessel as she enters the har- bor shortly after daybreak. The mes- sages will be from Mayor Hylan and Rodman Wanamaker, chairman of the| mavor's committee of welcome to homecoming troops. “Your presence among us” Mr. Wanamaker's message says, “reminds us once more that the greatest of all conflicts is over and that America has taken a place amonz the nations of the earth second to none. “We salute vou, General Pershinz.” says the mayor’s message, the commander-in-chief of the bravest, hardest hitting army ever raised in the | history of civilized _warfare—the American expeditionary force." As the leviathan proceeds up the harbor she will be greeted by the| mayor's committee, Mr. Hylan., Gov-| ernor Smitly and other notables on! board the city steamer “Patrol” and | by relatives of returning soldiers who will g0 down ferryboats. the harbor on municipal Secretary of War Baker, Vice Pres- dent Marshall, General Pevion C March, chief of staff, other hizh offi- cers and a congressional will meet the Leviathan as up the bay. They will he United States destrover Bilakely. Others on board the destrover will in- clude Allan A. Ryan, Nicholas S.| Brady Harry Pavne Whitney, Cleve- | land F. Dodge, Mortimer Schiff, John D. Ryvan. Bernard M. Baruch. Henry P. son and William G. McAdoo. After the Leviathan docks in Hobo-| ken. General Pershing will he brought| committee | she steams | board the to New York. where he will he wel- comed at the city hall. by Mavor Hy- lan and Governor Smith. From there storia | he will be taken to the Waldorf A H been | hotel. where an entire floor has reserved for him and his staff. He will attend a dinner in the evening, later g to a theatre. I REPRESENTATIVES OF RAILROAD SHOPMENg IN CONVENTION ! Detroit. Mich., Sept. 7.—More than| a thousand delegates have gathered here for the convention of the United Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes and shop laborers. which will open its sessions tomorrow and| the chief business of which will be to | pass on the strike vote taken among! members and canvassed here the past week. Between one and two thous- and more delegates are expected to arrive tomorrow and Tuesday. The convention will sit for an indefinite time, or it is declared by officers of | the_organization, until action is taken/| in Washington on_demands that have. been laid before Director General of| Railroads Walker D. Hines. Cla‘ming that their organization is the third strongest labor organization | in the country and that their members are paid less than those of the other | brotherhoods, the maintenance of way emploves and shop laborers are ask- ing an increase of $1 per day per man, time and a half for overtime | standardization of wages, seniority | rights in promotion and the right to appeal from dismissal. If the de-| mands are granted it will mean an! added wage burden on the railroads| of $187,800,000 a vear. imating 313 working days, and if they are rejected and the strike is called, it will mean tyving up all the rail transportation! in this country, Canada and Central, America, it is claimed i Leaders of the men do being confident satisfactory action will | be taken on the demands. The vote favoring pressing the demands with the strike an alternative in case of re-| fusal stood 325.000 to 5,000, it was an- | nounced. | Director General of Railroads Hines, | Frank Morrison, secretary of the American Federation of Labor. Glen E. Plumb, author of the Plumb, author of the Plumb plan for the operation of | the rail lines, and others are expected to address the union. | TO HOLD A CONSISTORY IN i NOVEMBER OR DECEMBER' Rome. Sept. 7.—(By The A. P)— The pope has decided to hold a con- sistory in November or December at| which new eardinals will be created.| In Vatican circles it is stated that thel! pontiff has not yet made up his mind whether Americans will be included in the honor list, but that if they are the prelates most likely to receive the red hat will be Archbishop Dougher- | ty of Philadelphia and Archbishop | Mundelein of Chicago. | The difficulty seemingly Is that if| Pope Benedict appoints both these| archbishops the United States would have four cardinals, which is consid- | ered to be out of proportion to the number of Catholics here. | | treaty submitted in any way either to| £t arbitration or to considerafion of the!| SUns of the equator. : council, or of the assembly of thel -Declaring that th league will League of or to the decision Dring universal peace,” Mr. Reed con- or recommendations of any othep tinued. “the president yet demands a pwer, standing army of half a million men: (Vote 11 to 6.) { insisting that war will be no more. he| 4 The United States declines to| Proclaims the doctrine of universal| submit_ for arbitration or inquiry Ty e S the assembly or the council of thejpaY & 2 s League of Nations provided for in| Beaten into ploughshares, he demands S s e hh T L TEene | Criticizing the presi@ent. for e Bates Gepeny aoEment oF ne United| mittmg conduct of the Parish nego- Jong eotablichon. policy & commonyyi tiations within what he termed as o T et policy, commonly| «secret conclaves,” the speaker declar- known as the Monroe Doctrine; sald; .3 Mr. Wilson “refuses to answer con- e oo e interpreted By the cerning. his vote oh racial equality, InieR States alofie, and is hereby de- | when the facts. ave he. voted for clared to be wholly outside the juris- on racial equalit diction of said League of Nations, and | & auall Japan entirely unaffected by any provision | - contained in the said treaty of peace! Former Empress Zita Has Son. FLEY oty | Geneva. Sept. 7—Former FEmpress (Vote 11 to 6. | Zita of Austria gave birth to a son at | Pranguins yesterday. Both mother SAYS DELAY IN TREATY |and girl are said to be doing well. WILL FOSTER BOLSHEVISM| == i New York, Sept. 7—Renewed Bol- - SR shevik _efforts throughout Europe. NatBauiet |Stons) Simpkins. which will spread to America; furth-| Hamilton. Mass., Sept. athaniel er chaos among the newer nationali-:Stone Simpkins of Boston, prominent ties abroad; starvation for millions ofiin the development of copper mines, persons in Burope during the coming|died here today. Mr. Simpkins, who winter and the probable forcing of!was 55 vears of age, contributed three this country to enter the League of|Sons to the Yankee division. Nathan- Nations as a novitiate, “hand in hand/ iel S. Simpkins, Jr, a captain on the with Germany.” will result if the|staff of General Edwards, was killed in TUnited States senate continues to de-' action. John and Willard Stmpkins lay ratification of the proposed peace also were captains with the Twenty- treaty without change, Thomas W. sixth. OBITUARY. On the other hand, persons high in! Papal councils declare, the pontiff | appears to be unwilling to elevate on one of the archbishops and therefore; the possibility is that neither of them| will, at present, receive the honor. FORMER RULERS OF GERMANY GO VISITING The Hague. Saturday, Sept. 6—(By| the A. P.)—Former Emperor William of Germany vesterday. for the first time since he took refuge in Holland, was a guest outside Bentinck Castle. Accompanied by his wife, who had made a previous visit there, and by Count and Countess Bentinck, William Hohenzollern motored to Belmont Cas- tle, ten miles from Amerongen, and took tea wth the Countess Constant, whose chateau once was considered by the Dutch government for the res dence of the former German ruler, in- stead of Amerongen. The imperial couple returned late: in the evening to Amerongen in closed automobile. BATTLE IN REFORMATO&Y AT PONTIAC, ILL., SUNDAY a Pontiac, 111, Sept. 7.—One officer and one inmate were killed and two offi- cers and an inmate were wounded to-| day in a revolver battle in the state reformatory here after two prisone had attempted to escape by sawing the | bars of their cell. When two officers tried to enter the cell the prisoners, who had secretly armed themselves with revolvers, fired upon them. killing one and wounding the other, and fleeing from the cell. Total number of deaths in race r.ots in Chicago number 3i Parade of thke First Divisi8 Washington will be held Sept. 17. Value of horses in western Englandi and south Wales dropped 20 per cent. Treasury department announced an additional credit of $17,000,000 to Italy. The 2,000 Balitimore & Ohio .shop- men on strike.since Tuesday returned U. S. Private Killed By Ger@an Scldiers American Had Been Deer| Hunting—Germans Con- ! tend That the Americon | Fired First. AUSTRIAN ASSEMBLY HAS VOTED TO SIGN TREATY Vote Was 97 to 23—Protest Against the Violation of Austria’s Right of Free Disposal of Herself—Places Blame For i 25 Coblenz. Saturday, Sept. 6.—(By | Ee by H6% y The & P)—Privace Reass Madsen | Conditions In Europe Upon the Entente—Looks to the Five million ponuds of army meat|of Sacramento, Calif. was shot and| - A ana poultry will be placed on sale in|nstantly Killed today by German Sol- | League of Nations to Repair All the Wrong Done—Res- New York city within a few days. jers in the neutral zone about a 5 3 i 3 mile from the boundary of the Cobe olution Declares That Ultimate Union With Germany Is Residents of Pawtucket and the|lenz bridgehead. S : Blacksione valley, K. I hegan'a two”| “Madsen und Private Tert Balsinger an Absolute Necessity—Arrangements Are Being Made aa welcome home to service men|of the Eighth Infantry, who had been | e . o on outpost duty. ‘weré deer hunting For the Signing of the Treaty at St. Germain Wednesday. - H when they met a German patrol of| Judge Joseph H. Shea, Americanthirteen soldiers. According to Bal-| Vienna, Saturday. Sept. 6.—(By The of Nations to repair the wrong done. ambassador to Chile. arrived at San-|singer, the Germans began firing With-/A. P The national assembly, by a tiago after a_visit of some months tolout making an explanation as to whq! 7 o ‘o sizn | HURRIED ARRANGEMENTS the United States. the two Americans were in the neu- | ot€ of 97 to tofugdineciaed Corptaa] A tral mone Dayans jvere in the Deu-|ihe peace treaty. The assembly, how- | BEING MADE FOR SIGNING French tax sleuths were authorized | ican authorities that when he and|Syely Protested against “the violation| . . = o . 7700 Lo by the ministry of finance to enter and | Madsen encountered the Germans he;CL AUStria’s right of free disposal of | =THES. Sebb. f-jlupriec arrange- search strong boxes of private homes|was reveral yards ahead of Madsen,|DORSelf o ot tr A Ut ey st St Gernie of eligable taxpayers Balsinger said he dropped his rifis|, | it Of the e ca hile | Wednesd S e = B SO0 95" Be s e who | @8ainst siznature of the treaty “"”"ly\n‘uv‘: o ‘_Yl'-: Siemony. v.\_ e Premier Clemenceau received Her-|a second atterwards began to shoot!S0me members of the South Tyrolese|TUSS 1995 formal than that at Ver- bert Hoover before the latter's depart-|at Madsen. The Germans contend|PArty abstained from voting. The salies as i is Delieved necessary to ure for, London. The premier thauked | that Madseri fired ‘at them., Balsinger;JOl¢ Was taken after adoption with. |Tush sienature of the document be- Hoover for his services. declared that the Germans fired first' OUL dissent of the government's reso- | {2Us v ipea ke condition oL . tht and that if Madsen had fired he did lution of protest. presented by the;Vienna government. British steamer Queen Marget, from [not see him shoot or hear the shot.|Christian socialist Hauser, declaringi Whe signing will take place in the Gibraltar ‘in’ ballast'arrived yat New| ‘Balsinger was taken prisoner by the| the ' territorial clauses of the treaty|sione age hall of S SRl (She . York after the crew had battied four| Germansand later turned over to. the | violate grossly the national claim toteau and much the same procedure days with a fire in her buniers. American 1 Tt N e SETTEHIRE SEE T Do R e o i EiT e the presoptation 2 i George Cockreil, and brought to Cob- | the’ armisticiwas iconcluded. - | Of the originsl treaty to Dr. Karl Ren- Governor Smith agreed to try hisjlenz. Madsen will be buried in thel o e Il o pssanthe Ausuian delosation, uckas a movie actor in order to | American cemetery at Coblenz. a peace founded on brute last June in the same room t the state’s campaign to increase —_— % | force. As one man we decline the di-{ There i much speculation as to the production of wool in New York.| MILITANT COAL MINERS 3 B R S R B Gl RRet e e Dllen Ralen WAL SR unfree, as is done by this peace. elthe ireaty. Rumania and Juzo Peace negotiations between the ARE TO RETURN TO WORK | ryptner declare that the four lmmoln;‘il':’r“r‘l::\{:-rlm;‘y|l the Jugoslavs still me- thonian and Bolshevik sovernments| Charleston. W. Va. Sept. 7. The|Germans forced under foreign rule goliating and apparently anxious te will begin at Pskov on Wednesday | severa) thousand miners oho too ug|will for all time insist on self-deter-|gel a reservation exempting Serbia At & Moscow message Fipes - : P|mination as the only possible basis on|and Montenegro from the minorities next, according to Mos Ze.la march across country yesterday = : 1 ¢ o i With the avowed purpose of forcing|Which the modern state may be yound-"‘;\fniw At leas Tt unlikel nm\d District Attorney Pelletier announc- | non-union miners in lLogan county to] %, : : Wil oo s o e el ed that an investisation Cf the beef|organize. were nrevalieq. wpon today|,,he resolution also declares that ul-|sign with reservation. as China was trusc by the Suffolk county, . Mass.| oo fes e therr otonts. Tatter Y | timate union with Germany is an ab-|d jthe same vrivileze in connec grand jury would begin next Wednes-|most hourly telephone conferences|SOlute mnecessity and expresses the|tion with the Gorman tweaty. China = 2 ¥ between Governor Cornwell in this |95 responsi- | treaty Orth to aot ‘a’ claus e Military authorities in Tampico dis-|city and Frank Keeney, president of |Picted. It ends by responsi- | reat R axt anclause dnto trict captured four more bandits!| Distriet 17, U NGne Warl " 1bility feor steeping in revolu-jthe Austrian treaty preventing an < h 2 jicity i {strict 13 United Mine Workers, the| ;o5 ana confusion on the shoulders of | power from signing it which did not | whom they accuse of complicity in the started back to their homes | on @ L b T aavie] sizn ihe Gorma s failed murder of John W. Correll of Ida.|late this afternoam from Danville| (N€ entente and looks to the League|sig iermany trea ailed. Okla |and Clothier, at which points they AT e — had camped over night. They were ‘ ' Commission of allied generals sent|irought back in special trains sent to| SERIES OF EXPLOSIONS BUSINESS FOR CONVENTION to investigate disturbances a iume. | the rendezvous by the governor and} M | i b: t P governor and MUNITOIN DUMPS OF UNITED MINE WORKERS in which French soudiers were killed, |the union officials said that all will e recommended an American and Bri-return io work tomorrow morning. | Coblenz, Saturday, Sept 6.—(By! Cleveland, ©. Sept. 7.—Resolutions tish police guard. J The m had taken up the march| The A. P.)—Property valued at about K against compulsory military service in e e 3 without instructions or counsel with 10,000,000 murks. sold recently by tne lhe United Staic and ~ demanding Second district public service com- | president Keeney. Rumors and re- | Americans to the Germans, was de-|dmnesty for “poliiical prisoners” con- mission_approved the action in New re said to be false and|stroved toduy by series of explo-| victed under the espionage act, free- York of the sitting commissioners in| inflamed the miners and| sions in ammunition dumps near [dom for lreland, non-interference in accepting the New York Telephone | with one section of the little army itiNieuweid. Among the terial de-| Russia. the formation of a national | Co.’ offer of reducei rates. was the determination to rectify the|siroyed was ammunition worth 3.000.-| labor party, and action ~ on , various === £ reported conditions in Logan county.!000 marks, which was sold Frida jother political questions find place Georges Gaston Quien on trial be-|Some of the reports that reached the|a German company for —commer: with preposals for the nationalization fore a court martial charged with!miners in the Kanawha field were | purposes. | of coul mines, modification of wage treasonablt dealings with the Ger-|that women and children were being| F.re followed the first explosion and| Scales and hours of labor, improved mans and having betrayed Edith Cav- murdered by mine guards in lLogan |destroyed abaut fifty buildings scat-}sanitary conditions and facilities at ell to them, was condemned to death.|county and it wis ihoir determination | tered about a forty acre tract, used|the mines and other particularly min- e . lto put a stop to it. for years by the Germans and then by | ing topics in ihe bhudget of over six The man who fired the first shot in| Saturday morning President Keeney | the Americans for storing shells ofhundred resolutions uwaiting action the war between“ne United States|wag called upon by the governor ta go | various calibers Thousands of ged-belore 1 zonvention of the United |ana Germany arrived at New York onlto the men who were at Danville|shells and millions of small arm.|3line Workers. which opens here Tues- the transpor: Zeppelin. He is Serz-|joone county., and urge them to dis- | which were abarfdoned by the German | Sh L.oad _officials and members eant Alex L. Arch of South Bend, Ind. |perse and return to their homes. Pres- |army were exploded, but there were 0f Important commitiees are already I T ! 3 1 | he ground and many delegates § = £ {ident Keenev notified the sovernor|no American casualties. SR SN BLanNd Snaimeny, delegdien ate Admirers of General Pershing in!ihat the men had voted io return and| Six German girls employed in a' ing, and a decided trend in favor Winchester, Va . purchased a_thorough- |upon that notification three special|dump were made unconseious by the affirmative action on the political bred riding horse at Staunton and sent | trains were sent to bring the men| first explosion. They were rescued by ! giiiCeiy: anfo-conscuiption. Irish and it to New \nr-\mll} '\;B an:‘Pmmll :‘h"n;l.\uk It was expected that the men| American soldiers The work “{; The s Caatat ;: wu;m:‘ a r‘w‘u’: evi vnln(,_ era s icially welcomed® home. d c ack at-once as the tra s ! breaking ] s was rformes - e o i RN 80 Six destroyers left Narragansett Bay | was 3.55 before the first train started,vicion. The ‘suse of the explosion is' i tatious Sentiment in regard to the for New York vesterday to assist in|away. In the meantime on the gov-|unknown R e the welcome to General Pershing t ernor's desk was a telegram to Gen- | - CviEE e g f ey ConboaR day. They were the Ringold. Connor.!eral Wood. ai Chicago, who had had |17 INJURED IN CRASH e O e ot Calhoun, Kimberly, McKean and Stev- | two regiments of troops under waiting | FNCINEW, YORKISUBWAY |4, JUSEEIONS of Wages ang hours of la- ens. jorders at Camp Sherman for twenty-| nant with ‘the delegates from Penne % | four hours.” These tro. were held| New York, Sept teventeen per-| o] B e John L. Lewis, acting president of | under orders to move at moment's ; sons, six of them women, were in-| ishington and other wide- united mine workers of America.|notice and just when the governor jured today when a shuttle tra e o OhEE Wide- officers, established headquarters | was about 1o give up hope of & peace- ining between the Grand entral Fihon DSIES T Aotcaiert Thess Cleveland, preliminary to a two|ful dispersi the men. President|tion and Times Square in the Inter-! 00 od 0 the end of the wap i weeks' cohference which begins Tues- | Keeney telc that the men were ' borough subway crashed into the | will he proposed to take them up day. ho,'mhn: the trains and would move humpers at -nn] Times .\‘qu.n-tl\"!uufvl;v‘“ o) R WaItEn & The Hasile) of satibens out at once. None of those hurt is expected to die.! fion of the peace trea o M. L. Crossiey, of Bound Brook, N.|”'Threc hundred men who are at'There wer b o Al Dot e Bence Breat 10 submil e I, predicted at a meeting of the Am-!(joth nearby used to board the. three car train when ‘the accident 0¢-|and to require action by Nov. 1. The ercan chemical society at Philadel- | trains ana dec d they would re-|curred. demands, according to presert pro phia that the United States will be|turn as they came. | S L Nccoriings (o eresant pro- able to produce fast German dyes by The strike is peculiar in that it was OBITUARY. hitherto customary regional manner Jaangey jaationeiotilabar | dgninst employ H James W. Osborne. with operators and miners in each par- | There appears to be no srievance in e s il eldimesotiating sebarsiely but Gordon Fawcett Hamby, now in the | the Kanawha field, the operators pay- | Sew Vork. Sept. Torames Wo 0871 0 Ch 88 400 Ol S mintng death house at Sing Sing, broke down |ing the union scale and abiding by the | POTR® (eTmer @ssieant SOt SU070) falds of America will Bafore the and “squealed” on his partmer in the|wage agreement. In logan county,|DNeY 0! SeW 1orK anc Wic n| operators for settlement not I i | a criminal Jawyer. was found dead in| nent n L murder of two clerks and robbery of {which is an old established commu-|{ (FIMIRE. SRS TS FOMEICRE8Y (01 Nov™ 1, with a menace of a zeneral $12.350 from the East Brooklyn Sav- nity. it is said the: min themselves; OC0 M B A Was discovered by | coal tieun at that time in the back- {natives of that county that the min- | 1S z 3 School aommittees in many parts of [er there m: more money than th ter spending Saturday night with| there make e nakieysfhvon the SLEESIPEDO DL SAUIIY. DIEDL New Ingland have notified sgencies| union men in the Kanawha field and Iclatives. The cayse of v (Wborne’s DEATH OF BRITISH ADMIRAL in Bosion that unless more teachers|that most of them own their own,1¢2(h Was iven as angind beCtals. . | BARON CHARLES BERESFORD are obtained for the rural communi- |homes. Many are owners of coal, I Osborne hid FEmAilec, 0o cLs) many schools must remain closed lands and draw alties. They re- -(‘)’:\‘)"Y"“ T to wisie A I.ondon Sep! 7.—Admiral Baron or at leay. delay the opening of the;sent outsiders coming info their field. eR0MME ARERE BONE 2 L0 o Charles Beresford died here ] night. fan"term | For come time the union men have:(her He had snent Saturday afiers o™ G0 Cnoplesy - | endeavored to organize lozan county o e in The evanihe Delegates representing 110,000 farm- | but agitators were always driven out i€ 10 the hotel Jate in the evening | ;,.q meresfora me distin ers in central and western France, in s, it is said; at the muzzle of [Afe & MeATN MIER - 0 o O ndiges. | ed at sea as.a fizht in the session at Blois. France, denounced With this condition the: g5 0 Tich brousht on angina B Inavy and then became famous o price fixing and asked the government | false reports, started the present trou- | U0 WaICh Drous it oF ST Y as a fighter in parliament for “a great o grant farmers the same represent- | ble. e O i & ! British navy to control the seas. ation as officials in measures to reduce | = e e e Te Ak ‘Our supremacy sea h the high cost of living. | CIVILIAN FLIER WON B pii threaten he exciaimed - FIRST PRIZE OF $10,000 ;icirict o SR Ile servea|lis appeals ‘We have arrived National delegation from the Union | e e tiomner ¥ M lerisis in our history as an empire, Tt of South Africa. which went to Enz-| New York, Sent. 7. -Although Major prrmecn st i e pvivaie | becomes a ma of lite or death to land 10 lay the case for South African! R. W. Schroeder. pilot of a Vought! 1 it i the Briiish empire to remain supreme independence hefore the British gov-i\el iraining vlane was today named e i ey us an acoistant sea.” ernment met with hostile demon- | officially as winner of the American | Fattorney Mr. Osborne gainel| fntering the Br avy, at the stration from a crowd at Pietermarirz- | FFiving club's international handicap ! oo™ s, DU 050 Tl casstul prosesu- | 388 Of 12, Beresf ved coun- burg on their return home. { airplane contest and reliability race.! . e i ndarer. ofLtr¥ 0N the high eas. for cen — | which was held between Mineola and ! o o G100 & Lo B Taven | tury. During brief periods he A BOLSHEVIK MOBBED l Toronto during the week of Aug. 1517 *8G1 ME PO Ce | HE, O e in parliament. He was a popular na- R. H. Depew, a__civilian flier, who : g n ot enmeali VAl hero of Fngland and a real ad IN NEW YORK THEATRE jiigica Curtiss JN4D plane, was an- | Rgand B. Molineux, son o on o i miral when he was retired in 1911 at —= " ed as winner of the first prize of | aWare S OHpoUR, W2 & CAALE | tHe ‘aze OF 653 s, New York, Sept. 7.—Becauee he.in- | JiFitsed 85 Winner of he fret priac of | with the “murder of Mrs. Kataerme | th3, 03¢ OF 67 Jears L nis cour- sted upon hissing when the rest of| Lented military entrants from comper. | B- Adams here in 1599 f bl b e R e audience applauded, and applaud-! ing for cash |n;‘vm-s H Four vears ago, Mr Osborne "”v"”‘ Totah ATenL it iAlerar At B iee inz when the rest of 'the audience| "o atermine the winners, the club's|in the “Oliver Osporne” case wih then 15 years.of age. In his little = hissed, Emanuel T.opes, an avowed| .gntest committee took Frr){n the gov- | fained nationwide nublic ty iss Rae! dor.” he sil o th 2 \ia S bor Bolshevik, was mobbed by an_audi-| Colridn S Tetords the theoretical per: | Lanzer of New York sued him for| C00d0n 06 SENG00 T8 JUSROR0 ence at tHe Strand theatre In Broad-| formance of each machine with a max- | $30-000 for breach of promise “lesInEl,, ofrective police force. He was pro- way late this afternoon. | useful load of fuel, oil and pas- | he Was the “Oliver Osborne” who. sheir (3" 0"} vank of captain. He also The moving picture film Which Was| cengers. This .theoretical load was Said. proposed to her within an houx| S0 FC 0 J 0 PN 0 S o e om being shown dealt with Bolshevism s a basis for detgrmining the | after they met and who had taken her| .. 00 P0G (he wildest enthusie and Loves’ outbursts were in SYmpa- | relative performances of the machines |0 a hotel in Plainfield, N. T. where 200 MIBETE JRG, FRC, WOl thy with the Bolshevist characters of| with the load actually carried. The;she registered as his wife His was an eventfui life. Scarcely the scenario. After Lopes had heen!\ioq the load @ctually ca [T Gnartes . wax, later arrasten ni | Sl was an seventtul life. Scarcsly rescued by a policeman, he was taken | slaanhinaly e Chicago and_brought here, admiited |4 ¥ear p: ¢ what sor ¢ 1 court here Magistrate i ‘h th vas “Oliver Osborne” and was|gallantry won bhim new honors. He b spoiice . Count. 5, im | NEGRO CHURCHES TO HOLD Canbidie X ledghis naval brigade across the des- Simpson fined him $10 and invited him | BALE B riior WeCTiNes Mentified as'"Oliver” by » mumber cf| [Pdglila noval brigade acroge the des to go back to his native Portusal ey | witnesses as a man who had cailed at °TL 10 Baarium n the vain ‘hr‘v'rr'ywnv‘ E B T e s Ve Miss Tanzer's home. i Al Sesethi Rl A PARTY MADE “GOOD"” CATCH | churches all over the country on Sune |iSe CAse a number of perse 1ad. the exmeditfon which . rescued .Sir ey . oo et o ling two ters of Miss Tanzer. two|iCh U hllchegssoncdene Cipi Ont, Sept. 7-—Fisherman’s| oot oo rnade Cpa B0 an . AN lattorners who represented her avhn|-harie party in the afit Nipigon. Ont, Sept. T nouncement made by the National|attorners who represented Stive. |for wh arliament commended him weather, showery and cool under gray | Equal Rights league tonight. At these ! (h il ‘.’;5,‘1\, E ‘2‘"“ Y wore | for gallantry. The I rovern- skies. has been ‘the lot of the Prince|meetings delezates will be elected toj2 hotel clerk, and Miss Tanzef W) mont™hanked hi assistance of Wales for the last 24 hours of his| the tweifth annual meeting of . the indicted. The jury in he —case off e UREEG g sojourn in the Nipigon waters, and re- | league in Washington from Sept. 23 to| Misg Tanzer disagreed, J 4 x\.‘\.x; e ports from the party tonight said that25. " A national program for the pro- (D Stafford. the hotel clerk who Tnd| | T. PROFESS as a result, the catch had been “good.” | tection of the rights of negroes wiil be | identified Mr. Osborne D (FORMERN L IRROFESS0R The prince will return to the royalloutlined at this convention. }"W‘P thefman who had tak B SUICIDED BY HANGING train tomorrow morning at Cameron — e - Tanzer to the Plainfleld hotel. —— Falls. and proceeding westward will| KING ALBERT TO BRING ]m“‘l‘ ted of perjury Winchester, Mass, Sept Charles resume the official programme at Fort GIFTS TO PRESIDENT WILSON George H. Townsend. F. A. Curler, for thirty years professor Williams tomorrow afternoon. o ‘ew Haven, Conn. Sept. 7.—George |of history at Massachisetts Institute The camp at Pine Portage was one Brussels, Sept. (By the A. P.).—!H. Townsend, one of the oldest and|of Technology until b rement re- of the largest ever seen in this dstrict. | King Albert. on his coming visit to the | best known citizens of New Haven,|cently, commitied suicide by hanging Forty three Indian guides were requir- | United States. will offer to President|died at his home today at the age of |during the night, it was discovered to- ed to pilot the prince’s 22 canoes| Wilson. among other gifis. a complete [92. Some years azo he owned Lake|day. Professor Curri had been un- through the rough waters of the Nip-| table set of Brussels porcelain with|Saltonstall, where he harvisted ice|der treatment for 1 mental fllness at ison. The temts were set in wide cir-| reproductions of the principal Belgian|which was shipped to mary cities in & sanatorium o few months ugo. He cles about the great campfire. monuments on the pieces. the east, was 57 years of age.