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“rike tomorrow, position until 1887 thirty publications, old and new, ap- peared. the volcano. today. with a labor organization f ist to practice abroad. 4 5 5 ’ Al VOL. LXI—NO. 234 PRICE TWO CENTS : Cabled Paragraphs Condensed Telegrams , i B f A To Demolish Von Hindenburg Monu- At midnight, Sept. 30, clocks ‘in . A i ment. Shanghai were put back one hour. L] 5 3 . Berlin, Sept. 30—The great wooden ; it i < > i ; Von Hindenburg momument _which ly “aerial mail service beween ¥ during the war was studded by the 7 ’ Paris ang London was inaugurated. y populace with nails. representing so - e B gt T BT > fmala t i i i . | much money, will be demolished this 3, 4 & ek, according to the Vossische Zel- Of $5,000,000 Worth of Sup- Sxstieall a1 tho St Deopsrtniont to- 8. A C e y. A L [ X plies On Cunard Liner Port i e b On vember Wil ar silve uote ence 7 Both Sides Are Awaiting Developments at the Industrial Con-| COUNCIL FOR SETTLEMENT No 1 Will Be , But $3,000,000 i cince i London. New York price| Declaration Made By Kung Hsiang-Ko, Shantung Delegate to h r: , OF INDUSTRIAL DISPUTES | Averted. , Was 5117, P ‘ P, B Oriten Thit erence to Be Held w.fimgton Next Week—Strike -, Sy = Conference at Paris—Expresses the Opinion al i g : 5 % Wgshington, Sept. 30.—Proposals for | Buffalo. N. Y., Sept. 30—With the| Boston. Sept. 20.—Testimony that King Albert and Queen Elizabeth oy . P! Leaders and Representatives of the Companies Continue | the cstablishment of & council for set- | eXtreme ‘views of both sides voled | out of the cargo of §2.000.000 worth of | will visit Boston atter (heir arrival in One of the Reasons Why China Was Defeated Was Be- tiement of industrial _dispules, re- |down. the ioint conference of miners|army “supplies on the Cunard Lime| New York. . . . B to Give Conflicting Statements. placing the recently dissolved ~ war |2nd operators of the central competi- | steamship Port Hunier, only ooy cause the Fiume Question Had Been Given Preference { labor board, probably will be one of |tive field tomorcw will begin at zero | valued at $3,000,000 were salvaged af.| Dominion: lron & Steel Co., it is ms- . Del Had Beth sides in the strike- of the steel j gie Steel Company statement. Other| (NS first subjccts brought up for dis- | to negotfate a new 'wage Bcalo and|ten tho steamer . sapl iy Vincvend|poried will begin opepitions’ only - on at the Conference—Contends Chinese Delegates Ha re, T s th day, are|tompanies made virtually similar an-|CuSsion at the labor and and industrial | new. working conditions. Sound on November 10 lust, was given |a singl shift. . P G workers, now in its nini ay, Lo T conference called by Presiilent Wilson | Following the rejection by the oper-s hefore n congrescional — investigating A ol Never Heard of the Tokio Treaty, Giving the German velopments at the indus- |POURCERERS L arters of. the| 0, Meet here Monday. it was learned | 2(0rs of the miners' original demands|commitice here (odar. 1 also| All Ducth shipping, amounting to £ . nterence which will open at | siiikere satlofartion aaa oriels of the | today from department of labor of- | for a sixty per cent. increase in wages |testificd that the coniract for salvag. |about & hait millon ione was rerurne Holdings In Shantung to Japan, Until the Japanese Pro- on next Monday, and it was |jeaders that they have the birine we | G41S in close touch with the arrange- |and a thirty hour week, the joint con- | ing was awarded to the Mercaniiie|ed by the United States. : Tight that there seems Ittle {in hand and thet ther an Wil Lo W | ments for the meeting. ference today voted down the opera- | Wrecking Company of New Bedtord duced It In Paris. “break” either way untll [to keep. the sieel industrs of the| . ocorelary Wilson- has drawn up ators’ maximum which was that the jafter competitive bids had been re-| Supreme Council sent a note to en country crippleq until the employers| (liAUVE Prosram for the confer- |{cale of 1916, calied the Washington|jected and the required bond reduced!Germany demanding immediate evac-| Kufow, Province of Shantung. China,ytung. little light has been thrown on Throughout the affected territory | consent to maeer the men pait BIOYSrS | ence but the yuestion of whether the ! aSTecment. be continued until April 1,|from $300.000 to $50.000. uation of the Baltic region. Sept. s—(Correspondence of The Aso- | this sccret agreement, called the To here was little malerial change vés- 375,000 Steel Work * meeting will be open to representatives | 1920. 3 The witnesses heard today were P. —_—— ciated Press)—Kung Hsiang-Ko, who|kio treaty, even since the conferenc e e b it ? eel Workers Idle. of the press hias not been decided. It| The olive branch came from the!B. Jeffries, formerly a major in the| American steamer Fanbush, after|iraces his descent in a dir line | This Toklo treaty, however, Mr. Kung e the companies continued to | Figures were given out for the first| Was said today by those making ar- joperators’ side, the motion to proceed | yuartermaster corps, who was station- | sending signals of distress, arrived at|ihrough seventy-four generations from |cxplained, was concluded with Japa zive conflicting statements. time in nearly a week. It was saidTangements for the meeting the gues- |10 ncgot(te o new contract “in ac-led at this port as superintendent of | Halifax, under her own stcam. Confucius, has returned to his home by the former Chine: ministe to : et Bt Tacrations | that- approximatily 000 steel| on of publicity probably would be |cordance with the call of the confer- | the marine division and Assistant povt p here from his labors at the Par's peacc | Tokio, Chiang Chung-Hsiang. one « the day had brousht little | WOrkers are mow idle. This is an in-|left to decision of the ‘conference. A |ence” being offered bv one of. their|storage officer. and Licutenant Col-| Director Hines igned contracts| conference, to which he wis sent by |the officials against whom the wrath chanze. while in Chicago it | CTese of about 33,000 over the num-| SUSEestion has been made that news- | number. It was conceded that the gan|onel Henry ‘D. Barry., quartermaster|with two railroads and short line|the Shantung provincial assembly as!of the students was turned In Ju hat the Yemsin had- in. | DEr of ‘men regorted by the it papermen not he admitted to‘the conm- | beiween miners.and operators was a{corps, assistant zonc supply officer at|contracts with five other lines. “|a special delegate represeniing the|when the minister with the cabin Letween the warring forces, | Jeaders as idle last week. The walk- | [°LeNCe room but that such parts of the | Wide one. but representatives of both|the Boston quartermaster depot. The| EEEr province. {then in office was deposed. It was wit crious violence was reported. | 0UL of steel workers gt Bethlehem | Procecdings as the conferees decided |sides expressed hope that it would be|hearing will be resumed tomorrow. Shipping Board announced cancel-| Kufow. in the far center of Shan-|the power of a plenipotentiary ihal Authorities at Waukeégan, Il con- {and at the Jones and Laughlin plant| !0’ make public be given to the press|bridged and that the threatened strike| The, Port Hunter was sunk after a|lation of all sailings to ports in Brit- | tung, noted because the tomb of Con-|Chiing Chung-Hsiang acted when - th niieh A i eeaia > Pitisburgh, it was said. was re-|as the conference proceeds. This plan |of 400.000 men on November 1 would | collision with the tug Covington. She|iin beoause of the rallroad strike. fucius is here, has felt propably more | concluded this treaty Ls terms Governor Lowden Tor state | sRonsible, for the_.increase. would be similar to the recent White | be averted. was bound from Boston to New Yorl sl 2 keeniy than any other center in China | the German holdings in Shantung and ine labor men zave assur- | One of the developments of the day | House conference between President| . The Washington agreement was the|to join an overseas convoy. and be-| Four man were severely burned in|the grief that the Shantung decision |in pariicular the railroad concessic they would ouble their that did not satisfy the strike leaders| Wilson and the senate foreisn relations [ only question before the comference|sides the army cargo had on board|an explosion n the boiler room of the|of the peace conference brought (o the | were given to Japan. When Dr. kao conirel the sirikers. and the | Was the decision of the Allegheny|cOmmittee. today John Lewis, acting pres| steel valued at $600,000 for the French | jesiroyer Greene, off Key West, Fla. nation, for il Shantung is the birth- tana Dr ‘Wang, protesting against the or troops was held in abey. | COUNtY court in upholding the action| IN event that President Wilson is|dent of the United Mine Workers, first| government. The steel is still in the 3 o 10 ) Siecg fof: ‘e’ Chiness nation ‘and. the | twenty-one demands, contended !tk 9( the mayor of Duqiiésne in prevent- In event that President Wilson is un- foffcred a resolution ihat the agree-|vessel, which now lies in 25 feet of Washington reported Europe in plaxie from which came nl‘n\‘ of the|they had been ~1|:nr:1| under threat of ioodrich of Indiana sent | IDE Mass meetings in that city able to open the conference as planned, {mcnt terminate at, the end of next|water. need of coal, but will not use the|sacred and historic traditions of the|war, the Japanese produced the T ation and report to him. {Pany sources that some of the plants| the presiding officer will be although | spokesman for the operators, moved|0002" asked Congressman Reav: \merican ships to r e ‘the si s o ulh At Mo ety S5 the exintancs /of) e ichem Stee! company eatd |in the Iarrell fieid are starting up,|il Was considered likely that the pres |as an amendment that April 1. 1920, ter Lieutenant Colonel Barry had toid | 4o™ Which theigreat Chiness auge lived an Ry were imnorant, U L) R iri= of dicorder haé bees ) fpformation was given out at strike|ideni would designale someone to act |be fixed as the date of expiration as|of the recovery of $3.000,000 Worth of | gandits obtained $10,000 From. thel| mmerriichhe Eave to the world his | i meng DN, Ueaty was produced Fal the cirike Situation|Beadquariers that only 500 men out of | for him. Secretary Wilson, to whom |provided in the Washington agree- | goods. sDandits_cbiainad U000 From. S immortdliesd¥; (4 ALk ety heart of the|Mr. Kung sald, “it closed. the,mouthe howed improvement over. Monday /8000 normally emploved were at( the president left the detaiied arrange- | ment. When it came to a vote oera-|- Ng one knows.” was the reply. ,r°° %,0 e o d! e Stan fl; N pr;:(nme.H ’ 5 P n‘ 2 : China's delegates and none o == -3 {work. A district organizer from that|Ments for the meeting when he left|tors and miners supported their re-| «ire vou sure of that?” after binding and gagging the watch- uneSiany ol foiber: Obi- | thom knew exactly what 1o do NO CHANGE IN STEEL STRIKE !a.““i‘dsl,m one m”}':am wai b,;“g S;‘nf:r :;){-a‘knng‘ it was saild today. | spect. ;; (](‘;ezntle 'flhof lx-nhouonr to “Well” answered Licutenant Colo-| Man: Ei’l'nmi?fi.‘f’, ‘1: puau‘ss 'u?‘fm:n ‘;\; e :‘n“l‘vvk‘\ 1inese r-:.nf»\ learn IN TH ' operated Ly negroes who were burning S O act as a presiding offi- | proceed under the call of e confer-|ne] Barry, “I know from hearsay that s w - | PRI SOPMN OB SRS T & PITTSBURGH DISTRICT | jarge quantilics of tar and srease to| Cer. But rather to take part in the dis. | ence was (hen unanimously adobted |ioout everyone in Vinoyard Sound had | Robert A Potter, for 24 years and bk LS ol e Mg M I LI 5 . i e o make smoke to “keep u; r- | cussions as a member of ti nfer- { ang A mment was taken until to- v 2 1 i~ ¥ 2 BLED - SN y rotested, .amnd. th Tittsoursh, Pa_ Sept. 30—The steel | A5 - P up appea S he confer. n:\‘:,n;i{our been at the wreck, but that is all I} g5/ 5 \ounpy retired yesterday after- sembly the ‘formal report of China's | Chineses took vigorous action. Al & ‘. . % T a5 ihe Pitte | "TAl Braddock the big Edgar Thom-| Secretars Wilson. it was said by | In the decision to proceed can be| ™% jefrrics testified that residents| o0 activities at the peace conference conference a delegate asked who had out ane . imporiant | Son works was reported to be almost|several officials, may submit a pro-|seen the first compromise, the opera-{of coast towns got “all they wanted” & The Shantung delegate has.’ the |made the decision. Speaking for tha n n noticed. . The & entir. y nUrely shut down. Union leaders|Pposal for arbitration boards, as he is|tors apparently vielding, for the time-|(rom the wreck with hooks. he as F. E. Carver, a grocer of Plantsville, | height of the northern Chinese. He iy big five M. Clemenceau answered ‘We <TOuict. The union | harsed that the company hada num-|known to look with favox on a plan | being at least, to the miners' conten-|certad, to pull thousands of dollars|died vesterday from a bullet wound injabout six feet tall, 32 years of ag A 1L When: TioToss shen raniie ©+ are hoiding their men to.| ©F ©f ‘smoke makers” at work burn-|providing for district boards of arbi- |iion that the mine workers' committee| Gorth of clothing out of the holds. He[the head, believed to have been self- has a family U arries the descent | big five could decide a question like Pl AR B The Homestead Works|tration. the awards of which would be |has ample authority to conduct, me- [ 0o ROt SR HNE P ere selling for intlicted. £ : from Confucius into the seventy-sixth |that, he replied, sawing We have i ranke. The steel rom’ | vas report¢d tc be crippled and the|Put in force by the issue of an injunc- | gotiations. S B o ollar: articiee taken| Army rules allowing American sol- | generation. Though he speaks Ing- |suffered more ihan others the catiit B Rk ‘situation deadlocked, tion by the federal court of the dis-| The other crucial point, the date of [FT0F }C5G, " diers to talk with German girls, but|lish fairly well, his education was not| “We trusted Mr. Wilson eniirely Wil - WO St e Reports were received t head- | trict restraininz employers who are|the expiration of the present asree My, Jeffries said that he knew little | N0t permitting them to marry were|obtained in the western world. Not|much. We sent a note lo Presid o GAAE BE mach 1b ok n arters that. eviction notices hadli parties to the dispute in question from |ment. according to William T. Brew- | "1 "NMorcantile Wrecking Company, | @nnounced. until he went to Paris, in fact, had he | Wilson asking him how he could recon = zood police protection affordec | 'een served on strikers living in com- | paving wages other than provided for |ster, chairman of the operators’ dele- | oni that he believed that it s fi- 3 e 2 oy, = seen any part of the world outside of | cile assurances he had given to China m pany houses at Sharpsville and atjin the award . gation. will come before the confer-|ToCEl G 5y oL Dreyfuss & Sons and( Grain receipts at Chicago last week| China. On his return he told friends|before she had entered the war, with While both sides are working to| Brackenridge. They must move in| This plan would preserve the right |ence or one of its sub-committees la- | jarcef] DY TaCoR RrETISS L T mpany (amounted o §.505.000 Bushels, a de- | the story of the diplomatic experience |ihe decision. He sent a representatise eae their respective forces ihere | thirty days or return to work, it was|of the men to strike, but s expected | ter on, 3 o Stout experience in salvaging | crease of 250,000 bushels over the pre-|at Paris and explained the causes'that |io us cxpressing his sorrow and h s & ellet 15 Somb GuAThErs that oo ]siitst to take away the incentive to strike,| The first demand of the miners to| 88 W o0 & 0 a laundry wreck- | ceding week. . led to be refusal to sign the treaty with | suggested that he would help us wher ax any. can be looked foe um| Secretary Foster said tonight that|as employers would be restrained by a | be takem up for debate tomorrow | VESSe s A e o over, e Germany. the league of nations was formed. + e S el ot he was endeavoring to have the sem- | Court decree from paying hikher wazes | ceades < Washington reports railroad control| After telling of the efforts of Dr.| “When the conference was conelud wh opens at Washington next|Ate investigating committee take his|fhan the sum fixed as just by the dis- | “We recommend that this conven-!grpyg OF PACIFIC SHIPYARD bill will be delayed. All constructive| Wellington Koo and Dr, C. T. Wang to |ed the Chinese divided on the ques testimony while it is in Pittsburgh. “I| trict board | tion demana a sixty per cent. increase | 310 0 o e on s ARl Y AVERTED |lcsislation will wait until the trealy|which had hampered the work of the|iion whether to sign the treaty with #he meantime the stragsic win|tm anxious io appear before the com-| Some means of removing causes of [in b appiicable to all classifications is acted upon. delegates at every turn, he said he be- | Germany. It was the _sudents and = here. There are ‘more organiz- | mittee” he said. ispute and conferring a larger degree | of day labor and to all tonnage, yard- 4 30.—SUr !, Sh— lieved one of the important reasons|Chinese statesmen in Paris who sway T A Piisburgn distric now. ac. | Effoits of the union orgamizers in|of participation by labor in'the mans | age and lcad work rates throughout| Washington &“;},,p;'_f",_db“‘\”f,f.,m.‘f 18 45 reported) i Coblons Hhat Al o e e etntns |00 thase who wore disbasearts Moe oriing to labor leaders. than at any :gisjusu-ict are ‘btlngm(“onte‘:n;ued)?n agement of Industey a'lm;t! the lines of | the central competitive field. ot & A e s AR sace wanis to Ta an ,,,hd,pe,.de:;‘ e’ | T Fiume quention had heen given | “Om (he morning of he day Set for me since the big walkout start. | the Jones and Laughlin plant. T, itley counciis in England prob- | B =S 2 v 5 A public. No news ~of the report has|precedence at the conference. the signing of the treaty, after China 4 aine days HEDs - VIHUADE SIS St or asserted (hat four mills in. the|ably wil be discussed, it was said. “WOOD, WITH fi O R Do . o ftonce by |Teached Paris ag yet “Presifuiit JDEbL Syim fully deter-|had been refused the right of signing S Tour unions “invoived |plant were completels down because| Whitley councils, so' ialled after he GENERAL WM RULIE A ;fii}% sentatiyes of ihe Shipping e 2| mined to support the Chineses cause,” | with reservations, crowds of student it ey o, ereanigere el et 96 & MNONG,E ANISY ATSUERY BER i and mamar ot &) - TR0GRS. B e o ek omi. oot Sane | i hne QoI 80 I S| purelod o, rronl et e 2of8 o % eds of men are being taken ifito the | ers. 3 mittee who proposed them. have been | Omaha, Neb., Sept. 30.—Fallowingto permit acgeptance by the JOoD oflmated at 11285000 tons anthracite| firat it would, perhaps, have been dis- | had been suffered Il health and was organizations every day The organizer in the Johnstown dis- | established in more than ffty Impor- | the sugestion of Major General Leon-| Wage increases ofte-cd b oroviied | Production, 185,000 tons. posed of to the satisfaction of the|again confined to his bed. The ques St-cl companies that daily give out|trict repvited to headauarters that a|tant British industeics. There is a|ara Wood that all public gatherings be|vards on the western coast providet ! Chinese.” tion of signing had not been decided sformation rontinue to maintain that|large nurmicr of clerical emploves in|separate Jjoint = standing industrial | discouraged until the race war and|ihe governt would <h: Reports to the State Departmont| “The hlow under which the Chincse |whon the elcgatcs gathered in he situation from their standpoint is|plants al_Jed by the strike had ap-|council. as they are officially named. | yiot of last Sunday is entirely quiet-|the additiona xe’“ e Gerence’s action |announce that an eight-hour working | delegates were crushed, however, the|room. He was asked for the last time owiy but steacily improving. ~“We|plied for iHembership. He was in-|for each indusiry accepting the nlan.| ¢a. the board of governors in charge| Notice of the copferences action v will soon be established in Spain.| Shantung delegate said, was the dis-|if he would consent to sign and he re o making steel and lots of it; We|structed to organize the clerical work-|Tn addition to the national council. dis- | of (he twenty-fifth annual celebration|immediately was telegraphed 10 S| Dayiight saving will be abolished Oct.|closure of the Tokio treaty, of which |plied With tears streaming from Wi e iost mo zround but on the con-|Srs and obtain an American Federa-|trici and loeal boards are created 0| of the Ak Sar Ben, the Madi Gras of shipyard workers’ union an s g they had never heard until the Japan- | eves: - rary are still zaining.” said a Carne- | ticn of Labor charter for them. ;\s:;ld« [g\reh)«m‘; ta';-mng within their | {he middle west, closed the celebration I:Jafl;:mg companies on the acific | 6 “f 3 o ¥ O R e oA WU T o P SN . | R &3 7 isdiction. Both emnvlovers and ¢ General Wood. who is in com- | coast. : .| Twelve soldiers and five officers| “*{y b TR can: O B et e e e - _— workers are represcated on the hnards, | oaay’ of the 1600 federal (roops here| Representatives of the workers herelwere killed when a detchment of po- Foidlh i vk B e Kl s 8 Bl S S T D LA PRESIDENT WILSON BROWN CONFERS DEGREE wwhich deal with the zeneral nolicy of | hue areansed with the local officials to| Were confident that tomorrow's walk.|jice fell into ambush recyently in|Foron® (G, [Weniionc Semants off ihe oniy anewer he gave and the foie CONTINUES TO IMPROVE UPON CARDINAL MERCIER| N7, 20tery. the eficiency of the plant | pronibic all public meetings for the|oul Which A wworkiars of the Indus. | Moroccs. according to Spamish re-|inese China surrendered the rights of | the conference was called to order (n g s d s r matters. as well as wi . g T S kors - t. | ports. e G ce of Shan- |seats e Chines re vacan Washington, Sept. 0. — President | prociience. R, I, Sept. 30.—Brown|Posxible sources o’ friction between Pl hird death as the result of |try on the Gult “and Adlantic coasts. | the Germans in the province of sh ats of the Chinese we ¢ whose iliness took a turn for |universi.y conferred the honorary de- capital and labor. the riot Sunday night occurred today wz\flgreb‘zr';{wxm-m and Chairman| g Thousands of Greek refugess i S £, er yesterday. continued to im- | gree of Doctor of Laws upon Cardinal when H. J. Hykell died of wounds.| & ;] ‘ race signed an address to Presiden i oday under the rest cure pre- | Mercier during his visit to that in-| SENATOR FALL ATTACKS I war whGt while riding in an auto | Pavne of the Shipping Board, both of | Wiison Gsiing him (o support their | MUGHES SAYS CUMMINS REPRESENTATIVES OF INDUSTRY scrived by his physician. stitution teday in connection with his THE LEAGUE COVENANT|mobilc near the county bullding. The|whom attended (he conicrence d¢-|claims for a union of Thrace and BILL IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL NAMED FOR CONFERENCE After the first good night's rest he|stay in this city. The exercises took = other two victims were Will Brown,|clared emphatic REIL he wovern | Gracel 3 — as had since he was taken ill, the |piace on the platform of Rockefeller| Washington, Sept. 30.—The German| negro, who was lynched, and Louis|ment would not snave in, the Bermtot 3 - Washingtoti,” Septe 90 Holaing | . Boston, Sept. 30—Magnus W. Alex- dent was up most of the day and hall, facing the middle campus. in the| peace treaty got 4 three hour speed. | Youns, who was shot and killed dur-|having been decided on by represencc| Directors of theatres in Paris and | unconstitutional the provisions of (he|nder, managing direcior of the Na- ~vas permitted by Dr. Grayson 1o give |presence of faculty, corporation and|ing up in the senate today, all but|ing the attack on the county building.|atives of the depa: the Federation of Theatre Workers|Cummins bill for railroad reorgar tional Ind Conference oard, is aitention for a short while 10 :student body. In conferring the de-| thirty minutes of which was an ad.| District court judges announced to-|board two weeks ago. accepted offers of arbitration from theltion which would take over all rxc announced today that in accordance ressing executive matiers. He si gree President W. il. P. Faunce said: | dress by Senator Fall, republican, of| da ythat they would call a special Government with a view of settling | earnivngs of the roads over a “fair With. the request of President.‘Wiisom ©d several minor bills and resolutions, | “By authority of the Board of Fel-| New Mexico, attacking the Leagus of| zrand jury October § to investigate/ DEPUTY COLLECTOR. OF the strike., | turn,” an opinion by Charles E. Hughes, | he had named five representatives of sent some nominations to the senate llows of Brown University | hereby| Nations covenant and pleading fori the riot. Governor Samuel R. Mc-|{ cUSTOMS ACCIDENTALLY SHOT L — 1 rendered to the Association of Rullway | American industry as members of the n ctated a few letters. [ confer the honorary degree of Doctor| amendments which would keep the | Kelvie arrived here this morning to Ext ot 4 Ernst Losis, a German war prisoner. | Executives has been filed wiin the | Nutional Industrial Confercnce o During the afternoon he took ancther of Laws upon his eminence. Cardinal| United States free from representa.| investigate the riot. Island Pond, Vt. Sept. 30.—The|while on his way to the interior of | House Interstate Commerce Commi tee, | for October 6th at Washinglon C gmobile ride and seemed to enjov | Mercier, archbishop of Malines, pri-| tion on foreign commissions created| Mavor Ed P. Smith, who was at-|pody of Ralph E. Flanders. a deputy | Germany under escort of American| Former Justice Hughes contends in Four of the men selected ar _thoroughly. Accompanied by Mrs..mate of Beigium, sometimes profes-| by the pact. tacked by the rioters, is still improv-| ohe tor of customs, bearing a bullet|soldiers, was shot and killed + by a|brief, that if rates which produre so- Frederick P. Fish, of Boston, chalr- Wison and his daughter, Miss Mar- isor in the University of Louvain. au-| The rest of the treaty nrogramme| ing although suffering from severe | wound, was found in the home of H.|French soldiers near Naney. called cxcess earnings are Jusi and|man of the National Industrial Con- saret. he was away from the White | thor, philosopher, Christian apostle,| was an address by Senator Edme re.] wounds inflicted by his assailants. |pRunaall. where he had a room. A — | reasonable rates them the °earnings | frence Board, formerly president of the iouse nearly two hours, driving far | who through dark and bitter days kept| publican of New Jersey. in which he revolver with one empty chamber was| United States Shipping Board will|from those rates are the property of [American l«»lwh\onf and . Telegraph culiae the country. & the great soul of a small nation nlne{. urged republicans and democrats alike| JQHN MITCHELL LEFT on the floor. Medical Examiner B. H.|convert the Leviathan into an oil|the railroad companies, wiicn may | ompany -('fl’""" s v,'r‘L' A As long as good weather continues, | protector of weakness, champion of| to hasten its consideration so that ESTATE OF $250,000|Stone, of Burlington, _pronounced | burning steamship. — Plans for con- |taxed, but cannot be (aken away. go. manufacturers of jron’ 'and _steel is_understood, the automobile riderju_atice. who never vicided right to| congress might devote its time and at. AN T X B Snta TN B phiootiria verting the Olympic, Aquitania and| ~All the rates fixed and wmaintiined,” | products and president of the Nation 0 De = CN\ Sestncs o= = presl- lmiiEht, but by inyincible faith subdued| tention to pressing problems at home. . i Sept. 30—John| Flanders last activity as a deputy|Maurctania are being arranged. he says,' “are open to inquiry and the|#l Metal Trades Association; S. Pem- demt's rest Program. Xt D been Dre- |kinkdoms and ‘Put to flight adrmies of| While thg leaders generally refrain-| ppibis: tobn o resident of the Unit. [was: early today- ‘when = he arrested e 5 commission has full authority to ‘nsist | berton Hutchinson, ~of Philadelphia, scribed not only to give him the bene |aliens. e cd from predicting just when (ha| Mitchell former president of the Uni | four men on a charge of smuggling| Board of Commerce in session at|that they shall never be more than|President of the Westmoreland Coal L0 Fae 2 ’“fl’fl“ o e o | His Bminence arrived in Providence| country might expect a vote on the| o3, AIne WomK et of Ay in stocks |and seized their automobile, which |Toronto, declared that, beginning next|just and reasonable. Company and a_member of the con ut because it aids in overcoming the | this morning at 7 o'clock. and was|Tall amendments, the continuing or-| cSiate of $230,000, mostly in StoCts | as loaded with liguer, on the “iron|month, prices of pork and other ho “The provisions of the ;ending hill | ference board's recent Buropean com sieeplessness from which he has suf- [met by a special guard of honor oflder before the senate, there wos and bonds, according to a petition e Loaded o e Can cian bord: |products snould be reduced fo prace|is not & tax laid upon all carriers wiih |mission; Edwin Farnham Greene. o P S i | prominent citizens and escorted to St.| flutter of excitement today with the| lStters of administration filed in the JFIG&S PG00, SHC" men o Jail and re- (tically same prices as March last. respect either 1o gross receip:s, or nei|Boston, treasurer of the Pacific Mills Grayson woul make no ic- ¥ v = i " A urt lay. x S = 1 H a te a acturers with ini S| ¢ abie to take anv part in the.labor | receptions for Governor Beeckman at| during the afternoon. But there ool | shortly before his death, but believed| He had been in his acom btut ai, SOT7CFEN o uthwest Africa, form- | requirement of the payment (o the| The name of he fifth appointee will d industrial conference which meets |the state house and at citv hall by| little hope of so early a decisige ] to be invalid because it lacked wit-|short 13 d nim ore o shots |erly German, are only accepted at|government board of the -excess' earn. | be announced when his acceptance has slietin merely said: e president |dom of the city, foliowing which Car-| floor, i of his estate to his wife a - e 4 = = e . - 4 7 4 it iy s o T i A L i T S | Dot el dndeen, when Senator| 3fen.” e §10,000 was o be divided | Flanders semi-conscious. He died a|in plain Engiish French or Duteh. |Commerco Commission determines 0| W oo o | ng" upon the askembled multitude Which| were Thalted hy n demand for 'Zg| among oiher relatives and friends. |few minutes afterward without spCakTl poyoai yudge Mayer will sign the value of its property. o bR ¢ GRAND DUCESS CARIOTTE g E: e Place far beyond the 5 o ) tition was filed by Mrs.|ing again. 5 el . - % i DERLY. POSSE CAPTURES NEGRO T or hig TSt SlnoFaRl ol e e s e bor leaders| | The builet from his revolver had |order restoring to the orlginal own-| ‘Such an exaction goes beyond the iz AND PLACES HIi The cardinai was then escorted to||NQU e ! Vidow. who lives in Mount Vernon.|bierced his hedrt. ers the 28 surface railwag lines of|limits of any decision known to me, Luxembourg, Sept. 30.—(By the A LACES HIM IN JAIL | O arragansett hotel, where lunch- | 'NQUIRY INTO FREIGHT T aON: faetn that Mr. Mitenell loft no| Flanders, who was 28 years old, had | the Brooklyn City Railroad Co. ope-jand if the rates under which the so- | P —Ballotting in favor of the reten- Merchantville. N. J Sept. 30, | eon was given under the auspices of WRECK AT HOLMES, N. Y.| real eostate but did leave stocks in|been active for some _time in the ;n{\‘d by ;}w B. R. T. as one system | called excess’ carnings are collected | tion of the Grand Duchess Charlotte ‘ames Whiting. the negro who i. al- | the Providence Chamber of Commerce, 2 B coal, railroad and industrial corper-|search for liquor smuggier: or over 25 years. Dy. the carrier are to be deemed to be | as Tuler and of the establishment of czed ‘o have assaulted a white woman | the attendance of businessmen far Danbury. Conn. Sept. 30.—Tnquiry| ations, valued at ° $156.000; onds et - 4 b e Y just and reasonable rates, fixed and|an cconom@e alliance with Irance in T A I e\ oman | cacting the accommodations of the | M0 he detalls Gf ™ reight | irain | valued at $11.000; noics worth $2600| WoULD LIMIT TIME OF Australian House of Repressnatives mainiained as wuch underiné authoruy [ stead "of with Belgium continued 0 a pos: ol g vesterday w: bt S0 i app d 5 a 1 for | w, I a able to cscape the con- | show overwhelming majorities at t 4% Peen scouring the countrvaide |BOfEL o | .l . reception to the|PeEUN Tiere today by T A Foward | Cona el wrrien on one of his let-| FOODSTUFFS IN COLD STORAGE |future control of former Gorman is- | clusion that the requircments as to (he [tart of ihe second das. s count of TIon jCsterday aftermoon. was ciP- | Chen of all denominations of the |IPresenting the Interstate Commerce( terheads and dated August 30, 1919, i Jands in the Pacifie those south of thepayment of the so-called ‘cxcess’ earn- | votes cast in the plebiscite Sunday o red tonight aiong Rancocas Creek, | SIetEYICR 50 Bl Cen o oy Man- | Commission, F. M. Clarke, general su.| cope: i Washington, Sept. 30.—Additional | the equator would go to Australia|ings of a carrier cxceeds the constitu- | detormine the future of the grand near Mount Holly. He was locked up|Zo0® Tl F e cardinal is being en- | Perintendent of the Central New Eng- YIf T should" not recover from the| ¢gislataion recommended by President;and those north to Japan. tional authority of Congress. duch Voting in the republican dis- e Mt My 2 tertainea- land Railroad and a representative of| operation T am about to undergo, I| Wilson as a means of reducing living 2 = 3 To the argument that the fixing of | tricts in Luxembours City and in . The negro was captured by Detec- Coroner H, C. Card of Dutchess coun- | pive my estate to the following per-| COSts was passed today by the house| A British hydroplane, with three rates by a regulating authority may |Esch reduced the proportions of the ve Parker, who :ushed him 10 jail in SRR . N. Y. TInjured = passengers and| oous mihe foliowing amounts: To my| and sent to the semate. It would lim-|passengers who missed the channcl|be considered only tentative. and that |lead of the grand duchess from four "0 iutomebile. Other membecs of the Siionl Fatrick. Bgsn. trainmen’ now here were questioned.| wite, Gatherime Mitahell, 33 per cent: | it the time of holding foodstuffs in|boat because of the railway strikc,| the rates so fixed may he assumed to|to one down fo something over (hre posse of more than 500 armed men 4 - Engineer Albert Irancis of the lo-| to each of my children an equal share| cold storaze fo twelv emonths and|arrived at Havre. Two other ma-|be unreasonable if they produce excess|to one but this reduction had been Frre mot informed that the fugitive| New York. Sept. 30.—General Pat-|comotive which plowed into the rear| of t(he remainder, provided, however,| reauire thai when released such food | chines traveling with the hydro- |earnings, Judge Hughes holds fhat |anticipated. p23 Deen taken into custody uctil he | rick Egan one of the founders of thejof a_ freight train collapsed on his| that from each share there shall be| P Pplainly marked with the date it|plane became separaled in a_ snow |what is reasonable rate can not be| The French economic alliance con- ad been lock=d up. Although threats | home rule movement in Treland and|Way here from Maybrook and will be| geducted an equal sum so as to make| Was Placed in storage. squall and have not been heard from.!determined in this way, which is not|tinued to be in favor by a vete of 2Fainst the negro were made by some | former United States minister toheard later. e A 00 ahall be miyen| , The vote on the measure was 264 to a regulation of either rates or service, [ about three to one ; f ihe men. most of them left f>: their [ Chile, died at the home of his daugh-| 'The list of dead by the accident was| 1o (he followins persons in the fol- | - The regulatory features of the bill| RENAULT EULOGIZED PROPOSED |but of carnings. ome shortly ufter learning of ihejter here fonight after an ijlness of fincreased to three tonight when Jo-| Jgwing amounts: Mrs. E. C. Morris,| Will beocme effective immediately . on LEAGUE F NATIONS COVENANT =Ty ¥ apture. and officials declared the did | several weeks. seph Amale, of Waterbury, a fireman | $3.000; Mise Margaret Dunne. $3.000¢ | }S passage, but ninety days for an STATE GETS $1,050,000 ot expect anv violence. Born in County Longford, August 23,[0n the telesconed train, succumbed 10] sy mrother. James Mitchell, $1,000; my | adjustment of the business affected is| paris, Sept. 3 Rene Renault, pres- | NEWSWRITERS WITHDRAW FROM WOOLWORTH ESTATE Parker said Whiting was so iiearly | 1841 General Hgan L A e T { brother, Daniel, $1,000.” allowed before penalties will be ap-)ident of the socialistic radicals, one o APPLICATION FOR CHARTER — exhausted that he did not offer any | ential business man in Dublin. From . > A i plicable. e arienl vips i the o Albany, N. Y, Sept. 30.—A’ check resistance 1o arrest. His clothes were | povhood he was identified with the|$1,000,000 TOWARD $14,000,000 2 Vast quantities of food now in suppnrlzed et s tisn of the peace ter, N. Y. Sept. 300.—Ro-| for 31,050,000 from the estate of the soaked as & result of spending last | Irish Nationalist movement. In addi- HARVARD ENDOWMENT FUND|STATEN ISLAND SHIPYARD storage are expected to be released|treaty and included a eulogy of the |cpmooeen N ¥ wriept 300-—Ro-|j3te Frank L. Woolworth, who origir 7ight in a swamp and he could scarce- | ton to being one of the founders of pioas ot MEN TO PRESENT DEMANDS | as soon as the measure becomes a|pioposed League of Nations in an ad. | CRESier newspaper writcrs who re-| ;ied ‘the chain store system of five T e it the hotee rul oeeanization T AbTL. he| New. York. SoSpt 30_earis st | g law.* Cheese. s the only commodity | Brobosed, . gendly presented _ domands to” pub- | 515! 1on®aaps mores; was recelved = giso heiped 19 found the Irish Land|000.000 has been raised in two days| New York, Sept. 30._Shipyard| exempted the time limit for storage| It is inconcelvable.” said M. Re-|pancrs of the city for incresses in saj-| 4y by State Comptroller Eugene M POSITION IN THE BRITISH League in 1 for Harvard University's $14.000,000 | Workmen emploved at four Staten ls-| 10 Perfect aging being extended for a!nault, “that the United States, after | P2P! & T lOThe eoneh: s M te| Travis. This amount brought the to- Mol General Egan was one of the de-|endowment fund, a larze mari of |1and yards tonight presented a demand | longergperiod than one year. being the promoters of the society of | iy resry thotr appiicaion oot ha3ve ] tal of transfer tax receints for Sep TRIKE UNCHANGED | fendants with Parnell, when the Irish| which is (0 be tsed in increaniie 1| for. wage imercases ranging’ from| Pe convicted of violating the | natians and after stretching. oui o|lihdrawn their application to the In-| iember to more than $4,000,000, th s leader and a number of associates|salaries of professors and instructors,|iweniy (o twenty-five per cent. and a | law Weuld be fined $1.000 or imprison- | yr, al hand Fr c: ik | O D o that (o ioF & | Targest ' ‘for any month since _the pondon, Sept 30.—(By The A. P)| were prosecuted in Dublin in 1830 |it was announved here todas. . The|i4 hour week, Imstead. ot forty-sight| e o from ratitying he pact which Erces | hartcr on the stound that the meas- | ransfor law hocame efective in 1531 | ourih day of the railway strike| for sedition and conspiracy. After|first day 3014525 e i a . 2 pact. whic] s-[ure of control over the editorial e Seame Steclifarin THEE ™ it n 3 . and iracy. ¥ saw $243.250 subscriled and |hours The demand stipulated that — ident Wilson in his admirable cam- ¢ the Sleels TEb T pusition ot the strug-| the trial he iived in Paris for " iwolioday's ioal amouniad to 602250, the change must take effect today. It| STREET CAR SERVICE patEn “has ‘explained (o his country. | Paniments insisted upon by the M. OBITUARY any appromeh toward the :en‘.:n:l:'l:: Toe Lantl IAI::.:: g9 . A member of thet closs of '3 con- | is suid 15.000 men are affected. RESUMED IN VIENNA|men.” e (g oubliab b Dr. Newell Sill Jenkins. = > % n in Ire ce|tributed a round $100.000, as | did e - ESUME i i T t I shers wax| 3 i ins. O arFyiiations: both arc showing an ominated for pagliament. he declined| Thomas W. Lumoni of .. 1 Morsun! LAUNCHING OF DESTROVER Vienna. Sept. 25— (By The Asso.| PAMAGE WROUGHT BY e o e ] Rl S Gonti. Sebt. | WS erm 3 Dec: ¢ and Com Progident J 1y E 5 - 2 3 a was received here today of the death There has been no extension of the| of allegiance to the British go\'ern-'H.::-‘-;r:; :nd e i = t Lowell .of PUTNAM AT SQUANTUM| ciated Press.)—Streat cars which have LAVA FLOW AT HAWAII; An association known as the Ro-|in avre France of Dr. Newell S| sirike 1o other industries, but James| ment. RN ok ‘the Bnd g antenties: s : Lo e TS been suspended owing to the coal| Honolulu, Sept. 30.—By The A, P, |chester Newspaper Writers' Associa- | Jenkins, an Ameriean dentist of nois Fienry Thomas. secretars of ihe union,| Gemeral Tobin came to the United | oot " ec c'committee] = Quincy, Mrss., Set ey ane de-|shortage. was resumed today. Other-| Two ranch homes and much valuabie|tion and unaffiliated with any labo | During his carcer he had practieed ::.’,.""’""a'{';'er'"i‘. rr‘:d"wu‘s (o aceep(| Staten in lulb!netllln( in Nelraska, s e lt:?‘;:::u,.“‘,“‘;fli‘- g u:.‘me.,‘fi‘ m;; there is no relaxation in the fuel| koa forest has been destroyed by the | o: ‘nmzallonlhni grown out of the|forty years in Germany and fve im from ades unlous and a| where he established a. nuwmber of Washingios S v e e tichem | econbmy. , lava How from the latesl eruption of | proposed union and the publishe: | France a e 1 the manifesio was issued from the traus- | grain elevators The next scar Me um‘.?"vfif: \':ie -‘:d':;wl:"“\:;:;;»m a Smp:‘ul;d-n% L‘ol;lao?;wl]- lg‘ay, was Newspapers in Budapst, which have|the volcano of Mauna Loa, ot the isl- | have slgniied Uiels willingaess Lo con ;u;:‘:: .“'.”'m‘n'fi?,i :’; m.'TX:"{f.'.J‘ o purt federaiion tonight. which fore-| was elected premident of he Irimh Nac | MToed the nominoncs Jale today con- it i S E T Pu}r been” utider’ suspension, were allowed fand of Hawzil. The flow apparently is|sult with ithe new body. Thev prev. | lenkins was born i Cape | Vs, SRe tomorrom i decision to calll tiona) Leagws of America holding the!lock of Ohlo to be Aambassador te] Arctic. in 1883, The sponaot woe| Rirr mapiborication Sunday. -About|a mile wide und is moving rapidiy. Jt[ously have refused io recosnive wi | ind 6 years old.. By repute-he : 5 SPONJVE. . ras: will reach Lhe ocean, 1=irty miles from ) organization of news writ aitilinted ¥ o Arst Amer cun educaied dan- EBelgium Miss Katherine Brown of Brookline.