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i e e e 12 PAGES—96 COLUMNS PRICE TWO CENTS ap A AN | Cabled P h ' o [Tronne. i Condensed Tei ; INC 36 AMENDMENTS TOPEACE | S Secerete Rulers Of Belguim (Troops Patroling | %ot Teeorans | CANMITION OF PRESIDENT EM'EB m SE 'l'[ s L < Guests United States| Village Of Elaine, Ark. ... .o s oo WH.S[]N I.ESS F AV[]R ABLE TREATY I]EF ' NA e msonas, Tonllee' 0 5% | Were Given Offcial Fresdom |Race Fesling Has Been Intons i s 5 it 00800, T4t -u southwest of Petrograd). Despile the . e R et s *7s¢| of the U. S. By Vice Presi-| ified By Killing of Alder- = 4 - ¢ Aol dent Marshall. man O. R. Lilley. an ounce in London - New York pricc | Fact Disclosed In Statement Issued By Dr. Grayson at 10 e TR T, oL ne | Mow Yok oot Fidicnas Ak Ot -2 Wil TRdeRl | Wee $119. i O’Clock Last Night—Patient Remained In Bed Through- All Had Been Introduced By Senator Fall and Were Aimed to Curtail American Participation In European Settlements 2.—The King and lQ:een of the Belgians, with Prince :lroop; patrolling the village of Elaine, B offssiale inminrded contrmchs: of esulting the —Of Nine Amendment et 2. fers -opold, heir apparent to the throns etachments on duty at Melwood and | 0 . o R g From War. ts Yet to e, o anahe Comer: | were the Ruesis of the United States|other centers of . population in the $75.000.000 in Ficlsbirgh where they out the Day—Doctors, After Consultation, Decided That ix Relate to the Shantung ow, and 3 : 7 %|in New Vork tonight. They have|southern part of Phillips County and visiting. : 3 Be Acted On, Six R » Section, the central competitive fleld this after” | come. as His Majesty cxpressed it, to | company of, soldiers stationed in N e ‘Absolute Rest Is Essential For Some Time—Concern i ing Power In the i i e 131 &) voice thei Helena as a caut v measure, \ . op - b Viokig o of Nations | duy, when thes wil recomvens o | e tncrous w14 Fiven hom | he situation dug i3 rocs riohng 1 |Lo. consider anWercase in the biy| Over the President’s Real Condition Was Generally Ex- adelpRBe o oversions: wanted by this country in years of direst need |the vicinity of Elaine, while intensi- —Senate Leaders Believe Debate Might Continue Sev-| mee!"ln waskingion b the " miners |1, 1 sountzy I years of disatiaced | \ianity, of Bajye, wnis imgna | o€ poler and iremen were opposed to the national capital. sl pressed In Washington. threatened wi % Lilly, a member of the board of al- ned with extermination. & prenber o g day delay to French voters to regis-| ~Washington, Oct _President | executive offices and gave out hi¥ Another Th 1 £ the Y to meet : eral Days Before Roll Call i om0, Mg | | Therr Bral hours on' Amorican sofl | dermen of (hls city, was believed 0| 3 delay to rrench v 4 seniival omlcanasnd Kags oty Was jast reach- ) which he now wanted to “desert.” based on fiieic bellef that ultimately | Wefe apent duictly in g Fepmlegll o {8 BOUW Band | o L Lo Witson is “a very sick man” and "his | P e in the day Dr. Grayson max ool Referring to Senator Lodge's state- | the government must take 2 hand in , resting after their voyage & ernor Brough o German National _Assembl. re- | condition 'is less, favorable,” it was|yp;wn that T president's ph ‘e semaie|Ment that the United States could be | the wage scale negotiations if a strike | foross (he Atlantlc ~and celebrating |25 at whose request five hundred|opencd ac Beriin. The . cmergency |sald by Dr. Cary T. Grayson, the|condition was fairly sirong and th 5 5 reaty. the senat e e 57 i . Koy, 1° 2 a 2 3 _Te- B o 5 RN, iof as falrl & and T de Ss Y 3 or- . i welcome to New York will not begin |Sent for duty in the riot district, an 3 ssued at 10 o'clock tonight from the | president’s @ 15 approaching k n L e v-five amend- [ eign relations chairman had an op- |SPoken in their oppesition to federal % “hi S 3 birthday —it was explain how S e e iiin o the | portunity in the present situation o | Intervention. holding that the issues at o oon tomorsoW At R o Jenks, i comial 98- GromiBts; in | Bunbury County, New | Fhe.taibming bulletin was issued by | aver, made ciose watching of his oF . 5 it ° | make good his words, but that instead | Stake lic between operators and their vill start an arduous round of recep- |the troops, expresseq confidence to- B) ESGIGE: 2 H Y ”j Py | e, following bulletin was issue by v 8 tching i ocument Ly #he forcign relations com his words, ad lic b : tions and_sightsceinz which will take | night that the force on hand would | Brunswick, was almosi totally de-|Dr. Grayso dition essentis : , he was trying “to stand from under.’ | employes. thy - stroyed by fire. Loss amounted 10| - i a | Formoer Secretary of the Treasu ! - |them to San Francisco and back te |be ample to restore normgl conditions. | S - The presideént is a very sick man ormer Sceret The smallest majority recorded ""‘“f Fletcher quoted a declaration| The Depss t'-n-ken 3Mn|ihe fem- | Washington. where they will be guests|Governor Brough accompanied the | $500,000. His condition is less favorable today|McAdoo. the president son-in-la again =y of the committee pEo- R un{.fi‘%gfi?fi!fi-‘.‘."%fifi?'fli’::;':f Tittee SWhieh was appointed at (he|at the White House. troops from Camp Pike this morning. e e e and he has remained in bed through- | called at the White House during t O e ee comidered Had |Or and self-respect to see that the|morning session upon the motion of| cThe Belgian rolalty were given the{ The death of Corporal Luther| PE73070ugh Rapic Transit ©o-8 out the day. . . Wheghor he had been requested o : % & terms of peace i e Acting President John L. Lewis of the | 0Mcial freedom of the United States|Barles, Company H, Fourth Infantry,|7et corporat Sl ugust,| “After consultation with Dr. . X.| whether he ha : - e FePSSES &20 cAFring. ont- miners. The committee remained i |DPY_Vice President Marshall when they [Who was wounded ' today, _increased | $426.381, against deflecit ~of $70,753| Dercum of Philadelphia; Doctors Ster- | come to Washington because x blican w Mexico and were de- — 2y Torrer session for two hours and re. | Siepped ashore from the transport|the number of white dead to five. last year. ling Rufiin and E. R. Stitt of Wasi- | Wilson's iliness or was in the city o : American participa- | GARY COMPLETES TESTIMONY |porced to the entire conference short- | G¢or&e Washington on the govern-| Mr. iilly was shot to death by one| , : e : ington, which all agreed s to hix con- | & business trip. dements resulting | T BEEQRE SENATE COMMITTEE| v after 2 otlock The eanference met | MENt ier at Hoboken at noon today. |Of four negroes who had been taken| According o leading Mexican news- | dition, it was determincd that ubsolut? | Wi ‘ i s At 2 o lock, hhe conference met] "“T welcome vou to this republic a# |prisoner and whom he was guarding|Papers, the schools were closed owing |rest is essentia) for some time NOT SATISFIED WITH mendments yet AR — Standing| sion Chairman Thomas T. Brewster, | King of the bravest people since time [In_an automobile en route to Helena. |10 the Government refusing to pay| Dr. Dersum returned to PL \ delpnia CONDITION QF PRESIDENT o six reiate to the Sha squarely on nis assertion that the is|an operator. and Secretary Willlam | P¢%an.” Mr. Marshall said, “but miore| Eleven negroes are known to have|the teachers. tonight, ~ Secretary ~ Tumulty an- scctio ropose to equal Rt I the pesar = 3 - 5 as a man whose conduct will be & |been kiiled and several others are re- 2 = nounced. | Pniladeiphia, Oct pon his re. <. e o & penging strike throughout|Green, a mine representative; issued |3 — Sernis It B " A ow = 4 e wat Iy the shee re | i B mighty force In steadying the world |poried to have lost. their lives but n agriculture sub-committee| After the consultation it developed |turn home tonight from Washinzton one w mit Amer representa- | j 400 Eibert H. G: - fhm~ N 5 _|to law and order, to friendship, faith|their bodies have not been located.|W2S appointed to conduct an investi-|that the physicians called in by Dr.|w was in consultation with D; : Pric xrvrivg = In g ary, chairman of the ‘The joint conference of the repre- 2 f ation int shiortag th a - L ations commission. board of the United Btates Steel Core|sentatives of the bitumineus operaiors | and. freedom. The four negroes were in the automo- | & into sugar shortage authorized |Grayson had agreed entirely with his | Cary Grayson, President W efinite agreement for | oration compieted his testimony {o- | of tne cantra) competitive feid nave| . KIng Albert's low voiced response|blle under guard when one of them|DbYy Senator New. diagnosis of the president’s ailment, | phy n, Dr. Franci Dercum. these proposals. semate | 4ot o o0 abon et | Gectaed o e 191001227 | was audible onlv to those who 5to0d|seized 'Lillys pistol and shot him. and approved the course of treatment ! tne presiden 5 that the debaie |10 inVestizating the stecl controversy.| sonvene at Philadelphis, Pa. on that | Dearest him. = He expressed deep re-|Other possemen then fired on the| Germany adopted new emblum, con- | dccided upon by him. [ v tory day .S, ret and selicitude At the illaces. of | crowd killing all of them. Other in.|SISting of black one-hcaded eagle on|° The name of Dr. Dennis. director of e ir cral days before 1 days befor During colloquy with committee | date. The representatives of both s taken. 1 6 i : President Wilson and then t 1- | ciflents ‘of the .day were the finding(EClden-yellow field. Hohenzollern|the maval dispensary in Washington, | 8 ~ (ne |members, particularly Senator Walsh, | operat d_miners cious of n and then the grat e findinz S [ ¢ the day's \ny:af the | jemoerat, | of Massachusetts, Judge d‘_’:‘; 3:!,_";““!“:‘;’; :‘;’l‘,‘_‘:‘“’i“‘g::‘;’v tude of all Belgium to all America. He [Cf 2 negro woman fatally wounded |arms eliminated. & dia not appear ‘in the builetin ~ Dr.|sudden presented 2 solid frent ool Heh. SR L QeTioiuoctis TNAge thelr respa public and feel that such |20 the aucen honed to galn many (near Eiaine and the wounding ofl according to a Mexico City news-|GFAYSOR gave out tonight, but he wus|statement added. “Dr. aid to have been at tne White House|m were not quit 1l mendments except for . val ssons cir | tw - ahoma and |Hon SomElder compromisc or o itra|recess wil be advetagbons to ait con- | LIS LRSI Jogons from MRl 00 OF Meadgaarices cersany and|Peper the order to Mre on American | TUd.2 By NG ks "consuita i Seventeen re- | Liom: of it} | e en now and mest Thursday the|And rezarded the journev as an epoch | Corporal Luther Farles of Company|oViators was not given by the Car-|"“picre was much speculation in Dr. F. De Schweinitz, pre y nand. lined UP | The senate during tne day by reso-| members of the sub-scale committee | " heir lives. H. Fourth Infantry. The latter wus|'ahee sovernment Capligl OMIERE ea LtD ot wprasidentu] fesaor Damoon ; \nd most of them stood | lution approved the committee's plan|will he-in conference with those they |, (SRSiches of the lives of King Al_ishot in the.face and seriously woynd-| According to a Mexico Gity news-|Feal condition .and concern wus ¢ IaEIb Dl (ol ek inEten S § on all succeeding | 0, cArTY lts investigation to Pittsburgh | represent, - information -will be zath- | 00F7,and O izabeth are primtedi e TRETRES Y SIS therea! PaPer. the erder to fire on American | “\G7 Oh; Cennite 1o 1eave: tor A ¢ s or Them samosqces | and other steel centers after hearing|ered and the hope was cxpressed by 2 = 7 onorording; £0. ntormation Eathered aviators was not given by the Car- |, WWheH the cons . De Seh s Initz: has el e erien ey | tomorrow William Z. Foster. secretary | operators and miners that some defi- | NG [MPORTANT CHANGE e o e e oY aa¥e | ranza’ Government. past six o'clock Dr. Gra M on's occulist for man, : ions nich thes |of "the strikers' ‘commitice. and Der- | nite progress Wil be made in arriving | NO, IMPORTAN cen ‘organizing . secretly, _providing e Saes S seonk B o . i endangering the treaty Rerr e Amasier Iokders on'that]a ta basis.of understanding: HE STEEL STRIKE| themscives with high powered rifies| A strike of 10,000 longshoremen, ty- St B g B aitirit & advosdtes | P S o e 'hHolh sides issued statements today,| oy BT oo g 5 |l e e ey g “‘the ing up_ Brooklyn waterfront, is pre- = e g e s 1| the operators re-stating their conten- s e, Oct: The ‘Wteel|; ey 28 2 strike situation “in the Pittsburgy [according to tije promises made by|f,0%] Jn nour were made. | B gt = ¥ S!that members of this ccmmittce do,”] tion that the 60 per cent. increase In ¢ Judge Gary said in explaining his re- [ pay sought by the miners would double fusal to arbitrate the issue. “I con-y the cost of coal to the consumer, while HAS LESS HOPEFUL LOOK Jleea I sen Teadeys, | Demands|yew YORK /COMPOSITORS "anms:. RAILWAY STRIKE ARE TAKING “VACATIONS" | > | district remained virtually the organizers, they were to be call- it today. Steel company off: ed upon by the goverament to join in| puce; ey mpany - offl ussian General Rozanoff, com trength | Pider the public's interest as para-|the miners sought to show that living | iNued to maintain thac demanding fifty centls a pound fo:| ., nger in Siberia, apologized to Maj-| New York, Oct. 2.—\With more than| | 5N | mount in the refusal. If the strike is| conditions and cost of supplies neces. | WE'€ returning to wori.and. tommage| their cotton.. Under the mystic plan [ Z* TSN 7, SLONR @PEOELES (0 M, (G 0k 50 n s Closed as the hesult Mdecinred. e |left to foilow its incvitable course, if| sary in.thelr work justified the ad- |\VaS being increased. while the’ strik-|according inform-tion secured DY smerican soldier on Sept. 5. of a lockout instituted by. employirs declared, 10 |4 certain vicious element in this coun- | vance. ing steel men's leaders declared their | local officials, the ncgrod. were prom- S printers against pressmen not affiliat- [wiri b ition to unless <ai- [try gets no encouragement To continue| ' “If the public believas. men were “holding firm ' ised that the governiacni was to pav ey b . ot » o - re ace i . sald one of g B 2 'y It roported prominent English fi-| cd with the international union, the po.r the almo: e - ccepted. | calling strikes of tne kind, the situa-| the operators, “that the miners de- | Steel companies assert that many|them for their cotton direct and they | Mt 18 roportec prominent Enghsn B-i & Bl (00 B ther complicated to- | p ne arrangemer Uit negative votes o EN Be 5 . 3 5 i " womg | Gon will be helptul in preventing in-| mands are just and should be granted | M€ attracted by the Ligh wages|in turn were to settle with the land | SOrl R DO T o riion $500000 for | day when, in order to avoid the Lech- | ng from the numer conferences all. they pointed out. would | qustrial disturbances of -the kind ev. ; aki Eepoesthic the. TG thise - ial dis -|and is willing to pay the insreased |are fcrsaking other lines of work and | owners. gk " A b L Ao ISl mpossible th ;.;_1;.1:,;_:, major- | ervwhere in the country.” _ [ price for coal made necessary thereby, | €1Lering the mills. They also elalm e EE R BRIt Hslca. Some: bt \the ‘leading . establishments | reprosentatives and c nent, & Government intervention, he said.|ihe onerators have misunderstood the |Unskilled Americans from the upper| DENY THERE HAS BEEN - John Skelton Williams, controller of | here left their work “to take a vacu- |and the position ain tien.” | The uetian was taken by cach | James Her - SALVAGING | the currency. predicted a bright fin asreement. speehies [shouid be confined to maintaining| public mind. Testimony recently given | Monongehela vailey. Johnstown. and DISHONES' ' = ancial future for the world despite -thej compositor indi were limited to five . . d ; ; v peace and order ,which, he added, was | berore the senaie commities ineastl | €astern Ohly are <oming = here .l Tty e ramming hase | the only present nmeed in the situition.| eating coal shows no. evidence of | “ETeat mumbers” seeking employ- | ‘Arinsyard Huvems Maes. Oct. 2.—|losses incurred during the war. - ists” annotunced. which cocupied most of the agy fiie. told the comnditiee that he .ree-| piofiteering orf the partwof the bitumin- [TSBE Sl Restdents’ of “the Tilond of Mariha's 5 b The firms affected print The Review 1 2 Tk ecimibes Fere mbocht acd p Triued concentrated <flgum| had,lm“ ous operators. ‘-\" statements came from any of the | vineyard who wave testimony today| Gencral Motors is nsported to have! of Reviews, Hearst's, Good Housckeep- | ir 4 B D e steel companies, except one issued by | pefore- the congressional committee |acquired control of the Fisher Body|ing, Leslie’s, JudZe and other nation- | dually, the “vacation- | retur members of the house crowded | oh g g s - = : ; he rear of the chamber (o see the | coritror et o Nesnsing and com. | SUPPLY ‘OF SUGAR IN NEW ihe, Garnegle Steel Company. Which | investigating the wreck of (he steam- | Co. Corporate name and manage- | ally known magazines. Four job print- | i othei of I il on on the treaty, while | missioning supervision of industrial ENGLAND 25 PER CENT. SHORT | [t further said: “Fhere . have: been e ":“:;'.)OH":,‘QL:{' ‘;""3 ";"_‘"i?‘““‘:h:‘l"‘wlme"‘ S e ibe s Slae 3= “’;“:r:m"‘;:' ;““‘f;'l“ . A et 5 RO SN foree . the ushers st0od | conditions. but that tne present con- — o8 et ER o November E a $ias = 3 e compositors on, | at med ut, while n Sl in t ain specta- | dition demanded o . such remidtes.| Boston. Oct. 2_The available sup-| Sl coming in i mer Semer’ el are | there had been any dishonest salvag-| Director Hines said that so far as|the sitation as a whole remained un- | (inued, the raflroad . i rs from 2 declarations | Labér likewise, he said; needed con- of sugar for New England is about | gaining confidance and are returning in | 28 G I e e ke yeres R ati, . Shave LB Ao L e rom th - batest CpRtro ®- |25 per cent. below requirements and|imc 5 supplies for oversea Several tes- |turned to their owners on Jan. 1. as ohn Adams. Thayer, sccretary of er u forc o exec ut the greatest controlling pow increasing numbers. Our tonnage is|tified that there wa ~ local salvag-|originally planned b the President. |the Periodical Publishers’ association he v et t ¥ issued a list of publi- | worke debate cihe ruleler he said lay in “enlightened public|consumers in. this region will . have|incueasing and altogether the situation | ne afier the Bovernm < tock o hand — who yesterd as broken. how- | centiment.” 1o limit their use of the product for o H o d g - 2pping following | In & sharp exchange between fhe|at least three months fo three Quar- | ering smmetoe in e pocm L0 be €ath-|in"the work and they . .rzcd officiai During September coinage manufac- | cations which had suspended { or Mcumber of | witheis and Semator Walsh. Jud-.lers of the amount gemerally com-|josies mn faeho gains and are not | negligence in the alleged failure of|tured amnunted to $340.300 in silver|asscrted the name of the 1% 2 e e republican member | Gars refuccd fo sateis action i :# |sumed, Brigadier General John IL| CResorts that strikers were returhine | D€ Sovernment to protect the steam- and $1,031,000 in onc-cent and five-| World should not have appear h " who Dleated AEainet | (asinE o mect amion Teaders JRdiceted | Snerbrne, chairman of the state com- | 1o pe ot Pal, Serikers were recurning | ship after the naval wreckers quit op- | cent Diccel. Tnere wis no gold coin- | Ut overnment of t of the treaty 4 conclud- |a permanent policy. His course. he|mission on necessaries of life, said to-ntyiona] sirike he d‘“;'{“s denied atjerarions last fall. A number of the > - _— . doe at of y at no harm explained. would be directed in every | nighi. He attributed the shortuge to| Wi caty Aaditions) o ters. Where it |witnesses declared that conditions at| Brigadinr General McManus, troop| JEWISH WAR SUFFERERS ATE i s “do ts ful situation towards the maintenance of| increased demand for suga .t e maditional men were walking | that time were unusually favorable for | movement officer. port of embarki- ‘GRASS TO PROLONG LIFE| n The demonstra | the open shen, and *he wresent re-|the deficiency in last SUPPIY | et e n o et ot salvazing the cargo. tion. left Hoboken to take command e | STRIKES OF MARINE WORKERS hushed by vigorous use |fusai seemed (6 him ® 1 -al-ulated to|and increased general cONSUMPLON. | ham Stoer Gomphon (wof, the Bethle- | = Cenzressmen MacGrego and Dono-|of the army supply buse, Norfolk| o Bringing a story | AT PORT OF NEW YORK ! brinz about that end. In an effort to meet conditions cre- | hesen. s oy reported b n of the committee both remarked |Va, s S e teut st to roating | Only Four Rell Calls. When Judge Gary concluded, Chatr-|ated, by the shcrtage. General Sher-|{'mian man wmels 13 per cent. down.|that in their cpinion criticism of the e nettle grass in desperate ecorts to| New York, ( I ing claims s wece ke 1 & 11| man Kenvon called Michgel F. Tighe, |burne said a commitiee had been or-|jnc “frr ¢ Contommn e " 06 01~ I people of the island was unju’. and| New York Fire Dupartment award-| 100 0 Z1C0% 00 FORRGIEE SE000 5ot were mag ! Ung.clsimes ne o e y president of the Amalgabnated Iron.|sanized in the pugar trafle the AUtY |sirikehreakers —are aileged ‘to waih| oS who took godds from the vessclled $10.000 by Standard OIl o of New | diciribution committer for the' rel pping m e Liesi and Tin Workers' Union. to the |of which would be to equalize allof- | paan® o = are alleged to have|in good faith, with the conviction that|York for prompt control of reeent | Gi¥ifibuilon commiitec o s rahing e oA e oo . stand, but his testimony was cut short|ments among wholesalers and supply | Sovn MmPOTted. More than 200 girls | the ship had been abandoned by the|fire at company’s refinery at Green-| o gq cWeld AN SUETERTE SITOY Kt C — by mecessity for early adjournment to|men. He said sugar cards would not|pPIgNes, ©n UEW! machine work at|government. 2 2 {point, L. a’striet of Poland he longshoremer rike has be- » on the commi |ailow members to attend the senate|be used unless it became absolutely iy 7. ‘wont T oo BAERCH Capgath Josephy, BT, Whelton, of ‘Bos —— ME Bt condicted & M ome & contest on ol B0 German-Belgian houa” | sessions. Tighe will be recalled -to- | necessay. pash d out this afternoon, head- | ton. one of the principal witnesses. inl The board of directors of the United |, 1% Bashein conducic S mea.- | or )n, ¢ v composed of Ita da senite wett on recorg 31| WotTow. @ The coal situation was met alarm-,guariers reported. They have applied |reply to a question, asserted that helStates Rubber Company today de- | §1 SHVER U8 00C SHI e8 G0 WG | crs, for m ay, 1 — 8 IR e ing the commission. General Sher- |ich & union chart Characterizing | pelieved the local wreckers had @ clared a 2 per cent. on the common| Tt Rdorors: Whichi Tia | said] s 1 he In onal I ommisaian Fag O the | GUMENT AGAINST THE burne said. but it was. certain that | .aeMenis that strikers were degerting | right to take tne goods from the ship. | distribution since. 19155 SAPONNESIOR BOETORs Which - 1o | S isso bt in commiss 2 o 33 there would be no reduction in price | D€ Tanks of organized labor as false jas no lizhts were left on her. there |3y per cent. was paid. S TP e Ten and cabie @ to | Ater Sainst refusing 1o he a party lo the SYSTEM OF SELLING STEEL || ere ot O o " The commision|and misleading, Fred Keightly, Fas no ene on board, nothing to i1 August 4. last and came dircc | esterday. The - ts aficcting Coecho Slovakdn, | 7 divises "Ciirvane o place orders m- | Riuonal sccreliry of ihe Amalfamated | ziurd her. and_hor anchors. chains| The NC-4 seaplane arriyod at New| SO YT HU ciement i ovein. 0t = P~ goluding this | Washington, Oct. 2. — The charge|meqiately for tne necessary winter | musociation of Iron. Steel and Tin|and moorings were gone. Bedford from Boston. Commanda- | ME 0 Ch S r trantadr il coun: Drer Silesia Sectle. | that the exieting practice of _selling | SR [or, (e, NECRAry | WInLSt | Workers, said. hunareds.of new appil. e Rasd tand. s iorew were' met by the| tCHghswithiactualiconditiona. . | . = | . 2€ | 8 aftectod all raw steel on a single basing point at| (10" (ne” needs will be. |cations were being received for mem-| CEREMONIES AT YALE IN Mayor and representativez of the ST RTINS W SWE DPIOT SHELIAN JRIRIV - b i e . Vste on Belgian Boundary. Pitisburgh in a means of illegal price | VAR e DSSC8 WO B o0 oo 0 i bership. * “We received 4.716 new ap- RDINAL MERCIER| city council al of our transport most of the peo-| ¢ b 1 Roa 1 The ro on the Belzian boundary | COntrol is made in arguments on this! mmog. e lPSCC 8 P Sherburne said| Plications for membership within the HONOR OF CA L oS o ple ‘subsisted on a diet of grass, a|Bath e > local offi mendment foliows vexed issue between steel producing|ine commission had found that since|last few days and more are coming| Mayors of towns and cities of | SOt of mettle as one result of eating e S Por sdoption. Mepublicans—Ball, Bo- | concerns on the one hand and fabri- | Sio SO SO0, 226, (OWNS, SR SRCCin he said New Haven, Conn, Oct. 2—Yale| Mayors of towns and cities of| which the body becomes swollen and| o Brandemee (aider Curtis, Dilling. | C2tors and manufacturing industries|jisf ‘0o " jssued. pork products hac| ACCOrding to an announcement at|university paid homage to Cardinal|POTICER RCCn N ofoss on King | the flesh turns blaci Mr. Bashein's| RUSSIAN WOMEN PREFER DEATH " : Fa! rnald. France, | On the other. made public today by the| gropped in price about 10 per cent.|3irike headquarters ~Attorney *Jacob | Mercier. the Belgian patriot at an im-| J0ror o5 ¢0r his services in the inte- | Staicment said | TO CAPTURE BY BOLSHEVIKI - L i, Yrance | Slaeral trade commission. beef § per cent., lamb 5 per cent. and| RO Of the strikers’ legal staff and |Pressive convocation in Woolsey Halll S/ 080, 100 B0, 20 From hunger and the grass diet| 5 ey s K2px: | Following a formal complaint last| 2ot 0Pl CONMn 1MP 2 BEL Z€0 SUC ihirty men were arresteq at Mciees. | tonight. The degree of docior of law. Pk the fiesh becomes sen a from the| Paris, Wedne < P e can, Moses, New, Newberry. Norris, | JAMmer by the Western Association of anq three-tenths per cent. ‘He ex-[POrt, while making depositions for | Was conferred on the prelate b Pres-| gocretary Baker recommendsd to| bones. T have seen many such cases ~Chemist Arct e Fhippe. Foindexier Sherman, | Rolled Steel Consumers against ~the | Scts'a further advance in the prices|thie ‘senate investigating committec. | idernt Hadley of Yale, who referred Congress an appropriation of $200,- | hd removed | ufferers 1o citiesfopenly selling o m yung B Tarren and Watson.ss | United States Steel Corporation and|qot hutter and eggs. but in otaer com- | They were taken to the police station | (7€ churchman’s “triple crown of scr-| EEREess B8 SRRCRCIHNCE 0 Sl | where hospitals exis yne becomes | women who are buying 1t with s—Gore. other producing companies. charing|modities the commission looks for 3 o v pedmission ~ for further | “ice in e el r mNen 22 S| repme neary Newask. for the. use-of| [Orxor stricken to see r condi-| pr 1 intention of kil st B violatiol yton -trus S deciina i ories erings to take further ion, | church, 3 Sl e avy rifie clubs. <) rather than nto the . oo 30 Mepublicans_ | 12% and the Federal Trade Commis- |%/°2dY decline in P it was given out. deposition, | O torium was crowded - ‘o capacity | civilians, army and mavy rifie club — | Botsheviki, according ‘to an . ntion. Republicans—! ion Jaw and the request at the same The police authorties at e aud on the platform was a dis-iaguish e ELEG. | officer who has ju rived fros S o ORE. Henyon. | er representatives of steel mills that BROTHERHOOD MEN CONFER|nouncement, said the attornss onq| President Taft and state and city of-| the war were among the 400 & | While several shipt of anti-Bel crroot Mccumber, MeNarv |} "Commiscion assame - Jurisdiction ; - union men had mot been actosied T | Thie ‘Gtetew was the third re-|1NE xhe wor were Smone (he 0 oo on Oct. 2 The National Indus- | sheviki have been deporeed from Are Pl e B = - Sterling and | the commission asked expressions of| Washington, Oct. 2. — A conference|had been orderd from the central la- | ceived today by.Cardinal Mercier— | {{Tora8e BIasCuBrTR, SIWERE, B 50| ia) "Conterence 4 announced to- | Angel by entente powers, the m ¢ R e A opinion from all interested parties. | between leaders of the steel strike and|hor headquarters, when it was closed | Trinity College and Weslevan Univer- KOTK on the steamship =ia ™! day that Leonor F, Loree of New York,|of the anti-Bolshevik population refuse B Chaiatee Bankhead. | Replies from seventy nine concerns Tepresentatives O i i aiosdithers yesterday atternoon. sity having given him diplomas pre- | Havre. president o fthe Delaware and Hudson | t0 leave, saving it is impossibie oe - . _Chamberl - | which have joined.in the proceedings| brotherhoods was hel ere might. | &t un, 3 viously. ¥ & ot A ek ) o2 | penniless into a s Rkl Dial Tieicher. ‘Gav. Gerry. Harris | Tore made sublic. todas - %I No statement was forthcoming after | tomight thar o i s, 7S ot The Commemorative Ode, written by| Protests by the Teachers' Union of | Railroad, had accepied the board’s in- | Denniless info a strange country. These i e = irby. Mc- | piacing the question on a formal bas- | discussion swill be held. had been released after being marched | th2 200 Yale men who died in the|including women who demand resiz. | National | W e o IO LWhHICh ADDSAT ABavitale nation, o MIers Nugent, Overman. Owen. | g for trial, as renuested by the par-| Participants said that the question|iy the police station. & marehed| yr was sung by a chorus. The mu-|nation of provincial - director of| by President Wilson to ussemble at] i Gbbears inevitabie as soon as Daetan, Pitiman, Pomercne. Ransdell | ties. Judge Gary is reported to have| Of co-operation by the brothernynds by! Secretary W 2 oster, who i sie, by Dean Horayo Parker. carried |schools, culminated in a general sym-| Washington on October 6. This com- r 3 lobinson Sheppard, Shields. Sim- | siid that should the cbmmission as- | @ Sympathetic strike or refusing 1o washington to sepesc Betors the el ) OUl the solemn theme of -the pro|pathetic strike. M e anp O Aive tismbens Ot fhe ey e — n e aayith_(Geor- | sume jurisdiction. the case probably| Carry ore or steel preducts was notiate investigating committee. was me. | ETamme. The Belgian national an- ze the president's request. The others are: | | o RO=S, MAKE APPEAL S | Mariand) | Sinles.| would develop info “the sreatest law | discussed in any manner although itllified of the action of the Mclocspaei|ihem was sung by the entire assem-| James Whiting, a negro, was con-| ¢ Presidents reaucsy The others are: | AGAINST MOB VIOLENCE Swansorn Thomas Trammell Under-l yic in the history of the country.| might, they said. come up Drobatly | auinorities. POrL| plage. victed in twenty minutes and was|orFgeriek B TIEh, of Bostoni Jonr { ontam e oAl |~ Under the existing system steel is|at @ later meeting. Cases in which 2 N Tl L In his address accepting the degree|sentenced to thirty vears' imprison- piciiv of CHEREQ: B, Pemberion! New York, et The National Ags ntana ams an oleott—| sold throughout the United Statcs at| members of the railroad unions be-|x e e oo o from Yale, Cardinal Mercier said Bel- ment at a special session of the| CHIGUESOR, ©of FAU@delphia, anc ~ | sociation for the Advancement of Col Total against the prevailing price at Pittsburgh, | come involved in the strike were con- ERS HAD gium was grateful for the sacrifices of [ Criminal Court. Camden, > Torama- [ R e o ooon: & _lored People tonight issue o Tota! agains: 3 q plus a charge equivalent to the freight| sidered, it was said, and the brother- RACE FROM FAR EAST| the sons of Yale in the war. His ref-|sault on a white woman at Merchant- | oMa8nUs W. alexander, =—managing| o o cilzens to uni s jeSenaters paired were: Johnson Cal-!late from Pittaburgh to the point| hood representatives agreed to take up erences to. General Pershing and Her- | silie. eRifor-ot wie Natlbual Inaustial Con=f Violence. - Wewsnapers. w ked to iformia republican. for. with Martin, | where the steel is delivered. regardless| the matier with its membership. Boston, Oct. 2—A race of three|bert Hoover brought applause from the ] 5l oM L8 s M T i eniphasizing in f faad Mocrat Virginia. asainst. } of the location of the mill sclling the| John Fitzpatrick, chairman of the|steamers from the Far East ended te- | audience, as did his description.of the TICIPATE et eaaye The| lines the .ace of which a criminal hap- Abgent and not voiins were: John- ! chipment and regardless of the actual| OTEaDizing commitfee in the stesl in-|day when the British freighter City of| scene in Belgium on August 2, 1914, AIRPLANES TO PAR DAy Of these meh, | the| pang to be & membor.” ; o7 1o South Dakota: King. Utah: Pase.| relgnt charge Mvolved, dustry; William 2. Foster, secretary; | Birmingham arrived, 45 days out from | when King Albert deficd the German| IN TRANSCONTINENTAL RACE| spiric of public service which ey "p, 0 P08 Tempers = 0 Yermon: tee Missouri: Smith.| This practice those favoring the| William Hannon, representative of the|Calcutta. Her competitors, the Howick | hosts and declared “They shall not = VI RID WA Accoptin board's| ¢niq the ussociation's st “and South Carolina. and Sutherland, West | abolition of the singte Pittsburgh base|International Association of Machin-| Hall and the Matonno, sent word by| pass.” < Mineola, L. I, Oct. 2.—: appointment, and the: carnestness Witn |1 ¢ o orime aphin o United ‘States V'y—mn'a j point argument means that purchasers| ists. and David Davis, assistan: prec- radio that they would arrive tomor- In presenting the eminent vistor, |can army airplanes manufactured | Which ll;u fze golng into, this confersl.¢g provoke ‘bloody (ra onfiicts by _Jf was announced that Senators| bf sieel puving from other tham Bitses|ident of the Amalgamated Association|Fow. Professor Theodore S. Woolsey sajd: | abroad arrived here today to partlel-|ence add to my fecling of assurance |2 Irovohe bloody race conflicts b Johmson. South Dakota. and Smith. | hurgh mills are burdened with an arbi- | Of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers. were| The steamers, all carrying valuable| “He defied the people from German| pate in the transcontinental air race|that the conference can scarcely fai to| oot s, W0 MERIIEEE | mmitted M South Carolina. opposed the amend- | trary added charge to cover the ficti-| Present for the sieel men. The broth-| cargoes of tea, hides and spices, had|aspersion; besought justice and fair| Which begins next Wednesday. Two|result in somcthing constructive and |y il WG TOF (RImes foiniitiod b ‘ment tious freight rate from Pittsburgh,| erhoods were represented by H. . |raced on virtually even terms through| treatment from thé governor: coun-|of the machines are of the Sopwith|Of very great and permanent value to| o yaint B0, ¥ Bitterness Marked Debate. The system, the protestants say, is| Wills of the Locomotive Engineers: P.| the Indian Ocean, the Red Sea and the | selled patriotism and endurance: | t¥pe, and two Nieuports. The Sop-|American industry H i i The debate developed conmsiderable | arbitrary, artificlal and unecompmic | J- McNamara, vice president, Broch. | Mediterranean to Gibraltar. Two days| preached the spiritual value of hard With machines, equipped with 150 = | Rnae AN 4 bitterness. Chairman Lodge of the for. | and gives to the steel producers exces. ) erhood of Firemen and Enginmen, ard | out on the Atlantic a severe. storm | things: unshaken, valiant, and at last| horse power motors. were not put in-| STRIKE OF TELEPHONE | N PABANIe CLooED vign relations commitice drawing fire | Sive profits for which there is o | W. N. Dok vice vresident, Broincr- | blew up. Capiain Finisster of the City| triumphant.” to commission until after the armistice OECRATDRe | BY THE BANKIN3 BOARD from the treaty advocates with a | commensurate service rendered. ot ot FELwa ik i, of Birmingham said it caused him to [liRE.p, Sihera taye pech . Besviceaon i e N. D, Oot.. % suppocting the Sokeral Mr. s sai e only way thereduce speed for 24 haurs, but | h, the fighting fronts. Captains Fred ] 3 argo, N. D., Oct. 2 Scandi e T imendmenie Wi Pese | FRANCE TO RATIFY THE railway orzanizations could take :c.|thought the other vessels were mone AR“",,?,:”;%ES‘;GQ'NSJ' = Kindley and O. O. Donaldsen will' pi-| Stamford, Conn. Dct. 2 —Forty tel-| navian American, Bank « % worid couid not doubt America's will- TREATY VERY SHORTLY| tion would be for complaint to or: severely affected. 3 NER DROPPED) |;; the Sopwith planes but the pilots| €Phone operators in the Stamford ¢ labliities Bakredhiiva inoreteon kL ingaess to come to'the aid of civiliza- s ate with locals, and then »> referred e Middletown, Conn, Oct. 2.—A charge| Of \he_other machines have not yet -?h?"rfl"o;fr l_'(";'m»*"'»""“ ;n\)' 5 "'u’:n (vi flmw- w today declared insolvent -3 . th g vote. said it was confrary % 3 3 .. Oct. P b clephone iy went on strike to- [ by ‘the banking hoard of North Dal-o tiom whenever it was threatened he| Paris Oct 2.—Complete ratification|(PC oIt L2 Sl jt [0 sontrary (o SR AnY of arson against Mrs. Caroline Foesa-| P°°" selected aay. They declared that the walkout( ta. Ti Wax ordercd el ieed. wnd : jaid. it was not neceasary to take pari | of the Versailles peace teeaty with | e onE-cqablished, poloy of | the Prof. John Vose Hazen. ner. of New York, was nolled by the was the result of the discharge of four| in the hands of & temporary receiver. tn_“evers boundary dispute of Europe.” | Germany by both houses of the French | Ero{he! s ©{ Hanover, N. H, Oct. 2—Prof. John| state in superior court today after| HOUSE COMMITTEE VOTE operators for, allezed inattention to| The bLank has uthorized capital ators McCumber, Pome- | parliament _is expected very shortly, ' Vose Hazen, the second oldest mem-|two davs' trial. Mrs. Foesaner was\ UNFAVORABLE TO FITZGERALD| their duties. = Theschief operator and| of $50.00 Sien BUTHO LIt G -eme, Ohio Williams, Mississippi, and | possibly within four days. Following Ber of the. Dartmonth. College Taonity,| atsested by state police in August and gyl B e and l;of 360,000, ansurplun of $10,000.5 ‘& Tetcher. Idorida. replied. all of them | today’s ratification by th chamber of | MAN KILLED DURING LABOR died today. He was ®5rn in Roval.|charged with having set fire to a| Washington, Oct. 2—By a vote of B working In thesexchange for about fwo| Non-Partisnn Lesete aepieat aueting previous deciarations of Sen- | deputies. the .senate will immediate- DEMONSTRATION IN BERLIN !ston, Mass. in 1850, was graduated| house owned by her in East Haddam,|to 2, the house elections committee to-| hours and great dificuliy expe: | $724.194.82, the repno. > i . wtor Lodge and declaring he had faced | Iy take up the discussion. The peace _ |from Dartmouth in 1875 and had been| for the purpose of defrauding an in- | day decided to recommend the unseat-| rienced in muking telcphone ealic | hoard by the examiners savs o ol- | conneeted with the civil engineering| suranee company. The defense put in} ing of John ¥. Fitzgerald as represen-| Operators were sent from Bridgeport | The above represents the excess were se- | 1oa dated. In his veace speech in the | completed its study of the document |diers during a labor demonstration by |department of the collegn =ince 1878 | evidence to show that Mrs. Focsaner|talive from the Tenth Massachusetts|and several former oporator carried hy the bank and con- senate last December. they asserted se- mpecificaliy argued for protection jor 'Poland and other small nations The debate in the senate is expected|15.000 nersons in the Muelle==t-oxge f~- | In 1893 he was made Wooi ~-n pro- | was:not in Bast Haddam at the time |istrict holdin Peter I < eity. 1 : 3 n st Had 4 & that Peter F. Takue| cured in this cit The strikers are| stitnte more than s . in parliamentary circles to be quite day fired into the crowd, Kkilling ome fessor-of civil engincering ar sraph-| of the fire. The defendant was dis- | was entitied to the seat. Both men arel said to be membirs of & telephone ape e rorm e gy, Do Sons, of cter s cxtremely uneatistactory.” | beut after the peace treaty wa ne:o-’cnmrmtlefl of that body has already| Berlin. Oct. 2 (By the A. P.)— short, pssibly not exceeding four days. civilian ayd wounding ten others. ics. charged by Judge Burpee democrats, erators’ union. b = ke Dl e 5ot “ P o W