Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
R P >9 ; ; " ‘ S - TG ; ; P PRICE TWO CENTS g ‘ in juvenile delinquency in Austria is| d A g . il R g w | with negrly 47,000 cases. not inclugng % g newspapers. : 5. \ 1L ¢ | those handied by . ing € /| - German delegates will not attend the x | 8 coming international labor conference VOL. LXI—NO. 245 : ¥ S0 | FAVORABLE W F Labor r at Washington. e = Department of Justice Is Putting Final Touches On New Pians TR - R ; y Question Bar silver was quoted at 6275 pencs | Semator Norris Made Another Three Hour Attack On the Meas- of Procedure—Attorney General Palmer Is Prepared to|panics whose plants are operating in - STH i Nk pornr compared. wi ‘ure Yesterday—Assailed Some of the Statements Made ¢ S aoneh dlatilct ‘continued to] washingtod, Oot. 13 g y 5 = HPON = = 2 Proceed Vigorously In a Number of Individual Cases, In- | 2597, 5ie29y jprostess toward normal| tion " of !fwflmerla shouliihe. an in o e R hapa e ot [French, aviator, Etienne Peulet, left By President Wilson In His Western Addresses—Sen- > mediate effort of congress ro ’ ¥ Coo- 'Paris. flight to Australia b; s Ry 0 volving Both Foodstuffs and Clothing—To Take Public| n:fionwie steei workors scnike. No| lcgisiation, declared Senator Kenvon e SR TR the, gucstion of |of' Rome and Constaritinopiel - . ator Lodge Probably Will Speak On the Amendment To- bim e = of lowa, chairman of t nate lai s n Into His Confidence Concerning Action Against the 3 rrritren R TR i Committee. which ;etg"flflt’fi?fl*‘xk‘mfi e R e, > v, intenien o & sy ahip, Pert Chaliers, 9| day—Leaders Hope to Make Some Progress Today In the > % tion of e steel strike i - S X ‘burni " 600 miles at sea. Coast guard (= Fye the Pittsburgh district, but several in| ine Dittepursh district. e senator | Sty out that heir inernational officers st &1 £ Text. of Living. Oiher slesl Contors wert reporicd 43| 1S, ot MO et S une e | Avandoned thels intention” o patiing | Sierd are ruaning to her aia ~ | - Reading of the Treaty Te bt French senate ratified the peace| Washington, Oct. 13—Another three the purpose of the Japanese zovers out of A . r having begun operations. Neither | workacs are of foreign birth and con- 3 = =ton. o ticipa- | ceed vigorously in a number of indi- | 1 crs are o A It was a. relative 5 ashington. Oct In antici sorol it were there any claims made of large| notegoad. write or speak English. Buti ey ol retured [ treaty and also the Franco-American | hour attack on:the Shantung provi-|miet to drive Christianity tion_that legislation to stop profiteer- | ¥idual eases, involving both foodstuffs | numbers of men returniing to work in| "“ige senator declined to discuss oth- ‘huskies” that filled the hajl but our. |#Pd Franco-British defense treaties. |sion by Senator Nofris, —republican, |and that the United States would I and clothing, as soon as the food con- f s be: Kt - . q b . ag sodh will become effective. the de- W | Plants thay havs B Workihs. er ideas gained from the committee in-| _— Nebraska, and a ten minlite speech of | aiding in that attempt if it acquiesce suches to its plans = for procedure |por AN0, L0 Provide a criminal The |Of the steel workers' mational com-|continued in the near future, possi {U1°, (0 Zain So determinedls in thelr | from the Irish people is establishment | republiean, ldaho, constituted the sum |anese rule over Shantung. when the mew weapons are available. | L0n O R OnS e A by bois | Miltee expressed gratification at the|hiy in other strike distriets. leforts to get in that Dolce rescires|of an Irish republic and mothing else.|of the senate's' programme today in its| I cannot see how Christian pesple Attormey General Palmer today | houses of congress. steadfastness of the union men. While| "In a formal statement issued todayp SFE to ge BT e 5 consideration: of tire peacef treaty. can read of conditions in Korea 4 - 5 - o 3 steel companies reported a steady in-| senator Kenyon said: e SHpnoned 10, PokErbe (-l meveckil SabiEl resultdd when| ~‘Tomofrow- the speechmaking will|said “and then ask us lo ratify i a ecting of the-confereces who Another ce is b i - < ~ (oo e RS TE BUY Srobiem under | tor in the Speek mro & by Thursday | 0OW of werkers' the “union “leaders| "1 ot desire to discuss the steel advisement nearly three months ago.lor Friday, at which time Seccretaries|™Maintained-there were no defecttions.| strike, nor the reasons mor causes|, 50 TECONE Mad Secretaries Glass, Houston and WIil- | . unce and Duniels are expected to at-| There Is much interest here in the therefor at this time. The comimittce]yiona) T cinoramente Asduclone o amendment. may be reached Wednes- | brings face to face with the fact Chairman Murdock and W rend and to advise concerning the re- | 3¢tien to i dee indust bas- mot: as "t empletads thel Siovtam > t Although Brazil 'has not yet ratified | day, others. are mot so optimistic. we cannot afford to turn over Shapn = conference ‘which refumes its sessions| vestigation. 1 think it permissible mi Wi RS T o e Ll i i ‘Sepator Norris, . who. had occupied|tuns to the heathen country of Japas The meeting had be | royal Irish constabulary broke up a|continue and: although some- of ~ the | treaty and not protest azainst a n -~ ot Che ntovna. | mecting of Sinn Feiners at Bailinasioe. | laders think a.vote on the Shantung | tion that carrics on such work of federal lease of surplus ioodstuffs still held | s v made by deleg: S Vs > s Bifuctor General, siimes, Asmmant | BE the millcoes dopastants of "thg | Washington tomorrow. on abor | suy: however, that the committee re-|made by delcgates of the various lp- |the German poace Ttreaty, 'she haw|, Sepator Norris who had occupled |tuns o the heatnen couniry of Jap: y General Ames. ' Assistant|government. _Secretary. Baker today|Dropopition.to arbitrate.the, differenc ] turned from the Pittsburgh district|{n podn” ferie pending respehing. ot o <% i hthing. apeech. concluded today af- |or religious organization but may r es existing in the steel strike a Strongly in favor of some 41" | their ‘case by the National Adjustmient | Accarding to representatives in|ter again.assailing the accuracy of |1ips be sealed with eternal silenc the Treasury Lefngwell, | cancelled instructions for the distribu- : ‘ gz, assistant to Judge|tion of sugar held by the army, on T e e oy e pend- (zf_s_;m}r‘xa:;l'ihuu‘m tor a long while|commission. ~Mr. O'Connor, who re- |France, of the department Of the in-|statements made by President Wilson fore I give official approval of an a \mes were present. learning that the supply was availa- e peated tonight his charges that the | terior, conditions there are approach-|in his western addresses and declar- [to stamp out the religion o esu Labor Teaders handling the strike|that congress must do what it couldJeqicH tonlgnt his lmn‘l"d L A ety SE TDAE efter the Tresident. Bad vacs | Christ and put.paganism in its stead he progress made | ble for only two and one-half months After a review of have always been in favor of arbitra-|to help stimulate Americanism. That -y C] '3 which was said to be very [in advance. X5 ; o, . Y o which we|Y. W., made a supreme effort to gain knowledged he was wrong he had gone| Chairman Lodge of the foreix ing. dering that none of | Planning (o take the public into hiz 1ion ‘a8d they exprested the Opinion|is a common‘sround upon WRICH We|controi of the meeting but He was| A report received at El Pass, Tex.|on mis-atating the facts about Shan. | tions committee planned to speak dur- rws Te f congrese’ IR tnilihce. cEREEINE arFon akdingtiSES, S St for all. When you find that in all|Pooed and hissed and it was only after | announced an attempt was made by|tung. Senator Borah also declared Mr.|ing the day on the Shantung amend- nlac 3 the | the cost of livins. Attorney Genmeral|©f he Bitioburgh strike district was| of thess mills mot over ffty per cent.|three attempts by Hugh Fravne and |rebels to destroy a train bearing Pres< | Wilson had been mistaken in his|ment but ke decided not to' do 5o be P - siarted. Officiale | latter part of this month. Tt was sald | SN ere B e e North | thess “Suil Wistricts ‘to publioh. orders| When it was evident that the men| Western Union Telegraph Co. and|in Shantung were acquired. " | Lodse, provably wil speaic ‘omorras ined to That hey A I e ane ror eontevenis Jour | Clairton. . The troopers had Qifficulty | in all Kinds of languages, it is time|Would not listen to a proposition of | Commercial Cable Co. announced tele-| - Quoting from the reports of mis-[and the leaders hope also to mak mind. but it is known thai Atlorney Iney to Albany for ~conference with |Cl Clearing the streets of crowds af| for the Amercan people represented by réturning to work, directors of the|graphic communication with Lithuania | sionaries in regard’ to conditions in|some progress in the reading of ih eneral Palmer is prepared to pro- w York state officials. Tieh . who . collpTegiten’ neay the maet-| the Americap ‘congress teigive = de- melf‘ungfahlr.flnedlthr-irdm;:ntioncs of | was interrupted. Korea, Senator Norris declared it was | treaty text. - - -y calling for votes. Instead. r. O'Con- —_— Y ing place, but no arrests were made.. | termined copsideration to some plan of 5 e : PPOSED T RVENTION Davig Patterson, an organizer, had |affording these foreign citizens an op-|10r asked all those who were opposed | Prime Minister Paderewski, of the : s SOMB SQUAD GUARDING o ED TO INTE e eI TaE poaat ta Al ABUmG| portuniey 0 Teavn: Whet the instiuag o e T - to stand up. The en- | Polish Republic, who went to Landoh|SOLUTIONS SUGGESTED FOR IX MORE ARRIVALS OF tire audience arose. He then asked|for a consultation with Lloyd George, THE ARMENIAN QUESTION WESTBOUND AIR RACERS IN THE STEEL STRIKE|jonea barn. When he appeared the| tions of America stand for and to b NEW YORK COURT OFFICIALS ] B all those “who are loyal to_the U. S.|returned to Warsaw. Sergeant commanding. the State troop- | come Americanized. We saw some|all, New York Oci 13—Hembers of the Washington, Oct. 13— Labors res-| ¥ i cntea the meeting, declaring| vouns fellows who had only a smat-[A.° o glve three cheers. hese the e Silvas, Asiatic Turkey, Sunday, Sept.| San Francisco, Oct. 13.—Six west - olution proposing intervention In tne| o BISCSHIed, (hey MECUng: SO IONNE of our tongue who impressed us|men gave with : ady MacKenzie, the woman hunt- |21 (By Couries—By The Associated|bound contestants in the tr rm : Several speakers who preceded Mr.|ress, is heading an expedition to ex-| Press.)--A variety of solutions for the| tinental air race arrived here (oda steel strike will come before the Na- i ilding was | as. spiendid material out of which to| | the state fire laws as the building Sl O’Connor were jeered. Then came the|plore the Tana river, East Africa.. Bik| Armenian 'questions ~have been sug-|in the wake of Lieutenant B. W. Ma -~ ional -Industrial Conference. without = e make American citizens. 2 e T \iesanger 1 Roric and Detective Ser- | recommendation from the central com-|Uneafe for assemblage. ~The strifers) manc MOLreed SUCCRS nding before|cry “Put on T. V. next Zame and snakes ‘are plentiful. Zested along the route taken by the|nard, who reached this c 3~ cting head mittee, as the first order of business| ;s i 1ola the meeting. the committee. of which I have the| When Mr. DBDMA ERrons g ha e Harberd Mission. Americans who have| They were Captain H. C ‘ne th temorrow. it was learned authorita- ) "o 2% Siroopers were clearing the| honor to be chairman, dealing with|met with shouts of “Thréw him out! In the wreck of an unnamed British | long lived in Turkey disagree as to the| Lieutenant Alexander Pearsc | tively tonight. Straets Shct wcas Tired from the hill.| this question. The committee mects|Supporteq by the presiding officer, he|ship on the Norwegian coast 2,000 lives | feasibllity of Armenian indenendence. | Captain J. . Donaidson. Ticaiens -5 The committee devoted only a small | Stheets & shet was e week to take them up and T|Was time and again howled down. Fi- | were lost, according to reports receiv-| The Rev. Henry Riggs, in charge of| Earl Manzelman, Captain Harry Smith portion of an all day session to con-|SIqG No B¢ WEB ML 4 o large] earnestly hope that one or both of|mally. he was able to make himself|ed at Archangel from Helsingfors. the American mission colege at Khar- | and Licutenant L. S. Webster, who ar- | sideration of the arbitration resolu-; e D et el ot Tt At o1 ¢ may be -eported out of the com- |heard, althpugh interrupted frequent- ; = said: rived in the order given. Five othe been plac- | tion. Owing to the opposition of a|number of etc and may be passed by wor-|1y. “Riding the tail” of racing airplanes ‘Until six months ago I believed in| contestants—Lieutenant T. F. Bower churches Mmajerity of the five members of the S T meectings of strikers were held| gress before adjournment. . There is| Iirst he denied charges that he had|while landing will be prohibited if rec- | n independent Armenia, but now pos- | Lieutenant C. B. Newman, Lieuten: n. - h lled the longshoremen I. W..W.'s but | ommendati h v § ing! an- | Sheridan, Lieuté Col el M A itRGup © hitirfevence. | N0 great question than thar of|cal ndations to the war department | itively .not. 1 regard a single man , Lieufénant clone | Bt ernoam troopars searen. | Americanizing this nation: of ours. |reiterated that the walkout had Been|by Lieut. A. B. Pitt are carried out. | date for the former empire as best, in| Reynolds and Lieutenant ¥. C. Ne - & number of houses for fire arms] “Many of those who cammot speakcaused by . W. W. agitators. He re. which the Armenians by native intelli- | son, rested tonight within a da 5 our language are yearning to know itjminded the men that they had agreed| A foreign equipment finance corpor- | gence may forge ahead. If a new Ar-|flight from their western destinatio employers group in the committee a avorabie report could nbt be obtai cd and the resolution will follow the other possible course open—back to_the main body of the conference. |but found nome. and want ‘the opportunity learn o abide by the decision of the NaJlation, with a capitalization of $100,-|menia were formed," there would re-| Captain Drayton, who ended <lo, which, signed _ Members of the conference express-| o0 gengo oo S s | ubout our instiiutions. Most of them|tional Adjustment Commission and}000,000, was formed to provide credits|main the insoluble race problem with|first half of his fiight at 1.45 p. m ed the opinion tonight that the pro- Yave subscribed for Liberty honds. but!appealed to them to live up to théir|for countries in need of equipment. the Turks, who are in the majority.|left Reno, Nev., at 7.40 this morning archistic Federated of NXew York” is to be the most rad- posal will meet the same fate at the FOR THREE YEAR OLD BOY | | " (" (hey know anything about|word and return to work. promising Also, it would be matural for the Ar-|Lieutenant Webster, Lieutenant pe: hands o fthe conference tomorrow. A e American in-Ututions when they can-|reopening of the case December 1. HiS{ Martin Nordegg, a Canadian financ- | menians to attempt vengeance for 0ld|son and Captain Donaldson flew fr trong majority of the employers'| Hammontom. N. I, Oct. 13.—Appeals | JoR€TUSen W L ISU A0S NS o8 Wejanswer was a_crv of derision from alllier with headquarters. in New ere | wrongsr Salduro, Utah, where they rested over found here, ETOUP is Kilown (o oppose intervention| to the governor ‘of ‘Pemnsyivania and | 07,00 Teach s one language rition |Parts of the hall. left Berlin, heralded as the first allied | There is every evidence of tranquil-| Sunday. dividuals, De. in the strike and action can be taken| New Jersey and lo the maqors of | overnight but that eventually shoald| After the meeting. adjourned. the ! financier (o propose a loan to Gormany. | iLy at Silvas and Slsewnere along the| _Lieutenant Pearson reached Presid o ihe molice im ORIy with the approval of each of thelmany ecitics in these state were made | pUECH B W (G SIRL G0 i e bsquare outside Cooper Union became a . route af the American mission. Those| flying field at 2.25 p. m. and Capta A three groups, voiing separately. Del-|bv local authorities today for aid in |yt W BYe i winl be worth while|sea of surging humanity. It was a| Eirse inter rred consider that th nation- | Donaldson at 2.49:07 p. m. Lieuier th B 11 ind | ibousands ...tes” entertained bul little doubt|the search for - three year old Billy for there is nationa] solidarity in :13|good natured crowd, however, and the 1914 was held in| !1 ts_headed “by Mustapha Kemal|ant Webster was the last of the arriv- Slo attemnied to march up s $ ’ ‘ o . n enue last week heut P | that more than haif of the puplic rep-| Dansey. wko disappenred Yrom his | 00, of a _:ai‘cn. speaking iha « police had no_difficulty in dispersing|ceneva under jresider Toord | Pasha_will seek friemdly foreigm sup-|als, having . been delayed five i e e R2uL 2 Der” resentatives .will vote for the ‘resolu+|home here last Wedneday. 7 i,_,—,g:.m Tight and a h: m1 the-men. ™ o n Weardale. Ten couniries wevs Tépre-| Hort, blieving that, otnerwise, Turkey|hours near Battle Mountain, where h pesr Which the de. | UoM. but pointed out that in the em-| At first it Was believed the child ““’|nnonle in this countr: At the sight of the first burly long- | o ioq ™" . would . be partitioned among France, | ran into a fence in landing. He a charzed with eriminal DOYErS' group only ihe agricutural|zotten lost in the woods or nearby! gz age cannont speak, read. or write|shoremen who burst through the door ‘ ¢ | ftaly and Great -Britain. rived at 6.26:08 p. m. - prosecutor at the LePresentatives look with favor on the|cranberry bogs. but a search by sev- | h. American languaze. To the ror-|the crowd outside yelled American .steamship Mount Hood| Nationalists express the belef. that| Captain Smith, who left Green riv- e S aainn | arbitration plan. cral hundred nersons of virtually every | rantion of that condition wvory citi-| “Are we going back? o was destroyed by an explosion of an | the British are seeking the remnants|er, Wyoming, this morning, coverec 3 R foot of ground within a radius of five { zor' should resolve to do his parc. “We're going to stay out” was the| il mnk during a fire in Montivideo |of the Turkish empire, having previ-| the greatest distance of tod a for everv| RED LITERATURE BEING miles has dispelled this theory. It —_— answer. i » [ Darbor. The crew escaped without in- | Ously acquired ~Egypt, Arabia and]rivals. He reached here at 5.42:58 1 5 s now feared the Jittie fellow was kid- { GROWTH OF NATIONALIST “Yes. -and we're going to - stick” | {7520 Mesopotamia. m. Lieutenant Manzelman, who 53, flew from Salt Lak CIRCULATED AT GARY, IND. i{napped and- is beinz held for ransom. E EY |shouted the crowd. § arrived at 4.3 Gary. Ind. Oet. 15.—Pamphlets an- | ne of a number of supposed clues il B0 iy The result of * tonights meeting| judicial case against seven persons| GENERAL GOLTZ HAS City. | nouncing a plan to wrest control of | being run down leads to Atlanti= City, | ,(hens. Oct 13 (Havas).—A despatch |leaves New York facing the prospect|, ogsicq” quring o radical demonsten. TRANSFERRED HIS COMMAND AMERICAN FLYING CLUB DINES AIR DERBY AVIATORS| this city . from the federal troops were | Where it was reported & hoy answering i ¢ lom ‘Constantinople savs that Rrous: |of a curtailed food ‘stpoly.. for in ad- | gUnSied Quiing o radical demenstra- e CAPTAIN AND MATE DEAD; scatiered throughout - the ~downtown | i description of the missing child | 2%, "oy Gient canital ef the Turkish |dition to nearly 50.000 longshoremen, | /o0 & (oW " OK 0 Baltic, . Oct.. 13—General Von Der SCHOONER ABANDONE. Who!Gistrict this afternoon.’ The bulletins | 24d heen seen with two men. appar- |55, (R AnC1n0 SaniRe BT LU0 TUDECE | forry” hoat workers and tughoat men | Lo it S S b S S T e M S B o ihe|callea on the workers to rise against | Cltiy Strangers to him. A detective | SIS SUL O Uihered (o | tying up freight movement, the walk- in’ the Baltic region to General Von| Boston, Oct. 13—The death of the werking on the case left for ihat city : o .00 teamsters, chauffeurs and x 3 % 2 k o lav. - Amother ciue Is belng mmveeti |Lhe Xationalist movement. Adriano- [out of 11000 jeameters, chauffuis a2d| Nerth American business circles in Bherhardt Sunday and is expected (o|captain and the mate of the B gaicd in Philadelhia. where a woman [Pl the moct important town 1n B | o fiway Ixpress Company to place an |BU2nos Aires are disappointed in the grrive In. Berlin very shortly, accord. |schooner Onato and the abandonme was seen to alizht from a New York :1OPeAn Tulkes nexl (8 CoRstantnop e | embargo ow all express packages en- | POStPonement of the proposed fast ing olsxsenu ial of the vessel at sea were reported in train with a boy resembling young |12S also thr tering and leaving New York. passenger and mail service to Brazil | here today. messages picked up at naval radi. Dasey. The child was crying and the o 2 and Argentina. oL T T et oty b n-v.ummuf today. hThP\ messages, which R & 2 4 H espa -lcame from " the American steame: > R R e The movement for the establishment 600 BOSTON INSURGENY | Representative Randall, California,|nOUnCes - that General 'Dupont, com- |Sarcoxie, indicated that the oibe . of a nationalist Turkish government. G -|announced he would Introduce a resar | mander of the Inter-Allied Mission in|members of the crew were taken of lution to have congress recognize the|Berlin, had received ~amemorandum|py the steamer last Thursday anc Mapnes, commanding here, issued a state- ment which follows: s is the most dangerous piece of ure that has ever come to my at- n. ‘Other Red pamp ts have been h h | vere but the subject matter has been | inZ scction of the city. started by Mustapha Kemal Pasha at + dinner ana theatre par- Nationalists. v Cow Smith. enant =, Oucens and Lieutenant b Worthinztan Major J. C. P.l - i i e The Dansey family came here fi " i — - . - . ally general in dire. £ s 1s 3 ' ere from | inor,| Boston, Oct. 13—Although the Bos . L, 21 aald S policer bRt e = Rochgater :nd";s‘flvflnhrow the federal troops in Gary s ‘l'-ea..xhreken‘ over her son's disap- | ORGS0 SO wemal after he|voted yesterday agaigst a strike,| °Fialize those killed. it s % e ) me| Sucoxle on her arrival in New Tuwk - ot arrival were: | o' is the most danzerous sttuaiion | PeATALCe and [t is feared she will mOt |y, extended his influence southward |about 600 union longshoremen struckl .o, Lyons, supervising boys | GErMAaN troops in the Baltic provinces| How the capiain and mate met : 5| We have had to deal with but it will be P o SUS- | ihrough Asia Minor and captured Ko- |today in the East Boston district. The | compulsory training in New York Gtty,|2nd Lithuania, and that General Von|death was not disclosed. The reques Queens 12.30:30 | Geule with aceordingly | Bovary were ooraa Sy (hild's £C; |nieh, felf himself strons enough to is- | walkout was in protest againsi thelSOMPUISOrY training in Ne “olleges ang| Eperhardt had been appointed to re-|for the police boat led to a sug: 93 p. m. R e R covery were offered in all the churches to the Turkish cab- |national adjustment _ commission’s| 3¢ 5 Von Der Goltz and take charke g Retcagipstialler L cemmanaing| oopenaTION THE SOLUTION | oF(he, town Tesicray ! o Thit “To “resign. which. brousht ‘about |award Of five cents and ten cemts an | Lniversities will beTorced'(o'train boya | BISES VO ST, G017 A, e ATy | thar they mignt nave beep il OF THE LABOR PROBLEM | bers vhtornd sE-c5ating | 14000 have line fall of the existing ministry. Al-|hour wage increase for different = years troops. et cansad S ats adouimont. of; the pon offered for news of his’ where- | 5ugh the authorities at Constanti- | classes of work. The Boston . long-| s g schooner. The position where the i B o (RPN oo UM s nople succeeded in forming a mew |shoremen had asked for a flat! Tate of nu?.:;:ff ofh;::':," mmu;{ l‘;lo-mmu a| REASSURING REPORT OF crew was taken off was given as la e e t;r;':‘:r:;rlzrofi“t{fl;arzl‘g;sm‘i\n:c Nocated WORLD COTTON CONFERENCE | movement, which has now swept along | A member of the district council|Of the large war debts, according to Washington, Oct. 13.—President Wil- [N, F. 2 B cared to make the re-|form of government from committing| New Orl - the railroad from Konieh as far as|tonight said that he believed _the|Chairman Good, of the appropriations|son's condition was described as| 'The Onato, a 105 ton schooner, ar t=p. accordinz to the rules gov-|suicide by Nicholas Murray Butler | the wooa ons: Oct 13—Delegates to!proussa, one® of the most important |strike would not last long. The faen |and special budget committees. “about the same” in a bulletin issued !rived at Oporto, Portugal. on Augud i 1 ¥ ;|the World Cotton Conference at theltowns in Asin Minor. with a popula- | who struck number about one-third Fonight /by Ban:-Admiral Grayson, his |55 from Durin. N. F, It is supposel s sala to have iaken the | o address tomanEoon “the vem Sy | Irst general session here foday per- |1 M pout 140,000, ' The town “is [of the umion’ Iongshoremen at. this| Steamer Persia, bound for the Far|lomiSht bY Rear Admiral Grayson, 3 [ihat cre e s ratiorine s in ot Toblem ™ before: the Institute of Arcs| il @ Lemporary organization with | accessible from Constantinople | port. < East with a_cargo of 30,000 rifles, 10, | Dr. Grayson in an informal conference | foundiand port : 3 3 William B. Thompson, of New or- 288y FOreEe VG, X0 cm munications of 000,000 cartridges, 20 mountain guns|Wwith newspaper men that a gradual al- Soi f the ni ity. P i ;- SITUATION IN BOLSHEVIST e isted ine Corapiem Sa this: |1S3NS as president. The temporary or- |fhc Tarkish caplial with the gveater|STEAMER HATCHIE TOWED and two heavy guns for troops operat. | though slight improvement was being | COMMITTEE TO DRAFT “Must the American form of govern- |c, s sl harge “of thelpgre of — a Minor. . INTO HAMPTON ROADS |ins against the Bolsheviki was brought | noted in the president’s condition daily. IEF sILL RUSSIA CROWING GRAVE | ot comimft wulcils in_ order to give | ooy, ont Thursiay, when blans [P re(he Spnealiof Mustapha Kemal to o to Fiume by the mutinous crew of the| The daily changes’in the president's Lol L o . Oct. 15— (Russian |10 _industry better and more .satisfac- | zanization. . o - DO MANAL OF- |eond ‘delegares to n mationalist cof | Norfolk, Va.. Oct. 13—The United | ship. condition. Dr. Grayson said tonight, | wogpinoioo oot o clegraphic Agency)—A . bolshevist | tOFY organization?” Sir A. Herbert Dixon. of Manches- | Eress Whith s (0, ¢t 10 B O i “the | States SHipping Board steamer Hat- Jhlle encouraging were slight and mittes representing each ~sectio Jess despatch picked up by the i The question. he added. answered | (er, head of the British delegation, de. | CTRent for Murkey, e th chie. which sent’out a_.call for help | SESSION OF ASSOCIATION could not always be ‘clearly indicated | 27T ¥ would be appointed “t gence office of the Siberian army |ltself for “if ine American form of | dured in an address in response. i |SUPCTVISOn and control of e Do:|Saturday atter her ' turbines had OF RAILWAY EXECUTIVES|n,2 formal brief bulletin. For this | 87,5 Cidicry’ “relier 1ill, under - t the situation in bolshevist | Sovernment commits suicide it will|welcoming speeches, that cotton man- [S1e N fhat great fortress town has|Durned out passed into Hampton {2?..‘“.';.5”.3;2?.’;.’3“523"1h'l"f;i‘;i! cus- | Fesolution introduced today by Repre - Okiaho today and has docked at T e vxenivod” oe'Cier |ufacturing conditions in England were |3 deq to disown the Constantinople | Roas ew York. Oct. 13.—The statebnent | jetin with &y oFal statement of tne Lo |Sentative Ferris, democra never has been so grave as it ws for repairs. . 4 ; 3 Newvort : 3 < ai r.csent: that nmever before has |indusiry is better organized or not|heing gradually brought toward nor- 2 tion, the latter apparently | ShDC = of Director General of Railroads Hin Bps Commenting on the resolution ine front been so near Moscow: Chaos will bave come again. mal and that the cpportunity present- S Comtrols only & very limited vart i Tue souigie. men (e g g {hat the railroad administration S (o & conditon. resentative Terris said " the Aonde i armice are moving towata "ire | RIDER HAGGARD DWELLS ON Sions between growers and manufac | Sroncd i onstantinoie and the Bos: | which had been sent to her aid. First| jisiments in freight rates to. emime | CONONEL E. M. HOUSE Is T o vhe interior depsrtment, was neart of bolshevist Russia from all DANGERS OF RACE SUICIDE |turers would be of great benefit. Chn Epors wers ihat the Steammsc, %8s inc . rosds 0 become: sclr-sbkatahe RESTING COMFORTABLY |peither acceptable to congress mor to directions. It savs the bolshevist or- . Giorgio Mylius, of Italy, reported the e afire. e e " | when 1cturned to private management, i - . Ydischarged soldiers, adding the new sanizations are dieintegrating, and | Londor, Oct. 13— Sir Rider Haggard, | work of reconstruction in Italy now | UNSEATING OF REPRENTATIVE _|cisco to an Ifalian port. occupied the attention of the Assoct- | proiGor rOrK. Oct. '13.—Colonel E. M.|committee “could get some new bloed that even in Petrograd there are at|giving evidence before the Nationai|in full activity. Labor difficuities. he FITZGERALD RECOMMENDED | L0 | qoiommimcmn e oo ation of Railway Executives at o mocy | House, confidential adviser to Presi- | ommmia s, cComd Be o T policy. present onlv 9,000 members of the bol- | Birthrate Commission, dwelt on the |said, had been overcome and mills are ing here this afternoon. According to |Gcnt Wilson. who returned yesterday Chevist party. dangers of articially ' keeping down | ez operated to capacity. Wasningion, Gt 13Formal re- | AMERICAN AVIATORS IN' MEXICO (ii clitman, Thomas Do Witt Cusios | (o Faris atter Kaving heen (aicin 11| peasaNTS AND TROOPS 2 no denite action was taken re Nogales, Ariz. Oct. 13.—Joseph Al-| v “Hines' suggestion that the reass |2 da¥ in bed, acco 3 len Richards. the American railroad|bring the matter before the Interstate | LOPIENt bY his son-in-law, Gordon Au- ng to a statement IN CONFLICT IN SICILY The acting minister of foreign af- | births, which is now widespread in| Iritz Jenny, of Switzerfand, devoted | commendation that Representative fairs received a representative of the | every western nation, he said, except [his address to an expression of the|JoRn PR IiO0 01 of Massachusetts, Armenian republic. to whom he pro- | perhaps Russia and Germany. gratitude of the people of the Alpine e Mostar: e Duted " : g Dosed the utmost assistance of the AT | - He was of the opinion tht unless a | Fepublic. to the URited States fof Supc i awat in the house was pre- {man who claimed to have located the | Cominerce: Gommissar ' ehi Srotate | chiniose. 3 Parls, Oct. 13—(Hay Newspa Russian government in meeting the | startling change occurred the western [plying food and raw material during |gented today by an elections commn_ibodxes of Licutenants Waterhouse and | cion will be resumed at another ses. | MF:: Auchinloss issucd the following [par despatches from Rome state (he A races within the next two centuries|the Wwar. “The shipments from the| (e, headed by Representative Goodall j Connolly, American aviators 108t In|sion tomorrow. bulletin signcd by Dr. Albert R. Lamb: |about thirty persons have bee 1 = would be submerged beneath a great |United States saved us” he concluded. | £, fiehded BY RERTSSCES Ve, RNEey | Mexico, Tett here today far San Diego, kgt : “Colonel House is cohsiderably bet- |in encounters between armed peasants ALLIED CRUISERS AIDING new influx from the teeming myriads | Sleven divisions of the conference |(,\' beter iv. Tague. former represent- | Cal, ACting on instructigns from the | o\ (i ol ter today, although still weak from an |and troops in Sicily. There were man IN DEFENSE OF RIGA|©f the east. held meetings today and elec'éd per-| Jiile’ be seated, while Representative |War ent to accompany an ext || \TS TO SEARCH attack of! rénal coli¢, which he experi- | wounded. The unrest among the peds Sir Rider doubted the effectivences |manent chairmen’ The = chairmen | Iuis' repupiican, Massachusetis, pro- |Pedition from San Diogo to Las Ant FOR BALLOONIST DAMMANN fenced shortly after icaving Faira and |ants s increasing and bands of «rmo c hagen ied , crutadss ] of & ling to the conscience of the |formed the general committee whicl ] - : ction be ordered | mas . Mexico, - 3 r uring the s o roa 5 oughout the R W T Smpire to Stop, this race suicide, but | sclecied the temporary oMcers. e O P Mot “men ave dewn. |ETaves of the American aviators. The| ‘Washington, Oct. 13.—Two Eagle |vovage. His temperature and pulse | bural districte. rains: Girman atracke which for fioe|thought that the state might stamp e catecting the election of last | expedition probably will leavé. boats stationed on the Great Lakes fare normal — I5ns have bern imeeasantion o vl ont diseases which are seriously af- | BROUGHT FROM MEXICO o Sond Chotise leaders: tonight.| Diego tomorrow. e (B been ondered by the vy gepart- | O et DEMAND FOR EXPULSION OF barn, according o a communication | °CUNE the race, and also subsidize ON CHARGE OF FORGERY |agreed (hat committee reports should | i I . Jment to proceed to Tovermors: Gntario, € RK O B O ssued by the Lettish foreign office | Otherhood Tork. Ot T3.Jacob Luban, | BC called before the house next Satur- BOSTON :I‘ALIANJ v’:’ e e o Pam- OF, ACTORS DURING WAR - s _Riga i mba New York, Oct. I3.—Jacob Luban, f on. NNUNZIO. | Foid - : New York, Oct. 13—Expulsion _of e o Ee is being bombarded by | pREDICTS CHANGE IN GREAT wanted on & charge of forgery. was| o ar Fiteseraiae plurality of 238 on g it IUNE ho have been missing for several| New York, Oct. 18.—General Persh-| the Gentrl Fedcraied Unton of New . BRITAIN’S NAVAL POLICY | brought here today by detectives on|the face of returns was reduced o ten| Boston. Oet. 13— Italian _residents | 92¥5- eir balloon was found in [ing praised the work of actors in en-| York from the American Federsiion of The communication fellows: Lake Huron some days ago. after they | tertaining soldiers during the war in a | Labe ympathy an the steamship Morro Castle from Tam-| by the committee canvass of 1,300|cabled $3,000-today to Gabriele.d’'An- unless ist “For five dar= the Lettish e ; ¥ o fore Riga hars been cnpmped 1o nens.| London, Oet. 13 —The pelitical corre- | Pico, Mexico, Where he was arrested.| contested naliots. and. (e diseard of | cemictn 1o Duy fony o) Crnricte or.nis | Pacl From et T othe recent endurance |letter o Daniel %rohman, president | support” be withdrawn immer ing off stubborn German attacka. spondent of the Evening News says|Luban, who is charged with having|the votes case In three precincts of |soldiers in’ Fiume. ~The Italiafis met| c{rom St Louls = of the Actors’ Fund -of ‘America. madé | fro mthe “outlawed” pressmen and “The Germans ar bombarding the|there probably will be a great change | forsed three checks. totalling $1.000 | the Iifih ward of Boston on the |io celebrate Columbus day. 3 Instrocten” to Geoagle boats have been gy (oday. “1 thoroughly appreciate | press feeders' unions, was demanded unfortified town of Riga. Crulsers be-| !N Great Britain's naval policy with ; became widelv known in the case of|zround that fully one third were fraud- | Speakers attacked President® Wilson ot e e S L Lake i the most 'wonderful work of the actors’|in a letter sent to Dresident Samue longing {0 the allied powers are par.|the advent of Vive Admiral Sir Rom- | Herman Rosenthal, a gambler whol {icnt wag held by the committee ma- |ana declared that he had forsaien nis| FLuron rious ielands tn tho hope | it payuring the war.” wrote Gen- | Gompers of the American Federatio ticipating in the defense. dyn Wemyss, who resigned last week. ' Was killed by gunmen, and the trial of | jority to give Mr. Tague the election |fourteen points in connection with the S e the. e ‘.}.’; hope |eral Pershing. “particularly in cheer- ! of Labor by heads of three rnas “The Germans repeatedly have been| Vice Admiral Beatty's friends, says|vvsepu Cohen for the murder of Bar-|hv 725 votes. Colonization of voters, |settlement of fie Fiume controversy. . v i ’"f’ iy men. © ac- |ing our soldiers in France. It was an| tional unions affected by (he unab- repuised in attemps to force the Du-| the correspondent, declare that he be- | nett Baff, a wealthy poultry dealer. ‘ege} registration and fraud were the L et = A o I eponza to @ re-|important service that men of our ar- | thorized printing (rades ike here o g = ) lieves the future warship will be an e rreurds given by the committee for | AUSTRIAN FACTIONS AGREE T o C o T wqammann. af St. Mmies will always remember.” The ac- | —— — oil-griven mubmersible battle oruis- | PRESIDENT POINCARE HAS its action. ON ‘NEW CONSTITUTION | U™ ather of Captaln Dammann. tors' national gnemorial day will be! THREE STEEL PLANTS IN OBITUARY. i and the admiralty’s plans may be SIGNED PEACE TREATY. - e : X gt S otnban b, | CHICAGO DISTRICT REOPENED b (g shaped in accordance with this beliet. — LETTS HAVE OCCUPIED Vienna, Saturday, Oct. 11.—Chancel. | S1X SKELETONS WERE - Ll L B _Rev. am D. Mossman. The dreadnought will not be alto- | _Paris, Tuesday, Oct. 14. (Havas)— THE SUBURBS OF RIGA [Jor Tiemner todas annaiicid that um FOUND JN A TRUNK |SITUATION AT RIGA e e o et AT T Ny Haven Conn, Oct. 13 —Rev.|gether eliminated, but it will be con- [The Journal Official announces this agreendnt han been reacifti belwsen — 3 HALTS SUPPLY SHIP ,‘r\”,",‘fm y that three steel plants.in K‘!l‘!’am D. Mae-:k“;i of l(lm_cm. died | sidered of secondary importance. morning the signing by President| Copenhagen, Oct. 13. — The Laits|the coalition parifes regarding the new| Cumberland, Md., Oct. 13—The ‘find- : o~ the Chicago district reopened. They !f Hme n ad son tonight, -x_e‘_fl — Poincare of the document ratifying|have recrossed the Duma river in the|constitution for stria. Phe German,ing of a trunk, of the type used by| London, Oct. 13—The steamer Lake| were the Wiscon teel Company, . He was a graduate of Yale, 1875, Danbury.—Rey. E. Z. Ellis, who has|the peace treaty with Germany and | direction of Mitau and occupied the parts of West ungary. which are | emigrants from southern Europe, con- | Fray, belonging, to the United States| where 800 men wer a1 to BEve which' Jittle | Bhipping board = and carrying rolief | {nrned: the Interet Steel and Iron and a veteran of the Civil war. served the Danbury Advent church for|other acts signed at Versailles June | suburbs of Riga on the lefi Link of 'ddded to Austria by 1he St. Germain | taining six skeletons on many vears he conducted the City|twenty-eight years and ten months, |2% wh are 10 be deposited in the| the river according to a tele Ve . S a e! 3 E i « river aceord < clegram |t nnve status” of | flesh_remained. on o city dump today |supplies to Riga. has been ordered | Company. 200 reported e e Mission here and was known as Tyas, resently re-elecied pastor for tne|foreign office in accordance with ihe | the Lettish Pross Burcan from Wen- an autonemgus land in the.new repubs |has ~myetified the authoriBes. AN | hot 1o proceed Turther nniil the | Gompany, 200 reported returned and ‘riend of the wnfortunatc, He re- | thirtieth ierm by practically a unani-!fina cliuses of the peace ° treaty,|den, Livonia, 50 miles northeast of A i et dhaulers disavow knowledge of taking |tion at Riza cléars. The steamer has _was sid 10 hive resumed wilh a 56 ired five vears a- mous vote. thereby cnding the state of war- Riga. sized as a federal state, “ the trunk there. . 2 put Into Hango, Finland. : “per- cent. force. -