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VOL. LXII—NO. 235 POPULATION 29,685 > NORWICH, CONN, TUESDAY, SEPTEMB ER 14, 1920 Pulleti TEN PAGES—80 COLUMNS REPUBLICAN PLURALITY IN MAINE STATE FLECTION EXCEEDS PARTY PREDICTIONS Large Majority of Women Voted the Republican Ticket—Re- turn From 557 Precincts Out of 632 in the State: Give Vote For Governor: Parkhurst, Rep., 124,966; Mcln- tyre, Dem., 64,296, Giving a Republican Plurality of Over 60,000—Gain in Ballots With Women Voting Was Approximately 46,000 For Republicans,; About 1,500 For Democrats. of radicalism was advocated here today|measures in the- senate. & Me. Sept. 13.—Frederic H. out of 632 in the state (from 453 cities | at the opening of the 22nd National En-| Col. Ullman, a member of the repubs PR was elocted gov-|and towns out of 519) for governor,| campment of the United States Spanish|can state central committee and chair- Fa . ey |BIve: War Veterans. man of the men’s republican committee ermor of Maine today by a phurality 5 m) L. 124,966 William Jones of New York, command-|of Connecticut for ratification of the hour promised 1o be the| Melntire (D.) ............ 64296 |er-in-chief of the organization, declared|federal suffrage amendment, had w story of the +W'e. HiS| Thes, same precincts in 1916 gave: | ihe government sould shpare no expense|ten to Senator Brandeges asking him e i Me- | Milliken (R) ..c..oeeeeneee 74979 in “wiping ‘out these doctrines that arelto give his views as to action en the pproxim half as| Curtis (D) ... sooooo. 62453 | designed to disrupt the very things upon|suffrage question. Mr. Parkhurst The republicans’ strength = was uni-|whicp this government was founded.”| In the letter Senator Brandegee says jeans carricd four con- fyrm throughout the night. Several off He asserted that ex-service men, when| “In view of the fact that the validity stricts arge majorities. |1, cities Which showed ~ small ~demo-|proved sufficiently qualified, should be|of the ratification of the amendent. by ressmen Wallace 1. cratic pluralities In 1916 returned large | given preference when vacancies in the|the state of Tennessce has heen enention. A rs and Ira C.|jluralities for Parkhurst 1oday. ' In|federal civil service are being filled A ands it e TR e - ting Carroll L. Beedy of {many others, which went repubdican | Reports submitted recommended that] 2. 2 Ve cutire first district where Con-ifiur years ago, the plurality for ~that!the pay of army and naval officers aud| o roon throughout the country may on odall was mot Atcket was greatly increased this)year.|of enlisted men be increased, and that| p, Teeriied pa L ¥ . A o 4 d he fact tha - They also ob- Congresisonal Returns, army” officers be selecfed from the ranke. Lizin %o be ratified oy mmecs (han oo o - oy L. Wardell|_Portiand, Me. Sept. 13—Retims trom| They also susgested that the 230 an-|quired mumber of states a6 soon. s their = A 75 precincts out of 91 in the first dis-|Nual income provision in the widows' and iegigiatyres assemble, I earnestly ho A audito 1737 orphans’ bill be eliminated, “that widows | Jaape - the mew factor of t-ict give for congress: Fonsne Siminated, 2 that the legislature of Connecticut will mt. In all| Breedy (R): voeesosdocssss (19,027 |Of Service men be given a monthly. pen-fp,oooey ratite the amendment. e was e L | Beennin) 33503 |slon of $30 and that dependent chilareng PP TAUEY the smendment oooiea *frst apportunity to vote| In the Second district 14 Oout of 145 |be Eiven a “proportionate increase. shall have the right to vote. I am con- - show|precincts ive 1300 | Asevar ENcAMEEE T ox Uinced, therefore, that his righ should yof them vote hite teeeneneeene. 3439 AL K iih e made unquesionable by the action of The vote for| Price 1[;\] g o gres .éu\“u(“f"" VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS|aq great a number of states as is pos- from more than h 4 district, 102 223 e sible b o o o I B g ey Washington, Sept. 13.—Delegates from |Sible before the coming election, so that e | Fatere {R) +ieeeeiieri..... 19,581 | various sections of the country were in| WOMeR may participate in every respeet ou | Towle (O 8815 | attandance today at the opening sessions| " an equality with men can four years| Towle (D) ..... ste was less| In the Fourth district 128 out of 173 twenty-first annual encampment of = i S A I o R the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Included | OFFICIAL RETURNS FROM esidential year. | Hersey (R) .. 25,920 | in the day's programme were a recep- NEW HAMPSHIRE PRIMARILS o 1 7 election precincts | Brown (D) ... 10,047 |[tion to national officers and an adaress e i to the delemates by Colonel F. Warner| Concord, N. H, Sept. 13.—Official re- Karling, commander-in-chief of the or-!turns from the state primarics ot loce 5 ganization. Tuesday, 2nnounced tod ved tha % FAYOLLE TO ATTEND |1HOMAS ¥. WILSON SAYS 4 Tuesday, announced foday, showed that GENFRAL FAYOLLE TO A PACKERS' PROPITS ARE LOW |, A PAECa portraving Imporiant events| 56156 men and women soted in she. roc AMERICAN LEGION CONVENTION A s In the history of the Ugted States willi publican primaries and a fotal of 1105 i 38 % ed tonig e open air near the| declared their peof atal Mk aite| At City N. J., Sept. 13.—Ad-|yr 2Rk ! i ela heir preferences on the demo- £ 3 e ens Wa | dressing the. opening semon of the con. | |v2thinEton, momumont. ‘Tommor even | cratic tioket . . ther Frenen|here today Thomas E. Wilson of Chi-|p;iristic organizations participating. vote, the aggregate of votes in the pri- went the French cigo, president of the assoclation, said| PRl SEENEALONS parteinaling | maries for United States senator was re. | - ne convention of |t1at none of the “Big Five" packers re-|yfontraacon will be reproduced Friday|PuPlcan 19.200, democratic 5323. The . p n ¢ r-jexived as much as a cent and a half of| o "o PNo g for the entertainment of | CATOPAIEN for the republican primaries of ! . ; lyrofit on each dollar of sales made in| g, TN oA (OT the CRerAInIent Of| a5 week was spirited, with several keen » I being cAndErastell and favks, Mirplsaes|COBtests. In the democratis, primaries the - o Mr. Wilson made public the profits | Li% TEECROLE AOd A e | contests were considered only normal. B 2 and sales of eighty-one American cor- | "" 280 ATtllery Harages Wil # | The totals announced today followed et . v Torations. . He said o very closely the press figures. United “These eighty-one corporations, Wi s DR R States Senator George H. Moses of Con- nequiesce o an invested capital and surplus of about| OCTLAW RAILWAY STRIKE * |cord, in nis fight fcr:renomm:\lmnohy the 4 B i/five and two-thirds billions of dollars ENDS IN CHICAGO DISTRICT|republicans, polled the higheet mdirid d next | handled about $9.250,000.000 worth of " vote—33,885. His opponent, Huutley N lusiness during 1919 Which netted near-| Chicago, Sept. 13—Switchmen, yard-|Spauiding of Rocheston, receluen 18704 con 2117 $600,000,000 in profit men and enginemen in the Chicago dis-| " Tha vote for the republieay J o “Tho "combined buiness of the five | trict, who' walked out last March, re-|cor govern O 0l TiPUPlican nomination > 374 in Which the 1ackers was about three and one-haif | turned to wark taday, having voted to end | o7 EOYOTOr was: Albert O. Frown of £-neives fourth, twenty-sixcn (ilon dollars, with an aggregate met|theri strike. Restoration of eniority | o Chenter S4843: Windsor H. Goodnow Frentyselanth and thirts-second Ameri.|yrofit of a liftle more than $34.000.000. | rights asked by the men, was refused by | (p roon, 15.280; Arthur P. Morrill of twenty.els {The combined business of the other sev-|the railroad managers. Nrid B g Vol sxmects 5 smbark from |€niy-six corporations was about six bil-| Many men did not wait until the vote| Raymond B. Stevens of Landafr. in win. | Bre Veduastn outeide of his et Drofits of $555,000.000, as conpared | Terminal superiniondents were kept busy | UNiled States senator, was high man on . Sties. SLNIN b5. b Sy |with 334328471 for the 'five packers. |yesterday with applications from former the demoeratic: ticket ‘with 7,010. A. W. B o ihe noint of timidity, |One packer earmed only an eighth of a|employes. The number of men on strike|y00ne of Peterboro, who sought both the i rienis deseribine him as hav- cent ner dollar of sales, while the ave-|was estimated at 8,000. jsenaforial and gubernatorial nommation, |« e e ot & willage priest|TiEs of the five was less than a cent| Recently sluggings of strikebreakers|Teceived 2,154 and 3,009 votes, respective. - ol g By 0.83). have been reported to the poli d the|ly, the latter figure comparing with 6, than a ¢ vetera end of the strike, railroad officials said,|477. the vote by which ‘Charles E. Tilton | 2 3 EXTENSIVE AERO MAIL would mark the list of labor troubles|of Tilton won th FRANCE MUST HOLD LEFT B,YK OF RHIN Alsace 13, i to deiend the the war, said address here ed a Sept. Saturd: t France a promi and lightened char, but can be su it have foree v Broug! ed times ared The military lightened, but 3 ¢ at the present moment 0ld the n BtFtet and ™ neve obligation longer any the have TYPOTHFTAE DISCUSSED LABOR CONDITIONS AND WHITE 1o Se pr of t an orga ention America, fourth annual ¢ 1 Typothetae of tzation of master printers, which opened re today Delegates asserted the convention pro four hour week paper shorbage, Dointed out that the price of pap: " had more than 400 D in the last few years, and emph d that relief must be secuseds DROWNED ATTEMPTING TO the ety estions. Viscussing cks nereased RESCUE HER SISTER New York, Sept. 13—Eva Beattie, R O A B R, T TRAIN e e gonditions throuzh _remedill legislation | Scottish immigrant, today lost her places. Fares will be reduced somewhat | Were advocated in regolutions prepared B S aftempting to resoue trom | New York, Sept, 13—an alleged at. [ BR5 TR W S feher St | (0 fodltio, the ‘surf her younger sister, who had | tempt to wreck a Brooklyn Rapid|in. road will continue to have free| Propoments of these measures assert waded out beynd her depth while | Transit train on the Fullen street ele-| icket priviieges. The new rates go Into | ficiency is lessened under the. system ha thi G e temporary de- s Ve v i that allows the of rt- Seation qlu::(r::; e ottman Tsland,| who sald she had seen two men tam- | effect mext Wednesday morning. e anpointment of a depart where the girls were staying because of crowded conditions at the Ellis ls- rescued the The body of Eva, who Jwore around her neck a bag contain- tunds which the two sisters this country, was not re- fand younger sister. immigration station, ‘n: th rought to eovered. PROCEEDINGS RESUMED T L C. A K. ew York, Sept. tens, Russian Siviet agent in the Unit istes scheduled (o be resumed today Eilis Island. were postponed for another agent of the de- who has been con- to com- further than 1o say that he is going to Washington to- morrow to cenfer with officials of the de- week. August P. Scheil partment of labor, ducting the hearings, refused ment on the postponement. ment. Marten's counsel said that prepared pa: CARSON BIRTHPLACE BURNED BY SINN FEINERS Belfast. Sept. 13.—Castle Wouse in _Athenry, whers Sir Edward Carson, Unionist leader was born, today way has been placed under law, making six Irish cities the Ulst nee fctory Premier tour of Al- e of burden eft bank of the 1t we Versailles PAPER Labor conditions naper shortage were the \iscussion at the thir- action on the closed shop | dele- MARTENS 3 13.—Deportation pro- eeedings against Ludwig C. A. K. Mar- to proceed with the case. Lambert County Galway, was burned presumably by Sinn Feiners. Gal- the curfew under this SERVICE INAUGURA! Chicago, Sept, 13.- coast-to-coast air mail serviee w. gun today when planes left for points across the continent. One plane will from New York with mall Francisco, one from San Fran New York, one from Chevenne, to San Franclsco, nne from Salt City to San Francisco, one from C g0 to San y for 2- to Franciseo every day er The first of operate here at under the new schedule § o'cleck this merning for Francisco piloted by planes Each of the pounds af mail. will car {SAYS NEW JAPANESE SECT Tokie, Sept. 10.—"Omo new mysterious religion Tierely an extreme form aimed at the social order, a merchant, aze to Ayade of_the sect. The leading adherents of the cult, Tokyo," of Japan, of soc he | n- according to Kakuji the village b- el tie military men. He said the er | er a- | Modyama. itie Omo Tokyos and made ‘with difficulty. been found driven switching points. in between been derailed and probably cause plunge 50 feet to the street. NEW HAVEN ALDERMEN New Haven, Conn., Sept. 13.—The od at|an ordinance restricting the oper: of jitney buses in the rentral part of was 15 to 1. MACSWINEY CONSCIOUS) he Tondon, Sept. band, on leaving the prison at six o' tonight, said he was weaker than she last saw him. She had not permitted to speak to him. He was scious, but still suffering from er | ness of the limbs. JAPAN TO_HAVE GREAT An entensive daily five cities leave each morning Wryo.. cept Sunday, and one from Chicago to New York every davk except Monday. the Chicago planes to J. P. Christensen IS A ¥YORM OF SOCIALISM destruction, of the existing Kato, who made a secret pilgrim- headquarters [1) reported, were retired and_discontent- tomb of sect's founder bore a striking re- s'mblance to the Imperial Mausoleum at Kato sakl he spext ninety days among his escape WOMAN BLOCKS ATTEMPT TO pering with a ewitch, according to a report issued today by the police. The police stated that a spike had Had the alleged at- tempt at wrecking not been discover- ed, it was sajd, a train would have RESTRICT JITNEY BUSES Haven board of aldermen tonight passed city to specified streets, mostly those not used by the trolley company. The vote SUFFERS FROM NUMBNESS 13.—Mrs. MacSwiney, who spent the afternoon With her hus- NAVY BY 1920, SAYS PRESS |Brandegee is for Suffrage Ratification Is Convinced That the Coun- try Has Decided That Wo- men Shall Have ths Right to Vote. CABLED PARAGRAPHS Earthquake in Scotland. Comrie, County of Perth, Scotland,| New Haven, Conn, Sept. 13—United Sept. 13.—An earthquake shock was ex- | States Senator Frank ‘B. Brandegee, in perienced here tgday. The inhabitants|a letter to Col. L M. Ullman, received were awakened When their|beds and|here today, says he hopes that the state furniture were shaken, legislature wiil ratify the federal suff- rage amendent at the special sessiom NATIONAL ENCAMPMENT OF SPANISH WAR VETERANS which opens tomorro; Heretofore Sen- opponent of woman suffrage by federal amendment, voting against all suffrage St. Louis, M . Sept. 13.—Eradication nomination for gover- which have handicapped the railroads al- | nor. most since the day they were returned to their owners by the government. . TED STORM CAUSED OVER $1,000,000 DAMAGE IN RHODE ISLAND Providence, R. I, Sept 13—Damage estimated at over a million dollars was done by a brief hail and t hunder storm, accompanied by a 45 mile gale in a narrow area extending through Cranston, Warwick and East Provi- dence this morning. Thousands of panes of glass were broken, the in- terior of homes and business estab- lishments were flooded and fruit trees were denuded of their crops. Occur- ring on the opening day of the public schools, several hundred children were made almost panic-stricken and after were allowed to go the storm they home. Street car, telephone and elec- tric lights and power service was in- terrupted. The hail stones m some sections measurey ne and a half inches in diameter. The foliage was from trees. A market gar- be- FRANCE TO PAY FART OF $250,000,000 DUE IN OCTOBER San for Paris, Sept. 13.—The French s of finance it is learned will pay part of the $250,000000 due in October from France on the Anglo-French loan from the proceeds of a resale of the American army stocks Which it purchased, and up- on which New York bankers will advance sums_reported to amount to $25,000,000. The Harris Brothers Company of Chica- g0 will be sales agents of the French government for the disposal of stocks es- timated at more than $150,000,000 in value. The stocks ipclude an immense variety of articles, including woolen goods, harness, wagon wheels, hardware, canned foods ad tools, a considera quantity of which probably will be sold in the United States, some South Amerfca and the remainder in Europe. The French government took over all the American army supplies left in France for §400,000,000. try Lake hica- ex- Teft San 2000 in the 38 alism stripped dener in Cranston estimated his lo: 4t $200,000 while one factory there reported 2,000 panes broken. near of glass REVISION IN OF TROLLEY FARE EASTERN MASSACH Boston, Sept. 13—Revision of fraes on the Eastern Massachusetts Street railway system was announced today as a consequence of the increased wages awarded employes last week. A 15 cent fare unit has been adopted in a few places; fares in secondary zomes have been advanced from five to ten cents, eliminating all five cent fares; free transfers are abolished in all but a few cases, with a readjustment of traffk: INTERNATIONAL: ASSOCIATION OF FIRE FIGHTERS IN SESSION ETTS Ka- St. Louis, Sept. 13 —Reforhs designed to increase the efficiency of municipal fire departments were under consideration at the opening of the third annual conven- tion of the Lnternational Association of Fire Fighters here today. Delegates from throughout the United States and Canada are attending. Removal of departments from political T. S. VESSELS IN FOREIGN PORTS HANDLED BETTER ‘Washington, Sept. 13—Marked im- provements in the handling of American vessels in foreign ports by shipping board representatives was reported to chair- man Benson by Charles F. Dutch, gen- eral solicitor of the board, who return- ed today from a three months tour of England and France. Closer cooperation between the cen- tral office here and foreizn offices has reduced the turn around of American ships to nearly an equality with foreizn craft, Mr. Dutch sald, adding that the entire ovérseas end of the American shipping was being handled more effici- ently. ment chief to be governed solely by par- tisan politics. had system also was advoated, delezates stat- ing this plan in Cleveland, Toledo and Hibbing, Minn., had cut fire losses in half. e FIRE DAMAGED COTTOX DUCK MILLS IN WINSTED ‘Winsted, Conn., Sept. 13.—Fire late to- day partially destroved the cotton duck mills of D. B. Smith & Son in New Tart- ford, entailin a loss estimated at $75,000. About 100 persons are thrown out of em. ployment. A high wind caused the fre to spread rapidly, two four-story wooden structures soon becoming a mass of flames. All emploves left the building in safety. A building containing a large quantity of baled cotton also was burned. Fire apparatus from this city and New Hartford checked the flames. The loss is partly covered by insurance. INSTALMENT OF $4,000,0C0 IN New ation £ the ATTEMPTS TO FLOAT THE U. 8. STEAMER SIBONEY Vigo, Spain, Sept. 13.—AIll attempts to refloat the American steamer Siboney, clock [28Tound in the harbor here, have been GOLD ARRIVES FROM FRANCE when [Unsuccessful. The newspaper Faro De been |Vig0 condemns that seamanship of the| New York, Sept. 13—Another in- con-|captain of the Siboney, declaring Vigo|stalment of $4,000,000 in gold from bay is excellently buoved and that ves- sels of any size ean pass easily day or night. umbd- France arrived on La Lorraine today making a total of approximately $20, 000,000 already shipped to be applied to the French share of the $500,000,000 Anglo-French loan maturing October CRUISER PITTSBURGH HAS BEEN TOWED INTO LIBAU |15. It is understood that France will Jaw. The others are Belfast, Dublin, | Tokio, Sept. 8.—According to estimates ship a total of $50,000,000 in gold to Jondonderry, Cork and Limerick, as|by the Japanese press, Japan will have| TLondon, Sept. 13.—The United States|this country. Well as a number of smaller towns and willages. is comptroller of the curremey yes- for the condition close of terday ¢ all issued a call national banks at the (business on Wed)>sday September & pected eight battleships and eight tle criisers on the naval building gramme will have been completed. Necessity knows no law and is el %o poer to hire aslawyer. 0 120 submarines by 1925, when it is ex- S e armored cruiser Pittsburgh, which went aground last week on the rocks off Libau in the Baltic sea, was fowed into Libau roads Saturday after her coal, ammu- nition and provisions had been lightened, according to an Exchange Telegraph patch todav. bat- A spread of infantile paralysis in the pro- vicinity of Boston which, while not an epidemic, yet comstitutes a - condition that has caused some concern among health officials, was announced by the state department of health i us- ator Brandgegee has been an outspoken | influence and improvements in working | Universal adoption of the three-platoon | igeneral mining_situation To Exhibit Paper merce — Cost From 1 Cents to $2.65. of commente will are to be th paper clothes are to be exhibited. today surprising. Ten days ago which should be brought to an en to their places. > prevail upon President open the wage case. Teve that willingness w it all men return and show to abide by tract system, shall end. There was little chwnge according the men on early reports, scale committee. LOANS TO TWO RAILROADS a loan of $6,073,400 to the Air Line Railroad company and $3%6 tion of St. day b mission. tal cost of $1,058,000, in making add tions ties aggregating $8,248,000. | to meet the loan of the government. The loan to the Terminal Railroad association is to .aid in. meeting ma- turing obligdtions and in making ad- ditions and betterments, the commis- sion said. Suits From Germany Samples Have Been Imported By the Dzpartment of Com- Washington, Sept. 13—Paper suits im- ported from Germany by the department g0 on an_exhibition tour of the country starting Wednesday. Representatives of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce in the principal first three cities where the that seme of its reports from the bedside of theh unger striker have been the officials believed that & new Irish crisis was im- Such a step was the hope of the organization officials son to re- Union officials be- their written contract, there is a chance that the pres- be brought to an in the “vacation” ghowing a disposition to await the out- come of today's meeting of the union APPROVED BY THE I C, C. Washington, Sept. 13—Approval of Seaboard 925 to the Terminal Railroad associa- Louis was announced te- v the interstate commerce com- The loan to the Seaboard Air Line, the commission said, is to aid the road in acquiring refrigerator cars at a ‘to- and betterments at a total cost of $7,500, and to meet its 1920 maturi- The rail- road is required to finance $3,982,600 BRIEF TELEGRAMS Secretary Payne announced;Zion Park. in Utah, will be formally dedicateq Sept. 15. An opera company under ‘direction of Eduardo Blascois left Madrid on the steamship Infanta Isabel for Cuba. Fifteen thousand cholera cases have been reported officially from Korea, with 6,000 deaths, in the present epidemic, Attorney Gemeral Thomas F. McCran, of New Jersey, declared women are en- titled to register and vote in that state 5 Connecticut _valley onions considerably above 1919, but under the mid-season forcast as a result of humid August weather. The condition of the Aroostock, Maine, cities of the country are to show the |Tegion potato erop was reduced to 78 suits, which cost from fifteen cents to|Per cent of normal by late blight in to manufacturers and clothing | August. Baltimore, Philadeiphia and New York Twenty-thres Belgian ed at New York on the Kroonland on students arriv- Belgian steamer Samples of the paper suits were im- g their way to American he railw 10 their owners, |Peal to those radical advocates of rallway ported because of the inquiries arising | universities. Harding charged in a speech to | OWBership.” from reports that German and Austrian - a legation of rail workers here menufacturers were secling them in| The Turkish erown prince, Abdul Med- |liic toduy that by assuming control of | COX SAYS LIGUOS QUESTION England, Italy and Turkey in competi- |Jid Effendi,. has mad ean unsuccessful the roeds the Wilson administra- “IS AS DEAD AS SLAVEBY™" tion with cloth suits {rom other coun- |AtemBL to fiee from Constantinople 0 |ton hud sought (o promote a bolic natoia. |based on pe ent gover ent - tries. ‘:‘ #ed on permanent government opera-|:Fortiand, Ore., Sept. 13—A statement 2 that the liquor gquestion 3 dead BRITISH GOVERNM A erowd of 200,000 persons gathered | !ad the experiment proved a sucoess .(:\pry,' u:u m':x .u'.e pr:fl.l‘l ulfl_"‘ BLUFFING IN MACSWINEY CASE |at Coney Inland for the final Sunday be- inistraton won Toeye Coiared the 34 1is one of law enforcement was made hece| gL i o Mardi GFas” despite the ministration would have fav eten- rove 3 - T i tion of the t sportation lines and oth: h.y Gov rnur'Lux. democratic presidential London, Sept. 13 (By the A. P.).—As- |R. T. strike. er public utilitics under government | cA2didate. to a large audience at ghe surances that there is no definite idea of control. The war, he said. had offered | Auditiriun today. His statement was biuffing:in tha respective attitudes of the | -Imtersal Revenus Burean annewmeed 1) 0L UG WD (0 SL OF heme |-&- T€PlY 10 a question shouted from the British government and the Irish nation- |tax dogers are being forced to disgorge (47 OPPOTIUnity o try out the scheme gaiiery. alists relative to the MacSwiney case |additional federal taxes at the rate of DU Tecause it pormitted administra- | “Tne” governor's statement came mear were obtained {rom responsible sources of | $25,000,000 a month. Antiettes of the Do pvantage of the ts closs of his addiess today, each faction by The Associated Press this Sy | i il P shed “How about the liquor question,” & . ¥ i ey 1a 0TIty to take over the properties. . afternoon. e reco price o 7, was pald | The senator also assailed as “socialis- . & " “If the Sinn Feiners think we are bid- |at the International Stock Exhibi and “revolutionary” the plan Sup- |a,is, Snderstand” the governor replied, ng our time and will capitulate when |at Buemes Aires for the shorthorn b d by some labor leaders to put the |yLiat SOme newspapers out here have MacSwiney’s condition requires eleventh- | Faithful, bred in Argentina. |railways at the disposal of the railway [Lit thelr former interest in the lesgue hour action in order to save his life, they — | workers. e Cummins-Esch bill, _he} a are mistaken This characterizes the (The Gevernment Tean Oreanisation [ciii. was the best measire congress|c? 8 Inierested in 2 subject a8 desd British official view as’ expressed to the [of the Second Federal District will in- coulil work out the time allotted and [*'g o 3 correspondent troduce a savings bank system in public lgave to both railway owners and em- | SCAGNE that he had invited questions “There can be no question about our |schools in New York Cit |Dloves a just guarantee of rights, g s | Jolicies, eyt desire or intention of having Lord Mayer | Several union men composing - » MacSwiney recede from the tragic stand | Turkish Crown Prince wos arrested fi. Hard Coolidge Rafiway, ciuli TR 1o & Countcy of (res ipmech S he has taken,” declared an official at the |and placed under guard when he at-'of Marion were in the delegation an’l]‘. a question of law enforcement. Let London headquarters of the Irish nation- |tempted to flee from Constantinople to they cheered the nominee as he hit. at '$ie. tell you that while I was ¢ organization. “If he is mot released | Anatolia and join the Nationalists. class rule and lauded the labor prais- [gi® o Y00 N M L e or vol rily by the government he will ns of the act i . B i laie s v as the| The fewr mills of the American Wool-| They carried banners expressing their (51 fiTst time in history, the front dopr most certainly go down in history as the | . id the back door of .every saloon in first Irish hunger striker to perish in an -: l?udm\'mny-' v’n li:"wrenrw. )dlws. which f.uumrv in h .n:f:;:m:omlh Ai\u ‘;Y'T;h' Chio was closed on Sunday.” English prison.” shut down July 13, resumed operations )Government ange Conductors Leside business and the budget, Gov- In dealing with the MacSwiney case|in some departments yvesterday. = 2 “\uc‘r:cg Us” and | Cox discussed the Jeagus, peogres the home office, which controls the prison 8 SV SARTAME: givism, radicalism and its preveation, commission, has all along strictly ad-| Twe thousand barrels of fucl oil were| Roseberry, past president of thely,g"siner subjects in his moon address hered o its policy of divulging nothing |Seized for the navy by Captain E. M ! unit of the order of rallway train- ;.. ‘3¢ the Auditorium, which crowds about the prisoners; but it became known Beach, commandant at Mare Island. The esented the delegation to Senator oil was property of the Shell Oil Co. A decision to fight the strike of lons- shoremen at Boston by the employment 118 to_mobilize governmentally, the re- 5 ur support he Cummins-Esch act. . minent when the prison physicians report. |Of non-union men was reached at a |YOUT support of the Cummine-Esch Sct giurces of our country in the war, said e that the lord mayor could not live |meeting of British steamship agents. ' |, Conceding that the act was not BeT- i, governor. He will tremendousty ore th x hours. e et it Telpful in the task of readjustment m‘s'.n(” doetors have declined to| TParley Christensen, Farmer-Labor can- (2 MOSt consid Tate Diece of legislation| Telling of progrie~ve legislation in predict have confined themselves to |didate for president. declined to speak |£107 €hacted /o e PrOectiol of SO¥ ohio, Governor Cox again declared that hat they believe to be the actual condi- |at the Minriesota State Fair when he was (ETQuD Of Workmen in the tmited Sttes itenator Harding his republicar oppo- NoEreaiL = told political speeches were not allow- heu)the WOTKIMSE Sume caid 1ént, Was the leader of reaction in Ohio, tion of the prisoner. They contend that | tof ¢ a11oW- l4inued, we had gone £o far in restriction [£5%% W23 the IRACE of Teoctien 18 SR the case baffles medical acl::!c;;\ha;w'm 3 Sl End regulation -that the ?3?(.'2?"2:.’.':. SChe pow. s, taihe astion TR VNN ¢ch a case one man migl 2 ponse to much of the railway bait % alsé weré dtad days ago, while snother might iiva| T handred employes of the Herbert 100", "% MO 70 Ve Tailway. It is (eme, Oreson mewspapers tead, many weeks, no one being able to judge | Hoslery Mills, at - Conshohocken. Pa. ;o jmportant to discuss now whether |€0 O vernor ‘i o B the resistance of any individual in such [8reed to accept 2 10 per cent wage re- fi. railway service was breaking down lgThe BOETROT e sy e S S . |duction. %0 the mills will not be forced lunder -the great sirain-put-upon. it for $icnete L the Suosia here. The doctors (ISAEToE with e répo war service, the ‘country was nl‘\"w:—? e A 2 g "'-'mo'" of the Irish Self-Determination league, oo [Eive and we wers eply concerned 1n {Sor Srimery. Thase e which are evidently obtained from rela- | Ktalah workers have taken over 200 juttinz everything that we possessed atiyio o vine SPR MGogey o Coplty tives of the prisoner who are allowed at [chemical plants and three textile mils. the command of the government for the % SUN 08 \aore SUR o rll g5 iong] his bedside, that the mayor is in great ;"';‘“"""1?‘_ refuse to take troops north. {winning of the war. With such A feol 'gonce that hoarseness would ' Interfere Salis ITHe homie SMcs Teport. thik SR '::l:‘x rieste are continuing on Fm«]l:r‘lx;y manitest throughout the, country the JL12 Wi’y remainder of His. western ing s he was noticeably weaker 4 railrasds were taken over - 1 than yesterday, but rot in pain. = Undoubtedly, th was back of thelTa, .. ve his voice. however, the. gov- 3 3 Forests of Alaska contain timber and ‘movement the insistent forces in our|, 1o *ave Ws velor. howewee, (e SR GOV. SMITH UNABLE TO Dower resurcey 0 urmiah the ‘United |country who, believe )l evrerminint | gt rp toiition ik il urait NN . States with 15 ons of paper a 'ownership of railway ar scemed to 5% for W fen iR SRS SETTLE B R. T. STRIKE | Sebi™ o herp i ackardins 1o cols (oer 1he opmorianity for the amsication £ Sone [0 erening at Hood_Rige ew York, Sept. 13—Governor Smith | on®l Greeley. {of their theories of government, and i;rincipal engagements tomorrow were 2 SSent 12 = Covernor ¢ — sometimes suspect the taking over of MO gt ke - . announced fonight, after CONfeIeNce| A strike ln throatemed In London of |the railways was more impelled by the sUermoon and . evening *imeetines’ 8¢ Nith | Tepresentdtives | Of penilKINE| 25,000 electrical engineers. which would |thought of modifying our government Fols: 1faho. srooklyn Rapi ransit con y g t e rrou 1 1 devi ing _— Dioosimd P th Foderal Judes Mayer, | tie-up all street car and underground |pélicy than the develop| {,;'::( 2 better o Veague of nations was the main Jegal custodian of the company, that | 2Iway iy and industries 15 e for_the conguot of the. War- . liwkiseet disoiahil Ny NS ;n\'erndrnw egal custodian of the company, thatly, 'on" gectricity. | This gestion was late - |Portland and Salem addresses. his efforts to bring about a settlement D s e i {firmed by 8 s public ireeting, he #poks 0 of the strike had failed. 5 ith|_ Chile's budget for 1921 amounts ap-|istration that it be given authority to :‘,_:"('.’:J’M’,m,’ gl e Governor Smith conferred first b | proximately to $65.000.000, according to take over the telephone and telegraph iii7fe Sucirce 0 OWEE RIC, SCASY Sangisl sGompensmpresident ber. ang|figures submitted to Conzressional com When congress voted a grant of | *3CheTS BETF W S UeroOr A Amerlcan Federation of Labor, andimittees by Franciseo; Garces Gana, M to take over the telephone and |<TIPRaTIEed the Gcaue S8 B B SHibn fof Shreat aniiRlectvic, Rallvay Hojech’ Sateice 1 0 Ind>penden o, mon-pirtisanshin, pes- Sion ot Siceat anlikiocirs BAlWAY | 0ue wersen e Kusun £} Eave boea exizencies of peril. the | Lol Aics were stremed by "the plo t drowned, two are missing .and an auto- phone and telegranh lines were seiz-, . giq500 ' ¥e also touched on westemm 1 § %an Say is that I was unsuc- |moblle containing several persons is un- tration WaS N iionie reclamatic Alaskan development cessful in my efforts to bring about2ccounted for, as a result of a cloud; posed 1o take ade!y T4 ivered further attacks on the at- & scttlement of the differences be- |Purst Rear Tarlton, Ohio tous LIEB S0, buy_ the_ yeseitency SMEERE veel dgze Mayer N 7 ure would be made. Un'ess yogs on the senatorial oligarchy. Refd e e, e Pha it 0 Ao Y comvemdion Lot ¢ | 1hs % s of war urgently required ying to-the republican front porch cam- A dae Maver Vit Irish National Foresters of the United |it. but after the authority was given, paign, Cox said: Judge Maver, in a statement later, nited | ot ol e R et po- | States opened in Providence a three it a new exige having arisen | Headquarters are to be moved from sition “had been deliberately taken|day session with about 150 delegates | thout a single new condition .of Marion-to the fields. The ;ronlmp!‘d and was well known.” He had “defin- |and guests in attendance. the telephone snd telegraph Jife$ cirpalsm. it is :nnn‘l;ud ';r itely determined and publicly stated”| seized, pecause an admisistration (3 am g0 modest (o el you wiy. aid, *“upon more than one occision| A plenary meeting of all the work-|was @ power which was disposed to take | e that he would not deal in any way |men's organization was held at Milan ntage of the anxieties of the peopie. | €@X PLEDGES '"“""-':.’n, S with the Amalgamated Association |to take under consideration the industras involved in war, to competely revo: ENFORCE PROHIBI rectly or indirectly and that as far |upheaval which has came through the our government policy in dealing = he was concerned the matter was |strike of the metal ¥orkers througheut | with these public utilities. Portland, Qre. Sept. 13—To an sudi- d Ital i i enge-4f women this afternoon, Governor closed.” taly. experiment wit Ilrpad: > Judge Mayer siid that “such a Communieation lnes e been [COF: Made anothef siatement in regard meeting at th time under existing| Seerctary Celby received a letter from S0 T to=the liquor question, :ldnntd_' conditions would not only be useless|Bombay. India, addressed to Thomas Jef- e would have been made |10 énforce ail laws regardiess what but would serve to prolong a situation |ferson, late secretary of state and mas- 2 ter of patents, the writer desiring in- | tent o esent administration. IVE THOMAS } e B A S i o e D IR ATH OEJOT s St e ona | misunderstandings relating. to the Camnt WAS DUE TO POISONING AL MINE! 4 P mins-Esch law. It did not provide €X|"“p it cant 13—The autopsy on the Wilkesbarre,” Pa., Sept.’ 13.—Leaders| s ioa wine: tuo Moo wory Toogime to- |pe nt government guarantee of divi- | yogy of Olive Thomas, the American of districts 1, 7 and 9, TWnited Mine|turning to this city from Newburs, X, |och0S on railway capital. On the con- | msuing picture actress, who died In Workers, meoting in Hazelton today |70, 0 this EaN vl | trary. it placed 3 limit on these dividends. |10V 08 BN hospital at Neuilly last were reported to be in favor of adopt- Sl o plunged over |1t gid provide for a maintenance of rates |V St ortormed today by Dry Yy of ordering all union work-|an ¢mbankment rear Dobbs Ferry in a a x months which would blinding rain storm. t id, however, would not be tak- en without ‘a bitter fight among the un- [, Charles T. Hilles, former chairman of n. chieEtains. the republican national counmittee, in a Back of the reported plan to resume |Statement issued at National hozr!m’m t operations, it was said by some leaders, | °T® predicted that Harding and Coelidge would carry New York state by more than 250,000 vote: Suffelk County Grand Jury returned multiple indictments for larceny against Charles Ponzi, promoter of the get-rich- flent will consent to bring the scale|quick scheme and his partner, Charles committee of operators and miners into!Brightwell, head of the Old Colony & new conference. orelgn Exchange Co., Boston. In_Pittston tonight, a meeting will be held to determine whether the strike of | Airplane Ne. 151, of the TU. S. Aerial £000 employes of the Pennsylvania Coal|Mail Service, landed at Marina Field, Company, egun July 19 against the con-|near the- Presidia, Cal. Postmaster Fay, of San Frapcisco, declared “we de- cided to send almost all San Francisco first-lass mail to New York by aerial mail" ‘ Deaplte heavy enlistment daring Avs- ust - the , National - Guard of the United States has less than one-third the total number. of men authorized by the new Army Bill. The present strength of the guard is 2,487 officers and 60,565 enlist- ed men. to »~| Permission to hire a Jafl In which to imprison _six Americans, was requested of the State Department in Washington by Counsel Allen. held in connection with the theft of $20,000 worth of supplics from the American Commission for Re- lief In the Near East. si| The Commercial Cable Co., announces that the Eastern Telegraph Co.. mives notice that owing to interruptions of other routes and congestion on their lines generally, messages transmitting their cables should only be accepted at the risk of the sender as to delays. This affects. messages to . Spain, _Portugal Mediterranean Ports, Africa, Egypt and Bl S S RGN S Ial »»-n'.{ an 3 HARDING WOULD SAFEG RAILROADS FROM POL Assails as “Socialistic” and “Revolutionary” the Plan Sup- ported by Labor Leaders to Put the Railways at the Dis- posal of the Railway Workers—Reaffirms His Support of the Cummins-Esch Act in a Speech to a Delegation of Railway Workers—Cox Déclares That the Liquor Ques- tion “is as Dead as Slavery”—Pl:dges Himself to En- force All Laws. Ohio, Sept. 13.—Reaffirming ency and the American people generally. of the Cummins-Esch act]| “Naturally, this enactment did net ap- |ocerflowed. The speaker was imterrupt- ol e e oy le] by Senator Chamberlain, who was o nrove the fallacy jraised by Governor Cox. \ railway workers are ©p- |} a n yoar candidacy because ~of I, N0 man in congress did fhors in belp- interest may be affected.” | permanent. Such was the undoubted n- for Paul-oficial physician of the city - [Paris; in the presence of five Ameris can doctors. Dr. Joseph Choate, who i charge of Miss Thomas durihe her fliness, representas The doctors <Cctufied that death; was. A=- o "polsoning th intox- rantee railway vamnnig-te sible the financing of mecessary | railway improvements under the cotazs {of their owners, but this guarantee of a 5 1-2 per cent. earning was limited to the | period of transition of siv months' dura- tion, and was universally reeoc=i=—2-gz]icacon with & evblimate,” acci-| being necessary becau:: of the admittea) =ntaliy. ] failure of the government to maintain the | - Judge Put.ert tonight granted & | railways in a state of preparedness for |permit fr the removal of the body of | emeient service. Miss “Thomas, which will be shipped: “If we had returned the railroads with- | to America on the first vessel sailing out this temporary guarantee of earnings | for that country. in all probability the great American sys- tem would have broen dqwn entiraky|PAUL B. ALTENDORF HELD FOR DEPT. OF JUSTICE and we should have found ourselves in.a state of rail Iysis which t - = } z:z gl i which the 0B~ | Gan Antonio, Tex, Sept. 13—Pa¥l'B, ‘We also stipulated that there shoud | Altendort, an ‘Austrian subject wha be no reduction of American railway | a5 ATCF ,"m:"'e ‘."lm"'h' 2t M- berty on’ bond. _Atlendort is with entering the United States at a place’ other than a port -of .entry. sad. ‘wages during the same period. In other words, we gave the American railway workman precisely the same = guarantee that we gave to the American owners. | iith antering the United States Withe and in neither case was this done with | ouc knowledge or consent of immigras . sole thought of owners or of workmen. | 4on. Fiithorities- - Altendorf. came inte but congress was thinking of the welfare | notice after the war by speeches he of all the American peonle. This ever |made on his reported work for the L'nl(edl SL:,K’H in Mexico. He was *‘. recently Mexican officials - as & ‘pernicious foreigner” and escaped fii=. 1 must be the thought in mind in dealing with any important public question. to the United States. $1,000,000 ESTATE LEFT BY - WILLIAM FROCTOR DOUGLAS ew York. Sept. 13—William Proeter 1 have already alluded to the restrie- tions which the government has placed upon railway capital, railway rates and sailway earnings. We have eliminated every speculative phase of railway opera~ tion until the railway business has ‘bes come an extremely conservative one, with nothing left o inspire efficiency and pride | Douglas, member of the first Ameriean n management. except competition In | poto team and owner of the yacht service. We have taken away that im- | pho -which successfully defended pelling force known as money making | America’s cup from the British and reduced railway operationto a sef- |lenger Livonia in 1871 Left an. vice to the American peonle, With a very | valued-at approximately $1,000,000, limited return: made possible on capital | eording. to an appraisal filed ¢ emploved. There dces remain that com: | Mr: Douglas Glog tn Jume, 1910 petition which may aim at superiority in | | Total assets were $1.1 service, and through that a genuine rail- | net ~estate $970,742. way genius and falent may continue ta_close relatives were appeal for the approval of thelir constitus the Praperty. . .. | A 3 b s i o B e IR ———————wwSwSASww