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+ VOL. LXI—NO. 271 HARDING EXPLAINS THE CONSTRUCTVE POLICIES IN AIMS OF REPUBLICAN PARTY In Pre-Election Statement the Republican Presidential Nomi- nee Purposes an Association of Nations For World-Wide and Permanent Peace Without Sacrificing the Independ- ence of the American Nation—Practical Reconstruction and Reorganization of Our Own Country to Be Given Precedence Over World Reorganization — Would Sup- press the Vices of Exploitation and Profiteering and Create an Equal Opportunity For All—Senator Harding Exposes the Shoricomings of the Present Democratic Administration. nator Hard- inistration, now about to retire from which tement to ks to have its policies ing, . o e utated. The country will decline to American people lie here 10-0 vy jts confidence and its mandate 1o nlg bt I PAMY) ha tparty or those policies. It remem- that th republican party fought and afterward restored and the nation. It Dbelieves that the rty is capable of repeating ice and because it so believes, bl inee| It i3 £0INg to return tne republican party p o al nominee| . 7 00T riticise mocratic administration “The nation is determined to be done h autocracy undep the mere guise of Yemoceratie forms; it is determined that ere shall be no return to the old order. ain people who, on the whole, ive, been raised to a n and higher nistration and t of their confidercs| \ 5 1§ level, are not only conv that they eade u . o | e ntitled to remain on this new equ W a1 )i foeUR | olane, but that they must rely upon the c e tation and Prof| Lonsiruciive abilities «of the republican v ns fssue, Sen- | PATLY 1o keep them there. It is our pur- v to ac omplish exactly this. While will oppose every suggestion of revo- lution or disintegration, we do stand for every measure of evolution and develop- ment that tends to carry the masses of the nation forward and upward. “During the campaign now about end- ing, (he republican party has proposed platform and developed in the ut- Lrances of its leaders a programywhich contemplates equal opportu for all. t 3 the viees of _exploitation end profiteeri 1t has declared for viise and practical measures looking to €ooperation in production and in market- iz It realize all measures to in i follows: Ameri- ablican can electora ¥ Sputien | preserve - equality, of opportunity, - there pasty has in 1 record f 860 | raust Le a 1ecogmition of the fact that viee from its ing whereof M 8| greed and cunning must be held in check very proud. and the vision of 0pPOTURL] (i wo are to insure that true character ty for ser n the future, whi " hie| 9nd worth shall be given every opportu- Eieediner presented during thiS| piey ot ghare in the advantages that the am We are asiing that & g8} community ean extend to its members. fesponsit be Inoosed upon us. MM “The republican party purposes in the n that| Tealm of international ,affairs such an as- of the #ociation of nations as will most effec- tively Turther the aspiration for world- Vide and permanent peace without sac- ficing any part of the independence of the American nation. Jt_believes' that America can and must bear its full part ia the responsibilities of the world but it 1 adminietra. | #1¥aYS believes that America alone must economic and adminlstra-| (ecide what that pary, shall be. It goes t s the people assured that they will rec- fo t cgnzie its superiority as an instrumen- confronts the world and the Incapacity which th ministration bas met the prot years. Onerous as % ok, our party has never has been gull ug war in Burope, The VAt l4ality of administration, and that in the roex i, | Slection now impending they will give it ar e i the ccrtificate of their * confidence and . el us from ypygp that disaste COX WOULD SIT WITH SENATE TPON THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS Ive and progres us from early re.| Huntington, W. Va., Oct. 25.—Governor ¢ ‘that confronted|COX of Ohio announced today that if &lected president he would “sit down with war n|the senate and make an agreement” up- \istration| On the league o fnations and that: his for tha|#ETeement should be determined by the case we should be|*Datorial clections. - e i Gy il The “exccutive will” the democratic e idential candidate said, should not of being drawn into| *ontrol and it is “unthinkable” he de- mads | £ared; that American membership in the hai|wague should be postponed two years, "5 | ¥hen the next senatorizl elections would % held. American membership, he indi- cated, was the primary consideration. at he fayored American participation ent to most imminen! v struggle, the democra its campaign on the boast kept us out of w the con keeping us out. TI found ourselves at lust i we were utterly unready M, » h “clarifying” rescrvations was reit- ;‘" r:‘1'\ srated by the governor. . 1ailed : oy n all the| Hailed by members of the governor's world was realize the im; of course could fused to| PATLY as one of the most important of s vampaign _developments, the. candidate's announcement was in response to an open letter sent today to Governor Cox and his ize while wo were a : republican opponent, Senator Harding, by ¢ preparing for peace. we enterell50 of their supporters urging them to ac- into peace quite as unready for it as We| cept whatever revision of the Lodge res- had been for wa:. Our economics Were | ervations two-thirds of the mext senate disorgan our debt enormous, our|micht approve. forelgn commerce devoted lar@ely 19| The governor's statement, issued during supplying the necessaries of war, a rushing West Virginia tour today, read: “Instead of setting jtself to remedy-| " “rhe situation is this: I favor going ing thess conditions, dminfstration | into the existing league with clarifying has devoted itself from the day of ta:| reservations. Semator Harding has said armistice to proms @ project of World | that he was mot interested in clarifica- of preparedness, expected 1o real- war the neces: no reorganization in which America shou'd|tion, but in rejection. I have every ex- bear the largest responsibilities of guar-|pectation that after November 2, much anteeing 2 new schemo of th Ia- | of the partisan spirit that has been vis- so0n as stead of making legal peace ited upon discussion of the league will actual peace had beer won, the Ameri-|have subsided. One-third of the seats of ca npeople alone of all the warrins na-| the senate are to be filled this year. The tions, were denied by thelr govermment|people understand the issue and we will the privilege of a ™ to the legal|accept their pression at face value, I status of peace and to the enjoyment of | will, therefore, sit down with the sen- those rights which they had tempofarily [ate and reach an agreement about our surrendered under the circumstances of | going into this league. There is no other, war, and any talk of a new association is but “The ecircumstances of war. So long|idlc phrase. The Important thing is to as war was on, republicans upheld the|get a start and help to statilize worla hands of the administration, forgetting|conditions which virtually affect the in- party considerations, and gave their vote| terest and welfare of America. For us to in support of war measures far 10| remain out of the league for two years generously than did their politictl oppo-| or until another election could be held ments. Yet an autocratic administraion | Would be unthinkable. If too much has repald this loyalty with the demand, inl|to be given in compromise now, in order the campalgn of 1918, that republicens|to insure our entrance into the league, the be removed from every position of in-iDeople themselves Wwill have an oppor-! fluence and power. That demand the|(unity to modify and correct later. Tt country rejected. It was the first time| CANNOt be a matter of the exercise of in the history of this nation that an ad. | merely the executive control. The sort ministration had been defeated in ‘the|Of agreement which I shall bo enabled midst of a foreign war. That defent|!0 Obtain will be determined by the sena- would have been ample ddmonition to | torial.elections.” ny administration not entirely absorb.| The givernor's anmouncement followed e in its own peculiar policies and pur- |UPOn the heels of his statement, in his poses. But it apparently was unheeded | MAdison Square Garden speech Jast Sat- by the powers at Washington. Neglect-| Urday in New York, that he would “com- fag the acute domestic situation the istration sudde eived a n- fmpressively with its lack of concern for | Siatement that Governor Cox's was an them in the petiod before we wers drawn | oy ic/ g regarding Article 10 as T e Wat President Wilson, “So, while !r:mv‘d!:tal lng oo ieal| COX PREDICTS OVERWHELMING eoneerns were being neglected, while re- ” 4 omermeiin i T arnisation of syr| DEFPAT OF REFUBLICAN PaRTY @wn cuontry were forgotten, the admi Toston, Oct. 25.—The prediction that Jstration was devoting itself to the chi-|yne republican party will Be overwhelm- mera of a worll re-organization. The|.) in {hy election Was made'by Governor republican congress, that had been elect-| cox'in q telegram to Michael A. OTeary, #d in the autumn of 1918, attempted to.| chajrman of the democratic state commit- snd did initiate measures to set us on tee which was made public tonight. fhe right track once more. It devised a| “wrpe ground swell for the ieague and tudget system in the hope of putting an | gemocratic ticket,” the telegram said, “is end to the treasury defiéit and bringing | ahoyt to overwhelm the republicans. The geonom yand eystem into our national| most reprehensible and untruthful came finances. But the president vetoed that|pajen in political history is at the brink measure. The administration went right|of defeat. Now is the time to. redouble on spending vast sums ip excess of our revenues, offering no coffstructive inspir- ation or leadership, apparently forgetting our domestic difficulties in its engross- ment with the chimera of world recon- 1| promise” the reservation controversy. At- tention also was called to lhe\ circum- have made can be redoubled. Let us make overwhelming the victory which is certain. I shall ever be grateful for the under a personal debt to ypu for what you have done in my name.” EDITOR LORIMER OF SATURDAY EVENING POST REPLIES TO COX Philadelphia, Oct. 25.—George Horace Lorimer, qlitor of the Saturday Evwiing Post, tonight gave out the following in reply to the statement made public Sun- day night by Governor Cox, democratic presidential candidate, relative to a car- toon to appear in this wesk's issue of the Post: “There could be no better vindication of the cartoon and comment that will ap- pear in this week’s number of the Sat- urday Evening Post, no clearer demon- stration of Governor Cov's unfitness for high office. than his misleading remarks on the advance copy of the weekly that has come into_his possession. “Governor Cox 13 a millionaire news- paper editor and publisher: of long ex- perience. He must, therefore, _under- stand that.it is a first point of honor among newspapermen not to make use of advance copies of publications that are sent out with the understanding that they will not be released until a fixed date in the future. He must know, as a publisher, that at the postal rate now be- ing charger periodicals and mewspapers, no question of a subsidy by the govern- ment is involved; that the periodicals are not only paying their way. but that under any kind of an_efficient admin- istration in the postoffice. there is a handsome profit in carrying them. Though the editor of the Saturday Even- ing Post has had something to say editor- ially on other scctions of the revenue bill, he has accepted and consistently re- frained from attacking the raise in postal rates, even though he believes it unjust. Tt Governor Cox has studied the adver- tising columns of the Saturday Evening Post with the intelligence and know- lelge that a man in his position shoutd have, he must know that it has ben the poliey of that magazine to refuse casu advertising, growing out of the excess profits tax, and. has insisted on well-con- sidered, well formulated campaigns be- hind commodities that can use advertis- Ing_profitably and cconomically. “The policy of the Saturday Fvening Post is now and always has been form- ulated by its editor. Neither any po'i- tielan or grou of politelans, nor any in- terest of any kind or description, have suggested what stand it should take in this election, or had anything whatso- ever to do with influencing its policy. * * * Given the same record and the republican party in power. he would not hesitate to take as strong a position against a continuance of republican rute. “Propaganda has come, in the minds of shallow thinkers like Governor Cox. to mean any view fyat does not square with theirs. Neither Governor Cox nor any other democrat found anything say- oring of ‘dislovel propaganda” in the Saturday Evening Post's consistent and unwavering stand behind the president during the years of the great war HARDING IS PREPARING LAST CAMPAIGN SPEECHES Marion, O., Oct. 25.—Senator Harding virtually completed preparation of his last campaign speectes today and planned to take a good rest tomorrow before starting on the swing of Ohio cities which will occupy the remainder of the week. Tonight he retired early, hoping a long sleep would rid him of a slight coll con- tracted on his last speaking trip. His physician sajd there was nothing serious in the affliction but that precautions were being taken to get the candidate’s voice in as good shape as possible. Harding headquarters made. public to- night a statement by Judge John M. Gar- man of Wilkesbarre, Pa., former chair- man of the democratic central committee of Pennsylvania, pledging support of the republican national ticket and declaring that “the pirates now controlling the good ship demoeracy should be thrown over- board.” “I favor Harding for president,” said the statement, “first, because I am a dem- ocrat. “His platform and addresses show that he is supporting the constitution, and is safer than one who openly commends ef- forts to subvert that grand old docu- ment” _ * DEMOCRATS COLLECT $74,000 IN SMALL GIFTS IN ONE DAY New York, Oct. 25.—A new record for campaign contributions received in a sin- gle day was announced by democratic national headquarters here tonight after Treasurer Wilbur W. Marsh had checked in $74,000 in gifts of small denominations. The treasurer's announcement asserted that “never in the history of democratic campaigns has such.a flood of contribu- tions been received.” RICHARD H. LONG TO SUPPORT HARDING FOR PRESIDENT ‘Washington, Oct. 25.—Richard H. Long, democratic candidate for governor. of Massachusetts last year against Goyernor Coolidge, today announced that he would support Senator Harding for president. “I think the present administration is demoralizing the democratic party,” said Mr. Long. “I think the democratic party would be better off under Harding than under Cox.” he continued, adding that the democratic presidential candidate had en- dorsed the present administration. ANOTHER DEATH IN WHISKEY FEUD IN NEW HAVEN New " Haven, Conn., Oct. 25.—Albert Nigretti, who was found in Franklin street early today with a bullet hole in his chest, died in a hospital this after- noon. He made a statceient to thepolice before I\: died and a search is being made for a man known only as “Sporty Mike” The murder is believed by the police to be the outcome of another feud among whiskey-runners. SIX NAUGATUCK FAMILIES MADE HOMELESS BY FIRE Naugatuck, Conn., Oct. 25.—Six fam- flies were made homeless today when'a two story house at the corner uf Spring and Pridge streets, in Union City was burned today. In the building also were: a saloon and a Swasitka Club. The loss totals about $15,000. The cause of the fire is not known. The battleships, Pennsylvania, Oklaho- ma, Nevada, Arizona, Utah and Floria your effort, if such great effort as youl left New York last night for the south- ern drill grounds. The Province of Quebec has three| schools in which maple sugar making is patriotic effort you have put forth in|taught. The province’s output of maple sonality of mine, but I must always feelland 2,470,275 gallons of syrup. #truction. behalf of o cause greater than any per-|sugar for 1919 was 12,353,667 ypounds L TR, I nm»h.}hyn-rflfi the LR # NORWICH, CON Klied His Twe DAY, OCTOBER 26, 1920 Headguartecs of the Fo rublishers of labor and —_— Had Been Charged With| Received in an Attack on Four amateur fisherman e Meriden, Con; lor, 40 yeafs Old, of this city, shet and |King Alexander of Greece died this ev- killed his two sons, Arthur, aged 14, and | ening at 5:2). Iils death was due to| The Ford Motor Co. will Frederick, aged 10, late today, and then | wounds which he had recieved in an at- | 16SSels to European ports committed suicide. The shooting occurred | tack on him by a pet monkey eariy ia|LAwrence deep waterway pi on the Middlclield side of Black pond, | October, the king being badly mutitated. | ‘ied out. Where Taylor and his sons were fishing Throughout last night the heart zetion from a rowboat. srew weaker, his general debility be- |, Seeretary Morrison of ¢ The tragedy was witnessed from the |came more and: pulininary | 03 A6 ‘emp oyers ar shore by two Meriden boys, who notified | cimbioms were s Breat the police. The bodies of the' two boys difficult and alarming, | M€A” to reduco wase were found in thé rowboat, with bullet i Swas snooniERT that e holes in the head. Taylor's body had or! wils® Hopetal: Tiarold Grussi, aged seve fallen into the pond after he shot himself. SRR tonight when he broke It was recovered by a policeman and the 4 S three bodies were brought to this city, | Th¢ death of King the king's cor to the bottom in Merider two sons. He was placed on probation. (DY his son’s grave iilnc 1s. Taylor, the police say, had not been |10 Gresce and living with her husband and sons for [ About the same t iming the throne. L — ne a regency was|, Thup of city trucking yet. My plans are those of my people. —(By The A.| Premier Venizelos on Sunday ifred Cocchi for the| pressed Polo=na, Ttaly, Oct. P.) ast ot ihat Drinse | & SlEht general declne i The trial of mseif 3 1917 began this morning with a recital| be prevented from taking the throne by | o\ 4o 0 TR of the evidence against him. Cocchi took! his father, as the latter would learn . o JHCERHCR ol Prienss a spirited part in the proceedings, indulg-| from the coming elcctions that there was | o o o FIENE (8 S PIOEH g in oratorial flourishes. He argued|no prospect for his return. ected. only his own words . were available| Prince Charles of Be % against mentionied as Do Cocehi declared his previous confes-| Gre, ium have been Jle candidates for the endicitis In made o as to protect his wife. beinz consldered. b =_— 4 Tt is probable that the old chamber | The erime for which - Alfredo Cocchi| will be recomvencd owing to the kings | Sfactory. was brought to trial at Balogna. Italy.|death to consider what steps are to be today for the second time was the mur-| aken before the new chamber meets. der of Ruth Cruger, an cighteen year old iy student ‘at Wadleigh High school, S Revenue agents and eity TO CONSIDER LOW L el est liquor raid in the hist York n February, 1917. Th P o Sty Copchive Blevels dtispeite hive) PRICES OF BITUMINOUS COAL|ington. skates sharpened and never afterwara o W s seen alive. For six months the po-| Cleveland, Oct. e/of New York were at a loss to ac-| tum count for Miss Cruger's disappearance. A’ | duc = fields throughout the country|legisiative commi cellar in Cocchi's shop was dug up and|meeting here tomorrow at which a com-| New York. the girl's body discovered. F munication from Attorney-General Pal- SIX BALLOONS ARE DOWN excossive prices for soft coal will belina extradition of Dr. Willia The meeting which has been calledleft that city Decernber, 19 e by Colonel D. B. Wentz, hiladelphia, | der $10,000 bond. Oeto 26 e | t of the National Coal Associ- . . is expected to be one of the most important dn the history of the indus- try. Tt is anticipated that upwards of a|wom' Owen thousand of the 7,000 soft producers| " Npngen’ of the country, who have been invited to Birmingham, A of the seven balloons entered in the in- ternational races for the Gordon Benne t trophy already down, officials anxi awalted reports tonight from Army No. 1, piloted by Lieutenant Richard Thompson, with Lieutenant Harold Weeks as aide. Since the hop-off in Birmingham | aetend, will participate in Saturday nothing has been heard £rom | mecting, and it is assured that the at-|thBEIP Letthant, o Diexer this entry. Tt was regarded as probable | {orney-gencral's communication will be ¥ ’ada ,to dissolve the divo Mcore was set evada. favorable current of air and pursued itlof the whole soft coal situation as | yicn he succurbed. without passing near anly place of com- | affects prices. . Fisaeat munication. Colonel Wentz called the general meet- Recretar Hounston mad Late today it was learned that the|ing at the request of Attorney General Y, o abol Lake Champlain near Burl'nston, Ver-|proposal might be put before all of the 2 *he Na-|tinued by July 1. 1921. safety. Local race officials thueght this| It was explained tonight that the Na- o Saiyy = balloon had reached a point father]tional Coal Association, whose member- from the start than any of the other five | ship embraces - s con is heard from it will be impossible [ coa output, which this vear reach| nd guldes. Tracks were it BNy mature of Its charter, fake any ac| he. animals were killed. jon relating to price fixing. Bocause of s. Colonel Wentz decided to put the the State Island Midland tter before the general body of coal| G (VS SEATE, W EERE - Vg operators, but as individuals, represent ¢ fe i man -('f‘n:'l"mnr ;lnd New York, Oct. 25.—Charles E. Ruth- | ing the various fields. Lindn b coptition (o enberg, of Cleveland, on trial here with | While it is not thought that the op- auled. CHICAGO LAWYER ON TRIAL General condition of the FOR CRDMINAL ANARCHY an wing” movement in the socialist party. jority of those operators in Cleveland,; Ruthenbe'g testified after the court | ton b 10 had denied motions by Ferzuson, who is | voring “fair and reasonable prices and©f Post office by employes. defending hims:!f and his associates, for | only reasonable profit to the opera-| o STrn dismissal of the case on the ground that | tors. g ill b nlated the pros-cution had failed to make al| Jt was also said that out of the i—’}'f “flfll t (fl:'""":!”‘n case azaigst them meeting_may come a recommendation | fonfrences row being held After joining’ the socialist ranks in|for what is known as ‘fair practice | ion between the X ¢ mlas whira e | ation; | for several public offices, including those [ ent soft cqal mining ““1}I= s of mayor of Cleyeland and governor of the | cessive prices have existed. Such com-| L. o e state. = mittees have been organized, in co-opera-| HAVATS G- Theodore. He said he was candidate for mavyor | tion With the atto perieralis oflce el iha s ficaktic ol | while under .conviction for epeaking | districts in West Virginia, Alabama, Ken- 3 o % fved 27 | tucky and other p Lt ki aeninst the dfact law, an received 2L-| (orl oo ‘are mow working € elimins| (e3Sibl : ate all abuses in the handling of coarjable terms. - = 3 after it leaves the mines, as well as to DODY FONND ST ISKERRING Sce that mine prices, wherever exorbitant,| Sawmills throughent the Operators here tonight said that with|the price of iumber and t the recent production of solft coal, now |burchasers. Fifty per cer aggregating nearly 12,000,000 tons a|on the Pacific Coast and g wheel of his auto- | week, excessive prices wherever they have | re closed. on the outskirts of this city, bear- | prevailed, are rapidly coming down. The — ing three bullet wounds and with a re- | same operators say that throughout the| One of the worse blizza: New Britain, Conn., Oct. 25.—The body of Eno Renaldini, of this city, was found today at the steeri; mobi! cording to_the police. the revolver was |of bituminous coa has been s placed in Renalcini’s hand after he had | contraet at the mines at nominal pric-| ‘hat state. Hundreds of cat been shot and roobed. No one who heard | es. have been killed and fruit any shots has been found. ‘Aside from the matter of hizh pric-| ~ort serious iosses. Members of Renaldini’s family said |©s, the operators tomorrow will discuss that he left home as usual this mornins, | ¢fforts already driving his new automobile. The po'lec | National Coal Assoclati found several seflver. dollars in under. | objectionable practices in the resale of brush near the automobile. which they | €&l both as to export and movement{Gen. Wrangel. believe twas dropped by the murdererr|Of coal for domestic us>s. The assocla-|Poland and Russia has m when he fled. The body was In.the ae- | tiom. it was said, has b.en co-operating transportation of troops. tomobile for some time before persons | With the attorney generals office for living mearby investigated in found it | SOMe Weeks to rid the industry of this| . Jean Jule was lifeless. . evi. New York Oct 25.—The speed tyne.| New York, Oct #5.—Armin W. Riley, Friting champlonship of the Unifea | Sef oFf the HePATTHERL Bl TeEOrs, ay| _Dr. Wiltam €. Woodward, States and Camada. was won ere fadgg | M€ sauadron’” of profiteer Kunters, today | 17, TWIET, & Wontar by George L. Hossfeld of Paterson NX.|icclared he would seel fodardl Brme|30 world w I, who typed approximately 131 words [Jiury JaPhOCRes o COMBY hoLE SRR O favorine s a minute for 60 consecutive minutes. The | o® 10 2P0 2 he ldier honns: 1 the sentatives of sev- I ik sasnl Rl ot ol M iley and representatives of sev i A eral of the large hotels, the hotel men| A famous school of the h:;xmn 1-;."7!swam, last year's winner, third, | a1y refused to accede to w 27 3 ices. 1t was then Mr. Riley warn-|fts departmeats Up to the o o o food prices. as the) y its depa GRAIN FUTURES IN KANSAS | make an investigation of t ed in hotel restaurants. barred to them. Topeka, Kas., Oct. 25.—Gov. H.J. Allen | Mr. Riley further declared today that announced today that he would proose a |if the hotel men continue to iznore his iR law to the next legislatureto prohibit | efforts to reach a satisfactory agree- |, Colentating thatclther the mation now on hand indicated that bucket PALESTINE MONTHLY Shops are operating in a larse number of cities in Kansas in violation of the law. on practfcal politics. i request tl e Agency,)—Professor Chaim Whizmann, | S e Tequest the latter SIX STOKERS KILLED ON FRENCH LINEE FRANCE |ing representatives of various frontter protecting entrances syna- Havre, Erance, Oct. 25.—Six stokers | Jews were entering Pales! aboard the French liner France, which left here Sunday evening for New York, e at the rate of 1,200 monthly and that the number MOPteAesTo and Albania. could not be increased until proper pro- 1S |King Alexander of | SHEF TeLEGRaks and Then Suicided) Greece is Dead ==& & John A. Taylor of Meriden, |Death Was Due to Wounds |fen = o8 were reided by the po- . & > pound deer swimmin, in th P 3 Neglect in Care of Sons. Him By a Pet Monkey. river, about five mies from Batimore | Lord Mayor MacSwiney’s D=ath Occurred on 73d Day , Qct. 25.—John A. Tay- | Athens, Oct. 25.—(By the A. P.o— |Md - ng ut |tosing factories and laying off work- his private chaplain, Father Dominic. ! for freedom. vision of Foods and Markets “there was | e it ing the past week. murder of Ruth Cruzer in New York fn} Paul, Constantine’s third son, would not | *ommodities during the past w i t o a ations, it is ex that no one had denounced him and that| Doth Prince Arthur of Connaught and [Ment on the league of mations, it is ol = fou. Fronk L. Polk. former under-secretary | m sions of having committed the crime were|said that foreizn candidates were I ew York_hospital 3 His condition was said to be sat- 3.820 quarts of whiskey and 150 gallons| There of wine and arrested five men in the 1 —Hundreds of bi-| Attorney General Palmer announced the rous coal operators from various pro-| department of Justice will assist the joint e on housing In fis | holding permission to John MacSwiney to tht end of that time the hottdh of the|reached Cleveland tonight for a general|investigation of building conditions in tion toward a lowering of| Federal court in Buenos Afres, granted | Ju OF SEVEN IN RACE | taken up. a Philadeiphia physician, alleged to have The action Lrought by the state of Ne- simple _off Philip Lefthand, a Digger Tndian who | vocates refusal to send it to Cork. T s life. done o it 4 Bakersfield, Calif. Sparks from his pipe : 5 that Lieutenant Thompson had found 1 | the basis for a free and open discussion|ohieIFs P ERRTES Mol U8 pine | 085, B oA, enid that e meoe! This man's death has - destreyed the 4 ‘s Closing the Boston Sub-Treasury and |formulated for the transfer of the body many da; Belgion entry_ “Belgico,” had landed in!Palmer so that the attorney general's Ting the office of Asslstant Treas: |0 Irclnd, wnd’ thut TRl Sachion’ on ¥ of torture and agony, has el e G e e urer. Al sub-treasurics must be discon- | this point would be up to Dublin castle mont, but poth pilcts reached shore in; representative soft coz TS, 4 A record number of bears in the Adi- 0 operators with more " entries down, but, until Leutenant Thomp- | than three-fourths of the asgregate soft|fondacks has been reported by hunte-s millions of men an o e heromas | Parts of the mountains” and several of |lesally secretly transfer the body to| o 4 eromen in this eoun- Adress to 1.500 emploves of the|and local branches of the organization Yew York Post ce. advocat 1| ¢ Cmight support & resolution da-|New York Post Office. advocated control tional Wom 1909 Ruthenberg said he was a candidate | committees” of operators in the differ-|and women delegates from every efvi zed accs recently. These|United States, said the plan was rot | cXecutive decree, Lynch stated. lie with those who gave o followtng inquiries for favor- meTe WHEEL OF HIS AUTOMOBILE jare brought down. closing down as a result of a dec'lne in volver clutched in the right hand. Ac- | coal shortage emergency the great bulk|verienced in Colorado is racing in the 1d_under | San Juan Valley and the western s'ope of der way, backed by the| Russtan soviet government will shift tion, to eliminate] troops from the Polish frontier for massed drive against the small foress of The armis‘ice hotween | Michael Fitzgerald dled. Jusscrand, ambassador | Mass. Secretary of State Colby was de. | LATEe number of citizens wore mouf bassy, It is reported in Washington. was born in Lynn. but that he had been SOUTH NORWALK G /Riley’s re-| where the great traditions of French ar*[phu: that he left the United States be-|tion is beinz conducted by Fire G quest to make any reduction in their|fre taught, s now open to women in all At the beginning of the war one son, | About the blaze wiich he regards as. ed the hotel men that’his agents would | ment could stady only painting and scu'p- e prices charg- | ture. encractag and lithography beinz 12 PAGES—96 COLUMNS NTSWINEY'S FAST IS FATAL; SEGOND DEATH IN CORK J i R e York the- jerated Pross, adical news- aptured a 250 —There Are to Be “Organized Manifestations of pation and Sorrow” Throughout Ireland Next Su - Funeral Services Are to Be Held in Cathedrals and Prin- e Ao Foot cipal Churchzs—Joseph Murphy, One of Eleveh '1_ a’ ger Strikers in Cork Jail, Di=d Last Evening. 14 London, Oct. 25.—(By * The A. P.)|MacSwiney and e XPied | Death carly today claimed Terence Mac-| died were the run Hs own of the Si. roject is car- his comrade Pit rinciples of the Tor y 5 e t | Leclaratior i Planking over an old well and fell 30 fect 0N ATDE, of S0, 1 NS, Y en of Independence and s Irish hunger strikers,|dent Wilsor ‘s war aims—“the e bodies b T e b \ and £aid to have been the brains of the |ble right to liberty, ‘the privilegs )llrll_lcz\l Bxaminer John' B Lovelandisain | /ey hrong, | Bormer = ted for | TCPUDlican army in Ireland. ererywhere (o clioose their own Wy T e of mirder and sulclde. ee | as reported, according to Swiss des- b ol el g M bt foel| The end was not unexpected, for the!le ‘and obedience. ™ e n x i AT et (tuationlcreated elect accommodate e | soveral days In Bri prison where he | rades.” s ith neglecting to properly care for his [ ke advantage of the situati "t oturning | 1arEe addiffonal vote of women. e 1 Mr. De Valera, ‘these/lrigh Was incarcerated. He was entering up-| patriots were reed by the tyranny that | on the seventy-foufth day of his hunger | could deprive | is threatened a of liberty to iy ® moral support in its Sght % KL 7 Ermaeingh 8y haetens as a protect against a senience|death the alternative” et b suggesied, and Constantine gave his| Yy differences hetweon eamsters’| of two-years' imprisonment on several| MF. De Valera declared Ireland gk oo opinion of this as follow: A0 chaufteurs” Union and (he Merchants' | charges,. including. one of having in his| 8w *the one last white naties. thetia MY TRIAL OF ALFRED GOCCHI “Sufficient unto the day is the evil | ruckmen’s Bureau, of New York. po: ion slmlh.ons documents. 'llulr;hul of its liberty” and that it asked . = AT o arnnw i i o —— Only his brother. John MacSwiney and|only America FOR MURDER OF RUTH CRUGER|!Mereof. T will not fhink of a re=ency| o ging to the New York State Di- there were with the lord mayor when he died. "‘5 S almost - all| Mrs. MacSwiney and the prisoner's two IRISH SYMPATHIZERS neLp oS ers, nnie and Mary, were a. 4 ned. | G = sisters, A ! MASS MEEFING IN NEW YORK. “The lord mayor, Who was terribly ema- w York, Oft. %5.—Irish clated 23 a resuic e crs numbering more than 10.000 atteades 2 ; any ho s b cd mass meetings Lere tonight, pretsting L ';:x and was unconscious when death against what they ler'rrd“l;a “raurder m | by the imperialistic government of 1 hours after the lord| Eritain” of e y > to inform Mrs. MacSwiney. When | Dudley Fied" Farmer.Labor received the news she came to the| party candidate fith::{.m e of - ruw prison. accompanied by her parents and | York, Walter £. Holloway, of Philadel- the Misses MacSwiney, and the family|phis.’ and several Irish women sl group sioical and dry-cyed. prayed over | ing to a great erowd in Commpes K 1 ie body as it lay on the cot. criticized "the government at were no untoward demonstra- | ton and the resaniar. iz tions outside Brixton prisont after the | national candiqates. ~fo news of the death of MacSwiney became | tervene in the cause of gererally known. A large force of police Flags of the Irish re; lic, been concentrated”to put’ down any | America, and bustons bearing s disorder that might occur. 1t was said | tograph of Mayor AlacSwinte &g taie at the prison that the Teason for With: | tributed in the crowd! which bused Sad hissed ev, ritich gov: inform the other relatives that the mayor | ernment "n};ahm“xl"r::-.lfi m;“nd George, was dying was that it was in the pris- | while references to. MacSwingy ol oner's interests : of the greatest martyrs in history” and Pefor MacSwiney dled = Father | to the “irish republic” were srasbedinl Dominic and John MacSwiney knel at| prolonged appiause. % 2 the bedside and offered up prayers. The e republicans | nt Wilson on a pronoure: ster- | she police seized ) Washing- and demoeratio refusal’ to-da- v of Wa: m S. Bricker, g : i3 19, while un-|priest administered the rites of extreme|he s o mp;';fl:nmmnm:hmu o unction. marks made by one of the speakers & It is well within the possibilities that|was severely beaten bef - the body will be taken to Cork secretly policemen. Zn: rce of Mrs.|in to avold unpleasant results “The to Tougias Fairbanks (Mary Pickford) | from whatever demonstrations might be yiure and death of tever MacSwiney for Nov. 27|arranged in England and Ireland as the|ered service train bearing the body passes. There|in haif s senar cr) CVerywhers. Mat is no intimation that any official ad- ot il one man. By SheEEN Mr. Malone said, “is 2 _ (0" arvune the morai’ e o Y 14 is dead at| The home office, in charge of pris- |and women eve s o men ons, which would eontrol the movement e, Sy here {Wiis M X nd. s prestige of the British govy be- for the removal of the body had been | yond th comblacd et officially considered. At the Irish office sty i ealth and econ Dublic orders | it Was declared that no plan had been | repais it ag, ‘Afiuence of & The death of this hero posed the pretence that Grear B gt Wants the league of nations ts re tone. : self-determination to oppressed ’ It s within the powers of the home "“If this young Irinerer Popies. oftice o give up the body of a prisoner | his wite and ehia, 3 ol Sy in whatever way is deemed most expedi-|life for his country's freedoy oy M SN found in all|ent. It is pointed out that it could Wil _not. ry of e some out of the way port and ater to 2 | theic. voiors 1 & s el 10, Crésd, raise vo government vesel and deliver it at Cork. | onr n:x?e:l:' o ocling demdnd ““:‘? Washington offic - the properts of 2 ially v "n‘“‘p;“"" r‘:"- TO BE DEMONSTRATIONS tion of the Americxy mi'ffg :“l:q, e i THROUGHOUT IRELAND|®ONtemot for mankind. 2 Resolutions adopted by the Friends- ol Irish Freed ks New York Oct. 25.—Diarmuid Lynch, om in another &4 lsaac ' . Ferguson, ' Clicago lawyer, lerators at_lomorrow's meeting Will &t-| ooty Conrr Justice Jacoh Pena. |NatONAL sccretary of the Friends of irieh | t5ted against “the mumermelgu”‘.: t charged with crimfnal anarchy, testified | te to fix :‘?}}‘TP\'(T“F[";'T "f""" candidate for the semate,|F om. tonight telegraphed all state|T78OR of Terence MacSwiney,” ang ap- 104 today of his 2ssociation with the “left|soft coal, it is understood that the ma-| Clsred: “We charge Lioyd George With boe yd lling for organized “manifestations of "’;"f?mfmulon of this most Beinous | lignation and sorrow” next Sunday | °Fime. < over the “murder of Lord Mayor Mac- e, . for woments | SWIneY” of Cork. and Michael Fitzger-| BRITISH PRESS COMMENT . t o series of | 21d. Who died recently after a hunger oN s of | strike in a Cork jat. PEATE ox iy e taey | . The demonstrations are to be uniform| London, Oet. 2. s party 5 4 throughout the country, with funeral services in cathedrals and principal churches, and corteges. Banners are to| “In contem t premier of | D2 draped in black, no mottoes are to be | of his own ’,nfi;‘llna‘l.urcla:ld . rishane con- | carried. and no speeches made on that|sisted in his design of sutoide raPl loan in the |9y according to the order’s national| sponsibility ia his 8o far Ciig; orle iR 1NN does not. | him counte- *. nance. 1 JOSEPH MURPHY, HUNGER s Snoht IMhiald in any meas-, ' ure to rest on the goverw: merely. STRIKER, DEAD IN CORK JAIL |declared that under ok 70 circumstances | could e be released. His death is o Cork, Oct. 25.—(By The A."P.) Jo-|truly a case of self-murderer ag if he he lack of | seph Murphy, one of the hunger sirikers |opened a vein on the firs: ikt op o of the plants | in Cork jail, died tonight. carceration.” = in the South| The death of Murphy occurred at 8.35| The Westminster Gaget 3 r. m. He was twenty-five years old and| “The government may -::,::‘ 1h unmarried. reasons to prove it could d rds ever ex. Murphy was a member of the Irish|what it did do." Neves |.:,’;:'::‘ Volunteers and was well known as an |beaten by Lord Mavor MacSwiney s athlete. / 4 lishmen have rever faile, nerous e tle and sheep — spect for those who r:-‘xn l‘h’m 9. :%' growers re-| Joseph Murphy was one of the eleven | death. They Kknow thats the o o men_incarcerated in_Cork jail two days | this man is no vietory for them et before Lord Mayor MacSwiney was sent 5 to Brixton prison in,")n(l‘nn. All the | SINN FEIN FLAGS T men in Cork jail im itely went on a hunger strike. Last week one of them. CORK ARE AT HALF 3ASS 5.—Comment death of Lord Mayor i Eveninz Standard say: country are 2 » —=y7 ade powsible| There were reports last month that mfz"“fy ‘;:';‘ ;fi-;?;-: Febxr flass over * Murphy was an American citizen. It was| e Sty hall and other lu-ldlm~u erted_that he was born in Lynn, mast during the' < x rosettes. There was no ex from France. who is now abroad. will | clared to be investigating the claim. = =i return to the United States within th=| A dispatch from Cork September 10|2MOn& the populace in the street. .o TYPED 131 WORDS A MINUTE TO SUBPOENA HOTEL KEEPERS ‘|next few weeks and will shortly there- | asserted that the American consul lh'rf $15,000 FIRE LOSS IN FOR 60 CONSECUTIVE MINUTES IN DRIVE AGAINST IIGH COSTS |after be transferred to a- Furonean em- 1 established /the fact that Murphy brought to Ireland when an infant by h : South Norwalk, Oct. %5.—] is father, who is a British subject. . 28, 2 ;:;"r,:"f:":"; Murphy's father, Timothy Murphy, a|over $15.090 tc automobiles and pr + votorans selling pammhiors | Shocmaker, resides in Pouladuff, a su-|Was done by 1 fire which swept the T anin ihe | urb of Cork, He said that he was the [liam H. Beess, Jr. garage tn N 2 fifte hildres o late yesterday afte Eades S n s Sl o neng | f2ther of fifteen children only six of y rnoon. Several contes 4 sist in obstructing” the government's|army unifo. s wronefully us~d test featured the opening of the sev- g wrone | whom are living. e emigated to Amer. | tomobiles wers destroved and Mr, enteenth national business show. drfve Seaiushi faod sconts 2nd the proceeds not being devoted to the | 1o, iy 1891, settling in Lynn, where three Satiite Sy et 316 in dits 7 i P At a 2 last week between . 1 T & poc s overcoat which he Margaret ‘B. Owen, four times title | aqo Rivey ot i o | ot nis]chldrens: nclndtig: Jostoh, were was born. The father declared that he took [able fo saye from the flames. ‘The start * Beanx Arts|out his first citizenship papers in 1895,|0f the fire is unkrown and an forc his naturalization became complete. | Bogardus. because of circumsi present wo- born in Lynn, according to Mr. Murphy |PC/0us and which® he refuses: to ms 3 registered at ‘the American consulate in|Public. The bullding occupled By the. V"%&A Queenstown as an American. Joseph, |T3Se Was gutted and Mivine sparks L g however, failed to register. several other fires which did s'ight.| Flnme ques-| It is asserted that the government ac-|38e. B o ot “staction or | cusation against Muwphy w. t h —— == trading in grain futures in Kansas if the | ment over their restaurant menus “they |tion Il Be Setted to bls satetaction orl Cuncion SEANS MUSELY was that he| Gpxpman mAWKINS WILL Dresent investigation of boards of trade | ronid precipitate examination of their| Sor U FU 0 URRIITRE e bHelle dan- BE BURIED IN PROVIDENCH prove that the prices of wheat and other | books and also great inconvenience.” Poonoed his ‘Drospective arrival fn Parls| TO BE REQUIEM MASS FOR ¥ prasg 5 farm products have been manipulated. + % s . = New York, Oct.’25.—Brigadi s The governor declared that the infor- | 1,200 JEWS ARE ENTERING i = °f leclures MACTRENSE D OTTAWE Rush Thristopher Hawkine. 89 Sears ald Ottawa, Oct. 25—High requiem mass|SOmmander of the = Hawking _claims to be prese: e M S (Ninth New York Volunteers) in the (& London; Oct. 25.—(Tewish Telegraphic| /2120 cIaims to be presented to Jugo- | for Lord Mayor MacSwiney of Cork, to evacuate | who died today in Brixton prison, Lon- i ; th ™ don, Wi ’ Head of the Zionist movement, in adqoes, | Klagenfurt: granting of land along thc [ don, will be held in St. Brighle’s chureh to Ttaly; ef- | here next Wednesday. Services will be| Fiith Avenue home. conscious to 2 hospital where he d : syma | fective politieal protection of Italian mi- [ under the auspices of Thomas Davis Ot- | S“Heions ¢ gogues in greater London today declared|nopjttes in Dalmatla and autonomy for | tawn branch of the Irish Self-Determi. s B o+ L ik 5 the first New York volunteer in # uation Leagus: war. He had previously served . o Mexican war ms an enisted man. were killed, and three. others injured in | visions had been made for the reception| Am Investigation was begun by Poland [ STATEMENT BY DE VALEEA 2 native of Pomfret, Vt. an accident to the stoking machinery of | of larzer masses. >f the report made by Commissioner of ON MACSWINEY'S DEATH| General Hawkins will be the veasel, according to a wireless mes- | A plan submitted for the irrigation of | nmigration Wallis, to Polish represont- sage reZeived here today. - The steamer will disembark the victims | Weitzmann announced, and at Cherbourg and continue the New York. : mn.wfllhclhned'kh(nlk'mfln.;'llflm- ‘helr journey. Palestine has been accepted, Professor|itives at Washington, that immigrants| Washington, Oct. 25.—Eamonn De V: the actual|'s the country arg being systematically | lera. president of the provisional. Irish voyage to | work, providing employment for 30,0001 robbed at Danzig and Warsaw before | republic. declared in a statement today