Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
A Turkish Civil Administration A\ antafillakes Heads a New Greek Cabinet. - Paris, Sept. 10 (By the A P.).—The wurkish nationalists, ending their ' two waeks campaign here, swept the. Greeks Asia Minor, and the Kemalists. erday entered Smyrna, took pris- oner the remnants of the Greek forces re- maining behind to cover the ‘wild flight ¢ the Greek army that a meonth ago cu a large part of western Asia. Minor and talked of marching' theough Thrace into Constantinople. The Turks ra na race with the diplo- leaders say, and won the racy Turkish arms settled in a few days, settied finally.’ according to 'Angora » problem of how Asia Minor vided, & problem with which has been struggling: for three acy a. which has been ‘in & stale of three days, since ~the Greek missioner took to a warship in ife, is now & hotbed of typhus lague and is crowded with thou- vands of efugees without food. The aliled consuls and maval contin- ding the Americans, had’ be- restoration of order as soon as ved, but the Turks have taken g+ of Smyrna and their first efforts bave been directed toward. stamping out and relleving distress. Smyrna, which has been the goal of the national- as Angora was that of the Greeks will witness, according to despatehes Angora. the ceremonious and tei- entry into the city of Mustapha Pasha and others of the nation- government. seething ferment of Asta’ Minor seems to have been transferred to Athens through the returried troops,. des- hes from the Greek capital say, and 1k of Constantin®s sec- the throne and the re- ™ of Venizelos to power. The Greek dlers svacuated from Smyrna were or- dered taken to isiands in ‘the Asgean b to be disarmed and demobilized 83 o0 avoll possible trouble n Athens, et the soldiers are reported to ireatened the ship's officees - and _com- pelied them to steer for Piraeus. the port 5! Athens. where they dissmbéeked and od through the straets shouting in- e king and demanding the re. m of Venizelos. chaos for high ¢ tear of his Kema TEK TROOPS REPORTED TO BE IN MUTINOUS MOOD | Sept. 10.—The first troops v} Piraeus from the former Greek Asla Minor in & mutinous mood ; paraded the streets in the city in ! and large grouns, in a. demonstra- istantine, many of shouting insults. ports bearing troops -have mctions ' from the war de- to land thw soldiers on the Aegean. but the troops.are have forced the eaptain ‘to Piraeus and they landed there te orders to the contrary. abdication of Constantine is being penly sed and the newspapers are manding the return of Venizelos. The rovalists, however, are reacting vigaroui msisting upon the shoice of Gen xa8 premier, to which- the have to agree unlese Triant ceeds in forming a cabin and would actually mean a military dictator- oh TO FACILITATE EVACUATION OF CHRISTIANS FROM BRUSA Comstantinople, Sept. 10 (By the A. P)—An allied commission composed ot three staft officers proceeded Saturday oon to Brusa in order to see that ecessary damage was done the and to obtain guarantees for the orities and for the peaceful handing # the town. The Kemalist autho; s understood, will facilitate the on of the Christians from Brusa 190,000, nch have sent a detachment oops to Mudania to nch nationals and thelr property. With the retreating Greeks oen s | the mosques and publle bulldings Constantinopie have been decorated In honor of the occupation of Smyrna. A great torchiight procession was Beid tonight, thousands of school chil- dren and students taking part. Relig- tous services were celebrated in all the Josques in memory of the fallen ol ers Traflc was suspended throughout the city this evening and the cars of for- Mgn residents were halted. A few clashes occurred between opposing fac- lons. but generally order wi 1l pre- verved < o Lriol e m KEMALISTS OBJECT TO BRITISE IN ASIA MINOR Angora, Sept. 10.—The Kemalsts ex- press some astonishment at the news ihat British contingents have been land- % on the coast of the sea of. Marmora, but officials here think that this is emporary mezsure \ending the arri st Turkish troops. the case. the Kemilists declars they will be cbliged to oppose the stay of the Brit- ish forces in Asia-Minor, Constantinople and Adrianople were Fiven as the next objectives: by omeof the Kemalist leaders. addressing a great owd that assembled outside the nation- assembly bullding as soon as the news M the capture of Smyrna was officially zonfirmed. “We will soon rejolce at the néws of the delivera > of two other great clties that impatiently awalt the coming of our Sag—Constantinople and Adrianople,” the weaker told the crowds. ‘Turkey will 30t et her army lay down its arms until the aims set forth in the national paet \re attained.” ANGORA NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR MASSACRES IN ASIA MINOR ‘:l—-(” The A. P. ; 1 Fthe federation resumes its Should this not be | ence here tomorrow, Neither Samuel Gompers nor the ten other officers of the federation on the ex- ly, worried. over the . situation, as imassacres have .aiready. begun. The message - through the Red Cross was that the government would not as. sume responsibility. for massacres . that may occur because of the extreme ten- sion of the. population.. The league of- fiicials fear that the Turkish authorities and the small, forces representing the allies 2t ‘Smyrna will be unable to dea with the excited people. League ofticials are considerably puz- aled_as.to what action to take With re- The league has,no authority_over the Red Cross and s of intervening than entirely new organiza- However, in view of complications lkely to arise with the Red Crescent, the Turkish relief body, in the work to spect to this information. has no other by setting up a tion. -Minor, it is not at al m that the league may be called upon to. co-ordinate the efforts of the Red Cross and the Red’ Crescent. This would enable the necessary relief work to"go on without conflict with the people of Asta-Minor. The situation has not. been officially red by the league authorities, but it_has been frequently discussed by the Earl of Balfour, Lord Robert Cecil, Dr. Fridtjof Nansen and the Steering com- mittee of the assembly. TURKISH CELEBRATION Constantinople, Sept. 10. attacked Greek houses and necessitati: e ‘services of troops to fut down the disordefs. For the first time since the armistice the allies permitted the Turkish authori- several tiea to call out the troops and companfes of lancers paraded the prin- cipal streets; whereupon the report be- attack- et R SRt st where _speakers . mmnm crow%." which then paraded past thé war office came current that the allies we: ing_Conjtantino; ‘The b! to, weird Oriental ‘musi¢; earrying por: tralts of Mustapha ‘Kemal, while Wwo- men ‘walched silently. behind latticed win- dows. Go.den -Horn to Pera, but the allied po- lice blocked .the Galata bridge. A num- ber of the demonstrators Towed ‘across and then marched-io the Greek quarter of Tatavla, where they attacked church- es and broke the windows in many . hous- Others attempted -to force their way the residence. of the . Armenian patridrcy, and, not being successful ig this did considerable damage. CONSTANTINOPLE CELEBRATING GREAT TUBKISH VICTORY Constantinople, Sept. 9 (By the A. P.) Established in Smyr-| 1. 2"10 k.2 na—The City is Now a Hot Bed of Typhus and Plague and is Crowded With Thousands of Refugees Without Food—League of Nations is Gravely Worried Over the Conditions in Asia Minor—Angora Government Has| o:u » this statement by .ths Angora goveranment is taken in some quarters to mean that RESULTED IN RIOTING The Turkish victory processions today on both sides of the Bosphorus developed at nightfall considerable rioting, when frenzied mobs churches, Turkish ‘yne paraders atfémpted . to- cross. the . Eigure Stolen From Cross. i ~Berlin, “Aug. 26—Berlin police "con- sider ' the “helght< of ‘crime’ was. reached when - they . were - informed. -that - thieves had stolen the bronze ‘figure “of ' Christ 4rom the'cross in ‘e Sophien oburch semetery. 2 — To Melt Statue. of Kalser, . ~~Officlals. of the vil- ensieben, Saxony, have found a use at last for the metal statue the former kaiser, which the town [%ouncil has decreed shail be torm down. t will be melted up ‘and'recast tms or- &an plpes. for the local church and the Dedestal. will- be re-caryed " as; a nionu- ment to the soldiers in’the recent war trom the village. - ARTIES CONFIDENT OF VICTORY IN MAINE TODAY Portland, Me., Sept.. .10 —With the eyes of the eéntire country upon ihe is- sue and_ spokesmen for 'both political parties expressing confidence of -victory, the voters of Maine tonight were pre- pared to go to the polls tomorrow to elect a United States senator and four ocohgressmen, ‘as well ' as ' a__governor, state auditor, members of the legisla- ture and county- officials. While Jast minute predictions of republican leaders were that the state would remain repub- lican by a plurality of 0,000, the demo- crats - maintained “that organizations of the democratic women' and other fa tors would bring about “a great sur- prise.” United States” Senator Frederick Hale, Tepublican, of Portland. is opposed for ré-election “by former Governor Oakley C- Curtls, démocrat. also of - this eity. Governor Pereival P. Baxter, who as president of the state senate -assumed the gubernatorial chair on the death of Governor Frederic H. Parkhurst in Jan- uary, 1921, is- opposed by William R. Pattangall, ‘of Augusta, former state at- torney ‘general, and‘ for many years the democratic leader in Maine. For the first time in Maine political history, the names'of women appear on the palolts as candidates for -state and county - office. Kight women seek elec- flon to the legislature and one to the state senale. Ten others are candi- dates for county. offices, While the long. ecampaign, which began immediately after the June primarics, has been deseribed as the most unevent- ful on record, the significance of the Maine election a8 an index to.the gei- cral 1922 resuit atiracted to the battle ground political leaders of both purties from many parts of the country. Among those who came to speak for the repub- lican cause weré Vice President C idge and Senators Pepper, of Pennsy nia, Lodge of Massachusetts, Fdge of New Jersey and Moses, of New. Hamp- shire, i While in the. federal field the/ tardt has been made the central ‘issue. of -the campaign, in, state aftairs Governor Baxter telied on a “campaign of educa- tion.” the ‘aim of which. was to make slssey tamiliar with -thetr sgy:-(em and machinery_ of : government. ' His _ oppo- Tont: Tormmer - AMgrmey Gineral® Patts 1 1 READY FOR PRIMARIES IN MASSACHUSETTS TUESDAY Boston, -Sept. 10.—The tumult and the shouting of & campaign that has suaken both parties .and confysed the .voters have died away -save for the customary whirlwind ' drives by various candidates tomorrow. On Tuesday- the republicans will go to the polls to decide wheth:r Senator Henry Sabot Lodge ‘and Gov- ernor Channing H. Cox shall be re-nom- inated and the democrats to select their opponents to the republican nominees. Joseph Walker, former progressive and one-time speaker of. the state house of- representatives, Lodge, He has charged the senator with being réactionary and with having failed to make plain his position on the prohibition amendment which Walker _Constantinople s celebrating _ the | Pr ereat Turkiah victoryl .The munlclpat| {AYOrs. - Senator Ledge 'n numerons authorities have sent an .official tele- | SPeeches has defen iz cotiuae. In ol gram of congratulations to the assembly Several thousand students banners fiying, singing the national hymn and at' Angora. marched in procession. with cheering Mustapha Kem: SAILORS GUARDING U. S. CONSTLATE IN SMYENA .—(By The A. P.)— The American destroyer Lawrence ar- and sixty sailors Smyrna, Sept. 1 rived here yesterday, senate and has pointed out that al- though = he opposed the prohibition amendment he voted for the Volstead enforcement act. Many bitter personalities have mark- ed the four-cornered contest for . the democratic nomination for senator . be- tween William A. Gaston, Fallas Lore Sharp, John Jackson Walsh and Sher- man L. Whipple. Walsh instituted = Itbel suit againsa Gaston and a Boston newspaper which has supported Gaston. from the Lawrence are guarding the | GOVERNORSHIP THE American consulate, the theatre. the Y. dissimeliio By TSR A M. C. A bullding and the American ik S school. The American property is near the consulate. TURES ESTABLISH CIVIL ADMINISTRATION IN Constantinople, Sept. 10.—(By The A. P.)—One hundred thousand Gresk troops have evacuated Smyrna, and a Turkish civil administration has been established there, TRIANTAFILLAKOS HEADS THE NEW GREEK CABINET graph company. It' is headed by M. Triantafillakos, who also takés the port- folibs of war and marine. M. Optaxias is minister of finance; M. Boussios, in- M. Kalogeropoulos, foreign af- terior fairs, and M. Mansa A. ¥. OF L. OFFICERS ARE TO national economy. CONSIDER GENEBAL STRIKE —— Atlantie City, “N. J.,- Sept. mands for 2 general strike of all reported by its 'c pouring in _sin: Daugherty - obtained _his against the striking rail shop crafts, will be first on the program for con sideration when the executive council of Attorfiey General scutive councll made any officitl state- ment concering the probable outcome of Expressing their in- dividual. opinions, however, council mem- strongly strike, althcugh they were unanimous in denouncing the’ injunction a8 a “blow to the rail crafts tomorrow's session. bers without exception, opposed to a general were and a threat to all organized labor.” “~The labor chiefs are united, they assert, in the bellef that too much uncertainty has already been aroused in the nation's industrial life by a .statement of Mr. Gompers {ssued at Washington which was interpreted by some as - a general strike threat. . 8, of. tel AL the same timie, large.employers of labor throughout the country haye . be- tederation.officlals. with ra- sleged the SMYENA London, Sept. 10.—A new Greek cab- inet has been formed, according to an Athens despatch to- the Exchange Tele- 10.—De- or- ganizations of the A. F. of L., which are icers to have ' been injunction jual confer- Montpelier, t. Sept. 10.—Only office—that of governor—will be con- tested at the republican primary on Tuesday. The democrats failed to poll a sufficient vote In the last presidential electio nto make it mandatory for them to participate in the primary this year, and they have madé their mominations already. Redfield Practor, of Proctor and Lieutenant Governor Abram W. Foote, of Cornwall, are the two gubernatorial candidates for whom the - republicans will cast their ballots. Congressman Frank L. Greene, of St. Albans, representative from the first of Vermont's two congrsesional districts, has mo opposition for the- Tepublican nominatlon for senator to succeed Sen- ator Carroll S. Page. Heading the. democratic -ticket, which will be presented to’the , electorate 1n November, ‘are r. Willlam B, Mayo, Northfield, for senator, and. J. Holm: Jackson, -of - Burlington, - for governor. one CLEMENCEAU TO VISIT ° - AMERICAN -IN' NOVEMBER Paris, Sept. 10.-—(By_ the. Géorge Clemenceau, France's’ w !jer, has addressed the following. miessage 1] to The Associated Press from his summer | home: at Jard, department .of Vendee; his. native district, on his contemplated visit to the United States: 4 1 have no time to.make plans. All'l can say is that I'am ready to leave for American during the first week in Novem- ber, there to remain for a few weeks if the state of my health permits. 1 will arrange the whole mattér with fny American friends who already know. that I can no longer bear - the idea of France being accused of fmperialism and militarism by the American people. Na uarrly 1 will speak of the: league of na- tions,.but 1 pursus no-other designs than to say what T feel and return home.” IRELAND EXPERIENCING A STRIRE OF POSTAL EMPLOYES i \ Belfast, Sent. 10.(By the &. P.).—All the Free State telegraph; postal.and tele- phene facilities ceased at 6 o'clock this evening. The British military authorities Since then score ‘ams hive [ are maintaining communication ‘with' Ul* m received demanding “ general | ster and England by wireless, The postal union officecs in Dublin said this afternoon that despite the govern- Lo Drohibition they. were determined to picket, m'&: opposes - Senator : With soft- coal ion” reaching sat- isfactory ‘levels and with the hard coal strike practically ‘gettled, ° fnterest in business. and financial cireles’ has cen: tered ‘during the past week in’ the extent of industrial recovery' and the *pros- Dpects: for fall ‘bushiess. - The steel 1Adus- try. perhaps the chief sufferer from the strikes, shows signs of improvement. The 50 per cent’ of capacity 'leVer of op-| erations. to_which' the “indlstry was're- duced' by the strikes has been ibettered slightly ‘and a further: gain is expected. With a conm:yd restriction of fuer and car supplies, However; the trade is mod- erate in"its anticipations.’ A ‘réturn te a 60 per cent.Basis this” fall.is consid- ered more likely than a full recovery to the 75 per cént'basis, reached in - the early summer. Opinlons differ as to the probable duration - of existing higher Steel prices, byt most observers consider, six_months: an’ adequate allowance. ° Reports on the railroad traffic’ move- ment continue' to be reasonably satistac- tory. ‘The latest available e for the week -ended August 3 tal loadings of $91,000 cars, 'a. figure which tops_tie -previous high record for the year.'by some 13,000 - cars. ~Coal loadings, the statistics for which- are:ob- tainable for later dates, are good and indicate a movement .of this commodity at-a rafe close to’ 10,000,000 tons & jweel. While the added demand: for, equipment on -account of the resumption of anthracite mining will be partly m by use of hitherto inactive rolling stosk belonging to the hard coal roads, the opinion is held that it will also offer a test of the acuteness of .the much-talk- ed-of shortage. Financial = -quarters meanwhile believe that-the railroads ate getting their ‘shop situation = better in hand and that the transportation diffi- culty will not.be-as serious as recently was believed, Publication of September 1 values for two of the principal indices of commod- ity prices failed “to disclose any ' up- ward tendency. One of the indices fell half of one per cent, while the other remained practically stationary. Farm products, such as grain and meat, con- tinued to give ground rather sharpiy and aside from metals and fuel the oth- er grouns moved but little. * Partly for this reason. less ‘credence is. given talk of 4n inflationary boom during’the fall. The belief grows that the - price - ad- vances will be confined to” commodities’ in which a temporary and abnormal sit- tively low purchasing power -of “Europe and our agricultural distriets will-be a damper to ‘any'-false. boom. Accordin to: this view a mioderate. but?sp provemient in‘ buiiness is in c&¥ The “department of agricuitu: P vised ‘its coen’ ‘crop. estimate downwards from -3,017,000,000 to 2.875.000,000 bush¢ els,” principally, ‘as -a - result~af.~the thot weather. damage in the southwest. The reviison the trade; howevér, and the department has placed the yield, of Wheat ‘somé, 13, 000,000 ' bushels. higher - at~"818;000,000 bushéls, ~ The -latter figure with an actpal crop last year of 795, 000,000 bushels. = The returns. show that supplies will ~be - plentiful- . European crops are reported to be-short.hut, while a fair volute of European buying ‘has been going on. it has-been insufficient to stiffen prices in this country. It iz pointed out that there is an obvious dlf- ference between what Europe might like to buy and what that-continent. will be able to pay for. The reserve ratio of the federal re- serve system shows another moderats decline) but-the loss is-attributed to hol- iday demands for currency. —Monetary conditions remain practically unchanged. BIG CAPTURE BY DRY AGENTS ON A FARM IN NEW JERSEY Rutherford, N. J., Sept. 10.—Four pris- oners, three stills with d total capacity of 600 gallons, and 107 barrels of mash were taken in a rail by prohibition en- forcement agents on a farm at Secaucus late today. The agents also found three loaded shotguns and - seven five-gallon cans ot aicohol. One of the fleeing prisoners was cap- tured when he became miréd waist-deep in a nearby marsh. Those arrested are Frank Kroll of Se- i caucus, Tony Scaiea. Charles"Duccola and Max Weiner, all of Passaic. Filling The Gap Until New ‘Leader Is Appointed | when found, and today, after getting in +| over. it.“try: as’ hi e Richard Mulcahy, holder of the. Defense portfolio in the Dail Etr- sean; who has left his-post to-su¢- : ceed Collins - as Commandper’in Chief of the National Forces inithe field.” Mulcahy, with Willjam =T, Cosgrave and George Gavan.Duffy, ernment in thelr. hands, untjl = head can ‘be & vation omtains and that thé compraa-:F 65y =] the had “been amply anticipated by |, “campares| . +8t: -Sofla. -In _Constantinople, the most imposing - mosque: in -the. world was at- tended by 25,000. Afol on the casion of.ap impressive, Turkish victory. and Simpson at:Smyrna was reported 10-the navy department.. The destroyer Parrott- has: returned . to .Constantinople. olonel Michael J. Hendrick, United States consul at Windsor, Ont,, died aft- er ap lliness of one week. He was 75 years of age. . The Costa Rican National assemly, has refused to ratify the Central Amer- ican: treaty. of peace and amity signed at'the recent conference aboard the U. . Tacoma. The eotton trade of the world has de- crseade - one-third, , or. approximately 3, 000,000,000 pounds :‘from’ the - figure] which it ‘had ‘reached’ before the war. t. 10.—(By The kvrl_)s- With 't ival” today of Hai Daugherty, _attorney ‘general United States, the stage wis set f hearing in fe ‘cout ?memmlme government's application for‘a permanent injunctnon against the striking railway . James - Beok,” soliitor-gen: Danjed-Mr. Daugherty, They were pre- ceded ‘yesterday ‘by line, assistant to the. - solicitor . - gen eral, Oliver E. Pagan, the government's indistment - expert, ‘and two carloads of evedence which, it is was said, would be used iin-an effort to-prove a ‘widespread conspiracy™to cripple thé natlon’s'trans- Portation machine. -~ The existence of such a pot was charg- ed directly by the attorney general when he “obtained on- September 1 ‘what -has been calléd the most sweeping tempor- fnjunction ever issued in such a case. Union leaders have not only,deriled thi existence of a _conspiracy, but have de- manded the.vacation of the order against them and have taken the’ ground that the government has: failed to_make out a case, that the injunction is in.viola- tion of ‘the. Clayton ‘act, and that it was obtained through misrepresentations for “ulterior and unlawful” motives. . In preparation for the government's batle to make the injunction-permanent. federal agents were said to have collect- ed’evidence from all parts of the coun- try, including thousands of - ‘telégrams, letfers, * photographers, blue prints, and books, tools of violen® angd ‘transcripts of statements of some 17,000 individuals. Al of this evidence, it was sald by fed- era]_agents,” would be used fn an’ effort ta show that since the ‘strike began there have been twenty-five murders and ‘that 56,000 railroad” cars have been. tamper- ed With and fourteen railroad bridges burned in the last seventy, days. I Tomorrow's hearing. will -be . . before Federal. Judge James H. Wl‘lke‘rlon ‘;veho grapted . the. tempprary injunction. Rep- Besanting fha ublon lcaders and opposed to Jthe brilllant _array .of government counsel “will be Donaid R. Richbers, a Young Chicago, attorney and. personal Ccounsel of B. M Jewell, head of the shop Mr. ~Jewell, himself, and~ John retary-tréasyrer. of the organ- ization aiso wat: d to-be in court. Governmient agents’ indicated that ‘if the %0 union leaders appeared. they ‘might De.called to the witness stand and_grill- d by the government. 3 “Another.plan,- to;subponea everyone of the- 240_ union leaders named -in: the tem- porary ” injunction. and N Washington, Sept! 10—Mrs. Harding and from out of town, spent (a fairly comfortable day, the of-|telegrams of sympathy ficlal ‘bulletin from her attending. phy- | ecutive oftice during the sicians at 9 o'clock tonight ‘said a nd | = Those in touch with the case wers the deciston relative to whether it would | couraged somewhat by the be nmecessary to’ operate has been post- | today as compared with last mi poned untl further consulation tomor- | the patient’s temperature and the row morning. - in pulse and respiration. Laist The night statement follows? bulletin gave temperature 102:2, “Mrs. Harding's condition - tonight 15| VO, 32, 314 pulse 102 e In an effort to eliminate from the sys tem as far as possible waste m “Temperature 100.5; pulse -116; res- | which could mot find passage through the | piration 36. kidneys, the physiclans in atten 13 “She has had -a fairly comfortable | continued to keep Mrs. m'#: day with such indications of a slight-im- | in heavy blankets and hot towels 2§ 3 2 provemént tnat the decision relative (6 |means of promoting perspiration. ¢ - surgical rellef was = postponed unt!l - It was reported that despite he The federsl government. began. against Count Rudalph Festetics De T na of Hollistown, L. I, seeking to an- nul citizenship which he claims was granted him in San Francisco in 1306. it Thirteen Williamson county men are now: in_ the county jail at Marion, Iil, charged with ;murder in connéction with the Herrin massacre and others are sur- rendering -or- being ‘arrésted every ‘hour. resplra-- All the moving plcture shows in Berlin are to be closed after September 22 in accordance " with a decision reached by the Association of Cinema Theatre Own- ers owing to the- excessive amusement tax. | \ (J Monday morning. continued to show tremendous pluck 7 C. 'E. SAWYER, M. D.” | fortitude,:and was said to bave sxpre ‘While anxiety a8 to Mrs. Harding’s|corfindence to those at her bedside condition was évidenced throughout the | she would quicki; Testored to health day by the White -House staff, some of o e the many intimate friends of the fam- fly. who called during the day wers ex- | MARION CHUECH-GOERS tremely. hopeful, basing their view of PRAY FOR MRS. HARDING the situation both, on -the continued-ab- — ’ sence of any unfavorable symptoms and | Marion, Ohlo, Sept. on the assurance that Mrs. Harding was [the speedy recovery of relatively free from in. Harding were offered at of Dr.. Sawyer, accompanied by Mrs. [church ip the home town of the president Sawyer left the White House for a short | 10day.” At the Trinity Baptist ride soon after the night statement was |home church of Mr. and Mra. Harding, 3 issued, for the first time in more than|tWo minute prayer ression of prayer &eck. It wax learned also that, for|wds offered ater whh & falag w the first time since Mrs. Harding’s ll- |Svmpathy was sent to the president. . ness became critical. only one nurse| Dr. Thomas H. McAfee, pastor of ¢ was kept in the patient’s room tonight. | Trinity church, who has been ill wit} The postponement of the decision as|®trcke of paralysis for months, has to necessity for surgical réliet also was | Praying continually fer an im seized upon by many as ground for op- [in Mrs Harding's condition. timism, though it was known that such |®ent the president a tlegram. a step was regarded by many experienc- | Dr. George T. Harding, the p ed practitioneers as an emergency meas- | father, received a detailed account ure, <daughter-in-law’s condition this Running through the .sad overture [ 800N after which he said which - enveloped the White House to-| “From the latest reports of the day was heard continually expressions |tomalatology of Mrs. Mrs. Herdl of admiration for the unusual pluck of ta noce she is Mrs. Harding and the fortitude display-|ira rest that she has had ed.by. her husband who, in all the vigil {Florence has a good constitution. since her iliness became serious, has|Ver she was sick she awayy never been beyond call of the room on|fast. After the operation, 15 the southwest corner ' of the mansion,|8he recoversd th,g[r: me‘ h‘;’:mnnd 3 A ny o watchers around the ! yuppy 2 > White House—most - of ‘them _intimate M, KILENR/WHEN § ¥ radkor chd presideat” and_nis ite— TRUCK CRASHED. leparted shortly - after - receivi word o ke that the question of & operation had| Stamford, Comn. Sept. 10 DoanpoRIOReE. were kilied' and three others Among the many’ callers was Rick Red- | 0517 injured tonfght when a dle. a senate page; who had known the §7¥ Uuck crashed into-a tree president as a senator, and whose father | LONE Ridge road, three miles from died some time -ago. The boy took hi inged intg a ditch. = n father's most _ highly prized gift, cpants and burying them in the mud. plenle. Jerome May, old time banjo - player, composér and minstrél_has played his last melody for death c&me to him in Stratfordas suddenly as a string breaks. undet a player's-finger. ‘Mrs; “Adelina Otero Warren, of Santa Fe, défeated Congressman Nestor Mon- toya ‘of Albuerquerque, N. M., for nom- ination for representative in congress- man in congress by the New Mexico re- publican convention. The ‘London Evening News states that it “learns that the London headquarters of the Guaranty ‘Trust company of Néw York has been defrauded off the sum- of £32,000. ::The arrest of & fur dealer charged swith - selling dved rabbit skins as high grade furs to working girls sent police detectives into the’ Dorchester district of Boston- on a search for . other alleged swindlers. He alse Henry V Greene, president of the H. . Green: company, Boston, and four subsidiary - financial organizations, sur- rendered on eight of nine secret indict- mients alleging -in _general consiracy to f commit- larceny; trom investitors, Ernesto:Vosali, -alieged to have fatally shot Mrs. Rosali-A. Galli, near the pub- lice “market in Portiand, Me. ten days ago, Was-sent-to the’ state hospital at Alll.um‘ v for mental observation. | feot: it would prolong the -hearing- for many: wéss. < ¢ * “AWhilé " c o P D ‘cofps of federal agents were rting over thi yérnment’s evidence ¥, the court ing Which is scheduled to open af 10.30..in ‘the morning, 'union 16aders ffom all‘parts of‘the ountry were riiving for-a meeting of the shop crart Policy - committes of finety ‘which' had been .ses {0 begin-in_an outlying. hotel. a half hour earlter. - -At-the-beginnifg-of: its- eleventh week, the -strike was estimated -to have' cost the men who walkéd-ont on July 1 more than $100:000,000 in lost wages. Mr. Daughert¥ spent most of: the day in ‘confererice with his aides and - tonight ssued--a statement, sa#ng in part: “We are ready, so far as the govern- ment is concerned, to proceed with the hearing of the case. Requests have been made: for modification of the restraining order in)some respects. We will ot ‘course,” ‘consider them in" ‘due time: These are questions which must be sub- mitted to the eourt. TWO WEST HAVEN MEN PICKED UP OFF BLOCK. ISLAND ‘Hamrold ‘D. Wilsen, candidate for the republican nomination for attorney gen- eral, and former. prohibition enforcement officer for Massachusetts, will be sum- monséd -Into court in Salem, Mass, for vilotion if the speed laws. o0 The framed copy of the 21st psalm and left | TN ‘Weré returning from a it at the White House dood with the| ~ine dead: 3 wish that it be given to the president, | XSoneth Gruse. 20, of New Casaan. believing hat the words would strength-| Albert Reuben of No en him. As the boy turned away; an old negro, hobbling on a crutch passed ioto an at. tendant a single flower, carefully wrap- ed in paper. He asked that it be Eiven to the president's wite. Throughout the day an air of suspense | 7 {pervaded the White House. Mrs. Hard- ing appeared to be holding her own, and | S5t Of the leg, In some respects her condition seethed more favorable, but the findings of the physicians in attendance were awalted by the president with considerable anxiety. At 1o time was the president for from the bedside of his wife. Worno by his vigil of the past 48 hours, he spent much of his time in the sick room, occasionally retiring to his study nearby for a con- ference with physiciass. Clifford King, of Marion, Ohlo; brother of Mrs. Harding arrived at White House shortly.after 8 o'clock morning. Two hours later Dr. accompanied by his wife, reached 0a capital, Dr. Carl . Sawyer meeting x some train_and’ taking them immediately the White House. Flowers continued to arrive in large quantities from friends in Washington The Pepperell Manufactaring company .of Biddeford and the Yotk Mahufacturing company of Saco ane| mounced 4hat effective today wages In their cotton textile mills would be re- storad 10 the scale in effect before the 20 ‘per cent. reduction made last winter. com- | The fire which broke out at midnight in the summer colony at Bap Point, op- posite Popham Beach at the mouth of the Kennebec river, was brought under control with assistance from Bath, Me., after it had burned the store of Fred Spinney and ten cottages. Notice was posted in the Cabot cot- ton mill, Brunswick, Me., that beginning today the wages in effect on Feb- ruary 12 last will be paid employes. The increase = undefstood to be about 20 per cent. Newport,” R. I, Sept: 10.—The fishing | steamer William ‘M. Welis, of Boston, irought to Newport last night L. W. Try- on and Edward C. Lohse, both of West Haven, Conn., the crew of the fishing schooner Ino, of West Haven, after, find- ing the pair afloat on the Ino's ice box about ten miles outside : Block ' Island. The men told the Wells' crew. that. the Ino had sunk about ten o'clock ‘In the morning and -they had been floating on the ice box about six hours. The Ino sank somewhere between Montauk Point and Block Island. Tryon and Lohse had practically abandoned hope of being picked up and had written in lead pencil on the side of the ice box fare- well notes to- their families. They were none . the .worse for their experience Reckless motor driving, it was sald, was the cause of Governor . Sproul's daughter, Mrs. J. H. Ward Hinkson, falling into the hands of the Philadel- phia police, along. with another young woman and young man. Protessor Alexander Smith, moted chemist, until recently head of the de- partment of chemistry at Columbla Uni- versity, New York, 18 dead at his homse in Edinburgh. Of all the several hundred Retarians who drew for a 150-pound pig offered as a gift at a Rotary club pienic in Okla- homa City, Okla, the - porker fell to the lot of Rabbi’ Joseph Blatt of Templs B'Nal Israel, who held the winning number, communication with realtives :left “for ,their homes. —_————— ACCIDENTAL ASPHYXIATION OF A MAN IN HARTFORD - Hartford, Sept. 10.—Joseph W. Spriges, 48 years old, of this city, was asphyxlat: (in-his. room tonight when he acéident- | &lly ‘turned on a gas’jef' with thé handle is-umbrella, ‘aceording to'a finding by Medical Examinér Henry N.:Costello. TRUTH_ABOUT SNAKES - One of the best 'meth6ds for. mak- ing a litelong coward out of & youngster for. setting him continually il at’ ease fifilevln‘lhe woods, .is. that .of im- nting in- his small head the com- mon, .almost- world-old; aversion fer all. snakes, Teach him" to’ be cautious; extremely “-cautious; “but.do not- let him grow up believing the-old failacy that in killing 'every snake he'sges he is : doing. . humanity > a favor. In the great. majority of -cases he:is-dolng humanity d serious .injury. Bnakes‘do an_ynlimited mount-of- good “in - de- nsects and similar pesti. : _ 1 you-teach.a: youngster ear and Kate all ‘snakes, he will ‘never get i may -after ‘grow- ing ‘up. But ‘it he grows-up With an will’ come ‘to’ thank " you for it.. ' With four exceptions, the dozens of different. kinds .of 7 snakes “in this ountry re -absolutely - harmless. The 5 ?:g -snake criminals ‘are 'the- rattle. , the copperhead, .the water mos- | casin‘and- the coral-snake. When 'in a ality wi any of these four, cannot: The bresking’ of a life line carried out ‘to the Rev. Martin A. Kraus, of North' Pelham, N. Y., by Marty Kava- naugh, 76f Newark, N. J., resulted in the of ‘Mr. Kraus. ‘Beparations and not the' league of na- tions'is the issue of most importance to Burope now, dedlared James M. Cox, fomer governor ‘of Ohlo and deocratle candidate for the presidency at the last election. - > Gt “Because _the' appropristion of $185,- 000" for the maintenince of the ~Rhode Island ‘state militia is almost exhaus State troops: mow on strike duty in the Pawtuxet vallly may have to be with- drawn. B ol - S Wl e pwin B several years: r known, to' newspaper readers as B was a her bedside. r.ifi. market was soon to ‘be robbed, po- | lice officers visited "2 house in Union square_and ' arrested at revolver polnt | two_ young men who were préparing to leave. their room. In the apartment ths ‘officers” said they “found burglars'_tools, three. revolvers and two black masks. by CAot ‘Marty Welah, widner “and ‘loser -on’ one * international = fishermen's. r o |case- she .is the victor’ of the it [ 3