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Bombing doi Coumbat Sk Aircraft—Turkiah Reply to ish Was Somewhat Defiant—Future to Mustapha Kemal Leader. J Sept. 38 (BY the " A. T.)—A formidable fighting force in foating fortresses and powerful bomb- ag and combat aircraft, together pos- ased of greater destructive power n the British grand fleey at Scapa Flow now guards the great international waterway of the near east from the na rows to the Black sea. Britain’'s gigantic armada waters is led by the two 34 per-dreadnaughts Revenge Resolu- Then come the three verftable prowess, the battles 8 24 Iron Muke. Some of these super-wareralt possess ponderous 16-inch guns having » range of twenty miles, The remain- ‘onstantinop! in these ton su- us, a sbort distance from Constantinople. Some_optimism was felt foday over the: megting between M. Frankiin-Bouilion, the French envoy, and Mustapha Kemal was & conférence on the general situation. Later Kemal recsived 2 message calling him to Angora lf discuss with the government the na- tionalist epl man, ey gt yoands: | Should. these, be upheld by a_ supreme pomed his departure - for Afudanis . to|cOUTt justice, but they were reported to the - Turklsh eader. nan given sasurance thar - his|makes clear that they have not conceded troops will not advance further than the | defeat. Briien military oleclon taat s e {out? it was learned that the plaintif | Pasha at Smyrna,. where there while on the way to Theretore General Harington has meet Kemal. Meanwhile neutral zone. ‘Sept. 29.—Turkish refu: i numbering 240 from the village of Bezara, in Thrace; arrived at the Bul- Wn*m, declaring they forced to flee to escape Greek ‘THe. Greeeks, they asserted, nded " the village, burned their homes and killed & part of the popuia- tion. REFEREE DECISION COMPLETE . VICTORY FOR MRS, STILLMAN *Carmel, N. Y., Sept. 29.—(By the A. P.)—James-A. _Stillman, - multi-million- aire banker of New. York, today lost his fight to divorce.Mrs. Anne U. Stillman and disown Baby Guy Stillman, and was himselt found guilty of the same chargé || he ‘made‘against his wife—the parentage of an dilegittmate child. Mr. Stillman, it was indlcated ton!gat, has not given up the fight. His Jawyers would not say whether they would ap- peal from the findings of the referee, have made a move . which _seemingiy As so0n as this announcement was given e tion as their standard bearers at the November election. . Their-nomumation for governor and lieutendant-governor re- spectively. was unanimous, -~ ° The withdrawal of- thie name of ‘Will- iam R. Heafst'as a candidate during the afternoon . smothered “out: the only isste that threatened.to precipltate & conflict in the convention and the 'slate”prepared by the state leaders ‘went through with- out a hitch at the_closing session of the convention: tonight. ~ _ The complete ticket follows: ¢ Governor,’ Alfred E. Smith. New York. Lieutendant-Governor, George R. Lunn, Schenectady. Secretary of State, James. A Hamilton, Bronx. Attorney general, New York, Sept. 20—Attachment of funds carried in four New' York banks to the credit of Hugo Stinnes, German industrial magnate,-in connection with a 32,085,185 breach of sult filed by James A. Tiliman, promoter, revealed today that Stinnes, through vacious fin- anciul schemes, had made attempts to float loans for hundreds of millions df dollars in this country. 2 . The attachment order, signed by Su- preme Court Justice Wasservogel, was placed in effect by Deputies to sheriff Nagle, of New York county. The funds, the exact amount of which was not dis- closed, .ace. held by the- National City | bank, the Guaranty Trust company, the Equitable Trust company and -“Hollestn and company. 5 “Tillman, described as 2 financial pro- moter, claimed that on May 3. 1919, he entered .into an agreement with Stinnes which necessitated the ‘transfer to a Who Gets the Most. for Hi# Monejr? The fellow who buvs haphazard—or the chap who puts his every- ..The Turkish government. intends. to the Groek prisoners, who cxceed 70,- 000 in number in the work of reconstruc- tlon in the devastated reglons. Jim Johnston, megro, was taken from ofticers and lynched while en route to ‘Wrightsviile, Ga., stand trial on a charge. of attacking & white woman. A_peat bog which Montreal officlaly intended to develop: as & substitute ' fuel to mitigate the coal shortage this winter, Is afire today at Thetese, Que. Benjamin Rosen was fined 1,000 and for manufacturing quor at Scarboro. intoxicating A penslon pay enyelope increase from 30 to 372 a month, for Civil and Mexi- can war veterans, possibly as a Christ mas gift from Uncle Sam, is planned by republican leaders in congress. Mrs. quadruplets at her Pa. home in Braddock. Mary Krikorian gave birth of| Athens, Sept. . 20.—(By The A. P.)— Several high personages connected with former, Greek governments have been arrested, the ailezation being made that they are responsible for the campaign in Asia Minor and for. political acts nst the futerests of Greece. The ficials now in_power say these persons will_be tried in the regular courts on ta charge of treasom. . The foreign "diplomats, including the Tepresentatives of Great Britain, France, Sweden and Holland, as a body received the revolutionary committee today and expressed satisfaction that rumors to the effect that these personages were to be exccuted yesterday after a mimmary Responsible for the Campaign i e 10,000,000 Gold Francs D posited in New York, Brazil and Switzerland, born in Copenhagen in 1845 and sassinated at Sajonica in lnz.m’ After an all night session the tionary commitiee decided to submit fe and Holland—New Greek Cabinet Was Sworn in Yes- - King George the names of a cabinet Wity Alexander Zaimis as premier a Pollils As minister of foreign afiaice, :' Politis held the foreign portfolia under Venizelos. As minister of war the committes lected General Charalambis, and as min- ister of the navy Admiral Papachristals: both these officers we@ removed from the active list by recent governments, Others named for cabinet places were Alexatider Diomede, active Jeader of the Venizellst party, and M. M. Thrace ober | Will Seek to have the matter placed be- e e by October | fure Supreme Court Justice Tompkins tn- This would permit the Kemalists to en. | Stead of Justice Morschauser on the same ter Thrdce by ports on the sea of Mar- | J3te. mora avoid violation of the straits apd | It Was announced by John E. Mack, satisty the Kemalist demand for posses- | Fusrdian ad litem for Guy Stillman, that sion of Thrace before the proposed peace ; h¢ Would ask Justice -Morschauser to confterence begins. 4% lconfirm Referce Gleaspn's findings at 1t 13 held that the Greek revolution has | POushkeepsie a week from _tomorrow. radically altered the Thracian situation| MOSt of the open court hearings in the and that there is no certainty the new | ©a5¢ have, in'the past, been before Jus- Athens government will be able to main- | dce Morschauser. JLyas he who granted taln an efficlent army there, even peng-; MTs. Stiliman record diimony of $90,000 a | ing the settlement of peace. . It is sug- | Y8a; and it was Justice Morschauser who gested that it Greece refuses to evacuaté | STanted, over ‘protest, the shifting of the Thrace an allied fleet may blockads the | Al to Montreal last spring. - There Jirs. Greek maigland, Stiliman presented some of her most It is feared that enly & radical modi- | amagaging evidence. 3 fication of Kemal's belllcose attitude can| The report of the case. filed here this avert a clash between, the British and |MOrning’ by Daniel J. Gleason, the ref- the Turks. I Kemal péfsists in his de- jeree, ‘gave to Mrs. Stillman a complet> mand. for the evacuation of the Astatic | Y\ in"ner defense of her own hopor side of the straits, it 16 believed the|and the' good ‘name of Guy, her three- British In no circumstafices will - alter | Yea" old son. She was also-victorious in their firmly expressed resoive to pressrve | the cointer-attack she urged against Mr. the inviolabllity of the - international | Stillman. The referee upheld her ac- waterway. i . . jcusation that the banker -had liviu wicn | General Thomas Matden who has sup- erseded - General Shuttleworth .jn- com- mand of the British forces-at Chanak,is. supremely confident. of the ability of his forces to resist the strongest-attacks"of - the Kemalists. s ADDICATION OF SULTAN v NOT YET ACCOMPLISHED it Paris, §ept. 29.—The abdication of Mohammed VI, sultan of Turkey, is not vet accompliched, but the sultan has ex- pressed the Gesire to-abllicats in favor of his cousin, ecording to a telegram received from thy Angora correspondent of The Havas axenay, who attribute s mews to a Corstantinople -dispatch o Angora. The dispatch furthée states that the vualtn’s. state of Heai'h prevents him fom. attending to the affairs of the eme In_ Angora parliansntary circles, Be news is consMered as sorrect. One of the babies died shortly affer it was born. The others were rushed to a hospital. All of them dled later. Five men entered the' Hamilton Coun- ty bank.on Woodburn avenue, Cinci nati, struck the caskier over the head and escaped with $14,000, according | 1o a report to police headquarters. Announcement was made by the park department that a cow moose ~ recentl captured in the Berkshire town of Beck-| et would be added to the zoo at Forest Park, Springfield, Mass. Although the strike of union pottery | workers is not effective until October 1, sixty per cent. of the 10,000 workers in East Liverpool, Ohio. have alrcady been 1aid off, union officials declared. trial had proved untrue. The omats were assured that the prison- ers would have regular trials. In the morning newspapers report that Ex-King Constantine will leave Athens on a vessel to be provided by the gov- erament and that all conveniences will e arranged for the former royal family, day purchasing on a business basis? The latter of course. He is the one who reads the advertisements and discovers just where he can buy what he wants. He is the one who realizes the great value of advertising when it comes to the im- Portant business of spending his hard eatned money. / The well informed shopper has the advantage when it comes to stretching the dollar. And you can't possibly be up to date on ihe shopping news unless yvou make a practice of reading the advertising columns of The Bulletin. . o The advertisements: show you how. to save money—and steps— and time. Watch them carefuily. Anything that increases your purchasing power is working hard for you. Make The Bulletin advertisements serve you well. Read them regularly. During the past week the following news matter has appeared in The Bulletin's columns: E Bulletin Telegraph Local _Saturday, September 23. 160 Monday, September 25 114 Tuesday, September 25 149 Wednesday, September 27. 118 Thursday, September 28.. 12 Friday, September 29.... dbr of the British maval fighting force hére comsists of a number of the most modern cruisers, destroyers and the air arriers Pegasus and -Argus, The British are confident that this ormidable line of Aghtimg skips will prove a stonewall barrier to the should the latter attempt to straits. It is also thought that be a sufficient protection’ for troops entrenched at Chanak and her point Constagtinople, too, will have air dat- s in the event of war. The British airplanes will fly over Stambou! and sther Turkish centers of population for the purpose of quickly observing any threatened uprisings. These would be jessed to the mava! and military pos ¢e. Thess observing planes will be re- nforeed by a feet of bombers, combat angs and seaplanes. Opposing them, ~the Kemalists will bave aireraft of ‘various types to ‘the number of sixty. The British, however, are confident that in the air the Kemal- \sts aro mo match for them. They point o the fact that the Turkish nationalist wrmy does not possess anything ap- vroaching the twemty super-planes, which arrived today on the air carrier Argus. Calligas and Canfllofiukis. former W@gh commissloner &t Constantinople. s Greece, pending the formation of a new ministry, s being governed By 11 officers representing the arnfy and navy. An exeoutive committee, a triumvirate composed of Colonels Gonatas and Flas- tiras for the army and Captain Phokas for the navy. is In actual direction of lhclnew refl‘!m&s Athens continues guiet, Perfegt order being maintal very. s s Dawn Thursday found the ¢ the revolution bivouacked on m.wm;: of the royal palace and a few hours la- ter the revolutionary committee disem. barked from the battleship Lemnos (for- merly the U. S. S, Idaho) at Phaleron and marched into Athens triumphantly at the head of a section of the army, gyl CONSTANTINE HAS 10,000,000 GOLD FRANCS TO COMFORT HIM Paris, Sept. Sept. (By The A. P.) g Constantine is In no danger of being reduced to the penury whica em- bittered the last days ot former Emperor Charles of Austria-Hungary, according to Greek circles in Paris. It i= assertels that Constantine took precautions against this long azo and has 10.000.000 gold franes in safe in- vestments, depesited partly in New. York, Brazil and Switzerland. In addition, as soon as the situation in Greece Dbecame ditsquieting the mag- nificent jewels of Queen Sophie and the royal household plate were shipped oft to Zurich, Switzerland, In charge of a trusted friend and safely deposited in the vault of a bank there. Total 663 579 General 370 2% o NEW GREEK CABINET HAS BEEN SWORY IN London, Sept. Reuter's Athens correspondent reports that a new cabinet was sworn in this afternoon. He says that M. Krokidas has taken the premier- ship provisionally and that M. Canello- poulos is provisional foreign minister. Alexander Zaimis and M. Politis, who also are members of the cabinet, now are abroad. Retall coal dealers in Bridgeport agreed that the city's hard coal supp:y this winter will be 40 per cent less tha normal. - The selling price was tentatiy ly fixed at 11550 a tom. 256 2 former Broadway show girl Florenc TLeeds in the manner of husband and wite and ithat he ‘had .acknolwedged himselr the father of two children born to Mrs. Mr, Gleason ‘ruled- that Mr. Stillman | Carl hiad not ‘proved his allegation that Mrs. | James. W. Fleming, Troy. et Stillnian. had /viblated her marriage vows | State treasurer . George .- e o el k x:;;?u'wh' Fred Beauvals, half I‘a‘:n State mgmep; Qw:gx y ING PA” guide formerly-employed bs United:. States séna - ix i “at_thelr- <4 op. .| Royal 5. Copeland, N Tondon, Sept. 28, Canads, on the banks of the St. r The" ohily ~difcordant note The events_of the river. He also found Guy Stillman to | sien at which nominations were made was ably. will largely be the legitimate son of Mr. and Mrs. [sounded when'Senator Patten of Queéens outcome of the meeting M. Frankiin|Stillman. -The banker, in impugning the | referred to the pre-convention _Smith- Bouillon, the French envoy sent by the | Jgitimacy of. little Guy, borfl in Novem- [ Hearst fight. He declaced that his dele Paris government, to_Asiatic Turkey, has | P> 1918, had charged that Beauvais|gatlon Wwould have voted for Hearst it fist had -wilth Mustapha Kemal ' Pasha,|"38 ‘the baby's father, St the publisher’s name had-not-been with- tle Turkish nationalist leader. © 1 s 7a result of‘today’s yletory Guy|drawn. The mention of Heart's name The polfey the British autherities have { Stillman retains his right o share with | brousht hisses from floor and gallery, PUrsued I the. famn of the Saities NaYe | s "two ‘older brothérs arid his siater in (but the-dsmonstration lasted only a'few cuption. by . the Kemu'i#ts of the.eegion |the $5,000,000 trust fund established seconds, S g in the vielnity of Chasi< .« belisved (n |hem by thelr grandfather, the late James [ _ DT Roval. Samuel Cipeland of New Eiomd i oW vor Ttk partly to the | Stilman, ‘and in a $27,000.000 fund. to| York nominated for Unitci States sena- absence of definiteinformation as to how | b€ distributed when James A. 'Stillman [ {0F IS 2 member.of the cabinet.of Mayof far Great Britain cowld depend. upon |48, ey e Froch: and’ allan suppott ir. the avent | - The refsrés not ‘only found Guy Stifi- | the Heart forcesat the convention. - Mr. of hostilities with the Kemallsts. . An|™Man-not fo be the son of Beauvals, nut| Hylan left for New York this afterncon agreement with tns Amgora government.|sald he did not discover efther suffictent | 4fter announcement was made of the concluded some time ago by M. Franklin. | or substantlal proof on which to bass | Withdrawal of M. Hearst's name, Boulllon, included 2 clause’ under which |any finding of agultery on the part of | French®indeetook’ not to engage in mili- | Mrs. Stiliman. STATE OF WAR EXISTS BETWEEN | 1afy operations againet the Turks in As . ‘?““"‘!’mf““e‘;fl fo Syereema. i, . mor. ¥y presumption o timacy, one of the GREAT BRITAIN AND TURKEX | Reperts from Constantinonie are to the | strongest ‘known to the law, the report éftect that Mustapha Kemal.is in favor | sald.” ° The™ evidénce presented by the of peace; . but on the other hand, the |plaintiff to show there had been no con- Associated Press correspondent asserts |jugal relations between himself and Mri that the French and Italian generals in|Stillman in the year preceding Guy's the Turkish capital- express the opinion | birth was held by the referee to be un- that the British ought Yo withdraw from | convincing and upsatistactory. Chanak and . confine hemseives to the| 'Mr. Stillman’s own misconduct was European side of the’ Gailipolf “penin- | in itself sufficlent to preclude his vura. sula. ing a divorce, the report indicated. Mrs. It is expected that the meeting be- |Stiliman did not ask for a divorce, tween Franklin-Bouillon and -Kemal will| It clearly appeared without contradic- make the actual situation clearer. ' The | tion Mr. /Gléason found that since at situation as revealed hers today foliow- |least as’ early as 1918 and ever . since ing an important - cablnet. meeting ap- | then, even ‘while the divorce trial was In peared: to be that the British govern- | progress the plaintiff “has been intimate ment had arrived nearly at the end of [ with « woman not his wife, known as its patience. Florence H. Leeds, < What is 5aid to have been virtually an| “It clearly appears” said the yltimatum demanding. that- the Turkish | “that Mr. Stilman has troops quit the Chanak zome has been | maintained her as his wif sent.to Mustapha Kemai Psha, and aftee the cabinet meeting 1t w Brigadier General Harington informed that he would have support of the government whatever ‘steps” he corsidered to bring the Turkish oceupa en zone to an end. and-thus According . to -testimor » minate the prave situatlon, which was | the trial, one. of tho onfidren b 25 considered nothing less thau Turkish de- | Mrs. Leeds dled in infancy, th fance, o, the Priton, Kossrnment view | Jay Ward Leods, born Ewva onthe Bh: note s one - of it s broken the whol of it becomes 5:‘;3"1’1‘5;2‘” 2 S tevan, ineftective, - 3 2 It was_added that the British govern-! ment no”longer will be_satisfled -with Kemal's promise that his troops will ad- vance. no further but wAll . require the| . actual withdrawal if .the nationalist| Shanghai, Sept. 20.—(By The A. P.)— forces, Sun Yat Sen, deposed president of South < According 1o the officitl view here at|China, today admitted the authentioity the coming meeting between - General | Of letters published by the Hong Kong Harington and Kemal nothing . will be| TeregTaph, taken Koms|Sefs mrivate discussed but actual military matters;|5afe after his flight from Cunton, di that it is intended to clear.up any mis. | Closing his connectlon with a project understanding arising. from the Kemalist | t0 form a. triple alliance composed of dharges of aggression. China, Germany and Moscow soviet gove 1t :m be ocontended that the British | erament. operations ara_necessary. and justifiabl n;h:m hosti®. £ e re have been reports.today-: Turks might e allowed to sros. loiy Thrace in return for the evacuation by An Armenian woman asied a writ of kabeas corpus in federal court in Boston to prevent her deportation to Asia Mi- nor from which she said she was driven by the Turks in 1921, T. ‘A. Schooley, ity paymaster of Vanoauver, B. C,, was held up and rob- bed o 375,000 By two automobile ban- s, .. /The Tobbers cscaped, making 'a ol o ‘mansging director-of the prin-| iiisational dash through iKe business Stinnes, Tillman's statement continued, | HStrict. was to furnish collateral seurity that Tillman might undertake to secure a Sherman, Buffalo. - Comptrolier, | Swedish corporation controlled by Stin- nes,’ of certain agencies for developing | trade with_ the United :States. - These agencies were owned by Tillman. he| stated, and he was to become, apder the NAMED FOR PLACES ON Shuler, NEW GEEEK CABINET A The latest direct advices from Athens BRITISH GOVERNAMENT concerning the new ministry said that g M. Zajmas had been nominated as prem- ier and S Politis as ministerof Toraigh affairs, thelr names having been sub- mitted to King George this morning by Great Britain has been advised that s, wumgtine -4 foan of $12&,000,000 inm the United payment of $50,000,000 on October 15 &8 | mooo s State interest on her war debt will be accept- " This amount, was needed by: Stinnes at | 2ble pending an adjustment of interest | SHOT CHORUS GIRL WHO the. time, 1t was sald, for the purchase |rates by the forthcoming funding nego- REFUSED TO MAREY HIM of American raw materials. Uations, Tnstead” of furnishing this collateral, the statement continued, Stinnes concoet- ed a lot of “fanciful financial schemes as a sort of panacea for Germany's fin. |4l Property wero ordered served on Mil apcial afflictions” which Tillman thought | 9red Harris, ‘Charlle Chaplin's _former would never be seriously entertained . by ; at-the clase of her vaudeville per- rheriohn Sanh e | formance in St. Paut. One of these schemes, Tillman averred, £ was that he was to obtain a $100,000,- | Divoree, birth control and a "God for- |the 000 loan upon Stinnes’ promisory nots,|Saken system of education were pointed | with a married sister known on the unsecured by any collatecal. After this |0 5 paths leading to/national disinte- stage as Hazel Clark. Both were sald loan the statememt went on. Stinnes|Bgration by Bishop Schwerner of Wichi- to have come from Texas. planned to use the money for purchase | ta, Kansas, in an opening sermon befor: Levinson telephoned Miss Dignum in the United States of billions of marks | the National Councll of Catholic Men in {shortly after noon and a few minutes at the current exchange rate, $.0125.| Washington. later arrived at the apartment ; two shots With this marks; Stinnes 1HteBdod. to: pur- ‘were heard and Miss Dignum ran from hs Tartiagt HRIIEDy e Haren e the apartment screaming for help, with German corpocation _which functions OB SR oxh ‘While neighbors tried to aid her two something after the fashion of Amer- ican title and bond and mortgage com- more- shots" followed, and Levinson was found dead. on the dining room fioor. panies. After these mortgages were secured at Feen MIBSED/EnL, el CRESCHIRE their face or pre-war value in marks, shptz sho, cAElysaid o, -hoes M gum Stinnes was. to send them to the United her, “Go to his aid. I'm all right. States as collateral for a_$2,000.000,000 Hosgits] suigeons Jeaidy sho Wilvxse loan based on pre-war values. Tillman e averred Stinnes figured he would not be observed by American bankers in this ‘manipulation. _Tillman declared_he told Stinnes he could have no hand in such schemes as he knew American bankers would not entértain them, but Stinnes refused to listen to him. . - Tillman claimed the $3,055185, for which he sued was due him for commis- sions in the few enterprises he undertook for Stinnes. Athens, Sept. 20 (By the A. P)— Crown Prince George has taken ths oath as king under the title of George IL George J, his grandfather, a prince of the royal house of Denmark, was AUTOPSY ON BODIES OF ME. HALL AND MES. MILLS Garnishment proceedings covering her salary, costumes, and all other person. New peration Yor! by pL. Driven to des- hercontinued refusals of his offers of marriage, Murray Levi xon today “shot and seriously wounded Nni Dignum; chorus gir], and then kill- ed himself. The shooting occurred fn the girl's Eighth avenue apartment. 3fiss Dignum, who was a dancer in the Moulin Bouge, shared the apartment New Brunswi . Sept. 29, Governor Edwards announced today in a letter responding to a request for aid from Charlotte Mills. sixteen-year-old daughter of Mrs. FEleanor Reinhardt Mlls, that he had invoked the assistance ©of the detectivis of the New Jersey state police to help solve the mystery of the murder. of Mre. Mills and the Rev. Ed- ward W. Hail. For the first time sincs the bodies of the slain choir jeader and the clergy- man were found under an apple tres two Wweeks ago the exact character of the Wounds of the woman were made known today following an autopsy after the examination of her body. This showed that in addition to three bullet wounds in her head. her throat was cut. Dr. ‘William H. Long, Somerset county physi- cian, who reported at the time the bod- ies were found that there was only one bullet wound, denied tonight that he had been cequested to make an autopsy at that time, but had simply been requested by Prosecutor Beekman' to report on the condition of the bodies. 5 a Mrs. Hall, widow of the murdered REPARATIONS. COMMISSION Slefgyinan, sald tonight that she woull APPROVES AMERICA’S ACTION jraise no objection to the examination of — Mr. Hall's body. The question had been Paris, Sent. 20—(By The A. P.)— |raised as to whether or not she would A-Havas agency despatch from Con- wantinople vesterday said -that ‘he sul- 4 had abdicated in favor of the heir- tpparent, Prince Abdul Medjid Etfendi, 8% gultan’s cousin, but added that the s was not confirm SEARCHING FOR ASSATLANT OF WOMAN IN GREENWICH s S Greepwich, Sept. Police hers are searching for a man who attacked ‘Mrs. rank Cotrame,. of this town tomight and struck her on the head with a hammer, fracturing her skull. Mrs. Cotrome was removed to the Greenwich hospital in an uncansclous . condition. ~Her _assaflant, whose name is known-according {o the police, -escaped. The cause of the at- tack i3 not known. London. Sept. 20.—(By The A. P.)— 1n connection with reports cireulated ir the United States that war had been deslared by Great Britain on Turkey, was pointed out today” that mo decla- ration of war would be necessary as peace never has been concluded between the two countries. Their relations aye still govrned by the terms of the arm- istice of 1918 Harvey Napler, a young policeman of Kenova, W. Va., fired a bullet into tha breast of his brother when the’ latter at the head of a mob, attempted to rescue 2 third brother from the custody of the bluecoat at the' entrance to the local jail. The American motor schooner La Mer- ced has been towed into Astoria, Ore., 69 days out from the Solomon Islands, with her master dead, her crew without food, most of her sails gone and one propel- ler out of commission. GIRL'S SKULL FRACTURED KEMALISTS WHEN STRUCK BY CAR VIOLATED g Danbury, Conn., Sept. 29.—Flizabeth Mahone: 13 vears old, daughter of Mr. and. Mrs. Patrick -Mahon of this town, Wwas removed to the Danbury hospital tonight suffering from a skull fracture which she received when le was struck by-a car owned by Steven T. Beli, of Yonkers, N. Y. Mr, Bell's chauffeur, who was driving, was not held. Constantinople, Sept. 29.—M. Araloft, the Russian soviet ambassador at A: gora, is declared to have called the a n of the nationalist foreign of- Ace to failure by the Kemalists:to ful- fifl their treaty obligations concerning the strafts. He is reported to have said also_that he would expect the national- ist delegates at the peace conference to ube their influence to have the soviets epresented. il TURKISH REPLY TO BRITISH g WAS OF HOSTILE NATURE When Earl Stewart, a legless man for- feited a §5 deposit by failing to appear in court at Trenton, N. J., to answer a {charge of street begging, the police dis- covered that he owned & motor car and | bhad his owh chauffeur. All the members of the reparations com- | permit this for the purpose of & thorough sission have formally notified Colonel | autopsy such as has now been made on James A. Logan, Jr., the American ob- [ Mrs. Mill" Server in_that body, that their respec- tive governments view with approval the American state department’s plan to credit German dye deliveries to the cost of the American army of occupation, The Associated Press was informed today. The textile alliance, which is the me- didm_ for obtaining’ America’s share of the. dyes, has nof yet been notified of the scheme. Tt is explained that the annual_ deliveries will probably not_ ex- ceed $3,000,000. — AUTOIST HELD CEIMINALLY RESPONSIBLE FORE DEATH report, supplied _and e; that ddrin the period she has .given birta to. two sald . that | children who "have been recognized by has - been | him'as'his children; that he has support« the full fed her with motor cars and jewelry, sup- in _taking | ervises her bank body Chrarles A. Templeton, nominec for. governor ‘on the republican ticket, has announced that he will not travel over the state to make speeches but will Vi it towns to make acquaintances. DISCOURTEOUS TO A WOMAN AND CRUEL TO A RAT DRUNKENNESS IN PROVIDENCE HAS INCREASED 85 PER CENT. JEWELS VALUED AT 3% New York, Sept. 29.—Julius Redmond, STOLEN BY of the Bronx was fined £5 for being dis- courteous to a woman and £5 for be- ing cruel to a rat today in the Essex Market court today when Miss Ella H. Valentine accused him of insulting her ndd’of swinginy the rodent about by & string tied to its tail The animal caused a small panic among throngs of girls and women in lower Broadway when it escaped from #ts_captors, ran several hundred feet and dove into a sewer opening. Providence, R. I, Sept. #3.—Drunken- ness in Providence has increased.85 per cent. since 1919, when prohibition first became effective, according to official figures in the hands of the pelice com- mission of this city. New York, Sept.-'Z3.—Jewels valued at-$75,000 were stolen Wednesday night from the apartment of Mrs. Thomas E. Bowler, the wife of a wealthy silk im- porter, at 7ist street and Riversids Drive, - it became known tonight. - Follr men engaged in the robbery which oc- curred while Mrs. Bowles and other members_of her family were away at dinner. Miss Paula Goodwin, an employe; sur- prised the four as they were leaving the house. One of them threw her down the stairs to a lower floor and the quartet fled the house before her screams couid summon _assistance. The Bowles apartment is directly ‘| osite. the .Riverside Drive mansion Charles 3. Schwab, Receivers for the Ingersoll Engineer- ing and Construction Co., owners of and lessees of Pleasure Beach at Bridgeport, were given permission by Judge .saac ‘Wolfe to take $15,000 in assets to pay rent of the isiand to the city of Dridge- port, ntinople, Sept. 29.—(By the A. PJ—The situation between the British afd the Turkish nationalists was ex: rémely tense tonight. A note from Mustapha Kema: Pasha to Brigadier General Harington, the British sémmander couched in a hositil tenor, wis considered by Bfitish military circles here as closing the door to a pacific set- tibment of the straits question. The Drospects of an armed conflict Were con- siéfed more evident than previously. The nots of Kemal demands the retire- mént of all British troops from the Asi- atie side of the stralts, as the French apd ltalians have done, and says in case of #cquiesence ho will withdraw the na- tenatst forces ightly” rom the neu- tral sone. It also demands the cessation of what ars termed the arbitrary measures of the Befiish authorities in Constantinople in @ealing with the Turkish population and a solemn understanding that no Gresk ves- el be permitted to pass the Darda- nél It concludes ‘with a' protest aghinst the destruction of Turkish war maferial in the straits. The note of Kemal was in reply to the 1s8t written communication of General ghmun. transmitted through Hamid the nationalists’ representative in Cénstantinople to Kemal in Smyrna. 1t fs-telt in British eircles tonight that they would be forced to ~modify . thelr . comciliatory attitude at the moment the Cogad n E ‘h-‘: bring up heayy. artillery h Sl i m; ons 5 which they would be'abla to _serio ¢ er . in on. treaten the European side of the Dai réport that the British fleet in the Dac- nelles and also hamper passage through |dangiles and the British army at Chanak th straits of British vessels. ‘are belng' constantly, eeinforced; submarines of the British Atlantle :o“’-:y” L et aanat il & fi4st have arrived and will .bo used to|PASET ' % i DE. SUN ADMITS PLAN TO “BOLSHEVIZE” CHINA English Poet Denies Report A motion to quash mandamus’ pro- ceedings against the Milford sthool board, over managements of the schoois in that town, was denied by Judge Er- nest C. Stmpson in common pleas court in New Haven. New Haven, Sept. 29.—Paul Fioren- tino of this city was held criminally ré- sponsible for the death of Mrs. Theress Bianco who was killed-September 17, in an_automobile accident, in_a finding handed down by Coroner Eli Mix to- day. Fiorentino was charged with Teck- Tecc and careless driving and will be ar- raigned on a mapstaughter charge. According to the finding Fiorentino wag_racing another maching when Tis car crashed into a telegraph pole. Mrs Bianco, who was sitting In the rear, of eleven passengers, was instantly ki ed, MRS. PRENTICE VICE CHATRMAN REP. STATE CENTEAL COMMITTEE. . Hartford, Sept. 29.—Mrs.. Samuel .O./ Prentice, of Hartford was elected vios chairman of the republican state central committee at its meeting this afternoon. Her election was by acelamation. Mrs. Davis. of Norwalk, had been mentioned for the place, but withdrew in favor of Mrs. Minerva Prentice. The committee fixed Monday, October 18- as the date of the caucuses to hom- inate candidates for the house of repre- sentatives. Several bilnd children of the Perkins Institute, at Watertown, Mass., for the Blind, played in the yard while a_steer, which had escaped from a stockyard, strayed through the grounds. The ani. mal was cornered and shot by policemen. None of the children was hurt, of OBITUARY Prof. Addison Yan Name. New . Haven, Conn., Sept. 29.—Prof. Addison_ Van Name, active libratian of Yale university for 10 years and wedely known to graduates down to 1904 when he retired, died tonight in St. Raphael's hospitai here after a short iliness. Pro- fessor Van Name, who was 87 years old, was the last of faculty scholars of the Dre-Civil war. perios Professor Van Name was born Binghamicn, N. Y, in 1835 and graduated from Yale in 1838 as torian. He studied in German univer- sities ‘until 1862 when he was made & tutor at Yale and taught Hebrew in the Theological Séminary. 1In 1865 he was appointed librarian and held that' post until 1904 when he became emeritus. cord in New Jersey in which a man is He was moted for his knowledge of | the palintiff was mied Thursday in | tanguages and wrote extensively on Ori- | state supreme court ,by Frank -Lyons, ehtal topics, specializing. on Jupan, | formerly of Wilkesbarre, ! Pa, against China “and Arabia: During the latter | Mrs. beth Downey, who conducts a years of his ilfe he was a well known | hotel in' Atlantic City. Beurs ofi theYals ‘campus where. he P > . spent ‘much of his time in study. - ‘Word was recelved in Hartford of the Protessor Van Name‘was married’ to|death of Clarence Lyman Collins, of Julia. Gibbs, daughter of Professor Jo-|Hartford at his summer Home in Horica, | destruction by fire of the schooner Mad- sigh Gibbs in 1867. He . leaves three[N. Y. Mr. Coilins was senior partner | eleise Constance. of St. John'e, N. F. | children—Willard . Gibbs Van : Name,|of ‘the C. L. Collins and . company, 27/{Teceived in a twireless e to Yale' 1§94; Ralph .C. Van Name, Yale|Thomas street, New York city and was | naval mmm- “ 299, and “Theodora, - @ graduate of |the representafive of many cotton mills | steamship . tonig GERMANYWPAT NO TIME CONSIDERED SUCH ALLIANCE Stanley Neweomb, an eighth grade pu- pil in the Lincoln school.at San Diego, Cal.,, has been awarded first place among more than 400,000 juvenile writers who entered the prize essay contest recently conducted by the highway - education board. PERSHING GOING TO. AN ISLAND IN BUZZARD'S BAY.| w Bedford, Mass. Sept. 20.—The island of Naushon in Buzard's bay, own- 2d by W. Cameron Forbes, of Boston, has been selected by General John J. Pershing as the place where he will write his memoirs of the World wa:, Hs will arrive there tomorrow. He hzy originaily planned to use the estate i Mirs. S. S. Sampliey at Great. ock, Long Island. but changed his nlans: it was said, because so much pub- Jicity was.given to the fact that he was about to Tent the house as a literary Tetreat. Later Providence was selected, but was 2lso given up. ¢ ence in London, but according to the As- soclated Press correspendent . i Con- stantinople there is tall, there of _the | Greeks being asked to evacuate ‘esstern Thrace by October 10, thus permitting the Turks to enter the Tegion by' way of POTts on the sea of Marmora. - The view. in_official circles hers tonight . was that DOMENICO CESARE SHOT DEAD IN BRIDGEPOET Bridgeport, Conn., Sept. 29.—Domeni- ©0, Gesare, of 68 Sherman street, listed &5 a real estate owner, was shot dead here tonight as he was entering a garage by unidentified assailants, who, after am- bushirig him made good their escape in an_automobile. Cesare’ had a pofice record here and had served 3 long term in the state peni= tenttary. INDICTMENT OF SANITARY 5 - POTTERY PEODUCEES New TYork. Sept. 20.—An indictment g:lnn'aw-udu ::-.u cent. of corporations, firms sertig that letters had -been discover- ed ghowing that discussion had been held The federal trade commission issues formal complaint against the American Tobacco company, P. Lorillard company and the Association of Wholesale Tobac- conists of Milwaukee; charging “unfair methods of competition in the mainten- ance of re-sale prices.” triple alliance by China, Germany and the Moscow soviet ‘government, the Ger- man -embasey severa] dave ago made The first breach of promise sult, on re- < iost CEXPLOSION'IN MINE. g P T Johnston City, ils., ‘Sent. 28, The bl B0 W s SRR aR b e Tl G ¢ injured-in an explosion in the Lake Creek f mine of, the 'Co | Coal company | . Approximately 300 men |- rere inthe ming when the blast ocruc: red.- First reports nine apparent- ‘been. ¥illed, MATRETANIA REPOETS SCHOONER DESTROYED BL FIRE AT SEA New “York, Sept. 29.—News of the end novelist, who denies he- made " from JEPERIORY itol the