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York accepted the dem- . United States of Her Sex to Obhn An Appom!ment—l: 87 Years Armistice Conference Held a Mm;mry Session—General Mazarakis and Colonel Sariyannis, the Greeb Envoys, Baby Guy Stillman, son of the mil- lionaire bankers, of cently spffered from an xmv:k of high Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 3 (By the A, P.).— |feVer, is mow out of danger. BwtnaFinlnacHuDuup- peared From His Usual Haunts—Has Met_ Finan- AmmeanAmsmmdlh cial Reverses. Boston, Oct. 3,—The whereabouts of Arrived at Mudania Last Evening—Angora Govern- menlA.udszattheGnehmd'theGkaroopsin Thrace Are in a Dangerous State of Unrest. A woman from Georgia today won the distinction of being the first of her sex to obtain appointment to the U. S. senate when Mrs. W. H. Felton of Cartersviile, Ga., long known as the “Grand Old Wom- an of Georgia,” was named by. Governor A baby girl born recently Oliver Morosco, wife of a theatrical pry ducers, died in a hospital in S0 Fran- 'flmmq ‘W. Lawson, financier, who has had to put hll South Shore estate, Dream- wold, on the. auction block to make up for stock market losses, were still a my: tery tonight. . Relatives, business asso- clates and: friends were without word ‘l‘"\hun assessments in New York city. for 1923 show an increase in real and persondl estates of more than $771,- 000,000 over 1922, Thomas W. Hardwick as senator to suc- ceed the late Thomas L. Watson until the ovember clections, when a successor Wwill be chosen at the volls. is 87 years of age and has been promi- nent, in state politics for ncad; half a] Oct. 3—(By the A. P.) [ immediately proceed to the annihilation of the Christian population, ~The preliminary conference for the set- tement of peace in the Near East began | presence of allied officers would be pow- today with the allied general and Ismet | erless to avert a_disaster. Pasha, repreum)n; the Turkish nation- Mrs. Fetton Recalling ‘Greek efforts and sacrigees meeting was | for the allies in the war, he admits lllad to order at three o'clock in the |it is not enough to expel the king in o Afterncon, but was shortly adjourned t6 |der to repair the broken thread of the Wednesday to permit the attendance of [ Greek alliance with the allles, as “un- fortunately many foolish people in Greees ssem to believe.” The appointment of Dr. N Rappleye as superintéendent of New Hav- to succeed Dr. Harold W. Mre. F8iton has accented the office and in expressing her gratitude for the honor stated that it was goitig to thrill the na- toin when the news is conveyed from the lakes to the gulf that a woman has been chosen to become a member of the United States senate. ‘England borrowed an Ameérican-born woman,” said Mrs. Felfon, scat in the British parliament, but noble en_hospital, resigned, was announced. the Greek representatives. General Mazarakis and Colonel Sarri- vannise, who were yesterday appointed | Greek aspirations have been tragicaliy belied by facts, he calls attention to the great dangers threatening from the re- of Hartford, leased on July 31 from the state reform- atory was arrested at a New Britain factory on a charge of theft v v the Greek cabinet to act In the Mu- dania conference in behalf of Greece, wrrived at Mudania on a Greek destroyer | constitution of the Turks as an Buropean this evening, and will take their places | empire, and says: .at_the conference table tomorrow. to aceept a “Surely our former al- ik Laura Blondl, daughter or Mr. lies are in duty bound t5 help in averting from ‘him since he left the home of his sister, Miss Mary Lawson, at Southwest Harbor, Me., yesterday. he had ‘brought up his family, now scat- tered by death and marriage. he had de- cided 1o go_somewhere for a change of scene. ~The ranch home of his daughter, Mrs. Henry McCall, at Prineville, Ore., was considered the most likely place. Policy of Isolation From European Affairs—10,000 ‘Delegates, Representing 23,000 Banks in the United States, Greeted With an Uproar a Plea in Behalf of Am- erican “Unselfishness” by Thomas W. Lamont. New York, Oect. An overwhelming espected of this . convention, sentiment favoring America’s abandons leaders declare they are satisfied with the ers of the country are amenable to America’s more active par- ticipation in foreign financial stabliliza- tion. In. making overtures to the foreigr nations concerning the possibility of = basis_for readjusted settlement. The subject will be resumed tomorrow. when Right Honorable Reginald MeKen- na, of England will address the banker: on “Reparations and intergational debts." Having defined its attitude on foreigr It appeared to be fairly well agreed | ment of her polic among those interested tonight that, up- set over the loss of the homestead which he built.and furnished at a cost of about three and one-half millions, and in which evidence that ban European affairs, and the substitution of a policy which might cven invelve part- ial cancellation of the allied war debi,. through _the comvention of Bankers' association. The subject was broached by ate of J. P. Morgan, whose plea in Dbehall of American the conventjor an uproar as the 10000 delegates, rep- today swept ‘With the financier,. who is now in his b year, is a maid, a servant of many old Georgia exverienced no need to boe- row, and she alone of states in the United States had a gover- nor with courage to say so, and to con- firm the saying by an cxecutive proclama- Angelo Riondi, * run_down by an auto driven by Mrs. A. L. Donovan of Fairfield, and may have a fracturcd skull. of Seymour, in | the extermination of yet another million the allled forces, will deal with | Christians on the sofl of EIH'ODE itselz.” mmxuy ‘questions in the negotiations as — a free hand having been | CONSTANTINE READY TO MAKE his government in these the forty-eight he deems best, years' service in the Lawson home. She has always accomranied him to care for his things, his assuciates said, and when he decided suddenly yesterday morning to leave his sister's summer home. he di- rected the maid to accompany him. SACRIFICE FOR GREECE John J. MeGuinne: trict, Bridgeport, was unanimously elect- ed chairman of the democratic city com- 'mittee to succeed Sohn A. Cornell, Subjects of a political or econ- smic nature ill be referred to the ailied bigh commissioners, who will'communi- cate with the governments. missioners will be in continuous gontact [ ments of his coun with Mudania by wireless. of the eighth dis- Before tendering fhe appointment to Mrs. Felton, Governor Hardwiek mutual friends offered the office to Mrs. Thomas E. Watson, wife of Senator Wat- son, who, the governor said, declined it because of ill health. In a statement today Mrs. Felton said “it was eminently fitting that this posi- tion should have been tendered to the widow of the late Senator Watson.” “For myself,” said Mrs. Felton in a communication to Governor Hardwick, “T wish to thank vou. Palermo, Oct. 3.—Former King Con- stantine of Greece appears to be sad and y the tragic develop- Whén asked for| a statement today he said he had noth- The allled ministers in Constantinople | ing to add to what he had expressed be- Are anderstood to have drawn the atten- | fore his departure from Athens, tion of the Greek government to the ne- sessity of lkeeping the Greek rather worn out b; King Constantine in talking with his friends before embarking for » where he is to make his home, made a plea that hearty support be given the new king and queen. “I can s‘mply repeat” he sald, love for Greece scrpasses any other Thrace under control so as to avoid the |feeling which the late events may have ¢ a conflict. This was due te | zroused -in me, while my confidence n representations of the Angora governmant | the ultimate triumph of the just cause in | of Hellggism is unbounded.” Constantine said that personally was ready to make any sacrifice for the good of Greece, “I have bowed my head o what seem- their | ed the will of my beloved Bop will of the heroie Creels troops in { my Frank Geninls, former Cleveland, Cin- cinnati and St. 1 is dead at his home in St. His baseball from 1885 to 1902. that the Mohammedan Thraee were suffering exactions a: the ~ o Grecks and roops are in a aangerous 1o the present the madé no real preparations lue neutral zon: wccording to an offirial report their s etirement today was aot of aporestable expressly and em- phatically, in the name of thousands of Georgla women—uwives, mothers, grand- and great-grandmothers—who are enthusiastic Georgians and who rep- resent the staffe in varied lines of noble philanthropy and endeavors.” ate of unrest Two soldiers of a free ment were killed in Belfast detachment was ambushed by irregulars on the road from Farranfore, Kerry to Killarney. state detach- Mrs. Felton was born i Dekalb coun- che was the and Eleanor ‘was married Oct. 1. ¥Felton, who died were born to this ty, Georgia, June 1 oldest child of (Swift) Lattimer. , 1853, to Dr. W. Five children but only one of them, Dr. Howard my person from the situation. is that this may help in the rejuvenatiox of my dear country. e future my assistance i y shape or form, Greece may upon me, in war or in peace, at what- But If at any time BRITISH FAMILIES HAVRE T CONSTANTINOPLE The migration of 10,000 more Mennon- ites from Canada to Mexico will® this month, the Mennonite church having advanced $4,000,000 to familics contem- plating the trip. Felton. survives. The new United States senator was one two Georgia women on the execu- tive committee at the Columbian exposi- She has awa interest in civic affairs. In the interest of temperance she toured Georgia in 1886-87. Mrs.- Felton has been one of the princi- pal exponents of woman suffrage in the eouth and is an acti Censtantinonle. 'y ¥ )=One hundred families of British of- fcers and civilians left Constantinople to- in accordance with the plan for the wacuation of n the event an umlublc arrangement js ‘cachied with ‘upation of the capital. rartures will take place as transporta- Thus far no Americans iaye departed, a majority of them havig tine refused All men between the ages of 30 and 50 in that part of Thrace which is under the jurisdiction adopted by it after lle also declined to reccive any information concer: active and ivey Constantinople for the oc- Additional de- government are being recruited for the Turkish army. Rpg gpplled hripm Athens ne‘t\l his party with the jon is available. Joseph Block, 22 year old son of L. E. Block, Chicago, incognito under member of the No Word from Lawson. Bend, Ore., Oct. 3.—Inquiry at the Mc- Call ranch, near Prineville, today indicat- ed that no’ word has been received from ‘Thomas W. Lawson Boston financier, believed to be on his way here, according to eastern despatches. Mrs. Henry Mec- Call_ his daughter, declared if her father was on his way west she had reccived no intimatio nof it. DEFINING THE RIGHTS OF JAPANESE IN UNITED STATES | Washington, Oct.” 3.—Argument was begun in the supreme court today by former Attorney General George W. Wickersham in two of a numbeg of cases now upon the docket to define the rights of Japarése in this country. He appeared in behalf of Takao Ozawa in a proceed- ing against the United States and for Takuji Tamashita and Charles Hio Kono against the secretary of state of Wash- ington, ‘e cases‘presenting for final de- cision the Jong standing controversy over | the cligibility of Japanese for naturaliza- tion. ‘The Ozawa case wlgmi!ed in Hawaii in 1914, ‘when the United States district court denied him citizenship. The government has brepared an elab- crate- brief and is,now, ready. to proceed. It contends that Ozawa is not eligible ior citizenship even though the supreme fpourt should hold that Japanese as race may be naturalized, for the reason _presiaent of ‘the Inland as a member how to make iecibcd o await the final Deace. conter: B SR R travelimg | Daushters of the American Revolution, a mcmber of the Colonial Dames of Ameri- | ca_ and one of the earliest members of Lhe Atlanta Woman's club. Despite her advanced age. Mrs. Felton is exceptionally aectiv potitieal following -in-the state an active and posi Hérdwick during Steel compan none of . the authorities were admitted to his presence, m gontinued exodus . of Ruropcans, ireels and Armenlans has served to cut two and also reduce | MUSTAPHA KEMAL PASHR ' #1A% ABBIVED AT ANGOS 1oue ' réntals in eal estate values. A comfortable ay (Ftment the rentd lof. which previbusty dollars a month czn now be \lfl for ’nr'\ five dollars, while a housa vhich before the crisis sold ioes begging at 81,500, A One effect of the ecxpected coming to “ontantinople of the Kemaliste has been _applications for 2ssurances by he inter-allied police that thers is no | 1osaibility of & recufrence of the Smyrna | Stella Gordon, arrested recently W - Tork “on E: 3 n‘u"!fisrl-j{l-m e stand for Govern Tecent campalgn for, 3.~Mustapha fagistrate Smith. Pasha, the Turkish nationalist leader, en- 9900 tered Angora today us a conqueror ith & conqueror's honor says a de to the Dally Express by John Pau! Jones; actor and playwright, arrested with her, was held in $500 bail for the grand jury. in announcing the ap- | pointment of Mrs. Felton, Governor Hard- wick announced himseif a candidate for the unexpired term of the late -Senator Wa The Hungarian News ageney in Paris, which on Saturday circulated a report that King Alexander of Jugo-Slavia had ! < v el at the Stasion.h i Kemal was received at the station hy a been assassinated deputation of membeis of assembly and was driven to tie lature building ) troop-lined . streets and & There are now eeven candidates in the| The primary will be held i senatorial race. as altogether unfounded. nenfans are taking out nddulonxl poli- ies and many business houses, especlal- - American firms, are er triumpnal : Sepertnl o BT s fireman that they had seen e s el REMOVAL OF DIFFERENTIAL The assembly, which was in fuli ces-! that he delayed in filing his application more than seven years after the passage of the act of 1906, The gboyvernment in its brief urged the court, should it consider the case moot, te decide it “in order that ‘the rights of persons of the Japancse race wm;.xm t9 naturalization” may be setiled. In the state of Washington case, I)\el two Japanese were naturalized by the su- perior court of Pierce county, that state. in 1902. but incornoration as a real cstate firm was refused them by the secretary of stuteon the ground that their naturai: 23,000 banks States, voiced their approval. affairs, the econvention tonight prepareé¢ issue which, according tc leaders,” promised to dominate remaining This is the guestion of “branch- y brought into the con- vention by bodies of “independents” rep- resenting four mid-western state bankers organizations who have brougirt head their opposition to the further in crease of such institutions, on the grounc that they tend to centralize capital and economic power. Andrew J. Frame, of Waukesha, Wis. appears in the convention as the chapior bank element, whick tonight was conceded to have gained con- i siderable &trength since the conventior The “pro” element was he by Waldo Newcomer, an eastern banker e importance of the caused President McAdams to upset the schedule of the convention, so that a re- solution adopted by the anti-branch mer may be put to a vote tomorrow. to tackle an s plea was echoed by Thomas B. McAdams, president of the Bankers' national organization, Myron T. Herrick, United States France, and other nationaliy-known fig- ambassador who asserted that until recently, the question of debt can- cellation had brought only protests from small and large bankers throughout the . expressed great surprise at the changed attitude evidenced yvear ago, they pointed out, a proposal similar to that cautiously advanced by was emphatically down by the association. Formal action on European debts to this government, the formulation of a definite program of loans and trade contracts, i of the anti-branch CREASY FOUND GUILTY OF SHOOTING MISS EDITH M. LAVOY SPOOK TERRORIZES THE CHICAGO NORTH SIDERS 3.—William M. Chicago, Oct. guard of police, the presence of a squac of newspaper reporters and photographer: and more than 1.000 curious persons,there was a repelition early tonight of welrd knockings and screeches which ter- rorized an entire neighborhood on the Sorth Side last night. ‘When the blood curdling cries first is- sued from the pueple shadows of the quie residential district around Clifton ané Seminary .avenues last night, a riot cal brpught special squads of bluecoats scur. rying throughout the dfstrict. light had transformed the familiar land- scipeInto one of urreality, and the un. carthly moaning, rising to a screech that thrilled the marrow of the policemen's bones. kept up-all.during the night. In the garish light of the day it seem- ed Jike a bad dream, but at sunset tonight little squads of patrolmen.began flitering through the- neighborhood again. deter- mined to solve the mystery. They wert followed by crowds of sightseers. The patrolmen set systematically to work and searched every house in a square block Up until a late hour the was still making the welkin ring y of murder in the first degree to- night for the shooting, of Miss Fdith M. 3 3 school teacher. The jury returned its verdict after less than three hours' deliberation. When the foreman amnnounc of murder in the first degree y requested a poil of the jury. The court ordered the poll, the twelve men in turn rose and answered and each of A motion for a ¢ trial was made at once, and when this was denied, coun said that the case would scl for. Crea: be appealed. The court room and corridors were crowded during the closing hours of the Women were in Many of the mothers and housewives who have followed the trial closely, court room at five o'clock, but crowded after the supper hour to awalit eargerly the return of the jury. There was no demonstration when the verdict was znnounced. Creasy appeared bul l" in vain. He was remanded for sentence | 5 ization had not been authorized by law. The same reason had been advanced by next Saturday. Love letters sald to have changed between the school teacher and nd defying all efforts toward its detec- The nerve-racking shrieks were varied the state for refusing Tamashita admis- sion to the bar. In his argument. which was not con- cluded when the court adjourned for the tocks with war sion, congratulated | Kemal for victories over the Greeks, Kemal attended a banquet i municipality. A general hol declared in honor of the arrival of Ke- Jjust ahead of their train in Mount Victory Ohio, spurred bands of villagers to renew their hunt for the beasts which have been reported in that vicinity. FREIGHT RATES IS SOUGHT TORMER KING CONSTANTINE MAY COME TO NEW YORK Boston, Oct.*3. —New England business interests, led by the Maritime associa‘ion of the Boston chamber of commerc gan a fight at a hearing today bei Bxaminer Charles F. Gerry, of the inter- state commerce commigsion on a petition for the removal of i rates by operation of which, speakers de- onsignments of which otherwice might come shipped from the west to southera and Canadian ports. Counsel for business organizarioxs many cities, including imporsant seaprts on the Atlahtic-and Gulf coas‘s, as welt as attorneys for several rallroads were present to oppose the petition f ¢ ton chamber for removal of th: tial when the first of a series o? opened at the state house. “The differential rates,” sald Judge Ed- gar E. Clark, speaking for the petltion- ers, “have literally dried up the business of the port of Boston. fhat were fot not for the con sumption here in New England large volume of freight import trade also would be negligibl Opposing the petition were attorneys .| representing the Pennsylvania railroad, the Chesapeake and Ohlo, the the Tilinois Central, Lendon, Oet. The speclal board of naval officers cre- satch to the Da ated by Secretary Denby for the pur- pose of recommending a definite stable policy regarding the maintenance of the shore establishments of the navy began its deliberation. ording to a des- © News from Palermo he local hotels were unable to furnish ccommodations for former King Con- ttantine and his party, COLONEL PLASTIRAS MAY BE GREEK DELEGATE and that they at Taermfna, south- vest of Messina, for a fortnight and af- ~rwards proceed either to Switzerland or 3.—Reuters Athens cor- respondent says it is a foregone conclu- slon that Colonel' Plastiras will at the last moment be appointed first Greek delegate to the Mudania conference. is expected that he will not give way regarding the evacuation of Thrace, the salvation of waich was the main pur- pose of the revolution. of the leading spirits in that movement. At any rate, it is certain that the Greek delegates will not accept any proposal without first referring it to Athens. Several hundred officers of the United meeting in Washington at the first annual convention of the Reserve Officers’ assoclation of the United States ‘were prepared to discuss taining to the policy of continued military preparedness in this country. States army, A despatch from the Stefani agency in Rome says the party after driving about he streets of Palermo again went. on soard the steamer Patras. Plastiras was one FENIZELOS PROTESTS RETURN Mayor Schwab, former brewer of Buf- &F ERBAGE $0 TAE TURKS falo, N. Y., personally and unattended by raided five alleged dis- orderly houses in Elm strcet Saturday night and compelled their proprietors to police officers, Londbn, Oct. 3—(By the A. P)—| Former Premier Venizeios, of Greece v long letter to The Times protesting wgainst the return . since the beginning of the var, he declares, have destroyed in Asia- Minor more than a million and a half Armenians, says: “If Jt is necessary to tuarantees to Kemal that the promise toncerning the return of eastern Thrace will mee with no obstacle in its execution, | If Kemal withdraws from E. I. DEMOCRATS NOMINATE N FOR GOVERNOR Providence, R. I, Oct, 3.—Rhode Isi- and democrats at their state convention in this city teday nominated for gov- ernar, William S. Flynn, Providence at- torney and democratic floor leader the state house of representatives. Flynn was chosen on the first with a lead of 17 votes over his nearest W. 8. FLYD And we shall show Relatives of Bart Conroy {arm” mandarin of old Chinatown, New York began their fight i court in Brooklyn to break the will in which he left all of his property to his wite, Susan, known as “The Bluebird.” and Western, William H. Coburm, 17, charged with st the treaty. d Mr. Wickersham pointed out that the questions certified by the ninth circuit | court of appeals in the Ozawa case pre-| sented the real issue. These were whether section 2169 of the revised statutes, pro- viding for the naturalizatlon of “free white persons,” placed a_ limit upon the naturalization and immigration act of 1806, which, enacted under the Roosevelt administration, contained no such restric- tions, and whether one of the Japanese | Tace and born in Japan is eligible for citi- zenship. In a minute review of Jegisiation on the subject, Mr. Wickersham contended that the restriction - of -“free white persons” was placed in the faw to exciude negro slaves. In support of this a persen and to emphasize the confusion of decisions on the subject, he declared that at least fifty Japanese had been naturalized and that many immigrafits from other coun- tries of Asia had been admitted to ci zenship, while others from the same coun. tries had been denied such privilcges. WAGE INCRE. DENIED RAILROAD LABORERS Chicago, Oct. 3.—A proposal for a two cent an hour increase for the track and common laborers of the mainteance of ‘way union, numbering about 300,000, late today was temporarily refused by the United States labor board. Only seven of the nine members have taken part in the discussions which opened yesterday. Al- opponent, Judge George T. Brown, of|Soutners, tne Loulsville and \Iuhville. - | the South Atlantic States association and organizations of business men n the Bal- timore, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Nor- folk, Newport. News, Charleston; S. C., Chicago, Milwaukee and other cities. Supporting the petition were represent- atives of the New York Produce BEx- the Massachusetts of Public Works, the state chamber of commerce, of Maine and New Hampshire, and similar organizations in several New England cities. The complaint, assault with intent to kill following the shooting of Mrs, youth’s step-mother, two weeks ago, ap- peared in city court in Manchester, XN. H. The case was continuea until Wed- nesday and bonds of $3,000 continued. . Stephen Checkley and her four children of 146 Jersey street, Ansonia, \wre poisoned by eating-toadstools which Mr. Checkley gathered Sunday ‘woods for mushrooms. he neutral zone and the British troops we thus freed from the present pressure wxereised upon them, they will constitute t sufficient force in conjunction with de- mchments of troops ther allied powers,” relatively smal » eastern Thrace. “This military occupation would give hem the power and the right of absolute sontrol of the Greek administration, so ‘hat all Turkish fears regarding security »f their co-rellgionists might be allayed.” Contending that in this Christlan population would be guaran- teed by the peace treay, tey Insists on evacuatior, began Venizelos 1sks: “Can it really be sald with hon- Providence, who had ‘bsen indnrsed the party’s commities. on The vote as annocnced was: Emn 102' Judn Brown, 85; !“vn.rd M Sumvnn Azerfbing My, Flynn's nomination to th edefection - of - Providence and Paw- tucket. delégates who were supposedly supporting Judge Brown, party leaders convention plans into a cocked hat” statement was seemingly borne out Ja- ter when Coilector of Customs Frank 1. Fitzsimmons, who had been slated as lieutenant-governar, re- fured to be a running mate with Mr. Cooney, organization to occupy the whole filed on February =¥, ! ilast, said that the rail export rates be- tween Boston, Fall River, New Bedford, New London, Portland and Providence, Harry M. Parker dled in Stamford from an injury he received on December 22, 1915, when he was head by Roman Howanice, an em) struck on the or, should ‘rur- bert Phillipps, of the labor group, and Samuel Higgins, of the railroad group, being absent. The. public representatives, Chairman Ben W. Hooper, R. M. Barton and G. V. W.. Hanger, it was authoritatively re- ported, sponsored the rejected .increase. It was understood -that their offer was based upon the general change in in- dustrial conditions since last March when the evidence upon which the last cut of the track and common laborers wages, amountnig to five cents an hour, was presented. ~This decrease became effec- tive July 1 last. Evidence offered the labor board at the recent plea for an increase made by ploye inlz F. Garble, president of the mainten- and the so-called. differential territory west of a Plttsburgh-Buffalo line, were unjunst, unreasonable and unduly prefu- diclal to New England in this = com- the Stamford Manufacturing co: candidate for attm—ney general, also de- plant in which Parker was a foreman. elined a nomination. In place of Mr. Fitzsimmons, Felix A. Toupin, of Manville, was nominated for sty that I am asking too much or that, ! came H&Fs as a fiend and war-monger?” ance of way union, the public group was understood to have held, was the de- crease in wages and living ‘conditions ‘William V. Anderson, of Hefldfl. ‘whe | predominated over advances until June pared with rates from the west to Phila- shot and wounded his wife, went. t delphia and Hatimore. leutenant-governor, ‘and in place of Mr. Cooney as a candidate for momay ge‘n- Sinee then, they held there trial before a jury in superior court in|has been a slight upward t repre#ent them abroad before the complaint named Montreal, St. John, maded that I can be of some use. eral, Herbert: L. Carpenter, N. B, and Halifax, N. S. New Haven yesterday. on the charge of Smithfield, was chosen. intent to kill and murder./ Last -Monday, the mumemce of way Anderson._ex- | organization representing more than uready reported my views to thn Greek government and I venture to believe that my opinion will have some weight with them. 1If, however they do not Adolptius C. Knowles, was chose nas the party’s candidate for general treasurer. j After planks favoring enactment y pects to testify in his own behalf. of Jamestown 2 TWO YOUNG COUPLES HELD FOR THEIR PARENTS | oS, B o 400,000 men, went into convention at De- troit, with its president represented as impatiently, waiting a decision on his manufacturers, made’ public a lstter to|PIS% {oF an increase to explain his ac- with me. 1 shall cld age pensions and a minimum wage for women had been added to the tenta- tive platform, Frank F. Nolan, a New- port attorney, recommending - modification of - the Vol- stead ‘act to permit and sale of light wines and beers. motion was vigorously opposed and’ it Was defeated 97-47 on a roll call vote, Unned States Senator Peter G. was unanimously nominated for re- :lectwn, after his name had been placed before the convention by George Hur- ley, ehairman of the democratic c&nk‘l committee, the conference committee on Rochester telephone matters in which he offers to buy the voting control in the Rochester Telephone corporation stock to the people of the city of Ro- This letter secms to put an end o ihe report that the Venizlists are in favor of fighting for the retention of eastern Thrage, that'is on the supposition that he mew Greek government is ready to e guided by Venizelos. sart of his letter the ler soints out that allied ldmlnlsunlnn of Tirace Is not what the allies contem- olute but Immediate sastern Thrace to Turkish adimintstra- jon_and the establishment of Turkish gendarmerie there under the supervision of ailfed officers alone. wowld condemn the entire Christian pop- young people from Lawrence, found to- day on the bank of the Connecticut river, were taken into custqdy by the police and are being held for their parents. are Florence McPherson, 15, quette, 17, John Lyens, 18, and Robert 20, and it was learned that they left home Sunday to seek their fortunes. They were washing off the dust of travel when found and were about to re- sume. their way toward New York, with Hartford, Conn., as their immedll!e ob- the | TWO AUTO ACCIDENTS manufacture In the carlier A handwriting expert, called by eou; sel for Willlam M. Creasy, of Fort Thomas, Ky.,.now on trial for the murder of his former Lavoy, testified that one of the numer- asen: 3 ous letters alleged to have been Wrltten | “ineg n iR s A transferrence by the girl, was a forgery. He was chosen on a : . This Be ardees They said they had been helned on R. L. Howard, ‘of Meriden, ‘who open. their way by guloisls and that they sperit Ralph L. French, of Thomaston, was tion July 1 in holding in abeyance a strike vote and refusing to- accompany the ‘shop crafts in a walk-out. U SRS A T l the mechanic who, the testimony showed came to know each other through a ma- trimonial agency, compromised the bulk of evidence. They were submitted by the state, seeking to prove that Creasy shot the young school teacher when she refused to entertain his suit longer; and in support of now and then by mysterious rappings or thuds, described by a volice lisutenant as resembling the sounds of padded brick: dropped on an empty coffin. After a brief neriod of quiet ended by the horrible banshes's cry, . confused by the shadows cast by the full moon. emntied his pistol at a fancied spectral shape which proved to be only a shadow. The crowds casttered at the sound of the shots and the policemen in the distriet weer ordered not to use their pistols un- circumstances, but to grapple bare-handed with the “spook™ on sight. After ascream more ghastly than usu. the defense ntion that Miss y suggested a postponement of their marriage. Dear Billie—you said want me to write any more, just_saying good-nigh This letter, Miss Lavey.’ in summing up, vou did not sent special delivery by said the defense attorney “is the answer to the It was sent after Creas al, the bluecoats beat on the fence with their night sticks and then investigated the woodsheds and dog kennels, but found nothing, and the neighborhood composed itself to sleep. “T guess we laid it, all right,”” remarked departed with his told the girl that he no longer loved her ~—that he was a divos ters, seeking to show that the school teacher had ceased to care for Creasy. One of these was an unfinished letterr found on Miss Lavoy's desk, she wrote that “Billie was an oil can” and that she * 2 the sergeant as But a half hour later another call sum- moned the police, who then settled dows to an ali-night vigil. * v in June Creasy came from his in Fort Thomas, TO EXHUME THE BODY OF pose of this visit, . EDWARD WHEELEE HALL his' counsel attempted to show, was to break off with Miss La- voy and to return her letters. On June ' New Brunswick, N. J., Oct. 3.—County Prosecutor Stricker, today that an order directing trustees of Greenwood cemtery, Kings county, 1 York, to allow exhumation of the body . Edward Wheeler Hall, who with his choir leader, Mrs.” Eleanor R. Mills, was murdered September 16, had been signed by Supreme Court Justice O'Mal- ley, in Manhattan. The order, it was said, directed that the body be removed to the Kings coun- ty hospital morgue, was to be performed by surgeons of Mid- dlesex and Somerset counties, New Jer- sey, and Dr. Otto Schultze, chief medi- cal examiner for the district attormey’s office in New York. The body of the slain preacher probably humed tomorrow. Meanwhile state troopers, working in- dependently of the Middlesex and Somer- set country investigators, are searchin; the Phillips farm, where the bodies were found, for the pistol and knife used by 20, the young school teacher her home, while Creasy was visiting her. The weapon used was a revolver, which Creasy admitted was his, but which he declared had been in Miss Lavoy's pos- session for some time. in his defense, nld that he had dropped off to sleep on the couch in Miss Lavoy's home, he slept, the young school teacher took her own life. informed late and that while where an autopsy LIQUOR TRANSPORTATION DECISION THIS WEER ‘Washington, Attorney General Daugherty transportation American coastal waters—which has been forecast as forming the basis of the in this regard 3.—The opinfon of government's policy will be completed by the end of the pre- sent week it was said today at the de- partment of justice. the opinion wil It is expected that be translated at once into regulations for the guidance -of the enforcement officials acting under au- thority of the treasury department. “Three major points to be definitely passed upon are: ‘Whether transpértation and sale liquor on shipping board vessels, property of the United States govern- , Is illegal under er. James- Mills, St. John the E the slain choir leade: that if he had not had a perfect alibi, supported by his friends “these bunglérs (referring to the county authorities) would have me in ja Mrs. Hall, the rector's widow, receives numerous letters daily from various per- out the country. the letters offer condolence and others She insists on opening ané of the Church of ‘Whether such transportation and sale on American privately owned shipping is illegal, when these ships are trafficking from American ports or between foreign are abusive. reading all of them. MONTCLAIR GOLF CLUB ‘Whether it is illegal for foreign ships JHOUSE DESTROYED BY FIRE to carry liquor “in any form"—as ships IN SOUTH NORWALK SUNDAY/stores or otherwise—into the three-mile South Norwalk, Conn., Oct. 3.-~Hos- pital authoritles held out little hope to- night” for -the recovery of John Wasen- sky, of this city, who was injured early limit of the United States o—st, or into J., Oct. 3.—Fire of -un American harbors even if scalod as ships’ determined origin tonight destroyed the fashionable Montclair Golf Club, routing a score of wealthy guests who were in the dining room &nd thil afternoon. when a Stamford trolley | pxTIRE DEMOCRATIC TICKET car crashed into a wagon at the Witch fracture and: probable in- ternal injuries. He ‘is about 55 years old and has been unconscious since the accident. .Harold Mussy, 16, of this ed a ninn in Nortli Haven Saturday ; nizhl city, also was injured, but is qot in a se- and was at once arrested by enforcement rices condition. ulation to complete destruction. “If Turkish administration Is re-estab- lisiied in Thrace before the signature of peace.” he says, {nominated . by the republican senatorial convertion for state senator from 32nd Aistriet in Woodbury, yvesterday, ~77tlen, no_other name being pre- They Lad $2, small bundles of “lothing and two uheule.os The - police learned that the Lawrence authorities had sent agents, appeared before United States | Commissioner Lynch and - gave_bond of “it ould be A second: hul.lor aeeldam. nre oc-, curred tonight, - Alexander Polastro Te- $300 for appearance for a hearing. next | ceiving brain concussion and severe cuts Monday on a charge of belng in posses- | when a oné-man troliey struck his auto- a waening to other departments to blindness to fgnore that the Turks would ' senicu. watch for them. sion of liquor, nnb_.le on Newtown -avenue, on the The loss is estimated at 1‘.000. the arrival of the fire lormed lines and t against the flames with water _(yum buckets. ELECTED IN ARKANSAS Little Rock, Ark., Oct. 3 (By the A. | P.)y—Barly. returns tonight in the general state clection - indicated- a_ sweeping vie- tory for Governor T. C. McRae and the entire democratic ticket for state offices, and defeat of three proposed amendmients to the state constitution. Political observers oredict the election of a small republican nhorny In ‘the house of rovresen(ml\ es.