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Kaeer te — ° mag Bs RUN 2 4 EDITION SASS) MATEY BANE NN MDS [ “Circulation Books Open to am| ——— oretos two 08} Two CENTS. 4 on ‘The Oopreignt, Moa De ° fork Pe Fsanin MEXICANS TO TREATY PREPARED BY A DEMOCRAT, FOLLOWING WILSON'S PLAN Pittman, Their Author, Says the Plan Is to Have Britain, France, _Italy and Japan in Addition to U. S. Senate. WASHINGTON, Aug. 20.—Four reservations on the League of Nations covenant are embodied in a separate resolution introduced to-day by Senator Pittman of Nevada,.a Democratic member of the Foreign Relations Committee. q Penatet, Pittman sald the resolu-' ‘ton was in tine with the suggestion made to the Foreign Relations Com- mafttes Dy President Wilson thet ie they be are to be made embodied in a seperate resolution and not in the resotution of ratification, which might make new nogotiations necessary. Senator Pittman said the reserva- tions had not been submitted to the Preaident, They are similar to those proposed by a group of seven Re- publican Senators and deal with the right of withdrawel from the League, ‘Article K., Domestic Questions and the Monroe Doctrine. ‘The Pittman resolution follows: ‘That when the Senate of the United States shail advise and consent to ‘Beth day of June, 1919, now pending in the Senate, that it be done with and Wa cobsideration of the following un- derstanding as to the present and fu- SIX BRITISH MOTORBOATS SANK 5 RED WARSHIPS Escorted by Airplanes, They Launched Torpedoes With Deadly Accuracy. HELSINGFORS, Aug. 20.—The sink- ing of five Russian waraKips Sunday night was accomplished by six British motor boats. Escorted by three air- Planes. The motor boats approached close to Kronstadt and launched the torpedoes with deadly accuracy. It is believed the cruiser Rurik was severely ed. GERMANS TO PAY KAISER 170,000,000 MARKS This Sum Is to Recompense Him OF HIS LAST 4,500 is toee Document to Be Filed Next Week Includes Score of Personal Bequests. MANY SHARED EARLIER. Daughter’s Portion Reported for Losses “Through Forced Abdication.” BERLIN, Aug. 20.—(Associated Press)—<A bill has been submitted to the Prussian cabinet which provides that 170,000,000 marks shall be hand- ed over to former Emperor William ag total settlement for the ctvil list he lost “through forced abdication,” according to a Weimar dispatch to Die Freihett, The cabinet bas not yet reached a decision, it is said, because the scheme is opposed by Herr Von Braun, the Minister of Agriculture. PREACHER 94 YEARS OLD GETS LICENSE TO MARRY Says He Is in “Golden Season of Life” and “It Is Net Good That Men Should Be Alone.” ‘The Rev. Mosed Allen, itinerant preacher of No, 18 Hast 182d Street, ap- ‘ture construction and interpretation to bo given tw the treaty: 1~—That whenever the two year’s no- vided in Article 1, the Government giving such notice shall be the sole international %—That the suggestions of the Council of the League of Nativns as means of carrying into effect tions of Article X, the exe- ot which may require the use or naval forces or econ- measures, can only be carried through the voluntary separate of each of the respective gov- erumente—members of the League, and that the failure of any such gov- ‘qrument to adopt the suggestions of the Council of the League, or to pfo- vide guch military or naval forces or @oonqmical measures, shall not ¢eon- tute moral or legal violation of the é f i Ht plying to-day to City Clerk P, J. B-That wll. domestic and political ese br Giving hie age questions relating to the internal af- “TY wasn't born yesterday,” said‘ the faire of o government which is a] preacher, “and neither am I as old as member of the Leaguo, including im-|the hills,®I am in the golden season Migration, coastwise traffic, the tar-jof life. ‘Rt is not good that man i ould be alon #@ and commerce, ure solely within | should be a the Juritdietion of such government | Rev. Ar Allen said he was born in and are not bg the covenaht of the |Nort® eae iat nents hale League of Nations submitted in any ge. Their plan was tobe mar- way cither to arbitration or to t sited aa Mr. Wicks of consideration of council or a ou gembly of the Leu of Nations, or! 1§T DIVISION PARADES HERE, to the decision or rec any other power, Ifa nmendatign gf ule a | WH tise Mareh in Wan! About 16, (Continued on Second Page.) WA ‘ A 0. The eoettreneor ' 6 home Pte J Bee GLO scan ane | i : : ay ‘ was an == n iu Viow the ¢ from. the unite are ed Wor ub mn % AN thi ted State 4 hap j bs. J Gattate evaded $3 the Division will parade he. apt. 16, after ma: r dais watt be determined, Reduced by Provisions Made at Time of Marriage. Andrew Carnegie died worth %50,- 000,000, according to one of his execu- “tives, “His wiltis to be offered’ Probate next week. Root, Clark, Buckner and Howland of No, #1 Nassau Street, are the attorneys rep- resenting the estate, Mr, Carnegic stipulated that the Home Trust Com- pany, of Hoboken, N. J. should act 4s executor without bond. The will, which disposes of the last of the dead steel master’s fortune is about 4,600 words long and in it about a score of personal friends and retainers of Mr. Carnegie are remem- ered with moderate legacies, Before his death, relatives say, Mr. Carnegie provided for his daughter, Margaret, now the wife of Roswell Miller and she does not share in the will to the extent she would’ have shared had her marriage dot been less than it was, Although nothing in the will indi- cates the extent of the estate. Mr. Carnegie’s last income tax returns, according to a member of the family, indicates it 1s valued et about $50,- 000,000 or Just a tenth of the $500,000,000 he earned from his business ventures. ‘The will does not indicate Mr, Car- negie’s interest in the welfare of those he thought a great deal of. Some were provided for previous to his death ®y life positions tn his vartous conporations. CARNEGIE PENSION SYSTEM PAYS HUNDREDS BENEFITS, Others were cared for under the Carnegie private pension system, through which between 450 and 600 persons recetve monthly checks from the Home Trust Company. Most of tMose receiving these checks are aged friends or former em- ployess of the steel master. They have had a claim on him through their work tm his mills, because of his as- sociation with them or their ances- tors or through something of individ- ual merit that appealed to him. He personally signed an authoriza- tion for each of the pensioners, As those on the list die the payments cease and the money will be available for other purposes. It is said that one Brooklyn woman ig carried on this pension list because sho was of Scotch parentage and of @ fine station tn life, but wae aban- doned when her husband aleoonded from a position of trust'and ‘became @ fugitive a dozen years or so ago. Her standing and her Scotch blood, band's flight left her, touched Mr. (Continued on Second Page,) rs KUN DOWN SYSTEMS vs Father John's Medicine. —_ TRAVES, BURBAW. Ruitt an ~Aavt 63-63 Park Row, N. ¥. City. ‘Telephone Beckman 4008, ‘Check voom for Dagwese and parcels opm day and sight. Monee sotere—and tworeiion’ shecke- tor ey plus the pogition in which her ‘hus- | NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, [“Cireulation Books Open to All,” | SAAS SAPP EH Ls 4 i pubes tnt i ZOE S Lal Te. AU 1919, $50,000,000, ALL LEFT OF HALF BILLION QUIMET AND EVANS TED AT 18 HOLE OF BRILANT GOL JSS... aE Champion and Boston Star Fight Neck and Neck at ‘ Oakmont ‘Fourtiey. By William Abbott. (Gpetial Stall Cormpontemt of The Brening World.) OAKMONT GOLF CLUB, PITTS- BURGH, Aug. 2.—The clash of America’s two leading See Chick Evans, Chicago, and Frai Outmet, Boston, in the second rou! ‘ of the national championship to-day on the Oakmont links resulted in a Geadiock at the end of the first nalf of thelr 36-pole battle, The golf this pair of junior stars produced was one of the greatest exhibitions ever seen on a course in this country. Brilliant shots, remarkable recoveries and long putts followed in rapid succession and the ig gallery that*trafled over the 6,700-yard battle ground raised biis- ters on thelr hands applauding the two players. RESULT OF THE FIRST EIGH- TEEN HOLES, THR Francis Ouimet, visibly geared up to high pitch for the long-awaited scrap with Evans, showed little ef- fects of tonsilitis, which threatened to force him out of the present tour- mament. If anything, he was more cheerful than the defending title holder, who #elktom takes his matches very seriously. Evans was the gen- eral favorite before ‘the start, due mostly to doubt about Ouimet’s real physical conditian, Chick started to make a renaway match of it by winning the first hole im three strokes, @ 175-yard massie pulling to within 20 feet of the pin. ‘This spurt was short-lived and Oui- met driving tremendous balls cap- tured the second and third holes, Evans, although a notoriously bad putter, holed a 30 footer om the 371- yard fifth for a fine three. Chick’s tee shot landed nicely on at the short stxth and he ran down @ 20-foot putt for a two. Evans's un- octet expectedly strong putting made Outmet look worried, Evans, his second shot unkered, lost the seventh. On the short eighth Oulmet won, Bvans receiving a stymie he could not negotiate, Oulmet recover- ed strongly from a trap near the green in the ninth and halved the hole In 4s, At this point Outmet was one up. Bvans, after drawing well on tenth, where his opponent hooked badly to the eleventh fairway, lost| @ promising opening when he flubbed |his second shot into a trap. He lost 5 to 4, although a chip shot from the edge of the green stopped six inches short of the hole, From this point |to the home green Chick earned a 4 Jon every hole, a great finish. | Quimet sliced into bunkers on the tOUTED BY U. S. AIRMEN CARNERES WL DISPOSES END OF BIG ACTORS: STRIKE TO-NIGHT PREDICTED AFTER PLAYWRIGHTS PEACE MOVE FORALL MEN ON “RED” CAR LINES _s. Third Ave, Co, Gives Another 15° Per Cent. BoostSwann ~eeto Push Plot Inquiry. ‘will be turned on the 18 dark housed ba to-night or @-morrow fight, ‘H.W, Hoff, president of the Thira ‘The optimism of the Bialts th based | Avenue Ratlway Co., announced this on the progress being’ made by the} 4fternoon that at directors’ meetings independent playwrights to-day, al-| held to-day the wages of all workers though the work bas been done in} the red car lines, including the executive Wession, It bésame known,|Union Railway lines in the Bronx, however, that Winchell smith of] *°Pkers and Westchester, had been raised to meet the scale established Smith and Golden, both of whom by the Interborough and green car are members ef ¢he Producing Man- | lines, : agers’ Association, stated that if the} The ‘noréase of ‘ten per cent al- Equity woulg: put it om piyge that | fS*8Y @rantea ‘to’ the men hoe said ares had “Been increased by’ fifteen per they would not insist onthe closed)... Sie “the - hotel” vate of shop if their demands were granted | twenty-five per cent. he was quite’wure that the matagers| Mr, Huff declared the increase was would grant all their demands. not the result of any demands by ‘On this’ statement - a ‘committee | the employees, who go far as he knew, comprising Eugene Walter, Gene| ad taken no steps in the matter, He Buck, Rupert Hughes and Owen said that he was not aware of any Davis was named to walt upon the| °Omsiderable membership of Third officiais of the Equity to get their|Avenue workors in the Amalgamated TO WAIVE ‘CLOSED SHOP Managers ‘Ready te to Sign if Equity One Point, It Is ted. Bide dete are ’peing made slong ‘Broadway that the actorw’ strike will settled arid that the ligh 22 PAGES __PRIOn TWO CENTS TWO CENT Progress Reported by the American Troops in Pursuit of Outlaws Despite Handicap of Storm — Trail Leads to Mountain Wee i MARFA, Tex Aug. 20.—A report was received here te Lint, Est, JMO tnt Lie. Cooper, observe, died: Beale giving details of firing on their biplane by the Mexican bandits While flying over a Mexican mountain trail the Amercan v served three Mexicans, mounted, riding” soutt. bdaurdisenis low to investigate. e4 ‘The bandits opened fre with rides, bullets puncturing the wing 8 the American machine. Observer Cooper returned the fire ‘with his mim chine gun and saw one horse and rider fall. ; DAYLIGHT SAVINGS REPEAL ALSO PASSED BY SENATE Overrides President's Veto by Vote of 57 to 19—Bill Now) a Law. WASHINGTON, Aug. 20,—The Senate to-day passed the bill repeal- ing the daylight saving luw over the President's veto, The yote was fifty-seven to nineteen, ‘The repeal bill now is law, as the who held aviators Peterson Davis, pending the $15,000 ransom. Major Gen. Joseph Dickman, Com- mander of the Southern Department since bis return from overseas, personally direct the pursuit the | signatures to guch an agreement. At the headquarters of the Equity only Attorney Paul Turner was present, but the committee went into execu- tive session with him, and when they left him their expressions gave as- surance that something had been ac- complished, Later the committee met Mr. Gill- more, who after the meeting. gave out the following signed statement: ‘Reports in the morning papers show @ complete misconception on the part of the managers, The BWquity ts not holding out for a closed shop and doesn't propose so doing; but would like to call attention to the very remarkably organized closed shop that the Producing Managers are indulging in at the present moment.” “The managers yesterday com- plained,” said Mr. Gillmore.” that they ‘would receive the same treat- ment that is being accorded by the Hebrew Actors’ Union, which makes them take leading ladies and chorus girls fifty-five and sixty yeare old. | It would be impossible for such a big organization as we have to do any- thing of the kind. The Hebrews’ union ts a local proposition entirely.” Mr. Turner, after the meoting, said that any further statement must come o'clook, and the committee of play- wrights will be there with their re- port, While Mr, Smith ts prominent understood that ‘he did not commit | them to his statement, If the man- agers are with him, there seems to be nothing to the situation, according to (Continued on Second Page.) > m= Abbott's story of the, ionehip situation at Oak- porting Page. <meeeelpeteneeeae | FoR rie. For will | Golf Cham | mont, see from the playweights. The meeting | of the managers to-day was set for 3/ in the cduncils of the managers, it is | Association of Street and Electric Railway workers, but that nearly all were members of their own union, the Association of Third* Avenue Employees. The Third Avenue Company oper- ates fourteen subsidiary lines In Manhattan, Bronx and Westchester District Attorney Swann ts prepar- ing to dig deeper into the charge made by Mayor Hylan that the recent strike on the Interborough was brought about by «@ conspiracy in which the company and its employees worked together. for the purpose of forcing the city to grant an eight-cent fare. Mr, Swann, after preparing subpoe- nes for fifty witnesses, suddenly beld them back when the strike was set- ted Monday night. There were some who feared that further action on the conspiracy charge might lead to an- other tle-up of the transit lines, But Mr, Swann decided to-day to push the investigation as hard as possible. ‘The first thing he did was to call upon Supreme Court Justice Weeks, who recently impanelied a special Grand Jury to investigate anarchy charges. The District Attorney asked the court to broaden the powers of the | special Grand Jury so that it could |go to work at once on the Inter- borough case, Neither Judge Weeks nor the Dis trict Attorney would tell the result of the conference, but it was an- nounced that the Special Grand Jury will appear before Judge Woeks Jate this afternoon, at which time the | Distriet Attorney will make certain requests in open court. It was sad] | that the Grand Jury might be caled upon to consider not nly (he matters for which it was impanelied, but ¢:v0 ond P (Continued on age.) Giunta Win Firat Game, Sa eS eo} 90000. bg 8,8 2 o- 8 House yesterday passed it over the President's veto. Repeal of the law becomes effective after the clocks are turned back to normal in October, It will go down in legislative history as one of the very few measures which have twice been vetoed by a president and became a law after all by the vote of more than two-thirds of both Houses of Con- gress. TINY GIRL SACRIFICES LIFE IN SAVING HER DOLLY Two-Year-Old Falls From Window With Toy Clasped in Arms. In her effort to save her dolly from being dashed to pieces, two-year-old Sarah Bilott, living at No, 20 Hers Street, Brooklyn, sacrificed her life to- day. The child was “pinying house” and placed her doll in the open window, telling her to be good and not to atir, A breath of air caused Dolly to dis- obey, and as she swayed in the wind, Sarah, standing on a chair, tried to catch her, In doing so the child pitched through the window and landed in the stone courtyard below. Her mother, Mra, Celia Biot, found her dead in the yard with Dolly, unharmed, clasped in her arms, NESE TRANSPORT SINKS; | Siliikt Founders After Striking Rock, Says a. Nagasaki | Despatch, | LONDON, Aud 0.—Tae Japaneee | jtransport MUNK Maru struck and foundered south of Sanega- m4 on Aug. Li, according to @ 2, Nagaaaki despatch received by Lloyds, One hundred and ten of those on CONT ‘poard are expented missing, wi 110 REPORTED MISSING) according to announcement San Antonio, 5 While he left ostensibly to army poste along the border, it said he really is directing the purgult troops, which are to-day spread’ out fan-shaped over a wide stretch of country south of the Rio Grande.” RAINS HIDE TRAIL OF FLEEING BANDITS. and canyons, and with thelr trai) partly obliterated by rain, will be hard to find, Military men think it may be necessary to search every square mile of the rough country. Despite the dificulty in lecating the bandits from the air, the aviators who left the Oying teld here yeaters day scouted almost the entire Ojinags district, Col. Lang! jorne, \@ command of the expedition, sent a message to Gem Antonio Pruneda, commander of the Ojinaga forces, through ‘the Mexican Consul at Presidio, notifying Pruneda of the punitive expedition, so the Mexican General would notity bis troops in the field to prevent @ pos¢ sible clash between Carranga troops and the Americans, Advices from Aystin sald that Gov, Hobby has tnatructed the Texas Adjutant General to have the Nae onal Guard ready to respond teen emergency call for service om the | border. U. S, PLANES IN MEKIGD | BY CARRANZA’S PERMISSION “| lt Is Said He Believed Our Plyerg Would Accomplish Nothing. MEXICO CITY, Aug. erie