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es MAINS TO REST |= ‘ EHE NORE é bor Leader's ders Body Will Be Interred at Scene of Early Activities. | Waneral arrangements were made to-day for Joha Mitchell, labor leader ‘and ereat ‘of the State Industrial Sty Who: died of pneumonia 42 Tpnercsy in the Post-Graduate following an operation for @Bllatones performed a week ago. Pursuant to his request made to his \ wire, his body will be taken for in- ‘e to Scranton, Pa. the centre his early activities among the coal | gall An attempt to save his Tite was made prewe / night by an intramus- ~eutar injec! of blood, obtained the woios of his youngest son, who Is twenty-two years old. b Pr. John F. Erdminn performed and later called F. Chase in, consultation w! patient's condition took @ turn CORPORATION | j=: at 8p. M. and Thi D° rset Ss unusually thorough, and is calculated |® Cos greatest amount of s ment from the car. ay would smash the record made by | Gaston Chevrolet when he won the ATES SERVICE BANKERS What i ite ge ita marks ret MARCONI OF AMERICA A BESS ee Sang singe toad, Merkel Annclist.” “Copy upon requent for 132—No, 38 ‘ScHMIDT & DEERY lg sep Stock Rates 2m. = RECORD and low quota- a aad to date, covering Independent Oil—Inclustrials STRIBUTION. | CHAS. A. STONEHAM & CO. 41 BROAD ST., NEW YORK CITY. gts ‘TELEPHONE~—BROAD one. ivingstonRefinersCorp. Participating 87% Cumulative Preferred Stock Common Stock Traded in On Estimated rate of earnings, per annum, $2,400,000. Has e:clusive contract for pr: end mana; LIVINGSTON OIL CORPORATION. Descriptive Circular on Request @. D.Kuare dr.aCo. Established 1900 Investrmntr Broxers ye Bute TEL, CORTLANDT —2543-4-5, 8273-4-5, “Ae vatgnenls herein, while ‘cod, have been obtained conmuler la relic and and authoritative source: toad Drow weed tod hes oe) < July Fourth, THE EVENING Wousd: wannsasat, Chairman of the Federal food Board and President of the State Food Commission and the State Counell of Farms and ets. . Mite COMES BACK FROM WAR AND DISAPPEARS AFTER ° wife, his three sons ghter, Compensation William C. Archer, yetclany were present when mu ‘The body was sent to Camp- undertaking establishment at Broadway. ae, Mitchell had resided at No. 3 bn penn Avenu ten years. Many miners and other labor unions were upon by him at his Mount ‘ernon home, About three weeks ago, while on his way to the Thousand Islands for » yacation, Mr. Mitchell suff from gallstones and hurried to tertown, N. Y. He obtained tem porary relief and returned to his duties here, Later he went to the Syracuse Convention of the State Federation of Labor, and as Chair- man of the Reconstruction Commit~ tee delivered @ report advocating public ownership of the railroads, health insurance and a minimum wage for women and children. After spending two more days at his offic he entered the hospital Saturda; Mh a to be operated upon bs 7 re Mitchell held a unique peaiten | in the labor world, inasmuc! wag one of the comparatively few | men who accepted public office and still kept In touch with and retained | his influence over his fellow trade} union| | } Ef respect Mr. Mitchell was a sell man, After he was ten Dr. | years old he received no education it such as he was able to obtain for himself at night. He was born at Braidwood, Ul, Feb. 4, 1870, and at the age of twelve began work in He rose from one po- ‘The Colt-Stratton Company an- nounces that they have again decided to open their automobile course, = PRHiLie PALMER, noon and one in the evening, Those ‘ho sare fe sr Clase A will est ge londays an aye at 4 B. M.; Bon Mondays and Wednesdays Manner. and Class C on Tuesdays (Bpecial to The Brening World.) ayes at 4 P.M, cos CO. Conn, Sept. The course, as it 1s now planned, Is |mother and brothers of Philip Palmer, young man who returne: ishes in an Unaccountable to enahle the student to secure the |fom ice and enjoy- |g™Ployment as an electricim In Stam- his whereabouts, Palmer wa: gerved in the A. B. distincti CHEVROLET BROTHERS 10 ford and recently vanished, will be rateful far any information concern: About two weeks ago there "NATIONALIZE COA USHESS SPITE MINES, {f DEMAND OF BRITISH LABO ovsenalipaitenees Vote in Glasgow Convention Puts Unions Back of the Miners’ Plans. GLASGOW, Sept. 10.—By an over- whelming vote the Trades Union Con- gross at to-day's session passed a resolution favoring the natidnaliza- tion of the coal mines., The motion, presented by Robert Smillie, the miners’ leader, was carried by @ big| majority. ‘The result of the vote was to throw virtually the entire Congress solidly behind the coal miners’ demands for the nationalization of their industry. The resolution pledges insistence by the body that the Government adopt the majority report of the Coal Com- mission, presented last June, known as the Gankey report. This report provides for the state ownership of the mines and for joint control of their operation, in which the miners would have an efféctive voice. The resolution passed to-day, calling for acceptance of the report ‘by the Government, adds: “In the event of the Government still refusing, & special Congress shall be comvened to decide what dutm of action shall be taken to compel the Government to accept.” The resolution ts the alternative schon ce tae aetement “contrary to the best fiterests of the nation” and as creating “the _ tinct trustification of the coal in- dustry.” Mr. Smillie tn advocati: the pas- aie et Ae ocean ee Philip Palmer of Cos Cob Van-|\8T inbors ant far the antionadestion | inv the pu of the coal mines. The desired end would be achieved through “the common sense realiza- 10,—The | 10m of the justice of our claims,” Mr. Smillie continued. {| James Henry Thomas, General Bec- Surope in June, took up his old|retary of the National U Union of Rall- waymen, in seconding Mr. Smillie’s notion, said the question had come to the point of a definite decision, he exhorted the delegates to be sure they © gf three brothers whelsaw clearly where they were going. Joseph Havelock Wiison, President as 8 ispute in the shop reganiing| of the International Seamen's Union, D the merits of a job and he walked out.| in opposing the resolution, pointed to He remained about home one week in idleness and then disappeared. brated Pair for Racing Supremacy, Automobile racing enthusiasts will enjoy the thrills of sesing two broth- ers battling for world’s supremacy in the 150-mile classic which will feature the card of events to be decided at the Sheepshead Bay Speedway on L. 1, SOUND FERRIES case are Louk and Gaston Chevrolet. Ever since Gaston deposed Louis as the 100-mile champion the latter, who is the oldest of the pair, has been busy tuning up a machine that some 100-mile Derby at the Bay on last The Chevrolets will have plenty of sition in their efforts this time. the leading pilots of the world will start in the classic, which will wind up one of the greatest seasons in the history o: ito racing. BIG FLEETS OF TRUCKS on Moriday, Sept. 15, this service will round trips Sundays. schedute will be: Sea Cliff every four hours, 10 A. M., and on Sundays hours from each end, odd Rochelle, even hours Sea Cliff, , ‘The fall and winter schedule has |r wail to do. pt a lel ARE NOW BEING ORDERED) a1rseay'boon “put “in” efvoct on, the [22,3 Meo thus chiorncon” at new Bridgeport-Port Jefferson Ferry, which now leaves Bridgeport at 9/Brunt Voorhees at Bensonhurst, De- eamer “Consistent with the good times that |4. M. and 3 P. M., and leaves Por thie country is now enjoying, there has | Jefferson at 12 noon and 6 P. M. been a wonderful stimujuq in the past —_+>-— month or so in the gale of motor ene ead at Bee, et | Oo. MY. HAS A COMPLETE ager of the New York Maxwell-Chal- mere branch. “A goed many of the larger corpora- tions who use big fleets of trucks for their hauling and delivery service, who ago, the automobile course at the Col- have been holding back for the past}icge of the City of New York has Year awaitin placing order: r present ust #0 ie th to hia hauling one at a time to vanes, pments, are now greatly’ increasing tle merchant adding wrown rapidly. The course is open to both men and ep step with his ad- | classes. our case we have been jcu- lant fortunate with {he Maswell worm: drive truck, In that our factory had jough to increase our truck d has placed us in a able to take care of im- $25 is charged In addition to Tso 4 new class is © advanced instru will take up autos Hghting and ignition systen will consist mainly of lab Practice In, looating and ret engine troubles and repairing systems, The feo for the e weeks’ course will be $16, _ LIBERTY OFFICIALS. BANKING «5 ear in connection with business usag than has been discovered among th officials of Company of Detroit. ‘The traffic manager of the compan; drives to a from the factory dail: |from his home in Ann Arbor, eduction of, and is controlled miles’ ised by the New York Curb The sales manager ‘lives si ing department dri Syne assistant while 6 of eleven miles ea |rive at the factory in the mornin: more consistently on time than the who ride on the street railways, tah ann i = Twice Marrted in One Day, After having been married «a few hours. previously at the Chapel in the New York Huilding, Lieut. Joseph French Mission, and his bride, Miss Cor went last evening to h ™ ont gomery F Stree and .were married again, wee coremony, NewYor« uniel worke; om Jersey City, The An announcement of importance to motorists is made dy the Marine Operating Company, which has re-| Romance Begun on Fourth of July cently purchased ail the Long Island Sound ferries, to tho effect that the service will be continued all winter on the ferry between New Rochelle and Sea Cliff and on the ferry be- tween Bridgeport and Port Jefferson. The present Rye-Sea Clift terry sér- vice will be continued, five round|chances are 11,000,000 to 1 that John trips daily, until and including Sun- |J- Pershing will not even be mentioned. day, Sept. 14, after which, beginning New Rochelle every |Coney Island, four hours, beginning 9 A, M., and|man, jumped in and saved her. The inning | 1octors worked over the young woman ery two |—she re New | eral days before she could sit up. women and the students may register d delivery facilities |for either the afternoon oF evening The course lasts eight weeks, or @ total of seventy-two hours, and a d for the complete | her no money in three years and has e, including lectures, laboratory instruction and outdoor driving les- fundamental SHOW CAR'S UTILITY ‘There has probably never been a bet- ter example of the utility of the motor | quarters of the Brooklyn Union Gas Co, the Liberty Motor Car|the men are still 4 miles x miles from the factory, and the head of | Mied that there i the Seoretar And it Is notably true n Who Use motor cars are ormerty the failure of State-controlled enter- He bad | prises, He was interrupted with a jabout $30 but rried no baggage. He Special Interest in Battle of Cele-|%an a momber of the 409th Acro Squad: H ron. jhout of, “What about the war?” President Bunting announced that a definite vote on the question of direct action would be taken on Friday, pret calla ssonsntaon) ely WILL RUN ALL WINTER| WEDS MAN WHO SAVED HER FROM OCEAN GRAVE AT CONEY Culminates on Pershing Day. If you shoald walk up to Ofrs, Frank R, Lambe on Sept. 10, 1929, and say: “Anna, what big event happened ten years ago to-day in New York?" the Miss Anna Burke of the Breakers 1 | Hotel, Coney Island, tumbied into the be shifted to Now Rochelle for three |°°e#® there on the Fourth of July when ro dail Und tree untae te ant Sve | caward Place and West 3th Street, @ canoe capsized. Frank (. Lambe ot ® Manhattan business is twenty-two—and it was sev- Mr. ‘Lambe called. He. is. thirty-alx, He called And the home’ of City Magistrate A. Van t}tective Sergeant Frank D, Cr Dest man, act- ing as aa BROTHER ESCAPES FROM REDS Former Grand Duke Michael Said to Be Wandering Incognito Somewhere Abroad. STOCKHOLM, Sept. 10.— Michael Alexandrovitch, brother of the for- | mer Czar Nicholas, who was ap-| pointed Regent of Russia: when the | Rom dynasty was overthrown but later was exiled by the Bolshe- viki, has succeeded in escaping from the Bolsheviki, together with his @ecretary and a sailor, ac ling to an announcement made by M. Sossl- onkia, Michael's aide, in the Svenska | Dagbladet, | Michael is said to have made his escape in a motor boat, cruising along the River Haini to Iricutsk, | \from which place he subsequently | went abroad and since has remained incognito, panniers STRIKE STOPS WEDDINGS. Burials, Too, Impossible tm Sixtr- Bight Parisian Suburbs. PARIS, Sept. 10—The municipal em- ployees and workmen in sixty-eight of the Paria suburbs went on strike yester- day for improved conditions. ‘This will suspend the marriage and burial services in the case of people liv- ing in the suburba, Probably the water supply will be cut off, as the employees of the water company are reported to have decided to strike simultaneously with the municipal employees, peeantenex crac MAY BAR STRIKING UNIONS. Miners’ Convention Takes Up Un- euthorizeé Walkouts, apn, : over the seatin Fepresent- i sich ted in unau- thorlsed strikes ehgrosecd the attention of the United Mine Workers of Amer= iea convention here to-day. A number of, Gelngates "favored, Duniuiment for Tecalcitrant unions,” Approximatel that | fwenty ave Tiinais unténa are reported ——__———. ea ‘ Te » oropoaing fa @ taxi) yes, aril SheaGive me time to think. He—Yes;* but good heavens, not in here. ePTeMER 10, In Next Sunday’s Issue of | The New York Times ' The World’s News in Pictures beautifully printed by rotogravure proces» Frrom all corners of the globe come a steady stream of photographs of events grave and gay — hiftoric scenes— splendid spectacles — famous people—pictures of sports, war, adven- ture, play. You will find the newsiest of them— the most striking of them—each week in the Rotogravure Picture Section of The New York. Times. Next Sunday’s Rotogravure Picture Section contains, among others, bd photographs showing General Pershing’s Arrival Doughboys and Frauleins Three pages of illustrations dancing on the banks of the showing his return, the re- Spree. ception at New York City Hall, and the parade of the New York Police Training famous Ist Division, headed Camp by General Pershing. President Wilson on Western Trip Admiral Kolchak, Russian Leader Allied Soldiers in Russia Former Kaiser’s New Home Graves of Americans in Prince of Wales in Canada Russia ay And in the Magazine Section ” 2 EXCLUSIVE PROCESS «UNION MADE... Patterson Bros. Tobacco Co, Tr. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA pan 1 \e| ASKS $125 A ee AUTO SCHOOL COURSE| "*zirr",t2¢.ts° Soznresten,co7" Herschel Ciifford Parker, formerly « Although started but « few months| Professor in Columbia University, and well known explorer, was to-day sued for separation by his wife, Mrs, Evelyn N. Parker, of 'No, 21 Fort Greene Place, 4] Brooklyn, Mrs. Parker asks $125 a week alimony, alleging ¢hat her hus- he is addicted to drinking, has given advised her to @ind some rich man to support her, Prot, Parker insists that his wife ha brought to their home members of he | family, despite the fact that it is no any tdo lange for themselves’ and tw: dre! He also says he has provided her. with $7,000 annually, “never ha -|more than three drinks in a day and that many of his trophies and art ourl os have been disposed of by his wife. GAS STRIKERS “SIT TIGHT.” Union Company Dentes Shortage of Gupply tm Brooklyn. It was stated to-day at the head- | strikers, at Tammany Hall, Grand Ave- | nue and Pacific Street, Brooklyn, that iting tight,” and company to come to ald that the supply erally diminished waiting for the y| them. They. of gas has bee ¥ | throughout Brool An official of company flatly de- y shortage or that the. gas supply will be exhausted. by to-morrow, He also denied that there are 2.500 employees out, but aald that the total is "alls ble SIN FEINERS LOOT WARSHIP Reb British Monit Ammun| * CORK, Ireland, sept. 10. Sinn Fein- Marrings ers boarded « British monitor in the M pal harbor of Monkstown Bay last night, © | overpowered the crew and seized a Pr, quantity of arms and ammunition, They At No. | chcaped with thelr loot, Only 8 akeloton crew was ai second vessel and. thelr altempis ip resin Sore sans repulaed, band has $15,000 a year, Ghe asserts) Baldy Ahmahont for enon ‘ihe orcening dl Or b be of Bnverest 1g 9 sly reacl feat or °9th St. Crosstown an: Liberty Loan Bonds Accepted as Ly ae te on any ae purchases, = and Span’s Spoken Here Write tor 80-Page Catalog and at Astan Sele Cuealor | wv) Al MBNE aeey ‘aan VAL L3 $245 4:5ROUM APARTMENT tier 'snoo vatum. $375 KOU APARTMENS GEAT "ar00 VALUE $585 Our | Libera! Terms of The New York Times . (Also Printed by Rotogravure Process) are presented a number of special articles that by themselves, are well worth the price of the paper. Here is a partial table of contents for next Sunday’s Magazine Sec- tion of The New York Times: . General Pershing’s Foreign Decorations The pictures with this en- tertaining article show the numerous gorgeous medals and badges conferred on General Pershing. plosives placed to prevent German warships from get- ting out of their own waters into the Atlantic. Farmers Get Into the Game of National Affairs They follow the example of business men and labor unions in establishing Wash- ington headquarters for the purpose of impressing their needs upon Congress. Americans Picking Up North Sea Mine Barrage A naval officer’s thrilling story of how a United States equacron is doing the peril- ous work of destroying ex- Other Features of Next Sunday’s New York “The Road to Freedom” Third.article in the series by Stephen Leacock, brilliant author and economist, on the great social problems of the day. Young Men Who Thought They Were Sick They formed one of the several classes of ner- vously disordered candidates for our victorious -army. “Howtheseafflicted youths were handled is told for the first time by Dr. Pierce Bailey, re- cently chief of the War Department psychia- tric section, a novel addition to war literature. Sporting Section Authentic, well-written news from all fields of sport: golf, tennis, baseball, boxing, racing, @&c. Every department is covered by an expert. ORDER NEXT SUNDAY’S EDITION OF The New ork Simes FROM YOUR NEWSDEALER TODAY Philip Gibbs’s cables describing France revisited —in the daily issues of The New York Times,