The evening world. Newspaper, September 13, 1919, Page 2

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adhe { { y ‘ 3 } , Afeoussed, 1 told the eOfnn itor Lithe matter suggested in tha tele waa entirely in the hands of Commigsioner. "Tho question of whether the men who had, pot reported for duty, wore still policemen was a question o hd fact on which I should be guid by the opinion of the Attorney ( SM grat, 1 understood the matter « ch telegram has been conveyed to Mr Curtis (Commissioner of Police) ‘Whether he has made any decision it yet I did not Know. I undertook 4 to transmit their request up ference between President O'Don. for a con Organizer McCarthy and President Molnnes to the Commissioner of Po- * itee." State Guard troops continued to tis qpatrol the streots in conjunction 4° with volunteer policemen and loyal <0? members of the regular force. There vty Was No repetition during the night of te: the rioting and looting whieb marked ~~ the first 48 hours of the strike and x only a few arrests were made for ~ Minor offenses. xo «60s The Gompers telegram wan ad- «4 @ressed to Mayor Peters, who has no control over the Police Department. A copy of it was wired by Gompers wv to New England Organiser Mo- ba Carthy. The atter brought it to the te, attention, of Prewident McInnes of ,10 the Police Union, who laid it before ol the strikers, or deserters, with the result announced. Organizations of business men rep- fesenting millions of dollars are adopting resolutions approving the| stand taken by Commissioner Curtis and ‘urging that policemen that de- serted their posts should not be rein- stated, <A‘ new and Interesting proposition will be injected into the controversy Monday night, when the Presidents » and Becretaries of newspaper unions aMliated with the Allied Printing! Trades tnect to appoint a joint com- ba Mittes to confer with the Newspaper be. Publishers’ Association of Boston and se @epister their protest against the al- Jeged “untrue, unfair and malicious ‘26 apticles being published in the news- ~u- papers of this city against the Police- e,men's Union and organized labor.” *9 <The Allied Printing Trades Council olf Will-meet at § o'clock Monday night | Gertodincuss the request of the Central | Labor Union that al! affiliated unions | divote “yes” or “no” immediately on | 2° the propysition of a general strike in okt S¥Mpathy with the policemen. os BOSTON NOW AS ORDERLY As| de ANY OTHER TOWN. o FoF’ at Toast twenty-four hours Hos- tesit@P has-been as quiet and orderly as 3 ome other town in the United States, bowtPhe walkout of the police and the i ataa of Noodlum bahds on Tuesday on and “Wednesday nights called atten- 8 ton to fhe small number of people Jos in’ this dig city for whose repression ow @ Police force was maintained. Another thing the police desertion Mp BAS. called attention to is the con- .,, tempt in which the public authorities bei ‘Bold "2.75." Have the saloons been So erdered to close? They have not. 3 And Why? Well, would you order ba the soda fountains to quit? Nobody has thought of closing the a! @x-saloous for the very good reason | * ¢ fa that, there isn't a place in Boston | ey Where you can get a drink of that 82 @lé-fashioned hooch—"ask Dad; he 3& knows"—two drinks of which could | . @ Jackrabbit tackle a bulldog. | ja two days The Evening Worid re- | ove not seen a single Bos-| 4 fonian walking tipsy. | sot Hé has, however, ® felting Up as it were, Bostonians | talking tips: Like that young man| ‘© toa Tremont Street newsstand who! basis the police trouble was a “con- Da thot young capital and labe ae man and a side part hed. Magish with un ao qu have S fear of Bolsheyvinm. heard several! mt | day. [mitted by Frank | city ©) KEPT UP BY ARMY | ALL OVER IRELAND House of David Kent, M. P., | Searched—American Com- mittee’s $ Reports Seized. | OORK, Sept. 1%.—The military and po which began yesterday in connection with the proclamation of the suppression of the Sinn Fein Par- | Hament rm ind Sinn Fein organisations througbout Dretand were continued to-~ During the morning the raiders proceeded to the house of David Kent, a Sinn Fein member of Parliament, | hed the place, The ralders | net with no opposition, the search | proceeding without incident. DUBLIN, Sept, 13—Arthur Grimth, Vice President of the Sinn Fein, an- nounced to-day that the Irish Partia- ment would float a loan of $1,250,000, in Ireland in conjunction with the loan being rained by Eamon De Valera and feare in the United States | Grimth maid that 200,000 soldiers now compored the British garrison In Ireland. The proclamation suppressing the | Parliament and declaring it a “dan- | serous association” followed the raids conducted on 1 Fein headquarters in various cities, Among the docu- ments seized were the reports sub- P, Walsh, Kawa F. Dunne and Michael Ryan, Ameri- can investigators. y filled with priv solved yesterday, arrived here ¢ to-day from nearby districts. At sey eral places crowds stoned the police accompanying the prisoners, but were kept at a distance “when troops charged them with fixed bayonets and threatened to are, DE VALERA SAYS IRELAND 1S NEWEST WAR FRONT Suggests Law and Order Can Be Had by Withdrawal of British Troops, PROVIDENCE, R. 1, Sept 18.—"The war fyont Ys now transferred to Ire- land."Famonn De Valera, “president of the Irish repubile, lared inn otor lorries, statement to-day, commenting on the in centres ie closing of the Sinn F “If law and order wanted in Ireland, it twenty-four hour alien go: all that is had within a naid. Great ernment of only tow | Britain bas only to withdraw its army | 4 meri of oceupation, The war front ts transferred to Ireland, where Vis count French, one time commander in France, and the former chief of staff, | Sir William Robertson, are now tn mmand. t is probably the parliament's ac- tivity on national reconstruction | work that has caused ita suppression | by the Lriti#h government,” De -Val- era said, “But the British cannot suppress the whole friah ple and Ireland will never acknowledge an allen authority,” partment, Among the this resolution ts the Hon, Matthews, who became May: at the age of thirty in 1891, and served in t \five years, Many years than the ack | acity later Matthews was the fearless champ of @ Boston Minance Committee whic hy} THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1919 Troops Driving the Gangsters From the Common| glee BOSTON FORMING: NEW POLICE FORCE AND BARS “RAIDS ON SINN FEIN ‘Scene in Boston’ 3 Police Strike Riots ; "THRILS FOR GREW 03 HOURS ADRIFT ————- Twenty-Seven Were Lost in Bahamas Storm. MIAMI, Fla., Sept. 13.—Many hours before the storm which sank the Ward liner Corydon in the Bahamas channel Tuesday morning with of twenty-seven Iyes, a vulture fol- lowed the ship and perched on her | spars, while a pantc-striken crew, be- leving in the superstitions of the sea, convinced that they were doomed. Such {s the story brought here by a loss | were jhours adrift, on an upturned boat. All day Bunday as the ship pur- sued her way jn calm seas ahd light winds, the great bird hovered over- head, Sunday night and Monday the Cory- (don staggered through the smashing seas. Monday night every member of the crew was engaged in a desperate battle for life, There was no food, | as the galley and provision rooms were flooded. Tucsday morning they lost contro} of the ship, the wireless \apparatus wag short-circuited, and| no 8, 0, 8, calls coukl be sent out. When the vessel went winder, the | Americans heads and saved the lives of several. “1 slid against a lifeboat and clung to it when the Corydon listed,” said one of the survivors, “The lifeboat and I shot into the sea togethor. | Luckily it landed rightside up and I EMPLOYERS’ UNION STARTED 10 FIGHT c for the \doing for |the | tion, Charles Piez, | United {cr for | Llinois ORGANIZED LABOR Le U. Former Shipping Board Head in Getting Together Manuta acturers. HICAGO, Sept. iployers’ inte van Federation forme! States Shipp! the of the H Baldwi H. Meri the Cudahy 13. of employers into a body that will do sts what the | méimbership | committee are Alba B. Johnson, (dent Company; Organizatic of Labor labor has been started by Illinols Manufacturers’ Associa- | r head ng pard, nan of the Committee of Or- | ganization. Among of n rick, Preside: ===: |of the Mississippi Valley Association one of the deserters back into the de- Jand of the Chicago Association of latest to voice N | Commerce; Thomas Creigh, attorney Packing Company, and John M. Glenn, Secretary of the Manufacturers’ Mr.|'Thia new union expects to take the | feld as the greatest of all unions, of the the Pres- Locomotive Association. on ts ie nt jar 1 POLICE AUTO SQUAD SCOURS CITY AT NIGHT FOR HOTEL GUNMEN tomlin Meares from First Page.) wi be in Ee ght and was pr self th the | those establishments that buys and sells Liberty bonds, the $50 and $100 variet | alone | his safe most of them of Mr. Schmidt, office, had just locked after 7 o'clock last aring to go home four men, wearing the shortly when BES hats, and well dressed, entered. A man about 5 feet 5 reddish hair,” who app ader of the four, and a! peared to be slightly intoxic: inchss tall, 1 to > ap- |, a= eotbika Nba |cording to Mr, Schmidt, said he pockets, ‘The robbers then fled, lei. | W!shed to buy a Liberty bond. Mr. ing Schiffman unconscious, Schmidt went back to the safe, pur mén with five suitcases at- kneeled down, fiddled for a few mo- tracted the attention of Patrolman mente. with the combination, and Thomas O'Hanlon ec swung open the safe door. When he ly this morning at the Staten Island approach to the #To8e he looked into the muzzies of St. George Ferry. them to stop, but instead pped the suitcases and ran. After firing several shots O'Hanlon cap- tured John Latora, seventeen, of No. 413 First Avenue, The others es- caped, In the suitcases were two shirts, gloves, they found elghty- twenty-seven pairs of six men's sults, twelve tles and a number of cuff links and other) sinall articles of jewelry, Later these ma were found to have been stolen from the haberdashery store of George B, Egbert, No, 48 Arrietta Street, Tomp- kinsville, The store was entered by cutting the which had been wired with a burglar | ¢, alarm. | Willlam Gerstein, a taxi driver, who lives at No, M4 Chestnut Stre Brooklyn, was at his station at Street and 7th Avenue at 4 o'clock |” ow glass from a window owing ‘Now ake a you'll be a dead man,” Th ns ved n cord ner and He commanded four revolvers, “Put up your hands hatred man. Directed by the red-haired man, the three led said the red- Mr. street level to shut off you stay noise until there and don't we are gone or said the leader. escaped in an automobile, the umber of. which reported to was the ob police. to the incompleteness of the t Pollee Headquarters the of the machine could not be for y of State's branch office in attan opened this morning. Detectives Brady and Daly of the fourteen hours, until the Opi oy cian they like a one conditions in 4 oficial crookedness and| Th® Proposed body will bind to-) this morning when three well-drossed west 47th Street Station saw three * “Well, Mistor, We don’t hear any of | high places, He has been a gether all manufacturers and mana-/ Negroes Apre iched ie sked him tO men enter a taxicab at 53d Street m things said about the situs: | on governihent at Harvard |garial heads along union lines, it was drive them to 147th Street and 7th ang Riehth Avenue, stopped them in Russia. The British don't al- | 4! President of the Franklin explained, and its chief work will be Avenue, When they arrived at that : is ioe the good news to get through. | Aaerewag a lg Also la Counsel oF thu lt’ make’ felt at Washington the|cornor the negroes drew revolvers and |"0c, “sed. them ‘where they were Pry Wy Gid the men on a French man. | Haston teal Katate exchange |wishes of business ax a whole Upon took $26 from Gerstein. ‘They then "oe “ Of-war refuse to carry out orters?| wine Ay, Peat pte (stg © confer |matters which affect the prosperity of tala’ hint to art eay ‘Oh, just for a ride,” answered | Why did American soldiers in Russia h the Governor on the general. sit- the country old him to drive awe one of the men, and the detectives ‘Ho Hkewive? ‘The revolution is hero | Wtlon. Mr, Matthews wa told by re= |" Tt will combat labor demarids and! George Schfer, who said he was a Oi)" 0.00 Tag te oe ome Nee Sail right.” to talked these alleged porters of ‘the Governor's declaration consolidate all opposition, Secretary! ticket speculator and lived at No, ?!** . y 2 thinkers, that the deserters should not be re- |Gienn of the Illinols manufacturers 957 Hast 12d Street, was arrested mq O'R? Hope, twenty-seven years bert inutated. |nald: ws . , arrested OF oid, No. 1444 Avenue A, @ beef hands QUARDSMEN FIND INNOCENT) | “Of course they shouldn't,” he said. |" “Manufacturers of the United ® charge of assault and robbery 1.2! jaward McIntyre, twenty-fiv M NT IN JOB! ith the Governor in charge there ave been finding out for the, made by George Wolf, a barte: 4 Sea RRIM JOBS. fey 6 States hav n finding out for th y & MRARN [cet ceed ara “ase erie. deck Breet <fitute Guard control of the streets |!# DOW an opportunity to bulld up aliast few years that 3,000,000 union | xo East 58th Str Wolt anid | Fare old. No. eet, ‘and public places took on an aspect | Te ew and better police force, The po- |jaboring men can make themselves Uk aa hilnwad ‘on Nik aed a laborrer, and Thomas Burke, twen- of military smartness late yesterday | ce force which deserted its duty has felt at Washington. ‘This orgunizn- lowed on hi ¥ home ty.two years old, No. 910 Bighth Ave- se-Gnon Cap FT, Hunnman’s cavalry | bea & joke for twenty years, tion will do the same thing for the| at 1.30 this morning, Near his house peep hares ce 4 got in with ‘théir tin, helmets and |, Another strong indorsement of the | manufacturers.” ho sald he was beaten and robbed |"¥@ & chauffeur, Charges of assaul ot everything. ‘There wero few arrests Governor's attitude came from the | —— lot $80, te reported to the police #22 Fobbery were placed against the i vf big and powerful Fruit and Produce , P ” the past twenty-four hours, |X tinge, whose members adopted | BECKER WITNESS ARRESTED. ‘ana with Detective Hughes of the ™¢™ those mostly of suspicious char- | rs adopted They are suspected of the hold-up “Ai ra, As they go along the guards. |fesolutions declaring that “men who m1 | East Sist Street station started | “ a ea bt Taen dnd volunteer policemen find a |2ad been guilty of leaving tho ci ty Marshall Ace Pxtorting #50 | oa sching for the robber. of Joseph Holaback, No, 842 West | © Metle innocent merriment in the jobs. |°PCM to disorder and riot should from an gee Wolf s Schter 57th Street, who was assaulted on *% A Harvard man in the uniform of |PeMoved from the enrollment of the Marshall. a wears. whose teatle| tone CCICes als Baw Reber | hint Manin Avenue oud 696 3 acguarda;nan was On duty yesterday [Police force and considered disquall- | Th ‘4 na hg i 4 a Mt Cherian | Rotting out of an avtomobile at 58th iat ciacetlin' a tacitahs Given to *®-aAerngon in front of Ben Franklin's |! v reinstatemen | mony helped bape there pagent isa *! Street and Third Avenue, He identi- ome + Re RiGhad reeead ae dan siey ba tue ih City Hall yard when Dan|, Members of the American Legion, Lig Mrivile traps ea tia fled him as the man who had com-! cea 'Cisn amounting to $304,” Poll han, Custodian of the Hotel de | following the lead of Col, F, J, Ner- in Washington Heights Court) " s. Sch and cash amounting to lice Vite thought it well to catechise|bert, the Massachusetts loader, in bis | to-day on a charge of extortion made | Mitted Min hua though Schler sent for Holaback to identify the Y |message from the Madison ‘Square | yy Ruth Gleason, of No, 108 West 180th | protested his t..nocen7e. | men MF What are your orders, won?" suid [Fecention to Gon. Pershing coh tee . "|" Oscar Olkenan, a cable aplicer who | Ae Ay \fo go on record on the side of law : espe Rau ear a eliebo a IR ag SS VOT a <a ame ae Rae Pw Jand order. The Back Bay Pos! Marshall ts accused of demanding ed bahay at No cast 120th § . Gemaned-if can tell which’ ones ure \uccord with the Police Commissioner, | son'a flance some episodes in her past| this morning when he was beld up at SYMPATHY FOR IRELAND the bums" Ke Mayor of Boston, and the Gov: |ufe, Me wns arrested after, detectives |ine point of a revolver ip front of hie ” dwick, th ernor of Massachusetts in thelr of- 4, he received th ey ked — a bee ee, Kor agent af \forts to keep order ji Boston.” ited received the money jn marl i luame and robbed of $, He shouied} fs aquad through’ the Mark ‘district |, The members of the All. Hae | ees for help and bis opine rere heard by Also Nn Resolutions aoa last night when they found a giant | Post edge our undivide and Policeman Curtin o} ne East 1200 Been © x ‘ Br Sieh Cece aay found Fant Eee cee ie law ne sider 224 |FOE SHIPS AS TRANSPORTS, |Folcwms Cu Free Speech and Protesting with a loaded revolver in his hand, |the form of Government we have ith Deportations, The Flardwick Squad at first thought [chosen by our own free will.” WHI Be Retained Permanently in| After @ chase In which the police i port bagged one of the prixen o All this time I Commissioner Army Service. man fired three shots a man who! GLASGOW, Sept. 18—The Trades It developed that the fat Hdwin Uptan Curtis was going qu. | WASHIN gave the name of Frank Lowrer was arrested at 119th Street and Lexing- ton Avenue, Lowrer said he was « longshoreman, though his finger nails oh Masa Might watchman who had /ly ahead with plans for the “new ITON, Sept. 18—Home of stepped into the doorway for fresh |police force. Mr rtls is not ready |the seized German liners are to be re air, The lock snapped upon him, ne|to say what these plans are, ‘He has tained permanently .by the United @idn’t have a key and he had sat | put « number of questions of law up| States as a part of the army trangport “ee to think it over. | to ie Attorney General and is await- corps, Chief of Staff March to-day told ©, volunteer policemén, some of )/ne that officer's angw the House Miitary Comite ane elderly, gentiomen with | A Maneashusette’ law everybody esident Wilson has definitely decid: ae vertavlance to that "Mr, Pipp"| haw been peru with interest in!ed on tho allocation of the ships, he Charles Dana Gibson used to draw— | the past few b iw Chapter 108, id, but asked to be exeused from dis the only way you can tell they Seotian 9 Volun which says cussing the plan of disposal which Aw hat they carry big atleks and| "Constables, City’ Marsala, Chiefy] Would be announced soon weer 4—have got’ over thelr! of Police and all other police ‘officers | : first Pros | boing and are becoming| shall wit their respective. cities American Confessed Part tn Mextoan quite diligent. - «and towns aid the Governor in the np A itneles BQ8TON DETERMINED NOT TO] Performance of iis duties whenever) WA mina Bent. 18—An Amerie ‘ culled upom fer that purpose, aud any lean citizen, Samucl Follery, has cor Cre XARE DESERTERS BACK.) | Puch oificers who refuse 40 to do |feased to participation in the assault on there is gotng to be a new) when called upon shall be punished the Atlantic KeAnery s property at force... Wvery day tbat passes! by « fine of not over $100 or im- Guayabillo on Aug. 14, necording tO an ate aaa thy ; geomtatien of: the Briones, for not more than three announcement made to-day at the ‘ Fi |day | reaffirming Union Congr seasion here with the » which has been in all the week, ended tor passage of resolutions the right of free speech appeared to have been carefully |and protesting against the arrest and cure od “he deportation of allen trades union of- manicured, He denied holding up) fifats tor alleged. connection with Olkenan, though he was positively) Bolshevism, The resolutions also ex- dentified he tte | pressed belief in the necessity for con- apa A Dy the lester: Linuing the control of food prices. POLICE SPURRED ON.BY AN- : vanes Ha vo} ‘Thomes, labor Morn: yer Parliament, acting ‘with Rober OTHER $8,000 ROBBERY. Smillie, the min rs \eader, Teves 88 rhe Po epartme os ed cinergency — resolution — deprecating | Whe Polibe Department wae spurred military pule in Ireland and declar- }to further endeavor by the hold-up ng that the only solution of the Irish lust might of the Irving Bond Com- problem The proven the method of pany, #84 Hulton Street, Brook- “"ypho resolution expressed profound lyn, of $7,000 In bonds and $1,000 in sympathy for the trades unionists’ | Irish brethren in’ their hour of cash, sion." ‘Tae Irving Bond Company ia one of hied Bolt resolution was Schmidt into a rear | room, pulled down one of those half- | draperies that frequently are used in offices at the the gaze of passersby, and bound Mr. Schmidt's head tn it. | ITALIAN DEPUTIES TO RATIFY TREATY BY 0 MAJORITY Debate is Sci Next Monday—Favor Cut in Military Expense. ROME, Sept, 13 (United Press),— got in, All the oars were lashed to it.” Nine other men got into the life- boat, !the Corydon went down, Almost im- | | Mediately the seas capsized the life- boat three times as far as the men \could dive from under it and right it again, They then lashed them. selves to the seats with strips of | clothing. TMrd Mate Mallowes told a graphic story of his battle with John Con- dron, a Greco-American seaman, | when the privation and fear, “I held him all) reer duled to Begin tee the first day and might.” ald Mal- lowes. “He was raving crazy. He got vio- [lent and tried to draw a stiletto, I tied him to the boat then. When I | became so weak I could do nothing with him and when he got a chance he threw liimgelf overboard and was The Italian Chamber of Deputies, it | drowned.” was believed, will ratify the peace} aaa treaty by a majority of fifty. The LAWSON AIRPLANE REACHES treaty 1s scheduled for debate in the | Chamber Monday when Foreign Mi ister Tittont interpellations of the deputie ROME, Sept. 13 (Associated —Luigi Luzzatti, former Premi presented to the Chamber of Dep ties a report of the parliamenta commission entrusted with Germany. and expresses t hope that t League of Nations will facilitate t admission of the countries respon ble for the war, including Germany. coming Inter- national Labor Conference at Wash- framed which will prevent any state from permitting workmen to labor under | conditions which would be injurious | It also says that at th ington legislation should to workers of other nations. Complaint is made that the |Italy 19 conditioned upon the poss compulsory by the treaty. peror William, the report. says: Srimes attributed to the Emperor were not contemplated \any penal code, which when committed did not co stitute a crime contemplated by la “The society of nations may esta als or disregard of treaties, lay do and provide for the penalty, point judges, and it is impossible ask Holland to extradite her purview of present treaties, mer Emperor must be placed harm, but the eternal ideals wh! be saved.” Inquiries on War Expenses Conting $10,000 a Month, WASHINGTON, Sept, 13.—Congr investigations of war expenditu being conducted by House committ when Democrats were in fweawy inquiries soot 048,784 is expected to answer | ress) has the e: amination of the peace treaty with The report urges a maxi- mum diminution of military expenses share | of the coal which Germany is to give none to Italy, although the amount | of coal allotted to France was made Concerning the trial of former Em- Nobody can be called to answer, and be punished, for acts| TOSSED 22 HOURS IN BOAT. lish for the future the criminal status | of offences against international mor- | again after being tossed about on Lake the procedure for judging the culprit Hohenzollern’s accusers cannot ap-|a plaything for th for political crimes not within‘ the| The for- | in a condition where he can do no further | ™ guarantee public and private law must $50 A DAY T TO U U.S. 8 SLEUTH. | Are |) in control, »-| HEMPSTEAD FROM SYRACUSE | Trip Made in Two Hours and Forty- Nine Minutes With Nine Passengers, u- r ¥| whe | cight of the crew who were fifty-three | in the crew kept their! and a. few moments afterward | latter became crazed by | -DESERTERS |WLSON REACHES PACIFIC COAST; ON UPTURNED-BOAT 10 REVIEW FLEET | Vulture Perched on Spars After | Greatly acaihieed in League Fight by Cheers of Big Crowds. TACOMA, Sept. 13. busiest Ready for the his “coast-to-coast ratification of the President Wilson ar- rived in Tacoma at 8.55 A.M. A big crowd was massed in the streets around thd station to greet him, The day campaign for Peace Treaty, President started immediately on an automobile city, to he | followed by a short talk at the high school stadium to school children, and a@ speech at the Armory. In the | Suburbs of Tacoma the train passed many people waiting\along the track to sce Wilson, tour of the The President left Tacoma at noon for Beattle to review the Pacific fleet. After a public dinner at the Hip- podrome in Seattle at 7 P. M, the President intended speak at the jArena. He will spend Sunday in Beat- tle, departing at night for Portland, where he ts due early Monday, | The vigor with which the President plunged into his subject at Spo. jkune late yesterday made it appeai> jas If he had been “fighting under wraps,” so to speak, in some of his lier addresses, He had the people upon their chairs cheering when he made his appeal that the (3 Nations issue be placed on a non- partisan basis. He said Republicans first suggested the League; that Re- publicans should be for it because they belong to that party, and flatly, ked that the 1920 presidential cam- |paign be put out of mind when the 'League is under consideration, No speech was scheduled for last |night, but many saw the Presidens jat small stations where he almost jalways came out to wave his hand. The size and enthusiasm of the |crowd which met the President's {tram at Pasco late in the evening impelled him, he said, to make a rear platform speech there, although his physician had ordered him to save his jvolce, Wilson said he could not re= |frain from telling the people how much cheered and delighted he was to see them and he said he took the Uberty of interpreting their wélcome not only as a tribute to the President “bat as an expression of your in« terest in the great cause for which |I came out to fight.” He mentioned the sufferings of women, mothers and wives in the war, and sald: “We promised the menswho went jout to fight that we would end war. |Now the question is, shall we carry jout the pledge for which we fought f* When the President asked, “Shalt | we out the pledge?” an old |man dimly visible in the glow trom the lights in Wilson's car waved his League carry n, nine-passenger air X= plane landed at Hempstead, I, I, this | hat and cried, “Yes, sire, sure.” morning from Syracuse, The trip was| Mr. Wilson told a story about a made In two hours and forty-nine |friend who played golf and always |minutes. Albert W. Lawson piloted |exclaimed “Assouan,” “Agsous he |the machine. Charles Cox, an assist-|when something went wrong, “The he |ant pilot, an engineer, two mechanics ent said he asked what “As- gj: |and four guests were passengers from | "meant and his friend ex~ yracuse. he Lawaon plane began the {ilght east from. Milwaukee stopping at Chicago, Toledo, Cleveland, Buffalo and Syracus: t was announced here |thatthe plane will fly from Syracuse to San Francisco as s@n as arrange- thents can be made | MAN MISSING 30 YEARS. Knocks a Seacaaes Waweetede% | Have Time to Write, bility of Germany to produce it, so; tow sor hangs FP age jake a ail | aD, Conn., Sep —Frs that Germany, naturally, will | gtve | Elderkin, who had not been heard from by his family for thirty years, knocked at the door of his brother Harvey in Avon, erday, and to-day @ reunion is being ated. The last me the brothers met Was at thelr mother's fun- eral in Nova Scott former| Krank has been in various parts of the | globe since 1889 and explained he was 1D) Too busy to wettes on- | AW.) Men and Women Adrift tn Lake abe | Ontario Reni TORONTO, Ont., 12.Safe POCKET PICKED IN CAR. chant Recove' Money and ten | Youth In Held, Mario Fontano, a commission mer= linens of No, 2343 Arthur Avenue, the | Bronx, felt a hand rv hing into his hip | poe! ket. while he was riding on a Fourth and Madison Avenye car at 23d Street Jabout 10 o'clock th s morning. Turning, ‘e found his pocketbook, containing $4 in cash and $197 of the car. ess| A passenger pointed out Max Alperin, rea |eighteen, of No. 94 Sheriff Street, as the tea | Man who dropped the wallet to the floor, Alperin was arrested. Magistrate Joseph cost about $10,000 a month, Clerk | fi) Corrigan, in the Yorkville Court, held Page of the House yesterday in- |him in $1,000 bail. formed the House Appropriations | Serres Committee, One Investigator, he said, |Calllaax New in Private Hospital, was paid $50 a day | PA Sept. 13.—Joseph Ux, At the request of Chairman Good, | former Premier, who has been in prison Republican, the clerk reported also for more than a year charged with that during the last four Congresses, having had treasonable dealings with the enemy, wi Hospital cy transferred to a private in checks, on the floor | willy, @ auburh of Paris, | “Why, don't you know As- is the biggest dam in ‘the There were shouts of laugh |ter at this, and Wilson added: “ft |hear they aresbullding a dam down South to be called after me, but I'm | glad it's not the biggest. I would iike to be sworn by, but not that way,” The crowd laughed again and then jthe President engaged in repartee with several old codgers. He asked about the weather and one man gaid they didn't need rain to grow crops the remarked Wilson, “Yes,” said the men. “We have t/ have a lot of grit to live here.” WN Three Killed ay Train Hits Aute | CHRISFIELD, Md., Sept. 13.—Edwe", W. McCreaby, Chicago cork manw It's a sandy country,” tu and Miss Margaret Steinbach, Inurse of Chicago, were instantly if,” |shortly before noon to-day when an a.- tomobile in which they were riding was |struck by a train ie Ann McCreaby, eixht-year-old daughter of McCreaby; died from injuries oe, | SPECIAL NOTICES. bh LB 2S HORLICK’S THE ORIGINAL i] Ontario for twenty-two hours in an wn | Jopen motorboat, four men and four MALTED MILK * |women to-day told how, after losing a| @Awoid Emit & Substivetes but Count | cluteh andl pit, thelr out became | asees—ss=e gee nneneseteg wale - ~~ ‘ hey were rescued last night by ¢ DIED. Olernw jo a lake steamer after having BEI TER.—FREDERICK. 0 fted pleven m guest | drifted ¢ bss at the CAMPBELT, FONERAD Broadway and 66th st, og at 2.30 P.M. BEVENS.—JAMES Services at the | cHuRcH. Sunday, GUNTON.—¢ | cHURCH | Sunday, CAMPBELL FUNBRAD Broadway and 66th st, o@ o'clock noon, RGE CAMPBELL FUNERAD away and 66th st, og NE Te cnurRcn, urday, at KAHN,—-UEDWI Lying in sta NERAL GHURCH, Br the CAMPBELL Fu, Broadway and @6th, WKEE—-ELIZABETH ALTHE | _bying in ots the CAMPBELL Fu, NERAL CHURCH, Broadway and 66th, SMITH.—GEORGE, Services at the CAMPBELL FUNBRaf, CHUROH, Broadway und 66th et, op Saturday, at Ll A. Mf WARKE) Lies, | Services at the CAMPBELL FUNBRAQ CHURCH, Broadway and 66) at, Aaare aor, 10 a eed |

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