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"9 TEXAS SHORES STREWN THE EVEN ING WORLD, gaia the town of Port Aransas, the northeastern end of Mustang wrecked. wave at Corpus Christi Wes driven inland by @ gale of sixty- five miles an hour. Water was ten feet deep in the city's streeta, North the city’s pleasure resort, prac- was swept clean. the missing are Capt. C. M. Company I, 37th Infantry, U. & A. commander of the military camp, and thirty=five members camp personnel, The lausch with @ party of fifteen, left Christi for Port Aransas on @ fishing expedition shortly before Property damage thore was heavy. It was a WILSON ENTERS CALIFORNIA 10 ator Who Wants the En- tire Treaty Rejected. the struck. No word had been yisananilin from the party early to-day.| ON BOARD PRESIDENT WIl-| WASHINGTON, Sept. 16—Advo- CBHstt was under martial) sox TRAIN, Sopt. 16—President | ogtes of the t German: Meway. ‘The wrecked parts of the |" * ihren, he treaty with vy and Wilson to-day enters California} the ‘Langue of Nations are ecousipg ity, inciuding its two main streets, ‘ware segregated to prevent looting. @oldiers from the military post were @iding in caring for the 3,000 home-| Treaty i | crowds this afternoon. ‘About 250 injured persons were in 4 considered = unlikel: that ¥z the hospital, the message sald. Many) Tt was consider My secete Senator Borah, who also haa been a in saving bis *4Mping, was called back to Waah- would be rear ay Wil there clinging to speeches, fhad floated for hours, pletés of wreckage. A message received by Mayor Am- @@an in Houston from Kingsville, | ‘Texas, said 23 bodies had been recov- ged trom the bay at Portland, seven miles from Corpus Christi. Des- from Port Lavaca sald dam- age there would amount to $150,000, the beginning of his Portland specob last night, but as he talked it im- provéed. Shantung has not been h Despa the President since he ents, sro a pad semingie ayliggc py Pacific coast, It is one » nealloe ro 97) several women, WAl6) (+ tne principal points of attack and they had floated across| i: way expected Wileon would fully ben! ives wreckage from Rockport) ocoiain hia viewpoint of it in Call- a, Christi. Boats all along | rienin, where the Japanese question spa vot Geared te in-| iy alive, He mentioned it in several see Siaent bess ing reliel) miadie western specches. » The Presidential train bad no stops scheduled for to-day. It will reach San Francisco to-morrow, the Preal- dent remaining two days in gan Francisco and Oakland, speaking im both cities. Wilson took a stroll all the way around bis train shortly before it lett Portland lant night. He paced slowly down the platform, in view of several hundred who had congregated to ave trom |him off, then crossed the trycke to Corpus Christ and received the dark side of the train away fro 5 on here via | ine atation lights and rambled buck to his private car, This was only Batre i a ashe te | the scoond walk of more than one ad Bis nym ered hundred yards that he has taken sinc WASEIYGTON. 16.—Oftclal| ne Jott Washington. phe in recent speeches has district sald rellef meas! seemed to be adtirensing his remarks ures have boon left entirely to the! varuy to those Senators who oppowe distrétion of the district officers. While ‘At Portland last night he omen: the treaty, ate Wn At vy tarodihel said heshad no respect for some of ‘Where the storm first ‘a cutter| his opponents, but with regard to Gelveston offers means of trans-|othors be sald: “I pray God that these eupplics to devastated regions. |gentiemen who are delaying this thing may presently see it in @ different ed _ left th BOUSTON ‘The President's train left the Nearing wutoon, physicians ana) Northern Pacific lines jast night and hint food eupplies left here| Was placed on the Southern Pacific, or in charge of Brig. Gon. Woltera,| While strolling about the platform he %. H. G. The cities of Galveston and! was introduced to and chatted a few ep-aperated in outfitting the| minutes with the Northern Pacific planned to proceed! omoials who have accompanied the fram Sinton, the impt of rail traffic, | | " |train from St. Paul to take direct te beryus ‘hia in autometiien and charge of arrangements for its safety, aecoeiiliieesrse telegraphing their orders abead ‘There officials left the train hi GAZERS SEE “FLY” In his rembjings around tho Port- |land railroad yard the President was intgreated in the names of some of ATOP WOOLWORTH TOWER ‘iets ‘care ite tocosted “a + Busy New Yothers paused py the hun- Hall Park todey to gaso the touched men to Damaged City. GAN ANTONIO, Sept. 16. —Gen. train pent to Corpus Christ! last might. The train carried tents, cota, Dighkets, medical supplies and several ‘thousand cases of food. He acted in porter and asked him for the pronun- Weotworth Building ciation of one. The porter failed to where a workmen was fastening copper & recognize Wilsan in the dark and did not know until jater that he had been sheathing that had blown Joho Myer, No. ot talkin with tbe President Speedy End Look: bn gg Breokiys, employed by | Ma A speedy settioment is looked for In the strike of the hard rubber turners and fountain pen makers of this and neaby cities which has beh th progr chet neta) werk since Sept. eo atrikers are + Ue yond t the Atte, Per of local unlon No. 16440, A. F. of iy 1, and have demanded recognition of the Unton."® forty fourchour week and a i) per cent, increase on time or piece He was York, Charies Damn, the President. has biished headquarters at the Btreet. a & Grace, No. 1 Bergen Ave What self-respecting tea kettle wouldn't sing at the prospect of mak- ing Tetley's Tea! Tea is the sensible drink—and you can drink it three times a day. Tetley’s Tea is famous for its de- lightful flavor—an expert blend of teas from 15 or more tea gardens. Tetley’s Tea is fragrant and cheer- ing—sort of makes you forget you were tired. Until you have tried a cup of Tet- ley's clear amber colored Orange Pekoe Tea, you don’t know what a cup of tea can mean! ¢ TETLEY'S TEA. ANSWER JOHNSON Meets Constituents of a Sen- home state of Benator Johnson, who! serfiltor Lodge of holding Back actes! ie on @ tour in opposition to the Peace} conaideration no that Genater Hiram Ho meets his first California voice for his efforts in the big Call-| Inston to-day by fornia citics. His voice seemed to! Much bickering and quarrelling is how some evidences of a strain atllikely to spring from this situation, OF HOLDING BAEK ATION ON TREATY Hitchcock Says It Could Be Ratified in Two Weeks— Bickering Is Foreseen. jJohna#on will be left free to complete his stumping tour against the longue. nator Lodge. which Ia not to the liking of Senator | Hitchcock and other Adminiatration leaders, Hitchcock ia determined, he to-day, t© make Treaty oppo- nents bear full responaibility for any undue delay, He intends to prod and | hareas them all he can, and if poss mible force them to speed up. ‘The | Treaty could be ratified within two | weeks, Hitchcock said to-day, Delay will not help the opposition’s cause, he said, because every Senator's vote |in now fixed on amendments and reservations. In & wet speech to-day Senator Sherman of Uiinois accused President Wilwon of shaping bis course with 4 view to @ third term The resident's second —hogira from the capital is the threshold of that didacy,” guid Sherman, “He has aunounced the League and treaty 4re greater than our Government, He is ready to die for it, Never in his Most oxalted heights has he beeh ready to die for our Government, A third term he puts by again and Again, but each time is gentler than the other. To save the greatest docu- ment in the world's history, no sacri- floe will be refused, A third term on An issue of subordinating our Gov- sald thing, ‘The issue is joined now." By the Shantung agreement, Ben- ator Sherman said, “an ancient and friendly nation was to be dismem- bered,”” and because of the jume controversy Italy's good will lost, “All must pass under the yoke of his epithets who will not reapond to his fight into tho dim world of Wil- sonian dreams," Mr, Sherman de- olared, “When we decline to ruin our. selver he continued, “wreck our Government and dostroy our country by a mad crusade around the world as tho guardian angel and knight er- rant of oppressed humanity ever where we are denounced as quitta: and poltroona by the Senator fro Nebraska (Mr. Hitchcock) and our Executive, who avows he thinks more of the Léague than bis oath to protect the Government.” Conceding for the frat reservations in gome form may be acopted by a majority vote of the Republicans and a few Democrats, the Democratic leaders to-day de- clared that adoption of the reserva- tiohs would not settle the question nor end the controversy. They assar' a that the majority atill would lack the necessary tWo-thirds vote to rat!- fy the treaty and added that, in the absence of a two-thirds majority for ratification without the reservations there will be an opportunity for negotiations. WOMEN ASK HYLAN'S AID ‘WN HIGH LIVING COST WAR More Competition Between Push- cart Men and Grocers to Force Prices Down. A committee of the Housewives’ Wel- fare Association, headed by Mre. M. Frankel, No. 200 West 111th Street as chairman, called on Mayor Hylan to- day to unk his assistance in their at- tacks on the high com of livin, ‘They asked specifically that greater latitude be allowed pushoart merchants, expecially between the hours of 8 and 11 A. M, #0 that more women may profit by the competition between the pusheart men and the grocery stores, jthus forcing the prices of both down. ward. And they asked that more liceni be @ranted to butchers to poultry for thelr own markets, to drive the price of poultry down and prubably carry beef prices down also. Mrs, Frankel said the Mayor re: ceived the committee cordially and referred its members to the Police Commissioner in the matter of the pushearts and to the Health Commis. |stoner in regard to the poultry, > DRESSES TO COST MORE. | mete te | With +s LONDON, Bept. 6 (Corr Associated time that * jaughter ipondence of Press), — Increasingly high prices for women's clothing, fore- Joust by the clothing trade for the com- |ing winter, probably will be combatted |by the manufacture, under Government jsupervision, of a half-million “stand- \ard’ costumes and coat frocks such as were manufactured during 1918, Leeds firms pave Upward of 2,000,000 yards of material available for the man- ufacture of these “standardised” gar- but announce that increased the TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, WITH HUNDREDS WHO DIED IN STORM 19196 || which left Trieste, Aug. 13. In the choir || are children all under sixteen yoars, and | ( || as their parents were not with them || they were sent to Ellis Island. Two pricets will be their guardians until | F such time as James Sleven, President of | ¢ the Bt. Gregory Musical Soctety, Inc., | | who is acting as manager for the choir, Belvedere, formerly an Austrian liner,| Among those who grected tho sing- ~OIR AT Cl ers were United States Marshal varthy Hoceo, Lady of Mt. Carmel children with Outside the pier were 500 other per- sons. Brooklyn, to-day from the steamship |to have 100 pairs of shoes at the pier. | tions, LODGE IS ACCUSED |Famous Vatican Choristers at City Hall Park Receiving City’s Welcome From Mayor Hylan HALL Mc- and the rector of Rev. the Francois Ma Church of Str Our et and ght 350 mobiles. 187th Belmont Avenue, who br. him in aut Ament to the League is ab little RT. Ry, ‘ean have them released. The trip from| Shortly after noon the choristers WE. ION, CA! . as an internationalist patriot oan vid OUTS Italy was so protracted that the young- | were formally received at the City Hall qiter to the world. Who woilld not} Seventy members of the famous Vati-|sters wore out their shoes playing on|by Mayor Hylan. In the presence of proposal?” The pave b+ oe Alcan Choir that will tour this country, | the decks and a radio call was sent to/4 large crowd that gathere: th nervice will juatity bim’in going any. |ended at Pier 7, Bush Terminal,| this city before the steamship arrived | park, they sang two tmpressive sel In answer to the city's welcome The director is the Most Rev. Raffacl: | contralto, lyoungest is elght. CONGRESS THANKS PERSHING AND MEN FOR HEROIC VALOR ascitidilisimatie Joint Resolution Adopted by Senate and House—Action on Gold Sword Deferred. WASHINGTON, Sept. 16—Congrese to-day formally extended its thartke to Gen. Perhsing for his “highly dis- tinguished services" as commander of the American Expeditionary Forces and to his officers and men “for their unwavering devotion and heroic valor throughout the war.” The joint resolution was adopted by the House and Senate. The House passed the joint resol. tion by a vote of 227 to 1, Represen- tative Schall of Minnesota voting in the negative, The action was a dem- onstration in favor of Gen, Pershing. The plan to give Gen. Pershing a gold sword was stricken out of the House resolution before it was sub- mitted, because of unexpected »pposition to the proposal, It will be taken up later, Chairman Kabn said, Representative Kitchin, former Democratic leader, was planning to fight it on the grounds that Congress should do more for private soldiers. Representative Mason, Illinois, is also against the proposal. “The opposition comes from the same group that opposed the war,” Mr, Kahn sald to-day. y are simply trying to square their war records, but I am sure the sword will be authorized later.” “The plan of giving the eword to Gen, Pershing was suggested to me by Representative Royal Johnson of South Dakota, who enlisted as 4 private and served abfoad. He in- formed me that the men abroad de- ed that this honor should be given jen, Pershing.” In recognition of the first regular division to parade with Gen. Pershing to-morrow, the Senate te-day inter- Casimiro Basimiri, who sings soprano, | 8! tetor and bass and who con- |‘? ducts without the use of a tuning fork There are twelve priests in the party and each morning during the voyage| rupted business to pass a resolution twelve misses were sald. The oldest} extending the regulars the same |man of the party is seventy and the|bonus and travel pay allowed eimer- gency soldiers. All soldiers enlisting On. the Belv there were alto-| prior to the outbreak of the war are gethor 352 pass among them Dr. | affected. Villiam H. Sugarman, No, 381 Sara- The House has already passed the Scores of soldiers of the in the galleries. 1 Avenue, Brooklyn Palestine as a sur; who went to n and returned pe agg’ ttt 1st Division were with a bride. The head nurse of the aes Zionist Medical Unit, Miss Rose Kolom- | When_the resolution passed bers, No, 566 West 162nd Street, also was aboard, VAN FAVOR Trade With the Germans Is Advocated by Former Finan- cial Minister Clemental. Office for His Part in Aiding | D’Annunzio. | LONDON, Sept ment measures 16,—Italian Govern- have resulted in the | advices from Italy received here, It is deciared that the plot for the oc- cupation of Fiume by the Irregular forces | to have been originated in Venice. The | Prefect of Venice has been removed from | office, and Italian artillery forces there ch were about to join the insurgents PATUS, Bapt. 16 (Asnociated Press). |"! ‘The Chamber of Deputies to-day re- | racks | | ° e = 5 sumed discussion of the Peace Treaty | ROME. Monday, Sept. 165.—The Gov jernment has prohibited publication of with Germany. Euenne Clemental, any news concerning the military former Minister of Finance, said the |events at Fiume. A special official e inted orvise economic clauses of the treaty were |e Seen sppeinted to supervise this censorship. He is armed with author- founded on a plan of not granting |ity to sequestrate all editions of reciprocity in trade with Germany for |hewspapers contravening the Gov- ernment orde: | immediate BERLIN HALS MISS MORGAN WITH STAR-SPANGLED BANNER America’s National Air Played First Time Since War in New York Woman's Honor, BERLIN, Sept. 15.—Probably for the first time since the war, “The Star-| Spangied Banner’ was played in Ber- lin to-day, in honor of an American woman, Miss Anne Morgan, daughter of the late J. Pierpont Morgan. ‘The scene occurred at the Hotel Adlon, the headquarters of Americans here. America’s national anthem was played after the way had been paved with “Disie.” Before leaving for France to-day Miss Morgan said her trip to Berlin was only for sightseeing, — SMITH'S PLAN INDORSED BY CAPITAL AND LABGR Albany Conference Gives Hearty Approval to Reconstruction Commission. ALBANY, Sept. 16,—The plan of Gov. Smith’s Reconstruction Commission for the appointment of a State Labor Board was heartily indorsed by Representa- tives of capital and labor at a confer- ence here to-day. About fifty were several years and the solidarity of France with the Allies, The American delegation, he gaid, opposed @ Franco-British economic treaty, It advocated absolute liberty of trade, and this had caused « rise in the price of raw meteriais and an advance in exchange. At the word xchange” J, L. Barthou, former Foreign Minister, and L. J. Puech, former Minister of Public Works, demanded a statement from Louis Klots, Financo Minister, on what they termed the extremely | precarious condition of exchange, This demand was supported by numerous other Deputies. M. Klots said the exchange situa. tion was due to France permitting free importations. “The only remedy,” he said, “is to show Amerioa and Great Britain that we can go to other countries with a growing volume of colonial and na- tional production. Otherwise exchange will continue to rise.” M. Clemente) said the remedy wa to cease buying from the United States and Great Britain and to buy in Germany, where exchange favored France. Rene Viviani, former Minister of Foreign Affaira, asked ratification of the treaty, Failure to ratify, he de- clared, would repudiate the proposed concert of nations and leave France isolated to face Germany. +e present. Oppo James P. Holland, President of the wl Btate Federation of Labor, declared ROME, Sept, 16.-—A minority report |that “organised labor would welcome on the German peace treaty, propared | heartily any moverme! which would on behalf of the Socialists, has been|tend to eliminate strikes and lockouts presented to the Chamber of Depu- |and to provide against interruption of Signor Modigliano, a member | Production.” pete cele tt Gov, Smith said “patriotism is gust scram : as necessary now as during the war.’ 18 rw ends that (taly refuse tO} 7) nis opinion virtually all the interrup- ratify both the treaty and the League of Nations covenant. The Socialists tate their conviction that justice is oats of production probably will. brin |the “cost ‘price of the mew lot to sit or $20. Similar garments last year we: retailed for $44 lo His, | isolation of Fiume, according to official American Peace De tion of production brought about by |6 strikes and lockouts could be prevented “at SATIRE IN LONDON =| ON “ENPLOSIVE BULLITT” | Prefect of Venice Removed From Editorials Colored by Political Views Wants Question of Demanding Sur. —Reference Made to Breach | of Confidence, LONDON, Sept. 16.—An authorized denial of statements made by William Bullitt, to the the | the formerly attached before Relations Committee of egation, Foreign under Gabriele d'Annunzio was found United States Senate, which is printed | le Journal in London newspapers this morning, 1s attracting more notice here than Mr. Bullitt's evidence before the committee. London morning papers express in Fiume have returned to their bar-| their editorials views which are colored | by their political predilections, some | criticising what they regard as Mr, Bullitt's “breach of confidenee.” ‘The Post, in a satirical editorial bear- ing the caption “The Explosive Builitt,”* scores both Premier Lioyd George and Mr. Bullitt. Regarding the latter it says: President Wilson seems to have nicked the wrong person when he took this explosive journalist into the employ of the American Peace Mission. A journalist who is treated in this way has no business to explode. It is oy the firet laws of the game.” ‘The Post also expresses the opinigh that if Secretary Lansing indorses Mr. Bullitt'’s statements regarding the Sec- retary’s views “it will be all over with the treaty as far as the United States ia concerned.”” Declaring the denial itself “untrue” wor’ the Herald, the labor oryan, cl be able to confirm Mr. Bulliti's stater ROOKIES. mn by Members Lhe: MAYOR PRAISES Sees Exhibit! ot Kduca al Centre, Twenty-eight graduates of the Army Recruit Educational Centre gave an exhibition drill in City Hall rk to-day and were formally re- by Mayor Hylan, Every man in the detachment, representing 14 nationalities, has been enlisted since May 1. Since that date they have re- epived instruction in English and be- Sides have been taught tho manifold duties of a soldier ‘ ‘To-day'’s detachment, which was highly complimented by Mayor Hylan, was in charge of Lieut. Col, Bernard T. Lents of the General Staff, Wash- ington, ved He ia REPUDIATE BULLITT STORY. Ste ment Indorsing Treaty and League. PARIS, Sept. 16.—Members of the American Peace Delegation issued a statement today indorsing without Qualification the German Peace Treaty and the League of Nations covenant The statement. they explained, was in repudiation of the testimony by William Bullitt before the ate For- ton and upwards; claim!ng; pure furlongs—War Spirit, 105 ( en and 1 to 2, first; Miss Krute ummer), 16 to 5, 6 to 5 nd; Hohok’ o parties to the controversy could LD an honest, la ‘ailferences, Aotainable only from «@ league of cad ieton, W Onwa, beek and Burplice also ren % sign Relations Gommittee in Washing: | - - AQUEDUCT RESULTS. nd 3 to 108 (Callahan), 20 to 1, 8 tol and 4 to 1, third, Time 1:183-5, War Note, Favour, Peerless One, Peasant, Overmatch, Mackengic Huey Trayls, LLOYD GEORGE INSISTS ON TRIAL OF EX-KAISER ATURE put the good- ness into these crisp, delicious crackers. We have it in—all the sweet, full flavor of the whole wheat. Your grocer has Wheats- worth Real Whole Wheat Bis- cuits in 15¢ packages. Served in restaurants and at fountains in sealed Individ- ual Service Cartons. render Settled Before He Leaves Paris. | PARIS, Sept. 16 (Havas)—Premier Lloyd George is determined to have it settled that mand from Holland the handing over of former Emperor William, the Peace Conference de- according to F. H, BENNETT BISCUIT CO., N. ¥. | The newspaper asserts that the Pre- |mier, who leaves Paris to-day, will in- | pheatsworthy sist before his departure upon having The peace treaty with Germany ar- |raigns Hohenzollern “for a supreme of- fense against international morality and the sanctity of treaties,” and provides for @ special tribunal to try him. The clause of the treaty dealing with this question closes with this sentence: “The | Allied and Associated Powers will ad- dress a request to the Government of Netherlands for the surrender to them of the ex-Emperor in order that he may be put on trial. 1 SPECIAL NOTICES, —HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Avold imitations and Sub: COLLINS.—On Sept. 3, 15, THOMAS COL- Lying in estate at THD ¥F" URCH (Campbell Bidg.), at 66th st, Services Wednesday, Sept. 17, at 10 A, M., at Olty Island, GABLER,— IL, Lying in state at the CAMPBELL ru. NERAL CHURCH, Broadway and 66th, SFEMON—Ra!ph H. RAL Broadway, BELA KUN ORDERED 2,000 PUT TO DEATH Victims Belonged Mainly to Hun. Ofticers and mem at “ ae oO bers of Bronx Lodge, B. O. Elks garian “Intellectual” Class TE ptr and to the Clergy. funeral services of our deceased brother at Rothschild Funeral Parlors, 2,003 BASLE, Sept. 186 (French Wireless).—| 7th av., this evening, (Sept. 16) at 8 Information received here from Buda- o' clos pest indicates that during Bela Kun's regime Hungarian communists ordered the execution of more than 2,000 persons, The victims were officers of the “intel- fectual” class and members of the | OST—Sa Ia. bet clerey: very tmuportant X-ray It is estimated also that Bela Kun's | 2,PMM, Of aeplansee, four months of dictatorship cost Hun- gary more than 18000,000,000 francs, LKO J, EMRHART, Exalted Ruler ————— LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS, 3 bet port by Dr, Karl He Ki small amount of. inon to ame on Ie ireenwich Conn, For Tamorrow, Wednesday, Sept. 17. EAM KISSES—The nai recalls id th - BA Lae fooly Saget e ccuprea in the dare at lene Teh This ts jentical sweet le even more delicious. if any. ne. 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