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= PLAN SENATE T END LABOR CRSES Americanization of Aliens Key- note of Plan Urged by Steel Investigators. WASHINGTON, Nov 8.—New na- tlonal laws providing for compulsory | ovestigation of industrial disputes, ompulsory education and naturall- | ration of foreign-born laborers under penalty of deportation, and a more rigid control and suppression of the | nternal enemies of the United States Government, are advocated in the re- port of the Senate committee which has finished its investigation of the steel strike. The report, -eleased to-day, is signed by Senators Kenyon, Sterling, Phipps, McKellar and Walsh. If condemns the radical element in the cadership of the American Iedera- on of Labor—naming specifically uch men as William Z. Foster—de- ylores the unbending attitude of the employers in some instances, and de- uounces impartially the indifference f both labor and capital toward the general public. The committee declares that the ~ PUSHING PLAN ~ TOCONTEST WL | Her Attorneys Asked to Prove | Charges Court Had Not | Been “Deceived.” Mrs. Milla B- Shonts, through George W. Files of Files and Dixon | of her counsel, made a general re- | joinder to statements of counsel for | | | the executors of the will of Theodore | P. Shonts who started an action to have revoked letters of adminstra- tion temporarily granted to Mrs. Shonts yesterday. Files asserted Mrs. Shonts, con- trary to statements made by De- lancey Nicoll of the executors of the will, never saw the will. He said sho never agreed to have the offering of the will for probate deferred until the arrival in this country of the Ducheas de Chaulnes, daughter of. Shonts. He intimated that the agree- ment made between Shontse and his wife in 1917 for her separate sup- ‘port did not terminate with the death |of Shonts. Mr. Nicoll stated yesterday that when Mrs. Shonts professed a “sus- picion” of the existence of an interest sole responsibility for the refusal to by another woman in‘ the Shonts vert the strike at the request of state she had already full informa- President Wilson rests upon three tion that the residuary legatee under abor leaders, and names them as |! the will was Mrs. Amanda C. Thomas, nendations which are in brief as fol John Fitapatrick, M. F. Tighe and William Z. Foster. Under the heading of “Remedies” he committee enumerates five recom- ows: 1. That a commission similar to he War Labor Board be established vith power of compulsory investiga- tion, power to hold hearings and ren- jer decisions, The committee does ot recommend compulsory arbitra~ ion, but advises that “pending in- estigation and decision no strike hould be declared, provided that no employees are discharged for taking part in the controversy and that all pportunity for the employer to take \dvantage of delay has been re- noved.” Public sentiment would be elied upon to enforce the decisions of the commission. 2. An Americanization bill for the “effective education and Americani- zation of the illiterate foreigners and native {lliterates.” 3. The work of the steel companies im building bomes for workers is commended, the companies are urged to increase their activity along this ine, and Congress is aske% to con- | ser seriously the matter of en- couraging home building “in some such way as the farmer has been aided under the Federal Farm Loan Act.” 4. There should be a change in our naturalization laws which will require the naturalization and some educa- tion of all foreigners, “at least to the xtent of speaking the American lan- guage.” Such knowledge should be acquired within five years after they arrive, with proper limitations on fur- | her immigration, giving to those al- veady here a certain time in which to become naturalized, “and if this is not done, then deportation should follow.” 6. An “effective law should be passed dealing with anarchists, revo- lutiontsts and all who would destroy he American Government.” “There is good sense cnough among be great body of the American peo- leave, when Surerus, Rroaned. | Surerus w York and thus avoid present labor | Ma§or Dunseith, Inspector Henry de- | ale,’ d 01 “to was en to ‘olunteer Hospital, ody. ubles. ple," aaid the committes, “to bring Sitering tram severe cule on the face | Policy of thet beady ‘industrial |__.28 the Bronx there are 8,000 ptano om- | Clared was agal..st the law, pout an adjustment of these difficul- |Gnd a sprained wrist, Ono of the features of “industrial ' pioyos, ant in, New York and the Bronx | ‘The andience, on learning of the | ¥ stele | About $10,000 damage was caused by | a {ll be the establishment | the trade constitutes about 80 per cei i Rte cedure nat tis ognize thet | jthe Fire, e e democracy’ pdestaeh poe ele to be the | of the piano manufacturers In this coun- Hapeciery: ornen hiaed ve Layee “The em rec PERS SE SETTER lof as! c i try, | wi ly 7 there is a new spirit in the world; “TAFT OUT UPP real governing body in our organiza- | + —-- jand fnvitations had been sent bat ta por is not content to be merely | I RT tion.” Seth Soyst Rae rene Soarienes annie to Lieut. Gen. Robert Bullard, com- fer OF Wood Ans hy on t know,” the letter closes, | “wmmiss ia | 1 De. t Bast; vater, and that labor is fighting for a | 0 We do no! tures Whalen announced to-day. that | ™anding the Department of the East; | tatus in industrial life, and is not “whether we can succeed in such an) ite te iis line, originally run- | Major Gen, John F. O'Ryan and Brig oeacerned meely with wages.” experiment, but we intend to try, aNd Aine to Riverside Drive and then tere |Gen. Goorge R. Dyer, According to —_———- va | WS believe that success ig possible.” |minated at Wert End Avenue, N88) Major Dunseith, the police on duty F ‘Former President Says He Believes | "tit and in an editorial im annin eon, ahorloned, and spill bones. | outside the armory stopped prosp i RTHQUAKE IN ITALY; They Would Be Accepted | the forthcom. ne Am NO" denied that either bee hires | wre spectators from énteriog by pay 4 by the Other Powers. “In view of tho representations | j{nrriss had. pi 1 Ast the |ing the bouts were prohibited, HUSOREDS HOMELESS | land promires that were held out by |Hive'terminal.”'He sald that he Nad | Major Dunseith sald the boxing| Thirteen out of the fourteen reserva- ' representatives of the league, ex- i H the change on hia ow respon- bouts were to have been the main jtlons to the peace treaty proposed by pressed and traplied, both uncmMotat |stbility licee ac tap antanaiiemanl, ake tak Shock ir the Senate Foreign Relations Commit- and official, as “ , er’ y ‘owd. The Shock in vin Formers Badly He Senay Foreign: Foistie the value /1919, we have become thoroughly hy (Served to draw a big crowd. ‘The act shakes Towns in Tiber | fied ‘satisfled that the men and their | The Harvard Endowment Fund! oe the police outside the armory, in STBRES PONT of the covenant and probably would be|icaders had substantial reason for | reached the A total of $9,988,899, it | announcing the bouts were prohibited, Valley. jaeccepted by the other powers, in the jexpecting the 44-hour week and QB yoy announced to-day. Boston is lead jhad served to put a damper on thi : is opinion of Former President Taft ex- increase of pay Oct. 1, 1919." 994 and Now York City! planned work of the ev and in ROME, Nov. 8.—Rome to-day aD He prossed in @ speech to- day before the _ —— 5,508 “ t of the connequence, the affair a oun te 1 to ausly awaited further reports from! The fourteenth reservation, proposed “ ” ibuted $2,225,2 little, the crowd arting almost apper valley of the Tiber River|{eague for political education. DRIVE TO FIGHT “REDS. fare Fixing Pow: S. C.\ mediately after tho Inspector's ce upper valley o' - by Senator Reed of Missourl, is so dras- — | ation Counsel Burr to-day an) nouncement. The major explained ocked by severe earthquakes last (ic, Mr, ‘Taft declared, that {tia im-| WIL Be Conducted Here for Week |nounced ‘that he will nevk on Monday | Tee here wan no obliqation on. the aight. possible of acceptance by other mations Beginning Nov. 24, Poe teen eid Publis’ Service | part Of the spectator to contribute It was feared there might bo heavy |ontions ‘which, Me, alt walt, | An enrolment drive of the great) Commission in the matter of rate xing | to the fund, nor was there any idea sasualties. Hundreds of persons' would be equally effective if couched! middle class opposed to both capital] of street car fares of charging @ jon, were homeless and communication {!*, 4 more, courteous, more diplomatic | nna labor In to be « onducted In with the stricken area was crippled. |" Mr Taft referred to the report that eooger a, nee, ‘beminning i | ‘ “4 nano | President ion Would refuse to sub-jand ending Dec Meagre arp i hes fe, Esbaoe init the reservations to the other pow-| ‘The movement is aimed at all forms ast night said two distinct shocks ers If they were adopted, and said he|o¢ radicalism and industrial unrest | 1 sve felt, ‘The towns of San Sepolero hohe’, tne Democrstle minority in the j i414 ty “Red” activities in the United The Most Healthful ind San Bartolomeo were reported rs dno Annad-* 2 take such @ vieW or would change thelr | States, It also i« plann edly damaged, More than 160 {8 | Braten, eat middle ~ collapred, according to the de ‘M4 act anarchy and ind | and Economic The frightened inhabitants awaken community conscien | nthe streets.| FUNERAL COST $7,269. seualae vcommuitica Into. | Rroup to discuss needa o se a cme Ness munity: to Kindle Interest | Arthur affa to form through co DYING "FROM ACID BURNS. From Father's Entate, apex, of the human triangle as consti- hi aes tuted by capital, labor and the silent! . The funeral of Oscar Hammerstein, [UNO Peiaes and to form a dentens\\ Patient Refnses to Tell How He ling impresario, cost $7,269, it was arm to serve the Governmen \ Wen Injured, learned to-day when Arthur Hammer- | of stress. at | by police a endeavo gs to learn " n, e bal e es tow Hi 8, thirty-five, a n-| Surrogate Towle ar on his hier 4 | M wr of tho cloak and suit manufactur-|stop-mother, Mra. Emma Swift Ham-| painn ¢ pa) Me tiateas) | ade ina moment,in 1g firm of Oltasch & Davis, No, 33 xecutriz, to show cause wh Ral neat, i, Bast inte Gircats neenived’ ack Warne id vot retin’ toma trom the Hard expert, returned to- the cup, and there's ne Maas anion het is. Goauin: ie » the money advanced on the York from Bridgeport taken carly. this. morning by two], returnable for, argument before with aman os motormen who found him lying in the] gate Fowler on Nov, 18. Mr. Ham- nd explaine Te Si / treet moratein” itemized tho’ funeral vex: this. acduaintancesniy to ‘Coraner Mix t.Satisfies, Although fold that he was likely to Bendltiron an mong them the following: of New Haven, The latter said n- | tie, Davi rated to fe al elves “Ae ; ust yee Bebe, 7h oy ieat Lf} na wide € nagects d with) or tell how he recely 8 | of violet autors, ‘and plot in the crime, neither was hls manager, peice, ia jin Cemetery, $3,200, | George Worde, formerly the wife of Herbert F. Thomas, a son of the late 0. F. Thomas, banker. H An order to show cause why the temporary letters testamentory to | Mrs, Shonts should not be revoked was signed by the Surrogate to-day, returnable next Tuesday. Attorneys for Mrs. Shonts were asked to®prove that the Court had not been “de-, ceived and imposed upon.” 1 Added to the application for the or- der to show cause was a pdtition which included exhibits showing that copies of the July 30 will were sent to Mrs, Shonts Sept. 24, as well as extra copies to be forwarded to her two daughters. A letter from Mrs. Shonts's attorney, Stanwood Menken, PSECU CCOSOSCTCES ST OSs Sti SoC SSE L ES Se Soe ooo Oriental touch and tone. “THE EVENING ‘WORLD, 2S BODRLSET SETH DTS IIT RTI HH HHH HHH THI The above photographs show the latest fashions in Paris, the gowns with the pantaloons. The importer who brought these gowns to this country wearing them indoors and more ven turesome women are wearing them © n the boulevards. RR ET ] ” « « f mrs tile seal 1 CHEE Be Ho BRE ETE EB HE I Oe All carry the says French women are to Cornelius J. Sullivan, counsel fo! the executors, dated yesterday, was also attached, in which Mr. Menken acknowledged receipt of the docu- ment ‘purporting to be thé will of jduly 30, with what “purported to be a ‘prior will and a schedule of the as- | | sets and liabilities” of the Shonts es- tate. Mr. Menken assured Mr. Sulli- van he had no inti ion of yester- | day’s legal action by Mrs. Shonts (to | whom he referred as “my client”) un- | til late last evening. He further vol- unteered the information that he had himself asked Mr. Sullivan to defer filing the will for probate until the! j arrival of the Duchess de Chaulnes \in this country. STRIKERS BECOME PARTNERS IN FIRM Plant Resumes on Profit Shar- ; FIREMAN INJURED IN FALL |Fighters Ready to Leave as Faint printing trade, which for several! Sigh Attracts Their |weeks has suffered an intra-union i {fight, a lockout and a ‘vacation’ Attention. git \striko, the Nation Press has reopened | A faint groan of pain saved Capt.{its plant on a forty-hour-a-week Frank Surerus of Engine Company No.! schedule. and ‘has begun what it 20 from being left, injured, in a bulld- terms “the development of our own ing at No, 35 Howard Street early c 2 es ¢ dustrial this morning after a fire that damaged /S20P along the lines of industria {wo floors fof the ullding had "been | democracy. extinguisn The fire started on the © new programme fourth floor, which is occupled by the| One feature of the new prog: Sew York, Tassel and Cord. Company, | Will be “the institution of a system nd burned through the fifth floor to|of profit-sharing, contemplating ultt- mately the conduct of the enterprise the roof, Among the men on was Surerus, on a fully co-operative basis, possi. bly ultimately to include the buyer.” Though the establishment is a member of the Printers’ League, it has made a sharp departure from the the fifth floor As he was going toward the stairs he fell through @ hole in the floor, Deputy Chief Helm, with several firemen, was on the fourth floor and heard a noise, but believed it was al beam falling. "They were preparing to COP HALTS SUBWAY EXPRESS. IN CHASE AFTER 4 IN AUTO Arrests on Charge of Stealing OF NATION PRESS) 2... Two men and two women, dressed In ay for je last jovertaken afi Vincent Dunning, The two men, ing Basis—Other Houses pera SAVED WHEN HE GROANS phseahie the Br As a result of the situation In the! i25 Be Jomin. id anot He PIANO INDUSTRY “MAY MOVE. New Vork Manufacturers Tn u An ul has been served by seventy-five ities BiG CROWD HISSES WHEN POLICE STOP RED CHOSSE BOXING Inspector Henry Cl Causes Anger Two Men and Two Women Motor Car. | arraigned to- | ed theft of an automo- | g in which they were | r an exciting chase by | the alle t event; motorcycle policeman. e the arrests the policeman had at Field Hospital En- a subway expt train, search urant and finally go through tertainment. ircliff Hotel in White Plains, — ro rete Parner aU Gune oe or! Aer the Armory of the ist Field « Ventinigia, Briarcliff Hotel, | Hospital, New York Guard, on West to be out in bail The two women, by the poilee, her auto theft len Venti latter of No. 3 1 th |Goth Street, had peen well filled with , | 4 crowd eager to seo a boxing exhibi- tion, the proceeds of which were ot aeorke to go toward the Red Cross Cuil complainant|Fund, Police Inspector Dominic | Henry appeared and announced that they did he would arrest tho entire ere {crowd of spectators and any man who put on the gloves and took part. According to Major J. Dunseith, who wa. in charge of the affair, no admission was charged, but @ collection was to have been taken up by Red Cross women workers during the show. This, according to Itimatum to Strikers timatum in the form of a letter piano rs of the Bronx and New on striking employees. The t that work will be resumed hey algo stated that many to Wave ave urged the companic the bouts could not go on, and that if} Frankita |» SATURDAY, ROVEMDED ANTLSTRIKE BOARD SHONTS'SWIDDW Here Are Women in Pantaloon Ga:b; _ §% They’re Wearing ’Em on Streets of Paris Tet ct Cee ee teeter et eee ee eee ee ee cee eee te — oT * $700,000 IN FINE PAID BY CLOTHING | UMKERSTO TOUNION + Some Feu Pol Put Up Huge Sums for Strikes to Crush Rivals, Says Prosecutor. CHICAGO, Nov. 8.—Subpoenas for sixty manufacturers of men's cloth- ing alleged to have been victimized by members of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America to-day were in the hands of deputies from the State's Attorney's office. Because of alleged threats a number of the manufacturers have refused to talk and the identity of those named in the subpoenaes was withheld, said Nicholas Michela, Assistant State's Attorney, in charge of the investiga-| tion, Mr. Michels said since the head- quarters here of the union was raided two days ago and papers and books seized showing nearly $2,000,000 had been collected during the last two years from manufacturers as “penalties and fines,” he has been fol- lowed by “strong arm" men and once stood off an attack with a pistol, The books revealed payments were! made by clothing firms to have strikes called in competitors’ plants, Mr.| Michels — said. showed @ payment of $300,000 to have. wiped out @ competing firm, with other | entries showing that that firm in turn| suffered by a strike paid for by a third concern, The original firm now is said to be operating at 19 per cent, of nor- mal because of a strike. | Mr. Michels asserted he would seek at least a dozen ocelot OFFERED $50,000 TO END PRINTING STRIKE, HE sald Feeders’ Union on Chief Declares Man “High Up in Tammany” Made Proposition. Speaking before a meeting of Franklin Feeders’ Union No. 23 in Webster Hall, Eleventh Street and ‘Third Avenue, to-day, James Bagley, |President of the Union, went into a| |detailed account of his assertion that | a man “high up in Tammany” had offered him $50,000 to lead his men | back to work. Hagley @aid he was | called upon the telephone one day | last wea and asked to come down to the office of “one of the largest publishing houses in the city.” There Bagley said, the $50,000 offer was e One such entry | Some one in tho reat of the hall | shouted, “Who is this vice president, Jim?" Bagley did not answer, but a score of voices throughout the hall roared back: Baldwin.” Bagley made no answer to the © close of Bagley’s speech the Junion unanimously voted to remain ov \until their demands for a 44-hour week Janda $14 tnerease had been granted |Members pledged the loan of Liberty bonds to the amount of $40,000 to go jinto the strike fund = Many, In thetr enthuslasm tosted thelr watches | Uckping onto the stage as strike fund loans, but they were not a ho action of the seceding press. men's union, No voting last night t m to, ernational prena- i" ced (MABBACHUt | 7% PREFE CAPITALIZATION AUTHORIZED ovrevennina $5,500,000 500,000 Common Stock 1,000,000 " "000,000 | Dividends have been paid regularly for the past seventeen years, |] Payable January Ist and July Ist. There is no better 7 per cent investment in the United States. OFFERS $3,000, ERD BA ait SPYING BY POLICE ON PHONES TAKEN UPBY GRAND JURY Members Positive \ Wires Are Tapped—Get Shadowers to Shadow Shadowers. One of the questions being invest!- gated by the Extraordinary Grand Jury to-day is whether the telephone eavesdropping system maintained by the police during the Mitchel Admin- istration haa been re-established by thé poli¢e. It was recalled to-day that during the Charities investigation of 1917 It was disclosed that the police had established a “listening in” post at No. 30 Church Street, where police shorthand writers were “cut In” on any desired wire and recorded con- versattons that passed over the wire. So great was the outery against this system of spying that It waa effec- tively used as a campaign argument on behalf of the Hylan candidacy. Members of the Extraordinary Grand Jury believe that this system has been re-established and that every conversation, personal or busi neas, over telephones is being re- corded. Several members of the Grand Jury were positive that their telephones had been tapped. Some of them have been so persistently an- noyed in this manner that it is sald they have closed up their homes and are living in clubs or hotels, while others have discontinued their private | telephones. The shadowing of members of the Grand Jury by private detectives has become so annoying to some of the | members of the Grand Jury that they have themselves hired private detec- tives to shadow the shadowers in an effort to learn who is paying for this continued surveillance. Members of the Grand Jury report that they are losing money by neg- lecting their business interests, but y ; Manager of the Santa ret Smith, who is 4 of the present z ft anien al ry wy he cari large squi sealed with a red neal, besides % were initials of the foreman Grand ry. These en learned. contained the exh: beforo the Grand Jury, Smith's famous gerne Aeona blue U. S. SISTER HEIRES MUCH WOOED IN F Rush Home: to Topeka to Their Intended Sister- in-Law. Modestly dewlaring that PIRES SE, the Theatrical League assigned to A. B. F., the Misses Nellie my Kaums, daughters of the returned to this country to-day England on the Carmania. Their return is characterised by sisters, Goth of whom are het) either “an errand of mercy” oF awful ahdéek to their brother naibid ities.” to marry &@ seventeen-y Topeka, Kan, ‘whom they rs know “When we heard of that,” sald ter Nell, “we decided to get back the States in a hurry ai ‘a prospective sister-in- over’ as the doughboys sah to cateh the Carmania we had +y from Paris to Engl Fi) in an eo, which cost ui wills Iwertt mt <2 a i AMERICAN DEAD ON SHIP. P, Ee im Russia, are Solemn ceremonies have been ranged for to-morrow when the of 111 American soldiers will from the Archangel sector of Russia board the transport Lake Daraga. will go to the mortuary chapel in boken, Later the caskets will shipped to relatives of the deceased, Taps will be sounded to-morrow & special squad of men will stand But,” probably will be attention when the at, sane flags, are brought ashore. to te chapel will include tie Sa Infantry Band, entiat vn’ the public, I LLER Getter Chocolates ata Lower eandy. moat box rucular lover of Extra S Milk Chocolate Covered Figs: Great, big. pulpy my 8, carefully”a a lected and pitted. din pure A ai milk ehocolate. feast to be en- joyed by real enndy connola- neurs, Extra Special 39c Pound Box W.L. 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