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Ki . ‘Alga Ui TO-NIGHT'S WEATHER—Fain lO RACING RESULTS New by The Press Publishing York World), JUDGE HAN oe UPHOLDS “DRY” LAW ENFORCEMENT RESERVATION ON ARTICLE X MAY FORCE WILSON HIMISELE aimless “tts Adoption Would Mean Re- jection,” He Said During His Western Trip. DESTROYS THE LEAGUE. Asked if U. S. Must Go Back | to Weimar Hat in Hand for New Treaty. ‘WASHINGTON, Nov. 14.—Rejection of the peace treaty by the Senate or by President Wilson himself is as- wored if the resolution of ratification geen & vote containing the reserva- tion of Article 10 which the Senate, sitting as a Committee of the Whole, adopted yesterday by a vote of 46 to 82. ‘This was the opinion in Administra- tien quarters to-day, based on the Presi- dent’s own words, frequently reiterated, during his recent tour of the United States. Whether the President then will carry out his threat to send lead- ing treaty opponents, including Sena- tor Lodge, to Berlin to negotiate a new treaty remains to be seen. Wilson has served notice that he would consider adoption of the res- ervation to Article 10 rejection of the whole treaty, There is nothing to in- dicate that he has changed this atti- tude. WILSON’S LATEST WORD WAS AGAINST THE RESERVATION. When Senator Hitchcock recently cated at the White House, Wilson told him the treaty would be unac- ceptable if certain of the pending res- ervations were attached to it, and al- though Hitchcock never has specified what these “certain reservations” were, it is generally known here that the qualification of Article 10 is one of them, What the Hitchcock forces in the Senate hope to do is to reject the res- olution of ratification containing the objectionable reservation, then pro- pose @ new resolution of ratification, which they expect the opposition to defeat, and then get together on a compromise. But the strongest mem- bers of the opposition hold that re- jection of the resolution now in proc- ess of formation will. constitute re- jection of the treaty and end the whole affair, And if they succeed in securing adoptton of the resolution comaining the objectionable clause the President will none of it, unless he goes back on his own words and completely reverses himself. On Sept. 23 at Salt Lake City the have (Continued on Second Page.) peeenere ae Bae we, CLOSING TIME 7,30 P. M. Sharp on Saturdays for SUNDAY WORLD WANT ADS. Want Advertisements for The Sunday World must be in The World’ 's MainOffice onor before 730 Saturday evening, Branch Offices before 7 Positively no advertiser: ents will be accepted : atter this time. Send your Sunday World Want Advertisement in carly Lo make sure of its publication. Somes (Continueg on Recond Page) se £ een path arte ‘ ORY ENFORCEMENT ~ AND WAR DRY LAW UPHELD BY HAND junctions Sought by Brewers in 2.75 Beer and by Liquor Firm Refused. Judge Learned Hand in the United States District Court to-day refused Act Law, and the Volstead Enforcement | The first case in which a restrain- jthe act by Government officials was denied was that of Dreyfoos, Blum & Co., commission merchants in wines and liquors, who contended the Pro- | hibition unconstitutional because they effectéd the confiscation of a stock of liquors of the value of $50,000 held by that company The second application denied by Judge Hand was thai of Jacob Rup- pert, Inc., brewers, who maintained that the War-time Prohibition Act was no longer effective because the Pr dent had practically announced the end of the war emergency in his unavail- ing veto of the Volstead Act, and laws were that Congress had no power to dec Are 75 per cent. beer an intoxicating bev- erage when it had been declared to be non-intoxicating, The decision ends with g state- ment that Judge Knox has author- ized Judge Mand to say that he con- curs with its general conclusion and on that*ground Judge Knox refuses to sustain the demurrer in the cases of Thomas F, O'Brien and another who were arrested’ jn the first day's raids by revenue agents upon New York liquor dealers immediately after the Volstead act was pr President's veto. Judge Hand makes interpretations of the law: “The real question is of the limits after the ceasation of hostilities of the powers of Congress to unravel the re- sults which war has caused, Demobilization, the disposition of | Surplus war supplies, the return of the railroads to their owners, the lotment of shipping, cancellation of contracts and the normalizing of in- dustries ail come under the duties of Congress after the actual end of hos- | tilities, the decision says, continuing to the conclusion that Congress has | the right to dictate the conditions of | the places where soldiers |men are released from war occupa- tions. The no right, he says, to'abandon the problems which it has raised and throw them on the States "AM L need to do here sed over the the following validity of the al- and work- nation * Judge Hand (Continued on Second Page.) _ TAKE BELL-ANS NEFORE MEALS and neo how fine Good Digestion makes ¥Ou feal.—Adw —>——___ THE WORLD TRAVEL BUREAD, Areata, Prlitear (Word) Bulldog, 68.00 Park Low, N.Y ONEUNIONPLANNED. to grant injunctions against the en-| forcement of the Wartime Prohibition | |'ng order against the enforcement of | IN PRINTING TRADE, International Officers Hear | Withdrawal Programme, HEARS OF PLA Charge Radi als With Being | Responsible— Claim Made That Big 6 Can’t Withdraw. |BERRY Ernest Bohm, secretary of the Cen- tral Federated that there is a movement to have all membérs of the printing trades unions break away from their internationals and from the Ameri- can Federation of Labor and form “dfieble union” of the printing trades New York City, this policy, Lithographers’ Union, stated to-day various in In pursuance of Amalgamated local No. 1 to-day jsurrendered its A. F, of L, charter. | Bohm referred to the movement as a plan for a “bloodless revolution.” George L. Berry, Pressmen's International Union, de- clared that the whole disturbance in the printing trades here could be traced to Bolshevik influences, and asserted that the purpose of the pres- ent strike was an effort by the radi- he said, | cals to establish a censorship, first on | the magazines, and then on the news- | papers of the city. ‘The movement, as explained by Mr. Bohm, plans to take in “Big. Six” Typographical Union, the leading union of the second largest industry in New York, Efforts to have “Big Six” surrender its international char- ter will be made, it was sald, at the regular meeting of the union Sun- day. The argument advanced in the movement is that conditions in New York are different from those ip other parts of the and that other tions. of the country dominate the nternationals. The plan, Mr. Bohm aid, would impose no hardship on any New York workman unless he wanted to go to other place and work. Major Berry predicted that if the plan was successful and the New York unions voted to withdraw from the internationals, new internationals would be established in New York at nce, adn the entire printing indus- try would be drawn into the fight between the tw ete of unions, country some “The disturbance in the printing industry here, said Major Berry, can be placed squarely and solely up to Bolshevist agitators. The ob ject in starting the trouble in New York is an attempt to gain control first of the magazines and then of the newspapers, so that the radicals an all exercise absolute censorship of and pictures considered harmful to the cal cause, ‘he articles, cartoons ‘big radical leaders behind this movement consider the winning of the New York strike of more im- portance than the winnig of the ateel strike, for the reaso that 72 per cent, of all the magazines in the United ates are printed in New York. If ey can gain control of these they will have done much to further of Bolshevism Ther ceding pre 5 thin was the ause was a large attendance of se- @ meeting of Local afternoon at Beethoven hall, It announced yesterday that strike benefits would be paid, but no checks en out, and it was expected by many of the men that they would draw their first st dividends to-day, rvatiy bers of Big Six men at we TOTURN DOWN PEACE TREATY <= === | That “Big Six” Figures in | President of the. | eS 200 I. ‘W. W. in Jail in North- west—More Sniping in Centralia District. SEATTLE, Nov. 14,—Gov. Hart publicly announced Louis F, to-day he had inaugurated a campaign to rid State the of the shooting of four former soldiers His the radicals as result at Centralia, Tuesday state- ment said in part “The death of these young men at Centralia can only be avenged by the successful prosecution of those in any way connected with the commission of this atrocious crime, and to this end the State pledges its every agency and all its power and resources to the local authorities the and prosecution of said criminals, “That the fair name of We may not be further smirche this State may be a safe pla law-abiding people, that our ¢ ment may not be weakened cankerous growth fostered and nour- ished or even permitted here, L ad- monish and request all to whom this is addressed to stamp out Bolshevism, in arrest hington that for all overn by I, W. W.'ism and all other seditious doctrines. “Influenced by the spectacle of self control and unyielding loyalty to law and order as exhibited by the re- turned soldiers of Centralia in pro- tecting from an outraged and jrate public the prisoners who had so wan- tonly violated the highest law of God or man, let us renew our allegiance to the Constitution and the forward determ speedily and lawfully rid of thes: law, and go with a ination yt enemies of und en mies of constitutional governmen N pected of members of the Industrial Workers the World we arly 200 men sv being of held in jails in vari (Continued on Thirty-second Page.) oo JIT CALLAHAN = YALE QINTERNATIONNL, 4 . ¢ GOVERNOR CALLS ON CITIZENS TORID WASHINGTON OF REDS ARIZONA GOVERNOR CALLS FOR |. W. W. EXTERMINATION Pledges Loyal Legion Support “Re- gardless of Where Limit Law- fully Leads.” PHOENIX, Ariz, Nov, 14.—"Px- termination” of the I. W. W. and of Bolshevism was advocated to-day by Gov. Campbell in a letter to Adjt, Ry P. the Mesa, Ariz., post of the American Legion. The Governor pledged his unlimited support to this Lush of action “regardl of where that Umit lawfully he cold-blooded mur- der of the members of the American Legion ut Centralia,” the letter sald, ‘unmisakably pointy out the menace that the Nation is facing from this source and should arouse every loyal man and woman to the taking of steps to exterminate this scourge which threatens to cast its blight over our country.” COMPULSORY ARBITRATION OUT OF RAILROAD BILL WASHINGTON, Nov 14.Compulsory irbitration of railroad labor disputes was rejected to-day by the House, which voted, 151 to 76, to substitute in the pending railroad mil the plan of oluntary ation offered by Rep= entative Sweet, Republican, and endorsed by railroad work- plan of Representa lowa for voluntary con to be writ legivlation, appinuded to-day when d debate on the bil the plan many members from union vr disputes, into permanent railway vixorou Hou. Colegrams indo ived by n from this ine nh disputes No practic & thelr Representative ews had been | "| Suits and Ovorcouts in blues J “Ciren lation Books Open to ain? 40 PAGES LOE SMITA Callahan Brothers, Who Face Each Other In. Princeton- Yale Game To-Morrow| Han PRINCETON Owiei noes aneon a ee Mother Neutral As Sons Battle In Football Game —a Mrs. Callahan Will Pray for Both—But It’s John’s Last Scrap. (Special to The Rrening World ) BOSTON, Mass., Noy. 14,—I'm not rooting for either Princeton or Yale beforehand. I am not saying which I hope will win—but it's John’s last chance.” This was the way Mrs. Mary B. Callahan, mother of "Tim" (John) Callahan, Captain of the Yale football team, and “Mike” Callahan of the Princeton football teain spoke of the Yale-Princeton game to-morrow, For It Is to be the battle of the Callahans, with brother against broth In grid- iron wartare, And Mrs, Callahan, the proud mother of the two six-foot foot- ball heroes, rides down to New Haven to watch the battle of the Callahans, “It will be the hardest day of my life" Mrs. Callanhan said to-day, “put don't mistake me, 1 will be so proud of the two boys and so happy that they are happy, and so glad of the honor they have had making the football teams, And yet—and yet— all the while that game is playing Haturday and the crowds are yelling I will be just praying for the end when, football over, [ can Inspect those boys and see with my own eyes that they have not been hurt." peice Giana RUSH TO BUY WHISKEY. Maey! erly Pay 870 0 € ie Aeiest oulaville Kull LOUISVILLE, Nov. 14.—Citizens from surrounding towna and States were haa- tening here to-day by train, automobile | and on foot to buy whiskey . By virtue of the injunction granted by Federal Judge Evans, two of the biggest distillers in Loulaville were permitted to dispose of their stoc W, «Prohibition mea. disuiiers bi urbon. lt was 4 of the waret > -— Suit or Overcoat, $17.95 UB" Clothing Corner, Broad | way, corner Burelay Street (Opp, Wool- | worth Buliding), will sell to-day and Saturday 2,000 then's and youn @reens, grays ur or double b Open Baturday night mi) Hethiere, Bar SAYS MINERS S Conference. operators;-caled by him to settle industry. Mr. Wilson said he had called 50 GIRLS MARCH QUIETLY OUT AS FIRE THREATENS BUILDING Flames Confined to Small Struc- ture on Roof of West 125th Street Building. Fifty girl school on the students in a pattern top floor of Ni West 125th Street were mareh the atreet # tly after 12 oe! day when @ fire developed in a one- story shack on the roof of the bulld- ine. The flames, shooting up from the wooden structure, made it appear that the intertor of the building was burning and there was much excite- ment Mrs. Jule McMullen, one of the in- structors, led the girls out without confusion, Mra. Talbot B. Bleeks, wife of the proprietor of the #e grabbed her baby and rushed the stairway Policeman Hddie Gable, of the West id Street Station, turned in an alarm and the bl which was con- fined to the amall superstructure, was quickly extinguished, : ead = FIRST RACE—Malden two-year old; puree $1.0 ; five and one f furl miatice, 116 (Falr- brother), $480 $2.70, won; Col Murphy, 116 (ntees, $3.40, $3.60, ond; Moronl, 116 (hodrigues), 412 third, 1.08 Mark Frank ‘ ailagher, a ow, Primitiy a Sime, Dorothy's Pet and Ksacarpolette alao ran. COND RACE—For mares; all ages; purse and furlongs. (Rice), $4.40, $4.00, first; Uncle Lannie, Rodriguos), $41.00, $1%.20 monda, Quietude ran. THIRD RACE—For all ages; purs $1,022.26; seven furlongs. — Kashmir 107 Citiee), $38.80, $14.10, $5.50, firat Pastorial Swain, 105 (Hamilt $ rf third. nk ‘High Young lin, Charlie Ls and Lad, Lrene, Adam, alao ran. FOURTH RAC art, Kullipolis, ‘Three-year puree © mile.—-Drummond, 108 (Rowan), $3, $2.50, won} | Ballet Dancer, 101 (Harniite on), $3.30, | $2.30, second; Thistledon, 108 ‘(John- hon); $2.20, third. ‘Time, 143 4-5, War yo and Siesta also ran. (Racing Entries on Page 2) ——- {WOMAN SEVERELY BURNED. Vactory © anced to $50,000 tm Bla Kanowits, a factory of No, 126 North Fifth Street Willameburg, was seriously burned thia xtent of Katie rty-throee sperator na fire in the Le Buchman & EDITION ___ PRICE TWO OENTS. — aomennenideintsioninctasinneneenl iinacinatieeenn WILSON OPENS COAL PARLEY: WASHINGTON, Noy. 14,—Detmands of union miners for a hour week and a 60 per cent. increase in wages “are impossib ilities and ought to be eliminated at the very beginning,’ Se¢retary Wilson de- clared to-day in opening the conference between union. officials arid. Me: BV ENING VG HOULD CUT iit DEMAND FOR 607% INCREASE Secretary of Labor Says Present Conditions Make This Impossible - —Owners of Non-Union Mines Object to Participating in the hi the differences éXisting “in the coal » the conference “not simply becalsse there is a labor dispute in the mining fields, but because the world is still passing through a great crisis.”” pa <a AR Sa Sh, MARR “The standpat position taken the operators heretofore also is an i said the Secretary, rapping the table to emphasize his utterance: Admitting that the Washington wage agreement still was.in force, the Secretary declared the people were not hylocks” and did not want te exact “the technical provisions of @ bond when the conditions undor which the bond was made have changed.” “We are confronted,” said Secte- tary Wilson, vith the fact that the kreat mass of people are dependent Upon fuel supplies from all ftielda, Prompt action is necessary, It ia for that reason that I have asked all of you to be here. There are three ways by which « mutual arrangement can be reached, “First—By the selection of a wage sale committee composed of opera~ tors and miners from euch of the Neids. They would proceed to agree on basic rates in their respective aise tricts to be worked out by the diss triet “Becond—By each district woing into * concurrent on! ve w consider wage agreement to each district, “Third-—By following the old pro cedure of having the central competi- “ve ‘elds work out an adjustment snd have this taken as a basis ley which the other fields could proceed. More than a hundred miners and about fifty representatives attendéd. Acting President Lewis of the miners was wpplauded by miners, He took & @eat In the front row, OWNERS OF NON-UNION MINES OBJECT TO NEGOTIATIONS, Before the conference began it was announced by operators of non-unlon mines that objected to enter- ing Into negotiations on the kround that thelr participation might be construed a® an acceptance of the they the union principle. The output ef the non-union imines is approximately 100,000,000 tons, or one-sixth of the nation’s annual production, Unwillingness of the operators out- side of the competitive fleld to enter into negotiations for another nation- wide agreement similar to the Washington Wage Agreement’ made during t 's another ob stacle final settlement, ‘That agreement, ne ated by Fel Ade ministrator Garfleld, was the first to date for the expiration acts between operators and in all parts of the country, Opposiuon Was expressed to the com> war to @ fix the sa of cont nine: me 107 North Seventh turned in before control. ‘The loaa is Uinuance of (his arrangement because it gave the amiga call pation