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-_ ——— —— (i : { fbn _ _ 21, 941DAILY. Copyright, Co, 1920, by The Prev Publichis (The "New York World). All’ SEVEN POINTS IN THE TREATY SETTLED, OOTHERS NEARLY SO, WHENBITTERENDERS REVOLTED —— ‘Agreement Had Been Reached | On Preamble and Other Clauses of Reservation. fSSUE ON ARTICLE TENS | Several of Lodge’s Provisions | Had Been Left In Tact By Conference. WASHINGTON, Jan, 28.—HMxact 1 of the bi-partisan treaty conferences, ob- tained to-day, showed that when the parleys were interrupted by the “ir- reconcilables” and Senator Lodge's ultimatum, agreement had been reached on seven points, with tenta- tive agreements on five others. The eonferences will be resumed to-nor row, ‘The agreements and partial under- standings covered twolve of Sfteen divisions of the Lodge reservi- dons. Following summary shows exact status of negotiations, with t formation coucerning the status the © terms of agreement and tentative agreement: PREAMBLE—"The conferees had wgteod to strike out the words pr viding for acceptance of the Amer can reservations by at le three of the four principal allied and asso gated powers, through an exchange at notes, leaving the preamblo to pro- vide simply for acceptance. The con- feroes then added these words: **And the failure on tbe part of the allied 1d associated powers to make objections to snth reservations and understandings prior to the de- posit of the ratification by the United Btatee shall be taken as full accept- ance of such reservations and under- standings by said powers’ WITHDRAWAL ROM LEAGUE— On this reservation a tentative agre ment had been reached to provide thet notice of American withdrawal dhould be made through a jaint reso- ration of Congress instead of a con- current resolution as. provided by the Lodge reservations, This would give the President the power to veto the action af Congress on withdrawal ARTICLE X.--The proposed com- promise on this article had been agreed to by most of the Senators present except as to the question of essumption ‘by the United States of fan Oligation to tnterfere in contro- vVersies ‘between nations whether ‘members of the League or not. The proposed Article X. reservation reads: “The United States assumes no @bligutions to employ its military or naval forces or by economic boywott to preserve the territorial Yotegrity or political indepondence of any other country or to inter- fere in controversies between na- tions, whether members of the League or not, under the provis- fons of Article X, or to employ the military or naval forces of the United States under any article of the treaty for any purpose, unless in any particular case, the Congress, which under the Consti- tution, has the sole power to de- clare war, shall by act or joint resolution so provide. Nothing herein shall be deemed to impair the obligation of Article XVI. con- cerning the cconomic boycott, MANDATHS—-The Lodge reserva- tion on this point was accepted un- changed. It provides that Congress must decide wh « the United States shall acc a& mandate DOMESTICS QUESTIONS The Lodge rv United Sts rvation, re questions are Mt to decide wha within its dome yur: (Continued on Fifth Page.) _ TAKE BELL-ANS AVTER MEALS and seq bow fee GOOD DIGESTION sakes you tcel.— Ade. the} Republi } ment } | | Department, | | RT. BORROWED WHILE. IVOENGS WERE §2,000 000 Hoated Loan of on Claim It Was Short th Funds. IMLTARY TRAINING QUEENS HOLDINGS BILL GETS A FINAL“: KNOCKOUT BLOW 1 Leader That It Would Cost $1,000, 000, 000 Settles Fate. By David Ugiorence. Special Corres 1 Toning Jaa. (Copy- ‘ew things have dis- WASHINGION, right, 1920).— appointed politically 3s of Representative Mondell, can leader of the House, that be is opposed to untversal military truin- ing. And this isn’t because the Democrats favor military. training 47,000,900, the Corporation Counse for the Nation's youth, but because they had hoped the Republican Party would make the mistake of passing such While has been much talk of making the treaty legislation. on the surface there Amounce- | minded Demo-} jerats here more than the statement Republi: | Seventh Ave. «Sten ay Equip- ment Cost Raised Without Warrant, Is Charge. Between 1913 and 1917, while e | Tnterborourh was claiming that it, was short of funds and obtained permission from the (Public Service Commission float $47,000,009 for equipment cost, under Subway Contract No. 3, the new Sev- enth Avenue line, it distributed more than $20,000,000 in dividends. This was admitted to-day by Pdaward Gaynor, auditor of the (nterboroush, at the Board of Estimate’s investiga- tion of that system. Corporatio nCounsel Wurr, in crows- examination of (Mr. Gaynor, called at- tention to the fact that the original loan to a extimated cost of the equipment which the Interborough proposed in- | stailing under Contract No. 3 was only $22,000,000. This amount was without just warrant raised tu the $25,000,000 additional saddled the subway contended, cost ibeing on uhd thereby on the taxpayers of the city on the ground of war prices “The contract for the $22,000,009 equipment under reement No. 3 was made in 1913," Mr, Burr argued. “We were not at war in 1913 and 1914./ an issue in the next.campaign, or) Why wasn't this equipment obtained carrying the “law and order” con- troversy into the Presidential con- test, the political sharps have really Plus of $16,000,000, seen a great opportunity in the mili- tary training question, especially be-| cause of the well-founded suspicion | that if Leonard Wood were the Re publican candidate he would warmly | espouse the cause of military train- ing. MONDELL SPOILS PLANS OF THE DEMOCRATIC LEADERS. Now, when the Democra‘s had sup- posed the Republican party was go- ing to commit itself to a military training or peace-time conscription program; when Senator Wadsworth, Chairman of the Senate Military Af- fairs Committee, ahd other Ropub- licans in the Senate seamed eager to pass legislation of that kind, along comes Leader Mondell with the declaration that any Republican who is responsible for sngh legislation would find himself soon in political | oblivion, Without question the strongest sentiment against universal training seems to come from the West and South and is not confined to either party, Indeed, Secretary Baker of the Democratic Administration has indorsed the Senate committee's programme, but Democrats on the hill are inclined to think the Secre- Ughth Page.) (Continued on STATE BILL WOULD RAISE POLICE PAY| Provides Increase for Firemen and Patrolmen and Substantial Boosts for Officers, W. C. Dodge of the 20th District, ntroduced a bill in the State Sen- ate providing for increases in salary for policemen and firemen, establish- a minitoun for the lowest ade The patrolmes stantial und in new prov and ides for a §700 raise Gremen for ants and for battalion for and also sub- orgs engineers, chiefa of the fore- Fire and _ HE WORLD TRAYEL BUREAU, Myaier (Ward) Thueding, ota Park N.Y) ity. Teterawe (Bodkman 4000 day and and parcels revellers” ‘chooks “for captains | i |the Interborough |Job E. Hedges, receiver of the New| fano refused to give her 10 cents to go in 1913 and 1914? Interbo says The Auditor of the there was a sur- and there wa more than $20,000.00 in dividends. “In the face of this the Interbor- application for the right to charge higher fares says the situation is ‘supremely urgent, and ‘that we have stripped ourselves of practically every dollar and are nod in debt, and that we have got to the cnd of our resources. “[ protested against the issue of the additional $26,000,000 worth of notes, Contending that it meant negligence ou the part of the Interborough to purchase materials before our partici- pation in the war, and that it would not be just to deduct this sum from the revenues of the new Interborough subway.” ‘The Intorborough’s total ments in Queens lines amounts $26,000,000, company o;cials testified, Mayor Hylan brought out that it cost $348,000 for power on Queens lines and that the tital revenues of the line did not exceed $1,000,000 in a given year. The Interborough sup- plied the power but none of the offi- clals could remember what price per kilowatt was paid. Interborough offi- cials could tell what the total of bankers’ commissions for the flota- tion of various securities amount to. When the inquiry was resumed there | was @ three-cornered row in which| Mayor Hylan, Alfred A, Cook, repre- senting the trust in bankruptcy of Consolidated, and ugh invest- to York Railways Company, were the principals Mr. Hedges said as the New York Railways a bad financial way vestigution of that company taken up, ‘as he understood Mayor Hylan laid to having exploded the Inter | claim | borough's claim for an eight-cent fare. Mayor Hylan denied the request. “You are not going to mix us up, \mir. Hedgex" warned the Mayor. “You traction fellows are all in the | same pot, and you know it.” “But we usé a different kind of liquid," retorted Mr. Hedges. Be | lieve you erted, Mr. Mayor,” |faid Cook “that the $245,000,000 rapre- wented pure velvet Whether or not ‘sr is true the present situation will not de relieved by announcements chaf there is a lot af velvet” He in- sisted he hag a perfect right te be heard, but the hesnivdh decided he tad $47,000,000, ompany was in| he wanted the in-| NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, pBertasdlalbstnded 28, “Circulation Books Open to An | ® 1920. New MISSPHIPPS'SUT AGAINST FORMER SUITOR SETTLED ‘Teaneck sindty Girl Who Balm Accepts $3,625. | .| FERVID LOVE NOTES. R. Smith Wrote Her “Saw Her Name in the Clouds.” | | Phipps, twenty, | He Mins Mary Dewtuthn Lillian and one of the teaders of Teaneck's younger set in Now Jersey, to-day in the Cireuit Court of Hack- $50,000 breach of promise sult against W1l- | tam Huswell Smith, leading dry goods merchant of ‘Tenany school teucher of the West Side Pres- bytertan Chureh of Englewood, iN. J, for $3,825. Miss PMtpps ts the daughter of George Phipps of New York, a type- writer inventor and said to be very rich, and @ descendant of Sir William Phipps, the Mest Royal Governor of Massachusetts. Her vomplaint contains abvut forty telters through which she says Smith poured out his love for her. Sh» eays santth first proposed to her during a ride m the Van Lean automobile to Asbury Park on last Easter Sunday and that she refused him, eusack vompromised har wid Sunday- Demanded $50,000 Heart | MISS MARY PHIPPS, WHO ASKED $50,000 FOR BROKEN TROTH _ Mieco 0y Internatsonad, MOVE IN CONGRES TO KILL GAMBLING Secret Work For Bill to Pro- hibit Sending of Odds By Mail or Wire. WASITINGTON, Jan. 28.—Reform | corces in Congress are quietly organ- taing for against horse | recing and gambling. The fight will an offensive The suitor was persistent she de- clured aad on June 4 she conseuted | She sald he telephoned thus: | “['m through with you, Lilian. You told friends of mine [ was a green- | horn and a boob.” Miss Phipps says she was huml- jated and wanted to die, Then she} brought the suit and says Smith's| friends tried to buy his letters from | her, excerpts of which are subjoined |to the compkuint. Here are some of | | the alleged excenpts: “You are the sweetest that ever was.” “The beauty of love lies in its life, My beloved. how beautiful you are. You have called me forth to Hfa I see your name on the clouds and I little girl] love to bear your plaintive voice suy My Bi” | Here is another: | “Swootheart:—Do the birds toll Do you I love you? the flowers (Continued on Second Pare.) SAYS SHOE POLISHER | MAKES $225 A WEEK Wife, Suing for Separation, De-| clares He Wouldn't Give Her | Dime for Movies. | Peter B. Stefano, a shoe polisher [who nmkes $225 a weok, according to ee wife, Mrs, Josephine Stefano, was ued by her to-day in the Braoklyn Su- | prame Court for separation. Mra Ste- fano asked for temporary imony of| $0 a week. She charges cruel and in-| human treatment, and says that | to a “movie.” | The couple were married in 1913. Stefano's polishing stand is at No. 79 | Metropolitan Avenue, Brooklyn. sion was delayed on the application for alimony. | Urges Mail Tubes | WASHINGTON, Jan. ‘onstrie= | tion of tubes connecting the} Pennsylvania and Grand Central Rail road stations in New York was urged to-day by Assiatant Postmaster eral Koons before the fice Committe mail Gen of Tengland Ireen Soa LONDON, Reuter, the Chief OL Fieet at Scapa Flow, who uve the der for the ecuttting af the | warutips tere lest June bas been wet free by the Bettiah @uthorittes ‘The Adaiet bee returned vo (lemany, it’ to Decuine hts wife and set the day for | the following Ocvaber. In July Mr. Smith eapertenced a change of heart. | yt be started in the open until its ladnerents sre certain. they have Jenvuigh votes pledged for victory. rhe Senate Judiciary Committee 4 oefore it a bill introduced by mator Sterling jouth Dakota—we- Uve tn Prohibition legislation—to bar eending of all kinds of betting odds through the mails or over telegruih vr tetephone wires. ‘This measure, ita svugsom believe, wil strike a erkp- pling blow at horae racing in the United states “This vill ix not aimed directly at gamblmy,” Sterling said to-day. attempts to prevent nullification of | State anti-gambling laws by forbid- ding sending of betting odds across State lines, It does to gambling just what the Bone Dry Law did to the liquor traffic." The Congressional machinery which was so effective in the sing of Probibi ution is being made ready anti-gambling drive BIG MILLS TO SHARE PROFITS AND LOSSES the ir _| EQUALLY WITH MEN} | Knitting Concern Will Pay &m- ployees 50 Per Cent. of Gains— Workers Will Help Meet Deficit. WESTFIELD, Mass, Jan. 28,” PLAN ting an equal division of net profits and net losses annually t tween the company and its 1,200 employees, containing pro- visions by which the workers may take over control of the business, contemp and was announced to-day by Win- ship, Boit &@Co, owners of the Harvard Knitting Mills, engaged in underwear manufacture, The employees, who in reeent years have received an annual bonus of 16 per cent., plan, In @ profitable year the com- pany will credit 50 per cent, of the net profits to employers, agreed to accept the Those of one year’s standing will re- ive 20 per cent, of their ecarn- those employed longer will have 1 per cent, additional for each year ‘of service, Individuals will receiv their share n cash, the other half to remain n the business at 6 per cent, in te vision is made for car ny tor old age pensions, disability insurance and for dependent widows and children of em ploy In @ your of unprofitable opera- tions the deficit: will be shared equally between proprictors and employees, s v\ ww Tew ON HORSE RACES “at! 5,589 NEW CASES OFFLUBUT DEATHS DROP 85 PER GENT co tet Sixty Per Cent. Reduction Pneumonia Fatalities in Comparison Veith 1918, e COPELAND IS HOPEF1 Doctors’ Reports Show Ilness , Prevalant This Year Is of Mild Form. whiten | Making public to-day figures showed that in the twenty-four sours lending at 10 A. M, the nunner of new cases of influenza rep@ited in| |New York was considerably larger |than that which marked the pesk | of the epidemic of 1913, Royal &. Copeland #4} Prompt to take the yw out of his figures by comparing the total nuin- ber of deaths “In 1918," the Health Couxmuanoned said, “the largest number of new cases reported on a single day was 5,390, on Oct, 2%, but there were 441 doaths from influenza that day and 890 from pneumonin-« tora! of 861. Health Corm- | missioner “To-day, although 5.589 new cases of influenza and 686 of pneumonia are reported, the deaths fram influenza are 67 and pneumonia 118, a total of 185.” The figures show that the per- centage of deaths from influenza is 85 per cent. smaller than in the 1918 epidemic and the percentage of pneumonia deaths is 60 per cent, smaller, Following are the new canes rm ported to-day: | tnfiuen ca Pommon'a, | Manhattan 408 Brooklyn 183 Bronx 58 Queens 20} JUchmond wv Totals 686 | Yesterday . 420) To date since J 4a Manhattan .. 57 Brooklyn 34] Bronx 18 Queens: 7 Richmoy * 2 Totals M18 Yesterday 112 To date this year...... iT “AIL the figures," Dr. Copeland said, “indicate that the epidemic is less fatal than that of 1918. mu {This morning | talked with twenty or thirty physicians and they all said that the cases are of a mild nature (Continued on Second Page) BUTTER AND EGG PRICES co LOWER. Three-Cent Decline In Western Firsts and Butter of Extra Va- riety Drops Two Cents, Wholesale prices of eggs and butter -Clins Matter Vouk. PRICE Two CENTS, 22 PAGES. N.Y DS ASI. R. T. BORROWED ——Y ALBANY TRIAL DENOUNCED Y SGHENECTADY MAYOR WHOM SOCIALISTS EXPELLED ‘Lunn Tells of Retusal to Let Purty Dictate HisCourse—“Lett Wing,” Not Regular Organization, Quoted in Letter Sent to Martens. by Martin Green. (Sov 1 Gurrespondent of The Evening Wortd.) ALOANY, Jat. 28.—-George KR. Luni Mayor of Schenectady, wao (uue OF (ea yeasd ayy War very ituch iu (he public eye as the ually, Mayui of @ latye aly was the oumuranding feure in che inat of the Socialist Assemblyinen to-day. wn, pectalist in the country, ie wihea called as 4 witness for the prosecution, how fe: MKCa wut of the Socialist Party in 1915 when he refused to remuve froin ATICe « adete HOt agreeable to the Socitlist Executive Conunittes of Schcaauy. _ $24,¥5Z,0UU,cu0 ) VALUE | OF CROUFS KAISED ON U.S. FAKMS IN 1919) Mi. toe wits & doube-barrelied He Tarnished 40 etadpie of an uMticlil expelied from the soctaltats: Party Decuuse he would got obey the videro. ‘Then pe chyeaend the upia= bhe proceedings im whtels Lay & Witness wue Uid eed wititenn jun Average scat & Nearly $4,000} for ach uf the 6,u00,000 Farms that app ad Lrveag it im the Couatry | “lain very much eppoowd to che WAHINGES a. San aL | Procedure by which the Asseubly= UIMULIAN Oarteeetiaie cick [ten Were suspended aud are now om ooupletea whe anost iat pital’ be said. “My sutagumtenna te 1M lerotn Dudnnen vous i, [the Moclullat Pasty ts very ereuh, ous niatury, the agacative Depart, |{¢ 020% ROC prevent we frum thinking us their repre nl vu ment showed to-owy tn annuune- | outa al ey eat rats ue Lineated "ol ae se ae eee, ee y ou ipsam OTS SE ee Is about Uhat of the bar assole tion 19D orapa, dee ated minal . aud other legal bodies which bave. products aes $24,982,000,000, Prolested Uguluast (hese proceedings, ores Of $2.500,000,000 over ine 191s. Mayo Nia Chine Uae M mene fe the Deuworutic Mayo: he an average inwuw of un phi Setnaaiy Ser He werved tm $4,000 for exot uf the 6,000,000 Mpreveutatives fram March WIT to March 1919 wad wae farms in the United States elected Mayor lust Ovtaber, It is approximately five wines ay xtet | Mr, Lunn mudd he woe! u iol és the gum the Government is |in 1910, be nous 2 wis for praparing to speud in the current yrs | Mayor in 1911 and after « tempestu-” | cus campaign wus glected. ‘Oo the night before alectivm, jhout 11 o'clock,” he maid, “Charles Noonan and Russell Alunt, the lead~ tise year? Kurmnene stil Meee w large pert of this eunn to spend, sine: centage of the 1919 por- urvests still Tomaing on the famus, and prices [ers of the purty in Sohenectady, of arm products now are still |came to me and submitted @ thunk unusually igh. resignation which they asked me to wien. ‘This aroused my ire, but after 4 hot argument ¢ signed at” Mayor Lunn toward the close ot Nis cross-exumination said that tm | his Judement all politica) parties are alike when it comes to trying to get ail they can out of men they elect te THOMPSON OFFERS MJLK CONTROL BILLS One Provides for State Commis- sion and Another for Pas- office, but, he said, the Socialist teurizing Plant, Purty \s differeat in the respect that pak ity demands are in effect Inandates, - ALBANY, Jan. Me-Two vile 0O8l LUNN GIVES, BATAILLE OF Hie creating # Btw Milk Commission of EXPERIENCE, three me: ra serving ut $7,500 4 year Mr, Lune, when questioned ebgut euch and the other authorizing the Ww his experience with the Schenectady Svctalivts, wtked permission to reply in the form of & statement. In effect a| he suid: York City Board of Estimate und Ap- portionment to purchase and operate a milk pasteurizing plant, were Introd took another drop to-da Weatern fresh eggs declined to 62 1-2 to 63 centa | a dozen, ag 72 cents Morday eggs should be available prices of not more than perts aay fresh | a retail | cents @ at 70 Butter of the extra variety dropp:d to 62 cents, a decline of 2 cents. ‘The | price was 65 cents Monday The decline of the lust two days ta| due to the arrival of large quantities of | butter and eggs that had been ‘eld | back by the cold weather. A further |drop in the price of both is predicted ‘The price of navy butter was cut to| 67 cents a pound (retail) w-day by Dr. Jonathan ©, Day, foliowing orde | from navy officials releasing another 000 pounds of butter for bu | tion ‘Yo meat the demand for ated milk, of which upply had beer exhausted in the food stati Navy released 125,000 cans of evapor ed milk and promised another 600, cans, Theso are “half-can” size and will be gold at 61-2 cents each, Dr, Day eaid, | in th ate to-day by Senator George “L considered the retguation Olass F. Thompson of Niagara. tore Or less child’s pluy. I tonow st The Milk Commission would have lwaus uot legal. ‘There = | sweet powers in re ting the | transportation, distribution and auie of | UVa Of opinion with <he orga: milk und would also have price fixing | 00 during any Gret tenn, Out 3 authority, The bills were assigned to] snade up my «ndnd T would never sign | Axricuits Committee over objection} the rewination blunk again, by New York City Senators, “When 4 was reoominuted tm 1918 Seek ka 1 refused to sign, I was beaten that year and [ attritvute my defeat t& some extent to luck of faith on the part ot the people—they lacked con- VICTIM SLASHES AT HAZERS. Stamford, Conn h School at iota Seabee ln daana: adeaoe in a ania bound to the STAMFORD, Conn., Jan. 28.—An rulee of the @oclelet Taran tempt by ten Alamtord hich acho) | “Before 1 was renominated m 298% ctudents to haze Joe Otalvero, a Cuban, | ate out with a statement repudiat- member of the senior ¢ the schoo! | ing the provision of the Socialist to-day, cal wear reaulting sly | constitution requiring a candidate to tor W y and Gaynor Brennan, | sign, @ cesignation in blank, and ¥ be ' cs stated in Uhe open convention that 1 rh rted a “tuvero's would not be dictated to. ‘There wap Lah roveo na ike ig fea ire oe vie Violent opposition in the party to my hand and Foley's clothing waa cut 19 | Stand but 1 was re-elected. vere) pia coe “When it came to making @ppotnt- > : ments, attempts to influence me were WORLD RESTACKANT, y ROR Are RANT made and the outeome was that whole SS, ictal Jan 28, 1920. Ss i Bool & la Mode Padsion, boo iia Ss “able Schenectady local was fired ous by Stata a aia niestenenap estonia teats nthatinant cocina name etna nanan a ge ee cea