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28 THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1922. TOWN AND HARBOR AT SMYRNA, ALSO CUSTOM HOUSE AND QUAY Armenians were thea shot down from the shore, the bodies being left floating in the water. According to other passengers, prominent mem- ters of the British colony in Smyrna were similarly murdered.” TERLIN, Sept. 15 (United Press).—British troops and the Turkish forces of Mustapha Kemal have clashed near Constantinople, according to an unconfirmed report received by the Berliner Tageblatt to-day. One hundred thousand persons are in danger of death by starvation. according to the despatch, which also stated that the British fleat has rescued all the tisn and some of the natives, TUR, PILLAGE AND MASSACRE s MALTA, Sept. 15 (Associated Pres8).—Hundreds of bodies of victims of the Turkish massacre in Smyrna were lying in the streets of the city when the British hospital suip Maine left there with more than 400 ref- ugees on board, it is stated by Reuter’s Smyrna correspondent, who ar- rived heré on tye Maine to-day. “When I Jef Smyrna,” he said, “the Turks were still pillaging and massacring, and hundreds of bodies were lying in the streets of the town and the outlying villages. Two large villages five miles from Smyrna were on fire. The British had withdrawn all their patrols and guards, and sev- eral British houses had been requisitioned for Turkish officers. “The, Christians,’ he added, “nave been placed in a terrible posttion owing to-the highly reprehensible action of the retreating Greek Army in burning. towns and villages. Thousands of Greek refugees when I left were lying in Jighters ip the port and on the breakwater in a pitiable con- dition, without food:or water, although the British had given them what assistance Was possible. The raisin and fig crops have been mostly lost. Many British firms. are hard hit and British prestige is low.” The refugees on the Maine included 270 British subjects and 81 Maltese, the remainder of the total of 407 being French, Greek and the nationals of otuer Allies, Lady Lamb, wife of the British Consul, and her, daughter also were on board. The majority of the refugees were well-to- do, but penniless:at present because of their precipitate filght. A section of the British Royal Air Force, consisting of thirty officers and nien, with five seaplanes, under orders to proceed to Constantinople, are here awaiting transportation to that point for service with the British troops, it is understood here. It was stated that the air craft ship Argus, which has been ordered to Constantinople, will take them aboard. CONSTANTINOPLE, Sept. 15 (As- @-- Maaetee ib ane minis cine. | ALLIES TELL KEMAL TO OBEY TREATY five miles of Constantinople, The Be apha Kemal, Head of A rmy Which Massacred Thousands IV.MLGA, Y.W.G.A. 2? SMYRNA WORKERS REPORTED AS SAFE Former Have Left City— Two Women Remain to Do Relief Service. paign and Succeeded tion of Smyrna, and culminais Kemel Pasha at ft bed, w! ference This would mean t Mustapha Kemal is the sou’ Turkish Nationalist movemen youth he studied books on A cablegram recelved at Y. M. C. A. headquarters to-day from E. O. Ja- cob, General Secretary of the organiz- ation at Smyrna, stated that the Y, M. C. A. reservation in that city was not destroyed, as had been reported, by the firo which swept parts oi Smyrna after the evacuation of the Greek Army. The cablegram added that the families of Mr. Jacobs and A. K, Jennings, a secretary, have ar- rived safely at Athens. There are two Y. W. C. A. workers at present in Smyrna. They are Miss Jean Christie of Springfield, Mass., and Miss Myrtle Nolan, whose home is in Minnesota.. Word was received by cable from them three days ago saying that they had left the Y. W. C. A. building in Smyrna and taken refuge elsewhere in tho city, but were still doing relief work, No word has come from them since then. Miss Christie, who is General Sec- retary for Smj has been in the Near East for three and a half yea Last August she returned to this country on furlough for two months, after which she went back to he Smyrna post. Miss Nolan was at one time a work- er for the Congregational Board in the interior of Turkey, but when trouble began in her district the board termi- nated its work there and Miss Nolan entered the service of the Y. W. C. A. She has been club and recreation sec- retary, having girls of eight national- itles in her care. him the object of Secret Serv attention. gained a military education. imbibed Soviet ideas. The Allied agreement at which left Greece cers’ an armistice. ‘The Sevres proposed that Greece exerci erelgnty for a period at the end of which period th lation, by a plebiscite, was to its preference for either a TRAIN, SAVING ———— Man Sees Her Fall in population ig ina state of nervous tension and the entire city is rife wita rumors about Mustapha’ Kemal Pasha’s designs upon the capital. One story is that the Nationalist commander has sent an ultimatum to the Allied Powers demanding the evacuation of their forces from the city so ds to permit the entrance of the Turkish Nationalist Army, An- other is that Nationalist troops have crossed over to thc Gallopoll Peninsula Future Boundary to Fixed by Conference. PARIS, Sept. 15 (Associated Press) —The French Government in 1 reply, forwarded last night, to the British note on the Near Kast, an- nounces that France has decided to join the other Allies in requesting the Turkish Nationalist Government to in Nick of Time Miss Viola Rose, thirty, of East 34th Street, Brooklyn, while standing on the eastbou form of the $nterborough Sul ew i Pg ee ns KELMAL Rasta from Chanak, planning to march intolyespect the neutrality sone of the| At the offices of the Foreign Division the Franklin Avenue station at noon] cheney tor foodatufts, horses, sheep Thrace with the object of taking) straits of tha Dardanelles fixed by]of the Y. W. C. A., at No. 600 Lexing- «| rangements for restoring strikers at|to-day and fell to the tracks. and goats, His ordnance consisted of grep h sen |the Treaty of Sevres, Instructions jton Avenue, it was sald this afterngon once to their former jobs under terms] ¢ R, Meyer of No. 852 Eastern|the first batch of cannon, big shells Rodosto and other ports on the Se® lig this effect have been sent to Gen, |that Miss Christie and Miss Nojan|IVs Te Us of the separate settlement plan, ay , her fall. He called ro|and rifles turned out in Russian of Marmora are choked with ref-lpoie the French High Commissioner [would remain.at their tasks in Smyrna Negotiations were in progress with | Parkway saw her fa’. |) satur| arsenals under the direction of Ger- gees, who are arriving by the tens offi, Constantinople. until ordered out. . several roads in an effort by shop|M- L. Wardell of No| 211 Deoalir) Miini tien cperts, who went thera thousands in an appalling state of} mis French decision, the note} Officials of the Standard Trading craft officials to effect additional set-|Avenue, the Bronx, to run te tie} (ten ete various German manu- Roig Cony conta misery. Hundreds are dying be uate caches nok prejudice the future |Company, which is reported to hav tlements. end of the ap tanal oe Siepeh tas ae 0 Died 2 8 2] oo orld must be ane ea 1 oe 4 . ‘a 3 e res. splay advertiain, on} nr the St ihey 3 = conditions of peace suffered heavy losses in tobacco Strike leaders were said to be ad-|train, the Bees We ee ae Mustapha's victory over the Greeks, | ment andes, Wont mutt’ be Nocera, Se medicines for Rodusto] , Diplomatic conversations among the |burned, believe that most of the to- CEOS CORB NISR CUE IE (SOLIS CEL ast aAsisians who were driven from Asia Minor in by a> P. foodstuffs and m bacco in Smyrna warehouses was re- the unwilling roads asking them to AND CONDUCTORS ‘ tO] Allies “appear to have established th b Y the Slat ldleretesue. out, mathe th endlsot Stephen B. Lowe, lirench view that the future sover-|moved before the arrival of the reconsider their rejections, Nase Fe ee aval to th root ieee east of the Medi day Mf eignty of Thrace by the Sublime Porte|Turks, They have received no con- ‘Among the larger systema aald to[form just In time. He waved to the |Greclan aspirations eart of the Mal) sunday sat thou: “tig ae BR TefUseeS | ist be discussed at a peace confer- |firmation of the reported loss afd are {Gar inned tice tnt Peaks have closed the ce Saatet the set. motorman whe Prete bitha ain ie tarraneen erent hae alread ve arrived in the Bosphorus enee, at whic © crus! viet trying to establish communication = eR EBS Ee lement plan are yivania, venty bai ‘ a ey ea ania ¢ vessels, and will be given shelter |or turkey will entitle her to the most sith agents in Brayron = Union Pacific, Norfolk and Western, |wih the assistance of isaac oe STR eat at ms in the Armenian churches of the city. |ijperal treatment in the final dectsio ‘The Liggett and Myers. Tobacco |¢ither to-morrow or Sunday to direct] Southern Pacific, Chicago and Alton. |iel Leary, was lifting the unconscious | ters ly wer foreed the: Butleh MYRNA, Sept. 15 (Associated bs ee |Company, which hasjarge holdings in|this drive. Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific.|woman to the platform. operations Press).—The fire spread early this “ Northern Pacific, Great Northern,| She was taken to the Swed! Smyrna, has received no word as to the extent of damage, if any, to their latter are doo! At the offices of the New York Cen- 1 unless the Greek morning to the Turkish quarters and Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, Mis-| pital, suffering from a fractu Tontract of otbees $0 ent ce provide tral it was said no informa i és enlousy of Enver Pasha, who or- |S was making rapld headway Government can provide vessels for} ai: Warehouses and properties there, se rmation woyld] souri, Kansas and Texas and subsid-|and kneecap. dealauay (06 MAVEN Fore ne coe: THE WORLD® E entire European section ts in] ‘6! CADE: “; 4 be given out beyond the bare facts of | iary lines. $<» dered him to ¢ i ee) SARIS AUF ORERN | : ‘Two companies of French infan-|'t Ws stated here to-day. a | th Other roads still outside the agree mand. After Enver Pasha was com- ashes and countlss thousands are . ©. J. Spervo, an importer and|the opening of the conference set for aide - Beige more cand: Coupee vitttens ot | trY were sent to this city from Con-| Mr ©. J. Sperco, an: tmporter ant : conkerence set FOF) went include the Central of Georgia, STRIVING TO AVERT [oeiied to flee, the young Turks mad meless. stantinople for the temporary pro-|°%Porter, with offices at No. 6 Harrl-|this afternoon and that the road was| Doaware, Lackawanna and West Mustapha Kemal their Jeader. He re casualties among persons who were u son Street, received to-day a cable- Ne mesting -withian. seiko a shisha PENN. R. R. STRIKE}: Near Matio’ ANDERSON.—CORDELIA. Campbell Funer- tection of the thousands of Christian entering the meeting with an “open]| prie, Ilinols Central, Louisville and organized the Ottoman Nationalist caught in the’ sections where the} of oe. here, many of whom, panic. {Stam from his brother, Henry Sperc: 1 1 ass eine gle sis — Army and caused munitions factories} a! Church, Biway, 60th. Saturday, 11 A. flamesspread with greatest rapidity i eheaer! ther hr who has a steamship agency at|™!nd and a sincere effort to bring | Nashville, Missouri Pacific, Frisco, A is ve kiald at Army an ay 4 pals, Fourteen naturall Americans are| *t¥icken, are throwing themselves/< 0) I" wie telegram was sent|about peace and good will Wabash, Santa Fe, Chicago Great} Hurried Conference Fleld at}to be nuit at Angore _ BENANDUE BUAGEO Pi t rican-born | into the sea a AG or ® = Western and numerous other he Smyrna, acene of the present dis-} bell Funeral Church, Broadway, . ee “ When the Turks invaded the town | (com, Athema ant besides same "99 About fifty roads were generally Department of Labor, rders, is the chief port of Asin} Notice later aceounted for ‘en of them are ° J afar 01 9 ¢ » 1B Me eeece tba, with, American and | they notified the French commander | \" Me a dhe tie ae ot BIG ROADS REJECT understood to have accepted the set-| WASHINGTON, Sept. 15.—A hur-| Minor. A city of 200,000 on the Medi inpbel Funerat Turkish gua that the presence a bra behad would} cmyrna was being bombarded tol TERMS; ENDANGER | tlement proposals, ae the Baltimore|+ieq conference between officials of] terranean ordinary, ; itty ulation day, 10 A. M. The A Consulate-General | ot be tolerated, but he stood his]... an extent that life was not safe and Ohio, Chesapeake and Ohio, New|the Department of Labor and the}has been swelled by hordes 6 = _ ~ — was situated the burned area.|sround tr ane part of the city. Henry PEACE PROGRAMME | York Central Lines, Southern, Sea-| General Chairmen of the Brotherhood! gees. It 1s 200 rallen Riatant from FUNERAL DIRECTORS. . f 4 ‘ ! js con- ge Horton and emlek, east of this place. ts de-Jererog said that he and thelr sister “anomie board Air Line, Chicago and North-|o¢ Ratiroad Clerks, Freight Handlers|Constantinople, with which It is con- | serted. The Greek destroyer Panther put Up a herole fight to keep back the invading Kemalists there, but the lat- ter brought into action long range western and Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul among the larger systems tn the agreement. flames swept to- taking with them nd funds, together and Ticket Sellers was held t the Labor Department in an had been able to get to Athens and Some of the Larger Systems were on their way, to France, 5 Reject Willard-Jewell ————— eer SIR THOMAS GLEN-COATS LEFT President of the Kemal’s Victory Marks the End - Of Greek Asia Minor Aspirations He Became Hero of Young Turks After Gallipoli Cam: Developments in the near East, with their aftermath of Greek evacua- are sald to have lost their lives, are mingled with the aspirations of the Turkish Nationals, who, at Angora, set up a Government, with Mustapha old Turkish regime, Dut, it iu thought now, the elimintion of Allied inter- ment and formed theories that made Incidentally in occupation Asia Minor, was revised in March of this year, when the Allies proposed of five years, Turkish WOMAN ON TRACKS, HE FLAGS SUBWAY and Has Motorman Stop avert a strike among such employees HOOVER SAYS PRICE OF COAL IS OUTRAGE Conference ‘To-Day to Plan Keeping Cost Down. WASHINGTON, Sept. 15.—The resent prices of bituminous coat are ‘an outrage upon the American pub- lc," Secretary Hoover declared in connection with the announcement of a conference here to-day under the auspices ot the United States Cham- ber of Commerce, of representative consumes of 1 in manufacturing and other industries, for the purpose of working out some plan by which coal prices can be kept down to a normal level. No specific charge of profiteering on the part of coal operators was made, bui Mr. Hoover said that while séme were charging reasonable prices, others were going far in excess of the reasonable limit. Enver Pasha, Forced to Retire. ing atrocities in which thousands of Christians ex ich h in view not only the upsetting of the he regaining of Constantinople. 1 of thee t. From govern- Greek rule. The revision provided: 1. Perpetual freedom of navigation of the Dardanelles and the Bosporus 2, Turkish soveréignty over all Asia Minor and the territory bounded by the Caucausus, Persia, Mosopo- tamla and the Mediterranean and Aegean Seas. 3. The Armenians to be under the League of Nations, but their territory to be under Turkish sovereignty, with an eventual home to be found for them by the League. 4. Adrianople to go to the Greeks but a large percentage of Thrace to be returned to Turkey vice offi- he He also Sevres, of Treaty se Sov 5. The Peninsula of Gallipoli to go e popu- | to Greece ; A despatch from Constantinople, express April 5, said that the Angora Gov ernment accepted the armistice with reservations, It asked the ev: of Anatolia, including Smyrna, four months time While European Premiers conferred Mustapha Kemal undertook to hasten vacuation by force of arms. The Turkish victory in Anatolia was not difficult. The Greek Army was poorly clothed and supplied, and hun- dreds of miles from Greece, with no heart for occupying Asia Minor, or fighting the Turk for the sake of pro- tecting Armenians, Jews and Circas- sians. The military equipment of Mustapha Kemal is said to have been fusnished him by the Soviet Government tn ex- There Is More Than One Way| of winning a customer. Ever try making Com- parisons — the Candy You Know with the Best Candy We Make. Advt. on Page 14 or HER Faint No. 485 fainted nd plat- bway at ish Hos- | withdrawal provided” above. “when omitted mill. No serve 19, red nose| His brilliant abilities aroused the earn diggounts of any obi nected by rail Many American business organizations and warehouses in the city, ‘o-day at effort to THE FUNERAL CHURCH Americas New Burial Custom” Call FRANK E.CAMPBELL and European have offices 1 important records and Ww. H. Finley, system. « Aacumente xuns, whigh soon forced the warship ‘1,000,008. Proposals. Nocrtwentart: end 3.0 Grears Vice | he eee An American destroyer sailed for} to retire LONDON, Sept. 15.—Sir Thomas] CHICAGO, Sept. 15.—Refusal by a| President of the Milwaukee, expressed ie Baloniki with 6 a petusves, and an LONDON, Pept. 15 = Mustaphs Glen-Coats, Chairman of the J. & P.| number of the country’s biggest rail- |t@e PPR Ses BBY ot NOMS SRC DEON other luter cleared for Piraeus with| Kemal, whose hordes o! urks are]. woul ck on their fol O- 4 aan eran, nel no of tho|ravaging Smyrna had demanded un-|Co*' M44. thread manufacturers, who} way systems to enter Into the War- | over the entire systems. The North, Conmulur stutt, m« of American] conditional surrender of all Asia| ‘led on July 12, left an estate valued at] tieid-Willard-Jen for ending | western employs about 12,000 shop. $ Benevolent orga J business] Minor, including Constantinople and | £1,800,000, it was learned to-da: the shopmen's stcike on the Karts Gt iced and the Culoaro: Milwaihes cna Little men Thrace, according to a statement pub- | | earate and individual St. Paul about 15,000, agreements MUDANIA, Sept, 4 oclated] lished by the Daily Mail, The Turk} should never exist, is demanded by] oes an element of co 2 ns 5 Press).—The Greek cruisers Giorgios| declares he will send his Moslems to] Kemal in his ultimatum. The Turk | “evelom nent of considerable | neo HAND DROWNED IN RIVER, Averoft . the latter for-]storm and capture Constantinople|wants most of Thrace and a great} uncertainty to-day over the scope und} tver Larsen, forty, of No, 288 Car- if you’re merly the U. S. 8, Mississippl, are at) unless the Allies hand over the city|swath of Europe stretching 159 miles| effectiveness of tho peace programme. | roll Street, Brooklyn, while sweeping -anderma. vering the retreat of]to him. east of Constantinople. While some of the lurger sy: a deck on the Clyde Line steamship 4 & Get acquainted with Piccadilly igars today. all the risk—your mone guarantee In every package. “ne Funeral Church’ (on -#ectanian) Broadway at 66th ®& We take back not satisfled—a Lost and Found” articles 9 4 in The World or renorted. nd Found Bureau.” Roone 108, World Building, will be lated for thirty days. lists can be een at any of The World's Offices. 4 adv i to “Low remnant of th ny, for| “And T cannot walt indefinitely,” the] A seml-official Greek message from|had flatly rejected the plan, others, Advertising Agencies, C Gilbil eccidentally fell overboard an safety. wu m is fell.| statement said. Athens says it te alleged the Turks nvtobly the Chicago and Northwens [Cue qewnet at Plat AN North Rivne 10 In the package Gal 2000 wasksncn. ‘New "rarke ey are at the heels of the What was once known es “Turkey carried off all the girls from tho tern end Chicago, Milwaukee nnd Bt. [nt 10,30 o'clock this morning, The CO rege ct) ze , eks,-and it ts believed the { Burope,”’ which the Allies American Girls’ College in @myrna, YTrul, had virtually comploted a:-|body was not recovered. Clero—Colorade Claro—Colorade