GENEVA, a OLAND WILL EMERGE AS SUPREME...

Post on 25-Sep-2018

215 views 0 download

transcript

t»e Home Paily for Senoct and Y»te« Countiet

Weather Forecast

T«ntflht—Fair and Mild.Tomorrow—Fair and Mild.

. Price Three Cent*GENEVA, a % , OCTOBER S, 1920

OLAND WILL EMERGE AS

• ;.-^Sv..

o•-ss^ms-

i'ri^\i ' "~~ - ^

of |Soviet Russia Accepts AU Peace TermsPresented by Poland, Scheduled ToTake

Brakes on Surface Car GiveWay and It Cra»he«

Into AnotherNew York, Oct. 8;—Two men are in

a serious condition and 20 others suf-fering from Injuries aa a result of thetelescoping of two. surface cars earlytoday at Amsterdam Avenue and129th Street. The brakes on one ofthe cars gave Way and it rushed downa steep grade, crashing into * carahead of i t William Withexax, con-ductor, suffered a. fractured skull andis riot expected to live. Henry Holmes,a motorraan, tost both legs. It wasnecessary to amputate one of his legs

•tes iiymami. tr&iu tun

SUPREME

OF COXSenatorial Oligarchy Play*

ing for Enormous Stakes

Governor Insists That HattJ-ing, If Elected, Would Ap-

point Reactionaries". ' *—'•-« . I - ' - ; " ' ; : ». .

En'Route witiii Governor Cox, Paducah, Ky-.,ip<)tt S—Absolute control ofthe Suprem? Court of the'UnitedStates; of Congress amd.the presidencyis tHe stak* jfor. which, jthe senatorialoligarchy i8 playing. Governor Coxcharged, iij J i i ! speech here today.

Fpur Supremo. Court judges arelikely to be appointed during the nextpresidential J administration, GovernorCox pointed out, and insisted that it"would naturally fpllow"-that SenatorHarding, if ejected "would appoint re-actionary, members".thus Wilding thecountry t eacti "f the'better

SOUTHWARD INTOMISSOURI

Finds that League It Para-

London, Oct. *8^Polanfl"will emergea her peace -negotiations . wJthiet Russia and Lithuania;, a p&pdjm-opean power, • cpmparabl* withj , Portugal or Swltresland; ac-ding to all the indication* "it.was

fid by diplomats. Th% ^e^tptf^Tftitblanfl as it existed when the Country

is part of the Hussion engpiirfe willnearly doubled. '""" r~"~ -

jVhile Poland has: no territorial pos-islons. she probably will *-ralons she p y y

Itlets on the Baltic to enable hejf toilld up her maritime trade. _pne out-f will be through the' Danzig cttr-lor the other will be through a eor.-ior along the Dviija Silver^ betweenthuanla and soviet Russia, , " =Ihe signing of the actual armistice,r which Soviet Russia a c w a J S N *

peace terms presented hy PoWSd,to take pjace" at Riga late today*annlstiee has heen effeatfiA ;fca

ieen Poland arid Xithuan|a and^nations between Poland; atidTand Poland and l4thuanlii~proIII bo carried on BlmultajMittUsly.bland will embrace part fif the Qldirman empire, this old Russian empire

nH A ustro-Hungarlan empire,.oland has the support .-tit - .Grefcifltain and France. These cpuntrieipint to see a strong and...lar|te

ublic created a* ablsbevik Russia a]

ope. On the other; hostile to Poland because .off ',fwr

i of German territory to the Ppjle*.._• Poles will get. the oJWL. Germanly of Danzig although X>afi$ft£lijfiown as a "ireeport." Other <3*

j Bnsteln, Tanneberg; Thorn,

j , Posen and Oppeln. .,.To the "feast 61 tne oltt Jt*ollsta trontier

Jollsh troops occupied" about jOO.OOOiuare miles of territory before; thejusso-Polish war broke put. -Tneloles were driven out of this: t*rrt-

iwvcTiow reocgaiiied ilcariyarty all of it. _

narchist Released byDepartment of Justice:

[New Tork, Oct. 8.i—AnotherIvestlgation In the Wall Street Ijombkploslm) eeHapsed today, -nthorltles are admittedly as miike dark as they were when thejcurrea. Oiacomo Carusso, who: wkstained by Department of Justiceents on the theory that his alleged

barchlstie afiUiatlons - '" """to throw light upon tttt( outrage,been released. Charted1 ''*i«nli>-d r tedFisuOf

ank Ferro and-Jance?izoft*.blaf6»: wlio-e arrested at the sarrie tjinB (t«usso are still In custody but they.not charged with complieljy inWall Street explosion. Abate and

prro are held as fugitives from jus-Ice. They are said to be wanted SKFfbbery at Waterbury, Conft, 3F*1 bein hld til th lij being held until the poMee can leirn•e source of a quantity of powdetfund in his barber Shop. ' .„„...'

itish Troops Create Reignof Terror Says Dispatch

[Manchester,>Ps have created a reign of terrorCounty Gal way, Ireland, s a l i . «oiin dispatch to the Guardian ,to-

A dance hall was raided and five

At Present It Is Anybody's Race Though Up to Ten PaysAgo It Was Undoubtedly Republican—Democrat*Dcperately Try ing To Stem Tide and Turn It in TheirDirection. ^ -1

Baltimore, Md.,Maryland as yett l t f

(DAVID LAWRENCE)Copyrioht 1920. Q«n«v« JJaily Timu

Oot. 7,—Nobpfl^sSomebody with a

italent for cartooning might portrayboth Harding and Cox singing the his-

confidently say " y yRepublicans uridoubtedl3f"hacl

o ten days agO'bu^ things ar

up over the awest of the nian who wasinvited by' Senator. Harding to cometo the patlform to debate but who wasunfortunately arrested, didn't help theR b l i didt Senator" Un-

p u cto ten daysi b t f

btedl3fhacl iivi; things are look-e y g f ^ ; g

ing better •forfcGpv;«rniipyG04.~«;'-*«'1^ f ^ n i p p>d iuck. • %ince Mayft

is .normally a Democratic state, andclings.:to.the.prejudices -whichi -havt.icept'tffe}':Iblid sdutM-froni voting'th*Republican ticket, there's ah" es'peclal

i i f i i th f t U t thp l n t ,

significance in thei h l

pthe. rafi*(Bbl l

g i j j i h fi(is eveh.;wlt jneans that the Bepubll-can. tide has invaded Maryland

The pempcrats are> .desperately try-ing toi s|em the tide an4 •"turn i t in the"ttier ;dlr<pctf<;r». C6iifldence~tbat theywill di> i o and win the! state jtor Gov-ernorCo*.is at the moment based en-_tlreiyuoii the, efficiency of the Demo*

organization; in the city of Bai-wTiflrntha. battleground la this

In 'westefir Bpueolies a s d i i U M•his strength somewhat with that partof the electorate.

Large numbers of women are regis-tering, something that is consideredSignificant by Republicans who poin;to'Maine and who also remark that

year,It. seema to be contseded that the

ifl Ot ide f BltjnIt. seema to

couiifleB Outside of Baltjniorego heavily for either candithat the, teal^. majority .JjeiU.

i h M in tfils city,t t

^ hotdate andb£

hM in tfis y.The state went>for Bryan as against,

T'aft and even; barker (jarried it. in1904 against Roosevelt.

' >en the entice east:was swept by'•&$• Hughesrin ••

Mil~ Neither Cox nor.-. Harding -Jhut, the« i + * * 4iijfoh with the liriprecedented majority

of 20,000. It *6uld take a politicalearthquake to shift the state to th«RejjublfBan ticket. •

The JtepublicanB think the. resent-irient

is clehtly'h

^^Imhiistra—'•to -. pr.otdUcjjs' while in

ti^ is i s u y * ^ g pJust suiti an uphiestval, b«t while in*roads. 5»Uuej8W6nably%ave. been inade»the tJeinocrliits haVe been aroused bythe prospect of losing the state.

A i * i he itjipAgain

ing si when itjings haveh D c t i lead

seifced andt4 flogged.name pf "Mqfe1y %%i

a«erded liopeless; the Democratic lead-erg have managed to capture the statein; the last few weeka.of the campaign.- 3Ihey -am starting out to do the same.thing- now. The desire for * changerof administration, ajjd, the consistent;opposition of such large newspapers;-aa-the Baltimore JSteses tt the Leagueof Nations have had their effect on thesituation. - - t. ,-s>4i«. . - • .

,O*i the-other hand, tfie BaltimoreguW which has-reBSlSietf friendly tothe -lieague throughout, has .oijanageaid>0T to- Tetaitt-fqr-Wilson -^~»i—'~speaking, inore friends - in -than supporting newspapers have beenable- to keep in other states. - Also>many of the prominent independents

. seifced andt flogged. ^by the name pf "Mqfe1y %%i W-;

f6r*BepiibU«ansi. who isspousettleague 6t n^iona Wi>til> it beca

he black and — „ ,.„r have been reinforced because ot

watened reprisals by the Sinn T'

i ipleague 6t n^iona Wi>til> it becaine fcpdlmcal issue, have come out openlyfor Governor Coat' as a^greater irlehdof the League than Harding, ,~\. ..

P i t S i onioiig these a*e Dr, JWJl

Confidence inMexican Government

, , --., Oct;- 8.—E., Kandolph,of the Southern Pacific Railroadn" n'dff1001 a n n o u ^ e * ibkl the

>sio — "* ^P^vements ana

*. this annoxtiiceiilciht. -»*-.p^pressed confidence !*»*%»

KlcaSUran^ 6t '*&*

v ,8 < e k« 8*pYork. Oct. 8.-J

mlliionalrfl husband for?*»«. charges that he

\ 2 o'clock in the ...„,„,.*-, „, .drinking cocktails ->n their

• Stevens, is a tootJd brokergrandson of Colonel Edwin ».

the' Stevens Instl-

Oct.

lgreat

^commenting onSSTJSJS&SL

as0TiB£^f % InteBectuaft itA t6isjfeverted, as one of %

of thet«tate,yand gheotorea?hTr^a^^a^tin^i«^^tg:

InteBectuaft

Ig^rfocannot be

championship* ofThe;BorJ'sof; ";

cans1 i»«vffebe:< . ..,.„._.latetl id f m \ t h e ft&«fe:-'JnusSJHf along the,;ftnju-fsentiment and did not ifeeling. - But .the " i iJ~ i-<*ththe <publican

big meeting the other Wght and-evenDemocratic leaders were surprised bythe"spontaneous, 'de.rnonstratKJii which

rlefed^'the' e i^ai ifaention^ o | thegWeted1 ..name of Wood]

the

-—.,-,,-T. ...V5- has always., m a strong wet element In the BeHi«

oc^tic party; Early in the campaign,this state .was looked upon as certainstate .wtes looked upon as certainj t Cox on-that account alohe, but hisfriendlihesB to prohibition exhibited

MarylandThe .De

was an anti-Suffrage State:Jemqcrats tmnK tHe woman

vote Is "a Xieague of Nations affair;,-Sodp the Republicans, but each.partyciahns the bulk of the vote on thatissue. The difference, between Mary-land- and inaji'y other states is theexistence of an effective Democratic

getting busy.

has ia'tigntrbold bri Maryland .today,

g busy. e U s p e h e s p& the &ov

chances are that the state willDemocratic by less than half the ma-jority President Wilson obtained fouryigars ago, ' •

Note': Tomorrow's dispatch willJerdcy. '

STRIKE OF SEAMENSPREAi>SlN DUBLIN

Dublin, Oct. 8. -The strike Of sea-men at this port, which has been sim-mering for some time, spreaa today;fen "OiouBand do6k workers Ve nowIdle. Cross ehanhel traffic in cattjeand merehandise Is completely ialyared. • "~ • Hea weartnf BrttTsB HHiformB iraid-ed a house at Bradford last night. Aconstable was" iselied,' stripped andbeaten with * lejitiher thong. The at-tackers called hjm;a traitor for threat-ening to feslga ffom the Royal Irish;.Constabulary.

Major McBrlde, son of Maude Cfon-he, famous actress, who was recentlyarrested- by British military policemenduring », serleg of. wfdw, haw ti f<leased from Mount Joy prison.

Mutual Protection.Washington* Ocfc 8—A "gentleraens

agreement" haa been entered intp be-i g a a tse BoBTievirW

trmaiitA t6r mutual protection againstChinese bandits ftnd

»m^uderiTalong: the Chinese bordei,the Siate Dejpartmebt was advised to-day. It ifM made plain, that theagreement was not in the nature of

4. « * • • • • • • • • • • • " • " • ••

THE WEATHEJT ^ ^ •

>n, Oct. 8—Forecast •i New Yprk-^-Fair tc- •

iwve j^m^r^S^

ly which the presence ot thetlal nominee wll help amooth put..

Hardlng.net a «oo<* r"" "' '"""Hftjl

country to reaction "forpart of a generation,"

"It Is a simple matt-pie .to make a changeand. -legislati** "

for the peohe executiveof the gov-

ernment," the governor continued, "biinot in the juflleilal. As I see it thisis the real, dasigey of asjMttctlonai-y vic-tory, next to the- sorwping of theLeague- of Ijfatfows • .- -. -. ,

are> tnree branches oi

CROWDS

gT e r t t v , lint Jeglsl»ttve-

and'the judicial; * Throughout theyears the Senate has trespassed upon.the iaujthprity^ofw-the House of Repre-sentatives. Ihe constitution 'providesthat all legislation, having to do witnthe raising off revenues shall be initiat-ed ill the House. Yet there has prob-ably^-not been a, single tariff measureIn tjhe -la,st 60: years which waachanged in Its every

onceline after t lieit, reached - theenacting clause

Senate.-" - " .,.,., ; , -; ..."By tjie jnjqintnfttiott ofjone of ;ts.

owannenaBers "as fh&*reacti6aary can-didate for the piresidehcy, it tiowTljuithe opportunity of anneking the ex-ecutive department, it the senatorialring should •wiii the election it would,in Addition t6 "controlling the JPresl-:denli .also possess the constitutionalright of confirmation of members -ofth S Court appointed by tjio

mount Issue

Audiences Loath To Let HimGo Without Some Declar-

ation on Covenant: ^B& Routa with Senator Harding.1

Omaha, Neb.» Oct. 8—Well satisfiedthat Nebraska and Iowa are Ftifely "Re-publican by Wig majorities, Senator"Warren 0, Harding swung southwardtoday Into the closely contested stat««f Missouri.

Senator Harding has found in thisbrief Invasion of the middle went thatthe League of Nations is the para- .mount Issue and at every stop, whetherIt bfe for a day or iQ minutes, his au«<31enees have been loath to :let him go•without tome declaration on the leagueissue. Consequently the league -willreceive^more and more attention 83 hegoes al;6ng, '. » . .

Both in Des Moincs and in Omaha,the Eemi6oratl& newspapers iuvo piijb»lished questionnaires on the league'fssue, addressed to Senator Harding'"With requests that he answer them.aiere%",.0Kiaha the, newspaper pwiiea"hy Senator Gilbert IS.. Hjtehcockf whomanaged the President's flgnt liv tha"•Senartff ft)?1:hi)*leaguerTrabJljplW<l u HST»lea of questions to the Republican can-didate, ranging from one whlcli ashedif ha was itr "ftecord.with 3E3o»h^ dear-fdown to why he voted against con-firming Louis D. Brandels for theSupreme Court.

Senator Harding largely Ignored,these questions'except to say Ahat heAnd Senator Borah were not In "per-fect accord*'

• Tfcie heckling-whlch Senator HardingTecelved in his first day's campaign-ing through the .Missouri valley hasled him to expect more, of it as ho dipsdown into Missouri and Oklahoma, two

; RETURN HOMEArdor of Home Folks Not

Dampened by Defeat

«Win the Series" Wa» Slo-gain Heard Everywhere—

, Speaker Given Ovation.i ».

Cleveland, Oct. 8—"When the- Cleve-land team reached home this morningthere was a crowded union railwaystation to greet them. Bands werethere to demonstrate to the Indiansthat the loss of two ganr.es to Brooklyn,had not dampened the ardor of thehome folks.

Tho reverses of yesterday and theday before were forgotten.- Nothingwas remembered but that the* teamthat for the first time In Cleveland'shistory won a baseball pennant wasbrought home, to fight it out with theNational League. • Speaker himselfwas given a great ovation, So too, vn 8Coveleskle Jhe only Cleveland pitcherto 310, <i' game thus far,

IfWfii tlie series" was theheard, everywhere and every -taealClevelander believes they will,

Wires Viscountess Astor'- on Behalf of Irela

the

beirig S6W eligiblethere will- beyond'fQur/,\|athe aex

down into Missouri and Oklahoa, o•atatea which both pgnjeciats and Bc-puhticana atller aflmtt; to be very closer

After spending the ttlght in Omaha,Senator Hardlng's special pulled outat 9 oJclook this morning. The firstscheduled speech of the day Is at St.Joseph, Mo., where the train will topf h thi f t n o n Tno

WOULD END WARBY APPLICATION

TwentyFive Nations Rep-sented at Conference

Washington, Opt; 8—Mrs. Gertrudeir 1 « of wo-

e ? oh, %fo«x years.

*« s«e*ii. at «,. glance ttmti l wd i l i f bi

t w l * s« «, glance ttmtthe senatorial crowd is playing for bigtJe!ri»Hica^j*s^n>ttt9 l

• n - - - • • for an hour this afternoon. Tno sen-for retirement atqr will be taken To the Aviditorlunni

be. aviBS^atj f01- i,speech and then rujihea toacH toTilp* train to resiinie the journey toKahsiis "Sfty;. • "ije irtU .teach" KinsasCltyjat BiiBO O'Clocki"aeltver a nightspeech' and depart at It): 15 .for thesouthwest. ,

Insistent calls for more speechesnor less

three cpn-6it"*"|ur gbyerri-

df, the United"on that "

f r r 7 p r a « d f , the UnStates will appoint aiiy "one thatdeems TmworttiViSBfr ^ pin6* ndeems -tttafifc-JtttL.hlghesj;,cbyrt of, tne jana Jut we mustbe: reminded: that the senatorial. iionj-;

inee for the presidefacy ha& connrrne'dhimself; many, tlines k^feeory of plurilgpvej»mentJw.hlchi .rneartftijthat he will

TF~the President slwaid-show signs oti h d M : Bej^Lf St ld tei»Me:8Se_ Burally, follow thad l* l

y, tdent •• wool* 3lppolttt

b f th S

gpj Lfs St Would nata reactionary presi-

E iy p

reactionaryC Thi

ent w o o * ppolttt JEoart reactionary.m-enibers of the Supreme Court, This

fd? ' 6 ^ a " T B ; f r e t f t - t ' t l iorwufd? 6^aTB;efetfuntryta(reactlothe better p»^; «f a generation;"

There? were 11 speeches on, the

were rear platform talks and. two-Weret* h n i P f l J *tl

e r e r p l a rset* speeches, one

i d otches, on iii PaflugaJi t)lg

morning and another at ijOulsVIHe xo-iht

PaflugaJii l V I H

Insistent calls for mor sphave led the Republican managers tomake several additions to his program.Brief stops at WIcMtaj Kaniaa City,-Kagr,-and-lPonca Ct t y . Q h Madded to the iUnerary.

Cannot Remain in CountryBecaute of Affiliation With

—Revolutionary Elem

SEextco-etty, Oct. «—Colonel PellxBlaz, nephew of former President

;I>Qrfirib Dla*, who is a prisoner Inthe hands of General Sanchez'serol troops; In the State of'Crua. "a* beeit-erdered-to 4aaye MCex-Ica within 24 hours. Colonel Diazwas Informed that he caniibi remainin this Country because of liis af-filiation with .revolutionary elements.It ia believed he wUl go to New York«r Havana. ;

R»fu«es to L««v«tefa Craz. Oct. *.—"I will not

leave JWexleo unless I am tajEeii outby force," declared" Colonel Ffttti Diaz,

-'wh"b Is a prisoner at military heacl-"ijuartersi Colonel Diaa arrived herefrom the Intsrlor ,of the^estate on aspecial train an Thursday; J*1"?*1"

lalonal President de la Huerta Bad-given I?ias&. h's alternative of leavingMexico to miake his future hothe-.- Itiia, forelgm land or going to a.inQillta.yprison for a-long term

eolonel vDiaj! se|itwor* tfoJS«City thit he W«uld -ttot I^ave thefcounfry.

"I have not committeed any crime' and.jive

as a Mexican l navein W native land," »aid Col-live' m jpy HULXVO II^UU, ntu * **sw

«iiel Diat. "'The Mexican ijovermnentwftere* -to-rehnburse me for my prop^erty, which was confiscated: duringthe Corraftaa regime^ I declined to

jteceiva anjr nnotioy, but the jsovern-ihea* insisted that I specify a «irnV•Witft great reluctance I ha.inea |500,-

^ > * " • •" . . . . _~ t.* ~— _ ^ . f t ' _ ^ ^ - - - t -- . r —. ^nl f • ~

Lord Moriey, o f Blackburn, veteran/

^mmAMM^m, *y ghe ^British Qo-veriunient's policy HitIreland. - His letter -ivao puilished Inth L d Ti L d M l

have been on "picket duty"In Washington and New York In be-half of freedom for Ireland, today sentthe fallowing cablegram of appeal to"Viscountess Astor, M. P.: "A.mcricannewspapers claint you are twistingLloyd Oeorge around" your little fingerand that your •Influence prevonted(lending of a British army to Poland.Would it not be expedient to use thisextraordinary influence over tho Brit-ish government to have tho band of,thieves and assassins known as the•Btisslc anST tan* police, who- are? a bloton England and 20th century civiliza-tion, removed from Ireland at once?"

FOR THREE MEN

Sermon on the Mount Of-fered in Place of the

League of Nations

Washington, Oct. 8.—Ending war"and industrial strife by the application ••of the golden rule is the aim of a con-ference which -will open here tomor-row w4tlv delegates present from 25nations.

It will be the second meeting of theworld brotherhood, an organizationwith a membership of 600,000, whicnwas begun atter the war by prominentlaymen of Great BrltaW. Prank Mor-rison, secretary of the American Fed-eration of Labor, and William Jen-nings ^Bryan wljl be among: the speak-ers.

"As a solution of the probje'ms of theworld we offer the teachings of thesermon on the Mount instead of theLeague of Nations," said ThomasHowell, secretary of the CanadianBrotherhood Federation and secretaryfor North America. "Until men areawakened to the fact that they arabrothers tmd love one another with.faith 5no understanding TRe Leaguoof Nations, nothing can bring peaceInto the world.

"Our' mission, briefly described, Is*another crusade to create a new spiritof human brotherhood, a new faith inhumanity and the great human ideals. _

"We preach that the golden rulemust be applied to the Germans andBolshevists as well as to the otherpeoples *of the earth. The bitterness*against them is not "Christian.

'"The war, a terrible^judgment CMunbrotherly international life andcommercial relations, has opened theway to ojir movement, in all parts ofthe worlds — -----

announced that he will pro-pose Berlin as the next meeting p!ac«of the Brotherhood.

the largest part of our membpr-shijj ta lirltiBh and French," be' Eaia,"nothing would establish a better feel-ing than to have pur next conferencein Berlin, I have sounded most of ths

,tes. and they are with me on.

n Since Explosion ofOil Tanker in fitvr

York Yesterday

New York, Oct. 8—Search was rriadotoday for throo men who have beonmissing sin^e the explosion on hoardthe oil tank ship G. R. Crowe, yester-day whenfl/e wore killed outright andnearly 40, Injured. U was not knownwhether the men had boen blown intothe water and drowned, or whether, Inthe excitement ,they left the shipyard,where the, explosion occurred > -withoutchecking their names with the time-keeper, and are Btlll alive. One of thoInjured men waB so b^dly hurt that itwas said he would die.

An inyAflfigiitinri is being made -byDistrict Attorney Lewis of KingsCounty to fix the reapdnsiblllty. Itwas reported that a workman bud.dropped.tun acetylene torch on the deckend that this caused an oil tank toblow up. For a long time It was be-lieved that the boilers had exploded,but this was disproved.

The tanker is owned by the MT t t i C

y tzuma Transportation Company of To-ronto, and carries oil from the Tam-plco,. MjBXi. fields..

Washington, Oct. 8^-Bxcess of ton-nage to handle the world commerceIs predicted by experts here upon thereceipt of reports from Europe as toconditions there. It was brought outat the weekly meeting at the ShippingBoard Department that more than1,000 ships are held up in Europeawaiting cargoes. The Shipping Boardfleet Is not experiencing similar trouble,however. Less than 3? ships are beingheld up in the American v merchantmarine.

The delegates will be entertained;..tonight at a reception at the British.embassy^ - • • -

German RevolutionistTo Visit United States

Berlin, Oct. $—Herr Kdpp who Wottfame through his ill-fated monarchist,revolution in Germany last Warcft,plans a speaking tour of the UnitedStates, according to £ Copenhagen dis-patch to the Achtuhr Abendblatt. HeI» schedtrfed to teotnxo on. .pqStisaland industrial conditions in Germany,

The would-be king-maker IS quotedas expressing confidence he will haveno difficulties passing Bills Island be-rcause he was born in the UnitedStates. Kapp Is at present livingquietly in Sweden. He at first hadconsiderable financial difficulties as th«:Gferrog» govammeht'ttgd up his estateand forbade his son to forward moneyto hteh KaPP1* ittrtker rrleuds In^sstPrussia, however, came to his rescue,raising: a fund for him that is esti-mated at half a million marks.

Cabinet May Discontinue /

Irish Postal Facilitiei

London, Oct. 8—The cabinet Is con-sidering the withdrawal of governmentsubsidies from Irish railroads wher«the employees refused to parry tRSOpiit wan learned this afternoqjn. Fur-thermore, the cabinet is cOnslderluadiscontinuing of postal facilities indistricts where mails are being heldup and the telegraph wires cut. Irianrailroaders went on strike in protestagainst the movement of troop trainsand some parts of the country hav«been isolated so, far as telegraphic a»dtelephonic communiation re cr»en isoatelephonicccrned.

, gp dcommunications are cr»->

SUGGESTS PRINCE OF WALESAS PRESroENT OF IRELAND

<por TtTQW o f . n g haftedmaking ecttlenient. more difficult.

negotlatlono are how going on be r.tween inlfi city and Mexico City a» tothe" - ciact amount it settlentent."'

, . I «eicti«r •Killisr fri Cerk.Cotk, Oct. 8 -Orie soldier wa« killed

and three, wounded, when civiliansbonxbtti a fflotor lorry Jtpade&^rithtroops today. The soldiers fired on the

• " - " ' -• *'• t h t e e ; .' ,"

RETURN TO WORK

Further Reduction in Nation's._ • * * * <"™ *f**'. Il ^ •• " . 1 - . • * . ? ' ' . & ,

K '•••' ! ~r ^ - - . ' a

iouston

. t«cil Condftlont •.- T Weather coadUioM have beeft •' ideal during the past 24 hours. •> The nlfht «M cool hilt froBOessj' •while the «*y *** warm and

T»*r« w » a moderately 2 ,uth br«e»e Which assisted A

• JU-v».-..ly itf thetwenty-degnee-• rl«e In temperature-this morning. -» W«MtMr of t«l» ti«s*J>matf & •. Scheduled «o MBUKM tmr «Mth«r f• **••• : ' Z

a in both. th% nation'B gross debt*! <he-«I»»tini debt. In connection

•Ing of »iM«W«» In

, on th« Mune date the 1er«at will Dr psyatftroi.

Treasury i» oflteirUig tor aubacrlptlortan I«ue. of & 9-4 percent on 6 months"tax C«rilflc»t4* date* O6tob«ar MthlliO, and maturing Karch 16•mounting to aboai *ttojmiW4>- 8^ret«ry Hourtoji aUU»» withtnue* l o t h e g»n«raJ ilna»cl«l c| tt tl

To Remain at Mines Pend-ing Outcome of Second

Referendum Ballot••••'• ' • " ' '• ' ~ •

•London, Oct 8—Virtually all of the210,000 coal miners In "Wales whowent on premature'strike before a ten-tative agreement was reached betweenthe Federation of Miners and the.gov-ernment were back at work today.They sent word that they would remain In the mities pending the outcome of the Second referendum balloton the question of a general strikethroughout the British coal fields.' Mhny coal miners in Lanorksiiirewent on «trike and the leaders of thewalkout attempted to make it general,but failed. Practically all the*« men*re back' at work «ho. " -' '

Kobert Smillie, head of^tiie Federa-tion otM****> if mg-nfr the -

\

Weekly Newspaper BelievesThat Would Settle IritifProblem—Makei Six Rec-ommendations.

4»lli«""iji«mni Jattr ©»•

liOhdon, Oct. 8—The Prince of Walesfor" regent of Ireland and perhapsultimately president of the Irish Re-public was proposed today by- theweekly newspaper Nation as the bestmeans of settling the Irish problem.

After pointing but the general pop-ularity of the prince of Wales- the•Nation further recommended:

1—Suspension of the present Britishofficials In Ireland;

2—A proclamation of amnesty forIrish political" prisoners:

3—Disarmament of the police in Ire-land; . . " • - .

4—Retirement of the Brijtish armyfrom the interior of Ireland to thechief port cities;

5—An appeal to the Irish people toabstain from violence;

8—Snmmciiiing the leaders of theSinn F*ein and Orangemen to form anInterim cabinet with representatives o(the other British overseas dominion*present to draw up an Irish constitu-tion, *, . , ."

1* Ration proposes that tne r«-^T,:'t"WC<m&.*»«»«• after the constt-tHilon In put Into effect anlws It is d«-•"" " •" *~-' '.tftat-.f"1"