""w 1Vtfl4 Wttkvj && 'JffK & I.- . n-'t , THEWEATHER Washington, Sept. 0. Knlr and warmer today and tomorrow. Tiair-EBATunn at mru noun ) Ml 1)10 111 ia 1 ,2 3 4 5 'TlT. 1(1(1 174 ", I7K ITS IMI H' KJ I j ftuetnttg FINAL '.: f- J rublUbed Daily Except Sunday Subscription Trjce $9 a Tear by Mall. Coprrtfht. 191 , by 1'ubllo Ledger Company. I -fyrwT it vrr ins Entered as deconi-Claes Matter t t'.ie Tottofflce at Philadelphia, P. Under the Act of March 8, 18TB. PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1019 k public meuger K iPACT FOS I A'S LOSE PUBUCTO'GIBBET I M PACT FOES PRESIDENT AVERS IT teclares He Battles for Cause Which Is Greater Than Senate , r EES WORLD DISARMAMENT ; BY MEANS OF COVENANT! executive Says '.Little Croup of ..Selfish JVIen' Mustn't Plot jVfc Nation's Future t... -. Wilsons Kansas Lily Speech in a Nutshell mrm ''Tieoty opponents who view the .document with 'jaundiced eyes.' who nre against it because they have some private political purpose. will at Inst be gibbeted and they will regret that the gibbet is so high." ''Little groups of selfish men must iBoFtPlot the future of America." i i "It- is 'a case of 'put up qr shit ,,iin,' The opposition will have to produce something better than the league of nations or step aside." "Merc negation, without offering anything constructive to teplace the treaty, is bolshcvism." , "Russia is an example of minor ity rule thcvrule of a gioilp of men -"ntorc crucj than the tzar himself."" k "The Philippines would get their independence under the league." ' "Here is the covenant of the league of nations. I am a covenan ter;" "If the treaty 1 beaten, those re sponsible 111 have u 'life-long leck 'onliig wjth.thc fighting forces of the Hynijed States. ' . w By' (he Associated Press ansas City, Mo., s"cpt. C Presl cut Wilson appealed to a Kansas Citj crowd today to support tho peace treat as a charter for a new order of world affairs. ..Making his third speech for the treaty in 'Missouri to a capacity audience, the .President spoke in Convention Hall, said to accommodate 15,000. t President ' Wilson ideclarcd iliat hc Is fighting for a cause that is greater than the Senate. WJbcuthc President, accompanied by Mrs, Wilson, appeared on the plat- iform tf the vast auditorium the crowd. .each of whom had a small American flag, arose und cheered for more than two minutes ' President Wilson had been cheered AS tbc presidential party paraded through four miles of the city's" streets to Convention Hnll. ' Mr. Wllsou was introduced by 15. A. .Parsons," president of the Kansas fCIty Cbamber of Commerce. Full of American Principles In his address the "President covered A ft. . . Many of the same points of the treaty 3o had discussed in previous addresses. He said be had come to teport to the people direct about one of the greatest documents' in human history. The treaty, he declared, vas "shot through" i With American principles, put there by 'itio common consent of the world. EOne of the things .America had had in vcart throughout her whole existence, laid the President, was that arbitra tion and consultation should be sub stituted (or lot ce. 'mis was aicom- ..llutittft lm .loAlnrotl liv till. lnni-iir.nf . nations covenant. f Vln. nnntlia nf .licucelm. nf rtnv international controversy would be as sured Tinder the covenant, he asserted, adding that this principle previously, ihad been written into thirty arbitra tion treaties, "all of which were con firmed by the United States, Senate." .The principle of the league, he, de clared, already had been adopted by the United States. , Iiojcott Effective Weapon ' 'i'he bo)Cott impAscd on loieuant breakers was emphasised by the Presi- I'iilt'ut as constituting a measure more ef- J.CTCUVU IIIUU l.l,.,u.j ,uVL, iuv niva, 'conclusive thing that could happen to f 'i nation," he continued, "was to be iftml oMt of decent society." '- " Effective disarmament would be ac- fcomplUbed under the coenant, Mr. Ulisqii preuificu, ucviuhuk u was iiuiq tuious to talk of the league as tending 'Vw yhen "its whole essence'1 is ruiiruiiuii u jivm-c, -inij icagup, ue lieslsrcd, would mean the end of, the "military clan" throughout the world fojovcr, . .'herB. is no other way to disiiense ' vlth great armaments without an agree- I'lueut b.v the great nations of the world,'' Vatd Mr. Wilson, J'sntl here js h agreeiueut. L Ses Dealli of Autocracy Atocracy would perish with niili vtMt added the Presldcut. and tho intrigue which had terrorized l.'urope for fewtrutlons Would be ended, He dc- . lari"that "democracies win toouer or lafeVlbavclo tfestroyhitj kind of gov- lumrnt, autl ifi w mm iit now tjw lob m uM .,au. ii tw i.tWwW', Wilson's Speech at Kansas City Kansas City, Sept. 0. it his ad drcu at C'onyriifioii Hall thi moiiiiii(7 President 11'ihon said: I came back from Paris, btingiug one pf the greatest documents of hu man history. One of the things thnt made it grent was that it was per meated throughout with the princi ples to which. Amnion has devoted her life. Let me hasten to Ray that one of the most delightful circumstances of the work on the other side or me water was thft I discovered that ! what we called American principles had penetrnted-to the heart and to the understanding, not only of the gient peoples of -1'uropc, but to the hearts and understandings of the gieat men wbo were representing the peoples of Uurope. I think thnt 1 can ay that one of the things that America lias had most at heart throughout her exist ence has been that there should be substituted for the brutal processes of war the friendly processes of con sultation and arbitration, and that is done, In the covenant of the league of nations. 1 nm very anxious that my fellow citizens should icalize that that is the (hief topic of the covennut of the league of nations, the greater part of its provisions. Aim to Prevent Wars The whole intent nnd purpose of the document arc expressed in provisions b.v which all the member states agree that the will never go to war with out first liu ing done one or the other of two things either wibmitfcd the matter in controversy to arbitration, in which cose they agree to abide b the verdict, or submitted it to discussion in the council of the league of nations, nnd for that purpose, they consent to allow six months for the discussion, and, whether they like the opinion expressed or not, thnt they will not go to war for three months after that opinion has been expressed. So that ou have, whetucr-jou get arbitration or not, nine months' dis cussion. And I wnnt to remind jou that that is the central principle of omc'tliirty treaties entered into be tweeu the United State!; of America and some thirty other sovereign na tions, nil of which are confiuned bv the Senate of the United States. We have such an agreement with France; we have such an agreement with firent Britain; we havcsuch nn agreement with virtually every gieat "nation cxrept Oermnnyr which lcftiKul to enter into such an arinnge ment, beiause, mv bellow citizens, (iernjini)' knew thnt she intended something that didn't bear discus sion and that if she had submitted the purpose which led to this war to so much as one month's discus sion, she never would have dared go into thp enterprise against mankind which she "(lnallj did go into (ap plause). And, therefore, I sav that this principle of discussion is the principle already- adopted by America. And what is the compulsion to do this? The compulsion is thU. that if any member state violates that' promise to submit either to arbitra tion or discussion, it is thereby ipse facto deemed to have committed nn act of war aguiust all the rest. Then you will ask, do we at once take up uims nnd tight them? No. We do something very much more terrible than that. We absolutch Lojcott them. Let auy merchant put up to him self, that if he enters into a eovci nant and th'en breaks it and the peo ple all around absolutely desert his establishment, and will have nothing to do with him, ask him, after that 'if it will be necessary to send the police. The most terrible thing that can happen to any Individual, and the most conclusive thing that can happen to a nation is to be read out of decent society. (Applause.) There was another thing that we needed to accomplish! that l& accom plished in this document. Provides for Disarmament We wanted disarmament, and this document provides in the only pos sible way for disarmament by com- iiion agreement. Observe, my fellow- citizens, that just now every great lighting nation in the world is a mem ber of this partnership except Uer mun, and inasmuch as Oertnany has accepted u limitation of her army to 100,000 mcti, I don't think for the time being she may be regarded as a great lighting nation. Armies Mean Taxation And ou know, my fellow citizens, that armaments mean great standing armies, and great stores of 4var ma terial. They do not mean burden some taxation merely ; they do not mean merely compulbory military service, which saves the economic strength of the nation, but they mean the building up of a military class, Again ami again, my fellow citi zens, in the conference at Paris, we wro face to fa with this situa tion : That in dealing with a par ticular civil government we found that they would not dare to promise what their general stuff was npt will ing that they should promise; and that they were dominated by the military-machine which they had created, nominally for their own defense, but really whether they willed it or not forMhc provocation of war. And so, as long as you have a military class, it does not make auy difference wliat jour form of government is. If jou are determined to be armed to the teeth, jou must obey the orders and directions of the only men who can control the great machinery of war. It is not merely the cost of It (armament), although that Is" over whelming, but It is the spirit of it,, and America has never had, and I hope in the providence of God never will have, that spirit., JQreat ap plause,), And there is no other way to dia-i pense with greot arni&mentn except by the common, agreement of the fight ing nations of the world. And here Is thp nireemenl "They promise dis armament, and promise to agree upon a plan. Hut there was something else we wanted tuat is aecompltshe thin treaty.-, Wi . by b wMisq 10 muay 2m& WMBLB2M?2V?gmetL9? nus wrna . hmmiiib tm s waii mil n ' t 'tv- hwmmnvw miL.iv?ir .' cy.iu jarr'j.rT" yf r a m.i'm VmiM$mvmmMBWstmk 'JAUNDICED'-WILSON; FIRST, 11-3; PHILS WIN REGISTRATION THIS AFTERNOON; SEE IP IN DAY Independent Leaders Expect Heavy Enrollment by Close of Day PREDICT SWEEPING WIN . FOR THEIR CANPIDATE Patterson Followers Declare , Heavy Vote Is Favorable to Them When the tegistry polls reopened this afternoon at 4 o'clock there were scores of men in line in hundreds of divisions throughout the city. They will icmam open until 10 o'clock tonight. Encouraging reports were received at the headquarters of the Moore campaign committee. Independents snid tuat a in- nnmher of voters who bad been somewhat tardy in registering nuu vui. out their usual Saturday afternoon hoi- -b4. fte lAflAl Mnv in order to have a voice in iuu Mmtiti. nrlmnrv. The great interest maniicsicu u in dicative of sweeping victory, the Moore workers believe." At the headquarters of the Patterson committee favorable reports were also received. The regulars said that u large portion of the names registered today would be lined up in the Patterson column. nn. It is estimated that more than lO.UW voters will have registered before the nntla nlncfl rm.i. nt'iimni-A was made by Inde- i i..ir. nhn say they have "c,M.,i nut" n new scheme to Keep down the Independent vote at the, pri mary, September 10. when choice is to be made between Congressman Moore and Judge Patterson, candidates for the Republican nomination for Major. No Such Ticket In Field According to John A. Voornces. exec utive secretary of the Republican Al lance, one of the groups supporting the Moore candidacy, Varc registrars are resorting to trickery to hold down the nnti-Pnttcrson vote. "In the Thirty-sixth ward," he said, "when a Moore supporter enters a polling place and announces himself, ns nn Independent Republican, the registrars enroll him under that title. They put him down as on 'Independent Republican.' - "The registrars refuse to allow Moore watchers to exidaiu that the voter should register as a Republican if he wishes to take part in the primary. It is llkelv thnt when the voter so legistered asks for a Republican ballot on primary elcctiou'uay nc vuu De torn he is enrolled ns an 'Independent Re publican' and that there is no such ticket in the field. "1 know this to bo true in the Thirty- sixth ward and I believe it is typical of what is being done in other Vare controlled sections. The old trick of missing assessors books is being used again in the Thirty-fourth and the Fortieth wards." Dull in Manajunic It was deadly dull in the early houis throughout Manajunk and Roxborongli. Some divisions did not hdVe a single registrant. Slany of the! votera ure mill workers, who have a full holiday on Saturdajs. Political workers explained Continued on rase Two, Column One 4 TO 5 FAVORITE WINS. Needam Outsprlnts Fast Field In Opening Race at Belmont Belmont Park. M. Y Sept, G Needam, a I to fi, 1 to 8 and out fa vorite, showed the way to a fast field over the ZtVi furlongs distance in the first sprint of the day here this after noon. Kelsey had the winning mount. TIRST RACK. lor two-year-olds, purae ssuo. S1 runonBs Biraiffni: Neddam. 112. Kei. ey 4 to a 1 to a out T?ai1ralr 103. Am- broee . ... 6 to 1 8 to 5 T to 10 Iloyal Duck 107 No- , ln . . .. .12to 1 a to 1 2 to 1 Time. 1 OS 1-5. Gloria France. Ira VVI1- aon. Ulen Light. Armlatlce and Ilread Line alert run . SECOND RACE the Treenort. ateeple- ,.& SnnHlan aelllnr. for thr.i.antri. and upward, with JOOO added, about S mllea. nhomb. 134. IJorgan .... even 1 to A out Hklbbereen. 137. Iljera.. .17 to 10 1 to S out Ileddeet, ISO, J Rowan,. 4 to 1 even out Tim, A 11 ?.o Onlv thr (,.!. UlUtD HACK the Champagne, with 12100 added, for two-jrear-olde, 7 furlongs atralght: tCleopatia. 107. McAtee lt-to 10 1 to 4 out Upaet. 1S5 Hnapp. ... 11 to 10 1 to 4 out (u)Doctor uiar. iu. , Amhrnm . .. 11 to 10 1 to 4 bill Time, 12 lb Captain Alcock tUavId Hari.m ann jjunaunaei aiao ran If, P. Whitney entry coupled In betting. tVV. K. Coe entry coupled In betting. FOURTH RACK, the Lawience Realiza tion, SIOOO addea, l mile ana n rurlonga: Veaatioua. 123. ICnapp A to 5 1 to 3 out nunboyne. i:a. Lor- tua 3 to 1 4 to out Tbunderatorm, lie. Am- ... broee .......... 8 to 1 5 to 2 7 to 10 Time. s-i o.o. Polka Dot and 'Over There alao ran. ? A. Clark entry counted In bettlnir Over Tbera Anlahed Drat, but w dlaquall KIFlIt PACE, for three-year-olds and upward ciaim'n. "e vuu.. x rnue: Mary Belle. 107, T, , Rowan .j.lfltqr. 6 to fi 1 to 5 Plctlr. 108 Enior(...,l toll A to S S to .1 Grannie, till Rlcei. . 8 to 1 3 to 1 S to 3 Ttme. Ii41 Hat. Frenk Waters. Clara Martin. Hlrkorynut and Drk JU1 alao ran. ' T BOY STRUCK BY AUTOMOBILE Johu Wilton Mnyer, twelve cars old, of Merion, Po., was struck by en auto mobile, on Lancaster pike itesr the Pvfrbrook qalf Cjib tbti atteraoont He ',w KBjwmjBii a.-aiaMii t!WH!WBre' M. M M 4 .fWr0Ul fflrWlM3S; iff--- f . n V GOVERNOR'S FLAG MISSING Disappears With Other Relics of .. Brumbaugh Regime The Governor of Pennsylvania has no (lag. It is missing. Officially, a blue, banner hearing the ront-of-arms of the commonwealth pro claims the presence of the thief execu tive at parades and similar public func tions. Governor Sproul is in Philadelphia today for the exercises attending the triennial encampment of Knights Tem plar. But no standard will indicate the presence of the state executive. Up to the departure of former Gov- .ernor Brumbaugh from Harrisburg the Governor's flag was in frequent use. Now, with other relics of the Brum baugh administration, it is not to be found. BASEBALL STITCHERS OUT Fifty Workers In A. J. Reach Plant Here Want More Money Fifty busebnll stitchers of the A. J. Reach Company, Palmer and Tulip streets, stopped work today. It was said they quit because two of their fellow-workmen had been discharged. They also made a demand for increased wages. Denial was made at the office of the company that the stitchers had gone on strike. It was admitted, however, that they had stopped work. MANY SOLDIERS LOSE VOTE Office of Registration Commissioners Closed This Afternoon Due to the fact tljut the office of the count commissioners was closed this afternoon many soldiers nnd sailors will be unable to vote. Scores of ex-service men, whose names did not appear on the asses sors' lists, appeared in City Hnll to qualify. They desired to appear be fore tho commissioners, purchase poll tax receipts and then register. The absence, however, of the commissioners prevented. ' MOOSE DERAILS TRAIN MHo. Me., Sept. V. Tiie engineer and several passengers were injured today when a Bangor and Aroostook train ran into a mdose at Kbeemc, u, siding near Brownvillc. The engine was turned over and the .express and mail cars de railed. i CROIX DE GUERRE STOLEN A Croix dc Guerre belonging to Charles Briscoe, of U324 North Twenty -second street, was among the articles stolen by sneak thiefs from Briscoe's room, according to his report to police today. Other jewelry valued at 5170 was also taken. New York Players Agree on 'Open Shop' Theatres Re open Immediately CUR'TAINS DOWN 4 WEEKS New York. Sept. 0. Bioadway, after four weeks of dusk, is to shine again. The actors' strike was settled early this morning. The theatres are to open im mediately, some of them tonight. The settlement provides for recogni tion of the Actors Bqulty Association and an "open shop." Trancis Wilson, nrosMent of the Knuity Association, said all differences nnu oeen uujusieu In the satisfaction of both sides. State ments from the opposing camps explain ing details of the agreement, nre ex pected,today. Charles C. Shay, president of the Stage Hands' 1'uion. anifbuneed this afternoon he had telegraphed 080 locals that the strike was over and that tbc men should go back to work. "As far as we arc concerned," he :.i (!, mnnairprq ran onen tonight. TheEquity contract has been accepted, agreed to and virtunllj signeu. rec ognizes nlso the Kqultv Chorus Associa tion nnd makes provision for thd open shop." Augustus Thomas, playwright, ac companied by several managers, shortly before 3 o'clock this morning entered the lobby of tU.e Hotel St. Regis from the room where the managers and rep resentatives of the strikers were In sea sion nnd ttnpounced the strike had been settled. . V Morris Gest anuouueed that "Chu Chin Chow" would open ngaih tonight at the Century (Theatre with the entire cast intact. Thomas Broke Deadlock The deadlock which followed rejec tion of the managers' terms by the Equity jesterday was broken br the mediation of Mr- Thomas. He ac ranged a conference last night between representatives of the managers, the stage hands' union. nnd the Equity As. sociotlou. It was the first time that managers had tretted directly with of ficials of the Equity. On the managers' committee wero David Belasco, Sara II. Harris, WR Ham A. Brady, John !, Golden, A. II. Woods, Arthur Hopkins and Henry W, Havarft and Batabrldge Colby as' counsel. 'Jfte'HtoUi', vty-mwmleii by fceu invq, id. attorncr. .is, b UNION RECOGNITION ENDS ACTOR STRIKE , .. .J; lit. ,-i.. i v i . ATHLETICS START ILL IN SECOND ;T Waltor Kinney Hurls Superb Ball in Early Rounds of Final Encounter ROTH, FORMER MACKMAN, FANS WITH TWO MEN ON Babe Ruth Fails to Get Hit Opening Fray High Re places Amos Strunk m' Uos More nnd dttnllft flritt game on Vase 1. of Athlft.r4-nos.on Shibe Park, Sept. 0 After the Ath letics had been ingloriously beaten, 11 to .1, in the lirt encounter, excellent pitching by AValter Kinnej made the second game of today's double-header with the Red Sox a regular affair. There vvas no scoring in the first three innings. Kinnej got in a jam in the third, when the Red Sox got two on base on hits. Roth, the former A's slugger, came up with two out and i fanned. For his third time up. Babe Ruth got his first hit of the day, n single through Burrus. The next time he faced Kinnev he struck out. Charley High, Mack's new recruit from Kvansville, Ind.. leplnced Ainoa Strunk in centcrfield On first time up at bat he was robbed of a hit by Morry Shannon. Joe Dugnn after three days' layoff re turned to the Mack line-up. A ?200 fine which was plastered on Dugan for leaving the club without permis sion in August has been lifted and the pipe of peace has been smoked. Tirst Inning Hooper out, Burrus to Kinney. Vitt popped to Dugan. Roth fouled to Bur rus. Nrt runs, no hits, no errors. Burrus filed to Hooper. Shannon tossed out Witt. Shannon made n great stop and throw on Walker's grounder. No runs, no hits, no errors. Second Inning Ruth bounced a single off Burrus's shins.. Walker nia'de a nitc tutch of I Sthnng's dritc. Witt thrw out Mc ' Innis, Ruth going to seioud. Dugan I Continued on Tare To, Column Tnoi T Hogg Has Big Day at Bat and Also Outpitches Rudolph, Boston Star FINAL SCORE IS 4 TO 1 BOSTON AH. It. I'O.A.E. ! 0 0 0, Boeekel. .lb. .. rick. 2b Powell, rf. .. Smith, cf Holke, lb Mann, If Maranvillc, ss. Wilson, c Rudolph, p. . .. Cruise 1 Fillingim, p 0 Totals .12 1 7 27 IP, 0 PHILLIES AR. R. Callahan, if 2 0 Blaikburuc, !5b.. . . I'. 0 Williams, cf 4 1 Meusel, If 4 n Luderus, lb 4 2 II. PO. 1 2 0 1 K.j 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 Bancroft, ss 4 0 Paulette, 2b V, 0 Adams, c 4 0 Hogg, p 1 0 To(a(s ;!2 4 l.'l 27 S 1 "Hatted foi Rudolph in eighth. Three-base hits Luderus. 2. Two base hit Hogg. Sacrifice hits Black hurne. Callahan, 2. Sacrifice fit Blackburne. Rase on balls -Off Itu- dolph, .'i. Double plajs Mnrunville to I Holke, Paulette to Bancroft to Luderus. I Stolen base Williams. Hit bv nitihed I ball Smith. Umpires Klein and Ewalie, BravtV Field, Boston, Mass., Sept 0. Iu a pitching duel today Bradlej Hogg, the Phillies' righthander, de ffated Dick Rudolph, the RravesVbest pitcher, 4 to 1. As well as pitching a great game, Wpgg was a star at the bat. He made three hits out of four times up. One of these hits vvns a double and scored the Phillies' first run. Luderus also had a great day at the bat, getting three hits, of which two were tripls. First Inning Callahan walked, niackburne sac rificed, Wilson to Holke Williams llil to Smith. Maranvllle threw out BOSTON CONTES U DER ' HITTING FACTOR IN VI RY o Smith. Maranvllle threw out jose control of the nuchinc, Iu jump- ft mere adjunct to tbe Postofice D- Tamptco Mtitifcjmw$f&bii a(w.Urf"'" L Reruns, nq hits, iio errors. g8rris hands were llhtJy cut by pHrWrit audsuhKatvfcut tc-' k, htHl 4&MiHWsfkpW& tyr : fM fl!d tii Biy .Pick UiM fWB it hrw twUritU, Cfe 4y 1th, Mfc;t. fjwrfjPrwfal W , &.... n. '. . r. 'i- ..(W ....... e .... t.jun,. -iammBtm,t n, , nflviifi'siiitf.-M n irimiiOTiffltlBll TODAY'S BASEBALL SCORES BOSTON 0 00G30110-112J ATHLETICS (1st).. 100000101-3 8 1 Pennock nnd Schnng; Johnson nnd Peikins. DIneen nn3 Owcat BOSTON 00000003 - ATHLETICS (2d)... 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 - Bussell and Schang; Kinney and "McAvoy. Dincen and Owens. PHILLIES 001002010-113 BOSTON 0000100001 7 Hogg and Adams; Kudolph and Wilson. Klein and Enislie. NATIONAL LEAGUE BROOKLYN 01201011 NEW YORK 0 1 0 0 Smith and Krucger; Nchf N r n r - - - t 4 p r (-i . ''end " rr IC'lJpf" ro"ifi nnd S'-hmldt ST. LOVIJS ,- ,- r o J J Sallce nnd Wingo; Schupp nnd demons. AMERICAN LEAGUE NEW YORK 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 WASHINGTON.... i 0 0 .0 0 0 0 Mays and Ruel; Shaw nnd Gharrity. CLEVELAND 110 2 CHICAGO 30 0 0 Bagby and O'Neill; Williams and Schalk. ST. LOUIS 3 3 DETROIT 2 2 V r SHOOT AND GET Two Italians, carrying a payroll to Hunt's Quai.y, ilano gate street and Fisher's Eane, this afternoon, were shot by four hold-up men and robbed of $900. Tony Alfe, 38 years old, of 517 Queen street, Is In a critical condition in the Episcopal Hos pital. A. bullet went through his neck. Hfe companion, Pusquale Ilaeiilc, 2g years ol'J, 702 Fulton street, -was shot in the back. Two of the alleged bandits were captured by the police. yIn the struggle one of the men was severely beaten. He is in an un conscious condition in the same hospital. Tony De Boco, of Tenth sheet and Washington avenue, is held b ythe police as one of the bandits. T.-r-(,v,;MviANTF7 OF ir-tfGAElAN FEDS INTER Er- TfZltT, Sopt G -Two former irembci's of the Hunnt -tvt iniicnt, Di. Lo'.:acs and Etncst Scldlcv, have besn arrector. ' 'i - iii, iccoiding to advices from Vienna. Seidler foimeil vas commander of the Hungniian red aimy. Both -ucn been iutcincJ by the Austrian authorities. n NEGRO DIES AT HANDS OF LOUISIANA MOB ' MONROE, La , Sept. 6. A negro charged with an attack on the wife of a f aimer near Mer Kouge, La., was snatched from the sheriff of Moiehouse Parish today by a mot of foity men and shot to death. The sheriff was taking his prisoner to jail when intercepted by the crowd. AMERICAN CITIZENS KEPT FROM TAMPICO. MEXICO LAREDO, Texas, Sept. G. Many citizens of the United States were refused permits to enter the Tampico section of Mexico today when they declined to waive responsibility of the Mexican government for any bodily harm that might befall them. STATE ENGINEER OF TESTS NAMED HARRISBURG, Sept. 6. (By A. P.) The State Hi-' Department today announced the appointment of H. S. Mattimc as engineer of tests succeeding Julius Adler, who resigns accept a position with a big manufacturing concern. TWO CENSUS SUPERVISORS APPOINTED WASHINGTON, Sept. 0. W. H. Treichler, of Sacramento, has been appointed supervisoi of the census for the third distiict of California. Floyd C. Hendricks, of Council Bluffs, has been appointed for the ninth district of Iowa. GAME COMMISSIONER PLANS BEAVER PROPAGATION HARRISBURG, Sept. 6. The Game Commission plans tc place about 100 beaver on the State Game Preserve during tf next six months as an experiment. If it succeeds the commission officials will undertake extensive stocking of the tracts set aside Tor game conservation and propagation. LEAPS TO SAVE HIS LIFE Boy Injured When Automobile Plunges Down Embankment John Sarro, seventeen years old, 4017 Cmbria street, barely escaped dcatli, today when he Jumped from a cur in which he was drlting just before it plunged over a thirty-foot embankmeut at Umbria street near Ridge avenue Into a creek below. It was said that a broken steering gear caused Sarrq. to 12 7 13 0 0 and Snyder. i Wv 0 -0 - TWO WEN AWAY WITH $90j BALKS AT BURLESON'S ROD Ousted Upon Refusing to Kneel, Says Civil Service Man Washington, Sept, 0. (By A. P ) Upon lus retirement today irom tliei Civil Service Commission, Charles M. Galloway issued a statement declaring that ho and Herman W. Craven, the Republicnu rmtmber of the commissiou, . i., i " .1 4. I were "ousted because they "were not wining tnst tne commission snouiu be ' . if PRICE TWO CENTS ,M WMW i TO TINE DIN ' ; PEACE GHANGES i Interpretations of McCuinber Gain Support as Democrats and G. 0. P. Faction Join "ASSOCIATED POWERS" APPEAR TO HAVE VOTES Lodge Fails to Line Up Enough Votes to Insure Success of Program ! BITTER-ENDERS ARE ACTIVE I Will Disregard G. 0. P. Leaders' J Advice ff Tale Road i Against. Treaty Foes of Treaty Weaken as Wilson Continues Tour Piesident Wilson, today continued his fight for the league of nations. At 11 this morning (Philadelphia tune) he spoke lit Kalians Cit.v . Mo. This eening he will speak at Des Moines, la., where he will spend Sundiiv. Ycsterdiv, nt St. Louis, he ar raign! d foes of the league. Meanwhile, the radical reserva tion group I" 'ho Senate is losing giound. the Democrats and the Rc imlilic.in group fuvoriug mild J-Lliiinges uniting. Reservations requiring assent fioin other nations npparuntly nre doomed, while mild, interpretive res ervations will be adopted. " II) CLINTON W. GILBERT sinfl t orreiKmlent nf the J.enlng I'ublle Ledger j Washington, Sept. fl. The Demo ciats nnd the Republican group of mild lescrvationists have come together. j The six McCimiber reservations, in troduced jesterday, represent sub- ' stantially the sense of the combination'. The alliance, perhaps it is better to borrow from the. lamruagc of the late war, the associated powers, McCumber "; i and Hitchcock, appear to have the vote? ! to put through the Senate .substantially tbc.rescrvations Senator McCumber in I troduced. ' Five senators, McCumber, Kellogg, I Nelson, McN'ary and Colt, have signed i I nn agreement to support, in principle ' If not in dctail'mild reservations of he I McCumber tjpe. i I The issue is close, but the associated l powers aic bound togethei firmly b.v i this ngi cement signed b) the five and ! h) the discipline of the Democrat!? jpnitv, which is sharpl) felt b) all ex cept n scattering three, four or five iin'iiibt i The associated powers are thus the most compnit gioup in the I Senate. Thev ate prohabl) also more iMinieious than their foes. I The only principle now involved in ' the light is whether the reservations jdiull be Mich ns require assent from othei partners iu the league of nations, or whetlfcr they arc mere!) to be In tel pi etntive and uquiie no such assent. The nssouatcd powers favor merel) in terpretative rcseivntions aud probably will win. Bilter-Knders' to rfpeali The bittei-endcrs plan two fights to defeat the combination against them. 1 i irsi, me) nre going to i eject tne no vico of Hajs, Hughes, Taft and Root .and go on the io.ul against the treaty, 'especially in the states of the five sign- (crs of tho ngi cement, and iu other states wheie doubtful senators he, like Sen ator Spencer, of Missouri; Senator '.lones, of Washington, and Senators KeiiMin and Cummins, of Iowa. They also talk of defeating the treaty if the , Lodge ami ailments, fail. j Seuntoi Lodge spent nil da) trying Id line up enough votes for his icscr viitiuns to constitute u mujorit) of the 'Si mile, hut he failed His supporters (spoke of having the "verbal ' assur ances of all but three Republicans and I of counting upon Reed. Thomas. Gore, iWnlsh, of Massachusetts, 'Wuleott, j Hoke Smith and Shields among the Demon atH. But in spue of these jchiiins. Lodge lacks the votes. In nd- 'dilion to the five McCumber ami his signers, there is Speuccr who is almost cerium, .lust now, nt least, he U lather mobile, mid Lcuroot, who is ingainst Lodge's Article X on aecoupnt of its economic features, and there are , three or four doubtful Republicans. ' Auioug the Democrats the only sure aids of Lodge nre Reed aud Core. ShieUIs is against Lodge's Article X. Thomas's position is more oi less undefined. Hoke Smith will probably respond to party discipline and Walcott almost surely ' will. ' Mi Cumber .loins Hitrhcoik In n da) of many developments, the biggest was the nssociatiou of McCum ber and Hlrthcock. It has been im pending for some time. It Las waited sinipl) the leportlug of the treaty and the evidence that a reasonable number of mild reservntionist Republicans nu1d Btand fast. Tbc evidence that they would stand fast was furnished Ino Continued on l'aie Twelre Column Oo , nab ROBBERS OF U, 8. CREW Washington, Sept. 0, (Ry A, ll.) The State licpaiimeut meived ur '-! patch from the embassy at McjK. City -J today nnnounc ug that the Meriesui'i , y,irl1 up ami nM American aft, o or(1 from, the movl7' uacyemie in Uit W M fl l w $ "?J rl l vvl i- y& ..Sfi "?&; 1 vk 1 i'l l i II v"i 1 ,e-"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers