-.,,.! ?-riut'ii. Euentng Bubltc Utbatt 1 4 THE WEATHER Washington, Sept. 20. Cloutlj, prob ably followed by rnln tonight, Tuesday. TliMrnwATHKC AT EACH HOUft I 8 10 111 12 1 1.2 3 4 61 I r.o im 02 i4 lr loo oo iot NIGHT EXTRA vi II l I I- VOL. VI. NO. 13 MAN-HUN T AFTER ATTACK ON IIMESEY STARTS - Armed Fanners SUrround Woods Near Merchantvillo Negro Believed Hiding VICTIM, SERIOUSLY HURT, io ui PKimncM uoqpitai P Chfef of Police Leads Force to Scene of tip Outrage Farmers, many of them nrmed with shotguns, Jiave surrounded a strip of .woods about five miles cast of Mcr- chantville, X. .T., and arc searching the .Underbrush, for n negro-accused of hav ing attacked Mrs. Mary Xotscy early Tioday. Mrs. Xotsey is in Cooper Ilospitnl, Camden, in a serious condition. She -was beaten and choked by the negro while she was on her way to her place of employment in Mcrchantvillc. Two shots were fired at the negro in response to the woman's cries for help. 'JIo was seen to stumble while running In the direction of a batch of wood land known as Green Tree Woods. It is Relieved one of the bullets struck the man. Chief of Police Lindcrman, of Jlcr ,ehantville. was told of the attack by "William Cole, the man who fired at the negro. The- chief immediately hurried the woman, who was almost uncon scious, to Cooper Hospital. Call for Volunteers Then he called for volunteers to ;hase the negro. News of the attack, which occurred about 0:30 o'clock this , 'morning on the Moorestown road about (i mile from Mcrchantvillc, spread rap idly, and soon there were nearly twenty farmers and p'roduco raisers from the k surrounding section lined up in front , of tlio police station at Merchantvllla. Automobiles were called for and sev eral persons volunteered to take the - men to Green Tree woods. Chief Lin dcrman hurried out of town at the head 'of jhe procession. Several of the men , carried clubs and others bonsted they hadyl evolvcrs in their pockets. Several carried sfiotguns. The automobiles rushed down the old Cove road toward the woods. A halt was made at various points where there was a thickness of woodland and every hopes of locating the negro. j Negro Believed Hiding M. i 'Tl)e cars continued at high speed iu Uhe direction of Green Tree woods. 'There the men in the machines, under .direction otChhjf Linderman, alighted " jind divided themselves into parties of fthrce and four each. k The groups were scattered along the router ring of woodland surrounding the woods.i Every foot of the woods was searched. Several of the men climbed to the top of trees to get a better view of'the surrounding woodlands. For more than an hour the search was continued. Tho negro had been seen running in the direction of tile woods and the chief of police and his Tolunteer aides believe he 'is hiding somewhere in the clumps of !igh grtss and fallen trees. Hack in Merchantville, within a few minutes after the first batch of volun teers had followed Chief Linderman, there were gathered other residents of the city and surrounding small towns. ;" Threats of Lynching " Tit-ante f 1Ml.t t . 111 --.vt i ijuvmuK were nearu. ' aTlllij AM A oo.vt lf 1 ah ..-.. It . 1 m p uuiuiuuih:3 were catiea lor and shortly after noon four more machines, each carrying from six to ten men, some of them said to be armed, started in the direction of the woods to aid lit the search. They scoured carefully the siir. rounding thickets and looked iuto every strip "of woods on the way down Cove road toward Green Tree woods. No trace of tho negro had been found. When the second contingent of volun teers' reached the woods where Chief pjjji'nderman and hi" searchers were busy , nunnng me negro, tney, too, were sep- aratea into groups ot several men each, and were ordcred-to completely surround the thicket. ' This was done. The men formed a clrclo for about a mile around the Yfoods. Several 6hots wero fired into the thicket in tho hope of driving out the negro. One of tho searchers wanted to, set fire to the woods and force out the alleged assailant. This was not done, the searchers believing that the negro would bo caught in the course of a few hours. n Identity Is Known At the home of Chief Linderman It Tras announced that the chief of police I-v .kuuiw mg jucunij ui mo negro ior whom the posse is searching. The man was Identineu by bis wagon. t lie was driving out from Merckant- Tille at the time of the attack. Mrs. . Xotsey was coming toward the town. '"It t. It-llk-.,! V. .LI...l 11 y ig uc.vtvu u5 gmuui-u cue woman by the throat and dragged her into n clump of bushes nearby. - Seyeral times Mrs. Notsoy screamed. rIler shouts grew weaker. Cole, who was talking along the road, heard faint shouts from the woman. He saw' the. man run from the bushes. Cole fired rtwlce at the negro. Tho man fell to the ground. He got up and 'continued running alopg tho Covcrond. i Then Cola notified Chief' Linderman and the man-hunt was begun. ! WaitTill the Clouds Roll By 'Tarmer tonight tcith the cloudt in- creating. Jlain ioth tonight and tomorrow. lEoontr or Inter the rain toilt be ccaihig Ana i9 inert no feaion for tor Entered Second-CUoo Matter at Under the Act Phila. Girl May Renounce . German Title for Fortune Baroness von Boecklinson, Formerly Miss Gertrude Berwind, Returns to City With Son May Seek Divorce From Husband The Baroness Boecklin von Boecklin sau, formerly Miss Gertrude Berwind, of tho prominent Itcrwind family of this city, is the first rich American girl who has decided to give up her German title and husband ,to return to the United States and reclaim her fortune. The former 1'hiladclphian and her son .arc visiting her sister, Mrs. Ilobert K. Straw-bridge. According to foreign dispatches she expects o obtain a di vorce from the baron and take oyer the directorship of her fortune, now in the hands'of the alien property custodian. The Baroness and Huppert. her son, have been at Meadow Lodge, the Straw bridge estate outside of llryn Mawr, for about six weeks. Neither the Bar oness nor Mrs. Strawbridge would dis cuss the subject of the return of the titled woman nnd her son to this coun try. Miss Berwind was a member of,oue of'the most prominent families socially in this section, nnd her marriage to Count Boecklin von Boeckliusau created P. R. T. President Tells Federal Railways Commission of Suc cessful Method Here IGNORES FARE QUESTION High Price of "Gas," Not Bread, Hit by Mitten In his statement submitted today to the Federal Railways Commission, Thomas E.- Mitten, president of the 1. It. T. Company, makes this com ment anent automobiles and the high cost of living: "The owners of, automobiles among wage-earners have become legion, and it would seem that the difficulty now is as, much with the high price of gasoline as with the increased cost of our daily bread. "i Bv a Staff Corrtnondent .AVaUngton,.3ept. 20. Higher effi ciency with increased production rather than fare boosts was the solution of fered here today by Thomas E. Mitten, president of the Philadelphia Ilapid Transit Compnny, for the transit tangles affecting many cities. Mr. Mitten's plan was presented to the Federal Electric Hallways Com mission. With reports of strikes, pub lic discontent and other traffic prob lems rolling in, it was looked upon as n dissenting voice in the wilderness ot higher fare demands. Mr. Mitten was the only street rail way executive in the country to pre sent argument before the commission, who did not emphasize that fare In creases alone will save the transit cor porations of the country from bank ruptcy. "Philadelphia's plan is not offered as a cure-all for other cities," Mr. Mitten told the commission. "Every situation has its- own peculiar difficulties to over rnmn. hut in the light of this cxperi enco. it is our plain duty to decry the thought that there is any cure for the nrpsont trouble excepting tnat wmen lies in honest dealing, efficient manage ment, effective workers." 08 Ftr Cent More Efficient AUhoueh tho Philadelphia Itapid Transit Company now has 5 per cent r.irnr pmnloves than in 1010. Mr. Mit ten said it is producing 08 per cent more effective traffic units per employe. He contrasted this situation with a condition existing on the Pennsylvania Railroad where, with a 14 per cent increase in the number of em ployes, the output, or effective traffic units, has decreased 11 per cent since pre-war days. Mr. Mitten quoted the figures for the Pennsylvania Itailroad from u state ment attributed to W. AV. Attcrbury, vice president of the Pennsylvania sys- Through co-operation, Mr. Mitten informed the commission, public patron age in Philadelphia has jumped from 1!8S to more than 400 rides per capita since 1010, and that average fares have decreased from 4.13 cents to 3.08 cents. The difference between that figure and that flat five-cent faro is represented by exchange tickets and free transfers. Stotesbury Holds No Securities Mr. Mitten declared that neither he nor E. T. Stotesbury has any financial interest in the securities of the rapid trnnsit comDany. ' ''Mr. Stotesbury is interested In ac complishing something worth wlille foi the city of his birth," Mr. Mitten stated, ''while my own ambition la this regard is to demonstrate that there is a real and rational way by which the veied problem may be solved. My long experience devoted to nearly twenty-five years ot continuous active, service has been devoted to this task," FOUR BURNED ON DESTROYER Explosion In Boiler Room of Greene Off Key West Key West, Fl., Sept. 20. (By A. P.) Four -"men were severely burned, In an explosion in the boiler room of the destroyer Oreene off Key West jester- Submarine chasers witu puys dirk and assistants have gone to jbe aid of tho destroyer, which will be towed here today. ' No details of jhe accident were given la tht mMMKM from the Gretne, EFFICIENCY TRANSIT GOMJMAN SEGER SOLUTONVIITTEN DIES ATHOME HERE the rootonlce, at rnlUdelchl. ra. of March 8. 1TB an International social sensation sev eral years ago. Word of her impending return Is said to have been communicated to inti mate friends and relatives several months ago, but no public word of her intended action was made known until Oie Berlin dispatch arrived. Tho course adopted by the foimer Miss Berwind to regain her lost fortuuc will be adopted by many other Ameri can heiresses who find themselves with out funds nnd with a German titled husband on their hands, it Is believed. When the baroness succeeds hi legally alienating her husband's title nnd nnmc she will automatically become a citizen of the Unltcll States again and thus be entitled to take over her property from the directorship of the alien prop erty custodian. Baron Boecklin von Boccklinsau, her husband, is an intinine friend of Prince Max von Baden. He wns n captain in thcfil'mssian Guards and was severely wouncicci at tue Jiarne. Later lie was attached to the kaiser's headquarters. Political Leader of Seventh Ward Was Unconscious for Three Days COLD IS DIRECT CAUSE Charles Seger, Organization leader of the Seventh ward, died at his home, 1715 Pine street, at 10:40 o'clock to day. He had been unconscious for three days, Mr. Seger's death was due directly to a severe cold which developed during his activities in connection with the primary election. Although he had been a paralytic for several years, Mr. Seger came here from his summer home at Atlantic City and insisted on tak ing part iu the campaign to nominate Judge Patterson. He contracted a cold. Later he went outdoors to attend a meeting of Select Co.incil. Following an automobile ride through the suburbs he was forced, to take to liia bed. He scon became un conscious nud never rallied. With him nt the time of his death was Charles B. Hall, chief clerk of Se lect Council. Mr. Hall had been Se ger's political right-hand man for-ycars. It was only after tho Organization had promised to take care ot Mr. Hall in his councilmanic job that Mr. Seger agreed to support Judge Patterson and the organization ticket. Mr. Seger was seventy-one years old. He had been a member of both Common and Select Councils for years. He was a protege of the late Israel W. Durham when the latter was leader in political circles. FOUR INJURED WHEN TROLLEY CAR CRASHES INTO ICE CREAM CART Occurred at Brandywine and 17th Street Crossing Woman Taken to Hospital Three men and a woman were in jured this afternoon when a Seven teenth street trolley car smashed into a Wagon at Seventeenth and Brandywine streets. Ono of the horses had to be shot. The injured arc: Mrs. Margaret Gllmore, thirty-five years old, 2017 North Sixteenth street, bruised back and shock; af Garretson Hospital. Robert Middleton, twenty-one years old, 4303 Falrmount avenue, fractured collarboner Walter Middleton, sixteen years old, 4303 Fairmount avenue, fractured right leg. John Piatt, motorman, cut by splin tered glass. Middleton was, driving an ice cream wagon of the Scott-Powell Dairies and was accompanied by his brother, Wal ter. They say that they did not hear any warning. Their wagon swunfc from Brandywine street into Seventeenth street and was struck as it turned by ttie trolley car. Both of the Middletons wero knocked from the seat and' one of the horses dropped with a fractured hip. ' The wagon was badly damaged. Mrs, Oilmore, Wjio was riding lu the trolley car, was knocked to the floor. Piatt wag cut by glass when the front part of the'ear was wrecked, AIR MAIL OVER CHANNEL Dally Service Begun on Account of British Rail 3trlke Taris, Sept. 20. (By A. P.) Com mencing at noon today a daily aerial mail service will be operated between Paris and London because of thellritlsli railroad strike, w filch has Interrupted malls to and from the continent. Air plane mall service has been operated, be tween the two cities three times a ifeck up to the present. A .British hjdroairplnnc with three passengers who missed the channel boat on account of the strike in, England be- - Jca'e separated, from two other mu chjnes In a snow squall over the channel last night and arrived at Havre this morning.- The fate of the other ma chines U unknown. x PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1919 4&k.' BOTH SIDES CLAIM rmUtl VICTORY AS STRIKE WKm. HITS BETHLEHEM ,'1 &?!.niBbu I aflslr'BlHssH ' ,&t 'tEHKal IAHONKSS BOUCKLIi VON IIOKCKLINSAU U. S. CANCELS ALL SAILINGS TO BRITAIN Shipping Board Acts to Lessen Congestion Due to Rail way Strike Vashln;lon, Sept. L'P. (I!y A. I'.l All Miilings to polls in Cieat Britain have been canceled by the United States Shipping Hoard because of the strike of milnny workers then-. Tln following instructions lime been I sent by the division of operations to ; operations oflicers at all ports: 'Til ntjiiil kaui.auI!.,m .. .1 I... .! n..!.. ' difficulties as a rc'iilt of the impuidiiig llritish inilway strike nud in line with action likely to be taken by British own ers, all sailings of Shipping Hoard ves sels for t'nited Kingdom ports hereby suspended and vessels ordered held in port. Dii-contiiiuc at once further hook- ings, loadings and clearances for United ! Kingdom ports." i. I-. Uaylor, assistant director of operations, said ships held in port un der the order would be allocated to other trade as lapidly as possible. Ships now loaded or nearly loaded will be dispatched as soon ns they aie ready to countries other thnu Hnglaud. As t,reat Britain supplies most of the world's bunker coal, the closing of British ports to Shipping Board vessels renders the bunker problem n serious one. The Shipping Board, however, is ipnKing arrangements with other coun tries and also with private concerns to obtain coal. DISCUSS MINERS' DEMANDS Soft Coal Operators See War Agree ment Still In Force IJuffalo, X. Y., Sept. 21). (By A. P.) The soft coal onerntoi's of fhn ron- -tral competitive field today submitted to imj joint conterence of operators and miners their reply to the demands ot the men for a CO per cent increase iu wages aurt shorter hours. The reply is Bttid to be a Hat refusal. At 12:30 p.m. the operators and minors were still in session and .it was announced there probably would be no break in the conference until 2 p. m. It is understood the principal conten tion ot the operators is that the war time agreement still s in force and will not terminate until the peace treuty with Germany has been signed. The miners do not accept this view. HEAR PLEAS OF VOTERS Registration Board Takes Up Those Who Failed to Enroll All citizens who failed to register and can give a good reason for this neglect had an opportunity to get on the list of voters today through the registration commissioners. U. Lawrence Tell, president of the board, and George Pierie heard the sto ries of about twenty citizens this morn ing. Tbey will continue these hearing until October 23, meeting daily from 0 to 12 and 1 to 4 p. m. Every citizen who can prove that he was prevented from registering by ab sence from thj city on business or other leasonable cause will be allowed to vote. 5000 U. OF P. MEN TO DRILL Expect That Many to Enroll In Mil itary Course Today 5Iore than G000 students of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania military unit are expected to enroll for the coming term. The unit will consist of in fantry organizations only at first, but later other branches of the service may be represented. Lieutenant Colonel Sheldon W. And ling has been made professor of mili tary science. The first infantry drill will be held tomorrow, he announced today. The military course, for the present, will be confined to the fresh man .and sophomore classes. Thrc hours each week will constitute the time allotted for military study. Summer camps and frequent hikes are expected to add attraction to the course. TACKLE TRADE PROBLEMS Prominent Philadelphlana Attend Conference at Shore Prominent Philadelpbians are at tending the first meeting of the Inter national Trade Conference at Atlantic City today. The meeting was called under the auspices of the Chamber of Commerce of tho United States to at tack the problem of getting world busi ness back into its regular channels. The conference will last all week. Among tbe Philadclphians to. attend will 'be E. T. Stotesbury, Samuel M, Vauclaln. Levi h. Itur, Charles S. Calwell, Thomas de Witt Cuyler, Em- est T. Trigg, Samuel Rea and Georg Threeiquarters of Men Out, Big, Works Crippled, Asserts i Union Leader ALL PLANTS IN FULL SWING, SAYS C0MPANY Mounted Police Disperse Crowd.' Workers Pulled From Trolley Cars Today, proclaimed by both sides as one of crucial test in the great ' steel strike, found the situation ' still obscure. Opposing leaders issued contradict ory statements in regard to the proposed strike today of the 40,000 workers in the plants of the Beth- lehem Steel Corporation. The cor-' poration officials claimed that the I strike call had been obeyed only by a comparatively insignificant number. Tho union chiefs said' tho plant at Bethlehem was com-l pletely ciippled and that the pow eihouse had been forced to close. Reported conditions in the other' steel centers indicated that the I balance was being held fairly i equitable between the two oppos ing sides. At Parrel, in the Pittsburgh dis trict, the Carnegie Steel Company lesumed operation on two blast furnaces. At Youngstown, groups of woikers entered a Carnegie plant, but op erations were not resumed. The strikers at Cleveland weic suc cessful in tying up the docks of the Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany and the Otis Steel Compan; through a sympathetic walkout of ore nnd coal handlers. The steel stocks icacted from one to thice points under realizing sales in today's New York stock market. Bethlehem Steel broke three points at the opening, but regained part of the loss. By (he Associated Press Pittsburgh, Sept. 20. Steel .strike headquaiters today gave out the follow ing telegram from David Williams, iu charge of the strike at the Bethlehem plant nt Bethlehem, Pa.: "Itethlehem plant completely crippled by nit ike. Power plant shut down." By a Staff Cortetpondent Itethleliem. Pa., Sept. 20. David II. Williams, who heads the forces of the striking steel workers iu the big plants of the Bethlehem Steel Company, de dares 75 per cent of the men have quit work. More will follow when the night shift goes on at 4 and ." :'M o'clock this after- I noon, he says, anil the union leudcisi estimate that already the production j ot tne Dig steel ministry lias been cur- tailed DO per cent "The strike committee is much pleased with the results of the first day of the strike," said Mr. Williams us he was leaving for the strikers' head- quarters in Allenton-n this afternoon. after lengthy confeieuces with uuion leaders here. iie nearu rcpous liom im men who had canvassed the situation iu Bethlehem plants in the rooms of the Eagles' Home. Sees Complete Tie-up 'We .. , . .. . - , ,i I'Sllimiir, luuacimovriy, mail i.i per ceni ui ""' ioice ui worsers ail ii.. t)...i.!!. ! i,.. ..:t i. ! the Bethlehem works have quit work." he said. "5Ioio will follow When the I night shifts are due to report, and to morrow we hope to see a complete tic-' up. As matters stand today, we fig-' nre we have succeeded in reducing pro-1 thiction at the steel plants by fully !)o per cent." The Bethlehem company also claimed ' victory in the stiikc which began to day. 80 Per Cent Work Sajs Company Police officials declared this afternoon that from figures furnished them by cflicials of the Itethlehem plant fullj SI) per cent of the men were ut work lodnj. An earlier statement was at tributed to Chief of Police Davies to the effect that the company said only 0.1 per rent of the men in the machine shop were working today. Officials of the Bethlehem Company, according to statements of workers at union headquarteis, arc scouring this nud adjacent towns in search of ex perienced electricians to man the big powerhouse which the walkout of clec tr.icians has left scant of help. II. B. Lewis, senior vice president of the Bethlehem company, this afternoon issued a formal statement to the news papers. It reads: "It was ascertained that reports had been read at tjic office of the Bethlehem Steel Company from their plants located nt Sparrows Point, Lebanon, Steclton, Heading and Bethlehem, All qf the re ports substantially confirm full opera tions of the plants, Bxceptions to this were only in unimportant, isolated unions,- 'In no way affecting the large and important operations. There is nothing to Indicate that there will be any curtailment ot production. On New street bridge today William Bohning, secretary ot a local union, was arretted for picketing by Police Chief Davis's men today, after alleged strenuous effprts to restrain workers from entering the Bethlehem Continue! an r(e Fourteen, Column Thrco TVhn you thlnte r sviitlnr. i tuafc (. tnuxiNa.!-av, w Fubllehed Dl!y Except Sundtjr. CopjTlsht. 11B, by NO STRIKE AT HOG ISLAND! AGREE TO ARBITRATE Fear of a strike at Hog Island shipyard ended this afternoon when VIccprcsldcnt J. L. .Acltevson, of the Emergency Fleet Cor poration, nuthovized President M. C. Brush, of the American In ternational Shipbuilding Company, to sign the agreement de manded by the Hog Island workmen. This calls for nn nrrjttrn tlon board of ten, five to represent the company nnd five to rep resent the workmen. Union employees at the shipyard had threatened to strike Wednesday morning nt 10 o'clock If refused this agreement. BANDITS ROB STANDARD OIL OFFICE OF MONEY TOLEDO, Ohio. Sept. 20. Bandits shortly after mtUnight entcicd the local offices of the Standard Oil Company and c&capcd with between $5,000 and $10,000 after binding and jr.ijjhig o night watchman. CITY EMPLOYES E Requests for Pay Rise of Police and Firemen Were Backed by Locals SOME JOIN A. F. OF L. r.y (;koiu;i: xox Mi-caix When the m'l'iit difficulties in Boston culminated In strike of the city's police who wcie members of the Ameri can IVdeiation of Labor, surprise wns expressed over the entire countiy. that the employes of uuy municipality, the guaidinns of the city's afet.v. should form labor organizations. It ma he n surprise to the people of this cili to l.noiv tliut the American I Federation of Labor mnj attempt to i control einplojPK of Philadelphia, par tlculaily firemen nud those in the water service anil in mechanic tiadc. i l'j-il tf'.niin.i fitwl nlnul iM.Mil ttrLi'u nli.ii ' have organizations. They, arc not affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, how ever. The firemen of Bostou. Philadelphia, and other cities and towns have unions of the Americau Federation of Labor. Philadelphia's is L'niou Xo. 22. It has a membership of 1143, three-fourths ot the firemen of thq city. ''At the last' session of Councils on September IS, petitions were presented, together with drafts of ordinances by employes in the city's service, for in creases in salary and wages. The fact was not noted in published iit-counts of that session, but theKe requests were prepaicd and signed by labor officials and presented upon organization letter heads and stationery. The labor organi zations weie us follows: Police The Patrolmeu's Protective nnd Benevolent Association. Head quarters, rooms 200-207 Uutchiuhon building. Harry 51. DioKerson, busi ness manager. Firemen The City File Fighters' 1'iuon, No. 22. affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, .lames M. Simistcr, president jHurtaii of Water Steam and Opciatiug j KngjUCers' Local I'nlon Xo. 447, af- j filiated with the Americau Federation of Labor; headquarters, Itopm OB, Parkway Building, .lohn H. Schmicb, j mesident. Uureaii of Water Firemen. Oilers ' mi Helpers' Local Union Xo. 810. n00I11 4($i, laikway Building. Kd- i narci .1. .uooiie.v. president. NNIZED thcillureau of Water .Mutual Benefit unci Protective Association. Headquarters, 12.'ir Columbia avenue. Lewis .T. Gardner, president. Electrical Bureau Emopljes' Assoc ia ., .. t, .t i..i...:. !.. Boom i J lion ui imreuu ui r.it-ciricii . ,.1(. .... iiii ui". "3 mm. r. ' i.-.i..' rt.i i .i- v in in,,.n.;,.,',i a ,.-..;. t ;,'. f .Machinists, affiliated with the Ameri ,.". "" ...... ... ....v.. wt can Federation of Labor. Headquar ters. 1117 Parkway Building. Wlillum A. Kelton, business repiesetitativc. I 0 Thousands In t'nloiis It is impossible approximutelj to slate how man thousands of the citj's cm-' ploy ps arc members of these organiza tions. In technical trades it is under stood that the majority of workers are identified with and members of unions. Depaitmeutnl clerks, laborers and Continued on Vase irour. Column Ono SHOPMEN SIGN AGREEMENT Rules Governing Working Condi tions Effective October 20 Washington, Sept. 20. (Bv A. V.) The national agieenient on woiking conditions for railway shopmen, estab lishing uniform rules for 000,000 men, as proposed in President Wilson's leply to tlic demand ot tne men for iu-j creased wages, will become effective Oc tober 2Q and remain iu force until the end of government control of the roads. It was learned today that the agree ment hod been signed by the railroad administration and six international unions affiliated with the railway em ployes' department of the Americnn Federation of Labor. It is now in the bauds of the. printer. ALSACE REPUBLIC RUMORED Report Emanates From Coblenz; Paria Know Nothing of It Coblenz, Sept. 27 (delayed,) (By A. P.) It is rumored here that an in dependent republic has been declared In Alsace. Paris. Sept. 28. (By A. P ) Xoth ing has been heard here relative to the rumor that a republis has been set up In Alsace, which wis current in Cob lent jeiterdiy. Bubecrlptton Price IS a Tear tr liall. Publlo Ledaer Company. WILSON'S ILLNESS T Democratic Politicians Believe President Is Eliminated From Field "BURNED OUT" BY WORK Wilson Will Not Receive Albert Until End of Tour Washington, Sept. 20. (By A. P.I President Wilson will not re ceive King Albeit and Queen Eliza beth of Uelgium at the White House until they return from a tour of the T'nited States, it was announced to day nt the White House. Boston will be the first city to be visited by the royal party upon leav ing Xeiv 1'ork this week on their tour. They will be in Boston next Sunday, it was said here today. The Ling and queen nre expected to arriie in New Vork Friday. Their tour (if the country will last seeral weeks. Arrangements for the reception of the king by the Senate Saturday were canceled to day after the announcement from the White House. Itv CLINTON W. GILBKItT Man CnrrfsponUent nt tbe Kirnlng I'ublic LeUrer Washington. Sept. 20 President I WilsonVbreakOniHittWestcrtvip 1 taken by Democratic politicians licM as furui"hiug the answer to the question whether or not he will seek a leuomi nation. H is not llkelj that the Pres ident would be able to face a hard cam paign. And it is .almost certain iu view of what has happened on his recent trip that his family and his medical ad A 0 CANDIDACY visers vvlll oppose his taking the liak a I fered from cuts oud fractured bones, campaign would involve. ' ,eiovered consciousness at noon. Those who hne wen him suj that! Mayor Smith was seized by the mob he has suffeied n complete nervous I on Seventeenth street near the court buakdowu. He is desc-iibed as "blirued , limine nlmnt 10 o'c-loek ami was threat' j out" by the exertion of the last few ears culnunatiug in the strain of this last trip. A long rest will he necessary rue! the intention of his familv is to trice- him away from Washington in a few dajs, so that he eun foiget the caies of his office. He will not tuke pait iu the labor capital conference which begins on October C. And he will piobably hold just one conference on the treaty situa tion, if he is able to before leaving this city. The presidency is now such uu office; it almost automatically solves the ques tion whether a President Khali be re nominated for a third term or not. Power hns drifted into the hands of the executive until the piesidcucy is an all the -year-around job, lequirinz all the energies of a vigorous man. 51r. Wilson'B Incumbency the Durin tli negotiations of nene.. Iinvo ,i,i,.,i ! to- the wear and tear of the nnsitlnn. . President's Ilcaty Task .Mr. Wilson has had no real vacation in several years. And the last year or more has been especially difficult. First cunie the Gcrmnu offensives of the spring of 101S, y ith nil the anxiety they caused. Thev were followed by the negotiations of the armistice, which fell entirely upon 5Ir. Wilson's shoul ders. The President did not spare him- self, but undertook rtc-rsoually the uego- saults on white women. The police tiatious of peace, the American dele- assert that that fact had much to do gatiou at Paris being in a true sense a ' with some or the remarks that were one-man delegation. made by members of the mob, who had The President virtually had onlj ouelu hand iu the attempt afeainst his life, associate, 'Colonel House, unci he was The fire that was started in the court an agent or brcker for Jlr. Wilson 'house left that structure u mass of rather than a fellow delegate taking half ruins. The property was valued at the weight of the peace bargaining on his shoulders The results at Paris were disappoint ing, nnd their reception by the Senate has been trying to him. On top of this ' county affairs siuce the county was or came the speaking tour undertaken ns ' ganized are believed to be badly dam. defense of the treaty. Mr. Wilson is aged. neither youug nor especially robust. That he will undertake another term for the presidency ufter the warning he has just received is rrgarded as un likely. Virtually Out of Treaty Fight The effect of the President's illness upon the treaty is not easy to predict. Ho is removed as a factor in the situa- tlon, except so fur ns a conference in which it is hoped he will agree to reservations is concerned. His nervous Continued on fore Six, Column Three 2 KILLED AS TRAINS CRASH Five Other Injured In Collision of Freight Near Danbury Banbury, Conn., Sept, 20. Two per sons were killed and five injured In a collision of ft eight trains on the Central New England Railroad at Holmes, N. Y twenty miles WMt of this city, this mornings PRICE TWO CENTS DM 1 NEARLY SLAIN sr Crowd Starts to Hang Official Who Sought to Save Negro COURTHOUSE AND JAIL DESTROYED BY FIRE Many Prisoners, With City Au j thorities, Imperiled by ! Raging Flames LYNCHING ACCOMPLISHED United States Soldiers, Rushed to Scene, Succeed in Re storing Order General Wood Ordered to Proceed to Omaha Washington. Sept. 20. (By A. P.) 5Iajor General Leonard Wood, commanding the Central Depart ment, with headquarters at Chi cago, has. been directed by Secretary llaker to proceed to Omaha, Neb., where federal troops were sent last night to quell the race riot. 5Ir. Baker communicated with General Wood after he had received a message from the governor of Ne braska asking for federal aid. The troops were ordered from Fort Omaha by General Wood, the secretary said. An appeal for help was received late last night by Senator Hitchcock, Democrat. Nebraika, from the sheriff at Omahu. By the Associated Press Omaha, Neb.. Sept. 20. After pight of mob rule in which a negro was lynched, an attempt made to hang the major of Omaha, Edward P. Smith, l the county courthouse burned, one man shot and killed and perhaps fifty others jiujmed. the city was quiet today under . paliol of federal troops from Fort Crook I and Fort Omahn. The mavor is in a liosnital'in a crltl- 'rnr&ndltlon as a result of the attempt made by 'the mob to hailg him to a trolley pole, because he advised against the. lynching of William BrowD, a negro, who wns in the county jail, charged with attacking a white girl on the outskirts of the city early last week. The condition of 5layor Smith was reported by his physicians to be slightly i improved today. I lie mayor, who sul- ened with lynching. He was hustled to Harney street and stopped nt the foot of n trolley pole on the cross- arm of -which was a coil of rope. "(Jive us the key to the jail." "If we can't get the nigger we'll lynch you." "He's no better than the nigger." "He's a negro lover," were shouts lira id among the mob. , Start to Hang .Major "Get that lope," some one shouted. II was pulled clown by the loose end, but was not long enough to reach. A man climbed the pole, and with n knife cut the rope. It was brought down and placed around the neck of the major. "Thruw it up over the pole and string the major up," yelled a dozen voices. The major was the center ot a crusu ffl I war andi1,0 great mat it almost ovcruirew an automobile stunding near. The rope was placed around th lllH.Or K liei'h. .lliuniltru Hi lilu uunai- ! bility of murdering the city's chief ex , . ....l.l . 1. !. ecutive, protests began to be heard. "We won't stand for hanging the muvor." "That won't get us the nigger. l.et nn go. xen im io get out of here." Then two officers cut the rope, carried the major to an auto mobile nud. rushed him to a hospital. The mapor's law firm is at present defending two negroes, charged with as- SI ,."00,000, The damage to the record could not" be estimated early today, but it is believed mauy have been destroyed bcrond reclamation. Statistics vital to 100 Prisoners Imperiled For several hours the lives of more than 100. prisoners iu the county jail were endangered by the Dames in the lower floors of the building. It was finally necessary to send them all to the roof. Sheriff Clark stood off the ......... .unit until the flntnes rflilsiMl tint , .)risoners themsehes to take action, TUev at nrst decided among themselves ' to tlirow ti,e negro from the roof to the avfment bdbw and leave him to tbe , destruction of the inob, It was at this moment that the mob that had gained entrance to the burn ing building pushed past Sheriff Clark and his deputies and forreci their way into the cell corridor .Here it was tbt, the negro was turned over Ut them. Throv.ing a rope nrouud his neefc. these im-n, nuinberiug about fiftx. dragged him to the ground floor, daw (.tiding, stairways uud through Minding tmoke to the street. When tlu-y ap peared at the Harney strvot tntfua CtuHMto aa Ttfw fcJMM " m vi a -V.3J l& ? 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