'St .fkt.i'- ?;;.f1 'Kii" K" "' " VV.-t " vl c k 'n r t L I HD OF BRITISH SHE IN SIGHT Minors' Loaders and PitOwnors, Accept Terms Proposed by Government MEN TO GET WAGE RISE Ity the Associated Vress Iindon. Oct. '27. It is reported that the leaders of the striking coal miners iave nccepted the government's terms And will submit them nt once to a con- erenre of union delegates, 'the mine incrs nlso nre said to have ngreeti to (He government's proposals. ' A member of the miners' executive Jody informed the conference of trndes tiion delegates here that there was Jrery prospect of terms for a settle lent of the coal strike being 1 cached onWht. A report also was current In inrllntnentnry circles that Tremler iloyd George would announce settle ment of the strike In the House of )mmons this nftemoon 'The terms, which nre irpnrtcd to have fen vlrtualh agreed upon esterdnv, v'erc withheld from the public at the vIMi of the miners' executive, pending he submission of the stipulations for atlficallon to the pending conference of he miners' delegates. Should the dele gate not rntif the terms, another ballot 6f the miners woum oe necesur.. m ibis case all the present hopeful predlc- tons might be nullified anil tne vvnoic iituation again oe pin inio ine mtmui or,, out tne present view is mm outu fc, contingency is lmproonuie. According to Information garnered in ouference circles, the miners, under h schemp virtually annroved ye.ster- ilay will receive the Increase In wages her demand as from October 1 until be' end of December, bv which time It g expected a national wage board which ". til I -! ..!,.. M i to be estnollsneu win navu uuvireu a lermnnent hcImw. ! luiimnnpnf uplvoinp The price of coal under the reporipa , Jettlement plan, is not to be inerensed to ilomeRtlc consumers, but the Increased Xvagcs are to be met by the revenue from the export tinde and. according to some I reports, the wage scale Is to rise ami 111 ncconung io me rrvniup num trade. Intricate calculations are am a . involved in the arrangement, it ilso is reported that under the contem- ( b ated settlement the miners executive tins undertaken not to resort in future 10 direct nciion i mtuit " " , iatlou of the mines, and likewise lias hgreed to co-operate cordlall toward Ihe success ot inc new pian. lJnvna R fnSOT)plt. y,TltffI.O mvwuvi vw Boulevard Today Ctnllniiril from race Onp egardlng that term in the higher sensp. I is everv frlenn aim every loeinuu "" vorked with or contended against him! veil knew, but his polities were of the f Jght sort. i "He was industrious ns a soldier, and lh nrffiiniz.ition of the 'Roucl! Riders. , Ihllovving his active service as assistant Vecrctarj of the navj. bespeaks his teadiness to net as well as to write and ipeak. I 1 Industrious to the End i "The love and affection of those who) fought with him in the Spanish -Ameri- I lean War, and marched with him up the' Jilll at San Juan, evidence his courage and practical patriotism ' j "He wns industrious us the governor fit New York, pressing forward to com- ' ipletlon among other things the great New York state barge canal, which now , Sconnects up the Grent Lakes with tne VJSAtlantie Ocean. He was industrious ns ICP i'resideiii oi me i mien nuiiw mm lubsequentlv as the President, lighting I lis waj through opposition nnd fearliu lelther powerful corporations nor the owli'st or most insidious opponent. i "He did not cease to bo industrious nt the close of hii (areer in the highest rffieo it the people s ift. He plunged nto travel. Into exploration, into re search, into civics; in short, became n great national teacher, known and re spected throughout the world. It is not uni.iir in mis pirscnrp io lken Theodore Roospvelr to Washing ton, the founder, mm to Lincoln, me pavior of our rountr.v , and to call him the expounder of all his gieit predeces sors htood for Up was American, lAmeri,,nn to the i ore H wfis for jAmericu, for America through nnd through, und the mOwnce of his life nd character arc todnv drawn to thp attention of Americana verv where. "Philadelphia has constructed a great boulevard it is a credit to the builders. nd a connecting link between Phlladel phla, the first American city, and New J'oiK. the gient metropolis whpre House velt wo born The Mavor and Council have deemed it fitting that this thor tmghfare, destined to unite the two great titles and to conmct up the hlghvvnv jif thp countrv. shall be dedicated upon this the natal dn of the great Ameri can, In whose honor re nre assembled "B rommon consent, therefore I dedicate the fioo-evelt boulevard ti i e pemorv of the twentj sixth Present ft the 't'nired States " Tribute Shown b TUgs Earl this morning (lags were brave 'AJving in the breP7i from the purr he Tjof homes that line the boulevard and I AMERICAN RED CROSS Southeastern Pennsylvania Chapter Fall Rally for Presentation of Plans Mrs. August Belmont of New York and Dr. Thomas E. Green of Washington Speak Clover Room, Bellevue-Stratford Thursday, October 28, 3 o'Clock WmTichets Reauired & Public Invited the circle. Tlili tribute to tloosrrelt wag paid nt the suggestion of the log.in Improvement Association, the organi zation In charge, of the oietvlses, A concert by the I'ollee Hand lniiu Ciliated the dedirntory ceremonies. Thli vvan followed by nn Invocation bv the Uev. William narups Lower, pastor of Holy Trinity l'rosb.v torian t iiuri'ii, jignu. i lien mere wu'i I singing uj tne 5011001 cniiiiren urnicr tne '.""'p , ".'"".i""' "M,t " HllWir l lilt ..t.fk "J HIV IH'III mwjj Si outs. Mil) or .Moore'M address fo lovvod After thin Mr. Wt'glein nml l.awience K. Abbott, editor of the Outlook, spoke. The slngln; of "Amer ica" b the school children tlnllied the exercise. After the ceremonies Mrn. Theodore Hoosevelt and Mrs. Kermlt lloonevclt vvcie the luncheon clients of Mrs White nt 1S10 South Uittenhouoe square. Mr. llohlns had na his gncft ('nptain Hoosevelt and Mr. Abbott at his home. 1710 locust street The Hoosevelt memorial meeting that wan planned for tonight at the Academy of Music will not be held because the speakers selected for the occasion will be engaged elsewhere by the Itepubllcnn national committee. State Has Hlrthdny Kxerclses The Hoosevelt party will return to New York at G o'clock. Ilesldes Mr. Edmonds, the members of the reception committee were Mrs. Thomas Hoblus and Mrs. J. William White, vice chairman: Mrs. Morris X. (Jibb. Mrs. (Jeorge Wharton Pepper Thomas ltobins, Mrs. Arthur X. Sevvall. IMvvnrd A. Van Vnlkenburg nnd Oiarles II. Von Tagcu, secretary nnd treasurer. BYSTANDER KILLED Quarrel of Foreigners In Mill Fatal to Onlooker Cnateslllo. Pa., Oct. 27. Charles Lindemnn, an Innocent bjstander, was killed last night during n iiiarrel be- tween two foreigners in n local plate , mill, .tegmnn Htc-Dert, n uussian. ue came infuriated hcn Polish laborers called him a Bolshevist nnd seizing a st of heavy Iron tongues, hurled them at his tormentors. The intended victims nnnttA.1 nation t 1 A T t ! ll A 1 ft 1 letlU utl!1flr sirm "" " ; " - on the head, djing instantly from n crushed skull Stcibert was rushed to the local police station when other workers threatened his life. At the inquest to day he was held for trial on n charge of manslaughter. Woman Hit by Trolley Oct. 13 Dies Mk.i f itffninl TtTrtllt utvtv t nncu (J v,yi N()rth Fiftletll street (1l,j n ,(t nt t,a, WMt v!,!),,,!,.!, TT..mponn.hie Hosnltal. of iniuries re ceived when she was struck bv a trol , lev nt Plfty-second nnd Warrington, streets, on October 13. i ST ' f Hf i "Merode" V WV4 and 1 J WINTER loses its terrors when you're protected by rhe cosy warmth of "Merode" and "Harvard Mills" hand-finished underwear. And yet you're not conscious of having on "winter underwear" it fits so perfectly, without a wrinkle, and is finished so daintily ! The fabrics, soft and fine, are firmly knit and the garments keep their shape from beginning to end. All weights and models for women, children and babies are to be. had at leading shops. Winship, Boit & Co. Wakefield, Mas3. EVENING PUBLIC I HEART FAILURE JS Wl'SWINEY VERDICT Coroner's Jury Returns Open Finding at Inquest Plans for Funoral Completed REPRISALS THREATENED By Hie. AMOclntnl Press Iximlnn. Oct. 27. A jury of ten men after twelve minutes' dellberatiou this morning, returned nn open verdict nt the inquest over the bodv of Tord Mayor MncHwiney. or roric, vvno cued in imx tnn nrlsnn earlv Monday, from the re sults of his seventy-thrce-day hunger atfsilf a The verdict was that the deceased had died from heart failure, due tn n Hinted heart, nnd acute delirium fol- lnu-lnir KMirrr. which wns due to ex hnuitlon from prolonged refusal to take The widowed Indv mayoress, dressed In black and heavllv veiled, was the only witness on behnlf of the Mac-Sw-lnev family, nnd was the dominant figure' of the proceedings. Her com posure wns Indicated by her nuitk and pointed replies. Widow on Witness Stand Mrs. MncRwlncy successfully resisted the continued attempts of the coroner to have her characterize her late hus band's occupation otherwise than as a "volunteer officer of the Irish republi can army." The Inquest was attended by thirty -five persons besides the coroner and I jur . These Included Mrs. MncHwiney, tuo" ,cna )or,i mayor's brother Sean (Jolin), his sisters Annie and alary, ins private chaplain, Father Dominic; the lord maor's secretary, the town clerk and cltv solicitor of Cork, representa tives of Irish civic and political orgnnl zatinns nnd home office and other British officials. The coroner was asked to issue a burial pcimit. sn.ving interment would be made in Irelnnd. The coroner de clined to do this, asserting be hadnoj jurisdiction. . ' The home office, however, granted the I permit without delay, and the body of Iird Ma.vor MacSvvlney was turned, over to his relatives in time to permit the original plnns to be carried but. i Tie livening .News touay prints rne I folliwing statement, which it sn.vs was mntie m tuo uepiiij icrn mayor on. oru : 'e nic Icuv ng behind us In vour capital ninny of our patriots who will "Harvard Mills" Underwear m LEDGER - PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1920 iee that the debt of your government Is fullv imld. Hie Kngllsh rfov.vitiieut miiy tMnl. they have stilled u. but tiieve wi'i be lepi'sals, ond sorn." Houlo of Funeral Belatlves of Terence MacSwIney were today completing arrangements for the funeral of the lord mayor. It was expected tho body would be turnftd over to them by government authorities following the autopsy, and plans ah ready nnnounced contemplate Its re moval to Ht. George's Cathedral. It will probably remain there until Thurs day, when a requiem mass will be cele brated, after which the funeral proces sion will start for Euston station. Cork, Oct. 27. (By A. P.) Out side of the Cork city hall there wan posted yesterday the following notice: "The second Republican lord mayor of Cork lies, as lay his predecessor, murdered by the British Government. Cork Is In mourning. Citizens, or nny section of thein, will take only author ized action. Orders will be issued by proper authority." lestcrdoy passed quietly, with the exception of a slight stir caused by military raids on banks In search of firearms placed In vaults for safekeep ing. Soldiers not on duty were re stricted to their barracks. Wihon Strongly Upholds Article X Continued from Tnire One way to assure the world of peace : that Is by making It so dangerous to break the pence that no other nation will have the audacity to attempt It. We should not be deceived Irtto sup posing thnt imnerln'istic nchemes ended wih the defeat of (icrmany. or that Germany is the only nation that entertained such schemes or was moved by sinister ninbltlons nnd long standing jenlnusles to nttack the very structure of civilization. There nre other nations which are likelj to be powerfully moved or are already moved by commercial jealousy, bj the desire to dominate nnd to have their own way Irt politics and in enter prise, and It 1h necessary to check them and to apprise them that the MVm& A Mm?, Mii4 tin .iras uj s P';-i -tit Vi WW P 4kk Yi.&X m i.it '45 Am i'. , fW', n"s2i '" mm , . , itfZlW. '-,: 4;t ; "&': world will be united against them as It was against Germany if they at tempt any similar thing. . ' The mothers and sisters nnd wives of the country know the sacrifice of war. They will feel thnt we havo misled them and compelled them to make an entirely unnecessary sacri fice of their beloved ones If we do not make It ns certain lift it can be mado that no similar 'sacrifice will be de manded of mothers dud sisters nnd wives In the future. This duty Is so plain that It seems to me to consti tute a primary demand upon the conscience of every one ot us. Guard Against Future Wars It Is inconceivable to most of us that any men should have been so false or so heartless as to declare that the women of the country would again have to suffer the Intolerable burden nnd privation of war If the League of Nations vvero adopted. The League of Nations Is tho vfcll-con-sldeied effort of the whole group of nations who were opposed to Germany to hccurc themselves and the rest of mankind against a repetition of the war. It will have baclf of It the watch fulness anil mnterinl force of nil these nations, and is such a guarantee of a peaceful future ns no well-informed man can question who does not doubt tbo whole spirit with which the war was conducted against Germany. The grent moral Influence of the United States will bo absolutely thrown away if we. do not complete the task which our soldiers and snllors so heroically undertook to execute. One thing ought to bo said, and sold very clearly, about Article X of the covenant of the League of Na tions. It Is the specific pledge of the members of the league that they will unite to resist exactly the things which Germany attempted, no matter who attempts them In the future. It Is ns exact a definition as could be given In general terms of the outrage which Germany would havo commit ted If It could. Germany violated the territorial In tegrity of her neighbors and flouted their political Independence in order to aggrandize herself, nnd almost every war of history has originated In such designs. It is significant that the nations of the world should havo good overcoat costs the least When it comes to price, a good overcoat and a poor one cost about the same; but when it comes to wear, the good one costs the least because it lasts longer If you aren't satisfied with our clothes money back Hart SchafFner Sl Marx .cv, df M ' 'l-v' w?:. vi- i ', i' ":.;0A TS,V "J,.-'?' HPPPPLjBHBI' i?vh1 ',,: X " (MmiiaMKZ'k&i4:m tiw&i You Are the Hart, and our at last combined to defino the gen eral causo of warnnd to exercise such concert ns mny bo necessary to pre vent such methods. v Article X Itedeems Pledge Article X, therefore, ,1s the spe cific redemption-of the pledge which the free governments of the world gnve to their people when they en tered the war. They promised their people not only that Germany woitld be prevented' from carrying ontiher plot, but that, the, world would be safeguarded in the future from simi lar designs. We have now to choose whether we will mnke good or quit. We have joined Issue and tho Issue Is between the spirit nnd purpose of the United States' and the spirit nnd purpose of imperialism, no matter where it shows Itself, The spirit of Im perialism Is absolutely opposed to free government, to the safe life of free nations, to the development of peaceful Industry, and to the com pletion of tho righteous processes of civilization. It seemB to me, nnd I think it will seem to you, that it U our duty to show the Indomitable will nnd Irre sistible majesty of the high purpose of the United States, so thnt the pnrt we plnycd in the whr ns soldiers nnd pallors may bo crowned with the achievement of lasting pence. No one who opposes the ratification of tho treaty of Versailles nnd the adoption of the covenant of the League of Nations has proposed nny other adequate, means of bringing nbout bettlcd peace. There Is no other available or possible means, and this means is ready to hand. They have, on the contrary, tried to por Miado that tho very pledge contained In Article X, which Is the essential plan of security, Is Itself a threat of war. Two Kinds of Americanism It is, on the contrary, nn nssurnnco of the concert of all the free peo ples of the world in the future, ns In the recent post, to see justice done nnd humanity protected nnd vindi cated. This Is the true, the real Americanism. This Is the role of leadership nnd championship of the right which the lenders of the re public intended that It should play. . .i i ' ? j m J8HI Ki -v. '"?K V-ft "f-ir. KjMEjUgjm W iuUaL Doubly Insured at this Store; Schaffner & Marx Guarantee own Strawbridge & Mothier , : Tho so-called Americanism which wo hear so much prating about now is spurious nnd inycntel for 'party pur poses only. . ,, , This' choice Is tho supremo choice of the present campaign. It Is re grettablo that this .choice should bo ass6cln'ted with n party contest. As compared with the choice of n course of action that now underlies every other, tho fate of parties is a matteh of Indifference, Parties' nre signifi cant now in this contest only be-" cause the Totcrs must make up thelr minds which of the two parties Is most likely to secure the Indispensa ble result. The nntlon was never called upon to mnke a more solemn determination thnn itimust now inane. The whole future moral force of right In the world depends Upon" the United States rathor thnn upon nny other nntlon, nnd It would be pitiful Indeed, If, nftcr so mnny great free peoples had entered tho grent league, wo should hold nloof. I sug gest that the candidacy of every can dldato for whatever office bo tested 1)y this question, Shall wo or shall we not redeem the great moral obliga tions of the United States? Holt Leads Delegation Thp visit of the pro-league Republl cnns.to the White House marked the first political reception the President had held during the presidential cam paign nnd the President's address to the delegation was the first he had made since he wns tnken ill more than a year ngo. The delegation included: Hamilton Holt, editor of the Independent, who acted as spokesman : Theodore Marburg, of Baltimore : Edwin P. Gay. president of the New York Evening Post; .lohn P. Moors, chairman of the League of Nations Club of Massachusetts; Mrs. John P. Moors, treasurer of. the Pro League Ilcpubllcnn Quotas; Mrs. Schuyler N. Warren, of New York, di rector of the League for Polltlcul Edu cation ; F. N. Warren, Jr. ; Mrs. Mal colm Forbes, president of the Women Voters' Association of Massachusetts; Joseph M. Price, chairman of the board of trustees of tho Now York City Club ; Dr. John Bates Clnik, professor of economics, Columbia University; Dr. John Spencer Bassctt, professor of his tory, Smith College; D. G. Jlowso, New York; Colonel Samuel P. v J ir&z M; mmmmm. wBaSMmiK Kt& U iVI ',,'!& w 11 r; Mi HB"Ye A MMiMmv ''yiM','i',"Ati',,'y'Ai7'"4" ' iVf"-."'" I .11 ' -"Ps PnnlYnU Italirstd m. H. Cooknxan, Arc Co. Wm, -trcMUel 'Turner for Concrete" , Ono of many buildings In 'Philadelphia but It by tho Turner Condroto JStcel Co., 'whoso entire organization has been taken over by our local office. ' Othor work includes: John Wanomakcr Acme Tea Co. John H. Smalts ;A. II. &T. H. Lippincott J. Sullivan &Sons Co. TURNER ConstructioR-'Co. 1113 fluniom Hfcrl Wethcrill, head of the pro-leagun n publican movement of, Philadelphia- il. Iter. Arthur J. Brown, Now Yorl honorary vico president of the LenrnJ to Enforce Peace, nnd George K. Hun ton, New York. DeBtroyera Are 8alvaged Five condemned torpedo boat de 8tro.vers, sold as junk by the Navy De partment, nnd dismantled In a marine boncvnrd at Brldesburg, are being con verted Into fruit carriers by the Clin ton Co. at the foot of Ontario street Delawaro river. Tlieso boats, with fine records in tho Spanish -American and world wars, are the Worden, Perry Whipple, Truxton and Stewart. Thej will form the nucleus of a fast fruit service between Mexican and Texin ports. :- i'i s'V V ' O '. K&f ?, ':&. twi A - .'S . i.S ?? m '. ,''V -' ' .tl v '&' XV kt;. .JO? -cr K rf 'V'Tiii wm? E.si.i'Vj. J 'ft:u ffi wm Mhii YUBax ?i5HH mm m& iztm ws.fov mm &T.1 V'. ' UWJV. A $& 'ft: "4 wml mm ft f'i H mm r' n tfi H-' km a wmmj ; ( !'A s tx-ifl t W- 'v .SWifr !W .rtJffifflfe.t.W.tt.rt-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers