! !''i I.i Sixty-Sixth Congress Finds Many Vital Domestic and International It HARRISBURG l§S§fßll TELEGRAPH olar-3ni>epcn&ent LXXXVIII— No. 276 16 PAGES "Master "at "the Post Office at lla"rrisburg HARRISBURG, PA. MONDAY EVENING. DECEMBER 1. 1919. ""ASiS!S& tnSiSRJW" "SM'ti" 1 HOME EDITION ' NEW CONGRESS TO STAY IN SESSION UNTIL ELECTIONS Large Attendance When Gavels Fall at Noon; Many Important Laws FORMAL COMMUNICATION OF NOTIFICATION SENT WILSON * By Associated Press Washington, Dec. 1. —The sixty-sixth Congress met tu-day in its first regular session, which was expected to continue until ! just before the Presidential election next tall. There was a large ; attendance, both in the Senate anil House, when the gavels of j Vice-President Marshall and Speaker Gillett fell promptly at noon, j In accord with an agreement reached between Republican and Democratic leaders before the session opened, the usual for- j mality of appointing a committee to notify the President that Congress was in session was dispensed with, because of the j President's illness. A formal communication of notification was , drafted and dispatched instead. . * j With the Congress already ':Tn | harness" and with much legislation j . ready for immediate constderation, ! little delay in the beginning of work was expected. Calling the geuate and House rolls for quorums, ap pointment of committees to notify thf> President and each other that Congress again was "on • the job were among the customary open ing formalities. Long fight On Treat\ Hue. Besides legislative recommenda tions, President Wilson's message t was cxpeeted to deal with inter na tional relation and particularly with the treaty of Versailles, while early ratification of the treaty with compromised reserva tions was "expected by many sena tors. with hopes of action before, the new year, leaders believed the issues involved would be carried into the presidential campaign. Politics is due to play a large • part in the events of the new ses sion. the last before the nominating conventions next summer and the final campaigns in the fall, headers propose to have Congress recess for the convention and work through afterward into October. enactment of legislation is ex pected to begin immediately. The Senate to-day had pending, with privileged status the Cummins -rail road bill with its provisions against strikes and for return of the rail roads to private ownership. In the House, the bill to restrict immi gration and provide for deporta tion of al-en radicals was first on the calendar. The House probably will be oceupied largely with the appropriation hills for man> weeks and leaders hope to enact several measures before the holi day adjournment, to begin about Dr cember 20 and continue to Janu ary 5. Railroad Rill Vndocided. hong debate on the railroad bill in the Senate was anticipated and leaders had little hopes of its enact ment before January 1. the date on which the President has said the roads would be returned to pri vate operation. A temporary reso lution continuing guaranteed com pensation for the carriers until per manent legislation is completed will be passed if necessary. Among the measures expected to be completed this month are the o 1, coal, gas and phosphate land leasing bill and the Edge measure, authorizing formation of corpora tions to finano" American export trade. Both bills are now in con ference. Besides the treaty of Versailles, several other treaties are pending and promise to evoke long Senate debate. Three treaties, one guar anteeing assistance to France in event of German aggression, that [Continued on Page 2.] Strike of 1,500 Switchmen Ends as Suddenly and as Unexpectedly as It Began By Associated Press Kansas City. Mo.. Dec. I. As sud denly and unexpectedly as it began >atu'-day. the strike of 1.500 railroad switchmen in the local yards was called off early to-day. The action was taken at a secret meeting which began yesterday and '.astod far into the night, wlren it was understood a proposition appropria tion. sponsored by more conservative members of the unions to end the walkout, was put to a vote and car ried. Farly this morning a delegation >.f strikers appeared at the office of \V. M. Corbett. general manager of Ihe Kansas City terminal railway and an nounced the men were ready to re turn to work. Reasons for the decision was not forthcoming. but it was understood that an announcement at the meet ing by IV. Anderson, of Cleveland, a vice-president of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, that the strike was unauthorized and that strike benefits would be withheld, had much to do with the final action. Dissatisfaction with the present wage scale and with the outcome of the recent conference of national union officials in Cleveland, was rc ™ sponsible for the strike, it is said. The two-day walkout paralyzed the shipping in the railroad yards. ITHE WEATHER? Jlarrlsburg and Yleinlly: Partly cloudy and continued cold to night nnd Tuesday, lowest tem perature to-night nlioiit Z1 de gree*. Eastern I'ennsj I vanla: I'nrtly cloudy and continued cold to night nnd Tuesday. Moderate west winds. Iliveri The Susquehanna river and nil lis hrnnehes will fall. A stage or nhnut It. I feet Is Indi cated for Harrlsliitrg Tuesday , morning. - EXPECT DEBATE ON MEXICAN STATES Washington. Doc. 1. —Senators and representatives, buck tO-da> for the regular session of Con gress, took a live interest in Intest dispatches front Mexico,and there were indication that debate would | break loose in both bouses at any time on the general Mexican situ ation. Several senators wlio had expected to discuss the situation said they would await publica tion of the last note front this government before expressing ' their views. In some quarters it was believed that the President s message to Congress, to be pre sented to-morrow, would have a good deal to say about Mexico. WOULD RETAIN RAILROADS UNDER FEDERAL RULE Senator LaFollette Also Fa vors Government Own- | ership of Lines Washington, Dee. 1. Asserting that government ownership of rail roads is logical and inevitable. Sena- 1 tor LaFollette, Repuolican, of Wis- , consin. in a minority report on the Cummins railroad bill, urged that the roads be retained under Federal operations for an experimental per- i iod of at least five years . The anti-strike provisions of the Cummins measure were assailed vig orously by the Wisconsin senator who declared it was impossible to take away the workers' right to, strike. Senator said the bill! proposed to retain most of the vices : with few of the virtues of govern- ! ment control, private operation had ! demonstrated its "rottenness and in efficiency," and that Federal opera- | tion during the war did not get a' fair test. t In urging five years' control Sena- 1 tor LaKolletto said he understood I this period also was favored by for- ! I wer Director General McAdoo, Di- ! rector General Hines and two mem- 1 bers of the Interstate Commerce I Commission. Body of Long Missing Woman Found Jammed Into Rotting Trunk By Associated Press i.-iwinu. Mich., Dec. I.—Jammed j into a rotting trunk which was con- ! cealed under a pile of shingles in the ' cellar of her home, the body of a j, woman, believed to have been Maud Tabor, missing about three years, | was found here yesterday by Iter , sister, Florence Tabor Critihlow. ! It had been reported that Miss ' Tabor died on a ranch in the west . a few months after her disappear- t ance. Circumstances prior to hec-i disappearance are now being inves tigated by the authorities. The young woman was a gratlu- j ate of the University of' Michigan, an instructor of foreign languages and the daughter of the late Lester Tu- ' bor, prominent attorney. Steel Striker Killed and Many Injured in Disorders By Associated Press . i Wheeling. W. Va„ Dec. 1. A steel i striker was killed. Sheriff W. E. Clayton, of Marshall county, shot . and seriously wounded, and a deputy : and another striker suffered gun- | ! shot wounds in a riot when a mob of ' I strikers ami their sympathizers' I clashed with a sheriff's posse at the gates of the Riverside mill of the i National Tube Company, tit Red wood, near here, this morning. Charleston. IV. \"a.. Dee. 1. a! , detachment of state poliee is being hurriedly mobilized for strike dutv! at Beinvood, where rioting broke ! out this morning according to tin- i nounepment by Governor Cornwell. who received a call for troops from i , Sheriff Clayton, of Marshall conn-I ■ ty. j If the Spiritualists Really Think They ' Can Bring Back Departed Spirits ] ■0 r — LilL, d I | f ■ N/ ; lh : It !> &/ j FEW MOMENTS { VERSATION J| ' P I _ REALTY SALES DOUBLE THOSE SN NOV. OF 1918 MOIL- Than 3,000 Properties Assessed at $8,565,075 Sold Since Fil-st of Year Real estate activity in the city eon i tinued during November sales being more titan double those reported in the same month in 1918 according to, i City Assessor James C. Thompscon. Last month 360 properties were transferred with an assessed vatua | tion of $978,240, while in November ■' 1918, there were 137 sales with an as ; sessed valuation of $360,670. Since January 1 there have been 3,113 properties sold, valued for tax , ation at $8,565,075, and in the same | period in 1918, sales totaled 1.736.! with a value on the properties of $4.-, 113,150. { Sales since January 1, according to wards, follow: Ward. Number. As. Valuation I 1 155 $244,570,00 j ; 2 312 605,585.00 3 70 1.483.090.00 $ 85 570,215.00 ! 5 174- 525.970.00 6 132 299,360.00 7 286 471.505.00 8 218 500,995.00 ! 9 446 1,245,775.00 I 10 463 1,073,575.00 1 11 262 522.330.00 j 12 166 422.100.00 'l3 288 517,775.00 ! 14 56 82.220.00 | Totals 3.113 $8,565,075.00 j TO MAKE PEACE MOVE Dec. i. - An attempt to j make a peace treaty with Hungary j through the new Hungarian govern ' ment was decided upon by the Su preme Council to-day. <6VARUS CI.ASII Belgrade. Dec. 1. A frontier clash between Serbians and a Hun garian detachment is announced in ! advices received to-day from tlie vi cinity of Prekomury. JAILERS HAVE I WITH 800 ' Deppens Resigns as Storekee Filled NVith County j With only 81 prisoners in the coun- , ty jail us compared with 212 one year | ai?o. the board of prison inspectors ! * to-day accepted the resignation of Ir ; vin K. Peppen as storekeeper at the 1 I prison and decided it would not be < necessary to appoint a successor, l One of the inspectors in speaking i of the action said: Since prohibition j became effective there hctp been a big ' | drop in the number of prisoners at j 'he jail. A year ago we had an aver- • I. W. W. BAND IS FORCED TO PLAY NATIONAL ANTHEM , Detroit. Mich.. Doc. I. On i command by Police Commissioner Indies tile large audience gather ed here last night for an I. W. W. meeting stood during the enforced playing, by their band, of '-'The Star Spangled Banner." The j hymn was called for by American Legion members who had pre empted the first ten rows in the 1 hall* after the crowd had stood j and cheered for "The Marseil- j laise" and a Hussion anthem. | Four hundred policemen and 500 i American Legion members at- j tended. William D. Haywood/ forbidden j by Inches in a telegram to To- , ledo last night to address the I meeting, did not come to Detroit, j SACCHARIN SAID ! ! HARMFUL WHEN ! USED FOR SUGAR I Dr. Ruunick Says Coal Tarj Derivative Is Injurious to Health . j Saccharin, widely exploited as aj substitute for sugar in _ these days 1 j of famine, was to-day declared to be | | unfit for food purposes by Dr. John i M. J. ltaunick, city health officer. j Saccharin is not a food nor Is it j j a suitable substitute for sugar, Dr. • j Ruunick said. It is regarded by ! .some eminent health authorities to! be injurious to health, he added. j The nature of the product was de- | | scribed by the health officer. It Is I j derived from coal tar and is devoid j lof food value, lie said. When sub-j [Continued on Page 2.] EASY TIME >ZE PROHIBITED! per and His Place Will Not Re j Prison Almost Empty I age of 200 daily, now it is VI way.s be- j j low 100. ' "Many of the prisoners there now j are serving sentences, but with no liquor on sale the usual list of drunks ! and other offenders arrested on minor charge* has been wiped out.We found 1 that with the decrease in the number of prisoners the management of the jail c<>uid be efficiently continued without namipg; a successor to Mr. : Deppen. EXPECT MINERS j TO TURN DOWN 14 P. C. RAISE Central Pennsylvania Opera-j tors Look For Men to ' I Delay Action By Associated" Press. i Philadelphia. Dec. 1. —II is pre • dieted by offiqials of the Association ' of Bituminous Coal Operators of j i Central Pennsylvania, that the prop- j | osition of a fourteen per cent, wage | | increase made to the miners yester- | j day. would be rejected. One official , ; predicts that the whole subject will | be referred by the miners to the j' j union officials at Indianapolis who j j would in all likelihood, lie said, call i a convention to consider the offer of j i the operators. j John C. Farsyth, of Clearfield. Pa., i j secretary of the operators' associa- j | tion, said the owners of Central i I Pennsylvan a mines had more than ! i met the conditions of Administrator | j Garfield. Wage advances heretofore j granted, he said, brought the pay of I j miners in his district to within four ! ' | per cent, of the peak of living costs, j | yet the operators were willing t > . I accept the government's fourteen ! 1 ; per cent, advance in order to keep j i the mines working. Gai'fiehl Notified The operators after an all-day! I session in this city yesterday de- | ■ j cided to grunt the increase. | A telegram to this effect was sent i ] to Dr. IC. A. Garfield, ruel adminis-| | trator at Washington, j The notice to be posted at the!' I mines reads: "The government of the United i ' States having decided that mine j i | workers an- entitled to fourteen per ! cent, average increase to bring ' j i wages up to the increased cost of | living. th : s company gives notice ! j that fourteen per cent, .average in- I crease in wages is hereby granted : I effective at once, such increase to be , ! applied to the wage basis provided i i for in the present wage scale agree- | ments, thus preserving the competi- 1 tivo basis therein agreed to. The ' new scale or wages will be posted as ! < | soon as posible." I < With Only 3 Carloads of Coal, Town Faces Acute Coal Famine j1 ( By Associated Pr -:s < St. Joseph, Mo, Dec. 1. This city with only three carloads of coal in the railroad yards and with fuel oil practically unobtainable, to-day i faces a complete closing of the light and power plant, the water plant i and all leg industries. A mass meet- I j ing of citizens was called for to-day i ! to consider the situation. .Conditions < are said to result muinly from the i strike of trainmen in Kansas City. ! i GIVES BOOST TO 1 RECORD BREAKING; EXTRAVAGANCE! tilass Wants Five Times as Much to Hun l". S. as Was I "sod Before War FIVK BILLIONS IS ASKEDj Army and Navy and Interest on Debt Are j Among Largest Items Hy Associated Press. j \\ n-liingtnn. Dec. I.—The record i billion dollar congresses of ordinary ' peace times faded into the past to- , day when Secretary Glass, present-] ing the annual estimates, proposed j appropriations of practicnllj live hit-i lion dollars for conducting the peace j time activities of the government during; the fiscal year 1921. According to these figures it will , cost more than live times as much to ' conduct the peace time affairs of government as it did in the year ■ immediately preceding the Woild War. The greatest individual estimates i for expenditures, of course, go to the ! Army and the Navy. The yearly in- ! terest on the war debt, however is] $1.017,500,000, which sum alone is greater than all the appropriations for all purposes whatsoever of any peace time congress. All in all the estimated justify the predictions made oh the tioor of t'ongress during consideration of the j war lax hills, that the present gene- ! ration would not see the government conducted at an expense of less than four billions a year. Extreme Socialists Leave Seats as King of Italy Begins Speech Home. Dec. I.—When King Victor Kmanuel entered the parliament to- j day to deliver the speech from the j throne lie was received with loud , cheers. Premier Nitti requested the ] audience to be seated. Upon this j the Extreme Socialists shouted; i "Viva Socialism," and left the chum- i ber. Their seats were immediately ] taken by other deputies. The King, in his speech from the j throne, said that the confidence and j sympathy of the nation were indis- . pensable to the parliament, as was uutiooal collaboration in all move- i ments for the good of the people. | Italy, he said, after her great vie- | tory, must direct fill her efforts to ; the works of peaces The King began by greeting the j heroes of the Army and Navy. The virtues ami energies they had dis- i played during the war would serve to hasten the economic x-econstruc tion, he said. "Italy, through the war, continued the Kifig, had gained some-of her national frontiers but not all. Her aspirations, ho declared, had every where been considered just. The as pirations of Italy in the Adriatic, he asserted, did not cloak any military design, and for the most part pos sessed no economic value. They were confined, he said, to the defense of native ideals. The protection of Italian populations was the duty and right of Italy. "We have no imperialistic views," continued His Majesty, 'and intend in no way that the peace of Europe should be disturbed." Italy regards with the liveliest sympathy the rise of the popular , classes, said the King, who charac terized the movement as one which should produce in the interior ot' the country a program of intensive work and production, and, in con nection with foreign polities, an in creasingly democratic co-operation between nations. Governor Sproul Will Address Republicans of National Committee (Special to the Telegraph) Washington, Pa., Dec. 1. —Gover- nor William C. Sproul, of Pennsylva nia, will, probably be one of the two State executives to address the Re publican National Committeemen when they meet here next week. The Pennsylvania Governor has been resting at Hot Springs, but will stop here on his way back to the State capital. It is the plan of the committee to have an open session for speeches during the meet'ng at which the convention city will be selected and arrangements for the 1920 conven tion outlined. At this time two rep resentative Republican Governors, one from the eastern states and one from the west, will be invited to ad drew tlie national council of the Republican party. Governor Sproul will he one of them. Destroyer and Ship With Troops Leaves Fiume on New Mission 11 y Associated Press Hclgrnde, Dec. 1. Great activ ity prevails at Fiume and a destroy er left Saturday night, presumably destined for Za'ra, according to the Serbian press bureau. The merchant vessel Adri.-t followed almost imme diately with 1,000 shock troops on board. Reporls from Fiume state that] "Admiral" Rizzo, commander of the D'Annunzian fleet there has gone on hoard a destroyer and purposes ' occupying Sebenieo. IIAM) TO REORGANIZE ' A meeting has been culled for to morrow evening at. 7 o'clock at the i Armory for the purpose of complet ing the organization of the reor ganized Eighth- Regiment Rand. Several places arc J-t 11 open for old or new members. Captain Philip T. Meredith has charge of arrange- i ments. T i RE-ELECTED HEAD OF CITY SCHOOLS i ROBERT A. FINDERS J ENDERS AGAIN ' MADE PRESIDENT OF SCHOOL BOARD Dr. If. L. Keen Klecled Viee-j i ( President; Two New Members Sealed Robert A'. Knders was re-elected i president at the reorganization meet- i nig of the City School Board. Dr. C. I . E. L. Keen was elected vice-president I j to succeed W. Frank Witinan. Two of the throe new members of ! i the board. William !'avoid and How-j j ard M. Bingaman, were present and j j took thme oath of office administered i ( by A. Carson Stamm, who presided at I ' the reorganization meeting. Franklin I i J. Roth, the third new member of the i | board, could not be present because jof liis work as court stenographer, j court being in session at the time the | • School Board met. I Dr. Keen named Mr. Enders for re-1 [Continued on Page 15.] 'a T ;| .■ i ■ ' 4* ' s A * ' 2* 4 *?* / MB "2* L Tj to tii. tew ;!i i,uaniry. Major Filler served, in the 4 . 4* i),-. . 3, X from Carlisle. JT* ± 4 X AGED Carpenter FALLS DEAD . 4 |p While fixingwindow pan< Ji I Jj home of H. J. .Roberts. 1 ?29 North Third street, this 4 : jj* I 4 4 1 jT * ■ 4 -> 3 A T 4 S A '4 : f S of t £ POINDEXTEK CHARGES GAG LAW TACTICS* SI £ gI 4* y, A I 4 9 t 4 i . 3 X 3 <4* •*§ T* i• ■ ' [*§ 4 - • '' an • oared *' • . ■enlion £ X ' • 4* '* J MAYBE THtfV COULD'T ST.EEP . " 4 H-arrisburg.- To-dnv the State Highway Depart- J J ment beean business at 9 A M. instead of K'hs dhring the r 'n X Everyone in the department turned up , X2oto 30 tin lutes ahpSd of time'. The department closes I :4 Jj. (WW- -4- I 1... ■ MARRIAGE LICENSES , ~r . \\ I 111 ji ■>• Toll?) i, ml Mil) It !<--. ) guimton n, Oliio; Chnrlr* I, * ' \\ hi inker. Wa) ni-ln.r<>. mill MiiriuiiM'tH- It. I'.mmrtf. Vork Hnrlmr.l #'< ~4, *'•■• M " ' .Wnuil I. Aur.imll, M llllam.buran 1.u1h.-r A. Ilrndt r 3 ~ nnd l.uurn K. lortnry, lOnolu. I r "MERE EXCUSES" U. S. REPLIES TO | MEXICAN NOTE I Avoids Judicial Discussion of | "Irrelevant or Unimpor tant Matters" | REITERATES DE M A X D S iMust (live Up Jenkins For Re- I quest Is Founded on "Right and Justice" By Associated Press. Klj PASO, Tex., Doc. I.—An unverified report was current liere to-day that William O. Jen kins. American consular agent ! at Puehla. Mexico, had lieen liberated from jail. Andres <>. (tarda, consul general for Mex ico here, said lie hail heard the report, lint no vertlllcatlon of the rumor had been received Washington, Dee. 1. Renewing ' its request for the immediate release i of Consular Agent Jenkins, imprlson i t>d at Puebla, the latest American | note to Mexico, made public here to : day. arraigns the Mexican govern ; incut conduct in severe terms and : characterizes it as a studied attempt !to ensnare the American consular 1 agent in the intricacies of legal pro i eeedings. No ultimatum was served I and no indication was given of what i the American government's course . would be if Jenkins is not imme diately released. ; The note begins by saying the : United States declined to be drawn ; into a judicial discussion of "irrele vant or unimportant matters," and 'says the request for the consular | agent's release is founded on "right I and justice." i The United States, the note says, i "is constrained to the opinion" that Carranza arguments that the ease ! is being Investigated and that Jen ! kins has not taken opportunity to he | released on bail are "mere excuses." I This government does not admit, the note says, that it is necessary to keep Jenkins in juil while his casi I is being investigated arid this gov j ernment "fails to discern" that the I "intricacies of the Mexican penal Other Social on Page 5