ALL MERCHANDISE ADVERTISED IN THE TRIBUNE is GUARANTEED Vol. LXXX No. 20,9(7 (Copyright. 1920, New York Tribune Inc.? First to Last?the Truth: News ?Editorials?Advertisement THE WEATHER Partly cloudy Ui day and to-morrow; continued warm; gentle variable winds Tell report em teat vmsje SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1920 :;;:?;:;: TWO CENTS In Greater New York THREE CENTS With*? SCO Mile? FOX'S? CENTS Elaewbar* ?Companys Gift to Cox Covered Up, Is Charge fitness at Senate In? quiry Says Dayton Con? cern Drew Check Ap? parently to Pay Note jCol. Deeds Among Company Officers Political Parties Report ed in Control of Two War Veterans' Papers from The Tribune's Washington Bureau ' WASHINGTON, Sept. 24.? Charges that Governor Cox has ac? cepted campaign contributions from corporations, and that a large part of the money was spent through liquor organizations were made be? fore the Senato committee investi gating campaign expenditures to S?y by George B. Lockwood, editor ?f The National Republican. Lockwood appeared before the committee as the result of a "lead" furnished by Judge Edmond H. ?Moore, Covernor Cox's pre-conven-1 tion campaign manager at San i .Francisco, who, it was testified, pur- j chased some of the business records i ei Tile National Republican and ' hid them before the committee in an effort to show that the Republican Katianal Committee was spending ! huge sums through the political | newspaper in order to conduct Re-: jobliean propaganda throughout the ?untry. Testimony before the committee cov? ered a wide range of subjects. Joseph F. Hefferr.an. pub'ishor of The Stars, and Stripes, declared his paper is con-1 trolled by the secretary of W. D.Jamie Wn, director of finance of the Demo- ; cratic National CummittPe. and that The ' American Legion Weekly is controlled hy the Republican National Commit Eg, The S'-nate committee also heard ? further evidence that Administration ; ?Skiais had gone to San Francisco at ? the time of the Democratic National I Convention at government expen?7e, and ' later it inquired into the finances of j the League to Enforce Peace. Says Check Was Covered I'p It was specifically charged by Mr. i Lockwood that in 1918 Governor ?ox I received a check for $5,000 from the Dayton Metal Products Company which Was "covered up" by means of a per? sonal note given by Governor Cox, and that in 1916 the company", through tkiee of its stockholders, also contrib? uted $21,000 of a $37,000 <~'.nd spent on behalf of President Wilson and Gov- j ernor Cox by Ohio liquor and brewing ; Interest?.. The charges threw the Democrats at the investigation into confusion, and it Is probable that Governor Cox will be summoned to appear before the Senate Committee before long to answer them. H. E. Talbot. of Dayton, president of the Dayton Metal Products Company ?ad also president of the City Nation? al Bank of Dayton, which handled the alleged contribution, was called on the j ta-g-distance telephone immediately after the charges were made. He will appear to-morrow. Senator Edge, a Re- ; publican member of the investigating ; committee, served notice that if Talbot ; cannot clear up the whole matter the Democratic nominee would be called. Senator Reed, of Missouri, the only j Democratic member of the committee | Ctent whef the charges were made, Is'.. J that the committee immediate- ? ?J investigate ?hem, although it con- | jerned Governor Cox's campaigns for ?OTernor in Ohio and was beyond the acope of the Senate committee's in fairy. Goe ; Into Past Campaigns 4n making his charges before the iomminee, Mr. Lockwood paid that he *a* offering a "lead." It proved to be the coroner's inquest in the case or the Sinn Fein councillor Lynch, who was : slain by the "black and tans" at the Royal Exchange Hotel in Dublin, is adding to the public incredulity of the official version that he was shot while trying to escape. An order to-day forbidding parades I of Sinn Fein volunteers at funerals is bitterly resented, especially in view of the possibility of a funeral at Cork at an early date. In connection with the banning of funeral parades, the inhabitants of Balbriggan have been notified by the "black and tans" that the destruction of their town will be completed if the victims of the former raid arc buried publicly. Consequently the Repub? licans attribute the new order to the influence of the "black and tans" and are asking whether the official govern? ment or the new police force is the real ruler of Ireland. By dynamiting the safe in the Dublin General Postoffice early to-day after overpowering the lone night watchman two unidentified armed men obtained more than ?'3,000 in cash and escaped. It is believed that the marauders were members of a gang of twenty (Continuad on page (href) Mrs. Spreckels to Stay in London And Face Barrett in Gem Case From The Tribute'? Furopran Bureau Copyright, 1D20, New York Tribun" Inc. LONDON, Sept. 24.?Mrs. John D. Spreckels, who has applied for a war? rant for the arrest of Captain William N. Barrett, husband of Alice Gordon Drcxel, of Philadelphia, New York and Newport, charging him with the theft of a $100,000 necklace, was much sur? prised to-day to learn that Harret was in California. She was compelled at the last moment to change her plans for returning to the United States to-mor? row and now intends to remain in Lon? don until Barrett is brought here. "I first met Barrett," said Mrs. Spreckels to-day, "in Washington in 1914 and I hadn't seen him again until I met him at the taces at Sandown this year in company with some friends. He was extremely gracious and pleus ant and I understood that he was a man of independent means. He prom? ised to havo me meet some of his irl?.nds, and as I hud been traveling around for mor? thnn a year I was glad to remain In London for a few months. Marrett kept his word, introducing me to many poraona of aocial prominence, inelMoing several titled ladies." It waa aoon after they became ?c qiiainted that Mrs. Spreckels intrusted ; her jewels to Barrett. About a fort? night later, when she phoned his apart j ment in Portrnan Square, she learned that he had left the city. She attached no importance at first to his disanpear ? anee, but when repeated inquiries brought iho SRme reply that he was out of the city, Mrs. Spreckels be? came uneasy and finally started an in? vestigation which led up to the appli? cation for a warrant for Barrett's ar I rest. In the West End the case is causing much surprise, as Bairett was acctu i tomed to moving !n the best social circles and was himself a lavish en? tertainer. .V,?., Uil Di.ipnteh t? The Tribune ?LOS ANGELES, Sept. 24.?William N. Barrett, who is in this city visiting friends, has retained II. L. Giesler, an attorney here, to represent him. It is ; expected that Barrett will fight extra j dition procecdijigs^started in London. | Domcatlo Help Problems velVH* _?_..,V'.1 hy coru-ultlni. Situation ! t,^'1 'T'"?1? Ad?, that. app,ar In The I wi-YSJ ?1?"yn_?r by ????run? a Help Wanted A<1 rhon* B.?kmm 3M? or go ?T?r r?0 tional Garment Retailers' Associate some months ago predicted a loweri of prices and said in his newspaf advertising that prices were comi down. Several retailers ventured the op ion that the widespread public given the price drops within the Ii few days will unsettle the confidei of the ultimate consumer and cai him to defer his purchases until he convinced that prices have reached 1 lowest possible level for the ti being. Bankers Look for Slow But Sure Price Declii ?Mail Order Business Falls C Seriously and a Fnrth Cut n Rates Is Like Mail order houses in New ?York ; undecided on the question of issu new lists in competition with the lo\ prices announced by Sears, Roebi i & Co. and Montgomery Ward & Co., ? Chicago. No statement could be ; taine.l from officials of the Chai Williams Stores here. Smaller n ! order houses reported that they 1 ! made no decision. S. G. Rosenbaum, president of National Cloak and Suit Company, serted that his firm, realizing t (Continued on n?t pa??) Perfumed Bath, Every Night Off, for Serva Also $35 a Week, Limousii Amusement Tickets, Fruit, Rich Steaks and Chicken Special Dispatch to The Tribune PROVIDENCE, Sept. 24.?The foil ing advertisement appeared to-day the "Help Wanted" column of an af noon newspaper here: HOUSHMAIP with ?rood appetite. moatly rirh fruit. ?teaks ?nd chlcl perfumea bnth ami nil toilet articles vlded; ?very nl?ht oft; limousine airiwcment ticket? provided; wages weekly. The advertising manager of the m Finper says the advertisement appar y was inserted in good faith and several replies already have been 1 cf?ved. Drastic Laws Enacted To Stop Rent Gouging; Evictions Are Halted 0 Teeth Put Into Rent Lan s Will Drive Gougers Out of City, Says Justice Levy ALBANY, Sept. 24.?Chief Justice Levy, of the Municipal Court in Now York City, said that the bills passed* by the Legislature to-day would make the city too hot for profiteering landlords, and that they would be driven out of Wcstchester County also. "The justices of the Municipal Court," he said, "now will be able to interpret the laws uniformly. The rent laws now have real teeth in them, and they will not only stamp out the profiteering landlord, but stop the gouging landlords making Bolsheviks out of the ignorant peoble who blame the government for the unconscionable greed of the comparatively few men who are a disgrace to the real estate com? munity.'' Wilson Defies Congress on Shipping Act Holds II Exceeded Constitu? tional Powers in Direct- i ing Him to Abrogate Commercial Treaties President Hayes Cited , ___________________ Asserts Compliance With the Act Would Be Breach of Faith With Other Nations From The Tribune's Washington Bureau WASHINGTON, Sept. 24.?President I Wilson announced to-day through the State Department that he would not carry out the provisions of the mer? chant marine act instructing him to give notice to foreign governments that they must terminate certain sec? tions of commercial treaties which con? flict with the act of the American Con? gress. The President held that Congress is without the constitutional power to di? rect the Executive to abrogate parta of treaties. * "The action sought to be imposed upon the Executive," the President de? clares, "wouid amount to nothing lesa ! than the breach or violation of said i treaties." In an official statement issued by the i State Department the point is made that the President's refusa! to comply with the direction of Congress does not : nullify the entire shipping act, but: makes inoperative Section 34, which requires the President to serve notice ; on nat?o?? that the merchant marine act ?3 supreme. Text of Official Statement The State Department announcement said: "The Department of State has been informed by the President that he does not deem the direction, contained in ! Section 34 of the so-called merchant j marine act, an exercise of any constitu? tional power possessed by the Congress. "Under the provisions of the section ; referred to the President was directed : within ninety days after the act be-i came law to notify the several govern? ments with whom the United States! had entered into commercial treaties that thi3 country elected to terminate | so much of said treaties, as restricted '? the right of the United States to im-: pose discriminating customs duties on; imports and discriminatory tonnage dues, according as the carrier vessels were domestic or foreign, quite regard-' less of the fact that these restrictions are mutual, operating equally upon the I other governments which are parties to the treaties, and quite regardless also of the further fact that the treaties contain no provisions for their termination in the manner contem? plated by Congress. Would Mean Treaty Breach "The President, therefore, considers! it misleading to speak of the 'termina? tion of the restrictive clauses of such treaties. The action sought to be im-' posed upon the Executive would; amount to nothing less than the breach ' or violation of said treaties, which are i thirty-two in number and cover every point of contact and mutual depend-, ence which constitute the modern re- j lations between friendly states. Such ; a course would be wholly irreconcilable with the historical respect which the! United States has shown for its inter- ? national engagements and would fal sify every profession of our belief in the bindirg force and the reciprocal j obligation of treaties*in general. "Secretary Colby, commenting on the (Continuad on pago four) Three More Killed in Labor Riot? in Turin Bomb Thrown Near Police Of- ; fice, Fragments Damaging Buildings in Vicinity ROME, Sept. 24.?Disorders continue at Turin and rifle firing is sometimes assuming" the character of a battle in the outskirts of the city, according to dispatches reaching Rome. Three more persons have been killed, it is said, among them being Mario San tini, president of the Young Men's Nationalist Association. A bomb was thrown in San Carlo Square, near the central police office, but no one was killed or injured. The nearby build? ings were struck by fragments. Po? lice and military authorities have made I about 200 arrests. A resolution passed by the Council of the Workmen's League, inviting the people to remain calm and not to ieop ardize negotiations in the metal work? ers' dispute by acts of violence is pub- | lished by the newspaper Avanti. LONDON, Sept. 24.?Workmen em? ployed at the Orlando shipyard at Leg? horn have refused to turn the plant back to the owners until they are paid wages for the time they have'been on strife*, says a Rome dispatch to the Excr" nge Telegraph. ( Port Is Blocked By Great Flood Of Immigrants Ellis Island Congestion Is at Its Climax a?d Com? missioner Wallis Goes to the Capital to Get Aid 3 Steamships Held Up Many Arrive Lacking Money or Tickets to Carry Them to Their Destinations The congestion of aliens at Ellis Island, which began three weeks ago, reached a climax yesterday when the Immigration Bureau issued an order that no immigrants would be received from inbound steamships until Monday. When the immigration station has a full equipment of inspectors the capac? ity of Ellis Island enables the bureau to handle a maximum of 5,000 immi? grants a day. * Commissioner Wallis left the city for Washington yesterday to confer with the Secretary of Labor on means of, getting relief from the unusually over? crowded condition of the island. 2,221 Detained on Island Byron H. Uhl, Acting Commissioner, said: ? "We we're obliged to keep 2,221 de? tained aliens on the island last night, a number far in excess of our sleep ing accommodations. It will require the next thirty-six hours to dispose of j these and make room for others that j are now being held aboard theU'ateam ships that brought them to this coun? try. We sent inspectors to-day aboard four steamships that have been in port I for several days without unloading their steerage passengers. These* in- | spectors will make their examinations j and will admit to the country all who are eligible to land. "Those who fail to pass the prelim- j inary examination and are ordered de? tained will not be sent to the island j for a few days but will be kept aboard I such vessels as the steamship lines i have in port. This will, in a measure, take care of the congestion, at the island." ' The vessels on which examinations were held yesterday were the Heilig Olav, from Copenhagen, with 379 im? migrants; the St. Paul, from South? ampton, with .379; the Mexico, from Vera Cruz, with 86, and the Carmania, from Southampton and Cherbourg, with 1,128. Three Await Inspection The other vessels awaiting inspec- : tion with their immigrants aboard are the Patria, from Marseilles, with 1,700; the Touraine, from Havre, with 538. and the Celtic, which arrived yesterday with 1,552. On board the steamship Thomas, a former transport which was examined yesterday, were 300 immigrants, who ' were detained as ineligible. It was . said at Ellis Island yesterday that a I shortage of money, rather than physi- i tal or moral fitness, was the chief cause of the detentions and general congestion at the island. Many of the detained persons are women and children, who are eligible to admission, but who have neither railroad tickets to destinations nor the ? money to purchase them. They are being held until the relatives to whom I they are going send them funds or | come from various parts of the ooun try to escort them to their destinations. "Parasitic" Element in U? S. immigration Grows Government to Warn Consuls Abroad to Use More Care in Sifting Out Undesirables WASHINGTON, Sept. 24. ? Reports received at the State Department from the immigration authorities concern? ing? the class of immigrants now com? ing to this country may result in in? structions to American consuls in Eu? rope to exercise greater care in sifting out the undesirables from the lists of those applying for permission to come to the United States. It was said to-day that the foreign representatives of the State Depart? ment had been able to check materially the attempts of the known radical element to enter America, but that they had not been able to prevent a huge increase in the number of what is characterized in the reports from the immigration officers as "economic parasites." Immigration authorities have re? ported to the Department that the ever-increasing stream of immigra? tion ' now moving into the United States carries a far greater number of Europe's shiftless element than it did before the war. Appeals of the immigration authorities to the depart? ment that it assist In clarifying the stream declare that before the war a large part of those entering the United States were in search of work, but that now the greater part are those who are attempting t? escape work in their own countries. Measure to Exempt Mort? gages From Income Tax Alone Defeated ; Legislature Adjourns Jury Trials in AH Dispossess Cases $25,000 Provided for In vestigation of Alleged Bidg. Material Combine From