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^fi ft i* r-' [M E E N I N E I I O N Boston Policemen Will Not Be Given Jobs. Again A New Force Will Be Re cruited By Commissioner Attempt To Compromise Is Complete Failure Au thorities Prepare' For Seri ous Trouble. Boston, Sept. IS.—It Is a fight to the finish. Hie offices former ly held by striking policemen are meant. New men will be recruit ed. The request of Samuel Gomp ers that tho Btrikers be reinstated is refused. This the attitude of the state as made known today by Police Oommlssloner Curtis. It ap peared to mean the complete fail ure of the attempts at eomprom- misc. More Trouble in Store. Attention is turned to the posi tion to be taken by the Boston firemen, electrical workers, tele phone operators, car men and other organisations affiliated wttu the policemen's union. A gener al strike has been threatened and if the threat is made good the most widespread labor trouble ever expertonoad in New England .is imminent. There is doubt as to the atti tude of other onions. It is re ported there arc strong differ ences of opinion within the un ions. Some of them will vote on the ouestlon tonight. Others are pxpected to take action within a day or two. Troops Available. Meantime It is known the authorities have taken steps to make the fight. Federal troops are available to reinforce the state guard which now is policing the city with the aid of volunteer officers under such of the old policemen as remained loyal. Under the direction of Brigadier General Sweetser, the old state militia is being revived through revolting. Governor Coolidge was in con ference with labor leaden this morning. He had earlier indicat ed he would not Interfere with any action decided upon by Com missioner Curtis. City is Quiet. The city was generally quiet to day and business vfent 'on as usual." Raymond Gaistof Dorchester, was shot artdL. killed when etate guard, Tt was sald.be refusedf, to'move on and when prodded with bayonet attempted to seise the guard's gun,-' In the, excitement that' fol lowed and-while the guards were dis persing the crowds', another spot was fired wounding (Mrs. Mary Jaques of Dorchester who was passing, in the knee. After his conference with £he labor leaders Governor Coolidge issued this statement: "At a conference with labor lead ers details were presented to me of the conditions under which the po licemen in Boston performed their duties. The telegram of President Gompers was'discussed. "I told the.-commlttee that the matter suggested in the telegram was entirely in the hands of the police commissioner. I told them the question of whether the men who had not reported for duty were still policemen was a question of law and fact on which I should be guided by the opinion of, the attorney general. "I understand the matter of the telegram has been conveyed to Mr. Curtis." Commissioner Curtis had nothing to add to his fortQal statement. It was a question whether the way had been left open for the return of any men who had struck. This did not seem probable under his use of the words "new men" in reference to recruiting. The decision of the commissioner sent a thrill] through the city. There was no attempt to mininjlxe the. seri ousness of the new'situation. Ourtis' Statement. Boston, Sept. 11.—The conmmission er made this statement: ,"I am advised by the attorney gen eral that upon the existing facts the offices formerly held by the members of the police force are in- fact and in law vacant. I shall accordingly proceed in accordance with' law and In strict compliance with the require- (Continued on page 5.) Declares Allies Are Follow ing An Entirely Different Purpose Than The Clear ing Up Of Doubtful Legal Berlin, Thursday. fl Sept SteiRa^^^nstS'. GOMPERS' REQUEST WORST LABOR TROUBLE IN THE NEW ENGLAND STATES EXPECTED 11.—(By the Associated Press.)—Dr. Hugo Preuss, who drafted the new German constitution recently promulgated at Weimar in a statement today to the Associated Press severely arraigned the demand made by the peace 'con ference that Germany must up the matter shows'they are follow* log „«atii«ly different purposes, tjutn Mmtrii* iip of doubtful lejhl f^^n^uruel* lit. TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS Syracuse, N. T.—The last day's pro gram of grand circuit races here waft called off because of rain and the' horses sent to Columbus, O. Washington—General Pershing was received at Washington by Vice Presi dent Marshall, acting for the presi dent. General Pershing said he would open A. E. F., headquarters' here to day. St Joseph, Mo.—St. Joseph defeat ed Wichita and clinched the Western League pennant. Detroit—Officials of. the United Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes, and Railway Shop laborers stated there is little prospect of an immediate strike of the six hundred thousand men. Cincinnati fiaaeball enthusiasts stood in' line all day to obtain 35,000 cards for application for world's se ries tickets. Philadelphia—Only one record was broken at the National junior track and field championship of the Ama teur Athletic Union. Arthur Tuck of the Multnomah A. C., heaved the javelin 178 feet and 1-4 Inches. The uld record was 167 feet 8 3-4 inches. Cassels—Philipp Scheidemann, for mer German premier declared there was great danger of a restoration of the-monarchy in Russia. Dublin—The British government proclaimed the suppression of the Sinn Fein parliament and Sinn Fein or ganizations throughout Ireland. A series of searches and- raids were made! Boston—^Striking policemen decided to return to work pending the indus trial conference at Washington, Octo ber 6. It was indicated, however, ac ceptance of their services would await a ruling by the attorney general. There were no disorders. Champion Of A. E. F. Works Near Drayton Drayton, N. D., Sept. 13.—"Paddy" Ryan, champion featherweight boxer of the A. E. F. arrived in the city due latter pa ft of last week and has gone to work threshing in this vicinity. Ryan says that he believes the threshing job will put him in shape for hard knocks this winder. He has just returned from overseas. His home is in' Chicago- Union Men Say This Means That There Will Be No Strike. Detroit, Mich., Sept. 13.—The rail road administration will unreservedly accept the proposal of the United Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes' and Railway Shop Labor ers for a new working scheidule, ac cording to a message read before a closed session of the organisation's convention here this morning. This means, officials of the brotherhood state, that there will be no strike of the organization members. New Wheat Varieties Thrive In Montana Bozeman, Mont, Sept. 13.—Pro nounced success of h«W varieties of grain under observation at the Boze man experiment station is announced by F. E. Fuller, secretary-treasurer of the Montana Seed Growers' asso ciation, in his call for the annual business meeting of that organization to be held, at Helena.. The Montana 36 the Peliss Durum and the 'heart less Kharkov wheats the Svalof oat and a cross of the hulless barley witfr the bearded strains have been most satisfactorily developed, Mr. Fuller informs members of the association, and it is expected that' in the future these grains will have a place of im portance in, Montana agriculture. Preuss Denounces Demand. Made by the Entente For •i Altering in Constitution Matter Seriouis' Objec tions Raised To Some Sections. V.:-. be any previsions of the constitution in contradiction of the peace terms, the latter would be valid legally, with out .any chance for the constttutlon.te take precedence over the treaty.' Not a Contradiction. "Article 61, paragraph two (pro viding for the admission of Austrian members of the relchstag). does not stand as A formal contradiction of the peace.terms, this fact being, recog nized by the signing of the terms by the Allied. and Associated govern ments^ in the German counter pro posals to• the" original peace terms the German government explained, in dis cussing this point, .that Germany did not desire to violate the bring about amendt the constitution so as to prevent Aus- ("termination of peoples weald count trian representation in German par- against Germany. The Allied and As llairientary affairs. '"J must emphasize first," he said, "that this is not a question ,of law. Regally it is clear and simple, the way in Which our opponents brought of tl)« m* German constitution la the clause: flPhs terms Mty ofpeaee signed at Ver- II not be affected by this oon ewsiudes any practical the fiskee terms' *nd for there ahoald Austrian tier but that If Austria a jCQfnUwiH-. «a. fron wanted to state of unity With Germany, the latter oould not obli gate herself to oppose the wishes of the 'German brothers in Austria' tor in, that case the right. of self-de solated governments merely recog nized in th^lr answer that Germany did not want forcibly to violate the Austrian frontier. Thus the peace treaty w*rf.sl*n*d. Article -it does not: forcibly violate the Austrian fron tier. Rather everything is left to .the fr*e initiative of Austria on the basis of national principles' and national seU determination. .. ''further, if the Entente raised pal objections to harmless two of article 61 there were plenty of spportunjtl— tpreach vptot u»to*- ymiii wzii THOUSANDS OF IONS OF COAL LEAVEDEUTH Duluth Unions Threaten to Call General Strike to Aid Dock Men. Duluth, Minn., Sept 13.—According to revised estimates of coal dock men, 103,137 tons of soft coal and 10,600 tons of hard coal were di verte from Duluth and, Superior docks when the coal fleet, scattered to other points this week -after waiting for several weeks to unload here and failed because of the coal dock strike. Dock owners admitted today they can do-nothing to relieve an acute coal situation here, and announced a complete' suspension -of coal ship ments to Duluth and superior. Prom the United States engineer's office comes the statement-that- in the estimated SO' days -of navigation on the Great Dakee- remaining this se%? son, a daily average of- 47,768 tons must arrive, to bring the soft. coal re ceipts up to northwest requirements for the ensuing winter Striking dock employes met again late yesterday but "nothing hap pened," according to union headquar ters. The Federated Trades Assembly of DulUth issued notice that it will back the strikers with a tieup of all in the city of Duluth to levy an as- seesment upon their members each week to help the striken," and voted $100 from its funds .for that pur pose. Resolutions adopted, directed that assembly officers request assist ance for the strikers and urge refusal of union men to assist at the docks or in hauling coal therefrom. It was further resolved that Representative A. Lt Carss present .to. congress a de mand for the Immediate, nationalisa tion of all dock properties on the Great Lakes. TRAIN BANDITS ARE CAPTURED AFTERPURSUTT Four Are Taken Off of a Mixed Train Intercepted at Ayr. Fargo, N. D., Sept 13.—Pursued in automobiles by three ,Cas* county deputy sheriff* and the cKlef of/po- Jf the: Indwtl^ WorKefW of the World"' who early Thursday Morning commandeered a passenger train on Grtat- North ern at 'Vaaoe Cass county, and f«rced the engine:crew under point:of guns to take .them to Bedford, 18 miles northwest of.. Vance, surrendered themselves-at Ayr. at 5 o'clock Thurs day afternoon. "Put the guns on 'em!" ordered One of the men" who crept over the- 'ten der of the engine, who soon bad the engine men of the passenger train covered, while- a score or more of passengers on board the train were unaware of what was happening ahead. The train slowed down. Ordered to Go Ahead. "Throw -her open!" commanded one of the Industrial Workers of. the World. "Toil fellows are going to run this train to Bedford) We are going to get something to eat, and we are not going to. pay for it either." The train pulled into Bedford and the four men made their escape. Conductor Michael Rohn of Fargo, in charge of the train, reported the holdup to a restaurant man'at Bed ford, who called Sheriff. A- M. Rosa In Fargo. Deputies James- Milligan, Fred Kraemer and Manners went by automobile to Bedford,at 1:SO o'clock Thursday afternoon. Oh the-. way they picked up Chief of Police Chaa. Bunker of Caseelton. They reached Bedford at 3:45 o'clock. Train Halted. Learning that four men answering the description of the train bandits had jumped a south bound mixed train on the Casselton-Devils Lake branch of the Great' Northern, the deputies got in communication with the train dispatcher on the Great Northern. who ordered the train stopped at Ayr. Armed with rifles and revolvers, the posse rode alongside the train and took1 off about 20 men. F\jur started to make their escape from a gondola car, and were halted by shots. From the description furnish ed the officers, the four were recog nised as the ones who had comman deered th* passenger train on the Surrey cutoff in the morning. When the officers started In pursuit the men tossed -their flashlights and re volvers Into the. jungles near the town of Ayr, which we*e recovered with several bags of.shell?.. ."gal*. Be Woald Shoot. Surrounded by. the officers,.- one of the members who later gave his name as Andrew Swanson, 86, of St Louis, an Industrial Worker of the World, reached to get his gun in an attempt to intimidate the officers. He quickly tossed it away when he was covered. "Why did you fellows give up so easily?" asked one of the deputies. "T^ere was no- use playing the game when we, were holding deuces against aces." declared one„ refer ring to the rifles, which the Cass county authorities had to play against the revolvers of the bandit^. A W W Charged with highway robbery, the four will be given their preliminary examination this afternoon, -before Judge J. H. Miller. They admitted to the sheriff this morning that their were all Industrial. Workers of the World and gave-their names and ad dresses as O. F. 8tohburner, tt. Mike Tutlo, 28, Italian aterbury. Conn. Three flashlights and four revolv ers' were recovered fey the deputies. The revolvers were a.Colt 4S, a Colt automatic .83 and two. .88'*, bsatdfo several bag* of cartridges, OOTTOK- OOWSUMKD. Washingtoa. Sept' l'S.—Jetton ooiv mined, during August amounted t« Siters, MM #, UnSTasd 11,171 rf the census bureau ahnbuneed today. Is .Augfaat last lyear 534, s§#. kfciMi firffr NORTH DAKOTA'S mmS GREATEST, NEWSPAPER VOL. 14, IJO. 219. GRAND FORKS, N. D.( SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,1919. PRICE FIVE CENTS. PRACTICED BY WHAN HUBE Builders of Earth Works in Wisconsin Said to Have Eaten Human Beings. society. During the past two months excavations by the Milwaukee muse- from the north, and the possibility that the newly discovered remains might have been built by them, sug gested the name. When the first survey was made the enclosure covered about eighteen The remains of the city were union labor on or connected with encIosed irTa* waTTftf MPth'«n'7jHnh« docks. It calls for "all of the unlona waH ot earth m4 adohe rlCKB wn,cn north, 1419 feet on the west and 705 The complete .. exe&vatieps at i-Atftalgn* ateprt vfllige 47-Wles'east^.Madliao in ter ritorial day* rivalled Madison tor BANDITSHOLD Sheriffs Posse Searches the Country for Miles Men Not Arrested. (Herald Special Service.) Minot N.'D., Sept. 13.—Four ban dits held up the coach on a stock train on the Sod 'line near Balfour last night and took over $400 in cash and valuables of ten Montana stockmen. A sheriff's posse and police are covering the country for miles, but the. robbers had not been arrested up to late this afternoon. MICHIGAN ARENA OFFICIAL PAPER Designated for Judicial Dis trict By State Printing Commission. The Michigan Arena, published at Michigan, Nelson county. N. D., has been named official state paper for the First Judicial district of North Dakota, according to word received from Bismarck. One paper, in which all official state advertising must appear, baa been named.by. the- .state, printing commission,, except in the .Third Ju dicial district, "ifi Which" tWo "were' designated. In. other Judicial districts the pa pere.designated were: Second District Tork Citizen, Tork. Benson county. Third District—Burleigh Count* Farmers' Press, Bismarck, and Dog den News, Dogden, McLean county. Fourth District—Richland County Farmer, Wahpeton. Fifth District—-Williams County. Fanners' Press, Williston. Sixth 1st rict-r—Bowman County Farmers' Press, Bowihan. ••^:f:- •'••SV'•:^': MINNESOTA LAW" m. MAKERS TO END WORK THURSDAY St. Paul, Sept 13.—The special ses sion of the State legislature will wind Up its business affairs next Thursday Bwanson. submitted Senator IT 'mmij SOLDIERS ARB 1 SENT TO SCUTARI limdoii. Friday, Sept 13 —British ferees have been landed at ScdtaW, •eroes the Bomhcrtis rr«m censtan ttaapl*. It i» officially explaliied. l»w •yer.rthat this was ordtoipit trben laefvetnent ^and that cnly me2 ol'.«hmr«.. IMS SCHEIDEMANN ASKEDTOSEEK PEACEIN1914 Bethmann-Hollweg Wanted Him to Work With Eng lish And French. Madison, Wis., sept. 13.—That the Berlin, Friday, Sept. 12.—(By the builders of the famous Indian earth- Associated Press)—Philip Scheide works on the Crawfish river near mann, former German premier, de Lake Mills were canabalistic is the clared recently at Caseel that Dr. statement of Dr. S. A. Barrett presi- Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg, dent of the Wisconsin Archaeological forTner hlm t0 the Aztalan earthworks enclosure has! in behalf of peace in No been subjected to investigations and to tinct. I democratic faction was planning a TW» fahiort Peace demonstration in the reichstag. Astalan was flm flefOI.e the whole world and full of 1887 bvN E HvPr Th«r consciousness of the enormous re v. sponsibility, I here now, for the first accordin^^^wurnhnif' itime' imperial chancellor? asked work with English and French vember* 7" «81 feet long on the is prevailing abroad that Germany is at ?5? ,on side, making the to- possible for you to work with Eng- tal length of the wall 2,760 feet. It was from one to five fet high. "That many of these mounds were constructed for ceremonial purposes was evident from excavations we have made," declared Dr. Barrett in a re cent address at a meeting of the Wis consin Historical society and Wiscon sin Archaeological society held in Aztalan. "In the center of some of the higher mounds within and outside of the enclosure were found cere monial pole walls imbedded in stone and cement made of gravel and clay. In a few of these mounds we have found stone hatchets, arrow heads and cellos and in one of them we found an ear ornament that was famous among the Eskimos. From the pot tery found in these mounds it is evi dent that the tribe which built the famous enclosure at Aztalan was familiar with the Iriquois Indians in the east,' the AJgonquins and lower tribes of the Mississippi Valley. "This earth enclosure was a cere monial establishment It was not a stockade, it was net a fortification. There are indications that the peonle who built and inhabited this place practiced canabaliem. Among the bones of fish were found dismembe- ed.bones of human beings and these bones had been craeked tor their marrow." according to the Vor- Herr um of which Dr. Barrett is the head. I follows: Although the grounds have been plow- ^"®vember, 1314, Hugo Haase ed upwardsiof seventy years the out- visited Dr. von Bethmann-Hoil line of the earthworks are still dis- Scheidemann is quoted "oti'y him that the social nlake PubHc what the chancel- the.Astecs had j0I. told Herr Haase and myself on a tradition that their ancestors came that occuinn. nr Bethmaun—Holl- that occasion. Dr. weg said: 'Gentlemen, I earnestly request you not to undertake this step pub licly at this time. Tou may rest as sured such a demonstration would only strengthen the war determina tion of our foes, for according to all reliable reports an impression already the end of her resources. If it is lish and Freneh socialists in the in terects of peace, do so.' Herr Scheidemann added that the governing board of the party "labored ceaselessly" to get in touch with the socialists of hostile countries but all attempts failed because of the nega tive attitude of the English and French members of the party. PLUMBTLAN ENDORSED BY THE MINERS Railroad Men Invited Join Therti in Joint Action. the state capHol, is an almoet forgotten village. to Cleveland, Sept., 13.—The United Mine Workers convention today en dorsed,, the Plumb plan for the na tionalisation of railroads, pledged the 'Supmfct of. the miners' organization to-^w |U eBuae&nent pad fnvtted" th# ™ilroad TTr6tter1iOodir to Joiif with them in an, alliance foir joint ac tion, to be later extended into ah eco nomic' alliance with labor organisa tions in. other basic industries. The convratieto's action was almost unani mous. Aasurances were given that the rail way organisations, which last year' showed themselves advene to the idea of a conference for co-operation with the miners, were- now ready to act with them. JOHNSON TO SPEAK IN KANSAS CITY TO GREAT CROWD Kansas City, Mo., Sept 13.—Dele gations from Missouri, Kaiwms. Okla homa and as. far south as Dennison, Texas, will greet Senator Hiram W. Johnson of California when he ad dresses a mass meeting tonight at Convention hall on the League of Na tion* Demands for tickets have been unprecedented, according to the. com mittee in charge of arrangements. Senator Johnson and party on ar rival from St Louis will be met by a reception committee and taken to his hotel, where a private dinne* will be given. Rumanians Make •. More Requisitions In Hungary, Report Paris, Sept 13.—Advices of further requisitioning in Hungary by Ru manian troops were received today by the supreme council. On Septem ber 10, the reports stated, the Ru manians requisitioned 71,425 pairs of shoes from the orphan asylum in Budapest. Of these the great bulk were shipped to Rumania. Many other cases of alleged looting were reported. Vulture Followed Ship For Hours Before it Sank Crew Believed- in Superstitions Eight- Members Of Corydon Tell Thrilling Stories Of Wreck Of Vessel During Wild Storm On Southern Coast Drifted In Boat For 53 Hours. Miami, FU4 Sept 13.—Many hours before th^ storm which sunk the Ward liner Corydon, in the Bahamas channel Tuesday with a lose of 37 llrea. a vulture followed the ship and perched on her spars while nitmben of a panic-stricken crew, believing in the superstitions' of the sea, were convinced that .they were doomed. Such is'the story brought here by eight of the crew who were 58 hours adrift, on ah' upturned boat, battered and braised" and without food or water.'- All- day Sunday as the ship pur sued her way in calm seas and light wlniJ heai ds, the great bird hovered over night and Monday Itrough Senday Coryden smashing member of. tin ensw .was engaged la a. desperate battle far-'life Thei4 was no food the galley and ston rooms wera., flooded. morning they lest eeatrel of the .iihlp. the wtreless apparatus whs short-cir cuited and as 8. O. & calls epuld be Mat 'rat. the Staggsged through the seas. 4loi Monday "Might every .4"' C-t .5 t'i'M' i*,'•'"--v' _• It has also been foond that farmers who have seleotod their seed from year to year bavc pro duced a much earlier variety as writ as a much more prolific va riety. A few yields on small areas have reached ISO bushels iter acre by weight. CmZENSHIP DAY OBSERVED IN DAYTON, 0. Factories Close And Big Celebration Is Held Dur ing the Day. Dayton. Ohio, Sept. 13.—To cele brate the blessings of citizenship in free America, all Dayton today joined in observance of a good citizenship day. Men, women and children, rich and poor alike, took part in the affair, which the committee in charge char acterized as timely, in view of the present condition of unrest through out the country. All factories were closed this after noon. The day's program began with speeches at the fair grounds, the pre vailing theme being the' duty of all "t!f5,nS_t°J o°fr0n} social problems of the day with an open mind. Speakers included Frank lin D. Roosevelt, assistant secretary of the navy, and John P. Frye, editor of the Moulders Journal of Cincin nati. Later a huge pageant, illustrating the building of America from various nationalities, was to be presented. Nearly 5,000 persons were to take part. PERSHDOAKES Washington, Sept. 13.—Almost fighting his way through hundreds of admirers gathered at the war depart ment, General Pershing officially re ported to Secretary Baker today his return from France with his mission —victory over Germany—accomplish ed. The cheering crowd had waited long to see the man that captained the American armies. By actual physical effort added by two of his staff officers and finally by guards of the building, General Pershing got through into the secretary's room. There were no ceremonies attending General Pershing's reception at the war department. He came as any other high officer would come to re port. RAIDS ON SINN FEIN QUARTERS CONTINUED TODAY Cork, Sept 13.—The military and police raids which began yesterday in connection with the proclamation of the suppression of the Sinn Fein par liament and Sinn Fein organizations throughout Ireland, were continued today. During the morning the raid era proceeded to the house of David Kent, a Sinn Fein member of parlia ment and searched the place. The raiders met with no opposition. When the vessel went under, the Americans in the crew kept their heads and saved the lives of some others of the 36. "I slid against a lifeboat and clung to it when the Corydon listed." said one of the ..survivors. "The lifeboat and I shot into the sea together. Luckily, it landed right side up and I got in. All the oars were lashed to it" Nine other men got into the life-! ,1.™ boat and a few moments afterward' the Corydon went down. Afmoet im mediately the seas capslssd the life boat three times, as fast as the men could dive from under it and right It again. They lashed themselves ta the seat with strips of clothing. TTilrd Mate Mallowes told a graphic story of his battle with John Con dron, a Creco-American seaman, when the latter became erased by privatlen and fear. "I held him alk of the fleet day and night" said Mai- "He was raviag crazy. He got vlo-.. lent and tried ts'draw a siietto. I tied him to th* boat then. Wednes day. I became so weak I could, do nothing with, hlm and when, he gat a chance he thraw. hlSBsetf overbaard and .was. -drawBSd,*'-. Mpw Orleans, Sept 18.—The tro] leal Storm is moving northward inu Louisiana of thte mouth of the Ml—iijirpt.v Davfarous eo»,-''pr*biwest E E N I N E I I O N WILSON SAYS PURPOSE OF HIS ADDRESS 10 DECLARE WAR ON GERMANS IS NOTYEr FULFILLED CORN YIELDS IN STATE REACH 106 BUSHELS PER ACRE Bismarok, N. D., Sept. IS.—An lnvestigatioa to learn how big com yields mny be scourcd in the state has broairht out the fact that scloctcd seed oorn has pro duced in many localities yicWs as Itigh as ipe boahcte ptx acre ou large acreages. BAKER Forced to Fight His Way Through Crowds of Peo ple to War Office. Stt-axeJii t*ni "*u, Delivers Two Addresses in Tacoma Today Declares It Is Proposed In Some Quarters To Abandon At tempt To Bring Complete Freedom From Autocracy And Guarantee Liberty Everywhere. Tacoma, Wash., Sept 13.—Reading to a Tacoma audience today a part of his address to congress asking a dec laration of war with Germany, Presi dent Wilson declared the purpose there outlined was not yet fulfilled and would not be until the treaty rati fied. Pointing out that he had asked in that address for a complete freedom from autocracy and guarantees for liberty everywhere, he said that was the program which had been adopted without respect to party and which it now was proposed in some quarters to abandon. When he asked whether the people wanted it abandoned, there were shouts of "No, no," and cheers from the crowd. It was the first of two addresses to be delivered by the president in Washington during the day. a night meeting being scheduled at Seattle. 30,000 Hear The labor section of the treaty was praised by the President who said it had been "made by men with hearts under their Jackets" and in the in terests of humane and just labor con ditions. "Party passion" the President add, had been aroused by the treaty dta cussion although the fundamental principles of the document had oome years ago from republican wlaliwihi ii He asked his audience to forget that' he had anything to do with the con summation of those principles and to overlook that there would be aa The crowd cheered this declaration and there was more applause w&en Mr. Wilson went on to tell ^of the work of former President "Tift and former Attorney General Wtckersham for the .league. Mr. Wilson said he was deeply touched by the interest of mothers and of children In the hope ot Without the league, said Mr. Wil son, the. treaty would be a "haase of cards." which toy "breath oT power" could overturn.' With the 'mrim ha added,'it was "as Strang as Gibraltar." Regretting delay in aeeeptaMe of tho treaty, Mr. Wilson declared American Industry would posed tt PresMeat afclbieK!' :, ss *tjr easterly reaching hun-ioane Satuxday and 4aturd*y night. changing to westerly en the weet and coast southerly on the Mt ..A- )"r* -f Hlm. Before he went to the armory the president was driven to the stadium where a cheering mass of humanity including many school children wel comed him. With a seating capacity of 30,000 the stadium was packed ex cept for small spaces at the ends of the horseshoe and thousands more thronged the steps and terraces above. In a brief addresB at the stadium Mr. Wilson said he was grateful that the children had come out to see him because he felt the decisions being made now affected the children more than those of the present generation. There was a continual roar cheering after he finished indiislrial and I and until his party had circled out of the stadium on the way to thfe armory. Speaks at Auditorium. ^1 of speaking. At the armory, which was packed, Mr. Wilson was introduced by X. B. Coffman, president of the Washington state branch of the league to enforce peace. Giving the cost of the war on both sides at 318€.(HO,O00,AOO and the cost to the United States as 31.8OOi0«O an hour for two years, he said that was the cost in money of saving civilisa tion. In addition, he continued, there were 7,450,200 battle deaths. These were "terrible facts," he declared, and he had come out to the people to see. whether they had forgotten' them." ^'The,couniri'to4s not forgotten,""be added, "and it will'never permit ahy man who stands in the way of the ful fillment of our pledges to forget the sorrowful day when he raaJe the at tempt. League Is Remedy. The remedy for all of this proposed as a fulfillment of the nation's-.-Kom ises, asserted Mr. Wilson, %mL the league of nations, which.rawSaflter manently could overthrow auvtv^y and quiet disorders. A new kind of disorderly autocracy was growing up, he said, in such movements as that which had overturned Russia. "I am an enemy of the rulership of any minority, however constitut ed," he continued. "Minor!ties often have' been right but they cease to be right when they use disorderly means.' ^tlPl 1 mm A elec tion in 1920. On his first return from Paris, Mr. Wilson, went on, he had received oer tain suggestions from the senate foreign relations committe, which came for the most from the republic an side of the committee. Returning to the peace conference, he said, he had secured the acceptance ef every one of those suggestions. Reading Riot Ac*. "I say* these''things," he rmiillnixl. "because I want to read the riot act to anybody who tries to Introduce politics into this thing. There is something so much greater be ing a republican or a democrat thai those names ought never to be men tioned in connection with it That to being an American, and the wag to be an American is to fulfill the pledges we have made." world peace. Saying many of the chidlren had hailed him along the way aa "Woody" the President digressed to remark that he had no objection to that if it were applied "aa a name and not as a description." Every woman with a child, de clared the President, should live in fear if this plan for world peace And those children who carried' flags on the street today—I pray God they never will have ta carry that flag on the field of battle." 4 •1,1 ill &§3 Im and ruined" nalsss there la' Every teal Am mice n. -the aaM. should be wilting ~te malte the 'fcadrlflee to enderw because it' #ss the trae spirit to "give uattHt harta." tempt wo«M treaty the