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>lts Against let Regime Suppressed Outbreaks Near ?w Quelled After _ Bloodsh?ed, Says |fCo?penliagen Dispatch Recapture Omsk ?? Forces Aided German and Han? ega War Prisoners i Sept. 8.?Several serions Taiaiastthe Russian Soviet gov j kgye broken out in the nngh 10f Moscow and have been sup with mach bloodshed, says an ?at* dispatch from Copenhagen, .friges from Riga. ,Manchuria, Sept. 8 (By The J Press). ? Russian Soviet aided by German and Hun tar prisoners, have recaptured ?here, as in other towns of Siberia, the peasants recently _, the Soviets. The Bolsheviki ia possession of the northern at the railwav, along which | has been proceeding, but they [ tied and without food. _. aaaaant population of the vil-1 ?ttjth* railway have evacuated, j ?tfith tbem the cattle and food-] ?n?! and traffic proceeds only with j ?^aatast difficulty under guard of | *j?natrian and Cerman war pris-: m r?it??s?tion has been received here MAijraported revolt against the Bol ?MS ?a the 'Ust-Kamenogonsk re "^ Altai province has been cleared af the Bolsheviki. J&s Charge Bolsheviki jbt Aiding LUhuanians 5FASSAW, Sept. 8 (By The Asso S?fti trtttj.?Conditions along the ?Sjajta front are becoming more mttt daily- According to latest re Ma the Poles and Lithuanians are B5b spasmodically across the im 'itm& frontier. In one action two ?taaiaa officers and 200 men wer? etnai by the Poles, (?traasa and Russian Bolsheviki are (Jinjthe Lithuanians, it is contended, [PaJiih authorities. Reports reach-1 ? an? basdquarters say that Leon ?atsky, Russian Bolshevik Minister list Efid Marine, has ordered Soviet Mite help the Lithuanians to drive braes oat of that country. Trotzky i?i te.be carrying on a campaign j pepaganda, declaring tne "Polish IM?a" threatens Lithuanian inde laineeand urging that the Poles be tf?ti at all costs. An official communication issued to Jtf says the advance of the Lithua ? ia the north has been checked Folias cavalry after some fighting. paralas took 200 prisoners. In d? south the Bolshevik forces re Atited farther east of Brubieszow, Ken they ?ere defeated with losses. ?Pt?ah aseeesses are announced on fttlanteig front, the Poles crossing pt lag River between Kamionka and ralywa and smashing a Red con? ation at Jablouwaka. One hun niaai fifty prisoners were taken. Tat Palish delegates who have ar lini at.Warsaw from Minsk say that ?ifjL conference may continue for They say that the Soviets ar? are losing interest in terrlto tjBtatiana and, it is reported, are ??g to concede to the Poles the old ?aa-Sossian trench line positions ?t?tet mach quibbling. ! The essential problem for discussion, fitas Tie? of the Soviets, is trade re vita England and Germany An Investment for All r In these days practically anybody ?can accumulate at least $200. That sum in? vested in a First Mortgage Certificate guaranteed by the Bond ?& Mortgage Guarantee Company will earn for you $11 each year. Why do you let that money lie idle, or spend it carelessly when it is so easy to invest it safely at 5%%? Title Guarantee & Trust Co. S76 Broadway, Naw York f 178 Raantnm Si, RroeUyn through Poland and the re?stablish ment of the world's diplomatic re? lations. Ultimatum Delivered to Pole? WASHINGTON, Sept. 8? An official report received in diplomatic circles to-day said General Zukas, command? ing the Lithuanian army, had served notice on the Polish military delegates at Kovno that unless Lithuanian ter? ritorial claims were accepted Lithu? ania would cooperate with the Russian Bolsheviki and eventually with Ger? many against Poland. League to ?Consider Appeal LONDON, Sept. 8.?The Polish ap? peal for mediation in her dispute with Lithuania will be considered at the next meeting of the council of the League of Nations which will be held in Paris September 16. ? Clemenceau to Hunt Tiger Will Sail From Marseilles for India September 20 PARIS, ?Sept. 8.?Georges Clemen? ceau, the former French Premier, will leave for India September 20, aboard the steamer La Cordilliere, sailing j from Marseilles. He will land at Sing? apore, where a British ship will carry him to Calcutta. ! M. Clemenceau will proceed to Hima? laya to hunt the tiger and will return I to France about New Year's Day. Rioting Mine Strikers Clubbed by Troopers (Special Dispatch to The Tribune.) WILKES-BARRE, Sept. 8?Twenty striking anthracite minera got bruised heads and bodies to-day in a clash with state troopers. There was a twenty minute riot, the first of the "vacation" in the anthracite region. A mob of more than one hundred strikers threw clubs and stones at twenty men who were at the Cork Lane, Pittston, station, waiting to take a work train to Olyphant to go to work for the Delaware and Hudson Coal Company. A free for all fight resulted. When it was at its height a squad of troopers used their riot sticks. The mob was dispersed quickly. At Browntown, Carmen Zabrizzo, a striker, was seen talking to a mine foreman yesterday and a group of strikers attacked him. The police res? cued him. <9 The return of a large number of men to werk in District No. 1 to-day broke the backbone of the strike in its strongest territory- It is believed that to-morrow will see a general re? sumption of work in this territory. Districts 7 and 9 remain well tie?! up. Two more colleries started srorY :r ? District 7 to-day, but two others were ! forced into idleness, probably because this was a church holiday. Will YOU Profit by ?the Experience of the Oregon-Washington R. R. & Navigation Co.? The Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation Com? pany of Portland, Oregon, is ?twang 112 Dictaphones in three of its important ?departments. Since the installation of The Dictaphone, diere has been a 25% increase in speed in getting out correspondeitce, The volume of letters has increased 50%. Whether your office ie lange ?or rraa?L" m ' are ready to saetmll Dictaphones. Then yon era ?try them ?out in poor office, on gear work, for ep?eed, economy, and efficiency. ?EW^TflPAVAIE Reg. U. S. Pat. OST. ?tut Foreiga Countrie? ' ?Phone Worth 7250?CeJ? at 280 ?Broadway, New York City Tim? U hn* otto Dictaphone, ttstin nmAati "The Dictas&ono." n?d?t *n? ?aercfcaadUej by The ?CoUmbia Graphophone Compaa? Strange $t waaa^ fcbnwght of be* fanl?CapL A ida? a Turkish OtaBCgttB of 1st famous PsHMal BSes& round m sh,ape wfth a free ?and easy dfaflght? A djguette thsfc docs not have to be tipped, squeezed or loosened. ^t7>^UB^iiH'?J>^kaBm><ajfiaw?iM- A?&aHk. ?HT X4ftt???tu*y UM,Ju?Of Oapt X today the idea ?of ?l who ?are putjcuflsT *~" nssvsi a big ?oca? Read the Story ?f Gspe. X PALiliM?U? FAMOUS CIGARETTES THEY ARE GOOD TARE* 20 M Ma8 fe?* lpnn?caap)to?b0 f*?% aim ix? gMcfeage ?we HAmOR?RK{RECHJIJ^^ Italian Mines And Farm Land Seized by Reds ?Cantinu?! fren pago ?s?) patch to the Giornale d^taaa. Much of this waste is due to the desire of the men to convince the public that the plants are working to full ca? pacity, which is impossible on account of the lack of expert superintendence. At automobile piants there the im? provised directors are said to be in? competent, and it is asserted that the men have become discouraged by the decrease in output and daily are ab? senting themselves in increasing num? bers. The Giornale d'ltalia estimates that only 20 per cent of the men oc? cupying factories are working. English unions, it is reported, have sent a communication to the Italian Confederation of Labor asking news of the metal workers' movement and expressing a desire to work in common accord with the confederation in ex? tending the conflict. At Sestri Ponente, near Genoa, the secretary of the local Socialist Cham? ber t?as announced that/if employers continue their retusa* to pay the past ; fortnight's wages to the men the Cham? ber of Labor there will turn banker and issue tickets to workmen which will be taken in payment for goods at cooperative stores. The unions are making all prepara? tions, such as inventories in the works and distribution of raw materials, to demonstrate that the working classes, as it is put, are "capable of self-gov? ernment." A Genoa dispatch says that in the entire industrial zone in that city the names of the works have been changed, placards on the fa?ades of the plants calling them "Communist Soviet Works." In one plant, besides red and black flags, the walls are decorated with photographs of L?nine, Jaur?s and Marx. One hundred men form a Red Guard, governed with the same disciplinary rule as tTie Italian army. Seek Solution by Saturday The greatest efforts are being made to reach a solution before Saturday of the situation created by the seizure of the plants. The employers in metal factories seized by workmen were given until Saturday, in a resolution passed Tues 5*y ?y, th? Socialist members of the General Confederation of Labor, in which to comply with the workers' demands. A rapid movement toward general nationalization was threatened should the employers decline to yield. In several cities negotiations have started between owners of the plants and their employees, the unions being ignored. There are signs of good will ?n both sides, several Socialist mem? bers of the Chamber of Deputies de? claring it is necessary to reacn an agreement to end the conflict at once. The decision of manufacturers to demand that workers evacuate fac? tories before entering into negotia? tions is delaying the solution of the problem, but official ?rvcles are opti? mistic. Pietro Mascagni, the composer, was given an ovation by wo*kmen at the Orlando factory at Leghorn yesterday, I when he visited the men. He left a written expression of his sympathy,] and before leaving made a brief ad-1 dress. "Your victory," he is quoted as say? ing, "will m.ake an end of a shameful exploitation of labor. I wish you vie-1 tory with my whole heart." It is reported that various Socialist Deputies are pressing for an early re? opening of the Chamber of Deputies, which stands adjourned until ?Novem? ber 3. Their desire is that the chamber resume its sessions simultaneously with those of the Senate after the meeting between Premier Giolitti and Premier Millerand, of France, at Aix les-Bains, on September 12. Hungarian Reds Welcomed GENOA, Sept. 8. -The Bolshevik character which some people give to the present movement in the metal in? dustry is shown, according to the local newspapers, by the fact that hospi? tality has been given inside the works to two Hungarian Communists, who,, the papers say, are circulating propa? ganda for the Internationale. At Sestri Ponente, about eleven miles from Genoa, the Chamber of, Labor has decreed that shopkeepers, of the city grant credits amounting to 200 lire to each workman. Lens Again Mines Coal LENS, France, Sept. 8.?A small ship? ment of coal left one of the pitheads here to-day. This co?l was the first! that had been taken out of the Lens mines since they were flooded by the i Germans during the war. Hundreds of Lives Lost in Italy's Quake (Continuad ?rom pas* on?) suite, who went to Pisa immediately alter he received news of the earth? quake in that vicinity, proceeded this morning to districts in Tuscany which were affected by the shock. FLORENCE, Sept. 8.?? dozen addi? tional earthquake shocks have been felt in the afflicted region of northern Italy which was shaken violently yes? terday morning. The terror of the pop? ulation has been increased by the new tremors. No fresh disasters are report? ed as yet. Telephonic communication with Mussa Carrara"1 is interrupted. At Pisa the inmates of an asylurr. for the insane were terror-stricker and tried to escape. Some of them suc? ceeded. Prisoners clamored to be lib? erated, but were calmed when the} were transferred to a large courtyart where there was little danger of th< walls falling on them. Up to C o'clock to-night ".he numbei of dead reported was 327, although thi: ia only approximate, for there an many bodies under the ruins. The in jured are filli-g all the neighboring, ho-pitals. Numerous rescuing partie: are at work, but food, blankets an< medicines are scarce. The lack of ic? is especially felt, as many are suffer ing from cerebral concussions. From scores of small towns and vil lages come reports of great destruc tion to home?. Some families were al most en'irely blotted out and eacl place has it's small or large toll o dead. Villa Collemandiffa was half razee It has been impossible to ascertain th number of victims there, because thos of the population who were uninjure fled. Only Mayor Bindi remained. The Mayor's house was destroyei and his wife and two children wei buried under it. Bindi with great foi titude undertook to rescue the bodie of his dead, and afterward did charitt ble work for the injured. Among th bodies found is that of the s?cr?tai of the municipality. The City Hal!, i which he was killed, and the belfry ( the village church were reduced to ! ruins. The dead at Marina, near Carrara, ! include a woman and her seven chil- , dren. Sinn F?ein?er Thrice Arrested j BELFAST, Sept. 8.?-Peter Paul Gal- ; ligan, Sinn F?in member of Parliament for the west division of Cavan, was ar rested to-day for the third time. He i ' suffered a broken wrist in the scuffle. ' D'?nnunzi? Disapprove ?Seiwsr* of U. S. Steamship LONDON, Sept. 8.?Gabriele d'An ounzio has disapproved the seixure of the American steamship Cogne by his officers and will order its release, saya a Fiuste dispatch by way of Rome. The Cogne, bound for Buenos Ayres with a cargo estimated to be worth 40,000,000 lire, lies in the Fiume har? bor under guard. Her cargo is intact. CLOVES?a small hem in VJ your clothing budget A big one in good form. You probably spend more for hats?shoes ? linen. Yet nothing you wear im' proves your general appearance more than a pair of good gloves. No one can be well dressed with bare hands? or shabby gloves. , Get the best in gloves ? it pays: ? wear better ? look better ?fit better. You're hard on gbves? The more reason for securing Fownes. You can be sure of the genuine Fownes because the Name is in the Wrist. Look for it, at your dealer's. ?^?sS^ ?7^ ^?^ ?n--^' *"^ ?a* ^ ^ % >^ ^ .^ U S?lice led , . o^ &t& tA1 ,^c? \ast ?OtOSi n? a WsVt to a ?tes^ t aft ? PottO a-- f ^?C< ^ld^ mc bat tc me, boaq1 uet tketfv ?o. daot tt \ ??e^e' to b? * - C aS ?( tbe u . ******* ?cW -Ac& *? ***** once V?1' . ? tVve W V? W*e t*^eW *&& ai** ctfc*TS' tny afr ^ a mV ** ,.-tYi\ . Vvotac broag^ ?d^ ,-bea iX~ / _ct scat be^c"7^tedto V?ViW" o\ta?st dcat A * see 1 ou LWC :V ?rodaccsl tViC finest ?&** de?'ta? cVg^s tbc?en ?vot ?cci Gastod fcctos * tbc d, i**^e? sta? Ue \?c otos fot *{<* !L? ft??1 ^oU Rico. ^^o ^ I?pf? tO rSC ?^s^' * ??' '?.'S..'?..'"... r*i?3 [?I?A?I'S/ 10NP Sooner or later yon'Il discover Ricoro~the moment you do, you'll declare it the mellowest, balmiest cigar you have ever smoked. Ricoro is beautifully made and sells at popular prices only because it is imported from Porto Rico duty free. A dozen shapes and sizes-^-ioc to 20c. Sold only in United Cigar Stores?.?Thank You/9* UNITED CIGAR STORES ?un P?erfe?cto Size,2for25c B?sTthttnbvtbe Box o? 50-56.00 11 other sizes 10c to 20c Imported ?from. PortoRico