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nd Congressional Record c( that ate) said, in apeaking as to Presiden! ilson's attitude regatding the use of e I nitod States military oower un 1er the. league; "'Hut finally a speech made by Pres? ident \\ .Ison to the Rumanian and Ser bian delegation makes it perfectly plain that the signing of this obligation put s us into every European war; that the signing of this obligation compels us to.send our soldier* to Europe every time the fighting cock of the weather vane shall turn in the direction of fields of blood. He was ifrging these people to sign the covenant of the teigue, and this is what he had to say: '""If these states are solidly estab? lished, thanks to the treaty which we are making together, the right belongs to the powers winch will guarantee tie execution of this treaty, in the last analysis, to see to it that the conditions on which these states wiil be established are of the sort to insure the public peace. . . . Pledge Quoted in Senate "'"If the world should be troubled again, if the conditions which, we all regard as fundamental are challenged, the^ guarant.es which wi bo ' givei to you. . . . that is. to Serbia, and Rumania will pledge that tin- Ui States will send it i army and fleet TOSS the ocean. 1^ it surprising, un der such conditions, that it should de sire to reach a solution of the various problems?" Thej have been telling the women of the c untry trat we will never hs ve to again : yet he r - is the President tc '..:.,: the re] rest tives of S i Romania that I United States proposes ; > send its men and its fleet across the ocean in or.i. r to maintain th< tient.' "There : re ? eral i iblc authors .-ml e.irre-, or..': nts and others who . ?.-, ? .-.. re in Paris at the I "me Mr, Wilson is sa used the lan p ?age in qt est had accc ! the reporter ation from Mr. \\ ilson's :. : ' ima < used. h-. and Reed. One of tl l r, a Pc mo crat, who held i post and i etl thi ersona repi itative ol matters ? . ? issu d in St. Louis 01 Sen : or "-; ncer in tl Mr. Mi rriwether repi I what h said ePi - V\ ???? ? exact wer.is to Premie r Bratiai R i a as re? in rted by t nographer at j. ci!. They ? ere thi -.; ne as u two Senators. Magazine Vrticle Printed It "Tl ? ? ? i '? -: - ? , . ? in an rtic | ? '? lent sty Maga ? ?: ... ... 'The In sidi - Conference,' ':?.. Dr. E. .1. 1920.), I ing t Wilson' . ?. ? ? Pi I parisoi ' 'pro] I i rite ? :. tCCl thi Christin o f T u r k e y : " 'Wi . , you fron I iers and : i- we ?ps and m. c -.-.-. ? i. - - el we p ? tl to 1.le ,. of a set of di .vhich W. : voidable.' "Dr. 1 - President Wil 'was delivi I i m re than swee , ? Eseh-Cunimins Rail Law Defended by Wadsworth Senator Tells Audience at Hornell of Advantages Granted to Employees HORNELL, X. Y'., Oct. ?. Foi the '? rst time t?te cam W. Wr.dswort ,-otetl ad ? ? tere ? -. : ig] ? lefeuse of t! tmmins rail roa II--- an ? ? largely . road moi net of 1 ' He said t h e i 't i c a 11 n tun fter two ernn ? n t o ] bot the publ vnei It wa th ' peech of the clay for .' ? ? vorth. add] ? '-. Mm d and C :. i ? - ? row Q? j Good coi fi e for breakf? si- a*?ch and * ' r - > satis?yii * o Coffee ,creeiny mi?i ana s\zdnv. to 'L-crfocily hlendva. Always msi r?/ht. Made in a m*zuite. 3? ??; Coffee Without waste NEAR 5TH AVE. in the F.cst 50s 1,1 YS ( IHIlON.s i 0 l?th . -..:.:? rbtit I 40 ? Refreshment s*?f vrit'n holder, 6 ?l xase ? A o ?Ut? ?.'/?uns fi 3.51) IT is not particularly to ?Ovington's credit that they show a greater var? iety of good gifts than most other shops. With long practice in helping to solve gift problems, it would be much to their shame if they did not. OVINGTON'S " The Gi ft Sttop ot'5ch A ve ' 314 Fifth Ave. nr.32dSt. ^'iTi'M'frn*11"1" m "?? lee * . . p?o ..i Tl ?bine- ' jui4 puc? - SS?uJ Li i:.:. V v ?4?g?T3k ???. V3* Sterling Silver Pearls Precious Stones Jewelry Watches Stationery Sn,YER Plate Reed &? Barton r rABt smed s;* Theodore B. Starring ESTASL 5HE0 Bl 2 Fifth Awnue Ai47th Street i sSCu rt,. 4 Maiden Lane New York |&!?^ ?%a^a II ? I Miller Says Polities Halts Development Of City's Traiisit Republican Gubernatorial Candidate Declares Im? provements Cannot Be Procured Without Money .',. Ige Nathan 1 Miller, addressing Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce n, said I hat the proposed hip cai I ? the St. Lawrence ucted, would "i; ai I sum, and that New York State would ay 27 per cent of the cost. "A project of th ki n :." he leclared, "would impaii the New York barg( '' cai al, on w h ch $11 1,000,000 already has - \ ? ., ended, i am informed that the bargi canal is virtually completed. All that is lacking now are the .terminal.-; and the barges. If the palsied hand.of tli ? Fi ii' n ! governmc i1 could be taken ! off of ! he cu nal ? her? vvoi1 Id be no of the d< velopment ol it." Referring 1 tin rapid t rans ?! 'itua tion in this city, Judge .Miller said: "You r rapid : fans il ystem has ?? row n jusl ..- .' r behind as have t he other improvements. Commissionei Delaney recently issued a map of pro ed e x t e n o i to t'h e transit system, ? ? mat- I cost of ?250,000,000, I '?.'? cos? ti lay .vould prol ably b< $350,1 00,000. 1 here i oi i vi y ob\ io is ?ti n. The city cannot gi ; im ? ' : i il capita!. Al! of I citj mprovements hould be : revenue ? roduc n .. The city has a born ving capai ty of only $25,000,000, , and it can be seen that that is not hion enou ? h to work on. We have 0, li 0 a, rth ? - bway bond i : : ? b< ing maintain! d out of I tax It . ?? . "I don'l km ? ; ow much i - requin il oi ? i ib' ay bo . but it. prob betwt en ?3,000,000 and $4,000, i DO. It nrol be bet >veen 000,000 and I if the proposed : ai rrietl th rough. ! ?' : bi e iminated business ? d . to the rapid transit u," tl judge said. Willian i i At 1er in, state supcrin nt of th An1 ?? aloon 1 .eaguc, yes ivroti Judgt M Her a letter s 1< d lend his sup pert if i lected to the election of ;. Speaker of tho Assembly who would ml th rough an enfoi cemi .'?T prohibition law. Ship Steered by Kar Through she Channel Electrified Cable Enables the Pilot to Negotiate 16-Mile Course Without Trouble i ommander Norton steered tho de Semmes through the sixteen mile course of the Ambrose Chnnnel rday \\:ih the pilot windows cd' .: craft covered with canvas. He ; ? I I j i . instead by eye, 1 neat! tin ko ! of I he Sommes was stretched a sixteen-mile cable laid by ... vy to guide ship - into port in \. ea*. hi r. A n elect ric current, ei ted at i\.i : Lai ay? Lte, on t he die of the Narrows, was oui t:." i ablu and set up v, hich u ei e a? ! ible in the headpiece v. I < m ma nde r N oi ton .. o- r hii en-s. irding to th< strength of the vi its he \ . < red his ves ici. If the 1 ? ' . i in i ight ear I! . n in his le rt it \. as an indication he cable, which lies in the center the 700-yai 1 fairway, lay tu tho riflit of the .':' mmes's keel. The Coast Guard cutter Peque*, laid iblc in eight hours at a cost of 1 The experiment made yester day is regai led i : roving the efl of the device and it is p ssible that milai ne res to offset fogs will be taken in ether pai : s, Cox in Kentucky To-day COLUMBUS, O., Oct. 6. Afterspend ing today at tiie executive office, t-nor ' on left to-night for Ken? tucky, where to-morrow he will cent menee his second extensivo speaking aign. Governor Cox in lorsed a program for betterment of i mployei s of the postal presented by heads of their .. ? .cus ore. . The program w i foi adequate facil s, just and equitable compen ? i with postoffice representatives of I ? ir own orj i and a court of . . ",-. to .\ .! may be taken tion er dismissal. M.irlborough Petition Listed LONDON Oct, 6 The Duchess of Marlborough'a petition appears in the list of defended^ causes for hearing by ,he divorce court at ur. early date. Borah Cheered in League Talk By Democrats; Senator Challenges Wilson's ; Statement That Congress Need Not Declare War! Under Covenant Terms' Says Obliga!ion U Moral i | Asserts Pi- narj ?-5 i Would ; Asks Vo ? log?e Special Dispi NEW HAVE] ho i Anti-League of gest Demoern , Haven, was a to-night by a j ? iam E. Borah. nit (I. Harding .1. . . ? ide gco, Republican .. for re? election as Senator . ? 0 nnecticut, adorned the wall. Tho club ehe' red every reference to them and shouted approval of Senator Borah's attacks on j the League of Nations. Senator Borah challenged Preside nt Wilson's statement of Monday eulogiz? ing the League of Nations. Re it si id that the league left the Linited Stute-.; ne alternative but to fight ^ for Japan if Russia at tacked her or el ;c be 01 ever dishonored because she had re? fused the moral obligation involved, j He .,<.kT: -The President'-, last letter t.. the ! public informs us that Article X does nc/J interfere with Congress i.i declar ing or not declaring war. 1 can con cci -': of but one way that Congress ? could get out of declaring war in case of the invasion of the territory of a member of the league. That would lie to violate and disregard the plain j terms of the treaty and tear in pieces; the covenant itself. "Heretofore the President has said, upon a very solemn occasion that Ar? ticle X constitutes a very solemn obli- ( gation upon the part of mir nation.' This obligation he declared to be more binding than an obligation of law 01 contract. Congress is but, an agent of the nation, and in refusing to carry ? out a solemn promise would brand our whole people with dishonor and moral , turpitude. What of Moral Obligations? "Arc we about to enter some kind of ! a monstrous combination in which moral obligations are to be disregarded when the occasion arises'.' Have we reached the point on international de? bauchery where we are plainly promis? ing one thing and plainly intending an? other if our own interests suggesl it? I would like to know fv'-iv.i the Presi? dent and from his associates who h -.,'?'. him write thi.-- creed that if we accept Article X as written and Russia ! invades the territory of Japan and Japan, through the council of the league, calls upon us to furnish money ' and mer. to help to preserve tier terri? torial integrity and we refuse, what will be the standing of this proud Re? public among the other nations of the world and what will become of the league ? "If we can exercise the discretion not to assist, of course every other nation will do the same and this su? preme moral obligation is turned a'. I once into a supremely immoral pre? tense. The United States steps out di credited and dishe notred and the seeds of wars are scattered broadcast." Discussing analyticallj the league provisions, Senator Borah said: "It is constantly being presented to tin voters of this campaign that we are now a great trading or commercial nation and that our policy of isolation sii;.uld not continue. But it was p.gainst political or military combina? tions that Washington advised. Look over your press dispatches day by day tend see the constant European strife. And it is over the same racial antipa? thies that they have liad war for cen tuiies. Therefore, I say, that until Europe changes its own theories of government it is unwise for us to ally ourselves politically with that con tit ent. Nation's Independence at Stake "To-day a nation must pay with its independence for whatever favor it re- . ceives. That was what happened on ; the League of Nations covenant, hut a' little group in the Kennte said that this country should not surrender any I of its independence, and one of the first and most c : rageou ? of hat I ai d, '"t.- of the ablest, was C nnect ?cut's Senator, frank Brande "Let us not he misled as to the is- ! sue. Do we intend to abandon the policy of Washington and Jefferson, | Madison and Lincoln, McKinley, Roose? velt and Cleveland to travel the road that bads us all over Europe? It is a stupendous, hut not a complex problem. It is simple and clear." Senator Borah said that he did not know what th" prosident naid or did m Rurope, but ho knew what they <Hd to him. He pleaded guilty to getting u copy of the league covenant, lrtr ho hoard that Wall Street had four when the Senat.- had hoik-, and he re i arded that as secret diplomacy and helped the Senate get one. "There has been peculation na to the women's vote on the league mat? ter," he said. "I have loen in sixteen different Htates discussing the league and I predict thai the women will record more votes i i pro i u I ?o i to the tuim ber who vote ap lin i the It i BUi than nn-n. 1 find the women of the country turning against the league much njoroi gem ralle than the man, are! the drift of both sides i - unmlstakabb Anarchist Is Arrested With Loaded Revolver Man Wanted in Conneeticut for $4,000 Hold-up Was Suspect in Wall Street 5'1< Giacomo Carisso, twenty-four years old, a barber, living in 75 Ro i levell '-tree!, Corona, Lon? i :'". !. vas ar t.t ? ! yc iterday by mi ;ibor?? of the bomb squad of the Police D< partmi nt ror having in his posse: don it :' revolver, Lie is being Id : r tin Waterbury, C' an., authoritiei i con ncction with a $4,000 ho1 . accord? ing to the police. <?arisso ir; an anarch I i 1 ? a I ,i, . ion. I! .? was a ?resl eel i n 19 I 7, the police say, in connection with a bomb plot in .1 -rsey City. Sine?! tin Wall Street expl, ?on agoni i of ' ho Department of Justice have been keep ? ?. ? i under su eil They fol - lowed him to Wat? rbur; and then had I j ?O lip lite ! h idoWlIlg ' 'Ol of b? ing detci As far :. could Lu lean I ; - 1er day, the Dcpartn ?' ? ' - nothing i o ???? n rran reqn ( larisso for pt-ssi i pa: dpation the Wall Streel los ion, Jamca J. Ciegan oi the bomb sy id did not seem to be interested in Carisso as a bi i b sus pi cl Rejected Sui?or Slays Girl and Shoots Self Bought Pistol on Way ??> Brooklyn liou*e to Entreat Marriage for Last rime Harty Gleason, twenty-one years old, a boilcrmaker, of I'M Twenty-third Street, Brooklyn, wanted Elsie Dohl, seventeen years old. to marry him. He had entreated her many times within the last year, he says. Gleason last night decided to ask the girl for tin last time. On the way to her home al 19 Hamilton Avenue, Brooklyn, he bought a revolver, the police say. On the second floor of the Kohl home kinsmen o? th< girl left the couple as they quarreled. A few minutes later, John Lubnian, the girl's -? -p I 1er, heard, a serie.- of pistol-shots. He ran to the room and found the girl dying. She had been shot three times. Gleason, with two self-inflicted h?l? let wounds in the breast, was stagger? ing down the stairway as Lubman came upon tin- unconscious woman. Sh died an hour later at the Holy Family i Hospital. Gleason was removed to the Long Island < ollege Hospital. It is said that his condition is not critical. Gleason told the police that the girl h. il repeatedly refused to marry him. He visited her yesterday afternoon* the police report him as saying, and plead ed with the cirl, but she was obdurate. When he quit the house in the after soon Gleason visited several saloons, according to the police, and drank whisky. Then the bought the revolver. TIMES out of 100 you can get Knickerbocker Ice at once Families moving, or opening town houses, need have no delay in getting Knickerbocker Ice. It is always wise to give the Company notice the day before, but ninety-nine out of a hun? dred emergency calls can be an? swered at once. Absolutely purr hygeir, ice, delivered in clean wagons with such uniform regular? ity "you can almost set your . ck by the .'? ver's 'irrii.-i!,'' make Knickerbocker Service, (fie Service sf discriminating borne:, restaurants, clubs and office buildings. any ? mum nnoun? An mh^day ?mHna m MRTIY 1AIL0RE REET Dresses 1 A eaiunnu dunpU tailoivd lima O'iibtvidertd deMcjn? xuid Juvid eoM?ei) ?tnid? xrx^^ Ahoeobvicf^atdaclvz ,cu\B sibbori ??fcuA.-Im?e? * ?. ?i ? -' li. t A ,, "il'ra IH ii 1 ?Tariff Linked To High Wage By Harding (Cnntlnuril from pnon nnel would do In fhiti community under certain circunutances. Suppose w? had boon visited by a great conflagration or oniy greal scou i go. You wou ! I give all t liai you had to stem the I ide ol : er and ?m t things normal once more. And thai is precisely what has ippei e | ?n the United Stales. W wen involved in the World War. We turned all our energies to warfare, to productivity for destructivity. After the war vas ended tin: big practical thing for th.-- government to have done <'.a- ti have concentrated on getting t he nal ion on I hi- right, normal. fi r ward track attain. "And our fault with the present All? ai iiiis'.1 ation is that instead of putting our own American hou e in ordei thai ever;, body in the United States could go forward it went to dreaming aboul American influence the Old World, "1 believe in the doctrine of 'America Hirst.' I like to preach thai gospel to you. 1 have the very strong conviction that here in the United States we have the most wonderful popular government on the face of the earth. We havo contrived to prosper and advance our own j; lople. W C have been able to make our own way in the great, for? ward march of civilization; and, God helping us, und " the next admini tra ; ion '. ' are goi.:- to conl inue to maka i u r . n \\ aj f if A merico n a 1, Lid ibove '; c applause wa; ea ??': a vi i< ? saying: " fou bet we will, undi : you, Senator." Ti .- candi late joined in the laughter ?and then continued: "1 do no! moan by that, my countrymen, that 1 -.vent to live in American sein* ?hn? s. That is not my thought. But it is not sel? fish, my friends, to think of our own secur !.. and good fortune first." Makes Appeal for Watson With the narrow Republican major? ity of the Senate in mind, Senator Ll.n : -; in a speecn to a crowd of 2,1 ?U : t Huntingtoi Ind., made an ap ?)? I l'or tl rc?ii c Ion of Senat o r .; ? !? V. ? : on w ho te seat i-- bi i ., eon ' v Thema fag carl. [t wa: thi> candidate's second rear platfoVm speech in Huntington, for lie spoku there on his way to Minnesota ear -, in Sept i mber. "] have a notion," h? said, "thai - o are interested in bringing aboul change in your government. You ire interested in bringing it about by put : t'inw the Republican party in ? ver, because you believe the Rep,.:. party has tiie capacity to rescue th - government from th. very unfortunal rut in which it is running. "And if you are going to put the R : ublican party in power in the ? ?; cet ' ve branch. ) wan; to ask you as' neighbors and friends to make sun that you put it ?a power also in th ? legislativ, branch and send my*, friend j Jim Watson back to the United States Sena e." "When the government reaches out and puts its hand on control of ac tivities that ought to ho in the hands ? of private enterprise then these :l it \ become a matter, unfortunately, let i mo my, of governmental favori'ism. "That is the reason wo- have no sue cess with our river highways oi com- : rnorce. 'I hey aie improved according. : , | 011 barrel met hodj, or the pull thai, men have in our national Congre ; sional bodies. 1 rememb?r not so very long ago o group of politicians, ?n-J fluential with Ihe government, asked' [or something like $3,000,000 to Im? prove a waterway not far away, but I shall riot m< ni :"n the place. When the I 'in'- came to consider thq C -as: bi ! it y of the im n ove men I a rid the amou m of wa tor in the si rea m on which it. wo i p? opi ed to float com merer ; ' wa fot ... I h n v quite n scarcity of water, and those who advo? cated the impi ov. meiil said : "Though ?....- hnven'l muc\h water now we thought we coul i be re v.. ?; -. .;? the I. ! of '?:'.' rivci and gel waler enough." The al of modern civilization was pictured as a threatening possibility by Senat >r Harding in at tack.- ?; I he ,:' Administration foi its failure?. " i v. nnl ou to ki ow that our civil I ? zation i; very much threatened," said '. lal - '? Harding ' We ha vc been in the turmoil, stress and anxieties of I the World War. And the reason you ,,i e thinking oi t timing ou' th mini - - ;;: ion no . ; -. in your common ^-r.M' understanding that the A,Im i ni tral ?en' J i, in the place, i n not yr \ ring to defei d cur rights in tin w , and, in the : :oni place, in failing to prepare us for the peace that has I o ve I." Smith Den es Glynn's Charge o? Extravagance MALONE, -X. V., Oct. 6.?Governor I Smith, a ?-.1res ing voters of Frankl n County to-night, appealed for - pperl ? execu! ive budge I plan. I er? ring ti ' ; if Geo -ge G!; an ? . thi Re] - . ?. i ., . . .' thi ? had been wa ti ani extrava; unc? government, !.. :-:;-i: "Eve ..- dol lar an] re prit ted luring my t> .-in was vot d bj i Republican ?: cjoritj ; he i eg al ire,* i id in two years I have vetoed seven and one-half million d.-d'ars of Republican appro-' : ions." In reference to the budge* plan the Govei nor said : '? n is t ate is :. i tempt ?ng to fun op a s> stem that - tan fifty -.-? ,:r- of age. I made a oncrete sug on a scheme to erect eighteen de -,:s of government, and put all : i. ? l~y'i boards and bureau ? into these . een depart nient -." Governor alsi defetided the day? light "A your If f you hi vi not be in 1 I | or lose your votd ! For places of registration PHONE WORTH 1307 i .-a reminder htm I ; '?THE UN'ION- LEAGUE CLCD Stop One Minute and take count of what you pay for meat, vegetables and many other foot'?, i hen note what yon pay for a large loaf of When you figure the superior food value and low cost of MO T H E R H UBBARD BREAD as compared with othei foods v<- the real reason -why you should Eat a Pound of Mother Kubb&rd Bread Every Day carried away by propagan this law," he sa id, "As!: ;. ou want to be Si ..' I trie repeal of thai ?aw at the i of the advantage to the f :tory .vork the girl in ?xtra ? - ? irriett May Milla warned ' a S'ra-.ght t to vote for .-? r MEN'S TAILORS Clothes tailored by Schanz embody the utmost in quality and smartness BUSINESS SUITS CHESTERfjELD OVERCOATS Ready-for-v: ear Models $100 ?4EAST 40th STREET NEW VORK THE VALUE TO YOU of your servant, the telephone, may never be measured by your individual use of it. Nor can it be measured by the amount you pay each month for its service. Perhaps the greatest value o? the telephone is not in the use you make of it but in the use that others make of it with resulting benefit to you. Out across the vastness of the Empire State on Lake Erie is Dunkirk. Up on our side of the St Lawrence River is Louisville. Way down in the extreme southwest corner of the State is Qymer. At the eastern tip of Long Island is Montank Point THE TELEPHONE at your elbow ex? tends to each of them. It brings all points in this groat State within the reach of your voice. We use the telephone so frequently and for so many trivial things that we forget some? times the bigger tilings it can do and does. We forget that there are times when busi? ness or personal affairs of great importance make the service of the telephone more valu? able than all our money. We forget that to? day, tomorrow, next week, next 3i?ar wc might be willing to pay any amount to get someone in Dunkirk, Louisville, Ciymer or Montauk Point on the telephone^ We forget sometimes that this entire city is ted, and clothed, and housed, and kept warm md supplied with its necessities, comforts aaa luxuries by a modern system of quick supply and distribution that is largely made possible by the comprehensive state-wide service of the telephone. This service is not a matter of a few long dis? tance terminals in the communities outside the city. Every single telephone in these lo? calities is part of the system and ready to receive your message or send one to you. Only by such universally adequate service can the people of this city and state serve each other commercially and socially in the manner required by their interdependence. THE GREATEST VALUE of the tele? phone is in the use wc all make ot it. It is the voice to voice communication of this great city locally and with all +he other com? munities in the State that is of the greatest benefit to each individual served by the sys? tem. And each of us must pa" nur fair share of the cost of this city-wide, state-wide rerv ice that has done and is doing so much to make New York City big. ew York Telephone Company