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New-York tribune. [volume] (New York [N.Y.]) 1866-1924, October 12, 1920, Image 5

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rjear Bloodshed
.When German
Socialists Meet
JRaiheal Leaders Threaten to
Assassinate Opponents of
Tenus Laid Down by the
Internationale at Moscow
^orkmrn May Use Clubs
Red* l?il *n Attempt to
(iain Control of Labor
Unions at Convention
By William C. Dreher
>???? ". The Tribune
Copyright. 1920, New Tork Tribune Inc.
BERLIN, Oct. 11. Possible blood?
shed and a split in the Independent
Socialist party at its convention at
y ruesday are indicated from
? es. The fight will be
?ver yielding to the conditions laid
'?own by Moscow for admittance of the
independents to the Third Interna?
ll
rts from all part? of the coun
Uyy . -,, thai a clear majority favors
accept ng Moscow's terms. Both wings
p{ the party are becoming more and
mcTc excited as the day of the con
y ? ? lws near. The Moscow wing
ia'f bee" organizing a system of terror*
ism to obtain victory. Freiheit, the <>f
flcia organ of the party admits "the
decline !n the party's morale has made
fitl progress under the influence
0f Mu ctrines," and says that
the Com ? ist ' wing is unscrupulous
ar.d maj '?' to plans to assassinate
? ?. opponents
Plan of Assassination
Lebedonr. one 07' the Independent
leader?, several days ago printed a let?
ter written by a confrere threatening
him v. ? ?To-day Freiheit prints
? statement of a "thoroughly trust?
worthy friend" who talked with one
woakl-h'' murderer. This frier.d ad?
mitted that there exists a far-reaching
erfs; ' the party whose aim
is to kill off the opposition leaders. The
paper describes the violent methods
whereb} the ? mmunist wing is seek
the party organization.
In Wurtemberg the Communist ma?
jority at the state convention dismissed
the old state committee and also made
in eiert to obtain editorial control of
Freiheil The committee served notice
or. the manager to dismiss the chief edi?
tor. H If : ng and a half dozen other
editor?. ". ; ? manager refused to yield
en "he ground that the committee had
procee I regu arly.
Freih? I says that the Ilaile local
eha:r77:-.77 has threatened that members
of the rational committee would not be
?Mowed to leave Haue and that they
wo'.:'; he beaten to death. Another
Hai:c : the Mansfeld copper
pin ' ? come to Halle armed with
clubs 7 perse the convention.
I.'eds Fail to Hule Labor
The first congress of shop councils
ever hel I here has adjourned. There
wer? - ? ? gates present. A re?
mar'-;.' for control was waged
betwe? - ? laboi ? ion element
bt. I thi " w er ra mun ?sfi wing
Ti ? R? Is demanded an independent
central rganization for all shop conn
cils, but I .. right wing succeeded, by
a large majority, in giving ti:?' control
tc ? . a union central office.
nevertheless was per
-p. led '. which was
?nspir? ? I s s1 rong detern
among workmen to assert far-reaching
control ver the processes of produc?
tion ai " ition. The congress
psssed :. res : ition asking the Germar
eovernment to Btand firmly against the
the Conference of Allied
Ambass idors to prohibit the construe
? sel motors in Germany, and
?",-?? ? itroy those now in use in in?
dustrial work.
The chairman of the congress re
mark."1?-! that the Fntente was demand
.- normoua indemnities, and also the
machinery with which alone it woulc
be poss : le to pay them. He added thai
the decision of 1 an b? ssadors was
not a war measure, but a stroke delib?
erately intended to cripple Germany
economically.
The congress voted unanimously.
with much applause, to send a deputa?
tion to the Allied commission of con?
trol in Berlin protesting against the
decision and asking its annulment.
At the congress was a Russian depu
tation under tlie Bolshevik leader
7. who in a speech admitted
that the.Russian soviets would be un?
able to hold out permanently unless
they succeeded in starting a world rev
o ! u t i o n.
600 See Policeman Quit
Banquet and Drop Dead
\V. A. Hagan Is Victim of In?
digestion YHiile Broher Ofli
cer9 Celebrate Promotions
Six hundred police officials, business
and professional men and politicians
gathered at a banquet in Pythian Tem?
ple, 149th Street and Walton Avenue,
The Bronx, last night to celebrate joy?
ously the recent promotion of three
police officers. William A. Hagan,
thirty-eight years old, a patrolman, at?
tached to the Alexander Avenue
station, arose from the table complain?
ing of pai k and was led from the
room. . Outside the officer collapsed
Physicians were summoned from Lin?
coln Hospital, but it was too late.
Stricken with acute indigestion, Hagan
died within a few minutes.
Inspector .John F. Sweeney informed
the guests of thi tragedy and the party
was adjourned.
Hagan had been on the force eigh?
teen years. With his wife and daugh?
ter he lived at 311 Hast 140th Street.
The dinner had been arranged in
honor of Inspector Sweeney, recently
promoted from a captain: Captain
Benjamin Austen, promoted from lieu?
tenant and Lieutenant Frank C, White,
promoted from a sergency.
Gateman Held for Deatli
Lifting of Bars Too ?Quickly
Blamed for Fatalitv
GLOUCESTER, N. J., Oct. 11.?Isaac
Christine, a gateman at the K?hler
Street crossing of the West Jersey and
Seashore Railroad, was arraigned to?
day before Mayor Anderson and com?
mitted to the county jail on a charge
of manslaughter. He was placed under
heavy guard as he was taken from the
hearing.
Late last night a motorcycle with
one mnn riding in the side car started
over the tracks just after a freight
train had passed and ran into the path
of an express train. The motorcycle
was carried 50 feet and Paul Pienlenz,
twenty years old, of 311 Jersey Ave?
nue, "was killed. The driver of the
machine, George McMullen, of 25 Mar?
ket Street, received a fractured skull
and is reported to be dying at Cooper
Hospital, Camden, N, J.
According to Charles Straw, county
prosecutor, the gateman'lifted the bars
after the freight tram went by, and
McMullen, assuming the track was
clear, started to cross. The gateman
denied he raised the bars.
Erin in Uproar
Over Arrest of
Vice-President
(Continued from page ono!
latter fired volleys, in which several
persons were wounded.
Lloyd George's speech at Carnarvor
started what promises to' become on?
of the bitterest political battles sine?
the war. Kx-Premier Asouith hai
primised that on Thursday he wil
make answer ti the Prime Minister':
utterance and the country expects hin
to do some plain talking in develop
ment of his charge that Lloyd Georg?
condones "the hellish policy of re
prisais."
The feud is expected to reach it
climax when Parliament reassemble
next week and the government bring
out the Irish Home Rule measur?
which The Times describes as emac
ated and discredited. The pape
charges that the measure is supporte
by the government simply because S
Edward Carson had the prime minist?
in his political pocket.
Consistently loyal to the prime mil
ister. The Manchester Guardian sa;
the Carnarvon speech marks the tur:
ing point in Lloyd-George's career.
It is difficult to see how anythir
beneficial to Ireland can result fro
the fight' between two leading Briti;
statesmen and the newspapers supper
ing them. Neither is there any pro
poet of the opposition developii
enough strength to bring about a poli
ical crisis. Lloyd George has serengt
ened himself with Conservative su
port and still retains his firm ho
on the coalition Liberals.
Morally the government is considi
ably weakened, but its politic
strength is still sufficient to control t
situation. The opposition, composed
Asquith Liberals, the masses of lab
and a few Unionists who disagree w:
Carson, will become more solidified a
may enjoy the support of a lai
measure of public opinion, but. Llo
George controls the majority vote
the House of Commons. Some politi
observers predict the defeat of 1
government at the. geneial -lectic
this fall, but there is little to just
this forecast.
The government professes to f
keenly the unsympathetic attitude
America, P^rance and even some of
colonies regarding its Irish pol:
although it is difficult to appreci
why it should do so when half
newspapers of England and Scotli
contain criticism bitter enough
leave them open to the charge of s
porting the Sinn Fein.
LONDONDERRY, Ireland, Oct. 1
Lively scenes took place after a i
by the police and military on Hami
Falls, Bogside, a Nationalist disti
Sunday night, in which two men v
arrested, charged with having sediti
literature in their possession. A 1:
and threatening crowd followed
"The Trouiseau
-*?> House of America.
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China May Use Famine
Relief on Canal Work
PEKING, Oct. 11.?The famine
committee is investigating a pro?
posal to devote the major portion
df the $500,000 donated by the
American Red Cross for relief'
work to improving the Grand
Canal, which traverses the
famine-stricken regions.
police nnd then captives to the sta?
tion.
Shota in th< nir failed to disperse
the fathering, and tiie police und mili?
tary charged with clubs and bayonets,
driving the Nationalists hack to their
quarters.
The prisoners in the. Londonderry
jail Sunday" ni<rht. acain wrecked their
cells. There were continued disturb?
ances until early this morning.
CORK, Oct. 11.- The first case, so
far as is known, of an attack on an
Irish prison official occurred ye.-ter
day afternoon when Thomas Griffin, n
warden of Cork jail, was kidnapped
while on the way to his home. No
trace of him has been found and the
jail authorities expressed the fear to?
day that they would never see him
acain.
It was state?! that Griffin was on
the "black list." being accused of
torment in.,' the hunger strikers in jail
by offering them food.
British Trying to Buy
Ireland-Halifax Cable
From The Tribune European Bureau
Copyright, 1920, New Fork Tribun? In,'
'LONDON, Oct. 11.-The British gov?
ernment has offered to purchase the
Ireland, Newfoundland and Halifax
line of the Direct. United States fable
Company at a price said to be about
?750,000. The cable was laid forty
years ago, and is American owned and
has been operated by the Western
Cable Company since 1912,
With the except!m of the former
German cable, all Atlantic Unes are
now under American control, and the
government feels the need of more than
one wire.
The suggestion has been made in the
press that'wli?le the government needs
cables, the construction of a new and
better line would be wiser than to buy
the one under cons iderat ion.
Reds Sue for
Peace With
Gen. Wrangel
(Contlnurd from pnse on?)
agreement both contract in;: parties un- |
dertake not to extend their support to ;
foreign military action against the
other side." , ,
Polish Council Favors
Annexation of Vilna
Diet Body Adopta Resolution;
Government to Disavow Or
eupation. Is Report to Paris
LONDON, Oct. 11.- The Council of
Foreign Affairs in the Diet at War?
saw has passed a resolution favoring
the annexation of the Vi.lna district
to the Polish Republic, the Central
News says to-dav
A Warsaw dispatch says:
"The Polish government does not as?
sociate itself with this incident and is
determined not to countenance any
willful act on the part of army de- |
tachments. The Polish goverment is
taking all measures in its power to
assert its authority."
Provisional Rule Established
WARSAW, Oct. 11 (By The Ass.,.
ciated Press.?-General Zellgouski,
whose forces occupied Vilna, th?>
Lithuanian capital, Saturday, hag es- i
t#iblished a provisional government in !
Vilna, according to reports from
Grodno to-day.
The Polish authorities assert it. was
ascertained after the Reda were driven
eastward that more than one thousand i
Poles i Id men, women and children -
lad been killed by the Bolsheviki in the
Vilna region during the occupation.
Army officials say that the action of ?
Zellgouski's units was in defiance of ;
the orders of General Sikorski, who
commands the Polish army on the:
northern front. General Sikorski
telegraphed headquarters here that
several ?lays ago he endeavored to j
pacify the dissatisfied group.
The group which revolted belonged
to the division which distinguished!
itself ?t Radzymin in defense of War?
saw when the Reds' August drive
leached the capital's gates. They j
were from the ?Grodno and I.ida
districts, and mutinied because of
dissatisfaction over the terms of.
th" Lithuanian-Polish armistice. This
agreement left the fate of Vilna in
suspense, and caused such hitter feel?
ing throughout the divisi in that it
was resolved at all costs to prevent
the Kovno government from annex?
ing the city.
Occupation of Vilna resulte,1 from
the rejection by General Zellgouski of
proposals by the French Goven
create Vilna a free city. The forces
occupying the city were Polish
Lithuanians, and not. while Russians
and Lithuanians as reported Satur?
day.
Great Excitement in Vilna
General Sikorski said he had bee::
unable to communicate with Genera!
Zellgouski since the latter entered
Vilna. He added that there was greal
excitement in the Vilna district.
was evacuated by the Lithuanian troops
before the arrival of the Poles.
General Zellgouski, who commanded
the group of Polish armies wh
1919 defended the retreat of General
Denikine from Odessa, sent in his res?
ignation by t?. lephone. He did not wait
for an answer over the wire, but fol?
lowed his, telephone message by a
formal written resignation.
Shell-Shock Victim Slew
Wife of German Admiral
Von Sch?eer's Daughter Still in
Critical Condition; Hope
Held Out for Recovery
WEIMAR, GERMANY; Oct. Il T ?
condition of Fraulein Von Scl.r,
daughter of Admiral Reinhardt Von
Scheer, who was wounded when her
mother and a maid were assassinated
in the Admiral's villa Saturday after?
noon, still is critical, but some hope
is held out for recover;.-.
One of the murders, an artist named
Buechner, who committed sucide in a
coal bin, is said to have bee:', a victim
of shell-shock in the war and very ex?
citable. Buechner concealed himself in
the cellar, where h'e attacked and killed
the maid servant. Frau von Sehe? r,
disturbed by the maid's prolonge?! ab?
sence, went to seek her and also was
kille'd. Fraulein von Scheer then began
a search for he mother and wat
upon and wounded.
The person wh was seen leaving tl
house after the shooting has not b? ?
identified. It is thought probable,
however, that it was Admiral von
Scheer, win ? as hurrying out to obi
the services of a doctor.
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