ALL MERCHANDISE ADVERTISED IN THE TRIBUNE IS GUARANTEED First to Last ? the Truth: News?Editorials?Advertisements THE WEATHER Showers to-day and probably to morrow; moderate temperature? and moderate south and southwest winds. Fall Report on Last Pago Lockwood to Quit Unless Partv Unites Warning Given in Fight | for Candidate; Ami-' Tammany Men Say Sen- ? ator Will Be Named ? ??????? Livingston Faces Leadership Loss Price Told to Avoid Kings Chief; Koenig Calls for Brooklyn Head?oTieket j Yesterday was- Ultimatum Day among the confussd anti-Tammany i fusionists. Senator Charles S. Lockwood served an ultimatum on the Republican . leaders that unless there is substan- i tial unanimity among the Republicans in all tho boroughs they could count him out of the Mayoralty race, as he wanted to go on practicing law and | winding up the affairs of the Lockwood housing committee. Republican leaders in Brooklyn ?erved an ultimatum on Elections Commissioner Ja.ob A. Livingston that unless he kept his promise made in the presence* of witnesses to Sen? ator Lockwood to support him loyally ?n the primaries he would wind up with only one vote in the executive committee and that his days of politi- ! cal leadership were numbered. Manhattan and Brooklyn Republicans served an ultimatum on Joseph M. Price, leader of the coalitionists, that if he wanted the confidence of the ! steering committee he Would stay away ! from Elections Commissioner Living- I ston and get his news from the Brook- j v lyn members of the steering committee | ?Senator Calder, United States Ap- ? praiser Kracke and Mrs. Beatrice V, i Stevenson. Troubles Soon to End Finally, as an end to a perfect dog- j day. Dr. E. E. Hicks, of the coalitionist ? executive committee, took to the execu- j tive committee of the coalitionists at ? the Commodore, a resolution calling j for the dislandment of the coalition committee. But the good natured doc? tor's wrath cooled at the meeting of the commitec and he did not introduce his resolution. ? The anti-Tammany leaders are con- i ?dent that they are getting all of their j pre-primary troubles out of their col- ] lective system, and that on Tuesday ; they will be able to name a winning ticket with Lockwood for Mayor, Cur- ? ran for Comptroller and an indepen- ? dent Democrat for President of the ' Board of Aldermen. Senator William M. Calder will be j back in town to-morrow more confident | than ever that the steering committee , will unanimously agree on Senator j Lockwood for Mayor and that the re- j mainder of the ticket, and the idatform, ; when it appears, will put Tammany on | the defensive. The meeting of the executive com? mittee of the coalitionists lasted for, two hours and a half. Mr. Price pre sided, and about fifteen of tho twenty nine members were in atten 'anee. The situation, especially in Brooklyn, was j canvassed. Messrs. Price and Allen, ? who called on Commissioner Livingston j on Thursday for information about the ? solidarity of the Republican organiza- j tion behind Senator Lockwood, told the j committee about their interviews. They j said afterward that they had not been criticized for their mission. "There is no change in the situation," said Mr. Price. "I fully expect that at the meeting of the steering committee i on Tuesday next we shall agree upon a ! ticket. The situation is such that a ! compromise candidate might possibly ! be chosen, although I am not raying ! that such a matter is scheduled for ! discussion. My position is the same as < it has been, namely, that the designa- | tion of a Brooklyn* man for Mayor is j not absolutely necessary." Report Being Prepared When asked about the possibility of j discarding all of the names under dis- ? cUBsion and choosing Justice Cropsey ! or Henry W. Taft, Mr. Price said there j was "nothing in it." He refused to , disewss at any length the doings of the ! executive committee, saying that there j Was an understanding that the execu? tive committee would report to the full j coalition committee at tho Commodore i on Monday night next. When Mr. Price was asked about the ! resignations from day to day from his j committee of men and women, who de- \ clan.- their intention to support Major i La Guardia in the primaries, he said : that there had been only five resigna? tions from a committee of 325, and that the committee did not worry about them. Senator Lockwood came in from Long Branch to talk with Republicans (Continus, on page three) Soviet Reported Ready To Give Up Government Offers to Abdicate in Favor of | Socialist Ministry, Says Prague Dispatch Special Cable to The Tribuna Copyright, 1021, New York Tribune Inc. BERLIN, July 29.?According to ad- j vices from Prague, Bohemia, which are j ?regarded with great skepticism in au- : thoritative circles here, the Bolshevik ; fovernmcr.t in Moscow has expressed ? Its rcadi__ss to abdicate in favor of a | ministry composed of Socialists, Social j Revolutionaries and Mensheviki. The , report adds that certain Socialist and ; revolutionary leaders in Prague have ; 80_e to the Russian frontier, believing Bat the downfall of the Lenine-Trotzky ! regime is imminent. While You're Away Make sure of having The Tribune every morning by ask? ing your newsdealer to i-._ke arrangements with us to de? liver The Tribune to your sum? mer address. Or if you pre? fer telephone Beekman 3000. .?^^-B Mrs. Stone Tells of Struggle j To Save Husband on Mountain Wife of Purdue President Saved by Chance as She Lost Grip Trying to Rescue Him From Abyss and Struck on Ledge on Bare CM BANFF, Alb., July 29.?The theory of how Mrs. W. E. Stone, wife of the president of Purduo University, dangled at the end of a rope in mid-air and then dropped exhausted^ on a four-foot ledge, tho only break in a precipitous cliff hundreds of feet high, after an unsuccessful attempt to save her hus? band, who had fallen into a crevice below, was revealed to-day in a dis? patch received here from tho corre? spondent of The Calgary Herald. Mrs. ?Stone is now in an improvised camp on the mountain side recovering from the experience of lying on the tiny ledge for eight days without food or water until rescued by Rammer, a Swiss guide, who carried her down the steep mountainside to safety. The correspondent told how she hac watched her husband fall as they wert attempting to climb Mount Eanon, anc then attempted to lower herself witl the rope in the hope of rescuing him. I The rope, however, wna too short, I and after hanging alongside tho moun? tain and finding she was unable to pull I herself back up, she let go, expecting to plunge to her death in the abyss below. Fate intervened and she landed on the narrow ledge, a drop of ten feet. I Members of the party that rescued ?Mrs. Stone arc busy building a raft to convey her down the Marvel Lakes, the first stage of the fifty-five-milo trip to ! civilization. The search for Dr. Stone's ?body has proved unavailing and mem? bers of the rescue party are nearly j exhausted from their efforts to lind him. It is probable that the body will bo left until another and better equipped search party can be organ? ized. Mrs. Stone is still weak, but Dr. Bell, of Winnipeg, who has been with her since she was found on Sunday, is confident she is now out of danger. Al? though she has had little sleep and nourishment since she was found she I was able on Wednesday evening to 1 (Continued on page four) $100,000 Slush Fund Rumored, Devaney Says Detective Swears He Heard at Albany This Was Sum Backers Were Using to Grease the Lusk Bill Denies Liquor Parties ? - Senator's Boom for Gov? ernor Considered in Push? ing Measure, He Testifies i K'^ ___________ Detective Bernard J. Devaney, who aided in raising $10,000 of the slush fund collected by the detectives to lobby the Lusk detective higher salary and permanent job bill through the Legislature, yesterday testified before Commissioner of Accounts Hirshfield: 1. That he had heard talk in Albany that $100,000 in all had been raised to get the Lusk bill through the Legis? lature. 2. That Detectives Cornelius J. Brown and James G. Geg-an had said that they wanted Lusk to get all the credit for passing the bill, as it would help him in his ambitions to be Gov? ernor. ' 3. That it was not generally known | among the detectives that Lusk was presented with the $1,131 silver serv? ice by Gegan and Brown until it was exposed in the newspapers. 4. That Jack Kleist, the lobbyist, who received $10,000 of the slush fund ?$4,000 of which he returned after the i bill was vetoed?had introduced De? vaney to Assemblyman Franklin W. Judson, of Rochester. Didn't See Him at Station Devaney said that he did not remem? ber seeing Assemblyman Judson at the West Eighty-sixth Street police station, where Kleist and the detectives dis? cussed raising the slush fund. Com? missioner Hirshfield then read from the testimony of Detective Thomas J. Finn, who two weeks ago swore that Kleist brought several assemblymen to the West Sixty-eighth Street station, men tioning, among others, Assemblyman '? Judson. Finn testified that he had the ! detective squad at the West Sixty- ? eighth Street station demonstrate the j method of taking finger prints for the Rochester Assemblyman. Devaney in-1 sisted that he first saw Judson in Al-] bany, when Kleist introduced them. j Hirshfield will invite Assemblyman j Judson to appear before him to testify | in view of his repudiation of the testi- j mony of Senator C. Ernest Smith, of I Staten Island, who swore on Thursday that Judson gave him the bill to intro-1 duce and that he talked to Judson j about the stories that there was a | slush fund raised to put the bill through, and that Judson denied there was any truth in such reports. Judson, in an interview with The Tribune's correspondent at Rochester, denied that he ever had the bill or gave it to Smith, or that he ever had any talk with Senator Smith about a slush fund, and also denied other testimony tending to show that he had killed legislation at the request of Kleist. Denies Wet Parties Devaney was asked about parties given by the detectives in Albany ? where Scotch and rye whisky flowed ? freely and at which detectives threw hats of legislators out of the windows. "I never heard of those parties," re? plied Devaney. "1 never saw anybody (Continued on page three) Rioting Convicts Wreck Prison Factory; 1 Slain Several Guards Injured in Oklahoma Institution Quell- ; ing Well Planned Outbreak ' M'ALESTER, Okla., July 29.?-One. ! convict was killed, a building was I wrecked and several guerds were I slightly injured in a riot which broke ? out in the shirt factory at the state penitentiary this afternoon. Mack Whitehead, life termer, from j Pittsburg County, was killed when he j attempted to rush guards. The determination of the convicts to break up the shirt factory was evi? dently hatched several days ago, ac? cording to prison authorities. With one accord, they began to wreck the mach? inery, break out the windows and at? tack all the guards in the factory. Armed guards leveled rifles on the rioters and ordered them to stop. The life termer who was killed, instead of complying, drew a knife and made a rush. One shot was fired, dropping him. Order was restored in twenty minutes. A. R. Garrett, deputy warden, de? clared the convicts made no attempt to escape and seemed bent only on de? stroying the shirt plant, which recently was installed. "Some of the unruly prisoners had been reading about the PilUburg riot and they thought they could put some? thing like that over i$i us," the war? den declared. Woman Driven Insane by Heat That Kills Two Temperature Only 84, but Prolonged Hot Spell Is Taxing Reserve Strength; Relief Not Yet in Sight Six More Are Prostrated Court Rebukes Citizen Who Dislikes Village Shower; Voices Envy of Bathers Continuation of sweltering weather yesterday resulted in two deaths, a half dozen prostrations, and a case of temporary insanity. The highest offi? cial temperature, however, was only 84 degrees, five below the record of Thursday. Some relief was brought by thunder showers in the late after? noon and breezes in the evening. Though the temperature was a few degrees lower, New Yorkers continued to suffer from the combination of heat and humidity. The long duration of the siege is telling on tempers and bodies. Children and old people are special sufferers. For to-day the Weather Bureau holds out little hope of any radical change. Laborer Stricken at Work The first death reported to the po? lice was that of Samuel Atlas, thirty eight years old, of 27 Rutgers Avenue, a laborer, who was overcome in the morning while at work at 250 Canal Street. The second death, reported in the afternoon, w.is that of George Looman, sixty-four years old, of 50 Cherry Street, who died at 1 Fulton Market. Excessive heat was given as the cause of the temporary insanity of Mrs. Philomena Zirpo, seventy-two years old, of 214 Old Ridge Road, Long Island City, who was taken from har home by an ambulance surgeon from St. John's Hospital to the Hunters Point police station arid removed thence to the Kings County Hospital for observation. Early in the afternoon neighbors notified Zirpo, who is employed by the Queen Street. Cleaning Bureau, that his wife, instead of doing her housework, was running about her home brandish? ing an axe in one hand, a crucifix in the other. It was necessary to call a patrolman to prevent the woman from injuring herself. Complains of Village Tank While most persons found quite enough to do trying to keep cool, there were some who enjoyed themselves getting hot over the way others sought relief. A man who described himself as a taxpayer of Greenwich Village walked into Jefferson Market court in the morning and told Magistrate Max S. Levine that the swimming tank in the rear of the court, which has given considerable fun to the youths and grownups of the Village, should be done away with. He said that those who used the tank made altogether too much noise. The older folks were as bad as the kids, he said, and the thing was an outrage. The magistrate said: "If that tank was carried into tho courtroom I wouldn't, object a bit. If all the neighborhood trotted into this room with bathing suits on, and made a re? spectable appearance, I do not believe it would upset the dignity of the tri? bunal. It is bo hot now I feel as though I'd like to run around the cor? ner in a bathing suit and plunge in and revel with the kids." So the taxpayer went back to his taxpaying, and the judge remained on . the bench. Enright Asks Tighe Arrest For Rampage Acts After Lahey Suspends His Detective Sergeant on Complaint of Women and Children Victims Suspected Hand Book Is Defense Inspector's Favorite Who Ran Amuck Figured in Many Other Assaults Police. Commissioner Enright last night ordered the arrest of Detective Sergeant Charles F. Tighe of Chief Inspector Lnhey's personal staff, who on Thursday afternoon caused a reign of terror at Ninth Avenue and West Forty-third Street. This action wa3 taken by Commis? sioner Enright after Tighe had been suspended from duty pending trial on a charge of "conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman." Tighc's suspension and trial were ordered yesterday afternoon by In? spector Lahey, following tho complaints of four women and two children who had been among the thirty-odd per? sons who wero either beaten with a blnckjack or kicked and cuffed into a rear room of the former saloon of Patrick Coen, at 000 Ninth Avenue, during the detective's wild and ap? parently unprovoked rampage. \Actims Charge Intoxication Several of the victims of Tighe'3 indiscriminate attack upon persons in the Coen establishment and upon women and children in the street alleged that he was intoxicated and ! demanded he be charged with felo- j nious assault. According to his record, Tighe is an old hand at violating department regulations. On numerous occasions I in the past he was up on charges rang ing from intoxication to beating pris- j oners, but he seemed to bear a charmed | life so far as punishment was con? cerned, escaping generally with repri? mands or light fines. The most flagrant of his offenses, ac? cording to a report of Police Surgeon ! Thomas F. McGoldrick, was committed j in May, 1918, when he was charged i with intoxication while on duty in the ] Bergen Street station, Brooklyn'. He ? was convicted and given six months' j suspension. ' That he escaped a similar charge of j diunkenness yesterday was said to be ? due to tho fact that he was not exam- I ined by a police surgeon immediately j after the occurrence. This is required j when a policeman is accused of intoxi- | cation. The hearing resulting in the suspen-1 sion of Tighe was ordered by Commis- ? sioner Enright shortly before he wa3 ? asked to make a full investigation by Mayor Hylan. Inspector Lahey, in ad? dition to taking the statements of tho complainants and viewing their bruises and discolorntions caused by the detective's blackjack, questioned Tighe and Detective Milton Kauffman, who was with Tighe during the "raid," but who maintained a neutral attitude and once endeavored to curb his broth? er officer. As the complainants did not implicate Kauffman in the attack, no action was taken against him by In? spector Lahey. ? Tighe Suspected Handbook Tighe, nervous and perspiring, bolted from Inspector Lahey's office after the ! hearing. The inspector would not ! make known the explanation offered by the detective, except to say that Tighe had declared lie raided the Coen place because he suspected a handbook on the races was being conducted there, and that he was compelled to use force in handling the crowd that gathered. Among the women complainants ap? pearing before Inspector Lahey were Mrs. Patrick Coen, wife of the pro? prietor of the former saloon which Tighe converted into a temporary prison; Mrs. Ella Fitzgerald, white haired and fifty years old, whose waist was torn off by the infuriated detec tive, and Mrs. Katherine Goete, who alleged she was hit several times with a blackjack while attempting to pro- | tect her two-year-old daughter, Fran- ; ces. Mrs. Coen was accompanied by j her two children?Helen, seven years old, and Katherine, three years old? who, she said, suffered at the hands of Tighe. Mrs. Fitzgerald was the most serious? ly injured of the women. Her waist was torn off by Tighe so that it hung from her in strips, and yesterday she exhibited black and blue marks on her arms and shoulders, which she said had been made by Tighe's grip as he flung her into the patrol wagon which came to the scene after the de? tective had kept more than thirty per? sons in the room for nearly two hours. Police Try to Hush Up Scandal The police at the West Forty- j seventh Street station, where twenty- : four of Tighe's victims were charged ! by him with disorderly conduct, made | every effort to keep the affair quiet. ? Only those who bore no marks were ? sent to the Night Court, where they | (Continued on pan? three) Pastor and Son Put in Cell After Neighbor Is Clubbed The Rev. James Barnes Deojay, pas- ! tor of Christ Church, Mariner's Island. S. I., and his son, Leon Deojay, twenty nine years old, were arrested Wednes? day night, it was learned yesterday, charged with felonious assault. The complainant is John Stanisana, a for- j mer Methodist minister, of 384 Union Avenue, Mariner's Harbor. Stanisana is now employed in the offices of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. Magistrate j William Croak, in the Stapleton police j court, held the Deojays in $1,000 bail each for examination next Tuesday. Some mystery attaches to the case ' and efforts have been made to suppress '? the facts. Stanisana appeared in ! the West Brighton police station to | make his complaint with head and face j bai.daged. He refused a statement as j to what gave rise to the qunrrel be tween himself and the Rev. Deojay, as- j sorting -that the facts would be revealed j iu court, The Deojays, father and, son, j also refused to explain the cau.e of the fight. Neighbors of Stanisana said last ? night'the dispute arose over a six-year- ! old daughter of Stanisana, who has I been boarding for some time with the i Deojay family. The Deojays home is at j .01 Washington Avenue. The story told by residents in the ! vicinity is that the Rev. Deojay calletl ! Stanisana Wednesday night on the tele- j phone, asking him to come and get his child. Stanisana, it is said, went to the Deojay house and what took place there can only be conjectured from injuries displayed by Stanisana in court. When the neighbors broke in, according to a story they told the police, Stanisana was standing at bay while being attacked with clubs. Rev. Deojay and his son spent Wednesday night in the West Brighton police station in default of bail. Yes? terday when questioned both denied that they had been arrested and denied also that they were charged with as? sault. The cha-^e, however, appears on the police bitter, i Six Million Hungry Rush On Moscow AdvanceForce of Frenzied I Horde Storms Tamboff, ! Loots Stores and Eats Fire Department Horses Red Guards Refuse To Fire on Mobs Special Shock Troops to| Defend Cities ; Workers | Slain in Petrograd Riot By Joseph Shaplen Special Cable to The Tribune Copyright, 1021, New York Tribune Inc. BERLIN, July 29.?Six million hun- j gry and ragged peasants are marching ! on Moscow in an effort to get food, according to the official Bolshevik newspaper in the capital, Izvestia. The vanguard of these starving hordes has reached Tamboff, and, maddened by hunger, has overwhelmed the Red I army detachments stationed in that i city, looted all the stores and ware? houses, seized every morsel of food, i and even killed and devoured the j horses belonging to the city's fire de? partment. Izvestia admits that the Red guard at Tarnboff refused to fire on the mobs. _ Similar invasions have occurred at Yaroslav and Nijni Novgorod. Panic stricken by the advance of this human avalanche toward Mos- I cow the Soviet war commissariat is rapidly forming special bodies of shock troops, consisting of sharp- I shooters and cavalry, for the defen3c j of Moscow and Petrograd. The only persons admitted to these bodies are able-bodied young men who have | passed through the special military j and political courses established by j Minister of War Trotzky. Special Communist detachments, made up only ? of tried and true Communists, are be- ? ing formed for the defense of other ? leading cities and the protection of j the railway junction at Kiev. These detachments are being placed under | the authority of provincial extraor- ? dinary commissions. Workers Shot Down in Petrograd ! Many workers are reported to have been killed or wounded in a labor dem? onstration in Petrograd, in which 3,000 working men and women advanced on the offices of the Petrograd Soviet, de? manding bread. The reply of the Red officials was to meet the assembled proletarians with several squadrons of Kirgiz cavalry, which fired into the crowds. In the panic that ensued the laborers broke ranks and fled, leav? ing their dead and wounded in front of the Soviet building. The massacre so roused the ire of j the working population in Petrograd tha?: all the large factories were im- j mediately closed by a protest strike. ! The strike started in the Baltic & Pu- ! tiloff works. | The Bol3heviki placed the city under martial law, and armed patrols, accom- \ panied by agents of the extraordinary ; commission, invaded the working class quarters and searched all dwellings systematically. These patrols warned the workers that if they refused to go back to work they would be immediately ar? rested. Most of the men and women agreed to return, but hundreds who ig? nored the summons, were placed under arrest. The search of the dwellings lasted all the night of July 19 and 20. By energetic action the Red authorities finally succeeded in breaking up the strike and forcing all the workers to go back to their factories. Appeals To U. S. Women Catherine Breshkovsky, "grandmother of the Russian revolution." to-day for? warded to the Tribune correspondent from Prague this appeal to the women of America to come to the aid of the starving Russian people: "A great part of mankind, a very great and beautiful part of the human ; family, is perishing from hunger, pov- i erty and disease. A great part of j European Russia is being depleted of I its population. The fields and mead- j ows, woods and valleys of my fair i country are stricken with a terrible calamity. "For a thousand years Russia stood ? guard over the culture of mankind, ? protecting the West from the onrush of Eastern hordes who were ready to ? drown in blood the triumphs of human reason and spirit, and took upon her? self the blows of barbarism. "It was for this reason that, despite their great natural capacities, the Rus (Continuod on next page) Housemaid's Auto Still Belligerent With Police j -? Miss Martin Has Another Mis-j hap Up Port Chester Way; Pays Sixth Fine in Court PORT CHESTER, N. Y., July 29.?j Miss Annie Martin, the only house- j maid in Port Chester who owns her J own car and is her own chauffeuse, rendered jumpy by frequent mishaps, drove to the left of one policeman while keeping her eye on another at Purchase Street and Post Road, Rye, last night. Right then Miss Martin received her sixth card since she bought the car, March 17. To-day she was fined $5 by Judge Thomas in the Rye police court. The young woman paid her fine with the remark that she was "glad it was no worse." On March 17, the day the car was delivered to her, Miss Martin did up the dishes early and started out for a spin. She had not quite mastered the steering gear, and because of that knocked down thirty feet of iron fence inclosing a millionaire's estate. On March 19 Miss Martin encountered a telephone pole head on. The radiator of the car was* badly buckled and the pole wrecked. She was fined $10 by Magistrate Coward, of Port Chester. Tho car was not repaired until April 1. A few days after that it chased Pa? trolman Tim Murphy all over Liberty Square. Judge Coward assessed Miss Martin another $10. On July 25 she paid $25 in Rye police court for nearly running down Patrolmen Frank Gedney and George Bayha at Rye Beach. After her last police court experience Miss Martin said: "It'_ all" nervousness. Whenever I see a policeman I want to go the other way, but the car heads straight for him. I suppose I'll learn in time, but it certa?-ly. does run ?ato money,'* British King Declares Northcliffe Interview On Irish a Fabrication Harding Set; Against Extra! Arms Parley! , Also, President Holds to Belief Powers Can Settle All Questions in Council as Arranged Originally By Carter Field WASHINGTON, July 29. ?President Harding is unmoved so far by the arguments of the British, Japanese and French for postponement until spring of the conference on armament limita? tion, Pacific and Far Eastern questions. The President is understood to have told visistors to-day that he still con? sidered November 11 as the most likely date. Incidentally, the President clearly is delighted with the progress made toward the conference. He believes that a satisfactory solution of all the controversies between this country and Japan, coupled with an armament lim itaton agreement which would enable this country as well as others to reduce taxes necessitated by the naval build? ing program, would make his Admin? istration stand out in history as one j during which the greatest step toward making wars unlikely was accom? plished. A somewhat detailed explanation of the Administration's position in op? posing the preliminary conference sug? gested by the British Foreign Office through Sir Auckland Geddes was made by a high Administration spokesman to-day. Announcement Definite "So much has appeared in the papers emanating from London in regard to to a preliminary conference," he said, "that I may say in regard to it that the attitude of this government is ] sympathetic toward any suggestion tending to insure the success of the coming disarmament conference. How? ever, the President's announcement j concerning the conference was definite ! as to the object, the subject to be dis ! cussed and where it wa3 to be held. | And we have received manifestations I of acquiescence fromall the powers with no qualifications as to the placo or the purpose of this conference. "A distinction exists between the conference itself and a preliminary con? ference. The suggestion of a prelim? inary conference would tend to convey ?the impression that there are to be two ?conferences, that it is the intention to put off indefinitely the conference on ?disarmament while the preliminaries ?are being discussed. I do not think it is well to give the impression that the real conference will be held at an in? definite time or to make it appear that the success of the disarmament confer? ence hinges on the success of the pre? liminary conference. "We would take a good many chances, one way or the other, by holding a pre? liminary conference or-by holding one conference and then another. The pre? liminary conference, therefore, is such ? a departure, and involves so many con? tingencies that it can hardly be re i garded with favor. No adequate reason exists for holding it. Would Avoid Haste "Should such a conference be hur? riedly called the opinions of the do? minion premiers would of necessity have to be briefly presented. The Far Eastern powers would be incommoded in having full representation and any? thing that might be done in that way would have to be referred back to the distant powers. "As to the date of the actual con? ference itself this government does not object to late October or early September, but desires a time when all can come and none will possess any advantages. Frankly, we are anxious to have it as early as possible. "In the event of a preliminary con? ference being held '.he powers not in? vited would be perfectly right in re? garding it as a discourtesy. I don t think the American people would like ! i*. very well, either--the spectacle of two great governments powerfully rep ! resented at a preliminary conference. How would the Eastern powers feel about it? The American ?.copie are whole-heartedly behind this thing, and I am sure that their opinion would be against a conferences or anything which : might tend to obscure the real issues ! and the prospect of a speedy consid | eration of disarmament." -? ??_--_____________-_____?--. I Lord NortJicliffe Sends Denial to King George WASHINGTON, July 29. ? After reading dispatches from London of Premier Lloyd George's presentation of King George's statement in the House .of Com? mons to-day, and the Premier's comments, Lord Northcliffe sent the following cablegram to the King's private secretary, Lord Stamf ordham : "Please convey to his majesty with my humble duty my denial of ever having ascribed to his majesty the word or words as stated by the Prime Minister yes? terday. I gave no such inter? view." I_,_; France Drops | Plan to Speed Silesian Force Briand Prevents Break in Cabinet; Wins Approval of Delay Until Supreme Council Has Heard Him Will Insist on Priority ! British Ambassador Helps in Solution; Italy Sides With London in Dispute Special Cable to The Tribune Copyright, 1021, New York Tribune Inc. PARIS, July 29.?The French govern? ment's determination to dispatch rein? forcements to Upper Silesia regardless of the opposition of Great Britain t< this move was virtually abandoned to? night. Premier Briand succeeded ir winning the members of his Cabinel j over to a policy of conciliation aftei ! two meetings, in which vigorous oppo? sition to the Premier's policy devel? oped. The tenor of the voluminous Britisl: note, which was considered by the Cab? inet, caused several of the members t< favor an immediate break with Londor on the Silesian negotiations. But Pre mier Briand gradually overcame th< opposition, and it is apparent now tha the French will probably withhold th< dispatch of more troops to the plebi scite district until the Supreme Alli?e Council has had an opportunity to dis cuss 'he plan. Would Preserve Allied Unity It is understood that the Frencl reply to Premier Loyd George, whicl was dispatched to-night, emphasize: the desire of the French governmen to maintain Allied unity. It suggest: that in keeping with thi3 unity thi Allies must adopt a uniform fron toward Germany in order that Frencl prestige in Berlin may be restored. T< this end it propose? that Germany b advised that the Allies are agreed tha the dispatch of reinforcements t Upper Silesia is necessary, and tha the German government will be in formed of the number of effectives an* the date of their dispatch after th Supreme Council has discussed th matter. It is understood that the French gov eminent demands that the principle o sending reinforcements shall be con sidered at the Supreme Council meet ing before the question of fixin boundaries is dealt with. The belie in Paris is that the British govern ment will accept this stipulation. The conference which Premier Br and had this morning with Baron Hai dinge, the British Ambassador i Paris, is reported to have been mos helpful in bringing about a solution c the crisis. The Ambassador went t the Premier's office at 11 o'clock, beai ing the note from his government, an talked with M. Briand for forty-fi\ minutes. Briand had to hurry away t a meeting of his Cabinet, but coul not present the British note until had been translated, and so adjourne the sitting until 3 o'clock. Two Ambassadors Confer Colonel de St. Aulaire, the Frene Ambassador to the Court of St. James' (Continued on next paie) Hardings Depart on Yacht for Ten Days' Rest in New England From The Tribune's Washington Bureau WASHINGTON, July 29.?The Presi ! dent and Mrs. Harding, accompanied by ; a party of friends, started on their ; ten-days' vacation to-night when they j boarded the Mayflower shortly before j 6 o'clock and set sail for Plymouth, ; Mas3. Commander Holmes of the May ? flower expects to pass the Virginia I Capes early to-morrow morning, when ; four battleships and six destroyers will ! pick up the Presidential yacht and I serve as copvoy. The yacht expects -to arrive at Plymouth before sunrise I Monday morning. The party will go ? ashore at 9 o'clock and witness the j exercises in connection with the ter ' centenary celebration of the landing of i the Pilgrims. A banquet will be given ! the President that night, after which | he will return to the Mayflower. The yacht will proceed to Portland, ! Me-, Monday night and arrive there [ JuAdgy morning, Automobile* will be in waiting to transport the guests to Mount Prospect at Lancaster, N. H., the home of Secretary of War Weeks, when the President's real vacation will begin. It is known that the Executive and Mrs. Harding are looking forward with pleasure to the prospect of a real rest ii the fastnesses of the White Moun? tains. The past five months in the White House have told heavily on Mrs. Harding, and it has been her tendency to overexert her strength, coupled with the hot weather, that forced her to take to her bed for a few days. She had recovered to a large extent to-day, however, and boarded the Mayflower with the intention of returning feeling at her best. The list of guests includes Secretary of War Weeks, Senator and Mrs. Fre lir.ghuyser.. Speaker of the House and Mrs. Gillett, Brigadier General Saw? yer, Senator and Mrs. Phipps, Repre? sentative an.l Mrs. Joseph Walsh, of Massachusetts, Senator ? Hale and George B. Chri^a-t-i-fi .. -' Disclaims Story Asserting He Told Lloyd George Before Trip to Belfast He Must Stop Killings Lays Statement Before Commons Utterance Which Giused Quarrel Given Out by Steed, Publisher's Aid From The Tribune's European Bureau Copyright. 1821, New York Tribune Ino. LONDON, July 29. ? Premier Lloyd George in the House of Com? mons to-day read a statement from King George describing as "a com? plete fabrication," certain state? ments which The London Daily Mail this morning quoted Lord North cliff e as making in the United States. The newspaper, which is owned by Lord Northcliffe, said that he had related a conversation which King George was supposed to have had with the British Premier prior to the King's departure for Belfast to open the Ulster Parliament. Ac? cording to the newspaper, Lord Northcliffe quoted the King as say? ing: "Are you going to shoot all the people in Ireland?" "No, your majesty," Lloyd George was alleged to have replied. "Can't Have People Killed" "Well, then, you must come td some agreement with them," the King was said to have added. "This i thing cannot go on. I can't have my J people killed in this manner." [Substantially these remarks -wer? attributed to H. Wickham Steed, edi? tor of The London Times and Lord Northcliffe's traveling companion, in an interview he gave out in New j York last Sunday.] The King's communication as read by Mr. Lloyd George said: "Hi3 Majesty the King has had his attention directed to certain statements reporting an interview with Lord Northcliffe, appearing in The Daily Mail and reproduced in The Daily Express and some Irish newspapers. The statements con? tained in the report are a complete fabrication. No such conversations as those which are alleged took ? place, nor were any such remarks as ? those alleged made by His Majesty. Kept to Tradition "His majesty also desires it to be I made quite clear, as the contrary is suggested in the interview, that in ! his speech to the Parliament of i Northern Ireland he followed the in- j variable constitutional practice re? lating to speeches from the throne in Parliament." Premier Lloyd George, supplement- , ing this note from the King, said: "Lord Northcliffe's interview is be? lieved to have been calculated to preju? dice seriously the chances of an Irish, settlement, as it has been circulated freely in Ireland." The Premier indicated his belief that) the publisher had caused the interview to be cabled to London, and after read? ing the King's communication con? tinued: "I hope that this statement may d_ something to sterilize the effects of the criminal malignity which, for personal ends, is endeavoring to stir up mis? chief between the Allies and misunder? standings between the Bnti?h Empire? and the United States and te frustiate? j the hope of peace in Ireland." Not Printed in London The storm over the alleged conversa- \ tion between the Premier _nd the King; j broke with such suddenness in London I that the public here was hazdly aware j of the circumstances until the inci? dent had passed. The original cable? | dispatch carne to the Daily Mail of? fice, but was printed only in the editions of that paper w/wc. circul?t? in Ireland, Scotland and Wales. There was no hint of it in the London editions of the paper. Some of the? other morning papers hau lepublished the dispatch and the evening paper? were just beginning to print unofficial denials of the story, when Premier Lloyd George rose before a crowded ; House and read the King's ?statement, j His remarks were greeted with hearty cheers. When ho had finished James Henry Themas, Labor member, vigorously seconded the Premier's remarks. "There is an issue raise! in .hi? matter," he said, "that is of more im-: portanco than party politicians or* newspaper proprietors." He said it was the duty of theHousai of Commons to approve this protest in ! the interest of constitutional govern. ! ment. -? Northcliffe Departs for \ West After Lively Day ? -.?_ While Bathing Gives Lie to . Curson Denial; Visits White : House With Correspondente, \ ' From 1 he Tribune'? Washington Bureau t WASHINGTON, July 29.?What with' ! cabling King George's secretary that a statement made by Lloyd George -, : was false, and characterizing as a lie ' o statement by the British Foreign i Office that Lord Curzon had nothing ! to do with the British Embassy her? ! snubbing him, Lord Northcliffe enjoved j a second somewhat hectic day in Wash [ ington. I He had not quite finished hi* men**