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WEATHER FORECAST. Shower this morning, followed by clearing; to-morrow fair, moderate temperature ; fresh northwest winds. Highest temperature yesterday, 73; lowtst, 64. Detailed wtatlwr raporta will ba found on Editorial pa. AND THE NEW YORK HERALD A HAPPY BLENDING The amalgamated SUN AND HERALD preserves the best traditions of each. In combination these two newspapers make a greater newspaper than cither has even been on its own. VOL. LXXXVIH. NO. 7 DAILY. DEMPSEY STOPS MISKE IN THIRD ROUND OF BOUT Challenger Makes Coura goons Fight, but Is Hope lessly Outclassed. HIS BLOWS HARMLESS Clinnipion's Crashing At tack Brings St. Paul Boy Down Three Times. LAST BLOW RIGHT TO CHIN Honvy Body Smash in First Round Started Miskc on Road to Defeat fj 0 Sfn Corrtspanient nf Thc Sin and New YniK HiaAi.D. BlXTON Harbor, Mich., Sept. 6. The coldly methodical walloper, Jack Dempsey, found Billy Miskc no serious contender for the heavyweight cham pionship In their ten round fight to 'iy. He knocked Miske out in the third round after seven minutes and thirteen seconds of actual fighting . NEW YORK, TUESDAY, CPOTUIWDI'D 1 1QOA Cntyright, !, by The Km-tteratd Corporation. OCiL I anOSM If IJ&V. Entered at'oond class matter, Post Offles. New York, N. T. PRICE TWO CENTS IN NEW YORK CITY. THREK CE.Vrs WITHIN von MU.tM. KOUlt CENTS UUIEWHERIt TILDEN WRESTS TENNIS LAURELS FROM JOHNSTON Philadelphia Wins Na tional Final for Title in Five Sets. GAINS WORLD HONORS Remarkable Effectiveness With Service Strongest Weapon. GREAT FIGHT. BY LOSER Saves Fourth Sot in Uphill Battle That Rouses 11,000 Onlookers. Gov. Cox Drive Pacer About State Fair Track By a staff (.'orrfupofldent nf THB SON AND K'BW YOSK 1 1 KRAI II. CT. PAUL, Minn., Sept. 6. Gov. Cox drove a racehorse around the one mile track follow ing his speech to-day at the Minnesota State Fair and won the applause of a crowd of 76,000. Riding in a sulky, the Gover nor drove a pacing horse named Peter Nash, time 2.01H, owned by John Ryan, a Democratic Alderman of Minneapolis. The 'horse had been entered in one of the races. The Democratic nominee let the pacer out for part of the. way, holding tight to the reins with his feet braced close to the shafts. He pulled down his soft black hat, but did not remove his eyeglasses. While he drove past the grand stand, receiving the applause of the crowd, the band played "Turkey in the Straw." At home in Dayton, Gov. Cox is 3uite a horse fancier, and has riven his own horses in local races. Horseback riding is his favorite exercise CALLS AMERICA ' MONEY'S HOPEFOR LIFE Lord Mayor's WTifc Says Sole Chance Lies in Appeals From United States. FOOD IS OFFERED DAILY Prison Attendants Every Morning Tempt Hunger Striker to Eat. 25TH BAY OF HIS FAST mm the Mine round in which Demp- wy won the title from Jess Willard at Toledo on Independence Day last year. Dempsey took Mlske's measure In the first round, disabled him with a ;ii rifle blow over the stomach Just btlow the heart in the second, and when the bell rang again finished him ue he pleased. In the third round he knocked the challenger fiat twice and to his knees ot.ee. Final Blow to Jaw. The final blows, a half swing with the left, following a hammer at Mtake'a midreglon, und then a right to 'he i Vive that the champion's beautifully In as sensational a match as has yet been played in a title tournament William T. Tilden 2d of Philadelphia wrested tho national tennis cham pionship from 'William M. Johnston of San Francisco at Forest Hills yester day. With his opponent fighting te naciously to stave off defeat, the mai Who swept all before him at Wimble- It I don rose to the height of his tennis ability, flashed dazzling speed and strokes and triumphed after five hard sets that will live long in the memory oC those who were fortunate enougi to bo on hand to witness them. The core was 61, 1 6, 75. 57, 63, and the victory gave Tilden undis puted right to be called the world's tennis champion. In defeat there was glory a-plenty for the little Californlan. He went down striving his utmost to turn the tide In his favor. He played well and daringly, and it probably waa the beat tennis he has shown this season, but his best was not good enough to beat 2 FLIERS KILLED AT TENNIS GAME Aviators Plnnjre 500 Feet to Death Near Grandstand at Forest Hills. Has Intervals of Dizziness and Is Only Able to Speak in Short Gasps. !0.000 WITNESS ACCIDENT i Victims Were Taking Aerial! riiotojrrnphs of Champion ship Match. the super-tennis that his rival played were delivered with all the 1 critlcal 8tae8 on the hcr .slde f i tne net. jonnston never iacea a gi- gantlc task more courageously. Corn- Premier Fixea Price for Mayor's Release LONDON, Sept 7. A despatch to the London Times from Viege, Switzerland, quotes David Lloyd George, the British Prime Minister, as saying that if guar antees are given that the murder of policemen in Ireland will cease the Premier is convinced that Lord Mayor MacSwiney and the other hunger strikers will be released from prison. Other special despatches tend to confirm the interview printed in the Times. coordinated muiclea could bring to , . from behind after being fairly bear. The last thump fell on the base, overwhelmed In the first set, the Call, m Mlake's Jaw a little to the right of fomian retaliated with Just as one ; 0 cj,n s'f.ed a triumph In the second set. In the second round Miske d ( T hen In the fourth, with Tilden lead bottneed right up after measuring hi Ing two seta to one and within a slngk- rlgta on the canvas. The flrat time he stroke of the match. Johnston turned i m felled in the third round he stayed j him back, pulling the game out of the tor thc count of nine, then regained his ) (ire by tho most thrilling sort of gets tet with the smile that had brightened ! anj the pluckiest sort of net attack face at the start, replaced by i in4he face of tremendous strokes that letTh!. rU,lKlth holder of the British title pound- The third time, the fast tlfne, the time ! d across from every angle. Mlahtr Service Wan. It served,, only to delay defeat, how ever. In the last set Johnston's daring He lay in the sunshine proved his, undoing. He rushed the net !ils rlaht arm crooked under his persistently. Intent upon niocsing i u ended the hopes of the St. Paul II eroan'i son that he could Stay ten nil., with a battering machine like minsey, Miske flopped down and red here i don's forehamlers and backhanders, and llil . were closed. Up and down , while ho did volley many of them bark fed th hand ot Referee Jim Dough- for earned points Tilden passed him r . tolling off the seconds. Miske more frequently and ended the match in inade nu attempt to rise. He twitched ; convincing style. wlce ; that was all. Over him stood In the long run It was Tilden s bullet . ' mpsey, who never from the moment like service that won thc title for him. lie entered the ring smiled. Dempsey It whlxaed across with almost incredible stood there with both gloves pawing j speed, and time and again Johnston had air, ready to smash once more if ; to stand by helplessly while the shot Miske should try to get up, but Miske j sped by almost too quickly for him to was for the moment beyond all thought I get his racquet Into action W Ith oeca of renewing the combat. He lay un- i atonal exceptions the service whenever conscious through the count of ten and I Tilden called on all the speed he could afterward, aa the referee signalled the Inject Into the ball was talfhttn flnal second and turned to point to takable Sixteen of them swept across Dempsey, the champion bent and tried ; for service aces i and m W J barely to lift the beaten man to his feet. But 1 were returned by tafomUiwto Miske waa a dead weight and down he ' na rwnyasw JZ2rZZ 1ZJ. .Ilrped sgaln. leaving the rest to the stances to break L ""JL ?2 rh,nn-.'. ..a. ...v, io. to win two or me live k An airplane piloted by Lieut. J. M. Orler of the United States Navy, with Sergt. J. P. Saxe of the United States Army as a passenger, went into a nose dive yesterday while circling the tennis grounds at Forest Hills. Queens, and plunged 500 feet to earth in full ,... e i nnrt nr n.OOO oersons who were watching the national cham- I w'fe ald: . . , ,u ,,, i ou can hard I pionsnip maicnes inui . stands. Both Lieut, drier and Sergt. Saxe were killed, the former instantly, while Sergt. Saxe died while being token to St. John's Hospital. Lieut. Orler and Sergt. Saxe had gene to the tennis grounds to take aerial photographs of the champion ship matches. The crowd that filled the grandstands saw the avlatorR ap pear out of the sky, dropping to a height of between 400 and 600 feet. Hundreds watched as Lieut. Grler and Sergt. Saxe circled the grandstand, taking photographs and competing with the tennis games as an nttrac- Th -wiatnrs made two circles By the Aufnciatrd Press. London, Sept. 6. At 9 o'clock to night Lord Mayor MacSwlney was still living, but his weakness waa in creasing and the prison doctor sug gested to his relatives that he be not allowed to converse because of the waste to his strength, ills wife and sisters spent several hours in the prison to-day. On leaving this cven- Thn dirk now luau-i --, , . , , . , lng the ropes into the ring. nempsey staisea to ms corner, pu.iea , ""7 -'dc : ny intermittent rain, al his red turtle-neck sweater over his yurr maao "f m-i head and disappeared toward his train ing quarters. Mlake Was Game. Miske did not make a farce of It. He fas, as they say, a willing lad and a ttvnt one. Weighing only a pound less than the champion, the figures were an nounced as 197 pounds for Dempsey and H( for Mlsko; a quarter of an Inch taller, a year older, but shy by one Inch of Dempsey's reach, he was not so hadly matched with the other mauler so far as superficial appearai ces went. He did not seek refuge In a clinch all the time, as In their two previous en counters, but sailed In the best he knew kow. He was nimble of foot, knew how to box and hit Dempsey frequently. But his blows did not affect the other gen tleman, while every one that Dempsey irove home was placed with precision beautiful to behold, and in addition car ried a punch that was simply annihilat ing. In the end, through the periscope of hindsight. It looked foolish for Miske ever to have dreamed that he could itand up with the Dempsey of 1920. But to the unpractised eye It did not Hem so In the beginning, nnd, as has been said, the pride of St. Paul gave to the encounter all he had to give, and his friends from the Northwest who had t on him to stay the limit, and did hardly Imagine that he could be so bad and still survive. Our enly hop-c now is In America and for American financiers to withdraw their money from English securities. Ap parently labor in England can do ndthlng for us." Each day as the fast of Lord Mayor MacSwlney In Brixton Prison pro greases there is staged by the bedside ot the dying man a tragic little act. which was disclosed to the Associated Press to-day by Father Dominic of the Franciscan Capuchin Order, Mayor MacSwiney'a private chaplain. Every morning food In some form or another Is brought In by the prison .1 ,.1 . . n .1 .,,V..,. . 1 tn . V. ulQM-loi. of the big rndS,ana"dn;t"U:lrne! prisoner in the hope that his almost a third, but they had gone no more , v before the i unconiruiiauic tia.iiis . him and that he will be tempted to ion. day and the discolored balls that dark ened up qulcKiy as incy uuunucu ui turf made heavy by intermittent rain, al. hined to make Tllden's amaxlng service all the more effective. That service supplied the winning margin may be understood from the fact that, barring service. Johnston earned more points, made fewer errors and more than held his own in the duel of tennis wits that marked the tussle from start lo finish. The Californlan astonished the gallerv by forcing the attack In the forward court the greater part of the way for In his earlier matches In the tournament he had been content with a back court game, during which he de pended largely on the speed and accu racy of his stinging forehand drive. Johnston did some superb volleying dur fng the match, and his swift drive, into h comers or along the s de lines had Tilden running all over the court at Umss to keep pace with the ball I he rCnnmmerednaVayr,ayt ZStil &k w.thTrTat "resuYut the Phllade.phlan generally got his strokes working fmthlv when the occasion required and thrilled the throng with aparkllng goto MUST .we through the Callfor nlan's defence. Crowd Ignores Rain. It was a great tribute to tennis and to the two Davis cup stars that despite the rain the standa were filled to ca naeltv and there were several thousand V he ho un, at the ringside, I standees along b the .r.:r,t reproaching him to-night the ,rand . and are. .u or all his wire, wno was a spec tator, and had the puzxllng task this tltnlng nf framing a telegram to the to Miske children telling them that 'it daddy was licked without making them cry. As for Oeorges Carpentler of France, li may take notice that the Dempsey ho beat Willard has not "gone back." half way around crowd In the grandstand noticed the airplane waa losing speed. The machine flew slower and slower, until in a few seconds Its nose dipped and It dived straight for the ground In full view of the crowd In the grand stand and of hundreds of motorists who lined Queens Boulevard. Some of the motorists heard a scream aa the ma chine neared the ground, and the next Instant the airplane had crashed head first into a hollow about fifty feet north of the poulevard. near Conti nental avenue. It was nothing but a mass of twisted wreckage, with the bodies of Lieutenant Orler and Ser geant Saxe pinned underneath. Hundreds of persons flocked from the stands to the scene of the accident, forming such a deep gathering about the wrecked machine that Patrolman Henry Kuhler and Matthew Murray, on duty at the games, had to fight their way through the press of people to get cat. Every morning tncro is tne same end to the ac; MacSwlney, who la toe weak to utter a spoken refusal, crushes his desire and turns his head away. So It has gone on until the twenty-fifth day of his hunger strike has been reached. There have been many rumors that MacSwlney was getting sustenance in drinking water or otherwise. This Is indignantly denied by relatives and friends, and the Associated Press was further Informed in an authoritative quarter to-day that the prison authori ties have not given the Lord Mayor any food In this manner. Father Dominic also denied that the prisoner was being fed, and added : "Although some people say that the desire for food disappears after a few days' abstinence, It Is not so In Mayor MacSwiney'a case. He Is still hungry, but refuses to take anything, although It is taken to him regularly. "The Lord Mayor looked pale, drawn end haggard this morning when I ad ministered the usual sacrament, and the lecal rumor that he received the last sacrament to-day is notrue. Mac- . . n . 1 iniBnnl. ,.r 1lvtnM and tn the alrulane. The po cemen crawieo 1 nwiney n . It f th machine and unbuckled the lis only able to speak in short gasps, atrap. which held Lieutenant Grier and owing to dttftenrty In bmthtng, i Bsrreant Saxe In tnelr seats, iney then called to the crowd to lift the wreckage, and when this was done Vnhler and Murray draigged the bodies of the two men from beneath the plane. attemDt at continual conversation is Impossible." MacSwlney passed a restless night. Father Dominic visited the prison this morning and said on leaving that Mac- ., .Hnid for the match to begls. It rained hard several times during the Junior tennis final, which preceded tho main attraction, and hundreds tn the crowd who had no umbrellas with them had to seek protection under tha grand tand Rain fell also during the cham pionship tussle between Tilden and Johnston, the players being forced off the court Just before the end of the fourth set. but the enthusiasts sat through It all, a fifteen minute drench ing downpour, and their patience and courage were rewarded when the clouds lifted in time to permit the completion of the match. Tilden startled the gathering as soon aa the match began by setting a whirl wind pace that fairly swept his rival off his feet. His service was snapum across with great speed and a sharp break and Johnston could do very little It was apparent tnat lieutenant oiir - Orler was dead, but Sergeant Saxe was lTllZ ?Xr:BRlTISH LABOR JOINS I'll i'-'i w- - - and hurried to an automobile owned by C. V. Dlckman of 687 Jefferson avenue, Brooklyn, and driven by Regi nald Ryerson, of 171 Prospect street, Brooklyn. They told Ryerson to drive to St. John's Hospital, and Ryerson made the four miles In five minutes. When the car reached the hospital, Dr, MACSWINEY PROTEST Trades Union Congress Blames the Government. Portsmouth, Eng., Sept. 6. The Relth, the house surgeon, said that Trao.es Lnion . " both Lieutenant Grler and Sergeant expected many grave industrial ques- Saxe were dead tlons. Including the coal crisis, would be The machine waa so badly wrecked considered, convened hero this morn- .. . in. i..."..!.!. 1 .. nr. It was aurnuen uy in"rc man of the accident. Madlators Well Paid. They fought before upward of 20.000 Prions, 200 of whom were women. In a rHl arna. It is a great bowl hollowed In the yellow sand In a lot outside of "M tewn. The seats were planks resting on '. driven Into the sand. Floyd Fltx Immons, the promoter, took In between 1 " and 1200.000. tiempsey rets a guarantee of J30.000. "!d In advance, and half of the gate re- ,,h lt. After taking the first game wjt above 1100,000. 80 his share Is ateagll. on his own service, Tiiacn Drone :;,,non for seven minutes and through Johnston's after the latter had "it,- se. in.is or satisfying 1011. im BRITAIN WILL SEND NEW ENVOY TO PARIS Baron Hardinge la Slated to Succeed Earl of Derby. London. Sept. 6. The London rimes understands that Baron Hardinge of Fenshurst will succeed the Earl of Derby as Ambassador to Francs In November. 960 delegates, representing s.ouu.oou workers. One of the earliest acts of the con gress was the adoption of a resolution expressing "horror and Indignation" at the Government's attitude In the case of Lord Mayor MacSwlney of Cork, and declaring that labor "will hold the MacSwiney la Dying to VWrt War Aim of U. S.' DUBLIN, Sept. 6. Arthur r Griffith, founder of the Sinn Fein organization, has sent a cable message to President Wil son recalling the British indorse ment of the American statement of war aims, including the right of self-determination with the consent of the governed, and adding that to assert this right the Lord Mayor of Cork is dying in Brixton prison. THREE KILLED IN CAYE OF WINDS 100 Niagara Falls Tourists Have Narrow Escapo in Slide of Rock. HARDING URGES LABOR TOMERT BABE RUTH ZEAL Best Way to Increnso Pro ductiveness ami Cut Living Cost. PRAISE FOR RAIL BILL RESCUE "WORK HAZARDOUS Maid of the Mist Runs Near to Falls and Recovers Rodies of Victims. Nominee Asks Workers to Give Measure a 'Fair Tryout: WORKERS CHEER SPEECH Refute Claim That Cox Has Stampeded Labor Into Democratic Ranks. Nuoara Falls, Sept . Two women and a man were crushed to death and tv.'o men were Injured this afternoon when a slide of shalo forced out a bridge leading to one of the stalr w.ya In the Cave of the Winds under Niagara Falls. A hundred or more trurlsts who were in the cave at the time had narrow escapes, many being bruised and cut by the railing rock. The dead are A. Hartman, 4118 Avenue P, Ilrooklyn: his wife, Louise Hartman, and Clara M. Faust, 2658 Norwood avenue. Pittsburg. The Injured are T. W. Lee, 44 South Twenty-second street, Pittsburg, and Frank E. Haehllng, 83 Clarendon avenue, Detroit. The dead and Injured wero members of a party of tourists Just completing a tour of the cave. With a guide leading, the party was In the middle of one of tht four bridges In the cavo when the slide raine Its noise drowned by the roar of the cataract. The guide was not touched j marked respect they displayed and In Cox's Coal Levy Charge . Denied by J. K. Denng CHICAGO, Sept. 6. Replying to charges by Gov. Cox that an attempt had been made to levy a Republican campaign as sessment of $80,000 on certain cogl operators, J. K. Dering, named by thc Governor as one of the principals, in a statement made public to-day said: "We never held any such meeting as Gov. Cox described. The committee of which I was chairman met, but wo never as sembled, even the committee alone, in the Auditorium Hotel. Generally, the committee met in my office and generally it was I who had to run around to the coal men and pry the money out of them. We raised between $18,000 and $20,000 and turned it over to Fred W. Upham, treas urer of the Republican National Committee." B.R.T. STRIKERS ROUTED IN RIOTS 1SH0T,17SEIZED 1,000, Many In Fx-Service Uniforms, in Battle on Prospect Park Plaza. FAIL TO CAPTURE CAB 8 HELD IN PLOT TO WRECK TRAIN Bullets, Rocks ami Other Missiles Fly Until Cops Charge Tranches. SOKE STONES HIT WOMEN Three More Arrests for Sea Beach Car Murdeu Two Taken for New Attacks. Massacre of Passengers Was Planned, Ringf'.e-aders Confess. SEVEN ARE FOREIGNERS hind Conspiracy. By a Staff Corrciprmdrni nf Tils Bun and Nrw Vo.k 1 1st i.e. Masion, Ohio, Sept. 6. For every man In his own employment to be a Babe Ruth, to put Into his day's work the same zest and zeal nnd determina tion to excel that marks the Babe's dally efforts at the bat and In the field. In Rnntor Hnrdine'. wav to In- cease productlvcneas, keep wages up. Informer Sayh Vengeance for take out of toil Its humdrurh wear!- J Coul Minft'S Was De- ness, cure discontent and generally 1 promote happiness and prosperity. This simple, sound philosophy, ased on the causes hat make Ruth of tho Yankees the greatest ball player In any man's world, was offered to labor to-day by the Republican nominee In the course of his Labor Day address at Lincoln Park, in this city. Aa the guest of the Central Trades and Labor Council Senator Harding spoke be fore 4,000 persons, an audience com posed largely of union laborltes and their women folk. In the warmth and fllcndllneaa of their greeting, in tho Continued on Sixth Page. by the slide and his first Intimation of It came from the screams of the women. To recover the bodies of the dead It was necessary to take .1 rowboat from the Maid of the Mist stamer, which had been run up as near as possible to the falls nnd cave. It was 11 haxardous ven ture, but the rowboat crew finally brought the hodles out of the pool and reealned the steamer. The accident Is the first of the kind ; high that has occurred In the cave since the first stairway was built In 188!. Thert have been slides before, but only In the winter or early spring. Only a short while before the accident In the cave a score of persons were In jured In the lower gorge of the Niagara River, when a trolley of the Gorge Route ran through an open switch. The acci dent occurred within a few feet of the the well Judged applause that followed through the speech there was small evidenco that Samuel Oompers's ef frrts to stampede union labor for Gov. Cox has bad any success. The allusion to thc champion of home run hitters as an example of how lt pays to do one's work ambition was a Pjxetal tn The Ri:n and Niw Tome Hsiaid. Chicago, Sept. 8. Seven alien an archists and one naturalized American who formed a conspiracy to wreck the Illinois Central Railroad's Dia mond Special, leaving Springfield for Chicago at midnight, are locked up at Police Headquarters at Springfield (111.) to-day. All are said to be mem bers of the Communist party. Twenty were seized in all, but twelvo were freed upon questioning. Thc gang had chosen a lonely spot fifteen miles from Springfield and close to the Sangamon River Bridge. Tliere they planned to murder those passengers who escaped death in the wreck, to rob them, to rifle the ex with spirit and 1 .)resg wlr, tho aid of acetylene nt touch hv . torches, to kill any farmers who nei.tll.Ui nmt UlilB wvaa avw uw v fams having penetrated to the remotest 1 might give thc alarm and then to as sertions of America, and It may be taken j , automobiles. They would have aa the keynote of the whole address. ' Not only work, but work done with the : gone through with the plot had lt not ambition to do a little better at the Job 1 ken tor the fact that one of the gang than anybody else can do is tho remedy j for most of the Ilia, social, economic j weaKenea. and political, that exist to-day, as Sena-i Sickening at tho thought of murdering tor Harding sees It. That Is the corner- the helpless, the squealer "tlpred off' Superintendent Brennan at the Depart ment of Justice's Chicago office, and spot where n disastrous wreck happened j stone of most of his speeches the nail three years ago. All of the Injured were that he intends to hammer upon straight sent to hospitals, where lt was said that through his campaign. none was hurt fatally. j Senator Harding used to ply base-' Ajgusc H. Loula, head of the anarchist I ball himself, knows more about the na- j -.ho with the helu of Chief of avenue trolley, manned by strike break- saleian for the tional game than Bill Taft nnd has a: ,, .. , , . ,. I ers, rolled Into view. The strikers Im- .-oin.-t: diuiiiB ii""'-'" - J mudlute v tathprr around th.- car and one ot them shouted : Moro than a thousand strf ys of the B. R. T., including sever j hun dred who served In tho army 1 jnavr during the war and who wot j their service uniforms, fought a battlo yea. terday with rocks and revolver ngainst patrolmen, detectives and strlko breakers in tho Prospect Tartc Plaza, Brooklyn. Driven back with heavy casualties by the charge of a detachment of mounted police, the strikers finally took refuge In subwny und repair ex cavations, and from these as trenches continued their bombardment of the police with stones and bullets. The police finally smashed their resistance with an attack In force along the en tire front, rapturing eleven prisoners nnd forcing the rest of the strikers to flee with bumps on their skulls and other evidences qf the prowess of the cops with their nightsticks. The rioting In the Plaza was ths worst that Brooklyn has seen In all of the nine days of tho strike, and waa followed by disturbances in othe." parts of the borough. A total of seven teen strikers wero arrested during the oay and several others who have been Identified as ringleaders in thc dls. orders will be arrested this morning. One striker waa In the Methodist Episcopal Hospital suffering from a gunshot wound and another was in the samo Institution seriously cut and bruised. Several detectives were badly ut and four or Ave women passengers were struck by bricks and stones thrown by strikers at surface and e.'cvated cars. Battle Seqnel to Labor Parade. The fight In the Park Plaza followed the breaking up of the Labor Day parade, which had been led by the strik ing car men, with precedence given to the veterans of the war. The men were swarming out of the I'lasa en trance to the park when a Khithuih Mr. Hartman was a Basket Importing Company of B Union nrettv fair Idea of how the big clubs ' siuare. He left here Saturday wltn nis 1 stand from day to day In the fight for : p icemen. 01a ine rest. wife on their first vacation In several ; the two pennants. "Therefore the al ytars. They lived In a cottage, which i melon to thc Cave Man of Baseball fell they owned, at the Avenue P address. ! easily and naturally from the lips of Making their home with them were this nominee, who la strong for clean their two sons, josopn ana Maroia, ana 1 outdoor sports. tne latter s wire. iNeitner 01 tne sons was home last night. Mrs. Hartman was well known In Brooklyn aa a pianist and a teacher of music She had appeared frequently at concerts In the borough. IRISH RAIDERS BURN POLICE BARRACKS Life's lllg Inspiration. What la the big Inspiration In lifer he asked toward thc end of his quiet The eight were seized In eight raids which began early yesterday morning. Four of thc ringleaders have confeaaed to the State's Attorney, and most of tho others are adding their bits to the tale. The story of the Investigation leading up to the raids Is one of the most dra- Lock Chapel Doors to Stop Rescue by Congregation. arguing the end of humdrum toll, by Dublin, Sept. 5. A band of men dls- I striving for the heights. The workman gulsed as soldiers descended to-day ; who performs his tasks better than an upon thp town of Belleek, County Per- j other has satisfaction In his soul, nnd managh, In motor cars, gained entrance : be will not long escape the notice that to the police barracks, held up the i brings him advancement." police with revolvers, locked them In ! Senator Harding asked his labor hear an outhouse, captured all their arms and era to think It out for themselves. He burned the barracks. Several of the was sure they would come to the con pollcc were attending church service I elusion that the only practical plan for at the time and a detachment of the i reducing the high cost of living without raiders fastened the chapel door, lock- i surrendering high wage standards Is to ing in the congregation so an to pra-1 bring about maximum production ; for vent assistance from that source. survey of the trying labor problems of matlc In the history of crime In the the tlmea 'The natural desire to ex-, united States, officers declare. The eight eel," he answered for himself. "Why! . . . . . , . do we all applaud Babe Ruth? Because ! hPd not only t0 become rlch throu,h he has batted out more home runs In a ! their act, but, according to Mr. Loula, season than any ball player on earth. to avenge mine workers subjected to al If you were going to play ball you treatment In the recent .ouidn't want to bat at .150 or .200, " you would rather be a Babe Ruth. But rioting In West Virginia's coal fields, men say that this Is different from the1 The band took an oath to kill any mem humdrum of toll. Well, that's why I'm , v. i,h,i,.i: from tho nint a I factory success Is the success of every includng samples of the spurious mint . man n hn w r L- in th. fantnwvr a w " I '" W "V WW. IM. Ill whj MlVlUi J . AIIU Donuoal, Ireland. Sept. 8. A large nartv of men. armed with r!fl. . nH bombs, made a nlaht attaoir i. nio-ht obtain maximum production with all of unon the Panad Head coant rimni .. ! -he benefits certain to result Is for Ing. he made It as clear as the blue of a rifles and 1 "K2" I?? lne . y .P""0 e. wa.? t0 confessions, was to be used in breaking Into the State Bank of Auburn. 111. This There are some of the scabs now I Let's take the car away from them!" Beneath thc Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Arch was a Police Depart ment automobile with Detectives Francis Carberry, Alfred Wing and .Edward Tracey, waiting for something Just like this to happen. They ran the automo bile toward the surface car, and Car berry shouted to the strikers: "You'll take nothing!" "Look out for the bulla!" cried on of the strikers, but another yanked the trolley pole from the wires, shouting: 'To hell with the bulls." The conductor of the car leaned from the rear platform to replace the trolley pole and one of the strikers hit him with a club. Carberry leaped from the auto mobile upon the man who held the club, with Wing and Tracey following him. The strikers turned their attention from the car to the police, and the trol ley, which had a few women passengers in lt escaped during the excitement. But In an instant some five hundred strikers not In uniform Joined the crowd who battled with the detectives, and the blacK with the strug- I T. . .. . 1 1. ,, riClllinB wiree But Carberry, Wing and Tracey gave good accounts of themselves. Several times their blackjacks swung through the air and some striker staggered from the milling group about the trio with a dazed expression and a much paining result the man who turned Informer Is being closely guarded by Government aids. All had either automatic pistols or re cently nurchased rifles. They had two .. ! nlnz.i was soon aceiyrenr ....... ,. figures almost a thousand men dynamite, a load of ammunition and a diamond drill. A carload of Red litera ture Is part of the haul ; also an outfit to counterfeit quarters and half dollars, tlon on thc Donegal coast, overcame the garrison and carried off all Its firearms. equipment and ammunition. The fight j between the garrison and the raiders lasted two hours. Coax, Ireland, Sept. t. Two boys ' were shot and killed at Macroom, this county, yesterday. Reports state that It Is believed the shots were fired from I a military lorry passing through the 1 village, which Is twenty-four miles west : of this city. laboring men to work with the will to "'ed unsafe. .v0 . t onorx Another plot of the conspirators was to blow up the powder works of the Western Cartridge Company In Spring field. This Is said to have been hatched because tho company Is working on a contract for smokeless powder for th. all-Russian Government, which is fight ing against the Reds In Europe. The dynamite found, according to the 1 head. The ieieciiv,-r, biw m.. w , tmat..lv swinging with meir macs- Jacks upon the head of plan had been deferred because lt waa for every uollar ri-celved in wage; honest effort, willing effort, ambitious effort. Let that Idea get firmly Into the heads of men who work In and out of white collars and there would be an end to outrageous prices, discontent and all the evils that have hung like a cloud over the face of the whole earth, he argued. 10 DEAD, 50 HURT IN CRASH. Old Democratic Falsehood. j The other main points of Senator I Harding's Labor Day address were his reiteration of his determination to think NINE DEAD AND MANY HURT IN OREGON FIRE striker and punching one of them In the Jaw. while they dodged bricks and stones and sticks and missiles of every sort Bnllets Start to Fly. Xo shots were fired for a short time, but lt soon became apparent that tha detectives were doing more damage than the strikers were. Some one on the out eklrts then fired a revolver. The bullet cracked over the heads of the detec tives who drew their own guns and be gan firing into the air. Carberry. Wing and Tracey succeeded In firing only a few shots when a crowd i.v.niv rushed them en masse. The ,UUUV..J 1 and act for the whole people rather than T..i Mnchx Are; Destroved at .'hren detectives went down before tha 8. Ten persons were for any class or special Interest or group. iemettl Fttllm j onslaught, and then all the spectators ...... . . , a m,-iys or men miuinir and kicking and plunging, every one of Dbnver. Sept. killed and more than flf'y were Injured near Globevllle, a suburb, this afternoon when an outbound special train on the Denver and Interurban Railway going to Eldorado Springs, a mountain resort, crashed Into a heavily loaded Interurban train coming to Denver from Boulder. Most of tho victims ot the accident were Labor Day pleasure seekers. Ills explanation of the Inevitable dls aster attendant upon a conflict of capi tal and labor, his regret that the old Intimacy of contact between employer and employee Is gone and his hope that it can be restored ; his hearty defence of the Eacn-tummins ranroau law as a Jnre of Miske has not been revealed. 11 - fenerally supposed that he was to Confirmed on Fourteenth Page, Continued on Twelfth Page. rut- IM .14 . . .d Dinner Danesa bars been rSMWee in the Boss Room.- I VI Baron Hardinge has servei officially j at Constantinople, Berlin, Washington, ; Psrls, St. Petersburg and many other 1 capitals. He was Governor General ' and Viceroy of India and Under Secre tary for Foreign Affairs. Why dine down town? Blue Room now open. Hotel Msrfoll.ee. Broadway at 10M BU-jUlt), Used Cars and Trucks For Sale or Hire See "Automobile Exchange" Ads. fttti AND NEW YORK HERALD NEXT TO LAST PAGE Klamath Falls, Ore., Sept 6. Nine tnem trying to get to the detectives to charred bodies have been recovered crack them with clubs and bricks. But from the ruins of a fire which destroyed still every once In a nlle ' iru . ?arberry Vlng or Tracey would swing the Hotel Houston and Opera House ,h h tne, air, a blackjack would thud fair, well reasoned act. which should be and burned two blocks of dwellings and upon a tr!ker's skull, aiul there would tried out and which can be modified as business houses. Five bodies have been be one less man to num. Identified. Many persons were burned or In jured In escaping from the hotel. All the dead were believed to be from Ore- the people may desire, his suggestion that the protective tariff la needed to protect American labor In the years to come from cheaply made European goods, his approval of labor unionism nnd collective bargaining and his rtralghtout declaration of an Intention to advance labor's cause. All of thesn points were applauded generously; but most attention and most spplause were evoked by his frequent adverslons to increased production and honest work as the great cure-all. He began with a reference to the an cient Democratic falsehood always flung gon. Mrs. Mary Campora. to whom a baby- Some citizen wnose sympatnies were with the three men fighting against such, unequal odds ran to the Lafayette Mon ument, at Ninth street and prospect 1'ark West, where a detachment of mounted police were stationed as a guard of honor for Maurice Casenave, French High Commissioner, and Frank- D. Roosevelt. Democratic nominee Cosftawd c Third Page. - Kor. loaf Frlrfav threw tho 1 In Infant from a third story window Into for Vice-President, who were addressing he arms of spectators, then Jumped, a large open air gathering The cltlie. The Infant was uninjured, but Mrs. told the mounted men of the detectives' Campora suffered serious hurts. , Pght In the Park Plaza and the pollce- j men left the celebration and hurried to help carberry, wing ana iracey. The first thing the mob knew of the presence of the other police was when NO PANdlSROrS I)Rt!OS All pure food elements In Father John's Medicine. 8fo for Sll-Adv. for I 1