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WEATHER FORECAST. Cloudy with showers to-day ; to-morrow probably fair; moderate tempera ture; moderate south winds. Highest temperature yesterday 78; lowest. 6a. Detailed wuuxr report, will he tomt on SKUiortal vw 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, either has even been on its own. VOL. LXXXVIII. NO. 10 DAILY. NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, X0iu!ISS,Ww Tan w. PRICE TWO CENTS IN HEW YORK CITY. ) THREE CUNTS WITHIN !0O MII.ES. FOUR CENTS XlEWHEMi NIGHT TROLLEYS, START ON B.R.T.;! CARS SET AFIRE Bettlrer Finn as He Goes Ahead to Build Entire New Organization. SABOTAGE CONTINUES Two More Deaths Blamed on Strike and Numerous Arrests Are Made. Alexander Berkman Is Section Hand or Jail Bird Special loTli Son xD NiwToii Hiialo. WASHINGTON, Sept 9. Alexander Berkman is work ing on the railroad if he isn't in jail again. So are the other Bolsheviks, anarchists and radi cals deported with Berkman and his partner, Emma Goldman, on the Buford several months ago. The State Department to-day received official advices that when the load of Reds got to Russia they were told they were welcome if they would work. Those who decided to go to work were made part of a railroad sec tion gang. Those who didn't went to jail. Officials here re called that while the Reds often were in American jails attempts to make them work were unsuccessful. T CAT GIVES CLUE TO STOLEN DYES WORTH $500,000 Orange Paint on Fur Leads Federal Officials to Hid den Loot. 30 INVOLVED IN PLOT 6,000 Pounds of German Colors Held by Govern ment Recovered. 6,000 UNIONISTS ABE OUT gome Time Expected to Pass Before Normalcy of Oper ation Is Effected. 19 SUSPECTS ARRESTED WARREN DELANO KILLED BY TRAIN i Police Say Gang That Has Preyed on Freight Shipment Isolated Island Census Increases 5 in Century pHE steamship Mismaha reached port yesterday with the latest news from Pitcaim Island, a tiny speck of land some two and a quarter miles long which rises from the depths of the mid-Paciflc. Capt. Robert C. O'Brien, skipper of the Mismaha, which touched there last month en route from Australia, said that the inhabitants of the island told him proudly that their popu lation had increased to 175 souls, while the previous count, made almost a century ago, showed but 170. The residents of the island, a British possession, are descend ants of fifteen mutineers of the British ship Bounty, who founded a colony there in 1790 with wives from Polynesia. Capt O'Brien said the colony is thriving and that the inhabitants show no signs of the mental deterioration predicted for them as a conse quence of long continued intermarriage. Runaway Horse Carries Him hi Path of Express Near Up-State Home. Is Broken Up. A dirty white cat with a bright orange tail and a broad orange stripe down Its back scampered across one of LEADING BAILBOAD MAN i the United States Army piers In Ho- token one day last month. It was a Uncle of Franklin Roosevelt ' p-cuUr looWn pUMy- 80m m partment ol Justice agents who were there in Hoboken working on the theft of a half million dollars' worth of German dyes, which were taken from the Hoboken warehouse of the Textile Alliance, Inc.. last July, were Was Director in Many American Lines. For the first time since the strike began night service was resumed last evening on a B. R. T. surface line tn Brooklyn. The Flatbush-Seventhave-rue line continued service somewhat timorously after dark, and B. R. T. officials promised that to-night citl ifns living along the Park Slope and I'latbush lines, and possibly the Greene-Gates avenue line, would not have to foot It home. No violence marked the resumption of service. Cars moved on a ten minute headway until 11 : 30. when service, was stopped. Twenty-four hours after the ex piration of the time set by Llndley M. Garrison, receiver, for the loss of .ninritv and other rights by strikers. 6.000 men were admitted still to be when a horfie he wa. MviBg attached ; 11 'ea l.nemJ110 nouse on mvtr, ... . .v .,. crviMi .. . t " . . . street and started them on a trail i solid in the strikers ranks. Service t0 a i,ght buBgy oecaTOe frightened ; ,,. .., , at midday was reported as 88 per cent i and tot0 of an express j p,eted cha)n evMenCd ln thelr hand9i j BRITISH MINERS SPURN OFFERS Price, Wages and Arbitration Proposals of Government All Rejected. MEN PREPARE TO FIGHT Special to Tn Bvn xt Niw Toil Hzuld. Pouch keepsix. Sept 9. Warren De lano, railroad director and uncle of I Interested enough to pick the cat up. Franklin D. Roosevelt Democratic j There was ground for their susplc-Vlce-Presldentlal nominee, waa killed j Ions, they discovered. The cat was not at a railroad crossing at Barrytown, : a natural blonde. It waa born albino. near this city, late this afternoon I So thy It down and followed It i nome Lloyd George Calls Advisers Together and May Appeal to Country. if normal on surface lines, but only 8C per cent, of the men working were former employees. The others are train. which, according to Frank R. Stone, Mr. Delano, his neck broken and his ' special Department of Justice agent ln body crushed, was tossed a hundred charge of the New Jersey district, n- strike breakers,, whose collections of i ftet from the crossing. The horse was volves twenty-five or thirty men. nckles and dimes never reach B, R. T. j carried still further. The animal waa I Nineteen of the suspects are ln cus- ceffers. Neither Mr. Garrison nor the strike Mr. Delano's favorite mount Belle, and was high spirited. Mr. Delano ha, a .1 1 m m nlar at R.irrvtnwn. leaders gave any indication of yielding gtfen valetje. where his wife and yesterday. The receiver admitted it j daughter now are. would be Bome time before normal rush hour service could be es tab- Da stud Into Train. fished. He added that from this time on the efforts of the company will be directed to getting together a new permanent organization. Aaked how Ion the company could stand the Mr. Delano was 68 years eld. He had driven to the Barrytown station tody and nearly all, Chief Stone says, ' are members of a gang which has ter- i rorised the freight yards district ln j Hoboken for years, numbering among Its operations silk thefts which In the course of the war ran to more than a , million dollars. Wednesday afternoon 3,000 pounds to check a trunk for oni of hi. guest, of the stolen dyes were recovered m a and left the horse .tending at the cor- warehouse ln Brooklyn, making up. ner of the station. As the train ap- the agent, say, with another S,000 preached the animal became restive, and pound, which were recovered in Pat Mr. Delano sot Into the buggy. The t... a3...v ,,. present cost of each crew, said to do , train nooui ,u r--- w- ,tolen ln Juiy. m . dav. he renlled: ttVf"lmLrerAd. "i.""": The robbery occurred the night of 'We hive not "figured that out We ESTtSgS YITcZM ere determined, however, to operate madly onto the tracks, and the crashor how M Jaelwon nd Ffth rtreetJi Ho. tie system and give good service. It the buggy agstnst the express locomo- bok,n ul , n,.ht watchman.g j n i . v.... im.t.iv w will tlve pllot . ... . bell. The watchman thought It was the i take tune, out, uuumwj " ; w, Delano was a lover or horses, ana ii-e , th. heat and cam rn thj. the animal that caused hi. death was docT He was garged. bound hand and hi. favorite. Mr. Delano', stable at f00t ana 0 ha.na- trucIt ln tn8 cor. j Steen Valetje was one of the finest rtdor. n,, dyel were loaded on the j in nutchaaa count v. He was superin- truck and th ran aned jmv Mr. Garrison reiterated hi. policy of tendent of the horse .how at the chief 8tone decided that the only j refusing to deal with officers of the Dutches. County Fair, and at the ex- solution lay ln trailing the stuff to its Amalgamated union, nut majcawo r-urer hlbltlon Saturday next wa. to nave source. The dyes are used in the manu- plainly that ne would deal wltn tne men drlven Belle for the prixe. dtrectlv, as he has done in the past A few sporadic aMt ef violence and Prominent Railroad Director, tabotaje occurred yeaterday. but the Mf DeJan0 w o,, son of the late majority of the strikers contented them- WaT.n Delano, a noted engineer. He Klvt with sullen silence as they watched banking and railroad Inter- street cars, half filled by doubtful Brook- " 'Ma of the Chicago, In- lynlUs. pass by onder the operaUon of dlanaJKlU. Ixulivllle Railroad, the strikebreaker.. . i t,.k!Iu ana Na.hvllle Railroad. At- jonn Mine, seventeen, wnu v tw able to obtain a working force." Garrison's Poller Unaltered. lantlc Coast Une Railroad Company, facture of silks, and the agents knew that Peterson, with its silk mills, waa the place where the dyes would be sold. The stage was all set for the cat with the bright orange tall and the broad orange stripe down Its back. Stone and his men saw the animal on August 31. They watched the house it led them to and the men who lived there, and last Saturday while on the lookout tn Pater son a sedan car containing one of the , . , . . .lj i , ka neck tn a ... i , ' - son a sruan cr cuiiuumna one ui ujc ? ; RdJ and Stewart MwnUc Coa,t UnJ Comp"J:' UnU" men. followed by a big red truck, passed ia:ant lot at Bioadway and siewan f.omnanr. He was chairman of ,k v r,. h.v, m..y,.. at at nww7 ..u v M,nlnK company Itrett on September 1 striKers woo Qf D inougnt ne was a siriauiac., veswrday ln the Kings County Hospital. His home was at 1733 Norman street Long Island City. tv.m tiv Thev stormed both machine. Director, of the Vinton Emmett T. Drew, the asrent who had Colliery Company. charge of the work in Peterson, shoved HI. sister, Mra James Roosevelt la bl. gun Into the stomach of Christian the mother of the Vice-Presidential ynn, who had been recognized ln the , ' - - - T. wa. rradnatad from Har- . Ktm .a tnmn- m hi. - . ... - 11.11111. . . I U J , 4,l. WIMU.W .11... .U .... W " Vy .11.. Another death due to tne sirme waa ..... , 1tTa j . member of the i a. wtiiaa n,t th.m nr. n that of William Osterhout of 2831 South Univer.lty, Riding and Driving. Engl- ,iibre colt slid to his feet. The agei si Fiftieth avenue. Cicero. 111., a strike- neera and Downtown cluba The family found about 3,000 pound, of the dye. In i breaker. The body of Osterhout who reslJenCe n New York city Is at 3 the red truck. was attached to the West End terminal Eajt TMrty.8lxth street j They arrested Jacob Wldder, trees- at Coney Island, was found yesterday Mr Delano leave. Me wife. Jennie urer ot the Wldder Dye and Chemical' in Coney Island Creek, near West Flf- w-alters Delano; a son. Lyman Delano company of 156 Broadway. Brooklyn. leentn street, Dy rairoiman naiwr 0f Wilmington, IN. ana tnree aaugn- George Dals, a cnemlst ln his em- For a time an Investigation was con- Mri Roland Redmond of Tlvoll. pioyi charged with receiving stolen gooda ducted to aecerUln whether strikers Mr B- Adaans of Greenwich. Conn.. They were both held ln $5,000 bail. Tea- might not have been responsible for his and jjjg, Laura Delano. aeaui. No marKS or violence were touna i on his body, however. Last night an- . .nirii , ether strike breaker, John Picket of 2118 MORE MILK GIVEN BY Indiana avenue. Cicero. I1L, walked into ...niier rifrT V-iUC the Coney Island police station and SAWDUST DIET COWS ciearea up tne mystery, ne saia uio. he and Osterhout; who was working here under the name of William Howard, had had several drinks together and had wandered on Wednesday night to th edge of the creek, where they had gono to sleep. Osterhout undoubtedly rolled lrto the creek and wa drowned while in a stupor. terday Adolph Wldder and Samuel Wela., cf the same company, were arrested In Chicago, where the Department of Jus tice believes they went for the purpose of opening a branch office of their company. All th men wno nave been taken into .. . . r ! I custody are awaiting arraignment be- UTUted State ram KeporU fore VnHea eut9t commissioner 8tan- Irtcr eased Weight AltO. ton on September 21. Christian Miller. j Richard 0"ConneIl and "8cranton Joe" M u, TH. Ben U. NSw Tea, H-au, ! Bgg who arre.ted Saturday Chicago, Sept When the dairy stoppedi were held ln $30,000 ball each, ea -r of theafutur need feed for hi I The others, who were arrested later. The fate of their companion failed to cow, ne may get a fresh supply by going were nem m iq.uuu anu iu, uu. camp tne spirtu 01 tne suo striae nreaa- , d Jot and reducing a few era quartered at the West End terminal. , oul m ' . , - ' - With uncanny ease and bloated pockets ! stump to wdut By chemical treat ttout 300 are said to have located liquor : ment hydrolysed aawdurt may be con- 'n officially dry Coney Island. The men . verted Into a nourlahlng cattle food. This fact wa brought out to-aay at the sectional meeting of Industrial and engineering chemist. American Chemi cal Society, at the Unlverlty of Chicago. The process of preparing ruch animal food was described by B. C. Bherrard flubs handy and last nigbt gathered ln and IO. W. Btenco. , . 'our of the "breaker." from Chicago! White 7du-t .tlymS wiA ho got too much beyond the law. One. ; treated ta2 JZSl George Fltsgerald, 30, a conductor, wa. 2J jWSjg Th bre-k. up Te.ed for firing a revolver In th. ter- " gffil ST .-ST To "" ' curing wnat tne ponce say was ; - lnluri0u effect, the acid It much ton vtvIH Hamnnat ration (if how ; ,t""". 7 ,. liave been paid recently, and thla money, together with their perquisite, ln farea, lias flowed freely from the terminal. Strikebreaker Under Arrest. me ponce or tne isiana Kept tneir i HEARS U. S. IS READY TO HELP WRANGEL Admiral McCully Quoted a Asking List of Goods Needed. London, Sept 9. The Russian libera tion committee here, which 1. an anti Bolshevist , organization, to-day Issued an official statement received from Con stantinople saying, among other things: "The representative of America, Rear Admiral Newton A. McCully, stated to Berandskl (Minister of Finance In Gen. k Intended W2Tlg t5 Se2XS SS&lZSS"" M S Unlt',d c?ua,tane. known as "Red" Lombardl. ZJtohw i M ! -a-u!ff. C0,?.0.m itigerald was charged with carrying a concealed weapon. The other arrested were Edward "lly. U, charged with Intoxication and u'iig lurid language; Sam Boyls, 28. charged with attacking George Barnes, a iwclai officer of the B. R T.. and Ches ter Smith, 30, charged with stealing a lanket. During the early morning hour ome got on board a nine car train stand t'r the Brighton Beach terminal i Lon"v ulanil and turned on the bat- .v.. matter on tery switchea The apparatu. on three . .narlment stations throughout the t the cars was burned out amid pyro- . country and furnish a detailed rejort on th value of hydrolysed sawdust aa cattle food taJnad. when boiled down. I. rich sugar, and when mixed with the fiber produce a moist feed containing about fifteen per cent of water, In which form It Is fed to dairy cows. At the Forest Product. Laboratory, United 8Ute Department of Agricul ture, Madison, Wis., experiment proved that' three cow thrived on this sawdust ration and not only gave more milk but Increaaed In weight The result was so satisfactory that the Government has decided to take up larger scale at tne I State, are ready to give him economic l aid and aaked him to present a list of goods wanting ln the Crimea." By th At$ciated Prtu. Cokstantinopu, Sept 8 (delayed) Gen. Wrangel, head of the anti-Bolshevist forces In South Ruasiti, I within twelve mile, of Alexandrovsk, the head quarter of th field staff of the Thir teenth Soviet army, despatches received to-day report technical sputtering and flame, but Jo'ioemen managed to put out the fire wore more damage wa done. About the an me time th serenity of CcnMa-sdMsatetaJ! TUB PLAZA Tea and Dinner banee have bent la rae Ba Itaeai ttm Special ( able Dcpatctt to Trrs Srs im Nsw Toaa Hbuld. Copvrioht, 1810, by Tus StTN and New Yob a Haute. London, Sept. 9.The last confer once capable of averting a coal strike broke down here this afternoon. To night Premier Lloyd George and all or his principal advisers are "out of town." It is believed they are holding a conference from which may come a decision to join all the forces of the nation in a battle against the labor demands. The steel master, have resisted the appeals to negotiate further with the electricians, and while other unions so far nave hesitated to Join the elec Uiciana, there Is fear that the strike will spread and cause a stoppage of all engineering trades. The International aspect of the Brlt lsn labor situation1 Is such that ln the opinion of an Important British banker this afternoon unless England know. Just what she may expect from labor next year it is fruitless for her to participate ln the Brussels financial congress or make any other plans either for her own or for world finances. Thl. man Is on of a group who have been Insisting all along that even If re sistance to labor demand now means Industrial chaos It might be better for It to come quickly and get It over than to carry on for months a condition of uncertainty leading ultimately to the same end. To-day's conference wa held at tne Invitation of Sir Robert Horne, president of the Board of Trade, who outlined be fore the miners' executive committee Just what was the Government's posi tion It was, first the price of coal. Robert SmilUe, acting for the miners, refused to abandon the miners' demands for a reducUon in the domestic price by 14 shillings. Second, that the wage claims go before an Industrial court, which Mr. SmilUe also refused. Third, a committee of miners and owner be named to discuss questions regarding relationship, wage and output to which Mr. Smillie also refused to agree. A huge crowd gathered outside the Board of Trade Building and watched the miner arrive there for the meeting. Then the crowd waited hour until the conference ended and watched the earns men. with grave face, leave the build ing. , . The miner held their own private meeting before giving their final an swer to Sir Robert Horne, and after the conference ended they hurried back to Portsmouth, there to attempt to consoli date the entire trade union sentiment behind them for th fight from which nobody to-night see. escape without an entirely unexpected Intervention by Premier Lloyd George. The Premier did not attend the con ference, but was Informed by telephone of the reult whereupon he summoned hi close political supporters to his coun try house at Cobharo, where he Isstay lnsr The political character of the ad visers with him to-night led to the prediction ln high circles that a full meeting of the Cabinet would be . called for to-morrow morning and that per haps there would be an appeal to the country, poselbly through the dissolution of Parliament to ttle whether the country, through political mean, will back up the Government's resistance to the miners' demands, which the Govern ment insists are political and not eCWnue0'lt I till poaslbl the political advisers may convince the Premier that the wisest coura 1 to intervene per sonally and Insist upon mediation lead-ins- to a compromise, such action aAlnst all those political probabilities arising from Mr. Lloyd George's fre auent assertion that he and the coali tion are the only barrier between Eng land and the outright social communism of radical Labor! tie, and hi search for an Issue upon which this political theory can be hammered Into political fact ONLY $3,079,000 IN G.O.P. BUDGET, BLAIR TESTIFIES Money Raisers Set Quota Mark of $4,800,000, Committee Told. NO SUPPORT FOR COX Investigators "Will Adjourn To-night for Fortnight New York Next. OHIO DIRECTOR HEARD Admits Doubling $650,000 Quota, but 'Shot at Moon to Hit Trees.' LEAGUE SNOWED UNDER IN MANY STATE BATTLES Georgia Democracy Latest to Plant Foot Down on Wilson Theories. EXPECT COX TO SHIFT Rain of Blows on Leading Issue May Drive Him to Substitute. BEATEN IN 'SOLID SOUTH' Watson's Victory Is Direct Repudiation of Leader by Own Party. Bv a Staff Correspondent of TBS Son iWD Nr- YOHK HeULD. Chicago, Sept. 9. The Kenyon com mittee has got about as far as It can go ln Chicago. It has reached the stage ln which the Republican money rslsers troop in from various States us witnesses and all testify to about the same facts. It is likely to adjourn to-morrow night to meet again either ln Pittsburg or New York ln about a fortnight To-day It was indicated that the testimony of William Boyce Thomp son of New York, chairman of the national ways and means committee, is essential. He Is In charge of the collecting of the fund in seven East ern Statin, Including New York and Pennsylvania, the richest part of the country. It Is evident that the com mittee feels that he is the man to ask about methods and results ln those States. There also Is still to be heard William Barnes of Albany, Repub lican. Regarding his quadrennial book of Republicanism and contributors thereto the committee has expressed curiosity. No Rapport for Cox Charge. The Investigators have found no sup port for Gov. Cox's charge that a fund of $15,000,000 was contemplated. The highest proposed objective that any one revealed was 16,075,000. This was a rough estimate prepared by Harry M. Blair, assistant to Fred Upham, th na tional treasurer, when he took a money raising Job mtfn the National Commit tee In November last Mr. Blair testified that he took an es timate of 15,560,000 then handed to him by Mr. Upham and revised It upward according to his own guess as to the proper amount to aim at But this was rejected. Mr. Upham then took an other tack, and, arriving at a new re sult by the simple method of taking t per cent of the sum achieved by the Red Cross ln Its wartime drive, put down $, 580,000 a the proposed Repub lican quota. That was merely tenta tive and Mr. Upham himself cut the fig ure to $4,877,000. Then along came Mr. Blair again and prepared still another quota, based on not only the Red Cross results but the Republican vote, popu lation of States and status ot their In dustrial products. This proposal wa $5,645,000. That was scaled by Mr. Upham down to $4,800,000, the final quota which he submitted to the com mittee last week with the statement that It was merely a mark to shoot at and that the real requirement was the amount of the budget $3,079,000. The foregomg summarizes the history of the Republican quota making as given to the committee to-day by Mr. Blair, who was croaa-examlned by Sen ator Reed for seven hours. Reed Score Once. Senator Reed, from a Democratic standpoint, scored heavily once. He got Mr. Blair to admit that an Intensive money raising campaign In fifty-four 'arge cities had been proposed by the national treasurer' office. This 1. three more cltie than were Hated by Oov. Cox In hi Pittsburg speech. But whereas Gov. Cox said a typewritten list of the fifty-one cities had been exhibited at a meeting of Republican worker and that the total of the quotas was $8,000,000, Mr. Blair, like all the other wltn eases. Mid there was no such list no such quota., so far as he knew. He told Senator Reed that aa a matter of tact "we contemplated organising In .i.v h v,,.. that, for one reason or another, the collection had been started ln only twenty cltlea And h wore that Gov. Cox wa entirely mistaken ln telling the public that national head quarters wa. directing these city cam paign, and fixing the quotes. He said the campaigns were under th direction of city or county chairmen, nominated by the State chairmen, but according to his testimony, they apparently were ap- pointed by National Treasurer Upham. Tha city quota, .aid Mr. Kelley, were ' wet by the State chairmen. Senator. Reed and Pomerene. who are exerting themselves to bring out every I ossible point In Gov. Cox' favor, were also as pleased a Punch thl. afternoon ! when Mr. Kelley testified that tn fixing the county quotas he bad doubled the dtate quote of $850,000 set by th Na-! tlonal Committee. "We hot at th moon In order to hit i the top of th trees," said Mr. Kelley. j -in- vminr man. to whom Sen- alar Bdge, on the spur of the moment j offered a Job, It h wa. out or one, auer th campaign. Cos Help Snbacrlptlona. In th course of the day Mr. Blair gave hi opinion that Oov. Cox ought to te one of hi paid field men, for a lot ot folk who never had subscribed beforo Forgot Name of an Ohio Presidential Triplet Bu a Staff Carrttpondtnt of TH. SDN and Naw Yobs Hsbals. CHICAGO, Sept. p. Htra is bit of dialogue and a sequel gleaned from to-day's proceed ings ot the Senatorial inquiry into campaign funds with John A. Kelley of Mr. Blair's staff on the stand: Chairman Kenyon: There is a rood deal of politics in Ohio this year, all around, isn't there? Mr. Kelley: A good deal. Chairman Kenyon : You have the Democratic candidate and Republican candidate and the Prohibition candidate? Mr. Kelley: Exactly. Chairman Kenyon : And while Ohio is called the mother of Presidents this year you have got triplets? Mr. Kelley: That is it. The sequel was that not a per son in the room could recall the name of the Prohibition candi dateand be was right in Chi cago at the time too. His name is Aaron Watkins. Special to Tn Brw and Nsw Year Hbuld. Washington, Sept. 9. -The Demo cratic donkey, burdened with the League of Nations issue. Is barely creeping alone, staggering under a succession of blows sufficient to take the heart right out of him. On top of the Impressive victory scored by Senator George H. Moses In winning a renomination to the Senate bv the people of New Hampshire on a stralghtout stand against the League of. Nations, the very stronghold of De mocracy has turned around and regis tered its will strongly against the at tempted realization of the Wllsonlan vision of entangling America in his League of Nations. The fact that Gov. Cox, the Demo cratic nominee for President, Is hand In glove with Mr. Wilson on the league j issue and considers the United States a "quitter" because it will not obligate Itself to police the rest of the world, brings the Georgia result to bear dl rtctly on the present battle for the Presidency. The Administration "butted into" the Georgia situation to try to beat Senator Hoke Smith with Hugh Dorsey. Thomas E. Watson, on a platform that he was opposed to any form of league, with or without reservations, beat both fmith and Dorsey. Senator Smith wa. rot opposed to any league, but had failed to stick to the Wllsonlan coat tails on several occasions and wa marked for slaughter. Politicians here Of both big parties, '.'rawing their Inference from all th primaries held thus far, are forced to draw one conclusion from the results that there la a tremendous swing of sentiment away from day dream and nonsense of all sorts and toward com mon sense, away from a policy of heads In the cloud, toward a policy ot feet on the solid ground. Without exception wherever a primary has been held there has been only the smallest shred of hope to be derived therefrom by the party which has elected to seek office on the Wilson Internationallxatton scheme. Democrat, hare admit reluctantly that thl 1. true. They cannot Juggle the New Hampshire or Georgia results ln any manner that will help them. In the' minds of Democrats there Is the thought here that Gov. Cox, shrewd politician that he Is supposed to be, will attempt to bury the league Issue under i mas of words about other matters. This Republican 'eadera here have now made up their mind will not be allowed to get very far. They have tetn the trend of the opinion of the nation and they are now going to hold Gov. Cox and his followers to strict accountability on the league issue. BRANDEGEE IS NAMEMC01. Renominated by Acclamation as G. 0. P. Candidate for Senate. OPPOSED BY THE WOJIEN Nominee to Make Campaign on League of Nations Issue. SLASHES WOOL PRICES TO START FACTORIES American Woolen Company Make Heavy Reduction. The exhibit of the spring line of the American Woolen Company opened yes terday, showing a reduction in price of between 15 and 25 per cent ln all of the products of the company. In a statement Issued after the opening of the exhibit William W. Wood, president of the company, declared that he In tended to get hi mill busy at some price or another. "It is time business started up." said Mr. Wood, "and we are going after order, to fill our nulla We are not yet wearing paper clothe ln this country. We are going to attract buyer for woollen good In a wool wearing coun try. The way to tart the market i. to .lash the price. Nobody can ask for lower price than we have named. These sre attractive price, and. so f ar a any on can fores, no lowr one can be named. We have got to make price such that our distributor can do busi ness with confidence." The reduction ln price wa reflected ln Wall treet by a moderate advanpe ln American Woolen stock. Mr. Wood's announcement that the mills would be operated again soon wa received with enthusiasm throughout the financial dis trict Special to Tn 3tm and New Yosk Hsuald. Harttow). Sept 9. United States Senator Frank B. Brandegee, who ha been a steadfast opponent of the League of Nations ever since Presi dent Wilson brought the covenant from Paris, waa renominated by ac clamation to-day at the Connecticut State Republican Convention. Senator Brandegee waa unopposed for the nomination, and the few Republicans who have opposed his stand on the league and on the woman suffrage question, of which he has also been an opponent were compelled to accept htm because his strength throughout the State la so great they had been unable to find anybody who would consent to run against him. Senator Brandegee has been In the United State Senate since 1905 and has always been considered one of the ablest men ln public life. The principal Issues to be developed by the Senator during his campaign will be the League ot Nations. The Democratic State organi zation, a well a. the Democratic Na tional Committee, ha already unofficial ly served notice that they are out to beat him and will concentrate their at tack ln this State against him. The Democrats are counting on the support of Connecticut women to de feat Senator Brandegee and elect Homer 8. Cummtngs, former chairman of the Democratic National Committee. The ticket to run with Senator Bran degee. a nominated by the convention during the afternoon, is as follows: Governor Everett J. Lake of Hart ford. Lieutenant-Governor Charles A. Tem pleton of Waterbury. Secretary of State Donald J. Warner of Salisbury. Treasurer O. Harold Gllpatrio of Putnam. Comptroller Harvey P. Blasell of Ridgefleld. HARDING PLANS TO SPEAK IN TEN BIG CITIES SOON His Greeting in Northwed Prompts Decision to I Leave Porch. HERE ABOUT OCT. 23 Large Tour, Which May Extend to Pacific Coast, Being Considered. MINNESOTA IS ROUSED St. Paul and Minneapolis Pec-i pie Impressed by Logic of Nominee. CAMDEN INDICTS 1,000 FOR SELLING LIQUOR 300 Arrests Already and Five Stills Seized in Raids. Continued on Third Page. Subastopol, Sept. g (delayed). The establishment of Gen. Wrangel s line along th Dnieper and to the northeast ha been affected by a series of counter attacks. In which both sides suffered heavy casualties Haay thousands of Soviet troop, It la dec! ai4 har. are suiroundad ny th DESIRABLE HELP Home and Office Workers See "SITUATIONS WANTED" Ads. 3b jftm AND NEW YORK HERALD NEXT TO LAST PAGE FRANCO-BELGIAN COMPACT READY Agreement Will Be Presented to France Totay. Bacsszx. Sept 9. The Notion Belft announces that a letter approving the I military agreement wim rTance win oe I presented to the French Government to morrow. The newspaper adds that all the Ministers have reached the opinion I held by Premier Delacroix that the 1 Franco-Belgian alliance thus will be an I ccompllshed fact. I M Delacroix said to-day that ne had ! returned from Paris satisfied with the ! reception he was accorded thera. He I added that harmony between France and i Belgium on th Ruaso-Pollsh question was complete. Camden, Sept S. The Camden Coun ty Grand Jury to-day. returned one thousand Indictments for Illegal liquor selling tn Camden city and county. To night 300 persons were under arrest charged with selling liquor without a State license The Indictments were ordered Impounded by th Judge. The warrants were served by county and city police under the direction of County Prosecutor Charles Wilverton, who preferred the charges. Five still, were seised In the raid. TWO KILLED IN FIGHTS IN TRIESTE STREETS Score Wounded in Renewal of Socialist Battle. By faa Anociattd Prat. Trieste, Sept . Th general strike throughout Julian Venetla was resumed this morning for a period of twenty-four hour. In protest against the attacks upon persons attending the funeral Thursday cf a striker killed during the recent strike riot. Th outbreak here leading to street fighting between Nationalist and So cialists were resumed yesterday. Two deaths have occurred and a score of persons have been wounded. Too aui rat the wry man you ar. loo tsl fortkrough a Help WajUd ad-jU- maa in i - -- - s GUARD U. 8. RIGHTS IN MEXICO. tVaaklngtoa Not to Confine Watch to OU Properties. It By a Staff Correspondent of Tn Sow ins 1 Yoia lUBULB. Marion, Ohio, Sept. 8. Senator Har ding's Minnesota trip, from which he returned at 8 o'clock to-night, accom panled by Gen. Pershing, has had at least two important results. First, it demonstrated that the) Northwest Is not hostile or even ln different but actually Is friendly to the nominee himself and definitely bent on turning out the Democrat! party. Second. It proved the soundness ot the opinion that Senator Harding would do well to go out among th people, so that they could sea tee themselves and hear for themselve the difference between a statesman and a vaudeville performer. The proof was so positively supplied by the people of St Paul and Mtnne arolls that It Immediately affected campaign plans. A schedule of speeches for ten large centres of pop ulation East and West already has been submitted to the Senator. It la certain that he will speak ln New York city, ln Madison 8quare Garden. on or about October 23. on that exact I date If the Garden is available. Tha other clUea to be visited under tha i tentative nioeramme are Baltimore. Philadelphia and Boston, In tha East I and Louisville, Indianapolis, St Louis, Omaha and Oklahoma City In tha cen I tral States. Two or three other cltlea I alart ar under consideration. It will not be eurprUIng If thl pro gramme is largely expanded, perhaps to the Pacific coast. Great pressure is be I Ing brought to bear upon Senator Har- ding to win hi consent to a tour that i would follow the general course of the well planned Journey made oy rresiaent Wilson a year ago, when he travelled, moatlv In Republican territory, in the la I terest of the League of Nations. Cltte That Want Harding:. The principal point suggested are rii.nannlia. St. Louis. Kansas City. 'Omaha, Sioux City. Bismarck, Helena, i Tacoma, Seattle, Portland, San Fran ! Cisco, Los Angela. Salt Lake City, Den ver. Oklahoma City and Louisville. Peo ple in the regions are appealing ear nestly for the nominee and are request ! - hia nraaence as a matter of right Until the extraordinary welcome came to htm tn Minnesota Senator Harding had not been cordial to suggestion, look ing toward a continuous tour. The rea son, for hi. predilection to a "front porch" campaign were simple and un derstandable. If the Senator decide to a tmt- nr aaveral tour the decl- ' sion will be his own, not th reflected 1 inrfrment of the Republican National ! Committee or of his friends ln the Sen ate. He Is a man of marked modesty and , 1 averse to the parading and whoopla- Ing and general baliyhoolng that seem I to be part of an extensive and widely advertled political tour. He ha hal the conviction that this sort of cam j palgnlng accord 111 with the dignity th j American people expect from candidates) .' for the Presidency. While he may be perrectiy sure or ma I own competency as a campaigner, and while hi. possession of the attractive and solid qualities that make a first rate campaigner are beyond question, nevertheless 6enator Harding doubta that the people, worthwhile people, truly desired him out among thm. I ui-n nfa ramnved that doubt Th Immediate development wa his consent to a enes or aorwaea wao mi In at least ten big cities. Kxpanslon 01 tniS progl anno ,v mwv pa sibl. It I probable. Senator Harding', experience among th? people In St Paul and Minneapolis were remarkable. Th keynote ot hi receptions and greetings everywhere waa the characteristic friendllnes and f) rpect seldom displayed by the people ex- j cept to a rresiuenv ui u, u-. Th Senator wa welcomed not aa If he were running for President but at If he were President. To person who have travelled extenalvely with Preal denta the mood of the Minnesotan toward Senator Harding was dramatio thing, even In the calmness and re straliit of it expression. Th- attitude of crowds, the four and I twenty little things that betray the In most mind, Is slgnincant. Ana on tnax judgment It waa undeniable that Senator Harding received ln St. Paul and Min neapolis such a tribute as people la large masses give only to th Chief Ex ecutive. Senator Harding wa treated a Minnesota used to delight to treat Theodore Roosevelt. Crow- All Attentlva. v- .naaker ever met more interested Washington, Sept . The right of ',.,, unbroken attention, than American engaged in agriculture, mln- gem4tor Harding was favored with from Ing and manufacturing tn Mexico, as jne -ued up thousands In the grand well a of those Interested In oil prop- ltJ1d at the Minnesota State fair ertlea, have been the subject of recent r0unds- And when he finished all u representation to the Mexican Oovern- fne vast assemblage went to their feat ment, It was learned to-day. :(n a aponteneous offering of superlative Instances regarded as Infringing on r,,pect. His passage from th fatf these rights through double taxation or rounda to Nloolet avenue and so Into confiscatory measures have been noted th city of Minneapolis wa th progrea tn th correspondence. It wa said. ot conquer .ir of a conqueror Of men ' , ' mind and heart. FATHER JOHN ItTOICDra 5n the wide avenue almost JW.TSt Jjpar a - th day Woodrow w