ffgsa WASHINGTON HERALD - . ' i *? ' ... ' ^ NO. 4967 1 WASHINGTON. D. C.. FRIDAY. JUNE 4. 1920. s TWO CENTS COURT STIRS AS STRIKER IS CONVICTED Crowd Rushes Officers, After Charge Jury Is Partial to Mill Men. I APPEAL CASE IS LOST Trouble in Connecticut District Worse as Bitterness Increases. <9pcelal tm Wuklxtn Herald.) Waterbury, Conn.. June 3.?Charging that the Jury hearing the striker*' case In the District Court , were "friendly to manufacturers I and naturally biased." Attorney'Edward Mascola challenged the panel twice tpday and asked for their discharge. ' Judge Peasley overruled the motions and gave the case to the Jury, ^ | which returned a verdict of guilty againat Flore Santoro, who was charged with intimidation. Santoro was sentenced to Jail for lz months. The case had been appealed from a sentence of sixty days imposed in the city court. The court directed that another j Jury be Impaneled for the other. triala Sympathisers t'aaae Stir. Strikers and sympathisers caused | a stir when Deputy Sheriff John j Tlerney took Santoro out of court, ! rushing to the door. City Sheriff , Robert Stone and a dozen police- j men sprang to Tierney's assistance. ^ In City Court Judge McGrath today sentenced six ring leaders in- j volved in yesterday's riot in Oak- | ville, giving each sixty days In Jail. | Strike Spread Crattaaea. The strike, now in its sixth week, i has no signs of an early settlement, i It continues to spread to other ; parts of the Kaugatuck Valley, and j strike leaders say it is only a matter j of days when it ^vill affect some j 500,000 workers. Manufacturers hold meetings fre- I quently and continuo "to sit fight." I FIND COCKREU. i MORDEREDWIFEi _ j Second Degree Verdict Re-, turned by Jury as Mother Swoons. ??????? ' Philip Shirley Cockrell was found guilty of second degree murder for killing his wife. Pearl Hortense Cockrell. June 31. 1918, yesterday. Cockrell faces a sentence of life or a minimum of twenty years im'prisonment. The Jury was out six hours. Cockrell received the verdict with apparent indifference but his | mother. Mrs. Clara Cockrell. col- j lapsed and had to be carried out of the court room. Justice Gould' remanded Cockrell for sentence, i which will be Imposed Friday un- | less his counsel give notice of an j appeal. His attorneys would not say last night what action would | be taken. Bets were laid by spectators that ; the Jury would disagree. Cockrell had been on trial since ' May 6 and had been in Jail nearly | two years. Dr. William A. White. ( superintendent of the Government j Hospital for the Insane, and his as- I sistant. Dr. John L.ind, a neurologist, both had testified he was insane. Cockrell is 36 years of age. He began life in a small town near I Warrenton. Va., and spent his early 1 manhood In Alexandria. Va., as a class iTorker. There he met Pearl Godfrey, whom he afterward mar- j ried and then killed with an Iron i pipe as she lay in bed ridiculing him for trying to persuade her to stop dancing with other men and remaining out until late at night. THE DAY \ <4|N the tropics" ("Hop-along" 1- Bibb, the bird fancier, was saying to me) "the seasons, months, fortnights, week-ends, holidays, dogdays. Sundays and yesterdays get so Jumbled together In the shuffle that you never known when a year has gone by until you're in the middle of the next one." r * "Hop-along" Bibb kept his bird stora on lower Fourth avenue. He was an ex-aeaman and beachcomber who made regular voyages to Southern ports and imported persbnally conducted invoices of talking parrots and dialectic paroquets. He had a stiff knee, neck and nerve. I had gone to him to buy a parrot to present. at Christmas, to my Aunt Jo&& n&? ^ Has Senatorship Field in Missouri , ,^| pjp / ^ S?& g^W BRKCKINRIDGE LONG. Jefferson Ctty, Mo., June 3.? Announcement by Gov. Frederick G. Gardner that he will not enter the race for the Democratic nomination for United States Senator, leaves BreckinI ridge Long, Third Assistant Secretary of State, with virtually a clear field to the nomination. Gardner's friends last week paid his filing fee and sent a blank certificate of filing to the Secretary it State, requesting that the governor be requested to sign It. 'A man of common sense should, when conditions justify, change his mind." Gov. Gardner announced today. "I am one of those who have frequently found it necessary to do and I should be glad indeed to find it possible to change in this matter, but as I said In a statement made to the people some two months ago. I cannot be a candidate for the Senatorship." (Public Ledger Service.) GOMPERS RAPS MEXICO REPORT Fall's Recommendations, Are "Vicious" and War- j like, He Says. * . Any attempt to carry out the recommendations embodied in the report on Mexico submitted byfthe Senate Investigating Committee, headed by Senator Albert B. Fall, will mean war between the United States and Mexico. That is the view expressed yesterday by Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, who, speaking for continuance of the friendly relations between American and Mexican labor, attacked the Fall report as thoroughly "vicious" and "in accord with the desires of American oil and mining interests engaged in the exploitation of Mexico." Mr. Gompers' statoment was made co-incident with the announcement that many of the proposals of the Fall committee would be included in the tentative platform to be submitted to the Republican National Convention. "Adoption by the Senate of this ; report." said Mr. Gompers. "would constitute the adoption of a foreign policy completely at variance with the established traditions of our republic." (Public I-edgrr Service.) Prune Pit Sticks In Throat 2 Days; Saved by Surgeon Prunes may be wholesome, but also risky, in the opinion of 8year-old John Sullivan, of Rockville, Md. John swallowed a prune pit on Wednesday, and was removed ;o Casualty Hospital. Three Xray photographs failed to disclose the location of the pit. tn an effort to save his life he was removed to Philadelphia to Dr.. Chevalier Jackson, surgeon. Late yesterday he was operated on successfully.. Dr. Jackson reporting that in all his experi- 1 ?nce he had never removed so large a pit from the windpipe. Casualty Hospital authorities ' ?ay that it is the second case of the kind to be brought to the hospital in fifteen years. I VE CELEBR/ "This one," said I. disregarding his homily on the subdivisions of time?"this one that seems all red, white and blue?to what genus of beasts does he belong? He appeals at once to my patriotism and to my love of dlacord in color schemes. "That's a cockatoo from Ecuador." said Bibb. All he has been taught to say is 'Merry Christmas.' A seasonable bird. He's only $7; and I'll bet many a human has s\uck you for money by making the same speech to you." And then Bibb laughed suddenly and loudly. . ."That hlrdi" he explained, "reminds me." He's got his datls mixed. He ?u|bt to be saying TE plurlbua unum.' to match his FRANCE SENDS ' MAN TO GENEVA,' SOFT MEETING. I _J Justin Godart Named for | Big Parley?Women Pleased. DELEGATES BUY HATS Attractive Prices in Paris Draw Americans to Shops. (Wniiftn Herald - Pnblir Lrdcrr Service. Special Cable Dispatch.) Br CONSTANCE DREXEU Paris. June J. ? The news that i the French government has appoint- t jed an official delegate to the World (. Suffrage Conference at Geneva, be- t i ginning on June 6, greeted the't American delegation of women in '. Paris today. The appointee is Jus- j tin Godart. member of the chamber t of deputies and formerly undersec- t retary for public health under M. Painleve. M. Godart was sent with the French high commission to the United States where he spoke In ^ the summer of 1918 at many public j1 meetings. He is president of the parliamentary committee of 106 members con- 1 stituted by the woman's rights par- v liamentary group recently formed v for the purpose of promoting af, woman's suffrage bill. The bill passed the chamber but is blocked P In the senate. d Mna Has More Power. j Mme. De Witt Schlumberger. pres- ( ident of the French union for woman suffrage, when asked why the COXTIXl'KD OX I*A?E TWO. _ c 20,000 TROOPS ! PDRSUE VILLAS I in I h Move of Provisional Army 11 ld Into Chihuahua Told j. In Reports. p Mexico City. June S.?Fifteen w thousand troops iTava been dinpatch- 1 ed by the new government to engage ? Villa in battle and effect his capture a if possible. I' Ignacio Bonillas. former Ambassa- ^ dor tor the United States, and Gilgaria, who was secretary to Carranza. have been freed by the revolutionary government. Reports from Tampico today an- J nounced the arrival there of Ru- * dolfo Herrero. accused of responsibility for the murder of Carranza, who is en route to the capital, where1 he will testify that Carranza committed suicide. El Paso. Tex... June 3.?Eluding pursuers following his defeat at Parral. Frunclsco Villa's bandit force cut wire and rail communications ^ between Santa Rosla and Jiminez. according to official reports received here today. Government troops under Gens. Escobar and Enriquez are i still attempting to capture Villa. 8 Additional federal forces are mov- 1 ing into Chihuahua from the south i p to enter the vigorous campaign ; ' against the rebel chieftain. WOOLEN MILLS RUN ON 4-DAY SCHEDULE | , Boston. June 3. ? Practically all mills controlled by the American Woolen Company will go on a fourdav?-a-?i eel; < periling i-cliedule. beginning tonight, it was announced at ti>e headquarter^ of t^c company here today. The comptry employs approxi- j matelv 25.000 operatives In mills In j New Entclunu. New York, Connect!- j rut and Pennsylvania. >'( Officials recently denied that any rut *n the ipcii-tir.g t-ch?d )le was h contemplated. w Red General Arretted. ?? l.ond'in, June 3.?A Warsaw dis- ir pitch today quoting newspaper ad- c( rices received there said Gen. Aliz Brusiloff. commanding Soviet 41 troops opposing the Poles, had been pi arrested. Brusiloff was charged e with responsibility for heavy losses (, suffered by the Red armies along the Berezina River, the dispatch Jl laid. , Jci "" \TE feathers, instead of trying to work th?- Santa Claus graft. It reminds me of the time me and Liverpool Sam got our ideas of things tangled up on the coast of Costa Rica on 'account of the weather and other phenomena to be met with in the tropics. "We were, as it were, strandcl on that seotion of the Spanish main with no money to speak of and no friends that should be talked about either. We had stoked and second-cooked ourselves down there on a fruit steamer from New Orleans to try our luck, which was discharged. after we got there, for lack of evidence. There was no work suitable to our Instincts, so me and Liverpool began to subsist on the y**'1 r,,m nt ' K*" f Republican conventions. In the different hearings to date t was revealed that frequently conentions have been called in places 'here negroes could not get In ouch through custom and actual j ractlce. This the resolution Intro- I uced by Charles D. Wuren, of] (ichigan, Intends to discourage, in ' act the wording is mandatory. Iti ollows: "That, in view of the fact hat at this session of the nationals ommittee. and at previous sessions f the national committee and pre- j eding national conventions, It has ppeared that in some States meet- j ngs of the Republicans have been ailed in places where it was the j ustom and practice to deny access 0 colored people, the national cgm-j littee gives notice, through chairlen. to all the organizations of the ['publican party that that practice' lust not be followed In the future j 1 any State convention or in any istrlct convention." There was a great deal of discusion before the resolution was HnalV adopted and amendments robbed i t of Its sting. As originally preented It was directed at Southern arty leaders, but after debate It! fas so worded that sectional seniment was eliminated. -Committeeman Hen. of Kea^Aclrrrr ras one of Its strongest champions. 1 nd he pointed out that the Repubcan party's only hope In the South j' iy in its absolute fairness to both' fhites and negroes. The resolution was strongly opCOXTINCKD ON PARR TWO. District "Rare June L 94, but Drop to Of Wzath Somebody once queried. "What 1st o rare as a day In June?" June days are no longer rare. j 'hey are frequent, piping hot and /ell done?done to a turij. Yesterday afternoon the Inky | nger of the weather recorder cratched a sharp line to 94. Be- i ween 2 and 4 o'clock It held that j oak position. 9 degrees above 1 he average for the past thirtyhree June 3ds. Hot Weather tieaeral. The glowing weather which herald Salesmanship Face Short Race of For Goal of Ownii Join the Salesmanship Club to-11 ay. Make a start for a home?one ' ?u can call your own, or for that latter you have your choice of six igh grade nutomoblles, any one of 1 hich you woujd be proud to pos- * ss. Now is the time to get go- ' ig?the time when your work will ' junt most. This is the big credit ' me of the campaign and the op- ' otune time for new starters.'' very member of the Salesmanship ' lub and everyone who Joins before'" une 17 will positively gain more redits on the subscriptions they | A man is liable to live al i ruch fruit as we could reap where we had not sown. It was an alluv'an town, called Soledad, where there was no harbor or future or recourse. Between steamers ifce town slept and drank rum. It only woke up when there were bananas to ship. it was Ik* a man sleeping through dinner until the dessert. "When me and Liverpool got ?o low down that Che American consul wouldn't speak to us we knew we'd struck bed rock. "We boarded with a snuffbrown lady named Chlca. who kept a rum-shop and a ladies and gents' restaurant in a street called the calle de los Forty-seven Inconsolable Saints. When our credit played out tbare. Ll*eriwtnl'a alon^uMi UVKTT* *?" *<< V BRING. VHITES" )P SEEN Wood Seats More Delegate^ Than Opponents in Day The result of the Republican National committee's hearings of contested delegates today was: Thirty-three of the 122 contests disposed of. Disputes in six of the fifteen States affected adjudicated; three others partly finished. Apparent score yesterday morning in the matter of delegates seated: Gov. Lowden, 21. MaJ. Gen. Wood. . Senator Johnson. 2. In the Fifth district of Mls ouri contest both Lowden and Wood delegations of two men each thrown out, reducing total temporary roll of nation to 982. Though the score of defeats in contested delegates yesterday morning stood Wood 25 and Lowden 4, the general has the best of it in claims decided during the day. The score last night was: Wood. 10; Lowden. 2; Johnson. 2. and Judge Prltchlina. The two contesting delegations from Florida, one pledged trj the 14 votes of North Caroto Wood and the other to Johnson. both ?eat?d with half a vote each. . Wood won the Tennessee contest because the Lowden contestants failed to appear. Lowrlen won the Second Oklahoma district contest and Wood that of the Fourth Oklahoma district. CAILLAUX DOCTORED BEFORE BANISHMENT (Waahlartoa Herald-Pnblle I.edarr Servlee. Special Cable Dispatch.) Paris. June 3.?Caillaux's banishment from Paris was remitted long enough for him to visit the doctor for a slight operation of the throat. It was learned his present Intention is to divide the remaining years in Belgium half the time and in Spain the other half of the time? lhat is when he Is not at his country home. "Names," where it is understood the renewal of his political activities is again und?r way. He recently wa? elected head ?f agricultural commission of the flepartment of Sarthe. This position is insignificant but it is the Brst step he took to regain his power after being overthrown by Poinortre. Caillaux also is engaged in writing a book entitled "My Prisons." (Copyright. IteO, bj Public ledger Co.) )ay" Registers 60 Is Forecast er Bureau for Today struck the District during the past two days was general throughout the Middle Atlantic States, due to southern breezes. Last night the winds shifted and the gusts that camc from the north cooled aft the sleeping city. The weather man predicts clouds and a drop to 60 for today. Despite the fact that V* official opening of the seaton will not L'ome. calendarly speaking, until June 21. there is no mistaking the fact that it's goodby. winter; so long, spring; hello, summertime. Club Entries Only Seven Weeks ig Their Own Home iurn in than they will later along n the campaign. (tetter Start Now. In less than seven weeks The kVashington Herald Salesmanship ^lub will be over and the winners jf the $6,000 home (or $6.<000 In ;ash, if preferred) the $3,585 Stanlard "Eight." the $3,250 Jordan, the 12.125 Sayers "Six," the $1,700 Dixie flyer, the $1,695 Allen and the 11,275 Maxwell will have been deeded. Those, who procrastinate in joinCONT1NCKD ON PAGE SEVEN. 9 long there without notic his sensations of noblesse oblige, married Chica. This kept us in rice and fried plantain for a month; and then Chlca pounded Liverpool one morning sadly and earnestly for fifteen minutes with a rasserole handed down from the stone age. and we knew that we had outwelcomed our liver. That night we signed an engagement with Don Jaime HeSplnosa. a hybrid banana fancier of the glace, to work on his fruit preserves nine miles out of town. We had*to do It or be reduced to sea water and broken doses of feed and slumber. "Now, speaking of Liverpool Sam. I don't malign or inexculpa(e him to you any more than 1 would to his face. But In my uninlnn^ an RnailnhmitM SPACT1 HANDEL ATMON, t - 1 * General Knew Of Fund Raising Senators Told I New Light Shed by Former Manager ? May Broaden Probe Scope. (Public M(tr Serrlee^ Ti e Senate committee lnvestlgat- | In* campaign expenditures began its , final attack on pre-conventlon ex- ! penses of the presidential candidates yesterday. The closing: session, before the breathing spell that It to be allowed for the Chicago convention, will be held today. May Broaden Pr#fc? S The attention of the committee yes- j terday was devoted almost entirely ; to the activities of workers connected with the Wood campaign with a few sidelights on the tangled Missouri situation. The evidence of the huge financial outlay in behalf of | several of the candidates which the4 committee has already received caused Senator Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio, to introduce a resolution in the Senate providing for investigation "after the adjournment of the | Democratic National committee and before the November election, the I receipts and expenditures of the sev- [ eral political committees, and the re- j ceipts and expenditures of the cim- j 1 paigns conducted by. and on behalf | of, or against, the election of the j several candidates for President, and ' Vice President, and the United States Senate." Two Wood witnesses examined yesterday by the committee were W. B. Burtt of Chicago, assistant to Colonel William Cooper Procter and Charles H Duell. of New York, who was connected with the finances of the Wood campaign during the time that John T. King of Connecticutwas manager for the general. Saya Wo*4 Sat la F??d Parley. | The most surprising information! ! obtained by the committee was that j ieeral Wood personally participated! in several deferences at that time 1 ! in which the raising of a campaign fund as large as one million dollars , ! was freely discussed. ; Mr. Duell. who gave the commit-' I tee this testimony, also said that it) i was Ambrose Monell. of New York, who originated the idea of having men of large means underwrite the Wood campaign to the extent of a million dollars, a charge which was made more than two months ago. The name of Robert K. Cassatt. of Philadelphia, also was brought into the hearing by Mr. Duell as having been approached by Mr. Monell in an effort to have Mm raise $500,WOO for the Wood campaign. i "Who is this Mr. Monell?" asked Senator Spencer, of Missouri. "He is a directing factor In the CONTINUED ON PAOE TWO. QUIT SATURDAY SENATE AGREES v Wilson Will Call Extra Session Only in Emergency, Underwood Says. The Senate yesterday agreed in: the House concurrent resolution to, adjourn Congri-rs at 4 o'clock Satur- j day afternoon. The resolution wa? ; laid before the body by Senator, Lodge and was concurred in tfter j amendments by Per a tors Kenyoh. ; Trummcll and Jones, of 'Washington, had been voted down. | That the President may recall; iCcngrefs after it ao^ourns was de- ,| | nied yesterday by Senator Under- |j , wood, who said: "The President's, snielaiy has authorised me tc state to the Con-! gress that wlien it concludes, such business as i* ditermincs, ;DEATHEY CONF i 41 Prefers Home Life To Being the Wife Of Vice President Chicago. June 3.?Because she fears it may mean the breaking up of their homo life, Mrs. Samuel Adams, wife of the only announced candidate for the Republican Vice Presidential nomination, would like to see her husband withdraw from the race. Adams was born at Westford, Mass., owns a big farm at Greenwood. Va.. and ls_ editor of the American Fruit Grower. Chicago. He insists on staying in the race. Mrs. Adams said she didn't like the idea of being second lady of the land. "X am for prohibition, woman suffrage and for the establishment of a national court of Industrial relations." he said, in telling of his fight for second place. Adams is a descendant of President John Quincy Adams. Mrs. Adams, formerly Miss Lee, of Charleston, S. C.. Is a descendant of Robert E. Lee. WARTIME LAWS' REPEAL YOTED District Rent Act Excluded In House Measure Passed 323 to 3. The House jestemay, by a vote of 323 ti 3, adopted the resolution repealing all war-time emergency legislation with the exception < f the Lever food control tct. the tradingwitb-the-enemy act. the District of Columbia rent profiteering act. and the Liberty i Flats For Rent Signs on King George's Palace By I'slTerul Service. London. June 3.?The King of England today decided to sublet his palaces to ease the housing difficulty. Concessions so far. however, are limited to members of the household unable to obtain accommodations in London. His majesty ofTers five-room furnished flats far married couples at the St. James Palace. wh(-r the Prince of Wales occupies only a few rooms, at eight guineas a week