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? MUCK. ori can y Will Andy Win The Great Gump Con Pa** 12 Fair today and tomor- , row; moderate tem perature. See page 2. The Weather SENATE BEHIND TNCONTESTTO ADJOURN TODAY Democratic Filibuster De lays Action on Two Measures. DEFICIENCY ACT IN CONFERENCE Liberian Loan and Anti Lynching Bills Remain On Calendar. The Senate Is ?j?? jump, and a filibuster behind the Home In the race for adjournment. But. lu'lis quashed the filibuster for the time being. It hopes to come in neck-to neck with the House thlJ altsr noon. Those two jumps are the IJberian loan and the I>yer antl-lynchln* bills. Both branches, are due -o adopt the deficiency measure today and this hill Is the last Important item on the House calendar. The filibuster Is of Pemocra-lc engineering, and was launched yes terday by Senator Vat Harrison of Mississippi, against the Republican attempt to force Immediate <"0?;''''" eration of the antl-lynchlng bill. ? aterest la Deflete** Of particular interact In 'he deficiency bill, which provides ap proximately $2.*00.000 for Immedi ate use. are the aprpoprlatlons of $170,100 for thirty-live additional Federal locomotive Inspectors; 1200, ?00 for the coal fact-finding comm.s sion: liso.imo fqr the ' distribution agency, and $?*?.?00 for the Herman Claims Comrmaslon. sn.I $200,000 for relief oV American refugees In the attack on Smyrna. This deficiency appropriation Is at least $1,500,000 more ,h?" ?*< amount provided by the House^ The increase was due to inclusion of ae. - eral claims against the government which the Senate wrote Into the measure. Conferees have ?>??"*? pointed and are expected to have their report ready for final action "Havl'ng'passed the deficiency bill without a record vote, the was ready for unfinished business. Since last week?except for the in terruptions of tariff and ^onus bate?the* Uberlan loan has be -n the unfinished business. Ad"ilnis tration Senators, however. .0 Senator Short ridge ?f Callforn-s. sensor Of the antl-lynchlng biU to press for Its immediate consW-Jra t?on. ... Havr Ceaeral S?i?abbif. This attempt met within ?bj?<j tion bv Senator Harrison, and countered by a Parliamentary ln ouiry by Senator France, Repub lican. of Maryland, which In turn roused Senator Rohlnson. D*"7>* ; crat. of Arkansas, to make a point Vt order on behalf of H.^ Then Senator Curtis. Republican floor leader. Pro.-t.d whereupon Senator Williams entered the Eventually. Senator Ashurst read the Senate manual to Inform Pre 1 dent Pro Tempore Cummins that Ibe point of order was debatable. So technically complicated was the situation thai half the Senate I was on its feet trying to the. Chair. And In the midst of this | controversy. S-nat.,r Shortrldie and Harrison maintained their insistence that the floor was theirs. F.ven ( Senator La?dg?- Joined the arsumei^. "Is this the Senate or an ?r?n* Senator Shortridge demanded o> the ; chair "I "ill s;ate to the Senate what I said, if anything, to defend my position.** Ilarrioon ^ i?" Polaf. Eventually the chair ruled In | fsi\or of Harrison, and the Liberia* j loan was again taken up. This. measure, with its $20,000,000 rec lamiiinn amendment, is but slightly I leas obnoxious to Southern Senatt'rs j than the antl-lynchlng bill, and the j fate ot both measures Is doubtful, j Senator Blirsum. Republican, of New Mexico. Introduced a substitute , adjusted compensation measure late yesterday, vhl.1i was immediate!;, referred to the Military AfTalrs t ?n? mittee. where il i? expected to die. It would pay a In.nus of $20 per month to war veterans and equalize money lost by veterans as compared with :hat gained by stay-at-homes. President Harding yesterday signed the Capper-Tlncher bill, which reg ulates trading in grain futures and the bill conferring upon the Terrl- I torlal courts of Porto Rico concur- | rent jurisdiction with the United | States Court of that district for ail offenses under the natitaial prohi bition art. 100,000 FORD MEN RETURN TO WORK DETROIT. Mich . Sept. 21? Nearly 100.000 workers employed in the Ford Motor Company's plants at Detroit. Highland Park. Northville and in branches throughout the country will r>e nack at their jobs tomorrow. Henry Ford announced he would ?e open his factories immediately ??rding a shutdown which went ^nto cftect Saturday because of a co?ii shorta;,**. The first of Ford's employes te tu**ne I at midnight tonUn*. for wcrk on the firs# ?hift. All factories will run full blast in order to overtake a lead of 25.000 un fiiis d ? "Jer*. ->fllcia 5 of thr Fr?l ?Vr? panv declared. POLO STAR RUMSEY KILLED IN CRASH NEW TORK. Sept. 21.?Charles C. | Rumsey. International polo plaver. was killed In an automobile accident at Floral Park, L. I., tonight. Rumsey played on the Orange I County Polo team in the Internationa! j polo matches now being h*?ld In the j United States. He was Tiding in a roadster when a tire blew out as they were parsing: another car. The road ster was upset. Rumsey's skull was , crushed and he died in a nearby ga- J rage fifteen minutes later. He was 43 years old and a son-in-law of the late j K. H. Harriman. Indict 43 in Pullman Booze Ring; Leader Flees to Cuba U. S. Grand Jury Accuses Business Men of Chi cago and New Orleans-?Havana Expected To Grant Extradition Readily. CHICAGO. Sept 11.?Trua bill* against forty-three members of the I*tol man porters' two million dollar boose ring, operating between New Orleans and Chicago, are said to have been returned by the Septem ber Federal grand Jury. Half of those indicted are said to be busi ness men In Chicago and New Or leans and the others are Pullman porters and Pullman coductors. Jack Sheehan. charged with being the leader of the ga*ig. is said to have fled to Cuba. Prohibition Agents Al Johnson and W. J. Cinders, it was reported, wi'-l leave for Havana tomorrow, armed with the neces3ary docu ments to bring Sheehan back for trial. Several months ago the Cub an government promised to assist in every way to prevent smuggling MRS. POULIN HISSED AS SHE TESTIFIES, DEFENDING SPOUSE Tiernan Shuots 'Lie!' When Charged Father Of Illinois Child. SOUTH BEND. Ind.. Sept. 21.? Mrs. Mae Poulin. wife of Harry Poulin. the clothing merchant who Mrs. Augusta Tiernan charges her 10-months-old baby's father, took the witness stand in the sen sational paternity suit here late today, looked paronlxlngly down on Mrs. Tternan as she contra dicted part of th* story with which Mrs. Tiernan ha* tried to tack the paternl'ty of the child on Poulin The hisses of the gallery which had greeted her' as she took the stand in defens of her husband seemed not to have diaturbed her at all- She seemed to be very happy at the chance to tell her story. The charge of Mrs. Tiernan that her meetings with Poulin had taken place on Friday nights dur ing Lent in 1921. when she had told Tiernan she was going to churoh. were contradicted by Mrs. Poulin. Mrs. Poulin declared she had at tended services with her husband at St. Joseph's Church ?very one ?f these Wednesday and Friday nights except once when Poulin was ill. Mrs. Tiernan looked scornfully at Mra. Poulin and Joked with her hus band The hisses which greeted Mrs. Poulin brought a warning from Judge Ducomb that if it did not cease he woudl have the courtroom cleared and the hissing stopped. Prosecutor Jelllson's cross-ex amination failed to make any dents in Mrs. Poulin'* stary. Tiernan was the hero of a spec tacular scene during his cross- ex amination by Defence Attorney Samuel Parker. "Isn't It a fact." Parker asked Tiernan. "that you are the father of a child born in Illinois and that this child is now being oared for by a woman In South Bend?' "That's a damned lie and you know it." thundered Tiernar. as he bent his fists upon the railing. "Produce the woman and the child! It's a damned lie I deny it abso lutely." NEW BONUS BILL COMES TO SENATE Bursum Introduces Measure Which Is Expected to Die In Committee. A new bonus bill was introduced in the Senate late yesterday. Sena tor Bursum. Sew Meixco. presented a substitute adjusted compensation measure, which. In general. Incor porates many of the features of the vetoed Fordney-McCumber bill. The bill provides for a bonus of $20 per month for war veterans. In addition provisions are included which are aimed to equalize the money lost by veterans by reason of their Joining the army as com pared with wanes earned by those who remained at home. The bill was referred to the mili tary Affairs Committee, where it expected to die. 'CORPSE' RECOVERS; RAISES FUSS; FINED CHICAGO. Sept. 21.?Joseph Repa violated .the ethics observed by corpses, when instead of lying quietly on a slab in thc Hyde Park morgue, he insisted upon sitting up and "bawl ing out" the attendants. His argu ments became so heated that the "corpse" was haled into court and fined $1 for disorderly conduct. Repa. who is 23 years old. was found lying <?n the Illinois Central Railroad tracks. Two embalmers were sent with a "dead wagon" and the corpse was removed to the under taker's shop A? the embalmers were about 1 egin work pn him. Repa sud denly sat up and turned loose a choice line of vituperation. He was taken to the police station and laid away until noon when Judge Ehler slapped a fine on him. FIND GIRL'S BODY ON FUNERAL PYRE KANSAS CITY. Mo.. Sept. 21.? The partly burned body of a girl rest ing on an improvised funeral pyre was found in the weed-covered bot tom lands of the Missouri River near here today. The girl apparently had been mur dered and an attempt made to hide the crime by destroying the body. of boose and dope Into the United States. It Is believed they will ar rest Sheehan and hold him for the American officers. Existence of the ring was dis covered when Federal agent* came upon several cases of whisky con cealed urvaer Pullman car peats. Two porters were arrested and ex posed the plot. A1 Johnson, disguised as a negro, and accompanied by several por ters, went to New Orleans, where the porters pointed out the mem bers of the ring there and several arrests were made. When the li quor interests learned of Johnson's activities, warning was conveyed to him to leave New Orleans Instantly or be "bumped off." On his futuro trip* he frill be given a special guard. HARDING PRAISES TARIFF MEASURE j ' ON SIGNING BILL Hopes It Will Be "Great est Contribution" of Kind in Centuries. President Harding signed the tariff bill yesterday and it became effective at midnight. The President signed the bill be fore members of the Senate Finance Committee, the House Ways and Means Committee and others who ^helped frame the measure. The President declared the flexible provisions constituted an Important achievement. "Your bill has been long In the making," said the President. "I don't know how many of you are in accord with me. but if we succeed as I hope we will In making effec tive the elastic provisions of this bill, it will be the greatest contribu tion toward progress in tariff mak ing in centuries.**' The pen with which the President signed the bill was supplied by Rep resentative Fordney, who kept it as a souvenir. Representative Fordney in a speech in the Honse following sign ing of the bill declared "there not the slightest ground for an ap preciable increase in rstall prices, foreign or domestic, and whoever does so will be a profiteer." Mine Cave-In Kills Owner. JENKINS, Ky.. Sept. 21.?John G. Smyth. 50. ore of the biggest coal operators in Kentucky, was crushed to death beneath a slide of slate de j posits in one of his mines near here today. JUDGE TO RULE ON DAUGHERTY BANTOMORROW Federal Judge Framing Opinion on Plea for Injunction. FINAL DRAFT MADE BY ATTY. GENERAL Only Slight Modification Of Temporary Stay Now in Effect CHICAGO. Sept. 21?The Daugh erty Injunction will be upheld, dis solved. or modified and upheld by Federal Jjirlge Wilkerson Saturday morning. Meantime, the temporary restraining order agalnut striking railroad shopmen la continued. Judge Wilkerson made this an nouncement today upon the conclu sion of Attorney General Daugh erty's plea that the Injunction bo upheld, declaring that a hasty de cision would not be fair either to the government or the union leaders. Few maigra Made. The final writ of Injunction which, if signed, will be sub?tantlally the same as that Involved in the tem porary order, was presented to the court by the Attorney General. The only modifications made by the gov ernment in the original are provi sions under which union heads would be permitted to meet, pro vided they did not discuss the strike i and the permitting of payments of j sick and needy benefits which would not affect the conduct o the strike. In presenting the draft of the# ? final Injunction Daugherty said, it "does not question thfe right of j the man or any numher of men to j strike, but It restrains them from 'striking back' unlawfully. Four ( Miraei Opea. In such a situation, the govern ment can do four things he said. 1. Forbad all Interference and. , that falling, proceed with civil i suits, as It has in the shopmen's I strike 2. It can step aside. "Inviting every criminal act destructive of human rights, or property, of life, i and of transportation" and "let those who bear the torch and hold ; in their hand the dagger" commit their acts and then, after all la j said and done, prosecute. S. By executive power. It could; call upon the military power, and legally, "mow down and kill?how ; many?'* 4. It could adopt "a policy of; innocuous complacency and let an- j archy reign and the mob rule." Rtchberg In his closing argument j dented that the shopmen were , bound to abide by the railroad 1 labor board's decisions, or that a strike, because It Interferes with . interstate commerce. Is unlawful. | or that labor unions were In vio lation of Federal anti-trust laws, j Many Ships Lose Race to Beat New Tariff Measure 'Carillo,' From Colombia, Only One to Dock Be fore Midnight. NEW YORK. 8ept. SI. ? Ships loaded with cargoes of foreign made perfumes, hand-made lace, tobacco. ' fine silks and other rich goods lost j their race Into New York tonight to land their cargoes before the ! higher tariff rates went into effect at midnight. Of all the big cargo and passenger bearers that put full steam ahead in the race with the tarjff, only one. the Carll%. from Colombia, arrived in time to havo her foods appraised under the old duties. The steamer France arrived off quarantine u few hours too late. Other ships which^falled were the ' Mauretanla. Haltic. President Fill more. and Rotterdam. Several of ; these will make port tomorrow. Custon officials said the rush to beat the new tariff was the greatest on record. THINK VENGEANCE LED TO MURDER OF CHURCH PAIR Police Ignore Robbery Motive Advanced by Slain Pastor's Wife. NEW BRUNSWICK N. J.. Sept. 21.?James Mills, sexton of the Episcopal Church of St. John the Evangelist, whose wife was founJ i slain with the Rev. fldward W. Ha!l. ' rector of the ahurch, was missing today an<I an all-day search by th<r authorities failed to discover any trail of htm. He returned late to- I night, saying he had left town to j avoid publicity. He will be quel- j tloned by the authorities tomorrow. The officials wanted to question the sexton as to the Identity of the woman member of t hechurch who, he said, first told him of the stories j going around the town regarding | the friendship of the rector and tne | sextons' wife. Mills, In his lengthy defense of hi* wife and the clergy man refused to name his inflrmar.t. The authorities will base their line of Inquiry on the theory that ven geance was the motive of the double murder. It was stated today that a definite line of investigation con cerning a definite person is Jtig pursued. * The official statements regarding the vengeance motive followed by a few hours, indirect utterances from Mrs. Hall expressing the belief that Hall and Mrs. Mills had been slain by persons who mistook them for other persons, or by robbers who ' believed Hall to have a lage sum of I money. It was said on behalf of I Mrs. Hall that she would not be lieve her husband p*??l Mrs. Mills guilty of improper *lations, even were she confronted with sworn tes timony to that effect. .Kipling Should Have Expressed Himself a Little More Tactfully. ?By J. N. Darling. SAY. THAT'S ALU BUNK ABOUT OUR ENTERING. TKETWAft. To MAKE. THE vtorid SAFE For. EEMOCWKy Vff VTEKT,IN BECAUSE WE WERE ATRAtD I 70 STAY OUT? V^/A/ ^~\ _ V? IN A ySS!^. _ IM ?3?j I C.UESS A0OUT THC Same as some or You AMERICANS Talk -> "what co you think, of America VVVVvvSL TURKS CROSS INTO FORBIDDEN ZONE AS BRITISH MASS TROOPS, IS REPORT; FRENCH WITHDRAWAL PLEA IS DENIED Jh A. PARIS IS WORRIED \ Formal Refusal of Re quest to Evacuate Cha nak Due Tomorrow. RUSS ARMY LOOMS AS A NEW FACTOR Hand-in-Glove With Kem al and Vitally Inter ested in Dardanelles. ! PARIS. Sept. 21.?The British have refused to withdraw from the Chanak promo?i:ory. which dnm ' inates the Dardanelles from th-? Asiatic side. Lorll Curxon received this momentous declson from his povernment today and win so In kf'>rm PrerfUer Polncare and Count Sforza. of Italy, tomorrow. Great Britain Intends t main tain the Integrity of the neutral zones* along the Dardanelles, as well an 0f the Strats themselves during peace negotiations. Lancashire regiments and naval detachments are diirging Intrench ments on Chanak. They are sup i ported by a very lartre British fleet. They have received orders from , Field Marshal Plumer. chief of the j British staff at Constantinople, not j to let the Turks advance intc the j neutral rone. C laim JaMlflratUa. j Britain will stoutly defend to morrow the right to maintain an armed force on Chanak on tha ground that such action was agreed to by the Turks In the original armistice, and is not affected by the mort recent hostilities between the Greeks and Turks. Such au | thorlty for the reinforcement of naval and mlltary detachments at the Dardanelles Is to be presented j as a refutation of chartre* of British btlligerency. On the contrary, the British are Inclined to regard the withdrawal of French troops from the Asiatic shore of the neutra1 zone as a violation of allied solidarity. Lord Curson emphasised that point at the meeting yesttrday. Polncare Plan Herappetf. The Polncare plan based on a cuarantee given to France by the Turkish Nationalist government that the Turks will not cross the Straits pending r.Xjr.itiatlons. there fore is' scrapped The French premier practically oers French naval co-operation in the Dardanelles In return for the withdrawal of British troops from Chanak. The French and British are even more widely opposed on the question of Turkish occupation of Thrace, the British opposing that, while the French hesitate, and Italians approve. Bussia is looming a larger factor in the negotiations and ^t Is pointed out on all sides that any presetn disposition of the straits of the Dardanelfes hardly can have a flavor of permanence without Rus-? sia being given consideration. Rtmaia's Army XDO.OOO Allied leaders are not unmindful *hat the strength of Russia's army, 800.000 strong, is the largest in Eu rope and that there is perfect liason between the Russian and Turkish commands. It was the British particularly that insisted on the exclusion of Rsussla from the peace conference meeting at the Quai D'Orsay yes terday and some sections of the, French press regard this as a slam at the Soviet leaders because of the report that France is making over tures toward a renewal of the old alliance. Mayor Harriott, of Lyons. h:? s cone to Russia on a mysterious mission. t (Copyright 1922 ) ANGLO-IRISH PACT RATIFIED IN DUBLIN DUBLIN. Sept. 21?The bill ratify ing the Free State constitution and validating the Anglo-Irish treaty was passed on second reading by the Dail Eireann by a vote of 47 to 16. Thurs day. Leaders of the provisional govern ment prevented amendments to sev eral articles, including the one con taining the oath of allegiance to the King and providing membership in th?i British commonwealth of nations. British send 15 DESTROYERS Gibraltar Seethes as Ves sels Leave for Dar danelles. GIBRALTAR. S?pt >1. ? Fifteen British destroyer* Wt here today for the Darda nelles. A battalion of the North Staffordshire regiment of infantry slso \eft The battleship Centurion and the cruiser Virsdlctlve are leaving tomorrow. Batteries of artillery are packing: up. Glbra tar is buzzing with talk. TURKISH TROOPS i ABDUCTING GIRLS AS THEY MARCH Tear Greek and Armenian Victims From Families, Say Smyrna Reports. NEW TORK, Sept. SI. ? New outragts are being perpetrated In Smyrna by the Turku because of 1 the allied failure to adequately protect the survivor* of the rtcent massacre. H. C. Jaquith acting director of the Near East Relief, reported in a cable to headquarters ' here. Young Greek and Armenian girls are being torn from their families and dragged off to the Interior, he cabled. American relief worker* are considering appealing to th? al lied governments for concerted ! action, the cable stated, and Ad miral Mark L*. Rristol. American high commissioner to Turkey has a*ked tor authority to employ Am erican destroyers In r?movinr refugee*. Food Meant for Russia Is Diverted to Smyrna Approximately 1.500 cars of) foodstuffs originally destined for, distribution in Russia Is to b?? di verted to Smyrna by the American Relief Administration, Secretary of' Commerce Hoover announced yes-1 terday. This cargo is now in the Medi-1 teranean. and arrangements are ? being made for its landing at Smyrna and distribution among' the thousands of Christian refu-1 gees there. Further than the diversion of j this food, however, the relief ad ministration is making no plans to! organise a relief campaign in Asia j Minor. Hoover stated! Relief work at Smyrna is being I pushed by the American relief com mittee formed at Constantinople f-*r j the Smyrna emergency. Admiral ' Mark Bristol reported to the State , Department yesterday. Bristol stated that under his in structions American destroyers were assisting In every poss ble way in the evacuation of refugees from J Symrna and that he was sending an additional destroyer to assist in thia work. JINX' miniature IS SOLD FOR $325 j CHICAGO. Sept. 21.?An ivory mln j iature of George Washington, painted j by Trumbufl. winch has caused two [deaths of record and unknown trage dies. *. as ordered sold today by Fro- [ bate Judpe Homer for $326. the bid ! I of a man whose identity was not di?- ; closed. | The Washington miniature 1* the i | last item of the estate of the late ! Mme. Vera Trepajtnier. of New I Orleans. She had been told It was J worth thousands of dollars and she | entrusted it to Paul Frederick Vel land, a wealthy publisher of this city, j to be sold. After two years of quarreling over j the miniature and Velland's alleged | I refusal to return it to her. Mme. Tre pasnier shot and killed him in his j j office. BRYSON INCURABLY INSANE, D. C. EXPERT SAYS, AT TRIAL Neurologist Tells Jurors Accused Slayer's Brain Is in State of Decay. HUNTINGDON, Pt, Sept. 21.?Dr. Herbert Bryson. the former prom inent Washington physician and war veteran who shot to death his soul mate, Mrs. Helen Irene Haines, has a disease which has narrowed the blood vessels which nourish the brain, and his brain is Incurably in a state of decay. This expert testimony was of* fered late today in the insanity de fence of the slayer by Dr. Tom Willisms, of Washington. Dr. Williams is lecturer in men tal and nervous diseases at Howard University, correspondent member of the Societe de Nuroi of Paris, and a member of the medical and mental clinic du France. On the stand he declared that he hsd made an examination of Dr. Bryson at the county Jail and had found him suffering: from increased reflexes not only of the right side, but also j of tiie left. He stated positively that Dr. Bryson is Insane. "Is a cure possible when the disease is progressed as far as in the case of Dr. Bryson?" he was ask*d. 1 don't believe a cure would be possible." the neurologist an swered. The defense revealed for the first time late this afternoon through testimony of Its witnesses that Dr. Bryson displayed symptoms of in sanity long before he entered the world war Dr. E. C. Wilson, of Washington, a schoolmaae of Dr. ! Bryson at George Washington Unl | versity, told how Dr. Bryson ha<^ removed the tonsils of a 9-\ ear-old ; child at Sibley Hospital in Wash j ington. This was Just before the j war. It was what Dr. Bryson called : "a military operation," and he in I sisted that all physicians present i be In military uniform. Chanak's Civil Population Being Evacuated After Report of Advance. EFFORT OF FRENCH TO MEDIATE FAILS Rumored Action of TVjrk Leader Believed to in dicate Certain Var. ' roXBTANTTNOPT*. ? _TS, varum.M of the K emal,,, lro^. h reports to h.v, craaaed th. neutral The're'r^ T"Ch*d ,h* onflZT ? 'VW h" ?"? rZl\ of Ram peana here reflect, an atmoephere pre*nant with paaafbllltl** -rh? , trXZ" ??""? ?h. BrTt -"?<^rt^ i^'.."n,r",chM - ??'?? D ,f " '* "Ported that G,? . . Fr*r,rh comma-det. has ^.,"7:ur"*fo1 In hi. attempt t.. conciliate Kemal Pasha BrltUk raa.oIMn, rvln.,, Brltlah military forw, ?? .n three ae-tonT* "* '"""-"'CUM E?F an aturl' Pr'p*r^ '? .. 2 "cninau'a?British 2s zxsriiss S?p Porting It ^ fleet, .tip -s^rrar-ssss s.n? *^^,,5: ? r II n fh* Hty ?t<h Kefturv. ?- ''"appeared plirhi *' ?*? '? a bad -amp. f.,ur K??mr?r,""*',;p*"<' '? ?nd the water vu; " Smyrna <*tlt off. 4 ",as ^fn mh" h? J?< re Anatolia ? orrte^y^hut'^he'r 'h*' haaty moblliu ?t ail * alnce the Sm"n. ru-u'r" ZTLT nC< * of ?**?* military activlt, - Oardanelle. '*'* rrom ??>? a England Holdin,Tchanak To Prevent War. Is Claim llrlt h^lncThanVk^*; ' =r =ES-2* pXe'nr J" -^ri'tTon'^^r0^ ?ho called on Mm t.SIV .I,*"' arr?L-as? '? '??* ?f "ml-oniclai .UBr?. ? fronl Pari, th., . ?ant. the Brlti.h to withd?. 0,n t-hanak Downin, SZIZ * arirnmr mea.ure and that Rr?t,.i troop, *i|| continue V, occupv ,T . .tronpho'd Kei?f0rcemen".P ,r. "HI arriving. u ?,, Will Insist Greece Pay For Burned Villages iw, wh^h i"r T" than 45(1 ?" ,he T,?JTr j announcement made hy ine Turkish Nationalist rnvomm '* at Anitora today COTernment An orriclai liot of atrocitie. .1. t? h*v? b**n committed by th* Grv*k " S?* the'Turk,^" nounced One hundred GrXk, Armenian, were cau.hk 7J~". raxollne in burnln, Village, 2H arreted They denied atorie. of ma?,.rre, h, Siymi^ mazatlan siezed BY 7.000 REBELS SAN ANTOVIO. Te* . Hep, i,_0,n Franclaco Murmiia. former .ecr.tarv of war undrr ff?*cr?in?> a forr^ - Pomona M V |e<1 <VZ, L' # rrN'" Wh" :*><> -fee ^rtr^,h- ? .*rmy ?ccordinr to oTT/cmT 0 advice,, advance! in? ii _c,ty from four directions lay. X? "!I ' , ?"'Vernmeni ,oldlira Sever ?! ZEISS' ar* "*'d ,c h?v' fallen . f *ttack?-r? duririf several davs' PC* Pa ration for the aicn b. wL2rEW ""' '""^ton W4rr hughes to reach new YORK TODAY received la M." S!'?." h"*" aniMHiiice4 2- ?-? *"rland which H?-h ^ " Secretary of state Hurhea from Braali. will re* , New \ork thla mt^ntn, at ? a m