m u,th YrNo. 275 OGDEN CITYTuT jfa FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 727' 192a " LAST EDITION- P. M. I SEARCH MADE FOR BODY OF WOMAN IN WELL I t 0 I 1 PRESIDENT OF HAITI PROBE WITNESS I Cork Hunger Strike Called Off I NIL BOARD I SIFTS CHARGES I OF KILLINGS Haitian Executive Says He Has No Official Knowl I edge of Murders I MARINES ACCUSED BY PUBLIC CLAMOR, HE SAYS People Rejoice Over Coming Of Americans. President Declares PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti, Kov 12. (By tho Associated Press.) Sudrc Dartlguenave, president oi tin repub lic of Haiti testifying today before th0 naval board of inquiry, declared he had no official knowledge of the charge of Indiscriminate kllhng of na tives by United States marines. Speaking through an interpreter, the president said he was without means of proving the exls tones of cases of homicide or violence that may haVe been commltteed by the marines, add ing: PI in 14 I I 1MOR. "They had1 been accused by public clamor" M. Dartlguenave was the only wit liens testifying, and after lie hud left the chair. Judge Advuc.it' Dyer an nounced he had n further witness or evidence- The court then adjourned to reassemble- Upon eull by Admiral b, Henry X. Qfayo, president o.l the board o( Inquiry, and it la not probable an other session will be held before next PRESIDENT DEM OCR I The Haitian president, with demo cratic simpiijcit) w..ik o rrom the-palace- to the courtroom, climbing the two flights of stairs. He expressed his pleasure In informing the United States government what he knew. An swering a direct question h he h id knowledge Regarding alleged Indis criminate killings, he said: "Officially no. I have heard of regrettable act?v perpetrated at Hlnc he. SI Marc. CroLxcs. DOuqufets, Grande Revert du Nord, Merebailis and Lhs Cohidos When people have been reprpatfhed for not having kept the government Informed of all that was bejng said, tho answer, rightly or wrongly, has . been they were afraid of being caugnt by martial law, Victims or their par ents have never brought their griev ances, to me because leaders of the revolution gave tthera to understand Ihero was no Haltlen chief of state nisi i in I l M IRISES. The people, with a few exceptions, such as may be found in every ioun try. have rejolceci at the coming of the Americans. They were expecting their liberty, prosperity and respect for their person and property, but 'compulsory road labor has been prac ticed despite advice by the counsel of the government This has given i Ise to discontent, which lad to the revolt ot the Cacos bandit. Misdeeds, how ever, are always possible in cases of repression " 'in oo I ' PRESIDENT-ELECT KEPT INDOORS BY WEATHER POINT ISABEL, TO, Xov. 12. MB (By The Associated Press.) Bresi- liHjl' dent-elect Harding's tarpon fishing I'M was interrupted today bj .t 33 - mile y$M norther that churned the l'olnt Isa- J Q'J iic-i fishing grounds into a tumbling i rftj field of foam and drove the tempera ture down to the shivering point. I . i dins; to stay ashore, the senator read and rested during the morning In his cottage overlooking tho la goon, but hoped before the day was over to lake a motor trip to Browns vllle for a game of golf He expressed keen disappointment thai iad weather ifffi had overtaken hl.s fishing venture. Mr. Harding's speech in Browns Bugjs villc yesterday was the only one on bis engagement list during his sta tsjyfwa here and he expects to do no work before his departure on the other inat JjS'4 ,,jrs awaiting his attention. Mail Ja H beginning to come here for him In great quantities, but his secretaries HH arc filing most of it away and are TPr giving Immediate attention only to JLgft most urgent letters. I HUMBLE JANITOR INHERITS RICH CALIFORNIA FARM FORT WAYNE. Ind., Nov. 12. Charles Wlneland an $S3 a month janitor at the City hall here, leaned on the handle of his broom long enough to read a letter Thursday and then a few hours later started to California to claim a 114-acro fruit rarm on tlie outskirts of San Francisco, and $28,000 deposited in a bank there. m The letter Informed hliu thai Tib i.r..thet had died leaving ids estate to the Janitor and n sister. Mrs. Caro iii.i Bowman of Burlington, Ind The farm Is appraised for lava -.on .t J7S.00O according to the letter. HOLIDAY IX I'LKIXtl. PEKING, Nov U. Armistice day was observed quietly In this city, and HUj there were no public functions, al- HH I though receptions were given al clubs -- and patriotic dinners were held r. 1 ho- ;,; .'., . "m ; sassssssw ' 1 w" HERE ARE CHIEF I PRINCIPLES OF HOME RILE BILL I The fundamental principles laid down by the British government l in tho Irish home rule bill are First That the people of the six Ulster Counties shall not be brought administratively under and outside parliament in Ire land. second That there shall not be I and weakening of the reservations which have been made by the government for the purpose of safeguarding the vital Interests of tho United Kingdom. At the time of the Introduction of the measure It was stated that the home rule the government In tended to give Ireland was based primarily on tho declaration of Premier Lloyd-GOprge in a speech hist December that Great Britain i an not accept separation " Cndcr the bill evo legislatures I with upper and lower houses would be set up. one for the north Of Ireland and the other for the south. H les.s than half of the mem 1 bers of either legislature are val idly elected or f"n to swear al , legjtance to the king, the- king may dissolve the parliament, and place the go ernmeht In the hands f coi mltteo appointed l. the lord, lieutenant A "council fpr Ireland." com posed Of forv- members, half of whom would 1e selected by each parliament, also Is provided for. The powers of the- council would be limited to tho-.-e granted It by the two legislatures. The fra'mcrs, of the bill it was said, hoped the council would form th" nucleus around which eo'rtd be built one parliament for the whole u! Ireland. The two legislatures would have full control of education, local i government the land policy. transportation old age pensions. j Insurance and other mnttors. A court of appeals for tho whole of Ireland, presided over by t he lord chancellor, i provided for. Neither body may establish any particular religious creed or pen alise ivny one for belono-ln 'o or iiot belonging lo'any religious' de- J nomination. Control of th royal Irish con Stabulary and the metropolitan police of Dublin would be trans ferred by the imperial parliament to the Irish parliament three yenrs after the act comes into operation. Powers reserved to the imper ial parliament embrace the crown, peace Bjjd war foreign affairs, army ami navy, coinage, defense, treason, trade outside of Ireland. postofflces, navigation, Including ! merchant shipping, wireless and cables and collection of Income and BXCeSS profit taxes Both north and south Ireland would contribute for two years to the support of the ruplre. oo- SANTA CLAUS READY TO VlSif YANKS UN RHINE WASHINGTON, Nov. U'. Christ mas paikugts for Amerhan troop-; en th.- Khlne must reach Hoboken Py De- I : comber 6 to insure delivery before. I Christmas day. the war department announced today Thoj should be! sent In cure of the general superin tendent, army transport service, Ho- boh ' n t'ackagCSJ for men stationed in Ha waii and tii" Philippines should reach the depot qtaartermaster, Port Masoi i not later thun Dc -ember 5 while thos for shipment to the Panama canal zone and I'orto Hico should bl In th( bands of the general superintendent. army transport service, Pier Arm: Supply Base. South Brooklyn, N. Y.. I by November 30. Packages for Germany must not e.x , ceed seven pounds In weight and 7 2 Inches combined letiK'h and Klrth Those tn men on dutv in thi 'anal y.one and Insular possessions are llm- : Ited to twenty pounds In weight and jtwo cubic feet In volume. oo SMALL HOPES HELD OUT FOR MISSING SEAPLANE CHICAGO. Nov. 12. Search was resumed toelay for the seaplane lost, in In storm on l."'ke Michigan, although Iveterun lake seamen had virtually giv en up hope of finding the three fllors I who set forth from Great Lakes n.iol training station Wednesday Bitter cold, high wind and raging, leas loft i small hopo for survival of the trio un- les they had found a landing n the I Wisconsin or Michigan shores. The missing men are Lieutenant Harrj i. Hurr, Lake Forest. 111., pilot. Ensign Edwin M. ' "lark, Peoria, III . and fjun-i ner's Mate John Caesar, of Chicago. I oo ORDER RE-ESTABLISHED AFTER SPANISH RIOTING BARCELONA. Nov. u order has been re-established In this city after serlouK dh'turliances during the past fortnight. Governor Anido, who wns recently appointed, has returned from I Madrid where he has been conferring! With rh president or (he council and the minister of the interior. SPEECH IDE IN DUBLIN SIS ENGLISH WRATH j I "May Have to Use Lamp Posts Or Wall," Liberal Ac cused of Saying 'ADDRESS IS DECLARED INCITEMENT TO MURDER Fremier Declares Independence For Ireland Means Con scription in England CORK, Nov u (I5 The SO la ted Pn--.-. ) The lump r strike of the nine Irish prisoners in the oi k mil was called ofl to day, the ninety-fourth day f th strike. LONDON, Nov. 12 lieutenant Col onel L'Esrangi Malone, liberal mem iber of the house of commons for the' eist division of Bcyton, who was ar-I rested Wednesday night In Dublin where he had gone Ijj invitation to, speak in a debate on Bolshevism, was arraigned In Bow street police court toelay under the section of the eiefense 1 of the realm act prohibiting the use of language likely to cause sedition among the civilian population The proceeding.-: arose from a speech de livered by Lieutenant .Colonel Melons in Albert hall here last Sunday. The ' am was adjourned for a week and th.- defendant was released In .0inj( bull. A large crejwd of sympathizers outside cheered him as he- left the cpuit. l 1 1 1 MI N I IX Ml KIM R Humphrey Travels, the crown pros ecutor, declared L'olonel Maionws bpi-ich was nothing l-.-ss t.iati an "in citemenl to muvdOr.' rie xjuoterl the lotldwiitg passage- irom me speech In! quostfon': iite Russian revblutlon taught us the Humbug ot ine old parliament i hope the day will soon come wh.n .. e s.iall meet Were to pass' ., blessing on tlic British revolution waen you ii,e-et heijs as delegates of the Clrut all-British congress of woik-, era, saiiors nd soldlera H vM.i n POSTS. "When Ltiut ia comes, woe to all UldSfl people who get In our way. We .ii - out to change the .resent constl-, tUuou, and i it Is necessary, to have bloodshed and atrocities, we shall have; to iiai I nc lump 1'Ots or the wall. v hat are a ,ew I liurehllls or a lew urzons on lamp posts compared with : li.e rataerj 0 tiiousands Of human be ings'.' HUNGER B i RIKJ RS LOM . CORK, NOv, a The condition of' the nine hunger strikers in t;ie Cork! tail IVi, s- rl..u-ri I...H cu "uhn.l(r.l, i low" on this, tae lllnetyrfOUrth day of their strike Bishop cohalen of Cork in a letter made public today, expresses belief that It is still possible t nurse the men back to health, and snld. Lord Mayor Mac8wisjeys strike accomplish ed tho purpose of attracting world at tention " II W CALL WOW . NEW YORK, Nov l : The com-! mitiee of 100 Investigating the Irish question announced today it had nc-i eepted the oiler f .Mrs Murie l Ma. - Bwlney, widow- ot the late lord mayor of Cork, to come to the I'nlted States; to testlty in the hearings which the i committee plans to begin November' 21. Mrs MacSwiney, thfl committee said, had been askedi to reach tho United States it possible hoi later than December (j. PKKM1F.K O.N IRELAND. London, nov. Former Pre mier Astiuith yesterday appealed fori advantage to be taken of tlie associa- j tlons and emotions aroused by the an niversary of armistice day w hich could j not be put to worthier use than an en deavor to find a bols of real settle- , nteiit for Ireland. Premier Lloyd-George, replying contended thut the present bill was a generous measure but the Irish people, were ne.t In a temper to give it proper understanding and consideration. He declared that documents to be I published it an early date, found In, the possession of Sinn Fein leaders in 1918, proving they were Involved In a Geiman plot, would Show the neces-1 sity of England retaining completi control of Irish harbors MEANS CONS4 RIPTION. To give Ireland the powei to raise' a conscript army, he suld, would bi a dangerous menace to Great Britain and he warned the laboiltes that with an army of that klnel In Ireland un der full powers of Irish dominion i ulo, conscription In England would become incv liable. The premier contended that it was; squalls Impossible to allow Ireland; her own navy which was ejuite need-: less lor her nutlonal life and could! only be used for the peril of Great Piitaln and her own destruction. He argued that It was fruitless to i talk of granting fiscal autonomy to peopl still demanding a republic. Im pressing a fervent hope for the re moval of misunderstanding's which would make the future so dark, the premier closed with a note of mo tion PR USES IRISHMEN. "It may b- thai il was an Irish soldier we honored today. Ireland has h ! $12,000,C00 IN I GOLD ARRIVES FROM ENGLAND NEW YORK, Nov. 12. Of 512,000,000 gold which arrived on the steamship Adriatic to day, $9,500,000 was for account I of the federal reserve bank of , this city and marked the final transfer of $111,000,000 held for that institution by the Bank of England for upward of a year, i The balance of the Adriatic's gold was consigned to Kuhn, Loeb & Co , making a total of about $63,000,000 received by that banking house so far this year. Most of the gold imported by ( Kuhn, Locb & Co. was shipped from South Africa to London 'where it was bought in the open market in competition with British and Oriental interests. The National City bank an nounced the arrival of $1,000, 000 gold at San Francisco from Australia. I 4 THREAT OF WAR WITH GEH HADE B POLES Newspaper Warns Great Brit ain to Keep Hands Off Silesian Plebiscite WARSAW, Nov. 12. The declara tion that vvar between Germany and Poland woulel be inevitable if the plebiscite to be held In tipper Silesia tfiv,. that regpui to (iermuny. Is made today in the iJiizette lJoi-,jnna In dls CUSSlng the peblscitc. The- newMpaper Is the organ of the National Democrats who.se leader in John Dombski. under set retary for foreign affairs The Qa-;-..t; poranni -predicts that another world war would result with France nnd Belgium Joining Poland and Great Britain sldlnK with Germany. It adds. -lf England should enter this war It would mean, perhaps, the end of British world lower " The newspaper contends that Great Britain has shown certain leaning to wnrd Germany In .Silesian affairs and warns Britain to keep her hands off. The data 6f the plebiscite In Kllesla has apraln been postponed Indefinite ly. Meanwhile unrest In the retjlon continues. A dispatch from Beuthen today suys ihat the allied authorities seised a car load of Germun urtlllery mine throw ers, machine guns and ammunition. The Polish mark today real hed Its lowest, figure of -I 5.1 to th- dollar and some of the newspapers attribute its drop to German lnfleunce seeking to Injun Polish Credit because of its ef fect on the Silesian vote. oo SAVING AND INVESTMENT MAY BE SCHOOL COURSE WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 Officials of the savings division of the treasurj department conferred here today with a number of eel in ators regarding plans for malting the principle of tho saving and Inv estiueiil ..l nion, a p. i mam lit and compulsory part of the American public school e urrlculum anel for tho us-- of government savingy securities as the practical medium for applying those principles, The conferences will continue to morrow and th. committee of educat ors, appointed at the National Edu cation association convention at Salt Lake last July, win comer with Seen -tary Houston during its stay In Wash ington n.i NICKEL STEEL INVENTOR RECEIVES NOBEL PRIZE STOCKHOLM, Nov. il. Charles Bdouard GUlaumc Bretehll, head ..: the International bureau of weights and measures, was today awarded the Nobel prize for 1920 for physics by the Swedish academy of leisure, ft is discoveries relative to toe alloys of nlck-l steel won him this honor, had a great and brilliant share In the empire- Some of hoi greatest states men the shining wisdom of Hurke and I he stern leadership o Wllllng ton all contributed to bulhl tho em pire. "All we ask is that Ireland should not. In a moment of anger, east nway an Inheritance which is as much hers as ours, but join in the empire it help fed to build and adorn. " 1H OLD LIFEBOATS RESOLD TO NAVY, WITNESS SAYS Castoffs Sold By U. S. for $10 Bought By Board for $110, Claim INVESTIGATION TELLS OF EFFORTS AGAINST GRAFT One Building Firm Had Only One Man Who Knew Ship Building NEW rORK, Nov. 12 Details of Steps taken by the ("nlted States ship ping board to suppress 1 Irregularities" being Investigated here by the Walsh J congressional committee wore given 'at the committee's hearing today b John T. Meehan, deputy chief of the board's (li Vision of Investigation. lb said that after Investigations conducted under his personal super vision, six indictments against alleged tninsirr ssors of the law had been ob tained through Investigations which he had not personally directed. TWELVI INDICTMENTS. Mr. Meehan said that the, twelve Jn dli linents have been returned alter sifting down something Ifke 2400 'charge, against various persons, ua h of which, he declared, had been thor- joughlv run down and either verified or disproved. .vianv of the eases InveaUsaAAsK Mm . Meehan vld. involved charges of Hand against contractors preferred ; by citizens desiring to protect the ' government" or by employes on ship ping board vessels. lb tostlfled that the first order to reduce his staff came in 191 and that now after a succession of cuts, , his corps of workers Included ten in- vestigators. i IFEBO VI si N l Questioned regarding a complaint said to have been referred to his of fice concerning a firm of lifeboat builders, tho witness referred to rec ords which he said were on lib- in the offices of his department Thej showed, he said, that the- building firm had "but one man who Knew anything I about boat building." and thai be cause of Inferior work boats COnstritCt ' ed by it w ere rejected. "In 1920." the witness went on. "wo wer' advised by the military Intelli gence Service thai the same firm was buying life-boats from the salvage ser vice of the navy at 10 each and re- mo"8 ,h' U ' lht' 3hippi"s bard for I Meehan said the investigation to llr.d out h..v. man-. mslam-.-s had 'occurred was still under way OO ATTACK ON PERUVIAN PRESIDENT PLANNED , LIMA, Beru, Nov. 12. Discovery of a revolutionary plot with famlflca l tlons in the provinces of Madrc de I Dios, Huallaga and Lambayequc and , the cities of Cuzco and Arequlpa was lannouneed by high officials at the government palace this morning The conspiracy was to culminate in an attack upon President Levgulu during B dinner given In his honor at (he I. nlon club yesterday, it is said. .Some thirty persons, some of whom are prominent members of the oppo sition party, havn been arrested at Anoehe. Tiny include Garcios Li tres Colonel Cecar Bardo and Colonel i lanfranco. Pro-gOVerhment demonstrations were hebl at Anoehe today, but the I police are In full control of the Mtu atlon and arc maintaining perfect 0r eler , All traffic over the branch of the ' entral railway serving the Cerro Pasco region has been suspended be cause of a strike. I The situation was tranquil at 6 o clock tonight. Among those taken ETl0.II?rUr,ng ,h" da" Senator , M guel Grau, who recentlj made a bitter attack upon tho government .and the senato in a manifest PRIEST WHO PRAISES SOLDIERS GETS BEATING LuNImiX, Nov. 1.' Serious rioting haH occurred at Genan... n ar I otonza Italy, according to ft Milan dispatch to me Exchange Telegraph company. A priest is said to have been severely beaten durinK a church ceremon j jt i which he praised Kalian soldiers and j a general strlk. followed the arresi of 200 person accused of having par j tlclpatcd ,i the disorders. A strike i also has been called at Foren.a town in the Apennines, fifteen miles northeast of Potenza, oo- v RESIDENTS OF MADRID UNABLE TO GET BREAD MADRID, Nov. il. Residents of this city found today that the bread shortage had grown much more sori- ; ous in consequence of the bakers' strike Newspapers demand that en ergetic measures bo adopted t in sure supplies for the city. tMILES4 M, A,1I,'L- Beoretl service agent, -vyill be in command of the bodyguard oX I Presideill Warren (i Harding, He is lnivv in cha re of the pro ! teotion of the president-elect 4 4- sUssr 9 & w i fi c ep M FRIEND : BF PROGRESS, GDMPERS SAYS Organized Workers Declared Not Opposed to Science In Industry WASHINGTON Nov. 1 J Organized labor will welcome' what over assist-. lanCC research and science can offer! I to modern industry. President Gomp-i jcrs of the American ITederatibn oi La bor toelay 'old delegates gathered here I for the preliminary conference on In 1 dustrlal research. A part of orga-' 'nized labor's own work, he said, has! been directed toward the., scientific; Study of conditions surrounding pro-j ducllon, and to the assemblage of data. I '.'A persistent effort has been made to saddle upon labor the odium of op position to improved methods and ma-1 chinery In production,'' Mr. Gompers said This Is not true as a general! statement. What labor has opposed is an effort to exploit them by the use. Of Improvements that ale Intended as i a blessing to manklnel. "Labor is not opposed to Increased I production or improved methods. I iQutte the contrary We recognize there an be no permanent betterment of' standards of living for .-ii except by Increasing the things that contribute I to better and mote satisfactory Hvlni , Itut wo hoM as a fundamental that, i material products are not the ulti-1 j mate of production but service, in a! better life for humanitj "I take It all of us haVe too much vision and experience to think we can I solve the labor problem. That is a' lite problem that will last as long as' ' life." oo BRITISH FAST SECURING OIL LANDS OF WORLD WASHINGTON, Nov. It - British ' oil interests ore .showing renewed In terest In Mexico, Ecuudor ami Peru' while th. British government Itsell has started a survey of the Hungarian oil fields, according to advices received! today by the American government, The survey of th,- ifungarian field . I the adVloes said, Is being made by the ' British commercial commissioner at i Budapest Alfred MacKe-nzle, a British Subject, Is said to have been granted an oil con ; cession in BCexloo covering 2imi miles! along the coast of Lower California. I The British Controlled II Fields, I Ltd-, whieh has interests in California Texas, ESucador, Peru and Venesuela, I the advices .said, has begun w ork n Us leases in Ecuador and I- seeking I large concessions In Peru. AMERICAN RED CROSS WORKER IS PRISONER I PARIS, Nov. 12.-Washington re-j 'ports that Captain IDmiuel KllpatrickJ American Red Cross worker in south Itussla. was not killed by the Bol Lslievtki, but is being held prisoner, w.-re confirmed hi a telegram received at a Paris branch of the American Bed Cross from stebastopol today. The ! telegram was filed In Se-baslopol on November 8, Tim telegram reads. "Definite in formation that Klip. Uriel; Is u pris oner was received from Russian of ficers who escaped from the frroup of prisoners whieh included Kllpat- rlck. Thts group left l.avlka under guard in the dir. clion of a prison vamp .it Klovaka on the Qnleper;" m BOY DECLARES 1 RE SI ESTHER I GOU CRIME I Stepmother Struck Down and Body Buried in Well, He Says I KEEPS STORY SECRET 4 YEARS THROUGH FEAR Alleged Slayer Disappears 0c tober 30; Then Son Makes Disclosure LANGDONj New Hampshire. Nov. I 12. An abandoned well on the farm H I of William B. Whitney, which had j been filled with rock ami debris, ws H re-opened today by county and city t H . authorities in a search for the body ot H Whitney's second wife The search H was ordered by County Solicitor Henry H j N. Herd, as a result of a declaration H I made to him by John Whitney, 15- H tld son, of William B Whitm-v H ; by a former marriage, that he saw his H father strike lown his Stepmother In ' their home four years ago, take I.e. H ! body to the haymow and later bury H the H WHITNlSf DISAPPEARS. I Whitney disappeared on October 3o after eight years of residence hero In whieh he gained a reputation as a H solid citizen, in his wake came bank- 'I ruptcy petitions against him, and ohasges that he had depullcated moi l - .H gages on hist holm-. The son went-to H county authorities with the story . which he said he had kept secret tin- H d.-r threat of death by his parent. 'H Liie i.tmny was originally named BVflyflyflyfl Doollttle, according to the son, ami lived at Nfadlson, .Maine, where the B mother died.' The father was charged with passing a woithless check, his son said, and. calling his children t.. H him lob) them he was leaving for tie w est and that the ir names t In r.-a f i would be Whitney He went to Mbn tana and lived there several H returning east in 101; w ith a second wife, and settled here H SEES 1TTAOK. I n the ni!,'nt of June ..to. l'JIG. W hltn. y and his, Tif, went to a l -c- returning late, John told the county solicitor thai he was awakened in his bedroom over the kitchen by a dispute, and looked through the hot air reglstdrVlnto the room below. H saiel he- saw his father grasp a sti. ;k of firowood and beat ids stepmotb. iH it. The woman was apparently killed by the repeated blows, the b,,y said, L adding that he saw his father next tak the bod out of the house to the haymow In the barn. There, accord H Ing to his story, it lay for several davs before Whitney buried it under rocks In tlm well. He told his son L that if he ever told anyone what had LH iei, done he would klil him. the bov Whitney told neighbors that his wit.- had gone to I hio on a visit. There was an Official inojilry n the summer of irij: County authorities went to the farm to investigate. After-thev i n. young Whitney said, hl.s father built a hay stack over the well. oo NATIONAL GRANGE WILL I FIGHT PRINTERS' STRIKE BOSTON, Nov. 12 The appearance at the annual sessions of the national grange today of its monthly magazine With two pages blank was explained at a. meeting of the board of managers p 1 y thi dttor, I h irlcs M .,. rein, r, K of Ma lachusetQ B grange", blh due to a strike of printers :H Th.- ediror sa,i (y,.,, ;l. tise 9H two pages' liad been set but not locked sH before the strike started, and that when he and his foreman locked up pagi erotypei refused 1 Wt handb- them Th.- board of managers today voted to print the tull eireula tion of 60.000 copies with tho blank The national grange went on record lii i ' solutions as approving the action Of the board of managers and com mending them tor refusing' to permit the necessities of Hie national grang '...-in made use of an attempt bj H labor leaders to compel n forced set t lenient anel acceptance of their de- v'l no, BBBBBSl REINDEER FROM ALASKA WILL BE MARKETED HERE SEATTLE, Wash. Nov. 12 Meat packers at Nome. Alaska, will be pre pared to ship al least six thousan 1 reindeer carcasses to American mar ketS through Seattle next year, Carl J. Lome-n of Xome said her,-. Noun interests ,,r,. building iwo addition:!! refrigerating plants at Egavlb and Go lovln. near Nome, and plan to estab lish a string of such plants along the coast of Alaska The reindeer herd 6 owned by one company In the- vicinity of Nome numbers more than 37,000 animals. Mr. Loin en said. OO BBBBsl RAILROAD TO LAY OFF 1.300 MEN ON NOV. 16 ALTOONA, Pa., Nov 12, An- k nouncemedt was mad.- al 'he Pennsyl; H vanla railroad offices here today that ISOo men In the Altopna sliops, or ten per cent of the force, would ba laid off November 16. OO fe ifBSBJ COAST PIONEER in S. .KI Nl. t'nl, Nov. IS, Hugh Craig, 7-, former president of tho San Eeron Cisco chamber of commerce, died here Thursday. Mr. Craig came to tho Pacific coast as a sailor before the gold rush of 1819 At one time he was president of the Truus-Mlsalssippl eon grresa to whieh post he suejeeeded WIL- Ham Jennings Bryan. H