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LABOR (Connecticut) NEWS NAVAL OFFICERS CONNECTED WITH NAVY'S OIL RESERVES WERE UNIT IN OPPOSING FAMOUS TEAPOT DOME GRAB Officers Who Hit Raid Transferred to Do Duty Far Away From Washington. By International Labor News Service. Washington, D. C, Sept. 7. Information made available through confidential sources to International Labor News Service en able this newspaper to make public what is perhaps the most astound ing fact yet revealed in connection with the famous raid on the U. S. naval oil reserve by which "he Sinclair interests secured the lease of Teapot Dome reserve in Wyoming. It is now made known for the first time that every naval officer con nected with the naval oil reserves, in cluding one admiral, filed recommen dations with Secretary of the Navy Denby opposing the lease before it was entered into. It is further now revealed that every one of these naval officers, except the admiral, was sub sequently ordered to duty far re moved from Washington and from all contact with the naval oil reserves. The admiral was retired ahead of time. This astonishing information will be brought out before the U. S. Sen ate Committee on Public Lands which will re-open the Teapot Dome hear ings, probably in December, when the new Congress convenes. The admiral who protested to Sec retary Denby was Admiral R. S. Griffin, who during the war was. chiei of naval operations, and admired and loved by the entire service. - Other i ft t jii navai omcers, wno recoraea ineir pro tests were Commander Steuart, Commander Wright and Captain Hal ligan. One of these officers has been sent to;, the Canal Zone, another to insular duty in the Pacific posses sions and another to sea servicewith the Atlantic fleet. , Had Charge of Teapot Dome. These naval officers were in charge of the administration of the Teapot Dome reserve, some of them having been stationed in Washington, while others were stationed at the reserve in Wyoming. The terms of the Teapot Dome lease have been fully reported in this newspaper. A national furore was created when the lease jwas signed. The facts brought out in the newspa pers associated through International Labor News Service were cited in the Senate as constituting cause for a Senate investigation. When Senator LaFollette's commit tee began its investigation into the oil situation during the last session early this year some of the facts re garding Teapot Dome were brought out, but the bulk of the work was purposely left to the Public Lands Committee. It was Senator La Fol lette who, during the closing days of the last Congress, secured adoption of a resolution which authorized the Public Lands Committee to continue the inquiry during the summer and into the life of the new Congress. This committee was the only commit tee authorized to continue its work by the old Congress andjhe fact sig nifies to a considerable extent the im portance that senators attach to the Teapot Dome scandal. Senators Walsh, Lenroot and Nor ris visited Teapot Dome and but re cently returned. These three consti tute a sub-committee in active charge of preparing for the inquiry. They have engaged three experts to go over the field in Wyoming, preparatory to testifying when the hearing opens. These experts are now in Wyoming completing geological studies. The purpose of these studies is to show the truth or falsity of the Sinclair claim that Teapot Dome oil was draining into privately owned wells outside of the reserve and that the Teapot Dome reservoir would in time have been drained entirely into the private wells. Pressing this claim Sinclair claimed that his lease pre vented great loss to the government. Secretary of the Interior Albert Fall gave credence to this claim in signing the lease. The fact that the United States Geological Survey had exam ined the field and reported that such drainage was impossible seemed to have had no consideration when the lease was made. Denby Disregarded Evidence. For the government the lease was signed by Secretary Fall and by Sec retary Denby. In signing the lease Denby totally -disregarded the evi dence and recommendations sub mitted to him by the naval officers in charge of the reserve. There is a possibility that Denby may be called before the senate committee to ex plain his low estimate of . the opinion of the naval authorities who were presumably the best informed men in the service on the question of the naval oil "reserves. It is of course well known that it is customary for department heads to have regard for the technical advice of subordinates who have been selected for their tech nical ability. Grab Profits Standard Oil. Harry Sinclair, who secured the Teapot Dome lease, is in fifty-fifty partnership with Standard Oil in own ership of the pipe line through which Teapot Dome oil must reach the east. Thus the most powerful oil interests in the country profit by the letting of the navy's richest oil deposit. Tea pot Dome was set aside as a naval reservoir by President Roosevelt. His design was that the reserve should remain as a permanent safeguard for the American navy. Under President Wilson Secretary Daniels sent a de tachment of marines to protect the reserve against private encroachment. Secretary Fall, since resigned, is said to have met Harry Sinclair at the Fall ranch at Three Rivers, N. 'M., where a pleasant time was enjoyed before the transaction was concluded in Washington. . The tremendous importance of the Teapot Dome reserve to the United States navy is not generally under stood. It is not generally known that the United States is using its oil supply 14 times as fast as the rest of the world and that the visible oil re serve that can be absolutely con trolled by the United States govern ment and tjiat is not in some sense under foreign ownership is good for only 18 years. The U. S. Geological Survey is authority for this state ment. At present the navy requires about eight million barrels of fuel oil a year and the Shipping Board re quires about six million barrels. The attempted raid on the' naval oil reserve made in 1916 assumes a new importance in the light of re- jcent events. In that year there was i before Congress a leasing bill which Two Investigations Made. An exhaustive investigation of the oil supply was at that time made by a board of naval officers and also by a committee of the Naval Consulting Board which was able to command the advice of the best civilian ex perts. Both of these boards empha sized the necessity of protecting the naval oil reserves against private en croachment and exploitation. On December 22, 1916, the Naval Fuel Oil Board made a report of which the following is a significant extract: "The most serious phase of the fuel situation is the insecurity of the Na tion's tenure " of duly constituted petroleum reserves In the four years that have passed since the crea tion of the first naval petroleum re- xl 1 1 serves, mere iias ueen a continuous i lands by private interests and cor porations. The strength of this at tack is sufficient to threaten a change of existing law in order to wrest con trol of these lands from the navy. Legislation now pending intends to destroy the navy's title to the bulk of its oil in the naval reserves. Action of the congress in this matter will in dicate whether it is possible to retain these or similar reserves, after they have become commercially attractive. It will determine whether, in such a contest between private interests and those of the government, the latter can survive."' The contest then, indicated between private interests and the govern ment has been fought to a finish and the great naval" oil reserve is now under corporation control. N. Y. CALL IS TAKEN OVER BY GROUP OF UNIONSJN BIG CITY Re-organization Announced With $500,000 Capital New Edi torial Staff Is Named. H. M. HODGES & BRO. Paints, Wall Papers, Glass, Painters' Supplies, Pictures and Picture Framing 952 Chapel St. s?0? . 290-292 York St. THE GO-OPERATION of PATRONS and EMPLOYEES for the BETTERMENT of the SERVICE is earnestly solicited. V: The Connecticut Company lit y vfiffl 7P!s . in Little Talk On Courtesy By THE VETERAN MOTORIST EVERY motorist who prides himself on being a better-than -average driver knows how impor tant the matter of courtesy is. A whole flock of seem ingly little things distinguish really good drivers from only average or fair ones. Consideration for pedestrians, especially those on the sidewalk, is one of those little things. Hoy often you see a driver go breezing up close to the curb full speed right through a puddle of water. He could have avoided it But no, he has that darned, "don't care" habit, and a woman has a new dress or expensive cleaning job to pay for. I don't get sore" very often. But that particular kind of thoughtlessness always gives me a sharp pain under the collar. It doesn't cost a red cent to be courteous, and "it pays big in the self-respect you get out of it always isan m Uniform Quality Best Results GASOLINE & MOTOR OIL 0 SO CO NY, fl MfcASOLINE MM fl'-V' Hi 111 Jst STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW YORK. 26 Broadway New York. The New York Call, for many years the official organ of the Socialist party, announces a change of ownership and a new staff of editors. Future policy of the4a per will be announced later. The Call has been the property of the Work ingmen's Co-operative Publishing Company. The new organization i's to be known as the Labor Press Asso ciation, Inc., which is capitalized at $500,000. The former owners will re tain 15 per cent of the capital stock. "The new company, which is con trolled by leading labor unions through stock ownership," the an nouncement says, "will take the old Call, with its record for 15 years' de voted service to labor's cause, and develop it as a genuine labor news paper., ' "Complete arrangements for re-or ganization require time. Definite an nouncement of plans and policy will be made as "soon as possible. In the meantime the paper will be continued in the present form. "How genuinely the Call is to be labor's newspaper is proved by the fact that the total membership of the unions which have already subscribed for stock is about 500,000. "It is confidently expected that a considerable number of other unions will acquire stock before January 1. The Workingmen's Co-operative Pub lishing Association, the former owner of the paper, continues in existence and holds 15 per cent of thecommon stock of the new concern." The following organizations are among . the original subscribers for stock: International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union, Amalgamated Cloth ing "Workers' Union, International Fur Workers' Union, local unions affiliated with District Council No. o, Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators and Paperhangers of America, United Cloth Hat and Cap Makers' Union, local unions affiliated with the Inter national Bakery Workers' Union; Fancy Leather Goods Workers' Union,, 'United Neckwear Makers' Union and the Press Writers' Union. Norman Thomas has been appoint ed editor-in-chief of the Call and Heber Blankenhorn, managing editor. Mr. Thomas formerly was editor of The World Tomorrow and associate editor of The Nation. Before his acceptance of the editorship of the Call he was director of the League for Industrial Democracy. Mr. Blank enhorn was a member of the bureau of industrial research and for seven years was on the news editorial staff of, the Evening Sun. He was secre tary of the Interchurch Commission which investigated and reported on the steel strike. New Haven Wall Paper Wall Pap ers Paper Hangers' Supplies ' 33 Crown Street Ca THE BOOTH & LAW COMPANY "YALE SEAL" PAINTS, OILS & VARNISHES and PAINTERS' SUPPLIES 35-37 CROWN ST. NEW HAVEN, CONN. 1 SERVICE FIRST The Southern New England Telephone Company . Telephone Building 114-126 Court St., New Haven, Conn. Telephone Liberty 6345 THOMAS F. CLARK Insurance Realty Management Investments Mortgages 15a TEMPLE ST., New Haven, Conn. JAPAN THANKS LABOR FOR OFFER OF PROMPT AID President Gorapers of the American Federation of Labor has received from the Japanese ambassador an ex pression of deep appreciation in re sponse to Mr. Gompers' appeal for assistance toward the relief of those stricken by the disaster in Japan. The letter to Mr. Gompers from the Japanese ambassador follows:: "Mr. Samuel Gompers, President;- American Federation of Labor. "My dear Mr. Gompers: "I noticed in yesterday's paper an account of 30UE. appeal to the mem bers of the Federation to contribute a part of their earnings toward the relief of the disaster in my country. "I wish to thank you, on behalf of my government and my people and to add an expression of my deep per sonal appreciation of your noble thought. The generosity and sym pathy which have been shown us in the catastrophe by , you and your countrymen touches us deeply. "Sincerely and gratefully yours, (Signed) "M. HANIHARA, "Ambassador." POTTERS ARE ENJOINED FROM ALMOST EVERYTHING Mt. Clemens, Mich., Sept. 7. The Mt. Clemens Pottery Company is at tempting to enforce the anti-union shop on its organized pottery work ers. Circuit Court Judge Eugene Law contributed a 'sweeping injunc tion, which restrains picketing and about every other thing that the pot tery workers can do. Under penalty of $10,000 to be lev ied upon land and goods of the vio lators of the injunction, the unionists are prohibited from even visiting the homes of strikebreakers to induce them to leave the company's employ or to accept employment elsewhere. j , - PROMPT SERVICE YOU can get stereotypes and matrices, as well as electrotypes, at EDW. H. PARKHURST CO. 365 STATE ST. MECHANICS' TOOLS THE JOHN E. BASSETT & CO. Ye OLDe HARDeWARE STORE 754-758 Chapel & 314 State Streets 7716 Nonpar iel Laundry Co. 271 BLATCHLEY AVENUE P. O. Box 1886 Phone Liberty 3047 18 to 22 CHURCH ST. NEW HAVEN,. CONNECTICUT ETHAN' EVAN L. STETTNER, Mgr. VNEW HAVEN'S LARGEST AND ORIGINAL CASH OR CREDIT CLOTHIERS Everything to Wear for Man, Woman or Child. ' GO FIRST TO Sugenheimer's Men's Furnishings, Women's Wear 15-19 CHURCH ST. Page Judge Gary I Break News to Him That Chicago Steel Mills Have No Trouble Getting Men for 8-Hour Shift. v Judge Gary said the 8-hour day was "impracticable" because the additional men necessitated by the change from the 12-hour shift could not be obtained. Here's what really happened in the Chi cago district, as told in a special dispatch to the New York World: "A summary of the progress of the eight-hour shift in continuous steel processes in the Chicago dis trict shows: "Plenty of labor available for the change. "Five thousand men -already have entered the mills. 'Fifteen thousand employes formerly on 12-hour shift now are on eight hours. "The mills are stepping older employes up, taking experiences hands from other jobs and putting them into the eight-hour turns as fast as units can be placed on the new basis and most of the 'new labor' is going in at the bottom. "In the last twomonths a slack ening, in employment has occurred in the steel industry itself, and this is helping to speed up the spread of the three-shift day, besides giv ing jobs to men who otherwise might be out of work or on part time. "Negroes from the South and Mexicans are coming to the mills in excess of demand." PAGER'S , Union Label Men's Wear Hats and Furnishings The Right Quality at Popular Prices. 6-8 CONGRESS AVE. THE A. E. AIUNG RUBBER CO. 7-9-13 CHURCH ST. NEW HAVEN, CONN. IF IT'S MADE OF RUBBER WE HAVE IT New Haven Rubber Store 819 CHAPEL ST. Do Not Forget That WE DO JOB PRINTING THE FURNITURE REPAIR & urnuiaiiiKiNU SHOP Succeeding Chamberlain-Hallock Repair Shop Rear of 61 Orange St., New Haven, Furniture Repaired, Refinished, Re upholstered. Mattresses Renovated and Made to Qrder.