Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 116, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 September 1921 — Page 2

2

ARMORED CARS ROAM BELFAST AFTER RIOTING Bomb Explosion Signal for Outbreak of Revolver and Rifle Fire, t MACHINE GUNS USED BELFAST, Sept. 24.—Corps of armored cars' patrolled the streets of Belfast today after a wild night of rioting. Fighting, which broke out shortly after midnight spread throughout a seetiou of the city. Gunmen hidden in doorways poured their fire into the streets. Rioting crowds surged along the main thoroughfares and order was not restored until the military swept the streets with their Hotchkiss guns. The number of dead r.nd wounded could not be determined. A bomb hurled in Ilarland street was ♦he signal for the rioting. The entire east side district seethed with rifle and revolver fire as the detonation of the bomb died away. Hundreds of gunmen, in the area of Newstnn road seized a railway station and the river bridges. They hid in places of vantage and poured a leaden fire along the main thoroughfare. Citizens in tramway cars became panicky and fled the district. Soon - all cars were stopped. The military, speeding through the streets in armored cars, fired their small arms without effect. It was only when they opened up on the rioters with Hotchkiss guns that the revolters threw down their arms and fled. The gangs dispersed before the guns, but some of them rooted themselves in points of vantage and sniped until dawn. They took their injured with them. The body of one civilian had been found at noon today. LLOYD GEORGE HAS NEW PLAN LONDON, Sept. - 24. —Premier Lloyd George has evolved anew formula for settlement of Sinn Fein problem which will be acceptable to both sides, it was learned here today. This new formula will not necessitate a compromise from the position of either 6ide, it was said It was believed Esmonn De Valera’s desire for a conference would prompt him to accept tins reported new proposal, as it will not /revid, that he withdraw from his previous stand, in which he insisted the Irish delegates were representatives of a free nation.

NEGROSENTENCED TO STATE PRISON Former Church Treasurer Convicted of Embezzlement. James Gordon, negro, former treasurer of the Mt. Zion Free Baptist Church, who was indicted on a eh.irgp of emlezzling SI,OOO in funds belonging to the church, today was seme-need from two to fourteen years in the Indiana t-dare prison by Judge James A. Collins of ti e Criminal Court. . The case was tried some time ago and Gordon was given a chance to reimburse the church treasury. were semonced ns follows: Barlett, burglary and grand ■prison, and Joe Anhnson, burglary, one year on the Indian* State farm. The court sustained a motion to qua-h Information against Clarence L. Brown, who was charged witli operating a motor vehicle at night with no lights. He appealed from the city court. Judge Collins ordered him discharged after sustaining the motion. . 36 TAXI DRIVERS ASK INJUNCTION Seek to Stop Enforcement of Ordinance. Pending on the docket for a hearing in the near future in Superior Court, room 4. is a suit filed by Olie Beau and thirty-five other taxicab drivers and operators, asking that a ng order be issued against the Indianapolis board of safety and Jerry Kinney as chief of police preventing them from enforcing provisoins of city ordinance No. 32. which was passed this year. On final hearing, the plaintiffs ask that a permanent injunction lei issued against the defendants restraining them from enforcing the ordinance which requires such vehicles to display and use a registering device, to pay a license for the privilege of operating taxicabs and the like. The complaint alleges That the ordinance In question is unconstitutional and void because it discriminates against the plaintiffs and because if- is claimed that it was not legally passed by the city council and also on the grounds that it Is not in accord with the State constitution. R. H. ABEL TOLD TO QUIT OCT. 1 ‘Pioneer’ in Local Prohi Department. One of the last of the old Federal prohibition agents to hold his ,ob under the regime of Bert Morgan, prohibition officer for Indiana. R. H. Abel, has been notified that after Oct. 1, his services will no longer be required by the department. Before Mr. Morgan took office Abel had been acting chief of Federal prohibition agents in this district for some time and had been active in a large number of liquor raids. Before that he had been a field agent and had been in service almost since the organization ot the department. Shortly after Mr. Morgan took office, Abel was removed as acting chief and .reduced to agent. Since that time his -assignments have been almost wholly in ‘■the sticks” and he spent very little time in Indianapolis.

AIR CONGRESS IS HELD AT KOKOMO Special to The Times. KOKOMO,' Tnd . Sept. 24.—Pilots nnd aviation enthusiasts front all the Central States were present today at the National Air Congress'being held here under auspices of the Kokomo of Commerce. Stunts today included races, distance glides, parachute Jyntps and aerial acrobatics. Among the_ visitors were Maj. R. W. Scbroeder of Chicago, holder of the world’s altitude record of 34.000 feet; Stanley E. Knauss. Detroit airman; Matthew Laird, Wichita. Kan., airplane builder, and Albert Johuson, aviator of Dayton. Ohio. The airmen put on exhibition flights List night with electrically lighted planes. ATTENDS STATE CONFERENCE. John Carlisle. baliliff of the Marion 'County Commissioners Court, will leave Sunday night for Ft. Wayne, to attend a conference relative to the annual convention of the County commissioners Association, which will be held there in October. Mr. Carlisle is secretary of the association.

Woollen Is Delegate

’■ ip m mf- \ ' - *

EVANS WOOLLEN. Evans Woollen, president of the Fletcher Savings and Trust Company, loft Indianapolis today’to attend the national unemployment conference, called by President Harding to meet with Secretary of Commerce Hoover in Washington next Monday. John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of America, and Mr. Woollen were named among thirtveigbt representative men and women from many lines of American industry and business to "inquire into the volume and distribution of unemployment, to advise upon emergency measures that properly can be taken by employers, local authorities and civic bodies, and to consider such measures as would tend to give impulse to the recovery of business and commerce to normal. Mr. Lewis, however, was unable to go because of the miners’ convention in session here and appointed John More of Ohio in his place. Others who were invited to attend the conference included the presidents of many national labor organizations; Charles M. Schwab of the Bethlehem Steel Corporation, C. 11. Markham of the Illinois Central Railway. Julius Barnes of Minnesota, Ida M. Tn'fbt-ll and SSmuel Gum per*.

MINERS TURN TO DISCUSSION OF COAL SUIT (Continued From I'nge One.) • mediately t-• give time to consider the ! case and that it reconvene after the case is heard. The motion was ruled out of order. LOCALS PLEDGE SI PPOKT TO EXECUTIVES. A motion was then made to give the International executive board the support of the unions. Discusslou on this motion was inter- i rupted by a delegate in the balcony, who moved a g.-neral strike. Ibis | was ruled out of order amid cheery President Lewis said he believed the j wise thing to do would be to pledge the i support of the !o als to the International. I A motion to this effect was carried. • A delegate arose and demanded the j name of the former ofifclai who testded i ngaiiiKt the union. He was told it was ! Tom L. Lewis. The name wal received ! with hisses. Relief of the most sweeping and general character is asked in the suit. The suit is ! asked to forbid the defendants to do or i cause to be done any act or thing that - will Interfere with the rights of the : plaintiff to employ nonunion labor, and a determined attack is made on the famous •‘check off system," by which operators retain money from the miners' and turn it over to the union in payment of the miners' dues to the union. Contracts between miners and operators permitting this to be done are declared by the compfaint to be a violation of the contractual rights guaranteed by the Constitution to every citizen of the United States. Should the courts decide nil these points in favor of the plaintiff, delegates i say, no union in this country could rej main in existence. INDIANA CONCERNS * ARE DEFENDANTS. In addition to the United Mine Work | ers of America and their officials the | oilowing operators are named ns defendants: The Jackson Hill Coal and j Coke Company, the Queen Mining Coal | and Mining Company, the Rowland | Power Consolidated Colliery Company | and the I/nver Vein Coal Company, all ] Indiana corporations. The following in ’ dividual* are also named as defendant*: I’hil 11. Pennn, Tetre Haute, secretary treasurer of the Bituminous Coal Operators’ Association; J. H. McClelland, Brazil, manager of the Sunbeam Coal Company; J. K. Seiffert and \V. ,1. Snider, both of Terre Haute, officials of local misers’ unions. Fractically till of the Indiana companies named as defendants and Mr. Ponca are now under indictment in Federal Court here in connection with thp coal cases charging violations of the Sherman antitrust law by miners and coal j operators of four states, j The petition for Injunction slates that i the Borderland Coal Corporation brings j the suit iu behalf of Itsel’’ aud sixty-two | other mining companies in M eat Virginia I and Kentucky in the Thacker and Williamson districts in Mingo County, West Virginia, and Pike County, Kentucky, iTOUCHES CHARGE I OF CONSPIRACY. ! The attack on the "eher-k off system" | lilts at the very roots of the coal mining : Industry ns now organized in this section | of the country, according to the plaintiff. | This system by which the operators eol- ! loot dues for the miners' union has been | the subject of bitter criticism in the past , lilid has been the basis of the Governj ment charge that there i , a conspiracy !>ei tween operators and miners to regulate production, distribution and supply of bituminous coal. This system is made | a very important part of the foundation of the coal cases now pending in Federal j Court. I The bill of oohiplaint denounces the j mine workers’ union as "an unlawful I combination and conspiracy acting in vioj lation of tbft Sherman anti-trust law. the j Clayton anti-trust law and in violation I of sound public policy.” , j In many respects the complaint prar- [ tically adopts the line of reasoning followed by the indictments against operators and min#, s brought In Federal Court here early this spring. That the petitioners will rely for their injunction very heavily on the attack on the check off system is indicated by the fact that companies using this system | are named as defendants. Return day I was set at (>b 13

.Soothinq and He&linq Skin and ScalpTrcubtes

‘ The Other Woman ’ Pays * Says Mrs. Perley Spiker Girls Who Have ‘Affairs’ With Married Men Are Branded‘Little Fools’ by Wife Who Stuck.

BALTIMORE. Md„ Sept. 24.—" Girls who get into affairs with married men are little fools. It is ’the other woman’ who always pays. The wife. If she is wise and bides her time, has the final triumph." With a knowing smile. Mrs. Perley Spiker. the remarkable wife In the inter national Spiker romance, uttered this, lino of wisdom today. Hhe was discussing the elosiug chapter in rhe romance as written by Emily Knowles Spiker. the pretty Kngßsh girl, who has deserted all the Splkiyps. Ewfy' was Mrs. Terley’s husband’s "war sweotheait," but It was Mrs. Perley who brought her to this country, established her across the street from her own home and arranged for her comfort. Mrs IVrley sees nothing remarkable about this action on the part of a wife. DOES THINGS SENSIBLE MAY. She is a wholesome ’ooking, pleasant woman, who believes in aoing things In a sensible way. She matched common sense against romnneo as represented by Emily of the big. blue eyes and the appeal of youth. "And. us you see. 1 came out victor in the end." Mrs Spiker said. She had just conic in from an airing with Emily s baby. Mrs. Perley mothers Emily’s baby. It Is her own husband's illegitimate child, but she sees nothing out of the

LOWER WAGES NOT PANACEA, GOMPERS SAYS (Continued From Page One.) the labor unions must move forward step by step with never a step backward. HIS LIFE PLEDGED TO LABOR MOVEMENT. "So long as I live I intend to give ‘to tllp labor movement whatever service and -whatever experience the labor movement has given roe.” He declared that experience gained in the labor movement is not the private property of the men obtaining it, but of the labor movement. He said these men are “married to the labor movement and they cannot be divorced from it." “We are now confronted with a drive for the open shop or what some others blasphemQiisly designate as the American plan,” he said. He called attention to the injunction suit just filed In the Federal Court against the miners’ union as an example of such activities. He said the advocates of the ojien shop say they wish to protect the rights of the working man. "Whe.i dl<l you ever find that the slave owner would make sacrifices .to protect his slaves?" he demanded. "Whence I'omes the solicitude for the tolling masses? Th y know better and so do ihe American people know better. Ho the open shop workers when they have grievances go to the Chamber of Commerce or the Board of Trade. No, they come to th" labor unions.” NOT MULL TO DRIVE BARGAIN TOO HARD. He said it is well to recall to uilnd |tlxat the pendulum docs not always swing one way and that It is not well to drive the bargain too hard. He said it had been intimated to him that the mine operators are trying to bring about a slrike so that the onus may be thrown on the miners. 11a advised to resist a reduction of wages by every means at hand. "It is better to resist end lose than not to resist at all," he said. "There Is nothing more absurd than the id. i (fiat men an be set to work by cutting wages. The cutting of wages mr tails buying. He upheld President Lewis In his stand on the West Virginia trouble. "i’eaee can not bo maintained at the point of the bayonet or the muzzle of u gun." he said. "A Czar of Russia once said that such a place was maintained at Warsaw, but that place did not continue to exist.” He said the mine operators must come to am understanding of their place In America and that their system must bo driven out. He advocated the settlement of the trouble through a conference. "I believe, supplementary to sending the Army into that region, a plan should be put in effect to the difficulties," lie said. "Bear this in rnind, that his tore shows that no great principle has ever been put iuto practice unless It was sanctified with blood. The memory of Hatfield and Charles will stimulate and accentuate the spirit of Americanism among the miners of West Virginia." He than went buck to the application for injunction and said that he doubted whether under the terms of ftp. application the miners would be permitted to breathe. The fight in the convention between Alexander Howat, president of the Kansas miners and leader of the radical element, and John 1 Lewis, international president, and the olher members of the administration and thejr friends was expected to continue this afternoon. The contest, which been predicted for some time, opened when the committee on officers’ reports reported favorably on the section of the report of President Lewis in which he demigndcd that the striking Kansas miners go back to work and condemned what he termed a violation of contract on the part of Mr. Howat. A storm immediately broke loose and Mr. Ilowut was given the floor. He then explained that at . (he Dean Mire, one of the properties involved. an attempt was made to use machinery in place of the common labor, and that the common labor was laid off. He contended there was no strike nt that mine. He said that all the miners are asking as a condition to returning to work is that the same conditions prevail ns have prevailed in the past. "The difficulties continued and the operators appealed to the International union, ns they always do. The International union sent District Board Members Andrew Steelo of Missouri and William Dairy tuple of Oklahoma to Kansas, and they ag.—ed to meet tho operators. The miners were given no consideration. The board member listened m tho operators ami not the miners." Mr. Howat said ,ie could not take the matter up, according to contract, because the mine superintendent refused to talk

“He Hasn’t Got a Dollar” This is the most, hopeless thing that can he said of a man. Perhaps there is a good reason for his being in that condition, hut in many eases the man without a dollar has only himsodf to blame. This STRONG COMPANY—the oldest in Indiana, offers every facility and convenience to those desiring to save. Your account, large or small, welcome. THE INDIANA TRUST C ”JZ $2,750,000 We sell Traveled’ Cheques and Foreign Exchange, payable in all partr of the world.

INDIANA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1921.

ordinary in the fact that she should devote herself to it. "Os Yourse, I am caring for the child,” she said. \ "Do you think I would let that little darling suffer? It is my husband’s child and I love my husband." NOW INDIGNANT AGAINST GIRL. She is indignant aga'nst Emily not because of the girl's affair with her husband, but because of Guy, Ferley’s brother, who sacrificed himself to marry Emily to give her social recognition. "1 don't see why we should have all this publicity," she said. “I took the only way to settle the problem confronting us. It was the commonsense way. I love my husband and I wanted him. I wgs not going to let another woman ruin our lives. Often men are blind creatures and you have to open their eyes for them. Because I had suffered I had no right to punish the girl and her baby. 1 did all 1 could for her. I never tried to show her up. 1 waited and she showed her true colors. Infidelity never pays. That's something commonsense tells ns. And because I used commonsense I still have my husband. "As for the girl—well, 1 don’t want to discuss her. We gave her a chance. Now we wash our hands of her. She has gone out of our lives T am sorry for Guy. He deserved better than he got."

to him. He said that the Kansas organization refuses to surrender anything which i! has gained. He said the full responsibility for tho mine being closed rests with the operators Ho then opened an attack on Governor Allen of Kansas, and his Industrial court. “We are telling the Kansas industrial court to go to heli and that's what we will continue to tell them,” he shouted. Later he iid he had been nske.l to give surety bond in the eoiudr not to call another strike, but that be had "told the court to go to hell," and that he hail been remanded to jail and that be was expecting to return to Kansas Sept. 28 and start his jail sentence. LEWIS APPEALS FOR RESPECT FOR CONTRACTS. President Lewis followed Mr. Howat with an appeal for respect for contracts. “The implication that the international president is in league with ih Kansas operators Is a base falsehood," he said. He said the greatest charge against the mine workers Is *that they violate their contracts. He pointed out that in the Mingo Investigation that fact was read into the record of the Senate Committee in charge that 703 unauthorized strikes were called in Kausas in forty five months and that 300 of these strikers were called in a period of twelve months "Your officers are compelled to meet arguments of that character and say we will keep our contracts. The Mingo County operators say we are not honorable men. People will lose confidence in your organization If you do not keep your contracts." he declared.

WOMEN WHO ’ CANNOTWORK Read Mrs. Corley’s Leiter atd Benefit by Her Experience Edmund, S. C. ‘*l was run down with nervousness and female trouble aiK * suffered eva ery I was nut hide to do any w°rk and tried a J saw your mediSi c **! e hdvertised in [ Jlj a little book, and 1 . ■■^. s had not taken two *"*4% Mm bottles of Lydia ■' " E. Pinkham 'a ***|Vegetable ComI pound before I could see it was helping me. I am keeping house now and am able to do all of my work. I cannot say enough for your medieihe. It has done more for me than any doctor. You may print this letter if you wish. Elizabeth C. Corley, care of A. P, Corley, Edmund, S. C. Ability to stand the strain of work is the privilege of the strong and healthy, but how our hearts ache for the weak and sickly women struggling with their daily rounds of household duties, with backaches, headaches, nervousness and almost event movement brings anew pain. Why will not the mass of letters from women all over this country, which we have been publishing con vince such that Lydia E. Pinhkam’s Vegetable Compound will help them Just as surely as it did Mrs. Corley?

Stomach on Strike 20 Years Eatonlc SettSed Btl

“Eatonic is wonderful,” gays C. W. Burton. "I had been a sufferer from stomach trouble for 20 years and now I am well.” Eatonic gets right after the cause of stomach troubles by taking up and carrying out the acidity and gases and of course, when the cause is removed, the sufferer gets well. If you have sourness, belching, indigestion, food repeating or any other stomach trouble, take Eatonic tablets after each meal and find relief. Big box costs only a trifle with your druggist's guarantee.

RURAL CREDITS ARE RELIEVED THROUGH STATE Syndicate Formed to Sell sl,009,000 Joint Stock Land * Bank Bonds.

Rural credits conditions throughout Indiana were-greatly relieved today by the announcement here that a $1,000,000 syndicate had been formed to underwrite and sell that amount of bonds of the Fletcher Joint Stock Land Bank, which is Ihe largest of the three, Joint stock land banks operating in Indiana. The bonds have been underwritten at a price that will net par value to the issuing bank and local students of the problems of farm finance point to this fact as an indication of the beginning of relief for agricultural communities, which have suffered for many months as a direct result of curtailment of credit by local banks. The news of the successful underwriting of the bonds came coineldently with news from Chicago that n Joint stock bank there had succeeded in selling So.OfU.OOO ,of its securities. Recently Congress authorized an increase in the maximum interest rate borne by this class of bonds from ."> per cent to •Ms per cent and it was on the latter basis that Ihe local bonds were sold. H. F. Clippinger. manager of the bond department of the Fletcher Savings and Trust Company, which owns the Fletcher Joint Stock Land Bank, formed the syndicate, which included bond dealers in Chicago, Cincinnati. New York. Philadelphia and Cleveland and the Fletcher Ravings and Trust Company, Jewett arid Company and the Fletcher American Company of Indianapolis. The apparent readiness of the money market now to absorb large offerings of this class of rural securities was pointed to by officials of the Joint stock bank here as a sure Indication that the joint stock banks in the near future will he provided with funds to enable them ft> resume the making of long term, nocotnmlsslon loans to farmers. if tilts situation develops, these officials say. the relieving of the stringent fli|n,ylnl needs of the farmer will work definitely to bring about betb-r conditions through out the Central West. ‘Milk Trust’ Ruling Early Next Week Judge Solon ,T. Carter of Superior Court. Room 3. has under advisement, preliminary to a ruling next week, a demurrer of U. s, I.esh, attorney general, to a p!e;i in abatement filed by the In dlana Manufacturers and Daily Products Corporation and thirty-seven other de ftgplants In the so-called "milk trust" "ase. Arguments v.-ere eoncludcd before Judge Carte r late Thursday. KO( lAI.IST MELTING TONIGHT. Socialist city nominees will speak at an open air meeting at King and Michigan streets tonight. William IT, Henry. Socialist nominee for mayor, is speaking in Dayton, 0., today and Sunday.

ONCE A DREAM In 1907 ( itizens of Indianapolis subscribed $1,000,000 of common stock of the newly organized ( itizens Has Company. Over 3,000 took this stock in small lots because, they wanted to establish a co-operative gas company with Indianapolis capital and keep the profits in Indianapolis. # THE ONLY ASSETS OF THE COMPANY WERE DREAMS '1 ho original promoters of the company knew nothing about the gas business and few oi them had ever seen any of the equipment of a gas company except the gas meters in their own cellars. When the company was organized for construction and operation, only one man connected with it know anything about the business, and he knew it from the outside and not from personal operating experience. The new company was confronted with competition from an old established company and won against men of long experience and of great financial strength. NOW A REALITY In 1921 Citizens of Indianapolis are invited to subscribe for $1,000,000 of T'Te cumulative preferred stock. .Cilice I lie company now has over 66,000 cas customers, the number of subscribers should be much greater than 3,000. TIIE COMPANY NOW HAS IMMENSE PHYSICAL PROPERTIES And supplies and other assets representing a total value in excess of $15,000,000. It has a corps of expert engineers and a large body of trained employees. Its volume of business last year was nearly $10,000,000. It is known from one end of the country to the other as a company which has won notable success while selling gas at the lowest price in the country. It no longer has any competition in I lie gas business. THE STOCK IS OFFERED ON THE EASY PAYMENT PLAN TO ITS OWN CUSTOMERS.

INQIIRY COt' PON. (Check one of the following.) CITIZENS GAS COMPANY, • Indianapolis, Itid. I 1 I’leasa reserve shares of your 7% Preferred Stock to be paid for by me In Cash. [ 1 Please reserve shares of your 7' w - Preferred Stock to be paid for by me on the Partial Payment Plan. f 1 Please send me additional information concerning your 7?t> I’referrcd Stock. Name Address City .j Phone

Wife German Spy, Husband Asks Divorce Max Golden Says She Caused His Imprisonment in German Detention Camp.

Claifhing that his wife, whom he married in Germany prior to the World War, gave information to the German military authorities which led to his imprisonment as a prisoner of war from 4914 to 1918 at Ruhlebien, Germany, Max Golden has filed a petition asking for an absolute divorce from Doris Golden, in Superior Court, Room 4. Golden claims be is now a resident of Indianapolis and intends to become an American citizen. He charges in the complaint he owed no allegiance to Germany during the war, as he was a citizen of Dublin, Ireland. He declares he attempted to persuade his wife to go to England with him wheft war broke out. so he could fight for his country, but she refused. PEACE LOOMS IN OIL FIELDS Several Moves to End Strike Under Way. SAY FRANCISCO. Sept. 24.—Prospects of p/are in California oil fields loomed larger today than at any time since 8,000 workers in Kern County aud adjoining fields went on strike Sept. 1. Returning from an inspection of the strike territory a committee of the Oil Producers Association" announced that a way was being sought to op'-n up their properties and resume operations "without damage to property or loss of life." Another move conducive to peace was the announcement that on the response to an appeal from Governor Stephens through his private secretary, the strikers had decided to abandon the stoppage of all Automobiles in Kern Connfy highways by "law and o-dcr committees" and that only “suspicious cars would he followed to their destinations to see If they carried bootleg liquor," which has been absolutely banned. MARINE CAPTAIN DIES IN PLUNGE WASHINGTON. Sept. 24. Capt. John A. Minnl's, I’. S. M. C„ wn* killed last night when the V 7 aeroplane fell into the Potomac River near the marine fiving field at Quantlco, Va.. the Navy Depart merit announced today. Captain Minnas was flying in searchlight tsrs. attempting to evade detection from the ground by searchlights operated from the fiying field. Because of the maneuvers it was not known for some time than an accl dent had occurred. The aeroplane Captain Minnis was flying was so badly damaged it has been impossible to determine the cause of the accident. Captain Minn’s’ home was in Montgomery, Ala.

EXPECT BOLIVIA TO RESIGN FROM WORLD LEAGUE Nation Is Peeved Because Assembly Won’t Interfere With Monroe Doctrine. GENEVA. Sept. 24.—The immediate withdrawal of Bolivia from the League of Nations assembly was hinted at today. Dr. Amaraya, nead of the Bolivian delegation, said he had asked his government for instructions in connection with the territorial dispute with Chile and believed he would be instructed to quit the assembly right away. The international committee of judges appointed to consider the Chilean-Boliv-ian dispute has decided the assembly is not competent to consider Bolivia’s de-

Charlie Chaplin’s hand an OMAR now rivals his well-known feet. Omar Omar spells Aroma Omar Omar is Aroma • Aroma makes a cigarette; They’ve told you that for years I Smoke Omar for Aroma. which means that if you don’t like OMAR CIGARETTES you can get your money back from the dealer

CITIZENS OS CO. Majestic Building EVERY PATRON A PARTNER

* mand for revision of the Chllean-Bolivian treaty. The question raised by Chile regarding the Monroe doctrine was not discussed. The Serbian delegation to the assembly admitted fighting was in progress between Jugo-Slav frontier police and Albanians, but the Serbs declared the Albanians were bandits aud not regularly organized forces. Final action on the measure defining the league's blockade rights was deferred until next week. Both mdrning and afternoon sessions were devoted to the Polisb-Lithuanian dispute over Vilna Vilna formerly was the capital of I.ithu ania. After the Russo-Polish war rolisb .forces seized Vilna. 300 APPLY FOR CITIZENSHP. Announcement yas made today that Judge W. AV. Thornton of Superior Court. Room 1, will hear petitions for final naturalization papers at a three-day hearing. beginning Oct. 5. Miss' Margaret Mahoney, naturalization clerk, stater there are nearly 200 applcaints.