Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 293, 20 October 1920 — Page 1
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VOL. XLV.; No. 293 Palladium. Eat. 1831. Consolidated with Sun-Telegram, 1107. RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY EVENING, OCT. 20, 1920 " SINGLE COPY 3 CENTS
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BELIEVE END OF ENGLISH STRIKE NEAR Negotiations Which May Settle Strike of British Miners Were Today Believed to be Assured. prepareTroposals
(By Associated Press LONDON, Oct. 20 Negotiations which might settle the strike of British miners were today believed to be assured. Government officials and labor leaders who outlined their positions before the opening session of parliament have shown their desire to reach an understanding. Belief was general today that proposals were in preparation by both sides. Wants Final Settlement. Premier Lloyd George has definitely declared he Is ready to enter into negotiations but he has laid emphasis on thn tact thnt th envRrnmfnt wants . I ... . . , ! U llUiil BCllltUJVUl Ul lilt? which brought about a cessation of work in British mines last Saturday. He has stated plans for a tentative wage increase pending a complete adjustment would not be satisfactory as that method of meeting the present situation would threaten trouble later. Coal production he holds, must be augmented, and he may submit Bome proposals which will deal with this phase of the situation. This morning's newspapers comment appreciatively on the calm and dignified tone yesterday in the House of Commons, and the absence of provocative words. This fact is regarded as a good omen, journals maintaining that although the deadlock still exists, the debate has cleared the stage for a compromise. Insist on Production. One possible basis for a settlement Is set forth by the Daily Mail, which says if the miners are willing to agree that an advance of two shillings given now may be withdrawn at the end of December. If production is not increased by that time, the government will consider such a proposal. The government however, will inflexibly insist upon its position regarding production, the newspaper says. Wales Expects End. One of the strongest rumors relatime to a possible settlement come3 from the South Wales coal field, which has been recognized as the main center of disaffection and extremism. A Cardiff dispatch to the London Times says it is stated there the end of the deadlock may be reached in three or four days. In the meantime reports of the clos ing of industries accumulated; coupled! with assertions tnai worKers in omer trades who are losing employment through the miner's strike are showing resentment. This is said to be especially noticeable in the Middlesborough Iron and Steel district and the neighboring parts of northeastern England. Railway Men Met. The executive committee of the National union of railway men planned to meet today and it was believed cer tain the attitude to be assumed Dy this t rganization toward the miners' strike ! would be considered. Two weeks ago the committee decided by the margin of one vote, not to join in the strike, but there are indications this decision may not be final. The Transport Workers' Union has not taken definite action on the situation as yet. but there is some apprehension that it may join forces with the coal diggers. May Strike In Sympathy The London branch of the commercial transport workers union has already voted to strike out of sympathy with the miners, but the strike order was held up until after today's meeting of that body. Members of this union throughout the country have been notified, however, that they may be ordered out and should be prepared for a cessation of work. A walk-out of this union would involve upwards of 180,000 men in various parts of England. Shipment Curtailed Further curtailment of shipping ser vices is impending. One daily boat J X 1 A 1 . 111 1 i, I
insreau oi uiiye run oeiei.jn works of peace ag up0Q the battle
t;Bver iiu iaitii aiiu tinny sfi vice ut tween New Haven and Dieppe will be supplanted by a tri-weekly schedule. This greatly reduce facilities for I travel between Fiance and England. I In addition at least one line of steamers plying between Eastern England ports and Hamburg, Roterdam and Antwerp will be suspended entirely. Mrs. William H. Turner Dead at Atlantic City Mrs. William H. Turner, 52 years old, died of pneumonia at Atlantic City, Wednesday morning, says a message received here today by Howard Grottendick. She was the wife of William H. Turner, who was associated with the George H. Knollenberg company for many years, and now is owner of a dry goods store in Kokomo. Mr. and Mrs. Turner were attending a convention in Atlantic City, where she became . ill. She was in Richmond last Thursday. From Atlantic City Mr. and Mrs. Turner intended to go to Patterson. N. J., to visit their daughter. Mrs. Hugh Perry, who had planned to return with them. No announcement of the funeral arrangements was made today. .but the body will be brought to Richmond for burial. She is survived by her husband, one son, Wilbur, one daughter, Agnes, two brothers, John Grottendick. of Indianapolis, and Henry 'Grottendick, of Richmond; four' sisters, Miss Rebecca Grottendick, of Kokomo; Mrs. Anna Veregge, Mrs. Fred Heithouse and Mrs. Robert Morey, all of Richmond.
MOST ANNOYING PART OF VARIED CAREER SAYS LAUB, IN JAIL Lyle T. Laub, lately employed as a stock salesman for the Multi-X Aircraft & Automobile company, an alleged swindling scheme promoted by several "blue sky" experts who operated profitably for a few weeks in Wayne county last summer, was brought to Richmond from Indianapolis late Tuesday afternoon and is now confined in the county Jail. Laub was indicted by the Wayne county grand Jury on a charge of obtaining signatures to written instruments under false pretense. He was arrested at his home in Indianapolis Monday morning. Arrest Is "Annoying." Laub appeared to be quite indifferent over his arrest, according to Carl Wadman, deputy sheriff, who brought him to Richmond. He referred to the situation which now confronts him as "annoying." He then stated, Wadman says, that he had been in "real trouble" a few years ago. He admitted to the deputy sheriff that he had been convicted of forgery in Indianapolis, had been sentenced to serve from one to five years at the Jeffersonville reformatory and had been paroled from that institution a little over a year ago after he had
served eighteen months of his senttnce He stated that his paroie expired three months ago. r Has Interesting Career According to information local au thorities have received, Laub has had an interesting career as a "get-rich-1 quick" promoter. Laub laughingly informed Wadman that he had met a "bunco" man while he was in Richmond who was almost clever enough to "skin him." He referred to a man named Williams, who did a land office business throughout Wayne county selling bogus diamond rings until he was arrested and sentenced to serve 30 days in the county jail on a charge of false pretense. Impersonates Farmer. Williams, garbed as a farmer, would stop motorists and ask them if they had seen a "couple of cows." He would then produce a ring and remark that he had just found it on the road. He would offer, to sell the ring and generally made a sale, sometimes receiving as much as $25. Laub stated that Williams had worked this ruse on him and that he offered to give Williams $5 for a ring. Williams held out for $10. "When he offered to split the difference with me I became suspicious and drove away. He overplayed his hand a little too much. He was too anxious to sell," Laub said. Laub is charged with having sold 500 shares of worthless Multi-X stock to Charles F. Estep, a Wayne county farmer, for which Estep gave Laub his note for $5,000 and a mortgage on his farm for security. It is alleged that Laub liter sold the note to an Indianapolis bank. POLISH-LITHUANIAN RELATIONS STRAINED (By Associated Press) WARSAW, Oct. 20. Relations be tween Poland and Lithuania are becoming more strained, according to advices from M. Kameniski, Polish minister at. Letvia, who has been attending the conference of Baltic states at Risra. On the eve of the return to Paris of the League of Nations commission, which has been at tempting to reach a solution of ques tions arising between Poland and Lithuania, threats have been made by the latter nation to intern all Poles as a reprisal for the occupation of Vilna by General Zellgouskl's army. As a cousequence, many Poles are reported to be leaving for their native country. Lithuania Determined Lithuania, according to M. Kameniski, is determined to oppose Poland in every way possible. A Lithuanian army, says a dispatch from Grodno, is being mobilized, men up to the age of 45 being called to the colors. German officers are acting as instructors, it is said. General Pilsudski, president of Poland, has ad dressed a manifesto to the army in1, convention with the cessation of hos-j tilitles with Bolshevik Russia at midnight Monday after nearly two years of war. He urges patience, as the actual treaty of peace is not yet signed, and expresses the hope the j soldiers will develop the same energy fields. . . . . . He hw already proposed to the govenJhff LJH lF wh,ch e sers fought should become the property of those who served the young republic while she was fighting for her life. PARIS, Oct. 20. Colonel P. Cedric Fauntelroy, commander of the Kosciuski aviation squadron of the Polish army, has arrived here enroute to the United States. He was recently promoted to the rank of colonel in the Polish army and has been authorized by the Polish ministry of war to recruit pilots and endeavor to buy American airplanes for the Polish air service. Poland has made, and is still making, every effort to obtain the release of Captain Merlon Cooper, of Jacksonville, Fla., who was recently captured by the Russian Bolsheviki. He is believed to be still a prisoner in the hands of the soviet army near Kiev and offers have been made to Moscow to exchange any prisoner of any rank for Captain Cooper. SERASTOPOL, Crimea, Oct. 20. Severe fighting continues along the Dniper and Northwestern front, in the vicinity of Nokopol. Leon Trotsky, Russian Bolshevik minister of war, is reported to be bringing up ten divisions of communist forces, which' will not surrender as easily as the ordinary troops heretofore used on this line. It is asserted numbers of former German officers in the Baltic provinces are offering their services to General Baron Wrangel, head of the antiBolshevik south Russian government.
ELIHU ROOT SAYS WILSON
DELAYS PEACE Noted Jurist Tells New York Audience Other Nations Would Accept Reservations for League. HARDINGlEANS PEACE NEW YORK. Oct. 20. Declaring that the treaty with Germany would have been ratified and America would have been a member of the League ot Nations if President Wilson "had been willing," Elihu Root delivered his only address on the league during the presidential campaign here Tuesday night. "Mr. Wilson, however, was not willing. He Insisted upon the treaty absolutely , unchanged," Mr. Root said, adding later on In his speech: "I do not question Mr. Wilson's beliefs that the disposition of the treaty for which he was contending on May 31, 1919. were just and fair; but, without disrespect, I do quetion Mr. Wilson's infallibility; I do question the complete control of abstract justice in the processes by which the four men who dictated these treaties, which undertook to make over Eastern Europe, reached their conclusions. "I have an Impression that there was the accommodation of conflicting of conflating, the giving of something here to get something there; the yielding of some things in order to avoid losing others, the shading ot justice by expediency which has characterized such conferences since history began. I have a strong impression that some of their conclusions were mistakei-. Opposes Territory Guarantee "And I think it most objectionable that the American people shall enter into a solemn and positive agreement to "guarantee and maintain by force of arms for all times the dispositions of territory and sovereignty which these four men made in the year 1919. "That is a part of what Art. 10 undertakes to do. It is an alliance to enforce perpetually, through the operations of the League of Nations, the decisions of Mr. Wilson and his associates in the year 1919. It is a throwback to the old discredited alliances of the past. It speaks a language of power and not the spirit of progress. It is an attempt to do what the Holy Alliance sought 100 years ago (with Just as noble expressions of purpose) to impose by force the judgment of the rulers of the present generation upon all future generations." Mr. Root declared that "we shall promote the peace of the world" by electing Senator Harding, Republican candidate 'for President, whose stand on the league, he said, was unchanged from the time he voted for ratification of the peace treaty and League of Nations with the Senate reservations. The election of Governor Cox, Democratic presidential nmoinee, he said, meant the effort to have the United States join the League of Nations without change, as it was brought back from Europe by President Wilson. Other Nations Willing. After "restating the situation," of the league, Mr. Root declared that it was well understood in 1919 and ' is well understood now that the other parties to the agreement would have been content to accept." the senate reservations, adding: , "Several European nations already have given notice of half a dozen changes in the covenant which they propose to urge at a meeting of the assembly of the league next month. The only reason why the changes nec essary to meet American objections have not already been considered is that Mr. Wilson simply would not negotiate for them." At the outset of his address, Mr. Root said : "I think a large majority of the American people earnestly wish lor an organization among civilized nations, through which the nations shall (Continued on Page Fourteen) $2,000 CONTRIBUTED TOWARD CELEBRATION Incomplete returns from the campaign for funds to defray expenses of an Armistice Day celebration in this city, indicated that about $2,000 had been contributed toward the required total of -$3,500 up to 2 p. m., Wednesday. Twenty-six committees, under the auspices of the Y. M. B. C. conducted the campaign. The city was divided into industrial, manufacturing and business sections. Officials in charge said that a certain amount of the work was sure to be left over until tomorrow, because of the fact that some of the business men were out when committee members called. Committee members will turn in their reports Wednesday evening. SETTLE MEXICAN STRIKE (By Associated Press) MEXICO CITY, Oct. 20. Following conferences yesterday between Provisional President de la Huerta and a delegation representing 12,000 miners who are on strike in the state of Coahuila it was announced that progress was being made toward a settlement. The conference will be continued today. The strike threatens to throw out of work more than 100,000 men. MILAN BOMB NOT INTENDED FOR ALLIED MISSION PARTY (By Associated Press) ROME, Oct. 20. Police at Milan declare the bomb which exploded on the doorstep of the Cavour hotel at Milan last week was evidently not intended for members of the allied mission staying at the hotel. They fay Another bomb was found outside the place on Monday after the delegates had left. It had not exploded.
British MbersV ' ' ' -' ' ' ' " W : ' ' . jfe y jt a3 m$
Miners' wives, bearing banners, going to protest meeting at Hyde Park, England, and a group of miners, typical of those now on strike. Knowing the cost and where the blow would hit hardest, the wives of the 1,000,000 British miners made every effort to prevent the strike which has practically halted coal production In the British Isles., Their efforts failed, however. Thousands of the wives attended a protest meeting In Hyde Park just before the Btrike was finally called by the leaders.
COX'S APPEARANCE IN RICHMOND, OCT. 28 PRACTICALLY ASSURED Appearance of Governor James M. Cox, Democratic president nominee, for an address in thi3 city on Thursday afternoon, Oct. 28, is practically assured,' Joel Moore, democratic county chairman, announced Wednesday. A letter received by Mr. Moore, from Samuel L. Trabue, of the Democratic state central committee, gives the Wayne county committee tentative announcement of the Governor's address here. Governor Cox is scheduled to pass through this city from the east on his way to fill a speaking engagement at Indianapolis in the evening of Oct. 2S. With the governor will be Thomas Taggart, senatorial candidate. It is not known whether Mr. Taggart will speak at the meeting planned for Richmond Taggart Also Here. The letter received by Mr. Moore from Mr. Traube, of Indianapolis, reads in part: "We have reasonable assurance that Governor Cox will be In Richmond on Oct. 2S. We will ad-1 vise you definitely as soon as we can safely do so. Ex-Senator Thomas Taggart will accompany the governor." Arrangements have been made by the local democratic committee for the Coliseum for the date given, and a: rousing meeting is being planned. On the day following, Friday, Oct. 29, Vice-president Thomas R. Marshall and W. D. Hedrick, a former Progressive leader, will be the speakers at a big democratic meeting, to be held in the Coliseum in the evening. With these two days coming together, so close to election day, Democratic leaders in Wayne county are expecting to bring their campaign here to a successful lose. Meeting Wednesday. Democra'.ic committeemen and women, and all others interested in the campaign work, are to meet in the assembly room of the K. of P. building, third floor. Thursday, Oct. 21. at 7:30 p. m. It is rlanned to discuss work to be done in the remaining days ot the campaign, and to take up methods of issuing voting instructions. Wilfred Jessup, of this city, will be the principal speaker at a Democratic meeting to be held in Abington, Ind., Tuesday, 'Oct. 26. A large delegation from this city is expecting to attend. New Paris, O.. is to have a meeting Saturday afternoon and night. Oct. 23. Announcement was made Wednesday that all persons from Richmond wishing to attend should notify local Democratic headquarters. Reservations then will be made for places on trucks which arc to carry the local supporters on the round trir. Mr. Moore said that 50 cents would be charged each person to cover expense of transportation. ARMISTICE FLOATS BEAR UNIFORM CARD Floats appearing in the armistice day parade will carry a uniform placard with the name of the organization, business house, or industrial concern. The committee, in an announcement Wednesday, Eaid the purpose of the celebration is purely patriotic in character, and for that reason floats will not be of a commercial nature. If the celebration were on the order of a Fall Festival, floats and other features of the procession naturally would have a commercial aspect? says the statement. The patriotic nature of the parade will be its outstanding feature and j will make it one of the most beautiful and impressive ever seen here.
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Republicans Instruct Voters at Headquarters Wednesday Night
Repulican women in the Seventh,, Eighteenth and nineteenth precincts, are requested to be at Republican headquarters, Wednesday, at eight p. m.. to receive instructions in the use of the ballot- Sample ballots will be displayed, and the full voting process will be explained. . - " The Seventh precinct Includes tho territory from the south side of Main street to the north side of south B st., between the east side of south Fourth and the west side of south Seventh. The Eighteenth precinct Includes the section between the south side of Main and north side of south B, between the east side of south Seventh and the west side of south Ninth. The Ninteenth precinct includes the section between the south side of Main and the north side of south B, between the east side of south Ninth and the west side of south Twelfth. All women voters in these precincts are urged to be present at the Republican headquarters this evening, at 8 o'clock. Colored Voters Meet Committees to arrange for the big colored meeting, to be held here the evening of October 28th, at the colored Harding and Coolidge club in the Leader hotel, on south Sixth street, last evening, and preliminary arrangments were begun for the affair. Thomas Lincoln Dixon, noted political speaker, from Georgia, who was delegate to the Republican national con-vention, will be here. The parade committee for the Beveridgc meeting will be held this evening in Republican headquarters in the Pythian building at 7:30 to make arrangements for the parade which is to precede the Beveridge meeting in the Coliseum on the evening of October 26. Dance Committee Meets. Miss Martha Whitacre, chairman of the Ticket committee for the First Voters' ball to be held in the Coli-i
fr-n ire ausPi.ces,.0f the R,tPUb'i turned and all the casualties were be- ' s rg.a n lzoa0,lo,n "n Thur" lieved to have occurred there. Rescue w Z e?eV.Ct0mr 28hod aJ?eet"t forces were quickly at work and in ing of the committee at Republican , shQrt Ume bode8 had Deen taken
Weather Forecast MOORE'S SPECIAL FORECAST. Warm weather will continue for the next 24 hours, and possibly for the next 36, as the cold wave has advanc ed only 500 miles since Tuesday. Fair
weather will prevail but conditions covery was problematical. So far as are such that a local rain might sud- could be learned none of the pasdenly develop as happened Monday, ! sengers on the east bound train was
10 miles from Richmond, and at Col umbus, Ind., where a severe thunderstorm prevailed Monday. For Indiana, by the United States Weather Bureau Fair tonight and brobably Thuhsday; little change in temperature. Temperatures Yesterday. Maximum St Minimum 62 Today Noon TJ For Wayne County, by W. E. Moore -Co'ntinued warm and mostly fair Wednesday night and Thursday. Possibly a local shower, but no general rain during the next 24 hours. General Conditions The weather conditions over the United States are changed but little during the past 48 hours. The main storm continues over the states of Colorado, Utah, Nevada and Wyoming, with general rain and snow, while the cold wave has moved southward only a few hundred miles since Sunday. Its southern limit extends from South Dakota southwest to Utah. General snow storms have prevailed for two days over Utah and Nevada; minimum temperatures are far below freezing in many places in the northwest. - - '. ?
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headquarters last evening with a large attendance of the members. Bach one of the 66 precinct committee women in the county was assigned a quota of tickets as well as the members of the committee, and tickets are also on Bale at Twigg's, Engle s and Jones s. Tickets Cost $1. The tickets are $1 a couple. The gallery and balconies will be open to! those who do not intend to dance at a general admission of twenty-live cents. For information about tickets telephone Miss Whitacre, phone 2303, or Republican headquarters, phone 1048. Republican meetings for instruction in the use of the ballot will be held this evening in Economy where Harry E. Yockey will speak: Milton, and Dublin where Filmore Riggs will be present. Successful meetings were held last evening in Boston, Abington, Centerville, Williamsburg and Fountain City. ERIE RAILROAD WRECK KILLS SEVEN PERSONS ERIE, Pa., Oct. 20 Seven persons are known to have been killed and at least 17 injured in a wreck on the New York Central railroad near the Union station here today. Some of the injured are so badly hurt that hospital physicians sali that they expected the list of casualties to be increased. Four of the bodies taken from the wreck are those of women. The Chicago and Boston express ran through an open switch not far from the station and sideswiped the train from Buffalo on its way west. The third -J - r sno-h f tvt t V a anHno river. lout. I Porta nf annthpr hndv. rpsciifi work ers 6aid. were in plain sight but they had so far been unable to extricate it from the wreckage. The dead in some instances were badly mangled. Fifteen of the injured were removed to hospitals, some of them, physicians stated, so badly hurt that heir rehurt. BUFFALO, N. Y., Oct. 20 The west bound train in the wreck was said by the N. Y. Central office here to be No. 23. which is made up at Buffalo. It left here about nine o'clock and was scheduled to make only two stops between here and Erie at Dunkirk and Westfield. The train consisted of day coaches and parlor cars. Three of the latter came from New York and were attache dto No. 23 here. Miss Florence Porter Answers Call of Death Miss Florence Porter, 50 years old, died, at the home of her brother. Thomas Porter, 108 South Ninth street, Tuesday evening. Miss Porter had been ill for " seven months prior to her death. Having lived here all of her life, she was well known and enjoyed a wide circle of friends. She is survived by three brothers. Thomas, Harper and James Porter, all of this city. Funeral services will b conducted from the home, Friday at 10 a. m. The Rev. Andrew F. Mitchell will officiate. Burial win be -in Earlham. Friends may call any time Thursday.
HARDING LAUDS TARIFF POLICY
OF HIS Republican Nominee Contrasts Democratic "Phrase Making" and G. 0. P. Performance. SAFE-GUARDS AMERICA (By Associated Press) JACKSON, O.. Oct, 20. Democratic "phrase-making" and Republican, "performance" were contrasted by Senator Harding in a speech here today lauding the protective tariff policy as an example of Republican accomplishment. "The truth Is," he eaid. "that with all the progressive tongues and all the literary idealism of our opponents it is still the Republican party, not only as to tariff protection but as to every other kind of production, which stands as the safeguard to America. "It Is a simple matter to make phrases; it is much more difficult to perform them, but it is on their respective records as phrase-makers and as performers that the Democratic forces of this campaign and the Republican party oppose each other." Speaks at Barbecue The Republican nominee, making an afternoon speech at' a political barbecue, gave particular attention to the Iron and steel industry as it has developed In this section of Ohio. This Industry throughout the country, he said, had given an illustration of the "success which attends the combination of the hands and brains of workers whose Interests are so bound together In a common cause that upon the part of all there will be profound realization of the need for mutual consideration." "As an illustration of the common Interest which binds those engaged in that Industry In a public policy," he continued, "I wish to cite the truth that the growth and opportunity for Investment of capital and the labor of men in the iron and steel Industry has rested upon a political policy. You know that it Is a fact that the Republican policy of tariff protection, given to our bome Industries, has been the safe guard and stimulus of our American iron and steel production." Pleads for Production "With all the natural resources and the good fortune of geographical position, the growth and perhaps the prosperous existence of the six hundred or more companies which are making iron and steel in the United States, is based upon impulse given men to labor this impulse to labor, I trust will always be made up in part of the love of men to expend their energies In creative production, but of necessity men labor for a living." "I would like to see the standards Of living among foreign nations raised up to our standards of living, but I do not intend to see prosperity and our standards of living lowered to meet the competition of foreign countries in our markets. Sympathetic as I may be with our brothers in foreign nations we stand for a proper policy of American protection, flexible, subject to readjustments, fair to our consumers, and yet protecting American Investments and the Interests and standards of living of those American laborers, who do their part by giving us on hundred per cent efficiency In their productive efforts. MONTH LITTLE WARMER THAN OCTOBER, 1919 If you believe that the weather of October, 1920 has been very much warmer than it was in the same month last year, you have been Indulging in an error. There Is, however, a difference in temperature for the first 19 days of the month. During the fiist seven days of October, 1919, the weather was warmer than it was in corresponding period of this year, according to figures kept by Leroy Brown. The same set of figures show that on Oct. 8 of both years, the temperature was 72; On Oct. 9, the temparnture this year was 74, compared with 72 of the preceding year; on Oct. lo. of both years, the mercury stood it 78 degrees; and since that date the warm weather is all in favor of 1920. Difference Is Small. Adding the temperatures recorded by Mr. Brown for 19 days in October, 1919, you will have 1319 degrees, and for 1920. you will have 1396 as a resul'. The difference, it is easily noted is not a great one. The average for 19 days in October. 1919, is 69 plus, and the average foi 1920 is 73 plus. From October 10 to 19, in 1920, the temperature has been warmer each day than In the corresponding period in 1919. Mr. Brown has compiled the following comparative daily temperatures for the month: 1919 Oct. 1 84 Oct. 2 86 Oct. 3..., 85 Oct. 4..T 81 Oct. 5 74 Oct. 6 66 Oct. 7 72 192C 52. 6:1 72 7 70 C2 60 72 74 .78 SO 78 20 SO SO 78 78 78 Oct. 8. Oct. 9. 72 72 Oct. 10 78 Oct. 11.... Oct. 12 Oct. 13 Oct. 14.... Oct. 15 Oct. 16 Oct. 17.... Oct. 18.... Oct. 19 62 60 60 62 68 68 61 62 66 Total .1319
PARTY
