Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 146, 20 June 1922 — Page 1

MOND TP ATX A TP AXD SCX-TELEGRAM VOL. XCII., No. 146 Vanadium. Est 1S31. Consolidated With Sun-Telegram, 1907. , RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY EVENING, JUNE 20, 1922. SINGLE COPY, 3 CENTS

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PRO-TREATY CANDIDATES AREVICTORS Returns from Irish Parliamentary Elections Show Advocates of Treaty Leading Other Factions.

DE VALERA IS WAITING

BULLETIN DUBLIN, June 20. The positions of the various narties In the Irish Dar-

liament elections, so far as reportS without and within.

TAKE PART IN PUBLIC AFFAIRS, GRADUATES ARE URGED BY WEEKS

(By Associated Press) LEXINGTON", Va., June 20. Secretary Weeks hailed as a "good sign," speaking here to the graduating class at the Virginia Military Institute, the increasing number of military schools in the country. The increase, be said, must be a great satisfaction to those believing in adequate military preparedness. "I do not mean preparation for war," the secretary continued. "An education at such a school does not create a passion for war. In fact, my experience lias been that those who know most about war are the ones most desirous of preventing it. We cannot be unmindful of the fact, however, that in order to survive a nation must possess a military force sufficient to defend it from the enemy

in returns received up to 5 o'clock, were: Coalition prot-treaty, 47; coalition Republicans, 26; labor, 10; independent, 12. BULLETIN DUBLIN, June 20. Forty-four coalition pro-treaty members and twentyflee coalition Republicans have been elected to the Irish parliament, from contested and uncontested constituencies, according to returns so far received. The returns show that 72,265 electors in the city of Dublin voted for , panel and Independent candidates fav-

orable to the treaty and 10,920 for the

"The federal government, especially

the war department, places great reliance on the results of the education and training at this institution. I believe that other things being equal, In addition to his capacity to serve his country in time of need, a man

who has received a military training

Is better equipped to meet the prob

(Continued on Page Twelve)

ATTACKS FORD SHOALS OFFER

AS MISLEADING

FLOOD COVERS 21,000 ACRES OF CROP LAND ALONG RIO GRANDE

(Bv Associated Press) SXN ANTONIO, Tex., June 20. Twenty-one thousand acres of Rio Grande valley land, with crops valued at J2.500.000 flooded In Hidalgo coun

ty, a fresh rise in the lower stretches

awer sireicnesiT 1 T5 '1

of the Rio Grande as a result of flood ; interest m latlOn-Wiae rail-

Representative Kearns, Ohio,

Save P J T T- J f waters which came down yesterday oays Propaganda Used to afternoon from the San Juan river m

Kniist Snnnnrt nf rarmprc. Mexico, while the cloudburst flood of ljuisi ouppori or rarmers, th6 upper riyer l3 nearlng Its crest at Labor tO Proposal. Laredo. 1 50 miles upstream, summarr j izes the border flood situation early

Meanwhile the fate of 18,000 inhab-

JOINT MIME, RAIL ACTION DP TONIGHT

(By Associated Press) DUBLIN, June 20. Officials engaged In counting the returns from Friday's parliamentary elections completed Dublin county today. Results thus far show that 0 protreaty members of the Sinn Fein panel, four Independents favoring the

treaty, six laborites and five antitreaty panel designates were success

ful. Of the 18 labor candidates, six have already been returned. Dublin city voted heavily against the treaty opponents. Before the election Its twelve seats in the Dail Elreann were held by seven treaty advocates

and five by antis. The results leave the seven treatyites, but transfer four

of the oppositions to Independent can

didates, all of whom favor the treaty

and one of whom is a laborite O'Kelly is Safe

The only adherent of Eamon DeValera to come through safely is Sean

O'Ceallaigh (John O'Kelly), former.'

Sinn Fein representative In Paris. The defeat of Mrs. Tom Clark and Countess Markievicz caused surprise. Joseph McGraw just managed to defeat his independent laborite opponent. Liem Mellowes, participant in th Easter week fighting, who escaped to America and later became the leader af the uncompromising republicans in the Dail Eireann. was defeated in a provincial district. Mellowes has been the moving spirit with Rory O'Connor In the dissentient section of the Irish republican army. His failure to secure re-election may leave him in a more powerful position outside the new parliament than he hjJd in the Dail Eireann. In Dublin county, Darrell Figgis head3 the poll by a big majority and Tom Johnson, the laborite, is also a certain winner. Feature of Election The feature of the parliamentary elections on the basis of results thus

far, is the preponderance of the vote in favor of those candidates who favor

the Anglo-Irish treaty. An analysis of the voting made possible by the proportional representation system shows a majority of seven to one in favor of the treaty in Dublin city 4 to 1, in Cork City and three to one in the Dublin university. The second preferences of the labor voters in Cork city were in proportion of more than 10 to 1 in favor of the treaty. The members definitely elected include 37 treaty advocates, 21 opposed to the treaty, five labor candidates and one independent. For these results and for the outcome of the army meeting in the Mansion House, Eamon DeValera is supposed to be waiting to decide what he shall put into hi'i promised statement. Rory O'Connor, leader of the dissentients is understood to have sent some sort of ultimatum to the Irish Republican army headquarter in Beggars Busli barracks notifying the staff that

ENJOIN MINE UNION

IN WEST VIRGINIA

FROM INTERFERENCE (By Associated Press) CHARLESTON, W. Va.. June 20. A temporary restraining order covering the whole of the Kanawha field not previously covered by Injunctions was issued Monay afternoon by Judge George M. McClintlc in the United States district court on behalf of the Anchor Coal company and 69 other defendants against the United Mine

Workers of America, district 17 of

that organization, all its local organization in the field and all the officials and union miners in the district, as well as any who would aid and abet the union men in trying to prevent open shop workmen from going into the mines. Samuel Palmer, representing the group of mine owners seeking the Injunction, said it covered the whole district which included the upper end of

the Kanawha and Michigan and all the Kanawha and Michigan mines, as well as big and little coal rivers not previ

ously covered by injuctions. all ot Cabin, Paint, Morris and Armstrong creeks, the main line of the Chesapeake and Ohio and mines at Mount Carbon and St. Albans, which ('istrict j employs about 7,000 miners. j A feature of the order is that two or more persons must not try to "persuade" a non-union miner from going to work. It was alleged that the mine owners that each had men return to work but that they were kept out of employment by threats and intimidations by union men. Mr. Palmer said 149 defendants were named in the application but the order covers all of them and then any others not mentioned. Arguments on

the preliminary injunction will be

heard June 29, before Judge Mc-Clintic.

(By Associated Press) WASHINGTON June 20. Henry Ford's offer to purchase and lease the government's power and nitrate projects at Muscle Shoals, Ala., was attacked early today in a report to the house, prepared by Representative Kearns. Republican, Ohio, and signed by several other Republican members of the house military committee. The report declared dissatisfaction with opinions already presented to the house by other members of the committee and announced that the signers were determined to tell "the people" the "real facts about Muscle

Shoals and the so-called Ford offer."

- Representative Kearns said Repre

sentatives Parker and Frothineham

signed the report, although they previously had indorsed another minority

opinion

mitteemen would sign later, making a total of eight representatives" signa-i tures on the report. Declaring the belief that "the country little understands what it is that Mr. Ford is offering to do. or what, if anything, he is offering for the great plant," the signatories first de

nounce what the:' describe as "one of the most insidious propagandas that the nation has witnessed for many a day." Many of the Ford advocates, the report says, are honest and conscientious, but have been misled as to facts of the offtr. In this connection it points to the provision by which fer

tilizers would be manufactured and says that despite "persistent reports! that he will compel the fertilizer' manufacturers of the country to sell; their product at one-half of what thev ;

are now selling it." Mr. Ford "does

not agree to make fertilizers at all unless he can make them with a profit to himself." Says Promise Hollow The committeemen declare "this is

itants of Piedras Negras. Mex.. across the river from Eagle Pass, isolated since railroad and highway bridges were swept out Sunday night, is causing, grave concern. The city is sur-

road Strike Centers in Meeting of Union Chiefs, at Cincinnati.

WALKOUT IS PREDICTED CINCINNATI, Ohio. June 20. Interest here today in the nation wide rail

funded by water and 5Te food supply j s-k centered the con" Is thought to be short. Terence ' tonight between officials of The flood stage at Laredo this ; the miners and railroad shop crafts morning was 27 feet and rising. Late j unIonSi when plans for concerted iSJpJSS el ZltV: -tion between these organizaand that border village was threat-. ns will b discussed.

ened with inundation. Apparently the B. M. Jewell, head of the railway

flood is traveling at the rate of 1 employes department and John L. 1 Tl - .uk.VIn 'wit ill '

miles an hour. Jts crest probably will i T

not reach the swollen stretches or tho lower Rio Grande before late Wednesday. Highly Developed Section. That section situated in Starr Hidalgo and Cameron counties contains nearly 20 prosperous towns and is a highly developed agricultural region settled largely by farmers from the middlo western states. The total population exceeds 100,000. Warning has been sent to the distiict by the local weather observer,

He expected two other coin-! spying the flood crest coming from

tho northwest is lx feet nigner man the record mark in 33 years. Breakage of a drainage ditch dam near Mission in Hidalgo yesterday followed a desperate effort by 3,000 men who started to work yesterday at daylight. A resultant flood caused damage estimated at $200,000. From the Mexican side of the river is a report that the towns of Sabinas and Allende on the Sabinas river, were practically destroyed. The Sabinas is a tributary of the Rio Grande.

N. Y. CENTRAL RAIL WORKERS ARE MAILED STRIKE VOTE BALLOTS

(By Associated Press) CLEVELAND, Ohio, June 20 Strike ballots are 'being mailed to all members of the Brotherhood of Railway and Steamship Clerk3, Freight Tn-rnress and Station em-

a hollow promise made to enlist thelploye"g on the New York Central railsupport of the farmer and not founded j roa(j according to an announcement on any fact, either contained in the I today by Frank W. Grosser, general

contract, or exisiung outsiae me contract," and challenge propagandists to tell the people that "the principle of Mr. Ford should be to get this plant

RAIL LABOR BOARD PREPARES REPLY TO WARNING OF STRIKE

CHICAGO. June 20. A formal reply to the communication of ten railway mions who informed the United States railroad labor board that a railroad strike would be authorized of the present referendum recommended a suspension of work, is being prepared by the board, it was learned today. The reply to the union chiefs wil! not be forwarded for several days, it was said. Meanwhile union headquarters were speeding up the strike vote in an effort to have it complete and tabulated by next Saturday wh?n the committee

i of ninety, renresentiner the rail unions.

ho is compelled to terminate the nego- j meets here to canvass the returns, tiations for unification of the army, I Fifty thousand ballots cast bv shop which have been in progress and that i f.raf, eranloves have been almost sol-

he will resume complete liberty of action. Many rumors are current in connection with O'Connor's step including gossip of an impending split in the army. Meanwhile the truce between the factions headed by Michael Collins and DeValera seems universally regarded as dead, although it is still nominally in existence.

SHOTS FIRED NEAR CRAIG'S RESIDENCE

BELFAST. June 20. Shot3 were fired parlv todav in the vicinity of

Stormont Castle, which was purchased by the Ulster government as the official residence of Sir James Craig, the premier, who, with his wife, took up his residence there for the first time last evening. Officials were reticent regarding the firing, but the belief was expressed in other quarters that an attack on the castle was contemplated, but was frustrated by the police guards.

BELFAST, June 20. The murder campaign continues in South Armagh. The body of a man, aged about 30, was found this ncrning on the bridge near Coraghwood. where the Great Northern railroad branches to Newry A religious emblem on the body indicated he was a Catholic.

DENBY AND NAVY PARTY

SAIL FROM HONOLULU HONOLULU, June 20. The United States transport Henderson, carrying Secretary Denby and members of the Annapolis class of 1881 to the class reunion in Tokio. sailed yesterday for Japan.

idly for a strike, according to John Scott, secretary of the railway employes department of the American Federation of Labor. Just where tho railway employes expect to go with their grievance against wage reductions due July 1, is a puzzle, according to H. E. Byram, president of the Chicago. Milwaukee & St. Paul railway. "The only appeal is to the public, and we felt in turning the case of readjusted compensation over to tho "abor board, we were submitting It to the public," he said. "In all previous controversies that is, in the past, before the labor board was created, the disputes were between the railroad managements; and the employes, and

when they could not agree there was

also some further action or other place of appeal to outside arbitrators, but now the labor board is the end and there is no place to go with rn appeal, as the board was created by congress to represent the public, and no appeal to rnybody is provided lor in that law. The board's findings are based upon I-resent conditions and therefore are not subject to immediate revision, which would be necessary to meet the demands of the organization leaders.

would be the manufacturing of other articles which he would be allowed to sell at any price that he might see fit." "The only thing that is kept before the public," the report continues, "is that he is to make fertilizer and sell it cheaply to the farmer, only charging for himself a profit of 8 per cent on the. production. No one has ever suggested how he could make fertilizers and sell them cheaply, or what means he would employ. The bold claim is made, and congress and the country mutt take the statement as absolute truth or be forever condemned by this crowd of wicked propagandists."

Propagandists also have attracted the unemployed, the report says, adding that they "do not only try to thus bribe the sympathy for the farmer, but try thus to elicit the attention of the unemployed by painting a rosy picture of the great activity that is to be started overnight at Muscle Shoals, where they promise a million men will be given employment." After explaining their attitude in opposition to the Ford offer, the committeemen declare they are not "believers in fables," nor do they think "that Mr. Ford is tho reincarnation of Alladin plus his lamp."

The properties for which Mr. Ford offers the government $5,000.00, the report says already have cost the government $85,487,900. It declares the amount offered "seems wholly inadequate when it is remembered that Mr. Ford could immediately dispose of tha Gorgas plant to the Alabama power company for $2,500,000," and thereby obtain the "Waco quarry, nitrate plants No. 1 and No. 2, with all their innumerable railroad engines and steam freight cars, steam shovels, concrete mixers and other surplus property that could be readily sold lor several additional millions."

Lewis, president of the United Mine

Workers, at a conference yesterday

discussed the agenda of tonight s

meeting and mapped out a plan of action to propose to the officials of

he two uniens. None of the "Big Four," or transpartation brotherhoods was expected to join in the meeting. Members of these organizations are not affected by the decision of the railroad labor board cutting wages and altering working conditions. However, they are members cf the rail-miners' alliance, having signed the agreement at Chicago last February. Only One Way Out. In a statement William H. Johnston, president of the machinists declared the only possible move that could prevent a walkout of approximately 1,000,000 railroad workers, July 1, was for the government to order the labor board to suspend its order reducing wages and permitting the farming out of shop work by railroads. "We are determined to strike if the men authorize one" declared Mr.

Johnston. "Of the vote so far cast and received at headquarters only a very small percent is against a strike. I have never seen such a determined sentiment among the men for a strike." The first move toward a walkout of

the clerks was the authorization of a strike vote being taken on the New York Central system. Approximately 14,000 men will be affected It was learned at the clerks headquarters here. Thomas Healy, president of the Stationary Firemen and Oilers, said the strike vote of his organization is returnable July 15, at Omaha. Men Are Thinking D. H. Helt. president of the Signal, announced no actionv had been taken

RETURNS INDICATE KELLOGG IS VICTOR; MRS. OLESEN STRONG (By Associated Press ST. PAUL, Minn., June 20. With, the outcome of the major Republican contests apparently determined, interest in the Minnesota primary turned today to the race, Mrs. Anna Dickie Olesen made for the Democratic senatorial nomination. Reports available early today showed her in a nip-and-tuck contest with

Thomas J. Meighen, one of her two opponents and it became evident that the outcome would be in doubt until many more precincts bad reported. Renomination of Senator Frank B. Kellogg and J. A. O. Preus and other Republican state officers with the possible of clerk of the supreme court, was indicated in reports from 200 representative precincts and their success was claimed by the St. Paul Pioneer Press, which has supported their candidacy. Awa't Reports Neither Mrs. Oleson nor Mr. Meighen was prepared to make a statement, as they preferred to await compilation of more reports. First reports gave Mrs. Olsen a marked advantage and for some time she held a lead, only to lose it as the Ramsey

county (St. Paul vote began to come In. Then first she and then Meighen would take first place.

It is the first time in the history pf

the state local politicians say it is

the first time in the history of the country that a woman has sought the senaVrial nomination of a major political party, and in Mr3. Olesen's case she had the endorsement of the Democratic convention. In the Republican senatorial race, Ernest Lundeen, of Minneapolis, former congressman, gave Senator Kellogg the closest race, although reports from the first 200 precincts showed Kellogg leading two to one. The same ratio was maintained by Governor Preus, whose opponent was Franklin F. Ellsworth.

0. S. BUILDINGS FIRED UPON IN CANTONSCRAP Ambassador Schurman Asks Protection Rushed: Gunboats Are Expected to Proceed There at Once.

organizer of the union. by the general committees of his

The referendum will be taicen ne union as the official decision of the said in protest against a wage reduc- labor board was not received until

tion for clerks of three and four cents j Saturday. A strike vote1 among the

an hour, ordered Dy tne ranroaa iiDir j signalmen rests with the general corn-

board last Friday and against the

private contracting by the New York Central of certain classes of freight house and station labor. Under the board's ruling the wages of the Clerks

will average 58.5 cents an hour effective July 1. The ballots are being sent out by the sj tern's board f adjustment officers here. They are returnable prior to July 1. Approximately 10,000 men will be affected said Mr. Grosser. Authorization for the. referendum was received yesterday. According to officials of the union on the New York Central system authorization has been

requested several days ago. Inasmuch as agreements had been signed with several railroads, E. H.

Fitzgerald, president of the Brother-

hood said in Cincinnati last night that no general strike referendum would be taken.

mittees on the various roads, he said, and it will take several days to determine the sentiment of the men re-

j garding a walkout. "My men are

thinking," he said. Edward H. Fitzgerald, president of the clerks, issued a statement last night declaring that if his men favor a strike, officials of the union will give their sanction.

HALE WINS IN MAINE

ATTEMPT TO PLACE

BONUS BILL BEFORE SENATE IS FAILURE

(By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, June 20. An effort to get the soldier bonus bill before the senate today failed, the senate adopting 50 to 22 a motion by Senator Watson of Indiana to lay on the table a

motion by Senator Welsh, Democrat, of Massachusetts, to displace the tariff bill with the bonus. WASHINGTON. June 20. Passage by the senate of the naval appropriation bill had cleared the way today for a final decision on the program of procedure with regard to the tariff and soldiers' bonus bills, with Republican leaders confident that the compromise plan of the majority side to give priority to the tariff measure would be adopted. The purpose of several senators on both the Republican and Democratic sides, however, to move that the bonus be taken up immediately made certain an open fight in the senate today when the majority seek to resume debate on the tariff bill which was laid aside last week for the naval bill. Adoption of the program accepted at a conference of majority senators yes

terday would mean that senate action

on tho rionna nrnhahlv would not come ,

before September, and some senators; "

AMERICANS IN DANGER (By Associated Press) PEKING, June 20. Three Aniirican buildings "in Canton were struck by shells during Sunday's bombardment of the city by the gunboats of Sun Yat-Sen, the South China leader who has been trying in vain to recapture his stronghold. Jacob Gould Schurman, the American minister, has asked Rear Admiral Strauss to rush protection to Canton and American gunboats are expected to proceed there. Word that Americans in Canton were endangered was received at the legation here today In a message from American consul at Canton. The ex

tent of the damage to American property was not stated. The consul has protested to Sun Yat-Sen against indiscriminate along the Bund, the macadamized way on the water front. PEKING, June 20. No day since 1918 has dawned with fairer prospects of peace and prosperity for China than this one. For the first time since that year she has a government with some color of constitutionality in power at Peking; Dr. Sun Yat Sen the chief political opponent of the Peking regime is stripped of most of his power, and the chief of the turbulent Tuchuns or military provincial governors has

been reduced to inactivity so far as arms are concerned. Moreover Manchuria which a day or two ago was proclaiming Beml-lndependence. ba signified its willingness to adhere to the unification movement. LI Yuan-Hung, formerly president, by grace of his succession to the office from the vice presidency on the death of Yuan Ehih-Kal and now again in office by the request of Wu Pei-Fu and other central China leaders that he exercise the constitutional authority remaining In him despite his ousting in 1917, appeared today in a

new light that of astute political craftsman. Li Arranged Overthrow. When Wu and his supporters were" Importuning Li to return to Pekinar and resume the presidency, Li demurred on the ground that he must be president of. a united China, or none, that meant in simple terms, that Dr. Sun Yat Sen must abandon his presidency of the Canton government which involved by inference the fall of that government. Sun was obdurate, but Li did take office. Now comes the disclosure that before he left the retirement of private life, Li had arranged with Chen Chiune- Min, eastwhile important leader of Sun's troops to overthrow the Canton president and seize his capital. Both events have become facts, but only now has It been learned generally that LI had a hand in arranging them. Sun is still aboard the gunboat at Whampoa which he boarded last Fri-

rinv when Chen's coup attained suc-

VOTE RAIL DIVIDEND ST. PAUL, June 20. Directors of the Great Northern Railway here today voted a semi-annual dividend of 3 per cent payable August 1 to stockholders of record June 30. Approximately 44,000 stockholders will benefit.

Weather Forecast

Reduction of Second Class Postal Rates Possible (TSy Associated Press) WASHINGTON, June 20. The administration is considering the matter of decreasing second class postal

rates, it wa3 said today at the White House. Considerable discussion was given the subject at today's meeting and President Harding and Postmaster General Work are inclined to believe that at least part of the increase in the second-class rates made during the war should now be removed.

FOR RICHMOND AND VICINITY By W. E. Moore. Partly cloudy, moderate temperatures tonight and Wednesday. Under the influence of a storm center over the southern states the weather will be somewhat unsettled but fair at intervals tonight and Wednesday. Temperatures Yesterday. Maximum 79 Minimum 54 Today. Noon 79 Weather conditions Continued dry and fair over the most of the central states while showers have been quite general from the Ohio river southward to the Gulf of Mexico and also along the Atlantic coast from Florida to Maine. Local rains over the middlewest and northwest, Boston, Mass., re

porting 3.14 inches in 24 hours with rain still falling at observation time. Cool over the lake region and St. Lawrence valley. Intense heat in the far west and southwest Fresno, Calif., reporting 100 and Phoenix, Ariz., 114 in the shade. The coolest nlaces re-

ness was issued Tuesday by Judge W;. p0rting temperatures in the United A. Bond. The injunction was issued states and Canada are Calgary and at the request of Skiles Bricker, pro- Edmonson, Alberta, with 40 and the

VIOLA ZIMMERMAN RESTRAINED FROM HINDERING GARAGE

An Injunction and restraining order forbidding Viola Zimmerman, widow of Dr. W. W. Zimmerman, from interfering with the business of the Bricker garage by locking doors leading to the washstand of that place of busi-

PERSONAL CAMPAIGN

(By Associated Press) PORTLAND, Me.. June 20. Senator Frederick Hale, Republican, without making a personal campaign, won an easy victory in the state primaries yesterday. The vote cast for him was larger than the total for his two opponents, former Congressman Frenk E. Guernsey and former State Senator Howard Davies, and his plurality over Guernsey was nearly 20,000. Davies ran a poor third. Governor Percival P. Baxter, Republican, was renominated by a plurality of 23,000 over John P. Deering, with Leon F. Higgins trailing. The vote of 513 election precinct3 out of 635 in the state, representing 401 out of 520 cities and towns, was: For senator Davies. 7,230; Guernsey. 16,699; Hale, 36,196. Governor Baxter. 40,532; Deering,

14,916; Higgins, 10,739. The total reistered vote of the missing precincts, mostly very small towns, was too small to affect the result. Last Two Counties. Senator Hale carried all but two counties and all but three of the cities. Guernsey carried his home county, Piscataquis and the adjoining Pensbacot county and the cities of Bangor, Brewer and Lewiston. Congressmen Beedy, White, Nelson and Hersey, all Republicans were renominated without opposition. On the Democratic ticket there were only minor contests. The Democrats nominated for senator former Governor Oakley C. Curtis, for governor former state attorney general William R. Pattangall and for congress Louis A.

Donahue, Bertrand G. Mclntire, Leon O. Tebbetts and James W. Sewall.

In a statement today Senator Hale

favorable to the bonus fear a filibuster

if action is delayed until disposal of the tariff measure which it i3 estimated could not be brought to a vote before Aug. 1, at the earlest. The majority program upon which a decision was faced today provides that the bonus bill shall be made the unfinished business of the senate after disposal of the tariff and that both shall be brought to a final vote before adjustment or any recess.

ONLY SENATE NAVAL FUND INCREASE LEFT FOR FINAL ADJUSTING

prietor of the garage.

The Bricker garage is located next door to the Zimmerman residence on North Seventh ptreet. It was ownd by the late Dr. Zimmerman and had been rented to Bricker under contract. One wing of the garage extends at right angles to "the rest of the structure back ' of the Zimmerman residence and opening on North A street. In this wing, is locatd the wash rack where cars are cleaned. The complaint alleges that on June 18 "in a fit of madness, without cause or necessity, Mrs. Zimmerman wrongfully and illegally nailed and fastened the doors leading into this wing." thus depriving the garage of the wash rack and a considerable part of its income.

Yellowstone National

with 46.

Park, Wyo.,

For Indiana, by the United States Weather Bureau Generally fair tonight and Wednesday except showers in the extreme southern portion tonight; not much change in temperature.

Paid Circulation Yesterday, was 11,901

(By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, June 20. Acceptance by the senate in passing the naval appropriation bill of the house enlisted personnel figure of 86,000 men left only the senate increases

amounting to about $44,000,000 to be adjusted by the conferees of the two houses. As put through the senate late yesterday without a record vote the measure carries a total appropriation of $29ft50,000. The final day's debate on the bill was marked by unsuccessful efforts to end American occupation of Haiti, the Domican republic and Nicaragua, and to launch a congressional investigation of navy administration. The policy of American intervention in the island republics was both attacked and defended in a lengthy debate which preceded rejection by a vote of 42 to 9 of an amendment to the bill by Senator King, Democrat, Utah, providing for withdrawal of American marines there. Both parties were divided on the controversy and the vote in favor of the withdrawal includes

five Republicans and four Democrats

wu's defeat of Chang Tso-Lin in the

north and the resultant armistice and withdrawal of Chang's forces toward Mukden his headquarters leave Wu free to move trops south, and this h is doing. . Already the dispatches tell of the arrival of his battalions, from the north, in the area tributary to Canton, where the fighting must be if an armed effort is attempted by any. of Sun's forces. "- HONOLULU, T. H., June 20. A cablegram from Hon Kong to the Liberty News, a Japanese language weekly paper here, says Dr. Sun Yat Sea is preparing to launch an attack with 30,000 troops against Canton in an effort to regain possession of the city from Gen. Chan Chiung-Ming, wha

, drove him out last week.

LONDON, June 20. A Shanghai dispatch to the Morning Post says it Is rumored that Sun Yat Sen, former head of the southern Chinese government. Is on his way to Shanghai on a. warship. He Is said to be accom-r panied by Wu Ting Fan, who was his foreign minister.

Discupsine his resolution nronosine

expressed pleasure with the vote of! an investigation of naval administra-

confidence given him and added: "The contest has been so conducted by all of the contestants as to leave no sore spot and the Republicans of Maine will be united in September. With Governor Baxter as our standard bearer I believe that we shall win a notable victory.

Denies Porto Rican Governor Is to Qnit (By Associated Press)

WASHINGTON. June 20. A definite denial that Governor E. Mount Ri

ley, of Porto Rico, had resigned or had given any evidence of intending to resign was trade at the White House by a high official.

tion and a survey with a view to

abolishing useless navy yards and stations which was referred to the

naval committee. Senator McCormick. Republican, Illinois, declared there was a navy "pork barrel" and that one-third of its establishments were unnecessary.

STEAMERS COLLIDE , (By Associated Press) PHILADELPHIA. June 20. The

steamer, Thomas F. Beal, from Pacific Coast ports via Baltimore, collided with the Norwegian steamcT Victo off Cramp's shipyard today. The Victo was reported considerably damaged while the Beal escaped with slight

damage to her stem. The Victo was at

j anchor.

MOSCOW IS NOTIFIED COMMISSION READY

(By Associatd P-essl THE HAGUE, June 20. The conference of experts rested today while notification went forward to Moscow of the formation of the sub-commissions which will negotiate with the soviet delegation in regard to Russian affairs. Tho president of the main commissions and the chairmen of the three sub-commissions will be elected tomorrow. These four heads will form a sort of central committee to insure unity of action. ' . France's decision to participate la the conference is explained as contingent solely on the condition that

the meeting "is merely a reunion of experts ad referendum" In other words that all decisions shall take the form of mere suggestions to their home governments and that all polit-. ical questions be prohibited. France also reserved th right to withdraw her delegates at any time it the attitude of the soviet represent-' tives appears to render it necessary.

ADMIRAL BEAUMONT DIES (By Associated Prss LONDON, June 20. Admiral . Sir Louis Beaumont, 75 years old, retired, former first Lord of the admiralty ana high commissioner to Egypt, died &. his home in Hurstpierpoint - Sussex last nieht. '