South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 292, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 19 October 1921 — Page 1

NEWS IME Tin: wr.ATin.iL Indiana Partly rl'.l;. W d r.e ! iy, ur.stt!rl In north j ort!'-:;-. Thür.- 1 iy fib and ceoler. Power Mlchicm Cl ; Iy W. ! r.e I iy an 1 Thursday, probably I . t! rait-.: r. l-lr. Morning Edition VOL. XXXVIII. NO. 292 SOUTH BEND, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19. 1921 PRICE THREE CENTS m4 tm m) 1m

SOUTH

BEND

-.LA ...

hi n

-LL JivLJllfA IL 1.

VLU JjIViaVILa ILA 3

0

Q

EFFORTS TO STOP STRIKE

HOLD ATTENTION OF NATION!'

Threatened Walkout is First Test of Practicability of Labor Board.

WASHINGTON, Oct. IS. The threatened railroad rtrike- recognized in high official circles Tuesday an having developed Into the firit real test r,t tho practicability of the railroad labor board. "The outrom of the negotiations now in tirogre??." it was declared, "will determine whether an entirely futile Dgency ha.i been created." Prominent in tho defense put forwar I by labor leaders in every controversy In tho past, it was pointed out. was the plea that there was no b-jrally ror.fltitutcd body before whleh they could lay their grievance or to whose Impartial Judgment thy could submit petitions for relief. With tho labor board expressly created to fill this gap, assurance was given today that it would bo perfitted to have a free hand In it effort.5 to meet the Initial test provided by the disagreement of the toads and their employes ov r wage schedules ,'inr. working conditions. With practically every active effort taoward averting the walkout, reduled to begin Oct. 30, cente-r-d in ho-ago the Koverrment today bad coinpl'td its defensiv- plans and was watching developments. The cabinet Rave only "passive" attention to the sehedub' at its regular meeting and there wan no official ntatement on any phane of tho .strike forthcoming from any branch of the government. While authoritative information Mill wa.i lacking a to tho basis upon which tho labor board was progreslng impression was given tiiat it Involved sumo features, at least, of the suggestion put forward by the public members of the board unday as "one feasible plan" for r rcvnting tho tie up. The probability of official .sanction being frit r n to the proposal that rthe uly wage reduction be offset im-

mPiiintoh' hv nrnnnrtionntP freight I rate decrease. was discussed in high j official circle.". In case thi was I ;,1f.i,Tp(l n tho srovernment's com-I promise j.lan, the test of the railr ad board's authority would arie iainediate'.V. it was pointed out, in the question of its acceptance by either r loth of the parties to the controversy. It was indicated that the entire pupport of the government would b l r II III". lit Udl I'IMI II 111 II M V 111)11--to reach a settlement of the controversy and that other government agencies would be instructed to cool era to actlvelj'. iiorsn in cpkoai:. tNngTV!s-mc!i Hurl ITpitliets at Ilaeh Other. Hut Io Not Tight. WASHINGTON. Oct. IS. The boii.e was thrown into an uproar Tuesday during heated debute on the rnilroud situation when Ilepresvr.tatlvo Ilurke, republican, Pennsylvania, ttv. ex-railroad man. called Itepresentafivo Itlanton, democrat, Texas, who hud Just concluded a bitter attack on the railroad brotherhoods, "a damned liar." .Mr. Hurko charged t!;at Mr. Plantort during l;: remarks had made faNe :atemrts. T!io T.'x.t num1r leaped to hi feet and deriving he hat! stated a falsehood, shouted: "You're a liar." This brought the letort: : "You're a d.imned liar," from Mr. Purke. The two representatives moved tov. nrd each other as other member rushed up to restrain them. Purir.g thn confusion Mr. Purk shouted at Mr. Planten: ' You're, a dirty do,r." Poth reresr n:ati -s later as-ked t. liave their remark x punned from the rc.-ord ar.J oraler was re- ' ort d. BRYAN TO ATTEND ARMS CONFERENCE His Report of World Efforts! Toward Peace Will Appear ! in News-Time Ni:V YOPK. Oct. lv William .Tennings Pry .an will attend th li'nitati n of arms tonfermo at Wr.shInyton as a reporter for the United Pn.. Arrangements have been concluded with Pryan who is now at Richmond. Va.. insuring his daily attendance upon the conference for the first two weeks of the meeting, lairing this period he will writo exclusively for the United Pns a daily Fignd dispatch analyzing and interpolating the developments of the orifert-iioe for United Tress newspapers. Pryan expects to arrive at Washington November J, and his bspatches will r.ppcar regularly ro'.n th ;. or.. As r goti.lted f rlatr Hran Tiefatnous "Prvan tratwhi. h iT..vi I. ,i for Internnt!' rial arl'itratii n with l natlor.s. STICK! Until the last hope is gone, and then stick because you don't know how to quit. Read today's SUCCESSPOWER in the cl assified section.

Scene of Action Shifts to Cleveland for Conference Tomorrow Afternoon.

CLEVELAND, O.. Oct., 18.- Tho scene of action in the threatened nation Wido progressiv railroad etrlke to begin Oct. 30. shifted back to Chicago Tuesday with the announcement that three local members of the "b!g five" railroad brotherhoods had accepted a request from, the railroad- laoor- board that tho flvo chief executives confer with the board in Chicago Thursday afternoon. The telegrams requesting the conference wore sent to Warren S. Stone, president of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers; W. O. Leo, president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, and W. S. Carter, president of the Brotherhood of Firemen and Englnemen, all with headquarters in this city. After a telephone conference, Mr. Stone announced tonight that the three chief executives had accepted the invitation .and would leave for Chicago Wednesday night. Similar request.", Mr. Stone said, were sent to L. 17. Sheppard, president of the Order of Hallway Conductors, and T. C. Cassen. president of the .Switchmen's union of North America, with headquarters in CedaivPapids, Iowa and Buffalo, respectively. Mr. Stone and Pres't Cassen would accompany the three local executives to Chicago, where they will be met by Mr. Sheppard. The local executives had but little comment to make on the request for the conference with the labor board, announcing that the purport of the meeting was not specified. Referring to the call for the Chicago conference, Pres't Ioe said: "Of course I will attend the conference. I will attend any conference at any time or place that holds out the possibility of an open door to fettle this matter. I have in mind the homes o( the 150,000 men in my organization and I realize what this means t '.hem. "I will do my utmost at all times to reach an amlcab.o settlement. -MAY VSIZ TBOOPS. SAN" ANTONIO, Tex., Oct. IS. Ordors for a canvass of all military commands in the eighth army con)' area comprising five state., for soldiers experienced In the operation of railway trains and the maintenance of ways, have been issued at Area headquarter, I"ort Sam Houston, it was learned Tuesday. COUGHS HARD; BREAKS BONE coia:mpu Oct. is. w. i:. Varley. a C'(lumbu busines man, is Mifft ring today frrm a broken breast bone caused, according to a physician. from violent coughing, accident occurred yesterday. The ALL WRANGEL WEALTH LOST IN SHIPWRECK CONSTANTINOPLE. Oct. 18. fJeneral Paron Wran gel's entire personal fortune; his wife's Jewels valued at 1 0.000 francs and important documents of the Crimean government were lost on Saturday when th yacht Iucullus on which the head of the anti-bolshcvik in Jlussia was a passenger was sunk by the Pritih steamer Adria. Investigation ha proved the accident was due to a swift current, and tho inability of a pilot to control the Adria. UNITY COUNCIL PLANS TO FOSTER FRIENDSHIP CHICAGO. Oct. IS The National Unity Council, formed to combat the Klue Klux Klan, has abandoned it plans for a national organization, according to a letter sent out Tuesday by former Gov. Kdward Punne. one of tho body's, bankers. Instead, the council will submit a plan for a general committee to foster kindlier feelings between all class s of Americans and the elimination of racial and religious animosities. siikim: CL.UU inui:cvroits. INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. IS. Th" Poansort shrine club f.led articles ef incorporation today with Sec'y of State Jaekson. naming Ciiarb Mes se:-.a. 'hris Pivincston. P-Jj.tmin Pennington. Frank S. Cleveland and (. oma K. Pavis. as directors. Foreign-Born Miner Damages for Being INDIANAPOLIS oet. IS. Suit? asking JCÖ.00O as damage from 19 j residents of Francisco, Gibson coun- i ry, was filed today in federal court hero by Pete Kreohak. one of the freignrs who fled front the Gihson county Meld during the disorders of Inst Juno. Krechak Is At id to liv in Yinrenr.es, and his uit was f.led by Curtis G. Shake and Josei h W. Kimmell. Vincennes lawyers. Threat. of the defendants, who in- ! clu do merchants and other., arc al leged Py Krechak to liave caused him and his family to abandon their pesor.s at Francisco, where he was employed by tile Ayrsnire district collieries company at $7.50 a day. Tir defendants to the suit im !uIe H. H. Harnes, a Paptist minister I who recently iaoed from Franci.:o 1

Busy on Rail

Tt

::: :z -4 ji' v -" i.. -'v- ';t':: :.V' .Afc.'i: -,.j 't ' A' : : I7 - 3 ? . ?U v i V - . b - - . . I .. .:. it s v A:, v., i

f

With i nation-wide rail strike threatened, President Harding is holding dally conferences with government ofllcials dealing with transportation. Here he is shown leaving the offices of the Interstate Commerce Commission after a conference.

FOGH'S BUSINESS IN WASHINGTON TO BE GENERAL French Marshal Will Be Advisor to European Powers on Militarv Matters. PARIS, Oct. 1. Mtr.-hil l'och's relation to tho conference on limij tations of armaments in Washington will be that of president of the In-ter-allied Military commission which is the successor of the inter-allied military council. This commission still maintain a ntal'f and offices at Versailles and is invariably consulted by the supreme allied council when military question come before its occasional meetings. . The Marshal thus will be. in theory and fact, military advisor to all the Kuropean allied ta,k;nt; part in the conference, these nation. being

France, Great I'-ritain. Italy and Pel-I Pegion, No. 5o. through Adjt. Gen. glum. He will alo. by a loose con-J Smith. The South Pend hero imstruction, still be advisor for the j mediatelv accepted.. American forces in Germany, be-1 Arch is now living at 121 S. Wal-

cause they are a part of of occupation under the the army Versailles treaty. The inter-allied commission, however, has never been consulted by Major General II. T. Allen, who represents both the Kate and war "departments of the United States government in tho Phineland. While in Was-hingten Marshal Koch will be ready to give information and suggestions, if they are desired by the conference. The French foreign office has sent a eiispatch te. the embassy in Wash ington lor transmission to the ttate department, dealing precisely this point and saying that tiie Chi of staff of the Fren t 'lluV:. military advisor to tl gat ion. wo.mi.n .Min nr.sci i:i. MIPDPKTOWN. N. V.. Oct. IS. Nearly 200 women patient, some of them bed-ridden, were resc-;jl early Tr.es. lay when tire swept Ta'.cott Hall the main building of the state home hosp! Los-' was estimated at i ' iiiin. Asks $50,000 Driven from Home to Corvdon. Kv.: W. F. Chanel and W. Samuel MeConnell. merchants: George A. Norton, paymaster: A. J. Schuh, owner of a brick yard; Or a T. Powney, a mere liant : Corli.s P. Maxim, a sehocd teacher; Joshua Stapleton, town marshal, and J rry Schalter, chairman of the town board. Ten others, alleged by the suit to have been in the crowd that drove Krechak frem his home, also are

detendants. as follows: I lyd L a nil!, , graph ec. by the motion picture men Dei!? Steele. Pari Hinkle. Frank Po- and then the Z 0 overburdened male lln, Hubert S. Kelley, James Harbi- ' mom her.? of the suad went through n. Charles L. Kelley, Jt s. M. Smith calisthenics while the women quakand Raymond A. Council. After a ed with laughter.

j public meeting in which the defendi ants nre alleged to hate partieipated, wmo of the m made demand on Kxechak's employe for discharge of the foreigners, it is alleged.

Crisis "5 :--. V. r,. . :- ARCH IS- INVITED TO WASHINGTON BY HÖ0SIER HEAD World Famed South Bend Sob dier Will Attend Armistice Day Celebration. Purther honors were heaped upon Alex Arch of South Pend, the first American to lire on the German horde after war was declared in 1817, last night when he was named by Gov. Warren T. MoCray as an Indiana delegate to the Armistice Pay celebration in Washington. Arch, who served in the regular army, will be one of three state representatives in attendance at tho ceremonies in the national capital on Nov. 11. Notification of his appointment was received by Col. George Freyemuth of South Pend post, American nut st. He was born in AustriaHungary 22 years ago and came to this country in 1903. He enlisted in the regular army in 1013 and was serving with the Sixth Field artillery when sent to France early in 1 1 1 7. It was while stationed in the; Poungeville hector that Arch gained world-wide fame as the solelier to fire the first shot after America's entrance into the great conflict. New York Faces Weighty Problem In Heavy weigh ts N'JW Y'OItK, Oct. IS. The city of New York tackled a weighty problem Tuesday. It mobilized ÖÜ fa: men and GO fat women in h reducing squad, which hopes to lose r.,'0o po unel or more by the middle of November, when Health Commissioner Copeland will present the houvyweights at the health exposition as an example of what stout persons car. do in the way of becoming more becoming. Everybody was told to start right in at breakfast Wednesday morning. Then the plump women are to get into bloomers and middy blouses for the first daily workout in the gymnasium at Madison Square Garden. Pathir-g suits are Kirred. Dr. Copeland counted excess china Tuesday while his assoclate-n ran tape measure around adipoe ankles. One man only five feel six, punished the scaler with nearly 200 pounds itr.d a woman four lnche shorter r:ghed when the balaneo quivered at the 274 pound mark. Tons and tons of f.esh were photoj JUPPTS KltONPI'IK; PUIS. j STOCKHOLM, Oct. IS. Julius l Kronberg, widely known artist, died her yesterday.

Strike

MANY PAPERS'

mßUPrrilQT T' DLKbUULLj CASE STOLEN Thieves Enter Office of Rep. Johnson, of Investigating Committee. STRONG BOX IS TAKEN No Clue Has Been Obtained to Persons Responsible for Robb er v. WASHINGTON, Oct. IS. -Nearly a thousand copies of a house committee report on the escape of Grover Cleveland Pergdoll, the draft dodger, and a big wooden box containing certain Bergdoll documents together with many private letters and papers were stolen Monday night from the office of Rep. Johnson, democrat, Kentucky. Tho theft of the reports, written by sMr. Johnson and printed at his own expense was not discovered until late Tuesday. Entering the window of the office on the main floor of the house officii building and adjacent to the post-j office, the thieves made no attempt j 1 to steal articles of pecuniary value J and the room was not ransacked. Tho box, bigger than a steamer trunk, was only partially filled with papers and by shaking It around, Mr. Johnson said, the thieves easily could have learned that it contained nothing as heavy as a bottle of whiskey, a product which it was said, robbers lately have sought in the building. It was dragged through the door, the marks being plainnly visible, but capittol police, some of them assigned to duty only a short distance away eluring the night, declared it could not have been taken from, the building without their knowledge. They had failed tonight, however, to locate it. Piscussing the robbery, Mr. Johnson said: "I have no hesitancy In saying that the robbery was for the purpose of securing certain particular papers, as well as to have the opportunity to look over other private papers of mine. Since I have been asked the direct question, I will state that the box contained some papers connected with the recent PergdoÜ investigation besides very private land important papers. "All eircumstances point conclusively to a desire for certain important papers as the object of the robbery. The box, which was taken contained nothing whatever of pecuniary value, while many articles of value were found lying in full view. Held Only Papers. "Moreover, it would have been quito apparent once the box was J lifted that it contained nothing but papers. It was only one third full ; of them and anything heavy in it j would have teen rolled around. The j circumstances also plainly indicate that the person on the outside who planned the robbery had one or more confederates on the outside. "The manner In which the office was entered and the box, as big as a trunk taken out shows that thej person who managed the robbery j had an intimate kner.vledge of the 'lay out' of the office and the building itself." The majority report on PergdolTs escape was prepared by Mr. Johnson and filed some weeks ago in the house but no action on it was taken. Mr. Johnson asked the Washington police to make a rigid investigation. They pot a number of excellent linger prints. snow window itomuip. PRINCETON, Oct. IS. The show window of the Leslie Thomas jewerly store in this city was robbed Tuesday of jewelry valued at $C00. 'Wealthy Broker' Owes Hotel Bill, Goshen Dispatch Speeial to The News-Time - GUSIIEN, Ind., Oct. IS. Although Alexander Stuart Itoss, who cut hi wife's throat in a Chicago hotel, is described by Chicago neunpapers as "a wealthy Chicago broker," the Alderman hotel here is holding a bad check for 1C0 given by Posa last taring in payment of hLs bill. After Uo.s left, the hotel was unable to locate him and he has never prosecuted. Posa spent several weck. here selling stock for the Gary National Associates, an insurance concern. Mrs. Poss was formerly of Nappanee, Ind. Her friends here say they warned her against Itoss, who has had four wives. She was twice marrieel and once taught school in East Chicago, Ind. Physicians fiy recovery of Mrs. Ros is improbable. WEEKS HLL INSPECT MUSCLE SHOALS SITE WAS.inNGTON. Oct. 1!?. Secretary of War Weeks announced Tuesday that he will personally inspect th Muscle Shoals project Oct. 28. Weeks said that he will accompany President Harding on his trip tc Alabama next week, and that the president and he will probably visit Camp Penning, Ga., on the 27th. The president, however, will not go to Muscle Shoals.

GoId Braid of European Royalty Is

marassnS to Attire of American Diplomats Before Society Overseas

Former Minister to Denmark, With Markham, Price, Addresses Club. The uiplomatic. poetic and economic elements of tho world's vibrations wero pleasingly set forth at the 14th annual banquet of the Knife and Fork club at the Oliver hotl Tuesday night, when over 1000 pecplo heird Dr. Maurice Francis Egan tell of the humors of a diplomat, listened to Edward Markham. author an! poet, as he depicted the outlook of "The Man With the Hoe" and heard Theodore Price, New York economist tell that world conditions exist in the minds of the people and not in facts as they are. It was the largest gathering in tho history of the club and eclipsed in point ef attendance any previous effort of the organization in its fourteen years of existence. A. R. Erskine, president of the Studebaker Corp., presided as toastmaster. Itev. Jam.es J. Tiurns, president of Notre Dame university and Itev. John Cavanaugh, professor of Advanced English were seated at tho guests' table. Royalty's "Homo Town.' Dr. Maurice Francis Egan, former minister to Denmark and widely known as a diplomat and writer pleased tho audience with a reminiscent story of incidents that confront ed him while diplomatic representa-j tive to Denmark. j Preceding the humor of his ad-J dress and speaking in serious vein i Dr. Egan declared Denmark wasJ the whispering gallery of Europe and was what might be termed the "home tewn" of European royalty. He said that no great nation of the world ha an ethical conscience except our own nation and we are too j young to be corrupted. He said! there are no ethics in the European i system of government and the few people running the governments there are just as unethical as they ever were'. The first embarrassment the great American diplomat met with in bis stewardship at Copenhagen was the fact Denmark was literally infested j with royalty. He said that Europe DISABLED YETS IN SLAYERY, CHARGES DIRECTOR FORBES Says Soldiers Have No More Chance Than Snowball in Hades. WASHINGTON. Oct. IS. Placement of disabled service men "under conditions that arc criminal and relating to slavery," was charged by Director Forbes of the veterans' bureau, in an address Tuesday at the first mee ting of the bureau's district majiageia Col. For'bea criticised in detail the system :by which service men had be-on pla-ced in training and in the course of his address and later through a formal statement issuoel from the veterams' bureau announced the disapproval of contracts held by 03 schools and individual.- feY training those disabled in the world war. In this connection, he told the district managers that in numerous cases they had been derelict in their duty. "You men had no records of the training history of the men," he asserted. "You should have had this information, but I had to dig it out for myself at an additional expense. The word has also gone around that certain districts have their own little political machines here in Washington to run the affairs of that district. "I want to warn those men who may have such an idea that I'm g'oing to wreck all political machine, and before I am through with this exposition thiß bureau is going to be operate I on sound, modern business principals and every phaso of it is going to be clean and above-board. "I have nothing to apologize for in my statements that men have been placed In training under conditions that are criminal and relating to slavery." The soldier re-habilitation division of the federal board for vocational training was blamed by Director Forbes for pom" of the difficulties encountered and a projot in southern California was mentioned by the director as a place "where the men had no more chance than a fnow'ball In II.nl es r.f V-ing trailed." Harding Leaves on For Ceremonies WASHINGTON, Oct. IS. Pres't and Mrs. Hareling left Washington late Tuesday on the yacht Mayflower for Yorktown, Va., where tho president will hpeak Wednesday at a celebration of. the 140th anniversary of hf surrender of the Uritlsh army there under Pord Cornwallis. Iater in the elay he also will deliver .n address at the college of William and Mary at Williamsburg. Va. A party of government ofiiciali and personal friends are guests aboard the Mayflower and will be In the presidential party during the visit to Yorktown and Williamsburg. Four members of the cabinet Secretaries Hughes, Mellon, Weeks and Hoover are in tho party.

nit. mauuici: riiANcis i:g . was immersed in ceremonials and would never get away from it. In recalling a public demonstration th--American writer told of tho grind display of uniforms on the part of the representatives of the little nations of the earth. Tho repri-si-nta-tive of Nicarausa was literally loaded with a golden suit, while tho Prince of .Monaca was so splendid ho could hardly move. All of thes little nation representatives, i.--spleT.dcnt in their gold and lace were received with vociferous cheers, but when the American diplomat passed the assembled thousands, attired plainly in black and white. Iowas hardly noticed. The greatest display of gold and adornment received the greatest amount of applause. The United Slates !s looked tfpon as young from a social stand point in Europe and still somewhat savage, according to Dr. Egan. The former Nctre Dame instructor paid a high tribute to tho .former King Edward of England, who he termed a very clever diplomat and a much underrated man. Dr. Egan kept his audience laughing when he termed himself the man who discovered Dr. Cook, who made a counterclaim to the discovery of the north po'.A at th' time Admiral Perry made his ceographical quest of the northland. When telegrams began to pour in to the legation at Copenhagen. Dr. Egan said he began te think the United States was in a sort of civil war em the subject of who disoereel the p and it was a ease of father against son. When the fitt returns reached him. Nebraska was for Perry, while Kansas was it r Cook. The diplomat" did not remember how Indiana .-Uood, but New York was for Cof.dc and a prominent Tammany hall politician sent an imploring telegram to the minister at Denmark asking him to support Cook's claim. Virginia was violently for Perry, the New York

Herald was for Cook, and the New York Times for Perry. Sweden and Germany were for Cook, while England and the Royal Geographical (Continued on page two) BRIAND DEMANDS DEPUTY SUPPORT AT ARMS PARLEY Pieniier Says He Will Not Act Unless France Stands Behind Him. PAPIS, Oct. IS. Premier Prland went before the chamber of deputies Tesday and made it eb-ar that his peilicy must have the support the streng approval of the deputies if he vas to reprrsnt France at tho Washington conforms on limitation ef armament". If France desired a policy of force, the premier declared, th representatives of the country mir-t say so. He would, however, deelino to nssoci itf himself with such a pf.Hey. The chamber Tuesday discussed four of the C) interpellations on the government's foreign policy. Premier Priand showed himself ready to argue the points maeb by the speakers, rising freejuently to contradict or correct statements made. In enof these interruptions he said: "There are two policies betseon which a choice must be made. Thor" is the policy of isolation and forc which certain people vaunt and which can be upheld and can be defended; but the re pi e s nt.ttives of the country must say so. I am to leave for Washington but I will not leave unless the great majority r.f this assembly approves my policy; it will also in Justice inform the country to what burdens it expoey itself in following a policy of forcfV These words came during an exchange with Andre T.irdi'u, who charged M. Priand with giving instructions to the comrni.-sion on rep arations when the German debt was being calculated. The premier declared this to be false. M. Tardbu later said that M. Pouchen r, minister of liberate l regions, had recognized t!.rt th government gave instruction.'- to th commission. M. Priand th'n dep.b-d in the most formal way that the government had done such a thing. Yacht Mayflower at Virginia Points i Mi,ia.-.iMa. lio, a., e t is. Preparations have l' en completed for the arrived hero tomorrow ' Pres't Harding to attend the installation, of Dr. J. A. C. Cl.an ll. r as president ef the college rf Willlam and Mary, and to recle an henorary decree. Pefore eom!r .z. here he will dine at Yorktown with a dele-ration of its citizen--. fl.'it- W.t rr, rw.l ;.rd i ; preside at the college- exf-n i- j which will be attended by Prpr-j- ' sentatlves of universities and .l-i If-ires In the T'nited St.ite i, v. are more than D" jears .ld. William and Mary Its'df was f. ur.de.l m lir"3 and is the second oi le.it college In ihh country.

SENATE VOTES GERMAN PEACE TREATY VALID

lifty-Two Kepiililicnn- and Fourteen Democrat Support Measure. PROGKAM IS COMPLETE Administration Also Gets Approval on Austrian and Hungarian Pacts. WASHINGTON. Cct. I?. Ti. snaiM Tur-i.y r.iht ratif.M t:.treaty of p a e with Germany w!:ii th.s re.-ervaTi..';" report 1 by i'.; foreign relations committee. T: vote was ".; i.r rati. ation tr . " against, or eight m-re tl;ai the necessary two-third's- malnty. Soon aff. rwarl.s :h f. r,,-itn rtlnd the pe.tre treaty wi:h Austria by th simc voto.. Another and similar pece tri7 with Hurary also wan rattHrd. compazine th- administration's imm d.ai-- ptac program with the former e antral power-. Fourteen demorr at!c sr.atf"V voted in faor of i.itlhcaticn and two iepubiican s.-r.atrs, pcrah .? Idaho and Pafolb ttc, r f Wisonn.r. voted against it. A third r. public in s- nator, Norris of Nchrat-ka. who was absent on account of .-Icktir . was paired arain-t tho tr.ity. Tho roll call en ratl:ication of th German treaty fallows; For ratification: pepub'.ica Pall, Prrndcge-e, Pursum, Caluwer, Cann r"ii, Capper. Colt. Cummins, Curtis, Dillingham. Pupont, IM-e, Elkins, Ernst. Ferna Id. JYance. Fndinghuyfen, Gooding, llal, Hamid, Johnson, K. 1'oLrg, Kenyon, Key;. Iyor.root. Podg, McCormlck, McKinley, McPean, McNary, Mof s. Nelson, New, Newberry, Nicholson, Norbe;rk, Od die. Page, I'enree, Poindexter, Shortridge, .Smoot. Spencer, Sterling, Sutherland, Tow mend. Wails orth. Warren, Watson. Indiana; "Weiler and Willis. Total 12. Democrats Ashurst, IVrus?ard. Dial, Fletcher, Gerry. Kndrlck. Myers, Owen, Prnif repe, Panloll. Shields, Trammell, Fnderwood and Walsh, Ma.s Total IP Against rati To ation: Pcpublicu.s Pnrah and Life'.ette. Total 2. Democrat s ea r a w a y , C u 1 b e rs a n , Harris, llarri'-on, Heflin. Jones. New Mexico; King. Me:Kellar. Overman. Pittman. Peed, Sheppard, Simmons, Stanley, Walsh, Montana; Watson, Georgia, nr.! Williams Total IS. With th" vacancy rausod by th death ef Sen. Kt.ox the total membership of th gerate wa 35. Nir w-nators were paired as follows: Hitchcock, pf m., Ne'. raoka; Jon"a. Pep., Washn ; I-iäd, Pep., North Dakota; I'Mpps, !'p, Cr'.o ; Smith. Dem., S. Car.; and SlanflelL, Hep. Ore.; fnr rathlcation; and Norri. pep., N'eh.; Itobir.sor., Pern., Ark . and Swan son. I"m.. Va.; a gains : ratification. IflTCHCOCIC 1Y)U TPi:n'. V.'ASHINGTON. Of. P.-.Mn'r Hiteh''ock, detnocra. ar. I for?rr chairman e,f tho foreign re!at;ocommit?' of the jnate, Tuay urg"'.l re-esbiblishm'T.t of peio v it a eierroany an ii"ct-ar' fcr American and world rehabilitation by ratification of th Grmr.ny ti aty. "I h'tvt betn a.;ef rnr-.f-.tln.C Senator IIitchc..-k continued, "how I. as a df ::.orr;t', could vr,: for (Continued on pag'i two) LUDWIG III DEAD AT WILDENWART Pictnre.-quc Bavarian Kuler Pa es Away After Lonp Illness. PURLIN', O;:. IS. Former Kirg Ludwig of P v.'arii Li eb-ti. it was announcfd here to-Iay. Iidu-;g in. pictu: c;o f.g'ire Europe f or thre"' q arte:- of a r r. t;;ry, r rc '.T 'ej his thr"t.o .a-: kl of Davarla :i Nov r PI. ll'P".. hai::g held it a r.r.l thr--' y-.-it.-. D;s..trer I rok- haAlly on tho f-n-era' c- r"Jr, a.- h'.a wife, M4ria. Tl:-:'-s n, .vh' w prir.c-. -s royal of H-ir.zary and IP-henJi. d: i n th Sit::-- elay. lie w,! t-i :-re iy 111 for Pnvral ::'.r.ti. at. 1 ori van errr nou r- r e.r : 1 I : d . -n I--. -J, 13 20, PuP.vig rot'-m-' 1 ' Wii b n v. -irt, .S -utherr. IJavar: a, wher j he ha retrained m.'st cf th lim- r r.ee. I' lvtrian rc'ahs- h'li a tr.er.Htf r ?.:'r ration on the o eavion of tl.e 71th -.r.:.lve-r.try of his birth '.a-t J :r. :iry 7. STEAMER IS AO HOI IV D neakc;heen hay, wis. GPKKN PAY, W.s., Oct, U.-. With a c,-r-'" ef S. ! ' tT cf CJ, tl..- ai-T P.r..:.- ui- .gr-uni o'.i PlttP- St Ccut G'.irl i r- wv w .re s. :.t f rc r.i hrt 1 .i in. the :-e.e .,rn, T'Js ill i b:t to all th.- s'. t:v r. Its b-w wag said t !" ull e ri th r ek.-. ()r. nn''-;::.t i tl"--' '.rrr.g Mir J and heavy :.. a. far is fe It fcr th Fafcty of the crew oa board.