The Syracuse Journal, Volume 7, Number 6, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 June 1914 — Page 1
Largest circulation in Kosciusko j County outside of Warsaw. Nr. Advertiser,'take notice and goi>ern yourself accordingly .
VOL.'VII.
HUERTA OFFERS PLAN TO YIELD • & Niagara Falls Representatives Issue Statement. SUCCESSOR MUST BE PACIFIER' Army Officers Protest Shipments. ' Ward Liner Said to Have 3,000,000 Rounds of Ammunition and Aero- I plane for Rebels—Yaqui Indians on Warpath at Hermosillo. Niagara Falls, June 3. —The stat® ment issued by the Constitutionalist chief has caused the delegates of General Huerta to break their long and ' carefully observed silence. They have I issued a statement saying: “General Huerta is prepared to withdraw from the government on condition, that, at the time of his withdrawal, Mexico shall be politically pacified and the governoment succeeding his shall be such as to count on the acquiescence of the governed and on the support of public opinion which constitute the real basis for peace and stability in any country. “It has been and is President Huerta’s wish to place on record that neither mistaken pride nor personal interest will prevent his with drawal once the above named conditions are satisfied. “The Mexican government accepted the mediation of the South American powers, Brazil, Argentina and Chile in a frank and open spirit and the Mexican delegation has been guided and will be guided in all its acts by perfect good faith. “To treat of the interior pacification of Mexico in the course of deliberations on difficulties of an international character cannot be considered as submitting sovereignty of the nation to an external influence. Said pacification is necessarily bound up with the international questions. This has been appreciated by the Mexican delegation and in setting forth the intentions of its government in the matter and in • its endeavors to bring about the pacification it has been inspired by the knowledge thatr without it no satte-’ factory conclusion can be arrived at in the international question.” Washington, June 3.—The importation of arms and ammunition from the United States into Mexico is fast assuming such proportions that this government will be obliged to act. Thus far Mr. Wilson and Mr. Bryan have been fearful of offending their friends, the Constitutionalists, by taking any action which would prevent shipments of arms through Tampico, but the news that at least three carloads from the United States are already on their way with shipments of arms for the rebels has caused considerable worriment. These shipments, following so closely on the heels of the landing of Huerta munitions from the German vessels, have raised protests from army officers who fear that the United States is only permitting the accumulation of war supplies which eventually will be turned against American soldiers. Administration officials heard that the Ward liner Antille sailed from New York with three million rounds cf ammunition and an aeroplane consigned to the rebels at Tampico. Yaquis on Warpath. Nogales, Ariz., June 3. —Official reports received in Hermosillo and relayed to the border state that the Yaquis continue to swarm out of the mountains and have completely overrun the fertile Yaqui valley. Mexicans are being driven out. Whether or not the American colonists are being forced to leave their ranches is not stated. The Indians have occupied the towns of Rotam, Bacum, Croz, Lencho and Torin. The Indians already have demanded the surrender of the town of Cocorit held by a constitutionalist garrison and are steadily drawing their lines closer about the town. Yaqui activity is also reported in the vicinity of Corral, the junction of the Southern Pacific of Mexico railroad, with its Tonichi branch line. Wooden bridges have been destroyed between Corral and Oroz, while the north and south approaches to the great steel and concrete bridge whtoh spans the Yaqui river have been destroyed. TOTAL LOSS OF LIFE IS 1,024 Four Hundred and Fifty-two on Empress of Ireland Saved. • Quebec, June 3.—The corrected figures of the Empress of Ireland made public by the Canadian Pacific officials show that 1,024 persons who were on the ship are unaccounted for. There were 1,476 persons aboard the Ship when she was struck by the col- i Her Storstad. Os that number only ; 452 were saved. There were 89 first; class, 256 second class, and 718 third class passengers and 413 officers and i crew. Os the first class 36 were rescued, 47 of the second class, 136 of the third class and 233 officers and crew. ( | Wh •
The Syracuse Journal.
PRINCE OSCAR Kaiser’s Fifth Son to Wed Girl Below Royal Family’s Rank. fgjfr- ■ v ■g* j i wuW ■ POTSDAM. — The engagement of Prince Oscar, fifth son of the German emperor and empress, to Countess Ina Marie von Bassewitz-Levetzow, maid of honor to the empress, has been announced. The prince was born July 27, 1888. The marriage will be the first morganatic union which has occurred in the Hohenzollern family since 1853. It is assumed that the emperor, who consented to the engagement, will confer a higher rank in the nobility on the young countess. The countess was born on aJnuary 27, 1888, and -her father, Count Charles von Bassewitz-Levetzow, is premier of the grand duchy of MecklenburgSchwerin. COLLIER IS BLAMED FOR DEATHS OF 964 fiaplain Matt, oHltfated Ship, Tells ot Orders. RIMOUSKI., QUE. — While final tabulations of the casualties in the sinking of the ill-fated steamer Empress of Ireland were being made, showing that 403 of its passengers and crew had been rescued and 964 had perished, Captain Henry George Kendall of the liner was telling his story of the disaster at an inquiry conducted by poroner Pinaud here. Captain Kendall, in substance, declared that he had taken all possible precautions against a collision. His ship had been stopped, he gave the requisite signals when the Danish collier Storstad, which dealt the blow which sent the Empress to the bottom, was still two miles away, but the collier had kept on through the fog which settled down soon after the two vessels sighted each other and had rammed the Empress of Ireland while the lattter was virtually motionless. Then, despite his plea to the master of the collier that he run his engines full speed ahead to keep the hole in the liner’s side plugged with the Storstad’s bow, said Captain Kendall, the Danish vessel backed away, tfie water rushed in and the Empress sank. STORSTAD IS AT MONTREAL Norwegian Collier Shows Effects of Jamming—Reporters Ordered Off. MONTREAL. — With the Norwegian flag half mast at her stern the colier Storstad, in charge of the tug Lord Strathcona, came into port under her own steam. She was badly damaged about the bows, but so far as could be seen this did not extend to more than twenty feet from the stejin. She was low in the water except Sat the bows where she had evidently been lightened. Her draught was twen-ty-six feet. < That the impact with the Empress cf Ireland had been great was evident by the way the vessel’s stem was twisted to port, the hawser hole completely smashed, plates cracked, rivets twisted or missing while the heavy anchor had evidently been driven back several feet into the bows. Newspaper men who met the vessel and boarded her were ordered off. |1914 JUNE 1914| | S | M | T |W | T | F-1 S | |l|2|3|4|s|6] 7 8 910111213 1415116117181920 1
MEDIATORS IN TILT ( U. S. Delegates Cause Deadlock Over Carranza. i . A. B. G. ENVOYS WCN‘T YIELD person* Close to South American Diplomats Say They Will Not Reverse Their Position—Looters Paid by Huerta—Bonds Accepted; German Ships Sail. '* >' I WASHINGTON. — The first definite evidence of a serious difference of opinion between officials of the United States government and the A. B. C. mediators over the admission of the constitutionalists to the Niagara Falls conference came last night. The disclosure took the form of a statement by Luis Cabrera, Carranza’s l spokesman in Washington. Cabrera takes the position that the I mediators’ chief function is bringing together the parties in controversy, and that to refuse the request of the United States that the Carranza representative be admitted with the other representatives in the Niagara Falls parleys is beyond the limits of the scope of mediation. NIAGARA FALLS, ONT. — The crisis in the mediation proceedings between Mexico and the United States i 9 at an acute stage The three South American diplomats and the American delegates have reached an absolute deadlock and nothing further will be done on either side before a solution of the latest difficulty has been found. Won’t Yield on Carranza. After conferring for more than two hours Saturday night and an hour and a half Monday morning on the issue in dispute, namely the participation of General Carranza in the mediation conferences, Justice Lamar and Frederick W. Lehmann have not been able to induce the mediators to view the situation in the light in which the state department at Washington would like to have them see it. Ambassador De Gama of Brazil and Minister Naon and Suarez of Argentine and Chile are positively determined to yield no more to the Mexican revolt leader than to Mr. Bryan. Persons who are close to the mediators declare that aH three envoys will positively refuse to reverse their position regardless of any pressure which may be brought to bear upon them. It was pointed out that the mediators have adopted this attitude not < otjdy for the good of Mexico, but also to protect their personal dignity. All three are of the opinion that Carranza was offered every opportunity to enter the conference on the same footing and at the same time as General Huerta and that he should have availed himself of the opportunity. > Looters Paid by Huerta. EL PASO. — Rodrigo Quevedo and Cristoforo Cabellero, Mexican filibuster leaders, arrived at Fort Wingate, New Mexico, where they will be placed in the prison camp with Maximo Castillo and other Mexican prisoners. The arrest of Quevedo has released additional facts of his operations. Originally organized as a federal filibustering force, the followers of the Quevedos, Jose Orozco and Manuel Gutierrez, it was learned, were to have been paid by the Huerta government. Bonds Accepted; Ships Start. VERA CRUZ, MEX.—The agents of the Hamburg-American line presented a bond of 1,012,625 pesos, or $506,317.50 United States gold, as a guaranty of the payment of the fines of the Ypiranga and the Bavaria. TJje bond was acceptable to collector of the port Captain Stickney and the steamships were allowed to proceed. The Ypiranga goes to Havana and the Bavaria will go to Hamburg. MIXES LOVE AND DYNAMITE Swain, Angered by Refusal to See Him, Blows Up Home. HALIFAX, N. S. — Miss Myrtle Robinson, a young woman to whom Thomas Reilly of Halifax was paying attention, would not respond to his appeal to come to the front door of her home early in the morning and see him. He exploded a stick of dynamite on the sidewalk. The explosion blew in the front of the house and smashed the windows in two blocks. The dynamite had a time fuse so that Reilly was able to get out of danger No one was badly hurt, but the dalaage to property is considerable. Reilly was captured an hour after the explosion and put in jail ‘ charged with attempted murder. KENDALL’S ANSWER LACONIC Declines to Give Statement of Wreck Until Further Inquiry. QUEBEC. — Captain Kendall of the ill-fated Empress of Ireland, went through here on his way to Montreal, ■ where he was received by officials of the Canadian pacific. { “Was Captain Anderson to blame for the collision?'* fie was asked as he lay in his berth, his freckled hand running over his eyes. “I can’t answer,” he said. “You’ll have all that in a few days.” |
- —r SYRACUSE, INDIANA, THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1914
INDIANA STATE NEWS .iin— «■« - ■ ■ Gossip Cause of Shooting. ANDERSON, IND.—Bitter jealousy caused by brooding over gossip that her husband was preparing to divorce and marry an Anderson woman is said to have paused Mrs. Elizabeth Cline, twentylejght years old, to attempt to kill her husband,- Fred Cline, as b<- lay sleeping. Neighbors heard two revolver shoes in the Cline home. It was said that Mrs. Cline had placed the muzzle of a revolver at her husband’s forehead and fired. Owipg to the poor construction of thq gun the bullet split anc. only part of it penetrated Cline s head. He was hurried to St. Johns hospital, it was found his wound was only,slight. Victim off Gunman Dead. MUNCIE, IN>. —Revel W. Hopper, the glass worier who was shot by I Patten Sloan Friday afternoon be- » cause the latter.asserted Hopper had | threatened to “get him,” died in a local hospital. Slean said Hopper had followed his wile home on a certain right and he went to the glass factory Friday at yoon to find Hopper. Net knowing HOpper, Sloan asked a fellow point him out. He then walked up to Hopper and with the word% “If you’re going to punch me, do itjnpw,” he pulled a revolver and firedonce, the bullet penetrating Hopper’s chest. Woman Swallows Poison. MUNICE, INWf- While on her way to her briber’s grocery store, Mrs. Hattie Bartje|t, thirty-three, drank an ounce of casffic acid and died a few minutes The woman was in the act of ojfehing the door to the store when sheilell to the sidewalk unconscious. Her husband died two weeks ago and.the widow’s grief is thought to have her mind. Chicago Autoists in Crash. LAFAYETTE,IIND.—F. J. Clampitt and party oj three from Chicago narrowly death m an auto accident here whfa their ear swerved from a bridge a . ndfel L fifteen feet into a drainage ditch. They were only slightly hurt. . The party the way home from lives at the Eastwood hotel, Sheridan road. »— Big Filed. SOUTH BEND/IND. — Two suits for damages aggregating $104,006 have been filed in the St. Joseph circuit court by the heirs of Theodore Metzger anti Dale* Hibberd of Niles, Mich. ,The men were killed in the collapse ol the Independent Five and Ten-Cent Store building in this city Jan. 3 last. The suits are directed against that corporation. High School Class Large. BLOOMINGTON, IND. — There jwere fifty-one graduates at the annual exercises of the Bloomington High school. The auditorium of the new SIIO,OOO building was used for the first time. Dr. E. H. Lindley, head of the philosophy department of Indiana university, delivered the address to the class. Two Hurt in Auto Accident. EVANSVILLE, IND. — In an automobile collision Walter F. Hanselman, twenty-four years old, ran his machine into a wagon driven by John Ulrich, a farmer. William Mcßride, twentyfive years old, was perhaps fatally injured. Ulrich and the other three occupants of the car were unhurt. Peru Day to Be Observed. ROCHESTER, IND. — Plans are being made to observe Peru day, June 17. again this year. A year ago many citizens of Peru came to this city to show their gratitude for aid rendered during the spring floods. This year aeroplane flights and other features will be staged on the same day. Razor Wielder Caught. TERRE HAUTE, IND.—Henry W. Mitchell, the negro hotel porter, who slashed R. L. Gaster, a guest, with a razor, was found hidden in the attic of his mother’s home at Burnett, a mining town near here. Gaster is recovering at a hospital. Farmer Hangs Himself. MARTINSVILLE, IND. —Daniel Riley Stewart, fifty-nine years old, a farmer living in Baker township, committed suicide by hanging. His body was found suspended from a tree. 11l health is said to have caused him to kill himself. Woman Forger Sentenced. NORTH VERNON, IND. — Mrs. Bessie Hudson of Washington, Ind., arraigned in the Jennings circuit court on a charge of forgery, pleaded guilty. The court fixed her fine at SIOO and suspended a prison sentence City May Have Dry Ward. FORT WAYNE, IND.—The Ninth ward of Fort Wayne, which is better known as Bloomingdale, will probably be made dry by remonstrance, following an attempt to open a new saloon in the residence district. Brookville for 1915 Convention. BROOKVILLE, IND. — Brookville was selected as the place for the next annual meeting of the Methodist Episcopal Woman’s Home Missionary* society of the Connersville district
INDIANAN DROWNS IN I SIGHT OF HIS FAMILY Mother, Wife and Sister Are i Witnesses ot Tragedy. ! PRINCETON, IND. — Gilbert W. Ritterskamp, twenty-three, secretary and treasurer of the Princeton Gardens, was drewned while swimming at Bingham's Bend in White River, about twelve miles from here. He was a member of an outing party at the Bend, consisting of his wife, his mother, his sister, Miss Edna Ritterskamp; Edward Pillmire of Vin- ' cennes, Mr. and Mrs. Sam T. Heston and Joseph Heston. Ritterskamp was not a good swimmer and stepped off into a hole beyond his depth and immediately sank. He was too far out in the river, which is wide at this point, for the rest of the party to reach him. The river was dragged and his body found almost I under the point where he ihnk about 5 o’clock. The body was brought to this city. DID IT IN “MOVIE” FASHION Youth Deposits $1.50 and Cashes Check For $1,350. LOGANSPORT, IND.—Herbert M. Dilts, seventeen years old, was arrested in Peru, charged with passing a worthless check for $1,350, with which he obtained a new automobile from Arthur Dunn, a garage owner here. Dilts, it is said, swathed his head in bandages, deposited $1,50 in the First National bank here and then, impersonating the bank president, telephoned to Dunn that a man with his head wrapped in bandages had deposited money. Dilts obtained the car and escaped before it was discovered that the check was worthless. COFFIN MONEY PAYS FINE Young Woman, Twenty-five, Traps Old Man, Seventy-five. COLUMBUS, IND. — "Your honor, I had been saving this money to pay on a coffin for myself, for I realize that I have but a little of life left to me,’’ said R. G. Stewart, seven-ty-five years ol<l, when he handed *; Mayor CoTlan(l $35 to pay ifts fiiie afl’d' s costs on charges of sending obscene , literature through the mail. A sentence of fifteen days in jail was suspended. Blanch Truax, twenty-five years old, trapped the old man by making an engagement to meet him in a local park. FRANKFORT PUBLISHER DIES G. Y. Fowler, Founder of Frankfort, i Ind., Times Penumonia Victim. I FRANKFORT, IND. —G. Y. Fowler, fifty-four years old, founder and proprietor of the Frankfort Morning Times, died of pneumonia. He had been in ill health seven years and re- ( cently returned from Florida where he • had spent the winter. | A widow and three sons survive. The sons have been associated with him in the publication of the Times and will continue to conduct the paper. POLICE SHAKEUP COMPLETED i Charles H. Powell Heads Disturbed Force at Lafayette, Ind. LAFAYETTE, IND. — The look-ed-for changes in the Lafayette police department were announced by President Theodore Domer of the police board. ' The appointment of Charles H. Powell, who has been acting superintendent since the resignation of John , R. Fisher, was made permanent. Mar- : tin Carrand Edward L. Osborne were 1 advanced to captaincies. ' SEYMOUR PHYSICIAN FINED He Wrote to Patient Agreeing to Perform Criminal Operation. INDIANAPOLIS, IND. — J. H. . Carter was fined SSOO and costs by Judge Anderson in the United States j district court for violating the postal < laws. Dr. Carter, who lives in Seymour, 3 was indicted by the federal grand jury ] for writing to a prospective patient at Logansport that he would perform a criminal operation. He pleaded j guilty. 1 —— j CLOUDBURST HITS INDIANA i Northern Counties Experience Overflow and Crop Damage. 1 WABASH, IND. — Wabash < Huntington and Miami counties were i visited by a veritable cloudburst. All small streams are out of their banks and lowlands are inundated. I It is feared that the corn crop, late- < ly planted, will again have to be put to the ground, as the downpour has - washed out many acres. 1 1 Indianapolis Man In aCnal. • CHICAGO. — The body of a 1 man supposed to be Fred H. Parsons i of Indianapolis, Ind., was taken from : , the dratoaze canal at Thirty-fifth I atreet. ' . .. 4 P
EMPRESS OF IRELAND Vessel That Went Down Noted for Her Speed. nl : |H « m Mb i Lil HK * w • i : " ■■’ ! ■ ! Ac -fag-' | SHORT CUTS TO THE NEWS j Fire wiped out a block in Lomax, 111., causing a loss of $50,000. I ily Hall Caine, siata” of Hall Caine the novelist, is deal at her nome to London. ‘ One man was Killed and a dozen were hurt inu a storm that struck Danville, 111. Floods in Utah have caused a loss of thousands of dallars to railroad bridges and river dams. Jacob Riis, friend of Roosevelt and noted sociologist and reformer is dead at his home at Barre, Mass. Charges of contempt of court, made against W. J. Burns, the dective were dismissed by an Atlanta, Ga., judge. Mrs. Richard C. Kearns, wife of the former ambassador to Austria, is dead. The body will be interred at St. Louis. Post Wheeler, formerly attached to the Rome embassy has been appointed secretary of the embassy at Japan by President Wilson. M. E. Liebhardt, well known lumber dealer of Indiana, dove sixty feet from a fire escape and is dead from the injuries sustained. Contrary to expectations there was no outbreak in Ulster, Ireland, over the passage of the home rule bill by the British parliament. Morris H. Desenberg, for years one of the best known wholesale grocerymen in Kalamazoo, Mich., dropped dead while playing golf. • The Denver, C 01.,. Law and Order league is trying to impeach Judge Ben B. uindsey. They object to his attitude in the strike situation in that state. t Eight miners were killed In an anthracite colliery near Tamaque, Pa., when a cage to which they were being hoisted was pulled over a shaft wheel. Eighty per cent of the convicts and guards in the Auburi., N Y., prison have been found to have scarlet fever symptoms. The priL-n has been quara'..ined. Bob Hartlett of Arctic fame, thought lost has reported to St. Johns, N. F., litat he is safe in Siberia, landing there after his ship was lost on North Herald island in January. Revel Hooper, aged thirty-two, was fatally shot at Muncie, Ind., by Pattern Sloan, who accused Hooper of flirting with Mrs. Stone. Sloan, wbo never hads en Hooper before, met and killed Hooper on the street. President Wilson sent a cablegram t;> King George o* England, exten.iug sympathy for the catastrophe which took 1,000 livjs 'n the St. Lawrej ce river. The king, in reply, thanked President Wilson and ths American people. General Martin Severein, chief of the rebel artillery in Villa’s army didn’t like the meal served him by an American negro at Torreon and “shot up” the negro’s restaurant. It took a detachment of soldiers to calm the infuriated Mexican. He had been drinking. Dr. W. A. Winters and his wife, cf Newcastle, Ind., have been arrested, to connection with the disappearance of the doctor’s daughter, Catherine, who disappeared March 20, 1913. A private detective made the charges against Dr. and Mrs. Winters, claiming he had found evidence that ths body of the little girl was buried qb the Winters farm.
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I SHIP CO/S FIGHT Captains in Marine disaster in Dispute Over 0 iters. GOVERNMENT PROBE JUNE 9 Bitterest Fight in History of Admiralty Courts Likely to Sp: ig From Investigation—Each Ster -.ship Company in Empress of Irel nd Disaster Stands by Its Own Capt. in. QUEBEC. — Captain iendall of the Empress of Ireland as srts: That he shouted to tht Storstad to keep full steam ahead, to 911 the hole to the Empress of Irelan ’s side, but that the collier ignored tl j request. That those who were saved were saved by the Empress’ b. ts, and not by the Storstad, with on * a few exceptions. That he had stopped b s ship and given adequate signals w en the collier was two miles away, ut that the latter vessel went ahead n the fog. Captain Anderson of the collier Storstad asserts: x That his course was&set to pass the Empress safely, but that the latter ship changed its course. That the Storstad’s engi es were reversed when the crash o« purred. That the Storstad. did not back away, but that her engin s were ordered ahead, but that tl 3 Empress twisted the collier’s bow out of the gash. r That he did all he coul I to rescue survivors and actually t ok 350 on board fiis vessel. MONTREAL. — Th > bitterest fight in the history of admi alty courts is likely to spring from th ) investigation of the St. Lawrence < isaster. Already marine interests. na\ gators and officials are at issue, one si e charging that Captain H. G. Kendall of the Empress was to blame, the t her accusing Captain Thomas Ande son of the ; Storstad. Each commander almost un- ■ qualifledly places the re ponsibility upon the shoulders of the >ther. It is evident that the C: ladian Pacific railroad, owner of th Empress, has determined to suppe t Captain Kendall and to make a fi ht for his exoneration. It is equa y evident Dqpilnion Coal cor aany, owui er of the collier Storstad. will stand behind Captain Anderson : rd will resist any efforts to fasten the blame i upon him. Government Probe Ji ie 9. MONTREAL, QUE. — The government investigation of t e stoking of the Empress of Ireland ' ill be held to Montreal and will begi Tuesday, June 9. This announceme t is made 1 at the offices of the Canat an Pacific Railway company. The to estigation will be conducted by a boar< composed of two judges of the Ca adian admiralty, to be appointed by lie dominion government, and one tive of the British admiral* . appointed by the imperial governm nt. The sharp point of an t chor projecting from the twisted L w of the Norwegian collier Storstac* may explain why that vessel did s'- h terribl e execution when it ramme the Empress of Ireland last Fridr. morning in the lower St. Lawrence. An examination of the collier’s shatt *ed plates revealed the anchor jammet in a position where it could ha e ripped through the hull of the Er >ress like a great can opener. The ar hor point and portions of the batterer steel surrounding it bore stains of t 'Od. Captain Was on Brk ;e. Pilot Nault, who navigate the Storstad up the St. Lawrence 'om Quebec, said that Captain Am rson told him that Anderson, his f t officer, and Pilot Lechance, who b: >ught the Storstad from Father Point > Quebec, were on the bridge at the t: ne of the collision. “Captain Anderson is deep y grieved over the tragedy. Several i mes during the run from Quebec I c ime upon him crying, with his face bui led in his bands. Anderson told me hs had been instructed not to talk about the accident." > QUEBEC. — The total number of passengers on the Empr? is of Ireland when she was struck by the Storstadt, It is asserted here, v as 1,467. Os that number-465 survive' , leaving 1,062 dead. About 100 passen ers were taken on at Rimouski and t te names and number of those passenj ers were not to possession of the offici ils of the company at Montreal at th< time of the sinking of the Empress ASKS HILLQUIT TO G IT OUT William English Walling W: nts Him to Quit Socialists. NEW YORK. — William English Walling, author of “Socialis n As It Is,” “Progressivism and At er" and other Socialist books, in ar address in the Berkeley theater, d mounced Morris Hillquit, national chcirman of the Socialist party befor Bouck White’s congregation. He ca led upon Hillquit to get out of the ] irty. Hillquit has been quoted ■ s saying that such persons as Uptoi Sinclair ' and Bouch White ought to b put out « fthe Socialist party as pv itshment for “Silent Mourning” in fre t of the Standard Oil offices and tht attempt to speak to Calvary Baptist ihurch of which the Rockefellers are member#
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