The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 13, Number 18, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 September 1920 — Page 2
"freight raise SENDS COAL UP Higher Prices to Consumer Are Announced by Dealers in Chicago. ' - i • FUEL MAY GO STILL HIGHER Illinois Operators^"decided Whether or Not Another Increase in Cost Will Follow Wage Increase Granted Workers. f . - —— • Chicago, Aug. 30.—Chicago wholeeale and retail coal dealers increased the price of coal, the advances ranging from 53 cents to $1.90 a ton, effective Thursday, the date the rail transportation companies added increases to t|?eir charges Southern Illinois coal moving intratetate will cost Chicagoans 53 cents a ton more. The same kind’ of coal, handled on interstate routes will be raised . 65 cents additional per ton. Indiana coals will cost the consumer from 53 cents to 57 cents a ton more. iPocahontas and other ‘eastern bituminous coals will cost $1.05 a,ton more. Anthracite prices are advanced $1.90 a ton. Illinois coal operators cannot state tat ’this time with a degree of definiteness; whether or not another increase in the price of coal will follow the wage increase granted to workers retroactive to August 16. R. H, May, secretary of the Retail Coal bureau, 407 South • Dearborn etreet, said the merchants raised their prices on Thursday, immediately following the issuance of the new freight tariffs. . , The increase in freight rates range from 40 per cent on interstate traffic )to 33 1-3 per cent on Illinois state traffic.. The-new wage agreement with 16 Illinois coal operators and workers signed at the Auditorium hotel grants an increase of $1.50 a day to all-day and monthly men. The day man will now average $7.50 for eight hours’ work, while monthly men will average between $l6O and $2lO a month. The agreement, which will terminate ton March 31, 1922, gives the workers back pay to August 16. Large’ consumers of soft coal already have been notified that'they will be required to stand another slight increase, as provided By their contracts, to thke Care .of the wage increases, E. C. Searls said. “We cannot say right now whether the wage increase will affect the retail price of coal,” Mr. Searls said, “but I can say that at present we do not anticipate any increase.” GREEN BAY IS GROWING FAST *■ Wisconsin City Shows Increase in Population of 5,781 —Los Angeles Has 976,438. .. Washington, Aug. 30,-L-Census figures given out Include: Green Bay, Wis., 31,017; Increase, 5,781, or 22.9 per cent. Red Wing, Minn., 8.673; decrease, 411, dr 4.5 per cent. Huron, S. D. 8,302; increase 2,511, or 43.4 per cent. Hot Springs, Ark., 11,695; decrease, 2,739, or 19 per cent. Corpus Christi, Texas, 10,522; increase, 2,300, or 28 per cent. Wayne county, Mich., containing Detroit, 1,177,706, an increase of 646,115, or 121.5 per cent Los Angeles county, California, containing Los Angeles, 976.438, an increase of ',432,307, or 85.8 per cent. Glendale, Cal., 13,536, an increase of 10,790, or 392.9 per cent Buffalo, N. Y. (revised), 506,775, previously announced as 505,875. IDAHO WOMAN FOR CONGRESS Democrats of the First District Nominated Mrs. Nell K. Irion of Sand Point. Idaho Falls,‘ Idaho,.. Aug. 27.—Mrs. (Nell K. Irion of Sand Point was nominated by the Democratic state contention for congress from the First district She is the first woman ever Ito be named for a congressional of- • tfice in the state of Idaho. United States Senator John F. Nugent" of Udaho was renominated by unanimous gising vote. KIDNAPED AMERICANS FREED IZamora, Their Captor, Is Reported to Have Surrendered In State of Jalisco. Mexico City, Aug. 27.—A1l the (Americans kidnaped by Pedro Zamora, the bandit leader, at Cuale, Jalisco, last week, have been released, according to reliable advices received here from Guadalajara, capital of Jalisco. These reports state that Zamora has surrendered. Russ Evacuate Vilna. Paris, Aug. 28.—The Russian soviet forces have evacuated Vilna, Lithuania, and the railway station and public buildings there were occupied by Lithuanians, according to news reaching the French foreign office. >, Illinois Miners Get Raise. Chicago, Aug. 28. —Formal acceptance of a new increase of $1.50 a day to more than 40,000 Illinois coal miners was made by 16 men representing Illinois coal operators and officials of the workers’ unions. Chains Daughter to Stove. , Peoria, 111., Aug. 27.—Because her ten-year-old daughter lost a silver dollar she had given to her to make some purchases at a grocery, store, Mrs. F. Fltzanko of Pekin, it Is charged, chained her to a heated stove. 1 .ii Yank Swimmer Wins. Antwerp, Aug. 27.—The Yankee athletes added another world’s record to their OljPX>P lc games string when Miss Ethelda Bleibtry of New York won the 100-meter free style swim for women to 1 minute 13 3-5 seconds.
HAR—HAR—H E BIT HIMSELF / I ///A ■ I
WOMEN GIVEN VOTE Secretary of State Colby Issues Proclamation. Document Signed at Eight O’Clock at Cabinet Member’s Home In Washington. Washington, Aug. 28. —The proclamation announcing officially that the suffrage amendment to the Constitution had been ratified was signed by Secretary Colby of the state department on Thursday. The document was signed at 8 a. m. at Mr. Colby’s home, when the certificate from Governor Roberts that the Tennessee legislature had ratified the amendment was received. Secretary Colby announced his action on his arrival at his office later. Secretary Colby’s statement follows: “The certified record of the action of the legislature of the state of Tennessee on the suffrage amendment was received by mail this morning. Immediately on its receipt the record was brought to my house. This was in compliance with my directions and in accordance with numerous requests for prompt’action. “I thereupon signed the certificate required of the secretary of state this morning at eight o'clock in the presence of Mr. F. K. Nielsen, the solicitor of the state department, and Mr. Charles L. Cook, also**ef the state department. The seal of the United States has been duly affixed to the certificate and the suffrage amendment is now the nineteenth amendment of tile Constitution. “It w’as decided not to accompany the simple ministerial action on my part with any ceremony or setting. This secondary aspect of the subject has, regretfully, been the source of considerable contention as to who shall participate in it and who shall not. The proclamation recounts the process by which the new article 19 of the Constitution was presented and ratified, naming the ratifying states, and continues: “Now, therefore, be it known that I, Bainbridge Colby, secretary of state of the United States, by virtue and in pursuance of section 205 of Lie revised statutes of the United States, do hereby certify that the amendment aforesaid has become valid to all intents and purposes as a part of the Constitution of the United States.” 150 CHRISTIANS ARE SLAIN Bedouins Descend on Village Near Jerusalem —Attack Train and Kill Officer. Cairo, Egypt, Aug. 30.—One hundred and fifty Christians have been killed at Ajlun, a village about fifty miles northeast of Jerusalem, bj a band of Bedouins, according to a dispatch received here from Haifa, Palestine. Another dispatch says that in a recent Bedouin raid on a train near Damascus an Italian naval officer was among the killed. Boy Scouts Sail for Home. . St. Nazaire, Aug. 25. —The American boy scouts who have been attending the “jamboree” in England and France departed for America aboard the American transport Princess Matoika. They held a reception aboard the ;hip, entertaining several hundred French boy scouts. Many Russian Prisoners. Berlin, Aug. 30.—Sixty-five thousand bolshevlst soldiers have crossed the, border into Germany. These, together with the 180,000 Russians who are still in Germany as prisoners, make a group of 245,000 Russianss. Many Russ Captured. Paris, Aug. 30.—Eighty thousand Russian soviet soldiers have been captured in Poland, 40,000 killed and 30,000 interned in east Prussia, according to the latest report received from the French mission In Poland. Charity Gets $2,000,000. Chicago, Aug. 28.—Practically all of the $2,000,000 estate of the late NelHe A. Black, widow of John C. Black, one-time president of the Continental and Commercial National bank, was left to charity. War Losses Astounding. Washington, Aug.-28.—The total loss in actual and potential life through the great war reached the astounding figure of 35,320,000, according to an announcement by the American Red Cross here.
THE SYRACUSE AND LAKEWAWASEE JOURNAL
JAMES WILSON DEAD Famous Farm Expert Passes Away at Traer, lowa. Served as Secretary of Agriculture in the Cabinets of Three J Presidents. Traer, la., Aug. 27. —James Wilson, former secretary of the department of agriculture died here at 11 a. m. Thursday. James Wilson was secretary of agriculture from 1897 until 1913 in the cabinets of Presidents McKinley, Roosevelt and Taft, during which he contributed largely to the agricultural development of the United StatesHis work In that capacity was notable not only for constructive achievement, but for its long term, which constituted a record. Bom August 16, 1835, in Ayrshire, Scotland, he was the son of a thrifty Scotch farmer, who, believing himself fitted for wider opportunities, brought his family to America in 1851, settling first in Connecticut and then, in 1855, in what is now Tama county, central lowa. James was educated in the'public schools and in lowa college. In 1904 he received the degree of LL. D. from the University of Wisconsin and Cornell (Iowa) college. In 1872 he was elected to congress and in all served three terms in the house. NEW RAIL RATES IN EFFECT Twenty Per Cent Increase in Passenger Fares and 33 1-3 Per Cent Raise in Freight. Washington, Aug. 27. —Increased transportation charges on practically all railroad and steamship lines of the country became effective at midnight Wednesday. Nearly every railroad filed blanket schedules with the interstate commerce commission, making effective the general increase of 33 1-3 per cent in freight rates, 20 per cent in passenger fares and excess baggage and milk charges and 50 per cent in charges for Pullman accommodations. Water carriers inaugurated joint rail and water traffic rate increases corresponding to the all-rail advance. Steamship lines operating on the Atlantic coast, Great Lakes and Gulf of Mexico will increase their all-water rates from 20 to 40 per cent on freight and from 20 to 33 1-3 per cent on passenger traffic, as a result of a decision Tuesday night by the shipping board. DEDICATE NEW PARK ROAD Officials and Auto Associations Take Part In Ceremony at Denver, Colorado. Denver, Colo., Aug. 26.—The National Park-to-Park highway, extending 4,500 miles through eleven national parks in nine western states, was dedicated and officially opened here. Stephen T. Mather, director of the national park service, and officials of the National Park-to-Park Highway association participated in the dedication, with officials of the American Automobile association. Immediately following the dedication, the officials planned to start in twenty-five automobiles for a tour of the highway. Grizzlies Terrify St. Louis. St. Louis, Aug. 30.—Two grizzly bears escaped from the municipal zoo and frightened hundreds of persons by running through a residential section, pursued by mounted policemen and a crowd of pedestrians. Mutiny in Canadian Police. Ottawa, Ont., Aug. 30.—Twenty-eight members of the Dominion police in this city recently amalgamated with the Royal Canadian Mounted police, have mutinied. They object to devoting so much of their time to drilling. William James Wilson Is Dead. Ottawa, Ont., Aug. 26.—William James Wilson, one of Canada’s most prominent scientists, and for many years paleobotanist for the geological survey, federal department of mines, is dead at the age of slxty-nlne years. Alimony More Than He Earns. Omaha, Neb., Aug. 26.—5. L. Gavin, Boston salesman, was arrested for nonpayment of S4O a week to his wife and children. When asked why ht failed to pay, Gavin said: “How car I man pay more than be makes?"
40,000 RUSSIANS KILLEDBYPOLES Eighty Thousand Taken Prisoner and 30,000 Interned in East Prussia. . RED COMMANDER IS OUSTED Gen. Tuchatscheweki, Known as “So. viet Napoleon," Relieved as Commander of Bolshevist Army for Failure to Take Warsaw. - Paris, August 28.—Eighty thousand Russian soviet soldiers have been captured in Poland, 40,000 killed and 30,000 interned in east Prussia, according to the latest report received from the French mission in Poland. The foreign office has counseled -Poland to attain the best strategic military position possible until peace Is signed, regardless of her ethnographic frontier, because the military situation would influence the peace terms. France has advised Poland, however, to withdraw- her armies within the Polish frontier upon the signing of peace, the foreign office added. Warsaw, August 28.—General Tuchatschewski, known as the “soviet Napoleon/’ has been relieved of his post as commandeo-in-chief of the Russian bolshevlst army on the Polish front because of his failure to take Warsaw, according to information given so the press here. Leon Trotzky, bolshevlst minister of war and marine, has personally taken command of the army, it is reported by bolshevlst officers who have been made prisoners. Ossowetz, the famous fortress northeast of Bialystok, 'l2O miles northcast of 'Warsaw, was taken by the Poles, according to a communication issued here. There are no details. The Poles took 000 prisoners in the > fighting north of Ostrolenka, after the ~ capture of that stronghold. A Polish detachment east of Lemberg has occupied Zadworze and Preeayslany. Polish cavalry on the southero front, after a short hand to hand tight, wiped out the Seventy-Second bolshevist brigade and made prisoners of many of the men, including the brigade chief of staff. . Fresh Russian bblshevlst forces, released from the Finnish frontier, have been rushed toward Grodnc in an endeavor to head off the Polish advances and if possible td rescue thousands of the red army hemmed in by the Poles, according to military information. Owing to the sovlet-Flnnish peace treaty, thousands of reds, it is reported, are being transferred to the Polish front. The Poles are expected,to reoccupy Grodno at’an early date. A bolshevist brigade of 4,000, which crossed the Dniester river before Horodenka and reached the Serth river, was surrounded and surrendered to the re-enforced Polish forces that are clearing out the region south of the Dniester and the left bank of the Bug on the Galician front. The bolsheviki no longer are grouped on a continuous front, but isolated fighting is continuing. London, Aug. 28.—A Berlin dispatch asserts that Russian prisoners arriving at Cracow report that the famous Russian bolshevist cavalry leader, Budenny, has been seriously wounded in action. The situation at Danzig shows marked improvement and munitions being unloaded, according to the Danzig correspondent of the London Times. It is asserted that there will be no difficulty in the future over the unloading and dispatch of munitions to Poland. GOV. COX HAS NEW MANAGER Representative Cantrill of Kentucky to Take Over Active Control of Campaign. * Washington, Aug. 26.—Representative James Cantrill of Kentucky has taken over active management of Governor Cox’s campaign for the presidency. Mr. Cantrilb left for New York and will take hold immediately. Governor Cox is scheduled to confer with Mr. Cantril) soon. At that time an effort will be made to determine the process by which Campaign Manager White can be “eased out of the Democratic picture.” It is possible that his retention as chairman of the national committee will be taken as the safe course. Mrs. Chaplin Spurns $125,000. Los Angeles, Cal., Aug. 30.—One hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars, it became known here, is not sufficient to appease the feeling of Mildred Harris Chaplin. The offer was spurned by her attorneys, who are said to have instructed the film actress to avoid meeting her husband or anyone representing him. Serbia Asks U. S. to Probe. Washington, Aug. 30.—The United States has been requested by the Serbian government to appoint representatives to an allied commission to investigate the conflict between Albania and Jugo-Slavia. First Linen Paper Maker Dies. Westfield, Mass., Aug. 30; —Frederick A, Thompson, 92 years old, one of the oldest paper makers in this part of the country, died here. He was said to be the first to manufacture the so-called linen paper. Falls to Swim Dover Strait London, Aug. 28.—After fighting the choppy water of the English channel for 18 hours in an effort to swim from England to France, Henry Sullivan of Mass., was taken into a boat When within three miles of his goal. Russ Drop Militia Demand. Paris, Aug. 28.—The,Russian soviet government is prepared to withdraw the clause in the Soviet peace terms of Poland concerning the formation of an armed militia of 200,000 workingmen in Poland, says a Mqscow wireless. *
WORLD’S EVENTS IN SHORT FORM BEST OF THE NEWS BOILED DOWN TO LIMIT. ARRANGED FOR BUSY PEOPLE Notes Covering Most Important Happenings of the World Compiled In Briefest and Most Succinct Ferm for Quick Washington \ Retail prices, in the opinion of the federal reserve ■'board at' Washington, will decline slightly duridjf the coming fall and winter months -find will slump next spring to stHLUwer levels. Hundreds of prohibition agents in New York and other cities have been guilty of taking bribes from saloonkeepers for protection. This was admitted at the office of Prohibition Commissioner Kramer at Washington. * • * A cablegram received by the Polish embassy at Washington from the minister of foreign affairs in Warsaw says: “The bolshevik army is completely defeated and cannot resist the attacks of our troops. Every day thousands of prisoners are being taken, until now there are 70,000 prisoners. The peasants, armed with scythes, are bringing in prisoners. The military spoils are great.” - • • •. For the first- time in the history of the United States the 1920 census returns will show more people live in the cities and towns than in the rural territory, officials of the census bureau at Washington estimate. * * • The proclamation announcing officially that the suffrage amendment to the Constitution had been ratified was signed by Secretary Colby of the state department at Washington on Thursday. • • ♦ The total loss in actual and potential life through the great war reached the astounding figure of 35,320,000, according to an announcement by the American Red Cross at Washington. • \ * President Wilson at Washington appointed Gordon Woodbury of New Hampshire to be assistant secretary of the navy to succeed Franklin D. Roosevelt, resigned. * * * A Washington dispatch says that the gunboat Sacramento has been ordered from Port Lemon, Costa Rica, to La Ceiba, Honduras, as a result of disturbances growing out of labor troubles in the vicinity of that port. • • * Census figures announced at Washington include: State of Georgia (rej vised), 2,893,960; previously announced, 2,893,601. * * * The census bureau at Washington announced population figures as follows: Kenosha, Wis., 40,742, 19,101 increase, or 89.1 per cent; Waukesha. Wis., 12,558, 3,828 increase, or 43.7 per cent. • • • Domestic Elated by their tieup of virtually every British ship in New York, the 2,000 or more longshoremen who suddenly quit work expect to spread their walkout to every port in the United States in the hope of forcing Great Britain to release from jail Terrence MacSweeney, lord mayor of Cork, and permit Archbishop Mannix to land on Irish soil. • • * • Chicago wholesale and retail coal dealers increased the price of coal, the advances ranging from 53 cents to $1.90 a ton, effective Thursday, the ’ date the rail transportation companies added increases to their charges. ♦ ♦ ♦ A British syndicate—the Collier Investment Trust. Ltd., of Swansea, Wales, London, Paris and New York — has contracted for 35,000,000 tons of American export coal, to be delivered at the rate of 7,000,000 tons a year, it was announced in New York. • • * Formal acceptance of a new Increase of $1.50 a day to more than 40,000 Illinois coal miners was made at Chicago by 16 men representing Illinois coal operators and officials of the workers’ unions. t For the first time In the hlWory of Ohio a jury of 12 women returned a verdict at Akron. The case decided was one involving eviction, the defendant winning. * * • Henry Martyn Hoyt, a-well-known portrait painter, committed suicide by Inhaling gas in his studio apartment in West Tenth street, New York city. * * • Illinois lost its 2-cent-a-mlle rate fight when Judges Geiger, Baker and English, sitting en banc in the federal court at Chicago, granted a temporary injunction preventing the state attorney general from enforcing the 2-cent passenger rate law. The injunction means th|it the passenger rate for intrastate travel will become 3.6 cents a mile on September 1. ♦ ♦ * Census figures given out at Washington place the population of Kansas City, Mo., at 324,410, an increase of 76,029, or 30.6 per cent. • • • The National Park-to-Park highway, extending 4,500 miles through eleven national parks In nine western states, was dedicated and officially opened at Denver, Colo. • « * A Rio de Janeiro dispatch says that embargo on exportations of sugar has been partly lifted, and 30,000 sacks were shipped for United States ports from Santos. • • * ■- The four United States airplanes ! dying from Mineola, N. Y n to Nome, I arrived at Nome from Ruby, Alaska.
All the Americans kidnaped by Pedro Zamora, the bandit leader, at Cuale, Jalisco, last week, have been released, according to reliable advices received at Mexico City from Guadalajara, capital of Jalisco. X• * • Eugene Leroy, wa«ted by the police of Detroit, Mich., in connection with the murder of a woman supposed to be his wife, was arrested on board the British freighter, Dryden, which arrived at Rio Janeiro. • • • Because her ten-year-old daughter lost a silver dollar she had given to her to make some purchases at a grocery store, Mrs. F. Fltzanko of Pekin, 111., it is charged, chained her to heated stove. • * • Sporting The Yankee athletes added another world's record to their Olympic games string at Antwerp when Miss Ethelda Bleibtry of New York won the 100meter free style swim for women in I minute 13 3-5 seconds. • « « Politics United States Senator Reed Smoot of Utah was unanimously renominated for that office by the Utah state Republican convention meeting in Salt Lake City. • • • Representative James Cantrill of Kentucky has taken over active management of Governor Cox’s campaign for the presidency, according to a Washington dispatch. • • • Personal Invitations are out for the wedding of Miss Dorothy Miller, daughter of Mrs. Roswell Miller and the late Roswell Miller, formerly president of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad company, and William Harold Stewart of Webster, Mass. The ceremony will take place on September 25 at Millbrook, N. Y. * • • The body of William K. Vanderbilt, who died in Paris, was brought back . to New York on the Olympic. ♦ * * James Wilson, former secretary of the department of agriculture, died at Traer, la., at 11 a. m., August 26. ♦ ♦ ♦ Practically all of the $2,000,000 estate of the late Nellie A. Black, widow of John C. one-time president of the Continental and Commercial National bank at Chicago, was left to charity. • • • Col. Beecher B. Ray, U. S. A„ retired, died at his home at Los Angeles, Cal. Colonel Ray served in the regular army about twenty-five years, retiring after service in the Philippine insurrection. * • * W. J. Atterbury, who died at Olathe, Kan., at the age of ninety-one, left 91 immediate descendants. They are: Eight children, 37 grandchildren, 44 great-grandchildcen and 2 great-great-grandchildren. * • • Judge Ben McCoy, pioneer member of the Mahaska county bar, and widely known In state Republican politics,’ and Ralph O’Hara, a prominent business man, died at Oskaloosa,, la. » ♦ * William James Wilson, one of Canada’s most prominent scientists, and for many years paleo botanist for ~the geological survey, federal department of mines, is dead at Ottawa, OnL • * * Foreign General Tuchatschewskl, known as the “soviet Napoleon,” has been relieved of his post as commander-in-chief of the Russian bolshevlst army on the Polish front because of his failure to take Warsaw, according to information given to the press at Warsaw. Leon Trotzky, bolshevist minister of war and marine, has personally taken command of the army. The foreign ministry announced at Paris that France bad counseled Po, land to attain the best strategical military position possible until peace is signed, regardless of her ethnographical frontier, because the military situation will influence the peace terms. Eighty thousand Russian soviet , soldiers have been captured in Po- ; land, 40,000 killed and 30,000 interned in east Prussia, according to the latest report received in Paris from the French mission in Poland. Recall by the Japanese government of all Japanese who have emigrated to the United States has been suggested by prominent citizens ofc Tokyo has a means of solving the Japanese problem. . • • • President Ebert In a proclamation issued at Berlin, invited all the political parties to submit loyally to disarmaments. The proclamation said severe penalties would be inflicted in case of failure to comply. » * • Serious rioting was renewed at Belfast during which there was considerable shooting and some incendiarism. A number of wounded persons were taken to hospitals. A fire started at the foot of Seaford street and «oon a whole block of buildings was a mass of flames. There was much , looting. • • • South Russian forces, commanded by Gen. Baron Peter Wrangel, have captured th6 important city of Novorossiysk on the Black sea, says a Sebastopol dispatch. A Warsaw dispatch says that the soviet committees formed in Polish cities that had been taken by the reds and have since been recaptured by the Poles will be dealt with through fielo courts-martial. Several members of these committees have already beer shot. A dispatch from Christiania says the Lettish government has contracted for 850 locomotives, 7,500 cars and 600,000 pounds of rails from an American company. The purchase amounts to $25,000,000, to be Daid in 20 years. '• « . ■ ...
ESCAPED AN OPERATION By Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Many Such Cases» Cairo, Ill.—.” Sometime ago I got sc bad with female trouble that I thought
I would have to be operated on. I had a bad displacement. My right side wdulc pain me and I was so nervous I could not hold a glass of water. Many times I would have to stop my work and sit down or I would fail' on the floor in a faint I consulted several doctors and
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