The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 13, Number 21, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 23 September 1920 — Page 2

BLAST BIS 36 IN WALL STREET More Than 350 Other Persons Are Injured by Mysterious Explosion. MORGAN FIRM MEMBER HURT Federal Officers Find Evidence to Justify Conclusion That the Mysterlous Detonation Was Caused by a Huge Bomb. New York, Sept 18.—Thirty-six persons are known to be dead, five others are missing and believed to be dead, and more than 300 persons are known “to have been wounded In an explosion 'between the United States subtreasury building and the office of J. P. Morgan & Co. at Broad and Wall streets. The damage to the great buildings is estimated at $1,000,000. The Morgan building appeared a shambles and part of the front of the subtreasury across the street was torn ■away. After hours of investigation, city and federal officers and W llliam J. Buras said they hud found evidence to justify the conclusion that the mysterious detonation was caused by a huge bomb loaded with T. N. T. (trinitrotoluol), titan of explosives, re-en-forced with iron slugs crudely manu- ' factored from old-fashioned tenement house window weights. The weight of overwhelming evidence* caused the authorities to give over their earlier theory that the explosion was caused by an accident to a dynamite-carrying truck. Every available detective and department of justice agent in the city was set to the task of ferreting out the band of anarchists believed responsible for the outrage. Scattered bits of the truck and the horribly mangled form of a roan horse were found in the street after the explosion, while rude bomb slugs were found in Wall street, in adjacent thoroughfares and embedded in the walls of the Morgan and other edifices, which were pitted as by a shrapnel bombardment. At the morgue, where there were 36 mutilated bodies. Including those of four women and one boyi Chief Medical Examiner Charles N. Norris said: “In several of the bodies we found parts of iron, such as might have been made by breaking up sash weights. There is no doubt that a bomb was the cause of the explosion.” Evidence gathered by the department of justice indicated that the plotters, in an effort to carry out numerous radical threats of a forcible demonstration against the house of Morgan, carefully manufactured a hun-dred-pound bomb, loaded it on a truck, either hired or stolen, and drove their deadly burden into the financial district. • 5 ... William J. Burns, house detective for J. P. Morgan & Co., declared that ,he is certain that the explosion was by design. Mr. Bnrns said: “A bomb caused the explosion. There Is not the slightest doubt about this. I might be closer to the truth perhaps if I said a wagonload of bombs. “From my Investigation I am cerftaln that the bomb was in the wagon which was destroyed. There is no other reasonable theory. ■ “The pieces of window weights ■picked up in the nearby office buildlings, where they had been hurled by ithe explosive, could have no other ■connection with the disaster than to !be parts of the bomb and used as its ■projectiles by some one who had schemed to do the greatest possible damage that could be imagined.” The bomb; he believes, was brought >to the corner in a wagon which was abandoned by the four men who brought it. It was composed of a high explosive and had window weights for missiles —thus it was merely a mobile ! high explosive shell of greater dimensions probably than any that were ever thrown in the world war. One other theory is offered. That ds the explosion was an accident occasioned by the colliding of a wagonload of explosives with an automobile. A messenger boy declared that a few minutes before the explosion he saw the wagon that carried the explosives abandoned at the curb In front of Morgan’s by four men. These four, he said, were joined by two others. This description, however. It is pointed out, would fit the theory of either accident or design. Every reserve of the New York police force Is in the area. A battalion of federal troops from Governor’s Island is standing guard with fixed bayonets. One of the injured was Junius Spencer Morgan, son of J. P. Morgan. Joyce, a clerk in the Morgan house, iwas killed. Insult Offered U. S. Washington, Sept. 20. —An attempted violation of the American consulate et Genoa, Italy, by workmen displaying red flags during the funeral of .. workman was reported to the state department here. Blast Is “Red Call to Arms.” Chicago, Sept. 20.—The Wall street explosion in New York is merely a Signal to the Internationale that the reds of America are not apathetic, but pre on the job, in the opinion of Frank (Comerford. J Proposed Census Scares Japs. Tokyo, Sept. 18. —Japan’s preparations for beginning the fii-Jt census on October 1 are causing many persons sxtreme perturbation. The authori- • ties are kept busy Issuing tranqullizIng notes. Plane Falls Into Abyss. Geneva, Sept. 18.—A large hydroairplane, which was last seen over the Alps last week In the region around fit. Gothard, Is missing. The machine Is believed' to have fallen Into an •bvss. ■ ’

CARLOS ARAMAYO f / * H IB \W'' j J Carlos Aramayo, confidential agent In the United States of the provisional government of Bolivia, is expected to be the minister from that country to the United States as soon as recognition is granted. He Is now In Washington, where he has been conferring with Under Secretary Davis of the state department. Senor Aramayo is a son of Bolivia’s “bismuth king,” now Bolivian minister to Parts. The son Is owner and publisher of a daily newspaper In La Paz. He was born in England and was educated at Beaumont College and Oxford university. ASK JAP EXPULSION Veterans of Foreign Wars Adopt Resolution. Declare Japanese Are N.ot Assimilable —Fighters Reviewed by General Pershing. Washington, Sept. 17. —Exclusion ot all Japanese immigrants was urged in a resolution adopted unanimously by the Veterans of Foreign Wars, holding their annual encampment here. Abrogation of the “gentlemen’s agreement” with Japan, and amendment of the federal Constitution so as to make children born in this country eligible for citizenship only If both parents are eligible were also favored. The resolution introduced by Commander J. W. Jones, Portland, Ore., declared the Japanese immigration question was of national scope and not confined to the Pacific coast. “The Japanese question is a source of acute and constantly increasing irritation,” said the preamble, “and in time this irritation cannot fail to end in grave international friction unless vigorous steps are taken to allay it. “We acknowledge and respect the virtues of thrift and industry which characterize the Japanese race, but if the Japanese are not assimilable, these virtues instead of being a contribution to our national character, are a weapon.” More than 5,000 men who had fought on foreign soil participated in a parade down Pennsylvania avenue. President Wilson watched the procession from the east portico of the White House. , Near the capitol the veterans were viewed by General Pershing and Secretary Daniels. Later Mr. Daniels addressed them from the, steps of the capitol. KILL WHITE MAN FOR INSULT Alabamans Avenge Remarks Made to Woman by Hanging Near Hartford. Montgomery, Ala., Sept. 16.—Alto Windham, white, was lynched near Hartford, Ala., because of remarks he was alleged to have made to a white woman. The woman’s husband is reported to have telephoned a neighbor to stop ■Windham. This was done, and soon a number of men arrived. The neighbor refused to surrender the man until he received a promise that he would not be harmed. The man was taken to a nearby swamp and lynched. Bomb Explosion in Italy. Genoa, Sept. 20.—A time bomb exploded in the stock exchange, doing a heavy property damage. There ere no casualties. The authors of the explosion are not known. The police, in a search of houses immediately after the bomb detonation, discovered enough explosives to blow up an entire block. It was hidden in a single house. Nurse Home After Terror in Orient. Philadelphia, Sept. 18.—Miss Mary Super, formerly a nurse In the Children’s Homeopathic hospital in this city, Is back home, considerably shaken by her experience at the hands of Turkish nationalists in Hadjin. Trainmen Expel 86 Lodges. Cleveland, 0., Sept. 18.—Eighty-six lodges of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen have been expelled from the order for participating in the unauthorized strike of switchmen last spring, W. G. Lee announced. Refuses to O. K. Suffrage, Hartford; Conn., Sept. 17.—Governor Holcomb, doubting the legality of the ratification of the nineteenth amendment, which was voted by the legislature Monday, has withheld certification of the action. ... < ... . 9 King Alfonso’s Horse Wins. San Sebastian, Spain, Sept. 17.— King Alfonso’s great racer Brabant won the grand prize event at the race track over thirteen other starters, the distance being approximately a mile and’ a half.

1 THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL ,

YANKS PRAISED BY GEN.FAYOLLE A French General Says No Soldier Was Better Than American in War. CALLS THEM MAGNIFICENT Leaves Paris for Cleveland, Where He Will Attend Convention of the American Legion—Plans Similar Body in France. Paris, Sept. 20.—“ The American doqghboy need nut take off his hat to any soldier of any of the armies engaged in the great war. There were some as good as he, but none better.” Thus spoke Gen. Marie Emile Fayolle of the French army, who In the closing phases of the war used in the counter-offensive against the Germans alongside the French troops seven American divisions. The general was talking on the eve of his departure for the United States, where he is to represent the French army at the convention of the American Legion in Cleveland. “The Americans were simply magnificent,” continued General Fayolle. “As a matter of fact, some of them were brave even to such an extent as one might call it rashness. “You know, it was under my command that the Americans received their baptism of fire at Cantigny. Then again on July 18 they were with me in the offensive between Solssons and Chateau-Thlerry.” “Magnificent! Marvelous!” General Fayolle kept repeating. “Your sbldiers,” the general went on, “were not only men as regards courage, but also in endurance and unfailing good humor. But there was one branch in the military service In which they were totally deficient, and it was one of th* most important in military science. “They could not cook, or they were too busy fighting to bother about such trifles as cooking.” The general said this with a merry twinkle in his eye. Then he added: “I shall be happy to meet the American poilu, who were my comrades In battle.” General Fayolle will be accompanied to the United States by Lieut. Col. Requin, a, member of Marshal Focb’s mission to America, and also Lieut. Soubiran, who will be his Interpreter. This will be the general’s first visit to "the United States, and he expressed pleasure at having the opportunity to see what he termed “that wonderful country”—-New York and its skyscrapers and other cities. The general is tall and straight. He stands six foot and is youthful of. spirit. in spite of his sixty and more years. He said he would study the organization of the American Legion for the purpose of ascertaining whether many of the organizations of the French army cannot be grouped into a similar body. U. S. NEED FEAR NO PANIC Chicago Banking Business Conditions Have Improved 100 Per Cent Since September 1. Chicago, Sept. 20. —The United States need fear no panic with the national debt at $24,000,000,000 and the -yalue of the produce that will be harvested from the country’s farms set ijt $26,500,000,000, by Secretary of Agriculture Meredith, Harry H. Merrick, president of the Great Lakes Trust company, told the members of the Executives’ club at the luncheon here. “Even if the government financiers wanted to, why should they tw to pay off this debt in ten years, as their program calls for?” he asked. “The national debt has been overestimated by $10,000,000,000. The authorities forget that the foreign countries owe us money and it is only a question of time until they will pay it “What the United States needs,” he said, “is a 5 reformed income tax and excess profit tax. The business conditions in this country have improved 100 per cent since September 1. Our sun has come from behind the cloud and we are safe.” WILL SHIP ACTRESS’ BODY Remains of Late Olive Thomas, Wife of Jack Pickford, to Be Buried In America. Paris, Sept. 17.—1 tis probable the body of the late Olive Thomas, American motion picture actress, who died here last week, will be \ shipped to New York on the liner Mauretania. Jack Pickford, her husbhnd. and a few friends will accompany the body to America. Acute nephritis set up by the absorption of bichloride of mercury by the kidneys was as the cause of death, following <an autopsy performed here. ( Strike Delays Fur Auction. St. Louis, Sept. 20.—The fall ..notion at the International Hur exchange, scheduled to begin October 4, has been postponed because of the ttrike of garment makers at some t>f the large Eastern manuafctories, J Club Elects Gen. Nricholson. New York, Sept. 2€>.—Brig. Gen. William J. Nicholson,/ former commander of the 157th infantry brigade, Seventy-ninth division; was elected president of the Army ®nd Navy club of Amyica here. To Unionize Fire Fighters. St Louis, Sept. 16.—Plans for spreading the unionteation movement among the members of the municipal fire department werq considered at the third annual convention of the International Association! of Fire Fighters. | World Court Plan. London. Sept. 16.—The headquarters of the League of Nations made public the text of the project for a permanent court of international justice, as adopt'd by The Hague committee of Jurists

CAPT. GEORGEK.SHULER 'A Bret I w - I'" vwi Capt. George K. Shuler, a marine officer with a fine record In the World, war, is out to capture a seat in congress from the Thirty-sixth district. New York state, the district which produced the late Sereno E. Payne. Captain Shuler will be the Democratic nominee against Norman J. Gould, Republican incumbent. ILLINOIS RACE CLOSE Official Canvass May Be Necessary to Decide Primary. Lieut. Gov. Oglesby Running Neck and Neck With Len Small— Hot Senate Contest, Chicago, Sept. 20.—Apparently the official canvass will he necessary tc determine the result of the hottest fight for United States senatof and governor that Illinois ever hQs seen. According to the latest returns Oglesby was leading Small for governor by only 833 votes, "with 293 precincts out of 5,737 in the state still to be heard from. For the senate, McKinley had a lead of 12,660 In 5,302 precincts in the state. The figures on the contests are as follows: Governor—Cook county, 2.205 precincts; Oglesby, 110,114; Small, 191,645. Downstate, 3,139 precincts: Oglesby, 236,936; Small, 154,652. Grand total, 5,344 precincts: Oglesby, 347,130; Small, 346,297. Senator—Cook county, 2,205 precincts : McKinley, 116,667; Smith, 184,674. Downstate, 3,097 precincts: McKinley, 223,868; Smith, 143,201. Grand total, 5,302 precincts: McKinley, 340,535; Smith, 327,875. MINE STRIKERS IN RIOT Six Companies of Alabama Guard Called Out—One Killed, Two Wounded. Montgomery, Ala., Sept. 18. —Six companies of the Alabama national guard, called into service last nighl by Gov. Kilby for duty in Walker and Jefferson counties where bituminous coal miners have been on strike foi two weeks, were expected to reach ths strike area. The trosms will be undei the command of Brig. Gen. Robert E Steiner, who planned to establish temporary headquarters at Birmingham. He expected later to shift his headquarters to Jasper. L. M. Adler general manager qf the Corona Coa company, was shot from ambush and instantly killed yesterday near Pat ton. Deputy Sheriffs Sullivan and Coker, who were with Adler in at automobile, were seriously wounded Reports that both had died were unconfirmed. Gov. Kilby called om troops when Informed by Sherifi Clark Guthrie of Walker county thai feeling had grown bitter <_betweet mine guards and miners and thai armed bands were gathering at Co rona, INDICTED IN OIL STOCK FRAUD Corporation and Nine Individuals Aft cused by a New York Grand Jury. New York, Sept. 17,—Conspiracy t< defraud oil stock investors of $120.00C is charged against one corporation and nine individuals in a federal Indictment returned last August and unsealed here. Defendants named in the indictment are the Pennsylvania-Kentucky Oil and Gasoline Refining corporation; L. M. Stephens, J. M. Dußois, C. M. Watson, ’A. E. Kenney, Frank Hicks, James L. Holland, Frederick W. Rogers, Edward Gerard and M. E. Tailman. The paper was unsealed and made public by Judge William B. Sheppard, sitting in the federal district court, on request of United States District Attorney Simmons. Blast Laid to Reds. New York, Sept. 20. —William J. Flynn, chief of the bureau of investigation, department of justice, declared he was positive that a bomb had caused the explosion In Wall street which took a toll of 87 lives. Steamer Burned in Dry Dock. Baltimore, Sept. 20.—The steamer Kershaw of the Merchants and Miners Transportation company was destroyed by fire in the yards of the Baltimore Dry Docks and Shipbuilding company. Hungary Has Big Deficit Budapest, Sept. 18. —Hungary’s budget, which was submitted to the national assembly here by Mr. Laranyl, minister of finance, shows a deficit of 10.000,000,000 kroner (about $2,000,000,000 ngrmal value). Missing Mall Pilot Is Safe. San Francisco, Sept 18. —Pilot John T, Eaton, missing since last Tuesday when he left Reno, Nev., east-bound in a mail plane, is alive and safe at Shafter, Nev., according to advices received here. ■r •

I Happenings of the World Tersely Told -Washington An attempted violation of the. American consulate at Genua, Italy, by workmen displaying red flags during the funeral of a workman was reported to the state department at Washington. • • * Owing to a decrease In freight offerings, the shipping board announced the tying up of seven steel vessels of about 38.000 deadweight tons, according to a Washington dispatch. • • • Warning against the purchase of patent motor fuels and other products advertised as having been tested and approved by the bureau of mines, was given In a statement issued by that bureau at Washington. » • • Population figures issued by the census bureau at Washington give Polk county, lowa, including Des Moines, 154,029, an Increase of 43.59 L or 39.5 per cent. • « * The American Shipbuilding company has been authorized by the shipping board at Washington to sell ten steel steamers of 8,700 deadweight tons each for transfer to foreign registry. * * * Labor leaders asking general amnesty for political prisoners were told by Attorney General Palmer at Washington that Jne government would continue its policy of “considering the ! cases individually.” * « • Directors of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs at Washington unanimously adopted the recommendation of Mrs. Thomas G. Winters of Minneapolis that the activities of the clubs be continued toward the Improvement of the home. « • • The United States government at Washington has sent a new note to Mexico City demanding that the lives anti property rights of all Americans in Mexico be accorded fullest protection by the newly elected government. • * * Domestic Thirty-six persons are known to be dead, five others are missing and believed to be dead, and more than 360 persons are known to have been wounded in an explosion between the United States subtreasury building and the office of J. P. Morgan & Co. at Broad and Wall streets, at NewYork. The damage to the great buildings is estimated at $1,000,000. • * * The American Legion announced at New- York the formation of plans to mobilize its forces throughout the country for a war against the high cost of living. • • * William J. Flynn, chief of the bureau of investigation, department of justice, declared at New York he was positive that a bomb had caused the explosion in Wall street which took a toll\of 37 lives. The fall auction at the International Fur exchange, scheduled to begin at St. Louis October 4, has been postponed because of the strike of garment makers at some of the large Eastern manufactories. » * * The Wall street explosion in New York is merely a signal to the Internationale that the reds of America are not apathetic, but are on the job, in the opinion of Frank Comerford of Chicago. • • * The steamer Kershaw of the Merchants and Miners Transportation company was destroyed by fire in the yards of the Baltimore Dry Docks and Shipbuilding company at Baltimore. « « * Jack Johnson, negro pugilist and former heavyweight champion of the world, was resentencecf to a year and a day In the federal prison at Leavenworth, Kan., and fined SI,OOO by Judge Carpenter at Chicago. • « • Miss Florence Welskopf, sixteen years old, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Welskopf of Chicago, was notified that, through the death of an aunt, she had been given a legacy of $500,000. • • « The mutilated bodies of three young men, all w-earing American Legion buttons and carrying cards indicating they had been employed by a circus, were found lying along the Union Pa- • cific tracks near Salina, Kan. 4 ♦ * * All five of the Socialist assemblymen who were thrown out of the New York state assembly last fall triumphed at a special election in their districts in New York. Each candidate defe .ted a fusion candidate offered by the Republicans and Democrats. * * * Governor Holcomb at Hartford, Conn,, doubting the legality of the. ratification of the nineteenth amendment, which was voted by the legislature Monday, has withheld certification of the action. ♦ * * Pilot John L. Eaton, missing seteral days after leaving Reno, Nev., eastbound in a mail plane, is alive and safe at Shafter, Nev., according to advices received at San Francisco. ♦ * * Exclusion of all Japanese immigrants was urged In a resolution adopted unanimously by the Veterans of Foreign Wars, hqlding their annual encampment at Washington. • • ♦ The mine workers’ policy committee at Wilkes-Barre, Pa., voted to end i tbo strike of anthracite miners.

Complete and official announcement that the strike of the outlaw switchmen is at an end was made at Chicago by John Grunau, president and chairman of the board of directors of the United Association of Railroad Employees of America. “It is now declared fair to work on any railroad on and after September 13,” the statement reads. “With “ reference to seniority rights, though we have lost our seniority we have won one of the greatest battles in the history of the railroads by forcing the government to appoint the United States railroad labor board.” • • * Liquor bandits, in two raids on warehouses at Chicago, escaped with whiskies and rare wines totaling $37,000 in value. • • • Consent for Austria to spend without restriction the recent credit of 5,000.000 pesos given her by Argentina has been accorded by the interallied reparations commission, according to a Vienna dispatch. I * • ♦ * “Until further notice no ship or vessel carrying passengers eastern bound Is to enter the port or harbor of Queenstown,” says a notice by the British admiralty printed in the Official Gazette at London. * * • Eighty-slx lodges of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen have been expelled from the order for participating in the unauthorized strike of switchmen last spring, W. G. Lee announced at Cleveland, O. • • • Federal Judge Garvin in Brooklyn upheld United States commissioners’ decisions that seizure of liquors without a search warrant is a “clear violation of the fourth amendment of th* Constitution.” * * * Personal Brig. Gen. William J. Nicholson, former commander of the One Hundred ■ and Fifty-seventh Infantry brigade. Seventy-ninth division, was elected president of the Army and Navy club of America at New York. * • « Thomas E. Wilson of Chicago was president of the Institute of American Meat Packers at Atlantic City, N. J. « • « Miss Mary Super, formerly a nujge tn the Children’s Homeopathic hospital in Philadelphia, is back considerably shaken by her experience at the hands of Turkish nationalists in Hadjin. • * * Abraham Lincoln Lawshe, third assistant postmaster general under Presidents Roosevelt and Taft, and for several years auditor for the Philippine Islands, died at his home at Mon rovia, Cal. • « « Politics A Chicago dispatch says that apparently the official canvass will be necessary to determine the result of the hottest fight for United States senator and governor that Illinois ever has seen in the Republican party. • « * Republican and Democratic candidates who received the Indorsement of the unofficial state conventions at Saratoga won decisive victories in all state-wide contests in Tuesday’s New York state primary: • • * A Portland dispatch says Maine went Republican by a plurality of 65,000 in Monday’s election. • * * Foreign A time bomb exploded in the stock exchange at Genoa, Italy, doing 'a heavy property damage. There werie no casualites. The authors of this explosion are not known. The police, in a serach of houses immediately after the bomb detonation, discovered enough explosives to blow up an entire bffigk! It was hidden in a single house; The Lithuanians and the Poles are again engaged in hostilities. It Is announced In the Polish official statement at Warsaw. Fighting has been resumed between the two forces in the Suwalki sector, near the German border. • • • A large hydroairplane, which was last seen over the Alps last week In the region around St. Gothard, is missing. The machine is believed to have fallen into an abyss, says a Geneva dispatch. • * * Hungary’s budget, which was submitted to the national assembly at Budapest by Mr. Laranyi, minister of finance, shows a deficit of 10,000,000,000 kroner (about $2,000,000,000 normal value). • • • Japan’s preparations for beginning t£e first census on October 1 are causing many persons extreme pertubation. The authorities at Tokyo are kept busy issuing tranquilizing notes. • * « Great throngs witnessed the launching at Bilboa, Spain, of the trans-At-lantic liner Alfonso XII, the first steamer of more than 14,000 tons ever built in Spain. • • • George Kessler, the “American champagne king,” died at Paris following an illness which confined him tv his home. • • • Many Koreans and Japanese pollc have been killed in attacks by Koreans on the police, according to press messages received at Tokyo. • • » King Alfonso’s great racer Brabant won the grand prize event at the race track at San Sebastian over 13 other starters, the distance being approxi- - mutely a mile and a half. • » ♦ A dispatch from Kovno reports the arrival at Lida, Lithuania, of Leon Trotzky, Russian bolshevist minister of war. Lida is occupied by Russian troops. • ♦ ♦ A Cruz dispatch says that a fire worked a damage of more than $1,000,000 in the Tampico oil area.

I SUFFERED THREE YEARS Finally was Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’i Vegetable Compound. Lowell, Mass.—“ I was all run down and had an awful pain in my right side, . as

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