old fulton ny post cards by tom tryniski 23/rome ny daily sentinel/ro… · - •••...
TRANSCRIPT
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W E A T H E R .
Washington, July i S - e a t t a r i i New York: Showers tonlghi; T p w d a y generally fair. *
Western New York: Fair tonight except ehowere In the extreme ewjt portion; Tuesday partly cloudyj mod-erate temperature.
entittel ? T H E S E N T I N E L Is never forced on suoscribera. Paper' Is discontinued *»nen time le up, un-1 less renewed. No exceptions to t h u i rule. Due notice Is sent Oefore ex I piratlon date. M j k e renewal while you think of it. I
VOLUME XXS1X. y K t JMCJ , IS. L ,
M f l O N FOR ROME, N. ¥., MONDA.Y EVENING, JULY 12. 1920. LATEST EDITION.
LA FOLLETTE CAN HAVE NOM THE ASKING BUT SOME GROUPS STAND ODT;
RADICALS HOLD CENTER OF CHICAGO STAGE
EUGENIE, WIDOW OF NAPOLEON III, DIES
AT 94 IN MADRID
OYER THE FALLS IN BARREL, BODY
FAILS TO APPEAR EX-EMPRESS HAD R E T U R N E D TO N | A G A R A R IVERMEN SEARCH FOR
N A T I V E LAND FOR V I E W . EX-PECTING BLINDNESS.
REMAINS OF C. G. STEPHENS, ' AGED 58 OF ENGLAND. -
POLISH ARMIES TAKE OFFENSIVE
AGAIN_AT ROVNO FURTHER SOUTH RUSSIAN3 CON.
T I N U E T H E I R DRIVE NORTH . OF D N I E S T E R RIVER.
ILL ONLY FOR A FEW HOURS WOODEN BARREL SMASHED'ALLIES IN TWO PROPOSALS
LABOR PARTY CONVENTION FOR RUSSIAN SYSTEM HERE
James Duncan, Leader in Seattle's General Strike, Delegate in 48 Convention and
Vice Chairman of Labor Convention.
LABOR MEN AND FORTY-EIGHTERS FOR -ONE NAME, ONE PLATFORM,-ONE TICKET
Probable Presidential Candidate of •) New "Third Party" Now Forming
CONSCIOUS OF APPROACHING E N D AND GLAD TO DIE
IN BELOVED SPAIN.
tees in conference found the selection ot a name for their new political par ty to be more than a minor problem. Ccnfbinations upon the word "labor" were in disfavor among the committ e r of 48 representatives. "American par ty" and "the United party" were' t i t les presented, but no decision was reacBed.
The conference also considered a proposal to bring all the delegates assembled In the two conventions into a single session for platform adoption a n j presidential combinations.
Under the direction of the Committee of 48, a special sub-committee, headed by Mrs. Ina P. Williams of Washington state, carried invitations
Separate Conventions, However, to Continue Independently Though in Concert—Selection of Name for Third Party
Proves More Than a Minor Problem, Forty-eighters Opposing Use of Word "Labor" in Connection
With Some Other—Frank P. Walsh and C. H. Ingersoll Still Possible Nominees.
Chicago, July 12.—Amalgamation of the Labor party of the United States and the Committee of 48 in a new political movement with a single party qame, one platform, and one presidential ticket, were included in the recommendations submitted to the Labor and Forty-eight conventions when they reconvened today.
Senator Robert L. LaFollette of Wisconsin remained the most talked of candidate in the presidential race. The terms of the proposed combine are understood by the party leaders to meet his views as expressed last week to Amos Pinchot and George L. Record, leading Forty-eighters, who called on the senator to ask if he would accept the nomination should it be tendered him.
Conference committees appointed yesterday by the Labor convention and Saturday by the Forty-eighters smoothed out objection to amalgama-t.on in a protracted session last night and adopted a series of recommendations to be offered to the two convention today. Resides urging the cobmiuing pt forces under a common standard with a common na tu .o the. also proposed appointment of special subcommittees to draft the machinery under which the combine will work and to prepare u point platform.
Conventions to Act Separately. The recommendationss, it approved
today, as the leaders confidently expect, mean that the two conventions will preserve their separate identities and continue to function in separate sessions, with sub-comm#ttees reporting identical measures to each for discussion and action.
What reception the amalgamation proposal will receive from other lib-eial and radical groups now meeting here only t ime can show. The single tax party, also in national convention assembled, is divided, according to expressions of various leaders, on the availability of Senator La Follette as presidential nominee. One group of single taxers has announced that it will bolt the proposed combine rather than stand for La Follette, while another faction has declared it will accept any presidential nominee so long as a single tax plank is incorporated In the platform.
La Follette—If He Wants It. If Senator La Follette wants the
third party nomination he can have it, both Forty-eighters and Laborites agree. He is already the overwhelming choice of the Forty-eighters, a mall referendum has shown. While other candidates will be placed in nomination in the labor convention and probably in the Forty-eight meeting, too, the Senator 's friends aay both groups are ready to nominate bim.
Frank P. Walsh, Kansas City, Charles H. Ingersoll, manufacturer, and Henry Ford have been mentioned for the nomination, but there Is no rpparent concerted action to further the prospects of any one of them. Walsh is also being discussed for vice president.
Yesterday was given over to the opening session of the labor convent/on with delegates from sixty t rade union groups and other organizations represented. The Forty-eightera and single taxers , whose convention opened Saturday, had recessed for the day and practically their entire membership a t tended the labor convention, many participating as active delegates,
Duncan's Dual Capacity.
Prominent among those assuming a dual delegate roll wan James Duncan, one of the leaders of the general strike in Seattle last year. Duncan or Saturday was elected chairman of the Washington delegation to the convention of the committee of Forty-eight and yesterday was chosen vice chairman of Labor convention.
The radical groups who, according to Swinburne Hale, one of their leaders, were in the minority In the For-
F I T T E D W I T H ELECTRIC L IGHT AND OXYGEN, CONTRAPTION
PROVES TOO L IGHT."
OFFER SUBSTANTIAL AID IF POLES W I L L W I T H D R A W TO
L INES SET T H E M .
LIFE OF GLORY AND SORROW: WARNED BY ''BOBBY LEACH
SENATOR ROBERT M. COPYRIGHT • UMONtTON. W A t H ,
L a F O L L L i T E
COX BACK ON JOB AS OHIOGOVERNOR
MAKES FIRST CAMPAIGN PLEDGE TO FARMERS—TO PICK "D IRT-
AGRICULTURAL SECRETARY.
-Columbus, 0., July 12. — Governor Cox arrived from his home this morn ing, prepared to resume Ins duties at the executive of lice. Tuis afternoon he was to confer with Franklin L>. Roosevelt, his running mate, who
o representatives of the Non-Tarti-, c x p e c t s t 0 s t op off for a few hours en san League, the Single Tax Conven-J r o u t e t 0 Washington from San• Fran-tion. the World War Veterans' A s s o - [ c j s c c
station and the American Conatitu-f T h f l g o v e r n o r w a s accompanied tional Party that delegates attend the f r o m D a y t 0 n b y ex-Coneressman T. T. Committee of 48 convention. All, »t| A n s D e r r y o f Ohio, who yesterday ar-was said, agreed to go that far, pro- r i v e d f r o m S a n Francisco and gave vided they were not bound to remain i t h e Democratic nominee first hP.nC tain the session, or support the deci-l f 0 r m a t l o n of the convention.
Cox Makes Pledge to Farmers, Dayton, O., July 12. - Governo
sions. The resolutions committee of the
•numittee of 48 held another session: j a m e V " C o x YromTs"ed"a delegi t isn 'of today. According to Chairman Record i t a r i n e r s t h a t h e w o u i d n a m e a "real, the platform would not actually b e : ; l l r t f a r r a e r " as secretary of agricul-completed before tonight. | t u r 6 ( i f t n e v o t e r s elected hiru presi-
Work on amalgamating the v a r i - | . i e n t n e x t f a n . Tlve farmers were elemen f c r i neighbors around the Cox mansion,
"Trails End." His promise to them was what Cox himself. terrmu his "first campaign pledge."
I t was an informal visit by the neighbors to congratulate Cox on h(3 nomination, but he took the occasion to tell them that his first official announcement as president, if Rlected, would be of part icular interest to farmers.
"If elected," the governor said, "I shall select a man to be secretary of agriculture who himself has tilled the soil, made a successful business of farming and demonstrated his efficiency."
formation of a new party continued \ behind closeu doors this forenoon I while the conventions of the Committee of 48 and the National Labor i Pa r ty marked time. j
Hale Attacks Palmer. During ' the Long wait for confer
ence reports, Swinburne Hale of New Yc k, telling of deportation proceedings of the federal government, attacked Attorney General Palmer and won applause. Hale said that Parley P. Christensen, permanent chairman of the convention, was "one of the first defenders of the I. W. W." The relegates cheered until Chairman Christensen was forced to acknowledge by bowing.
"The Department of Labor has since become emancipated," Hale said, dealing with Palmer, "by the courage of Louis Post."
Hale asserted that Attorney Genera l Palmer "has the highest Ideals and the lowest practices ot any official ii our history."
Eammon de Valera, who got a rousing reception as he entered the hall, cut short Hale's talk and was presented as "president of the Irish republic."
were In mobile, the ascendancy yesterday and vigor cusly applauded when their leaders prayed for the day vhen the workers of America would follow the example set by the workers of Russia.
Every reference to Russia, and to Ireland too, was applauded with a will, and when John Fltzpatrlck, the labor kevnoter, praised the Russian revolution three cheers for soviet Russia were called and given.
Hitch Over Party Title. Sitting late last nlghl the commit-
ESCAPING ROBBERS SHOOT 3 CITIZENS
PREVIOUSLY LOCK OFFICIALS OF BANK IN CELLAR AND SE
CURE $13,000 BOOTY.
Plalnfield, 111., July 12. — Five men entered the Plalnfield State Bank soon after noon today, locked official in the cellar and robbed the institution of $13,000 in cash and Liberty bonds,
Fir ing down Main street with rifles as they drove out of town in i n auto
NEW THEORY AS TO WANDERER'S DEED
Brilliant Career as Spanish Countess and as Empress of the French Followed By Triple Visitation and Prolonged Years in Seclusion in Great Britain.
Madrid, Spain, Sunday, July 11.— Ex-Empress Eugenie of France, who died this morning in her 95th year, Aas ill only a few hours before her leath. She was exceptionally well Saturday morning. At midday she unched heartily, eating chicken and ;ome ham.
i -A short time later she became 111, i experiencing a severe abdominal pain. j Dr. Grenda, physician to King Alfon-! so, was called and, finding her eondi-' i ion. serious, summoned. Dr. Moreno
"^htJu7lo7^~^peclal is t , and a lso two' otker physicians. They were, how-
' ever, unable to relieve the pat ient . ! Empress Eugenie seemed conscious i 'hat death was approaching and thqse ' who stood by the bedside say she ap-, peared glad to die in Spain, her nat ive • country. J Some time ago Eugenie lost the 1 sight of one of her eyes and was fear-
( lul of becoming totally blind. With ihe desire again to visit her nat ive
I country, Spain, she begged that, she p l i g h t be taken there before she be
came entirely blind. Her wish was gratified and last
j'April Eugenie again saw the beauties if Spain— and especially of Andalusia—where she was born.
Despite her 94 years she displayed notable vitality and expressed warmhearted gratitude over the way in which she was received by the people of Spain. During her travels in Andalusia she was described as having been almost childlike in her Joyous-ness in again visiting the scenes of her childhood.
Had Some American Blood. Eugene Marie de Montijo. was born
in Granada, Andalusia, Spain, May 5, 1826. She was the second daughter of Count Manuel Fernandez di Montijo, duke of Peneranda, and Maria Manuela Kirkpatrick of Closeburn, Dumfriesshire, Scotland. Her maternal grandfather was William Kirkpatrick, United States consul at Mai-
ARMISTICE ASKED FOR THEM Former Successful Negotiator of Fal ls
and Rapids in Steel Barrel l To ld
Engl ishman H i s . C r a f t Would Break
— F e a t T w i c e Before Accomplished.
Niagara Falls, July 12. — Rivet-men were patrolling the-Niagara gorge bo-low the falls today in the hope.of •©-covering the body of Charles G. Stephens, 5S, of Bristol, fctaghvnd,.who lost his lit" yesterday in an at tempt to duplicate the feats of Mrs. Annie Edsoi Taylor and Bobby Leach by going over the cataract in a barrel.
Pieces of the oaken barrel in which | Stephens went to death continued to float ashore in 'he eddy of the Canadian side a,bove the Maid of the Mist .landing uTillT^n early miuni'-ait~~b u t Stephen's body failed to appear and experienced rivermen said it miitht be several days before it was released from the cross currents at the foot of the falls.
The ea?k in which he made the trip, though built of Russian oak staves and bound with steel hoops, smashed like an eggshell on the jagged rocks at the base of the cataract. Pieces or the barrel were picked up near the bank on the Ca»
Spa Conference Sends Request to Soviet Government in Behalf of Poland— Coal Question Celays Con. ference With Germans—-Jews Slain in Ukraino Prove Americans.
London, July 12. — Polish armies struggling to stern, the advance of Russian Bolshevik! on the southern front have taken the offensive near Kovno, according to an official state*} ment jasued la Moscow and received here by wirefess. Further south, the soviet for 'es are continuing their" drive successfully north of the Dniester River and have occupied Novava, i'sMfsii, rioithrast of Kanienelz» Podolsk, the statenn nt declares.
Allies Make Offer,
APPARENTLY INTERESTED IN A SIXTEEN-YEAR-OLD G I R L -
NEW STORIES CONFLICT.
Chicago, July 12. — A theory t h a f a g a , who' was a native of Scotland, Carl Wanderer shot and killed his but a naturalized American, wife and a hired -robber" because, The future empress was educated of his interest in a 16-year-old girl in France, Spain and England, ana was being investigated today by the traveled extensively with her mother police. Confronted with the girl in ' on the European continent, a h e mot his cell, Wanderer for the first time ] her husband, Emperor Napoleon Hi, lost composure momentarily, but ; first in 1851 and married him in No-firmly, denied the girl had any infill-Ure Dame Cathedral, P a n s January ence on his desire to be free, so he, 30, 1853. Prince Napoleon, her only could return to the army. j son, who was the prince imperial, was
The girl, Julia Schmitt, told the ' born March 16, 1856. police she had known Wanderer some The empress had great Influence time and had gone to an amusement! over her husband and on several oc-park with hiiu several t imes, but did; casions she acted as regent during .he not ,;now he was married. She was I amsence of the emperor when lie was not held, as police say they werJ ' traveling or was with his armi convinced she had no knowledge of! the field . This was In .
radian side, but Stephens's body has not been recovered. Rivermen say that it may not come to the surface for a week or ten days.
Stephens, who boasted the title "Daredevil," has a wife and 11 children in Bristol, where he was a bar-bet. He served three years in France with the British army. He had planned to make a lecture tour of England If his tr ip was successful.
Bobby Leach, who went over the Horseshoe Falls in 1911, told Stephens before he started that his trip would be a failure. Leach predicted the barrel would not withstand the drop of 158 feet, but Stephens refused to be disuaded from the venture. Leach was among the spectators who watched the s tar t of Stephens ' fatal tr ip.
Few knew Stephens was to make the trip and when the barrel was towed out Into the river from the Canadian side two miles above the falls, there were only a dozen on hand to watch, i t was 8:10 o'clock yesterday morning when Stephens was cast adrift. Early sighteera on Goat Island saw the barrel bobbing up and down in the tumbling reaches oi the upper rapids, but none knew that It carried a man about to defy the cataract.
Moving Pictures Taken. Members of Stephens's party fol-
Jewed the cask down stream In automobiles. In one of the cars a moving-picture opera tor filmed the progress of the barrel.
As the barrel drew near the brink of the falls it seemed to stand on end, hesitate a second or two and then slide gracefully over the slope, head foremost and at a slight angle. I ts gleaming black and white str ipes could be seen until It had fallen about half way down the face of the cataract. Then it was lost to view in the misty spray.
Men stationed below the falls on
in ires,
the murder plot which wVs*"cXrried! and 1870, the latter date during the put in the lobby of Wanderer 's apart-j Franco-Prussian war -inent June 21. ' At the outbreak of the Franco-Prus-
According to one of the latest of sian war there were many persons Wanderer's s tatements to the police., who accused Eugenie of having been the $l,r,oo which his wife drew from responsible for the commencement of t: bank two days before she was 'host i l i t ies . Later her enemies and shot was his own money. He had they were numerous, used to say that I tho_Lanadian shore watched the bar stated once before that he Intended she was the cause of all the calanv , > steal the money and re turn to the ities which befell her. Nevertheless army, hut in the excitement follow- the onetime empress from the oublic
«ing the shooting forgot about it. ! generally received respectful sympa-The Identification of the hired thy and even after her beauty had lad-
"robber" as John J. Maloney of River ed and old age had crept upon her Point, R. I., was further supported to- ' she was reverently greeted by thoso day bv John V/elland, clerk at a ho- j who saw her seated in the parks of tel where Moloney had stayed three Paris enjoying the warm sunshine and
ALL COHOES MILLS PICKETED Second Week Under Open Shop Poll.
cy Begins—Denial That State Troopers Have Been Called.
.Troy, July 12. — The second week Of the "open shop" policy in the Co hoes textile plants s tar ted today with pickets being assigned to all ihe shops in the city by the United Textile Workers ' Association. t No disorder was reported. A report that state troopers would be asked for was de nled.
RAINBOW DIVISION REUNION
a fanner , though both legs, Joseph Vincent, merchant, in the chest, and Herry Bayles, a grocer, through the shoulder.
Stamford'! Population 34,488. Washington, July 12.—Guthrie,
Okla,, has a population of 11,757, an Increase 103 or 0.9 per cent.
Stamford, Conn., 35,486, increase i>,048 or 39.6 per cent.
Norrlstown, Pa., 32 .31 \ increase 4,- half-breed races, w^r-h a rc greal <"o'n" 444, or 18.9 per cent, sumers of alcohol.
City and State Officials Greet World War Veterans Assembling at
Birmingham, Ala,
Birmingham, Ala., July 12.—The first annual reunion of the famous Rainbow Division began here today with thousands of former soldiers and visitors In attendance. The veterans were welcomed by city and state officials and later two bronze tablets in memory of those who lost their Bv— in the war were unvelle
For Prohibition In Mexico. Mexico City, July 11.—Legislation
making all Mexico "dry" Is being prepared for presentat ion to the next Congress atTtha office of Provisional President de 'a Huerta, says the newspaper Universal.
"The provisional president has decided on this s tep," says the newspaper, "as a means of accomplishing the regeneration of t he fndiau and
days just before he was slain, and had registered under that name.
State 's Attorney Hoyne today asked a grand jury to return two indictments tor murder against Wanderer.
Doubt the Identification. Providence, R. I., July 12—Relatives
of John J. ALaioney expressed strong doubt today that he was the main slain by Carl Wanderer a t the time Wanderer killed his wife, according to his confession.
John Maloney's brother of Arctic Center, and his sister, Mrs. John KM in of River oint, examined a photograph of the dead man forwarded by the. Chicago police and both said they felt positive the picture was not that of their brother.
LAKEFRAMPTONSUNK OFF ATLANTIS CITY
alking with the children playing nearby.
Sorrowful After Years. Lame, bent and white haired, the
former empress often was called "En-ropes' Queen of Sorrow." She was quoted always as praying that death might end her loner term of sadness and again bring her to her Husband and son. In tho Tuileries gardens in Paris the stern visaged gendarmes looked the other way when Eugenie was plucking flowers.
In their frequent journeys to Alder-shot to review troops during the war. King George and Queen Mary often called upon the ex-empress of France
re! as it fell and prepared to catch it if it floated Into the eddy above the Canadian Maid of the Mist landing. It was there that the barrels In which Leach and .Mrs. Annie Edson Taylor made the falls trip in former years, had been recovered,
A quarter of an hour passed, then a half hour and an hour. Field glasses trained on die boiling v a t e r s at the base of the cataract revealed no s ;gn of the cask.
When the hour had passed, old rivermen in the little group of watchers began to shake their heads dubiously. They remembered that .Mrs. Taylor1
had made the trip that flobhy Leach was on his way the fop of the bank IV.) minutes after his barrel had been sent adiift above the falls.
Word that Stephens had fried and failed spread qulrkly through the two Falls cities and great crowds congregated on the banks of the river. Men and women stood dense ly packed on the upper steel arch bridge, at. Pros-
Canadian
Spa, Belgium, Sunday (By the Associated Press.) — If the Poles con-seut to retire within the natural frontiers of Poland, the Allies will g t .e tniem all po.-vsible assistance in the event of their being attacked by the Bolsheviki. This announcement was made in Spa today.
The Allies have sent a proposal to tho Russian soviet government for an armistice with Poland on condition1
that the_Poles retire within their nat-ural Polish frontiers. It is set forth that the armistice will bb followed by a" conference of representatives ot all the countries on the Russian border and that if the Bolshevik! a t tack tho Poles within these frontiers the Allies will go to the aid of Poland
Poles Dissatisfied. Spa, July 12.—The Polish delega
tion at the conference here is understood to be very much dissatisfied with the terms of the Allied note to the Russian soviet government, proposing an armistice between the Bolshevist anu Polish armies. They feel, however, that they will be obliged to accept it. ,
New York Jews Slain. Warsaw, Sunday, July 11.—Dr. Is
rael Friedlander, professor of BiblicaL l i t t rature at the Jewish Theogolicali Seminary in New York, and Bernard cantor, also of New York, have been. identified as the men killed, on July 7, near Yormolince, in the Ukraine, by three men wearing Bolshevist uniform, according to information received today at the Warsaw head-qua* ters of the American joint distribution committee, to which both the victims were attached.
Dr. Friedlander and Dr. Cantor had distributed more than a million marks in the prosecution of their relief work and were preparing to leave the region in the Ukraine near, which General Budenny was operating -witji his Bolshevist cavalry.
Coal Delays Spa Conference. Spa, Belgium, July 12. (By the As-;
soc'uted Press.)—The German-Allied^ conference was brought to a temporary halt this morning by the coal: question. The Allied premiers, who mot at 10:20 o'clock to discuss the Germany reparations proposition and' the question of priority in coal deliveries from Germany, were unable to finish their work in time for the general conference to sit at 11 u J e'clock, the hour previously fixed.
Chancellor Fehrenbach and his colleagues, who had arrived with a
(numerous staL', were informed in the ante-room by the secretary of the conference that the full meeting had beep postponed until afternoon.
The Allied ministers, it appears, are not very favorably impressed by the German reparat ions plan. The prevailing view, the correspondent was Informed, was tha t the plan was somewhat Indefinite on the essential financial points.
.It is understood that the German delegates have in reserve another pian, or -amendment, of much greater
i 49 minutes and i Importance than the plan submitted yesterday. The plan now before tne conference is considered a substitute i. i this original plan, which the Germans are Withholding, being unwilling to diseio.se the original proposition because they were not given satisfaction on the coal question.
Lithuania and Soviet Agree. Moscow, July ly. — Uy ths Asso
ciated Press.) — Lithuania nnd the soviet government of Russia have reached an agreement relative to the establishment of peace, said Adolf Jolfe, representative of the soviet government tr the negotiations today. Hi s.nd thi-j Agreement included an un-dsrstandlog H H> boundaries and indemnity and that Roasts recognized
SHIPPING BOARD STEAMfcR IN COLLISION W I T H T H E COMUS
T H R E E OF CREW LOST.
New York, July 12. — The steam ship Lake Frampton, owned By the United States Shipping Board, bound j ray a debt when she fled from Paris In ballast from New York to Newport, j It has since been reported, as brought was sunk early today off Atlantic I to America for sale
at Farnboiough Hill. They found h e r ; . T , alert mentally, and,-that she kep t - in , g j / ' * „ a n d
ha k > n g t h e
touch with the news of the war as j a n d Amnrtann shores few women of half her age did. Those I P a r t s o f B a r r e l Found. who knew her, said that her grea tes t l l w<is hortly af ts t noon, four hours hold on life wag due to the fact t h a t , a f t e r Stephens began his trip, when rhe was* strongly determined to live j aonin one caught sight of a black nb-uittil the Germans were driven from im : f ir> " '« river near the base of the France. falls. "There h e i s ! " watchers cried i
Ono instance of Eugenie's former , and there was a brief Interval of hope t (...J J i ^ ' V M n ,° * brilliancy recalls the opening of the that Stephens might have survived v'inre• , t r • St-ez Canal. She was the center of • the trip. j , " , , , , ' . . ;!',",' ' , the festivities a t Cairo, upon which The dark 'ob jec t was borne swfftlv j - p . ....,"* . , „ '",x\ ihe khedlve Is said to have spent all downstream for some distance. Then of the $11,000,000 in his treasury. The | ft circled several times and floated gown she wore at the khedlval ball I easily into the eddy. As i t came- to cost $25,000, and later it served to rest on the peaceful waters there the
watchers knew that Stephens" attempt.
ot are
he pro-»thno-
h
City, N. J., after it had collided with atanmrhlp Comus.
It has been estimated that the for-
The Comus was damaged slightly and anchored until after daylight. Three of the crew of the Lake Framp- { had been Induced to leave her ent i re
ftrm\v or The ex-empress amounst tn $39,000,000. A report was published In Paris several years a&o tha t she
ton are missing. The Lake F r a m p ton, a vessel of 4,200 tons was operated by the West Indies Steamship Company.
The Comus reported by wireless that Captain Powers and the snrviv-ing members of the crew of 87 to the I,ake Frampton were on board.
The Comus is a Southern Pacific passenger steamship, running between New Orleans and New York.
estate to the church, but this has not been confirmed.
Forty-Eour Sparkling Years. Forty-four "years of her life were
sparkling in the successive roles of
had ended In t r agedy The floating object was onlv a sec-
flon nf fhfr hiirrar As this diift'ej uutir ' i"tTnii"rs !
£ ? o'n 7 h V h^nV d r a . 7 - ln*Knf1 P,UUef1 '"X n " r t y settlement of the negotla-ik. Later other pieces tions pending b.
said, "vg.% accelerated by ihe reverse sutfered by thf Polish forces. The Lithuanians a,-e assured of protection aga.ust aggression and have modified their original demands. Russia will not interfere i n boundary disputed involv-
the FolisjjJijLfitv,ian fit M
of the barrel floated downstream and Into the eddy and were recovered Put there was not t race of the bodv of it? occupant.
The barrel designed by Stephens for the t r ip was six fe«t three Inches high It had s t rap ar rangements inside and
the Spanish countess, Eugenie Marie j an electric light system. An oxygen de Montijo, travelling thrbngh Europe j tank was carried, which. Stephens ! and the signing of the treaty"*' a visitor to the French court, wife of I said, would keep htm alove for sever- Asked regarding rumors coseera-Napoleon III and an occasional re- al hours if the barrel became caught j tag a possible Polish peace ofter M B e n i 5 ' i b * F r e n c h empire. Then in • in a back eddy under the falls. I Joffe replied that present Indfra/ion*
(CONTINUED ON FAQ* F I V E * (CONTINUED ON PAGE EIGHT.) ^CONTINUE© o T p l o s m ^
tween tne soviet government and Let via Is prevented by 'be fed that ths Letvtafi ministry tot not liivfl the support of a majority in Parliament, but we have
treed with tho Letvian request thai conversations be continued at Riga, from which city the delegates will ro-urn to Moscow for final deliberations
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