Local ikttm and th sneer- " Ufini Saturday aad ia4ajr Hot math change temperature. a aT (n4 tnl ( : Say ! lraii,a) ec sfaal aialil etaeM ava. 'VOL Oai. NO.; 59 FIVE CENTS BLANKET INCREASE i HI FREIGHT RATES l! Corporation Commission Al lows 25 Per Cent Raise ' Petitioned For EFFECTIVE 15 DAYS " . ' AFTER FILING TARIFF Commission Retains Power To r La tor rlteiasr- and - Gemot 1 Tariffs;, Argument In Peti tion Heard By Commission ' Last Monday; I. 0. 0. Briefs Used By Railroads '.Blanket lucre of 25 per .cast m GRAfJTEO RAILWAYS j all existing iatrufaU freight rale wit ..greeted the ateara railroads of. North CaroHna" yesterday 1 n decision haad- 4 down by tb Stat Corporation Com . miaaion on th petition of ths railroad ... , tied In July and hoard before the com mission last Monday. 'The increase be- comet effective lfr days after tae pact' tionera hare Sled new tariff a. , . In presenting i their esse before the commission, the railroad Sled-without 'argument the .briefs used in their eaae before the Iateratate Commerce Com ,- mission'., usklng for an increase in ia ' teratate freight rates. The State Com- . - mission retaiaa -the right to-investigate Mhcaew .tariffs to determine whether V they comply fully with the 85 per cent . allowed. ... 4- A ' The margin of increase duplicates the Increase- allowed by the L C. C. for iateratate rates. An iaereas of SO per cent, is made in excess baggag charges, the eureharee' on passengers in sleep ing ears ia raised JSO per cent and the 1 - rate on milk and cream earned pas senger trains is raised 20 per cent. The . . full . order or the eommjasion is k" ''.', The Commission's Order - "is - tho- above - entitled proceeding authority is sought by all steam rail road lines operating -within the Btate of North Carolina to inereaae rates aad . charges to the same exteat in the same proportion as authorised for Interstate transportation .into ana out of the State of North Carolina by the Inter state Commerce Commission in Er Parte 74, the said1 increased rates and charges being as follows: - "Increase in all freight transportation tatee aad charges S3 per- cent. .. "Execs bacgng rate 20 per cent. Surcharge -upon paaaenger ia eleeo- ' Ing or parlor ears Of 60 per east of the . charge . for space ur such ears, such - eharge to. be collected is connection with the charge for space and to accrue to the rail carriers.'.' '.- '?.' ,-,. - "Inereaae ia milk and cream rate : carried la passenger trains, 20 per seat. . - "The ' foregoing rates aad ; eharge have been aothoriaed ! in iateratate transportation by 'the Interstate Com . meree Coin miaaion after a most eompre hanaira investigation made for the pur pose of providing for the carriers tho amount of return upon' their property required by Act' of Congress of tho United States. - . f , . Joint Investigation Made I Tho Investigation by tho 1 Interatats Commerce Commission wss made joint' ly with representative of tho National Association of Bailway and '. Utilities Commissioners to tho end that such in crease as- was' found to be aeces- sary to . comply with . the Aet , of Congress might be made uniformly aad contemporaneously to apply to all rates Tor iateratate and intrastate traatport : ation, , ." , "' .,. 'v. "The North Caroling Corporation Commission attended -.meeting of the National Association of Bailway aad Tj'tlities Commissioners , when , repre seatatives of the Stat Commissions wer designated to participate with tho ' Iateratate Commerce' Commission, in making thin investigation. The Cor- poratioa Commission ' was represented at the principal hearings held' by tho Interstate Commerce Commission in Eg Parte T4, and n traasaript of the full record in that proceeding is made a . part of tho record in the pending ease. . T " j Increase UneHcial s - , , ''A publie hearing before the Cor i . porstien' Commission ' npon tho pending application of tho carriers was held In n the office of tho Commission- in Baleigh oa Aaguat 23rd,-1920. At this hearing ' no objection was mad by any shipper to granting tho inereaae in rates in line with the increase ia interstate ratas.'.terf protest was mad by the North Carolina Traffle Assoelation to . 'granting the inereaee in intrastate rates until final disposition was mad of the proceeding now pending before the Interstate Commerce Commission involving interstate rates into and out of North . Carolina. ' The Corporation --- Commissioa ia party to thio said pro ceeding and in full sympathy with ths allegation of diserimlnatiow'in existing interstate rates,' but in n matter in- - volving official reepoaaibllity ws oaa not accept th view that w ehoald take the responsibility of setting np n dia- - crimination in intraatate rate, by re- fusing to permit n percentage inereaae in rates equal to the percentage in ' - eroaso' made uniformly in interstate rates and generally authorised by other Btate Commission In intrastate rate. "Th proper procedure 1 seems to. us U bet ' -To giv aathority for-the oqaal inv areeae in intraatate rates and eharge and to look with continued confidence to tho Interstate Commerce Commissioa to provide each rate for interstate traao portatioo a will remove existing dia- . eriminatloa in th rates. . - -. ."Section 8630 of the North Carolina . Statntea require Sfteea days' aoties be ' for inareaaed rate may be made ef- feetive. . It iei -, ,V....'.V'-. Fito TarlaT riret. Ordered, that all the North Carolina carriers, parties to aad oa whoee behalf ' this application, ia made, may tie with the Corporation Commission general sup plement in blanket form to existing rate aad charges increasing sueh rates QBtln4 n In tr'-lL'' " DEMOCRATS JOYFUL OVER EXPOSURE OF REPUBLICAN PLAMS Pittsburg Speech One of Mos Sensational In Political ; Annals In U. S. THINK COX'STAHACK , OF MUCH IMPORTANCE Republican Sanction -. From Crave Charg-es ot Knonnons Slnsh Tnnd ltoted With In. terest; Mrs. Catt Delirers Remarkable Address at Cele . bration of Snffrafe Victory ' New and Observer Bureau, SOS District Natioaal Bank BuDdlng. - (By Special Leased Wife). Washington, Aug. 27 Cox ha "mads good. ' Administration Democrat and ova a independent slapped one another on th shoulder with th above joyful exclamation this morning on reading tho governor's Pittsburg speech. Many Democrats war nrveu with fear thatL th Governor had overstepped the line of safety in his allegation that Bepnb lies as were raising $15)00,000 to carry the election. Bat he showed 98,000400 and he quoted from th Bepublieaa Bel letin, "get- tho money." v Governor Cos speech at Pittsburg, a Kepublieaa stronghold, was naquaa- tionabaly one of ths most sensational political speeches ever delivered ia thi country. Tho audience, many of which were Bepublieane, ia reported to have gone Into a freasy of emotion when the governor held before its eyes the Bul letin printed by the national Bepublieaa campaign committee containing tho act ual figure of assessment of 61 eltie in 27 State. Th Governor, road to bin audience tho endorsement by Sen ator Harding himself of this gigantic financial scheme to pnt Harding. iathe Whit House. . . - Beoabllcan Beaetiesu What every Democrat hero has boon interested in observing i th char aeter-of the reaction of tho Bepublieaa candidate : and ' campaign manager to the grave charge- All Mr. Harding would say in reply when questioned was to shake his head- Be, who had en dorsed the scheme, could not Ttlesd'ia-- aoranee of it. Chairman Will Hays said he would ahow that Demoerata too wore collecting a vaat fund and we are not going to li down to Governor Cox InSUltS. ; V :-: -" ' " Treasurer Tjpham of the Xepablican Lnntioncl enmpafarn .-eammitto retorted that hi committee had not received ill ttat money. It was n joke torn oa had played on Cox. Th Bepublieaa managers hav eom forward with the apparent innocence of n babe and they sayt "Well, sup- Doee wo are raising this gigantic sum yon allege, yon do not show w got it from sinister interests. We claim we got it from the people aad that w win spend it honeetly." .The outstanding fact is that the Bepublieaaa are raising n campaign fund so - great that they do not themselves know how big it ill be. . They are collecting it from sinister end non-sinister sources snd from every source that' will yield it. , i G .0. P. Saye "Get the Money. .Gt the money, get .tho money,1 reads the . bulletin. Ia almost every community in th country there 1 n corruptible"' element ia the electorate. In, the doubtful trtatee the peesessioa of n big eampaisgn fund furnishes nn overwhelming temptation to corrupt veters. What Governor Cox is aimiag at ia to check this rushing How of money into the coffer of a party ttat is corrupt ing the conscience of the people with false prdpsgnndn and dulling its tens of honor nnd duty. Thst is a far worse sort of corruption than th net aal bribery of a comparatively small n.rt of tie electorate- The J publi cans will put turfy thousand speak ere oa the hustings for that work- - The party learned from the war th power of propaganda to change th thoughts aad actions or men. Big Propaganda Machine. Two years aio thevBepnblieaa be gan th organisation of tho machine to kill the popularity ox nuns aaa uei the Democrat. Na country in th groat war, not oven Germany, bad built np n more perfect propaganda maehiae than th Bepubli eaaa are now completing. Governor Cox in attacking the method of raising and th amount df money needed to run thi maehlns Is aiming n (hot right at tho heart of Bepublieaa hope. "Stop th flow of this meaeyr he cries to the American people. "Ton are putting it Into the hands of men who are attempt ing to debauch year mlads with sinis ter propaganda. J -r-'-'-. i Cox' attack at th heart of this propaganda organisation has begun well aad Democrats ar confident that if he has only time he will cripple it for lack of fuel. . It takes a deal ef. money to make n .success of evil propaganda, a tho German i can testify. g. Mrs. Catt'a Address. 'Mrs. Carris Chapman Catt, head of the Natioaal League of- Women Voters, delivered n remarkable" speech at the woman suffrags victory celebration la Washington last night. It was th fea ture ef the greateelebration. She out- lined ia graphic language the opera tion of the "invisible government in fluences which gave such a, desperate battle to the ratineationlsta. (. "It wss th flrst time in- the history of our long battle thst this invisible government, which w knew existed, and whose power we felt ia every suf frage battle, was unmasked and forced out ia tho open." said Mrs. Catt, amid tumultuous applause. - "W were pussied at flrst a to where this mysterious it-iiuenea came from. We had more thaa enough votes pledged whea tho fight began, hiving 62 votes for as ia the House. As we felt our men slipping away from as, we were mystified snd looked about to see from wheaee this influence came. Then we .(Continue -on page Seres-) MONSTER LOCOMOTIVE IN PERILOUS PLIGHT cx ! ' ON BRIDGE WHICH CRASHED UNDER ITS WEIGHT This bridge near Greencastle, Indiana, crashed with a roar when used, for ster locomotive's full weight waa upoa wheels on ths bastion of oa aide of engine can be saved.. ,: L Irish Sympath British Ships At New York EIGHTY-FIVE NEW lAVYERSjN STATE Women Applicants Are Successful n Bar V Examinai ion Eighty -five of the ninety-eight appli cants for ' lieenso to practice law in North Carolina were successful 1 the examination held Monday aad the name ef the new lawyer were made publie by the Supreme Court yesterday after noon. ' Th eighty-five include thirteen Bal eigh men, aad twelve of these thirteen were students of the law class ef Judge George Pell. They are: A. S. Brewer, . K. Culbreth. & H. astmaa. W. Bailey Jones, H. A. Keen, Edwnrd Vtnrrsy, nobis r. Fhiuips, B. U Price. W. H. Pittmaav J. H. Bawls, T. U Webster. and Jaui K. Smith. The thirteeaU Bat- eigk man, wa Mr. Eugene Mills, son of Mr. Jno. A. Mills who attended the law school at Wake Forest. - High honor, it is understood, goes to Katharine McDiarmid Bobiason. of jrsyettevllle, whose paper waa char acterised as considerably above the or dinary. The only other woman applicant for license was Miss Ixuiae Brevard Alexander, -.who, also, was saeee faL . . The eighty-Sve laew lawyers licensed in North Carolina are: Clarence Moore Austin, Charlotte. Louise Brevard - Alexander, Greens boro. Boeeoe Butler, Clinton. Alfred Smith Brower, Baleigh. Frederick Oscar Bowman. Berea, By, Francis Hamilton Baldy. Hartsville. South Carolina. Graham Arthur Harden, Burgaw. Jesee Vernon .Baggett, Balemburg. Hector Clifton Blamkwcll, Lumber- ton. . i John Morris Blaekmon. Kershaw. South Carolina. - John 'Moor Brit tain, Aaheboro. Robert Paschal Burns, Bozboro. Leonidas Martia Chaffln, Lilllngtoa. Eugene English Culbreth, Jlsleigh. Zebuloa Carter Csmp, Butherford ton. AOoert inrsson uronry, 4t Wilming ton. . - i - Louis Heyl Clement, Jr Salisbury, Irving Edward Carlvle, Wahe Forest. Hugh Dorteh, Goldsboro. ' .'' ' Charles Bufus Daniel, Weldon. Charles Henry Edwards,. Goldsboro.' Winfred Swain Elias, Asheville. v. Biehard Henry Eastman, Baleigh. Harry LerFagge, Leshsville. " Wesley Luther Ferrell. Winston- Sslenu ' George Kirby Freeman, Goldsboro. Walter .Connor Feimster, Jr. New ton. :'".- ' -;i . - John Marvin Glaaee, Leicester. Wiley Frank Harvey, Littleton. Charles Baymond - Hamrirk, Buthf- fordton. - 1 EUias feott Hale, MU Airy, t James Spear Howell, Asheville. -Matthew James Hatcher) Mount Olive. John Bright Hill, Warsaw. Robert Lee Humber, Jr., Greenville. William Bailey Jones, Baleigh. Mack Murphy Jerulgan, Dunn. Ferdio Talmage Johnson, Delway. ' " osen M. Jsekaon; Clinton. Alton Luther Jordara ShUoh. ' George Watts King, Charlotte. ' John Brame Palmer, Warrenton. -Odio DeWitt Ingram, High Point. : Harvey Allen Keen, Baleigh. James Connor Kennedy, Moltonvillev Brye Little, Mnrshvillo.. Sila Bow Lucas, Wilson. 'Edward Murray, Baleigh.- William timer Matthews. Clinton. Linville Kerr Martin, Winston- Salsm.-. .'''."' 'u-y f-..-f--:",-f ' Eugene Mills, Baleigh. Boberf Allen Helntyre,- Lumberton. Benjamin Augustus McDonald. Park- ton. ..','..' '' - Jams Wallace Mason, Atlantic. " 1 'Theron Burt Mnuncy, New London. James Bslph Pattirr Jr.i7 Durham. -Robert Fletcher Phillips, Baleigh. . ,. Frank Caldwell Patton, Morgan toa. Joha Hill Paylor, Laurinburg. ' Frank Wylie Orr, Charlotte. Raymond Lee Price. Baleigh. " Wiley Haaaell Pittman, Raleigh. ' , Julian Guton Roberta, Chapel Hill. Marvin Stanford BevciT Kenly. Katherine MeDiarmid BoMnson, Tay- stteville. Henry Clay Boysls, Trinity. ,' Joseph Hinton Buff, Durham. . : (Ceatinsed on Pago TweJ - ' Tw6 it. The center epaa fell twenty-ilve th bridge and tho rear .wheel on 'the , f -. : (Copyright, Underwood h Underwood.) izers Tie-Up Longshoremen Say Britain Must Release MacSweney and Let Mannix Land WOMEN PICKETS BRING i ABOUT SURPRISE STRIKE Strikers Bay They'ro Not Ooiag , Back To Work Until De mands Granted URGES COLBY TO ACT IN BEHALF OF MAYOR OF CORK Aaaevllla. . Aug. T-8ecretary Cat by baa keen asked to act in be. half of Terence MaeSweney, Lord Mayer of Crrk. aad endeavor to ob tain hie release fma priaen, where ho Is on a hanger strike. His sister. Rev. Madam MacSweney, principal of tho collegiate department of a eok leg here, yesterday aeat a telegram asking him to wee hie efflce la seek ing the release of he bre4or. ' No dlroet reply haa beea received New York, Aug. tSV-By the Associ ated Press), Elated by their tie-up of virtually every British, ship in New York, 1,000 or more longshoremen who suddenly quit work today expect to sprsad their walkout to every port ia th Unite States la tho hope of forcing Great 'Britain to release from Jail Tereace MacSweney, tho Lord Mayor of Cork, and permit Arehpishop Mannix tp land on Irish, noil, The womea pickets who inspired tho unexpected walkout of longshoremen, aad the marina fire men, water tender and' oilers who joined them,' feel thesame way about it They are not going back to work en British ships, they, said, until Great Britain meete ' their wishes. Irish sympathisers working oa Ameri can, French aad Belgiaa steamships also quit, work during th . whirlwind campaign th strikers waged along th North Biver thi afternoon. Although not en masse, longshoremen ef various nationalities rushed from the holds of vessels st the command of their Irieh comrades. More then M0 negroes who were anloading th cargo of n Cunard liaer fell into lino with the (peed of the historic 'minute men nnd received a big ovation (from the other strikers. Womea Inspire Strike. . - A little band of women piekets in spired the strike during the noon lunch hour. They stationed themselves out' side the White Star Line pier in the evening to await the arrival of the Baltic . During the lunch hour the longshore men who had started work on the Bal tic decided not to go back, and aecora Denied by the women piehets, they went into th holds ef the other nearby liner' Caaopie, Olymptie and Celtic, whvere they quickly Induced hundreds of other -longshoremen and allied workers to join their walkout. - Forming outside tho Whit Star Line pier, inside ef which were offlcials call ing for police reserves, the strikers be gaa a parade that swept up West street, leaving in its 'wake more than a dosen steamship, with loading schedules bsdly disrupted.- r -. . -r. "A Sornriss Attack. It was all ia ths nature of n surprise attack, but persuasion- was not necessary to lore the men away from New York.. Stunned by the appearance -of the pa ratlcrs ji they hurried into ths piers andvout again with new strikers trail ing' behind them, steamship officiate were aasbla to state what they will do to maintain their schedule la the unex pected situation. -Nor were lingshorej mea union leaders, who declared the stik unauthorised. . Chiefs nor steam- chip officials could estimate tonight the number of men who quit work. - Several .British . ships are .scheduled to arrive tomorrow and early next week, but the longshoremen 'declare they will not unload them, except for mail, until MacSweney is freed snd Archbishop Mannix is allowed to' go to. Ireland. IMMIGRANTS MCST PAY J HIGHER RAILROAD FARES Washington,' Aug. 27. Ths 1,000 im Igrants bow at Ellis Island most pay Increased railroad Tales to complete their Journeys. Answering an Inquiry from Immigration Commissioner Wel ti, 'at New Yok, the Interstate Com merce Commissioa today ruled it had as suthority to permit immigrants to proceed at the rates in effect whea they jpooktd their passsg abroad. 1 lU - the first time, giving away shea the mon feet, leaving the engine with its front other. The wrecking crew doubt If th NEW RAILWAY BILL Tells Audience of Rail Workers Esch-Cummins Act Is Great Forward Step DELIVERS ADDRESS TO BIG CROWD AT GALION Senator and Sereral Score of ' Marion Women Celebrate Ratification of The Suf . fraff e Amendment; Expresses Pleasure at Victory of Suf fraglsts Gallon, Ohio, Aug. 87. Facing an an dlence of "railway employes, soma of whom ho recognized aa hostile to hi position, Senator Harding made speech hero today mllitaatly champion ing the Cummins-Each Bailway' Act, passed at th last session of Congress. Deliberately, bat without driving ges ture,' h proclaimed his stand for "a Just government, for all th people, not a government yielding to class, ' and declared his faith in n governmental policy that would insure to railway men ue Dest .ox treatment and, compensa tion, but would also givs to the people "a continuity of service." "Some of you' do not approve," ho sua, pointing xoreonger at those near est him. "Borne of - you wished the Plumb Plan. Let me look you ia the face nnd let me tell you I think the Cnmnrina-Esch Aet is ths expression of th conscience of a Congress Which sought to give highest ' service to the MRMW. . V' - " J Some day, maybe not this year, you railway workers will hsil -that law as the greatest forward step in all ths history of railway legislation." - The Bepublieaa nominee'a declara tion started frequent bursts of hand clapping aad after the speech he was congratulated by many of the railway mea as they passed by to shake his hand. Making his second sddress of ths t campaign away from Marion, Senator Harding spoke at a park hero where employee of the Erie eyatera were ia the midst of aa athletic field day. The twedty-mile trip to Gallon was msdo by motor, tho senator and Mrs. Harding going directly to the park aad returning to Marion immediately after me apeech. i CELEBRATE RATIFICATION . OF SUFFRAGE AMENDMENT Marion, Ohio, Aug. 17. Ratification of the auffrage amendment was cele brated nt Senator Hrdings front porch tonight at a meeting ia whieh the Be publieaa nominee and several score of Marion womea took part. Tho senator expressed his pleasure st tho success of the suffrage cause and also, urged that there be no segregation of women ia a party founded on sex prejudice. Tho evening celebration brought to a close one of the nominee's busiest days. la addition to a aumber of imoortant conferences hs nfotored to Galion, Ohio, to speak to a gathering of railway men nnd completed preparation of his .11 . . V . 1 1 ' '1 . i saurese to oe ueiiTcrea nere tomorrow elaborating on his stand on the League of Nations. -- Tomorrowf address is expected to be one of the most important of ths cam paign and it has : been prepared with great care. Today- brief calls were made . oa the candidate by . Henry P. , Daviaoa.- partner la the Morgan banking house: Fred. D. Underwood, president of the Erie railway, and Gutson Borglum, ths sculptor, . who figured prominently in the aircraft Investigation of . some months ago.' ' , ' . . Several Make Speeches. -i'At- the -suffrage- celebration tonight short -speeches were made by Henator Harding,-CoL George Harvey, Former Senator George i Sutherland, ' of Utah, who . has -been a guest at the Harding home since yesterdsy, snd Charles Warre, of Michigan. - Colonel Harvey described himself. as the-"one, lonilv Democrat left east of the Allegheny mountains and tailed on his - sister Democrats , In the delegation to vote for Harding. "' The nomine told th women that h believed they would vote according to principle . and conviction rather 'than prejudice aad would not be unduly in Adeneed by the argument that it was a Continued oa Psge Three ) - HARDING III FAVOR GOV. COX CONTINUES FLAYING CAMPAIGN METHODS OF GT O. P. BIAYT BAINS FALLING ' IN UPPER SOUTH CAROLINA ; CAUSE MUCH DAMAGE '! Charlotte, - Aug. 27 Beets were aeed to convey employee of the tex tile mills at Bock Hill, S. C, near hero, to work thie nsernlag when are families awoke texfiad their homes iSooded aad arreaaded by See feet of water follevU'g the dowaooura of. Thursday night. All tho etream la that vicinity were rhv lag rapidly today;- Many train wore dalayed aad . several waahesta wer reported. .' Special School Tax; Election Is Called For ".' October 2 Baleigh women 21$ bo the irst of the sex to cast tho ballot ia North Caro llna. Tho Wake County Commissioners paved th way for thi yesterday when they called n special eleetioa for Octo ber t that the voters of ths township pass oa tho proposal-of a special tax ef ten cents on property nnd thirty eeats on the poll for the purpose ef granting school teachers adequate sal aries. Ths bill authorising th special elec tion went through tho General Assem bly during its closing' hours aad yes terdsy ths To mship School Board lost so tim ia presenting the exigencies of the situation to th County Commission ers. That body in special seas ion called the election for Saturday, October t, and ordered n new registration for the purpose. The proposed tax) it wa pointed out by Mayor T. B. Eldridge, chairman of ths school board, will afford b etwees forty or forty-five thousand' dollars with whieh the school board ,caa mak good it pledge of higher salsriea to th When th teas hers of th school aided and supported by virtually al th eivU organisation in Baleigh, asked th board to allow thorn a salary ached- ale with n $1,409 maximum based. oa Stat classifications, th board entered the plea of iasoffleieat fund nnd mad the maximum $1,200. After consider able agitation, ths board lot it known that it was in thorough sym pathy with th demands ef tho teach ers and that if legislative authority could bo secured, -nnd tho people of Raleigh would stand behind tho board at the polls, tho additional salary would be forthcoming. ' he move of the board toward the special election is by way of putting ue eaae np to the votnr of Baleigh. EXPRESS COMPANY ASKS FOR FURTHER INCREASE Wants fifteen Per Gent fiaise In Sates To Offset Recent Wage Award Washington, Aug. 27. Testimony in support of its application for aa addi tional increase of IS per cent in oxDress rates to cover InCreaaed wages wss nre- sented or representatives of th Ameri- can Bailway Express Company, today to examiners or th Interstate Com merce Commission. The hearing de veloped virtually no opposition on the part ot shippers. Th exsmiaers stated at the conclu sion of th bearing that th ease would be. submitted without delsy to th com mission, which will expedite its consid eration, although no decision is expect ed before Heptember J. when the in crease of 12H per cent already allowed the express eompanay will become ef fective. FURTHER DETAILS ON NAVY TARGET PRACTICE Washlngtoa, Aug. .87Further de tails of -Navy target practice conducted during the past year, made publie at the Navy Department, shew thst while the short range battle practice scores were aomewhat lower that a year ago, the efficiency of the major ships at long range practice under stimulated battle conditions was greatly improved. Firing by divisions at ranges np to 20,000 yards, the battleship scores as Anally tabulated showed aa average merit of 33.76 this year as compared with 6.56 a year ago: i ! . - Ia day firing at long ranges for indi vidual ships ths average merit thia year was 44.46, ths snnouneement said, againat 33.07 last year, aa improvement of 139 per cent. The short rsnge di rect or eentrailiied control firing also showed aa improvement of IIS per cent this year. Th most progress in gun nery wss msde during the year by th battleship, the announcement aded. CAT HIKES SIXTY-SEVEN . MILES TO FIND MASTER Bloom field, N. J- Aug. 27. Bed Bloomfield' champion tom-eat pedes trian, today curled up on a bag of braa nd purred contentedly while Lawrence Blarney, hie ' owner, proprietor af th feed store, patiently applied soothing salve to his paw, Beds claw were worn down to the quick by n hike of 67 miles from n farm, wtilch Mr. Blarney sold a year ago. Thinking his pet eat would prefer field mice to those of the feed store variety, Mr. Blarney left Bed on-the arm but yesterday the exhausted feline succeeded la nding the' new bom ef RALEIGH WOMEN MAY VOTE FIRST 1 master. , .s, ;- Democratic Nominee, In Open ing New England Campaign, Declares He Has "Proven ' Charges As To Cor- . . ruption Fund ; SAYS SECOND BREAK IN : RANKS OF REPUBLICANS OCCURRED AT PITTSBURG While TaJkinj; ef Leafn of 9a- tions 1 Issue, ' Governor ; Cox Made His First Eeference To The Irish Question, Saj inf League Wot Intended As , Instrument To Diseonrage Emotions of a People , For Freedom; Nominee Sepeats - Assertion That Xepublicans Are Assembling a Campaign Fund of Not Less Than Fif teen Millions; Comments On Bepublieaa Denials New Haven, Cona August ST At- - .j;uiic campaign centrum tions was renewed hero today by . Gov ernor James M. Cox, Democratic preei. dsntial candidate, in opening his New England campaign. He asserted thst bo ', had proved his ehsrges, in his Pitta- y!' burg address last night, of the assem bling of a $15,000,000 "corruption fnnd by the Bepublieaaa. : , The first "break la .the Bepablieaa line," Governor Cos declared ia oa of four speeches here, was th Bepub. heaa proposal for n separate peace with Germaay. , "Ths second break la tho lines cam J last night nt Pittsburg," bo continued. "They have beea going along gathering th largest campaign fund aver known in the history of government in all the world. No one ever dreamed of getting such a sum." ' Republkau Variation Governor Cox said that Will H. Hsys Bepublieaa natioaal chairman, hod denied tho charges ef n $13,000100 fund snd declared that the fuad would be only $3,000,000, whilo a few days later, tho governor said, Fred W. Vp. ham, Bepublieaa treasurer, "multiplied Mr. Hsys by two and one-half times' by Mating that th fund would bo $7 ; COSy00V'P'i 'Wev -r-'- !. --. ' . In my Pittsburg sneeeh bet night," ths eandidste added, ''I have demanded . to the astiafaetioa of every nnpreju diced voter in tho country that we worn justified in multiplying Mr. Vphnm ' figure by two. "' . f Repeats HI Aesertioa. "I repeat that the Bepublieaa fund . the corruption fund will . be aot lee thaa $15,000,000. Wa will not attempt to match their dollars.' 1 Governor Cox also made a statement commenting on Mr. TJpham's denial of his charge. Ths Senate committee can find out perfectly well," be said. Besidss his criticism of tho Re publi can eontributore, tho governor urged tho entrance of America into the league ef nations nnd to his audience at Savin Bock he made what hi auditors regard ed a a reference to the question of Irish freedom, the irst of his enm- psign. . ' The league or nations," the govern er ssid, ''does not nbrldge the right of say , racial entity to determine its own dee tiny. Tho league was never intended ' to be and under its ndminiat ration it never will be aa agency that will re- atrain er dlaeoarsgo tho aame kind of emotions of aay people emotions like those thst stirred th colon its to scaler thsir independence in 1776." Cheers From the Irtatu The statement wa cheered at length by the aadleaee, many of them tt was ssid, being ef Irish blood. - ' Th Irish cmestion alee entered Into the arrangement for tho speakisg pro gram of tho governor. An-aaaouaeo- ment that Professor Irving Fisher, of Tale TJniveraity, n strong league ad vocate and one ef n group which eaoe memorialised Congress to refrain from acting in tho Irish freedom dispute, would speak tonight' brought objections from Irish sympathisers. - Professor Fisher offered to strike his ad drees pleasantneee. -f-J'-i . Professor Fisher aaaouseed. how ever, that many college professors and other "progressives aad independents" -soon would organise to work for th league and for everaor Cox s - elec tion. Baying the Presidency : ": "Men are trying to' buy tho Presl- dential , election in order that a fa vored few rather 'thaa tho average maa may have ; his interests considered first," tho governor eontinaed in aa- - other speech. . , . ( , "I have hoard names of mea la Ohio who have cent contribution aad it haa beea a singular coincidence that many who have written largo cheek are tho asm mea who visited the governor .. office at, Columbus and wanted m to order out our soldiers ia strikes aad industrial disputes.-. These men ar seeking to buy aa administration fa vorable to tho sac of the baronet in strikes." Bankers seeking to "emasculate" the Federal - Reserve- Aet Governor Cox also asserted , are eontributiac to tho Bepublican fund. No Patriotic Motive Don't think that these contributions are being made because of patriotism," be said. A great many ef the men who are writing the mrgeet checks re mained at home, making fortunes whil the American boy were overseas-" - The world s ' eiviliation aad safety.-. Governor Cox declared, "depend npon success of the lesgue." The time has come, he continued. "to put tho house of civilisation in or- der. The mothers ef -America ere- going - (Coatlaned on-Page TweJ 4 1