OW
" r
XL2 KZATUZ2
Kerth CinUui Fair (sassy
u Monday, little change
! th tessaeratar.
' 1 AICJI.'
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i a,....
VOL CXIL NO. 102.
FORTY PAGES TODAY.
RALEIGH N. C. SUNDAY MORNINCl. OCTOBER' 1 6, 1920 ' .FORTY PAGES TODAY.
PRICE; SEVEN CENTS
li he mewB mm
if
LIES "LEAGUE R
l!0 LEAGUE" BATTLE
CRY OF CAMPAIGI
Governor Cox Centers Attack
-. On Des Moines Speech of
Republican Nominee .
DPI IVFRS ADDRESSES
TO INDIANA AUDIENCES
Calls .'Attention of ' Theodore
Booserelt's Misstatement o:
Iague' Powers To Declare
War, and Urges Primary In
struction . Tor "JnTenile
Statesman"'
' f Terr Haute, Ind CM. tWThe issue
of "leagus of a leagu". today waa the
. battla cry of Governor Cos, of Ohio,
Democratic preeideatial candidal, la a
rushing day of campaigning throfigh
. out Indiana. -
Governor Cox, Ja fourteea. apeechee
through Indian from tha Ohio mar
to Tarn Haute, cloning with a teat man
msetiae- hara tonight centered bin Ira
oa tha Pea Moines apoeeh of Senator
' Harding, hi Bepublieaa opponent,
"The Senatorial eaadidate for tha
Presidency within the but three dare,'
(ioTcrnar Cox told his audience, "a
declared positively gaalnst the League
of Nationt. I am for the league aad I
. am for It with ail my aom." .
- Booacratt'a Mlketateaeat.
la hia league preachment, Goveraor
Cos charged Theodore Boovlt with
misstating that the league eon Id do
' ?lare war aad aead troopa abroad. Be-
asserting that Coagreaa oaly aaa sue
. authority. Goreraer Cox said.
"Soma real friead of the great Booae
sclt, if there be any who art oa speak
ing termi with the reaetioaary crowd
ia control ef the ' Repoblieaa party,
: ahoald let thia bey right concerning the
fundamental of the league, it u a
pitiable apeetaele to aee thia bob of
i great. aire shamelessly paraded before
. , the public Out of reepeet lor the
' nemory f hie illustrious father, some
one should -take thia juveaile atatea-
bub aside aad ia primer faahioa make
""pJnia what really aught to be obvious.
' - f ueh minute etateamea aa Judge Taft
and former Attorney General Wkker-
' tham who, for the sake ef party vic
tory hare sacrificed prineiplea foe their
- partisanship ,ia associating . with the
reactionary candidate, ahould laatruet
.' ttr. Booeevelt Juaior la the A"B Ca ef
the laagne by readiag to him their ewa
. ( ' lueid -interpretatioBa of the eoveaaat
- ' publiahed before the tobjeet had beeeaia
footbau or poiitwa.- , ,
Ledge A Ceaawlralae.1
BlaaU at the tMBeBatorial Oligarchy
were eontmnona ia tha goreraor a Indi-
du tour. ) He reiterated ehargea that
: htaalor Lodee, of llaaaachnaetta, waa
, end urged defeat ef Beaotora who aiga-
-i tie round robin againat the leagna.
"At maar who T eigaed th round
robin agaiaat the moat hamaao inatru
meat ia tha world doea not deaerre a
- rlace la the Benate," aaid th governor,
; referring to ita aignature by Seaator
Mataon, Sepublieaa, ef Indiana. The
goTernor aaid . Senator Wataoa waa
member ef' the "Oligarchy aad aaked
rirtually all hia Hooaier aadieaeea to
vote for. Tom Taggart. Democratic
Reaatorial candidate. -
-Old Time CamaalgBlns.
Goveraor Cox declared that today
, tour waa "old-faahMBed Amerteaa eaav
paining. .Cheeriag crowda ef faamera
aad towa folk, lachidiag women la' aua
bonneti and mea ia oeeralla, gave the
goreror warm reeeptioaa. - Braaa band!
tad deeoratioaa were the rale and at
maay atopa the goTeraor left hia tear
platform aad apoka ia Tillage eeatera
.from mproTiaed graadataada. - V '
- Instead of apending Buaday here aa
ad, been planned, uorernor Uoa ar
' ranged te leave here 4onight aad apead
Baaday la SpriagSeld, Illinois, where he
leeumea hia campaign lion day with a
, night apeeeh aeheduled at St. Louie.
COX SATS DEMOCRATS NOT
7 AGAINST BESEKVATIOXS.
- Bloomington lad. Oct. . S. Attack
upon the Dea Moinea apeeeh ef Seaator
Harding' Bepublieaa presidential can
audate, waa continued today by ootot
aor Cox, of Ohio- hia- Demeeratie op
ponent, ia a aeeoad viait of tha goTeraor
to Iodiaaa. . f : '.
Following up hia eritieiim of Seaator
t Harding's open ataad agaiaat tha League
' of Nitioni, Goreraor Cox denied the
. Senator! atatemeat that Preaident Wilr
aon had Inaiated upon ratification
'without tha crowing of a t" or the
dotting ef aa V and declared that
Senator Harding ahould "apologia for
misleading tha public.''
Following np hia attack upon hia op
ponent'! Lea hlomea apeeeh, Goveraor
Cox, who toared Sontltera Indiana after
closing hia Kentucky campaign but
night at Louiaville with eritkiam of
Benatoe Harding, eited Preeidaut Wil
bob'i letter to1 Senator Hiteheock of
Kebraika, approving the Hiteheock
feaerrationa, to contradict the 8c Tutor's
statement regarding Preaident Wilaoa.
; "In miking aueh a statement," aaid
Governor Cox,'UiC Harding ia inviting
th reproach ef the nation. Our people
are so aroused at the revelatiea'of the
plot to defraud the dead of tha lasting
jeee for which they fought that they
ue in ne temper te have- the truth
tsifled with.
- "Ia charity of judgment, I waat te
' give the Senator the benefit of the doubt,
1 Vy assuming that in thia matter he
imply doea not know what he ia talk
ing about." ' .'-'"" .
Governor Cox added that there waa
"more thaa one fraak kxehanae" be
tweea Preaident Wilson and Senators
Hoarding league amaad'menta' and that
although Benatof Harding dodged 1-183
Carolina. Soma ait week age Bepre-
v . (Cob tinned aa Pag Twt4 ,
White Says Democrats Are
At Threshold Of Success
New York, Oct 9. The foes of the League of Rations
have at last come out into the open. Senator Harding's Pes
Moines speech pledges him to reject not only the League but
any modification of it. ' '. .' ,:', '.. ' 1
The hour is at hand when the friends of world peace must
unite, to preserve the 'only agency ever constructed to effect
it. The Democratic candidates are pledged to see that the
United States goes -into the League with all reservations nec
essary to preserve the ascendancy of our Congress and consti
tution and their national committee is In need of funds to
complete the great battle for peace now being waged. -' -
We are at the threshold of success after many discourag
ing days and reports from all over the country reveal that
the nation is afire for the. League and needs only insistent
presentation of the truth to fleet Cox and Roosevelt. . '
May I prevail upon your interest in this great cause once
again to ask you to publish this appeal for financial aid from
all who would save the League and "brand with; infamy Sena
tor Harding's plan to make a separate peace with Germany.
. The ime to help is now; It matters not how much or how
little any man or woman can send. I urge that it come at
once. w : ... '-i-u:,.- -f ;.
, I '.. w f, GEORGE WHITE, Chairman,
, . " . Democratic: National Executive Committee.
CoBtrioutieaa may be teal te 3. M. Breugnton, Stat Pinanee Chalrmaa
f th Lemoeratie National Committee, Baleigh, or direct to W. W, Ifareh;
treasurer ef th Democratic National Committee, Grand Central Palace, New
XTk City. . . . - , . .
L loyd G eorge
Present Irish Situation
Advocates' Stern Measures For
Restoration of Order and
Stopping Outbreaks
- i ii i F
TALKS ON PROPOSITION
OF SELF-GOVERNMENT
Premier' Declares Ireland Con
spired With Germans Dv
ing The World War.
Carnarvon, Wales, Oct - (By the
Associated : preaa.) Premier Lloyd
George, in a lighting apeeeh : to aia
Welsh eonstitueata today, . which waa
intended for th world, at larger 4r
iclared that th geverameat Intended
t restore order la Ireland by "methods
however atara,1. aad proceed with its
koaar rule kill. Th prim minister
tamed dawn dominion home rale, pro
testing againat the aggestiena that the
goverameat ahould go farther thaa did
GladetoB or 'Aaauith." : not . because
Ireland Beeda ft. not beaaaa it ia fair
to tha United Kiacdom. bat because
crime haa beea aaseemfni." . '- '
"A republic," he insisted, "would not
iiafy Irishmen, as Ulster would have
Mmethiaa; to say to that
-KoUiing which has happened la the
pant, continued th. premier, would
iuatifv th ureeeat eoaditiona ia Irelaad
aad aftev giving tgureo oa th number
of poneeraca killed, h aaid: '
- ratlsnre GivaaWay. -
The police have eadared this state of
thiaga, ia a way waieh ia th high eat
testimony to their discipline aad self.
lestnuBt. There ia a doubt that at
last their patience haa five way aad
fher haa been soma sever hitting
back." '
Th Premier declared that a real
nurder gang" is dominating Ireland,
making it impoaubla for reasonable men
to com together t consider th best
way te govern tha country. "It ia e
reatiaL" ha weat en," "ia th interest
of Irelaad that thia gang ahould be
broken, aad antes I am mistaken we
rhall de it Bat aide by aid with that
w must proceed with the measure of
aeif-gbverasaent ia Ireland." -
Aa to Self-Government, ;
for aelf-govemmeat for Ireland,
th premier explained that If complete
dominion home rule were accorded,
Irelaad - could hare conscription. Ia
that ease, h poiated. aut, England's
army of 100,000 mea might be eon-
fronted with na Irish army ef 600,000.
Coaacriptioa for Eagland he aaid, must
necceaariiy ioiiow aomimou noma rate
ia Ireland. Mr. Lloyd George aaid "he
eoold understand and sympathise .with
th ideal that eelf-goverameat should
be gives that It eald bring good will,
bat not because a gaag of assassins
had bulMed th govrameat iato it.'
It waa aU eery wail, ha eoatiaaed, to
tau about a dominion form ef govera
ment, tot Irelaad demauded aa abeo
lotely independent republic and even
that weald not satisfy th Irish. He
declared Ulster would not have aa Irish
republic aad we do aot waat to negoti
ate pcac with civil war at ear very
docra "
Aided "Th Cermasai
Th premier charged that Ireland
had assisted th German submarine
campaign and declared that although
little aad been mid about it. Ireland
waa Great Britala'a werry durinj the
WamsTei aiau IUiivhvj eavnyar yww stivai
maaey. ha declared, aa to allow Ire
land to obtain her indepeadene with
her wa army aad navy and her capac
ity fpKaaaiating Great Britain s ane-
iea. 1 ;f"j"' f V .
No a wanted to manag Ireland's
dpmeaKe affaire, ha aaid, , but danger
ous weapons like armlea aad navies
wee better nadePth control ( th
imperial parliameat and tha govern
ment would resist any attempt to give
Ireland a .separata aavy . and army.
Tha preeeataome rule bill, he declared
weald hav given Irelaad - very pos
sible facility to manag Jker aw do
mestic affairs.
Irish Were Cawepiring
Ia connection with the charge that
Ireland assisted Germany daring the
Mr. Llord George asserted that In
1917 aad 1918 th Irish were conspir
ing la eoBBoctioa with Germs a subma
rine eperatioas aad that there were
(Continued oa Pas Tw4
Discusses
TIDE SWINGING TO
DEMOCRATIC SfD
E
George White Gives Assurance
of Success of Cox and Roose
velt In November
i
New York, Oct , I. George White,
chairman ' of the' Dcmoeratia National
eommittee, tonight gave hia "personal
eau ranee to th country that th tide
ha swung t Cos and Booeevelt," '
Benator Hardingls Del Uolaes speech,
"tu ruing aia back en our - national
pledgaa. and ideals and -rejecting the
Leagn of Nations and all modifleatioaa
ef ita covenant," Mr. Whits'! state
ment aaid; "proved the turning blow."
,' emee inesr uu ; eada,drtere has
been reeeiviat every anmistakable sign
kaowa't politico of a turn to the Dem
eeratie eaadidata which will end ia
certain victory.' -:
-"I never aaid this before, beeaui It
did aot appear to be true. I any it now
because it docs appear to ba true. If
wa can collect the money accessary for
ue intensive pucuelty required to pre-
ssnt the truth the appearance will be
come a certainty!.
"1 say thia because tha Bepablieans,
from their candidate dowaaa indeed
by hia Kaaaaa City speech Intend- to
east to tac winds even th (aw con
siderations of truth which have bound
their 'dlaeuaeiou of the covenant. We
must nail each lie several times aver,
This country haa realized at last
that the entire Republican campaign is
a soarx Bate we want to be through
with hate of each other ia this country.
Wc want to be fair with one another
and wc do aot want any future Preai
dent to be subjected as hfr, Wilson
haa beea, to a campaign of personal
hate. That waa what - animated Ger
many. It is not the American way. ItJ
will die aa November I aa Germany's
straflng waa killed oa th battlefield.
Aad at tha earn time will die Benator
Harding's attempt to make a separate
peace with thoeo who tried to put the
hyma of hate abev th free chorus of
mankind. ' - - '!
CROWD THREATENS TO
LYNCH MAN IN NEW YORK
Assailant of Little Girl-Bes.
trued .2 Polios As Noose
Was Placed Around Nock
HI. AUI, Wh .1 0 utlUM.a
was rescued from lynching at tha hands
of aa Infuriated crowd of Brooklyn
resident today after a 14-year-old girl
had accused th maa of attempting to
attack her.. When police officers arrived
Cav the acene, a noose had beea adjusted
about Mathlaa' aeck and tha other and
of th rope attached to a telegraph
pole. .
Tha girl said Mauias asaea aer so
gr to the seconH floor of a nearby house
cad awaksa friend of hia. When she
went iato the doorway the maa follow.
ad. she aaid. and grabbed her.
Whea she screamed tor neip AUtniaa
na into tha street, tha eirl aaid. She
told her story to pisaerahy' and a ehaie
after Matblas was started, pursuers in
creasing uatil they numbered aearly
600. The fugitive was inally tripped op
by a maa who came out of a garage.
A rope waa obtained and plans perfect
ed for the lynching when two police.
men arrived had, with drawn revolvers,
effected his rescue. Hathlae was hurried
awav ia an automobile, arraigned in
court aad held without bail for further
cxaminatioa next week.
TRAVELS 181 MILES PER
HOUR IN NAN AIRPLANE
Bne. Prance. Oct. I. Captain Pa
Bomanette, th noted French aviator,
established a" new world's airplaa
speed record at the aviatioa meet here
today. He flaw a kilometre la iz.s sec
onds, hieh is at the rate of 202 Jf
kilometre, r about JUJ mile aa
hear, ; - '"- '
BRUMMin THINKS
Speaker of General Assembly
Arraigns Sordid Appeals
of Republicans
UNNECESSARY, TO TURN
PENDULUM BACKWARD
History of Party In i North
. Carolina Bad ' Enough To
Condemn ' It " Ignobly1 Bat
- Beoord . of Present Pailnre
Damns It Still More,; Speak.
er Contends ,
By B.E. POWELL.
(Staff Correspondent.)
High Point, Oct .-It waa just aa
easy for Bpeaker Donnls G. Brummittrf
to prove - to his audiene tonight th,at
the atepubueaa party ia as disqualified
by its performances of 1919 aad 1920
to rule ia North Carolina aa It la for
veterans of the Bed Shirt day to prove
that the came party gave tha State a
reign of terror in ua ainetiea.
' Tha Sf th district elector and Sneaker
I of the General Assembly ef 1919 ar
raigned tae mmortty party
State for its behavior in matters of
legislation and struck a happy medium
between the two schools ef Democratic
thought which have been pondering
over th propriety of calling present
day Hepabneans bad names.
Democracy is entirely justified In go
ing back to tha rule of Butler aad Bus
sell, Mr. Brummitt declared, but it is
aot necessary to do so to prove thst
as a party it has ignobly failed to
stand to the rack. There ia a place
for a minority party in any Btate, he
thinks, but the, Bepublieaa party in
North Carolina haa never found it.
Republicans Lose Opportunity. ,
Tha high tide of public spirit la 1919
was potent for th Republican but its
leaders six months after began to tear
dowa all that had been bnuded in- the
One work of thejregular aeasioa which
won tha approval and support cf Re
publican members ef the legislaturev
They supported revaluation and the
fneome tax amendments then aad aix
month later begafe to assault tha work
they helped do. They, lauded . tha
Leagu of Nations then and now thry
turn their becks oa it and deny their
own handwriting.
- "Th whole miserable , performance
disqualify th party for serrieo aad
Only shows Its ineptitude and ineapaat
ity aa completely as th 'grandfather
clause' aad educational -test hav dit-
qnnllfled most of its member it the
ballot not for th past twenty years,'
he declared.'' '
. Actuated by motives at An ha their
pretenses, Brummitt declared that ,ther
is Dlentr of room for a minority nartv,
It could do wonder ia keeping the m'
Jority party at the forefront of prog
ress if it only would work with that
end ia view and cease to appeal to un
reasoning discontent and passions. It
night, aa old Soeratei oao aaid be a
gad fly, but it persist fa playing the
mosquito re is.
Defends Revalaatlaa Act,
With his respects psid to the Repub
licans, Mr. Brummitt went into a lucid
defens of ths revaluatio act. Epiete
tus once aaid thst anything may be
taken by two handles, if his brother
wronged 'him, he wanted to consider it
because of bis brother and not because
of tha wrong. Revaluation is a .moral
propositioa of enough force to be' eon
sidered by the taxpayer ia bis Individ
ml relation to bearing a fair ahara
of the burdea of government. 8ueh is
ths appeal of the Democrats while the
minority is' saking the voter to take
it by tha handle that would dodga all
tax possible aad shirk all responsibil
ity, v ' '
The State is sot unlike the nation in
its reaction to the sentiment that
actuated statesmen in .the days imme
diately following the war, Mr. Brum'
mitt said. Then the Republicaa party
of tha nation wished for a meana to
put an cud to war. Today it would
crucify the greatest document sines
Mount Sinai oa a cross .of bitter par
tisanship.
Pablie Spirit At Law Ebb. ,
This crisis finds ths people In a sorry
plight for righteous judgment, said
he. "Public spirit and public devotion
arc at a low ebb. . The idealism that
galvanised this great democracy into
glorious action in 1918 is gone aad we
have turned back to th flesh pots of
commercialism. Wc arc hanging gar
lands upon the horns of ths goldea
calf, seeking first th -things of the
kisgdom of selfishness-and .forgetting
the things of ths kingdom of God.
"It ia to this conditio of the Nation
al mind aad spirit that the Bepublieaa
party makes its appeal for power, aa
appeal to ths lowest and the weakest
ia human nature. - .
To every elaaathey make a selfish
appeal and make a selfish! promise.
They invoke this man's fearf. They
call upon . his timidity. - They blay up
on hia cowardiee. Somewhere la their
witch's kitehea they hav brewed a
concoction of selfishness, sordidness,
cowardice and fear, ana tbey hold this
stuff to ths li:s of the American aa-
tion and invite it to drink.
"They would have ui say: "Boul, thou
hast much g.iods laid ap for maay
years; tska thine ease, eat, drink and
be merry.' They .would shake of
America the great coward aad shirker
of all ages. Whils the world welters
ia a great Slough of anarchy, ehaos and
waat, they would have thia astioa sit
idly by, a selfish monster, mlnA a con
science aad minus a heart.
Demecrata Appeal Ta Highest.
'Whatever else you may lay at th
door of ths Democratic party, yon can
not say that it makes any such miser
able appeal as that to yon," he eon-
Catlaud a Pag TwJ -
HERBERT PARSONS
ICH REPUBUCAH
FOR GOVERNOR COX
Flop of Staqpch Old Guard
Leader In Hm York Causes
Consternation
STOOD FOR TAFT BUT '
- CANT STAND HARDING
Issue . Before Country , One of
' League or 2To League, : Ee
Declares; Bepahlican Can.
Vdidate- 8trddler Without
Principles;. President Oets
Report Prom Paris
The News and Observer Bureau,
603 District National Bank Bid
(By Special Leased Wire.) t
.
"Washington, ' Oct' w -Herbert Par
sons I That name ia en the lips of every
prominent Democrat and Republican ia
Washington today. The Democrat are
saying the procession baa started and
the Republican! arc doing their best
to ml-'mlse the break la their party.
But th defection of Herbert Parsoas
ia the Republican party ia New York is
in te-H blow that has sent the cold shivers
down ine spins oi mm xiaya sia wa
co-workers according to re porta receiv
ed 'here. Parson's bolt la Viewed hers
as tha symptom" of a great revolt that
msy bre ';, opea against ths position
of Harding ia scrapping ths League f
Nations.
Last night reports of the big metro
politan preaa scurried ct to get the
views of Taft. wickenham, ungues
aad Boot but everyoa of these dis
tinguished Republicans whe could oe
loeated aad questioned put his lnger
oa hia lips and soma of these daring
scribes attempted a little mind read'
lag of their own. What they noted wai
that aoac of these 'mea 'essayed
parry the blow that their . hoaored
party colleague - and co-worker for
years had struck against his. party,
Stood rot Tart la 1IU.
Herbert Par.oni going over to the
Democratic party in New -York, paid
North Carolinians today, can be
ured by that if A. Wilton McLean, or
Chairman Tom Wkrrea should
cut for Harding aad Parker in North
Carolina, . supposing - of course the
Democratic party la North Carolina
wae-aerlously .divided on the League of
Nations. Parsoaa, it la true, haa not
been actively ia politics since the Re
publicaa eonventioa at, Chicago-whea
ha resigned aa National committeeman
from . th BUtc ef Near York, but
maa haa don mors ia the last twenty
years to mak tha Bepublieaa party ia
New -York what it is today than hs. Hs
was credited with being ths most la
Buential member of the - New York
county and city Bepublieaa committee.
Ia 1911 whea so many influential Be
pablieans left their party to follow
Colonel Roosevelt. Mr, Parsoas stayed
ia the party and atack to Mr. Taft
The former Preaident aad Mr. Parson
ar known to be Intimate personal
friends and it is believed that Mr. Per
sons must have consulted Mr. Taft
before taking the tit p that he haa tak
en. Even Jttpublicana privately , ap
plauded hi courage aad admit tbey
have aot received into their ranks
Democrat of anything like equal emi
nence. ' '.'.' '
League Or Ne League Issue,
Mr. Paraoas in his letter declaring
that-h intended to vote for Goveraor
Coz for Preaident)- aaid that the issue
was not between ths League as Presi
dent Wilson brought it back and
League with reservations, buV between
going Into the' League with reserva
tions aad aot-going in at all.
Th only likelihood that the United
State will, under Harding, enter the
league, he said, la that he will fiad
it impossible to erect " aa amoeiatioa
of nations or a new legaue,,and so will
nave to erawi into tnie one.. ,
Mr. Parsons warned. Bepablieans who
believe in the League that they were
being deceived by the Bepublieaa can
didate for President; aad characterized
Senator Harding's tslk on the League
issue ss 'mush," He attacked Senator
Harding as a "straddler," and said the
latter's real policy : would be "aot to
do what the honor and peace ef the
World requires, but what . hs will be
squeezed iato doing by the pressure
nf the conflicting fprces supporting
'iim. ' 1
"Ths cause, ths greatest ia ear day.
calls for the eggressive. positive lead
ership of Cox,1. Mr. Parsons said, "not
ths self-confessed ignorance of Hard
ing. No strsddlcr can lead a cause.
Get Stenographic Report.
A stenographic report of the eighth
plenary vSessma during the peace eon
ference. ia Paris, at which President
Wilson has "been charted by Senntar
Spencer, cf Missouri, with giving prom
lace to send th Americas army sad
aavy to ths relief df. Serbia and Bu
mania, has been received at th White
It is understood to have beea leeei' 1
last night in the form of a confidential
eablc from the French .foreign office,
and whether or not it will be made
public by the Preaident, and if so, in
what form, ia a matter of conjecture,
Whea asked regarding this, Seeretiry
Tumulty said today that be had not
seen the report, but that hs was in
formed that, it had beea cabled. He
said he did aot know the manner in
which the Preaident will use it- Ha ex
pressed the hope . that the latter would
mike it public, and that he would lose
ao time in doing so.'
Te Relieve Feel Sltaatloa.
The actiba of the Interstate Com
merce' Commission yesterday in Order
ing the railroads to furnish coal ears to
the mines ia West Virginia and East
Tennessee and other places will help to
relieve the bad fuel aituatioa ia North
(Continued en Pag Twe.)
CLEVELAND
MASSACRE DODGERS
, IN FOURTH BATTLE
The Same Cotelithie
BROOKLTNl, AB.R.R.POJLB.
Otsan, sa ....v d '' 1. X S .S
. Johnston,! .... 4 I t l 'M
Griffith, rf . d .e 1,1
Wheat, If ......... 4 S 1
Myers, cf S t S S I'S
Keaetchy.lb .1 g a
KildaV, Sb ........ S S 1 S S
Miller, .....T.... S t ? S
Cadet, p it IS S
Mamaax, p ......... 1 f a
Mar card, p ....
tLamar .i........ 1 S , O S
Pfeffer, ,......., X t e
Near ...4.. t S t S O
Tstala
. l'IS4 S I
CUTKLANDi AM.
Jamiesaa, If ...... t
Bvaaa, If S
Wambygaaaa, Jb . 4
Speaker, ef ........ S
Smith, rf ......... I
Bntwa, lb ......... S
Card aer, lb ....... S '
W.JokBatosvlb... 1
Wed.rf ,.. S
Craney, rf ...... )
s9"wll. awS uLe j s af A
O'Neill. ......... t'
CvUskle,p .,
R.H.POJLK.
A J a aa
e t ds s
Totals ...... ....M I II IT IS t
. fBattoi for Mar sard la sixth. .
, laa far i. Jfeknetoa alata.
Seer by laalag-. " 'aW
Brhly .....tat IN 1
CleveUad, MS HI
h Twe-bsM htt CrifSth. - Saeria
hltCerdner. Oacibl plays My
to Olara to KUlaSl Sewell to Wam
bygaasa to Berna; Cardaar to Warn,
byganaa to Bara. Left a hssis
Breaklya, 1 Clevwlaad, It. Baa, am
halls ear Cadore, 1 g Mar sard.
It C Casrelsshta. It ef rfetTer. X
Hlta- Caaare, 4 la ee laalagi aT
Msmaux, I la mmm laniagi Mar
Cjaard, S la three laalagsi ef PfeaTer,
4 ta Ure Inula gs. Struck Mt by
Cadet, It by Mamaax, It by Cwr.
leski. 4t by Marcjaard. t; by Pfef
fer, 1. Wild pitch ffgT. pasa4
hall MlUev. Laatag plUker CaWore,
VsaplreaOlaeea (America) behiad
platet Kleaa (Nattoaat) at Srat baea;
Ceanedly (American) at sissy, baaat
O0y (NatieBal) at third baa. Thm
ef game lit. r
Roosevelt Names Ten Kinds (
VoteaHe Hopes Will Vote
. For Mr. Harding
: Kansas City, Ho4 Oct l-Amariea
must join th sibtlag Laagu of Na.
tiona or d. preparM to "arm to the
tenth" Franklin D. Boossvelt, - Demo
cratic vie presidential nomine, de
clared la two addresses her tonight
Any other alternative ia impossible, he
auueu, oeeauea mirty-oac aatioaa al
ready ia the leagn will not consent to
abandon it aad experiment with corns
uairiea pise. -
Jr. Kooeevelt spots this boob at
Beoaua, Io later k climbed iato aa
airplane, piloted by Tex LaOron. a
former aviator, aad flaw to Kaasaa
Llty, Kaasaa, where he addreesed
large crowd. .
Ia hia address her hs class! fled tea
kinds of voters, who. he Hid, "I hope
will this year vote for Mr. Harding."
They a ret
"1. Those who believe that it it mors
important to slset. Bepablieaa office
holders thaa. to occur th peace f the
world. r - . ' . - t .
. Those who rot the Bepublieaa
uraes nerause taeir. fraadfathera did.
"J. Those who waat to 'awt ' with
President Wilson, who is. not canning
a-resiuency mis year.
"1 Those who believe wc eusrht asm
nave raiereo tac war to nmtm
ciTiiixaiion. . .
'3. Those Who put the interests of
aome loreura nation befor tha i
terests of the United State.
a. loose who exrwet to nuke hr
nnanciai gaia sarouga ta racognitioa
of their apecial interests by reac
tionary frealdeat.
T. Thoae whe want any old kind of
change, without atoDoin to ihsni
wnctaer they are Jumping iato the-frying
paa or into th Sr. -
T. Those who believe we ahould
nt one start a war against Ifeaies
IB order to "rivilix- it ia th Into.
eats of Americas oil and mining com
(WBICS.
9. TliM who read Bepublieaa na.
pers only and accept aa gospel truth
partisan editorial aod aew eolumna.
-10. Those whe believe that tha
a the persons! nronertv of fiennhlleaas
ana mat no democrat ever waa a good
nmencaa.
POLITICAL DONATIONS
NOT EXEMPT FROM TAX
Wsshington, D. C, Oct. t. Contribu
tions to politiril earn pair, fundi are
taxable. Commissioner of Iaternal
Revenu William d re la red todsr in a
formal atatemeat "advisine member
of ill parties" that they will aot be
allowed to deduct amouata given to
campaign fuada from their iaeoms
tax returaa. -
Ths income tax regulations. Mr. Wil
liams said, are "brief but . explicit."
that taxec muat be paid ea aura eon-
tribntioaa, aad provide that wader a
eoadjtloaa would deduction be allow,
EffTER LEAGUE OR
PREPARE FOR WAR
Y
INDIANS
American League Contenders
Even Up With National
League Rivals By Win-.
ning a 5 To 1 Victory
COVELESKIE'S SPIT BALLS
ARE COMPLETE PUZZLE TO
BROOKLYN BATSMEN AGAIN
' ' J i sssssmam-aaasa 4 '
Pitching Aoe , of . Speaker's
Tribe Yields Only Pir ejest
, . tered ' Hits and Repeatedly
. Xetires Side In Order; Hard
Hitting Representatives of
Ban Johnson's Organisation
' Put Tour Robin Slabsmon
To , Rut, Beginning? ,Thelr
' Oaslaugbt la ;pirst Inning
'and Sustaining It To The
Znd
Clovalaad, Oct S-rThs CTerclaa'd Lv ,
diaas maaaaared the Brooklyn Bobins
ia the fourth gam of the world aertee
hire this afternoon, winning by a score
. '7' ?J!?!f thB, Wl! atrunle "
for the 1920 hasebaU championship ef
the universe. Each team haa new wea
two game aad th battle will be re
newed tomorrow with th America
Lsagncrc th favorites. '
Thatrlb of Speaker evidently bur
nished ap its collective war club during
the toip from Brooklya aad fn apoa
th helplea Bobins with a enrage at
tack that swept th Ksiternsrs com.
?, ,X th1 ,Mt ' kwwght an
Umitea joy to th thousand of fail
wh had been waiting ths awakening sf "
ths horn club with coaddent iaipaU. '
one. . ': . .
Whllr th Indiana war, latterlag
foot of Brooklya's pitchera to a friaile,
Stanley Coveleski wa holding th la
vader almost helpless ia th grasp of
his sptthall delivery. But flv hits
war collected from th former miner
slant aad shoots. Almost every Inning
th Bobla batter want cut ta order.
So perfect was hi control aad the,d-
fense of hi teammates at hi back that
bt three Superba were left stranded,
and only one, Jimmy Johnston, ton
pleted the circuit for a tally. . v.
f Begla WMb a Buah." '.'""vl
rrm th offeaiiy standpoint th
Cleveland clan tor into th Nationals
with a rush te th ant Inning snd
actually wea th gams te that frtm
as later developments proved. Tw -
ran wer -quickly accumulated follow .
by another pair ia th third and tho :
laal score went across ia th fifth,
It was not tha total-anmber of maa '
that the Indtam mad which impressed
their followers, but the mianer ia which
th winners fslriy ran rampant through
th highly touted pitching talat of th
National League pennant wiaasrs.
Cador waa knocked cut of tha box ia
tha second session aad Mammau wh
replaced bfm, luffered a simUar fate in
the third period. Bubs aUMranrd. whe
earlier ia the day bad beea arrested for
ticxet speculating aad released upon his
word to report for a hearing oa Monday,
followed Mammaux aad after ridding
himself- of Ue heritor of Afammanx.
pitched good ball until he retired la
order to permit Lamar to bat for him. .
Jeff Pre iff er then took up the burdea '
ox tac hurling ana hid th final run
scored against his delivery. Twelve
hits, Svc runs aad tea Indians left on
the bases tells th story ef Cleveland's
rise aad massacr of ths Bobins ia a
autshell. The airtight hurling f Cole-
leski was hardly needed ia view of the
brutal meaner in which Speaker aad hia
player battered the offering ef the
Brooklya quartet. Nevertheless Stanley t
moistened ths ball time after time snd
shot it ap to the plate with all ths hit
defying slips and slants as though th
contest depended r-entlrery npoa his
aballty to slip th ball past ths weak
Robins without even the courtesy of a :
how-de-do." In the nine inningi in
which it was necessary for him te take
the mound ' Coveleskic hurled the ball
at the Brooklyn batters 8 times. Of ,
these deliveries 23 were balls, 6 strike, '
nine foul strikes and three fouls after '
th aeeoad strike. Bevea tlmea the ball
was played for a ground out and. Id
times for fly outs. These figures plus
ths Sv scattered hits igalnit Coveleski i.
shows his ejfectiveness in th box.
- Indian Now Havs Edge.
Ths victory cam at ths psychological
moment for the Cleveland dab who aow
are thought to lave ths edge oa the
Brooklyn team. With th score of
games nil even at two cseh and three
games still to play on , their heme .
reservation the advantags ahould rest X
with the Indians. Ths America
Leaguers have aow eeea cverV, Brooklya
pitcher of elass working against them
aad th star twirlers of the Bobins
ser a longer a mystery.. With the
backing of home crowds lad such bit
ting aa they uncovered todiy there sp-
pesrs to be resson for ths odds offered
by the Cleveland fa as befor th eerie
opeaed. .
The affect of thia kvil etrrroort wai
evident today in every action of tort"
Indiana both before and daring tha,
game. , .-,,.,,
f Park To Small. .
The game was played ia perfect base
ball weather, the afternoon beivg so hot
that many of the bleacherifci sat
throughout the eon test ia their shirt
sleeves while women ia ill part of the.
grand stand used programs as fail.
Long-before the gam began every part
of ths cheaper seat sections wer dlled
sad tall trees snd telegraph pole ever-'
looking the grounds threatened to top-
pie under their burden ef venturesome
youthful fa nr. Neighboring house tops,
too, bora full quotas of men and women.
Inside the park tha fans showed all
fCeatiaaed ea Page Kiev.)
V