i1 v
nrvn 1 T J)
erver
fair aad innitt Mondays
Tuesday unsettled, showers.
Moderate to west wines.
VOL CXII, NO. 124.
TWELVE PAGES TODAY. RALEIGH, N. C, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 1. 1920 TWELVE PAGES TODAY.
-PRICEr FIVE CEMTS'
Obi
" WAtOl IMZL
SatoM-re ssnsWsa asm asU
Isiss tMVW wwb - ..j ,
THREE KILLED III
FATAL COLLISION
NEAR ASHEVILLE
r fiva fithors sppiftiislv In lured
w w W fcl v wwo sjwrwwwsej ""J
When Southern Passenger '
Train Hits Auto
PARTY OF YOUNG MEN
EN ROUTE TO CHURCH
-
Engineer Unable to See Auto,
mobile in Time to Stop the
Tram; Oar Struck Sidewayi
by Fast Moving Train and
Literally Smashed to Pieeei ;
Wounded in Hospital
Aaheville, Oct. 81. On boy wm
killed outright, two other men died at
the Biltmore hospital thia city, and It
ether are seriously injured and may
not Kve through the night a s remit
of Southern paueager train. No. 15, an
root to Asbeville, striking an autemo
bil at a eroeting, one mile east of
Old Fort thie morning at 10 o'clock.
The 12-year-old ton of Carl Lowry
was instantly killed when the train
truek th machine and Jeter. Bhinehart,
Dt ..J T... Vnlln.T an 6.
wards Iron tne enects 01 injuries, n
were picked ap and rushed here on the
train which struck them. Others in
lured ire J. T. Myers. Carl Lowry,
Thomaa Rhinehsrt, Paul. Conroy and
Tommie nninenan.
Cr Smashed To Pieces.
All are from Marion. They had been
to church and were on their way to a
singing contest, sll eight riding in. a
touring csr. Thtvear started to cross
the track and was evidently struck side
ways, being completely wrecked. Nearly
all the injured are suffering from in
juries to the head, in many instance
fractured skulls.
The train is ssid to have been run
ning at the . usual rate of apeed but
th t..!n mmn rmild not have aeea the
tar until the front part of it was already
on the track. Both the train ana me
iilnmnMI, tried tit itoD but it Wl
humanly Impossible, all reports agree.
to stop eitnor oeiore we iaiat w
lision.
Tmm Mia la Haanital.
The train was stopped a few yards
from ths seen of the accident and the
train-new, with the assistant of th
passengers, got the injured people in
the oaggage ear .rwo.
at to Asueville, stopping at Biltmew
to rush the wounded to the Blltmere
hospital. -
MuUae sad . Jeter- Bhinehart Iired
for only a short time after arriving
here. Both suffsred from fmctu red
kntla- attndlas sunreona stated. Mull
nex also had both legs broken and
.....k.J mwut Rhlnehart had on lec
rusbed and the left leg broken betides
. numerous other injuries, praetieajiy an
v ... t Iwulv-.
Ths bodies of the deed will be re
turned to Marion tomorrow for the
funerals and interment. Th accident
-. east a gloom over entire .Western
North Carolina as the news spread and
telegrams and phono messages poured
Into Ashe vine an aay.
Employed in Cotton Milt
Th men were all employees of the
Cross cotton mills of Marion and are
known a hard and steady workers, Mr.
Conroy, especially being a well known
ebareh worker. Myers is a married
man Jeter Rhinehsrt iwas newly mar
ried ; Tommie Bhinehart, also newly
married s Cart Lowry, wife and two chil
dren and .Mullnex was sged 20, and
ingle.
' The machine belonged to Tommie
Bhinehart and th two men were follow
1 ing a truek and another large machine,
' all from the cotton mills, en route to
i a ' ,
1 big singing contest.
th. Mathnriiat ehnrrh at (lift sort tor &
HEAVY VOTE IN SOUTH
CAROLINA FORECAST
jtepuuucan vote Apparently
Will Be Heavier ; Many
Women Registered
Columbia, 8. C, Oct JL A larger
oto than in previous years will likely
be polled in Booth , Carolina Tuesday,
largely incident to the enfranchisement
. V t . . t 1 . I
X women, hpihiuh vj wddii am
boon eonsiderable In a Bomber of
counties, particularly tm Anderson,
, Charleston, Richland, ' Aiken, Spartan
burg and Greenville, where leader
among the womev marshslled their
forces and Qualified to east their ballots
: ta th general election.
Th Bepnblieaa ToU in th stats will
me P""7 BMa veoB aopeHaaiy vipin.
Two factions ksrs placed presidential
. electors in th field, and each ia working
stroauoatly to consolidate its ttroagth.
--r One faction, led by J. W. Tolbert,
. of Greeewood, ass only white presiden
tial leetora. The other led by 3. Dua
eaa Adams, of Spartanburg, and I W.
Blalock, of OoldTiUo, has a mixed
ticket, there being, both whit and
- ' blacks ia the group of presidential
electors, two of these being woman.
The Tolbert faction was , seated at
I the Chicago contention over th pro
test of tho Adams-Blaloek faction.
' .m . i i . 1 . ' I. 1 1 1 .
' cnw rnnr inner dcctiua
i 'uwii vwwuuui. iiboiinu
AFTER STRENUOUS WORK
Boston, Mass, Oct ll-Oovemor
. Coolidg rested today, from his esm-
paiga at th Bepnblieaa nominee for
' Vieo-Frosiden. His flnal address was
mad at a rally in Tremont Temple
last night whsn h expressed eonlldeneo
In a .Republican victory at the election
next iTuesdsy. Oovemor Coolidgo wiU
, go tomorrow to his horns' ia Northamp
ton aad on Tuesday he and Mrs. Cool
. id(re will east their ballots in that elty.
After voting Gov. Coolidg will return
to Boston, and writ watch- the returns
ker Tnesday aighU . - '.' , 1
BAILEY GOES INTO REVERSE
ON INCOME TAX AMENDMENT
He Wrote Its Praises in Plat
form Four Years Ago arid
Now Fights It
MAXWELL BRINGS OUT
FAC-SIMILE OF PAPER
Fonr Tears Ago the Income Tax
Bemoved Borden Vrom Poor
and in 1920 it Fallf Heavily
Upon Him, the Collector De.
claree; MazweH Writei Cloi.
ing Arfnment.
By A. J. MAXWELL.
This is not an attack on Mr. Bailey.
He correctly states that th issue is
not Bailey, but how tho income tax
amendment will affect tho voter of th
State.
By his own boasts ho has sown th
8tat with his pamphlets.
Th purpose of this article is to show
what Ballsy himself thinks of tho ar
guments in the Bailey pamphlet.
Contribution from ths big interest
have been, used to carry to tho oav
mom people tho messsg that "tho bur
den of this iaeoms tax ..ill fall on ths
poor that it will faU on th farmers,
the tenants and the wage-earaera.
What does Mr. Bailey really think
of that argument f
J-WOIsW' W. & , own Jprj:
Mr. Bailey is operating his owa punch
bag.
When not trying to help privilege
bold on to Its own aad peculiar special
privilege in this 8 tats ho write that
the Federal income tax has "removed
from the rsnk and file of onr people
tho heavier burden of taxation sad
placed that burden upon those who are
more able to bear it, aad who, in com
mon justiee, ought to bear it."
Noble words, aad true.
Bailey Knows Truth.
Mr. Bailey knows they are true. He
ia himself tho collector of eustc is, and
ho knows where : these millions come
from. Ho knows they do not eomo from
tho tenant, tho farmer and th labor
in man. '
They are words written by Mr. Bailey
four years ago, when ho was offering
a plank for tho Democratic State plat.
form.
Aad his plank was accepted beeaus
it was true.
"My pamphlets are in the hand of
th voter . or tne mate, says au.
Bailey
It ia to. bo hoped these voters will
Kt out their pamphlets and compart
I printed reasoning (paid for by ths
special Intoiostsy wrtn th plsrn til
aliatilalaaKaH lrtlliylcnHlify
ill And below in hit owi writing,
whsa h,wss not seeking to serve th
special interests, but seeking to later'
prft th plain Democratic thought of
tho etate.
Note that when he eamo to tho words
"common justice," ia declaring that
those of great wealth ought to bear
this larger portion of tho public bur
den, his pen instinctively bore a little
harder aad emphasised sll uncon
sciously tho plain truth of his declara
tion. "Instinct is a great matter," says Col
Falstsff, when in ths unconscious pres
ence of majesty in combat hs was a
coward on instinct.'
Principles TJachaasvd.
Thus it was that sub-eonseiousnes
(I-like that better than sincerity) gar
an extra push to his pen when Mr.
Bailey reached those . noble words in
his summing up that tho income tax
in our Federal system had transferred
tho burden of taxation to those most
able to bear it aad who la "common
justice ought to bear it.
The principle of the income tax
haan't changed in four years, except
that more of oar people have come to
have great wealth and those of great
wealth have come to have greater
wealth.
But if we want a more recent opin
ion wo have the letter written by Mr.
Bailey to Mr. Warren, within tho last
month since he-has been sending out
these paid-jor-by-spoeUl-privuege) pam
phlets that the Income tax "doesn't
reach h former as : well as I would
like."
He -tust laugh ia his sleeve as he
contemplates tho situation-
"My pamphlets," (paid for by the
Xsi iU.
.
wU)
ae simile of Cellestoi BaUay lacsaae Ta aWtloaj of Psmscrattc rlatform Isi itlf.
; EQUALIZING THE
j-.A..VwHlvaw M afcW.ffyTayy,'--- jXkrf
... iil-am. sTi aaaaf. ... aaaV a. AonawAaahahmT - . I anuninal .m, - 1 t M
special interests), "are ia the ihnnda
of the voters of the State"
. ' "I've told th farmers (who are
not reached by ths income tax as
well as I would like") that they
ought to vote down this income tax
which they wouldn't pay, because
the burden of it would faU on
them
"I've told th wage -earners, who
are already taxed for State income,
that if they vote to tax the income
of Dig business just ns their income
is slresdy taxed, they will have it
all to pay
"Of course yoa can see there ia
my owa hand writing that I know
better
"Big business is paying for this
aad
"My pamphlets arsMn tho hands
of the voters of tho State.
"I've made them believe that the
maximum limitation of six per cent
would bo levied as a flat rata oven
on their small iaeomoa, although
without any limitation, they have
never been taxed but on pen eeaV ,
"And they have my pamphlet
f I teU thorn: that wo can't tan th
income of railroads and foreign
corporations doing baeiaess ia the
State. Of ooursa a man of my si
tniv general sad export income
tax knowledge knows better. They
do tax their incomes in other Btatei
and get very large revenue from
them. No other State prohibits tax
ing their ajneomo equally with, thst
of their employes, but
"W can't reach tho income of
farmers as well as I would like" it
takes a properly tax to reach them,
and
"They have my pamphlet.
"I teU them the Bute isn't fair
in submitting the amendments Ic
xether. Of course I knew that the
State aad eouaties couldn't get along
on a 15-eeat rate without th in
come tax, and that for this reason
they had to bs submitted together,
snd thst when I wss on a eonstitu
tional commission wo submitted
seven propositions to bo voted on
ss one, but
"It sounds plausible ia my
pamphlet, and they have it.
Senator Simmons says the idea
thst the income tax is a double tax
baa been exploded by-nearly every
government on earth, nnd that its
a (hams to tax th incomes of
those who toil snd exempt unearned
income, but it's in my pamphlet.
"The most distinctive nchieve
uieat in tho Senator's twenty yean
of able service in tho Senate) the
achievement that gives him a dis
tinctive place ia the legislative his-
tory of ou reooatry was his lead
ership ia transferring this burden
of taxation to those "most able to
bonr't, and who in common jus
tiee ought to bear it," but I tell
CaAJJ
oataaa
4
. ntaaniav'n
S1 .... . '
XiJkjJL. an.
BURDEN OF TAXATION
tho people that .he income tax is
Unjust snd inquiaitive the most
obnoxious form of tax ever ia
veated. "If the amendment- is beaten in
the State wo will have to keep on
taxing toe income of tnose who work
(our State ia collecting HlOfiOO
from those who work for their ia
come this year; sad we will con
tinue to exempt the insoqjes from
inherited fortunes snd big business
(from which I collected for the Fed
eral government in this State fifty
three million dollars last yesr) and
will continue to pile on the taxes on
tho amall farmers and home-owners
snd home-renters there'll be prac
tically no limitation on the rates
that may be levied if th amend
ment it beaten
"Tho amendsnent ia eadorsed by
tho Democratic Stat platform, but
mr pamphlet tolls them it isn't.
It s my party's program to give a
square deal to all the people, aad so
plainly just that it is eadorsed by
leaders in both parties, but-
They havw -B!rTmW." "
n "Mi
d Big Business nave aeon
to that.
"Ia vaia ia
of any bird
the not spread ia eight
PRINCE TO ABIDE BY
WISHES OF POPULACE
, Lucerne, Oct. Acceptance of ths
Orssk throao by Prince Paul depeads
entirely upon wishes of Greek people,
he told the Greek minister to Swit
zerland today, when informed verbally
that the Greek government considers
him called to assume th duties of
sovereign. Ho declared that only in
tho event tho Greek people did not
wish the return of King Constantins
and excluded Prince George, th Duke
of Sparta, would ha accept the offer
made by the government
Prince Paul said, however, that he
considered the throne belonged to
King Constnntine, aad thst, next to
Constantino, Princs George had the
8 rat call to tho honor.
ONE MAN KILLED AND
THREE MEN WOUNDED
Williamson. W. Vs, Oct 81. Travis
Hortoa, of Thneker, was killed instant
ly. Matt Lester, of Matewaa, waa prob
ably fatally injured nnd Doug Mounts
aad Jamesi Overstreet, of Mate wss,
were seriously hurt v in three iseparat
shooting affrays ia Mingo county to.
day. Mounts nnd Overstreet urn un
der indictment aad awaiting trial oa
charges growing out of ths recent fa
tal rioting at Matewaa.
it (.
'S ' '
1
j nsmsBWeB, ,vWanssauya
A S"T' a)4m 1
ORGANIZED LABOR
WILL BEAT NEWELL
T
Final Survey By Democrats
Promise Two Thousand Ma
jority for Bulwinkle
HIS FIGHT ON LEAGUE
DOWNS CHARLOTTE MAN
Whale of Vote Expected in
Mecklenburg; ' Where Dr.
Alexander Hae Been right
ing Morrison and the Amend
ment! ; Cleveland Will In.
create Majority Thii Time
By R. X. POWELL.
(Staff Correspondent.)
Charlotte, et. 31. A final survey of
th situstion in the inth district, sll
along ths i most doubtful eontest in the
Stste, barring purely local fights, leadi
to ihe conclusion that Major A. L. Bul
winkle, of Gaiton .i, will be eleeted to
Congress on Tuesday over Jake Newell
b a majority if approximately two
tlKUftand-vqtei.
To organised labor almost exclusively
will belong, the credit for the victory.
th. Mirklpnburg man into office in spite
of tlio-fiuj personal qualities of hit
opponent Labor went under the sur
face mi'' v-ith the League of Nations ss
tho ifsue made a clean fight for ths
soldier candidate. The winning of the
Ninth will give the State solid represen
tation in Congress.
- The Eighth district, always sn un
kuuwa quantity in prci(lntial years,
is in the best shape the Democrats havj
known since "Farmer Bob" Doughtoa
began hit, career as n lawmaker. The
Seventh, where for a long time it ap
peared that M.s personal eqtstioa woald
be tho undoing of William Cictro Ham
mer, it regarded as entirely sate. Re
ports coming to Charlotte are that Zebu
Ion Weaver will win by the biggest ma
jority a candidate for Congress hat
ever been given in the Tenth. Th
triumph of a progressive record in Con
frets over thousands of dollars spent by
the forees behind L. L. Jenkins will
carry supremo sntirfoction tc the eles
torsfat sll over the St-itc.
Big Vote la Mecklenburg.
All the sign of the times point to
whal of m vote in Mecklenburg oa
Tuesday and ia stilts of th opposition
J of Dr. H. Q- Alexander th county vilU
i . r . r i
nana vj uwwn nsornson, sujor
iSulwinkle aad th amendments.
Th Doctor hat mad a terrific appeal
to the prejudices of the fsrmers. Oas
demonstration after another for the
league, however, has crushed the doctor's
hopes at badly as Senator Simmons did
when hs wss asked by the Mecklenburg
mystery to fight the peace pact on ths
floor of the Senate. Whatever-lse may
be ssid of Mecklenburg, it can't bs
charged against it that the Doctor holdt
any great influence. As a township
politician, his decline in power hss
been tragic.
Cleveland eounty will return ths
Ninth district majority and it is ex
peeted that it will run well over two
thousand with the women voting. Meek
lenburg will pile up from four to sii
thousand nnd this majority will offjel
lie majority the BepuMicnnt will get
in t'js ir.oui.tain. Lincoln and fl.iston
eounties are going to be close with the
bright prospects th.it Gaston will giv
Ave hundred majority and Lincoln will
go Democratic by n hand red or more
Newell Flghta League.
Two weeks sgo Newell might here
been nominsted for orgsnixed lsbor, st
that time, would have given a mnjority
of its vote to him. Since that time, the
Charlotte man has run counter to the
big issue. J. F. McMahon, of Raleigh,
has kept the League of Nations at the
forefront as the issue and Newell hat
beea blindly going shesd with his fight
on the league. He was offered by labor
friends sn opportunity to repudiate the
Republican platform but he declined
aad bis refussl to "lay off" the league
issue sesled his doom.
- The stsge is set hero tonight for s
greet rally tomorrow evening when
Comeron Morrison speaks to ths home
folks. Local political leaders forecast s
demonstration unlike nny outburst of
the campaign when Mr. Morrison ap
pears on the platform at the auditorium
tomorrow evening. The Charlotte folks
hnve watched bis campaign the past
week with the keenest interest,
Morrison Closes' Tonight
Spending the dsy in quiet rest at hit
home, the Democratic standard-bearer Is
entirely confident of an unprecedented
majority in ths State Tuesday for the
ticket The constitutional amendments
are going to pass,, ho believes, with a
wholesome majority.
Mr. Morrison will lesve Charlotte to
morrow morning for Shelby, speaking
Ihrre after the noon hour rain fit
Gsrronis in the afternoon. A large
party of Charlotte friends, including
his pre-primary manager, will make the
i rip wiia nun.
DORMITORY. OF CO.LLEGE
FOR WOMEN DESTROYED
Tallahassee, Pla Oct. 81. East Hsll
th only frame dormitory oa the cam
pus of th Florida 8tat College for
Women, wns totally destroyed by firest
11 -o'clock this morning caused by s
defective flue. A majority of the eighty
five girls who occupied the dormitory
war st church services aad there was
not svea tho slightest accident during
tho blase. .. i -,. ,;.;.,.
- - A uaifcbef of , young w women lost
all of their personal effects. Jst Hall
wss built ia th daya of ths old co
ed ucstionsl Florida State College and
was slated for rebuilding probably
next year. Tallahassee . Elk raised a
purs -of 11,000 which, they presented
to President Coaradi to ?eplae cloth
lag and other property' lost - by th
young women. Private home wets
thrown open to tho girls tonight and
N NINTH
all will be comfortably housed. ; v
STAGE ALL SET FOR
MIGHTY BATTLE OF
BALLOTS TUESDAY
MUST ELECT NEW
HDUSETOmQRROW
One-third of Senate Also to Be
Elected; Number of Seats
Democrats Need
Washington, Oct 31. A new House of
Representatives snd slightly more then
one-third ofjlhe Sensts will be chosen
In Tuesday's . general election. While
th Presidential campaign has eclipsed
sll others in interest, the Congressiisual
lights, particularly the Senatorial con
tests, have received mr.eb attention
from ths leaders of both parties.. .
Both Senator Harding and Uovernor
Cox have pleaded with the voters to
elect a Congress in which their respec
tive parties would byre a majority. Ths
hesds of the. Congressional and Sena
torial campaign committees hsve beea
especially active, stressing ths impor
tance of the Senatorial elections be
cause the Senate which meets next
March fourth will be called upon to
dispose of the question of peace with
Germany,
rtrict. party vote, has given the Re
publicans a majority of two. Thirty
fdiir Senators will be eleeted Tuesday,
the terms of 32 expiring next March
3 and two being eleeted to fill unex
pired terms caused by the deaths of
Senators Baykhead, of Alabama, and
Martin, of Virginia. These two places
are certain to be filled by Democrats.
Seventeen of the 32 Senators whoss
terms expire next'Msrch 3 srs Demo
crats and IS Republicans. The Demo
crats, to be in s majority, must espture
st least two Senstorisl sests from the
Republicsns. Leaders of both parties
are claiming secessions to their present
strength.
Four hundred end thirty-five mem
bers of the House of Representatives
are to be eleeted Tuesday. The num
ber necessary for a majority is 218.
Ihe present membership of the House
is 190 Democrats; 232 Republicsns: two
independent Republicans, one Indepen
dent and one Prohibitionist, with nine
vacancies. To obtain a majority, ths
Democrats must gsin 81 seats as eight
of th nin -vacant sests normally are
hold, by Republicans.
REPLY-TO CHARGES OP
WASTING WAR SUPPLIES
Deo artment Declares - It Has
Saved Taxpayers Over Four
Millions; Statement
Washington, Oct. 31. The War De
partment today answered charges thst
the government had sustained greet loss
through the sale or surplus war sup
plies with the claim thst it had "saved
over $4,6754281.15 to the tax-payers
of this country" through the sale of
such supplies snd ''settlements of
claims."
The Department mads public a state
ment, in which it took up ehargea re
cently in a number of newspaper!.
Characterising these ehargea "as un
founded," the statement said that to
have a proper understanding of the
situation it "must be remembered" that
the department in msking its purchases
of war material! was contemplating a
field force of 5,000,000 men, and that
hod the wsr 'continued another year
the supplies on hand st the signing of
the nrmistire would have been totally
inadequate."
The statement asserted that sales of
war materials overseas segregated
82223252.
In addition to th supplies sold over
seas the department ssid equipment
valued at $672,000,000 were returned to
the United States.
As to sales in this country the De
partment saserted tha.t the sales division
had disposed of property which eost tho
government $1,132,067,476 03 ' and that
P'the return to the United tSates hsd
beea $83978,41742." --
The statement asserted thst "to re
duce the high eost of living" the War
Department in the past yesr snd a half
had sold approximately. $83,000,000
worth of food supplies at 60 per cent of
tho eost value. .
FINAL APPEAL FOR
CAMPAIGN DONATIONS
Columbia, S. C, Oct 31. A few mors
dollars will finish the job. Let mi ap
peal to every Democrat in the South,
man nnd woman, to contribute to the na
tional campaign fund before Tuesday
night Republican rule will spell ruin
to the South. We will win.
JOE SPARKS,
Assistant Treasurer ' Democratic Na
tional Committee. -
. - ..lluiMli.. - m , mt . i
ELECTION RETURNS
TUESDAY NIGHT
. The News and Observer will give the election returns
' Tuesday night on a screen on the Wright Hotel' building,
across the street from the News and Observer office. As fast,
as the information comes in by wire from all parts of the na-
tion and the State it will be flashed on the screen. All are
" invited. r" - ;''T
' In order that conditions may be as favorable as possible
for the compiling of the, returns, the editorial rooms and
business office of the News and Observer will be closed ex
ceot to employes and telegraph messengers. This role ex
cepts no one and it is respectfully requested that the public
1. 3 It. . .
cu-vyemtc ui bcsimiuji us fuivtvsuKum
1 sect
Leaders of Two Great Political
Parties to Make Final Efforts
Today at Vote Getting
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
IN APPEAL FOR PEOPLE
TO SUPPORT DEMOCRATS
Predict! Tomorrow Win Brin?
Only One Possible Result
"The Repudiation of Senator
Harding ai the Representa
tive of Reaction at Home
and Abroad" ; Outlines Cane1
of the Democrats and Dwells
on Sordid Campaign Heth.
ods of the Republicans; Will
Hays Issues Appeal in Behalf -of
O. 0. P. ; Both Sides Con.
iinue Confident of Outcome
at Polls Tomorrow -
New York, Oct Sir Leaders spd
workers of ths two greatparties in th
National campaign restedoday" in an."
government and nation will eome inth
their own aLthe polls to render their
decision. '
Though it had been announced there
would be no campaign activities on aa
count of the Sabbath, the .Uairmen of
both Be. ublieaa and Democratic N-
tional committees spent a portion of the
dsy at their headquarters. Each re
iterated his prediction of yesterC y
that the cs Jid.te of his party would
be elected P-cident
No pre-election statement was issued
by the other contending parties Social'
iat, Farmer-Labor, Prohibitioa aad
Bo-ialist Labor.
Cox Closes Drive Today.
Senator Harding has dosed his cam
paign of speech-making and returned ta
hit Marlon homo to await the result of
Tuesday's balloting. Governor Cox baa
one more appoal to launch to eitisens
of kis own Stats. This he will do at
Toledo tomorrow evening. Seymour
Stedmaa, Socialist candidate for vice
president, Is-in the West leading tho
fight of his party ii the absence of bin
principal, Eugene V. Debs, who hi
prisoner ia th federal penitentiary .nti
Atlanta, seizing sentence for vi4ati:tc
the espionage law.
Will H. Hay, chairman of ths Re
publics Natioaal Committee sqmmed
up the ease for Senator Harding ist a
statement in which he defined the is
sues of the eampalga. These issues, h
sdded, "necessarily are personified by
the candidates."
Roosevelt' Statement
Franklin D. Rooserelt, Viee-Preti-dential
Lomiue- of the Democratic
party, msde public a statement review
ing the campaign as it hss been wagedT
snd pred' tin that elettioa day will
bring "only one possible result tho
repudiation of Senator Harding a tho
representation of r' .in at horn aad
abroad."
"The issues," Mr. Bays' statement dc
clares, ' 'are plain.
Upon th Democratia side yea have -
''1 Internationalism, involving tho
United States contrary to its traditions
snd for th first time in its history
in a military alliance with four other
great powers to superimpose their will
upon all other peoples oa earth.
2 Wilsonism, comprising the truly
dreadful effects of unpnparednea for
both war and peace, and unprecedented
cigy of waste and extravagance, a
wholly unintelligent nnd ruinous taxa
tion snd an aggregation of sxseutiv
beads notoriously matchless for inefli
eidncy. !Cauipaign methods. t
"4 James M. Cox.
Republican Merita.
"Upon the Republican tide you havet
''1 Americanism, comprehending tho
preservation of independence of tho re
public, the faith of the fathers, tho in
tegrity of the Constitution and an earn
est desire to join with nil other free
nations in aa honorable aasoeistioa do
signed, withefat impairment of aeU-eeas-'
trol or self-respect, to maintain uni
versal peace upon tho enduring baste Of
justiee established under law rather
than of authority asserted by fore.
'2 Comprehension of vital domontia
problems and determination to solve
them through intelligent and sympa
thetic co-operation of all departmcata
of "the government instead of by the ar
rogant domination of oac .
"3 A campaign worthy of the partr'a
traditions nnd th country's honor. '
4 Warren O. Harding. . -
"5 Calvin Coolidgo.
"Necessarily the candidates personify
the issues I would nsk for ao contrast
more vivid.
"Even as chairman of tho Bepubli
(Coatinaed Oa Pag TweJ
1