rrrs ILYCIAZ Weather Cooler Local Cotton 23 Cents VOL, XLIII. NO. 250 GASTONIA, N. C, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 19, 1922 SINGLE COPY 5 CENTS EFEAT GEORGE COALITION ENGLAND OAS DA flW JI ii iw OF LLOYD PRECIPITATES GRAVE CR S S N CONGRESSMAN WARD AKR41NGS REPUOllGAN PARTY FOR ITS FAILURE Declares That It Has Not Met Demands Of People. TARIFF LAW INIOUITOUS. For Three Years It Has Dal- lied With Treaty An German Question, T1. ; "i 1 1 1 uf tlm Rciub!icii party to live up to ils pledges was no theme of Congressman Hulle-lt S.Ward, ji Washington, X. C, Wednesday evening ut the courthouse in olio uf the must vigorous campaign speeches ever heard here. Ho arraigned tin- -Republican party for the high tariff, the Newberry scandal, the Muscle Shoals iiasco ami the disposition of alien projM.-rty in the tinted StaTc. "Billions of dollars worth of property in the Cnited Hates va seized during the war. It was prop erty of the German government, or of Gorman citizens. So fur no aisixj-.it io.t lias lieen made of it. It lias not been returned to the owners, nor has it been turned over to the I'nited States. It is ,till in the Itonds of the alien property custodian." "The League of Nations was rejeci cd, Hnd we see the Trpectacle of the Tar, dipping liis iii'iu into the blood of tlut Vr aim Pnr tlie next year .we shall Ik? called on for money to support lin ear hast refugees, una an i"ju Turkey is allowed to do u she pleases. "The Republican tariff is the greatest monstrosity. Of the -1" meml-ers of the ways ami means committee, 15 are Re publicans and six are Democrats. Of the : Republicans, 11 are muiti million-, aires. They . ailed in tlie secretary ''i the treasury, Andrew Mellon, the thirl jichost man in' the world, "to help them frame the tariff hill. He lias framed. tariff hill that makes (lie rich richer. They have taken offthe execs profits tax. They apped off t-lo,n00.(MiU in rev enue to the government that hud been coming from excess profits tnx on. men whose incomes were more than $71,UM ji year. J hey rcuuccei roe uiira m " liio't able to pay it. llicy cur on .T.-i.-l00,litl( in surtaxes from tlcse who pre iouslv had to pay the extra tax. That is the sort c-f revenue hill the Ki publi cans wrote, the nio.-t iniquitous piece of legislation ever conceived. Wall street was the dietator of the tariff, ami yet they say the KeMniblicnn 'parly is the friend of the farmer. Vet -the price of everything the fanner has to buy have lieen have in. raseil umler Ul" new rami. iuv, nut a tariff on his products, t"t. but all the world knows the American f. -inner raises for export. the lanu duties do h'nn mi good. "They are keening Ilenrv 1 'iiid .from prtmised American Muscle Sh'tuK where he lias to make fertilizer for the farmer cheap and in unlimited cjuauf ity, scandal u in .-.use of the 1 ord-.Newliel rj Michigan." Mr. Ward is one of the most (orcein! campaign speakers hoard lure in a long time, and he was heard by a large and ;.,nr,.i..l jindieme. He was iiitrudin-c-i l.y Ernest It. Warren, chairman ot tin- icinis-iatie executive conimittee ot im. eounty . GRADY RANKIN ELECTED . A LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR OF THE DISTRICT K1WAN1S ASIIEVILLK, Oct. 1H. Selection of .Wilmington as 1 he place for the district convention of lSl:'., and the election of Alva Lumpkin, a prominent attorney of Columbia, S. ( Miccecding W. boro, were tla wssions of tin , jis iliMtricf governor, !. Mc riiuon, of tireens features id' the closing .livti-l.-t. cun vent ion of iHsnm .-I i,v "- Kiwanis i lulis of the Carolinas today. It was formally decided at tlie session to make the "conventions annua! instead of semi annual, and the P.t! session will Vrobably Ik- held during the month of August. R. H. McDonald, of Columbia, S. C, was elected' as district secretary and treasurer, and the new officers will take office mi January 1, JSl-.'. Considerable interest centered in the lection Of lieutenant governors, -wit a two lina each from North and South I aro- i, R. Grady Rank'", who is engage.l ii. .. ...,tt. hi , nil! liusiness at tiastoaia. iu an and Pert James, attorney, (if Greenville. were elected .-'from Xoftlr l aroinia, aim W If. Keith, general liisinaiiee agent, of GreuviUe. ami F- W. Sykes. president .f Coker college, Hartsville, were, elected to serve from the Palmetto st:Je. Tin- session opined this nunning in a strictly luisim-ss manner, aft.-r several Mings," led by Jules Jira.il, and the invo cation by Kiwaniau K. F. Campl-H. A feature of the business session was the increasing of the district per J-apit .i frimi t ti, it T.li- in oriier to uroviile more finals i or naunnng ine iin.urs u; urolinas district. - the George If. Ihevs,- interr.at lonal .resi- deiit, Mrs. -, Fred C. W. Parker, in ternational 'secretary, and Jules Hr.it.v. Kiwaniau entertain'-r, leit tins aiternooii for -Siivaiuiah, whire they will lattend the the Georgia district cotm-ntiou, later leaving for Jacksonville, Fla., and Gulf port, Miss. COTTON MARKET GASTONIA COTTON. . f i d Receipts J'lire . Today. .-.110 ..23U Minnesota Man Introduces Resolution Demanding That Brig.-Gen. Sawyer Be Ousted 1 Fourth Day Of Convention Featured By The Arrival Of Pershing. OWSLEY IS FAVORITE Major Scott Thinks Bonus Measure Has Had Its Death Blow.- , roXVKXTIOX II ALL, NEW OK- J.K.VX.S. Oct. IS). (Hy I"' Asso ciated I'reas.) General John J. IVrsliiuu, commander in chief of the American Expeditionary Forces, HRain this iu(niin acknowledged the tribute of the forces he led in Era nee, when he appeared as the principal speaker at the fourth day of the, national con vention of the American Legion.. : Coinmtttee reports opened the. day session. . Meeting until '-' oVlork this morning " the interstate hospitalization committee pruduced a eons'rvative re port for the convention, which avoided further condemnation of the policy of P.riRadier ieneral .Sawyer, head of the l'ederal liosjiitalization board. Dele gations of fourteen state presented resolutions severely criticising him, but all of them were effectively smothered. This victory of the "conservative" element in the convention brought to attention the fact -that the interstae hnspializatiou committee would present a report to the eonvenion today iip nrovinir the solvinir of the General Sawvpr controversy over the govern-1 meuf 's treatment of hick and lisubleil veterans on the terms ISuwycr ' hnsIIRlv iy unconfirmed rumors that ffce agreed to. (Missouri delegation and the predicted' led arl y today to be the outstanding XKW ORLEANS, Oct. 1." (Hv the candidate for nntional commander. up Associated Press.) The fourth dav of ll'orters of William F. Deegnn, New York the national convention of the American S,U'L' iommander, and the first candidate 1 Legion, iu progress here, was marked by j to publicly announce that he was run thc arrival of the commander of the, in"'K for. the office of ehief executive of Aineiiean ExpeifiHoiiary Forces, General John J. Pershing, who reached here to day from Washington after several days I spnt in Atlanta and either Southern cities. , i Tbe gi-nral. official dignity laid aside, ' leaped from the pl.it form of his sh-epiiitr car, ahead of his staff .officers,' and grasped the hands of the "budefies" who had come to the station to meet him. I Tomorrow the legion will select a buc esor to Hanford MncXiiler, national commander of the organization. ; Late last night Major Hugh Scott, 'a jiic-i I i-;i Meal officer, whose home is in Okla-j Greatest Bridge Is Planned For ... . . ' '. , . ' . ,. . . . , '' ', . reside, 3ll men were arresetd. Would Contain More Meet Than All The Bridges On Ohio, jtiu-y had been clicked oer, Missouri And Mississippi Rivers Combined And Five Times'""'"' bciieu-d to be members '. That Of All Fae R;vr Tl.. IT r : r KV . way, I he Lower containing WASHINGTON, Oil. I. The pro posed North River Bridge spanning the Hudson from 1lie-center of New York City to Wechankeu, New Jersey, will be, v. it U its connections ami terminals, "thu most stupendous engineering w (irk yet j undertaken, surpassing iu that resjiect I and also iu final eost the Panama Ca nal,' according to Representative Ernest Ackerinan, of New Jersey. The plans call for a single span of .l.imo feet, with out a single der in the river, huug on lour immense cables suspended from terminal towers 6s..1 feet high, or 130 feet higher than the famed Washington Monument iu this city. Tbe bridge will contain 4,")0,UU0 toils of steel, which is twice as 'much as in all 1lu- live well known East River bridges -unbilled, and which far exceeds tlie ton nage of steel in nil the existing bridges spanning' the Ohio, .Missouri and Missis sippi Rivers combined ! ' The. 'Hudson River bridge woulld con tain more than ten times the tonnage of the Miipt-ndous Quebec Hridge, in Can ada, which is the longest span iu North America, and which took 17 years to build. It would contain thirty times as milch steel as there is in the great Brook lyn Bridge, hailed for many years as the ve.nti-Kt tcorlr uf ireni :i-i,l ui.nM remiire ! ten times the tonnage of steel iii the! otch bridge over the Firth of Forth, the largest steel bridge in the world. These ami other breath taking facts i concerning the projf.sed construction, tin- authority for which is included in a bill now pending In-fore Congress, are contained in Mr. Ackerinan 's remarks printed in the Congressional Record as a part of the record of debate on tlie bill iu the House of Representatives. The bill was before the House on aduirumeiit, Sept. 22. In return for the 'immense cost, the gn-at amount of labor ami c-ngiiiering in volved, and the fifteen vears estimated as the minimum time required to buildthe gigantic bridge, Congressman Ackerman presented many advantages to lie derived, i I ..1 Automobile and motor trucks would Bales jl. ,-ilde to cross, from New York to New Cents1 Jersey in a, few minutes instead of being Train Passes Over Child, 'But No Hurts MORRISON, ILL., Oct. 18. Bernice Witt, six years old, of Ful ton, 111., was run over by a Chicago and North Western passenger train today, but attended school as usual. The little girl was on her way to school when she fell in front of the train, the engine and five cars pass ing over her. The trainmen pulled ber out from under the trucks of the last car and found she was un injured. She did not cry, but hurried away to school. homa City, Okla., and who is now serv iug .ax. executive officer to Colonel O. K. Forbes, director- of the United States Veterans' Bureau, told a representative of the Associated Press that Colonel Forbes' decision to return to Washington followed a long distance telephone con versation with high officials iu Washing ton, in close) touch with the president. According to these sources, sources usually reliable, the chief executive re plied that Colonel -Forbes was at liberty to use his judgment as to remaining here. Major SSeott told the Associated 1'ress that lie regarded the legion as a dying organization, ami that he believed that the last blow had been administered to it wlieu President Harding vetoed the measure flir adjusted compensation last summer. . Alvin M. ()wslc-. head of the leirion 's Iciiiiiiuissioii on Americanization, a in tea r- jtlie legion, n wis sanl, appeareil ciiseour ''inidwest coalition" hail split, and tint I the south, with the possible exception of ! Alabama, was lining up in .favor of Owsley." He-sides General Pershing, today's; speakers at the convention session in- i eluded Hear Admiral Pickett Mhgruder, 1. S. X.; Urigadkr (ieneral Eli K. Cole, V. S. M. C. ; t'. liadarau, representing the Kuniaiiiati veterans; G. .1. C, Pyett, president of the Australian veterans, and Captain William. Appleby, of the British Legion, who sacrificed his eye- sight during the world war. in The World New -York City Ri-IrlA. Wn..ll Wa Tw naA. T l.. aj a d. j yiu t i Kauroad 1 racks. held up for hours as is now the case. A saving in tlie cost or ilelivery ami a ; certainty of supplies, fuel, food and other necessities to the metropolis would ! "suit, Reduction in shipping costs to and Cr..... Il.n ....... ..I-' X'....- .....I .......... . jiuiii im mil in. .-.i" mil -.iini V.MI51 - , quent benefit to the nation's commerce, would follow. Through rail connections from the north, and south, east and west would be possible, as railroad tracks woulld oc cupy one level of the structure, thus giv ing greater speed and convenience of travel with elimination of some unneces sary costs. Besides allow ing for greater business expansion and home building in New- Jersey ami along tne tiuitson, me linage would offer in time of war an important clement of safety and efficiency. The history of the efforts to eoiistru-t the bridge gm-s as far back as 1!'0. when an act incorporating a company to build the bridge tins approved.- ' The bridge is not to cost' the federal government a cent, It is ti be erected by the same engineers who built the Hell Gate Arch brige, with finances raised by the States - of Xew York and New Jersey. The only federal participation is in authorizing its erection over tide water, which is under government con trol. litigation, injuuciioii ana otner i.-ic- j tors have urevented actual construction since lsi0. Work was started on the i New Jersey foundations iii T.sy.;, but per-' sons living in tlie vrcmity stojiped worx with an injunction, complaining of the noises of ilnllls ami blast tug. lite money panic of that year also bad a hand in stopping the railroad finances had years hod elapsed. work, .and before - War caused another delay, but now, it was said, everything is read, to go ahead. In tlie 'meantime,- tjie plans for tlie bridge have lieert greatly changed. Traffic has increased by leaps and bounds. The four present plans call for a brbidge times creatcr than the original. A new i location also, had to be found theec-nter of the city had niovefl because i farthcrd north.-and instead of being located at rw . .l ' , . : . . I. ....... I 41, Twenty Third street, as first planned, the New Y'ork terminal will lie at about Fiff? (Continued, 04 page tlx.) A "Mountie" Members of the romantic Royal Northwest Mounted Police In Can ada are trained to manage their -high-spirited horses under all kinds of conditions. Here's a "mountie" making his steed dance. 200 MEMDERS OF I. W. W. ARRESTED IN PORTLAND; SITUATION IS CRITICAL Thousands Threaten To Talie . Par In Big Water Front Strike. MAYOR ORDERS ARRESTS I JVJanv j . I. W. W. Organizers From Chicago Among Those Arrested. J POIITLAXP, Ore., Oct. 10. More Mhau L'dtJ men were under arreot here today following Mayor George' L. Ha jker's dccla'rtiim that Poijtlaud was tiueatened by an -invasion of thousands iof iiii'inbers of the Industrial Workers of the World, coiubg here to participaK1 iu jthe water front strike, and his orders to I the. police to round theui up. j In wholesale raid-, in sections of- tlie i Wh.'u ! most of of the' 'Marine-transport industrial union. No. " i '"'tland, were jailed on charges; ,f vagrancy. The others were released. William Ford, said to be head of the I . . . . ' joi lilt ii.ii ii. j iic-.u lumos i ii.ii mi.e 1 on land J. . organization w.isjMilu is rol,ortl.j to lllivt.- i,,.llti(ied as among those arrested. He was released i,..,.: i.,.i,ri..i , i,. oll $:m h:ui f ul)1is!)el by Frank Cornell, j a . member of the International Long- shoremen 's I'nion here. ' to the po- . organ- of thy men according , vi.r(, i,u-nt ilied as I. W. . - .. . '... ,.,M fi-inii I n.-;i..i. Tlii.ir u,i -i- given as Klmer Hanson ami Sweu Swan- sun, iieuic iioiuaiier, sccrciarv oi n Portland branch of the I. V. W., alsa was taken into custody. ' Reports iu the hands of the officials 'were said to show that 1. W. W. papers : in various parts of the country have adopted the slogan "On to Portland'' I .... .1 .I.... . i. .If . i. : i :.. .oi iii.ii x"ans c;tii nr ine iiiimciuaie march of more than l!."i,000 inemlx-rs of the organraitioii to Portland and other p(1inis on the Pacific coast. ' j During a-conference yesterday in the 'mayor's-otfic-e word was sent to'the city leouncil concerning the situutiou and an ! ordinance appropriating 10,000 for the j immediate hire of 74 spi-cial officers to jaid in combattiiig the 1. V. W, was j 'passed us an emergency act. Within an j hour afet r the conference, police and i men from the sheriff 's office were conib- ing the city for mcmliers of the I. W. W. known to be active iu the present water front strike, and also iu meeting freight trains said to be loaded with "nob blies." Mayor Baker said the officials were not taking up the standard of the em- pioyers in tlie strue, wit uisrean were waging war on the I. W. W. Prominent i Portland labor leaders Have iiiiorinea ( MaVor Baker that tlie strike is not na - thori.ed by organiieif labor, according j ro tne mayor. Mayor Baker, in a statement to the , public, gai.i : . settled down ten! "With the outbreak of a general I. I-iter the World jW.-W. strike on the water front and an influx of I. W. W. from over the coun try, Portland facts a critical labor sit l ntioii which must 1 met forcibly and immediately in order to prevent serious r) j disorder, if Hot a reign (if terror, 'strike is auiiounced as an I. W. W. I strike and is. sponsored by that orgautza- i tion.ainl will be attended by the blaek- jack -tactic of that organization, which! Itas for its only known purpose the over- j throw of law-und order, tlie ruination nf j iinlusfry and the Russianizing of tbe" j world." - am LLOYD GEORGE GOVERNMENT HAS RESIGNED; EXPECT BONAR LAW TO BE CHOSEN AS PRIME MINISTER MURDER MAY HAVE BEEN COMMITTED FOUR MILES FROM THE PHILLIPS FARM Some Of The Officials Place Little Credence In The?' New Theory. CHEMIST'S EXAMINATION. Two Men Declare They Heard Cries For Help Weston Mills Shed.. xi;w p,i:ux.swicK, x. J., o.t. 111. Ketectives began today to in vestigate the newly developed report that the Rev. Edward Wheeler Hall, rector of the Episcopal Church of St. John The Evangelist, ami Mrs. Elean or Ileinhardt Mills, choir singer, were murdered iu a she ! at Weston M)IK a settlement several miles from Xew Brunswick ami about four mile, from the hillips farm, where their bodies were found on September 1(1. Affidavits contained this new in formation were made public by the police yesterday, almost at the same time that lr. John F. Anderson, chemist, reported to the authorities that an analysis of the blood soaked ground where the bodies were found led him to believe the murders took place there. The two men who made tho affida vits said they heard a woman's screams ami her pleas for mercy as they pass ed the Weston Mill shed about Pt-.:iO p. m. o" tin- night the rector and Mrs. Mills were slain. The men mid they continued on their way and that soon after one' o'clock in the morning an automobile whizzed past them in the direction uf the Phillips farm. Some of the officials are known to place little credence in the new in formation ami are clinging to the theoiy that the couple were killed near the spot where the bodies were found. NEW HRCXSW1CK, X. J., Oct. IS. ( Py the Associated Press. ) Affidavit have been obtained from two men whose identity the authorities refuse to divulge, county prosecutors said tonight, which set forth that the double murder of Rev. Edward Wheeler Hall ami Mrs. Eleanor Kc-inhardt Mills did not occur iu the Somerset county orchard where the bodies were found but In, a I mm on the southern outskirts of New Hrtinsw iek. Investigation, which follower! the filing of the affidavits, the authorities said, j e.. 10 o.seow ry ... u.c pu.nc .,, l.i ... .1... .i: i.. ..... i: i .1... 1 I U IKIUtinvitllll ll Vtil' a man s ami tlie i other a womau s held to bo important i clue es. in tlie case. , Thev were not found on the Phillips farm, as was reported ut that time, but in ilif. 1i:irn ivhich Kt;irn! mi tin. nDiiiisi! e 1 -j, f v r,.n., ... , k , . jto have been found on the dirt Ibmr in - (, . . v ,ii"ini. Heard Screams In Barn. . The statement which the authorities I allege they have obtained from the two ,1101, ; g-jij to ,1c, lure that thev were i,irivinfr from Ue.l M:ink. X. .1.. about ' : - , - ,vo Ini,,.s ,)llf fr011 Xl,. jl.uiis iek, t o clock on the night ot EM-plcinoer II. ' sn ill. they passed the barn, a deserted, dilapidated htriKture, plastered with a l ' 'vertising posters, which stands iu a field ; close to the highway. From this barn the men are reported to have said, they heard screams issuing, ; pleas for mercy, and then one long ;shriek, "Murder! '' "The police!" ' ' The men drove tiirough New Bruns- i .wick without reporting the occurrence, ' und an hour later were on Last on ave- ! line, when tlu-y wr'- passed by a sedan ! going toward the Phillips farm, lit the j machine, they said, were a woman wear- j ing a gray coat, and a man. ' Te. affidavit is said to state further ; that the men were on East on avenue, near the park which adjoins the Phillips farm, for nearly half an hour and that : they saw the sedan returning. lit a high ' sK-ed. It turned from Easlou avenue; near te l-ark and disappeared. i Probing In Secrecy. The county prosecutors, in an effort to slir.iud their iuvestigatiou iu a secrecy which they declare to be rsseiitiul to. :l successful golution of the mystery, have ! fCnntinued on nacra 2.1 lsABE RUTH'S WIFE IS SLIGHTLY j INIURED NEW YORK. Oct. 19. Mrs. j jHeleii Ruth, wife of -"Babe" Ruth, 'was slightly injured early today when ! her husband's racer . skid.U-d . into a :tree on Pelhaiii parkway. She MifTer ,cd a. minor abrasion of the left hand and continued to her home in New 'York after the injured had was dressed iliy a surgeon from Fordham hospital Her chauffeur was uninjured iui-1 tiie car ouly slightly damaged. THE WEATHER Fair warmer tonight tonight and Friday; slightly in extreme west. Insures Wedding Event Against Downpour DANVILLE, VA., Oct. 18. Archie Rene Graveley, who will be married tomorrow night to Miss Dorothy Holland, of this city, has insured the event against rain to the extent of $500. He admits that he is doing this on1 a gamble. If it rains one-tenth of an inch to morrow between 4 and 10 p. m., he will collect the $500, and if it fails to rain he will be "out" more than $40, the premium for the insurance. PIIVSIAN WANTS TO TRY TWILIGHT SLEEP ON FEDERAL PRISONERS Believes He Can Get Leaven worth Men To Confess Truth. FAILS OF ENDORSEMENT. Acknowledges That money Thus Secured Not Be Official. Tesli Will HOT SPRINGS, Ark., Oct. 19.-vbr. E. K. House, Ferris, Tex., physician, probably will continue his efforts to se cure permission to conduct experiments on prisoners at the federal penitentiary lit Leavenworth, Kus.,,to demonstrate his theory that while under the influence of J m-opolamicn anesthetic, or during ."twi j light sleep. " subjects will tell the true I facts regarding crimes of which they are I licensed. In addressing the convention hero of the Medical Association of tlie South west, Or. House said that lie intended to use every effort to secure permission to 'make experiments on 1,000 prisoners, j taking the stand that this number of exerimefits will prove his theory to tho i satisfaction of both physicians and ! criminologists. The medical association failed to give it s official endorsement to Dr. House's 'plan, but the subject was widely ilis j cussed in mi informal man tier, and much' j in t (-rest was exjiresssed in the eontinu.i ticm of tlie experiments, which Or. House J say's have been under way for several I years, and have brought invariable sat i isfactory results. ' In lli. i i C-.ti-iiiM I iliu'ituuiim lii mi. f ...n. ...... ...j. . ' J ,M.r ,,, ysiciall emphasized that the results of his exiieriinents could not be . expect el to stand as evidence) in any ' court, but claimed that the facts obtain ed through questioning of accused er ' suns or ttitnesses during the period of "twilight sleep" could !,c advantageous J ly used by a ut licit it icn iu the solution of i many mysterious crimes, ami in dozens ; of instances would prevent a miscarriage , of just ice4 even if the real criminal was ', not brought to justice. i In oiii.' exiH-rimeut iu Dallas, Texas, ! which l.e cited to the association, he said ; 1 b.-i t ii man umler arrest, charged with a I serious crime, .seemed almost certain of 'conviction cm circumstantial 'evidence, "Twilight -sleep" was induced without ,the prisoner's knowledge, and be gave information which, when checked up by j (the Dallas police, proved 1e man's inno-j ceiici. jiii. i risimcil in ins acquittal. j The physician held that, when his, theory has been adequately proved l y ; torongh experiment iu undreds of cases, i a new field in criminal investigation will ; lie opem-d up, wich will not only proie a t powerful aid in the detecton of criminals I but will also beionie a great protection, to those unjustly accused of crime. STRANDED AMERICANS TO RETURN HOME S PARIS. Oct. P.. siiciati-d Press. ) One 'fifty Americans, who 'stranded in Europe will (P.y The As- f hundred ;uid I had become sail for homo ion the steamer President iOetr.U-r !. Their , return Polk, on! is made po-ible through the efforts of the American aid society of Paris and as .1 result of notification by the state department that L',0t'" third class pas sages to the I'uitcd 'States wii! be pro vided on shipping board liners for I citWrrs ind istress on the continent. Three hundred uiore, it is c i-cteil. will lie ready to .-ail XovemU-r lt. ! and there are hoiss that the remainder j of t!ios Uc-e.riug help to g.g home will ;le takes eare of by the end of No ' vember. 1 French ciffici;ils have sliowu s dis 1 positie.u to io oiiute in This work to ithe e xtent uf .their ability, and it is understood that the cases of seores iof ' Americans some in c-c.titiuenient ;iind others under police mrvvillnnee? jlss-auw of - the rxtiem'.ties to which they weie .forced by their 'dire - werete 'sities will W eh-iiled up through this ' move-nii'iit . iHm't blame the child for getting b hind in srlnKil until yon- know first th you us a parent Itive de your i-art. CONSERVATIVES IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS VOTE TO APPEAL TO AS PARTO 'Greatest Political Confusion ! And Uncertainty England I Has Ever Known. CHAMBERLAIN TO RESIGN Andrew Bonar Law's Speech For Conservatives Was Powerful. LONDON, Oct. 19. (By the Associa ted press.) The government of Prima Minister Lloyd George resigned this af ternoon. 1 After a brief nudicno with King George this nt'term.n Lloyd George re turned toDowuing street, where he re- ceived a miner's delegation, but accord ing to Frank Hodges, who headed th delegation, Mr. Lloyd George said ha rouuld not consult' them as prime minis ter, since lie had resigned. - Members of tlie miner's delegaton said Mr. Lb.yd George had told them thi king had accepted his resignation. Tho announcement of the govern ment's resignation wns made by thu Central News und un to 4:2-'l o'clock this afternoon official or other announce ment of it had Hot appeared, but it had been preceded by tho semi-offcial an nouncement of the Press Association stating it had learned on high authority that tlie government would resign, forth with. - ' ' - Lloyd George outlasred all the states men who guided the groat nations through the world wr. Jn the turmoil of readjustment that followed that con flict, he kept his seat at tho steering' wheel -when all urouaa him were losing theirs. The men with whom lie sat at Paris as te "Big Four" of the peace confer ence, long ago t opted over. Premier Or lando, ef Italy, was ttie first to go. , nis ,; cabinet resigned in June, 1919. Ths following January, Clemenceau, the French Tiger, was cast aside. Two .....nll, i..ln. II, A ' 1. i!.:i...i ..1,1.1 1 .1.. nil. j, ine o. iniir hi nil- vililv-l Stales refused for n' second time to rat-', ify the peace treaty .'Woodrow Wilson' had broiight home ;"f rom ; Versifies, and" not long afterward his party was beaten. at the polls. After all of the other three had been put aside in their countries, Lloyd Georgo became probably the most outstanding" figure among all the men of the world who were engaged in public affairs. His position, constantly in danger, from a possible droimiiiLi- nwav of one of th groups forming the coalition on which his government rested, was strengthened, so far as history is concerned, after all the other war statesmen ad gone be cause it was he who acted as Great Britain's spokesman in parleys last win ter with the rebellious Irish leaders purlleys which led to the creation of tho ' F re State and peaeo after 700 years of strife between England und Erin. . The rise of Lloyd George w as an ad venture in polities rilled with as much romance as the ives of famous Ameri cans who came up from log cabins 'to the White House. He was born in Manchester, England, January 17, ISti;'.. , ilis father, a I'tiitarian schoolmaster, ili'-d when David was an infant mid tin child was adopted by an. uncle, Richard Lloyd, a Welsh shoeioaker and lay-, preae-ht-r. With only a limited education tie iluwu in North Wales, where he lived with his uncle. Then he married an.l son dived, into politics. For 1$ years he was a livcral member of parliament, -ieiresenting Carnnvon. Then euuic n! rapid rise to fame. His ascent tee a place among the mighty liegan iu 130? when Asquith ljeci me prime minister. The litlte Welshman with the sparkling eyes entered the cabinet ss chancellor cf the exchequer. Tte next year In the gre.it budget battle he routed the oncO pviwe-rful House of Lords. Hts achieve ment iu this fight was called "tbe rirsf victory agaiust tho privileged citadel of wealth in the modern wealth. " With the cominK on of the war Lloyd George convulsed t'.a country by intro- . ilucing drastics re forms iu taxation. vhich p-.it new burdens on tlie wealthy classes eiind e.iufise-nted part of the un earned increment of land. In lsMti when England wa threatened with strikes nt a time when Germany was scoring , heavy sii.-ersee on tlie wi,tern front Lloyd George left the rharieeilorship of the exchequer to ls? cosie minister of munition and with no ot hensiquipreent than a privafo secTetflry and jr -.rue tat.U; stake-l liiu repiitati'm and las future on mobilizing the iudus tr'od resoiin-es of tUe nation U-fore . n s too liete. " Almost iniieied lately he milmtitut'-d a smsil i"iritc.'t war cabinet for ih'-h.rgi-r. stid nii.ro unwirld.'y ioini' r.r tlir.l. hd gone. During the .'r In- t irie l : tiies of Ore-it Bri:.ili v ' . v. tiima f.ict.-irie, rai I t.i