Fair tonigfht and Saturday. General to moderate northeast winds. HE ESTABLISHED SINCE 1882 AFTERNOON DAILY 'ALL THE NEWS IN A NUTSHELL.' VOLUME VIII NO. 25. FOUR O'CLOCK EDITION SCOTLAND NECK, N. O. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1919 TELEGRAPH SERVICE PRICE TWO CENT WEATHER: WE? A IT PTT1TUT Fe Treaty Represents American Ideals and I The Saving Grace For Generations Of the Future SHERMAN ATTACKED WILSON IN SENATE SURPRISED AT CRITICS IGNORANCE Objects to International Meeting Of Labor SEGTY REDFIELD RESIGNS EFFECTIVENQVEMBER1. 'DISREGARD OF LAW' the make ''last the Ttul'anapolis, Ind., Sept. 5. "The primary provisions of the Lea inn of Nations" stated Pres ident Wilson, "was to prevent violations of territorial integrity such as Germany had been guilty of in Belgium. "Article ten speaks the con science of the world. It goes to the heart of this whole bad busi ness.' The president toid his audi ence that no one believed T,p;ifiiP of .Nations would all was impossible but that he expected it would make war "violently improbable"; the economic and arbitration sections of the covenant, he asserted, would "keep war on the out- jskirts" and make it only a report.' The opponents of league had discussed only three of the twenty-'six articles and had overlooked the articles which would make war improbable. "I am. an American," said the president' "and a champion of the rights which America be lieves in, therefore I want the people to forget, in connection with the peace treatv that thev are republic-axis or democrats. Some delegates, the President said- came to the Paris . confer ence with causes which were not considered properly within the scope or the peace conference. In that connection he pointed out that under Article II any threat of war could be investigated by the league. "At present," sa'd ii T CONDEMNING LEAGUE OE NATIONS FIND SUB5TITUTI Wilson Asserts Objectors To Treaty Don't Suggest Better Pact Washington Sent. 5. Senator Sherman bitterly attacked in the senate President Wilson's state ment that the International La bor Conference would meet here whether the treatv was ratified or not, characterizing it as .con temptuous disregard for law. Resignation Been Ac cepted By The President dtb I LANSING ADVOCATES 1 INTERNATIONAL COURT DISPUTE WITH MINES Nationalism As ference Sanctioned by the Peace Con Would Survive, So He AVOID ALL POLITICS St. Louis, Sept. 5 President Wilson arrived here today and is scheduled to speak at a luncheon also tonight at the Coliseum, where he was nominated for the presidency in 1916. -Livueiiiry speeenes Dirceny as sailing the treaty were made here by Senators Reed and Johnson ine president is determined to avoid politics and confine himself strictly to explaining the Peace Treaty and uring its ratification He has challenged his oppo . -i . J co t i " i i iicms 10 oner a suostitute or quqit condemning the Versailles pact. RAILROAD WORKERS DEMAND MODE PAY ISTOI GUM GUILTY BETRAYAL MISS CAVELL Washington, Sept. 5 Secre tary of Commerce Redfield has tendered his resignation and been accepted by ' President Wilson effective November 1st, it was announced officially today. This announcement followed rumors that Redfield would re sign following a controversy with Hines regarding prices for steel and the dissolution price fixing board which he was chair man. rAi It- RN AFTER HAGUE CONV'N 0 Paris, Sept. 5- George Gaston Quinn, charged wTith having be trayed Edith Cavell to the Ger mans, has been condemned to death bv courtmartial. illSTRIA INDIGNANT OVER PEACE TERMS Geneva, : Sept. 5. The ' peace terms have been received in Vienna with surprise and indig nation and it is believed the Renner ministry will fall, ac cording to advices received here. TB00PS0CCUPYMU1ICH LATEST REPORT SAYS 51 5.000 FOR EXPENSES OF TOURING SENATORS AGIST PEACE TREATY Bill 'o Pay Traveling Of Speakers Against Wilson Geneva, Sept. 5. A Constance dispatch says that government troops occupied the principal buildings in Munich, the capital of Bavaria. WILSON'S BILLS PAID GR WILL HORT, SAY CONTINUE ZABRISKIE 5.- our own busisess covenant and the can mind other peo- Jiave to mind but under the i jfyjrue we Pie's business Ihere was not an oppressed People anywhere, he said, that could not get attention for its ta.se under the league. He , did J,ot mention any oppressed peo ple by name but many of his hearers remarked 'that they thought he spoke of the ease of Ireland. Referring to the Shantung settle Washington, Sept ;sentatives of six hundred thou he, "weUand members of the Brotherhood of Maintenance and Ways and of the railroad laborers asked the Railroad Wage Board today to adjust their wages in accord ance with the principle laid down bv President Wilson. Washington, Sept. ' 5. A eon- Repre-jtinued shortage of sugar is pre dicted by George Zabriskie, pres ident of the United States Equal ization Board, who said the re finers are unable to supply the demand. ITALIAN DEPUTIES PASS WOMAN SUFFRAGE OILL Rome, Sept. 5. The Chamber of Deputies adopted Woman Suffrage here. DEMOCRATIC NAT. COM. TO MEET SEPTEMBER 261 imrade sczamueli's- spectacular career F11I5 SAY AUSTRIA DESIRES THE UNION Berlin, Sept. 5. The German reply to the allies' note, protest ing against Austrian representa tive in the German Reichratln states that Germany could not oppose Austrian-Germans desire for an union with Germany. Washington, Sept. 5. An ap propriation of $15,000 will be provided to defray the expenses of speaking tours by Senators opposed to the League of Nations if Congress adopts a joint resolu tion introduced in the House by Representative Newton, Repub lican, of Missouri. In the preamble to the resolu tion, Mr. Newton points out that President Wilson :s tour to i convert the American people to his views" is financed by the government, and declares that it is only fair that the people be given an opportunity to judge "intelligently and impartially the great problems involved in such proposed league covenant. Mr. Newton will press for the adoption of the measure at an eary date. Should it be favorably acted upon by the House, it is declared it would put the lower branch of Congress definitely on record in opposition to the league I Boston, Mass., Sept. 5. Sec jretary Lansing, before the Amer ican Bar Association here toaav in his first public speech since returning from the Peace Con ference gave a warning that the theory of internationalism, oi "Mundanism," which received great impetus during the war. constituted a grave . danger to world order, but expressed hii conviction that democratic na tionalism as sanctioned by the Peace Conference would survive as the basis of society. Secretary Lansing urged strongly the establishment of an international court as modeled by thr Hague Convention, and founded in the principle of strict legal justice, for the settlement of disputes between states, and the codification of international law into an exact system. He paid tribute to the Hague Con vention ofi 1907, whO(.se work, al though imperfect and hampered by "the evil purposes which the powers of Central Europe had so long secretly cherished,' he said) still stands as an instrument for the maintenance of the law of nations. Without an international court and conified laws Secre tary Lansiug predicted a return to diplomatic anarchy, since "na tions today are influenced more by selfishness than by an altru istic sentiment of justice.' He gave warning that "we should not deceive ourselves by "assum ing that the policies of other gov- covenant as President- proposed by the, jernments are founded on unself- Washington, Sept. 5. A meet- Budapest, Sept. 5. "Com rade" Sczamueli, one of the or- of the Red Army, who ganizers 'ent, the President pointed 1 ing of the executive committee was shot while attempting to lu ,t!;jr Japan repeatedly had Promised to return the peninsula to China. He did not go into the sn,,ject at length, however, but mentioned h in emphasizing that he covenant would refuse to rec ognize the validity of secret trea ties. Tiie President said te could lr"k the mothers of the country face nroudlv because hp of the Democratic National Corn- cross the Austrian frontier after mittee has been called for At- the fall of Bela Kun, was one of lantic City on September 26. in tl BELGIAN KING SAILS ON AMERICAN WARSHIP Brussels, Sept. 5. -It it an- ad ko, t hi' -rvrrTYiicft ii v.q nnnnp.pd that, Kiner Albert and emlcl to prevent any more war. Queen Elizabeth, with Crown "This league," he said "is Prince Leopold, will sail for the the only conceivable arrange- United States ttuit which will prevent our an merican warships 11LUI1g our men abroad VeiT soon. again COTTON MARKET. "Oetob D . 28.S9 ,er ' 29.00 nuarv OA I7.UU March ay . 29.20 29.35 the mostspectacular figures m the brief but sanguinary reign of the 'Hungarian Bolsheviki. Sczamueli was thirty years old, the son of a small landown er. He worked on the Budapest radical newspaper, Kepsave, and was rather an obscure member of the Left Wing of the Social Democratic party. He entered the army, and was among the officers captured by the Russians September 22 on Jin 1915. They gent him to a Sibe rian prison camp where he re mained until the Bolsheviki rev olution, when he went to Mos cow. Here he took a leading part among the agitation of the pris oners of war, and became inter ested in the Bolshevik movement. 9 GOSTELLD ASSAILED BRITISH INTENTIONS Washington, Sept. ' 5. State Senator Costello, of New York, told the Senate Foreign Commit tee that England deliberately created differences between Italy and the United States at the Peace Conference for economic reasons- DANDITS FOUR MORE. HAVE BEEN CAPTURED Mexico City, Sept. 5. Mili tary authorities Jn the Tampico district reported the capture oi four more bandits accused of complicity in the murder of John Carroll, of Ka, Okla. DICKMAN SAYS FLYER WAS ON U.S. TERRITORY Washington, Sept. 5. Gen eral Dickman, commander of the southern department, informed the War Department that the Americn army plane, fired upon by the. Mexicans was at no tima over the Mexican territory. The Mexican government has expressed a regret at the occur rence in a message to the State Department. "FAMILY COURTS" MAY SETTLE HOME QUARRELS Boston, Sept. 5. The estab lishment of "family courts" to settle domestic . qquarrels and thujs combat the growth of di vorce, was suggested by . Chief Justice Charles Hoffman, of Cin linnati, before the convention of, the American Institute of Crim inal Law and Criminology. jishness or on a constant purpose to be just even though the con sequqences be contrary to their immediate interests." PEACE TREATY TO RE REPORTED THIS WEEK Washington, Sept. 5. The Senate Foreign Committee is considering the Peace Treaty lnally -prior to reporting it to the senate. The report will probably be made today or tomorrow. AM PETRDGRAD FOLLOWING L A 5. Famine threatening Stockholm, Sept. is reported to be Petrograd following an outbreak of cholera. PRESBYTERIANS ARE IN FAVOR BF PEACE TREATY GE m w COVERS PAYMENT FOR INJURY Lake Geiieva, Wis, Sept. 5. The Presbyterian New Era Con ference went on record as favor ing the immediate ratification of the Peace Treaty. Weimar, Sept. 3, The Na tional Assembly has received a bill covering reimbursement for personal injury r property loss es incurred since the revolution. It provides that those who suf fered 16sses, injury and deatfi have a right to recover from the government. Money ' claims are limited in the measure ; amounts necessary, to replace damaged property, to actual ex ! penses in case of personal injury and to grants for loss of labor and for death. The national gov ernment, the state and the com munity are each to bear one third of the costs.