V - - i;::. C, Th'; : i. una kocin .1. coopli: i nn;o in it killlm; senator f AEMACK IS .mi-rocked Na hviHe, T mi,, Ah. 'obm J. ('(Mijirr, a Na Ii t1 ; h' )', H );i , tl ':... fi f t, fil ing of former t'ii.t''I St.ttt Seti Jdor V. Carma.-k, dm ing the t (till, late J pistol dl'l between hlS father, Col. 1). II. Cooper, iilii ft-- Carmaek in I'.XH attracted coun try wide att"iiti( .n l.a - l.( .mi mur dered hv iv mirier my-te' ions ir cumstanoos. Cooper's body .h taken fioui Richland Cnk in day soon after his 1.1 Kd booed automobile hail be- ii found on a li i!k' in ar hi., l.'. i in tin fashionable R..i!" Me.id ' paikc s-'tion. The skull h; d been rru he l, hut tli w "!-. evi dences that a violent s-t.uggle !:al ta'a-n plane before th" fatal Mow was struck. A coroner's inqU'Vt I.:?-- toda) d- ! il no tines to t!i( mur derer or murderer.-, hut the po lice are proceeding i n th theory that Cooper was lured from hi.-; 4. home ly person-! determined to itjj him. This th'ory is based largely upon evidence that Cooper had drawn $10,000 from a hank a short tint' before he disappeared bet Thursday night. The authorities assume tliat the your.? lawyer was lured from his home to the secluded bridge over the creek and there done to death. The condition of his clothing indicated that he had leen dragged some distance Ik? fore he wa. thrown into the j water. Physicians w ho examin ed the Imdy said the small amount of water foun'l in the lungs was evidence that Cooper was dead when dropped into the creek. Mrs. Cooper, who is a daugh ter of Milton J. Smith president of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, has been visiting rela tives in Iuiisviilo and her al sence accounts for the fact that the disappearance of her hus band did not ln'come known until today. Theie ws no evidence that the Cooper home had I en rob U'd after the murder and some doubt has been expressed that the murderers could have ex pected that the lawyer would hae great sum on his person. His empty pocket lxok, however, was found in the lottom of the automobile. Governor Roberts ha.s offered a reward of ?."O0 for the arrest and'eonviction of the murdiwers of the lawyer. This later was supplemented by offer of a similar amount by the family. The police admit that they have nothing on which to work in .solving the mystery. The Carmark tragedy, the most notable in the history of Tennessee, grew out of the C.u-matk-IVtU-i son laco for gover nor in liMW. in which Col. I. R. Cooper, father of Robin .?. Coop- cr, was one of Patterson's closest advisers. In the fatal encoun ter, which occurred on an up town street of Nashville Novem- r her 9, 1918 the son fired the shot which ended earmark's life and & in the shooting was himself wounded. Father and son were convicted of murder in the sec ond degree in the lower court. but on the appeal of the case to the supreme court the verdict was reversed as to the son. judges standing three to two. r- The verdict a.s to Col. Co'p'-r was sustained, tliio to two, but before leaving the capilol the fa ther was pardoned by Governor Patterson. The case against Robin J. Cooper when it came up again in the Davidson county criminal court was dropped. MUHUKKS FA UK U AI) IN SOUTH CAROLINA COUUT. Grecnvill, Aug. .",0. Three convictions for murder, carrying death sentence in as many days, is the record of court of general sessions for Greenville county, which today closed a fourth njOjii'Vjiial. with sixteen homi cide cases" TeiiitriRir on the docket. II. T. P.ramlett, of Greenville, a building contractor, who shot and killec! his mother-in-law, Mrs. L. C. Mcllugh, and serious ly wounded Ms sister-in-law, Miss Leora Mcllugh, is schedul ed for trial in sessions court hen Tuesday. Solicitor r.lartm an nounced today. NOT A SKLN OF E'MIAhlM' DEAD! OCR AT I! Kill POINT High Point, Aug. '?.'), No change 'vhatevr is noliecab'e toil.1., in the controversy b--twi iii manufacturers and em ployes that will ci.tcr upon its h.UIi deadlocked Week Monday. Piiion nu n are maki: g prepara tion, lor a thorough observance of Labor day, the first one a ma jority of them have ever pa;d any attention to, hucc their iiiemle iship with organized la bor is biief. Plans aie as yet in a tentative rtato, but it is assert ed that there will In' speakeis of con iderahle lenown in the cily Monday to address the vcoikeis. The u-u.d band concerts and pa rade. uill (on. litote the lemain der of the program. Thousands of v.oi kers u ho are now idle be. caiiM' they joined the union v ill participate, since there is little eUe left for them to do. Practi ci lly all factories, except the six or .-even operating as "open" shops are closed and the "open" ones will be shut out of defer ence to union Jalor on Monday. The po.4offi:e and freight sta tion .. operated by Uncle Sam, will follow suit. Rumors of varied hue and ex tet.t filled the air today, but dili gent digging failed to reach any substantial foundation for any of them. One wa.s that the man ufacturers at a recent meeting of reopening their plants on the open shop system and that the result had been oO-oO. This yam was aired to a manufacturer, owner of a closed establishment, and he asserted that it wa.s made up pure, unadulterated Ush. Another rumor that refuses to Ite either downed or verified is that some of the plants will at tempt to resume operations dur ing the coming few days. It is further intimated that the em ployers will seek and demand protection for the;r loyal em ployes from the pk keters repre sent in the unions. Ju .t wheth er the manufacturers really con template putting things to a test at this time or letting them jog along as during the past five weeks with these able to survive the longest on the least to eat as the w inners can not stated. Relief Cards Ik ing Sold Relief cards were leing sold nt various places in the city today. The prcceeds are used to streng then the determination of the unionists to win their contention that to join a union is not any cause for ejection from a payroll. Financial bulwarks at places that might l' weakened by lack of funds is the intention of union leaders, and there is a unani mous biliif in labor circles that the relief cards will do the buri ih'ss and, further, that their sale will not have to be continued in definitely. There is as yet absolutely no indication that the manufactur ers care to talk over the situa tion. They are saying just as much as their plants are run ning. In the meantime, drays carrying l)ouse furnishings, eor tectly tagged, are seen on the streets bound in the general di rection of the two freight sta tions. 1' .ndreds of workers must have left town, and dur ing the past three or four days it appears as though the men with small families are beginning to go. Residents view the proceed ings with manifest concern, for they fee! that with the local dis pute settled. Hie single man who onlv nas to Milton his coat to move would return, but the man ivith a biinily and household p. periy is not so strong i ot moving. When lie locates else where, he is generally there for keeps. 1 lie number or workers leav ing the city is not having a de pressive ell'ert on these remain in";. "They'll send us back enough to hold up our end and see us through" is the way they put it. In other words, the unions have two irons in the fire; the one here that cannot got hot because of the lack of work, am the one elsewhere that can get Tieal-H-jiough to divide with the other. laim'ier Shortage Closes Plant The number of plans operat ing as "open shops" . was reduc ed by one Friday afternoon when the Snow Lumber com pany, employing perhaps the largest number of - workers of "A!R!uG Ai .rt HiU nil!it tn n t tlrnt'H, tut It Id rciilly a J hnierriil '1. Hini'l"-! froin iIih ftjfttt if' t ot Mm V. S. S, (khilmmH, hliiiwliig th 'K'iIk" llin't up for "IfUV.ui drill," vlilii' mloniUiif lln ri'M soi t s. n j'm t-il'Hiij .f tin nallnm ihi.-i in ! frt.li lr. my wood working establish ment in the city, closed down be cause of an accredited "shortage of lumber by demoralizing ship ping conditions." The Snow plant took in numlx-rs of expe rienced workers who lost out elsewhere iK-cause they joined the union md its closing re moves one splendid source of in come and employment from Jh" unionists. Ofl'cils of the com pany, however, stated today that it was hoped that it would le possible to icsiime operations by the ndddle or latter part of next week. Much of the lumber used by the company comes from the eastern part of this and adjacent states and shipping conditions have been greatly de moralized during the past week or so, it is asMTtd. The plants operating1 at this time are the Purham Hosiery mills, the Myrtle Desk company, the .Noith Carolina Wheel com pany, the Hill Veneering com pany, the Stehli Silks cor? .ora tion and jKissibie one or two others. Pa tween '.)') and b plants are not ojMrnting Uvause of their operatives enrolling with the unions. Recent esti mates are that there are 7,"(i0 workers in local plants, and. ac cording to this figure, at least l.oiX) or 5,000 must be out today. It is believed the unions have ln tween .",,000 and 1,000 mem leis enrolled, although officials of the organization are not yet ready to make a definite state ment of progress. Monday brings the sixth week of the controversy and the two Ics are H-emitijr'y just far k " apart now as at the otitM when the positions were stated; that the employers would not work any man ai'liiiated with a union; that the employes beheved they had every right in the wot Id to join a lawful and law abiding or panizntion. Suggestions are coming from many sources t ) have steps taken to get the dif ference; nviu'd out, o 1 ; tin stepper i me so far consp cjus by their i.bsenoe. The ft si pul pit attempt to bring harmony will be made Sunday morning at 11 o'clock at the first Reformed church when the pastor. Rev, Roy 11. iAinb.uh, will deliver a special sermon to both manufac turers and workers. Neither text nor his theme h.u been an nounced, but a capirvn eon-;ie-gation is expected to h'ar li ni, WHEAT AM) FLOUR MEN TOLD TO i!KT LICENSES Washington, Aug. 31. An other move in the government's camapign to 'combat the high cost of living was made today by Wheat Director Julius H. I lames in warning all dealers in wheat, (lour and other product deiin quent in taking out of federal licenses to obtain them at once under pain of prosecution by th: department of justice. The license requirements un der an act of Congress of last March and a presidential pro clamation of last June, will be rigidly enforced. Director Rai nes notified the dealers. The only exceptions to the regula tions of the wheat directors are bakers consuming less than .10 barrels of wheat Hour monthly, retailers, farmers and farmers' co-operative association -i. DAY" 01 THE U. S. S. 7 n-j'rrwni M'u ., nr-li fiio License control under tli'. w heat director is made neies sary, Director Raines said in li statement today, as one of the steps in tarrying out the- juice guaianteo for th.? 1919 wheat crop, and to protect the govern ment again 't undue enhance ment of its liabilities thereunder. Another CiTcct, he said, of the licensing of wheat aid its pro- duets cou'd be to prevent hnartlin;; a.u- , route, , mg m these commodities, hiI petnut regulation of profit.;. "Not only is it ',. criminal of fense to eng.tg" in business re quiring" a license without such licen e," Director llsrnes' state ment said, 'but ai aj one of the important conditions upon which licensees hoM their licenses is that they will not engage in busines with envoi.! required to obtain a licev-a' ho has not obtained mch ;t la eh.-e." Forty Italian Soldiers Pardoned. OWENS REPLIES 10 SPEECH OF LODGE Wash, ng ton, Aug. ."'.O. Re- phing in the senate today to ar guments presented by Chairman Lodge, of the foreign relations committee, against unreserved ratiiicatioiiof the p.e;e treaty, Senator Owen, Democrat, of Ok lahoma, declared Ml. IlgC had been blind. -d by pat tisar.-diip and by a distrust tf jpl.u in dilu tions. Referring to the committee man"? paiii'Iel U'twifs; the Lea gue of Nations and the iii-fUia d 1 1 1 v Alliance," Mr. Owen raid the agreement had oerioM'.i the intrigue and autocratic sel fishness which sin rounded the ance. "The f;at that war follow the treaty of the Holy Alliance," he continued, "was bctwvn this treaty was between military dy nasties, made by muiuuchial au tocracies each controlled b in trigue. The senator from Mas s.e hu-etts believes that the promises of these royal scoun drels may be justly compared with the promises and aspira tions of the honest organized d'1 nHKiacics of the whole world. "The trouble with the senator f I om Massachusetts is that he really believes in the rule of the few- over the many. He does not briieve the people- ought to have the lU h! to :'.V. !:s they w,iit or Veto laws they d not want. He looks upon them with less confidence than he did tiHn the military autocracies for the seirttov favored a lea gue in 191 ."i when the autocra cies were in full (lower. "Th:? galleries always applaud when a senator ftrikos an oi'a torical pose and thunders forth his sturdy Americanism. Hut the senator's Amei icanLni did not prevent him from making nn Argument at Union College in 1915 in favor of a league of na tions. Am I going loo far if 1 appeal from Philipp drunk to Philipp sober','" "He is not, as he things, wag ing a war again-1 Wood row Wil son, lie is waging a war against the desires and the he,v., of all mankind. Let him beware of throwing himself and his blind ed partisans across the path of the righteous judgment of mankind." OKLAHOMA - rliiK Uk- ili.in.'i-r iluilhg uhi ROYSTLU AM) MTN( II prmsi; polk i: l ORCi; Charlotte, Aug. ".-It is lieved the final chapter in the events of the week in Charlotte are cmliodiod in the following : tatement given out by Mayor Mr-Ninth tonight: "Whatever other questions way remain with us for settle- mnitipla, jo0 m. K;V(,n 1SI1 ,ln. n)i.,t:iVu,,;e m to lhe Senge of lawlessness, mid what ever division of sentiment there may be among our people as to the issues involved, there i no division whatever among our te ponsihle citi:un-hip in their de tmnmation that mob law shall i ot prevail, but that h'V stud or der tdi.ill be supieme in this toni mrn.lv. "Conditions i.re rrpidly im pro ing and we feel a s ured that there will le no futther seiious outbreaks of violence, but if it should come w e at e even In Iter prepared to meet it than licieto fore. I urn sure all law-abiding citizens aie conscious of their debt of jo atitude to the. local po lice force and the state militia and likewise to the large ImmIv of citizens from 'all ranks of life who so quickly responded to the call of duty and le-toivd law and order. "I want to again express our appreciation of the voluntary action of the Central Iiio! union in postponing the Lu'hu' day parade cc! .'rat !!, Such .u Udli M hig 1,1. comm''Tvfa!!e and will doubtli s contribute to veard stabili.ing condition in this community. Adjutant Ocnertd Royst,r in ctmversation willt .uavor .mc- Ninch today highly compliment ed official' and police of Char ctte for determined manner in which they had met and put down mob violence. Cars Operated And No Disoide at Chailotte. Charlotte, Aug. "0. Follow ing a cor.feieiue here today with Mayor MfNhidi and other offi cials with reference to the street railway strike -dilution. Ad.w tant Cejtcral R. S. Roy-der re turned to Raleigh. Lieutenant Ciovcrnor O. Max Carner also re- ii t iifI tt) his home at Shelby af ter spending ii dav and night here investigating the situation. Cars manned by strike break ers and new i.ii. n in tnihsing were operated - throughout t lie day on the city lines of the Southern Pubhr Utilities com pany and there wore no demon st rat ions, Cily officials nnd citizen's gen erallv e orossod considerable re lief tonight that a quiet night and day had passed since the re niov.il of the six companies of troops who were on duty here four days and the belief is more general that there will be no fur ther at tenants at violence. The cancellation by the local laUu unions of their plans for cele bration of Labor day has remov ed the fears of many that trou ble might occur Monday. . The (00 citizen guards oragn ized s-neral days ag" still main tain I heir organization ready foi immediate dutv. moors Ti:iN m ihni: i (.I N ON AIOIPI) PPM KS Nnoxviile, Aug. :;o. Folhnv u"c trii iiiing of the Knox enmity lad Saturday night by a mob. beet oil reaching Maurice M.ivos, a negro, arie-ted early in the day in connection with. the mur der of Mr.R-rti... Li-...ey, a lace riot of serious piojiniieu t.-rted ..hortlv after midnight Sunday nnming. So'die - m the Fourth National Cm -d t -: i (I a mach'i.e gun n a c r d o : . nied negroe at Vine -wo Cen ti al Avenue , after a !.(;,. be I'.'cen c hit o 4 j. rid m'Twiei in Whiill lUO lleglue tt.TO k'.l.'.l. Foil!' lieglT)", fell rod V th" i i .'':i e gun fire. Fo'ing ( n bn'os and p j.s inipo si,.'- to ie'1 Ii w many have hi en t,,!l. d o. uoiiiel 'd, Sr-ven mm ul w lute, ion d in local ho: pit ai s a the re nils of the tumble at tin jail and .-nbveipient rioting. Lieut. Maguey and Private Henderson loth of the machine gun company Fourth Tennessee National Ouard. -.were killed at 12: lo, a, m. It i.v said both were slain by mistake by bullets from their own command. All hard ware stores and pawn shops' have been looted to secure arms. Knoxv ille. Tenn., Aug. .",(). De-pitc assurance, that the pris oner had been removed to Chattanooga and inspection of the jail by three separate com mittees of citizens, a nmb to night stormed the Knox county fail in seairh of Maurice F. Mays juil search for Maurice F. Mayes i negro w ho had been arrested as a suspect in accordaiiee with the murder of Mrs. Katf Pel tie Lin-1 Ley early this morning. In a series of fights U-tween deputy sheriffs, K)lsce officers and mili tiamen and members of the mob in the jail corridors and outside the building, several nun were wounded. In the confusion, all were taken a' ay U-fo e their identity could Ik' learned, except-' ii z the' national guardsmen who were beaten, but not seriously hull, and w ere able to remain on luty. One man was carried! iwny by his friends inuon-cious rnd sufroring from w hat npjM-ar- d to be a serious wound on the iead. Most of the window glass in the jail was shot out; one front window and the main door were battered in and all other exposed windows broken during tin dis order. F.aily in the evening it become .ipiKirciit that the deputies and policemen on duty at the jail would be unable to cope with n situation and n call was sent for soldier trom the Fomth Ten nessee Natiomd Ouard which is holding its encampment here. Two squads were ribhed to the jail in a motor truck. The dis order reached its hoighth with their arrival and fi-t fight were numerous and promi -.cuous shooting outside the jail began The guard men were soon stren gthened by the arrival of a full company and it became possible then to clear the j nil corridors and the yard. Mrs. Lindsey was shot to death in her home at 2:"0 Satur day morning as she was prepar ing to leap from a window to es- i capo a negro, nor niece wno was sleeping with her was threa tened by the same negro. The two wonnn were alone in the house. The negro Mayes, who has been arrested ten days ago for piowiimr alsout a house oc cupied by nneiUier wlntc family, was taken into custody in con nection with the murder an hour after the crime was committed He had bevn home only a short time. Mayes denied his guilt. rearing possible violence. Sheti If Cate look Mayes to Chattanooga by a roundalout way this evening. Crowds be gan gathering alwuit the jail ear ly this afternoon, the first com crs In ing allowed to look thru it to satisfy themselves that Maves was not thereabout. The crowd increased steadily and at 11 o'clock still numbered possi blv 1,000 men although '.he sit nation at that time appeared to lie under control of the police and militiamen. Ciattanooga, Aug. I'.O, When informed that the Associated Press had carried a story from Knoxville that a mob was on the way here, Sheriff Rob Pass, af ter calculating tho probal WILSON TO CALL (A I'll A L LAT.OU MLI'IINt; SOON Wa.diington, Aug. "L Piesi-m-nt Wilson, in a Labor day message to Auiciicaii workers today, announced that he would call in the near future a confer ence of representatives of labor md industry "to discuss funda mental means of bet taring the whole relation.1 hip of capital and abor and putting tin; whole p.iestiun of wages upon another- looting." The President said he was en couraged and pleased with the results thus far of the govern ment's elloi ts to bring down the co;,t of living and expressed con- hdeuee that substantial results w'taild b accomplished in the solving of this problem. Patience ami vigilance, however, he said, must be exercised and the gov- ,ininents ellorts must have tho co-operation of every citizen. He Appeals to Citizens. Presumably referring to the existing lalxir tinress and threats of strikes, the President appeal ed to every citizen to refrain from doing anything that would torn! to increase the cost of living-, but instead to do all possible to promote production. Hie President expressed par ticular gratification at the at titude taken by the representa tives of organized lalxn in nup poiting the kovcniment's pro gram to meet requests for addi tional wages through a lowering of living costs and said he hoped that the workers themselves would "move with the govern ment instead of again it in the olution of this great domestic problem." The Lalrf-r day message us made public tonight at the White House follows: "I am encouraged and grati fied by the progress which in be ing made in controlling the cost of living. The supjiort of the movement is widespread and confidently look for substantial results, although 1 must counsel patience as well as vigilance, be cause sut Ii w ill not come instant ly or without team work. Wants Production Incrcus. "Let me again emphasize my appeal to every citizen of the country to continue to give his personal support in this mat ter, and to make it as active a possible. IM him not on'y re frain from doing anything which at the moment will tend to in crease the cost of living, but let him do all in his power to in crease the production; and and further than that, let hsm at the same time himself carefully economize in the matter of con- impiion. P.y common wet ion in this direction wc ."hall overeom a danger greater than the dan ger of war. We w ill hold .steady a situation whii.ii is fraught with possibilities of hardship and "suffering to a large part of our population; we will enable the pieces' es of loduction to overtake the processes of con' sumption; and we vviil speed the restoration of an adequate pur chasing power for wages. "I am particularly gratified at the support which the govern ment's policy has received from the representatives of organized labor and I earnestly hope that the workers pern-rally will em phatically endorse the position of their leaders and thereby move with the government in d)i I of Muain&t it in the solu tion of this gieatest dome tfC problem. "1 am calling for as early a date .s practicable a conference in which authoritative represen tatives of labor and of those w ho direct lalwr will discuss funda mental means of bettering the whole relationship of capita! and lalmr and putting the whole questk ii of wages upon another footing." number in the five ti ticks, re marked; - "All right; let 'em come. I've got room for that many in j.iil." He added that he could handle the situation here without any assistance. Rome, Sept, 1.--Forty Italian soldiers, sentenced to long per iods of imprisonment during the war, were granted mrne- ty to day by King Victor F....aur.ue!,