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49.50 47.00 30.00 7.75 4.50 Bldg. his dull sma.ll satin or to to 7. , white ily col- and on in of pieces the Iy Barr~ge\ Hiding Senti- ment Against Plan Push,Clean-up Until Every Cab City Is Safe ,for Riding Public indppendent uri \ ers and \a. flttltude of, l'rooks, gangsterf! were deelared today by Mayor be the weupons ()f the enemies supervision of taxicabs in New Hyla 1\ made his allegations in an statement Issued at City Hall In Ir~!s'Dons, to a query on what \he had to about the brothers of John F. Sin-' Ills son-in-law and secretary, beinJ; inte.'ested In the Yellow Taxicab Company al)d the taxicab bonding business, p, J. Sinnot Is an official and share- llolder In the taxicab company and C J, Sinnott Is engaged In t he bonding if taxicab companies and drivers, Their connections w·re told by this newspaper some months ago and now are the subject of disoussion by attorneys for 11le Independents aPllearing at pubUc hearings on t'he proposed control of taxi- cabs by Commissioner Enright's depart- ment, Denies Interest In CoOt'tteay oe America.n 'releplwne & l'elesrapb Co, Pbot~gl'3ph sent ~ver wire shows Pree Idellt, MnI, Coolldgo and SClIator Cmtis leltvlng White HQuse for cerem~ny at (Japito); OLYri~IC, A DAY lATE, BORGLUM INDICTED SlfAMS IN BAnE REO I ON LARCENY CHARGE Huge Wave Breaks Funnel, Dam- Carver ot' Stone Mountain Me· ages Bripge- and Srrashes Screen rnb'rial Accused of Stealing Models in Olle of Gales Met in Atlanta Jury Return WILLIS BOOTH RETURNS HOME \ DECLARES 'fhe 'Whit€' Star's giant linel' Olympic docked today twenty-tour hours late 00 its trip from ('herbourg and Southampton, with her bridge damaged 'iind a galley I I HE WILL FIGHT Spemal Dispatch to the Evening Post Atlanta, Ga., Mar~h 4,-lndlctlOenIQ charging J~rceny from thp house, sitnple larceny and m.alkious mischief . turnpd today nothing reprehensible In any dty Lelno:loyee, 01' their relatioI1ll hQldlng English Channel l·'rlday. in the Yellow Taxicab Company. ceedlng at half spe-ed a huge \Va,.., br<>k<> Foreign P-oIiQY' and De- termined Tax Cut Aims Set Forth by President BLOW STRUCK AT OJ.,D BOGEY ~ OF 'ENTANGLEMENTS ABROAD ~-- Nation's Duty in World Oefil1fed in Sure Terms-Economy Proposed as Means to \Save Peopte\ By CLINTON W. GILBERT Staff Correspondent 0/ F1'r!ening Post cCJpllnght. 1~2~. bll N. l'. E\ten~ft!l post, 1,1.0, \Vashlngtol1, March 4,-I'.'esldent Coo· IIdge's Inaugural address delivered to- day streB~es just two purposes of his Ad- ministration, Improvement of international relations which will bring about further co-operation between thfo United States and the other nations of tte world and make possibio further progress toward disarmament; and economy in government whi()h wlJl mn ke the burdens of taxation rest less heavily on the producing classes of society. The first half of the speech touch~ .. upon. foteign relations, Its position In the address it\f1icatlng th., ¥\ew Importance which intJrnational relations have as- swned for America. The second half Is devoted to domestlo affairs In which the prevalling mea is bet- ter an<l less costly government, In all the President has to say about foreign relations the purpose Is 'plalnly not to stand still; not to rest ron tent with and the adoption of the Daw,s plan in promoUng International peaee a.nd mutual understa.ndlng artlong nations. \Of course,\ he SIlSS. \I have no control over tho bridge, brell.ldng the funnel, The bills are based 011 Borglum's de- a 1l\t1ng:.' WilUam Marshall, commander .. Most oC sodatlon dismissed him as sculptor of the \The attack agalnst the Sinnotts is tlle passengers relt the ,effects ot the£oErn· grgantTI:: ~Ir!g;-~ - ~- ... The ner Administration mell!,-s to move forward. There is a note of confidence about the foreign policy of the 'country that has been laCking ever since the great contusion {)ver where my -son-ln~la\V's brother or smashing the clear view screen and snap- struction and removal of the models and IIny one elSe may worlt. I presume Mr. ping the compass pedestal. working '. plans for the memorial last ~tnnott has a family to support and that During the trip ncross. terrillc gales Wednesday after the eXE'cutlve committee he' must -work som~ place If he Is to make we\e encountered, according to Captain fOf the Stone Mountain Monum'eTItal As- ' lU~l'elY~ a uarl'age behind which a great tng, be said. J. G. Tucker, .hls a1d and superln- deal o~ sentiment agaInst the pollce con- In addition to 1108 passengers, or whom I tendent of cQnstruct~on, WaS joIntly Indlc.t- \,01 of 'taxi operation III concealed.\ 443 w~r~ first clal!l!. the vessei bro.l1gh~ \ ad. on both Iwrce.ny ch/lvges. The Gratld. J>ut!!, AU Fe;lr8 Beltln~ :Q:hu Mr. Hylan further' deolare~ that he over £6-00,000 Rte\Unll oonsigned to tbll Jury was tn s611s10n 'Ye~terdaY Mllvfnc The ptea~d811t ;\luU! behln'd/ alt'tbe f.a.lse standS: for law and order. Natlenal City Bank. Armored cars and evidence rel!l.tlve to the .destJ.'uctllln. ot the teat'l! that folIQwed upon Pr~srdent wn. \The law,\ he asserts, \has been ana guards w~re at the pier to transfer the • modelS. <Several witnesses ~stlfi\d that in son's defeat at Pm-Is and tile wreoRing ~t will continue to be enforced Ir:-espectlve gold to the ba,\k'S \.aUlts. ~udltlon to the ttlijde~ Mstroyed at the t'IJe VerSailles -treatY' in tM SlinMe. of whether the olTender be high or low, Among tbe passengers was John \V. studio ~everal smaller, models were car- \We cannot.\ he says, \pernjit ourselves rl~h OJ: )lOOI', unknown or 'Insulated With Doty, pr .. sident of the Foundation Com· ried away by Borglum and Tucker. to be narrowed a.nd dwar.~d, 1>y s1og~ns ,lhe wire.'\ pany, whl~1I b\1l1t the ',,\oolworth and Of/kers armed with search warrants on and phrases. . , . :t wlU1>e well no~ That, he declares has be&n his pOlicy Singer Building bases. He displayed kl'en TUe:'!day found mutilated model of Robert to be too mtlch dlsturbp.Ji ~.t1te tho.u!l'ht and no favorltll3m, lie sa.ys, lias been interest tn the earth shocl<s here Satm'· E. I,ee and t!lt:' centrnl g<'oup at equcstrtan of either isolation 01' of entanglements ot ShOWli in Its discharge toward anyone. day, figures hidden In the home of Tucker at pacifists or militarists.\ wheth~r he opproved or dlsal1proved of Mr, Doty waR on a. ship 1:1. Tokio harbor Stone :II~untaln. Accordlllgly. he renew\ In emphatic that person's associations or the ~person In 1923 when Quakes wrought great dam- Borglum Is schedUled to appear Batur- words his bellet that this country.should himself. age throtlghout,Japan. day before Judge Mlellael Sch'eneck in give Its adhesIon to the World <:ourt of \There are Quit .. a number of people,\ He said that Manhattan'. sl,yscrapers Greenbofo, N. C_, at a h<>arlng on a writ 'Internatlonal Justice, the Mayor alleges, \who resent every ef. would not be abl .. to withstand su('!?an of habeas corpus taken out last Saturday \We ought,\ he says, \to engage in no rC'rt of 'the police to round up the uri. earthquake. but it \auld bp possible to niGht. when the sculpto.· was arrested at refinements of logl,~o soPhistries and no licensed and criminal operators of taxi- build such if necessary. Because of New tho request of the llekalt County au- subterfuges to argue away t1l.e undoubted cabs. York's geographical posttion .lhere need thorltles, who held a warrant against him duty of this 'ountry by reasotL.Q.f the \My plan to have the jurisdiction of the be no fear of such a disturbance, he do- charging malicious ml8<'hief. might of Its n'umher., the power of It\ reo pollce extended to taxis nnd chauffeurs also dared. Borglum gave $5000 bond for hls ap· sources and its positinn of leadership In has been nttll-clipd In devIous ways. 1ts ~[r, Doty went through Tokio aft~r the p\arance at the hearlnl,;, Georgia will ask the world actively .. and compr\hensively to the honest licensed taxi driVer 11115 noth- quako to stUdy its etTects upon ],uliJlngs (Oontinl.cd on. Pane TlCO.) signify its approval and to bear its foll ing to fear, those who Ilnd fnult with the thore anti learned some valuuhia fad\ bE' share of the responsihillty of o.'candld and arth'lties of, tbe polic' must Imve an ob. said. o.he was that thelr hull dings aaat'pod SMITH TO HEAR DIAMOND PLEA disinterested attempt ot the establishment ;iec:t In mind that woole! be defeated hy a hetween the second and third Hoors, which ~.-- --- of a tribunal for the administration or clean.up of the present Riluation. apparelltly was the \- pcin! \f ~<>n- Governor Sets March 9 for Executive even-handed jus tiC'\ hetween nation and Dpfies \El.l>ose\ Threat stru(tion, I Clemency Hearing nation.\ Willi\ If, Booth, \'lc~presldeI1t of tilE'\ 0 til subj -t f disarm t f \\\Ilen the McAvoy transit hearlilG\ 0 ~ B ff c nee, 0 amen con er· -ere under way. the Trnnslt L'ommlssion, Gua.rnnty Tru~t Company and presld<'nt ot i y a Sta orrespondent enoes 1 he Pre.ldent ~oes so far aa to say \ ' Albany, March 4.--liovernor Smith to- through its spokEsmen, .ent forth In- the International Chamber of ('omme.rc\ \even failures CHnnnt uut oe accounted f day set March 9 for the date for hearings f I\ hi h th t h n about the YelloW' Taxicab Com- returned rom a six monlhs' stay. L1urinc: use n, w c mmn\ a e w I not hav\ _ on pleas for executive clemency for Mor- f I d f th f )'l an~.. its connection with the City Hall ... {hleh he arranged for Lhe third bl(,lmlal to ee assure 0 e success 0 another ris and Joseph Diamond, convicted of first t tilt II It and the Interest of the Mayop: congress of the organization. It will h\ In erna ana ('ongre.\ 0 m armament degree murder In connection wIth the rob- I d fit d I III \Threats have been made from time to held In Brussels on June 21 and 1000 clele n or er to ee warmn e n ca ng one, bery of the West End Bank In BrOOklyn. \- I 'I'\ I h time tllat unless the police went easy on gales representing forty,two nation. are ,,0 ong as < ,Pre 18 a prom Be t at The two Diamond broth<'l'8 have been tical d f hi Its b tl1<\ taxi problem, the newspapers would expected to be present, he said. prac an nvorn\ resu may e sentenced to die in Sing Sing on the week secured,\ he wili Reek a. further confer- .Jje given statemoots showing that John One oJ: the matters before the cOllgress, f M h 28 TI C f A Sinnott'S brotller was ~mployed by the Mr. Booth declared. Is the prohlem of 0 arc . ~ ourt 0 ppeals has ence, d'or, he, believPR In the salutary effect Yello~ Taxicab Company. Now what do transfering from Germany to Ileneficiary conllrmed the conv ctlon. ot internatIonal ronfprences. Respo-nds to Nation's Mandate QUILT DlGNI~ARKS IN'AUGURAL~EREM6NY AS MILLIONS lISlEN \N President Bends and Kisses Bibla to Take Oath While 50,000 at Capitol Look On DAWES STARTLES SENATE; DEMANDS RULES REFORM , Prol)oullcement/or Rigid EconOMy Has Outstanding, Place in Exeoutive's Address , , . \ By ROBERT BARRY Staff Corre8pot~deltt of EVlJ'ning Post ,·opvriP.hl, 1925, bll N. Y. Bf..'enfnQ Post, 1»0'. Washlllgton, March I.-Inaugural Day in Washington. ' .2:J; CAl..W COOLID1E t The President's Address 1 ,_----------l The complate text 0/ Prll8ldcnt Coolldoe'8 'nauuttral addTe~.s fo ll oW8: M y COUNTRYMEN: ' sunp<lrted, and secured by the Monroe doc- No en\ can contemplate current trlno, The narrow fringe of Stat()s'along conditions without finding mu('11 that Is the A UanUc seabo!U'd advanced its fron- tiers. across Ih\ hms and plains of an in- EXlotisfying and still moro that Is \ncourag- tervonlng cOntinent until It paAsed down tng. Our own country is leading the' world the golden slopc tt> tho PacifiC. in the general readjustment to the results l\lade Freedom 0. Birthright VI\. made fr('edom a birthright- 'We ex· tended our domain over dlstlmt Islands In order to snfeguard out· own Interests and accepted the consequent obligation to be- stow ju\Uce and Uberty upon less favored people~. I n the defense or OUl' own Ideals and In of the grea.t conllict. Many of Its burdens will bear heavily upon us for yearS, \nil the secondary and Indirect effccts we must expect to experience for some time, But we are beginning to compreh~n<l more definitely what course should be pursued. wbat remedies ought to b .. appiled, what the genpral couse of lih\rty wn ontered the actions shoufd ho laken for our dellver. gro\ t war. Wh\n victory had been fally 'I. seeUl'ed; we wlthd,el'\l' to our own shores an-ee, aPd are dparly manIfesting n. detN'- unr{lf\oml1f'nRPd suve In the consciousness mlned will faIthfully and conscientiously of rluty done. to ad:O'Pt these methods of relief. Throughout all these experiences we Calvin Coolidge takes the oath. of office at 1 :02 o'clock, .He speaks, then ,bows and kisses a Bible his grandp10ther gave him when he was five years old. Ho tUl'!l.'l from Chief Justice Taft to the greatest audience which ever ~eal'd an Inaugural address. plifiers cal'ry his voice to acres of people massed between the Capit91 and, the Library of Congress. ~t least ~O,OOO:t ,Maybe more. But ~llt over the Wav .. of the air his words are taken to count- less Americans. '* 'rho- Pl\llsldenli no new lel'1,ijJ. ~ his p(lUUoa.t llhlll)sopl\y., lte nc~tes the lessons he drew trom- the 1.~U eleotions, He reitera.tes IUld ampUft88 l1!& 'V!/l'Ws on tax rEiduotlolll and till'. i:6!onn anq ~ widor 11'Ifluenc~ In foreign aft'a.1rs; lle pro;pOllell to lteep poundlng on ·tll .. t .!Iubjeot to the clluntry. '1'he Cobl}dge inaugural 1$ not tlie UIIUal seneatltm oe thIs quadrennIal teta m th, national capital, The expected haillpens. \Hell and Marla\ Du.wes breaks 100Il~ He takos five minntes \ becomlnJr President ot tile Senate to tell that body Just what he thinks about it. D&wcs StUpetIllS Senators The sheer a.udaclty of his Inaugural ad· dre\s beard In the Senate Chamber by IW ' exclusive an audience as could be WI- sembled In Wnahlngton, lea.ves some Sena.- tors llttle short oC stupefied, othera )Dutter' Ing and still others sflllllng sardonicallY and predioting that the new Vll.:'e'Pl'esmen~ will le'am lJls lesson In time. He say~ that when olle obstructionist Senator by Wkintr against time at the close of a session ca.n. defeat the wishes of the entire bodY, can p\ev~n t action on one Ot' any blU, then. that Senator Is wieldIng !L greater powel.\ than tbe f're8Ident'!! V'lto power. HOUS9 members snicker. The galleries join ther\ . Cahlnet officers and Supreme rourt justices study the faces of Senatons. Wheele1' of Montam. In one of the front rows leers n.t Dawes, Already we have sufilclontly rearranged, i hR\\ enlarged our freddom-we have cur domestic affa'lrs so that confidence haa , slrel1~t hened our Independence. ~ have retumed. business has revived, and_ wI' ap· \ heen, and proposo to be. morC and more pear to be entnring an era of prosperl!.v Am{'rkan. \Ve heUpve thnt we can best which Is gradually reaching jnto every part serve our own C'ounlrY and most success· of the nation, Heatizlng that we ('annot I fully dlsrharge our ohllgatlons to hu· Jive unto ourselvos aione. we have con- manily by continuing to be openly and trlbuted of our resources and our rounsel , mndldly, Intonsely and scrupulously, to the relief of the suffering and the set- \ American. If we havo any heritage, It tJement. at the disputes am~l1g the Euro- has been Ihat. If we have any destiny, Wh~lI th\ Vice- President finishes. he proceeds without delay to smash a Sen- ate precedent. He refuses to ll.>t Sen- ator. be sworn In four at a time. \Ilrtng 'em up at once,\ he barks out, wil h a bang of the gavel. JUs volcs is rasP'.i'_ ~'-';7~~~O~f~l~hTIa~t ;fo~r~a~t,~e~rr~lb~l~eie~x~p::::os~e~?~-;:;niiiF1~(a~O~I\~t~I\~U~e~d~v~n~PiaFg-eFT~lC~'O~'~~ 17TI1rC'n-~ . .!.2~4~M~O~V~IN~G~,:S~;~N~O~. ~2:5~T~O~C~O~U~R~T~J~Pu~S9~,.r:o~0~ti~1I;g on Foreign Policy Ended II \Methods !8 Ihe Indication of a more , . ployed with the \tudled purpose/'of oo:erclng Brockton Couple Set Rec()rd In Fifteen positive and confident attitUde In Interna- public officlnls Into permitting thEl present M th f M I Wlf I B d tlonal relations thaI\ existed four years I I Is Coolldga's Last Act_B~fore Taking on S 0 arr agJ!- e I ~. me 1tuwho eRome conditions In the taxicab Held ~ , ago, when Mr. Coolidge entered office as to remain undistUrbed. Oath of Office Spemal Dispatch to the EV6r.ing Post Vlce-Pre!lidllnt, with Mr. Haralng as Presl- pean nations, w<> 1ttW& fO>UIQ It I-n thaL d1.r.ec.llon. Because of what Amf'I'ica Is and what i Ilut If we wlsll to conUnuo to be dis· America has done, a firmer courage. a I tin('tlvply American We must continue to highN hope. Inspires the heart of all hu· \ make that term I'<llnprehenslve enough to manity, emhrace the legitimate desires of a e1vl- During the walk from the Senate cham· b~r Spnators are muttering and .:H0'09\ mp.mbel's gossiping about the Dawes spe<'ches. \But we are going to ke.ep after this I Washington. March 4,-President (;00' Boston, :March 4.-John Howard Tufts dent. (Gontlnued on. paoe Two.) I iidge today signed tile legislative appro. and his wife. Mrs. 'Lizzie M. Tufts, now of 'The day of pussyfooting In Europe Is SHOOTS GIRL THEN HIMSELF priation bill carrying Increased \\-Iarlos for l Bro,ck ton , are rated the\ movers evidently over. \ \ members of Congress the Cabinet and the of New England, according to Probate The Presldont put\ his reason for Insist· , • Vice\:f'resi<lenf\ , ____ ' _, ___, \ Court attaches, inS- on economy In a new ~and strIking I B1)th Are Rustled to Brooklyn' Ho&';l'taf The measure was. tlfnast sIgned by t~- Tufts tesUfl:!l'tl_\ITr-1:he • I These results have not occurred by mere Iized ancl \nllghtenerl people detennlned In chance. 'I'hoy have been sN'ured by a con. I all thplr relationA to punme a conBcien' stant and enllghtene'a <'ffnrt marl(cd by I Aiuus ilnd religious life. 'Va cannot ,..n el ·· many sBcrificaH and extE\ndlng. over many mit ours~lvPB tn be narrowed and dwarfed genel'a.t.i<>llS- ___ Wi!. l:u.n llot rontlm\ lh<'se I hy slno;ans !lad jlhrrt\os. It is not the ad· ,In critical\ State President before taRing the oath of office. suit brought by his wife that In the fifteen \I favor lhe policy of econ-omy,--not I Walter Gurkus, thlrty,flve, of 31i Slan. months tIley have been married they have because I wish to Rave money. but becaUse r',,\: street. Brooklyn. shol and severely moved twenty·four times, The husb.l.nd I wish to save peopie. I brilliant auo~e\se\ in the future, unle.\ w;'-l- t,'<,!'h..-, tm! th..,. submant!v<', whkh Is of conttn'Ue to 1 .. l1rn from the past. , real Impurta\ it is not the na.me of , the a('tloll. hut the result of the a.eUon \hi< h Is the .. hler ..ancern, It will be wen nut to) 1m too mUlh disturbed by the Expprlenc6 l\lust Be GuMe wouAded Miss Elizabelh YulJlUl, nineteen. TRAPPED IN SINKING TYG, 2 DIE blamed his Wife. \The men and. women of this countr1»: Of ~ Model place, Ma~peth, Que~n., ana I' who toll are tho on .. 8 who bear tile COBt ;then, shot himself this aftemoon in the Wash From Outbound Ship Founders AUTO MI~SES TURN, WIFE DIES of the GoveTnmrnl. clothing factory of Simen & Czerkaukas Vessel in the Delaware \Every dollar we carelessly ~aste menns I thought or e!thor Isolation or entangle- I ment of pal'lfials an<1 I1)llltarists. Annament Only for Se('urity I It Is neceARnry to keep the f0f'n~r ex· perlences of oUr country both.at home and a broad contfnualiy before UR, if we aro to have any f!('lence of gove1'nment. If I vi ,258 Ainsley street, Brooklyn, throwing Philltdelphia.. March 4.-Adolph Olson Golfer Badly Hurt as Car Plunges Over their life will he BO much the more meager, the place Into an uproar. and B. J. Lurie were drowned and sIx ,65-F'00t Bank In -White Plains \Every dollar\ we prudently, save means Fifty men a.nd thirty women at wOl'k their life Will be so much the more abun- \ others. \vere tbrown Into the DeIawar\ Mrs, Fannie Clark or White Plains was d ' at tables with Miss Yuban rose in a panic ant. I River today wl)en the tUg Augusta, owned .killed and her husband, Georg'e. Clark, was \E I Id lis I It when he fired first at her. Nothing Is .. conomy s ea. m n s most prac- known of the motive. GUrkUB enter!,d tile b!' the Amerl~ .. n Dredging Company, was Injured severely lhls afternoon when 'their tical form,\ SUlik off Gloucester, ~. J .. 'by the wash automobile plunged over a sixty-five-foot place, walked directly to where MIRs h New ,Idea! of Efficient-. Government y from t e outWard-bound British motorshll) embankment In the Bronx River Parkway uban was working on a coat, trIed to Mississippi. In White Plains, He has said so much about economy that puIl It from her and wben she resisted, ed he W o \ in \'on~\ of being thought Inter- a hi A. t C \. 'The drown men were believed to have The accident occurred at a. sharp turn ~ \'\ n- , rew s gun. n on . ~erkab.Jl:as, who d ' 11/ (Oontj~ed ,on, PliO\ S---,) was nearby. tried to seIze the weapon and been trgPJle ill the engIne. room. . In the road leading to a bridge over the QUU,\ was struck on the, h~ad, Tlle : 'y'o'Unded I Harlem Rallroail tracks. Instead: of taking pail' were taken to 'St. Catberlne's Hospi. AT 108, BIRTHDAY TAKES MONTH the curve\ the car dashed ovor the em- tal In critical con<lltlol1'8'o'''. bank men t. Mr. Clarlt formerly was golt woo' wi::;h to erec-t new M ruet ures, we muat have a definite knowledge of the old foun, dations, We\IUst realizo thRt'human rJu. ture 18 about the m,,-t constant thing In the unlverRe a tl,l that the eSMntialfl of human relationshtp do not change, We must' frequently take 0111' bearings from these fixed starA of OUl' poIltl\\1 firmament if we expect to hoM a true coUrse. H we e:<a.mlne carefully what we have dolle. we HELD IN ATTACK ON EDITOR \.. ~: c~~to::,lne the mor\ ac~urat\ly what I h f BPI dl' I We staJlld. at the oppnlng of the 150th profllsslonal at the Metropolls Country Club. COFFEY- NAMED STATE JUSTICE Smith Nominates, Troy Man In Place of Howard. Resigned By a Staff Corrospondent Albsny, March 4,--Governor Smith to·' day-named James V, Coffey of 'i'roy 'to 8UC- ceed Wesley O. H~ii\'ar • .!..Q.S Suprame Court JI1~tlCB' and the filEfuate 'i'<lferrcd the noml- patlon to the Finance Cemll'dttee. Mr. Howard resigned yesterday, assert/n .. /lalliry was too l~W. , ' Publ. er ~ ayo\ne aper noted for I year' since our national oonSOIOll\ne~\ Hrst As.aul~· '\ assorted Itself hy unml~tal<Rhlc action with MJchael Donovan, publisher of Public I an array of for~e. The old \pnllment of Opinion. a. Bayonne newspa.per, etands dotae-herl and dependent colonies dls\p- indlcte4 today on a charge of lUIsault I peared In the ne_ sentlmpnt of f1 united a.nd battery on Morris Lending, his man. and Independent nation, Men hegan to agiog cilltor. <liKcard the nurr'!.l'1 c-o-nflnes of a 10CRI It Is ,!1 11e g ed that laat Friday Donovan, I chartpr for the hroader op»orlUllltlcs or a.ngered\ because LendIng had published a national oonstltutli'ln. t:nder the pternal an edltorla.l he had n~t sanctioned, at- urge of freedom we became nn in.d<,pend- tacked the editor in hlA office. cnt nation. A lIitle less than fifty years later that fretldom nna Independence w\}\\\ resnsel'ted ill the. fi):Ce ot\.all the world.~nd. guarded, The \hysical ('onflgurat'torr of the carlh hilS \el tlS fr\'m all of the Old World, but the common brotherhood of m3 n. t hA hlgh ... t law of .• It Dill' being, I ,paA united us by in8eparablo bond\ with ali hunl.wlly, Our country represents nothing but peaceful intentions toward all the earlh, but it ought not to faJl to maintain such '!; military (or\\ as com- portH with the dig-nit) and se('urlty' of a grp,,1 ,,,,ople. It ought to h~ a. balanced for.,p, intensely m 011 prn, cnpahle of de- fpnR\ by sea and llLnd, beneath the sU.'- fn<.o anll III the all', But It should be 80 ('()oduC\teci thut all the world may see In it, not ll. mella, e, but all Instrument of f.;fI/'1Jrity anc1 p~a('f'>. This nation h\I1< thoroughly. In an honorablo p\a( 0 u n<iOl' v..1hich the rights rLjl!;L~l\J!:~!l.\ fIre t', h\ pVel'Ywhpre pro· V'f'.UlU. It has ne\'~l' found that the npces .. .... 11)' ('njtl:,I.\(lnt or l1'lC'h a p(lnca could bu nmintuin\rl duly hy f1 gl't'at alld thl'eaten- Ing \1'l\I)' of Ilrn1\ In common with otber nations. It is now more determined than (VonHnlled 0\ PGgG Eight,} Echo of Last Bill Signed Ho doesn't seem to have forgotten the last bill to obtain tIH~ Prlllli-o:cnt's sig'ntr.- ture \as the logh'lllLlive appropriation blJl c\l'rylng sa.lnr~· ine,N!a.ses tor then:t. Tho procession mov(>s through the ro- tund\ to the platform ereetcd on the cen- ter steps, facing nast. • . Boyon.1 stretches a dense mass of peo~ pi ... ('nmel'amea are perehed on platforms, In.prnvisect telegraph benches carry forth the worus of newspaper men working un· <lo,' gl£>at presst\£C', There Is a llatch of vacant seat,<! just In front of th& President. Th\\y were reo served for the wives of Senators. ,Repre- aentali ves and diplomats, but in the crush the hOi<1O'!1'B of the preoioUcs tlck~ts <::ann~t got to their placos. Fl'Unlt B. Kellogg, who wt\lS an Am- bassador until 11 :69, and a SeCl'etary -;.}, State therea.fteT, ,!loes not walle with t~, CI>blnet. lie stands with Senatol' 'Butler of Massa- \ chusetts and SenMor \Jim\ Watson of Indiana. ~Ie lifts h l~ silk hat wheneve,,- he ree·· ognizes a friend. Kellogg hRs aged mil' terlally silica he was in the senate. There are more Bilk bats'llere than eur were assembletniwone capitaf tuncti~n be; fOft'. Some of them are ratheit' batfer~d, \\ Will Hay, Colollel Harvey and Ft~nk Hltl'hcocl!-Hgures all ones in pre\ pic- (OOrfntled /Ill 'Palla Bd1l<:I\:-'---' (1\11\ cnmpl~to text 0/ tltC' itla.1lYllral tp!.~ drrss of VifC-PftJ8ident Dil4W8 appG.otr Pogo 5.] • /i ~ \: , ~t<.,.-