{ title: 'The Adirondack news. (St. Regis Falls, N.Y.) 1887-1934, October 28, 1922, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070345/1922-10-28/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070345/1922-10-28/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070345/1922-10-28/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070345/1922-10-28/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Northern NY Library Network
+ Keep Posted ea • By HOME MATTERS Rtftdlnf Your LOCAL NJEWgPAPEft. IDevoted to Local News • • • and Home Interests. VOL. XXXVL 8T. REGIfe FALLS, N. Y. ; SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1922. PUBLISHED BY M. A. ROWELL. ESTABLISHED 1887. BUSINESS CARDS. L 0. <K F. Si. toe* Lodge, No. KM, Meet* tvery Monday evening at 1'AQ o'clock In tbetr rooms over De- Lalre's Barber Shop. Brothers from abroad art invited to atUod. B. T. Parks, N. tt. Joseph Duun, Fin. Sec'y. H. J. DUDLEY, \~ Buooessor to &. B. Skinner Go, Fire, life and Aeeldent Insurance. MaionA, N. v 80 FirsUClass Insuranoe uot. rtp- reeenUd, Your patronage solicited. LESLIE at SAUNDKRB, Attorney and Counsellor at Law.. 1 Drawing of leg*l papers a spe-v isity. Collections. Real estate bought aad for sale. St. Regis Fails, N. Y. DR. fML GREEN, Dentist. Offioe at Reetfeuee, Main Stre*t. St. Regie FalU, N Y. Inme^with th7 ffiVIHO 10ENCT Ask your neighbor who kins had a loss. Fred Lemieux §1 St. Kerfs F«lla Representative. Wild Flowers of tnt Tropics. Between Tonnla and the Guatemala border txiits one of the* greatest flor- al bowers In ,the republic. Thli It the time of year wbtn all of the morn* teg glories and many other wild flow¬ ers of the tropics art beginning to bloom, and railroad men who art fa* mlliar with all the roadi of the re> public say that tht grandest sight of all Is to bt sttn here. Tht maativt trtts In tht forest which line for mllet the railroad art covered to the tops with Tlnei and bioMoms, and the tele¬ graph polss and wires present a slmi* tarty beautiful tight Along tht lint art hundred! of eornflelds, and It seems that each stalk of corn forms a polt upon whtoh Is growing a morning glory vine. This does not in the leant hinder the crop, tor the corn of the particular ttason hss been topptd rtady for harveat. Near Mepastepoc, below here, there Is a lane some six kilometers in length where the tops of the trees on either side of the track almost meet, forming A most strikingly beautiful floral arch. These trtes are all covered with tines with the millions of blossoms, and the eight Is one rarely, If ever, seen in pther parts of Mexico. The Sett Water. • writer In Vim does not d.:'* highly of mineral waters. He says: \The best water in the water contain* Ing the leant mineral matter In it. The nearer you can come to getting absolutely pure water to drink the moro easy It will be to keep in Rood health. Tho simplest form in which ahitolutely pure water In found it in m'n. And rainwater collected from off a dean surface and ntored in n clean reservoir It nn Rood as Any* thing one can find. The bent •insti¬ tute fqc rainwater In good dlnttlled water. In fact, dinMUed wator may be opmewhftt preferable, an It Is not subject to accidental contamination In the many ways ralpwater Is. To irgus that absolutely pure water is •pt helpful is equal to anylng that the addition of pollution improves It—a proposition that will not stand the lent of ^ard common sense.\ • Whepe lyeslght »e Good. Tht best tyeslght Is possessed by those people whoat landn art vast and barren and where obstacles tending to shorten* the sight are few. Eski¬ mos will detect white fox in the snow at a great distance away, while the Arabs'Of the dtntrts of Africa have such extreme powers of vlnlon that on the vast plains of tht desert they will pick out objects invisible to the •nUnary eye at range* from one to en miles distant Among olvlllied people the Norwegians have better lyenlght titan iboet, if not al), others, as they more generally fulfill tbs nec¬ essary eondltlons. The reason why defective eyea art to much on tht In¬ crease In England and In America lien In too much study of books In early lift and tn badly lighted rooms. GOOD SALT RISINO BRtAD Althp most people of today eat ytast bread, there are many wbo would enjoy salt rising bread occa* slonally If they could get It. Wt usod to wish for thin bread, but It Is only of late that X learned how to make it successfully, and following is my method: On the morning of the day previous to which I wlnh to bakt tho bread, I bring a small half pint of swttt milk to a boil. I add to It while 'scalding hot tnough corn meal to make quite thick, thtn cover this and keep very warm, but not hot, by putting it in a bowl and netting the bowl In a Jar of water, which I keep quite warm. It may take till night for this to rise. When light It will look bubbly, and give forth a crackling nound when presntd slightly. This may be used next day; If kept In a cool place It will keep several dnyn. Now for tho baking. Enlv In the morning Into A (loop bowl put. 1 toa- >spoonful each of nalt, nurnr nnd «n<l;t, slso slow spoonfuln of now milk; ncald tnls mixture with a pint of holt 1LR water. Stir and 1H ntniicl Mil It *tll not ncald tho ll rlHln«, M Www ml.I tho rlntng mndn on tho t ivvlotw day (this In somttlmot enllod Ikhhnlnu) k Add flour to make a stiff butter. Keep warm by netting the howl In warm. water. Let thin AIMO got vory IlKlit. If your bowl In not lar^o the riding will soon run ovor Have your broad pan ready wlth'slfted flour for kneading; make a bed In the middle of the. flour, nud In thin pour the following; To the content* of bowl ajdd welting, con¬ sistency of one pint of half sweet milk and half water for each loaf wanted, and nalt as for any bread, fltlr well, Itt stand a mlnutt to allow tht corn mtal to settlt, tfien pour all but the meal Into tht flour. If tht meal in Itft in tht bread will be coarser. Stir tht flour Into tht wetting, loave a Wall or lining of flour around tht pan. Makt as thick as yeant bread sponge, cover tht top with flour And sot in u warm plact until the nponge rlnon high tnough to crack the covering of flour In all direction*. Then mix in /lour to form A loaf, being careful not to get too ntlff, The minute you have e smooth,, firm but not hard loaf It la ready for the tins, which should bo filled Just a trifle over half full. ,8et these also In a warm plnce, and when rained a little beyond the topn of the pans plact In the ov.on, and nalu> from one half to thrqe quartern of an hour, according to slse of loaves. Salt-rising Dumplings.—These are \the bent ever.!' Tnkt nome of the dough when ready for tht tlnn, and knead into small blncult; have nome ulct broth (chicken or beet) warm but not scalding into which pan the dumplings. Let them rlne In the warm broth until light, then put the kettle over the fire and boil 2& or 80 mln- ttes. Succetn with nalt rising bread do- fund* on keoplng the sponge an*l dough warm; otherwise, the work en.y, and after the \lightening'* Is made tho real of the process in quick- .v done. The bread in very sweet and wbolusome. Try It. NEW YORK BRIEFS Heathen Buslneet Methods. Business among the Chinese, so- cording to a Runnlan traveller who t)Sj jk|t foturnfd from Manchuria, Is on P'e&periuye basis. There, are neither proprietor! nor em ploy net, but h] who woft In an establishment aft pertaers/ tt it From Mme to time small sJlpjranQSf are sole! out •hem—barely tnougfj |o llTt on—b- t tht end of tbs ytaf el) tbt proAtH >i<i divided. The OMnese merchant* are so boa- ttt that among all tht ten branohet Of tht Runto-Ohinese Bank located In China there ban been no record sloes their tttabllshmtnt of ft single protested note. Only Cause for Smoking Out. k New XjMk youngnter who livt la a attghborhood wbtrt tflteanv makes frequent nunlgatloas ntcts- sary returned from hit first visit to Mftfttrr wfth the astonshlng la wbodcttuokn had' >b*en m4' ty with starttt fever. Tht sumener tt*ch«r abhors nature faking, so snt eAmoaishtd him not to tell fibs. \But that ain't ao lit,\ said ht. \Didn't 1 & the tret they lived tn wid *f eyte, aa' dldnt} Hear Mr. joatf hA# he had to iTnok4 'em (r Old Virginia Hnmn A corrcspon4ent of Wallace's Farm tr given the fojlowing directions \To twenty gallonH of water add thirty pounds of Bait, eight pounds of coda, five ounce* of salt peter, and ten pounds of brown sugar or one gal- bn of molasnon. Put all in a Jarge krttle and let, It come to a boll. Then draw from the fire and nklm. When cpid, pour over (he meat *nd J<*t otand for five weeks. Then hang up and let 'ivy foe three or four da>a. Smoke un til brown, and, then sack. First melt Moras brown sugar and spread over with, yqtir hand. Then sprinkle black ^TPP?r *U over the meat part and tnds of hock. Roll In pVier, put into 'he cotton aacju, and hang up In i good, dark, dry place, and you will have fine meat. Cut clean, pure timo¬ thy hay flnt and pack around hams enclosed in cotton bags and hang up until used. Will keep for years.'' When Stringing Pearlt There are certain, tricks in string- ng pqArty and othor beadn an well which the Amateur nhould know. Chief Among the^e it the device of tying s knot between.each bead. This Is undoubtedly tedlou«, but It Is a wise precaution. Then if tbo string breaks only ont bead 1s lont. Neither wire nor catgut Should bt used to string Jewels unless yod wish them to look stiff. Surgeon's'n)lk Is excellent for \he gurpoae. || Is wtven like braid Instead r>4 twisted, ' ^nd 'cpmtj*' in stveral tMcknenMes. Findv woven, flexible gold or platl- cum ohalpn are also uned, but they are of court? mor^ expensive.. In strlpglng^ precious beadn, never nbe a needle. Simply wax tht- end or the thread and pass i\ through the bole, Manners of the Boy For some reason many mothers do not give the same attention to the manners of tholr noim as to thoav (if thtlr daughttjs. Ytt the boy'i truinlnx In svm moro Important than thot-o of the girl. The majority of young men i leave their homen nhortly nfter Ihev ' come of Age, and many leavo before that peridd, and they come into run- tact, into intimate axnoclatlon fre¬ quently with mqn who have hao but U|tIf tiulnlit^ In tliu Hltvtiep or life, iinU all too frequent these evil com i i-nYut onH corrupt the good manners of the more fortunate clas*. Dut tho noy who 1H trained to courtesy from his childhood ca» be grunted in an* environment Burr Brothers 4t Co. snd Heinlck, Hodges & Go. of New York, purchased $730,000 in bonds from City Comptroller Thomas Fitzgerald of Albany, paying $744,028.00. The city will receive a promt urn of $t),U2&.ftO from the sale, and the money will be used for Im¬ provements. Bast Schuyler Falls' shortage of help necessitated the closing down of the school for one wuek to permit the pu¬ pils to old their parents In the potato harvest. • James F. Farnham, Inc., of Albany, with restaurunt at 01 State street, Hied schedules In bankruptcy In United States court, Utica, showing debts of $467388. -. John Farrell, PlatUburg's tfrst chief of police, died ut his home there ufter several months' Illness. Contributors to thu Kepubllcan state convention fund, ralsud ut Albuny by a coimulttwe, received refund chucks amounting to 20 per cent of their con* tributlons, with copies of a report showing ttiat $4M)H f was received and $8,000.86 disbursed. Gold In puylng quantities Is suld to exist In the hills of IMeeker, Fulton county, according to Situs F. Horning and Joseph v A. ltoss, prospectors of Albuny, who returned from ttiut place. Horning and ltoss, clud like Forty- niners, visited the secretary of state's office and filed a mlnerul claim. Frederick B. Lyford,. for more than thirty years president of the First Na¬ tional Bank of Wuverly and director of the National Protective Legion, a fra¬ ternal Insurance organization since Its founding, died at Wnverly. Albany's traffic force Is to be com¬ pletely reorganized after January 1, and twenty-live new policemen will be added to the force If the plans dis¬ cussed by Mayor Hacket and city of¬ ficials are curried out. * Repsselaer shows a decrease In pop¬ ulation which those familiar with the situation sag- was caused by the rail¬ road strike. Rensseluer had 6,687 names listed last year, while the new directory has 4/207. Reports from game protectors and others who have frequented the woods over large areas agree that the deer are plentiful this year and the predic¬ tion is made that the number taken this fall will be larger than last sea¬ son. When searching in the ruins of the Jefferson County Golf Club, workmen found a $1,500 diamond ring lost by Mrs. Walter Fox Smith. The jewel won found In a partially burned bureau drawer. Mrs. Hnilth lost the ring last summer and the finding of tt tn the bu¬ reau drawer lends to the belief that the gem was found and hidden there. An¬ drew Gordon, who found the ring, re¬ ceived a reward of $100 offered for Its return. A jury In the Supreme Court, Al¬ bany, awarded Ithea Fountain** of Oo- hoes, ten year*, old, a verdict of $5,000 agulnst Fuld ft Hatch Knitting Coin pany. The action was brought to recover damages for Injuries suffered by the gtrl tn August, 1021, wften her feet find legs were burned by coming In contact with hot cinders from the fur¬ naces of the mill which were ftpreud In the roadway In front of her house. Reports from game protectors and others w^ho have frequented the woods p,v$r large areas agree that the deer are plentiful this year, and the predlc tion Is made that the number taken this foil will be larger than last sea soq. Full co-operation, rather than de¬ structive criticism of the veterans' bureau In New York State, will be the policy of the State Department of the American Legion, according tb Albert 8. Callan, department commander, now attending the national conven tion at New Orleans. In two days the students of Vas- sar College raised their share of <a $6,000 fund for a recreation hall 'o be built at Poughkeepsle in, cdnnec- (Ion With the Gopd Fellowship Club, an organization of men and woman employed by the college, In the Interest of settling the strike at the Delaware and Hudson railroad shops\ at Colon I e ind Green Island, which affects 2,800 men, a big mass meeting took place at the Labor Tern pie tn Troy. A plan to finance 200,000 families in the purchase of homes in Long Islnm from $4,000 to $10,000 each is content Mated by Fruncis M. Hugo, fonnei fecretary of state, who Is preside of the new Interstate Mortgage repa¬ ration. \Our entire capital will be used exclusively In financing homes on, Long Island/' Mr. Hugo said. Thus far this season the Schenec- fady Association has dlHtrlbuted ft,- 000 pheasant eggs In Schenectady and surrounding counties, and has Stocked waters In Hchenectady, Sara¬ toga, Albany and Schohorle counties with flngerllng lake trout, wall-mud mouth bass, brook trout, wall-eyed pike and perch. This Is the most ac¬ tive season in the history of the asso¬ ciation, according to' sportsmen. The branch of the Hnllston Spa Knitting Company at Chatham soon Will extend operations and a large number of additional men will be em¬ ployed. • Electrocuted as he lifted n receiver from a telephone, was the fate which ! (eon T. Gooden, 28, of Olean, met at 1 Vandalla, near Olean. Gooden, a conductor on a freight car for the lo- fol traction company, bad left the car to use the telephone and receive moving orders. The telephone wus attached to a telephone pole and It Is believed a company high tension wire fell across the line leading to It Political Influence In city schools de¬ prives children of rightful education, Governor Miller HII.VH In Albany speech. The liuffulo nyntum for muting out Justice Co drunken moforlMtn In an fol¬ lows: Tim (IH.VM In the penitentiary, $1 fine tint! revocation of the automobile ticennu. That rule, formulated by tht five jmluoH of tho lluffulo city court, WHN put Into effect a year IIKO, and It in enfomui Impartially upon every driver convicted. Jack FoHter, IU'IIOVIMI to be the only doj< In America POHMCHHIIIK Liberty bon<lH in ItM own name, died ut Geneva. Juck'n owner, MIMH Neena Foster, bouulil the IMUKIM four yearn ago and made provlMloiiH for the une. of the In¬ terest to nupport the animal until death. Consumer* will not be affected by t.he Increased pool price for September milk, announced by the Dairymen's Loatfue Co-operative Anxoelatlon. Al¬ though Albuny milk dealern will be forced to pity higher price* for their milk, they will not mine, the price to the consumer, C5. I*. Wfevenn of the Nor- nianMklll Dairy Company announced. OlllclttlN of the General ICIcctrlc Com¬ pany and (lhnrlPN M. Hcliwuh of tht United Stiitex 8t<H*l Corporation have been scheduled an HpeaUern for the meetings <>f a Foremun'H aHHoclatlon of the Scheneetady workn of the (tanera) Klectrlc (Company, which will tuks place In the next three months. Two Inehen of nnow, the earllent In yearn, blanketed the central Adiron¬ dack n. With a 00 mile an hour galo fanning the flames, ft re deHtroyed part of tht bunlnenn section of Hroadulbln. v Ten buildlngM were wiped out, with & IOHH of upward of $100,000. The .vlllagt wan without fire protection. Portraits pf T4»w»dore Uoonevelt will bt unveiled In armories throughout New York ntate October 27, Colonel Roosevelt's birthday, Adjutant Gen¬ eral Kinkald announced. Recount will be given to tht Breed¬ ing Bureau of the Jockey Club by Charles A. Stoneham at the end of the Empire City meeting. The owner of the New York Glantn wanted to get a .good home for thin seven-year-old horse, which cost $n,000 as a yearling. Albany, with the second lament rail¬ way mall trnnHfer point In the United States, will have a Kreat transfer sta¬ tion near the trackn of tlto New York Central railroad In the vicinity of Quackenbuah street. A verdict of $tt,000 wan brought In by the Jury in the Supreme Cottrt, Hall- ston Spa, In the action of HarrUon N. Brown, administrator, against Kd- ward E. Reynold** of Troy, for dam¬ ages in the. death of Mr. Brown's duughter, aged eight' years, who was struck by the defendant'H cur and died shortly afterwards. The acci¬ dent happened In Maltavllle opposite the home of the clilid, July 22,1022. The Court of Appeals, Albany, heard arguments in the appeal of the Sche¬ neetady Railway Company from a Judgment of the Albany Supreme Court awarding Leokadyu Janlnzewskl $14,000 an damaged for the death of her husband, Marion Janlnzewnki, who was struck by a car of the company near Stop 18 And killed, October 2, 1021. A baby one year old, asleep in a necond story bedroom, wan rescued by Amsterdam firemen who had been sum¬ moned to extinKUlsh a fire In the hQint* of Michael Lyons at Kant Main and Schuyler streets. The fire was con¬ fined to the fower floor. Children play- Ing with matches are bejleved to have caused the fire. Mrs. John H. Booth, Pittsburgh,, was elected president of the New York State Federation of Women's Clubs at the closing session of the annual convention In New York. In Schuylerville the people are liter¬ ally praying for coal, so serious is tht fuel situation In that locality, accord¬ ing to a letter written by Prancl* X. Lynch, administrator of that district, to Clarence B. ^Kilmer of Saratoga Springs, deputy fuel administrator of the fourth Judicial district. Miss Grace'Williams, former prin¬ cipal of School 8, Albany, is now critic supervisor at the Pennsylvania Stute Normal School at Mansfield, one of the oldest schools of its kind In Penn¬ sylvania, with a registration of more than &0Q students. Prices of staple vegetables are much lower at wholesale this year than last, According to a statement Issued by the state department of fUrms and mar¬ kets, Albany, In which ti comparison of current wholesale prices of farm prod¬ ucts Is made with the prices for the corrseponding period lant year, Hudson river apples brought tht, world's record price when four bar¬ rels sold last week for $l&8, or $84.00 a barrel. They will be exhibited at the fruit shows throughout the United States thin coming winter un the finest examples of their kind In point of size, contour, color, weight and. stylo. The apples were raised by Dudley B. Pulwar, whose fruit farm at Milton Is one of the show sections of the south¬ ern pnrt'of Ulster county. • A syndicate said to have the back¬ ing of prominent New York men who spend the summer months at Hcliuyler- vllle has purchased tho estate of For* mer Governor John A. Dlx in Thomp¬ son, near Hchuylervillu, which, it Is re¬ ported, will bo remodeled us a club¬ house. Work now Is In progress. It Is sulil u golf course will bo built. # A wholesale milk dlHtrlbutlng con/ cern In Scheuectadv has offered to supply public school children bottled milk at a inlnHmim churfce at the rate \*t a half pint euch school day for each of the 17,000 chlldrer/ Thu offer tn made by the concern \n the he.llrf that many of the children are under aour* lshed, District Attorney Wyman S. Hascora of Washington county announced his candidacy for the ofNce of county Judge on the Republican ticket to suc¬ ceed County Judw Brskin&C. Rogers, Ropubllcuu cundidute for the office of attorney general. '• MRS, GEO. D. HOPE Offers Jewels to Help Pur¬ chase Sulgrav* Manor Mm. George D. Hope of Washington and KauHMH City, a collateral descend¬ ant of Georue Washington* gave her Family Jewels for auction while on board the steamer Homeric crossing to Kurope, the proceeds to fonn a nu- cleiiM for a fund with which to pur- 4'iiiiHt' Sulurave manor.Iu England, the /anci'Mtral home of the first President. BANKERS, 2 WOMEN IN BOND THEFT NET 26 Indicted in Minneapolis on Charge of Passing Loot in New York Robberies. Minneapolis.—Three officials of Twin City bunks, three officials of bond houses and three other persons, one a woman prominent In Minneapolis *<*• clety. are under arrest here as the re- *iilt of R\v<M'pl*x Indictments reported by the Federal grand Jury for this district Twenty-six Indictments were re¬ ported, all charging possession of bonds nnd securities stolen from the United States malls. Conwplracy to Hell $2,000,000 In bonds stolen in mail robber I en In New York, October 21, 1021, .and $U>00,000 in Chicago, Janu¬ ary 18, 1921, IH charged against the Indicted pernons. Those under arrest, aU of whom were arraigned in Federal court and relnmed on $5,000 ball, are: A. H. Chrlstopherson, St. Paul, pres¬ ident of the Midway State Bank, St.. Paul. • L. F. Young, Minneapolis, vice pres¬ ident of the Midway State Bank. Arhn Perry, Minneapolis, president of Perry & Company, Investments, Se¬ curity Building, Minneapolis. Stanley McCormlck, former vice president and treasurer of Stevens ft Company, inventmont bankers, Minne¬ apolis. Mrs. Holen McCormlck, wife of Stan¬ ley MeCormlck, society leader, Minne¬ apolis. Arthur VV. LIn(INnom, real estate nnd bond broker, Minneapolis. Allen (\V Busney, assistant cashier of the State Hank of Commerce, Minne¬ apolis. William H. Buswy, Sr., father of Allen Bussey, real estate and bond dealer. LATEST EVENTS AT WASHINGTON President Harding hamee committee of sponsors from every state In the Union to assist in the Near East relief wor. Despite, the Daugherty ruling on dry ships which went into effect United 8tates offfoiale expect no test oases for a week. Despite recommendations of tax slon to be made to Congress In De¬ cember by Secretary of the Treas¬ ury Mellon, legislation malng any material change In revenue laws at this session Is unlicly, oongrceelenal Icadcre declare, Farm oredlts and ship subsidy chief work of forthcoming short session of Congress, eays 8enator Lenroot; rail legislation sidetracked. : State Department announces plane for evacuation of .the Dominican repub¬ lic by United 8tates troops. Secretary Mellon announces no special 26 per oent levy will be made against the 400 per oent stock dividend de¬ clared by the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey. Four New York firms win* contract* for building of United States Cham* l«r of Commerce's $2,500,000 home lA* Washington. Great Britain seeks to free the vessels seised by United States prohibition enforcement agents, President Harding Is being urged by legislative leaders to summon con¬ gress back to Washington In extra ••••Ion as quickly as possible after the election on November 7. For the first time in\thrce decade* the center of foreign-born white popula¬ tion of the United States moved westerly instead of easterly in the ten years 1910 to 1020.. The weeterly movement was due to the Increaee in foreign.born white population in Cal¬ ifornia! Texas and Arizona. DEATH TOLL IS 14 IN NEWYORK FIRE Flames Sweep Five-Story Brlok Tenement Building Where 24 Families Were /(sleep. STARTS IN BABY CARRIAGE Believed to Be Work of Pyromanlao Who Csused a Similar Holocaust Mechanic's Helper Saves Many; Little Olrl Returns for Slater. New York.—Fourteen persons, most ef them children, lost their lives In a fire, believed by city officials to be fte work of s pyromanlne. The flames swept with • murderous suddenness from cellar to attic of a five-story brick tenement, occupied, by twenty- four fsmllles, at Lexington avenue snd One Hundred snd Tenth street, In the thldtly-populated Bast Bids,. The blase apparently started In a babj carr|a«e, under the stsirn In the lower hall, under almost Identical cir¬ cumstances an the recent Incendiary fire In an upper West Side apartment house, which resulted In seven deafhn. Bo quickly did the flames shoot through the building that a number of ths deml we,rt found In bed, burned or. suffo¬ cated, without the sllghest opportunity to escApe. Nathan Silver and four of his chil¬ dren were among the victims. Mm. Silver escaped. Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Matlltky and Sidney and Catherine Sugarmaii, brother and sister of iMrs. MatUaky, also perished In the flames. \Buerythlng points to the fire being of Incendiary origin,\ Assistant t)U- trict Attorney Hennls, who Is conduct¬ ing an Investigation, said. Mr. HenaTlii, one of the first officials to visit ths scene while the blaxe was In progress, has noted the marked, similarity be¬ tween thin flre and that in the Went Side apartment house several weeks ago, when seven persons were burned to death. , At that time, In a doorway next to the building burned, a tsnant reported that Just before the flre he had discov¬ ered a biasing baby carriage In the hall. He extinguished it, and as he did so, SAW a man, unknown to him, come from the passage to the cellar. He questioned the stranger and the latter annwered: \I Just thought there might be a flre, so I came to see.** The charred frame of a baby car¬ riage was found tn the ruing of the building whew fourteen persons lont their lives. Part utf the investigation hinges upon the uncanny, baby car¬ riage clews. . Taxi cab drivers, lounging In their machines at the curblngn In the early morning hours, turned •flO-mlle-an-hour Samaritans during the flre. Scores of them put their cabs at the disposal of the police In dispatching the Injured to hospitals. Later they *«ere comman¬ deered to bring relative* to the morgues where the bodies of the dead were lying. , In one morgue Edward Pine hurried to the body of his fiancee, Sarah Silver, and identified It when others had flailed to dct sa A party had been planned in the flat, at which the en¬ gagement was to have been announced. Miss Silver, survivors gay, had once passed tne danger point in the halt- way, j>n her way to safety, when she returned to her room for her engage¬ ment ring. In a moment the flames blocked the corridor. Miss Silver Jumped from a window. Ske died of a fractured skull. Police estimate that 800 persons lived in the five-story building. Many of them lost aU they had In tfye flre. A relief committee Is making s provi¬ sions for the care of the homeless and providing them with temporary funds from public collections. Shortly after 1 o'clock In the morn¬ ing, while on his way home, City Mar¬ shal Joseph Lazarua saw smoke issu¬ ing from the hallway of the building, and he ran to the next corner and turned In an alarm. When ae returned the whole building, the ground floor of which Is occupied by stores, was. a mass of flames* and exit by the stairways was cut off. Most of the persons on the second floor succeeded In making their way down the flre escapes, but those op the upper floors had to buttle through smoke and flames pouring out of the windows. SHRIEKING SIRSNS BANNKQ Devices on Motor Truck* Declared Menace to Public Healt^i Chicago.—Shrieking exhaust whistles and sirens carried by motor trucks are to be silenced as nulnunces and a detri¬ ment to the public heultli, Heo.lUi Ooio- misflioner Hunrieitxen, uatiottnced. Person,* auntoriug from heart disease cannot ntund n shock' such as pro¬ duced by the average truck wlilntle set off at full blast, the Commissioner declared. BRIBERY IS CHARGED Providence News Springs Issue of Newberryism. Providence, K. 1.—An attempt in belnb made to Inject tho Issue of \Newberrylmu\ Into the Uhode Island The Providence News charged an iit- teiupt was being made to bribe Demo¬ crats to support former Governor U. Livingston lieeckumn, Republican nominee for United Stales Senut<>r, who is running ugaiunt Senator O. Gerry. • Mail Order Ho EXIST'BY ADVERTISING To Get Baslnce* Do likewise. • e • *> # f> NO. 38. TERMS, $1.50 A YEAR. DR. J. K. WARDEN Takes Post of Honor to Help Armenian Sufferers Dr. Jesse K. Murdsn of liassachu< setts, who for many years has been a physician and surgeon practicing In the Near Kant, has been made head of an administrative committee which will dlrWt American relief efforts In Armenia He takes row, wl»4 recently returned to this country. and Transcaucaslan Runsla. the place of Cunt. K. A. Yar- RIGID CONTROL GERMAN BUDGET Regulation of Taxes Even Inolud- ed in Proposal Put Forward by Barthpu to Foroe Payment PnrU,—^Complete and rigid control of all Oe man finances, power «to veto expenditures and regulate taxation and authority to dictate the arrange¬ ment of the budgets of the various German states are among the chief proposals . of ttes and position The p Reparatlc contained In the plan of the Frenjch Government for a so|u- Germany's financial dlfflcul- for placing that country In a o pay the reparations. was submitted to the Commission by .Louis Barthou, French representative on the comiiisslon. Although not men¬ tioned lx the official summary, Bar- thou's plan contemplates a meeting of leadln i business men of the world to determine Germany's capacity to pay and to consider interallied debts. The pi in, In effect, is a reply to the British reparation project recently placed before the commission by Sir John Bridbury. It differs radically from the British point of view. Bar¬ thou urg m the calling of a conference In Bruss »ls to deal with a broad set¬ tlement of reparations, Allied debts and Oernan payments In 1028 and 1894, France would limit the pow¬ ers of tl e Reparation Commission to the application of new guarantees and reforms for \Germany leaving wider Issues tc on International meeting. The plan would gradually put Ger¬ many on a gold basis, beginning with an Issue of gold, treasury securities, Barthou would have Germany pay her outitandlng Johllgattona in her curremej. He calculates that then Germany's paper circulation would be 510,000,0)0,000 marks, which at the present rate of exchange is worth less than the Relchsbank gold re¬ serve. WORLD'S NEWS IN CONDENSED FORM R IQ X,—T h e Russian armored cruisers Rosslyn and Gromobol and several other vessels have been lost In a storm tn the Baltic sea. ATHBNS.—The free revolution wae proclaimed at a great moss meeting held In] the Place de la Constitution here. SOMsJRSIT, Ky—A pet ef fold coins of on the early EnKlish date was found arm of Dave Jones, near here. State ojfflclalH, who are holding tbe money origin*! Investigation as to the owner, estimated the pot con¬ tained 148,000 at present gold price*. PITTMURQH^Waoee for eommen labor in the steel mill* will advance 10 per cent November 1. CHICAGO.—Th« deeteton of Attor¬ ney General Dougherty barring liquor from i hips in. American territorial waters spells the ruin of American psssenier ship trade, A. P. Lasker, chatrmi n of the United States Ship¬ ping Bcjard, said in an address.in this city. AMeT*RDAM_Th« former Qer- man ke trar at riage. iser gave notice to the. regis- Doorn of his approaching mar- The original date set for the marriage was November 5. PAR 18. — Hereafter November 11, AnnistUe Day, each year will be a legal hqllday In France under the name of Victri NIW cutor 8 evident* ry Day. •RUNSWICK, N. rlcker clultnn discovery of new In Hall-Mills murder; authori¬ ties ag4ln promise arrests. PITTPFICLD MA8*.—World tread riots w by Dr. wizard, fore th« within certain. d urJMlucUen. thin a century were predicted Charles* Htelnmetz, electrical in an address on \Energy** be- Hot a ry Club. A food shortage one hundred years, be said, is even If we double or treble LLOYD GEORGE OUT BONARLAW IN Knockout Blow to Premier When Vote of Confidence le Refueed Chamberlain by 186 to 87. SEE REGIME' SHORT LIVED General I lection Is Expected to Fellow Formation ef New Cabinet Welshman Ixpeoted te Fight ' Despite Deteat London.—After holding tbe office of prime minister through seven of the most critical years of British history- three years of war and four yeein of reconstruction—Dnvld Lloyd George went into the wilderness. This was the description In his Man¬ chester speech <if his position If the Unionist wing of his folowers should desert him. Unionist wlthdrswsl from the coalition was decldeff upon by the meeting which Austen Chamberlain had palled at the Carl ton Club and which was Attended by ths coalition rmMiiher* of the house of commons and a handful of lords who were enrolled In the cabinet The vote was 186 to 87 against the Chamberlain policy of pledging the party to sustAln the coalition snd In favor of a general election to conform Us course. The meeting was followed by a succession of swift events which carried the coalition government Into outer darkness. Andrew Bonar Law, the man under whose advice David Lloyd George achieved his great success, stepped up to the staggering coalition government and, with some reluctance, but with deadly precision, struck a blow that forced Premier Lloyd George to re¬ sign. Andrew Bonar Law will put on the prime minister** mantle for a short term of office. The king summoned him to Buckingham Palace and In¬ vited him to form a new government, which Bonar Law will undertake, al¬ though the state of his health, which compelled him to withdraw from pub¬ lic life a few months ago, makes it a risky venture Before Mr. Bonar Law can formally accept the premiership, however, a; meeting of the Unionist party must bd held to elect a new leader to carry cut the policy to be decided by caucus. This meeting will be held In a short time, when Mr. Bonar Law will be chosen. Between the Carl ton Club meeting and Bonar Law's visit to the* kino: tt was a seething period of -rumor* and of group gatherings among the political factions. Austen Chamberlain . first visited the prime minister's official residence In Downing slreet, as had been expected to offer his resignation; several undersecretaries and the chief coalition Unionist whip, Lieutenant Colonel Leslie Wilson, had already In¬ formed the 7 newspapers that they had resigned, and within two hours Lloyd George was In possession of the resig¬ nations of practically all the members of the cabinet. He then drove to the paince. to tender them to the king. Lloyd George advised the king to summon Bonar Law, and, according to custom, this was done. While Lloyd George exhibited cheerfulness to the few who saw him and cheered htm on his Journey to the palace, he could not but feel deeply tbe verdicf that he no longer commanded the support of the majority of the Unionist party, which for the past few months hod furnished the strongest material for hi* cabinet.' It wo* Bonar Law, more than any other man, who Influenced the Union¬ ist caucus to secede from the coalition. He had been the sphinx whom the rank and file of the Unionist commeav- ers were watting to hear. Be is ft serious and unemotional man, with a quiet manner. His opinion that tt was more Important to keep tbeiMtrty to¬ gether than to win the next election and \whether by his own fault or tbe force of circumstances. Mr. Lloyd George has lost the confidence of the country,\ decided many votes. There was also a strong feeling In the party that the Chamberlain plan, which gave the party's destinies over to the small faction representing It In parliament, was not a fair device. Bonar Law will probably have Lord Curzon for one of the pillars of bis cabinet. Curson remained away from the caucus but sent a letter of protest against the exclusion of the lords. LIFTS ZION CITY BAN Arrests of Cigarette Smoker* Forbid* den by Court Injunction. Chicago.—Cigarettes now can n# smoked with Impunity on the street*; of Zlon City. Judge Claire C. Edward*, of the Lake County Circuit Court, ha* granted a temporary injunction re¬ straining Overseer Vollva from ar¬ resting persons Indulging in a sismke* The \injunction U part of the ram* palgn of reprinalfc which Independent* are waging against the aluxttt supreme (UctatortMhp with which Vollva rules* MOB KILL FATHER AND *ON Faces Blacked, Lead Prisoner* Out and Shoot Them. Nashville. Tenn. -Two men, recent¬ ly convicted of nmnftluughter In Ben- ton County lam February, were taken from the county jail at Camden an'! *hot to (lenth in a lot 200 yards from the JHll. The. pri*onor«, Ko\ Hartley and lit* s<>n, were held In connection with the murder of Connie Hartley, nephe** of Ed Hartley. The mob was Apm- posed of fifty men with faces blacked