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•••/«* :T^&^ *-'://;/->'*a T*<*v**^r>i*fr-> *^^^^, ^\ J '*?^«^hojf«iw^ ) ^a^^ M .-*- s ™i« i *;.£•'*& ...V- : V' JT'--*T\r1'irtri J t : \''•^\•i \'''''''\rntWifw'-tiii'jp^i^'il^jM^^ia^i^j; n'O'^V' /I '** . ' THE! NORWOOD NEWS, NORWOOD, NEW YORK, i- : AMBASSADOR DUM6A. Austrian Envoy's Recall Is Asked by tN U. S. For riis.Munitions Letter. \About Pr. It wi Utah, upon \ conceit the pol I be so t her prei the tvi I^ondoE Amayoi' toelmet boots i farce When •woman her no' built a feet in r \ thirty a «nt fit- whicli • usually describ) mldabie She b_ the reqt* J tell the - fn i * M I t 1 *• IT iS THE INDIFFERENT THAT OPPOSE SUFFRAGE Mrs.\ O'NeiI, Appeals to Voters of the , State. it ! $ i: Photo 'by American Press' Association _ JDj. Konstantin Theoclor Dumba has 1 ex- plained to Secretary Lansing that he act- ed under the orders of his government When 1 he wrote to Vienna asking foi money to use here to- stop the manufac- ture of arms for the allies. His dispatch was c'arried by a New York newspaper- man and fell into the hands of the Brit- ish. This man says he was tricked. Pres- ident Wilson finally decided to ask Aua- trJa-Hungary to. recall the ambassador. —consictei women work at widely In offiee / of Inqu thoritles cifled t( of abse travel a ities a be' Nineteei MIRE MAY SIRE IN -DUMBA'S- FATE German Military At ache Is Marked For Attention, Racquef Potatoo NewN, Choice ' Quart j^t; New Cai- Lustre i Atlas B\ Bbl .0, Salt P<J Piosh hi Special % Peat We Our Yes, Washington is nwaiting action at Vienna on President Wilson's demand for the recall of Ambassador Immba. for his interference with the American munitions industry. It is said that Ber- lin may be asked to recall Captain von Papen, German military attache, and the Austrian consul general for similar reasons. The note to Austria, which follows. explains the complaint against Dumba: Sr. Constantin Dumba. the Austro-Hun- garian ambassador at • Washington, has admitted that he proposed to his govern- ment plans to Instigate strikes in Arneri can manufacturing plant's encaged in the production of munitions of war. The infor- mation reached this government through a.copy of a letter from the ambassador to -Ms government. The bearer was an American citizen named Archibald, who was traveling under an American pass- port. The ambassador has admitted that lie.employed Archibald tn bear official dis- patches from liim to his government. By reason of the admitted purpose and Intent Of Mr. Dumha to conspire to crip- ple legitimate industries of the. people of the United States and to Interrupt tln'-h legitimate trade and by reason of the Hag- rant violation of the diplomatic propriety in employing an American citizen proteci- e<3 by an American passport, as a secret bearer of ofTlctu! dispatches through the lines of the enemy of Austria-Hungary. the president, directs me to .inform your \excellency that Mr. Dumba f« no long»i Acceptable to the government of the 1'nit- ed \States as the ambassador of his impe- rial majesty at Washington. Believing that the imperial and roya- government will ren-llzc that the govern- ment- of the I'nited States has no rtltc native but to request the. recall of Mr Dumba on account of his improper con- duct, the government of the 1'nlted States expresses its deep regret, that this course has become necessary and assures the im- perial and royal government, that it sin- cerely desires to- continue the cordial and friendly relations which exist between the United States and Austria-Hungary. The patient efforts of -women through a long stretch of - years have brought about .some slow reforms in New^ \York state in the matter* of child-labor. But these laws are n6t adequately enforced.. There are many children in the cities who have no youth, no education, nothing that goes to make life bearable. They are forced to labor while only babes. A woman told me of a child six years old who tied SEVEN THOUSAND KNOTS in a willow plume. When she had finished her fingers were raw and during the work her mother peri odicaliy threw water in her face to keep her awake. The mother receiv- ed seventy-five cents for this work. I saw a little newsboy in Albany not over seven years old, asleep at the hotel entrance at three o'clock in the morning waiting to sell all his papers. In Georgia, Mississippi and other southern states mere babies' are work- ed in droves in fields and factories from dawn till dark and often all night. Would you like to see your baby driven by a foreman from dawn till dark? Would you like your little girl to get up at daylight and' shiver through the cold to work? Would you like your child to fall asleep at mid- night ov\er her work and be shaken awake and set to work again? Would you like to see your babies wear their hands to the bone to help support the tamily.' There are many mothers who are forced to see just these things. There -are- many children whose bodies are sore and sick w.ith toil, whose lives flicker, out from toil. Would you oppose any work that is struggling to better the laws and help these children? Why will suffrage in New York state help children in Georgia? Be- cause New York is the biggest, most WANTS 40*000 tRAINEl) QFFICERS. Photo by American Press Association. Major General Leonard Wood, commander of the eastern department, thinks we should have-at least 40.000 efficient army officers always ready for emergencies. This photo was Snapped at\the' PlattsDurg (N;Y:)\training-camp- for business men. - ' the gray matter appears at a some- what disadvantage. God created Eve a help-meet but there is a suspicion that man translates that a bit too lit- erally at times. Man was given greater strength than woman that he might help protect her and her young, possible harm as has been proven in the suffiarge ^states, and only selfish- ness could prompt a man to oppose it. There are men who object to woman's voting because of the added election expense. Would those men think it perfectly legitimate IF THE HEW YORK'S CONSTITUTION Convention\ Ends Its Work by Adopting Short Ballot and Home Rule i, For State's Cities. New York's constitutional conveu vention yielded to Chairman Roofs plea to end the invisible rule of bosses before it finished its work, adopting the short ballot, which will elect only gov-. ernoi'j lieutenant governor comptroller and attorney general. 4 Provision is made for home rule for cities, subject to veto by the legisla- ture. Consolidation of 152 state depart- roents under seventeen heads is pro- vided for. The judiciary is to. be re- W'guntaed. The death penalty Is re- tained. Saliules of legislators are' raised to §>2«JO0 a year and the governor will get $20,000 instead of $10,000 a year. Woman suffrage lost, but will go to the people separately. MINERS WANT 8 HOUR DAY. Will Ask Anthracite Operators Also For Increase In Wages. Seveutl hundred delegates attended the tiifjistrilct convention of the United Mine 'workers at Wllkesbarre. The chief business is the -formulation «f a new wage scale which is to be present- ed to the. coal operators prior to the ex- piration Of the present agreement. Aptll 1,1016, The demands will include a wage Increase of ft'otn £& to 25 per cent, an ejgbt hflW uny, a system of adjusting disputes *'Wft^fc Will jtitlke tor e*. -p^*nx:y^-^^flp&JttMJJte : mM§&£9& tt<« of mwm> ~* influential statein the unTonand when New York adopts woman suffrage it will boom the suffrage movement in every other state, and bring these helpless children so much nearer hav- ing decent, humane laws. The suffragist is often asked what women suffrage has done in the suff- rage states. It has revolutionized the vice conditions/cleanded out red light districts and greatly alleviated the condition of poor women and children. These are the things women are nat- urally interested in. These are the things women want to vote on and the things they are going to vote on in New York state, for while there are a few men, who through ignorance of the cause, oppose worn an-suffrage, yet I every good man who is intelligent and ; knows why womon are working for I suffrage, indorses it. The best edu- ! cated, biggest, brJadest-minded men ! are for suffrage. Every man who loves his wife, his mother, his sisters or his daughters UNSELFISHLY is for suffrage because He knows that womean's vote makes for woman's protection and he realizes that in case they are left alone in the world it is the WOMAN VOTE that will force the law to protect them from injus- tice, evil and poverty. Men have voted over a hundred years in New York state yet they haven't as good a code of laws or as clean a government as the women made in .Colorado in twelve years. All suffragists want is good laws. Are we to infer then that those who oppose their voting do not want bet- ter laws? Are to infer that they prefer the conditions of evil, pover- ty and vice? I think not, at least with the exception of those men who are thoroughly unprincipled and open- ly allied with vice. Who keeps the societies- for moral and social bet- terment in active condition? Chief- ly the women. II is their work and because they have no, vote it is slow work. They want the vote to assist them in this work. You are a voter. Perhaps you are going to vote as yotlr wife or daugh- ter tells you to. I say PERHAPS. You may vote for clean politics, for reform, better laws and. against vice, and youthinjc_tha^sj]f^ient. jJutjf your wife and daughter could vote THERE WOULD BE THREE VOTES AGAINST VICE instead of your one. And they have as much RIGHT to Vote as you have. The only people-debarred from voting are aliens, children, lunatics, idiots AND WOMEN. Do you class yovir .mother, your sister, your wife and your daugh- ters with idiots? Does your mother or wife, or sister or daughter class herself or wish to be classed with idi- ots? There are women.* of course, who do not know much, about polities. Likewise there are men who are quite as ignorant , But there are also womep Who know more of politics than Borne men. When they vote, they wilt acquire political knowledge; and acumen, \They have had no use for such knowledge, no incentive to acquire it. But there is (Be same king hf gray matter under $bQinet 'Jgft^tfaeW'-jii^'OnrJer'' ># foibf ' ah$' the man wh\ ?*?l*|ItSfl^\~wjf?'~to-th8 : TTOTTHaTTie'mrTrtOee^-n^r^ ' TAHklN ior to himself. | AWAY FROM THEM on account of In primitive times man fought wild the election expense? Because a beasts to protect his woman and her woman is forced in the nature of young. Are white slavers other than' things to'stay at home and bear child- beasts? They are infinitely worse, ren, to sew and mend and cook for Are inefficient laws for the protection of women and the happiness of homes any less menace? \ They allow the death and ruin of thousands of women. Would the man of the stone age hesi- tate to arm-his woman with the rough weapon he made to protect himself, were it necessary? Conditions are different today. Women are menaced in a different way. The women of the city feel this menace more than the women of the country. But women are women wherever they. are. and no good man will hesitate -tcPpro- tect.them wherever they are, and THE BALLOT IS THE PROTECTION THEY NEED TODAY. Do you know why some men are against suffrage? Because they buy and sell their country, their state, their constituents and their friends for gold; because they directly or in- directly, license vice for gold or place and they know that the great mass of women who stand for church and home and children will not stand for these things. Suffragists are neither cranks nor freak3. There are, of course, cranks and freaks in their ranks as there-are in every organization in' the world, even the churches, and political organ- izations. These people are thinking and working for t'hemsleves, not for the public weal. But the main body of suffragist's are earnest, high-minded women like Susan B. Anthony, who originated the .resolution now before the National Congress for the univer- sal enrfanchisement. of women.- They are mothers fighting to protect their sorts and daughters- from vice.' Man- politics usually spells personal ambi- tion. Woman-politics makes for the protection of home and children and social uplift. Woman has to obey laws that she has no voice in making. She is treated as a chattel hy laws she has no voice in making. If> she hdlds property she is jtaxed by laws she has no voice in making. Instead of being considered a distinct unit of society, with the legal rights pertaining there- to, she is simply .neglible social filler. There are women.who are guarded and safeguarded who neither heed nor want anything different, But. there are thousands of women who not-only want but who need legal recognition to safeguard their happiness and lives. And nobody has a moral right to. deny them. this .protection,' It cap-do no • T^tR^tegystei^^ oftUe-hunia^ «jdy« v la per£eci;liealmwe iatdly;r<i«ilketJuat we have a tietwork of nerves* tittfe when he^aiiseboing, wkeri strength is declin- ing, the sanie iiervous sjrst^iii giWS the alarm in headaclies, tketlricsa, dreamful $le*jp, ^irritability and unlesl idorrec&d* ieidir StraigM to a bfeakdowfa* '%o .ttwxlct »e^0ttsfi.e(* k Scpfctf.S 3$fl»il* riori ii-,e^tly-*Mifb'U'tiiW6tiJ4:;taJte; .fife rich nutriment getd into the blood ma rich blood fe«d» the tiny nerve-<elh while man, and occupy herself with these things to the exclusion of broader things, should she be deprived of her entity and become a monentity, just an acquisition and appurtenance of man? We all know men that vote who haven't the slightest conception what they are voting for, yet women who can sway nations through the power of their intellect have no vote. And it is these women of intellect who are suffragists. They think and see a bit farther than the average woman. Not so many years ago the couservativje element of mankind opposed education for women. They contended women did not NEED education to cook and sew and bear children. . True, if a man wants a squaw for a Wife—and daughter. But who is better able to bring up and educate sons and daugh- ters, the ignorant or the educated woman? Ask the uneducated woman who struggles along trying to keep up with the schooling of her children to- day. No man now opposes education for women. And the vote is the last upward step jn the education and emancipation of woman. A hundred years from now men will look back at the men who oppose suffrage today as they look back now at the men who were too narrow and selfish to believe in education for women. The suffrage movement is not a fad. It is a natural phase of the evo- lution of woman. In England it is a revolution and future history will so recognize it. Far sighted politi- cians do not'oppose suffrage. They are too keen, too) intelligent and TOO SHREWD. They read the handwrit- ing on the wall and know it is inev- itable. Every man knows • in his heart that he has no moral right to deny the mother of his children or his daughters equality with himself. It is their RIGHT, God-given, and when he denies it he assumes a super- iority that a modestt fair-minded man hesitates to assume. Fair-mind- ed men and MEN OF PERSPICAC1 Worn Out, Tnin and Miserable Untif She Took \FTuIt-a-tives\ ' PAfcMBSEOS, June -20th, 1-914. . \Stomach Trouble and. Distressing Headaches nearly drove me wild. Some time ago, I got a box of \.Fniit-a-tives your-famous fruit medicine, and they completely relieved me. To-day I am. feeling fine and a physician-, meeting me on the street, asked the reason for my improved appearance. Isaid, \lam taking Fruit-a'Hives.\ IIo said, \If Fruit-a-tives make' you look so well, go ahead and take them. They are doing more for yon than /can.\ • Mits. II. S. WILLIAMS.. - 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50,' trial size 25c. At dealers or from Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ogdensburg, New York./ so you should rememher that other men have loved ones and thousands of them need your vote. If you refuse the-ballot to the women who are working to protect their own sex you are working with and sanctioning vice, sanctioning white slavery, sanc- tioning child-labor, and sanctioning injustice and the destruction of women and children. , For woman's vote will be a moral power. • There are very few men who are really intentionally narrow-minded and selfish oi who are willing to ap- pear so. The big men, whether of nation, state, county or town, are the broad-minded, intelligent, generous men who look beyond selfish motives and aggrandizement to the public good. These men are for suffrage because they know it is right, just, fair, and makes fbfesocial betterment and the public good. Are you one of these men? 'EDITH O'NEIL MACDONALD, Assembly District Leadsr of Franklin County/ fWPARMY Soma i«i War May^Last From to pmperor Nicholas, has'taken over, command of the Russian armies. \Ap- parently -tbe czar's action, was lcept a close secret in Petrogradf because the first intimation was in a personal dis- patch from the Russian ruler to Presi- dent Poincare. He has\ sent Grand Puke Nicholas to fight the Turks. , The czar is quoted as saying he is willing to fight for ten years If needed to win the war. King Alfonso predicts after the war all nations will arm more than ever. Dr. Ralph I« Thompson of the facul- ty of St. Louis university, who has re- turned from France, where he was a physician in a British hospital, predicts that the European war will last from five to fifteen years. Dr. Thompson said the deadlock in the western theater seemed unbreak- able and that the permanent nature of the British hospitals and of other British preparation testified to their belief that the struggle will be long. Rev. A. J. Klder Mullan. English sec- retary to the general of the Society of Jesus, who has just arrived here, says: \There is no talk of peace in Italy. Italy appears to be in the war for a. fight to a finish.\ TY are for suffrage. - - . ~ Are you one of. the men who. feels that, your wife and daughter do not need the ballot because- your protee tion is sufficient? But do you know that you Will always be.alive to pro. feci^trfem?- .Dp -you never think that 1 . you may die and leave them alone to manage their affairs, to look after le- gal matters or to earn their bread and trust to fhe honesty and mercy of the world? If they'have the same legal •esfcatUs and the same business and poli- tical status and education that- you .have,. wijj ,'they .stand any better chance of holding their own? And When the time conies that your daugh- ter is alone, penniless and helpless, will it he men who will protect her and guard, her? What influence is it •that Wakes for\ the protection of *o» t^ett the Witt W&ti Woman's itafiu- eace^and Womert ire handicapped in <J0ing tangible tbihgiS because ihey $gD$ m vote, jferhaps ysu hav<} *o ^™^^^^2«QSte f^.*^X^#^ *»~n*.M*muu.9.i. • :x %mw^ihrmm$*i~ife-#M& ' %t- Coughs That are Stopped! Careful people see that they are stop- ped. Dr. King's New Discovery is a remedy of '.tried merit. It has held its own on the market for 46 years. Youth and old age testify to its soothing and healing qualities. Pneumonia and lung troubles are often caused by de- lay of treatment. Dr. King's Ntw Discovery stops those hackfng-coughs and relieves la grippe tendencies. Money back if it tails. 50c. and $1,00 Fort Jackson. Mrs. Alice Converse visited her parents at Winthrop last \'eek.— School opened here Sept. 7 with the Misses Winifred Dawney and Bertha Desmond as teachers.—Mrs. Anna Davis and Mrs. T. W. White called on friends in Madrid, Norwood and Potsdam recently.—Miss Charlotte Blowe has a position as milliner at Massena tnis season.—Miss Ethelyn Devine has returned to Hudson Falls, where she has a position as teacher in the school.—A Harvest supper-and entertainment was held al the Metho- dist church Sept. 9.—Mr. and Mrs. Gelnn Ketchem, of Malone, visited the Clifford family a few days the past wee.k.—Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Dawney were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Wright at Nichol- ville.—Mrs... Franklin and daughter, Erva, of South.ville, visited at H. P. Grow's the past week.—Mr. and Mrs. Edward \Lawrence and son, of Lisbon, visited relatives in town last week.— > Miss Daisy Coolidge visited her cous- in, Mrs. J. B. Pringle, it Norwood Wednesday, Sept. 10—.Mr. and Mrs. George Macomber, of Dickenson, were guests of their mother, Mrs. V. A. Chase, Aug. 31.^-Mr. and Mrs. El- win Skiff will move soon to Brasher Falls where Mr. Skiff has purchased a meat market.—Mrs. Anna Davis and Mrs. T. W. White visited Dr. and Mrs. E. B. Wells at Nicholville last Week Monday.—The Odd Fellows and Rebekahs will have an entertain- ment one night of each of the four months beginning Oct. 16, withthe Savranoffs,' the Russian players. Season tickets $1.—• Mrs. Harold Dut- ton. and two sons of Fair Haven, Mass., are visaing -her parents,' Mr._ and Mrs. A. E. Ober.~Mr. and Mrs* W. C. McKelvey and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Knapps B.pent Sunday the 5thV at Paul Smith's'.—Mr, and ' Mrs, Archie Mulligan of Nicholville, were Sunday gusets of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. John-Harper.^-Ivan J3honya,' Charles Coolidge and daughter, Daisy, were callers at J. B. Prtngle's in Norwood, Sunday, Sept. 5. %», 0. H. Coolidge and Miss.\ Lillian-Jttolfrii* back returned home with them, .\ CROP CONDITIONS IMPROVE. Mm ~mu: mmmmirimk Government Report Shows Advanct i| Over Conditions a Month Ago. ...'••,': . A supplementary analysis of crop'} conditions in the - United States .oii-,| Sept. 1, as announced by the deparfcyl meht of agriculture, indicated a sliglit|| improvement In prospects during tfe| last month. The composite conditipfel of all crops was p.5 per cent abora M their ten year average, compared wi|fcl a epndition of 3.0 per cent above tlilitr| ; avernge on Aug. 12. Improvement: was shown , by prac/ tically all the principal crops except! millet, potatoes, sugar beets, lenioiis,K| Si-apes,, toniiitoes^ hojis. oranges, ctfcj| ton, rice, onions, field beans and sugar/ cane. • ALBANY CAR STRIKE ENDS; Trolley Traffic Begins and Disagr?«|;i rrient Goes to Board of Arbitration.',/!\ The strike on the United Tr'aetiefcl company IlUes r wkicrh for foar.-'daM tied up all. city traffic in Albany. Tw|| Cohoes, Watervliet and'Green N. Y., hftfi been settled nnd tlieC. have resumed Operations.. 'The t&m ed -point—whether the 'agreement.,1£| tween the company and its einpl^l permits the discipline of motormeu$*| conductors by either the genertit'|| perlntendent or .division supertax/ ents—will be decided by a bourd* #*J nitration on Oct/J. 33 DEAD IN TWO ZEP German Airships: -at Last' Pen«trate4»| trie CeVttep.bf London. The set'Oh'fl at Hv^Zepv^»~^^M London ivuff the.Kntfifeh cast cmwi resulted in,the' klUfng'' Of twen^M m\s mid the ihj«r^oleiebty-siys|i era. .'£hU umm, a- -total of tw«|r three persons feflledinto 129 .W»J| the raids rot ttsr.fr wgessjve mfiM^.pl p6tis itiMvMWkttiii airships• «M the ee«W: pn# of i.onciot), ; ; m says that the ah'shlft 1 ? dropped;4»Pa on dot'kss/fiifti *»$' est&MisMAeB^r* ttond^h ^n^YMjMfr/'' ' ' ';'/ m Pesitfrig ft ¥>•*#««' Wit SftuaiW v 'President wlteoii' \m mm&f'$ low Democrats iiv ?W > Ws \< ti i home fltitfe toihaofee Mm fffS* Vsm, heerwise »e latte & ®W A S3 thoBlch he xtm taUinf ft » vw VS| fcheiMeffihttohfii situation w r personal a^vaHbic^ JA ^^ A letter tt«« secretary l™R Hhm&i m t&fe-'gMfftott min ®:?; gtrnm :le««Eth». .^gia'tt*«setet ludorsed him. :illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll • Zl Do. not wait a small sum-d Business car | Charles F, Smitt I F. W. Perry, Vk iiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin,,,,, FRENCH CHECK GERMANS. Cmwn Prince's Drive Upon. Verdun -jj| Fails, but Paris Admits the Loss of Trenches Near Binarville. The furious onslaught undertaken by the German crown prince's tinny and ' continued throughout the day, with Hie object of breaking through the French ; lines in the Argohne, was checked by • the French troops, it was officially .an-', nounced by the French war office. A»- aff finn of trenches to the east of La.YOn^l de Binarville, according to the com- ; ,;| munique. is all the attack netted the crown prince's army. The second Russian victory over the Austro-Hungarians, reported by Petro-„'3| grad tit Trembowla, is said to have Si yielded, in connection witii that -atiif Tarnopol. more than 15.000 prisoners. British losses of officers in the fwt-./| night ended Aug. 30 totaled 1.502, of^if whom 407 were killed. The severity of.,i| the flghti»ig on the Gallipoli peninsula,--jl where most of the losses occurred, is;' indicated by these figures. />' German ^forces that have been en-'ifl gaged in battle with the Russians, in ill the district north of the Bielnrieidi/l forest,have captured the city of Wol/ kowysk. They got 3.800 prisoners. For 59 years, w«'t perience and large ou1 loiver prices. Gold Coin Stoves fuel va&,trotible, and a TOTOTJR CON The net earning .ing.and in addit : and interest on paying 6 per ce issuied and outst The Public S York, ordered company, shoulc • the Dollar and i .We shall be • prospective pui'< Otir Preferrec desire all of our be contented wi anrl'at.the same fore-we \offer in ferred Stock nai We-have* mac ferred Stock wl to sell such stoa .'beatiy such hoi. ;:;V; ; **-&*^™w*iw,Mi^itJte*4m-^^