The Omaha Morning. Bee VOL. 52 NO. 122. stars' M tami-Clsal Manw tu M, IN. IhM f. . Utsar As tt Bin I. IN. OMAHA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER, 7, 1922. Br Mall II rurl: Dill, II; ill, ll.SO. sstMS Is 41ft im Ositist Ihs 41ft nit (I xtill PtM as utu. Hll Ss sslt, . TWO CENTS "r JV Lvu uvy JV I mm KM British Defy Turk; Force to Remain Kngland RefiiHes to (Comply With Demand That Allied Forres Leave Con Btantinople. Peace Meet Postponed ronslunflnnple, Nov. fl. Uy A. P.I Ilit Tiirklnh iiuflotiHlM government ha handed a note lo the allied high MiiiimlMilonrm hei r to I lie effect Hint lha warship of all nations must ask It f'ir authorization to pas the strait of (lie Hardcm-llf. Hie Havaa rorresponilcrit has been Informed. Ihey must also salute the new gov ernment of Turkey, I.nniloii, Nov. 6. (Ily A. P.) As a result of th new situation t reated in niiiituntlnnple by Urn demand of ICafrt Pasha that the allied military occupation of the illy rcase, the lieace conference called to be held at Lausanne November 13 has been post poned, possibly for a fortnight, it oil announced here today. It In staled In authoritative circles that In no circumstance will the Itrit i-.li point of view regarding the pre enre of allied troop In Constantinople bi) chanced. The Uritlsh Intend to up hiild the Mudsill armistice agreement and remain In the neutral zone with their troop. Seek Fresh l'uninesis. Constantinople, Nov. 6. (By A. P.) The Turkish nationalists, alter overthrowing the sultan's govern .1 anlnrfnV film hart'tt tit fill 111,111 flllU UCI.IHUIIB . - his civil power, are now seeking fresh conuuesls in a manner that may bring about trouble with the allies. After taking over control of Con tanllnople l""t night the national Itits demanded withdrawal of the al lied troops from the city and served notice that allied or American sailors would not be permitted to land from their warships at Kemallst ports ex cept by rpeclal permission of the Angora government. An extraordinary meeting of the al lied commissioners flulckly assembled to decide what stand they should take in the quickly altered situation, de . trmlned that they would refuse categorically the nationalist demand for military evacuation of Constan tinople by the allied forces. Ask Control of Hallways. Along with the demand for the de parture of allied troops, the Turkish nationalist government In an addi tional note handed to the allied com missioners by llamld Bey, asked that the Turkish railways In Europe and Asia, which ore under temporary al lied control be handed over to the Angora government immediately. Over the weeg-emf the nationalists bucked up against the allies, not only through written notes but with a show of physical power as well. With a seeming disregard for the agree ments in the Mudanla convention that lecently ended armed hostilities in the mar east Turkish gendarmaines have now moved Into areus known as neu tval. They are advancing Into the Chumtk area, where only a few weeks ago the British dug themselves In ti prevent violation of neutrality of that district. At Uurgns, a few miles from the Dardanelles, the Kemalists have established an administration. Arrept New Regime. The allied high commissioners have r.i-cpted the new regime In Constan tinople, with Kafet Pasha, the mili tary governor of Thrace, as governor. And the sultan's government hss ac cepted its downfall, although Moham med VI considers h.mself the lawful constitutional ruler of Turkey. Ha baa not officially rceognlied me uoci sum of the grund national assembly u Angora, declaring his sultanate at (Tare I'M T aa. alum Tw. Miss Mary MacSwiney Goes on Hunger Strike PuMin, Nov. tl'y A, P V A bulls tut u-. by the r publicans state Unit Mii-s Mary M-iifwUiey, who wS srrrct- I by the free ut military on HviHir.uy. his n hunger MnK since she w taken Into cue-te. A 1. iter t ' h f-und j 8f!rr hr arrs. rra-ls: ' If tmpri-i ,..l, I will hutnrtl. I ,.w h-bre f'v 'H i hl it thr' .t . I'MV tt m I an r s To the Voters: You are Tuesday. the governmt You will employ the men who will run your government for from two to six years hence. Do not fail to vote. VOTE EARLY IN THE DAY Tram Kills Patient of li o s p i t a 1 Witnesses Say Canijihell, Neh,, Man Apparently I furled Self in Front of Car. Farmer Is K i 1 1 e d I Good Weather by Electricized Barbed Wire Fenee Man Mowing Alfalfa Near Florence Ii Attracted by Smoking Fence Pont Found by Father. Ward J. Smith, 26, farmer living five mllee northwest of Florence on the Washington highway, was In stantly killed Monday forenoon be tween 10 and 11 by an electrically charged fence wire. timllh, who had been mowing al falfa In a field on the farm, apparent ly left his machine when attracted by a burning fencepost. The position of the body Indicated that he straddled the fence In an attempt to climb over It, according to If. F. Hoyt of the P. J. Stack company, undertakers, who rnnde an Investigation for the county attorney. J. J. Smith, father of the victim, who was at the house about 200 yards distant, noticed the team and the mower standing Idle for about a half hour. Investigating, he found his son dead on the fence, both hands clutching the wire. According to Hoyt, Nebraska Power company linemen were making re pairs on electric light wires about 400 feet away, beyond a hill which screened the view from Smith, and al-1 lowed the wires to fall across the fence. Hoyt ' sayi his investigation showed the barbed fence wire had been burned where the light wires came in contact with It. ' Death was Instantaneous, according to Dr. A. S. Pinto, city health officer, who examined the body. Smith, who operated the farm for his father, also la survived by his mother, a wife and one child. Predicted for Election Day Favorable Conditions in All Sections of Middle-West Ex cept Dakotas Both Sides Claim Victory. Omahan Mentioned at Inquest Over Girl Lincoln, Nov. 6. Special. More than a month ago Martha Luckhardt, a young woman with a craze for the movies, was found dead beside tne Rock Island tracks In south Lincoln with her head severed. The investi gation then conducted led the officers to believe that she had committed sui cide. Friends said she was despond ent because she was unemployed and had been turned away when she ap plied for a place In the movies on a recent visit to Hollywood. Since then so many stories of pos sible foul play have been circulated that an Inquest was ordered. Testimony taken at th Inquest showed that she was acquainted with a number of young men about town. and that she had been much worried .because one of them, sn Omaha friend, had not kept a promise to make the final payment on a 7!0 fur coat she had bought at one of the de- tinxtment stores. One witness said that the young woman had exprensed a fesr that she might be murdered. To others she had talked of filicide. De Valera Deniei Rumors of Peace Negotiations Chleugo, Nov. 6. Oiy A. P.) Weather conditions throughout the middle-west and Mississippi vulley with the exceptions of the two Dako tas nr reported tonight oh favorable for Tuesday's election. ltaln on the prairies of the Dnkotus and snow In the lilack Hills have ren dered roads in many sections vir tually impassable and threaten to cut down the country vote. Kepubllcans and democrats in South Dakota both claim, as a result, they will have an advantage over the farmer members of the Nonpartisan league. The league candidate for governor Is a woman, MIhs Alice Lorraine Daley. In Texas, by an llth-hour de cision, the supreme court ordered the name of'Karle B. Mayfleld, the demo cratic candidate for United States sen ator, printed on the ballots. Doubt About Outcome. Word was sent to all county clerks, but some doubt exists whether all can comply In time. Injunctions by his political opponents had prevented the printing heretofore. The name of his republican op ponent, Oeorge B. Peddy, hae been stricken from the ballot because he was not nominated by a regular party convention. Last minute meetings, speeches and the usual final hour claims of victory featured the closing campaigns throughout the middle-western states. Following the old political maxirn that it costs nothing to claim everything, most of the campaign managers made their final communiques so all-embracing as to be worthless in determining what they actually believed. Harding Mails Ballot. Washington, Nov. 6. President Harding and four members of his official family, Secretaries Hughes, Weeks and Wallace and Attorney General Daugherty already have marked their ballots in Tuesday's elec tion, mailing them to their home towns. Secretaries Denby, Fall and Davis and Postmaster General Work will vote In person at their legal places of residence, but the other two cabinet officers. Secretaries Mellon and Hoover, will not vote. It wiui slated that they were unable to leave Washington because of the press of public business. The president and Mrs. Harding sent their ballots to Marlon, to be cat at the place where the executive has voted for years. Mrs. Harding marked her ballot while sitting up In her own room. Returns from the election will l rocelved by the president In his study. They will be received at the execu tive offices over a special Associated Press wire and will h relayed to the executive over the telephone by Sec retary Christian. Wilson lo Kel) on Papers. So far as was learned, former l'resl- Jerks Free From Nurse A man died beneuth a southbound street car at Tenth and Hnncroft streots shortly before noon yesterday. Witnesses told police they believe he deliberately hurled himself in the pnth of the rar. lie was It. C. Chevalier, 95, mer chant from Campbell, Neb., who had been a patient for five woks at St Joseph hospital. Yesterday morning be went for a stroll with n nurse. Miss Octave Le Porte, his niece and devoted to him. according to hospltnl suthoritles. Killed Immediately. As the pair neared Tenth and Ban croft streets, Chevalier Is said to have Jerked loose from the nurse, who had her arm through his, and to have leaped directly into the path of the oncoming tram. One cry from him and the car screeched to a stop. The nurse ran screaming Into a nearby house. Mein bers of the street car crew drew the man's body from beneath the front end of the car, but he was dead. The wheels had not passed over him. Police surgeons stated his legs had been Injured and that his forehead appeared to be fractured. Mies La. Porte was removed In a hysterical condition to the hospital. Moforman Unnerved. William Warren, 1112 South Tenth street, the motorman of the car, was so unnerved by the accident that he was removed from his run and sent home. The conductor was II. A. Beck. Mrs. J. E. Ryan, 2739 fouth Kiev esth street, told police she heard the girl scream and the man cry and believed the man had deliberately tak en his own life. Miss Freda Kuechenhoff, visiting at 2516 South Tenth street, told police she saw the car strike the man. Chevalier Is survived by a wife and one young daughter, according to the hospital authorities. Miss La Porte Is said to be in a critical condition. Touches Every Home Today Bloomfield Gives Randall Ovation Coal Mine Wrecked by os ion Ex pi Fleets to Hold Joint Maneuvers Off West Coast Candidate Met by Fellow Townsmen and Band Heard by 600. Bloomfield, Neb., Nov. 6. (Special.) Charles II. Randall, republican can didate for governor, finished his cam paign her tonight. The band Same from Randolph, where the candidate's home Is. It was accompanied by about 100 of Mr. Randall's fellow townsmen. Party . lines were forgotten and about 600 enthusiastic Randallites al most shook the building' with their cheers when the canciidate had fin ished speaking. Mr. Randall went from here to his home, where he will rest tomorrow and receive returns. 7 Killed as Fascisti Fight Nationalists .,v I l l ! ttV I, f"l t" ' ' M,v M.cmiov :"' ,.f t . ii, h. .Ur.1 ll ltS'el pit, I I ,., ik i -.lr IV !:. f'r " M.dill M.Cortu'uk Hopes Vi.irti. j U ill Aitl i'unp, r. . t - . .! i-e . ,-, t t k t I t J .4 f I . k t j 1114 t ' I k Mt I t-.t:' I I ! ll ,t.r I ' ! ' f:i t b-trtjH.I Jm.I- j I, . , , j.. W- W ! ' A ..f i .. - '- . ... Jt4 i 1 ur i iiu.n had 111111 no Mx-ciiil ar- Dublin. Nov. s Hy A. P.V-A long fr (setting the returns at statement Issued as "Dell communl-1 ,lrw.t e was expect.-d qu" and s gned by Kimon de Valera i(0 fllluW uiai custom of retiring as president, announces definitely j ,.,, ively esrly .relying uKn the that there is no train to the rumors j Wednen-!y morning iiew-p"!' .if iiedce nsgotiatlons betwsen bts' l j4i, l0i U-tallel a-vomit "f puny and the fte state government r,lW,i, than It will ) hiM for him obtain b telephone or from dim-rel leader duttng th I early eeMng. 1 Air. y iiwn ,..... j I, . . in sending bis ioiiid buib-t bis old , n . . , 11 , 1 h.,- m prii,.r...n, hh b w.s Mate Hoard Awaits Iteply itn rs j' of IMione (!oiiiiany on Hates IK There s So Surprise for Us in That! When advertiser tall u en the phone t tU us t ! continue their aJs biu the fotin4 what thf lt we're plvl, hi no! v.f fr !. f It's to wufh f ra!er efarrar h fr that, An4 h Mi '. M. Ht .Wth 4M etreel, let knew ht her "U ' a t Ui Keen Ifttrvimsalel la h!if hr rr h fSMSff after " snia la T (teasSa Pre, 4. f If YOl' ! .tK.f. jiMl lt Usik lo-"J est rr " A4 utr, hint ftttf ftrWft l turt t'fl Rome. Nov. 6. (Ty A. P.r Fas clsi and nationalists clashed today at Tarunto, in southern Italy, over ques tions of local ijitc. In the tight which ensued, seven were kilted and ! ......... . u,- wtioclc.t casM.ilti-s tielng suffered by both sides. fount r'toricu, I ' 1 Kit 11 uiiilSHiaiIor to Kranre was the objwt of a hostile ilenioiitr.tiion by fniu lstl when he ar rived at Iti!si-ni, in the province of Turin, on the lisllnn frontier, while returning to Home for a conference wp.h the new premier Mustinl. The fuwiati Uvtsclied the larilag in which th count riding from ths train but rarut'iner ruhl In and retrunt tin. Battle Practice to Start in February Old Dread nought Iowa to Be Used for Target Washington, Nov. 6. The Atlantic and Pacific fleets will combine for Joint battle maneuvers In the Pacific next February, Admiral R. E. Coontz, chief of r.aval operations, announced today. Plans for the maneuvers now be ing worked out by Admiral P. Jones, commander-in-chief of the Atlantic fleet, who will command the Joint Friends to Honor Woodrow Wilson Program Arranged for Armi stice Day Former Ambas sador to Speuk. Washingon, Nov. C Friends and admirers of former President Wood- row Wilson are planning to remember him again on Armistice day. An nouncement was made yesterday by Mrs. Kate Trenholm Abraham.who was In charge of the Armistice day demon stration for the former president hint year, that a short program is being arranged to start at 3 next Saturday afternoon. Admirers and well wishers of Mr. Wilson will Join the committee in making a pilgrimage to his home on S street that afternoon. The Hon. Henry Morgenthau of Plans Launched for World Court of Arbitration fleptfl In flielr nnerntl.ina mnlninhir I. - : , ' ; " -cw lorn, rormer L'nlteu states am- basing on Panama. The battleship ,)USuor to Turkey, has accepted the Iowa, which will ha controlled l.y 'invitation to address Mr. Wilson on , .7. . im.o o- behalf of the visitors. hiiu win ue nsea ns a target lor tne 14-lneh guns of the dreadnoughts. Whether the. canal fortifications will participate in the maneuvers has not yet been determined. Orders have been Isued to Admiral Jones to proceed with the Atlantic fleet on January S for Guatitanamo for torepdo and ship drills, and on February 13 the fleet will leave for Panama to effect a rendezvous with the raclflc fleet, under the command of Admiral E. W. KUrle. The maneuvers and tactical exer clxcs will continue until March 30, when the Pacific fleet will proceed to California kmi and the Atlantic fleet to Cuantamimo for target prac tice. The vessel of the Atlantic fleet will arrive at their homo p"''" April In the .arch for the bma. whose International Chamber of Commerce Perfects Scheme to Settle Commercial Disputes. Washington, Nov. G. Plans have been perfected by the International Chamber of Commerce, the Ameri can section of which has headquar ters In Washington, for the establish ment of a new International court of arbitration for the settlement and ad justment of commercial disputes be tween different countries. The new tribunal is the result of several years study of the problem ot international commercial arbitra tion and will be Independont of all agencies established by governments. The administration of the court will be directed from the headquarters of tho International chambers at Paris. Twenty-seven nations beside the United UtalM h.III - - S . ...... rf , iiaiii? Riuiipn I'l ivyiv ..inUHun , . . a iuL,,e ouaiiiri-B IU ncr.i Oil the court. Owen r. Toting, chairman of the board of the General Klectrlc company, has agreed to Serve as chairman of the American group on the new court. The other members will l Newton D. liiMKirtdiit Clue I Found in Poison Cake Mystery f l" PMU.leil.hu. S.- i- !. d Tkrphl.e f.-n Unhusked Com Crop Damaged by High Wind Des Moines. Nov. G. While no of ficial reports have Wen received, Charles 1 Reed, director of the Iowa weather ctop service. In of the opinion that the high winds which swept Iowa jwcm.v ciiuneii coiinni-ianie nam- ; 1 -i, ..-,-.,.....,,......, age to the unhue.l corn crop of the ;t ,'., T, ,,, f , 'h ' nilnnl company, New Vork; II. Cloud win Pbeet, president of the People's ' National bank of Charleston, 8. C; I President Henry M. Robinson of the lllist National hank, I Angeles; sFredeil.k H. Hnyder, president of the ! lioston Chamber of Commeive: Presl- t.l. ,,1 Tk V- l'll.., . l.-ii . - ..!..... . ... 1., k.ie ,.f tk- - . ..... t... 1.... "t ii-im m morior .0. , .............. r,...,v., ....... ...... ;ro rhl rarulan of the liy lauit, wivn m, i.i.p i,i ..'anil j ini'. destroyer and Sir iidnucs will aid " ' I .M,ir!lIUO II, MIV, B - l.l'Ol lK i from wl-l.lv "rti!,.t mi hum of the county ueliiv ttidi. ete tlotl fimn on I.Mlf to two thuds ft the corn ; blown d.. by a (l Niindav. fit It- J lug Will I i1r.ie.t. Wild ilulloilt li ny re-oill fioltt tutm ll.".ll.IMk" en Wet itutiitd tr N-tng tiuttsid to state. The wind was enpeciully severe In the weitern part of the state. It reached u velocity of 41 miles an hour In Ivs Moines ami vicinity. A number "f windows were broken by the wind and a -oro of trees werti blown down. Mr. Reed says that not much more the dreadnoughts The maiiruveiv ill 1 ni idio t--d liesrlv iisibe under a. u.sl battle toiiiliiKuit. Beatrice Wholesaler Hurt; Autoist Held iciernauoniti lienemi r.im-lrlc com pany, and llirris and M. J. H.mder. msnHger of the Imerustlonal Mercan tile Marine. Nrw (i leans Hed Cro Call Fndorsed. Fiflj-five of Miiieis Caught ill PeniiHj I v a 1 1 i a Pit IJiiac counted for; 14 Taken to Hohpitalii Others Believed Alive Kpangli.1', Pa., Nov. . (I'v A. P V Fifty live of the 111 miners who went down Into the Iti-llly mine of the Kellly Con I rompnny here this morn ing, it few minutes before the woi Ic ings were (urn by an explosion, were unaccounted for whin th rescue crews came up the shaft at 6 tonluht. Twenty-five, IIimv wiM, probably had been killed find 14 had been taken to it hospital. Hope that, some of the jolting nu n were still alive was rellectod In re ports which came to the surface that a brattice had been built of old tim bers ,y the miners iifler the explosion cut off a part of No. 8 heading to the left of the main entry. "I-ook behind this wall" had been burned In a smooth place on timber by an acetylene lamp. Knowing that experienced miners would take every means to help their rescuers, this startling Sentence was taken to mean that the men were still nlive. Fear Poison (as. But no attempt was made to tear down the brattice for the main en tiles were filled with gus and I nlted States bureau of mine engineers feared that such a course would send the deadly poison where tho men, al ready weakened by hours of anxiety nod unprecedented by oxygen helmets, were bidden. It will take a short time to have the entries cleared of gas, and then, they suid, the brattice would be de mollnhed. They determined upon this course after one of their canary birds, taken with them from Pittsburgh, had died in the foul air. At another point in the mine a heavy fall of slate had completely clogged tho entry. Back of it, res. cuers declared, they could hear voices and they were hopeful that they would II nd some of the entombed men alive, although they received no an swer to repeated calls. - Rescuers Making Progress. Rescue forces were made up of skilled miners from Spangler and vicinity In charge of engineers from tho United States bureau of mine and the mine rescue crew of tho Cam bria Steel company, which arrived here early this afternoon. They worked unceasingly In short relays, hrattlcing the workings so as to con trol the gns and admit the pure air from above. They gave no Intimation as to when the work would be com pleted, but each relay, ns It came to the surface, said they were making progress. Other volunteers gathered the dead and injured which wire scattered In -tho working not far from the foot of the shaft. The dead were placed In a subterranean room and the injured, swathed in blankets, were taken to the surface. There a first aid station had' been established by Kpangler physicians and the American Red Cross. Dig Crowd (.atlnis. The crowd which assembled almost immediately after the explosion, con tinued to grow until at nightfall al most the entire population of Kpnngh-r and of the surrounding mining vil lages hail assembled. The drizzling rain which fell throughout the day had no effect upon the crowd, which Included the wive and children of many of the ntoinhed miners. Kmno of them wept, but others stood In stolid sll.-iioe, closely watching the cage each t!m It cni UP the shaft and orcasloimlly think ing they recognized th outlines of a familiar form. They wero so fur away, however, and the hodn-s wei so carefully covered that recognition was impossible. MiukIIiik I" tbeirowd were the mint Ixtci from all the i hurcln-s of Hpaii gler and number from nearby towns. Cont.picu.ms wets two Roman Cathoho prist, Father Janus Paubh I furs ta Too. I'nluNi Monument to Missouri Dead in War Dedicated Cheppy. Fi.iiiv , .Nov. illy A P I A ii.oiiuiii i,t to roiiitu mor.ite tt.e ol.lK t of tlit it i f ,Mihurt wim fell lIlltlMK !( M" rid r ite.i,- tlnc'lii. Nov - iHi, Ul 1 - Tl.s ( r.lv.v e..iiiin..N.a has rit.t t NmtVlk, V. V"'- t i-t Ihs N,.l.w..wi i.l j T!li IIimv .-hh'k, l. o IlilNlSr Whfiref H Will l'"r .liil. ri..l.ir in lira.ri.-, !r,l tu inimuUllt W .Ulid 14 ' . 'I. . .... ... ... .. Ik lcn .isl t mlf, sow wtih.iut .lul.eii for 1 i 11 li.s f. I h i its . I l Id Imi lti Tt tf-.. I ! gns All l. u.s u n s'-m.u is fc- I i b :i M0; . ..is I (i. tlt IHis "1 it4 tK ..ii,us fe.tr, ! r ... iit im -li tf! n. i Ilr tltiUnl Kit I . ...' i I tl .i ) L. f'f i t it the ini-ruH ta t mki allowed tu ' " ' "i"i"l u m. l.n It rdr t'l lt l4'uMi. i tett Tell, n s'is lilo g mImnmb linniiiir Hivn ti ft 4", Tt t In tity hl ca.t i'h lo .! f-.-r ri.nii I ist liidiim.lis, Nov. 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