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W E A T H E R r\IB »*» rOOLaOl TOtlU; TO MOB aoB » U6l BSO»6BaUTR VTaBal XM» HOuXaatWaVn niM'V Tiill Ra|""« bb r»aa 8. Vatata^ F;rcr fn J , ^$M. '*%£> ftrttmiu CIRCULAT10N Over 100,000 r>»iiy a\et Paid. Non-Returnable First1 to Last . the Truth: News . Editorials - Advertisements Voi- l.WVI No. 25,500. .'(.paricht 19l«. Tha Tribune Aaa'nl SATURDAY* SOTTEMBER 9, L916. * . ? In Naw Vork ( Ity. Newark. AVii a~»l",Vrr In >?» ¦«.* < Hy. Nawa ( ).> 1*4 l l'-y 1 Jaraar Cllv anil Hoh«k Shonts Moves to Crush Surface Strike RUSSIANS OPEN WIDE ASSAULT ON BULGARS Battlc on Front of 70 Miles in the Dobrudja. RUMANIANS DRIVE ON IN HUNGARY WinGripon Foe's Second Linc by Seizing Orsova. TV'' r- * -Russian troops. B the Dobrudja, Bolgara oa the front fi a Danvbc to the tanCl of peventy hting tVrcaly to . i the invader. read I y Aua- " advancad in ier von Mark- :-. on the Btriking along haa eapturad rler, .jik, Kavarra ar.d Kali Akra. in southernmost :ja. the back, waiting thia ter- ...-..'. r .roopa -,h now, and a s-- gun, If the iua they arill l>e- ." Bulparia fmm Rutnani.ini ontinue Hrhe. Rumanlana are thfl thru«t in admita a tiona weat of northern part i coiieedaa a, on the ron Gate. | rces are now nitl B the Tran- Thia . i Horaaaanatadt --. .... Ru- .-- H Hungary. the | . 'uhe, Press laatrlaB ( ampaittn. -,y is deterrr ;jar Insraaio n aritb The thi Danuba a (r»>neral8 " i k a u striai ,:-.r. Inereaaiag bi furtl ei ee» .pera* laalaai la the tetm tl of thi fall of Tirtoki r '.¦" ona rted br Bulr.Hr eaa Teaaparary. made for IC thi "Hpa. ritiaa ii maniana r>int is hutir. «*'..¦¦ ¦ ?.'-" aralai »- d ZV**** '' I patrol pjaji... iii.i- ,'i.r* )n force Day's Offiuai Reporta °n Kalkan Opcrations .'. H .Th* foUounna '¦¦>. > .,/ yeatarday'a oporo- "* >* tha Ball rmi u aa iaaaaad te V ...I on ;.i'i- ui «4tM'i' ' ra.-!' <ir, r, ,r nZr fr'-' l i eneaai ihi ad tha ^" .* K-.j././a during tha night. ¦adpT ^.^aaaaa, l«a* 1. aalaaaa I Lebaudy, "Emperor" of Dreams and Desert, Dodges $135,000 Released from Asylum, He Vanishes, VC hile Unclaimed Money, Won Back. from Carnegie Trust Company, Worries Supt. Richards, Judge and Attorneys. If any or.e knowa where his majes'y Jarqurs I.ebaudy, erstwhile "Emperor of the Sahara" anrl still more recently » potentate iri tha Kings I'ark Asylum, ;s holding court, he ahould inform Kupene I.omb Kichnrds. State Superin- tendent of Hanks. It lins brromc the auperintendent'a duty to delivcr to the former monnrch of the desert 135,189 good, aound. American dollara. But a complication has arisen. His majesty haa declincd to accept under any circumatances, tho 613 f>, 1S 9 Mr. Richarda ia holding for him. And ao it comes about that Wilbert Ward, an attornay from the offieea of Carmody, Kellogg «fc Gormley, who repreaent Mr. Richarda, has been compelled to appeal to Juatice Finch, in the Supreme Court, for "relief." His majesty wnn't have the money; Juatice Shearn has decreed that It ahall be paid to him from the funds of the defunct Carnegie Trust Company, which are now in the banking auper¬ intendent'a hands; and. fmally, the em¬ peror hns moved his court to parts un- known. so that a process scrver eaai even slip out under the cover of dark- Boaaaadlaavatho6135,169 on Jacquc^'s dooratep. Juatice Finch ia expected to hand down a deciaion to-day or to rr...rrow, directing what Fhall be done with the royal revenue. Builda Hia hingdom on l.and. The story of the unwelcorr.e little fortune begina fifteen years ago, when STORM SWEEPS CITY; 4 KILLED Two Boys Are Struck by Lightning. Baby and Man Drowned. Aprointing itaelf rescuer extraordi r.ary to a fclty simmering in a P" dcprer temperature yesterday afternoon, an amhitioua thunderatorm roked its head up out of thr- northwasl ahortljr beforc, 3 o'clock. Then, accompnrned by a -Mle-an-hour wind, it ruahed to relieve^he heat-beleaKuered town. It flooded streeta, it drenched thoa- sands, it deaf-ned persona with thun- der, It killad two with lightninc. it backed sawera into the houses. and b'.cw down trees, ahattered church Bplraa, drowned two. a man ar.d a baby girl. on SUtOB Island. and nearl/ buried E. H. Fothern in the ru.ns of a movie castle at Flathuah. Bat in three min- OtOS II drove the mercury down fron ItS haujrhty seat at 90 to a lowly 77, where ..¦red until the thunder anol the I ng disappoarad in the gencra! Storm ( nrtifs Suddenly. One minute New York waa mopplag its face and rursinj? a September hot «pell. The next there was a sudden puff of wind and a few dropa of ram. In the minute iBMBedlately following approxlnately flro bbIIIIob paraoaa wara ardantly seekir.ff shelter or daahlag aboat apartataata shutting wladowB. Jht. ram cnm» from ai! dlrootlpn* rtatly, a few hundred acre = of 'he Atlantic Ocaaa had baoa plehad »P aad throWB at r'ather Krnrkerbockcr. DrivOB by the lash of the wind, the ... througb the straeta ia grtBt ssBohallha elouda. Poaplo woro ofl their foot by tha foreooftho gala, aad arara saakad 11 taa aklB, or. ob* side by the shallaw rWai whleb b«d M( baoa a Bidewalk, on thr by the Bolld layai ol water which spillad aal r.f the sky. - i eaaa, lashaga ri4n* Bn,i nnv t|M that was aot rivatad faat Bf dowa "¦" .'"«-" Aa . track waa llftod and taraod . ..,. eorner of Flftiaah Streol mtB Avenue. and than buried tth BBBio Beoaory which bad be< n Bg st tha iaai ol tha Wmter (,ar l.iahtnlng KilU T»o. ,, tha lightaiBg wai dolBg ,.s r,e.« '..r-.o',s Naw Torkara kapl Ihatl f.r.if ra in their eara and thooght I the eawparatlv* paaea al Vardaa, Bdward Wayaasrfli ol 761 Eaat I66tli wai drlviag hia aaioaiobila aloag Twalfth Avobuo, r,«-ar 160th ..., arhoa al ..<!< r «. ;,'>.<¦. BapBTOBtlf from tha ighl ha wai Burl Ati Bmbalanea froB Ki ekerboeker Hoapita! ram* aad e ? ';¦*',< Tt flil Ii 1 eould ba d eo**rod, h* had riot boon red r <t ir b<ij-\ wara playlng Indian in a .. ¦¦ vaeanl IcH In Long Island City whaa ihi .' "r brok* rhey wara | M lieri a gB/OBl rrn«h n Polieemea who saa uoorge tial ren, ol 112 AaadosBy Btreet, i, ii.- i iinvaa nastenod to 'oa wtawaai »rni foaad th* doad bodiei of I.eo jaai lla. '"i, of 106 A'»d '... rt BBd Will,am McKibbltt, Iwalva, <,1 601 Urahani Avenue Jinic Maaiy, nine yeera old. who war. BtBBBOd, (.ylluotd aa iaa«* *. ealoana 8 .Jaeojaea Lebaudy inherited several mil- lion dollara from hi» father. Max Le¬ baudy, who was known as the "Sugar K:n>; of France." Ilavmg lots of money but no title. .lai-ques (iccided to ex- chanpe a portion of his wealth for r.o b.iity that was worth wblle. So with 800 followera, he cct out to found an i mpire in the henrt of the Sahara. He and his eolnnists reached their daatination In 190n, and Lebaudy immo- diately erowned himself emperor. He made his valet a count, his pardener a baron. and his stable boy a knipht. At the end of aeven montha he left his kingdom to ahift for itself, and re- turncd to Taris. France was forced to aend an expedl- tion into the desert to rescue the Fm- peror's stranded subjerts counts, barona, kmphts, et al. and the action of the ropublio in breakinsr ap his kinjr- dom so angered his majrsty that he de cided to leave Frnneo forever. Accordintrly he rame to Amer'.ca, and placed in the handa of the Carnegie Trust Company the power to dispose of his vast propi-rties In Kurope. His royal proclamatioa eonfering the power of attorney on the trust eompnny bore .he Ictterhead of the Enapire of Sahara. The writer. in true royal style. referred alwaya to himself as "we," and couched leerec in terms that would have dignifled a pmclamation issued by XIV. The property to be disposrd of, L.a- 1 ..nllnii'd »n pagr S. rolnmn S SHE TYPED HER OWN MARRIAGE CONTRACT Misg Pauline Cahn Tonk Shnrt Cut to Matrimnny. Mi3s Paurine ''nhn, of 202 Rlveralde T'rive, remembered the example iet hor by her fri<-nd and eoHaojeiato, Mi?s Frieda Klrebway, and eeonomir.ed on the eerenaony which made her tho wife of Arthur S. I.evy. of M Wea1 Ninety-third Street, by dlapeaaing with the Berrieea of either minister or justire of the peace. Tho eeremony was purely conper- Mr. Levy, who ia a lawyer, iat down and dictated a contract. Miss Cahn poundod it out on a typewriter 'Then they hummed "Lnhengrin" all the way downtown on the euhway, nnd gnad the document before Justice I.ehman of tho Supreme (ourt. Only yesterday was thr contra.t ' lad in the Supreme Court Mr. and Mra. I.evy have roturned from their wedding trip ar.d are living at 41J West Twentleth Street ONE KILLED AS CAR HITS FENCE TO SAVE WOMEN Truck Driver's Companion Dis- regarded Order to Jump. Georga Buah waa drlring a alx-ten .ruck, loaded with beei ta*** and empty bottlea, throu-,'h Houglaston, aaterday as :he storm approaehad. Beaida him was Michael Jaekleta, a fellew employe. H 1-. was eominfj down Pouirlaston Hill, a steep do<-corit. when, as he rr-ached the middle of the slope, a BOTen-paaaenger tourmg car filled with womrn atarted np the hill. The truck veered, akidded and headed itraighl for tho r-ir Ti. BBYC tho womea Buah turned aharply to the riKht and drove the into a fenee, which gava way, the trunk alld down an en . a meadow, where it toppled over on us aide. Jackletz, who refuued to heed Buah « ng to jump, waa thrown out the truck ernahed hia body. Ha wai doa.l when Hush tried to eatrieati Buah, who livea al 118 Ea I Fifticth t, was unabla to tell where .''"'*- letl livi-d and the police could DO Idre a. 'I i... touring car did nol atap. DUTCH SHOOT DOWN GERMAN MONOPLANE Aviator Wllgtd While Hyinn Over Holland. Ami-trrilarn. Bapt 8. Aoi-ording tfl the "M;.< tl ehl Icb Nnuvellos," a Ger man monoplane, after being hit in th<- ¦riasja aad petrol tanh l>y butlota Brod by Duteh aoldiera whlle flying over putch territory, landed in the Putrh -. illage of I!"'" trrm. ..-. ui'i.r, who wa anlniureu, waa .. ei with hia maehine. The newa itot probably loal -. .-, re< onnai an *«.. DANES FAIL TO BREAK U. S. TREATY DEADLOCK Sale of Islands Uncertain as Coalition l.ffort Is Hlocked. 1 epenhagon, Bapt, I 1 ho now ,'¦ forte toward soivir.g tha ejaaatlea af tha aale of thr Daaiah Weat Indiea t" tbe United Statei by th<- foranatlea af ., oalitlon ' abinal failed to nighl n.o eollapee ol tha lataal atteiapt to in agreemenl waa brought aboul 1,., ti,,. demand of tha Radleal party that the goneral aleetiona be peetponed 111.til May. 181 Tho l.eft and 1 011 servalive partiea were ready to post- pona thi alaetioaa aatU the dose of tha war.'i BRITAIN FEARS FRICTION OVER THE BLACKLIST Reply Expected Soon WillRefuseto Yield Any Point U. S. TO RENEW CENSOR PROTEST Full Text of Lloyd George's Speech Stirs Washington Officials. My ARTIIIR S. DRAPER. I.ondon, Sept. «.. -Britain's raply ta the American protcst againat the black- list will be rendj soon. I can state definitely that the government has not altered its view and ia not likely to, despita the retallatory BBaaaaraa adopted by the American A'ongrcss. i.ord Robert Cocll, sfiaister of War Trade. said to-day that an effort to en- force the Thomas amendmant, givmg tha I'resident power to refuse clearance to vesscl« which discritninate against American firms, might lead to friction between the I'nited States and Britain. "If, because of |ts power we, yield to *he I'nited States." said I.ord Kobert, "»e must ncce«saniy yield to gmaller neutrala who hava not your strength. Ihe black lists are a war measure not to injure neutrala, but to protect our- selves. We are trying to cripple Cer- many AnaBclaUy, though it is diflieult to say just how much efTect the hlack- havintr, but certainly marks are faiiing. dbviously, in a war of this mairr.itude. -st n"'i" . oir<- inconvenience, but we are anxious to Itisstn this as much aa possible. No Deaire to Hurt l S. "l>en if we could, it would be poor policy if we tried even to cripple or injure American trade. Our rommer- cial interests are too closely bmind up, nnd any injury to America would re- act on u«." He aeemed to think that America had confused the b'ackliat and the Paris conference rreommendations aa one war measure, where as tha latter is primarily Intended to meet (Jerman po- 'itical and rommcrcial activities after the war and also to bring about eco- nomic rOCOBStntCtion among the Allies nt the close of hostilitiea. Trade War Not Soughl. "There is no politidafl in this coun¬ try," I.ord Robert addcd, "who wants a .rade war with America. I.egitimate eonpctitlofl another question. r'«>r a time our interests ar8 centred on winning the war, and we certainly ara not considering methods to injure the country with whom our trade relations are so eloaa, I will aay that the re- stnction on the imtmrtation of Ameri¬ can tobacco wai due solely to lack of space in tranaatlartie steamers, the to¬ bacco making way for neceasary food commodities. The same rulings hold for motors, ira, etc 11 munt be re- membered that Creat Hntain is at a ¦erioui stag" of th* war. where inter- national relations are guided not by philonthropy or frloadly feelinga. The general feeling here is that we want to ba friendly. but we cannot weaken our chances through past friendships." Britain Guards Against Any Unjust Blacklist I.ondon. Sept. K. Lord Robert Cecil drclined to-day to enter into the de- tails of the rontents of the reply to the I'nited States on the blacklist beyond the Rtatement that '.he principle em- died in British legislation forbidding tiadinK with an ei.emy country is un- |,kely to bo aurreiid'red in any meaa- lt was pomted out to I.ord Robert that the belief piWl elled that consign- of BnBi tradiBC arlth blach- liated firms might !..¦ refaaed ihtpnoat from American to othi" rieutral ports through tho fear of not getting coal. I ord Raborl replied: .. Ih i~ fOBI r- ungrounded, we l nntlniiril <in rm*e .1, cohimn : WILSON DODGES ON FEDERAL SUFFRAGE Tells Women at Atlantic City Convention He.Fighta with Them, but Avoids Issue.Resolution to indorse Any Party Candidate Is \ oted Down. ITrom a S'afT 0am*B*O8aai of TT.a Trr-ur.a ] Atlantic City, Sept. 6. "I have not, eome to ask you to be paticnt, but to, congratulate you on the fact that there is a force behind you that wtll beyond any peradventure be triumphant and for which you can afford a littla while to wait." That waa the waid ProsldOBl Wilaon brought to-night to the i'.OO eager dele- gates to the National American Woman Suffrage Association convention which awaitad his declBration on the Anthony amen.lment. Skilfully dodging the Is- aue, as he always has Ir. the past, the PrasldaBt daclined to follow Mr. Hughes's lead in making suffrage a na¬ tional laaue. "I get a little impatient aomeMmes," the Preaident declared, in what many in tha audienre thought his only refer- ence to the national amendment, "about the discaastoa al the ehaaBolfl and methods by which suffrage is to pre- vail." Women Are ni«appointed. But for what every woman in the vast audience that filled the New Nixon ThOBtra ta overflowsng had eome to hear the President had only disappoint- ment. He ihowed and explair.ed his full sympathy with the auffrage cause. He told the women that it "not only had eome to stay, but had eome with concjuering power." Its triumphs, he de¬ clared, was as cerfnin as the rising of the tide to meet the moor. Yet he de- clined to aid it in tha only way, the women believe, it is pos.-ible to mskn victory romplete. "We feal the tide," declared the Pre«- idenL "We rejoice in the strength of GERMAN COURT FREES SKIPPER FACING DEATH Condei.med by Court Martial After Capture by U-Boat. I Amaterdam, Sept. 6. The "Haagaehe 'Courant" printa an intcrview with Skipper Taal, of the trawlcf (iertruida, which was aunk by a Cerman aub- martne. The Bhlppar was taken on board the submarine and carrted to Garsaaay, where, the iatanriew aays, he was rondemned to dcath by a court martial nn the charge of having B gun aboard his vessel and al having at- tempted to ram the submarine. On an appeal the skipper was pro- nounced not guilty._^ ENGLAND MAY BAR SINGERS AND ACTORS Door Closing to All Exccpt Munition Workers. I.ondon, Sept. R. "The Official l.az- ett," to-day prints an amendment to the order in eoBBCtl governing the re- tioB8 imposed upon aliens by Which, after October 1. the written sanct.on and approval of the Board of Trade must be obtained for the ad- mias.on to the Cnited K.ngdom of any al.en who works la any other capacity than munitions work. A rigid application of this order, some offieials say. apparently would ex- clude from the I'nited Kmgdom foreign actora, aingei-a. musiciana and all othera who do not eome to work in munitions factoriea._ PUGILIST SAYS WOMAN GAVE HIM BLACK EYE Has Sister-in-Law Held for Grand Jury. After waiting for a black eye to fade i harles BodOB, an iai truetor m box- ing. made a complaint yei.terday in the <MCond Criminal Court of Jersey I ity nrainst his brother's wife, *«. Agn.s Fo.ian. of llf Paliaado Avenue. Joraay dty. She punched h.m, he says. while they were <b*cending in a Chancry Corl el.vator on August 31. fallowing a hearmg kfl Which Mrs. BadBB had de- manded more alimony. Mra. Roden said she had overheard a r.mark that she WB8 no lady and Ihought it was made by n.-r brother-.n- !.w She waived exumination and was held for the grand jury._ / Ibove the Lines .Vroplanin* ahovr the German linrs vvith an omcer of thr French Flying Corpa would he. undouhtrdly ,n- Irrrnt.n* bot doubtfully plrasurablr. lt more rnjoy- f to\*A thr effecl w,thoul th. dangrr-and ihat you i ,-an do to-morrow. Thrrr pnge- of rrmarkablr arrial pjcturra are in Thr Tribune Craphu. Thry arr ,n Thr Frihune. Graphic , telUoively. 7r.ey arr onr of thr many things that makr . worlh your whilr to rraerve your copy in advancr. Ik Shc ^unoajj 2Tribunc Plrui to lA*st.the Trulh: Sewa-l:dltorlaJ».Adrertlaement%. Mnnb#r <* Bai aVBBl nnr»4.i <~r ao-'il»»l«'« A it; we ll a!l not iii.arr.-i ia the long run as I the method of it." As when BSOBthfl before 'hese suffra/e icaders hu.l viaited the I're-i- dent at the White HoiMC, and he h.ui *o'i| thci he eoald noi go farther than his part would go, 10 n ml a:*a:r'. to;,j them ?o-r. ight. "The whole art and practico of gov¬ ernment ronailta," he declared, "noi in moving individuals, but in moving masse*. It is a'.l very well to run ahead and be cnlm, but, after aK, you have got to wait for the body to follow." PreniHent Is Impressod. The President himself had showed how deeply he was impressed with the audience of earnest fared women who listened to hia word-t. He d iclared thal he "fe!t th* wholeaoB** eoataajtaa of the orcasion," that he would b. "otflit t ng a <!u;>" if be di<l not aay some of the things that had been in his thoogfata. Then he outlmed how the whole conccption of govrr.m»r r bad rhanged sinee the founding of the Re- public. He spoke of the "legaiistio" state of Washington an<l HamlltOB, and char- arteri/.ed that period as "lawyers' his- tory." With lha War and the forcea that brought it about, he de¬ clared, a new foreo, a moral force, had BBtcred American OolltlCB. "Is it not signitieant," the President asked, "rhat it wa« then, and then for the first time, that women becamu prominent in poli'ies in America?" If -ha Preaidaat hal expected any (..iiiiiiu.il on |m«a -i. niliiinn 8 BAKERS PLAN FOR TEN-CENT BREAD National Body Recom- mends Abandonment of Nickel Loaf. Chieago, ^^o*. 6. Rscommendations to all bakers of the Uflltod Stataa that; the fuc-cent loaf of bread be aban- doned and the 10-ccnt loaf itaadard led were made after discussion at the cios- ing session of tha executive committee ol th* National Aaaoclatloa of llaater Bakers to-day. They urged that tho rerommenda- ttona bc put into effoet iBimodlataly. Beonomic wasto incident to the mi.nu- faetur* ol tha flvo-COBt loaf avbs em- phaaised as a reason for if- dUcontinu- arro. Sariag 4n raanafaeture, improre- mi nt la qaalitjr BBd itandardization ar.' Urgad in favor of the 10-COBt loaf. It ia also recommended that where local conditions rnak" it BCCOSSary the srrnller loaf mav be maintained, with B nncc consistent with the cost of manufactura. The bakers rited the following per- centages of increase m cost of in- grciients in the manufacture of bread withm the laat two years: Patent flour, 100 per cent; rye, 124 per cent; sugar, r,8 per i.ent, shortening, 60 per cent; milk, 46 per cent; aalt, 14 per cent; wrapping paper, To per cent. DoliTOry costs also have increased, it was atatcd, through an advance of 106 per cent in gasolene and 86 per cent iti feeri for horses. The bakorS went on record strongly against r.ny attempt tO lowcr 'he rjual- ity of bread. The conference here was an out- growth of the bakers' national eOBTOB- tion at Si.it I-ake <'ity ae\eral months ago. at which informal resolutions »o the -am- effert were VOtOd. Alrendy the pric.! of bread has been adraBCed, 01 the ."> cent loaf abandoned, in sev¬ eral c.ties At mi' time there woro throata of a gosreraawat iBTaatlajBtiaa of a conceit- ed movi n.ent to IBcrOBM tho pricc. Baker* .'ttending the conference here taid thej had no fear of such action now. S. P. MeDonald, of Hemphis, praal- din» of rr,,. aaaociatioB, said he believed most of the bakers of the country would adopl the plan «ugge»'ed to-day. MISS BORDEN FINDS L0NG-S0UGHT HOME Oirl Who Fled Sanatorium Weds Chieago Lawyer. |l. IMaSf*SB i" V . Tt a I Laa Angeles. Sept x When Ktsa Ramona Borden. heiress to the Borden milhons, ran away from a New Jersey sanatorium two years BgO she gave as the reason for her flight that she waa looking for a home. "All 1 have :s money,'' she said. "A home is what I have always wanted and have BOTCr had." To-day the girl found a home. over which she Will rule with the title of Mr-. Cal* Parker. Mr. I'arkcr is n Chieago lawyer, and the son of a Wia- eoBsla mlllloBBira. The earaaioay was performed at the home of the girl's gTBBdparCBtS, Mr. and Mra. L B. Valk. of »Hf» Choetar Place. The couple will tour Soutbern Califorma by motor be¬ fore ret-irn.ng to Chieago. UNIOWS BEATEN ON TUBE ANDLSAYLR.T.HEADS Green Cars To Be Operated on Schedule Aiter I P. M. To»day, Shonts Orders. 2,000 RETURN TO LINES, !S CLAIM OF COMPANY Strikebreakers Ready To Take Place of Those Who Refuse Amnesty.7,850 Out, Union Declares. Tho strike on ihe subway and "L" haa been beaton to the satisfaction of tractibn officiala. Asserting it required no more attention from them, they last night turned to the surface road sittiation, with the order from President Shonts to "operate the road" after 1 p. m. to- day. Quoting Mr. Shonts again, tho subway and cle\ated trouble is "water over the dam." The men who struck lia\e been replaced for good, service is normal, those who walked out "tirt'd themselves" and that'i the end of it, if the Interborough people have their way. Men Must Keport To-day. Next on the programme is the reartoration of service on the New York Railwaya lines. At 1 oVlock this afternoon the amnesty extended to striking green car men expires. Those who forswear their union ;dl»>gianee may go back up to that hour. Then things will be jammed through in dead earnest in an effort to restore ?he badly crippled surface car service. HoweVer, William B. Fitzgerald, union organizer, declared himself satisfied with the progress of the strike. Recruiti had been gained from both the Interborough and the .New York Railwaya Company in the last twenty-four hours, he said. Among 1he :'.50.men who joined from the Interborough's force were many motormen and switchmen, he declared. lle esti- ,mated that the Interborough had lost 8350 men to the strikers !and the New York Railwaya Company 4.000. "I" TRAIN FIRED ON FROM TENEMENT ROOF Subway Plot Rumor. but Day Ends with Little Violence. Rumora of a plot to b!ow up the sub¬ way at 125th Street and I.enoa Avenue, which kcp' the police guarding the un- dergroand railway vigilant all day long, and a f*W iCBttered acts of v.olence were the only suggcstions of disorder raarking yesterday's progress of the car men's strike. One Elghty-alxth Btraat etaaatowB car was stoned. a light between loyal employOS of the In .'rhorough and itrikeri oecarred on the platform of the Weal Karms subway itaVtioa; MBSa red at a train drawiag into the Kiftieth Stree! itatlon ol the Nm'ii Avenae eleirated, aad some one else threw b BBtoko bomh on the tracks at ,:ne place later in the day. The shooting took place early .n the morning. As b south bound Ninth Ave- nae traiB drow into the Filtioth Street ¦, b revolver wai 6r*d four times r'roni the roof of a tcr.ement overlook- ing 'he tracks. Nona of «he ahots hit th* train, as far as could be deter- mineil. but there was much confusion ol passer.gers und guards swarmed off the rrain to get out of the line of the :.re as rapidly as possible. KILLsllIS GIRL WIFE AND TAKES OWN LIFE Brooklyn Barber Chief Actor in Double Tragedy. Thomas Adano, a deputy sheriff, wa« ataading before the teaaaBcat at T2l Boirum Street, Brooklyn, last night. when he heard BBgry roieaa, then twa Bhots, and then th- wailing of a baby. Drawiag hia rorolTOr, he ran upstairs and lurprieed Edward Kaaeuio, a barber, a* he was elimbiag out of his , ri windoW to a fire escape, a re¬ volver atill in OBe haad. Oa tha Boor bohiad Manc.no was the body ol hii wifo, R. soraatooByaara old. with a ballet hola ia her temple. idaBM eoTcrad the barber with r. s revolver and ordon di "Drop that gun:" A BOCOBd later Mannno's revolver elatl irad tO the fipor and his body red it. for with a ijuick motion he shot hlaisolf throagh the head. Tha deputy aheriff -. f far the police, and than tiiod to qaiot Michael, nineteen months old. whOB* father and mother had JJ^' heen taken from him. MRS. RUSSELL SAGE, 88, MAKES BIRTHDAY GIFTS Donates $40,000 -Syracuse Uni- versity Oets $15,000. Laurence. I. I. Bopt 6. Mra. Pus- sell Sage. who has given 166.006,000 to tharity, eelebratod her eighty-eighth birthday to-day m her hOBBa] at I.aw- rence Beach, by givin,' away ?4".. Although Mra. Sage is *aid to be in good health and exeolloat spirits. her phyaieiaa, Dr. J 'ari Schmuck. advisod :ecauic ol her advanccd age that no celebration be held. Accordiag tn dispatchoa from Syra¬ cuse. where Mrs. Sage was born in isj.i, Syracaa* Uatvoraity haa rocetvod. 115,000 from her and tive other institu- tions 16.000 each. Mrs Sage spent tha morning it. her flower garden. but the afternoon atorm coinpelled her to remain la the old- .aahionad h, use which was tee favonte raoldaaca al her late husbaud The Publie Service ('..mmission listened to witnes?es from both sides without paininj: much, aave ronfirma- tion in tlie belief that the brearh he- tween men and employrrs was a wide one and that each aiflVa was con- vir.ced the other was at fault. No Overturea Made to Mllrhel. Mayr Mivhel, nfter a COfaferCaatg with Chairman Straug of the Publie Service ('ommi^sion, and (orpora- tion Coanaal Hardy, de^la-ed that he would have no statement to make coneerning tho trouble until he had made a careful Btudy of tho situa- tion. No overtures had been made to him, he Faid. but he araa r<-ady to listen to either sido. Srrvires on most <>? the stroetrar lines where the atrike ia on ehowed imprmement yesterday. Tho in- i roa.=es rajlged fr'jrn m<>ro than 100 pei cer.t fttl the 116th Street lme, where se\en cars were running in- stead of three, to an ir.rrease of two over the thirteen cars that were run¬ ning <>n Twir.ty third Street on 1 hursday. I.lnea liadly Crlppled. Only the Thirty-fourth Street. Iine ehowed no improvement. But three cars were running there. In no rase were the lines running at 50 per eent of their eapacity. r'rank Hedley, peneral manager of »he Interborough and the green cara, ih in touch \v;th Jami-s T. Waddell, . trikebnakcr, and haa been aaaured atrikebreaker, in proper numbera will be on hand *n ghove into the bresch if ex iK'-r.c;es demand. Mr. Shonta do<>« not befleffle lt will be r.ore^sary to put strikebreakers into l-.owever. "Krom the ara| 'he old men are eom;ng back in n-sponse to our propo«:*:<.n." said he. "it appears that we will have enough of our own men to man f*n for operation Saturday afternoon. They are tumhhrg over one anothrr to get back in gincc our notice has been post- ed in the varioug burns. And even be¬ fore we aent out the notice men were aigning up right along." Old Men Keturn, Saya Shonla. Two thousand gre»n car men were rhui nijrnej up '..-' I | -. Mr Shonta dec!ar<-d. Not all surface men who went out are taken back. Marked trou¬ ble makers are being eliminated. Mr. Hedley is anxious to move thinga along awlftly w the surface figh* Mr. Shonts. admita. though. that the real teat on the green car lines will not come until Monday. After 2 o'clock on SaturtUy afternoont traffir is light. On Sundaya it is below normal. The trar- tion genern'« thea will have a day and a half to wrnp tning' into share meet Mon.lay mornir.g's d'.wntown naaaV Officiala Moie Hcadquartera. The Belmont Hotel emergenev of- fi.-es, from which the transit men dl- r.-cted their tMceaafal -ijrht on the subway nn.i "!.'' walk-out, were cloaed last night, and the officiala tnoved their heailijuartera haa; . id baggage ln the New \ork Kailwaya. Sarn at Fif-

New York Tribune.(New York, NY) 1916-09-09.chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1916-09-09/ed-1/seq-1.pdfU. S. TREATYDEADLOCK Sale of Islands Uncertain as Coalition l.ffort Is

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Page 1: New York Tribune.(New York, NY) 1916-09-09.chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1916-09-09/ed-1/seq-1.pdfU. S. TREATYDEADLOCK Sale of Islands Uncertain as Coalition l.ffort Is

WE ATHE Rr\IB »*» rOOLaOl TOtlU; TO MOB

aoB » U6l BSO»6BaUTR VTaBal

XM» HOuXaatWaVn niM'V

Tiill Ra|""« bb r»aa 8. Vatata^ F;rcr fn J ,

^$M.'*%£> ftrttmiu CIRCULAT10NOver 100,000 r>»iiy

a\et Paid. Non-Returnable

First1 to Last . the Truth: News . Editorials - Advertisements

Voi- l.WVI No. 25,500. .'(.paricht 19l«.Tha Tribune Aaa'nl SATURDAY* SOTTEMBER 9, L916. * . ? In Naw Vork ( Ity. Newark.AVii a~»l",Vrr In >?» ¦«.* < Hy. Nawa

( ).> 1*4 l l'-y 1 Jaraar Cllv anil Hoh«k

Shonts Moves to Crush Surface StrikeRUSSIANS OPENWIDE ASSAULTON BULGARS

Battlc on Front of 70Miles in theDobrudja.

RUMANIANS DRIVEON IN HUNGARY

WinGripon Foe's SecondLinc by Seizing

Orsova.

TV''r- * -Russian troops.

B the Dobrudja,Bolgara oa the

front fi a Danvbc to thetanCl of peventyhting tVrcaly to

. i the invader.read I y Aua-" advancad inier von Mark-

:-. on theBtriking alonghaa eapturad

rler,.jik, Kavarra

ar.d Kali Akra. in southernmost:ja.

theback, waiting

thia ter-...-..'.

r .roopa-,h now, and a

s-- gun, If theiua they arill l>e-

." Bulparia fmm

Rutnani.ini ontinue Hrhe.

Rumanlana are

thfl thru«t inadmita a

tiona weat ofnorthern part

i coiieedaaa, on the

ron Gate.| rces are now

nitl B the Tran-Thia

.

i Horaaaanatadt

--. ....

Ru-.--

HHungary.

the

| . 'uhe,

Press laatrlaB ( ampaittn.-,y is

deterrr ;jar Insraaion aritb

Thethi Danubaa (r»>neral8

"

i k a u striai,:-.r. Inereaaiagbi furtl ei ee»

.pera* laalaai la the

tetm tl of thi fall ofTirtoki

r

'.¦"

onarted br

Bulr.Hr eaa Teaaparary.made for

IC thi

"Hpa.

ritiaa ii

maniana

r>int is

hutir.«*'..¦¦¦?.'-" aralai »- d

ZV**** '' I patrolpjaji...iii.i-

,'i.r* )n

force

Day's Offiuai Reporta°n Kalkan Opcrations

.'. H .Th* foUounna'¦¦>. > .,/ yeatarday'a oporo-"* >* tha Ball rmi u aa iaaaaad teV

...I on;.i'i- ui

«4tM'i' ' ra.-!' <ir, r, ,r

nZr fr'-' l i eneaai ihi ad tha^" .* K-.j././a during tha night.¦adpT^.^aaaaa, l«a* 1. aalaaaa I

Lebaudy, "Emperor" of Dreamsand Desert, Dodges $135,000

Released from Asylum, He Vanishes, VC hile UnclaimedMoney, Won Back. from Carnegie Trust Company,

Worries Supt. Richards, Judge and Attorneys.

If any or.e knowa where his majes'yJarqurs I.ebaudy, erstwhile "Emperorof the Sahara" anrl still more recently» potentate iri tha Kings I'ark Asylum,;s holding court, he ahould informKupene I.omb Kichnrds. State Superin-tendent of Hanks. It lins brromc theauperintendent'a duty to delivcr to theformer monnrch of the desert 135,189good, aound. American dollara.

But a complication has arisen. Hismajesty haa declincd to accept underany circumatances, tho 613 f>, 1S 9 Mr.Richarda ia holding for him. And ao itcomes about that Wilbert Ward, an

attornay from the offieea of Carmody,Kellogg «fc Gormley, who repreaent Mr.Richarda, has been compelled to appealto Juatice Finch, in the Supreme Court,for "relief."

His majesty wnn't have the money;Juatice Shearn has decreed that It ahallbe paid to him from the funds of the

defunct Carnegie Trust Company,which are now in the banking auper¬intendent'a hands; and. fmally, the em¬

peror hns moved his court to parts un-

known. so that a process scrver eaaieven slip out under the cover of dark-Boaaaadlaavatho6135,169 on Jacquc^'sdooratep. Juatice Finch ia expected to

hand down a deciaion to-day or to

rr...rrow, directing what Fhall be done

with the royal revenue.

Builda Hia hingdom on l.and.

The story of the unwelcorr.e little

fortune begina fifteen years ago, when

STORM SWEEPSCITY; 4 KILLED

Two Boys Are Struck byLightning. Baby and

Man Drowned.

Aprointing itaelf rescuer extraordir.ary to a fclty simmering in a P" dcprertemperature yesterday afternoon, an

amhitioua thunderatorm roked its head

up out of thr- northwasl ahortljr beforc,3 o'clock. Then, accompnrned by a

-Mle-an-hour wind, it ruahed to

relieve^he heat-beleaKuered town.

It flooded streeta, it drenched thoa-sands, it deaf-ned persona with thun-

der, It killad two with lightninc. it

backed sawera into the houses. and b'.cw

down trees, ahattered church Bplraa,drowned two. a man ar.d a baby girl.on SUtOB Island. and nearl/ buried E.

H. Fothern in the ru.ns of a movie

castle at Flathuah. Bat in three min-

OtOS II drove the mercury down fron ItS

haujrhty seat at 90 to a lowly 77, where..¦red until the thunder anol the

I ng disappoarad in the gencra!

Storm ( nrtifs Suddenly.One minute New York waa mopplag

its face and rursinj? a September hot

«pell. The next there was a sudden

puff of wind and a few dropa of ram.

In the minute iBMBedlately followingapproxlnately flro bbIIIIob paraoaa wara

ardantly seekir.ff shelter or daahlagaboat apartataata shutting wladowB.Jht. ram cnm» from ai! dlrootlpn*

rtatly, a few hundred acre = of 'he

Atlantic Ocaaa had baoa plehad »P aadthroWB at r'ather Krnrkerbockcr.

DrivOB by the lash of the wind, the... througb the straeta ia

grtBt ssBohallha elouda. Poaplo woro

ofl their foot by tha foreoofthogala, aad arara saakad 11 taa aklB, or.

ob* side by the shallaw rWai whlebb«d M( baoa a Bidewalk, on thr

by the Bolld layai ol water whichspillad aal r.f the sky.

- i eaaa, lashaga ri4n* Bn,i nnv

t|M that was aot rivatad faatBf dowa "¦" .'"«-" Aa

. track waa llftod and taraod. ..,. eorner of Flftiaah StreolmtB Avenue. and than buried

tth BBBio Beoaory which bad be< n

Bg st tha iaai ol tha Wmter

(,arl.iahtnlng KilU T»o.

,, tha lightaiBg wai dolBg,.s r,e.« '..r-.o',s Naw Torkara kaplIhatl f.r.if ra in their eara and thooght

I the eawparatlv* paaea alVardaa,Bdward Wayaasrfli ol 761 Eaat I66tli

wai drlviag hia aaioaiobilaaloag Twalfth Avobuo, r,«-ar 160th..., arhoa al

..<!< r «. ;,'>.<¦. BapBTOBtlf from thaighl ha wai

Burl Ati BmbalaneafroB Ki ekerboeker Hoapita! ram* aad

e ? ';¦*',< Tt A» flil Ii 1

eould ba d eo**rod, h* had riot boonred

r <t ir b<ij-\ wara playlng Indian in a.. ¦¦ vaeanl IcH In Long Island Citywhaa ihi .' "r brok* rhey wara

| M lieri a gB/OBl rrn«hn Polieemea who saa uoorge tial

ren, ol 112 AaadosBy Btreet,.¦ i, ii.- i iinvaa nastenod

to 'oa wtawaai »rni foaad th* doadbodiei of I.eo jaai lla. '"i, of 106 A'»d

'... rt BBd Will,am McKibbltt,Iwalva, <,1 601 Urahani Avenue JinicMaaiy, nine yeera old. who war. BtBBBOd,

(.ylluotd aa iaa«* *. ealoana 8

.Jaeojaea Lebaudy inherited several mil-lion dollara from hi» father. Max Le¬baudy, who was known as the "SugarK:n>; of France." Ilavmg lots of moneybut no title. .lai-ques (iccided to ex-

chanpe a portion of his wealth for r.o

b.iity that was worth wblle. So with

800 followera, he cct out to found an

i mpire in the henrt of the Sahara.He and his eolnnists reached their

daatination In 190n, and Lebaudy immo-

diately erowned himself emperor. Hemade his valet a count, his pardener a

baron. and his stable boy a knipht. At

the end of aeven montha he left his

kingdom to ahift for itself, and re-

turncd to Taris.France was forced to aend an expedl-

tion into the desert to rescue the Fm-

peror's stranded subjerts counts,

barona, kmphts, et al. and the actionof the ropublio in breakinsr ap his kinjr-dom so angered his majrsty that he de

cided to leave Frnneo forever.Accordintrly he rame to Amer'.ca, and

placed in the handa of the CarnegieTrust Company the power to dispose ofhis vast propi-rties In Kurope. His

royal proclamatioa eonfering the powerof attorney on the trust eompnny bore.he Ictterhead of the Enapire of Sahara.The writer. in true royal style. referred

alwaya to himself as "we," and couchedleerec in terms that would have

dignifled a pmclamation issued byXIV.

The property to be disposrd of, L.a-

1 ..nllnii'd »n pagr S. rolnmn S

SHE TYPED HER OWNMARRIAGE CONTRACT

Misg Pauline Cahn Tonk ShnrtCut to Matrimnny.

Mi3s Paurine ''nhn, of 202 RlveraldeT'rive, remembered the example iet

hor by her fri<-nd and eoHaojeiato,Mi?s Frieda Klrebway, and eeonomir.edon the eerenaony which made her thowife of Arthur S. I.evy. of M Wea1

Ninety-third Street, by dlapeaaing withthe Berrieea of either minister or

justire of the peace.Tho eeremony was purely conper-

Mr. Levy, who ia a lawyer, iat

down and dictated a contract. MissCahn poundod it out on a typewriter

'Then they hummed "Lnhengrin" all the

way downtown on the euhway, nndgnad the document before Justice

I.ehman of tho Supreme (ourt.

Only yesterday was thr contra.t' lad in the Supreme Court Mr. andMra. I.evy have roturned from their

wedding trip ar.d are living at 41J

West Twentleth Street

ONE KILLED AS CAR HITSFENCE TO SAVE WOMEN

Truck Driver's Companion Dis-

regarded Order to Jump.Georga Buah waa drlring a alx-ten

.ruck, loaded with beei ta*** and

empty bottlea, throu-,'h Houglaston,aaterday as :he storm

approaehad. Beaida him was MichaelJaekleta, a fellew employe.

H 1-. was eominfj down PouirlastonHill, a steep do<-corit. when, as he

rr-ached the middle of the slope, a

BOTen-paaaenger tourmg car filled with

womrn atarted np the hill. The truckveered, akidded and headed itraighlfor tho r-ir

Ti. BBYC tho womea Buah turnedaharply to the riKht and drove the

into a fenee, which gava way,the trunk alld down an en. a meadow, where it toppled

over on us aide.Jackletz, who refuued to heed Buah «

ng to jump, waa thrown outthe truck ernahed hia body. Ha waidoa.l when Hush tried to eatrieatiBuah, who livea al 118 Ea I Fifticth

t, was unabla to tell where .''"'*-letl livi-d and the police could DO

Idre a.'I i... touring car did nol atap.

DUTCH SHOOT DOWNGERMAN MONOPLANE

Aviator Wllgtd While HyinnOver Holland.

Ami-trrilarn. Bapt 8. Aoi-ording tflthe "M;.< tl ehl Icb Nnuvellos," a German monoplane, after being hit in th<-

¦riasja aad petrol tanh l>y butlota Brodby Duteh aoldiera whlle flying overputch territory, landed in the Putrh-. illage of I!"'" trrm.

..-. ui'i.r, who wa anlniureu, waa.. ei with hia maehine. The newa

itot probably loal-. .-, re< onnai an *«..

DANES FAIL TO BREAKU. S. TREATY DEADLOCK

Sale of Islands Uncertain as

Coalition l.ffort Is Hlocked.1 epenhagon, Bapt, I 1 ho now ,'¦

forte toward soivir.g tha ejaaatlea aftha aale of thr Daaiah Weat Indiea t"

tbe United Statei by th<- foranatlea af., oalitlon ' abinal failed to nighl

n.o eollapee ol tha lataal atteiapt toin agreemenl waa brought aboul

1,., ti,,. demand of tha Radleal partythat the goneral aleetiona be peetponed111.til May. 181 Tho l.eft and 1 011

servalive partiea were ready to post-pona thi alaetioaa aatU the dose oftha war.'i

BRITAIN FEARSFRICTION OVERTHE BLACKLISTReply Expected SoonWillRefuseto Yield

Any Point

U. S. TO RENEWCENSOR PROTEST

Full Text of LloydGeorge's Speech StirsWashington Officials.

My ARTIIIR S. DRAPER.

I.ondon, Sept. «.. -Britain's raply tathe American protcst againat the black-list will be rendj soon. I can state

definitely that the government has not

altered its view and ia not likely to,despita the retallatory BBaaaaraa

adopted by the American A'ongrcss.i.ord Robert Cocll, sfiaister of War

Trade. said to-day that an effort to en-

force the Thomas amendmant, givmgtha I'resident power to refuse clearanceto vesscl« which discritninate againstAmerican firms, might lead to frictionbetween the I'nited States and Britain.

"If, because of |ts power we, yield to

*he I'nited States." said I.ord Kobert,"»e must ncce«saniy yield to gmallerneutrala who hava not your strength.Ihe black lists are a war measure notto injure neutrala, but to protect our-

selves. We are trying to cripple Cer-

many AnaBclaUy, though it is diflieultto say just how much efTect the hlack-

havintr, but certainly marks are

faiiing. dbviously, in a war of thismairr.itude. -st n"'i" . oir<-

inconvenience, but we are anxious toItisstn this as much aa possible.

No Deaire to Hurt l S.

"l>en if we could, it would be poorpolicy if we tried even to cripple or

injure American trade. Our rommer-

cial interests are too closely bmind up,

nnd any injury to America would re-

act on u«."He aeemed to think that America had

confused the b'ackliat and the Parisconference rreommendations aa one

war measure, where as tha latter is

primarily Intended to meet (Jerman po-'itical and rommcrcial activities afterthe war and also to bring about eco-

nomic rOCOBStntCtion among the Alliesnt the close of hostilitiea.

Trade War Not Soughl."There is no politidafl in this coun¬

try," I.ord Robert addcd, "who wants a

.rade war with America. I.egitimateeonpctitlofl i« another question. r'«>ra time our interests ar8 centred on

winning the war, and we certainly ara

not considering methods to injure thecountry with whom our trade relationsare so eloaa, I will aay that the re-

stnction on the imtmrtation of Ameri¬can tobacco wai due solely to lack ofspace in tranaatlartie steamers, the to¬

bacco making way for neceasary foodcommodities. The same rulings holdfor motors, ira, etc 11 munt be re-

membered that Creat Hntain is at a

¦erioui stag" of th* war. where inter-national relations are guided not byphilonthropy or frloadly feelinga. Thegeneral feeling here is that we want to

ba friendly. but we cannot weaken our

chances through past friendships."

Britain Guards AgainstAny Unjust Blacklist

I.ondon. Sept. K. Lord Robert Cecil

drclined to-day to enter into the de-tails of the rontents of the reply to theI'nited States on the blacklist beyondthe Rtatement that '.he principle em-

died in British legislation forbiddingtiadinK with an ei.emy country is un-

|,kely to bo aurreiid'red in any meaa-

lt was pomted out to I.ord Robertthat the belief piWl elled that consign-

of BnBi tradiBC arlth blach-liated firms might !..¦ refaaed ihtpnoatfrom American to othi" rieutral portsthrough tho fear of not getting coal.I ord Raborl replied:

.. Ih i~ fOBI r- ungrounded, a« we

l nntlniiril <in rm*e .1, cohimn :

WILSON DODGES ONFEDERAL SUFFRAGE

Tells Women at Atlantic City Convention He.Fighta withThem, but Avoids Issue.Resolution to indorse Any

Party Candidate Is \ oted Down.

ITrom a S'afT 0am*B*O8aai of TT.a Trr-ur.a ]Atlantic City, Sept. 6. "I have not,

eome to ask you to be paticnt, but to,

congratulate you on the fact that thereis a force behind you that wtll beyondany peradventure be triumphant andfor which you can afford a littla whileto wait."That waa the waid ProsldOBl Wilaon

brought to-night to the i'.OO eager dele-gates to the National American WomanSuffrage Association convention whichawaitad his declBration on the Anthonyamen.lment. Skilfully dodging the Is-aue, as he always has Ir. the past, thePrasldaBt daclined to follow Mr.Hughes's lead in making suffrage a na¬

tional laaue."I get a little impatient aomeMmes,"

the Preaident declared, in what manyin tha audienre thought his only refer-ence to the national amendment, "aboutthe discaastoa al the ehaaBolfl andmethods by which suffrage is to pre-vail."

Women Are ni«appointed.But for what every woman in the

vast audience that filled the New NixonThOBtra ta overflowsng had eome to

hear the President had only disappoint-ment. He ihowed and explair.ed hisfull sympathy with the auffrage cause.

He told the women that it "not onlyhad eome to stay, but had eome with

concjuering power." Its triumphs, he de¬clared, was as cerfnin as the rising ofthe tide to meet the moor. Yet he de-clined to aid it in tha only way, thewomen believe, it is pos.-ible to mskn

victory romplete."We feal the tide," declared the Pre«-

idenL "We rejoice in the strength of

GERMAN COURT FREESSKIPPER FACING DEATH

Condei.med by Court MartialAfter Capture by U-Boat.

I Amaterdam, Sept. 6. The "Haagaehe'Courant" printa an intcrview with

Skipper Taal, of the trawlcf (iertruida,which was aunk by a Cerman aub-martne. The Bhlppar was taken on

board the submarine and carrted to

Garsaaay, where, the iatanriew aays, he

was rondemned to dcath by a court

martial nn the charge of having B gun

aboard his vessel and al having at-

tempted to ram the submarine.On an appeal the skipper was pro-

nounced not guilty._^ENGLAND MAY BAR

SINGERS AND ACTORSDoor Closing to All Exccpt

Munition Workers.I.ondon, Sept. R. "The Official l.az-

ett," to-day prints an amendment to

the order in eoBBCtl governing the re-

tioB8 imposed upon aliens byWhich, after October 1. the written

sanct.on and approval of the Board of

Trade must be obtained for the ad-

mias.on to the Cnited K.ngdom of any

al.en who works la any other capacitythan munitions work.A rigid application of this order,

some offieials say. apparently would ex-

clude from the I'nited Kmgdom foreignactora, aingei-a. musiciana and all othera

who do not eome to work in munitions

factoriea._PUGILIST SAYS WOMAN

GAVE HIM BLACK EYE

Has Sister-in-Law Held forGrand Jury.

After waiting for a black eye to fade

i harles BodOB, an iai truetor m box-

ing. made a complaint yei.terday in the

<MCond Criminal Court of Jersey I itynrainst his brother's wife, *«. Agn.s

Fo.ian. of llf Paliaado Avenue. Joraaydty. She punched h.m, he says. while

they were <b*cending in a Chancry

Corl el.vator on August 31. fallowinga hearmg kfl Which Mrs. BadBB had de-

manded more alimony.Mra. Roden said she had overheard a

r.mark that she WB8 no lady and

Ihought it was made by n.-r brother-.n-

!.w She waived exumination and was

held for the grand jury._

/Ibove the Lines.Vroplanin* ahovr the German linrs vvith an omcer

of thr French Flying Corpa would he. undouhtrdly ,n-

Irrrnt.n* bot doubtfully plrasurablr. lt .» more rnjoy-

f to\*A thr effecl w,thoul th. dangrr-and ihat you

i ,-an do to-morrow.

Thrrr pnge- of rrmarkablr arrial pjcturra are in Thr

Tribune Craphu. Thry arr ,n Thr Frihune. Graphic, telUoively. 7r.ey arr onr of thr many things that makr

. worlh your whilr to rraerve your copy in advancr.

IkShc ^unoajj 2TribuncPlrui to lA*st.the Trulh:

Sewa-l:dltorlaJ».Adrertlaement%.Mnnb#r <* Bai aVBBl nnr»4.i <~r ao-'il»»l«'« A

it; we ll a!l not iii.arr.-i ia the longrun as I the method of it."As when BSOBthfl before 'hese

suffra/e icaders hu.l viaited the I're-i-dent at the White HoiMC, and he h.ui*o'i| thci he eoald noi go farther thanhis part would go, 10 n mla:*a:r'. to;,j them ?o-r. ight."The whole art and practico of gov¬

ernment ronailta," he declared, "noi in

moving individuals, but in movingmasse*. It is a'.l very well to run aheadand be cnlm, but, after aK, you have

got to wait for the body to follow."

PreniHent Is Impressod.The President himself had showed

how deeply he was impressed with theaudience of earnest fared women wholistened to hia word-t. He d iclared thalhe "fe!t th* wholeaoB** eoataajtaa ofthe orcasion," that he would b. "otflitt ng a <!u;>" if be di<l not aay some ofthe things that had been in his

thoogfata. Then he outlmed how thewhole conccption of govrr.m»r r badrhanged sinee the founding of the Re-

public.He spoke of the "legaiistio" state of

Washington an<l HamlltOB, and char-arteri/.ed that period as "lawyers' his-

tory." With lha War and theforcea that brought it about, he de¬

clared, a new foreo, a moral force, had

BBtcred American OolltlCB."Is it not signitieant," the President

asked, "rhat it wa« then, and then forthe first time, that women becamu

prominent in poli'ies in America?"If -ha Preaidaat hal expected any

(..iiiiiiu.il on |m«a -i. niliiinn 8

BAKERS PLAN FORTEN-CENT BREADNational Body Recom-mends Abandonment

of Nickel Loaf.

Chieago, ^^o*. 6. Rscommendationsto all bakers of the Uflltod Stataa that;the fuc-cent loaf of bread be aban-doned and the 10-ccnt loaf itaadard ledwere made after discussion at the cios-

ing session of tha executive committee

ol th* National Aaaoclatloa of llaaterBakers to-day.They urged that tho rerommenda-

ttona bc put into effoet iBimodlataly.Beonomic wasto incident to the mi.nu-

faetur* ol tha flvo-COBt loaf avbs em-

phaaised as a reason for if- dUcontinu-arro. Sariag 4n raanafaeture, improre-mi nt la qaalitjr BBd itandardization ar.'

Urgad in favor of the 10-COBt loaf.It ia also recommended that where

local conditions rnak" it BCCOSSary thesrrnller loaf mav be maintained, withB nncc consistent with the cost ofmanufactura.The bakers rited the following per-

centages of increase m cost of in-

grciients in the manufacture of breadwithm the laat two years: Patent flour,100 per cent; rye, 124 per cent; sugar,r,8 per i.ent, shortening, 60 per cent;milk, 46 per cent; aalt, 14 per cent;wrapping paper, To per cent.

DoliTOry costs also have increased, itwas atatcd, through an advance of 106per cent in gasolene and 86 per cent

iti feeri for horses.The bakorS went on record strongly

against r.ny attempt tO lowcr 'he rjual-ity of bread.The conference here was an out-

growth of the bakers' national eOBTOB-

tion at Si.it I-ake <'ity ae\eral monthsago. at which informal resolutions »o

the -am- effert were VOtOd. Alrendythe pric.! of bread has been adraBCed,01 the ."> cent loaf abandoned, in sev¬

eral c.tiesAt mi' time there woro throata of a

gosreraawat iBTaatlajBtiaa of a conceit-ed movi n.ent to IBcrOBM tho pricc.Baker* .'ttending the conference heretaid thej had no fear of such actionnow.

S. P. MeDonald, of Hemphis, praal-din» of rr,,. aaaociatioB, said he believedmost of the bakers of the countrywould adopl the plan «ugge»'ed to-day.

MISS BORDEN FINDSL0NG-S0UGHT HOME

Oirl Who Fled Sanatorium Weds

Chieago Lawyer.|l. IMaSf*SB i" V . Tt a I

Laa Angeles. Sept x When KtsaRamona Borden. heiress to the Bordenmilhons, ran away from a New Jerseysanatorium two years BgO she gave as

the reason for her flight that she waa

looking for a home."All 1 have :s money,'' she said. "A

home is what I have always wantedand have BOTCr had."To-day the girl found a home. over

which she Will rule with the title ofMr-. Cal* Parker. Mr. I'arkcr is n

Chieago lawyer, and the son of a Wia-eoBsla mlllloBBira. The earaaioay was

performed at the home of the girl'sgTBBdparCBtS, Mr. and Mra. L B. Valk.of »Hf» Choetar Place. The couple willtour Soutbern Califorma by motor be¬fore ret-irn.ng to Chieago.

UNIOWS BEATEN ON TUBEANDLSAYLR.T.HEADS

Green Cars To Be Operated on

Schedule Aiter I P. M. To»day,Shonts Orders.

2,000 RETURN TO LINES,!S CLAIM OF COMPANY

Strikebreakers Ready To Take Place of ThoseWho Refuse Amnesty.7,850 Out,

Union Declares.

Tho strike on ihe subway and "L" haa been beaton to thesatisfaction of tractibn officiala.

Asserting it required no more attention from them, theylast night turned to the surface road sittiation, with the orderfrom President Shonts to "operate the road" after 1 p. m. to-

day. Quoting Mr. Shonts again, tho subway and cle\atedtrouble is "water over the dam." The men who struck lia\e

been replaced for good, service is normal, those who walked out"tirt'd themselves" and that'i the end of it, if the Interboroughpeople have their way.

Men Must Keport To-day.Next on the programme is the reartoration of service on

the New York Railwaya lines. At 1 oVlock this afternoon theamnesty extended to striking green car men expires. Thosewho forswear their union ;dl»>gianee may go back up to thathour. Then things will be jammed through in dead earnest inan effort to restore ?he badly crippled surface car service.

HoweVer, William B. Fitzgerald, union organizer, declaredhimself satisfied with the progress of the strike. Recruiti hadbeen gained from both the Interborough and the .New YorkRailwaya Company in the last twenty-four hours, he said.Among 1he :'.50.men who joined from the Interborough's forcewere many motormen and switchmen, he declared. lle esti-,mated that the Interborough had lost 8350 men to the strikers!and the New York Railwaya Company 4.000.

"I" TRAIN FIRED ONFROM TENEMENT ROOF

Subway Plot Rumor. but DayEnds with Little Violence.Rumora of a plot to b!ow up the sub¬

way at 125th Street and I.enoa Avenue,which kcp' the police guarding the un-

dergroand railway vigilant all day long,and a f*W iCBttered acts of v.olencewere the only suggcstions of disorder

raarking yesterday's progress of thecar men's strike.One Elghty-alxth Btraat etaaatowB

car was stoned. a light between loyalemployOS of the In .'rhorough anditrikeri oecarred on the platform ofthe Weal Karms subway itaVtioa; MBSa

red at a train drawiag into theKiftieth Stree! itatlon ol the Nm'iiAvenae eleirated, aad some one elsethrew b BBtoko bomh on the tracks at

,:ne place later in the day.The shooting took place early .n the

morning. As b south bound Ninth Ave-nae traiB drow into the Filtioth Street

¦, b revolver wai 6r*d four timesr'roni the roof of a tcr.ement overlook-ing 'he tracks. Nona of «he ahots hitth* train, as far as could be deter-mineil. but there was much confusionol passer.gers und guards swarmed offthe rrain to get out of the line of the:.re as rapidly as possible.

KILLsllIS GIRL WIFEAND TAKES OWN LIFE

Brooklyn Barber Chief Actor inDouble Tragedy.

Thomas Adano, a deputy sheriff, wa«

ataading before the teaaaBcat at T2l

Boirum Street, Brooklyn, last night.when he heard BBgry roieaa, then twaBhots, and then th- wailing of a baby.Drawiag hia rorolTOr, he ran upstairsand lurprieed Edward Kaaeuio, a

barber, a* he was elimbiag out of his, ri windoW to a fire escape, a re¬

volver atill in OBe haad.Oa tha Boor bohiad Manc.no was the

body ol hii wifo, R. soraatooByaaraold. with a ballet hola ia her temple.

idaBM eoTcrad the barber with r. s

revolver and ordon di"Drop that gun:"A BOCOBd later Mannno's revolver

elatl irad tO the fipor and his bodyred it. for with a ijuick motion

he shot hlaisolf throagh the head. Thadeputy aheriff -. f far the police, andthan tiiod to qaiot Michael, nineteenmonths old. whOB* father and motherhad JJ^' heen taken from him.

MRS. RUSSELL SAGE, 88,MAKES BIRTHDAY GIFTS

Donates $40,000 -Syracuse Uni-versity Oets $15,000.

Laurence. I. I. Bopt 6. Mra. Pus-sell Sage. who has given 166.006,000 to

tharity, eelebratod her eighty-eighthbirthday to-day m her hOBBa] at I.aw-rence Beach, by givin,' away ?4"..

Although Mra. Sage is *aid to be in

good health and exeolloat spirits. herphyaieiaa, Dr. J 'ari Schmuck. advisod:ecauic ol her advanccd age that no

celebration be held.Accordiag tn dispatchoa from Syra¬

cuse. where Mrs. Sage was born in

isj.i, Syracaa* Uatvoraity haa rocetvod.115,000 from her and tive other institu-tions 16.000 each.

Mrs Sage spent tha morning it. herflower garden. but the afternoon atormcoinpelled her to remain la the old-.aahionad h, use which was tee favonteraoldaaca al her late husbaud

The Publie Service ('..mmissionlistened to witnes?es from both sideswithout paininj: much, aave ronfirma-tion in tlie belief that the brearh he-tween men and employrrs was a wideone and that each aiflVa was con-

vir.ced the other was at fault.No Overturea Made to Mllrhel.

Mayr Mivhel, nfter a COfaferCaatgwith Chairman Straug of the PublieService ('ommi^sion, and (orpora-tion Coanaal Hardy, de^la-ed that hewould have no statement to makeconeerning tho trouble until he hadmade a careful Btudy of tho situa-tion. No overtures had been made to

him, he Faid. but he araa r<-ady tolisten to either sido.

Srrvires on most <>? the stroetrarlines where the atrike ia on ehowedimprmement yesterday. Tho in-i roa.=es rajlged fr'jrn m<>ro than 100pei cer.t fttl the 116th Street lme,where se\en cars were running in-stead of three, to an ir.rrease of two

over the thirteen cars that were run¬

ning <>n Twir.ty third Street on

1 hursday.I.lnea liadly Crlppled.

Only the Thirty-fourth Street. Iineehowed no improvement. But threecars were running there. In no rase

were the lines running at 50 per eentof their eapacity.

r'rank Hedley, peneral manager of»he Interborough and the green cara,ih in touch \v;th Jami-s T. Waddell,. trikebnakcr, and haa been aaauredatrikebreaker, in proper numbera willbe on hand *n ghove into the bresch ifex iK'-r.c;es demand.

Mr. Shonta do<>« not befleffle lt willbe r.ore^sary to put strikebreakers into

l-.owever."Krom the ara| 'he old men are eom;ng

back in n-sponse to our propo«:*:<.n."said he. "it appears that we will haveenough of our own men to man f*n

for operation Saturday afternoon. Theyare tumhhrg over one anothrr to getback in gincc our notice has been post-ed in the varioug burns. And even be¬fore we aent out the notice men were

aigning up right along."Old Men Keturn, Saya Shonla.

Two thousand gre»n car men were

rhui nijrnej up '..-' I | -. Mr Shontadec!ar<-d. Not all surface men whowent out are taken back. Marked trou¬ble makers are being eliminated.

Mr. Hedley is anxious to move thingaalong awlftly w the surface figh* Mr.Shonts. admita. though. that the realteat on the green car lines will notcome until Monday. After 2 o'clock on

SaturtUy afternoont traffir is light. OnSundaya it is below normal. The trar-tion genern'« thea will have a day anda half to wrnp tning' into share '»meet Mon.lay mornir.g's d'.wntownnaaaV

Officiala Moie Hcadquartera.The Belmont Hotel emergenev of-

fi.-es, from which the transit men dl-r.-cted their tMceaafal -ijrht on thesubway nn.i "!.'' walk-out, were cloaedlast night, and the officiala tnovedtheir heailijuartera haa; . id baggage lnthe New \ork Kailwaya. Sarn at Fif-