SEVENTY-FOURTH YEAR FSALEM, OREGON, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 1, 1924 PRICE FIVE CE: mm Mi - ' mil Eiht. Deaths and Extensive "V, . . t n -x DCStrUCttOn Of Property T..ake TClI 01 InUndatlOnl Hear Philadelphia ANTHRACITE COAL ! REGION HARD HIT a v . a mm.m . 9 a Putting Step to AH Min ing Operations PHILADELPHIA; .Sept. 30. Sight deaths and heavy property damage, with serious interruptions to railroad service and Industrial activities, was reported tonight from 'towns and cities in eastern Pennsylvania as a result of flood conditions after 48 hours of heavy rain 3. . Roads blocked with debris, bridges washed away, land slides, the drowning of much livestock, closing down of mines and other plants and the flooding of cellars wra mntlnnil in mhnt nf tht rA- ports. The water was receding I tonight at the majority oi places jrrt9 " f w anma S a sao - wo fill 1 rising. r;;--: ; ' The anthracite coal region ap parently : suffered the greatest damage. . In Hazelton, mines were flooded and it will be several days I before some of the collieries can resume operations. J Two men were v killed and &-1 other was seriously injured at Girard, near Bloomsburg, when a landslide carried a locomotive over a 200 toot embankment. Wilkesbarrie also reported two! dfla.th. A man was killed at Wvomlne bv a live wire blown down, and a woman was drowned in ftawollen creek. . Two -deaths were reported In the Scranton section and two a 2 fauch Chunk. At the latter city. Henry Herman, a .contractor, and Louis Eichoff, bis assistant, ; were swept into the Lehigh river whtie repairing the archway of a sewer. Jermyn. near Scranton, k concrete T brldse over iinshbrook creek gav way, the swollen 'waters sweeping Samuel Langman and Emery Av ery, prominent merchants, to th:lr deaths. - Many Industrial plants in Scranton were seriously af f ectt 3 and mines were flooded, Railroad' lines were washed out in many places. no- Glosy Says it Is Too Late to i . jnmaie , necoraer . Amendment s Mayor John E. Giejr said yes terday that, although' there Is and has been for seme time,- a sent! ment'ln the city favoring making the office of city recorder ap pointive Instead of elective, the question cannot go upon the bal lot at the November Election for the reason that there is jinsuffi-l cient time under the law to have I it -placed on the ballot. ; I The mayor said .further that I should a change in the charter bejeate the foot and mouth disease made at any subsequent time the I near here, announcement was office would be appointive by the! council ana iiot by tne mayor, lie I uiweif uo wuuiu veio u oraj-j nance provjamg ior a vote on the I question if it provided! for ap- pointment by, the mayor alono. snouia sucn a measure De Dro- .. m m . . . i , I posed during his administration. SEATTLE OFFICER DROPS SEATTLE. Sept. 30. Albert A. Osborn, .63, Seattle policeman and United States custom officer for more' than 40 years, died here lo-l dy of heart failure THE WEATHER OREGON: Unsettled, occa sional raia; moderate tempera tures Wednesday; strong south and southeast winds reaching gale force. ' J LOCAL WEATHER (Tuesday) ; Maximum temperature, 69. 'Minimum temperature, 52. '"i RIverr -1.8 ; stationary. , Rainfall,;'.29. Ze , , . ini, northwest. . , .f ' 1 v., GENERAL DAWES JUST GRINS AS ATTACK IS SEEN Letter By Senator trookhart Fails to Dampen Spirits . of Republican CHICAGO, Sept. 30. Charles Q. Dawes, reoublican candidate for vice president, smiled broadly lL!11 TP''!? shown a copy of the letter written by Senator Brookhart of Iowa to republican national Chairman But ler requesting that steps bp taken to displace Mr. Dawes on the re publican national ticket. The itinerary of Mr. Dawes next speaking tour as completed today by national committee officers will afford the nominee opportun ity to reply to Senator Brookhart in the latter's state if he should care to do so. j Associates of General Dawes do not expect him to take advantage of the opportunity, however, as to date he has maintained the po sition that "a ! man's reputation should not be debated In a politi cal campaign." 1 : 1 BRIBERY TRIAL GETS STARTED Defense Wants Testimony ntrOdUCed After Jan. 26. . ' 1923, Excluded PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 30. Demand of .the defense in the bribery trial of Charles S. Rudeen. on trial in the circuit court, that testimony as to happenings after January 26, 1923, be excluded, late today opened the most lm- portant legal battle of the' trial to date. The indictment charged that Mr. Rudeen and Dow V. Walker, associate commissioner 9 or before January 26, 1923, accepted or promised to accept more than 310,000 from Robert E. Kremers in "exchange for ap pointing, him i county bridge) en gineer. John P. Logan and Robert Ma- guire, active counsel 'for the de fense argued that things ' which happened after the date of the alleed Im taay not rightfully Ka krnnirht tntt this trial be brought Into this trial Today 'the state's attorney con tended that the act of making Mr. Kremers county - bridge engineer was merely started on January 26 and was not. Completed until the signing of the contract in March He pleaded, on behalf of the state, for the right to. delve, into all that happened during that inter val of time. . Presentation j of recommenda tions of .engineers, with which the court was concerned most of the day, was without incident ex cept for constant objections by the defense attorneys. They succeed ed in having ' many documents excluded. i 1 S Foot and outh Disease Found Breaking Out in; New Places in Texas HOUSTON, Texas, Sept. 30. With forces of the state and 'fed- eral government being coordinated for a protracted fight ' to eradi- made tonight that there had been new outbreaks during the day In the quarantine areas. Both J. E. Bogg-Scott. chairman of the Texas sanitary livestock commission and Dr. Marion Imea riifnrnU nriwrt ( ).! nf ha field forces," announced that the area ' of Infection had not been widened." The authorities, ho ever, were not disposed to enter tain any considerable hope that the infection had been checked. Mr. Bogg-Scott explained it was hoped that the spread of the dis tj .. ritory between Houston where the snip cnannei ana ' railroad . pro i vided barriers, and the gulf of Mexico. : I " 1 He estimated that 15,000 cattle were In that area. He would not bo surprised, he said, if the ma jor portion, at least, became in fected. ! ' ' HERMAN AXD VILLA DRAW SAN BERNARDINO, Cal.. Sept 30. Checkie Herman, local "ban j tarn-weight. ' was given a draw I with Pedro-VUIa of Loa Angeles here tonight. '.Bennle Jordan of Redlands outslngged Joe Garcia of ;tL!j city la ezjl-wladup. EVOIiTBHSOF DUEHDED SIB BALLOT FIGHT , IHKHGTH Four Parties, All Claiming to Represent La Follette All Argue lOr UlllCiai heCOg-l nitiOn : j ALL brlUULU bfc rUI mm m Am. m m mm mm mm mm a mmm I " ..7 . .. .... rr- I UU I, Id ULAIf.1 MAUL SeriOUS r.llXUp UCCUrS UVer Hour of Filing Conven tion Minutes OLYMPIA, . Wash., Sept. 30. After 'hearing afguments by rep-j persons named in the will as exe resentatives of four alleged La cutors and the trustees Major Follette parties, the state supreme court here today took under ad visement the question of Whether all four of the tickets are to ap pear on the ballot in the general election November 4 or only one.' William A. Gilmore, gubernator ial candidate for the La Follette state party, and Edgar C. Snyder, ty. presented evidence in support of their respective party tickets. The lla Follette independent progressive party held its conven tion at 1:30 p. m., September 9 and not 10:30 a. m., as its con vention minutes, filed with the secreUry of state Indicate, Char-r les T. Peterson, Tacoma attorney, l representing T. M. Cummings and I the executive committee Of that party, explained to the supreme r" court this afternoon. e "The 10:30 a. m. on the min utes was a typographical error,' Mr. Peterson declared in answer ing the charge that the nomina tions were fradulent because they were filed in Olympia at 8:07 a m., and the convention was sup posed to have been held in Seattle at 10:30 a; m. ' I ;a-a -ii 1CK.u vUuu electors chosen .by the various La Follette groups were illegally chosen, including the party he re presented and declared that they should all be thrown out. "The realtors (referring to mem bers of. the progressive party who are bringing the .action) are all demagogues who have been booted out of the reputable parties and are trying to get into office," Mr, Peterson eaid. " ' ; - W. D. Lane, associate council . : - i ior me prugressie p.r ,umu out that under Mr. Peterson's line of reasoning none of the political Dartles In the state, not even the republican and democratic parties. had chosen presidential electors legally, ' The Independent party was not represented by any attorney but August Toellner, the party's, can didate for congress from the sec ond district appeared before the court Globe Girdlers Given - Welcome at Spokane SPOKANE. Sept. 30. Spokane turned, out en ' masse tonight to cheer to ' the echo the presence and the somewhat halting acknow ledgements of the first six men who ever Hew "around the earth. One of them. Lieutenant Lesl'c P. Arnold, designated this city as "the only home I have," although he said he had never been her before. Lieutenant Arnold's mo ther, Mrs; Cora Arnold, and his sister, Mrs? Frances Cole, are real dents ot this city. HEAVY .fHIGG Ofl iMira LIIIES ThrCC Trainloads Of Wound- .Jrt.:i n..i. r.. r.i i cu oom uavN i uiii i iuiii By Pekmg Forces TIENTSIN. Oct. 1. (By the Associated Press). Heavy firing heard in the vicinity ofShanhai kwan, on the Manchurian-Chlhli border, Monday and Tuesday was presumably caused by an . attack I son 3055; PIerci?213,' and Ful- J of this city, it was announced to which the Manchurlan troops are Nerion 1879v 4 if f night. The club will be known as reported to have launched against! the Peking government force sta- tioned near that city.' Three trainloads of wonndud from the government army arel reported to have reached Lan - chow, between this city ahd Shan- naiawan. on mesaay. The bonib - ing of Shanhaikwan by; Manchur- lan Blrnlanrxi rnr.ttnncn Aaflv y..4.HVV , iA . FIND SCORES : OF RELATIVES FOR ACTRESS Many Persons Seek Part of Fortune, of" liotta Crabtree, -, Millionairess BOSTON, Sept. 30. Scores of letters from persons- claiming re lationship with j Juotta .Crabtree, he actress whOS ymi made pnt.- Bd rVZoo&oo tabled veterans of thet World war and their dependants, set aside almost as Bruai a sum ,iur uiuer puuan- thropic purposes and , bequeathed 1100.000 to relatives. Were reeeiv- ed today by three persons named .il. iu. .,w I? "7,. T. , f ,T ' .V t.- ;L . thit ranntrv anil ATitrt mall added to their number. While legal action to contest the will on behalf of relatives of the actress not named therein im pended, Judge Dolan, in probate court today appointed as special administrators pi the estate the General Clarence R. Edwards, U. 5. A. retired; Justice William? C. Wait of the Massachusetts Su preme court, and William A. Morse who acted as the actress' attor ney for many years and who drew the will at her instructions. Ttieir duties will be to : deal with any emergency In 'connection with the estate, nending the allowing ot " " TE 7 - r'T about November l.r s :- At the same time Mayor Jam ss M. Ciirley directed Corporatpn Counsel E. Mark Sullivan to tin der the goodpfilces of the cityjto General Jay ' Benton ' to the end that thA Interests' of the disabled veterans of th World war may k adeouatelv protected in tne event of ct will : contest. - f lefiA?. nifitni74tifln opa0fi glOMi viywiimuvii wtwuwui AS ReSUit 01 t.ab0r Fed- eration Efforts EUGENE, Or.; Septv30.--A Btate f armer.labor legislative league was formed here tonight at a meet ing of representatives of the Ore gon - State. Federation of Labor, state grange and' the farmers un ion Jn the assembly? hall where the labor federation is holding its I o n n n fi 1 onnvantlnn Tha lAHellA I win lmmeaiaieiy oegiu a campaign favoring the compulsory work- men compensauon uui, wb Oieomarganne uiii, auu uyyuaius the repeal of the state income tax. all on the ballot at the November elections. George Palmiter, state grange master was naifned chairman and li. M Rvnerson of Portland, edit- or oi tne uregon aoor .tress. a weekly publication, secretary. 'It is planned to make the organiza tion permanent, that it may rune tion whenever the two classes con cerned have legislative interests In common. . S One of the leaders in the organ- w- wito M. Pierce, governor of Oregon. He took a verv active cart. tooa a very active paru . rinai biailStlCS Ulve li.Oy Lead Over French, Near est Competitor : OLYMPIA, Wash., Sept. 30 Colonel .Roland 'II. ; Hartley of Everett, won the republican nom ination by 1,769 votes over E. L, Fpenc0- Vancouver, his? nearest ooponent, . aceoraing to, oixiciai figures compiled today by the :irxu. 7 election was 244,i4i. r The official figures on other re publican gubernatorial candidates follow: Clifford 33,140; Paulha mas .26,508; i Lamping' 21,535; Coyle 20,983; Retelle 8809; Iver- Ben. Hill, Walla Walla, leads Charles Robinson. Spokane, by 1 1185 votes for the democratic I nomination- for f eovernor. Tho largest number of TOtes polled by 1 any candidate wa3 received by Clark V. Savidge,epublican nom linee for, commissioner or public lands, who got 159.119 on the of- tlnll onnn t ' : . I filial VvVuVf 'y1' Filfi-UIBOR: LBGUEFORLiS liTlH'5 11 MADE OFFICIAL Action of the Declared to Ju s t i f y , United States' Stand l Congressman Albert Johnson man of Immigration Committee, Issues Statement. CHICAGO, Sept.; 30. The' ac tion of Japan, at Geneva has jus tified the action of the United States senate regarding the league of nations and the steps by con gress and the' president regarding the Immigration act of 1924, con sressmau Aioen jonnson oi vasn- i a V x . W m ingonr chairman of the house im migration committee said during a visit to (Jnicago today. Mr. Johnson la on' his way to the Pa-. cific coast to speak for the repub lican national ticket. : Congressman Johnson said he saw in the situation a tightening of the lines against orientals on the part ot Canada, Australia and Argentine and a drawing together of all the white races around the Pacific, but 3ded heL was not alarmed over war prospects. It was the United States he said that first insisted on reservations to the covenant of the leagne with regard to domestic questions In cluding immigration. "The reser vation," he said, "failed, of adop Raise of 20 Per Cent RepOrt- r,A fnr P rri Q v Mnnihc CiU iui i not vi ITIVlllllO of This Year WASHINGTON, Sept. 30. Au tomobiles registered in the United States during the first six months of 1924 totalled 15,552,077, an increase of j 20 per cent over the corresponding' period of a year ago, the American Automobile as-i sociation announced today . upon the basis of the semi-annual count 1 made y the tJnited eutes bureau , bl, road Them wern r- j gistered during' the first six months of the year 13.645,726.. i 111 rn. no,. Dfl. Pormo i wui uajo uaiuc Vfuinco iu a fJose With N either Side Having Won SHANGHAI, Oct. 1. (By Asso elated Press1.) The battle w,hlch naa Deen in progress ior iour daye. west of this city between the forces of the rival tuchuns of Chekiang and Kiangsu, has ap parently come to an end with neither side gaining any advan tage the Lunghwa headquarters of the Cheklang army reporting the battle fronts unchanged.. The fir ing has subsided. ; !, , A brigade of Shantung troops commanded by General Pan Hung X f a Y i H the line and despatched northward I ,v w t-,ii!m tv manaer. in cnier, according to the Lungwha ' headquarters. Prisoners taken by the Cheklang army in Its recent offensive north of the Shanghai-Nanking railway told their captors that Kingsu had lost '2,000-killed and wounded in this battle. The anticipated attack by the armies of Kiangsu, Fukien and klang defenders of Sungklang, 28 miles to the south ' of Shanghai, has not yet developed.' SEATTLE HOCKEY TEJfJI GETS START club Will Be Taken Over By Uhanes- F. Adams, a Local Resident BOSTON. ,'Sept. 3 0. The 'Seat tle hockey team of the Pacific coast league will i be taken . over this winter by Charles F Adams the Boston professional associa- tion, under the presidency or Mr. I Adams, and it will be the only I American member of the National j ilTCkey;3eague,i the strongest pro- I fessionai hockey circuit - 1 ; Art Ross former amateur star I player ana now a professional, wm manage the team and act a vice ItiraclHont ! r.WV, SnO'.V DIGIIJCRHSE Tieague: i of Washington, Present Chair tion tin the senate but it opened the eyes of , the people. Apparent ly such a reservation never would have : been satisfactory , to states men of those countries which be lieve that the United States was born to be the receiving end of evQry thing they want to dispose i The ! exclusion provision of the immigration act was not an in sult to Japan he added and said that ,he expected south American countries' where the Japanese, talk of migrating will soon hold a con ference in the United States to discuss the problem. 'In my opin ion.T he added, e need . not become hysterical over anything said; or done at .Geneva or In the orient which looks a threat of wari We are Ixl the right or else there is nothing to the Idea of the sovereignty of nations." he said he placed no reliance in reports of a Japanese boycott because the United States receives ,45 per cent of the country's eiports. . , ..... . - MBED FOB ffltt Ma Jerome Phaff Taken in By French Maritime Au- inoniies ai crest BBEST, France, -Sept. 30. (By Associated Press.) Charged with piracy on the high seas for which the 'penalty is death. Max Jerome Phaff, a .German-American who claims residence in New York, this evening emerged smilingly from a nine-hour ; encounter with. the jFrehch" maritime justice." I Phaff was given his first off! cial; examination today before Commandant : Fonrnier of the French navy.. The piracy charge is in connection with the Tsoarding of the - French steamer Mulhouse off the Canadian coast last July, when it is alleged, fi,000 cases' of whiskey were removed by armed raiders to schooners which 'stood by.) t I " Phaff pleaded not guilty and in his 'examination he declared he Could provide an alibi. He also in yoked the ' argument that it was hot ! necessary for him to ' commit a piracy because he had unlimit ed credit with a big Canadian bank , which enabled him? to buy contraband whiskey without the use j of "Captain Kidd" methods. He said he was' prepared to pro duce documents which would show tba on three definite 1 occasions the; Canadian bank supplied him with letters of credit for 25,000 pouinds sterling, the object being to buy whiskey Ih England for smuggling into the; United States. JAP REHITi'J Draft of Agreement Now Be ihg Drawn Up, Says Re ! port From Pekin PEKING I Oct. 1. (By the As sociated Press) The negotiations being carried on here by Li M Karakhan, the soviet ambassador to thina, and Kenkichi Yosjlzawa, the Japanese minister to China. gave promise of an early recogni tion of the soviet government by Japan, according to Japanese sources. " Five ont of eight articles of 'a draft 'agreement which the two diplomats have been discuss Ins! are alleged to have been agreed upon. . Karakhan, it is said, has1 agreed to waive the Russian demand for the1 'immediate evacuation cf northern SagahaJIen island by t.ie Japanese. This, he. admits, is Im possible at present, owing to the approach of winter. The evacia tion. however. Is to be carried out in the spring of next year. i ' SHANGHAI, Oct. i.(By th Associated Press). Major Pedro Zanni, the "Argentine 'round the Trofld aviator arrived here n.t 3:16 this afternoon ' from Foo- chow, which place he left at 10:05 this norulnj. SOvET EXPECTS .... i . T Y COBB I S 1 - WASHINGTON Manager' of Tigers; Says ' lie Got a Real Kick Out of ' Eliminating N- Y. i RICHMOND, Vai, Sept,' 30."I didn't win the pennant, but I had th consolation of- kicking - the Yankees out of the race and t got quite a kick out of that,' Man ager Ty Cobb, of th Detroit Tig ers said here tonight. " "If Walter Johnson pitches on a dark day he'll show the Giants something they ' haven't seen often,". Cobb eald. "I won't attempt to pick the winnerbecause so many things can happen in a short series, but I'm pulling for , Washington." Mrs. Wilson to Defer ,: Ouster of Race Men Governor 'Pierce yesterday sug gested to Ella Schultx Wilson, secretary of the state fair boarj, that she defer for a period of 30 days and pending a meeting of the state fair board, the order for all , race horse owners to vacate the stables at . the fair grounds on October 15. . Mrs. Wilson said this would be done, f f - 1 The governor's suggestion was due to a protest from the horse men, and also by citizens of Sa lame, against the board's' busting them from the stables where for a long time they nave made : win ter training headquarters. ' The' board' is"; expected at a meeting on isovember 5 to arrive at a definite policy in the case.' Automobile 'Accident May Be ! Fatal to Woman and Granddaughter - TUYALLUP, Wash:, Sept. ao.- A grandmother and her 18-months old granddaughter wereIctlms of an . automobile accident . on the Enumclaw highway, east of here. this afternoon that may cost the lives of both. Mrs. Thomaa Code, 60, Enumclaw, and Eunice May Wallace, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Wallace, also of Enum claw, are the victims. Both were brought to- a local hospital where it was found that the baby has a fractured skull and the grandy mother a probable fracture of the skull. In addition to severe bruises. The condition of each was pro nounced critical.;' Mrs. Wallace was driving the automobile and lost control at a point near Enumclaw when she reached around to get a, package from the rear seat of the car. The machine plunged off the road and struck a telephone pole. T STAGE BAHOOI! . EflKCEIIICE jExpect Giant Aircraft to Be Gamed Over - beverai i States By Wind - WASHINGTON COURTHOUSE, Ohio, Sept. 30i Three, giant bal loons took the air here today ' in an -attempt to break the world' air endurance record, The Good year, piloted by i Wade Van Or man and W. K. Wollam, was the first to leave the ground. The Detroit and the Washington C. II. followed in succession. Th Goodyear carried four ahd one half bags of ballast and left the ground at 4:13 p.- m. The Detroit, carrying 'eight bags, was seven minutes later and the Wash ington C. H., with five bags, took off at 4:25 p. m. 2 A, strong -wind was blowing 1 a boutheasterly direction, indicat inr that the bags.' would be car ried over Kentucky and perhaps Tennessee. - The pilots expect to remain- in the air until late to morrow.; - y Old Pioneer Resident Of Salem Passes Away Report was received in Salem last night of the1 death of Mrs, Will Perron, formerly Anna Cold en, who was born; and grew up in Salem. Mrs. Perron is survived by her husband, her sister, Mrs R. E. Lee Steiner of Salem, and a brother. Dr. -Thomas S.; Golden, one of the old pioneers of Salem. Funeral services will be held next Thursday at the Finley un dertaking parlors, Portland. Tt9 hour Is sgt PI 2:30 p. tV GRin'Di'.iOlllEf;, CHILD, HURT 1 fl PT P r ! Li ill 'Si LLI I : - L B'f 'f i " I- ILL Diffic-Jlty Over 0 vcrCw m 3 . j . Hours cf.il::. PROTOCOL v:.' FinaI CtcnToX3 V:;: By Pcxlmcr.t c L ... f t GENEVA, Sept. -"S3. ' AP.) With Japan t-i: the British dominie -3 r content, the del?-' league of natic night 'cohgraU upon the aucc I t the atnpendous t protocol of arLU, curity which, when in sufficient nunler " : be followed neitt J: l .r ral world c " f duction of 1 The final gotiatlons . 1 '. when the protocol , .1 ed to the asseriLIj', Tlrtnally all the represented on tl j which tQday ador : ' clauses and solved t dif acuity. It was r pected tonight that tt 3 will approve the text f r. the transmission of tLa : the home toTernnc-U : ments for ratification : cussion today prorair'r t took paina to enpLz.' solntipn of the Japarr -3 c through the revision eft: col strikes no blow at V eign rights of states. It noticeable. th?t tv ;- ' pains to " allay any 1 : sion of the American r they ' repudiated the t during tne last two c?rs va that the amendnenta r by. the Japanese were 1" certain other powers. ; Two Amendments 1." Concretely, the Ja 1 a r. tion 'was found by ma... amendments' to the pre' -the first it is provided tL -. question in dispute 13 L : the world court or tt I council to be a' matter " ' in the democratic juri- . a state this decision eha.t r vent any consideration of t: ation by the council or It? t sembly under article c : league covenant. The other amendment r that a. country shall - net 1 sumed to be an aggrec: udicial sentence has t - nounced against her c-" fall to submit the qu. t: council or the assembly 1 tide XI of the covenant. Original Text Crr--TJnder the original text 1 3 Japanese . took exceptioa, hostilities 'break " but a which has disregarded a .' sentence declaring that ti ter is of purely internal j jr' tion, wouhl be presumei t " aggressor. . By reason of C endment this presumption c hold good if the state mits thb matter to the cc . Everything, therefore, :. . to article XI of the cove which declares that any v . threat of war is a matter cf cern to the entire league, z league" may take any tct: may deem wise and ' ef f , . (safeguard the peace of ; . Jurists explained tonight tl. . pan or any other dis:; : nation gets merely the rl: t additional hearine after ils has been thrown out of court that - ftnnniiM Vi a n r T-1 - v f sbevter to impose or even u aujr ucwioiuu. . " .B. . . t. .-f meni necessary ior iarj j the world, for they telltTa a' state whose case Las thrown ont of court won! J before the council in a !icr mood and be less likely to t to war over a question r" judged .to be a purely . . matter. ZR-3 Will ncf Lcdvo Europe fcr C:n: LONDON. Sept. -39. -T' ible .which wsi soc 1 started on fcer trat-3-Atr to Lakehurst, N..J., l.t C unexpected trouble, r Frlederickshaf en c" Daily Express. "T. , r . t . -. ..