Newspaper Page Text
It w?i not di- rr- 01
the property i?. or who
Lodge of M??-.ici
i on Mr. lUrdinf ?ml Se.
Uk? up with them tl
Enrland coal ?
wae to impre*i on them that Ne
land nm?i have coal ear'r.
there ?ill t>? ?eriou? los? and ?u
Senator w?i definite
?ured that New Kngland would b
car? of.
? ntor Klnf of Utah If
? named by the 1
board would invratigat? t?
bet?
i
*c?
? pen the two part
? ?! than m?k?? ? finding of fae
-cnmmer.iiitnn? a? to wage
If tho
dent ?ri ' ? sr? he
of thi
ir,i??ion h ?ettlem
the rdingly. Tl
earn?? ?n aprr I $100,<
S'rire Boutins To He Curhe
In i annouii'.
; rrvet
boosting, the Administ
-, h:?s
a meeting of I - rcpr?
-
? ylvani? and Alabama d'strit
der ?l?o the queetion of h
etT?et distribu* to thi
way?, pui' ??trie?
? % nrce??itie? and public ir
t:ons, it will have the imm?diat?
_ back into l:ne ft
raton who have recently vji
. -
?? thi? point ?
; . . .
ins for making the volunta
atr.,
trict? which hav
' and are no?
? ton for coal a
- T to make It ?#
nority of irrc?poi
-er district?
?n away from the agree
-.?tor? are he
i the other hand
rs and other
r\t\ out oroer? to-day offering
plan for re?trai
1 basil thre
'??uk down through the abov
c?s.
n? hav? been formulated fo
-nt of
?- and the Int ?
Commis-ion and the Dcpartmen
tk the co-oper
1 ? contr
? button can
?
? ration and i
? coal in each
car? u
of the
, ? -ition ol
? raOr?' r
t'nlon Warn? of New Worker
Aerae
min?
?
punible disasters,
a skilled tr?d?
crding I
lay by the Tin
?rica.
y the i
inauranc? c
loua of
?taten
?
e mine
?:de.
ir'uranc? r
Tanir?. have found that
? have ? death rate
lor all other
?
?npanie? will insui
I
aix.ve h is actual age and U
rm of policy.
-n ?t li
accident? in each
re mine ?
<\ hundre.
car In which
? even w
the ir ? Xpert?
and ?killed workmen \\Y.???
Injured if
?d with i:
ken.
Ibe inexperienced r
know ah'.ut protecting himself ?irai
lid ?urroi
. al mine? In n recent y
ni report?
-
wa? a tota death? i
V aerlottfl) injured ?
These at
by fall? of r
. fall? of
cat ? -.plosi?
i - . ;>io?io
ndy ?hot?, ?
?ctriel
i sj machine? a?. .
?
i hreakinf of cable?
irs a
ion? a
other ,-..
Few ftctk-M Itr
" "Very f( w ricoVi r fr m the Injuri
?
I hundre
" * ?d for life,' said
I
The gre?
at tl
coal.
I oaek ye?
-, such a? choke dam
: k damp at
-h the in?:
1 . he helple??.
? tetanu
or njuiie?.
??In "recent jr?i ?
? t4> mine a
? treated at the MlMI
pital at Albia, Iowa. alon?. The mm?
{/{ Iowa hav? from mm c
Mb year, according t
? - . superintendent c
?
ne know? when an explosio
?"I occur in a mine. Nor can ar-y on
w ?
?? ar? opened I
rl c?d ?trike-break?ri the publi
e?d not b? ?urprised at a high acci
t?-_t rat*.''
thdiana Operators U'oni
Try to Reopen Minei
XT ill Meet isnin M ext Mee fi
and Report to iictvernor, but
Action Resta ff it h State
?[? II Tritn,%4
INDIANA.'O'iS. July 21 -Governor
McCray ar M ?"f ?M Na
t -?1 Coal A?- nd of the
Indiana H - ,'or?' Aaaocl
I an hour and a
in th? Governor1? office to-day.
tame to no understanding as to how
the coal itr'ke should be met in Indi?
ana, nor annour.ee t at the
?nd of the conference. No immediate
made to re? pen the
The oper?tor? will meet again
Haut? early next we?k ?nd
will make a report to the Got?
i
The Governor said th? operator?
I
Seize Mine* and Roads,
Miss Daly Tells Harding
MIT- D., .Tu:
?lin Paly,
partisan League candidate for
Governor of S-uuth Dakota, to
;'resident Harding ask?
ing that the gov'Tnmcnt tal
il mine? and railroads and
pay the strikers the wag??? they
i')A.
i told him they hud been unable to
1 ?ir??? am'.ng themselves a? to how
1 they should proceed. He ?aid he would
hold all his plan? in abe vane?*
after the Terre Haute conference and
that no mines would ba taken over by
the state or any other step of the kind
taken unt.l then, If at all.
It m understood from trustworthy'
?*t**ts-* tkat a majority cf tha Indiana
operator? wish to assume the a"
toward Governor Mc< rsy's proposal i
which the nationally organised opera- ,
i tors I 1*11*1 Hard
mil to reopen their mines that'
..t they will reply by eaylng they '
' will place themsclvea entirely at the
dispossl of the Governor. This would
put on the stste the, necessity of mak
? first move and relieve the oper?
ators from taking .tire.
It ii understood that the difference
of opinion amcag the operators Is as
to what coursa if procedure would be
? best to follow in bringing sbout the
: reopening of the mines.
When the conference began it was
jundeistood the conferees h?d two
plans of procedure before them, one
was for the operators to atter.
?c-ir.ply with the request of President
Harding by opening one or two
in Ii.d-.ar.a under ?Military protection,
ar.d then consider th<* poMlbility of ?i
tending the operstions to other min?--.
The other was to give up all thought
of the operators trying to open the
mines, and for the state to declare
martial law In a certain field and rail
? '*!unteer miners to work under
ample protection flags.
Itljr after the conference began
?r sent for Harry B. Smith.
; Adjutant General, and this led to the
supposition that the operators wished
to know just how much protection the
state would be able to give them in
? they decided to try to reopen
thair - ' ml Smith has more
than - . National Guardsmen
* under him. There are ab" |1
' eral soM*rr? at Kort Benjamin H.irri
? son. It was believed that the turn
to martial law and state ?<-i*ure would
come only after all other possibilities
; had been exhausted.
Coal Men Ash Harding
To Send Troops to Ohio
|
Ctnmtrluhttrd Company Ai&?r?t
(Governor Pari? Ha? Il/Mil
to Furninh Protection
'nio, .luir 11. Declar?
ing that local officiais are unable to
I ith the situation and that
j ernor Davis has refused to furnish HI
any protection," the Consolidated Coal
Company of Butler, Ta., through its
.*?>?? here, to-day telegraphed
President Harding asking that Federal
troops be sent to guard the company's
tions near New Straitaville, Perry
County, Ohio.
Tha telegram aatd tha company had
a slack coal pile of 400,000 tons, but
that atrlklng miners had interfered
; with the operations, one attack result?
ing In the death of one man and seri?
ous injury to several o'hers.
Attorneys for the company last week
appealed to John Weld Peck. United
States District Judge, at Cincinnati,
1 to ask the President for Federal troop
h tli i s week r*>
I fused the appeal on the ground that
. he did not have Jurisdiction.
This decision was followed yeeter
! day by anoth' r ?
r>v
? rnor Davis to-day made public
I ?>.'-? th? Consolidated Coal aijd
pany'e request. The reply
i sent to the company's general oil
Puller. Pa., said:
"Referring to your letter of July 20,
delivered to thi? office by your
* neys, written with referenec to i
?lack pila In Perry Count;..
our military forces are mobilized and
are being assigned to ?trato .
determined upon by officers in charge
; of tr " e purpose of r ,< ?
' the situation in f sny pos
! ?ible industrial disturbances."
In a statement making
1 letter Governor Davis roin'ed o?it that
\ a National Ouird company, mobilised
* last night, is under arms to-'!
Lancaster, F.iirficld County, adjoining
? County, where the slack ?
: situated.
Coal Jumps to S8 a Ton:
Roads Chief Customers
Industrial Buyer? in Cleveland
Field Hear S. Y. /* Taking ill
Available at Higher Price?
BperUtl Ditpatfh to The Tribun.
-VEI.AND. July 21?The coal
famine has reached the point where
minea are loading little more
fuel for railroads nnd some ??
utilities. Industr r, this sec
di?covered to-day. Apparently
they had definitely lift the market
when brokers asi.erted during the af
n that coal was going at i*> and
a ton in Pittsburgh, bu*
none was being taken at that extreme
figure in Cleveland.
The information from Pittsburgh
was to the effect th.it eastern I
sylvan la and New York purehssers
'ware taking everything in sight. It is
ion in coal circles that
rather than pay there prices roost
Cleveland users ; '?own
The Nickel Plate Railroad was
among those inquiring tor coal In
urgh to-df?y. One of tha light
plants here was reported to have
bought 100 cars there.
ral consumers here have giren
op trying to get coal through the Cin?
cinnati gateway from non-union fields.
The clerks' strike on the *
* Ohio apparently was putting the
finishing touchas on the outlook that
way when the road announced at Lex?
ington. Ky.. that it was receding no
freight at that point
I dark side of the coal strike to?
day was:
?-'hortage of steel reaoltltlf from lark
of fuel temporarily closed twenty-six
tin mills of t?-e American Sheet and
Tin ; pany. at ?farre.. Pa,
near Young?! wn. Half the Cincinnati
foundries are shotting down.
Nearly half of the northern West
? ia (Fairmont) minei which hare
started work since the miners' strike
began have closed through Inability
to get ear? except to load rail fuel.
Zighty non-union miners struck east
of Welleburg, Ohio.
T?Htwhall Striker? Are Out
EAU CLA?RK. Wis. July 21.?Six
baseball players who went on "strike"
when the Eau Claire club director? re?
fused to reinstate Marty Smith, pitcher,
hare been replaced, Manag-r MeCor
mack announced to-day. The "strikers''
declared they would organisa a sepa?
rate toare.
Hoard Offers
Ships to Krinji
British Coa
?
.>.?0 Available. r-ip.il.iY i
..iirryin.' 2 Million I on
Month. 1 n-krr Aiino-m?-.'
a- Short.!..''- (,r??TT- \rii1
M.mv Seekixxf Chart?
RailrnmU am. Public I tilil
Corporation- Alnailv I ur
to Kliropr for Stippli?
Five hundred end fifty ?hlpi. e?P
brlnr* ?"??.' over ..000.0'
coal a month from Gr
the contribution which the
Board is ready to make to relieve tl
ahortajre here, official? ?aid yeiterdi
Chalrmnn A. P. I.*?-?*'
declared that the government vesse
are available for. any who wl*h the
at a rate a? low a? ?even ?hilling?
ton, or ?bout fl.'.O. Thirteen ?teamei
of PO.CiOO to
. ?tcrdav for the mov?
Ino'itry ?mtrng roal dealer? rfcvi
oped the f?ct that orden hare bee
within the la?t three days ft
'in 500,000 ton? of British co
and other contract? are being ligne
?teadily. Thla amount if to b? deli?
ered in New York between Augutt
and l.r> nt a co?t of $7 to $7.10 .-. ton o
board ship in the harbor. It Is repor
ed that the concern? orderir.? mo<t r
this were the Li cknwann.i and Ne
Jersey Central railroad?, the Interbo;
ough, the New York Kdisnn I
and ?ugar refiner?.
ship officials I
that sufficient coal ran be brought hei
from Great Britain to meet the ?horl
age on all public utilitie? and to Insui
again?. I The **
rival of 2,400,000 ton? n rnor'
?aid, would ?train the facilitic? for ur
loading at the port, but the oplnlo
wni expresied that thi? diffirul'y eoul
he met.
The Shipping Boar.'
Broadw. nnpotter
'atives of Indu?'
M.'ilkin. chartering cxe
'oerd. U*i ?, B .'???"i i.
It was one of th?
they had experirn?
?ion in ?hipping fet in I
Four Hundred Idle Ship- UallaMe
Mr Bmt.11 said thnt the Shlppla
Board now hi.s l?*-7 ?hips :n the Nor
Atlantic trnd*' which can be a
In a short p?-nod to trnnspor
this numher more than fifty are nca
d can be .'
notice. If neeeiiary, h
added, 400 additional reisels can h
taken from th?? Idle fleet within thirt
days.
wag asked if tl
anticipiit-d any difficulty wit? Ion??
?en In unloading foreign ship
ment?.
"Not a Hed. "You mus
remen-ib? r that the oal I
by union men."'
An attempt was mad? yesterday t
Ret the attitude of officials of the In
? t?shorem?n's Associa
tlon, whose members wo-iM b
to unload th? vessel? ;.?
?*? e a?socia
tion, 11 Moore Street, ? young womai
I ?aid that presi
I dent, was vrouh
I not returr:
to ?ay ?".here he was.
Inquiry among official? of barbo
1 coal line? showed :
ment used in
i capable of handling i
?
?
? ?? ?n;
ilty in getting
?hips.
Rush for Fn*li
fork h?? h,
? orders. It wm<
-
I across th?
j and ibllltl
extended for some time, led to ?
'
there || r..
Eacia
- i ?al situation occupied the a*
.
to a .
tion to Chairman Lai
the Washington staff
Love. . traf?
fic, u :
d the bon
amount of coal available in !?
wai ?uffleient to r. and?.
4?
Michigan to Rim Him
If Striken ?ht Not I U Id
(.oirrnor '..ire* th? l niait [ util
Won Joy it, Arne to l'r><lw>
tnnl ),,r SlarV. /'/.
I A
ficient coal for ?1
pose? th? mine? will
?tat? cont:
sent to-dy by Govcn
? nt of
ted Mine v
America.
?
ing min?r
control and his menage i? regarded a?
indict.* n the aU'-nc?. of any
word from Washington, the Ma
act.
"I am of the opinion," the Governor'?
me??a.
erga' ild, without yielding
?ny v.? le involved, arree ?
operation of the mln?? per.
adjustment bv the national body and
therefore I a?k you to consider th? fol?
lowing:
"Flr?t, whether th? miner? ,? "*1 re?
turn to work for th? purpo?? of supply?
ing rr.ut.icipa] and ?tat? agen? ... and
initiation? with coal. If ?
prod .
di?po?al in Michigan to be provided for
through a committee repre
parties ar.d tkl ftate.
?Second, m the event that it ahould
Recome nece??ry for the ?U*
operate the mine?, whether t*r miner?
will return and start prod.r
for municipal and state need?, any ?ur
plu? to be disposed of by a com:
of the miner? themselve?.
"In lubmittlng th? above it I? undef
?tood that the wage ?r?1e |n effect prior j
to April 1 ?arill control, and that air
working conditions "will b? m?de ?
factory."
M ?lier Sends TfOOpt
To Port Jervis Shop*
\].V .e-mor
MUlfr '
tact lif?
'operty a* Kail
road ahupa
? phone mess??.***?
' Mayor RuUn that ho ?
?
A ten man patrol wai di?
pat<*he<l from Troop K at
I'lain*. with directions to aid th<?
local authoritiea in qncliii .
h ich ha? assumed alarmin-?;
proportions.
1_I
Gompert idriscs Hivdlng
Ta Order Direct Parley*
One I ogU '??/ H *t) to Bring
Slrikmt to End? Lab >r t fcl#/
? hum ni /'.>'.'<? \ Hit
:. July II
?nt of the S
! ?bor. In a sta'
: ?
i and :
! their r
? th.it employers and
gether." t.
rnment ha?
this on<
, ? err.ment h sthreater
?
ference and it k
say about the right? of the
? r.?.
Ms upon the governm
talk about ennferenr? b< tween ?
er? end workers, both in tha coal in
n the railroad I
the thing that is
r a conference with
i
the gi
? that
i can m
g the
?
susta
re about a
'
I
?*s the governm
* come back 1 lira and sane
?
?n workers
' and ? ?
'
?
can quickly be adjusted end prod
* ?nd I
opera*.
?Plug Imi With End,"
Maine Sheriff's Onl? if
\;i.m !, on Sfj Du G h ?? r d -
Brin "?on
i Court
PORTLAND, M-, July .
I King F. Graham to-day declare
??art," and orie-r
'
had attempted 'o run
i hill
:ng a
man i rainal Com
1
?
?ids to keep the
. also was complainant against
; four
alleged to have :
kidntped him last Thursday night.
!irr-in-I kl
> 11?t Hamo
manager, will i .
?
?
hat his A
?
?
eitahluh ..
'
'
? ago obtain**
i
> -Ute, which he
WliitVs Anvst
Postponed at
La s l Minuto
M I.<l
?
the Min
for I
kctfon I * Expected I
\\ i; Still I
%,Hf-iii im.! Hm
Nol Giangeri Hi?* Mind
' ???
" n-W
came to a- ? ? day when
.
who defied *
. eing a strikers'
placard In the window -, wat
infor*- ?t him for
violation o t law
ted all
day in his office for the Assistant At
' >rma
tion which was to result in a warrant
being : the Assistant Attor
! appear.
vhlch
caused the brenk between White and
Allen I? ??
has not rh
path;*
day II
<e|lng
I
Ml f)rr>-.t| for ' xrrutlon
The .Is to
bring ahout an
r, He ?ays
?
"All
r the
ers 1
;>nry Ganse, hi?
attorney, and ?r*.' ymns wait?
ing l'?
end
man : s gas
maik
?
'
?-. and
'ame?
'
Mr. Wh.t" and '
'
?
r? who ?r
and
Went Home to Work
rench T.l\
ofllce
?
when : be no
firewor
?
..ave the ?? that
i
day.
the first that 1
really expe
?
hour for the in
?eka appt'
wa? expecting the
'?
not s he woul :
to-nlv
TOPERA, Kan, Ju ernor
B the
name o{ the law by til
'
-asked and
e no com
..
Beauty and Shade Board Save
Band Stand of Trysting Fame
Dcwn ir. I. fpopula
??Hinz
. thing? about a Rutherford
bandstand, and they just about
rinced him that It was hie duty,
ai a citizen and a? a Councilman, to
have the thin, whacked down and th.?
rob young couple? of the town of a
favorite render.voui.
Edmund T?te, both a* a citizen
and as a councilman, did his best, but
he encountered the oppoiition of the
Shade Tree Commission, and the Shade
Tree Commission ii interested m
shade trees than in uplift. The band?
stand will ?tay where it I??at least
until the council'? next mieting.
Th? bandstand is in Lincoln Park,
and ha? been rtf?ht there for year? and
It's ?riven food service, too, and
that ? ?
f . ent out. Ar.d nob
? ?
?lin.
rve a
was
tter wae
. 1 wai
irapres??d upon ! .nd h?
?greed to do ? . and
irr.an. ought to i hi hie
?-i make a person?! Ir
the pa
do ?o. Th?
n Iman
He Rever bai ?ml exactly what he
heard and ?aw, but it w?>
seem?, to hare c?u?ed him to reach
delegation that
. on him was right - that the band
I should really come down He
-? calling- for th?
..-tion of the ?tend.
But rich- Tree Com
.-.'.erpoied. Moral? or no
mor? - ? city
had to he : and. a? th?
"id band stand contri
mission could 14
stand should be de
- matter waa ptst over
u-flttl the neat meeting.
IhrlhpUire of \\ il*on
lalites Hording More
?
?'
?t a n .r.?. ?. though
?'hio.
f VVil
?
'??
|S6 and Ilard
*,f the
? was sold first.
iring the
praph Hornsh
hanebaJl
100 State Troopcri
Pul End to Kioto
In Buffalo Strike
Straeteari Retome Opera*
tioni .nul tttaeki ?>f S\m
paihlsen \rt Di-ronim
iicil: Move in Stop Jltnejn
III ^per?,
under cmmimJ Oorge F.
'his ,-iftrrnoon took a hand
*-h ha? tied
I hun
: es on
was the q
! Railway
trihe of
g er?
wecke ago.
: by employeea of
: pid Tran?i*
on all but nine
-night an
ed that f??ur additional lim
? dey it
m car? on the re
Night ?ervice :
,-. At pr?s.
their run? at 7 o'clock in
M the e??t ?MM lines
i in heavy wire me?h,
? *-.e hail of
er ml??les
n To-night
i and an*at
. to operate
rage? around the motormen.
tan will continue to ride in
. each car.
under?tood that n? soon as night
?he con-.pany will
prevent the
automobile? from plying the
needed that
. ft r. re removed the public
will patronize the cars. Few il
trolley? at pr?tent M or.e can taxi to
r a dime.
Unclf, despite the prote?t
of eounsei for the company this after?
noon : s?ued
repre.
sent?* ' 'ys are
operut.r.g ?llega!
The ?tat patrole.i
took their
- Chandler if con
?iwab and Sheriff
Waldow ?r.d a?sured them of hia co?
operation.
Tiffany Sues for ?$80,3.50
On Spreeklei -Necklace
?
- again
irt records
?* Co..
;. ftled
i
itori of
? of John D.
.1 purcha??
attorney?, Kr.ig*
?'.in, of San
s say thai
, named in the
comr Sprockets, purchased
1 the t ? | te pay for it,
guaranteed pay
1 ;t was
pay in
that if she
?isband would make
raph of this agreement
;
f any
'
? unce al! rtnrm to the
md will undertake not I
' to see the child with
-. D. Spreck
? *.. Tif
? allego that neither M
n?.ail
afterward
??lalm out of the
? * Jr., who
'. August 8,
-?
Patrolmun. on Sick Lett \
iTea \\ oman and Child
' ? k . Uim? Fr.M.i
lus Borne to Retrae l'un
From Drawn!
i Albert G. Herter, of the
?talion, home on ?ick
ip in u ch.-.
"f his horn? at 598 :
?n he heard the cry that
! ad fallen overboard
?"? had said I
Jamaica Bay, 100 feet '
A? he reached
ren>ove any
??- H rte? w< nt ..-. after
After n e brought
Ar.na
Mur
1 hy aided Herter In r>?.
"T, remembering what hi? phy
?ician had told him, qu:.-kly returned
to his home .-m.I w.i? again propped up
?n hi? ' .ch chair.
?
L?mar Asks I)i-ini<-.al
:n.r Justice Leonard A Snitken.
! I miar, "the Wolf of
Wall . to .? under in.li.-iment
for grand larceny in the first d.-gr*?
because of an alleged fraudulent stock
deal, appeared before Judge Mancuso
i. ral Sessions yesterday after?
and a?ked that the indictment be
* ?ed on the ground that evidence
Lamar was indicted on complaint of
!'ite!le Allison, of 126 Kast Fifty
Strott, who charged he obtained
141,000 froj? her by falsely represent?
ing that he own rent of the
Atlantic. Gulf ?nd West Indie? Steam?
ship Dines. Judge Mancuso reservad
(.on??ress Drops
Plant for Laws
To Halt Strikes
hrrty. iliimmin? ?\_M
Other Senator? \gree
Wen-Mire*.
POMirblf il 1 II"** 1 I
May Take ?t I p ?n Fall
tm i), clara s-i.iiii.oi.
nnbifiif?. a-- BaHfsg Will
Not Riik C?ntenme* Htm
Frtm Ta* Trt***** W ?M M a ?*?>?? SI
WA Plan? for
?ntl-itrlk? le_
WM?I r?:l I
,,ren abandoned for ?
?a the remit of a conference t
-?ween A
Iiaugherty and Senator
.-hairmi.n of the Interstate Commerce
? i
'.?tion, of Indiana, M
logg, of Minnesota, alio of th? i
?tat? Commerce Commit*
said to he agree.) I
!eg:i!?tion could be p????d no,
it may be Uken up next fall to deal
with future atrike?
ml Paugherty alio
ronferred with Senator- Bora
Idaho, on I
the railway strike. Th?
Idaho, whe
?
and men
Daagb?
lid not ?ay ho-?
I
Dublou?. S?y? W?t?on
The situation, a? *e*n
rummin?, Watson and Kellogg ai
: by them to tl
day, present
?liate solution
Harding <i -m it wi?e now
to call a conference of the railway
ar.d the ?trikeri.
leaving the ' hita P ? I Itor Wat
ion chara? ... Um situation ai
dublou?.
?g fb.t Seaator Cummin?,
along with Senator Kellogg and him?
lelf, m yeiterday'i futile eonl
strike, had talk)
railroad executivei to obtain th?
at firit hand ar-1 to f.r.l ' I
any *ugge?tion?, .Senator ?*?
es made it clear
could not and would
the ?triken | ? Hilar?
i rey ?aid that o . I who
went on strike the place? of -O<),000 to
; had been I
He' .k Word
"The executive? promlied th'
1 whom they employe.;
occurred that t not be dis?
turbed, and Ibty say they car
or?). Further, the ex?
es a??ert
word on t of the de?
cision of th? i: Jad La
and are unab e to deviate from
wer? UUtbl? U See h
? - itaoi new move
1 to suggest and knew of non?
'. undertaken. W .th the s* ke .n dead?
lock, he thought it evident,!)
', have to wear itself out.
A delega roil e r. ploy eel'
act be res:
I not likely to be done in view of the
I fact the Railroad labor Bo*.rd is now
lor by law. Th? d?
< con?
.
'
; men. and N. W. Doa?
, hood of Railway Trainmen.
-.
W':ili r Company Iii-i-l
It Owns the Main
riaim Thnt Dfrlopnn?nt < MB?
1 ill I'ijw* in Ourvn?
_rgB6d Btiort < < ?n, -:-?i m
? ie resjmption of the condemna?
tion proceedings ye?t?rday against the
Citizen! Water Supply C
Queens, in the Municipal Building be
'ore Condemnation Commisitoneri
?m R. Bayei, Robert A. I;
: I! Tow ??>>-. th
^er of the company. Nicho!?? S.
led hi? deicription of
lysieal prop?rti-s which ?
! la?, taken over. He mas allied by
Joseph F. Moran, counsel for the com
to give a detailed des?
.istributin?.- and water
! La Guardia, special counsel for
? ? i 111
mony on the ?ground that th
uad not pr nain?.
i?nt of th? com
who also ? i that
tent ? ?
lid not own all it? m in? wi?
La Guardia
n con
ible mileage o.? the main? oa
: tailed by ? . ipany
?I n f:
? ? home ?e-krrj te
I ?..me i?
? land d'
had ln?talli
money had bien refu
?ter company. The hearing waa ,
.?day.
a
?plnyment on Inereo-e
? Jab 21. -Fo.
?
k-roup? of mail',
?nnoi::
'. abor |Bt of
I abor, showed an .ncreas? for the' ye>r
last June mi tlfht and a de
?ur. The Urgeit increase?
I and
I for car
i uildine ar.
t-utomobile?. wh: .to ?test >le
? were ?hown f -at) -
facturing. "J5.1 per cent, and ?iU
May to Jun? there was an in
crea?e
,??? m tw. ?nd
tr|ei ihowed an Inerte
IJ per cent; automobile?. TJ pal
c?r bulliiir.g and repi. and
nen'? clothing M, witk other in
rreaiei ranging within 1 per
toe decrease?, were '?2 per cent in silk
and one-half of 1 per cent in h
and underwear.
t lifton Dead Now Seven
I t??OMQ, W. V?., July 21
-? of a second body to-day, just
.? t.r no. n, brought the list of kn.it n
<!-ad since the gun battle of Monday
morning at the Clifton mine to ?even
The last to be recovered waa the body
of a whit? man found in Cro?a Crook
near the acen? of the fight.
The condition of the body prevented
examination by Coroner J. B. Walken
?haw, who l??ued a permit for burial.
The coroner', lnque.t into the death?
of Sheriff H. H. f>uval and member?
of the ?tucking party adjourned this
afternoon until Monday.
Rad ht Aid* Hashingt
To Keep Mail Mot?n**
' 'i'f? a
?Perta.
ti'.n rl.rr.f* the railway ttfa
? T**ehM by rsiji,
by ' ??'? I>?p?rt?JgaM
whirh ?? i MBi for
?ion (if i'< rad.
...
?tali ,,,'? ^
San I - i^
air I untry, tfc
dep?i* . ?
. t
that the- <"o?t ? wor, g| M^
[tel it*.
??aget a m- l
Proposed Steel
fombinesLeg?
DaughertyFindi
tmoe?
I_
the Boil
Lack?
'??_
pr??4^^B_
'??Mr
Dautr* -.-? -?-??j
warra *" that thl **Mt
will ? If?.
through. ? tok? *?,
?iderr.* ' ?? fU
mon**r ?n attearft g.
The ? the ztrst
I , - - ,
1 makes it .
<
monof
?
is to r -
latter r
these
Lacks
Com pa i'.* I? Pul
-?? .f urk
? "i ieaeai
t? -rtBii
l*Z?9|
. .
val?
?
II ?h? W*M
? ? ?u
* ": IMP
..?.?r?? I
?C*r I
ri -sas*
*'., iW
. itrw*
: *>??
Mt?
? u*
jtfc?
*e**m
?i n
;?; f?tt, J?
;i per celt II
? il aetklicjl
?ti the nte
?
?
Pay V Si i i Sb?
of the
;*.*?
.,;-,
tamBM JorthebtA
* Call for
Phffipi%iis
CIGARETTES
' Twentl/'iive centS ***r*
ROYAL LETTUCE
?Chtriemigne forbade tin
^wingoflctmccany?P
outside the imperial gaf?*-*
And from the sale of *J
royal en rived ? *?!
considera'.-1;?.' ..venue.
Weresuch a monopoly?^
attempted today, there woe?
be a mighty protest,
Especially by those *vho hi*
enjoyed the tender? ?*
lettuce served at tni**'
i .?tu?, ???* ?*tJ*\\yt
4.UMT ^lKl?*??
J. ?.tr