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n 9B Unusual News Stories From I Many Sources H Bxperti Rreerl All Kinds or H Dos From Misnintcl Pail . M Fox Trotter Travrela Mile in JAVAa Pen Minutes. So Prescription BVV ' fin Halk n Spanish Dnf&guM I ONDON. Mar. h C Prof IML I'arl lar.in to'. I tin mix th 9V Belborne society, m in address si V University college. Gower street, w y eugei partment of the collegi "For nearly 10 year we have been B l reeding dogs, and have bn i nhout 400 up to no, ' he said. W I rted with a pure hrd blak. hoi I harking cli .1. htt'e do I a 'pom' and pure bred Albino" !' kinese The 'pom' Ik absolutely, din- I i lnguishable from h Pekingese, I ull its p holoijuw haracterlstlc re different I "From these dog we have hn-U I dogs of every colur and sue. choco" I lite dog. led dog . .. i If ,iiicr ).- - I with long legs. dog with the bod) 1- I most tou bins the ground, .i I !i i ni - I es standing almost es high ail S I chair." I 1'rofessor Parson said that only it I per cent of the popular ion produced I f0 per cent of the next feneration. I Sixty per rent of the population did I not produce the next generation at I all) wT - f KSK A, Marcl it age fox trotter travels about one: mile In 10 minutes, while In th ; is of other donees, a dancing couple coven ' a mile in 2ft minutes He found that dancers, at ball which lasted from 1 j p in until S a. m.. made 58.ouo (p. amounting k to a distance of about 30 I among them were womi i tin high heeled ihoea ho would never M walk a hundred yards In th-.- street. I preferring the rnOlOJ A N. ARBOR Ba suet .iii.' iich Kan co-ed allows her galousl-e- to . i unbuckled I no lgn that sh- - 0 r "flapper" In the opinion of the unl-1 ; verelty women. She Ih just out of i style, that's the long and sbort of It J In the face of arguments, o.' ottiei i university women, th- countr) ovct who claim that women who wear 'em I loose are free- lencei In thi mstflnto niai market, the average Michtgai co-ed says that this is no prool at i ll The theory that the women who' I L r' . wear 'em buckled is engaged la all; j- "bunk," they declart If the truth must be Itnown it is' that Michigan co-eds all Iv'onr em fastened That's no tlirn thai lie Pi all engaged or dlseni tged, a few I thousand of them affirm. A woman at Michigan with em aecurelj fas-1 tened la never out of the nnge of Cupid's bow for nv , i.i n go Oft apace In Ann Arbor. Engagements have not .-! Mil en J nor accelerated at Michigan Jn In ter, the marriuge expert . lalm. Por tho last two years, from December) to May. the women wore 'm nifvi-J tered, and then ihe style changed I.viicnig.in women m.n tie i nnmiie untold risks of single bles.scdn.-.h. nut thoy claim that it better to be In style than In love. D R is. March IS Pari I j . had e-'smtte I has Just had a wine week," which to many people means the sumo thing. I The French wine Industry Is In a bad way About one-third of the fj ( uious wine lands have been M j drawn from cultivation, parti) as I result of the war's devastation it hi I applies particularly to the Cham- I pagno ouni i I bul lai gelj i" it I of the falllnR ofi ji . fpprti Even with a greatly i duced output I: I declared that marketa don't exist tot L J tho surplus i rop Pk The Anon, i n proh II trouble, but alongaldt se are the customs duties of other countries, What will astonish Amerlt however. Is that there is no aerlous effort to educate the French them- selves in the use of wine This gTCi Industrv spends hardly a nickel 'or advertising lo its own countrj The papers are full of ads for all l,in i. of fancy drinks and you can't drl a hundred" ardc along a country road without seeing -ign boards urging lo try sonieOod s cherrv I.i ui. so-and-so's Imitation absinthe but never a word about hc f in I vlnt- ages of lturgundy and Bordeaux and 'hninpagne. It is astonishing also to dl tr that l-'renehnion Know much i bout w Ins than - comnv posed. The number of true eurs Is surprisingly small. Boyoncl the ritual bottle uf "vln ordtnaln I 1 with meals, the Frenchman Is tli-lnk- ing the fermented Juice of th grape lei and lesa and H Is Ukelj ,. H true uuse of the wine Industry's dlf- $ H IVi A ",: ' hc 1VI world how a druggist manages t. make I out the hieroglyphic j of ;i d iccr's I f proaci ipt'.i n I The story ol the la ;. IVhn fCt I I I a note from her physician declining I Hn invitation to lunch out. and being I unable to decipher It, seal U Nj the I pharmacist, receiving in return not i I transcription, but a buttle of cough I mixture. Is probably an exaggeration I Kut a Spanish deputy. Sen- i Marti- I ner, has Just proved that tie rc a I lot of bluff in the pharmacy busi- I now, at least in the Iberia:- penin- I sula. I He prepared a sheaf of prt - I lions In which he mlngb-d among lh I names of druggists appearing I materia medtca a number : wise I sounding but meaningless nanus of I his own invention tike pul at - . ui- B calls.'' syrop of eplthaeamliim." etc. He declares. in a rei--rt 1-- iii-- Spanish parliament, ihai IB . ins was filled bj i .--us druggists v ll h th Ugh I eat question or hesitation. EDWASDBVILiL I IZj Ben lam In Jordan -a - rtiracy. BHjj .Mrs. Blanche Jordan pot herself mim .l divorce from lienjaniin today. "He, beat me Into lnsenil-jln with S summer sausage." sh testified. "Divorce granted." smd the roun. Mrs. Jordan left th. oourl room find Itenjamln approached the court stenoKraphei. "M; wife made a mis- !..'' he .-wild. "X did not hit her with a aumm; sausage. It was a bol--'1 1 But tho dei ree stood. Accordlh' to local delicatessen cx- Rperts a "summer sau.age" is a hat I dr' confection about three In- has in diameter and of the convention il bologna length. OCKFORP. III. March 26. Told by the court that one or iht gS ether must tcrve a Jail sentone fori (f onttnued on Page Two.) I ... Hirl BBBBBiBnfflBBiBBflHBBBBBBBBBn tatftw I iAk hsmm Fifty-first Ye. No 26: OGDEN CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 26, 1922. j ALL UNIONS FACING CRISIS FOUR-POWER TREATY IN MIX-UP COMBS 1 1 UNDERWORLD FOR MILLIONAIRE SON SIAMESE TWINS II HOSPITAL: 01 m ill CHICAGO, March 25' The Siamese twins," Rosa and To;efa Bl.izek, who were born joined together, were taken to a hospital today. One ol them had just contracted yellow jaundice. The condition of the sick twin was said to be criti cal. Physicians recently examined the twins to see if it would be possible to separate them, but decided that the necessary op eration would prove fatal. U. S. WATTS FOR GREAT LEADER, . GBBSWPJTES i Great Gulf Exists Between Senate and Liberal Thought of Nation BY SIR PHILIP GIBBS NEW YORK Iii my last message ; ventured to put down a summary of self criticism which I have neard from Americana daring my visit to jh United States. It Is valuable perhaps I not ns a .tudy of gloomy thought, too darkly shaded lo present a true pic ture, but as a revelation that beneath the surface of American cheerfulness and Belf-cpnfidence there are man) minds seriously disturbed by their analysis of political and social life In th r;ind States. Perhaps I may be l permitted as a true friend pnd lover of the American people to express ni. own views upon one danger and ele ment ot weakness which I think I ob Bene, In their social Mstc and proc !i"ses of thought. SENATE UNPOPULAR j To m naJnd the chief drawback to Mlic m.a., ut leadership In the 1'niled j Stales is the great gulf which seems j to exist between the senate and the I liberal thought of the nation. I ma b Utterly wrong, bin over and over again In conversation with men who ar. in intimste louch with the business ..nd financial life or the United States it has beiii iicpressed upon me thai there is no chance of deallug with the affairs of the world in a bold scientific and realistic spirit because the senate. Jealous of its prerogatives and old fashioned In 1 15 mental processes, wouldn't sta..d for anything that goes beyond 'he political platform of pre war tradition and party prejudice i The war. it seems, and the cfranged onditions of the world, have left the' p penology of the senate untouched. It is still thinking. I am told, In terms of old watch words that have no real response In the mindi uf intelligent people who see the necessity of fac ! ing the realities of the after war world ; I and adapting American trudiiions of I isolation and self dependent e to the i new needs of cooperation in world reconstruction. 25 YEARS BEHIND. Over and over again I have been twld ihat the senate Is at least 25 j years behind the advance of American I thought, and If this Is no. It explains the contradiction between the bold need of the individual American mind, and the timidity as it seems to me of Amerlcau leadership Take for In stance th question of the Genoa con ference 1 can honestly say that 1 hava. met no American citizen up and down the country who did not express I the beiw that the I'nlted States ought : to participate in that consultation of' nations on the economic problems of! our present slate. I have not met a single American who would give me I any reason at all why the I'nlted I States having called the Washington j lonference should refuse to accept tli (C'ontlnned m Page Fwo PROGRAM FOR RATIFYING IS TIED IN KNOT Leaders Hurry Into Confer ence to Draw Up New Plan of Campaign FOES SCORE A POINT Insist on Reconstruction, Claiming Supplement Was Not Voted Upon I WASHINJTt .. March 25. The j I four-power Pacific treaty and its two , supplements got into such a mixu)i in the senate today that the admin Istratlon ratification program tempo rarily was tU-d in a knot and the , leaders hurried Inln onferenco to I draw up a new plan of cam pa ign. i Challenging the :ilUMty ff ycstcr- day's action by whli h the four-powoi I pui t Itself was ratified, opponent. ol j the treaty suggested that the vote be reconsidered so that the ratlflca i Mon could Include th supplementary J Interpretativ e agreement signed bv I the plenipotentiaries at the same , lime. At firat the ndmlnlilration leaders refused to recognize any merit In th'. . :UKestlon but after aeveral confer ences they decided that some further ; action was advisable Must of them 1 opposed the reconsideration plan pro I poalng instead, q separate ratlflca j tlon ote on the supplement Such a separate resolution of ratification was in process of draft ir.f" when the sen ate adjourned over Sunday. U(,l MI N I - l 1 foIN I Throughout the Bay's debate the tic.ity opponents, sought to give point I to their arspmeht '' emphasising j that the supplement deals with Issues I which lung have been sources of fric tion between the United states and J.i pill It ileclan-s It to be the im- I dferstandine; of the signatories that the treaty shall apply to mandate I Islands in the Pacific and that purely domestic Questions shall not ! brought before th. four-power ..n ference for "consideration and ad journment'" Many times in the debate the ques tion of Japanese ini migration into Jhc I'nlted States was mentioned as :i ' domestic' American question which might be a frail ful soUrce of trou ble, senators on both sides agreeing tlvJt no doubt ought to be left tht the American government retains p.wer to deal lt h the sub ject a s It sees fit. Those who asked for n reconsideration contended that unless the validity of the supplement were established ejearly. Japan might claim the privilege of referring the whole Immigration problem of the Pacific coast to a meeting of the Iiovvers. , SEA i M E l PPLEMENT Meantime the business actually be I fore the senate was a second sup plement to thii four-power pact, sign ed two months later than the fir-". I and so defining the geographlt i I acope of the pact as not to include the homeland of japan As hood as it oj Vailed up at the outset of the sesion Senator Robinson, Democra.. Arkansas, offered an amendment to exclude alo the Island of Sakhalin but neither the geographical supple; ment nor the proposed amendment to It was mentioned thereafter In tin d.i.v's debate. Late In the day when debate on the donsi tli Issues sup plement had died down. Senator Ransdell, Democrat, Louisiana, took the floor and occupied the remainder of the sv.HMicii v. itll a speech support ing the naval treaty und advocating an efficient merchant marine. EDTGIICOCK in 5IS1 S Senator Hitchcock of Nebraska, ranking Demot ratb member of the foreign relations committee, took th lead In demanding senate action on the domestic issues supplement l:ul in challenging the validity of the vote by which the senate yesterday ratlfie J the four-power .treaty. The .supple ment. Senator Hitchcock' contended was cither a proper part of the treat y and required senate approval or else II was not binding and left the proh lem of domestic issues In a "dangei -oua" situation. He iecall-i thai b fore yesterday's vote ho tried with out success to get the supplement In cluded In the ratification resolution I Vltt.t Ml NTS SI PPORT1 1 These arguments were supported by Senators Plttman. Democrat. Ne vada. Swanson. Democrat. Virgin ib, Robinson. Democrat, Arkansas, and others. Mr. Swansofl dee taring that to reconsider the trenij vc.t .,nd in elude action on the supplement I the only way this government can get a guarantee that the Immigration question is not to be within the scop of this treaty." Several times they raised again the queiWn of why Ve supplement signed at the same time (Cnntlnnisd mi Pore i i Dan Cupid Factor I In Iowa Election CHARLOTTE Iowa, March 25. Dan Cupid has taken a hand with ven geance in the political al fairs Oi ihis Clinton county town Three women are candidates for office Mrs. James BicDermott Is tunning for mayor and Mi? Nick Steiner and Mrs. Martin Nellson are candidates h.r the city council They are being opposed by men candidates, t More than a score of the town's fairest daughters have served notice j to Ihe bachelors of the town that if the women are not elected they need i not bother about visiting them anv more Wednesday evening is known ; as "beau'0. night" Jn this town of 4 G4 population. Mrs. McDermott announced Ihat she approves the action of the un married daughters. She expressed regret that the women candidates have Bo eligible daughters lo join (heir supporters. "All our daughters are I safel married, or are too young," she said TEACHER WHO i SHOOTS YOUTH STILL IN JAIL j Release on Bonds Likely on Monday; Uintah Shows Its Sympathy Marlow ChristenSen', principal of the Uintah school, who shot and fatally wounded Lloyd Bybcc 18 years of age, on the Uintah road Wednesday night 'when fearing an attack upon him bv C bee and others. Is still being held In the county j.i i t and win rem'lan in cus todj until tomorrow when a' conilalnt Will filed agnlnst him The complaint will charge Chrlstcn sen with voluntary manslaughter, ac cording to David J. Wilson, county at torney, and the principal will th n be allowed liberty on bond. Hybee died early 1 rld.TV evening In the Dee hospital after pneumonia had ect In where tho bullet penetrated his lung. Timothy Kendall of I'lntah. said last night that a statement expressing the jaentlments of the people, of Uintah o- er the shooting has already been Signed by the heads of 25 famllfes there and is still being circulated The I paper Is said to declare that Mr , Chrlstenser. had been driven to the ; shooting by boys who harrassed hlni constantly and threatened him with bodily harm It also enumerates some of Ihe acts of the youths against Mr iChristensen and .i ri t -I Mr Kendall said the paper will not be . J f--1 1 for any purpose except to ex- I press the feeling of Uintah people j "who wanted to do something in be i half of Mr. Chrlstcnsen and aid him In I these unfortunate circumstances. " YOUNG WOMEN TAKE TO BANDIT CAREER (International News Service) , NEW YORK March 15 - Mi--i Catherine Burns, cashier of a Brook- . lyn firm reported to the padlcs to- ni'ht that she had beor. held up by -a heavily veiled wpm.in and tubbed I ' of f39J. Miss Burns was on a rowded j : Urcoklyn treet vhen the t.'muuiici 1 robber pressed a receiver against h ; side ami hissed: j Walk m ound, th- corner and don't ' yell, cither.'' i LYNN. Mass.. Match. -3.--A young girl bandit with a pistol in her hind 'stepped through the window of the ' j room in which Mrs. Arthur Malionaj was lying 111. bound the sick woman' I to her tied and ransacked the furnl-( j ture getting $30 She I leaped'. ARMOUR CALLED TO LIVESTOCK HEARING KANSAS CITY. Mo. March 1'5. j i A subpoena for the appearance here j Monday of J Ogdefl Armour of Chi cago to testify at the agricultural de- I part ment. s bearing into the unit j brought by the local livestock ex- change company against Armour and Company, and the Fowler Paoking company wax placed In the h inds of i District Attorney Cline at Chicago, It ; was announced here today. RICKARD INTENDS TO TAKE STAND MONDAY N BW TORK, . 9da,rgb Zi. Tex Rlckard will take th.- stand Monday to refute the charge that he assaulted ll'-year-old Sarah Schoepfcld laat No vember, The announcement was made by counsel for the port promoter today. MINE YIELDS I BODES OF 13 AFTER BLAST Four Other Victims of Colo-1 rado Disaster Still to Be Recovered I TRINIDAD. Colo., March 26,' The! jSopris No. 2 mine nf the Colorado) I Fuel & Iron company, which w.im wrecked by an explosion of undeter i ruined origin Friday afternoon, has j yielded up the bodies of 13 of 1" vie-t tlms. Rescue crews encountering dif ficulties In exploring the mine had j brought out none of the remaining four bodies at 6 o'clock this evening.) but the hope was expressed that all bodies would be located and brought out tonight. It has been a day of anxiety for the p.-ople of tho little mining town many of whom, at different times had taken up a vigil near the en trance of the mine to await the re covery of mote bodies. The xtnpe ha been cleared of bodies and '.ho re maining bodies are though", lo be in I the rooms where the victims were I working w hen the bl ist caught them I The first of the funerals of Ihe dis- aster victims will bo held tomorrow! from a local undertaking chapel American Legion posts are arrang-1 ing a Military funeral for the three I cx-servico men among the dead LEAGUE OF NATIONS TO GOVERN ARMENIA PARIS, March Jo. By the Asso ciated l'ie-.s i -The allied foreign ministers, holding sessions here on i Near Eastern questions, today de cided to give the administration of Armenia to the league of nations und to leave with the league the respon sibility for supervision and protec tion of the minorities The ministers finished their dis cussion of the freedom of the Dar danilles. but declined to make pub lic what decision hud been reached. The report of the financial experts re garding the revision of the financial clauses of tho treaty of Sevres was also approved but the details with held Tomorrow thj ministers will' discuss tho status of Thrice as well; as revision of the military clauses of j the Sevres oo EIGHT DROWNED AS BOAT TURNS OVER I SiU TII BEND. Tnd.. March 25. j Light iorsunn. including two scout-1 inaxtcrs and six members of a South J Hend boy scout troop, were reported drowned ar MaKiclan Lake. nea- Dog-i lawlOi Mich., this afternoon when the I motor boat In which they were rid-' Ing capsized Included In the eight were Joseph Taylor head of tho local boy scout i troop, and his son. Joseph, Jr RUSS RECOGNITION DESIRED BY BRITAIN LONDON. March 26. IBy the As sociated Tres-.) PoiUiaal recognition of Russia will be tho main plank in the policy of Premier Lloyd Oeorge at the Genoa economic conference If a vote f confidence Is given him oy parliament April ". ii cording to the News of the world) the newspaper of' Lord Riddell, who was liaison offi cer of the British delegation to the Washington armament conference, The newspaper keys 1 he premier will urge a treaty between Russia und the Baltic Mate. Poland and Ri; mania. TWO MOTHERS SEARCHING FOR j MISSING BOYS lOne Rich: Other Scrimps to1 I Buy Fliwer for Long Hunt CALLS HER ON PHONE Then Fails to Appear As He Promises; Parent Frantic NEW YORK. March 25 Hy The Associated Press.) A mother, cul- turcd and refined, with all tho ro-. sources of Immense wealth today vain ly combed the dark. Ill-smelling Bow ery for her lost son. heir to a million. At the unto time, unother mother, 1 worn by ill-health and hard work put I together her few threadbare clothes land With firm confidence prepared to Journey to find her missing boy. The first mother. Mrs. Graham I'uf ! field, of Chicago, has almost lnt her faith. Por eight days she has h.int e.l Todny she visited the haunts of the wrecks who have afiled in th battle of life and dropped out of sight I into tho cauldron known as the Bow I ery But she failed. The second mother, Mrs. Mary Whittaker of Henry street, is supreme I In her confidence. Her boy is iomi where in the west and Tuesday, in accordance with her announcement earlier in tho week, she will leave New York in a cheap little motor cur t which she bough', with her nving, carrying everything she owns und ready to back her faith aguint the hardships of the road. RICH BOY REBI LS Mrs Duffield, whose 17-year-old son, Gordon, rebelled against school life in Plalnfleld, N J , and fled to the Bowery, let her presence be known on her arrival The boy re sponded with telephone calls. But al ways, after telling her he would conic to see her. failed. Tonight his mother appeared on the verge of n breakdown and feured approaching Illness would force her to return home toinorovv She picked up her search today at the point it left off last night, yvhen i telephone call from her son was traced to a drug store on Klrst ave nue. MOTHER SEVER I LINC1H S Frail, still youthful in appearance despite the worry she has experienced, she entered squalid rooming houses, rubbing shoulders wilh unkempt dangerous men She never flinched She mingled with the broken dere licts of Bowery life, asking if anyone had seen a boy of five feet, nine, dressed In a faded blue suit. At one restaurant she was told that u boy answering the general description of Gordon had washed dishes there up to yesterday. At a squalid. 25-cent-a-bed room ing house, not more than two bloclfs dlstauce she was informed that a I vouth who might hav been Gordon ' had slopt there up to last night. I FAILS TO FINS HTM. At v another restaurant, a sleepy j habitue roused himself enough to tell ' the mother that s "kid like that w.im down to the Cooper I'nion." But at Cooper Union; which for eight days! has been the center of her frantic! search, there was no sign of tho boy. Gordon, so he has told her over the telephone i- trying a personally con- ducted experiment. He wants to ex- j perience real poverty to sec what it is i like. "But he wants to be good to me. I know he does. " she said. "I can't be- j lleve he wants to make me suffer. He- ; I may be starving. I know he has no money. If he would only come and j see me.'' EYES .i (TED un DOOR. And Gordon, with an nir of bravado, brasses into a pay station telephone J a different one each nli-ht calls up j his mother caliSher 'Moms." prom-j j ises to go at once to her hotel, and ' see her and each night leaves her ( i to sit with eyes glued on a door w hich : never opens. In a Henry street tenement Is a : different scene. A few days ago Mrs. Whittaker told i her neighbors that a! last she had put away eitough pennies to make pos- j i slble her trip into the west and to-1 : night she was pushing forward with j her plans Just as determinedly as'if the west was only as biz as Central park. HIvMis poll K s s CITY. Four years ago. in Oklahoma City. She separated from her boy Sidney who Is two years older than Gordon. Tlie lad drifted to 'he wheat belt and hl.H mother to New York. Seated In her dingy tenement, up three flight of stairs, she told a newspaper man that when she drives out of New York Tuesday wi'h .iust few gallonx of gasoline In the tank of her car. she flrat Li goini! to tr!k'- out for Kan jia ritv. SEE DISASTER I SHOULD MINERS I LOSE STRIKE 1 Coal Workers Have Largest I Single Organization in Federation I GOMPERS IS ACTIVE ! A. F. L. May Collapse, Some j Say, If Big Union Is Crushed S BY B K REYNOLDS. International New- Service Stuff Cor- reioiidrnt. WASHINGTON. Mjch 2V As. H j President Harding and high officials of the United Btatei government stood quietly on the aide lines to i night a half million conl miners got I ready for one of the tnoit gigantic :-.trugKles between capital and organ. ! Ized labor the country his ever wit- i i . Having abandoned all hope of IJ I bringing the coal opern... - an I leaders into any kind of a confer j enee to head off the strike, sclied- t j uled for April !. federal offi. who I ordinarily ure called upon to act in I crises of this kind, h ive decided that 1 no action will he taken by the gov crnment unless suspension of work In the central competitive fleldn leads I to an industrial and transportation j crisis or to outbreaks of violence I-almi b-idern h re look upon lbs forthcoming strike as the turning point in the development of the labor movement ir GOMl'I'RS TAKKS STAND They fear thnt the defeat ! I'nlted Mine Workers the largest sin- H j gle labor organisation In the country. I H will mean the ultimate crushing if H the American Federation of Labor H It Is because of this feeling that Sam- H uel Gompers has assured John L. H Lewis, president of the mine work- H ers, that the organisation will take i H its stand solid as the Hock of Oi- H ; hralt.tr. behind the striking miners H until their demands are granted. While officials do not anticipate H I that the big railroad brotherhoods will decide to support the miners ex- cept "morally" in tiic opening week of the strike, ir was pointed out to- I night that the alliance entered in'o between th two might lead ta tho fc two powerful groups uniting lo pre- I yent the defeat of the entire labcA movement. INJUNCTION DISCUSSED. Mthough the department of justice ejfl miners through tin .,nr-- if It shou d II appear the production of coal is beinvt I seriously impaired by the strike, t 11 , was the general ojiinion in labor cli r cles tonight thai there would be r. mA reo. tltion of the oci urr-ni i- of 1 '.' ' ' WM J when a strike orde- II John i II had been m tl,,. , at Indianapolis restraining the mlnei-s from laying down their tool If the government takes a limits step in the present strike. Lewis and Other officials of the I'nlted Mine ! jail rather than sgrei to recall tl. 1 strike ord-r. The officials are confident if they I H ' go to jail, they yv;ll arouse sympathy I H among organized workers throughout I I the country that will lead to walkoutt H In other Industry. thereby adding I tori e to their demands. i L ut si R1BI s BIT! rio Matthew Woll, vice president Of th" H I American Federation of Labor, rle I i lared tonight that the alms of tho I mine owners in the present crisj ; were: l i Kirst to crush the union and thus H open the way to wage reductions and I complete employer autocracy. "Second, to profiteer on coul now ! above ground and to maintain, If nut raise, prices of coal next full. "The mine owners unquestionably N ome a stoppage of mining for the next several mouths. Woll eald. j "They feel that after they ha. e j' ! beaten the workers into submission h they can dispose of their surplus and make up their loss of production un- I I der the idov fuvorable conditions for themselves." GOMPERS ISSAIIia OWNERS. Samuel Gompers assailed the mine operators for refusing to go Into wuge onferences vvl'b the miners -ind s.ij.i "If the mine owners thlnW thn have selected u moment of weakness among the workers for this vicious brazen breach of faith, they are se rlously mistaken. Labor stands unl' -ed and solid. H 'The United Mine Workers ire en- tied to the support of ill rig),-. ' V thinking mon and women and If my H observation teaches mo anything It H is th it the miners are going to hav" I the Hupport to which thoy are en H titled. As for the organized labor H movement It stands volb.l as Gibraltar H with the men whom the tyrannical H profiteering mine owners now seek to bclruy and to crush." GOVERNMENT MOVES. 1 The house labor committee wlli I meet on Thursday to consider a bill I offered by Congressman Bland. It--PObUoan, Indiana, to create a fsdi BH era) commission .to Investigate labor conditions in the coal mines. KB It was announced tonight that Sec r Starr Of Labor Davis would iss-ue a bBJ itatement lust before th" open'ng of Hj the strike, outlining the moves thf gV tne go,rrnnient has made to a?r: BgwJ the walkout- WM