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The West Virginian. [volume] (Fairmont, W. Va.) 1914-1974, September 12, 1922, Image 1

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9 Timrr nrniu ta
KlftKItt KtiULIo
IN NEW RATING
Wore Important RatesJn New
^.Measure Agreed Upon
Ppy Congress.
IGIVEN OUT TODAY
|H%h<Rate on Sugar; Rate on
1 Wheat is 30 Cents
1 WAp|rNGTON~, Sept.' 12.?(By
(the Associated Ifresa)?The ad
| miiuatimup'n tariff bill as finally
^perfected was presented today In
f'baKouse and the conference reB/irt
on it,/bearing the signatures
BEf the Republican managers, will
Fb^ called iip tomorrow with the
, expecijittpn that it will be dispos|
ed of BMUateir, than Thursday. The
L"yasure|then will go to \the SenMsfe
but ^because of opposition to
|{ue''''dKg embargo and other pro.
actions there may be devetttij'dr
more. As now tram(ed
the bill Is estimated roughly
(|by the experts to- raise approxi$400,000,000
in revenue .on
a the basis of the present volume
nations:import trade,/.Th?
jV-vel of'its rates, according to/ue
B'x&crta, la slightly below the
level ..In the, Payne-Aldricb bill,
the last Republican protective
|HfflHUbht.'ls considerably above
IHK|||$of the Democratic UniKfTtfe
,bill will become effective
hmediatjly. after President Hard.itni
It renlaclna both the
more Important rates-In the
itjjjion tariff bill asilnally
Kpon .in conference tolloOt:
tttfral products: Cattle, from
cents' to 2 cents a pbuhd;
Aldrlch, from $2 a head to
per cent ad valorem. Underfiheep
and goats, (2 a head;
iambs, four cents a pound;
>ne-half cent a pound; fresh
three-fourths cent a pound;
^ham and shoulder, 2 cents
ltd;" lard. 1 ceiit a pound;
gnpounds and substitutes, 4
impound; milk, fresh, 2 1-2
a gallon; buttermilk, 1 cent
cream 20 cents a gallon;
condenser! or evaporated,
ned, 1 l-2c a pound; butter
jjoinargarlne and other buthVHthfas.
, R cents a nonnd
and substitutes, 9 cents a
Bound: Payne-Aldrlch. 6 cents,
^nnd 20 per cent: poultry,
live. 3 cents a pound; poultry, dead,
n cents a pound; eggs of poultry
in the shell. S cents a dozen: honrey,
3 cents a pound; fresh or frozen
I salmon, mackerel and halibut, 2
I cents a pound; barring and mackI
erel. pickled or salted, I cent a
pound: barley, 20 cents a bushel;
KbrajtiS cents a bushel; macaroni
VRcdEpbdles, 2 cents a pound; oats,
HHmfc a bushel; milled rice, 2
Wheat Rates.
I Rye, IS cents a busbei: wheat,
30 cents a busbei: wheat flour, 78
cents per 100 pounds: apples, 25
zents M busbei; apricots, green,
ripe, jjjled,or In brind, one-naif cent
Iiu. uiudi, u uduib a Kttnua,
feeh died or in brine. 2 cents
d: raisins, 2 cents a pound;
i 2 cents a pound; limes,
siand grape fruit, 11-2 cents
d; olives, green or ripe. 20
ifgallpn; peaches and pears,
ISfeehba pound; pineapples
t, three-fourths to 1 cent
hrinr) slide jellies and fruit
WjS',per cent; almonds, un8'
8-4 cents per pound;
nuts,.5 cents a pound; cocoasats.
3 cents a pound: peainehelled.
8 cents a pound;
S cents a pound; walnuts,
ed,' 4 cents a pound; shelled,
U; peas, green or died, I
pound; onions, 1 cent a
Irish potatoes, 50 cents per
infls; tomatoes, one-half of
lent a pound; chocolate and
I cocoa.;i cents per pound: hays. 24
I a ton: hops, 24 cents a pound;
lafifsf, 2.20 cents a pound; maple
It sniar.. and maple syrup, 4 cents a
!! ' (Continued on Page Four)
I OAR LOAD OF FINE HAND 1
' .J PICKED GRIMES
J Walker's Siding
Built AT CAR. 12.00 DELIVERED.
CAR NOW OPEN.
Page 3
iff
Singers in Discord
|H VKSEQT
Luella Meluis, soprano, has applied
for an injunction to block the
proposed operatic concert tour ol
Ganna Walska, now the bride ol
Harold P. McCormick. ,The actior
Is based on an alleged violation o!
agreement by Jules Daiber, oper
atfc manager.
SlSi
Wi I a ilMl -iMlltal IWII!
?, .
Membership Meeting Called
For Monday, September
25 by Directors.
At the, directors meetingotthe
Chamber off. Commerce held -In the
Chamber's'rooms'-in1 the Bethlehem
nii?ii!)iavMi?mus?intietii"?wt?'^o'
ciaeB to hold. & membership meating,
of the 'iorgahltaUonA^ronoas
September ?5?Jn fSi /Circuit Court
room at the Courthouse. At this
meeting the members will be asked
to vote on a referendum submitted
to tbe chamber by the United
States Chamber of Commerce. Another
Important question to be
taken up at this meeting Is the
city water supply.
In connection1 with the discussion
of the city water supply the
officers of the Chamber have been
hard at work collecting data with
reference to the present wafer sup
ply and the best methods to lm
prove the supply of water that it
being served' to the homes of the
city.
A vote of thankB was given the
committee - that was in charge ol
the entertainment for the Clarksburg
Goadfellotos who visited the
city last Friday. The directors were
well pleased with the work of the
committee.
' Preslent McKinney made a report
on the road work between this
city and Morgantown. fie said that
the contractors had plenty of material
but were handicapped al
times by a shortage of labor. The
work is progressing nicely however
and if the material holds out
and the weatljeh Temains fair*' the
wot-k will be-completed this fall.
Thomas D. Connell secretary ol
the organization was praised at the
meeting last evening for the wonderful
work .he is doing for the
manufacturers,' road contractors
and local shippers .-in getting
freight where the shipping conditions
are congested and where embargoes
prevail. His splendid work
Is greatly appreciated by the menhers
of the organization.
TWO BANDITS SHOT
WHILE ROBBING MAN
TOLEDO, Sept. 12. ? Twc
bandlst were shot, both prohabl)
fatally by Joseph H. Wagner, 32
years old. a decorator here earl)
today. The bandits were registered
at the hospital where the]
were taken as James Gray, Canada,
and A. Smith, Toledo.
Wagner came upon the banditt
as they were In the act of beating
and robbing a neighbor. In the
struggle he obtained one of th;
bandits' gun and shot the formei
owner of the weapon twice, he
then turned on the other robbei
and shot him twice. At the hospital,
it Is said, the men will die,
INJUNCTION ISSUED.
HUNTINGTON, Sept. 12,-^-An
Injunction, restraining G. W. Mul
ford and Vivian Mulford from further
Interference with operation
of the Feddy School, ohe mile east
of the- city, was .issued Tuesday
by Judge Graham I" Circuit
Court. TJie petitionhrs were the
members of the hoard-of education
of Guyandotte. district, whe
through County Attorney Shepherd,
alleged the Mulford's are unlawfully
In possession of the property.
The Mulfords, it Is claimed, refused
to give the keys to the
teachers when they attempted to
open it September 4.
^?" t^an "
EETA
: ' ; . . . V/.. '_. j r..
IQ Ifl DfD PrWT
lu IU I Lll ULHI
Eighty-Nine "Operations Are
Unable to Work TodayHave
NO CarsCar1
supply on the B. & o. system
is again very ragged today.
There Is but- an 18 per cent car
supply on the Monongah Division..
ana a total of eighty-nine
. operations are suspending opera-'
Hon today because they have no
cars.
Charleston Better.
Tdday the Charleston Division,.
B. & 0., has better luck than ;
the Monongah Division and has a
run of 28 per cent. The Connellsvllle
Division, B. &. 0? which
ordered a very'limited number of
> cars, again has a full run of emp1
ties. Along the Cumberland Dit
vision, B. & 0., there is a 60 per
> cent run today. Practically a full
t run' of empties Is on the M. & K.
- today, which is said to be due to
the fact that the bulk of the coal
Is either being shipped by the
Penn Mary Coal Co, (Bethlehem
Steel Corporation).-to their plants,
which comes under the category
of a public utility and the B: & 0.
Is grabbing off some of its own
fuel on that spur.
Rull Run Again.
. On thie Monongahela; ,Morgantown
-ft Wheeling and the Bellng
ton & weaver branch ot the
Western Maryland Railway there
| Is a full run ot empties today. On
the Helen's Run branch ot the
Western Maryland Railway thero
Is a good cat; supply today, only
lacking four empties of having a'
10# per cent placement In conformity?
with the aggregate humi
bert of empties ordered; today.'*
Rrio^^^^W^ft^if*&e
.MonongahJD?Tl*l?n>tBs& O. Rail'
total there Is 125 cant going'to
the lakes and forty cars a-'day as
B. ft O. fuel.
Thus far, according to W.
Fepe, wlfo represents Federal Fuel
; Distributor Henry B. Spencer in I
, Northern West Virginia,, there
, have been all of tbe 5.40 cars shipped
to Michigan and others points
. except 25 cars.
It was learned today that an or1
der for 21,000 tons ot low sulphur
t goal for gas purposes was rei
layed to Northern Weat Virginia
. fropi Huntington. This coal Is for
i shipment to Detroit, but'has been
, held up' pending whether high sulphur
coal would be acceptable. It
i (Continued on Page Four)
I "
BIG FOUR LINES TO
; ANNUL MANY TRAINS
*?
1 CINCINNATI, Ohio, Sept. 12.? ,
: Abandonment of nearly a score ot
' trains, of the Cleveland, Chicago.,
Cincinnati and' St. lsiuls Railroad. ,
1 effective tomorrow was announced
- here last night. Elimination ot
: these trains was for the purpose ot
i conserving equipment ana motive
power to facilitate the movement
' of coal, Hj A. Worcester vlce-presli
dent of' the road, who was In St.
' Louis, stated In a telegram to Cln-i
i clnnatl officials of the-company. . 1
1 Among the trains to be taken off
: are four on the Michigan-division:
' four on the Peoria division and four
' on the Cincinnati, Northern. On
; the St. Louis division, number 2.38
' and 8 will be annulled and numbers
14 and 18 consolidated. On the Cincinnati-Cleveland
division, numbers
4 and 6 between Gallon and Cln
clnnatl are to be consolidated.
Numbers 49 and 1 and numbers 48
and 10 between Springfield and
, Cincinnati may be consolidated efr
fectlve September 14.
I Definite announcement as. to
' these trains will he made later.
These are the first regular trains
' to be taken from the Big Fdur
- schedule since the railroad strike
began.
| FAIRMONT FOLK
AT CONVENTION
Fairmont Is well represented In
the list ot the state officials ot the
Knights of Pythias In the Grand
i Domain of West Virginia which Is
. holding its-state mget In punting
fnvs ?h<a nrenlr \T \f Vnnlv A1).nv?
i J. Kern, J. Clark Miller and S. E.
: Miller are all 'elate officers, ana
' are at the: contention; v J.' Clark
; Miller and family motored through.
I leaving Sunday, Mrs. J. Clark Mil
ler and Mies Millie Evans wlll'repi
resent the local'Pythian Sisters'
- Temple in the convention.
Fred .Cole and Royal Woodward,
. the two regular representatives
from the. Mountain City lodge No.
. 48 and John's. Scott and Ed Wolife .
i who represent 'Marlon Lodge No.
i 27, left today for the convention
ClW' ' M
NcuHpaper A Progressive Force
n r' | -^r!TT*w'
V. VA^ TUESDAY EVENI
Crisis Passed
/n /i/ness of
Mrs. Harding
WASHINGTON. Sept 12 ?
Continued Improvement wltli
inly slight possibility that it
.would -be necessary to operate
was the word that came today
from the sick bed of Mrs'. Hard- I .
pruce appeared .friim- incomplcteJ s
returns to.,l?e assured of the vie- U
^^t.r^^0Cr
The. Detaocratic, - contest - de- .
reloped considerable confufefoh
due to the ^provision for first and ,b
second choice voting where ttiere g
are three candidates and the d
method'of distributing the second c
choice votes in the event no candi- j,
date received - a majority in any <{j
county; In several counties fail- c
ure to announce-the second choice g
votes made it difficult' to deter- g
mine the winner. Bruce, how- .
ever, carried three of the four city h
districts with seven delegates in t
each district and apparently p,oll: c
ed enough outside votes to nave f
the required majority. His op- p
ponentB were William I. Norris
and Da^id Lewis. . . * ' v
The vote on both sides was c
light, about 60,000 Republicans B
going to'the polls,jof whom 36,- q
000 voted for France and 82,000
Democrats. x ..
The Republicans ' only had the
senatorial nomination to draw
them but the Democrats had five congressional
fights. The chief c
interest in the congressional fights t
centered in the first districts In r
nuibu uuuKroDttmaQ i. Aian uoias- 1
borough, a dry, won easily over
Alexander M. Jackson, .listed ns fc
wet, and Ablet W. Sisk, who fav- i
ored government control of , the a
liquor business. Other Indicated c
winners were M. P. Tydings, e
Antony Dimarco, Clarence M. 6
Roberts and Frank Mish.
Goldsborough's victory means
that all six- members o^ the pres- '
ent congressional delegation .will
be candidates for re-election, j
others having been re-nominated t
without opposition. 1
. . ..? i
In Michigan 1
DETROIT,.-Mich., Sept. 12? s
(By the Associated Press)?The 1
fortunes of United States Senator '
Townsend held chief Interest In
Michigan's political arena today.
The senator was seeking re-nomInatlon
In.a primary'that will be r
recorded as one' of the hardest t
fought DOlitlcal hftttles in ihe -
state's history. r
With Senator Townsend oppos- r
ed by three Republicans who cen- p
tered their campaign fire on his n
support ot Senator Truman H. a
Newberry, the primary was re- b
garded by a great number of rot- t
ers as a verdict to be rendered by
the electorate on the action of the _
Senate in seating the junior member
from Michigan.
Congressman Patrick H. Kelly,
of [Lansing, State Senator: H. F.
Baker, C. H. Wedock, of' Grand
Rapids were Senator Townsend's
opponents. V"'
In the , Democratic, primary
there was no contest for the senatorial
nomination,' that-party having
agreed on Woodbridge-N.'Ferris
of Big Rapids, a former governor.
I
. .-T?
Both Confident .
COLUMBIA, S. C., Sept. IS?
Bojh candidate;, for the Democratic
nomin governor of
Ing.
The:crisis In Mrs. Harding's .
:ase seems to have passed, at. >1
official bulletin issued by at-ending
physicians this morning
said. ,
The text or the bulletin, sighed
Jby Brigadier General C. E.
Sawyer, White House physician,
follows:' J
"Mrs. Harding's condition S 0
a. m.: temperature 98.8, resplra- t
tlon 38, pulse 94,-early part ol g
night restless, latter part com- i,
fortable, general appearance lm- a
proved. Laboratory findings fa- n
vorahlp. ARPma tn fin vs. _
been passed. Surgical pro- ' v
ceedure (deemed unnecessary tor
the present. . h
UGHDOO I
MARYLAND FIGHT;
. p
Bruce and' France Likely to ?
Be Candidates for 8
Senator- -J
.. . c
BALTIMORE, Sept. 12.?United 'J
States Senator J, I. .France, Re- e
publican, and W. C. Bruce, Demo- ;t
crat, probably will be the oppos- 1
log candidates at the Maryland y
senatorial election In November, s
Senator France won decisively a
over-John W. Garrett, secretary A
aC^h^- Wusbinaton Arnte .Oot^g ^
fa ?fe Community.
KG, SEPTEMBER 12,192
PNE
V
LS POLL
BY HIGH COURT
ntersting Decisions Made
in Charleston Today by , ,
Supreme Court-'
CHARLESTON, W. Va,, Sept.
2.?Limitations. on. the powers
f county officials wsre defined In
wo opinions handed-down by the
Upreme Court 'of Appeals today
o cases in which the court bad
Iready granted writsiof mandaJUS.'
Other decisions upheld the ubllc
oervice commission in two
Igorously contested cases.
County courts were held to '
ave no discretion in levying or
ppropriating for the pay of
ounty agents in an opinion id
be case In which the county court
f Ritchie County, was ordered to
rovide for the pay" of D. W. Mc- ,
'arland as county agent. Under (
be law, the opinion pointed out <
'hen an agreement between a i
irm bureau and the agricultural .
xtenslon division of th? stato
nlv'eraity la made, by which from
ederal aid the extension, division, f
rovides half of the . pay of a. I
ounty agent, the county court I
iust providfe the other half of the *
mount paiO.
In the'' case in which a writ of
land'amus had been granted, ofering
E. B. Rocke, Fayette
toiinty' assessor to turn wer his
oolcs to a special/assessor appointed
by the state tax commlsloner
* the court' held that jec- (
Ions of. the constitution .creating .
be office of assessor should' vhe
ead In connection with sections
equirlng equality of assessment
o read it declared -the' assessor
P" asent of the legislature and
uhject to the supervision of .that
through other . officers.' The'
commission or 'appointed
pWrt?TK aHSesstfr ul7f-tlrr*case ~ icttei 9
Jalmlng the elected assessor had ?
set the ;true< a!nd actbal'H
alue iol land in jurfoouhtyv . ; '
Petitions of the citjr of Bluefleld
nd the Royal Glen Land '& Lura- 1
er, Co., for suspension of public '
ervlce commission order? werev
Ismls8ed. In the .first case the
ourt held the commission , had *. ?
uri8dict!on to grant an Increase '
u water rateB, although another '
ase was pending on appeal to the '
rapreme court or me uniien 1
itates. " <
In another the Supreme Court j
eld there was no appeal directly 1
o It trom a permit granted by the
ommisslon to construct, a dam 1
or gesierating hydro-electric 1
ower. - , 1
Other decisions were: Peterson '
a. Mclntlre, :Wetzel County, Cirult
Court reversed, demurrer
ustalned; Leckle vs Bray. Mingo
lounty, Circuit, Court sustained. ;
MRS. BENJAMIN DEAD
MIDDLETOWN, N. Y-. Sept 12. J
-Mrs, Park Benjamin, 56, brother ,
,f Mrs. Enrico Caruso, who had ,
men a patient at a. Goshen sanltalum
(or twelve years died Buddeny
there last night. E
Mrs. Benjamin survled her bus- <
iand, widely known patent lawyep (
y less than a month--Her deatn j
dds (urther complications to the (
ontest which her children lndicat- t
.1 1,1 Kv.tr.., tl.alw fntU
u uicj nuuiu uiiufi U'iu utcu iaiu
rs> will .
MAKES CONFESSION
KANSAS CITY, Mo? Sept. 12?
1 confession that be had killed his
wo daughters and thrown .their
lodies Into the Missouri river was
nade today by Tony Dlnello, of
Kansas City, Kansas, to Henry
Simmer, chief of polled and severil
detectives, the police chief enlounced
today. .
REACH VERDICT
WASHINGTON Sept. 12.-Do- (
ailment of an express train on
he Michigan Central Railroad
ear Gary. Ind., August 20, which
esulted In the death of two railoa'd
employes and lhjury of two
assengers was cauBed byi "ma[cloud
tampering with .the track"
ccordlng to a report issued today
y the Bureau of Safety of the Inerstate
Commerce Commission.
Get Your Share?
WASHINGTON, Sept' 12?
Everybody's cash on hand Increased
,by( 4 6 cents during August,
according' tiT a circulation
statement Issued ,by the trea- f
sury., v j
On.September X the per cap- t
Jta circulation of money J
throughout .'the country was <
139.93 ae compared with '
139.47 cents on-August 1 and 1
frith; 342.99. on September la <
year ago.
The total amount of money
waav whMe'the ,
population o'rjfolP&untry was' I
eattm5W''at'?ilOi01JiOO#; per- I
^ A,
WPF
,iv rc
Lady iri Waiting Y
>ffiy J9SRK|^H
ifl|H
a
Lady/Mulholland Is the lady-ln- "
valtlng to Princess Mary, who re- '
lently married Viscount Lascelles. t
3he Is the daughter of Lord Dun- r
eath, and is one of the most it
popular ladies In the court circles. *
SHjpiij^uj'^ *
' TO EAST URGED '
? e
lurren Requests Operators
to Decrease Western
Shipments- s
ljl: t
M cl
W. C? Curren,..Baltimore, .gen- d
iral superlntendentof, transportation,.0,,
BKltfoad; has' Issued s
a circular urging coal operators-to -v
increase the eastern ooal ship- j
neritf jma^-dd?'^ih''e weite!rn t
soal sh'lpmetfte.vHdr,intimates, that v
further heavy, western'-'shfpments,
?vlll interfere with the future car I
supply. 0
Dally. Shipments 1
Oft the Mononggh Division, B.
fc 0., yesterday there were lis t
cars of coal shipped to the lakes t
There were '378 cars of coal load- t
adieast and 2S6 cars.west East f
oft the Charleston Division, B. &' u
0. there were 10 oars of cbal Ioad-|
sd to the,Bast and seven to the I
lakes.
Twenty-seven cars of coke were
loaded on the division. Twentytwo
cars loaded Vest and five east.
Ten cars of coal was loaded by
wagon mines. ,,
Dally Railroad Fuel 31
Railroad fuel loading oft the !
Monongah Dlvlslap, B. & 0. on
Monday was 208 cars of which the
B. & 0. secured: 120 cars and t!
foreign roads 88. Oft the Carleston
Division, B. & O. forty cars of
railroad fuel were loaded- of which ,
the B. & 0. secured ten and for- i,
elgn roads the remainder.
Personal Mention. ?
losepb W. Reed, head of the
;afety department,' Consolidation ,,
3oal Co., Is in Coalwool, W. Va., "
inducting nrst am wore in mo
?ocahontas-New River field of.that ft
iompany, He will return to Fairno'nt
on September 25. h
J. W. Howard, Of Branson, Long
i McFadden, coal brokere, Phlla- i,
lelphta, (is in Fairmont today on
mslneBS. He was formerly a darks- p
rnrger. ?
Glenn F. Bairns," of, Hite-Barnai',
2oal Co.. has gone on an auto trip I
o Atlantic City, and points'in New
England. He Is accompanied by
dra. Barns. t
Charles E. Hawker, .Fairmont rep- o:
esentatlve of the Edward Hlnes ?
ioal and lumber . Interests, will fii
(Continued on Page'Four) '1
n
)FFICERS ENJOY V; J
PEACEFUL .HOURS?
b
si
Yesterday was about the most
leaceful day of the entire sum- si
ner In Palrinont and Marion b
lounty, if the acUvity of Chief tl
if Police L. D. Snider's city of- w
leers and Sheriff J. D. Charlton's ai
leputies, is a criterion of lawless- '
teas. n
' The county officers ' did. not r
nake a slngle arrest last night or
ill. day yesterday, and this morn- r
ng business was not at all'-ftish- ng.
at Sheriff Charlton's head, .
iwrtersfi
Likewise, , the city officers had' "2
Ittle to tdo yesterday: Their, a'c- f
ivity was evidenced this, mortiing .
ly the first blank session of police 5
ourt in- many-days: ' Not; even -'a r
ilnlela* 41.. ?U? ..11
WJBIU4 ui uio viw;. tim&iutl ic|(U*
at Ion s to before Mayor W. W. J
lonaway this horning.' - , i '
?~ | ^?11? ?BURIAL
IN OHIO . \
Thee body ? ofc 'Mri; -" William I
Io.oye,,*ho?e fleatb oebnrrediyetf S?
eraay .atfcher, home on.Waablnj- e
oSi'ettSyswm bej'takeSi -'tbmbr- b
ow morning to ber borne at Cald- c
eel!, . Ohio; lor buriaL t
Fu" Ai
ACE I
MANIS LEADERS
DISCUSS PROGRAM
ihairmen of Committees and
President Prepare for
Winter's Work. ,
. *7 > \
The chairmen .of the;'varloui
rorking committee* ot the Klwan3
club met Dr. L. D. Howard,
resident,ot the club, at.hla otflcc
sat. evening dnd spent two houn
a discussing lines along which the
tub ought to direct Its effor(i
urlng the winter. While meetlngl
ave been good'and aomo-excelent
programs have been enjoyed
urlng the summer the club hai
one little constructive work more
ban launching a movement toi
ecurtng additional fire fighting
.pparatus tor the city. This ap
aratps has not been purchased
et, although there has beer
15,000 set aside In the, budget 01
he city to take care of this addilonat
equipment.
The meeting, was attended bj
bout, eleven of the chairmen and
he discussion of club actlvltlei
rought several suggestions thai
ad merit ,ahd It was the sense o|
h? meeting' that. a number ol
hese ought to be taken up at
apldly .as the club could devote
be necessary attention to them, In
n effort to accomplish something
rorth while., At the luncheon-to
lorrow, it Is likely, that the more
rgent of the campaigns, such, at
be one referring to hygienic !conItions
In the schools of the city,
nd the manner In which the prols!ons;of,the
milk,, ordinance art
sing"carried out will be brought
o the attention of the club.
50NUS BILL ABOUT ;
READY FOR HARDING
WASHINGTON. Sept. 12?The
oldters', bonus l.blll was today. In
he.forjnSlbdt 11 wlll.gotoPjesi.
ent .Harding, perhaps within ten
ays'or two weeks.'
Provisions added by the ^hnatt
rare > elltnlnsdcd .by the^co^irew
hree hours.'9 ThMe'proVlfcloii
re're:1 i'j'.- ' ' /,?' %
Payment1 of the-bonus opt ol
nteresis.'frdm. the 111,000,-000,'
00 foreign debfahd. the SmithlcNary
reclamation plan.
ThejiUl'.was to he. reported tc
he House today-b.ut"actlon.on.il
>oth there and In the Senate was
o ] follow;. disposition - of the coner'ence
report on 'the.' tariff mess
te- M
iigh compliment
paid to hughes
RIO JANEIRO, Sept. 12.?"It the
nlted States determines there
ball be no more. war, there shall
e no more war, as sne is the
:rongeet nation In the world," wae
te statement made to Secretary
lughes by Brazilian officials last
Ight,
Senator Alfredo Allls, spokesman
ir the government, said that Mr.
[ughes was the man behind the
un who was best able to conserve
le peace of the world. - I
"Yon have become known
lroughout the world," he contln
ed,\ "as one of the advocates ol
eace In whose hands, perhaps le
le solution of that problem."
Secretary Hughes In expressing
Is (hanks said Brazil and the Un!<
id States were Joined hand In
and, In the great cause of peace.
xact number who
Sere lost unknown
SOUTHAMPTON, t;I., Sept. 12.
-,i na iobh 01 me in tne IlounderlnE
t the Qermpn steamship Hamirinla
off Vigo, Spain, last Satnray
will probably never be definite
known. The passenger list was
ot saved, and the total ot those on
oard can only be-approximated.
Captaln Altted Hoeler, commoner
of the jHalnmonla,-asserts that
nly fifteen persona are missing
lit of- a total of 657, The crew, lie
bllevea numbered 192 and the passngera
366.
Captain Day, commanding the
teamshlp . Kinfanns; Castle which
rOnght .385, survivors, here says
iere' was pbsslbly' 80 'drowning
bile.others' placed the death list
t "0. ' g j
iNNUAL OUTING OF
WOODMEN TONIGHJ
'The annual' outing of the local
amp. ot '* the "Woodmen of the
Vorld together with the members
idles ;ot -thd Woqdlnen-'will b<
eld' this evening at'the-Morgan
amp in Wlndeld District Bathi?
followed by.-a corn and welner
out Is the program outlined for
te,affair.
All members of the camps and
heir ladles are' asked to meet at
:30 o'clock at the .Woodman!!
[ail - where J transportation ;wlll
walt.v. tSem'- to'." the : ica&plhj
round. The transportation will
e -free and the committee It
barge want all the membemr.fo
I Shop Crafts Leaders Go Into
! Matter at Meeting Today
| JEWELL'S STATEMENT
| Tells of Meeting at Noon,
' CHICAGO, sepr. 12.?A basis
1 (or settlement o( the strike of rall1
way shopmen was considered to;
day by 'the general policy com;imlttee
of the shop crafls, B. M.
Jewell, head nt the railway em!
ployes'. department of the Amerl1
can Federation of Labor, an1
nounced at the conclusion o( Hie
morning session.
' been'present oil to the policy com
mlttee notwithstanding ma
rumors and reports concerning
1 settlement planB. He. however.
; would give no Indication what the
plan was and asked that speculation
concerning It be dropped In
were, indications', union officials
inent would be reached late to
1 nbtseenjtlie statement would read
stetementtotbe'sbl||tor general,
the; B. & 0. freight station In Fairmont
has resigned his position on

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