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I | PAGE EIGHT MINERS MARGH TOWARD MINED) 2 from P: in Boone courmty, with the an | ¢ advising the men | march in Mingo | ay This step was and Mooney had Gen. H. H. Ban arrived this mor OFFICIALS DENY REPORT OF TILT. a. CHA W. Va. Aug. 26.— yh bee A ¢ ce of Sheriff Chaf. a0 rn 1 today that there | 7 at en Log: of armed CITIZEN ARMY BREAKS 1 Madi CAMP—ON TO MINGO cag hy ga ops RACINE, W. V FEDERAL TROOPS TO AWAIT ACTION ORDER. WASHINGTON before ree in the MBUS, ©.. A * rra he We NA, W Va Aug. nd Secretary ted Mine Workers, passed . eat 11ie%Glodk to the cam Prince Takehiko Yamashing has here which han |Baval aviation school at Oppana, ed about two miles west of | Lieutenant. : of | imperial family of Yamashino. r dinner. It was reportec 6 workers” officia strage j the road BY NATIONAL Japanese Prince Full Fledged Birdman just graduated from near Tokyo, Although but 23 years of age, the prince is the head of the Sandbagged By Surplus Gold Supply SHAWMUT BANK BOSTON . ciated Press.}—Premler Lioyd George. replying today to Eamonn De Valera he Casper Dafly Cribune in aluding to the demand for recogn!- tion of Ireland as a foreign power, says De Valera “is playing with ‘ phrases to suggest that the principle } of government by the consent of the / ‘governed compels recognition of that | demand on our part, or that in repudi- . ating It, we are straining geographical jand historical consideratons to justify (Continued from Page 1) a-claim to ascendancy over the Irish race.” their title to Independence there cam be for them no rebirth to freedom, |. The prime minister warns Mr. De “In Ireland's ease. to speak of her | Valera that owing to “the action being seceding from a partnership she has|t#ken in certain quarters, it is dan- he negotiations.” not accepted or from an allegiance Serous to protong ti | which she has not undertaken to ren-| Therefore while willing to make every lGer is fundamentally false, just as @llowance, he cannot, he declares, pro- r rer Yong the mere exchange of notes, but | the claim to sul inate her indepen-| Mr. De dence to British strategy is funda-|$3¥8 he will be happy to meet Mr. mentally unjust. To neither can we,|V#/era and his colleagues again> as representative of the natinon, 3 mee bergen ah. ENTIRELY, SATISVACTORY “If our refusal to betray our na- : =| jtional honor and the trust that has! DUBLIN Aus. 25.\By Tae Asso- deen reposea in us is to be made an|ciated Press.)—The reply of Eamonn issue of war by Great Britain, we de-|De Valera to’Premier Lloyd George plore it. We are as conscious of our|sums up southern Ireland's position respormmibilities to the Hving as we on an Irish settlement which js and |are mindful of the principle of our ob-|™must remain unchanged Mr. De Val- |ligations to the heroic dead. lera declared in addressing the Dati | “We have not sought war nor do! Eireann today after reading the reply | we seek war, but if war be made upon the public sessions of that body. us we must defepd ourselves and shall; The Dail re-elected Mr. De Valera @o so, confident that whether our de- 49d the members of the cabinet. It jfense be successful or unguccessful,|2!s0 sanctioned the loans of 500,000, | rio body of representative Irishmen or, 069 pounds in Irelan2 and $20,000,000 | Irish women will ever propose to the, in America. i nation the surrender of its birthright.) After reading the letter to. Lloyd “We long to end the conflict be-|George, Mr. De Valera said: tween Great Britain and Ireland. If} ‘That reply ‘sums up-our position, your government be determined to tm-|and I do not think it necessary to deal | pose its will upen ue by force and an-|with it now, particularly as we have- tecedent to negotiations to insist upon |n't got a reply from the Eritsh gov- onditions that involve a surrender of | ernment. jour whole national position and | “Our position is unchanged. We make negotiations a moekery, the re-|cannot change our position, because it \ sponsibility for the continuance ofjis fundamentally sound. Just the mo- the conflict rests upon you. ment we get off that fundamental PEACE SECURED ON rock of right and justice we have no CONSENT OF GOVERNED. case whatsoeve: No fight can be m the basis of the broad guiding |™de except on that rock and on that the Japanese with the rank of Second, who were } * tan mbers e i] . SF RI! +5 ry vent of the governed, peace can se- MADIS Was 3 26—(By| Our Atlantic coast is considerably transportation, insurance and®* other! a — __ MADISC y, Va, Aug. 26—cpy| Ou a apie acrg arti ea other |oured * a peace that will be justi|C@iis @q@ Doctor. Fici cana barring de- | 7 paenpmenaoeng ge ringed with sand hills that storm) services; but our chief opportunity i8/anq honorable to all and fruitful of ’ sertions, th ni would be | ™!° : roast bie , in PFO-| waves. have piled above the normal| through foreign investments. In the| concord and inducing to amity. oe ail. tt Seed arbor 3¢ lett (Racine. test against martial law, cate to an| ‘igeievel, thus forming a barrier that|days when we were a debtor nation| “To negotiate such a peace the Dail| Then Suicides MOB IN ORDERLY = te arc A ~ ; anes Ri heventiially cks the process. For|/Europe sent capital here to finance) is ready to appoint its representatives, | CONTROL IS REPORT Keeney of District No, 11, United Mine} y our industries. ‘This served to bal-|and, if your government accepts the| Inquiry amcng the people of Ra. | Workers of America, induced 500 or/seven years, now, waves have been ance exchange, and, in the early days| principio proposed, to invest them) pexvEr Aug. 26,—Lee Livingston cine develo at no thieving had $00 of the mep, tog D that crecigt| Washing gold and obligations to our/of the war provided a fund of eredit/with plenary powers to meet and ar-|telephoned from his tailor eatablish- bec: reported there Were nO ee mala be e again authe/aaek shores through what we call a “favor-|for the allies’ purchases. Now that|/range with you for its application in| ment today to his family physician, vel) ie 98 es Cathescar ra. would be ded for the : eye ET eae a | | 3. 4 ports of shox the camp. The! vere while the thotisands along the/@ble” balance of trade, until a! barrier|W° have the credit we must, if we are| detail. Dr. Philip Whitely, the latter reported men who would discuss the move Neon and Pertona|has been formed that threatena the|!° Testare & measurable parity of ex- Tam, sir, to hospital author:ties and said. “I'm ment said they were in earnest, and arian e as fehange, send it to Europe on’ the se-| “Faithfully your going to end it all,”-and hung up the Proposed to carry out their project. | taken the ‘back track, contittuance of our export trade, al-|curity of Eugope's capital gvods—|(Signed- “EAMONN DE VALERA."| receiver. Dr. Whitely rushed to Liv- When questioned regarding reports | —— - ready seriously checked. ‘Trade can-| her reliable industries; ard for a year] ‘The reply to Mr. De Valera's letter! ingston's shop where he found the here that Governor Mc n had ask-| not freely climb a strong up-grade and and a half we have had, in our Edge|'probably will be drawn today, the! tailor dead from the effects of poison. ed for federal troops, they professed | it wish to secure its full volume,|law, « government provision for ad-| British cabinet having met and con-jq note was left by Livingston be- ignorance of what the state and na-| we must dig away the hill of unequal| vantageously effecting this by trans-| sidered the Irish Republican leader's questing his tallor*shop to his wife. tional authorities were doing but it exchange forming foreign mortgages into safe-| communication. H ss was said that several! couriers had | Foreign trade must balance, or near-] guarded debentures that should be} —- $— CLACSIFIED ADS seasiien 9 camp a : Ma RIGHT NEWS ly balanee, to function unhindered, | readily salable in our markets. LONDON, Aug. 26. r road ‘late last night and carly toda The importer’s dollars p the ex- MEN MOVING WIT perter’s accounts; if these are not |€00000460000¢060¢- PREC ON Now. i sufficient they command a premium,|@ was noted by observers that the ‘ x and when are but fractionally men moved with greater precision | | SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 26—The | Tir Tents vot se. the. burrler—the | and in’ better“ formation ‘than when ny-continental rail carriers have | Wuificlent we ha e | they arrived )ester¢ While not iron and |)" | that 7 ‘ v1 money paid marching with military precision t eastern | r they | t +t a0 3 formed in line, and there was little concur- rter for his ¥ andise becam straggling. Committees scemed to be England lines to Sedo ee ssiser hacks seeps | in charg make the reductions ecsective, G. | Country because of some export from | It was said ile the meni W. Luce, general freight agent of | hs country; or, the money that came from widely ttered sections) the Seuthern mportér hh may becomes of the st were some. entire) nounced. ble because its value has been local organ in the line, and ported, Fi these wer under tho, ¢ OFFICIALS GO TO ENGLAND, | [= the toy instance if the exporter of thetr officer 26 Vise | demand United States dollars for his i AuE- Viscount | jorchandise, the buyer of, this T 7 jord lieutenant and gover- | fin - fi ADVANCE RUNNERS OF nor geni Of) Eroland,* was Heung: -| Phen Gse, must sell sometalog to 2 MINGO BOUND MOB. moned to London to confer with the importer in the United States, or find PEYTONA, W. Va., Aug. 26.—The| cabinet. someone else who has done so and who has United States funds for sale, tbr which he will be willing to take the funds of the buyer. In the second first. of the marching body of men who camped yesterday and last night| at Racine, five miles east of here and FLOOD DB! PEKING, Aug. 26.—Hundreds of |)... elie hak ; : who say they are going through! villages have been destroyed and | ‘money of the countrs, in which he Boone ana =cs=n counties to Mingo,| thousands of persons. left homeless |tiakes his purchase ho will have to Degan ae throus* Peytona short ) by an overflow of the Hoang Ho, | bu his funds from some exporter to 4y, Dafore '9'a:/m} today They rokrched |" or’ Yellow. river, whieh, > after “ml jhar countesewhe has) thosinebanney in g008 “order ‘and ‘seemed to be in) month of heavy rainfall, has flood- | .ci1, Under normal conditions the buy- excellent ‘spirits ‘after thelr reat at Ra-|\ ed Hargevareas in the (province of | (5° angraellinicl of euch’ fundman, abt cine. Shantung. i | dompligted iby. gugaxchasinn oC teat ISON, Wi cya) Aug. 3-3) Rea through the banks, but it must be re Mere Asdoriason Fiesih sts aneanae Denver to Honor membered that the banks cannot cre- guard of the army of miners who 4 ate them — trade, balancing trade, marching from Marmet to Mingo cot ° 5 |must do that. Brace eee abot Germs fone he) Italian Officer)” x: vrosent’ we nave a formidable Pitched camp in @ hollow near the ie {surplus of debits inst European business center and waited the com Tigo nations. They have no credits, nor} ing of the remainder of the force} DENVER, Aug. 26.—A military es-) money, with which to buy our exports | which, it was said, was strung out|cort from Fort Log: id representa-! except what they m: receive for the} along the road between here and Pey-}t Italian societies will ac. ods which we “buy of them, the cost which is, to them, multiplied by disparity of exchange—the hill hutting them gut estimated at former | of army, from th hotel when’ h mpany Gen. Pietro Badoglio, f of Italy’ his next tona, ‘where the nain ermy had stopped for body of the|c chief of st Union tation to Denver to us’ is FEDERAL TROOPS ARE arrive PREPARING TO MOVE. 1 n dollars, and the in-| CHILLICOTE : Aug 26.— the reception of the gen-/|‘terest this more than three quar- tween 500 and 600 federal troops w been n at the Italian|ters of a billion a year. They cannot tion commit- id us more gold to pay this as the Shoup and Mayor] entire world supply is chly about one half the sum owed us, and of this we ready have approximately one-half » that further accessions would ofly add to the “hill, preparing to leave Camp Sherman fore noon today for the West Vriginia. with his staff of-} iliani and Captain riv 30 Wed- ing. An informal recep-| To. level this hill we must transfer held for them at the Union| money or credits to Europe otherwise | than in tion wil station payment for goods. Some in a mo r| A banquet will be held in the even-|thing of this can be, and is, done mp of the marc! ing [payment for “invisible imports”— ss Radio Auto Pilots T = x S 28 i] 7 = S Sy YOR | 490 is B&) - 1x © ® ‘Baa HO A driveriess auto bile recently startled the traffic policemen in Dayton, Ohio, when Capt. R. E. Vaughn, chief of the radio section at McCoolks field piloted it by radio control through the business streets of the city. The | car vontrolled by radio was cigar shaped, about eight feet lorg, and h=d three pneumatic tired wheels. In a car a short distance behind, with a radio outfit. overhead, was Captain Vaughn. When they came to s crossing the driverless car slowed down and the horn tooted. SHOWN AT THE LYRIC TODAY 4 : * BPVPD9DDO 5991990090000 906-999 0994-9099 FDP ODBOD DIG 9S 308 995-2 50090-00000S-09000950099059 9990-999400001 to the ex-| are! > Suits, Coats, Dresses and Millinery Long Coats— Distinguish the new suits, giving them that de- sirable slender silhouette. In such rich shades as brown, Sorrento blue, Mistral gray, Volnay nd Malay with black also playing a leading role. No outfit is complete without a smart suit. —Prices Range $25.00 Up Width of Sleeve— Length of skirt and height of neck are marks of distinction in the new frocks. Skirts are long, With hems of varying unevenness; sleeves are decidedly full, and the Jenny neck is becom- ing to every type. All Specially Priced $23.75 Up Luxuriant— That alone can describe the wonderful furs for the new season. Exquisite wraps fashioned from the finest pelts have added distinction through their new turn-back cuffs and graceful collars. t Real Fur— And it must be real—adorns the new coats and wraps. Slender de Medici collars, and a marked Russian “influence in line are” evident, —Prices Range $25.00 Up A Garment That Comes From Fuch’s Is Bound to Be Smart We Feature Clothes of Character and Individuality. Prices Guaranteed to Be the Same as in Denver Stores. Z A distinguished assortment fresh from their boxes is now attracting the attention of tiebutante and matron alike ~Hats with that inimitable originality undeniably parisian. MILLINERY $7.95 Specially Priced Up DEPHHO DOOD IS PEVH LOH HHE LH HOGOH OGPHPOHHOOEGI-OOE ©FOOOO SOLS0059OD FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1921. street car lines here today in accord: ance with the order of Federal Judgt “Martin J. Wade. The service will con: BRUIN GETS SORE, SLAPS Ie during the period of the state _man’s FACE|TENT GITY IS. nd Joe Piz of Kemmerer "pebbably would | 4 be wearing it on a sling. Anatomical | limitations making that impossible, he; EL PASO, Texas, Aug. 2¢—Red is doing the next best thing—wearing ‘Cross workers have established a tent it swathed in bandages which leave|ctty on high ground near the town of Uttle except his eyes visible. The rea-|}iatch, N. M., which was flooded last son is that he was slapped—slapped by | week by heavy rains in that vicinity, a bear. It ,happened in Yellowstone |and people are carrying on their busi- park, from which region Pix has just | ness. returned. The bear, a confirmed beg-| ‘This ig a part of the report made by gar, flagged the automobile in which |5s,," Dorothy. Coons. a Red Crosd Piz and several others were riding. No|\crker who today returned from thé bedy had anything to present -bruin! Tiolaed piace. and he peevishly reached into the ear |) °°¢ i and cuffed the nearest of the occu-| Work of the reclamation service pants, which happened to be Piz, It {Was delayed about three, days ai was not a hard slap, from the grizzly Hatch. Mrs. Coons reported. on ac. Viewpoint, but what it dd to Piz's/count of tfouble with thé citizens of face will require several weeks to re- | Rodey. pair. In order to drain Hatch, reclamation —————_—_ |men started to dig a ditch across prop- lerty owned by Rody citizens. Several workmen were arrested by Rodey of- Street Cars Must * ficers at 2 a. m. and pet in jail and Resume Services until the next afternoon. pite of the fact that there still jis as much as two feet of water D MOLNES, Iowa, Aug. 26—'standing in some places there is nO Street car service was resumed on all sickness. Mrs. Coons said- Items of Interest for the Family BASEMENT Large assortment of Cottage Rugs in great variety of colors and combinations. Size 24x48. Saturday Only. Size 27x54. Saturday Only___. Size 30x60. Saturday Only The arrivals of new unbreakable Dolls and School Supplies really makes the basement an interesting department. SHOE DEPARTMENT © & Men’s English last Shoe in brown and black. Our regular $10.00 value. 1 $5.98 Saturday Only ——. Children’s Shoes in button or lace, shown in black ortan. Very suitable for schoul wear. Saturday Only. $2.98 $3.45 Sizes 1314 to 2. Saturday Only READY-TO-WEAR Fine Jersey Bloomers in good variety of colors. $2.75"? $2.98 Jersey Underskirts in all sizes and colors. Sur $2.89? $3.00 Small Women’s Skirts in blue serge only. : $3.98 MEN’S DEPARTMENT Men’s Blue Cheviot Shirts in all sizes, faced sleeve, gusset sides. 50ce Saturday Osly:=o We are offering a complete assortment of Men’s Felt Hats that commanded $5 00 and $5.50. $3.45 Saturday nly ........ Priced Saturday Only .... Some Saturday Only~... -.saturday Only Men’s Union-Made Blue 220 Overalls. Come in and see them. Saturday Only Full cut. $1.00 The Golden Rule We Sell for Less gle yl zPsseoumon le |