Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
=3 WEATHER. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to Generally fair and continued warm tonight and tomorrow. | Temperature for twent: y-four hours Member of the Associated Press | | the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or mot otherwise credited in this end:d at 2 p. today : .;ll!hca!. 85, = paper and also the local news published berein. < at 2 p.m. today; lowest, 69, at 6 a.m. | All rights of publication of special | dispatches herein are also reserved. ; Full report on page 4. Closing N. Y. Stocks and Bonds, Page 23 No. 98,527, Entered as sec ~ PRESIDENT T0 END , DAYLIGHT-SAVING | ONLYIFU.S.ISHIT Administration Willing to Ad- post office Washington, ond-class matter D. C 7-YEAR-OLD GRANDSON OF WALLACE RIDES IN BUGGY FOR FIRST TIME “Times do change,” Secretary of Agriculture Wallace Temarked to- day as he climbed out of the horse- drawn carriage which by custom conveys the agricultural chief on official missions, and entered the White House executiva offices for the regular cabinet meeting. His small grandson, aged eseven, rode with him in the ancient equipage. “That is the first time this boy ever rode behind a horse,” the Secretary explained. b WASHINGTON, TAX ON GASOLINE MAY BE TESTED AS RECIPROCITY BASIS Commissioners Considering ¢ Foeni WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION SURE 1'LL RUN %/ IF THE COUNTRY Star. D. C, TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1922—THIRTY-TWO PAGES. Yesterday's PHILIPPINE MISSION IN DETERMINED DRIVE FOR “FULL FREEDOM” SAN FRANCISCO, June 6.—The mission of the Philippine inde- pendence commission to the United States is not a mere formality, Manuel L. Quezon, president of the Philippine senate and joint chair- man of the commission, declared here today, but is purt of a de- termined effort to obtain freedom for the islands. “There are three things,” Quezon said today in published statements, Net Circulation, 88,243 TWO CENTS. WAGES OF 400,000 SHOPMEN SLASHED - §o0,000,000 YEAR Rail Board Action Taken mit Blunder if Disadvan- I Levy on Out-of-Town | ihat ve'want made piain. First Over Strong Protest of tage Is Shown. PRES"]ENI WH_I_ Autoists to Try Plan . e o eanatstor Labor Members. — — preciate what the United States UNCONCERNED ON VIEWS OF BUSINESS INTERESTS Has Had No Evidence of Disad- . vantage in Departments—Hours FOREE ACTON ON SUBSIDY MEASIRE WILL PROTECT MARYLAND FROM LOSS OF REVENUE A. A A Likely to Send Out Ques- tionnaire to Sound Out Motor- has done for us and will always want her friendship.” The commission will leave June 9 for Washington to lay the islands’ case before President Harding and Congres: IRISH LEADERS MAY CUT EFFECTIVE JULY 1 {WITH THAT OF LAST WEEK f Minority Report Charges “Human Needs” Not Taken Into Likely to Stand. ists on Proposal. ! | Consideration. When President Harding is shown|To Stand or Fall as Party The District Commissioners, it be- | B the Askoclated Pross. tiit the daylight-saving plan is work came known today, are considerine TI, June 8—A atrike g 1o the detriment of the govern- recommending legislation to Congress | vote of approximately 1,200,000 yient departments he will readily is- Leader on Merchant under which they would be ahle to raflway workers of the United sue an order bringing about the| : find out definitely how a gasoline tax | oz L ! States will be taken by the indi- mer working hours. This fact| Marine Issue. would affect Washington and whether | Griffith and Collins to Back | vidual uniona -ll'n-ned, hy' n-u. i v.as made known at the White House | BY DAVID LAWRENCE. it would be an equitable basis for ob- rond Labor Board wage reduction fadix. bt at the same time It WaS| b en yording has come to a | (2IMINE reciprocity in automobile tas | Anglo-Irish Treaty in recently ordered and pending, it . mu‘ml uvml thus f:‘\r xll er: is r:lshowdw_“ with members of his party | With Maryland. : | wax decided at a conference of (\ul("nrfi lm..x the reu’;fl yx nuv\;sk |in Coxiarass, Ha mean to keop Con- Lo’gx‘:x pll'“r:s:; ogx‘\tl.?!:‘dg‘l;l" :‘::::er‘:‘? Full, London Hears. | union leaders here today. oy e 1 epart. |Eress in sesslon until a ship subsidy |dicates that the Commissioners have A The vote in each organization R L bill s passed. Hopes of adjournment \in mind asking Congress for a law LONDON, June 6—Arthur Grifith| aemy ‘g ciiriable: within thirty ' A = 3 at would permit them to collect a 3 - 5 A ays after the board announces he President also s known to| 2 AUSUSt 20 as to give membera an | ool SNE PLTLL Si to Soest o g : and his colleagues on the Irish dele-| oy b Cr os (OSFY ennonnce lave very recently admitted that|CPPOFtURity to participate in thell|eign cars. but In the case of cars WAITING AT THE RADIO. gation which has been discussing the| o = » of em- S R ‘inced that the day-|°%P campaigns in September and Oc- | bearing District tags the gasoline = Irish situation with the British cabi-| T oo the vote of the ahop crafis. hien S comvoncedt by oo tober are rapidly vanishing. The |®tations would only keep a record of whose reduction was ordered by scheme was working to a dis- vantage, he would lose no time in admitting that the admin- stration had‘made a blunder, but so r as the business concerns in Wash- Fresident is in earnest in his insist- ence upon the passage of the biil| jcreating a new American merchant marine and will make the fight of his it. If Congress adjourns | the amount of gas sold to each local motorist without actually collecting the tax. In this way the Commission- ers at the end of a year of such re- ports would know accurately what the gasoline tax would produce if im- 1. 5. J0B SEEKERS LILLIAN "RUSSELL DEAD; - ACCIDENT AT SEA FATAL net will leave Dublin tonight, it is announced, for a resumption of their negotiations with Colonial Secretary Churchill tomorro: Tt Daily Mail's political corres- | e board today, being returnable June 30, CHICAGO, June 6.—Over the strong protest of the three labor representa tives on the United States Raflroad Bt concerned, he has nothing | career on | posed. pondent says British govern i 1 . : ; pondent say ment cir- 100 With their interest in the mat- | without action, a special session | T Sles Deliove Grimin oo s s orl| Loy Boara, 4 mew wage cut 'of 5 probably will be called at once. Stectl Murylang: ns have agreed to observe the full| ccN!S an hour for railway shop me Not Keen for Change. Urged by his friends to assume ac- | The collection of the tax from for- M lQueen of U. S. Stage terms of the Anglo-Irish treaty, even | chanics and 9 cents for freight car Tt was intimated that the President |tive leadership of his party on the | e€ign carg would have the effect of pro- thou . men, cutting 400,000 shopme; : | L 5 ough this means throwing Eamonn :000 shopmen approx Vs heen advised that the plan is not!tax bill last year and then the tariff jtecting Maryland from having mo- De Valera overboard, dessite their|Vmately $60,000,000 a year, was or working satisfactorily among the|and the bonus., Mr. Harding has re- torists of that state buy their gaso- | 4 g recent ct Wi Vi dered by the board today ¥ | i, W D . ccent pact with him, while the Dub- oday Lusiness houses of the city, and in |frained from taking the reins. But [line in the District to avold the gaso- Government Wants to Know; BeltewdRecotermg, lin correspondent of the same news.| The Dew wage reduction brought anidta SR Ihe is up In arms on the ship subsidy |line tax. which already h : | g EOREN onnection it was explained that| f 0 08 "o his mind & pledge | eprect 1n e A 1tito; Something of Personal At- Paper reports the impression that the |40 stimated added saving of §5.654- tiie President's action in bringing|¢h. party must keep. Just as Mr. | e. Suffers Relu se. Collins-De Valera pact will be aban- | 347 annually to the railroads. follow about d; -saving in the depart- | Wilson in his first term regarded The American Automoblile Associa- t .b t f A I.Gants P o doned after the elections {Ing on the heels of a $50.000,000 cut nients was due to a large measure to | currency reform as paramount and |tion probably will send out within ributes o1 Apph . it s oo D Tee wahs of et s s e e by T reation of kept Congress in continuous session | a week to local motorists a question- : ySurprise is expressed here at Col. 1 nce of way s o8 |all summer until he obtained action | naire to get a line on the sentiment| The Civil Service Commission has| i bl e S o {,‘,’:1;‘%?" last week. The shop crafts cading business men. so is Mr. Harding convinced that the | of Washington car owners on the |just put into use its new confidential | J/7, the support o lectors | decision becomes effective July 1, the I, Wi made Known that the Presi. |major act of his administration is 10 | question of adopting the gasoline tax | inquiry bianks, alming to learn the Violent Fall as Sea e Withatawal 'af ‘the othor sanql. | SAme date ag last week's order dent < ¥ was not keen for |provide a merchant marine. as a basis for reciprocity. 4 . ” 5y 4 o | % the chan, jut he was willing to| St AN oa T The letter of the Commissioners|Character of applicants as well as g [@ates in the national interests. This,| The minority report of the labor vizage in the adventure after rep- | Stakes 3 replies to a request for information | their scholarship. For the present Tossed S’”P Cause lnw'w'undr‘aw{x 2 m’;‘;xy“l'!lld-‘P lzzd‘_nfi“‘!nvmbers pointedly stated that the ssentations had heen made to him| Mr Harding is willing to stand or | on the subject from Mr. Cresop. and | their use is confined to the fourth candidates, but will encourage the |MAJority decision was made “with no {hat the change to be made would | fal as party leader on the merchant |12 Intended to outline the Commis-lcivil service district, including the sts’ forcibly, to prevent the|consideration of human needs” and t that these representations which | marine fssue. The nation is today e T pistrict of Columbla. Maryland, Vir- Of Her Death. election of those igrioring the appeal. | charges that it fails to carry out the iuased the President to yleld were | losing $50.000,000 a year in operating| oo con ot 5 ginia, West Virginia and North Da- Pettigoe Battle Splits Pre function of the board to it i sk S > L L e Commissioners’ letter reads, in Sidisteiee TReluding f the set a “jus 1o doubt made in an honest man a kota, and the tent i Br |anarennoat et and as the result of & careful | the ships inherited from the war and| ..y o4 followe: : Loy Aeras ¥ the Associated Press Tie London press is taking sides in easonable” wage. er. and as e 2 2 a an; xas. SITTSBURG e A & | Burvey the vessels are steadily depreciating| “wopyiously, any new system should X:,’vi:unc, aa] anners; wablityln s SO URGE June iae sl |the controversy over the capture of | Vindicates Propagand; Plan to Continue. Presideat’'s attitude toward saving would indicate, It v, that the plan now hingtoh ‘Wil con- The daylight Was stated toda: effect in W m | in value, and no others are being built by private shipping companies to re- place the war fleet. To drag on this way means, in Mr. Harding’'s judg- ment, an absolute failure of the United States to keep her place on be as fair as possible to the owners of motor vehicles as well as to the public . in general, which through taxation, at present bears ot least a part of the eost of tenance and the entire cost of construction. As a means of arriving to learn, industry, initiative and co- operativeness are inquired about in hich #oé elerks and cafriers in the postal service, but which later are being used| {lian Russell Moore, whose death was | announced early today at her home in this city, had been ill for several weeks following an accident suffered while on shipboard when she was re- | turning to this country from Europe. Pettigoe from the Sinn Feiners by British troops. Some think it will be a valuable lesson to the republican extremists, while others condemn it sharply as an invasion of Free State “The tendency of this decision is 1o vindicate the propaganda of the rail- - roads and consequently condemn such” statements as the employes have been able to bring to public attention,” the the seas, with a consequent loss to sed for all positions in the territory. i e tinue throughout the summer un-|4merican industry and commerce of | at an equitable basis, we are propos- ke It was believed, however, by her The Westminster Gagstte, referring | by atbort o swnsmanr, o T e 1 cabinet officials take the initia- [ yntold proportions. ng to ascertain as closely as can be physicians last Saturday that she had | to the claim advanced by the generai | »-. ert Wharton, W. L. McMen- tive and request a change. Cabinet officials recently questloned on the subject in the majority were represented as belleving that the The pending bill, which will be re- | ported to the House in ten days, pro- | vides for direct and indirect aid. The | first year it will cost about $20.000, 000. The annual outlay will be grad done the exact amount contributed by the owners of automobiles in the District of Columbia through taxa- tion and through the payment of au- tomobile license fees, and at the Mere Recommendations adequate. No longer will Uncle Sam be content with a mere “recommendation™ from some party who is a friend of the ap- passed the crisis and that she would recover. She was conscious until the end. which came at 2:20 o'clock. LILLIAN RUSSELL. | headquarters of the Irish republican army that “only part of one street in Pettigoe” is in Ulster and the 7e- ainder in County Donegal, says that the British troops have invaded the |imen and Albert Phillips, the labor | representatives. | Supervisory forces | of the railroad shops were not decreased. After dus new plan, which had been glven a | e ti : Mrs. Moore, who was the wife of - b ! s s % sed to about $45,000,000,|Same time we are, In co-operatio: v vi 5 e e of S G v i i o ((:Lrg:)!;‘:xl;xll:‘e;: d‘:;;lr“l"r:lse'ntssonr(:::u:f hn e the mnd of ten e ap- [With the A. A A. heeking to arrive |plicant. Eiye Of themow "‘x‘;"“f ;”r“ Alexander P. Moore, publisher of the | failed In health after her arrival| be able o claim that the g?—‘::la's‘fi, \;Al«;;:\'n:ss‘l:iel{all!:g?.lh‘ehf‘luld:»‘s and responsi: cerned, efficiently und there Is no|Proximately $250.000.000 will have ffieao»)é?‘::-li‘in ff lhl:“senumenu of e sent out in each case, the INfOT~| p o yrgh Leader, suffered a re-|home even those most closely asso-|not the Irish, are violating the treaty. |bilities of such forces warranted in their opinion, for golngibeagdspe&n. :TM gtov:{‘rl-.menl expects |t O en :x"a:["";m::"::!::; Dh"'-mulon secured to be confidential. lapse and yesterday afternoon was|Clated with her were not aware of | The government, it says, must xake,;m;:‘nlenancf of the present rates ormal Koy confiden o ge s sum 3 e- % - ine. 5. 2 s ant action to correct the ! e reduct ) anics to normal hours. j co ¥ | fore us, we shall be better omle ;| Under “appearance and manner” the [ Wy " 0" honnare o the family | e decline. Mrs. Moore's trip toinstant a serious eduction for the mechanics “The business men of the city, cred- ited with starting the movement here, | through the sale of ships and through the profits from private operation. | The private companies will be limited decide upon a correct policy. Along Lines of Legislation. iperson filling out the blank will be asked to give the applicant a rating were summoned to the bedside. Her Europe was undertaken at the re- quest of Secretary of Labor James J. Davis for the purpose of making | "A "Belfast dispatch to the Times reports considerable firing last night javerage a little more than § per |all_machinists, boilermakers, bl smiths. sheet metal workers, elect n clination, as far as can 1 R e v B earned o tevisit the White | to 10 per cent In the taking of Profits | «at present it seems Iikely that the | under one of the following five [Phsiclans, however, retused to give |y, PES, 800 M Jiy ™ Shons pros- |near Leftercran. between Pettigoe cal workers, carmen (excepi freight Jlouse in an effort to have the Pres- | and must divide 50 per cent of their | policy finally decided upon will be | heads: Very favorable, favorable, un-jup hope and early in the evening| cctive emigrants to the United|and Castlederg.alsoat Mullaghfad, on | carmen). molders. cupola tenders ldent reverse his action on daylight | excess with the government to Tepay | along the lines of securing legislatioy, | impressive, makes poor impression.|were so confident that she would sur- | States. [the Fermanagh-Monaghan _ border. |and corémakers and the regular and saving the subsidy. The 10 per cent IS not| from Congress under which we shaij |OF antagonizes. 2| Sive that they arcanged for & on [ Two men and a girl were killed in |helper apprentices receiving a cut of Summed up, therefore, the Presi- | guaranteed nor are losses to bel!pe authorized to Impose s gaseiin | The applicant's “ability to learn”|’ et Al In Demand as Speaker. the Lettercran area. 7 cents an hour. Freight carmen. nt has put the matter squarely up |covered by the government, but if the! tay in the District of Col will be: indicated by: Very superior, | ference to be hel ere this morning ‘ = <2 e icommonly known as “car knockers.'® dent has p e ! R e | olumbia, upon ditary, Rlow wels Mrs. Moore, who was very well Irish Face Food Shortage. A tholony to the government departments,|private owners Lo e “p Sfleg}au vehicles not holding District of |learns wl;h“esue. ordinary, slow with Dr. John B. Dever of Phila-|, oo 0oy b the country for e o mad fne n‘l’ueclthor some of the heaviest g e turn, believe that the | cannot take more than a specified | ¢, > or dull. e ¥ fo rohibition of the exportation of|assaults by the roads in their bat: whoze heads, in tur 4 Columbla,_licenses, ‘and jat the (same |léact: delphia. her interest in civic matters, was in D for lower wages, were cut b venta not be changed. plan should BROOKHART LEADS Candidates in Field. By the Associated Press. votes sufficient to nominate him as the republican candidate for United Thirty-five per cent of the total vote cast for senator is required to nominate. Brookhart's vote is more than 38 per cent of the total in precincts re- ported so far. His lead, however, is slim that the result cannot be positively known until virtually the entire state is in. Whether there is a primary nomi- nation Brookhart will lead the field by & decisive margin. On the basis s0 amount. : “Subaidy of Life.” Chairman Albert D. Lasker of the| its own ships, is paying sums out of | private owners as “a subsidy of life” | | for the American merchant marine. The plain truth of the matter is that Congress does not yet see tie President the bill would have better chance to pass aftér the fall elections than before. The republicans have i rich interests. To all of which reply is made by the administration that the opposition party will merely change its tune if the bill is held up and declare the republicans are “con- templating a steal,” which would, so far as campaign twaddle goes, be just as effective as the other statement. Democrats Favor Bfll. Fears of partisan opposition are largely groundless. Democratic lead- ers in the Senate have told their re- publican colleagues within the last time require the operators of filling’ stations and retail dealers In gaso- line to report in detail the amount of gasoline sold to District of Columbia “You will, of course, appreciate the fact that whatever is done along this detail of the system of compiling and analyzing these reports. We have great hope that discussion cf all these matters with the A. A. A. state of Maryland.” GOVERNMENT FOR LAND That $1,600,000 probably ill be made available for the purchase of seven plots of land west of 17th street, on which thers are now tem- porary war buildings occupied by the government, was assured today when the House accepted the conference re- port on the independent offices ap- propriation bill. Under “industry” the applicant will be marked according to the follow- ing: Very energetic. industrious, mod- erately active, indifferent, or lazy. Under “co-operativeness,” the would- cepting or rejecting the applicant, it was indicated today. Civil service district secretaries will use this new power with discretion, sion here. . The first reports under the new sys- be determined, within six months. This work is the first under the appropriation of $40,000 given by Con gress to carry on character examina- tions. —_— MANSLAUGHTER CHARGED Boy 15 Shot Playmate Who Was Riding Away on Bicycle. MIAMI, Fla., June 6.—Willlam Les- ter, fifteen, who killed his playmate, Thrown Down in Storm. The accident which, Dr. Schilldeck- RENT COMMISSIN i Taylor qn Problem Under ’ In deciding who is to serve on the newly created Rent Commission for the District of Columbia, President Harding is known to be facing what he has termed as one of the most difficult tasks now before him. For that reason the President i3 giving jundue thought and consideration to the selection of the five persons who are to comprise this important hody. In making this known at the White House today, it was explained that er, one of her physicians, said, was | great demand as a public speaker and only a short time prior to her death filled a number of such engagements. WILL BE PUSHED Await Fate of Reclassi- The House appropriations committee will start work next week drafting the so-called bonus bill, providing a con- tinuance of the $240 bonus which gov- ernment employes have been receiving for the last five years. Chairman Madden of the House ap- propriations committee said today that this action is necessary because the committee cannot walt longer to see if the reclassification bill, which has oils from Londonderry is reported to have been extended to include food- stuffs, live stock, coal and other mer- boats in which to import food from retary Churchill and if sat. actory progress can be reported there will be a formal conference of the Irish and British _representatives Friday since the ground was somewhat cleared by the answers the Irish rep- resentatives gave last Friday to the PATIENTS IN PANIC. Bullets Pierce Belfast Hospital ‘Windows—Attack Mystery. By the Associated Press. BELFAST, June 6 —Belfast was mystified last night by reason of intense and long continued firing in the vicinity of the Mater infirmary, adjoining the Crumlin road jail. A number of bullets struck the wall of the hospital and six windows were Knockers Cut Heavily. The larger cut was ordered for the Shipping Board, who is largely ! machines . With this information, we on Initintive. S v ively 5 in civio|chandise, the object being to termi- | “car knockers” because the boa ible for the evolution of a|shall, of course, be better able te Graged the primary cause of her illness and | S1¢ Was actively interested in civic E e E . re board responsi 3 SHfatre Gnl oiis; connt G nate the robberies of these articles |said it believed that their work did bri a t of | eStimate the amount of revenue that Under “Initiative” the applicant is to death, occurred when she was vio- s u Yy and was a < = | ir a | concrete plan to bring order out of | L L B e e taat T e ot s oo ming? Vory 3 2 ket TeaBecdn) woments Taovements from trains and lorries in Donegal. |not require the same skilled service the chaos in which the governmentgat various suggested rates, and, there. | & i) " ourcerul, occasionally sug- lently thrown on the ship during a| In addition to her hushand. there|The Times reports that the provi- as other branches of carmen's work found itselt after the war with re-|after, to frame Jogialation which will | TR IEO8 0, 1 S0 K e | Storm: The effects of the Injury | oments, her dqukhier. Mas | Slonal freo state government is meet- | This heavier reduction for the freight spect to ships, is of the opinion lhat,";:";‘r‘“ us to apply this system of tax- | ges! ”-flmn were not immediately serious, never- | Lorothy Calbit, and he ing the consequent food shortage by |carmen came under especially severs the government today, by operating | BUpeL: X theless, and although she steadily |~ (Gontinued on Page 13, Column i) sanctioning the chartering of motor |criticism in the minori Teport, the labor members declaring there was no 3 ! line should be based upon very care- | be clerk or carrier will be graded as Glasgow. c: | the treasury to kill 'h;! |nmal;lva"«:l ful consideration of the vations 483 | to “nighly cosoperative,/co-operative. Mr. Griffith 1s expected to bring |Justification for discrimination in car Has 38 Per Cent of the Vote the private owners. batdy of deatn | culties involved. such as, for ex-|¢oljows instructions, difficult to handle, | with him the revised consti’ tion for | Work. present method “a sul ly of e: ample, the registration of wholesale o ¥ his negotiations \_l'llh Mr. _hurchill Car cleaners, who now receive an Far Report Si for the merchant marine.” and in con- | AP1%. 0 JERTLACon of Wholesale | o opst-uctionist. tomorrow. Premier Lloyd George |average of $3.18 a day. were 5 So Far Reported— SiX |trast he characterizes the aid which | ports to be rendered, the method of| These five character inquiry blanks will arrive in London from W ‘les on |cents an hour. or 40 cents # das the government will transfer to the | 20 unting to be enforced, and the | will be almest the “last word” in ace Thursday. We will confer with Sec- [ The mechanics, whosa dails Tate now averages from $6.11 for electri cal workers to $5.28 for blacksmiths. will lose 56 cents a day under the new decision, bringing their daily -wage DES MOINES, Iowa, June 6.—|enormity of the shipping problem |{th " Fequit in agreement upon the . morning in Downing street. tc_approximately $5.70. Smith W. Brookhart of Washington, |and is looking at subsidies with the | 11t Feanit, 18 RETRETCRT BEOD the e ndicomman e il ihe In official circles here the outlook | The board's latest decision, which p political vision of pre-war days. 9; PP T8 L& & £ o B for the continuance of the conference |iS to be followed shortly & rduc- lowa, maintained a percentage of | S {oRders Rave. tola" tne |mit us after January 1, 1924, to onter | of the doubt. Doubtful cases will be[proacidant Talks With M £ or : > foito hetollome y by reduc Republican_ lea o ©|into complete reciprocity with theput up to the Civil Service Commis- | P T€SIQEN alks Wi rs.|House . Committee Not to|is resarded as distinetly favorable, |tions for railway clerks. telcgraphers and all other classes of rallway {Ployes except the train serv was brief and offered no exp em- men. States senator from lowa in returns tem must be turned in by the district tion g sald the stump speakers of the op- Vi i + definite questions propounded by the |of how the new rates were arrived from 932 of the state's 2,348 volng| position would say the government sl ,500,m0 ASSURED uecé-e:urleu lmllhnll};g '},‘fi;{,‘&fi“@;’,‘*?& District L = 1, B Jetniee SF Ihie omiais ks prere arsive! precincts, compiled early today. has stolen taxpayers money to favor and in certain o s 3 IStrict Law. fication Bill in Senate. from the dissenters, who declared the majority decision did not consider “human needs.” ignored the pleas of the emploves for a “living wage” and made “no attempt to show that me- chanics are not entitled to such a standard.” % Suggestion for Standurd. Suggestion for “some recognized standard” to be worked out by the board and used as a basis for future wage adjustments was contained in |the minority report, which consumed several times the number of pages in of these figures he is considerably | few meeks that the democrats, as a| The item of $1,600,000 for purchasing | Philip Heslington, jr., thirteen, Sun- already passed the House. and is hang- -~ = more than two to one -ahead of the |party, would not oppose the passage | this land was lpgmve: some time 280 | 3uy with a twenty-two caliber rifle,|the President is making a pams-|ing fire in the Senate, will be passed f}l.‘;r;fi';e:‘f:!:;?ffi?; ::finiin:sm:fii the hmn!or:l?l decision. The labor next man among five other candi-|of the merchant marine bill, though | bY, Both houses. but the acceptance by |, ) "o tter was riding away on & taking inquiry into all of the various | before the beginning of the new fiscal | jeft their béds, taking refuge on the |romrers felt. they said. that the dates. 1 b ill, e O Ae last SSotts Ties 1d didates for th: and that he|JgAr on July 1, and also because even | fioor. The police combed the district [P0ard “should initiate a study which i Individual members will, of course, | port removes the last obstacls in the |blcycle, in attempting, it wwas sald,|candidates for the post, at e | FE colasaifcation bil ls beasen, Tt | BoCTpahe, Bolice Sombed the dinteiet | oa L L o e et mome! J Precinets. express their views and vote of this money becoming available | to shoot an object out of his has no idea of unnecessarily hurry- f g - P agiizat| way of thisimolieyibecoming (svallable | to shoot su Ohisct Sutiof Tis YIeHA ¥-|would take many months, probably | The official report on the incident|sary to meet some recognized stand- The vote on senator in 932 pre- cincts follows: Smith W. Brookhart, 54,490; Charles . Pickett, 25,641; Clifford Thorne, 21,202; Leslie E. Francis, 18,514; Bur- it. When the measure comes to a vote it Is assured of passage in both houses and will have a substantial amount of democratic suppor:. Neither House nor Senate republi- cans can risk repudiating the chief executive on a major issue which he leases expir | purchased as fast as the war time |yesterday afternoon on a charge Of manslaughter. ‘MOONSHINE GIVES BABY BUGGY BA ing the matter. Law’s Natfonal Aspect. The President is known also to con- sider the new rent act as of especial significance not only to the Distriet most of the year, before the new salary schedule could be put into effect. Will Safeguard U. S. Workers. With the passage by the House of the $240 bonus bil) the House will said shots were fired at the jail, and !the guard, believing that institution was being attacked, replied with ma- chine guns, some of the bullets from whick' struck the hospital. COLLINS MAKES PROTEST. Ilrd. and that it must use its results (as a basis for its decisions, and that it must, through those 'decisions. l:'nn mit this information to the pub- lie.” The Increasing antithesis between ton E. Sweet, 15,460; Claude M. Stan- have done all that it ib profits and just wages will result 1 himself makes an .absolute party 3 of Columbia, for which it was created, possibly can to T n ley, 5,410. . 8! lowered morale, thus reductions will £ Houoer whors Teadur M miatt b, pa REPUTA TIO]V, HELD COMMON CARRIER |3, tne country at 1arge because | establish new statutory salary- schea- N e i I o oy il very present representative is leading in incomplete returns on four lowed implicitly the administration’s wishes and has moved hig legislative of its economic features and its close relation to the problem of bringing uled without the government service &nd to remove the evil of variations of DUBLIN, June 6—Michael Collins, head of the provisional government, ty opinion said. “The majority failed to carry out the function for which ongressional contests In which the | brogram. nicely. Te. jo Inthe® S - his So Eva, in different by the board was created.” continued 1he ; ate, | Special Dispatch to The Btar. half_boys” of moonshine. So Eva, pay in different branches of the serv- e 7 b b ¢ 0 = v t about price levels. The President 1s us view of the Brit- | minority report. *‘Such decisions, giv- incumbents -are candidates for re-|The House leaders, by the way, are| CHATTANJOGA, Tenn., June $.— |her and the baby carriage|about price level G e pos: |ice. It will have passed the Lehlbach | t2kes & most serio | InE no_expianation to the pubite of clection. Results reported up to_early today are: tired of sending bills to tha Senate only to see them get caught in the jam of the tariff. epublicans in the Is a baby carriage 2 common car- rler? This question is perplexing were taken. Eva testified today in her_own de- fense, after a double chair hiad been gibility of similar bodles being estab- reclassification bill and will have lished throughout the country to meet | passed the $240 bonus bill as a_safe- conditions ish shelling of Pettigoe, in Free State territory, and has demanded from the British authorities a full inquiry into the process by which the majority ar- tive at the rates established, give the public an impression that these rates Fourth district, 16 precincts vas tound | the _economic brought | guard against the danger that the re- ! 2“Gilbert N. Haugen, 1.921; L 3| (Continued on Page 2 Column 3) |Judge Sam D. McReynolds of the|requisitioned for her, Sho was (ound | i, “by"the housing problem since | Classification bill doss fot got through | the circumstances. Rre not founded upon & careful con- Kehoe, 485. 7 : criminal court of Hamilton county.| E/ T, o qecialon holding a-baby |the war. thisisenate § 1t had been supposed that the Irish |sideration of facts. Wifth district, 74 precincts judge is diligently seeking the Trier. He| Mrs. Clara Sears Taylor, a member| Chairman Madden said today that|troopseat Pettigoe were irregulars | “The duty of the labor board as a i Corimis G 680 e B ADMITS MURDERING MAN |k o™l i e ook Seomae on| SE0EE" ke b PGS s s et corintn Sl | v llen B B fefnly s ot roneb o G procionsl | omietit RES, Wil T2 4.629. s ially designed for individual use” | White House today to offer herself|ques 2 o e federal es-|government, L b D i i 2 it hinges the liberty of Eva McFad- | Pogially " t on the new"commis- | tablishments regarding the ue issued from Beggars Bush, |ployes can have their legitimate Tentt district, 120 precincts out of| TO CLEAR PATH TO LOVE dent & colored person of 400 pounds|2Dd Tarely was used on “interstate|for appointmen that will bo necessary to pamCunt | Niaye uarters of the Irish repubiican | human needs satisfied without re- 312, L. J. Dickinson, 7,167; Frank J. Lund, 6,055. Eleventh district, 108 precinets out of 287. W. D. Boles, 7,889; W. P. Daw- son, 7.113. In_ the third district, where fhree candidates sought nomination for the seat vacated by Burton E. Sweet, 59 precincts out of 217 gave T. J. B. Robinson of Hampton, 4,007; Charles . Ryan of Eldora, 3,674, and Arch Mc- PORT ARTHUR, Ontario, June 6.— Fred Baldwin, a farm hand, last night confessed to the murder on May 9 of Robert Molton, his employer and father of the girl he loves, because he considered him.an obstacle in_the path of his courtship. He was held on a murder charge. “I talked with my girl before T did displacement, who played the stellar role in & comedy drama which held the boards at the courthouse for an hour today. Two local plain clothes men suspect- ed that Eva, despite her bulk, had concealed bootlegging proclivities. They paid an unexpected visit to her home and found her just leaving Journeys. The court declined to be convinced, holding this was a freight and not a passenger transaction. The orig- inal sentence of thirty days in the workhouse and a fine of $100 was directed. Eva went back to jail, but her attorney insisted that he was not_through. “We will roll that oaby carriage into a higher court and prove that sion, and at the same time explained various matters of importance r- taining to the rent situation in Wash- ington. ’ Mrs, Taylor sald her appointment with the President was made at the instance of Semator Phipps of Colo- rado, to whose state she is accredited and who, with Senator Nicholson of that state indorsed her application for appointment to the.new board. bonus during the next fiscal year have been received, and they show that the bonus will cost approxi- mately $40,000,000. There have been whispered inti- mations among members of the Sen- ate and House that conferences have been held looking to a reduction of the bonus from $240 to $120. Chair- man Madden said today that he had rmy, says that there were np Irish :rooiu T that Qistrict except those of the regular republican army. ‘Although the manifesto issued yes-: by Michael Collins and Eamonn g:d‘?{le¥l was expected to dimipish the number of independent candidates for the Irish elections, the posting of nominations today in every con- stituency in the twenty-six counties course 1o stoppages, and to enlighten the public so that through the state of unregulated industry and the con- fusion of propaganda they shall ba able to see the real facts as they af- fect the body politic. This decision fulfills neither of these duties.” MILL LABOR SCANT. Farlane of Waterloo, 2,588. "“" it Baldwin is said to have told the ind & baby carriage, whi B e s TSt a Common carrier, and | Mre Taylor explained that she is|not been a perty to any such confer- |of southern Ireland indicated that| . ..cuperpR N. H., Wune 6,—The Dawson is oreopiic up on Boies|pilice. “WWo agreed that we could get Soleg o well blenketa torm . " Ly Hva will eyentually go free " was | especially interested in the work and |ences agy that his committee has uot I R e otion mills that reopened yesterday as later returns from e purely ru: along better ier fatl fMice! rr . has de a dee) U e | con: ropo! redu Vi e = > $recincts come in, purely ror™ | tne wag, Jas out of | - Rnforcement officers ‘hela: up JEva jhis final ‘wo R Ll b1y 3 selected candidates. : p on Page 2, Column 13 and found—not & baby. but . several (Copyright, 1922.) R