Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
BRAZIL EXPOSITIO . BOARD ROW ENDS President Accepts Harrison’s Resignation; Successor Not Named. b 1 COLLIER TO RIO SOON Countercharges Filed by Retiring Member Referred to State Department. Members of the United States Bra- sillan exposition commission were in- formed yesterday by the White House that President Harding had accepted the resignation of Frank H, Harrison of Nebraska, a member of the com- nation of Mr. Har- rison recently requested by five members of the commission, Wwho charged that he was not working in harmony with the commission. Commissioner General Collier of the commission said he was not advised as to whom the President might se- lect as successor to Mr. Harrison, who had served since his appointment as resident commissioner at Washing- ton. Bookkeeping Assailed. s that Mr. Harrison was not s in harmony with other mem- bers of the commission, and that he had failed to K his accounts in such condition as was desired by other members of the b with the President 0. Mr. Harrison, in repiying to the . alleged that the other mem- r mmission, particularly Commissioner Genera ‘ollier, had conducted the affairs of the body snomical lines. He filed with estdent, it was understood, a series of charges against Mr. Collier and those members who joined with the commissioner general in demand- ing his resignation. All of th& charges were referred to the State Depart- ment for study. President H rding let it be known the filing of the ctions in the com- regard the nature, but would be resignation was resident along with the charges he filed. Tried to Quit Before. He had previo: nnounced that he had requested Mr. Harding several ago to relieve him of his as 4 member of the commis- rissioner- General Collier will €ail for Brazil within a week or ten days to perfect plans for American exhibits at the centennial exposition to be held at Rio beginning in Sep- tember. Inquiry at Mr. Harrison’s home here brought forth the information that the former commissioner was en route to California, and would not re- turn to Washington. SENATOR SCORES DELAY ON SHOALS ‘Norris Takes Colleagues to Task for Concurring in House Action. By the Associated Press. The Senate was taken to task yes- terday by Senator Norris, republican, Nebraska, for concurring In the House amendment to the Army bill delaying until October 1 next the new work on the Wilson dam at Muscle Shoals. Ala. In a brief speech he reminded the Senate that its original proposal would have permitted 1,000 to have begun work day and declared its confirma- n of the House action meant an- other year's delay of work on the project, and prevention of idle labor- ers In the south obtaining employ- ment. The Senate original proposal, Sena- tor Norris asserted, also would have saved “a couple of more miliion dol- lars for the ayers,” as well a prevening the “great fertilizer trust from “hammering down for another year” the Alabama farmers and con- tinuing during that the “domination ver downtrodden farmers of a senator attributed the Senate’s action | iding to the House to a great propaganda that “carried it off its feet” and it ylelded because of a “combination of men who were afraid” Henry Ford's offer might be lost and because of men who did not want anything done. The Senate roll call, he said, showed the former group w d by every millionaire in the te. “This is the lIst of July,” Senator Norris continued. “It is the day when, had it not been for the postponement of preparation which was made by the Senate for the continuation of the work at Muscle Shoals, a thousand or more men who are now idle would have been put to work down in Ala- bama. I want to say just a word to the people of Alabama. _—— UBA ENDS ILLEGAL LOTTERY METHODS $10,000,000 Yearly Collec- tions Halted on Crow- der’s Advice. By the Assoclated Press. HAVANA, July 1.—Illegal collection of nearly $10,000,000 a year from the Cuban people through violations of the national lottery law was ended today by presidential decree. Point- ing the wide variance between pres- ant methods of conducting the lottery and those set forth in the laws of July 7, 1909, and July 9, 1912, which estab- lish and regulate the Institution, President Zayas ordered reforms in- tended to remove the lottery from the category of political spolls. The decree embodles recommenda- tions ade by Maj. Gen. E. H. Crowder in one of the ten memoranda he recently presented in his cam- paign to secure honest and efclent oollection and disbursement of fed eral revenues. It also marks the pas. sage of another crisis in the nego- tlations between the Cuban govern- ‘mgent and the persohal representative ot President Hardin The first was solved by the reorganization of the cablinet. ' ROOMER WIELDS GU MINNEAPOLIS, July 1—Becausf he refuséd to marry him, Frank Sul- va, twenty-five years , _today ‘shot and dangerously wounded Mrs.’| Phpebe Baker, thirty, at her rooming house here where he lived, and then . committed suleide. Mrs. Baker is the symother of five children [ AIRPLANES DROP SEEDS IN INACCESSIBLE SPOTS. N REFORESTRY BRIVE ' T. H, July 1—A new use for airplanes—dropping seed In spots otherwise inaccess- ible to man—has been found by Army officials here is being carried out in co-operation with the Hawailan Sugar Planters A soclation in an attempt to reforest & series of steep ridges and gorgy which form one of the island’ watersheds. On days when atmospheric condi- tions are favorable the planes fly back and forth over the ridges and valleys forming the Koolau mountains, dropping seeds of fl trees, which have been found fdeal for retarding the flows of water resulting from heavy rains. All_previous efforts to reforest the Koolau mountains had failed. They form the watershed which suppiies much of the plantation irrigation and domestic water used on the island, as well as Schofleld barracks, the large military reser- vation. SENATOR DPPUSE “SEATING CABINET Participation in Congress Would Bias President, Declares Robinson. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., July 1— The suggestion for participation by cabinet members in congressional de- bates, reported recently under con- sideration by President Harding and his cabinet, was opposed by Senator Robinson, democrat, Arkansas, in an address here tonight before the Mary- land Bar Assoclation. Senator Robin- son also criticized pressure by propa- gandists upon Congress and declared that the nation needed “less govern- ment, rather than more legislation.” Appearance befors Congress of cabinet members, Senator Robinson declared, would threaten, If not de- stroy the Constitutional division be- tween the legislative and executive branches. He sald he opposed “any change which would confuse and com- mingle” these functions. “The President inevitably would be committed by his ministers in ad- vance to the approval or rejection of measures,” sald Senator Robinson, “which our scheme of government contemplates shall be passed upon by him with an independent mind. The Congress would be subjected to executive influences and the result would be either subordination of the legislative mind to the executive will or hopeless and Irreconcilable confliot between the two.” Information Available. That Congress, by initiative of or request upon the President and by resolutions can secure all necessary Information without having cabinet members appear on the Senate or House floor was asserted by the Arkan- sas senator. Senator Robinson sald Congress *'de- serves only part of the censure which public opinion directs against it for the prevailing restlessness and dis- content, although it is undoubtedly following a faltering leadership whose strategy is to make mere successive advances and refirements over the same ground.” The public, he said, believes erroneously that legislation is the panacea for many ills which Congress cannot cure. Dificulties Greater. “The normal difficulties of Con- gress,” he continued, “have been augmented since the war by the pres- sure of prcpaganda. The government is being administered through the in- fluence of propaganda. The Senate and House no longer divide strictly along party lines. Frequently the alignment is according to groups of blocs organized for the promotion of special Interest, as, for instance, labor and agriculture. The finance and labor groups have long been in- fluential factors. The agricaltural bloc is of recent origin and is justi- fied as indispensable to the protection of a large and deserving element whose situation renders compact or- ganization difficul Referring to organized propaganda as “unwholesome practic Senator Robinson said it could not be pre- vented without infringement upon constitutional rights of free speech. “It is better to endure the evils of unrestrained propaganda,” he said, “than to stifle free speech. The only remedy for propaganda is exposure, tull and fair publicit Senator Robinson advocated more deliberation in legislation and ‘re- peal of unnecessary, vexatious and admittedly unpopular statutes’”” He also urged simplification of internal revenue and other complex laws and “rigid and impartial enforcement as the surest means of compelling the repeal of obnoxious statutes.” “The violations of the national prohibition act,” he said, “are no- foriously frequent, converting the Afnerican people into & nation of lawbreakers. FIND DENTHHIT INVIETNFS LETTER Miss Lavoy Wrote That Creasy Was to “Live or Die With Her.” By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 1.—Edith Lavoy, the Freeport school teacher for whose recent death her former sweetheart, Willlam Creasy, has been charged with first-degree. murder, penciled a letter last May, saying Creasy had come up from Kentucky and jnformed her he was either going “to live with her or die with her,” Assistant Dis. trg:t Attorney Bdwards announced today. The letter, which he made public, ‘was written on school stationery, May 1, addressed to Dan L. S8herman of TUtlca, N. Y., described as an old friend of the Lavoy family. “For the last five weoks I've realized it was useless for me to try and love Billy,” the letter says, “and, as frankness is my motto, I wrot him_the truth. The result is he is up here with two objects in view. He says he came up here to live with me or die with me. There has to be 4 decision before sundown—I will never marry without love, 8o it re- mains to be seen what he means by the latter statement.” feel better now that somebody it,” the letter concludes. un indictment ing - first-degree murder, de- clares that the school teacher, whoa body was found in the parlor of h boarding place in Freeport on June 23, shot herself while he lay asleep beside her on the couch. in Freeport on & grave- " Miss Lavoy is reported told George Davison, an artist friend, at about the time the letter to Sherman was written. —_—— DIRIGIBLE FORCED BACK. NEWPORT NEWS, Va., July 1.—The Army dirigible A-4, which left Nere today on a cross-country flight to chart landing flelds and to study air currents, was forced to return to he: base at !‘lahy Field when: she en- countered ‘weather. ‘will atart again when the weather is fayorable. Boott Field, Illinols, will be her desti- MANY STAY ON JoB AS OTHERS STRIKE Only 4,000 of 10,000 Quit Hlinois Central—Pennsy Men Loyal. By the Associated Press, CHICAGO, July 1.—Out of approx- imately 10,000 shopmen employed on the Illinois Central rallroad only 4,000 joined the shopmen's strike, which began today, according to fig- ures given out tonight by a member of the United States Rallroad Labor Board These figures were sald to cover the entire system and were the first complete poll, for any road centering in Chicago. The following statement was authorized by the northwestern re- gional headquarters of the Fennsy! vania system. tonight: ‘All schedules of both passenger and freight trains have been main- tained on the Pennsylvania system today and there is every indication that normal service will be available tomorrow. The number of employes who have left the service has not affected the train operation in any w. ay. “Early reports from all points on the Pennsylvania system indicate that the majority of the shop craft employes remained loyal. A number of employes who left their work this morning returned late this afternoon. “The Pennsylvania system is not a Rallroad Labor Board and is carry. ing on negotiations with its em. ployes with a view to arriving a & mutual understanding. No reduc- tion in wages has been made up to this time.,” Only 500 Quit Sante Fe. TOPEKA, Kan., July 1.—John Pur- cell, in charge of all shops on the Santa F'e system, said today that ap- proximately 500 out of a total force of 2,600 men here went out this morning. Unlon officlals asserted that Monday morning will see the strike nearly 90 per cent effective. The shops here are the largest in the entire system, officials say. None Quit on Clover Leatf. EAST ST. LOUIS, IIL, July 1.—The 1,100 shopmen of the Toledo, St. Loufs and Western rallroad (Clover Leaf) did not strike today, because W. L. Ross, president of the road, did not reduce wages, employes here stated. The reductions granted by the Rail- road Labor Board to other lines did not apply to the Clover Leaf, as that road did not make application for wage reductions. Less Than Half Out. CLEVELAND, Ohlo, July 1.—~New York Central line officials announced this afternoon that out of 2,000 loco- motive and shop men employea be- tween Buffalo and Chicago 880 quit work. Announcement was made that the shops will be opened Monday and all men reporting for duty will be given employment and protection. Other Cleveland roads announced that less than G0 per cent of their shop employes quit work. 168 Strike; 534 Stay Onm. LOCKHAVEN, Pa., July 1.—OQut of a force of 1,200 men employed in the Pennsylvania railroad shops at Renovo, 375 men left work today, company officlals reported. At the Avig shops of the New York Central only sixteen out of 550 employes an- swered the strike call, according to a statement by the company. Pennsy and 17,000 Agree. PHILADELPHIA, July 1.—The Pennsylvania Rallroad Company an- nounced that agreements covering the readjustment of wages have been reached between the management and he elected representatives of the clerks and miscellaneous forces in the eastern region of the system, afw fecting 10,000 clerks and 7,000 mem- bers of the miscellaneous forces. Coal Loading Continue: NORFOLK,' Va, July 1.—Coal movement at Norfolk to supply the needs of seaboard cities which are depending on water-borne ‘fuel from this port will not stop because of the strike. Although ~the electrical workers went out at both Lamberts | point and at Sewalls point pier: the movement of coal is continuin at both place Officials Load Ships. NEWPORT NEWS, Va., July 1.— Chesapeake and Ohio coal piers, tem- porarily shut down this morning ‘when 250 shopmen and electrical men quit in response to the strike call, resumed ‘operations early this after- noon with volunteer crews recruited from officials of the company. The plers are not operating at full tilt, but ships are moving both with bunker and cargo coal. HUGUENOT MEMORIAL MOVE ON IN FLORIDA Erection Near Mouth of St. John’s River Would Commemorate - Landing in 1562. JACKSONVILLE, Fla, July 1—A movement for the erection of a suitable memorial near the mouth’ of the St. Johns river, about twenty-five iniles from here, to commemorate the estab- lishment of the first Huguenot settle- ment in the new worlid, has .been launched by hiétoric, civic and social or- ganizations in Florida. Jean Ribault and a small band of Hi ots landed near the mouth of the St. Johns on May 1, 1662, and he gave the stream the name “River of le” by which it was known for many years 3 - After trading with the Indlans, Ri- bault and his followers moved to. Port Royal, 8. C., where they remained a year, returning to France in a ship of their own construction because of fail- ure to receive proper support from their mh-‘un ;nt a | over extensive aress in and, is_bel UNION STATION RAILROAD SHOPMEN DROP THEIR TOOLS ALMOST - TO A MAN AT HOUR APPOINTED FOR NATION-WIDE WALKOUT By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, hourly rate: under the wage reduction, effectivi United States Rallroad Labor Board. Comparison is the rates paid in December, 1917, when the federal go in January, 1920, under the federal ad- in May, over control of the roa ministration pay increase: $600,000,000 award; in July, 1921, u tion, and for July, 1922, the new raf Carmen 2. 8% Common laborers (track 19.3 Clerks .. s .. 36 Common’ labarers (statfon) 22.3 Signalmen 3213 > Stationary firemen & oflers 21.8 Rail Shop Craftsmen Join Strike From Coast to Coast By-fhe Associated Press. NEW HAVEN, Conn., July 1.—An ofcial statement from the New York, New Haven and Hartford raflroad this afternoon says that out of & total mechanical force of 6,139 men, embracing three shifts, which work eight hours each, all the men on the first shift, or about 2,500, withdrew from service at 10 am. There are 276 mechanics of varjous crafts re- maining on locations. Repair One Engine. ROCHESTER, N. Y., July 1—A passenger train scheduled to leave here at 10 a.m. today was unable ta do so, owing to a breakdown in the mechanism of the locomotive. All repairmen employed on the road re- fused to work on the engine and the train was held up for half an hour until one of the officials of the union gave the men a special order grant- ing them permission to repalr the break. 30,000 Out in Southeast. LANTA, Ga. July 1—Upward of 80,000 shop crafts employes in t! southeastern territory answered the strike call of the presidents of thelr six international unions, according to figures from the -various locals. of the unfons, up to mnoon. All reports stated that the walkout was carried out in an orderly manner. 2,000 Out in Chattanocoga. CHATTANOOGA, July 1—The en- TRADE PARLEY PLAN FAVORED BY HOLLAND AT] American Invitation to Session in Honolulu May Be Accepted. BY LEOPOLD ALETRINO. ble to The Star and Chicago Daily News. By ouns !Oflvyflnt. 1922, AMSTERDAM, July 1.—The Dutch government apparently is inclined to accept the Invitation of the Ameri- can State Department, addressed on, behalf of the pan-Pacific pawers; in- cluding the Dutch East Indies, for & commercial conference in Honojulu from October 25 to November- 3. Dr. D. Fock, governor general of- the Dutch East Indies, is one of the vice presidents of-the union which aims at peaceful ¢ollaboration by- the people of all the countries on the Pacific. ShTaca sersitorial siehta arc! 01 5! land has. ex the could: FIGURES SHOW RISE AND FALL OF RAILROAD WAGES SINCE 1917 July 1—The following table shows the averige of pay for the principal clai airplane had of Erohiing, wheal TRALLABOR BOARD | JKE, SAYSCONLON Machinist Official Declares Unions Get Small End of Decisions. Characterizsing the Railroad Labor Board as a “joke” and the transpoy- tation act ‘as the “most damnable plece ot legislation ever enacted,” P. J. Conlon, first vice president of the International Association of Machin- ists, in an address to the strikers of Washington terminal and the Penn- sylvania carmen of Benning, D. C. at Washington Lodge Hall, 3rd and | Pennsylvania avenue southeast, yes- ‘terday afternoon declared that the men are going to have some uniform. universal laws that will be obeyed, “even if they mre rotten,” as a resuit of the_ strike. Conlon. said. that the rate of 50 cents anshour would be paid shopmen throughout the country or. 77 cents would be the standard wage, “but they are not going to pay us 60 cents on the Erle railroad and 7% cents in Texas."” ‘Every available square inch of the hall was jammed. Although it was the hottest part of the afternoon, the heat had no effect whatever in curbing the enthusiasm of the men who had quit. Reviews Labor Fight. The speaker gave a brief review of the fight labor waged against the transportation act and the unsuccess- ful attempt the raflroad employes made before the Railroad Labor Board in having their grievances ad- justed. He said the board had passed upon 1,100 cases, 700 of which were awarded in favor of the railroads and 400 for the men. The railroads themselves are mnot the target of the employes, Mr. Con- lon explained, but the faction that 1abor has to contend with is the Asso- cistion of Rallway Executives. He declared that constant breach of regulations by the association has made the laws a farce. Sees Short Strike. In concluding Mr. Conlon stated that the strike would not last long, and although “scabs” may be placed in the shops, there are not enough of them to give the slightest con- cern. He urged the strikers to be natural in their actions and not to congregate around the shops. Threats have been made, Mr. Conlin said, “to put us in Jjail” but, he stated “we are mot afraid to go to jail if it would improve the conditions of the railroad men. It was announced at the meeting that the unorganized men who walked out with union men would receive the same protection and same bene- fits the conclusion of the strike. A meeting will be held in the hall this morning at 10 o'clock and every morning while the strike is on. Charles Holmes, system federation, railroad shop president, presided at the meeting. President Johnson of the machin- ists’ unfon will be the principal speaker at today's meetin; PLOT T0 CRIPPLE ENGINES IS BARED Sand and Emery Found in Journal Boxes—Several Break Down on Runs. By the Associated Prei DECATUR, Ill, July 1.—Sand and emery dust were found in fifteen jour- nal boxes on engines at the Wabash rallroad roundhouse here today. George Hess, superintendent of mo- tive power, sald several engines were reported dead along the line. The re- moval of a cotter pin also caused the fallure of an engine ten miles out of ‘Chicago. Hess said he believed these acts to have been the work of an in- dividual acting on his own respon- aibility. LOYAL WORKERS REMOVED. |RAIL TRAFFIC GOES ON UNCHECKED BY STRIKE (Continued from First Page.) rallroads, no longer came under the Jjurisdiction of the labor board. He was quoted as declaring that any ne- gotlations by the shopmen would be with the rall executives, although it might be possible the executives would choose to deal through the labor board. When informed of Mr. Jewell's at- titude Chairnran Hooper of the labor board said that such a position “may rise up to haunt him later.” “The position that Mr. Jewell is now taking to the effect that the employes whom he represents are no longer under the jurisdiction of the United States Railroad Labor Board or the ap- plication of the transportation act and, consequently, that they are not in & position to avail themselves of the manifold protection that the board has glven his organization and f members during the last two years, is a position that may rise up to haunt him later,” Mr. Hooper said. ‘Wage cuts ordered by the labor board totaling about $135,000,000 and affecting over 1,000,000 men’ became effective today the strike started. At the same time freight rate cuts authorized by the Interstate Com- merce Commission, totaling about $400,000,000, went into effect. RECORD CROWDS HANDLED. s of rallway employes ed by the made with rnment took e today, recently ol 1920, under the Labor Board's,| der the board's first wage reduc— July, Refusing to Quit, Picked Up Bodily . by Strikers. By the Associated Press. BEARDSTOWN, I, July 1.—The first reports of a display of force in the nation-wide walkout of railroad shopmen occurred here this morning. Four hundred and fifty shopmen of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy railroad, who laid down their tools at 10 o'clock, returned in force shortly afterward, and after failing to per- suade four men who stayed at work surrougded them and picked them up bodily and carried them out. tire foroe of 2,000 men of the me- chanical departments of the Southern railroad, Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis and Central of Geérgia rail- roads walked out this morning. Iowa Walkout 100 Per Cenmt. DES MOINES, Iows, July 1.—~Re- ports from nearly & score of the Iowa cities indicate the strike of rallway shopmen was practically 100 per cent complete, 80 far as the members of the six federated crafts employed in this state are erned. The work- conc ers quit work in an orderly fashion, from sent them home, “to avoid trouble. —_— “IRON RATION” BECOMES POPULAR IN GERMANY ‘W the leader said, Despite Strike, New York Gets by ‘With Usual Holiday Delsys. - By the Associated Press, NEW YORK, July 1.—Burdened with an unprecedeated load of passenger. traffic, rallroads entering New -York city passed the-first day of the shop: crafts strike without any more than the usual pre-holiday deviations from schedule. In shops wrkin{ on a.single day shift a majority of the men were re- ported to have walked out at 10 am. daylight-saving time, {n accordance % 11 Chi head Workers Great Consumers of Choe- " . olate Oandy, Which Was Pre-War Luxury. BERLIN, June 13.—Chocolate candy, the war-time “iron ration” of armies, has become increasingly pop- ular since the war among the labor- ing people, despite the hand-to- mouth existence:in which they are forced to live beciuse of low wages and_high prices. The workers here are said to have usurped the pre-war ‘position classes as th this “luxury.” Simultaneously with comment in the press on this anomaly in the workingman's budget nounced which show man laborer today 1s receiving wages barely sufficlent to keep him and his family in the necessities of life. Clara Bohm-Schuch, socialist mem- ber .of the reichstag, reporting ts the results of an inquiry Uving conditions, de: and no disorders wers reported & any part of the state. 10,200 Reported Out fa Utah. SALT LAKE CITY, July 1—~The walkout of railroad shopiven in Utah todey was virtually 100 per cent, and'| all of aha carriers in the district are| ffected. roximate number of strik- ers in Salt Lake City was reported as 1,000; Ogden, 8,000, and Pocatello, 1200. - se that the Usfoas Win on Paeifio Coast. will not become known until after-mid~ SAN FRANCISCO, July 31~The [RIEDL 2 astimaten ilroad als that the strike of railroad shopmen was more go&i‘ nunmn:fl; men-who-answered the than 90 per cent effective in Califor- |strike cgll today at between 14.000 and nia, Oregon and Washington, acoord- | 15,000. Unlon leaders’ figures were sqv- ing to statements of union Jeaders an [eral thousand above that ¢ hour after it was called. Harl, fs. eatest consumers of agriculture, industry and trad: writes, she was told that diligent workers in his establishment receiv- 'good” wages .at about 1,150 marks a week, equal to about $4.60 in American money. Hospital Record of Russell’ Vep Arsdale Shows “Homicidal Tendencles.” NEWPORT NEWS, Vs, July 1.— Russell Van Arsdale, held here on a charge of urdering Miss Rose Brady at Camp ‘Bustis, was committed to the Esstern State Hospital, at Wil- llamsburg, April §, 1931, on account lencies,” his record there shows. He was relessed on February 3, 1923, ‘his condition II: improved, the opinion of officials of the asylum. Van Arsdale, is about forty-three ears of age and was born in Brool yn, N. Y., where Miss Brady made her home befors coming to Eustis}. to live with her sis —— For two hours. the a8 howed e " the metropolitan. dmttiot ures showed that 9,756 men terminals in the metropolitan ceased work, with meveral points yet | were..reported to have felt the strike R o g R o wi . ns? Ne R A TS Naw Hhven and Hartford, Erle, Central 1% QL i Lnigh Vaiiey® and i 3 van! GIRL’S SLAYER FOUND: - 130t 'ans Bdion" =" ° " The unexpetted walkout of fiffy car INCLINED TO MURDER |tnspeciors, coupler men and signal men ; at Grand Central station temporarily interrupted traffic at a period when the station was hapdling & , crowd of holiday travelers, replaced the strikers within two hours, however, and a serious tie-up Was .averted. Buregus for the enroilment of strike breakers were established early in the day. glnrlau H. Stein, general super- intendent of the Central of New Jersey, announced arrangements had been hads to replace all union men Who walked out. 3 ——e NEW RK, July 1.—A solid train- Toad o&ochlo“uh 4 ty-0ne - cars earing 1,250,000 pounds, the l‘r‘rul single rail shipment of fts- kind'in the history of the candy industry— assed through New York tonight en Paare! to Chicago from. Stamford, i i ‘week. In t‘{{;aos-“uny of four.the budget wa: hm‘h“ earnings of 3,800 marks a month. Y JAMAICA TESTS CHINESE. Immigrants Must Be Able to ‘Write English Sentence. yum‘umo:uu:&e.-nmnym- KINGSTON, Jamaica, July 1.—Here- sfter-po Chinese Immigrant who is rrectly in Edglish by a ‘customs offi- to n - weat. Busir K 0! ! Spaee out wald. conditions have created mand for candy thraugh- part of the country, it ‘was to- Lond Th occupled by the middle Interviewing an industrialist, shes| ———:4 Piano | Bargains All of the following in~ struments have been traded in on Chickering Ampicos—our repair de-- partment has recons ditioned tHem until they are practically as good as could be desired. Any one not objecting to a shop worn or used instrument’ will find it to'their advan- tage to attend” this sale., i i 1 Used Uprights Demarest .....$65 Bradley ....$70 Jacob Bros., $135 Swick & Co., $145 New England, $165 Kohler & Campbell, $215 Mallenhauer & Bach ..$225 Cable-Nelson $295 DRI L i L Player-Pianos £ Kurtzman ¢ £ Mahogany, $265 = - £ Artistone : Player ...$385 Cable-Nelson Grand Pianos Steinway Grand $435 PRV L L LT Christman Baby Grand A-1 Condition Cable-Nelson Apartment Grand (See = - This) ....$690 G T LT See This Bargain . $1,150 Behning Baby Grand . (Shopworn), $875 |