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_in private conference with railroad{master general, who belleves that the EE Member of the Associsted Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to the use for republication of all news liepatehes WEATHER. Falr and cooler . tonight and tomorrow. Tempemature for twenty-four hours eredited to it or not otherwise credited in this oaper and also the local news published herein. All vights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. ended at 3 p.m. today: Highest, 95, at 2 p.m, yesterday; lowest, 75, at 5:30 a.m. today. Fuil report on pagé 7. WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION ) / : * Yesterday's Net Circulation, 85,309 Closing N. Y. Stocks and Bonds, Page 30 No. 28,364, Entered as sccord-class matter : WASHINGTON, D. C., TH‘U?‘ SDAY, JULY 13, 1922—FORTY:. PAGES. post office Washingten, D. C. TRAFFIC DELAYS TO CONTINUE UNION HEADS TELL PRESIDENT; * MAY ORDER OUT TROOPS TODAY Declare Executives|DAY’S DEVELOPMENTS 150,000 Auto Trucks Refuse to Conf IN RAIL STRIKE LISTED. | Ready in 24 Hours © use 10 LOnler | SOME DISORDERS OCCUR| — co 0y, ’ With Employes. President Jewen ot the sopmen | WOTK Declares. telegraphed appeal to President | TWO CENTS. |ROCKVILLE’S CAMPAIGN | AGAINST BOOTLEGGERS { SWELLS POLICE Fuun\NEGu"AIIUNS END assisted by United States internal revenue officers, re-- cently have been making thfngs warm in this county facturers and d liquor. Every few d 1s pulled off .and almost without exception thpse placed under ar- rest either plead guilty or are found gullty in the police court here and pay their fin Judge Bamuel Riggs, who presides in the lice court, where all of these Non-Russian Subcommission Is Convinced an Agree- cases are tried, is imposing heavy o fines In most cases. As a result ment Is Impossible. of these fines, the police fund of the county 1s rapidly assuming Tho frarch LIS 488 volls | ALLIED DELEGATES HOPE penses o e county’s police sys- R e A I FOR A FORMAL BREAK-UP have changed their minds. The latest to fall victims to the vigilance of these officers are Ar- thur Dove and Mollie Wade, both , Harding, stating that the execu- LAF:)% BOARD RULES | tive's proclamation of Juiy 11 was |STRONGER ACTION based on “incomplete information. VIOLATED, IS CLAIM | , Postnuster General Work In. BELIEVED PLANNED formed President Harding that ! 50,000 motor vehicles could be i mobilized within twenty-four Peace Hope Hangs On as| "ol o ooion oficials ana | Department of Justice & rail labor board members appar- 5 % Hooper Continues to Aoty Rauipantsafiveacaifactsities Authorizes Naming of Litvinoff Stands Unyielding. Lloyd George Informs Commons temporarily. colored, whose homes, near Be- It was announced thist atrike . thesda, were visited on Tuesday Seek Settlement. orders are- being sent out to the 2,500 Deputies. by county and federal officers. At Conference Is Deadlocked clerks on the Chesapeake and each place a still and some corn ce Is ocked. At 1 o'clock Prosident Hmi'§: 01311.0. ; Orders may be fasued by the lN“l" were found. Both pleaded IRy the Associated Press. ing had not yet received the tele- | 'Wo alleged strikebreakers seiz- ‘War De rt ime te gullty in the police court here 2 m from the railway weons tn | ¢4 bY @ band at Denison Tex. PRl =138 e :-t:oo to having intoxicating liquor in | THE HAGUE, July 13—The non- ®ra m the ra y lectured and told told to.leave the s fo movement o their possession with the intention |Russian subcommission on pri answer to his proclamation, which | state. to certain localities where dis- of selling it, and each paid a fine |property, of the conference on Rus- telegram was sent today from Baitimore and ‘Ohio annulled | orders have occurred in connection of $300 and ‘cos sian affairs, unanimously adopted to- hicago by B. M. Jewell, head of | SIERt vassenger tillins Dbetween | with the rallroad strike, Seere- S S day a resolution declaring that in the (he rallway employen® department Several | strikebreakers and | tAry Weeks indicated at 1 o’clock, 1Light of the views expressed yesterday of the American Federation of La- guards injured and four missing an he left the White House after by the Russians concerning the resti- bor. and the six International | Aafter a raid on a roundhouse at | a conference with the President on tuton of forelgners' property in R Eeeat@ente’ Of 1RE reRilviay fikep Oroville, Calif. the situation. sian it would “serve m‘: mirul p: erafts. Definite amnouncement, the Sec- | —_— X e — retary sald, would be made later 5 the Associated Press. i in the day as to whether troop CHICAGO, July 13.—B. M. Jewell, movement orders would be iasued. head of the railway emplo:=® depart- ! ment of the American Fc#¥ration of | By the Assoclated Pres ANOTHER WALKOUT. , Labor, today sent a telegra: to Presi- | 'Frf;::l':"d.a;e;elt?:nlt)"l:re:lv:::t ;{:c:{ - EN'I' PLAN e L e S f;"j;:; et notitying it erscaiive ittt [:[]I_I_INS |S M AI]E COW GORES WOMAN NEw j[RSEY RABE Pose to continue the meetings with the Russian commission.” This resolution was forwarded to the Russian representative here and also to the full commission of The Hague conference. It was regarded as the first of the formal steps for the conclusion of the conference. = surv d by all departments tion and opening a nev: phase of the 5Yoy preparel TRYING TO SAVE DOG, srievances. of striking railviay shopmen, of the government showed that a in whici the President wvs told: "anMen Doing Strikers’ work'"‘“""“gh"' joEEanixediifestHoAE0.000 WHICH ATTACKED CALF Labor Department Official terruptions of commerce and Interfer- | jmotor vehicles could be mobllized sl ence of mails will contin?: and increase | within twenty-four hours shoul the T Ihe a = until_agreement Is obtained upon just| NOW Declare They Cannot ;raiiway shopmen's strike turther in- MEDIA, Pa., July 13.—An infuri- and Operators Seek Terms and reasonable wages between the rep- ated cow chasing a dog, which had 4 2 : terfere with the movement of United Postponed until then, and no meeting Tesentatives of the skilled employes and Stand Added Strain. States mall. attacked her calf, gored Mrs. How- on Pmposal_ is planned for today between the railroad executives, who up to date have refused gven to mect with employes' rep-| ey The results of the survey were for- ""hMClC“"tle °fh Ifi’"n:v near :"e‘ i el Russian and non-Russian delegates. Tesentatives. Ve stand ready to co- “onditions at the Washington ter-| arded to the President as a matter 80 basly that she is in a serious sec = Meanwhile experts representing the o wh ¢ with 2 2 o 2 diti S Representatives of bituminous coal chi J operate wholeheartedly with £ffort i minal are rapidly approaching that| e information, but there was no offi- cq;lhetc%r‘!"l:&-!ybdn‘ Soris et 2 of bits countries which have tried to reach 10 _bring abcut such an agreement.” r e operators’ associations went int -|an agreement w The telegram, which also was signed | POInt Where the load thrown on the| s} indication that use of motor ter hitched to a wagon, with the ,D tod: e el Dolding meetings for the” discussioy by the six intérnational presidents of | men remaining in the service is Eet-| yrucks to carry mail was belng seri. calf inside, when Mra. McCorkle STOnce . MOORy, Withi, Secretaty, offiot utielr Mnslimtand fonith ol o the railway shop crafts, declared that, ting too heavy, and a break is immi-| o1 % 2P0V ML il came along the road with her col- : " Labor Davis after conferring With|of foreign-owned property in Russts the strikers had walked out because | 51y considered. The prevalling be-| Eroa Gtaters Rush Move t0| lie. The dog jumped plavray at [Victory by FrelinghuySen | mugh xerwin, chiet of the bureau of |confscated by the srnioes Sbimt s Tomerrow May End It. Actual dissolution of the confer ence probably cannot take place be- fore tomorrow, as the session of the subcommission on credits has been . it leaked out today from a re- | s wages fixed by the labor board were in ¢t lief in Washington was that should the calf and the cow broke away 21l th wviolation of the provisions of the trans- } liable source. The maintenance of |the President's warning against in- h c| o and started for the dog. Mrs. Mc- Would De ress Wet ::r‘;cilhllon of the Department of ulney 'f;l'flol;le'-“dfl:lr:‘nfiz:'c = :r. 5 portation act and because of the viola- | way craftsmen who have not been |terference with the mails be disre- 0 ClaiM | Corkle, in an attempt to save her or. rRinte e = | 5 eservations_gor tomorrow or Han of she labor board’s decision by the | called out on strike have on their list e Iongsrqunerauresiiweraficon. Def. A8 connered pong e el The conference was understood to|Saturday, and haveéadvised the hotels a . emplated. f T 5, kno they wi The strikers insisted that no inter- |2 number of men with trades similar| “rpe” post Office Department con- Gains Around Cork. stamped upon. Hopes Elsewhere. Involve possible interpretations of | they will sursénder their rooms. The 4 ock_evEr the property questio; ruption of commerce or interference|to the shop craftsmen, and the for- {trols about 10,000 motor trucks and President Harding’s proposal to bring | ;" g Hght and both FRusels = : with the mail had been caused by an | mer are being called upon to do their |Postmaster General Work was ad- | By the Associated Press. e BY N. 0. MESSENGER. the natidn-wide coal strike to an end. | nonARussians are so firm in their unlawful act by the shopmen. ~The! oo 800 (0 F0 00 TR0 0 O ing | vised today that there were more than| DUBLIN, July 13.—Michael Collins NEWARI. 23, Jily. 1830/ Mw {"The saratiie oolttas s e Ll sErTs s telegram laid such interference ai-|oWn Work an G e striking | 40,000 motor vehicles owned and con- X 2 : y Tay! o ems un- rectly to the attempt of the railroads . men. Itrolled by the various states, while |ha8 been appointed commander-in Jersey the senatorial election this |of Kansas City, president of «the| oo, 20¥ formula can be evolved to operate with incompetent work-| The life is too arduous and the|thousands of others owned by the|chief of the Irish national army, it; fall will have an angle bearing im- | Transmississippi Coal Associgdlon and | tion. O o ke men. President Jewell and his associ- | gerain Is too great and many of the,Wwar Department and used by the' was officially announced today. Col- portantly upon the nation-wide move- | the Southwestern CoalsZasoctation, Abruptuess Is Marked. e e T e 'eacs, | men fear that the double duty which |ware baailonias - Gierent Stales| ., pichard Mulcahy and Gen. Owen ment for modification of the Volstead | which emhrleel)l‘fy, but declared that up to the present they are being required to perform The Postmaster General planned to | O'Duffy will comprise a war council act, to encourage or discourage it. If |Oklahoma, Io The non-Russians seem inclined to the rail executives had refused to| wil] result in some serious accident, |ROtY the President that this vast|in gupreme charge of military oper- Senator Frelinghuysen be renomi-|Ramsey of Afabama and Jos! break up the meeting in a parlia- wi owa. Mr. Taylor has been|mentary way and talk of the neces. meet the representatives of the em- fleet of motor trucks could be set to ployes. Anxiety Felt in Homes. work ransporting the mails at short | atlons throughout the country. =~ = siel Swhich. et histime ) ssems) leader for the bituminous|sir: of the varmo B Hentiet Mekaage: Coupled with the double duty which |RCtice: and that the governors of the| Mulcahy also is named chief of probable, and if Gov. Edwards should | Si3raiy ot ir el cicaminous 8 b o b . ZOUR ¥ Ch | different states would be asked to ar- | gtaff of the army. O'Duffy has been be nominated for the United State®|held in Washington since the coal|making their reports to the main /The balance of the text follow tie men say they are required to per- range matters so that every state-|y.. ,meer in command of the south-| MrS. H. Campbell Graef|senate by tne ae ts, which®® re. | Strike situation became acute. dommission, which, in turn, must act It appears from your proclamation | g, “the men say they have on their lowned machine and government ve- . Y ale Cemocts: - | Although the anthracite operators h ‘ of July 11 that incomplete informa- | [T the men say s ron® it [hicle would be placed at the command | western divislon of the Irish forces. .. | garded as certain, the R tted Wy B e Tt0ss [ upon them. Litvinoft, the chief Rus- tion has been furnished you concern- | minds their families at home. for it |or” the ‘postal authorities In the Te-| It is in the vegion cavereq by wis| Struggles Half Hour—Hit |resoive in consider aaid to regard &8 s complete | 3!an delegate, has been so precipitute contest between 4t wets and drys. ;acceptance of the government's offer [ in his methods that the entente group : of arbitration, the situation with re- |has been unable to soften the ab- It can be-realized what an Impetus | oo;3 ¢o the bituminous operators and | ruptness of the clashes and pave the De given the campaign now in |the miners' union continued under a | way for a peaceful ending. Fress in many states for relaxa- |cloud of uncertsinty today, with both| _In reéplying to the questions of the ing the present dispute between the{is four and five days at a time be- Igpective states. division that the principal opposition ?,',,'f:’,‘.‘f'l woperators AN SRS | fore they see their familles. And the| Co-Ordinators May Be Called On. to the Free State government re- transportation acts or decisions of{ families are constantly worried when| There are sight co-ordinators ident- | -° " the Railroad Labor Board in 104|the head of the house is forced to|ified' with the bureau of the budget in Muleahy, who is the mini Over Head With Sandbag. Mrs. H. Campbell Graef, well known er of “These involved not only contract- ::,',:m SRk ndechatoesscoRa] ",‘lfl"":'d "";" ;;,.:‘“ "'"‘";"" ;:: defenss, s considered the ablest in local sdcial circles, woke up tion of stringent prohibition shoufa |#ides pursuing o policy obvicus . m?;' PR ’.,';‘1‘.'1'..12'.' ing outwork in shops. but also wage - Y Gl L Lo 3 maysibegam strategist in the country. 16 this morning In her room, | the wet candidate win at the polls | “Declaring the intention 18 to the proposed concessions. decroases, interpremtions of rules| The men who have not been calledjto co-operate with the postal author- [ *"CLOEE 0ol T00 L™ g0 1n re- |necond floor of her residepastat 1626 | oo P SWIC TS R CC LS PO UL Declering the intention fe to Gelen| Mo declared the question of com- and right of employes to_ elect thelr jout on strike are required to work litles. So completely have arrange- |, officials see in the cou pensation for confiscated properties nisation of the general staff are:|35th street, to find ar beside | woula Jook down their noses should own representatives. When the i, ,m tourteen to twenty hours a da; ts b rfected that Post Office | Assistant adjutant general, Col. Com- disposition to reject the had not yet arisen. and that it was Pennsylvania railroad —refused_ to | o y i |Department ‘officials feel, they said, | mandant Kevin O'Higgins: vies com. | nef bed: they meet defeat in the state, where | 318P08itlon a"question for negotiations : . v : E ! plan it public opinion |a question = comply with the board's rulingw: Fed- | they say. .Cots have been provided |or i mandant of the southwestern division, | She screameff and the man tried 0] 4,0rq 13 & strong sentiment favoring |would approve such a cours s Mo A eral Judge Page held that the board's | for them in the Union station, and|that the strike no longer can cause Sectoriof position on wages or rules was only | when each goes out on a job he is |annoyance so far as mail movements f;“,';',';,“i;%._“fi':f o saneph - Mor B ROTy er Toiace oA PY® e |accompanied by a special policeman |are concerned. Grath; director of organization, Com- S S e e e No cuftailment of railway mall | mandant Gen. Diarmuid O'Hegarty. _{ transportation act to establish na-las a bodyguard. While the men are | transportation has occurred on the tional boards of adjustmont described |belng paid overtime money for this | Pacific coast since the strike started, Rebels Claim Big Gaipa. wion” 3 . work, it was pointed out by The!postal officials announced today upon ymunique ed at hangs. Senator Frelinghuysen, en commission be required to sub- part of the machinery to declde dis- |Star's informant that they would |receipt of telegrams from inspectors | A mmm:m que | et | With something resembling sand | baags Senat ing, ane” strong | Srate commiss & Au::n Saasisuty putes between the carriers and thelr | ather have the rest. The equipment|in the coast states. In the south few |Cork says Caherconifih, County | hag, which raised welts on her fore- | packer of the ’.d"’m‘,,,_m"“‘ 15 bes |m 5 employ oo fias de all ne.|is 5ald to be in such bad shape that |trains have been discontinued. The |Limerick, the republicans captured Brik. | nead, but did not tear the flesh, the |ing opposed by George L. Record, |ing in the meantime to pay the wage The railroads have made all ne- | takes constant work to keep it|postal inspector at Atlanta. Ga., re- |Gens. Hayes and Connolly Of the Frée | man struck Mrs. Graef three or four |former bull mooser and Drogressive |rate of March 31 as suggested in the gotiations merely formal, thus throw- |,y ng. rted that trains 101 and 102, operat- ; and still a radical in y view of 5 sisted, was the stablest government in ing on the board an impossible bur- e Y 7 State forces, with thelr men and twenty | times. Ehe, in a desperate effort, | Sublic questions, He 18 entering the | Presilents proposal. They asked|piop, Woy there was Tess risk In bring- ‘While the maintenance of way|ing between Brooksville and Tampa, s den of arbitration. The board has|. .;ttgsmen, through their national of- | Fla., were withdraw July 3; trains | rifles, Sniping is In progress in Lime- | eiched the telephone and started ! contest for the senatorial nomination |that the proposed separate commis- |inc"cajital to Russia, he declared, tha sion should be required to set up & |to any of the capitalistic countries of abolished overtime pay for Sundays |fgcers, decided to stay on the job, it|28 and 29, running between Clio and [rick. The republicans alsq, claimr—the nd holidays, enjoyed for thirty years |fC€rs, . : calling for the police. Even'‘on'whorkanized roads The | vas pointed out that the local men Latta, S 'C. were discontinued the |capture of a post bekd-by Fres Staters| gimultancously, she reached into a permanent method by which wages |Europe. i n this branch of the union cannot|same date. Trains Nos. 7 and 8, run- ai . led M. Litvinoff reported it if the ne- hoard has cstablished a rate of P&y | 4ang the conditions fhuch longer, and |ning between Atlanta, Rockmart and |near neachy Bureandrawer andipnllsdiont and working conditions would be|ggtiations broke down the Russlans ;'nferfzg e T g "ot bace sopartilare already discussing the possibil- |Birmingham, will be discontinued to-‘er J. Little, head of the republi-| & revelver The bUTEIas snetcted Io[recalled that New Jersey was & |-agjusted sutomatically” in the fu-|would regret it. but that they were con- living at over $1.400 and a minimum [{tY of 2 Walkout as a protest against|day, the depariment vas Informed ~ “ean publicity department, stid Bamonn | shoqt her if she did not stop crying | Sronghold of Prowtetsiin When |ture, and proposed that to assure a|vinced that the fault was not theirs. comfort budget at over $2,300. the {conditionsjundeciwhich it heygiate Finhe SCIno = De Valers oL e ailog | for assistance. He ran out of the - non-partisan adjudication the com- micr Tells of Deadk required to work In order to handle|Ing to tlegrams receiyed today from and, so far as he knew, had not called | o, "down to the firat floor and out Lacks Militaat Leader. mission be composed of three repre- e ock Basic Wage Unfust. the business formerly handled by the | Dostal Inspectors, the following trains |at the publicity buresu yesterday. oo S 3 e et iy one | By the Assscinisd Fasen. “When the basic wage is unjust it | shop chaftsmen now out on strike. |have been difcontinued: No. 12, run- s the progress rear door. Unquestionably, it is said by poli- |Sontatives of the public : Lt ST e O e HO e I o e E i P O Telephones to. Plice. ttctaps®here, there is still much| John L. Lewis. president of the|riova George told the house of com- for skill and responsibility are lik men who are out on a strike, a num- |[-NOs. 23 and Z’, Petween Cincinnati T & X e Mrs. ! & ¢ in the state for pro- United Mine Workers of America and wise unjust. Organized employes sup- | ber of business men of that city, it |and St. Louis; Nos, 51 and 52, between 'wo servants, awakened by Mrs.:latent sentimen DUnited Mine Workers of Amerle ina [mons this afternoon he was afraid a port your declaration of May 23, 1921, | was announced today, have volunteer- | Detroit and 'Cincinnati; No. 33, be- 3 Graef's cries, made thelr way To|gressivism, but it is compained that|Other, OTICUIZ OF MRl DrEUS S0 | deadlock had occurred at The Hague, that the lowest wage would not be|ed certain free things to the men who |tween Chicago, Nonon and Cincinnatl; jare using all the post offices and are,per room just after the intruder left. !t lacks the militant leadership of {and were understood to be endeavor- [put he had no information that thers enough for comfort and to insure that | are out and will continue glving same [ No. 30, between Cincinnati and In- |collecting cus-oms and excise taxes at | i" "0 SU° FEET 8 0 Pl T | o e T o e i m o | Loy P molanfrmetion (ks Hoy the struggle for existence shall not'till the men return to their former |dianapolis; No. 11, between Grafton | the rate of 12,000 pounds weekly. I8 o STInor ! i the arbitration proposals apply to all | ence on Russian affairs. crowd out things purely worth Hving)place; of employment. This news was |and Cincinnati. The department an- “Listowel (County Kei ) has been | verely from the shock, and bruised | attractive, educated man, a good the partially unionized territory as for, and should provide for amuse-:recelved with sincere satisfaction by |nounced that additional postal cars |taken by our forces. We captured | apout the head She telephoned the | talker, but recognized as advocating | oy o o inining Area shutdown by ment, recreation and saving. Em- ! the union men. are being added to other trains to|300 men, with rifles. ammunition and | [N ) ¥ %\ 1 vever, and Nigh{ | bctripes which are rather shocking | the bituminous strike. . So far as the| STRIKING MINERS RAID ployes have never violated any deci-| The men at their meeting in Alex- | handle the mails for trains discon- |53 machine ns, as well as some | P . 3 3 oc e Sthractts opers ipes To sion of the board. but the rallraads!andria today announced that there|tinued in this section. armored 1o We are in com- | Inspector of Detectives Embry rushed | to the conservative business element | Willingness of snibracis operators (o have viclated declsions, and employes | was no change in the railroad situa-|_The postal 'nw;_cgj.! l& charge at | plete el:‘nn;ol ot :l;vw;f‘“f;flr:.v Detectives Cox and Lynn to the |of this strong financial and industrial | g 1p 8 TH0 °in “the anthracite field NON-UNION MEN IN PIT have refused to work under wages|tion locally. ontinued , Column 4. where life is proceedin " g 5 at be considered by the mine = e e & eihave: | ration proposals at the general v outside the financial and maumm;;;}’l‘c‘y o D os e e Satheday | Dispersed by Sheriff—4,000 Gath er at Capeburg, Pa.—New Out- ' > in the south, eapecisily the Cork Ex- | purglar in vain. v popses e o | Giant Auto Reserve Planned |5 y: S8y b | "Hon i e in the vows | Sie (i 0rie ki o om0 commis 2ot break Feared as Guard Is Placed. " financlal burdens of railroad manage- except for the servants. ment upon employes through inade- band. & retired business man, and her | language which he thinks they can| = =~ "o .. the anthracite in- By the Associated Press. COKEBURG, Pa., July 13.—A great quate wages, and this will undermine 3 4 4 4 Ly BB ‘hter left for Malhe yesterday |understand, and putting forth doc- EheRealdls and yrosperitylof ithe next TO Ca Mdllg I 2 rains Fall ::'lhe was ‘geetlng to 1eave 1o |yrines which he believes will be popu- |dustry had no problems of part-time generation. After exhausting all other The provisional cabinet has de-|join her family tomorrow. lar in this time of unrest and up-|employment, but had entirely differ- ent conditions of work and UvIng!crowd of striking miners and their sympathizerd today surrounded the methods the employes sought again clded on & further pestponement for | Entry to the house was obtained Wilson mine of the Acme Coal and to obtain a conference and agreement iron bars protecting a |heaval. E with' the raiiroad cxecutives. Oniy| All automobile owners In the coun- | Into effect, with sutomoblles taking |at least & fortaight of the first meet- | b PTYINE 0%, o0, st Boor“Pofice | He Is conducting a kind of circus | than In the bituminous felds and that Coke Company, at Wilson Junction, with the announced Intention of as a last resort did they strike. We | ¢y wij) e forced Into a giganti. the place of runners, each “run ing of the new parliament. This|pelieve the intruder was famillar with | campaign, designed to bring out the| s commission now appointed to oper- respectfully insist that no_interrup- | 7Y » gantio re- | L0 P to the next mal This very people he wants to reach. He | tioh of commerce or Interference of | erve to help earry the malls, in case | Drathoq the entive ceuriey canid be |action is taken becsuse of the state | the house. Y. peop ate should be required to set up a bringing out the non-union men who yesterday went into -the pit. The crowd was dispersed by Sherifft Luel- put & beoll over her head. He had their plans. If New Jersey would not thry a gag Into her mouth "‘“'“”‘fi a wet propaganda it might Two Conditions Named. &rted to tie her hands with a cord [ Well aq WY ST Sieemhere The anthracite operators attached wever, is when she commenced her struggle.|ns memination of " caudidaics and |two conditions to their acosptance of For almost half an hour they*fought. | upon that propesition this '::nry arbitration yesterday, one that The assumption of the burden of compensation, he said, meant new obligations for Russia, and she could not promise to assume them until she saw how speedily the country could be reconstructed with the help of foreign capital. The soviet government, Litvinoff in- f th ized 1 leat! 'S WIFE When he D eatthamtin :m‘ndh s ki ditions i the future ful acts of the organized employes. % rruption of communication pre- When he gets them inside he pro-|and working con Such ‘Interruptions and interference | ‘°rfere with thelr transportation. 80-) "ipi,¢ sutomobilists would enthust- | (TNPHOR ML SUCIES O e COAL MINER’S ceeds to wallop the plutocrats and | sre po utematically adjusted,” the result inevitably from attemnts /of ) cOrding to plans being considered to- | ggtically enter into the scheme, once | Vonting FARMERS | the bosses. and whoop it up generally | ked the President to name railroads to operate with insufficlent, | day by the Post Office Department. |it were put into motion by the gov-ment from reaching Dublin. =Many SLAIN BY along that line. He says little about |operators as goes around with a big tent and in = mails was caused by direct or uniaw- | railroad strikers should seriously in- | chained together in one great mall|of the country, it is announced, in- permanent method “by which wages link. incompetent and unskilled workmen.” Formation of such a nation-wide | érnment, is the belief of Gov. Bart- | members salso are active service Pl prohibition, but is regarded as a dry. | three representatives of the public on | .., who hurried here from Wash- Peace Still Expected. lett, who remembers with what great | with the national arm Recently he has taken to writing | the board and only one miner and one ! ce organization of Patriotic auto own- | snihusissm o eamie of ais Sowrs | " The cabinets view fa that the r Befisal to Leave Berry Patch |lotters to his opponent, showing him: |operator. This. it was held would as- | Ington. Later reports reached the au g Railway peace activities, which ers would be in addition to the use| home stat g 13 e is the overn- = adjudication. A | thoritles that the crowd w: again e, Noew Hampshire, and’ of | toration of D e o self to be a master in putting em- e a non-partisan adju oritle Joomed large on the trike horizon|of postal and Army trucks and atr-|the whole ‘country, carried ‘out the|ment's first responsibility and there:|. o\ o0 mragedy, Pennsylvania |barrassing questions to denator Fre. | aeciston from such a commigsion. they | assembling in the hills, and a guard yesterday, slumped perceptibly toda¥. planes to carry the United States) SS6GaLions of the’government dur- | fore must pre: = o=y linghuysen. The latter's campaign declared, they would 2oeeD of state policemen and deputy sheriffs while rail executives, union leaders|man should emergency arise, bl b Sherift Told. O e e a e | Foae T 12 and union officials, who | was thrown around the property. and Railroad Labor Board members = R e Tt (Wintes ta | Carry BeIE. HARD BATTLE SEEMS NEAR. . |96y o attention fo ihe letters, but|have professed themselves powerless ! According to the deputies, it was the awaited the gext angle of develop-| e 5 Rt ing. Use of the automobile relay would . B A eOwN, Ba., July 15.—Mrs.|In Tetort would like to know from | to, answer e D ramoral | mOst pretentious demonstration since i e new scheme is the idea of|enable the government to continue its Insur, Free ters Are 2 > ¢ Mr. Record whather Heary Ford is/| withou - , fully 4,000 men hav- - H 3 y tely sur. of second-class matter, including Btrengthening Porces. Cigheol K Bl 1 mear | that Honcy Ford's friends threatened, | arbitration prooeedings in settiement | the march. They had completely sur- presidents again today, however, fol- | 3utomobile owners of the country|newspapers and magasines, which | By the Assoclated Fress. jPlcking ‘”’"‘m e Jate yester. |in Fetaliation for Frelinghuysen's vote | O wages in practically all thasearst-=J rountl sl ithe It s Lob et e lowing the tiat refusal of a commit- | Would be more than glad to answer | probably could not be transported by | LONDON, July 1.—The provisional | Reverse. Fayetts oomtly: “C0 SN Cllin the Newberry case, to “go atter” | tory Which the SOn SIwioh biron | leaders, and, just before daybreak, les from the carriers yesterday to| the call of their country in this man-| trucks or planes, in case the rallway |Irish Free Stats government's dnl-!:::' “:'":;.:'m o ah:“" . ;::fl::n:;o; e!]-:c:‘n:l w Jersey pri- | Mb."" those of West Virginfa |:u;.¢eha memwi'flo.:’:fn :nI: men to talk to the strikers so long as ‘they | por mail tra & centrate its energies on 8y R iand nnsylvania, were some pro-|their homes. hops. Mr. rains should be largely tied up. sion to con : Deputies wiho went to the scene Freliaghuysen Favee lished; Mingo | of the many important properties in Hooper declined to discuss his plans, | Once the car owners “put thelr| It is a serious question if the sev-|overcoming the Fepublicans and e Lace and the wives b = ‘:.‘P:‘.{:; hv'v'.:t"{"n::f:f:.pci. scene f}igm- Vicinity to attempt reopenin; but B. M. Jewell, president of the ;‘*;’“Mfl' to the wheel,” Gov. Bartlett|eral thousands of motor trucks, even | teblishing order throughout the coun- |of thi enator Frelinghuysen is making a i o000, 0 Thances in recent months, | and it was conceded that if the move shopmen. atill maintained a hopetul | FoEre e O e D ot ouls, | aking~ Into consideration the 'ATMY | .1, pefors summoning the new: par- |10 leave the farm by & man aTOSY oryign of addresses, handshaking | and Somerset county. Fennsylvania. | was successful other big mines near- ‘which of n to turn over ‘ . A b 1 steel out- also would start. " “!nt:': strike leader declared he be- to the Post Office D-’n‘rtm'nl. would | liament ~is tiken to ‘indicate (hlt‘.n said, and the man ar-d.bt llm.“ and organisation work. Recently h-i;'::f"’ ';':";'n;&'r‘::‘mgf“l“ atil by ! llevu‘d the l'o;d-l‘:‘llllld ’::rllhnlenltkm: t :‘l‘:n&ulphr:'ol:nl!hh $ mfll u(h&d- military operations on a considerabls .:trlkl Mrs. Lace in the ";:: "fi addressed the big Mothodist camp|fhe present strike, were included in x ]UDGE TO BE SHOT ok e strikes e for n; aesi) g .. 5 Eobresemtativen oo™ US| The entire country would be di-|of the second-class matter, Thus the |scale are impending. | they s iotim, ::«:’7: ::p(;cn:no?';? '1::"‘ e | e I E = the wvided into sones of operation, auto-|public would be de; to -| The republicans, sirice their. defeat Blew to Arbitration. i B L aey e o it ""'y“,‘fi' magssings and ufi;’:‘; **|in Dublin, b S o S A high official discussing the pro- y in the fact that the railroad chiefs | giiiricts, accordink to | towhahipw | Hkelhiood: be s b ek oo o (it posals sald this was equivalent to who rejected the proposed conference bia to:tiks Ern ; him In the b Doupticn and state: i the Biat elame Taro Patcrson and Tre asking that the Preslents oo of murdered his wite and burned her were not authorized to speak for —— as Newark, railway executives generally. Hauls te Be Small. arbitration in “the mines npot now 4 In theins BRITISH PAY AMERICA _ |.c S Topking: be, changed to 1 oer o | e, 0, JCreti st el D SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, July 13.— Omer R. Woods, former Idaho probate judge, who was convicted of having+ New Disorders Crop Up. Each car owner would be called hop! s leasu rposes, - us " itrati in all mines. It was ad rather than ging, e e shopmen ::m":;:"»::m‘.?;’::‘: E:uu::";n;l. uml'.ft":nzummm mflg;‘.‘_m“""“};‘: +$12,000,000 SHIP CLAIM jer onservatium It i :":cn“,,"f.(mu.‘ SRt iRt wevaras ;"é‘"::m":fi " sentenced "%‘:'u‘»lr . T0O! classes. " % & Mteaawhile the shors Toll in which |Bort the maile for hundrads of miles, 0t Dlotting of the antire doun-| Dabiin Cemmenication Cut O®. | Counter claims between the British resiened ment could not force every operator | udse Ephriam Johns sate ce diminished somewhat | each owner would be required te haul | 7. on thy of. : ;| min ot ahk -r'"‘l.“'l};u“;:m"‘ by S "hip | St she 3008 {n the ocuatey to Roeopt 1at e by renewed outbreaks|mail for a smiall dfstan isactions be- | fortunes take 3 1, lite” Home Sha Sicnigan wors smane the | B ; it would be necessary for | yy it B | e the. 1o mat bids fair ek Fration- ble. Hia datonse was ihat hia® scenes -of fresh disorders, while | riserve wal tor | < 0 work 4 ? A b by 2 r % 0. th %Jfiv bitum! A mb—nwh-zynma