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s . I . \VEA?HER- : ; - 3 ; ; ‘ The u-:\-u: Prvu.l- exclusively entitled to -5“557,-3-*:5'-5': t;zé;:;:;a;fé:«gg; i : /, created 1o o 50 oherwie i 1 e | ! wenty-four ho! en: . ] 0~ a also the local news pul ;"x’é-%lu.:t'l'::} t’o:i';'.' ZorAreays g s Ar rights of publication ’.zuu.:..:m e Full report on page 7. ; J dispatches herein are also reserved, = ‘ Closing N. Y. Stocks and Bonds, Page 16~ ° L\ WITH SUNDAY. MORNING EDITION Yesterday's Net Circulation, 83,915 A — : WASHINGTON, D., O, FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1922 TWENTY-SIX PAGES. * TWO CENTS. MINERS LIKELY TO REJECT PLAN FOR ARBITRATING COAL STRIKE. | RAIL WALKOUT SPREAD FEARED Definite Statement Awaits Action of Policy Body. LEWIS TELLS DAVIS OF UNION’S STAND Non-Union Owners Send Message to President Opposing Proposal. Rejection by the United > Mine TALK CONGRESS ACTIONINSTRIKE AT WHITE HOUSE As the result of a visit which Senator Lodge paid at the White House today, the question of the Posaibility of congressional aetl to deal with either the rail strike or the mine strike, or boths, was brought forward for discussion. It was disclosed that se far no ¥ bedh made for action it w said that atter is not Trackmen May Join ‘Strike—Held Back With Difficulty. WALKOUT MAY END * ON 17 RAILROADS Shop Craft Official Says National Agreement Possible in 2 Days. By the Assoclated Press. ——— MAN WHO HAS BURIED SIX WIVES WEDS HIS EIGHTH AT AGE OF 87 By the Associated Press. QUINCY, 1Il, July 13.—Embark- ing on the matrimonial sea for his eighth voyage, Daniel M. White of Hersman, Ill, was married today to Mrs. Mary Bowen of Clayton, L, who makes her second ven- ture. Mr. White has outlived six of s wives and the seventh was estranged. The bridegroom is elghty-seven and his bride eighty- four. TANGLED AFFAIRS OF PARTY GIVING PRESIDENT WORRY Bonus, Subsidy and Other | DU PONTS ACCUSED OF BIG DYE FRAUDS BY SENATOR MOSES Held Co-Conspirators With Chemical Foundation and Textile Alliance. TARIFF BILL EMBARGO PROVISION ASSAILED Delaware Corporation Charged With Mulcting U. S, Treasury During War Time. B the Associated Pre b : CHICAGO, July 14.—Strike threats Charges of a somewhat sensational Wo S £ ca of the plan of s Y % e Varksesiof Smesics ofiicie h ihe Fresident. by “maintenance of way employes, | Issues in Hullabaloo at character against the Chemical President Harding providing that Should Mr. Harding become cOn- | overshagowed the last ten days by Foundation, Inc.; the E. L. du Pont de miners n union mines ‘go back to e the shopmen’s strike, broke out again Nemours Company and the Textile work at the pre-strike wage scale pending the decision of an arbitra- tion commission to be appointed to draw up a new wage scale is prac- tically certain, it was learned today irom a reliable source. John TI. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, in a confer- ence today with Secretary of Labor Davis asked the Secretary to outline more clearly the government's pro- posal for arbitration in the coal con- iroversy. Secretary Davis took the request of the head.of the mine work- ers to the cabinet meeting, with at least two other counter proposals suggested by Lewis, while the latter and Phillip Murray, vice president of the mine workers’ organization. went into conference with conciliators of | ‘ ashi l of the House, wi [ til August 15, CABINET DEVOTES President Confers With Ad- visers—Reported Hopeful SESSION T0 STRIKE! today, bringing the rail strike to'a new crisis as it neared the end of its second wecek. Fresh outbreaks of violence, notably in Texas, Okla- homa and Missouri: President Hard- ing’s determined steps to keep the tions for a’settlement of the shop- men’s strike on seventeen roads the northwest were among gther im- portant developments of the last twenty-four hours. Pressure_by many of his general chairman upon E. F. Grable, presi dent of the United Brotherhood o Maintenance of Way Employes and Railway Shop Laborers, pushed the common labor problem to the front again. Mr. Grable's action in with- holding strike orders after mainte- nance of way employes voted to join the walkout, did not please many of the organization's general chairmen, who passed on to their chief the per- sistent demands of the rank and file for concerted action. Mr. Grable arrived in Chicago while men, he asserted, had no authority to mails moving, and informal negotia- | inl THE WANING HARVEST SEASON. ASSASSIN'S ERROR SAVES MILLERAND IN PARAD Bullets Intended for)| HAGEN SETS PACE IN OPEN GOLF PLAY| | House {from giving White House. BY DAVID LAWRENCE. Midsummer {s bringing an unex- pected climax in the Harding admin- istration. The visit of Senator Lodge, republican leader, to the White today ‘accentuated the tan- gled condition of affairs, which, far the administration a summer of vacations and lassitude, isuch as republicans were wont to have in pre-war d of normalcy, has brought a maelstrom of worries and unsolved problems. Senator Lodge talked with the ex- ecutive for a half hour. The object of his errand was to tell Mr. Harding that many republicans would like to sidetrack the ship subsidy bill and do sundry things with reference to Alliance were made today in the ate by Senator Moses, republican, New Hampshire, in the course of a prepared address in opposition (o the dye embargo provision of the admin- istration tariff bill. Senator Moses said these organizations were three of the actors in the “gigantic fraud” he was opposing, and added: “These three are significantly inter- locked in their related personnel and in_their activities; and it they WhoSe subsidiaries, officers, stock- holders, lobbyists, paid propagandists and faked and kept organizations have been the most aggressive, avari- clous, and insolent of all the prof- iteering trew who pertinaciously push this legislation.” Senator Moses declared that what- ever the outcome of the government proceedings against the Chemical Foundation, he always would believe that it was “conceived in conspiracy is the tariff and the bonus, on which|{and fostered by falsehood.' the Department of Labor. The basis ; e Al amh : 3 i : ‘ by falsehood ” He sregard his refusal to : B . * : s eat s S i en which the miners. will reject me[ Rail Board Can Act. {jhalm the walkout” came from within | Him Speed Past Shoots a 68, Two Under Par ‘Tl;.e :f:;lildnosn: ::e\:u"::‘zn::z;:t::; gharged that the -conupiracy” was ove s organization. 1 chair- W | . e s government plan was not made Presldentl Hasraine and, lisladyisers 8 e general chair- | 001S a y 3 president; ~ “his associates in the of known. & Definite announcement of the atti- tude of the unions will not be made oificially uptil tomorrow, when the volicy committee, composed of more than 220 district unfon heads. will again today devoted a cabinet session to the rail and coal strikes. Several of the cabinet officials ar- rived at the White House for the ses- sion bearing reports on the two in- jcall a strike, and he indicated an in- tention to remain firm in his refusal to sanction a strike. Midnight Conference Held. The maintenance of way men’s chief | Paris Prefect. |Arrested Anarchist | declared that no especiai significance | in the First Round of | Tournament. By the Associated Press. accounts of the republican conference held during his, absence in_ Marion just what are the plans of the lead- ers, so he pleaded excessive work on the rail and coal strike situations as a legitimate reason for declining to enter into & discussion at this time of the legislative situation. fice of alien property custodian, and certain of the dye manufacturers of the country.” ; & attention that the founda- tion was organized in the winter of 1919, Senator Moses said that on Feb- d : dustrial disturbances. Postmaster | ¥as attached to his midnight confer- . GLENCOE, Iil, July 14—Walter ruary 26 of that year Acting Secre- meet In Washington to pass on the {( 0L G SIS veral reports | Chce last night with B. M. Jewen, the | Bealen by Bastille e e R T T Little Time to Conler. tary Polk signed an executive order unswer of the United Mine Workers | s \ " | shopmen’s strike -leader. Mr. Grable Practically all the time Mr. Hard which had been carefully prepared 10 the proposal of the government for | °7 the mail situation as affected by | stopped in Chicago on his return from round of the national open golf y e time Mr. Harding | ¢ his signature” by the foundation. arbitration in the coal strike. The President is expected to be apprised ©f the attitude of both the wminers and the bituminous operators by Monday norning. The committee represent- g the soft coal operators will meet here at 7 o'clock Sunday night to de- cide on the attitude of the operators toward the government proposal. Hoover Seeks to Hold Price. !the rail strike; Attorney General ! Daugherty said he had about a hun- idred telegrams, the nature of which | he would not disclose, Secretaries Hoover and Davis had ready for pres- entation the latest information on the government's proposal for arbitratian of the coal strike, and Secretary Weeks was prepared to discuss possi- Kansas City after conferences with { his chairmen there and asserted that | he had no further grievances at pres- ent to take before the United States Railroad Labor Board, mediations by whose chairman, Ben W. HooMer, and W. L. McMenimen, one of the three labor members, prevented the threat- ened July 1 walkout by maintenance men. Mr. Grable admitted that he'was i Celebrants. i By the Associated Press, PARIS, July 14.—Three shots were | fired today at Prefect of Police Naudin by Gustave Bouvet, an anarchist well known to the police, in the belief that it was President Millerand at whom he” was “AfMing. None of the ‘shots | | l championship at return in the playing partner, Atlanta, todk 39 to get out and came home in one under par for a T4. en lost a chance for a 67 when | sliced a spoon 50 yards to the Skokie today by | scoring 68, two under par. { |out in 34 and with birdie 3s on the | fourteenth and fifteenth managed to same figures. Bobby Ji He was His of | | ones has been back from Marion has been consumed in either -the railroad or coal situations and he hasn’t had an opportunity to check up by personal conference with friends on Capitol Hill to learn just what is the situa- tion. The congestion of problems is al- most unparalieled. It ‘looks more authorizing the licensing of seized enemy patents and jrade marks by the organization In this connection he presented a memorandum of a conversation which he said he had had with an unnamed federal official, setting forth that Mr. Polk, who was acting in_the absence in Europe of Secretary Lansing and President Wilson, had explained thut he had signed the order upon repre- | Marigny. The assailant shot from be- hind 2 woman, and the fire scorched her dress. The assailant was beaten by the crowd before the police seized | Rim. Bouvet sald to the police: “It was at the carriage of the president of the republic I intended firing. However, 1 did not wish to kill any one. I wished only to make a demonstration that would attract attention to the condi- tion of the proletariat.” he with difficulty _holdin, m i war time here than peace time. | sentation that the action to be taken . ble action to maintain interstate com- | line. . e tnion ey oo | ook effect. ol e e o R g %o | The coal operators and miners are|was -with the full approval of the n the meantime Secretary Hooyer |ble atenad Ploxes, | The shots were fired while the pa- the eighteenth and then missed a six : m - L met today.we”theiCommerce Depart- [merce and crausportition of the maila) ZySIIS RGN Al WO | T8 L0 e along the Champs foot putt fter & beautitul pitch for Bis| 10N g D e e o | Tran lisossine theipatonts usbls ae- A of elr C! i ’ 5 ment with § small committee repre-|in accordaace with the President's|jona" Juiy have joined the | Elysees at the corner of the Avenue ! 1 Hutehison after going out in| Tailroad situation is etting worse. | thority of the trading-with-the- enemy asenting non-union bituminous mines|recent warping proclamation. j strike. { N miserable 42,.0r. § abov Marshals and deputy marshals are | act. | The new crisis caused by threats from the maintenance men arrived as peace moves to end the shopmen's strike had apparently slowed up ma- terially, except for conferences at St. Paul, which lent the only hopeful air to the. situation. ., Northwest Parley Gives Hope. The initial St. Paul conferences be- tween P. A. Henning, chairman of the Federated Shop Crafts of the North- western District, and rail officialsy brought no definite results, but both The memopandum set forth alwo that Mr. Polk “scemed very much dis- turbed” and held several conferences vith officials of the Trade Commis sion, and had “intimated very strong- 1y that he had been made the victim of false representations to induce his signature o the executive order. Garva Sale to Self. A week after the order was signed, Senator Moses continued, Mr. Garvan became alien property 'cus- todian, and “as such on April 10 sold e unable to prevent disorder and federal B npALSe ot i but | LTOODS are being held in readiness for not find the holes in the green, { action. Hardin - Ry . g has tried te be found all those on the fairways. | deliberate and patient. There are ‘The cups looked like washiub®|those who think he should have in- ‘Monday, when 1 s h looked | Sisted upon immediate acceptance or .qualifying, but today they looked | cjoition of the plan he offered to like worm casts,” sald the former! ;. oa] miners and operators and R o ot0 threatened action by Congress as a Jim' Barnes, the tigle holder, possible solution if the parties didn’t agree. The dclay given in consider- ing the plan of the President has re- sulted in the inevitable raising of obstacles and barriers in both camps. 1o discugs means for preventing smaller operators from advancing prices beyond the Mmit recently. fixed | ., g no advices from C. E. Schat, by voluntary agreement. Secretary|‘oiv® Moy 1 Hoover announced he would discuss | SC°IVeT for the Missouri, Kansas and ih The operatars Buch omaasoiscuss | mexas railroad. who was advised late could be taken to hold the smaller|yesterday by the government to make 090:::::; " ::l & ::: dV?“'u:\l:hry price | another request o2 Gov. Neft of Texas, Aagr 3 e 1A lere were To drastic means of enforcement in |fOT Protection by state troops on the the government's hands because of | carrier's property, now in the hands the lack-of laws covering the sit 1of a receiver, appointed by a federal ‘Weeks Not Advised. Secretary Weeks said he had re- PRESIDENT MILLERAND. young man, twenty-three years old, and started to organize a lynching party. ‘The prefect's guards, however, came up quickly and’placed Bouvet under a rest. had a | 7 Jesse Guilford, amateur champion, had a 77. Some . of the figures for the first i ! : i i 250,000 property tion. court. The expectation at the War| sides adi it Anarchist. | Meanwhile some spectators had | eighteen holes were: | *Delay, moreover. in dispatching fed- | to_ himself for § ¥ Thg union heads were understood | Depatment, howeve, was tha some re- :d::n:eénis‘e:sa;‘e hatiseve proae e e e ivein com. | Stopped the carriage of President Mil-| —Among the eighteen-hole ScOres! oral trpaps to. {rouble areas on ihe | Whose saraing e panlty toda¥ to have demahded through Sec- | port would be received during the P! Bouvet {lerand, who had not heard the shots.| were: railroads may prove injurious, judg. | closed _indicates o Tetary Davis that assurance be given that non-union fileds be included in the government arbitration proposal. It was also understood that the unions asked that the arbitration nago- tiations will not include discussion day. J. P. Noonan, president of the In- ternational Brotherhood of Electri- cal Workers, the members of which organization represent ome of the six crafts of rallway workers on strike, ise of a settlement of the strike on the seventeen roads of the northwest- ern group. Mr. Henning went so far 1as to assert that he believed it was | entirely possible to settle the strike x2 national basis within forty-eight ours. Before entering the St. Paul munistic and anarchistic circles. formerly was secretary of an extrem- ist society, and was sentenced to a year in prison for circulating anar- chistic propaganda and He ‘instigating The president was urged not to proceed, but he insisted upon driving on quietly to the Palace of the Elysee, a few hun- dred yards away. M. Naudin, when congratulated by the president upon his escape, replied: t John Black, Californja, 71. Jack Blakeslee, Muncie, Ind. Edward Gow, Weston, Jack Burke, St. Paul. 76 Laurie Ayton, Evanston, C. W. Hackn v, Atlantic George Duncan, Englan ing from the pleas coming from af- fected zones. The been loath to intervene with the full weight of its authority, but the situa- tion is rapidly compelling such a step. government has | worth many millions. Turning to what he characterized as “the orgy of falsehood with which the Chemical Foundation camouflaged its real purpose.” the New Hampshire senator asserted that while the foun- " advertised N , Te. R 1y of working conditions under the cur- | declared upon his arrival in Washing- | no violence. 1t is my. baptism of fire. | Program in Jeopardy. dation had “unctuously - gotiations, Mr. Henning conferred k pl President cceeded M. Leullier, Charles Evans, vas to carry out educational rent wage contracts, and the “check- om The attack took place as President| TLast week he su ed M. “harle : 3 5 that it was to 3 DI System for enitectianthe ‘sheck- ton today from Chicago, tiat calling | with Mr. Jewell. who had asserted | ypiliseand and the prefect were rid- | dermted: o protect of Paris. Aside from the critical developments field of chemistry, Hard Coal Operators Accept. | out federal troops to cope with the | railroad strike situation would hurt rather than aid the government in its that it was upon a national basis only, and through direct negotiations with the roads. that the shopmen's | ing in the procession homeward from Longchamps, where a military Bouvet carried two revolvers, re- | Joaded. and twenty-five cartridges. | In the rail and coal strikes the en- { tire legislative program on which the purposes in the it had bolster k. nearly $300,000 to he propaganda for a dye He placed in the Record The operators’ bituminous group|efforts to deal with the situation. |strike weuld be ended. i oy caoonImasel e Three Marshals Present. | republican party had expected to go | SMParE0” He placed 0 Lhe RS are ready, it was learned todasy, to|Many union workers throughout the| Chairman Hooper of the Labor M. Naudin was in the automobile| 5, ... marshals of France, Foch, . E. Rogers, Dayton, Ohio, 41 to the country in the autumn elec- | (jquals and organizations over the & : country, he sald, would leave their|Board. whoannounced formulation of | tnax preceded (he presidentialahorse. | . . C. Farrell, Quaker Ridge, N. ™', | 1o ' B b which there was made present” Protests to ' the President|posts with the rail systems If forced | new plans for ending the strike. was | iat, Dreceded the Premte ah i Joftre and Petain, were present to see | 3¢~ . Liope 18/ 1 deopariy; (M. [Hacding JcoliiEy. i o i leas the "Thlbe against continuation of the March,|to work under military protection. | closely watched for his mext mans | ara¥ " in pursuit of | the marshal's baton presented by the | “"cnarles H. Rowe, Oakmont, Pa., 42.| Wants elasticity in fariff making, so | What the senato a 1922, wage scale while the arbitra- tion negotiations are in progress Operators of anthracite mines have practically accepted the plan of the President, but it is pointed out that allowance must be made for vastly different conditions in the anthracite industry as differentiated frora the bituminous industry. Declaring their opposition to the government arbitration plan, repre- Charges Trains Dropped. Mr. Noonan charged that Some of the railroads were annulling mail trains purposely in an effort to force the government's hand and were re- fusing to meet with' the striking workers in an effort to force the men into conference with government of- This {s’being done, he said, to keep up the appearance that the | ficials. for peace Disturbances Continue. Meanwhile disturbances in connec- tion with the strike continued. State troops guarded every ap- proach to the properties of the Mis- souri Pacific rallroad at Poplar Bluff, Mo., today. The city was quiet and reports that a mob of several hundred striking shopmen and sympathizers from Hoxle, Ark., was' marching on the town to prevent the opera- assailant, i diately started ‘B"(‘):xn\‘eell,n who had began to run, and:head of the state to Gens. Fayolle and one of them caused Bouvet to fall|Franchet D'Esperey. by hurling a bicycle overhead at him. Crowd Falls on Assailant. The crowd immediately fell upon the | tall, NEXT HAGUE MOVE square-shouldered 1 of military airplanes and an observation : Gen. Lyautey, who came from Morocco for the cere- mony, was ill and unable to attend.: A big ‘yellow dirigible, three squads Ben Lord. Glen Falls, N. ¥. T. Sprogell, Memphis, 40. John Golden, Tuxede, N. Y, 36. F. A. Godchaux, New Orleans, 40. Ira Couch, Chicago, 41. Charles Thom, Shinnecock Hills, 38. Bob Maedonald, Chicago, 3 balloon hoveréd over the vast fleld, while on the green lawn of the race course in the midst of trees of the Bois de Boulogne, 20,000 men, with a mass Bobby Jones, Atlanta, 38. Jessie Guilford, Boston, 38. Tom Kerrigan, Siwanoy MEXIGAN TROOPS as to make the schedules conform to inevitable changes in economic condi- tions. Republicans are themselves di- vided on the merits of various sched- ules, either now being debated or as yet not formally before the Senate. Mr. Harding may have to be the ar- biter of these differences. Some of the disputes are so serious that many republicans would prefer to sidetrack the tariff until after the elections. The agitation for a soldler bonus aw is undiminished, and the cham- claim” that the foundation was vernment agency. B genator Moses also introduced a number of letters to show that the Chemical Foundation’s agents nm{ had the bureau of education, under former Commissioner Claxton, dis- tribute articles about chem Y ‘rrlt; ten by R. E. Rose of the chemica department of the du Pont COF‘Inlllx. Dye Exhibit Financed. N As another illustration of how, he said, “great agencies of the govern- y f war material, marched for an hour - ; victimized by the dye- sentatives of the mon-union tion of trains were said to be un- o 5 pions of the measure want to see|ment were Vic 3 - Tors wired the President today ihat '"”“x:“l'm""’"'""' e mn Tevolt| foimdea atRy Investigation. and a_half past the stands packed | action ‘no matter what happens to|makers of the country and our pub; non-union mines have accomplished | 262" e government and not the| ‘It was lefrned from =2 rellable with _ cheering people. and _the thickly | the tariff. On top of this is the ardent |fc agencies turned to use n $&ired “that reduction in the labor cost of | railroads. . : | source that the raflroad had brought X massed crowds that encircled the fleld desire of the President to put through | propaganda,” the senator preseated producing coal which is justified | President Harding was described by | in strikebreakers and planned to re- and darkened the surrounding slopes. the ‘ship subsidy bill as a constructive | correspondence designed o, Shue And required by present economic|yyhite House callers toda: ite | Sume work todav at the shops which The martial spirit of the many thou- achievement. Mixed up in the the|that the dye exhibits cecently Shims conditions and have sold coal at the 8 today as quite) p,ye been closed as a result of the sands of veterans came to. the surface problem is the wet and dry fight Philadelphia, Rocl . mines at prices consistent with the wages paid. thereby making possible to the public that reduction in the «ost of living to which it §s entitled and which should not now be sur- rendered.” HITS PRESIDENT’S PLAN. Mining Congress Says It Would hopeful over the rail strike situation and confident that Chairman Hooper of the Rallroad Labor Board would be able soon. to work out a sclution satisfactory to all concerned. Senator Lodge of Massachusetts, re- publican Senate leader, one of the visitprs, sald he had assured the President that his course with re. strike. - Two hundred and fifty state troops mobilized at Sedalia, Mo., for a week } were under sealed orders to entrain for service early Yoday, presumably In connection with the railroad strike. Destination of the militiamen could not be learned, but it wa# said they probably would be sent ;a Poplar Individuals Trying to Induce Krassin to Act jo Save Situation. when fourteen massed bands struck -r the “‘Marseillaise” as President Mill , in his carriage of state, with outriders and a guard ‘of hongr, drove on the fleld, while the regular cannonading of the presidential salute sounded like Breat drums keeping time. Later, as the bands passed, leading their own units, the contingents of veterans sang their war songs. BEATEN BY REBELS Carrasco Band ‘Augmented| With Soldiers After Battle Near Mazatian. | Should the members of the over the sale of liquor on govern- ment vessels outside the three-mile limit. The House of Representatives s in Tecess until August 15, waiting for the Senate to pass the many bills already acted upon by the House. iower house come back and find little ac- i complished since they left the Capi- tol the dissatisfaction over the Sen- icago, A M Wishington, D. C. and other cities and now in the Naticnal Mu- seum here, had been financed by the dyemakers, having been prepared .m the chemical warfare section of K\ci War Department. The correspondence was between Capt. O. E. Roberts, Jr. and the du Pont company, the M {ional Aniline and Chemical Company and other dye concerns. spect to the strike had .the supporyl Bluft to reinforce the four com- “. | ate delay is bound to grow. Of the E. 1. du Pont de Nemours of the greater portion Troops on Review. ., Senator Moses declared Set Aside Natural Adjustment. | jation of New Bogiand.’. ¢ sonc D Texas: which Besame o sooss ot | Pl At P 14—No farther{ Preinier Poineate-ssd-ofhet cabisiet 54 i Pross Congress Seen Drifting. (oi"ihe’ peopis. through advances The proposal of President Harding | SecTotariesPal and Weeks qud At- | intdreat when Gov. Neft expressed re-| (1 (0 "L itn the Russlans will |members _were. present, together with | |NOGALES, .Arls. July 14—Seven| Opportunities for decisive action |from he Yedera N veed the du Fonis Tor arbitration in the coal mining in. | __(ConUnuEd on Page 11, C | (Continued on Page 11, Column 2)_ (197 10% "1 conterees on Russian | hundreds of motables and most of the | hundred rebels, under Gen. Juan Car. |and aggressive leadership on the part| ¥at, RO TLnaous extension of their dustry In effect acts to set aside the {airs here unless the soylet repre- \forelen imbassadors. The &ay Was| rasco, routed attacking government |of the chiel executive are numerous. | i inces, but were also mulcted by e A R T St .k H 5 éntatives make known a’desire- to|comfortably cool and the sky was over- | troops 1,200 strong, led »y Gen. Alva- | Congress is drifting along lines of the du Fonts 10 A} CXincrease iis trial disputes,” the American Mining rikers ave ROd(lS in I{()le‘ submit new proposals, it was declded [cast for the first time on the 14th of | radg Rodriguez, in a battle Tuesday |least resistance. If it could have its| B0 lue to an admitted $220.000.- Congress declared in a statement sent to the White House yesterday. made public through James F. Cailbreath, As Business Booms, Says Jewell this afternoon. The non-Russian rep- resentatives will continue thelr meet- July, within the memory of the present | apoyt thirty miles from Mazatlan, generation. Ohly a few drops of rain | ginalsa, according to unconfirmed ad- | way it would patch up the tariff bill hastily, pass the bonus and adjourn Pisn. s scme time taking 000, while at the Jime caking hich Do 9,000.0 He charged out net 29,000,000. ive time for cam- |amounted to $}%8.80C980 (0% dvancett secretary of the i d they plan to hold a plenary | fell. ices on the boarder today. by September 1, to gi that of the $99,250, Reopening of mincs ner o atrike Ings, o ajourn the conference, ! President Millerand *Tonferred the " atrer the rout. the advices added, | paigning. The President has said |3129, thal of tR€ Riiict war thers ¢xcept upon & competitive basis' with i o bably mext Wednesday. batonis upon the new. marshals, as soon | many federal soldlers joined Carrasco | b would call Congress Into extra scs- ng-a;;gw;g;;emm on July 1. non-union mines in operation would x < b D 2 v whose band is ot i t on ghe | 1922, $35,000,000. he ruinpus,” the statement . said. | BY the Associated Press. “The prolonged coal strike megns| Private individuals made an at-|as they arrived, the crowd cheering. The | P70 101 C10,000. The government | sion at once if it fal lefll;: ::nnnl: :“. I World Monopoly Planned. “Moreover. such operation at “wage levels would create satisfaction among high the non-uni n ines, undoubtedly leading to strikes #nd thus cutting off the only reliable eource of fuel. The proposal to open mine¢ at the war scale of wages nay seem temporary, but in effect it wouid be permanent.” Asserting that the Mining Congress did not attempt to speak for the coal industry, but that it did represent the great western mining industry, Mr. Callbreath sald the congress consid ered that “the nation’s welfare de- CHICAGO, July 14.—A strike bulle- head of the striking railway .shep- | men, declares the strikers “have the railroads In a hole.” Here ‘are the facts summarized, comprising, Presi- ?iem Jewell said, “our strategic posi- ion’ “Industrial and business conditions throughout the country are picking up_strongly. “Steel and iron production_is stead- i1y increasing and activity and her Times are gncressing. other re ¢ncre: “Dun’s and prepa- n an|’ report steady there has got (10 be a tremendous great.dis- | tin sent out today by B. M. Jewell, | OVemont of coal between now and mber in order to supply both. domestic users, industri; and public utilities. e nceran “Over a week ago the Unit geological survey repbrteq the' erioe: ing -coal reserves are the lowest they can r:ulbly Bo without endangering the future regular supply. “The threatened strike of seamen ;un. Sreat hke:',l l‘l‘ it happens, will ly throw still m mp"l’:' coal on the rulwol?l.hm“ 2 n-vmo-u.‘\_" tween the on_credits a hew stal foreign restitu W Krassin received the co a resumptlio R rly today to mediate be- LoD (e Russians and non-Russians. They informed Leonid Krassin of the Russian delegation that the only way n of the conference could be had was for Maxim Litvinoff, head delegation, g:y"zelolnt fneetln‘ of the commission to announce at to- that he was ready to make tement outlining the Rus- tion on the restoration of po‘?property or compensation tion was impossible. munication ussians ap- troops then began the long parade around the track. The soldjers of all the cavalry units, stretched on a fine a halfunile long, fac- : o7 ing the. grandstand,”charged toward the | ctowd,.as the final maneuver. ‘The parade through logné was - continued - through streets crowded with ‘spectators to the Palace of the Elysee. g 3 i S AR R The 1334 anniversary of the fall of | the Bastille and overthrow of the } is reported to be rushing reinforce- ments to the Mazatlan zone, in prep- taration for another attack. All gov- Lernment troops stationed in Sonora, it | J have been sent south to Sinaloa. The number of casualties in Tues- the Bois de Bou-: day's battle was not stated ia the re- porti {BARGES FLYING U. S. FLAG |two > FIRED ON BY CHINESE | ation: -| store i tion, legislative tangles, ‘ship subidy measure. ford to retreat and his party does not dare to administer a defeat to his leadership just before the elections in which the whole repul:llcgn party will again ask for support. rife, political disaffec- Industrial st P |dlumm:r eratures all combine to bring the :?l:lle of the administration not quite two years after its election. Primary re being analyzed to discover trends, but without attempt- ay what the future holds l’n politically the facts of today’s force the conclusio) “The senator asserted that the du Ponts and the National Aniline and Chemical Company constituted the listic features of the dye in- Tustry in his country, Pont compdny, aside from entering into a contract With Levinstein, Ltd concern, to divide the world h le of their.dye: 5 h.l:r:::‘.={ enter into & Wo! 3 :111'31 ‘l?he Badische company, the chief producer of dyes, which, with the dye cartel, he added, had p “as the bogle men of the ince the agitation for an was started. and that the du | . % ent. The “';rn. rtul reports on condition of vuhout.?m meeting ef the credit P tamy those for April. show the jocomotives | com! at the Peace Palace this e ¥ per cont on, N tnn:o’o-nhgm the discussions that en- sued were not-decisiye. New Instructions § LONDON, July 14.—Néw instructions wibox have been forwarded by the soviet ¥ - John ompond e i aed st Lo Leonkt Ressbio of (e . ot : . ey O red shots were fired. Dt | an delegation at The fue con- d |the barges were “not "“"."'d‘ to , which may prevent a definlte NP, ; reak o _ALTERS HOLIDAY. preak in. the negotiations.there, says DAY # . means | an Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Bt > July, 14—The L 7 : Y : 3 i ber 11 as present demand for_rolling | e Sannot Eelenough | copenhagen, quoting advices veceived | Sent has fixéd Boeererl bout 300 per cept more thani - - ¥ with. us, | via Berlin. — SNOSaA mand for locomat the | €ar-rea Bourbons by. the”'people of France will he celebrated in High School 3 Central Harding administration will be made Auditors tonight -at o'clock. of - the on what it does in the next "mnb?::nlour weeks of its political © (cmrent2) N c————r WORLD FLYEE AT BAGDAD. , -July 14—Maj. W. T. ‘!lfcsnfh“: m’-h aviator, arrived pere from Ziza, Palestine, at 4 p.m. Thursdsy on his attempted flight around the world. t bary bettarment of conditions all ‘iens N rter ine. ““This means the ralirosds have to carry a tremendous amount of mlgl.n in the mext few months. Since the be- ginning of the yecar and business have increased t: dously over a corresponding period last year. S ar o, the agresment, nter into the agre g‘e‘::&w“l:m said the du Pont com- pany had submited a proposal to the: Associated Press. T RNTON, July 14—Two Standard Oil barges fiying the American flag :were fired.on In the Tiver two miles 'from: hiere by troops of Yip Kue, the g of Sun Yat-Sen, the deposed timidation of a ben of men united under the I~ ner of the United Mine Workers of America. » “It wouid be eriminal,”* ment continued, “if thefion-union op- g e have enabled o continue should sacrificed by-a governmen; entirely for 2 incoln. Post : : ]o’lnl Chinese company or an Ameri- - mpany to license these f::dem:':rh\::o feom the Chinese . gov crnmm:;.:_' Mosts added that for more ‘than a year he had ‘of he:. fm] now - or- T de ¢ “A government guarantee of pro- tection to' every individual in - his right 0~ work ‘Wil settle the coal|jy "y strike’ menace for all time. We ap-| %oy rerk for the enforcement of the 1aw i ook is under the Constitution and for pro- )':e"on of independeni workers. By s