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o LJ GREEKS: DEFEATED IN TURK ATTACK Forced to Evacuate Afiun Karahissar in Face of Onslaught. WHOLE FRONT ACTIVE Anatolian Frontiers Closed—Amer- ican Destroyers Unable to Com- municate With Land. Rr the Assoclated Press LONDON August The have evacuated Afriun Karahis: der the force of the Turkish nationalist dreeks roun- 20.- attack, says a Central News dispatch from Athens today. his important central point in the Greek line in Asia Minor was vlelded in the face of su- forces, perior enemy OFFENSIVE A WIDE ONE. Communications in Near East Dis- turbed by Battles. BY CONSTANTINE BROWN. By Cable to The cago Daily News CONSTANTINOPLE. August 29 Whila the diplomats are talking peace and preparing for a meeting in Venice of the recks and Turks, the na tlonalists are carrying on an offensiv along the whole front from the Meander east of Smyrna sula and the shores nce Sunday been alley, sixty miles so to the Kodjalli of the Sea of Marmora. ail of the Anatolian frontiers have closed. Telegraphic., posial and othet communic ns terrupted and no are ona of any nationality is per travel. No boats are allowed nd pas- sengers, ships are not permitted fo enter tlie ports and all the smail craft een Leache in_the harbors have The Ame a destroyers stationed fn national ports are alowed communicate Suppiies are brought urkis officers. rer wards t Kemalis: Biledjik Brusa is thr that this i milar to the (it is though demonstration begun an offen sar where afte artillery tack i at- ere believe ir operations urkish effort for on the Eskisher f where bulk of the nal 18t army is concentrated WCUMBER FLAY LAND AMENDMENT TO BONUS MEASURE (Continued from First Page.) the Smoot paid-up insurance lieu of all options; the Hure cash, half-credit proposals by Senator cash bonus and crat, Massachusetts a plan under which (he vete could apply their bonus money o the premiums of their converted Bov ernment insuran enturen of the Debate. Sena chate sesterday on the sol diers’ bonus hili ye o largely on | the land reclamafion amendment of- fered by Senator McNary, republican, Oregon, but neither th roany of the other amendments offered cam to a vote. The unanimous consent agreement limiting discussion on amendments to twenty minutes to each senator became operalive at § pm. In the discussion ators W worth of Ne York" and I South Dako repuls v their oppositi to b us, al- though enator Sterlin supported the reclamation projec Senato Nicholson, republican. Colorudo Heflin, democrat, Alubama, supported the bill, the former also arguing in favor of the M v amendnment Senator Nicholson attacked big business men opposing the honus. mentioning particularly the United States Steel Corporution and the Standard Oil Company. e charged that the latter comp: profited | through “unconscionable”™ = prices charged during the war. and d ed that it ill became Judge @ary, chairman of the board of the Steel Corporation, to oppose udjusied for’ the veterans when compensation his company had during the war Wadsworth's Vigorous Attack. Senator Wadsworth was particu- larly vigorous in his attack on the 1 that the bonus y through taxes declar 1 measure. He could be fina now or later and that the Ame people had reached a limit i - burden they could bear. Also he argued that the veterans themselves. thelr wives and their children would have to work but the harder in the years to come to piy back the money the former soldiers Fecelved. which. he contended, would be insufficient to afford any lasting benefits. The New York senator argued that the measurs could not be properly termed ‘adjusted compensation” bill because it proposed to treat all the men alike, no matter what their pay in war time and whether they needed assistance. Attacking the bank loan provision, he asserted that. this was an invitation from the government to self-respecting men to borrow from the banks and then repudiate their notes, leaving to-the govern- ment the payment of the sums bor- rowed RAIL CLERKS SETTLE DISPUTE WITH ROADS C., M. & St. P. and El Paso and Southwestern Reach Agree- ments Over Pay. By the Associated Press. CINCINNATI, August 29.—Clerks and station employes on the El Paso and Southwestern railroad and clerks on the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul railroad have effected settle- ments with the managements on the questions of wuges and working con- ditfons, it was announced here at the Brotherhood of RailWway and Steam- ship Clerks, Station and Express Em- ploye: G Th, 00 clerks on _the‘Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul railroad ac- cepted a reduction in wages, but were given vacation #nd sick leave pay and a Saturday halfcholiday. 4 The settlement on the El Paso and Southwestern ‘rajilroad, according to the statemedt fl erky’ headquarters, affects 1,200 Slerks and. station. em- ployes who hiive been granted an in- crease of froin 3 to 4'cents an’hour, which restores the former wage scale in effect before the decision of June 30, 1922, of the Rallroad Labor Board cutting the clerks and station. - 5. __raclllon and sick ‘hal wde “great profits” | PRICE OF COAL- . WOULD ADD $1.50 TO FORD CARS Present coal prices would only add $1.30 to the price of Ford cars, Sec- retary Hoover declared today, in ex- pressing the hope that the Detroit futomobile manufacturer would not find it necessary to close his plants because of the price of fuel. Mr. Hoover said he noted that Mr. Ford considered $4.50 a ton & reason- able price for coal, and that the Detroit manufacturer could obtain it now at $6.50. Figuring on the basis of 38,000 tons of coal used & day, Mr. Hoover estimated, that even under present prices the increase per Ford car would only be about $1.50. Legislation now pending, Mr. Hoover added, probably would pro vide price control machinery that could go into operation within a few days of September 16. the date set by Mr. Ford for shutting down his plants. i 1 DETROIT, August 29.—The state- ment of Secretary Hoover that pres- ent coal prices would add but $1.50 to the price of Ford cars was charac- terized at the Ford offices here to- day, as “a trivial and playful state- ment for the head of a government department to make in a situation a8 serious as the present one’” “It is quite in keeping with every- thing that has been going on at Washington in the present situa- tion.” it was added “Does Mr. Hoover think we should turn over to the profiteers from § 000,000 to $10,000,000 that would be represented in the increased cost of coal”" asked. The normal daily consumption of coal by the Ford plants here ranges from 3,500 to 4.600 tons TRANEN RETURN AT RODDHOLGE L { ! ton Ends as Trains Re- ! sume After Tie-Up. iMANY DISORDERS OCCUR | Reports of Bombing and Attempts at Wrecks Come From Wide- spread Points. | Walkout on Chicago and Al- ! MILITARY DRILLS FOR D.C. POLICEMEN All Not Fifty Years Old Must Participate in Training Twice Weekly. REVIEW ALSO PLANNED Maj. Sullivan Believes Program Will Increase Discipline and Efficiency of Force. —_— The Washington police force is to be trained in military discipline, Maj. Daniel Sullivan, supeviitendent, an- nounced today. Beginning this afterrioon, all mem- bers of the department who have not reached their fiftieth bBirthday, will be tequired. to take part in regular drill%and Army setting-up exercises forsone hour, twice a week. Assist- ant Supt. Henry G. Pratt, who was an officer in the Army during the war, has been placed in charge of the military training in the department. Each precinct commander will desig- nate a number of men who have had military service to act as corporals and conduct the drill. These cor- porals will have to be obeyzd just as officers of the department. Fifteen minutes of each drill will be devoted to setting-up exercises | and the other forty-five minutes will be taken up with instruction and’ practice in_all drills, up to and including the school of the squad, such drills to be under the supervision of the precinct commander. The company drills will be under the direct command of the pre- cinct captain. 3 Three of the four shifts will drill si- multaneously, leaving one set of men to guard the precinct. Each precinct captain will designate the place in his territory where the drill grounds wi be located. Some time later in the year, after the men have had a reasonable amount of training, they will take part in an an- nual review fors the District Commis- sioners. At ghat time the Commission- ers also will make a general inspection of equipment and appearance. Maj. Sullivan belleves that the pro- posed program will infrease discipline and efticlency of the force, and thereby improve their value as policemen. The schedule of drill will be as follows: | | hour WShe Smngiated Brees) - Mondays and Thursdays—first, second, CHICAGO, August The walk- |third, and fourth precinct: out of Chicago and Alton trainmen | Tuesdays and FrMMaye—fth, sixth. . it i Stei seventh and eighth precincts. 1t Roodhouse, 1. is over. Striking |™Sgenegqays ~and Saturdays—ninth, enginemen and company officials met | tenth and eleventh precincts at Slater, Mo, in a move to end the Chicago and Alton tie-up there. : the last twenty-four hours. Seek to Unravel Tangle. I The Chicago and Alton, which has been oue of the chief sufferers from i since last Friday While ¢ o and Gary police, federal operatives and raliroad de- tectives dug » their investigations of the Gary wreck and other alleged { » *f a program of ter-1,, oontrol the distribution of coal. i separate inquiries were be- |, hil] embodying the recommenda- ing made into an attempt to ditch |5y of the executive wis introduced | {the Calitornia-Florida fiver on the | {20108 Charles J. Hewett. chulr- risco eystem. at Capleville, Tenn. {,nay of the finance committee, and and the dynamiiing of Chicago. und | Asgemblyman George N. Jesse. {Alon railroud bridges at Drake and | AR e “Woula empower the Whitehall, 11t administrator to “‘supervise, regulate i Lixt of Disorders, and control the recelpt, storuge. pur- I B .q | chase. sale. use. distribution and de- i.,t,’}_’,’"“"l“ h9L ,‘,'l‘,fm"'l‘{r"""“l‘f,""' gEilread|iivary of fuel within the state and | Montgomery, Ala; the shooting of a ;:]‘:I FREGUUTHTIER s thin S cneutate 0T hicago and Alton watchman In Chi- He would also ascertain what {cago. “a gun ight between railroad| 400 he a fair price for coal In suards and a soiper at Moline, Hl. | gifferent localities and the reasonable and the dynwmiting of & bridge at|paofont OO G g juds, Fla., were among strike dis- orders reported from different sec- tons” of the country i ery of an fiear u gasoline storage tank at Flint Mich., increused the rapidly growing list of reports of violefice. sympathetic strike at Jefferson City, Mo.. returned to work Federal agents wt Hammond, La. i Oscar H. Joiner, chief of] police, and his’ assistant, Gillan, on charges of vio njanctions graunted to the Illi- Central raiiroad. were made in connection with the ar- *st_of a deputy sheriff of Pike coun- ne iy, Mixs, by the Hammond police. FIRST TRAIN ARRIVES. C. & A. Promised Trainmen “All ' "But Road.” Says Official. By the Associated Press, ROODHOUSE, 11, August inmen who had quit work that he would “give them ng but the railroad.” Vice Pres- A. P. Titus of the Chicago and Alton Railroad Company, at o'clock this morning had the satisfaction of g the first train in sixty hours ave Roodhouse bearing two passen- gers to St. Louix. It came through from ville. will present. This, —After run only by day for the Mr. Titus said, was at the request of the men at “the final peace conference last midnight. The chief mediator for the employes was Jonas P. McBride of Cleveland, vice president of the Brotherhood of Loco- motive Firemen. It was also agreed to curtail night railroad vard service here, so as to re- duce night work for the men. STRIKERS SUE OVER JOBS. Fired From Construction Work After Joining Shop Walkout. orthern Pacific shop- men h have lost their jobs. This is how it happened. . After the strike was declared the railroad management decided to bulld a fence around the shops as a pro- | tection to the property and the work- The contract for building the ifence was let to a construction con- ers, cern. The twenty-eight idle shopme: immedi put up the fence and got them. ‘When the Northern Pacific foand it out, the twenty-eight alleged in their lawsuit, they lost their new jobs. Boycott and blacklisting are charged. ~RAIL YARDS BOMBED. i.ong Strips of 'l‘nck Dun.nlhhd at Danville, INL. st r explosions » red windows and uuoim ing. shatte: long strips of yard trackage in - the shops of the Chicago and Eastern M- nols road_here. 3 -1t was bei;:vtd umn-: attempt had o -Dosah: had Deen plas . These were important developments rike complications since the shop- plots in which train wrecks inflammable bomb | PASCO, Wash.. August 29.—Twenty- | e1gnt striking e are starting sults for $1.000 each against the rallroad because they iately applied for jobs helping near ilis COAL STRIKE END in the railroad situation today fol- lowing bomb outrages. shootings. DECLARED ASSURED wreck plots and investigations by T 3 i derz), stute and private operatives (Contiriued from First Page.) garment workers who sued their em- { ployers for a breach of contract. GOV. MILLER ASKS LAWS. men's walkout, Ju 1. prepared to = B i unravel the traflic tangles on its | Bills Introduced in N. Y. Leglsh-l With b sett t : " S et e began™et| ture for Coal Distribution. rangements for a daylight schedule| ArBANY, N. Y., August 29.—Several | for its trains. T unauthgrized S ) strikex by train service uniond vir- |bills designed to remegy the coall tually had paral d the Chicago and | shortage situation in this state were Introduced last night at a special jon of the legislature called by Miller. The governor, in a mes- sage, recommended legislution would provide for the appointment of «a state fuel administrator with power MINES RESUME PRODUCTION. Many Operators Start Work Under Altoona Agreement. 1 REMENFIOhexs TRzaften ALTOONA, Pa. August 29 Prac- | Big four transportation brother-|{ically all operators in the central hood mien on the Frisco at Chafee. | Pennsylvania field who signed the Al- | | Mo, threatened to strike. but & num-!1oona agreement with the 1lnited | ber of n employes | Mine Workers are today. working of the Mi who joined a | their mines, according to reports re- ceived here. President John Brophy of District i No. 2, Miners' Union, commenting on | the situation, declared he would not permit union iminers to return to work for operators who also own {non-union mines. They wiil remain The arrests!out until non-union mines have been put on a union basis, he said. | ! miners employed by coal companies | | forming the Logan Coal Operators’ | Association will receive increased wages beginning September 1, it was announced at the offices of the asso- ciation late yesterday. New rates { were not given out, but it was said | they would compare with the wakos ! paid in the union fields. The Logan | district, one of the most important in West Virginla, bas never been union- ized. SEEKS FIRST-HAND DATA. Representative Brennan Probingl Charge of ‘“Bootleg” Coal Prices. ! Representative Brennan, repuhlicnml Michigan, left here last night for the coals flelds of Kentucky and West Vir- ginia, announcing that he would seek first-hand information as fo charges that none of the 160,000 tons of coal approved for- Michigan have reached that state, but that any amount of coal is available at bootleg prices.”” ‘ Mr. Brennan said he would proceed first “to the supposedly congested rail Jjunctions” to find the real cause of the stuation which has “created so much heat” between Secretary Hoover, Henry | Ford, Fuel Distributor Spencer and the } Michigan fuel administration. COAL PROFITEERING LAID TO EMERGENCY BROKERS Detroit Mayor Declares They Are . Men Who “Carry Offices Around in Hats.” DETROIT, Mich., August 29.—The charge that increased coal prices can be “laid to the lot of emergency coal brokers, who carry _their offices around in their hats,” was made by Mayor James Couzens before the city council today. The mayor was speaking in oppo- sition to a proposal that the city purchase 200,000 tons of soft coal for municipal use at $4.75 = ton plus carrying charges, which would bring the cost to $7.33 a ton. Representa- tives of & West Virginia-Kentucky ooal-producing s; also at- 1eR00 Drescat. coal Drices can be o e pi coal can Iaid ta the rot of emer; brokers who a tterly di and who are gou, the meayor deciared. . ing fln’n:g l h thetr offices olasx Wi ouiry ¥ ov.eu'nmn bled a d that | st | to THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1922 PROPOSED TRANSPORTATION BUILDING. o I[» / - Duke, Duchess And Dog Give Up Palatial _Suite y the Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. August - 129.—Duke Helie de Taileyrand-Peri- Office structure, to coat between three and four million dollars, will be erected op the present site of the Rich- mond Hotel, at 17th and H streets northwest. FIVE SCHOOLS LOSE ARMY INSTRUCTORS Retired Men Drawing Full Pay Must Be Replaced by Undeg its new policy of relieving retired officers of the Army from fur- ther civic educational institutions having a course of military Instrue- $4,000,000 OFFICE ROAD T0 FAIRFAX COMPLETED SOON Deming and Waddy B. Wood are as- sociate architects. Interested in the Transportation Company are some of the best known building men of New York and Wash- | ington. W. \W. Stuart is president of | { the company, Edward W. Donn, jr.:! | Waddy B. w nd Willlam 1. Dem- | ing, vice presidents, and James Baird, | urcr. In addition to ciation Gets Encouraging these officials, the board of directors! i | Sommprises 3 Blicr naemant Report From Richmond. of the directors of the and Improve- ment Company of New York, and Paul Sterrett, president of the same cor- poration. Mr. Baird is president of the George A. Fuller Company, a sub- sidiary of the United States Realty Company. Special Dispatell to The Star. FAL CHURCH, Va. August 29 Prospects are bright for early pletion of that part of the Lee high- com- Falls Church Citizens’ Asso- | lgora, who also 1s the thirteenth | count 6t Grignola, | i {nese tion, Capt. Hollis C. Clark, instructor way from the south end of George- at John's College, this city, and Union Trust Finances. town bridge through Cherrydale and | Capt. Joseph W. Blanchard. instructor| The negotiations for the purchase | Falls Church to Fairfax, according to at Howard University, this city, have | of the site and the leasing of the|the report of a special committee been removed. to take effect August | buiiding have been in the hands of | headed by John F. Bethune, submit- | 21, and ordered to their homes. Capt |the Real Estate Investment Com- |!ed at a meeting last night of the| Clark is a resident of this city. Capt.|Pany. which also will have charge Falls Church Citizens’ ociation. | Blanchard's home 1is in Leavenworth, | of the management. ¢ financing | TWo gaps in the road remain to be = was handled by the Unicn Trust|buill. One is slightly more than a . 7 Company. 1 Col. ¥ K SR ¥ mile and a quarter length, from ol. Frank H. Wolven of this city| Edward H. Everett of this city | Halls Hill, in Arlinglon county. to! has been relieved from duty at the|acquired the Richmond Hotel and!the corporation line at Fast ! University of Pennsylvania, Philadel- | $1t® Knre! nh:rn' years 8¢, #8 an|Church. and the other is of eight| s \J. Frank < investment, and has held it continu-|miles in Fairfax county, from ihe phia, and Ma). Frank B. McKenna.|ously. An option on this site und| corner of Washington and Br 5 also a resident of this city, has been|on the entire block, with the ex-! streets in Falls (hureh 1o ax | relieved from duty with the high |ception of one parcel of property.iCourt House, through Merryfield i achooIs of Detralt. Mich: was obtained gome time ago for al By special act of the legisiature. | Capt. Guy E. Manning. military in: | BOlel profect, but fnancial dificul- | Le highway has been taken over by | structor at the high school. Winches. | €3 voided the “p'h"‘l"‘- the state as a federal-zid road, and in | ter. Va.. also has been relieved, a I'he nr;x»n;»d uliding will be | time state and federal funds will be | will proceed to his home in Berke lose to the fine structure which theappropriated for completing But | Calit Chamber of Commerce of the U'nited | by another special act of the lexisia- | Reduced appropriations for the | S1A1eS l‘“':“* 8 “‘" j’:’" on the next|iyre, the state highway commission | military establishment, it is explained, | {7050 “L ‘"m"'“} ny recent- | wag'authorized to accept loans, with- has made It necessary to relieve prac- | Iy completed @ bulldthe af Jackson | out interest, for purposes of r Iy all retired officers from active | P18¢® U b st building, o be repaid when the state titling them 1o full pay and and federal funds become: available. | nsfer the dutie them to officers o ruse of the h A ade In the commissioned parsonnel e War Department is having diffi- acing the r structors at colleges and high schools all over the country now performed the active list CONGRESS BAFF WOMAN” STATUE OF “THINKING ADELLER The Capitol ‘has a mystery. Today members of Congress are wondering what it all is about. They are under serutiny. From the headquarters of the national woman's party, cold, staring feminine eyes watch them. But it is not the woman, but what she represents, that troubles the law- makers of the nation. DllpllFllhlI the attitude of Rodin's famous statue, “The Thinker, sculptored woman sits near the wir- dows of the headquarters. Unlike the former, she is fully clothed in some- thing about a cross between a bath- robe, a meglige or a toga. Her chin is supported on one hand. In the other -she holds a manuscript. ' What the latter is all about is what the Congress members want to know. Not a Letter From Lover. From the sad and gloomy expres- sion of the lady's face it might ap- pear: that it was a letter from her lover announcing that-his inheritance had been stolen. But not so, say the members of the woman's party. It cannot be a letter from any man, they aver. “Women have other things to oc- cupy their minds without thinking about how to charm some man_ or keep him faithful,” declared Miss elen Todd, one of the party mem- “The center of womas thought has now changed from individual man collective government. What wom- an demands now is a reckoning from the men who essay to run the na- tion. TER st when sculptors miodels for. beauty. :genmaomm one seldom has seen reductions being | tired officers t omly. use ~women ancfent an® It Is to take advantage of this that the present effort is b:ing ma Urged by State Oficials. Mr. Bethune reported last ni that Supervisor Harrison, just retu ed from Richmond, reported that Trinkle, Chairman Shirley : gineer Coleman of the state commisalon urged that the RAILROAD SHOPS OPEN. NORFOLK, Va, August 29.—On ti heels of a court urder restr: strik- ers from interferring with work in its shops, the Norfoik Southern Railway h: announced the opening of shops at lina Junction and at New Bern, N. LED BY GAZE ople |and officials of Arlington and Falrfax » counties act immediately, as loans are coming in so rapidiy that all pros- pective funds for a number of to come will soon be taken up. To complete the road from Halls Hill to Falls Church will cost about $40,000. Al Arlington county will have to pay of this will be the inter- est from the time the money is ex- pended until the loan is repald, which {will not be more than two years and probably less than one. To build the elght miles from Falls Church to I Fairfax will cost about $275,000. Tt |is proposed to petition the it ourt to authorize Falls Church and Providence districts to vote at the November election on a bond issue for this amount, the money to he loaned {10 the state and the road bufit next year. Providence and Falls Church districts, the latter including that part of the town of Falls Church which lies in Falrfax counts. will have to carry the Interest on bonds until state and federal money becomes available. 1f the legislature at a special session next month votes the proposed $12,000,000 bond the money probably would be a ble about as Soon as the road is com- pleted, and there would be little or no Interest for local taxpavers to P If no state bond issue is voted, the interest probably would have to be carried for two and possibly three years. But even if the interest runs for the maximum period, it Is regard- ed as an unusual opportunity in road | building. !flTM goverror and state highway of- cigls sent word that if Arlington county will raise the $40,000 at once, work will begin immediately on the {road from Halls Hill to Fall urch. and it will be completed during the coming fall BANDITS GAG EMPLOYES By the Ansociated Press. LETHBRIDGE, Alberta, August 29 —Five motor bandits invaded town of Foremost early today, bound and gagged employes of the Union Bank, blew the safe and escaped with $52,000 in cash and negotiable secur- itles. second floor of the building. They bound and gagged all but the junior |'clerk. They compelled the clerk at the point of pistols to open the outer door of the vault, and then blew open the inner door and rifled the vault of $12,000 in.coln and $70,000 in secur- women plctured as thinking beings. |ities. Take Wattesu, for example, he always | Before starting thelr operations at painted women as lovely doll-like [the bank the bandits had cut tele things living only to be serenaded by jgraph and telephone wires leading beautiful geutlemen with guitars. |fato the town, and had blecked &l ! ! | partment of Labor was advised to- day in messages from agents of\the bureau of conciliation. The last mine in Indiana was opened this morning, the méssages said, while mines in the eastern part of Washington were also opened up today, resuming maximum production in the state. Poassibility of a soft coal production ot 10,000,000 tons per week appeared Hkely today, provided the coal can be moved by the railroads, and there a possibility that more coal may be mined within the next two months than before the opening of the great coal strike en April L Mines in Illinois and Indiana have speeded up production and are now practically at maximum, while the West Virginia and Pennsylvania bi- tuminous mines are nearing the peak of preduction. . Too Many Venuses. roads save the one by which they e " ' escaped. ey locked this behind ‘There have been too many Venuses | 8000 oo 60 0" OTrer pmflnc& rising from the foam. There Is no|poiice are Wworking on the case, but foam on the Woman's Party. Andso far have obtained no clues. there is no coquetry about this sculp- | OT'¢ woman who represents the TR R | BIG BITUMINOUS GAIN h"s:.e 15 not_even couquettish. But | - she is very brave and very womanl and very self-contained. Her mougm’;!Prod“ctiflfl 75 Per Cent Normal. 'well not on the men unless it be on Be who is to occupy the Presldent's May Reach 10,000,000 Tons. cl r o - o Production of bituminous coal in But if the lady is picking out the i next President here she is certainly the muinesjof tis rathon/mow approxl looking rather hard at the material in the Capitol across the park from where sba sits. It Is somewhat of an uncanny gaze which may make fitsell felt on Some of the statesmen who remember the part women now are ftaking in politics. Of course, there ‘are certain members of the Woman’s Party who insist ‘that she is holding a list of diseriminations between men and womeén in the law of the land and that this has {ts influence in giving her tures their stern expression. Will Not Go in “Cellar.” The statue is by Julia Ogden Heidl, a pupil of Saint Gaudens, and was pre-~ sented to Woman's Party by her, Thinking 2 ‘Worman,” is to have the place new he uarters the to build, “The Watch .On the Hill' It will not be the nation to take its o Ly Stong and. Susan N ' Susan 5 basement of the i . (Copyright, 1922) . —_— Courtesy to visitors to Cuba is sald to begin at the dock, at the inspectiori of customs, Wheéré tourists siy vou will be captivated by it immedigtely, the | AND ROB BANK OF $82,000 | the ! The bandits found several employes | jof the bank sleeping in rooms on the ! i i H { { | bother about ! daily | were said {of railway i will ‘be considered is the com jand { tuali | AWAITS 37 YEARS mate 75 per cent of normal, the De- | and his duches: who was former- ly Miss Anna @Gould of New York., together with Tanky, their pedigreed ' Peki- pup; their servants and many pleces of luggage, are here from Portland, Ore. The duke and his entourage went traight to the hotel,” where pre- vious arrange- ments had been made for accommoda- tions. The duke and duchess did not the presidential suite. been planned to give TALLEYRAND which it had them, but accepted som good. Meanwhile Fred Scobey rector of the United States mint, is in the presidential suite he has occu pled since his arrival several days ago. ¥or a time. it was announced re- cently, the hotel management antici- pated a trying situation in view of the duke's request for a suite occupied by a high federal official. PRESIDENT WANTS FOWER TO SEIZE ROADS AND MINES | (Continued fre First Page) 0 or was announced as 11 cars, approximately 6,500,000 to Not Sufficient Cars. The association’s announcement said that coal loadings in the southern district on Friday had exceeded the average of last August by 5.8 but at the same time com- 1 per cent, plaints reached the Department o Labor from some of the non-union fields, particulariy in Ken- tucky, that they had been unable to obtain cars suffifient to move more than half of their production. Tt was said that many wholesale and retail companies had appealed to the d partment for more transportation. Department of Labor reports for the day telling of further strike set- tlements in the soft coal industry by officials to show that about 95 per cent of the bituminous min to shortly would be ready ndi- sume operations. The reports ated that practically all bitur and the state mines in Indiana Washington would be in oper: within .a few days as a T ments just signed betw nd miners’ officials, base eland conference wage b Vote Expected Tomorrow. the House tod al d@istribution bill in Consideration f its emergenc under a rule providing for six hours of debate appeared to insure a vote on the measure before adjourament tomorrow. Meanwhile a more complicated islative situation In the Senate was deferrng action on the companion measure pending there. also rep. out vesterd: but leaders predicted _!that it would receive favorable action without much delay. y Hoover, in appearing at hearings vesterday on the House bill, asserted that some legal method, such as contained in t bill of restraining extortionate prices in coal, would be necessary;sand Com- rs | missioner Aitchison of the Interstate ion concurred in Commerce Commi this view. Oppo: on was expressed, oy Vhowever, by representatives of both | EDGEWATER, N J st 294 operators und labor in the INAUSLEY. {qpa story of Mice A dmibels U. S. Operation Plan Put Aside. {voung movie a venlill With administration leaders ap-{ what preceded £ “Dare- parently confident that the difficuity {devil” John bomb. i threatened in moving the increasing |George Cline 1o n man, last quantity of coal being mined, due to | Friday night, to led Bergen coun- trangportation conditions, can be ma- | tv authorities sunce they wers terially relieved under priroity au- |ready to present t t the svhol thority already pos d or to be con- | jury on Septeml ferred by pending legislation, the pr posal for government operation of Tail properties, as well as those of the anthracite coal industry, d been put <ide today. The President was un- lerstood 1o be not disposed to ask for the-necessary congressional at least at this time. As ta th cite situation, reports reac White House were so reassuring that it was Indicated an agreement for re- opening of the mines was expected within a very short ti Pending passage of the emergency legi fon by Congress, federal con- trol of coal prices d distribution un der the voluntary distribution o zation had stopped today, Feder: Fuel Administrator Spencer announced the disbanding of his Ve untary committee by the end of the week and a discontinuance of super- priority orders for the moveme: coal. “BIG FIVE"” CHIEFS MEET. Strike Issues to Be Taken Up at Cleveland Session. { By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, Ohio, One of the things to b heads of the “big five” brotherhoods employes’ unions which nieet here today will be the proce ings of the recent conference in N York with representatives of the rail roads in their efforts to bring about settlement of the shopmen’s strike A complete review of these proce: ings will be brought before the c: ference, and a report upon it will be sent brotherhoods. A second thing which, - w is stated, ilation of the vote taken before the sirike of the shopmen went into effect vote, brotherhood leaders claim show that the majority of the who remained at work voted 1o stri therefore ara not entitled rights over those who ‘Without these votes two-thirds vote 1o bring not hate been it seniorit quit. necessary about a strike could had, it was said. Those expected to attend conference are: W. G. Lee. of the Brotherhood of Trainmen; D. B Robertson, president of the Brother- hood of Locomative Firemen and En- ginemen: L. E. Sheppard, president the Order of Railway Conductors; T C.”Cashen, international president the Switchmen's Union of North America, and Warren 5. Stone, presi- tods | dent of the Brotherhood of Locomo- | tive Englineers. FOR WIFE BEFORE SUING FOR DIVORCE HONOLULU, T. H. August 2 Colburn _H. Maemae, Hawaiian. waited thirty-seven years for h wife, Emily, to return to him be- fore he brought suit for divorce on the ground of desertion, he testi- fied here at the hearing on his case. Maemae and his wife were mar- ried In Ewa, Oahu, in 1884. the year following the coronation of King Kalakaua, and she left him four months after the marriage, he testified. Since then he has wait- ed for her return, but finally con- cluded that she “meant to stay away,” he said. Mrs. Maemae now is a “fisher- lady]’ and resides on one of the small islands in Kalihi harbor. ad- joining Honolulu bay, her husband testified. | POLICE NOT WORRIEQ hing just as | ai- | southern | i Miss Thornton's story, told last Inight after a scarch for a “mysterious { blonde,” w jed at New | York apartment, was supplemented { by Joseph Turil Grantwood, J. .1 who also w tline home when i Bergen n 1tk It was stated { that Cline’s duel was dis- | credited b having | . MINNIE BOYKIN TAKEN to the members of the several; esident | of | PROSPECTIVE BRIDE* JOINS SEARCHER {No Trace Found of Louis 1 Feldman, Whom She Was | to Have Wedded. ifhmble to Locate $12,000 Man T Said to Have Had in Local Bank. Mrs. R im . was all ready m Louts Fel man of 2Ist streets last Sune ay afternoc Louis did now show up, arriyved Washingion tos day to try to fh missyig proxs | pectiv | panicd 1 | street, a lana Mrs The first rey this on missing the wve after having announced | awing §12,000 fro | r as the. police ts of and had e pi AT ax ' pick timore t tions a wait J o ' hi s sh worth wedding ring $100 b 100 p m Hady s “We Ideclared {police {they ta Lo va i such a nice man. liked the four children Hs a widow.) He Binder for several the last f jeoming 'to s {tinued & six her Police Not Concerned. | “I asked him. how support a woman so micl than you, and aid he had | | property Mich.. a zi‘rx. r hl eot mes from § t would take hing. Ha promised Mrs 3% } 1%10 a da “What do 3 detectiv him war t done anythin g 12 Didn't he break s that's a « case. We can't { handle tha they left, discussing possibilities suit for breach omise ter it was | ¢ e had been fixed {broker, and t minute tha Where Louis is know. The po very much abo SHED NEH LEHT ON BEREN EAT | | H i i [ | | | | By the Associnted Story Is Supplemented. The movie & ummoned t e had been ce to be resent wher was confronted { with charges th had attacked Mus “line at Saranac Lake Y. recently urilo. & movie fireworks expert, was there to discuss a « with Cline, he said Say Berger Both tola h nd Mrs ¢ ording Hwed, ed \ccused by Mr. Admitt ack at the poir Miss Thornton ed to have they heard a d Berzer down they he was found? ated her story. AGAIN IN LIQUOR CASE 64T, $400 in @ was ar st night her home ed by Sergt. Mc- Privates O'Day and Mansfleld enue Agents Ruby and Elliot, s of selling and illegal po session of liquor. The raiding squ tear out the w { boards of the floor, behind lice claim, they found te orn whisky n the wall, in pint, half-pint llon containers Theodore kett, thirty h street, w rrested 1 shortly hefore gid- selling and illegal Police say they and one-half gallons ot ust pa wo weeks penter d dash- hich po- i possession of liquor. zed three whisky The arrest was made at a garage at 1241 4th street. The liquor was found in @ hole closed by a trapdoor under the sink Twelve gallons of liquor are claim- ed by the police to have been seize early this morning when r.-mnsz Kelly and Davis of the ninth precin rrested Edward R. re. twentys three, of 649 20th et ‘northeast J tand Robert Davidson. thirty-five, of {1369 E street southeast on charges {of illegal possession of liquor. | Arthur Ferguson. seventeen. of 338 114th street southeast, and Barney { Balinsky. twent#-six. of 706 6th | street were arrested carly this morn- jing by Privates Worrell and Jackson 1of the first precinct on charges of | transporting whisk Three and a {half pints were allezed to have been {found IR their possesgion |DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION _b DOVER, Del 1 democral assembled for | here today August 29 —Delaware the stat former Ridgely and William H. Bo. W. W. Knowle: the nomp nation for senator. The state committce - adopted a tenta i for ecgnomy n_gol A laws, ®ood roads and oppositiom federal tariff. = 1 calli oar'y