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OHID MINE STRIE STUATIN TENSE Officials Plead for Order as| “Drives” Are Prepared on Two Shafts. By the Assoclated Press, ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio., June 13.— A tense atmosphere prevailed in the Eastern Ohlo coal fields tonight as striking miners prepared two “drives” upon mines still operating, despite a proclamation issued by Belmont County authorities calling upon good citizens | to aid In putting down “grave dis- orders and lawlessnes i Leaders of the Ilalional Miners’ Union, who are directing the strike, €aid they would continue the drive to- | night against the new Lafferty mine | cf the M. A. Hanna Cozl Co. and start | a new one against the No. 6 mine of the Rail & River Coal Co. at Bellaire, where 350 men are employed. The men are striking for an eight-hour day and re-employment of men they said were discharged because of union connec- tions. Beimont County cfficiels issued the proclamation after the strikers forced the closing of three more mines in the Beimont, County_territory nfme cf the from wnd the work- | were employed, ! €0 men, also were closed down. Officials Issuc Proclamation. “This grave disorder and lawlessness is being caused by and financed by pec- ple from without the county, on a large dart, without the State, who are not in- terested in law and order or in the miners or good citizens of Belmont County,” the proclamation said. The proclamation was signed by the three members of the Board of County Com- missioners, Sheriff Howard Duff and Prosecutor Paul Waddell. The strike in Belmont County has affected approximately 1500 miners, | officials said. They pointed out that! this was approximately half the per- sons employed in the mines of the county which is one of the richest coal fields in the State. Picketing of the new Laffertv mine continued throughout today although deputy sheriffs drove the strikers away from the mine tipple after they had made several attempts to advance dur- ing the morninz. More than 400 strik- ers, women babies, were camped ngs in an attempt to on of the mine. e in the Jefferson | Bomliski, 37, was | to miners at v mine No. 2 of the United States | Co. He was removed to Steuben- | field Jail after threats| received by ing threate) cial deputy sheriffs in Belmont and Jefferson Counties were maintaining or Prosecutor Waddell late today or- dercd the release of 4 of the 1i men arrested in an alleged attack upon the new Lafferty mine Thursday night. | teve Miller, Andy Hobart, | Nemez. said the men did not | d the purpose of the demon- willing to return to| Lafferty mine. The | cther seven were keld in jail. Continue Hunger Strike. ‘The three alleged leaders of the Bel- | . sirike, Leo Thempson, 23, | Tony C. Gizigna, 31, Pitts burg Fanta Spontana, 50, New Laff rrested in an attempt to storm the cou il to release the 11 arrested at the New Lafferty mine, continued their hunger strike, started vesterday, in an attempt to force officials to free | them. Sheriff Duff and Maj. John A. Blunt of the adjutant general’s office went into the Hanna Co.’s No. 6 mine late today and told the men there that the county will protect them against the striking ‘worker: Dufl told the miners that they wowd not only be protected in the mines and | on the highways, but in their towns and their homes. He said agita’ors had been ing the homes of miners still at d_threatening their wives and . He promised to stop this prac- The sheriff said there “was no strike.” | and that the agitators were “Commu- nists disguised as members of the Na- tional Mine Workers' Union.” Meanwhile miners at Lafferty met in a field there today and decided to post- pone until Monday their contemplated march upon and picketing of mines | there. Mayor Asks Sheriff’s Aid. Sheriff Duff tonight receive from the ma; of A County, were roaming the stree they had announced their intention of | ass meeting at 3 o'clock to- mayor 0 “what the men w up to,” but asked that Maj. Blout go there to investigate ituation, and the latter left shortly There is only one mine ncar Adena, and it is 2 miles awa Sheriff Duif said he thought the men were the sa | ences, Miss Bench Bentum, who lays Florida avenue northeast the D. C. War Memorial. claim to the title of international diving champion, heads a troupe of diving experts who will headline the free attrac- ticn card at the Central Labor Unicn Fair opening tomorrcw at Fifth street and Five members of her troupe are girls, the two male | members furnishing the act’s climax with a dive off a 90-foot ladder. is being staged by the labor union as a means cf raising labor's quota toward The fair the Sardis Co. employing 75 men| near Lumberport, had signed an | agrezment with the union, bringivg to | an end a strike of its employes. | The Harrison, Barbour and ‘Taylor county strike area was quiet todav. Un- ion officials said about 3,000 men were | on strike in thosa counties. Company officlals_estimated. the number at ap- | proximately 2,000, APPEAL TO GOVERNOR. Civil Liberties Union' Asks Intervention in Kentucky. NEW YORK, June 13 () —The| American Civil Liberties Union an- | nounced today it had sent a te'egram | of appeal to Gov. Flem D. Sampson of Kentucky for executive intervention in the coal mine troubles in Harlan County. Forrest Bailey, director of the union, | sald reports he 'had received indicated James Chasteen, a union coal miner, was shot and killed at Cawood on June 11 by a mine guard, and, al- though 14 miners were in prison es a result of the shooting, the mine guard was still at liberty. “We understand that the general policy in dealing with present discr- ders in this region,” said the telegram, “has been to direct the full force of police power against helpless and fering miners. We protest that method only accentuates class di tending steadily toward civil war. We urge executive intervention | directed toward the remedy of an acute | economic situation, with protection of lives and rights of those who are at present the sols sufferers.” WAGE AGREEMENTS SIGNED. | Two Companies Meet Union Terms in Pitisburgh Area. PITTSBURGH, June 13 (#).—Wage agreements were signed by two coal companies witl the United Mine Work- ers of America today while efforts were being made to bring about peace in the strike troubled coal fields of South- | western Pennsylvania. | The Creighton Fuel Company was the first in the Pittsburgh district to agree to terms with the union. while the Sardis Coal Company, operating near Lumberport. W. Va.. followed the example of other Northern West Virginia operators, Strikes in the Scott's Ru district of West Virginia ended recently | when the companies and the unions came to terms. Pinchot Calls Ccnference. The National Minor's Union, mean- while, announced it would repudicte anv negotiations for rettlement of the Pittsburgh district strike entersd into by operators and the United Mine Workers of America. Gov. Gifiord Pin- chot has called a conference of U. M. W. representatives and officials of the Pitts burgh Terminel Coal Corporation to be “held” Thursday. The National Miners Union has demanded that the | operators deal directiw. with its reore- | sentatives and claims th> majority of the rikers are members of the N. M. U. They seck a higher wage scale, recogni- ton of the union and union check weighmen. | There were several demonstrations at mines in Washington County today, but all were orderly | It becaTe krown today that voluntary | ne who had been in Lafferty during the past two days. CLARKSBURG STRIKE ENDS. Union Officials Announce Agrecment | With Coal Company. 1 CLARKSBURG, W. Va, ((#)) —Officia's of the rica_tod: June 13 United Mine y_announced CCME AND SEE THE NEW CONVERTIBLE SEDAN Latest Body Type Now on Displsy at TRIANCLE MOTCR CO. N. Cap. & N. Y. Ave. Nat'l 5982, Open_Sunday_and Evenings. GRADUATICN GIFTS Shop the friendly store—for that most cher;- ished of all gifts— Gradu- ation. * 2> at K2 "’ X2 00 4% o® % osoo o 0 K3 QXD % "’ "o Perfect Diamonds —and complete line of stand- ard and all-American made watche: 99, D> e X4 Qoo oded] 2 0 L) XZx3 Chorge Accounts Invited delight every bride. “on all For Exam Hunt Club S 18750 spoons 816 6 Dessert Forks $19 6 De:sert Knives ... ENGRAVED grom. Jewelers M. Wurtzburger Co. 901 G St. N.W. o3 % o% DXIXZX Stationers Platinumsmiths A | first wesk of the trial of Elliott R. Hath- |away of Fall River, Mass., for murder | | trial. “AT HO! Announcements Place orders n~w fcr engraved cards announc- ing the arrival home of the bride and bride- advance of 20 per cent or more had| boen granted miners at the Edna No. 2| plant of the Hillman Coal and Coke Co.. | near Jannette. The men went on | st last January when a wage re-| duction was _made. The advance, ef- | fective last Wednesday, restores wages to the level prevailing prior to the cut. | Terms of the advance were not an- nounced. | United Mine Workers officlals sald | the Creighton Fusl Co., agreed to pay 58 cents a ton for machine coal; 74 cents a ton for pick coal; $4.75 a day| for motormen and trackmen; $4.60 a day for helpers and $4.20 & day for| outside work. Employment of Union checkweighmen and full recognition of | the United Mine Workers also were | agreed to, union officials said. United Mine Workers scales submitted | to operators in West Virginia called for | 30 cents a ton for loading coal, 5 cents | a ton for cutting and 40 cents an hour | for day labor inside the min<s. NURSE CHOKED SAY MEDICAL WITNESSES | Hathaway Defense Attempt to Break Down Doctors’ Testi- mony Fails. he Associated Press, EWPORT, R. I, June 13.—The of Verna Russell, a nurse, ended today with the Stte’s medical witnesses ing she was choked with human hands. Painstaking cross - examination by Grorge Hurley, chief of defense coun- sel, failed to shake Medical Examiner Charles H. Bryant and Dr. Elmus D. | Peasley, pathologist, from this decision, | which they reached after an autopsy | and a later examination of the girl’s bedy. Eoth medical men refused to enter- tain defense inferences that a thicken- ng of a valve of the girl's heart inter- fered with its function. They also de- nied that a fragment of a tooth could have caused more than an “irritation” | nad it lodged in her throat. The nurse's body was found in a | lonely lane in Tiverton on March 24, the morning after she had gone for an automobile ride with Hathzway, the son of a Massachusetts legislator. She was studying in the Fall River Hospital, whi€h retains Dr. Peasley as pathologist and head of iis laboratory. | Peasley was under rigid cross-eximi- | nation throughout today’s session of the | Peasley made a pathological ex- amination of the slain girl's organs, | which, he told Hurley, did not include tests for alcoholic content, “because there was no suspicion of alcohol pres- | ent.” As today’s session ended the fifth wit- | ness was being cross-examined and more than 100 were yet to testify. The deepest place in the o-ean vet | found is in the Mind2nao Deep, be- tween the Philippines end Javan, | | where soundings of 35,000 feet have been reported. 39 Years We picture our shop . the shop because of your after year . array of exqui quate to meet your ev Her most thrilling moment should be merked with a thrilling giit. Flatware makes a practical gift and will Steriing Timely Reductions STERLING FLATWARE Fairfax 6 Tea- spoons .. 6 Dessert. Forks 6 Dessert Knives ... Other Patterns Also Reduced $6.50 t 815 818 99 E For 39 years terest Arthur J. Sundlun, President 39 Years at 935 F Street | lanterns and they would not burn. | mud. d | the clothes and into the hair. should be carefully pur- chased—uwhere the firm name stands for relia- bility. continucucly a reputation that should in- any Washingtonian seeking the finest Diamonds. Kahn Jnec. SCIENTIST RISKS HIS LIFE IN GAVE New Smithsonian Curator Braves Dust to Uncover Relics. (Continued From Page One) high, through which ths workers must crawl. They removed about 100 tons of earth, which could be gotten cut only in small baskets through the nar- row passags. There was no ventilation inside. Extinct Race Found. The wo:k resulted in the discovery of remains of a presumably pre-Columbian peeple of American Indian stock which so far as can b2 ascertained up to thej present, hitherto were unknown to science. All of the earth was sified for human artifacts and aninal bones. A worker could stay inside only about three-quarters of an hour at a time. Despite the masks a fine black dust penetrated the throats and lungs of the men so'that all of them were feeling serious effects of the experience long be- fore the job was finished. Even to enter the cave, in the face of the almost universal human terror of narrow, dark passages and of the pros- pect of being crushed to death by falling boulcers at any moment required ex- ceptioral courage and could be done cnly by gritting the toeth and hoping for the best. T was the “baptism” of Frant M. Setzler, newly appointed assistant curato: of archeology, as a | cave explorer. He was interested in the scientific findings. The Mexican labor- ers, for whose heroism Mr. Setzler ex- pressed tke highest praise, had no motive for undergoing this harrowing experience except their daily wages. Cave Used as Shelter. Once the cave had a large opening— probably centuries ago. Then, the evi- dence indicates, it was used a+ a shel- ter for the mysterious people who in- habited this part of the country, con- cerning whose nature or origin there is no clue. Then the egtrance collapsed ‘There was only a small hole in a side of a narrow box canyon which nobody would be likely to notice. About a vear ago the owner of the ranch upon which the cave is located was hunting foxes. He saw a fox dive into this hole and crawled after him, finally emerging in the dust-filled subterran- ean chamber. The discovery of this cave interested a local amateur archeologist, Who crawled into the cave, and ncar the en- trance to the chamber found a piece of what had evidently been a child's cradle and a few other articles. These were seen last year by Mathew W. Stirling, chief of the Bureau of Ameri- can Ethnology, who suspected that they | belonged to a hitherto unknown cul- ture. Setzler was sent to investigate. From the first it looked like a hope- less proposit! Setzler found that there was no way of enlarging the cave entrance sufficlently to permit the use of a wheelbarrow in removing the earth or to provide light and ventila- tion. His first idea was to blow up the entrance with a charge of T. N. T., but | this would almo: certainly have | brought the roof shing down and ihe site would have been permanently ost. Foar Roof Collapse. hole structure of the roof was s0 that it might collapse even with | the removal of a single stone from the entrance. Inside it scemed that parts of the roof were hanging without any support whatsoover in defiance of grav The stability of the whole The w justed keystone which a slight jar might | displace.” Excavating #he floor ef the | chamber, however carefully the work was done, provided such jars. It was| a risk that had to be taken. | First Setzler tried to obtain illumina- tion by lanterns. The dust was so fine and thick that it penetrated these There was also the possibility of an explosion. The lanterns were aban- doned and the work was carried on with flashlights. These would penetrate only two or three feet at the most into the dense, black dust cloud. About them the workers could hear frcm, time to time, the warning sounds of the dia- mond rattlesnakes. They could not see the reptiles, but only judge their dirce- tion and distance from the sounds. Even without the dust clcud the snakes would have been prastically invisible. They were dark red in color, correspond- ing “with the cave walls which they infested. Poisonous trantulas dropped from the roof. Only the hands of the workers were exposed. The dust was so fine and thick that it was only par- tially stopped by the chemical filters of the masks. These filters had to be changed two or three times a day. Toward the end of the job the men continually were coughing up quantities of black The Gust penetrated through Setzler had no idea of the dificul- ties which awaited him when he went to the cave. Back in Washington he cpeaks only of the archeological finds. Fellow scientists of the Smithsonian, at Same Address we are very proud of-—proud confidence undiminished year the shop where an endless ite gems is more than ade- requirement. we have been building up Members Amsterdam FRANK M. SETZLER. tell the rest of the story. It would have been easy to have avoided the whole task. A charge of dynamite would have been enough and the. col- lanFe of the cave an unavoidabie acci- lent. The Mexicans were hired for a pick- and-shovel job, nothing more. But something of the scientific enthusiasm must have entered treir spirits, for, Setzler says, thore was never a word of complaint over risking their lives and health. The evidences of anclent human habitation wer2 all in a layer of dusk about three feet thick. Artifacts re- covered were parts of baskets, cradles, matting and fandals. Near the en- trance of a chamber was found the| tkeelton of a child, in poor state cf prescrvation. The only clue it gave to the identity of the ancient people | was that they were of the Mongoloid type, which was indicated by one of the teeth. The artifa¢ts show little relationship to any known American cultures. The cave evidently was inhabited before the coming of the Spaniards. There was no trace of any European influence. One theory is that it constitutes a “wedge” penetration of tne Texas | mountains by some Indian culture of northern Mexico. Other caves in the neighborhocd revealed no human re. mains, The people evidently were not cave-dwellers in any strict sinse. They only used this cave as a habitation or retreat from time to time. The work may have added a new cul- ture area to the map of pre-Columbian America. Further work is planned to| determine the extent of this culture. WINS $175,000 BALM FROM SEATTLE MAN School Teacher Is Given Settlement After Telling Jury of ‘““Fake” Wedding. By the Associated Press. SEATTLE, Wash, June 13—Miss Ivyl Barker, former high school teacker, was awarded a jury verdict of | 175,000 late today in a $500,000 | breach of promise suit against Reese | B, Brown, Seattle and Spokane capi- | Aalist. Miss Barker charged Brown, a mar- ried man, led her to go through a faked marriage ceremony. Subsequently they | ghared an apartment ere, che. testi- led. | £he kept their marriage secret at Brown's request, the former teacher | | evidently depended on a delicately ad- | s2id, and after a time he told her he | i'y describ=d Starr today as a g'rl whos: would obtain a divorce to marry her. | Brown, on the stand in his own | defense, 'entered a general denial of | Miss Barker's chary ! a taxi man said, she was intoxicated, | in answer to a question that the next | week, | Greenwich Village home, helped her to SISTER QUIZZED INFAITHFULL CASE lnépector Says Tak Was of Starr’s Men Friends and Diary. (Continued From First Page.) to plece out Starr's life fairly well up to two ::zs before sh2 disappeared. On last Tuesday a week ago she told Tucker she “had a date with a nice man” but nothing was found which would show she had been with him on the Cunard liner Franconia, from which she was deposited on a tug in mid-Hudson for overstaying visiting hours. Detectives were sent to Long Beach again late today, but their mission was 20t explained. It developed the visit to Long Beach was in connection with the finding of a pocketbook on the beach there. Detec- tive Joseph Culkin after examining the pocketbook, however, said it was not Starr's missing bag. MAY APPEAL TO ENGLAND. | Police May Ask Aid of Scotland Yard to Solve Mystery. NEW YORK, June 13 () —New clues in New York and on Long Island spurred detectives anew today to solve the mystery of Starr Faithfull's death. Reports were current that appeals for aid dwould be sent to England’s Scotiand Yerd. A new link in the mystery chain was kept a secret. It was a document which police took last night from the home of Stanley Faithfull, acid manufacturer and stepfather of Starr. It was rushed to District Attorney Edwards at River- head, Long Island, by plane, giving rise to reports that police had found a sec- ond volume in which Starr recorded her romances, her fits of black gloom and sudden joy. Police denied a second diary had been found. Perheps the last letter written by the girl before her stormy career ended in her disappearance a week ago Friday was on its way frem London to police here today. It was posted June 2, three days before she vanished, and was ad- dressed to Dr. G. Jameson Carr, ship’s | doctor on the liner Franconia, with whom the girl was believed to be in love. Letter Contains A-ology. The letter, Inspector Harold R. King was told, was an apology and explana- tion to Dr. Carr for her actions aboard the Cunarder, Franconia May 20. On that day she went aboard the vessel and failed to leave before it sailed. Capt. Robert B. Irving put her ashore in a tug and when the reached the pier, hysterical and weeping. After giving her a lemon to sober her and telling her boat to London would not sail for a the chauffeur took her to her her apartment and left. In her letter, King was informed, the irl told Carr she brought her ow liquor aboard and “drank it too fast.” Statements from the ship's skipper and | other officials are coming here with the letter from London, where Starr, who enjoyed traveling, often visited. The police, although not ignoring the possibility of accidental death or tui- cide, are als> checking a theory that Starr may have been throwa overboard from a yacht. William Kozok, me- ! chanic, came forward with a story ot! wild parties aboard a yacht moored at College Point, Queensborough, about the t'me the body was found. On Kozok said, two or three wome abcard the craft, An artist friend of the Faithfu!l fam- | erratic emotional tempo kept her sat odds with her environment. “She was likely to do anything,” was the phrase used by Edwin Megarg: “Short Change” Your Home 7 7§~, Good paint is not expen- s g Use { sive, and POOR paint is ‘not a bargain! “Small change” paint often means short changing the home! Murco Lifelong Paint Thousands of dollars have been spent on “Murco” advertising . .. it had to be good to live up to our claims made for it, and it IS. 1007 Pure, Beautiful, Durable “Murco” is a paying investment. EJ Murphy G INCORPORATED 710 12th St. N. W. NAtional 2477 Build this Year Building Matérial Prices are the Lowest Since the War ® LUMBER is the lowest in cost since 1918 PLUMBING is the lowest in cost since..1917 HEATING is the lowest in cost since...1921 HARDWARE is the lowest in cost since 1914 PAINT is the iowest in cost since.......1917 MILLWORK is the lowest in cost since 1918 [} GET OUR Diamond Exchange BOTH NEW AND USED MAT These Lowered Prices are in Effect Every Day at Our 3 Yards. ESTIMATE! 3—Branches—3' MAIN OFFICE-15th & H Sts. N.E. DOWNTOWN-6th & C Sts. S.W. BRIGHTWOOD-5925 Ga. Ave. N.W. ERIAL | artist and terrier fancier, who was a witness before the grand jury yest; dlfl; Meliargee said he knew the Faith- ful 0_years ago when vthey lived in Oran; J. 4 Some time twe ge, N. J. ago, he said, she came to him and offersd to pose, but since he specializes in dog pictures, he sen: her to other artists, So far as he knew none empl?lyed ;‘"ihlm Tall and a ally bullt and beau- tiful, she displayed uiet nature at times, he said, but at cthers would fly into a rage. iie disagreed with the murder the- ory, expressing the belief <h; ae d ed in a plunge a Europe-bound steam- thip and that the drift washed the body ashore. SEARCHERS CEASE HUNT FOR EX-SENATOR Mystery Unsolved in State Selon's Disappearance From Motor Boat. By the Associated Pre:-. THE WEIRS, N. H., June 13.—Search for Chelso Arrigoni, former Connecti- cut State Senator, on the islands of Lake Winnepesaukee, ceased at night- fall tonight with the mystery of his dizappearance still lved. Alternating theories—that he had drowned, and that ‘he was alive on one of the islands—remained unproved after several days of searching on the slands- and in the waters of the lake. Today’s search brought one bif of cxcitement when an unidentified “man was pursued by a deputy sheriff and a Doatman of Timber Island, but the man was not captured, nor was his identity learned. Meanwhile, a diver worked unsuccessfully under the lake’s sur- face in a search for Arrigoni’s body. The former Connecticut Legislator disappeared two weeks ago from a mo- tor boat confaining three other per- sons. A conference will be held to- morrow to decide whether further search will be made for him. Colgate U. Seniors at Dinner Shout “We Want Work.” HAMILTON, N. Y., June 13 (P).— The yell of the graduating class of Col- gate University was changed at the alumni dinner today. Instead of end- ing the cheer with the usual “31, 31, 31" the seniors shouted “We want rk” three time: PRESIDENT QUITS VENEZUELA POST Congress Accepts. Resignation and Fixes Jvne 19 to Elect Succestor. By the Asscciated Press. CARACAS, = Venezuela, June 13.— President Juan Bavtista Perez seni his resignation this afternoon to the Venezuelan - Congress, which _unani- mously accepted it and fixed June 19 as the date for the election of a new .chief executive, The cabinet selected Dr. Itriago Chacin, minister of foreign affairs, to act as President in the interim. Congress, sitting as a committee of the whole, had demanded that Dr. ! Bautista Perez siep down. “In view of the fact that private suggestions, both oral and written, by members of Congress to the President requesting his resignation have been an- swered by evasion and delay,” the com- mittee’s resolution said, “the Congress now formally requests that at today's special session the President present his formal resignation, the supreme inter- ests of the nation so requiring.” Reports that ihere was a rebellion against the Perez government have been coming out of Venezuela by way of Colombia for the past two months. Dr. Bautista Perez was elected to the presidency by the Congress in May, 1929, for a seven-year term. GIRL IS IDENTIFIED CLEVELAND, June 13 (#).—A young woman who attempted suicide by poi- sonin~, in a hotel here several days ago, but who subsequently recovere identified today. police raid. as Mildred Lyness of Roch-ster, N. Y. and was returned to that city by relatives. Miss Lyness refused to explain why she tried to end her iife, although wken she was in the hospital here she in- sisted, “Please let me die.” She said she was 28 years old and until her identity was discovered laimed she was “Helen Nelson of Bufialo. 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