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VOL. LXIV—NO. 144 POPULATION 29,685 ATTACK N SENATE ONDEPT STORES AND NEWSPAPERS P Senator McCumber Charges That They Are Spreadin; “An- sidious and Poisonous Propaganda” Agaisst-the Pend- ing Tariff Bill—Declares Purpose is.fo Further Their Selfish Interests and Maintain “Extortionate” Profits— Accuses New York and Boston Nem@qi@d' s Washington, June _14—Metropolitan ffor sale by a department store. Using newspapers especially of the eastern sea- |the articles, on which both the foreign board and importing houses and_de- |#&nd retall selling prices here had beet partment stores of the count e at-|obtained as examples to illustrate his in the senate Senator | speech, he described what he characteriz, mber, republicam=North Dakota, [ed as “the enormous frauds perpetrate who charged that ey were spreading |on the American people. an “insidious and poisonous propaganda”| Article after ariicle was held up be- nst the pending tariff bill to further | fore the senators. There was a cuckoo interests and to maintaln | clock made in Germany, Mr. McCumber extortionate™ - profits. said, for 94 cents and »n|:| l? N“l"‘r‘l’r‘!'cks Assallt rticularly New York, Bos-|at §22; a string of pearls from France ton “and " Phiadelphia’ Hewspapers, the |costing $12.25 and sold here at 3150; smmittee chalrman said the republicans | electric bulbs made for 5.3 cents and re- had decided to change thelr policy of [talled in America at 30 cents: kid gloves ke silent on_the subject of profits |involced at 27 cents and retalled at $2 wnd were now ready to meet the argu-|a straw hat of English make, bought ments especially of the “so-called repub- | there at 69 cents and sold here for $4. lican press who have so capriclously | Wool blankets and carving sets and curl- ndemned this bill” ing irons, hair clippers and briar pipes Senator McCumber's speech nearly two [ Were among the exhibits. hours in length, immediately precipitated | “And the men who handle these are replies from the democratic side and [the men who are fighting this tariff brought a resolution by Senator Walsh. | bill,” Mr. McCumber shouted, “they don’t Mortana, calling upon the attdrney- gen- | want to give up robbng and taking the eral to advise the senator whether steps |life blood of this couniry. had been taken or were to be taken 10| .The press, especlally those in New establish whether a conspiracy existed | york and in Boston, are afraid to tell . o terests mentioned bBY e pe truth. Why do they print articles ikota senator. The resolution |ang editorlals to decelve the American that if such combination existed 2 ed. { people 2 on of those suspected be in-|" Because their life blood depends up- v nder antl-trust laws. on the revenue from their big advertis- Montana senator sought immedi- |ers and their big advertisers depend for the resolution but Mr. Mc- |their prosperity upon the high prices they jected saying he was heartl-|can get in the American market from avor of an investigation of the |the American consumer.” s and incidents presented but did not| Mr. McCumber said that some time e the Walsh resolution was in ac-|ago Semator Ladd had “exposed the un- rd with the situation laid before the | truthful propaganda” of the New York ryolution wat over a day | Tribune in printing a story that the tar- te rules. iff on hides would increase the cost of derwood. Alabama. the dem- ! ghoes $2 a pair but that the newspaper a eader characterized the tariff| jad not printed a word in reply to the v vl and as “most remarkable and | 1,add statement. The speaker also men- entin w in tarlff discussion.” He | tioned in the course of his discussion declared that on the position taken bY | advertisements carried by the New York Mr. McCumber. the republican protec- Herald, Boston-Herald and several other papers in support bf his assertion that their greatest advertisers were those who . ad left no longer any appeal manufacturers or labor. ™ or has shown” sald Mr.|.ou Vigorously oposed the tariff pro- nderw that the profit taken by [ N0 T e B et b e hgh 45| ' The. Senator absolved “the great ma- 2906 e cont. 3¢ Tk B4 how " t A jority” of the newspapers of blame in Pt Ao s ans|added: “This campaign of misrepresenta- > 2 ok A . - | tion against the tariff is concentrated in e o o “hare | the big cities where the importers' ad- T etraiad » gigantie fraud on the Am. | Yertisements dominate the newspapers ated “The inconsistency of this so-called re- The MeCi b Gk At 108 publican press,” Mr. McCumber went om D e e e e tacit | “is that while, it snupports. senators as A 5e the time when | able renresentatives of their states it . o laid aside temporarily for | Revertheless at the behest of these great neideration of the annual naval appre- | Importing interests condemns the very : is expected {o be be-|Men it supports as its representatives. + senate the remainder of the|More than this while it ardently sup- Ports the prestdent, it assalls those poli- smber appeared on the floor | cles for. which he stands and which he s articles usually imported | re asserts on every occasion. DIVERS ARE WORKING FINAL CONSIDERATION OF FOR SUNKEN TREASURE IRISH CONSTITUTION TODAY. Ontario, June 14—| London. June 14 (By the A. P.)— the lure of sunken treas-|The draft of the Irish constitution . worked feverishly today|has now been completed in a manner murky waters of the|generally regarded as satisfactory to Y Wye. about an ancient chest|all the parties concerned in the sunk deep in the mud. They hope t0| London negotiations. se It tomorrow There will be a full meeting of the ins, they hope | British signatories of the treaty un- wure lost nearly three centuries|der the presidency of Premier Lioyd a black robed band of Jesuit|George, tomorrow morning, to give s to Huronla. If it proves|the draft final consideration. he Jesuit fathers' long 10St| At the conclusion of the discussions opped overboad in 1650 while|at the colonial office this afternoon veyed by canoe to Fort|petween the southern unionists and Marie, the order will be en-|the Irish provisional government rep- recovery of a set of solid| regentatives, Viscount Midleton sta- andelabra, presented to|teq he and his colleagues would not by the court of France.|participate further in the colonial| and quantity of French gold coin|ofce discussions. From this it was!| brou er to pay the troops who|gathered that sitisfactory assurances! sccompanied the missionaries to the|had been forthcoming regarding.tha| ew world position of the minorities in South hough tradition long has had it| ireland. the seventh box was buried be-y On leaving the meeting Arthur #rs of the Wye, no se-|Griffith stated he would meet Winston attempt was made to locate it| Churchill at the colonial office again s few days ago. This search|tomorrow, and hoped after that to s stimulated by the recollection of | leave for Dublin. story told by raftsman some thirty % rs ago that he had touched the| DISORDERS REPORTED. IN ox -when poling logs. The story VARIOUS PARTS ‘OF IRELAND ecently was told to Diver Captain pd . - %, \ rson and he interested Edward i arso i 5 Belfast, June 14=The Methodist O, e Tad oin- | church 1h: the military road in Cork . a peculiar magnet A \III'AII\! was attacked this morning. All the e e Tccessful In| windows were shattered. This was - oo "’{‘“"l’ ry "“l”‘ - the third attack on the church, which o two rowed at ud\‘x ;afi\f‘;fi‘:“‘ was bullt for the use of the Metho- at length the needles of the divin-| gists among the British - troops in ng rod showed a >’;r0ng reaction to the Cork barracks. the influence og goid. % 3 S . @ party of gunmen opened up pro- K gl BT e oharted| miscuous fire in . Killucar village, . s e 4 S heohuon and| County Westmeath, last might, rid- measurements of the chest wére con- | GrigtY, Vestmeatn last -might, rid- Correspond Caetls o the eumenslons | Richard Reynell, secretary . of . tho he T y >/ Y| Westmeath Hunt club, fired on the the Jesuit Sathors.@hen Fort BUME| men who wers atticting mia home Marie was in the making. & Grovs D o T 5 - polajor General Cooper, owener, of ™ unboden Park, Mullingar, who Te- NORTH ANENIGAN. SEWERAPER | 1 ity Siiies s wre oes to ALLIANCE IS INCORPORATED| puave his home, has dismissed his S forty-two ret New' York. Yade 1é—fficarportation | aters we suefine® @nd Put up his ot the_ North Amn;‘m;&v‘ spaper el ol aliiance. a mutual GrgamzAtion. for| \TALIAN WOMAN FIGHTING the isition and “production of, = ewepaner features wen mnnounces] ORDER FOR HER DEPORTATION bere today by Laring Pickering of the 2. San Francisco Bulletin, secretary of{ New York, 'June ,u_‘,;i.:ui‘ hita the organization committee. | Motti, wealthy Italidff “Woman' who The alliance, designed to supple<|Sald she.would never:pose as @ the distribution of purely feature|cOUDtry, has appealeq t8 “Washington! matter of a high grade, had its in-|a8ainst a deportation - order,” and ception in a series of meetings of | Probably will be alldwed. to "enter; publishers held in New York during|Ellis Island officials said teday, Mrs. the recent annual meetings of the | Motti_ came after &u‘g Italian™ quota Associanted Press and the Ameri- | Was filled, but grew indignantswien ” Bery: ment the work of news agencles by|ant girl to ant-r& % _any other D '] l_ v g ARG Body of Guy B. Barham @Y% apic. London, June' 1{.—The et £bt Guy/ B. Barhamh, the Los XApgéles Bublisher who died suddenly in London last week, is peing sent to the United States on thel, Stéamer -Olymple, whidh sailed today ;™" om Southampton. = William R. Hearst, [ pg. - 1 owhons vpiety s Marhm. sk’ . {DABY: S in consequence of the death of his friend -and will "embark upon the, Olympic when that liner calls at Cherbourg. BUSCH REPLIES TO LETTER chairman of the United States Shipping (Start =@ Board. “misunderstood and therefore as- 2ailed president of the Anheuser Busch, Inc., in | S0UIts to the sale of liquor_gboard the steamship | \nformed, George Washingtot vessel, and the vi bition act, is embodied in a second let.er | The on sa: proposal shipping board. declared argument that our passenger ships can- [ ment of Which we charge is being unlawfully | consider done, T am bound to consider that you admit the truth of the charge. “On our behalf, I admit the correct- mess of vour charge that we are sel- fish in that we sevk to again have the | process lawful right to manufacture heer. If | “wrested this is selfishness, let it go at that. We, in that respect at least, have the ship- board as an example. federal j “The shipping board desires to main- | senato: s tain the value as a golng business of the | Taft, but Eovernment's investment in merchant second te may be seved through = restoration of the lawful right to partake of whole- | TRYING some beer. ‘You have misunderstood, and there- Tore assailed our motive in writing the president of the eighth Instant, as we lators of the Volstead law on land and | orrr. “wireless sea destroy the investment of law |according ablding manufacturers who might oth-| Marconi erwise preserve thelr investment, and at the same time endeavor, as we are en- deavoring, to have restored amendment to the Jaw, the right to make er. 5 “Respecting your ‘entirely irrelevant intimation that we are German sympa- thizers, we remind yol and most of the falsehoods on that roint | away, clo Were thoroughly dealt with and dispos- | Marconi ed of finally by the the war. See the flles. You flatter me by your that I have so much power as to be able | York nexi promote the Gen ‘Whether “this accusation, gonstitute its own' answer. “We seek no controve your boards. that your board, without trouble to get the lates for profit a la: always observed and be enforced. You s notcome to tre With clean hands, uggest that we do D, them clean, and’ wi remind vou that we have In. g - Tesrondence repeated fir Gema BOARD VESSELS TO CONTINUE ’,":“"‘;exc erred is Washington, June 14—Sale of 1i Dight Was 3 .—Sale of li e shipping' board vessels il continued, Chairman Lasl night until 2 supreme c he “hasibeen convinced of its illegality”| The Mr. Lasker maintained throughagt i day the position taken by him in his let. | ter to Adolphus Busch, 3rd, vice. presi. | dent of the Anheuser Busch Brewery. com.- pany, St. Louls, despite indication that it would be made the subject of attack in CONgress and by dry organizations. Officials of the department of justice refused to comment on the situation Hut that i fa mittee it to an opinion on file there which was ren- dered by former Acting Attorn Frierson in 1920, Mr. Frieraon nery cre: the national prohibition act upon ships fiying the Wherever they might be, According to high department officials, an opinion of an attorney general re. mains the officlal interpretation of a law | untll it has been revoked by court decision Or by a superseding opinion, more, “they added such opinios stands unless request for a revi from the same department t was effective | American flag | Buckner not less lew comes | ruling. iquor sales s taken, he authority of eral Counsel here late Bucknes April 21 house an Mr. Lasker'’s stand as to 1 on board American vessels wa: informed Mr. Busch, on the jan oplnion rendered by Gen The chairman conferred Attorney General Daugherty thers gave him copies of the ence' with the St. and while correspond- | home, Louis _brewer. . The primary purpose of the conference, Mr. OF Lasker indicated later, but it was brought up incidentally. S | Jersey Chairman Lasker declared he would not jen < opinion, being entirely satified with rendered by Mr. Schlesinger. ddea that there would be any move by an ex- cutlye. department 1 e v in the matter, at the Gapltol the Busch-Lasker correspondence, Provoked considerable discussion among prohibition leader coming, democrat, ‘Massachusetts for permitting the sal can Newspaper Publishers associa- | 8he was told she might. get -intto tion. Its membership already in-|America If ghe posed as a-<érvant. - cludes many of the strongest news- | Officials ‘edid- that she did‘not.staf papers of the United States and Can- | the purbdséiof her tripiwhen she wae Ben with '8 combined oireulation. ot | taken 45 i"é‘ 1!‘"?»50502 Heti~; 7,000,000, ance last week, She ",dne'r,tg ey visit to”Her, epusin, is wascdge ¢] and on ‘that jground thére "p: }f DAVID W. CROSLAND HEADS will be no m,y In- %d’vlasm THE ANCIENT ARABIC ORDER | 50 ashorefit wastsaid: i POSTMAST GILTY - <7 3 e <O EMBEZZLING 3740 ) Sun Franclsco, June 14—David W. Crasand. of Alcamer temple, Mont. omery, Ala., wes el mperial | e s A Eih. priest and prophet, and Clar- | Newark, N7 June: 4—ames ‘A. ence M. Dunbar, of Palestine temple, |McHaney, former, Jpostmaster of Roeb- Providence, R. 1, imperial outside|!!"s, N. J. wa§ foind gullty by a jury guide, Anclent Arabic order, nobles of | !n the federal court’ Here today of em- the mystic shrine, here today. These |Dbezzling $740 in postal savings _funds. wers the only affices contested for,|The jury, which was out nine hours, rec- the others being filled by moving for. |ommended mercy. Notice of appeal was PGl e SBoers_wext ju ragh, _.°, " served. ¢ g iCity, June 14.—A jury in the & {fl%::g:{ county district -court .today! re- the sale | asid of liguor on American ships. 5 5 ;u?lr; . AGAINST JOSEPH OSTER | Collector 3 -~ position ugned . Toir verdict: 1 T e s _aggregating $28, not get business unless they do the thing | Bates voted to vest ‘Waterbury, Con: which-originally required the ruling. > |\ oido Marvin in the superior A.F.of L. ould Ater tart a Drive for a Con- drive. for a constitutional amendment for a congressional veto of 3. . Supreme ‘court decisions, and for the de- ve of ht usch, 3 set aside a federal law as. un- Priting to. President Harding regarding |constitutional. This, the delegates were would " overcome decisions, = shipping board | Which labor has regarded as inimical to tion of the prohi- | Its interests, ly formal acticn, however, was on Adolphus Busch, 3rd, ‘tonight: 1n T~ \lmanimou:.[adoynon of a motion ecreat- ply to the leter of Chairman Lasker. I"E a -!ftc ial committee to frame a pol- The letter, dated today from this city, | ¥, Which action was taken after the for the amendment had been have read in today's papers what |Mmade by Senator Lafollette of Wiscon- pumorts to be a letter from you ai-|Sin -Other speakers, most of them dressed to me, from Washington, under | leaders in the Jabor movement date of vesterday. I have no doubt the |d the program as practicable. letter will reach me in due course, and | The suggestion of a drive for the T am taking it for granted the newspa- | amendment came in the midst of a pro- Pers have correctly reproduced” the let- |§ram devoted to condemnation. of - child ter. It refers to my letter or the eighth, | labor. " The address of Senator Lafol- addressed to the president, complainmg | lette, centered attacks on the supreme of violation of the Volstead law, by the | court, which for a second time ; approv-, the federal child labor law un- “Inasmuch as you again resort to the | constitutional. In authorizing appoint- the special committee the deie- in it authority to all decisions of 'the last few vears which the federation has brand- ed as inimical to organized labor. Senator Lafollette, in his speech, con- tended that the federal courts had by a of gradual encroachments sovereignty from the peopls” and he cited the child labor law decls- ion as “typical of the conduct of the} udiciary.” Hisses greeted the Tfirst mention of Chief Justice these quickly changed to ap- vern E plause as Lafollette declared that Taft Ships; while we are selfish in hoping | was repudiated by the voters when a tHat our investment of many millions Tm candidate for president. TO PICK UP “WIRELESS MESSAGES” FROM MARS New York, June 14—En ruote to the v United States on his yacht Elletra, Wil- did. Our motive was to remind the Z : | Chiet evemutivg. tae s fo| remind. the | liam 3Marconi, perfector of wireless teles- seeking to pick up what he calls messages” from the planet Mars to The New York World. i, it is said, has been of the belief for five years that signals are jbelng sent through space from Mars. Last by an|(year, while crulsing in the Mediterranean on the Elletra, the inventor picked up a wave of 150,000 meteres length, the greatest ever recorded. Mars s now approaching the earth and u that all the facts |next Sunday will be 42,000,000 miles ser than it has been since 1909. therefore, is attempting solution government during | Of What he belleves to be the most fes= cinating mystery held by science. suggestion | _ The inventor, upon his arrival in New t week, will address a joint fo affect adversely ‘the American and |mMeeting of the Institute of Radio Engin- man merchant marine, | €er and the Amerlcan Institute of Hiec- s 1s & compltment or ap|trical Engineers. its obvious absurdity muce| Besides the Mars experiment .Mar- cont 15 conducting a series of other exper- ks S ments, which The World says may prove et S yc‘;‘;r:: of extraordinary importance. These in- taking the|Clude tests of direction finders on both law amendeq iy |ShOFt and long wave transmission and of W which we. hewe | DiEh speed dispatch and reception of mes- Which we are ove | S88es in co-operation with radio stations ing to Mave amended because it cannot | " P® American mainiand. hlarhol Dudlic opinion | HOVSE :3,,::;: B‘;Z:’i’é’“ WEER t has i g of dollars to kee Tl i his cor.| Washington, June 14. — Republican ! nd for a |leaders announced tonight that the ad- congressional investization.” ministration's ship subsidy bill, intro- = —— duced today, would be taken up by the LIQUOR SALES o SHIPPING— house next week provided the merchant ommittee, to which it was re- able to report it-by Saturday at sea will pe| The measure is expected to be report- Ker relterated to. | ©d by almost a straight party vote, ourt decision has | With one -possible exception democratic been rendered holding such practice jl. | committeemen declared they would vote legal under. the. prohibition laws or until |against it and file a minority report. statement by Representative Mondell, the republican leader, that the bill would be considered by the house next week was taken to mean that ths rules committee would give it privileged status. Its opponents claimed, however, rule was granted by the com- would be'defeated in the house, thus delaying action until the Decem- h ber section a ed a i it In other quarters attention was called number of re;u‘l:lrlinns.by gl rson held thyt | CHESHIRE MAN SENTENCED FIVE TO EIGHT YEARS June 14.—Albert cet US.JudcarySystem The Hague Totay ==~ of Somerpotnt, N. J., shot and. kill him- nterr * o |mit, N. J., Teceiver for the - lem—International Justice |78 by. company. the Hague peace palace tomorrow. 4 2 11.30 o'clock the first annual session “f| Rey. Dr. Paul Moody, son of the svang- the permanent court of .international|elist Dwight L. Moody, was i appointed Edward Maxson o Sum- | —_— 8 At the commencement exercises of Mid- dlebury (Vt.) college honvrlrrdfi‘l’; x:’ The Hague, June.14 (By the A. P.)—|conterred upon President James. Two notable ‘meetings will be: held in|gen “or Yale university. % —_— 5 i¢ at his home there.| - He had besn :des- D 3 ti £l 'n oy to ;ndent!lmlher‘mmau'thdjfi“v SRS ey P Vice Chancellor Backes.at Newark. Europe, is curtailing his continental tour | stitutional Amendment for| Consider the Russian Prob-|; Vi a C?n;reuimul Veto of Supreme Court ‘Decisions.| Court to Meet. 2 COincinnati; Ju 14 (By the A. P.)— OF CHAIRMAN LASKER | L o thine ool & detivmion. tion_at the American Federation of La- St. Louis. Mo, June 11—(By The A. rica ) P.)—Tho. statement that A. D. Lasker, | PO convention here today that it wou.d Justice. will_open, and at 2.30 in the af-|president of Middlebury, (vx,)-wb?. ternoon the conference arranged to con-|at the annual commencement exercige! sider Russ'an -problems will. begin its vhict the “onion beltef effort to settle those questions which .'l'hllv year's crop in the Genoa conference abandoned after |New York state may be destroyed by ris- a ot weeks of unsuccessful wrangling. ing water due to the heavy storm . Two more dissimilar meetings it would|Sunday. . be difficult to find, under the same roof. —_— The first. will\be curely judicial, with the| ~Tdward ¥. McSwoeney St Beotenc " solemnity and restrictions which l:m °;'5:::l ;‘tm:hr; c:m‘m 8 e te8. th mine casts about its doings, whilé, the 3 l"-"‘mm_ second will be & continuation . of _thedegroe of docter of laws and rd by i Manhattan_college, New York. sylrited sessions at Genoa, devoted tlo|Manhattan college, attempts to untangle vexatious prob- s Horace Everett Hooper president of the lems arlsing from’ the war. A nmica, Tnc, and formes The Hague is mot especially pleased, | Encylopedia Bri particularly the offcial part of tho cap” ital, in having the Genoa troubles | e e QU {\ferred hero and sheltered under the | disease: He ¥ peace palgce. H. A. Van Karnebeek, Dutch (nister of foreign affairs, will extend ‘a welcome to this conference, and then turn it over to the represen- | tatives of the various Furopean POWETS, |retary. which have sent delegates. Delegations from the major countries| Cadet Avlator Raymond White, lost arrived today, or late tonight, but some|for three days in the Everglades, was out ditor of the London Times, died at his home at Bedtord Hills, N. Y., of heart 3. Levy of New ork, was re- eleoted grandmaster of the Independent Order of Brith Abraham. Max L. Hol- lanoer, New York, was elected grand sec- of the representatives of the smallerof the hospital and back on duty at Carl- countries” will not reach The Hague un-!strom fleld, Florida, little the worse for Ul after the opening of tomorrow’s|his experlence and ready to fiy again. meeting. The British delegation, head- —_— ed by Sir Philip Lloyd-Graeme, numbers| Two hundred and fitty-six studenmts re- 50, and the Italian delegation, headed |ceived their baccalaureate degrees and by Baron Avezzano, former ambassador |the master's degree was conferred on at Washington, 25. Some of the small- | candidates at Vassar college’ er countries, like Czecho-Slovakia, may | mencement. not despatch representatives until June 57 com- v] si A blow at the transportation of liquors i e whe meetings with the Russlans | b ada to the United States s seen Baron Avezzamo remained in Paris|in new provisions adopted in the revision viewpoint at a conference with French |ing. minister of finance of Canada. officials endeavoring to bring about har-| = 1 ot ssadorial mony and close co-operation between | Three-fourths of the amba for several days to discuss the Italian Of thé budget announced by W. S Field- #uard’ named " Wounded—Train Wes ] - Governor Has Ordered Mobilization of Troops st Salt §alt: Lake ' City, “June 14--A- mine’ Webb ' was~shpt and| %Y E (TR " Ogden in Readiness to be Sent to the killed, and . P. Lewls, general man- ager .of .the Standard: Fuel: company of Standardville, Utah;” and gn_uni- dentified Gresk mirer, ‘Were wounded today when a railfead train.carrying new ’:‘nl;eh to tilu eowll.urn-m ‘was ul ~by men In _am) Sccording 10, reports. récetved here: The trafn, belonging . to the ~Utah) L Rallway company, was Jacobs, pear Standardville,. the. ad- Vices stated. - Stuperinterilent . Lewls. acting’ as-énginéer, having taken regular, wag charge when - the i refused to operate the ‘apon learning that “is’ waa- wl_'?‘!l‘t t&r;n- mines to teke the place ofthe strik- [an. Governor ch.!n&m ‘of Utan, | dift mobilisation ot National ird_troops | sald. : at. Salt - Lake « Citys and; fen ‘for 8o probable despatch’to the-coal area to- Governor issued. & proclama TG tion at 2.16 o'clock this'. n declaring martial faw in coal dlstrict. OPERATORS DEMAND THAT COAL MINERS AGREE TO ARBITEATION e branchies ‘of the coal industry are o New York, June the . Carbeii county | HOOVER TO COMBAT THE PEYY INCREASING FPRICES OF COAL 14—With the refusal ymeet with Secretary Hoover tomorrow ‘| ot miners’ representatives om»the wage | to conaider steps for bringing into. line ! corps will be absent from the capital this mfnlew;l;:::';?e;'ekgmm is héaded by |Summer, a condition almost without pre- = | ceden, when the president remains M. Sato, “Counciller of the embassy at {godin WOTR AT e n v Paris, Who Is a son of Aimaro Sato,| e former ambassador to the United States and one of .the Japanese representatives| at the Portsmouth peace conference. Hugo Stinnes is expected to arrive here tonight from Berlin, in Five bandits were killed and three wounded in an attempt to hold up a train of the Southern Pacific de Mexico near Rosares, between Mazatlan, Sonora, and Teplc, Sinaloa, MeXico, late Saturday. DEDICATION OF MEMORIAL A eargo of gold German marks, des- TO FRANCIS SCOTT KEY |cribed upon its arrival in New York on the Frederick VIII from Sweden, as worth Baltimore, Md., June 14.—A national | $35.000,000, trned ‘out to have had one memoria -Ito_Francls Scott Key, author | CiPher too many added. of the “Star Spangled Banuer,” was dedicated by President Harding. today on |, ®e¥ Marsden, 37, e ach -!l'“‘- ee police that he robbed Doof boxes in the site of Fort McHenry where in 1814 | Mo hung the flag to Which the anthem was |2 Milwaukee church His circh thefts written during an ‘attack by a British | the P! L v fleet. Referring to' the inspiring words | $1:000 and thelr prayer that victéry ever may be justified when liberty ig imperilled the el McSbane in volce” o such an aspiration was “one | O FOjice Officer Danlel McS of the greafest services which any man | (07 /28t January, % % in state lson. could do for the young republic.” to-15 oare skt Lowering - skies” and otcasional rain greetted he presidential paty es it ar- Renvy Murray, a negro. whe was feund. president declared that. “to mive ringing |EUIIY of mansisughter for the shootifg o Federal Judgs 3. ¥ w;:mu'lr‘-m in , Del. filed & decision restrain- rived by automobile from Washmgcon | ) nEon s i 7 ing the internal revenue colleetor from but did not dampen the enthusiasm of | collecting by distraint from Alfred I Du the ‘greeting ‘by.-the peope - who lined | the route of a pageant procession which preceded the unveiling and in which the president rode. Thousands of massed and uniformed school children sang and wav- ed flags in tumyltuous greeting. The “dedication” was the center of the nation’s Flag Day celebration and Mr. Harding aopealed for more of the spir- it of Francis Scott Key to be instilled Into Americans of any of themt. I must, of course, except ‘Dixie’ ‘which In the years since Appomattox has. been. claim- ed like every other good thing that the South possessed, as part of the common heritage of the entire people. A sprinkle of raln fell as the presi- wide coal strike. ton, Cal, last Saturday. auditors to turn to shelter 1If they felt it necessary, adding: “I self.” The people cheered and stuck, and the cide. Pont taxes amounting to $1,576, 15. The statement was made at the Whits House that the administration is notjcon- templating any important, immediate or darstic action in the continuing nation- Willlam B. Brown, born 97 years ago, Is t:e youngest shriner and the oldest Knight Templar in San Francisco. He has been a Knight Templar for many years but was initiated into the shrine in Stock- Arthur Hitchcock, 70, wealthy resident of Mount Carmel, was found dead in the dent began speaking, and he told his|basement of his home. Death was due to Inhaling of gas and Medical Examiner 'm a Baptist my- [Joslin said the man had committed sul- president thanked them for his welcome | Robert Bowen. eight year old mom of as he vroceeded to read his manuscript. {Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bowen of Walnut Before the ceremonies, with Mrs, | Grove, Meriden, was fatally injured ‘at Harding, he visited and talked with sev- |3.45 o'clock vesterday afternoon when eral scores of wounded war veterans, |struck by an automobile driven by Samuel Mrs. Harding distributed tlowers, and |Sharnick of Madison. allowed a number of photographic snap- After the ceremonies conpluded ifie shots to be taken of her by the men.| Management of the Lincoln Motor C., purchasel recently at a receivers' sale by president was taken to the home of |Henry Ford will be transferred from Hen- Senator Franer, republican, Maryland, |TY M. and Wilfred C. Leland to the com< for a brief reception to Maryland viti-|bined Ford Motor company and Lincoln zens before returning to Washington. |orsanizations. of Ches] was sentenced to than five years nor more than ht years in the state prison after be- ing found guilty on charges of attempt- Further- | ed” arson, assault with a n always | weapon and assault with intent to kill. Sentence was passed by Judge L. P. dangerous Writs of mandamus commanding the Former U S Minister Tq |American Tobacco company and P. Lor- illard and company o submit to agents of hjll i the federal trade commission books and China Given s_emenm papares concerned in_ the investigation of By French Tribunal the alleged “tobacco trut” were handed court today. T was arrested at Cheshire after having set fire to his d firing a shot which Inflicted Schlesinger the. of the Shipping boara. a flesh wound on Andrew Murty who . iy | as living in the house to protect Mrs.{ 202y N | Buckner from her husband who had 1eft mmatter of liquor sales at sea was not the | MRS. MARSHALL ACQUITTED EMBEZZLEMENT CHARGE City, N. J., June 14—Mrs. Helen Grant Marshall, assistant tax ask the department of justice for a new | collectar of Kearny, was acquitted o by a jury in the Court of Quarter ses- that he would not ansgm gurtis [24ded | sions late today on a charge of hav- t ther letters | ing embezzled 394,000 of the town's on_the subject of liquor selling. funds. Th 4 lo there was no indication tonght | hogs, . o Ueliberated two She had been previously tried and convidted and was sentenced to from four to seven years imi/-isonment. s | This ws after Harry B. Caithness, on the | tax collector, h: heels of the attack yesterday on the board | the same cha!g:d s \by Representative Gallivan, Mrs. Marshail's conviction wad set her appeal that she could not ¥, as Caithness, her superior in office, had been acquitted. = Thi VEEDICTS AGGREGATING 323,500 woman has been assistant to the tax thirteen years and held the When Caithness took office. GEORGE S. WARD SILENT REGARDING THE SUBPOENA drist Joseph: Oster, of -Hoboken, T 23, 1921, dashed' into ‘a Ing- thfee -men and injuring several oth- | suit of ti ers. _Several months ago acquitted of a charge of murder in'con- nection with the incident. T The four plaintifts Albert W. Kruger, whoiwas killed: 3154 ‘ 000; Charles Mosie,§7,500; Adrian Post,| Formo: $5,000; and Adolph W, art, ‘81900, phor, H.%%;fia “automobile on the night| Williamsort, Pa., June 14. George S. t Ward, of New Rochelle, N. Y., who Is ‘Dolitich) parade in Secaucus, N..J., kill-[in this city, in connection with a civil he Ward Baking company, was %, was | 6tlll uncommunicative today ouhis in- tentions regarding the subpoena to ap- \ | pear before the Westchester . county Who' recefved | Brand -jury which is investigating the awards todsy, residents e of , Sgcauous. | slaying of Clarence Peters, to which his are: Mrs. Emma D. Kruger, sf@ow af | son, Walter S. Ward, has confessed. sa has a world monopoly of eam- to New York by Federal Judge Knox. , Walter C. Sanders. Charles W. Gifford and M. J. McBridge, the latter a pilot, are |- belleved to have been lost at sea during the storm of Suhday. They left Provi- dence, R. I, Thursday to dellver the mo- torboat Esther in New Rochelle Satur- day evening. They have not been heard from. A check for $165.000 in payment for the Toss of the schooner Florence - Thur- low. sunk on May 20, 1920, by the ship- ping board steamship Laramiie off the coast of ‘New Jersey, was tendered to Peter H. Crowell, Boston, one of the own- “|{ers of the schooner by the federal court. United States Attorney Robert 0. Har- s of Boston recelved from the New Eng- land Society for the Enforcement of Pro- hibition a request thit liguor cases bs heard by United - States -Commissioner i Jury. . ‘Willlam A. Hayes, 2nd, during the past year be reviewed by the federal grand Justice Monet, in the court of King's bench, Montreal, characterized as a ver- ftable lle, an article published yesterday by La Presse, to the effect that-the allen- ists named to examine Adelard Delorme, had decided the former priest was'insane, and should not be tried for the murder of his half brother, Raoul. cago representative of a belting conbern, was. found in the basement of the. com- pany’s loop offices in Chicago with abul- let wound in the left temple and a gash Damascus has meted out a sen- |Cide or murder. tence of 20 years in prison to Charles R. Crane the former Min- Shock and grief over the railfosd cross- ing accident near Absecon in which John The body of Harry J. Wemmett, Chi- across the forehead. . The police were un- The French Military Court at |decided whether the case was one of sul- ister to China from the United |H. Stratton, of Atlantic Clty, and his en- States, - for Inciting recent, dis tire fdmily lost their 1lives turbances In - Syrfa, after hearing |brought on the death of Mrs. by default. i l Paris, tho not_under.survelance, dren at Pleassnteilla N. L - Mary Stratton as she was attending the ‘fun. Mr. Crane 18 now 18 |ora)s of Stratton, his wite and four chil- B scale conference 1o accept arbitration ; the | aperators and -dealers. who have falled anthraclte operators’ representatives Jate |to eomply with the administratios" today flatly refused fo prGceed further in | pian fo rvoluntary price restraint during the negotiaticns, unless the' miners -agree | the strike. to arbitration. ~Thé confererice adjsurn- ed’ without setting meeting. While .ihe ' majority of operators and a date’ for Another | dealers, Mr. Hoover said tonight, are prices il inous Both sides’ regard_the negotiations as | o nE 0 the pian. h. v broken off, af least or.the. po coal| in @%tricts which have refused 1 E accept the voluiary program-have risen u;:l:’:‘m ;-':!: ’-;;;::'Dm;‘:' to &s much. as u.?u- and the average = . War o o riner, spokesman for the, operatofs, said | Price has advanced 36 cents & ton after the conference. “It looks Itke & the scheme was adopted. ] strike,” asserted Phil- Advancing prices of anthracite coml ip Murray, vice president of. the unfon |4r¢ 4180 1o be considered ut the and spokesman for. the .scale committee; | €N WHICH is to be attended by :;."{3: “We will call out strike votés now 3 g teict “heddquarters,” on' June , 2% m dealers. comni! appointed from Frem, s | Soa1 Sdsoctagion.at the yn::efi- nwiil ray-u;dmmm. , 3 H.—Two Feeent’in-] pital £ undergo- ts CEecuts thent TeamerpeceE The experiment .was conducted by Dr. John Howard-Frick, in an effort to al- viate the meitsl ‘torture which his. pa-' tient, a naturally nervous-pérson, ‘would haye had to endure‘under the kmife. During the firat opetation, -for appen- dieltis,” the girt remaihéd ‘oblivious of the surgeons. The' ardio recslver strapped |’ over her ears, her-only .comment was that she could ‘hear ~ perfectly” = the strains of music coming «through space. The second operation was for the re- moval of gall stones. - Through it the pa- tient entertained the nurses with laughing |to ‘the’ protest filed by t3e comment.on the “good execution” of the |eompanies. artist who was_ transmitting Chopin for i her. She even offered occasional criti- | INYEREST CEASES TODAY oN cisms when, she sald, the pedalling was at fault. elor;. of She was on the operating table 45 min- utes. Her . pulse a - 1l conse throughout, Dr. Frick asserted ‘at the|3.3-4.per cent Victory motes wil tnd of the experiment. tomorrow and all these securities should 3 3¢ FTR CENT VICTORY NOTES remained constant| Washingtori, June 14.—Interest on all be preseritéd for ~payment, Secretary Melion States tonight. R Redemption ‘of the thres and thres-, fourths per-cent Victory notes on June 15, he explained, was announced in Feb- ruary and 5 date approximately $140- 000,000 of these obligations have beem Tedeemed, leaving about $240,000,000 of the notes -outsta: i 1,300 CASUALTIES ,IN BATTLE - NOETHEAST OF TIEN T5IS the mwpfiufflm This honorary degree was con m‘u.*m-,w; | a7 _member_of- ‘which' s looked - ‘honors Mr; Christian ‘'wis W(fi c ! ot