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VOL. LXIV WHITE OUSE MEETING O SIFT COAL STRKE FUTLE Conference ‘Was Said to be an Effort by the Administration to Bring About a Settlement of the Bituminous Coal Strike—Union Policy Remains Unaltered and Unyield-| ing—Miners’ President Declares the Country Will be Facing a Serious Shortage of Coal Within a Few Weeks. ‘Waghington, June 26.—(By the ‘A. I’.) —Administration efforts to bring about a settlement of the bituminous coal strike met a preliminary check today. After conferences with President Iard- ing and Secretary of Labor Davis, John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of America, announced tha: the union policy still was unaltered and un- .yielding in its insistence that a new wage scale must be set up for the strike ridden mining districts by national cr semi-national conferences with operators. ington last Tuesday and £pon his arrival Sunday was taken to Secrstary Davis' private apartments for a protracted dis- cussion running several hours past midnight, to be renewed later today at the labor department. “We talked over the gensral problems of the bituminous . industry and the strike,” Mr. Lewis declared on leaving the White House, “its over-development and intermittently and projects for uts stab- lization. “1 explained to the president the fu- The meeting between Mr, Hardidg, | .. P . % S tility - of attempting settlements in in: Secretary Davis and Mr. Lewls, Whlch|gicig0a) mining districts. ‘There are no took place around the White House lun- groups of operators willing to hazard cheon table, was last of a series of con- | i ompetitive relationsaip with cther B CIRchAAt Bunaky . scale until they know what - their . com- . t 4 The coun- Officially no statement vas fortheom- | Petitors are going to try will be facing a serious shortage of ing, th ough, Secretary Hoovar was also | ™% WO 10 CRERE & DEO S BOTE® e | N 1l % h to take'care immediately after Mr.gLewis loft. Ap-|2ble to transport enoug of industries and domestic consumers.” There were no indications of what further steps might be taken by the goy- ernment after the meetings . had been concluded. Mr. Lewis expected to re- parently no spokesmen for the mins ov- erators, whose refusal before last April to meet in the semi-national wage scale negotiations of the central i field was the controversial point in the strike, were in capital for today's dis | main in Waghington for anntaer day but cussion was said to have no appointments with Mr. Lewis was first invited to Wash- | officials. . ot R e T - DEATH ANNOUNCED OF THE PRINCE OF MONACO PROGRESS MADE BY SENATE ON THE TARIF BILL Washington, June 26.—Confining it- #elf more closely to the tariff bill today than it hag on any day since the measure came before it, the senate cleaned up the wood schedule by voting 49 to 18, to retain shingles on the free list and then disposed of all coramittee amendments to thy tobacco schedule. Tomorrow it will eéme 1o the agricultural schedule with its multitude of dutics on farm products. The controversy over shingies was condned almost wholly to tae republiean gide and took up most of the day. After voting to approve the committee action in striking out the house rats the seriate rajected 45 to 18 an amendmeat by Senator Borah. republican, - Idaho, to make the duty 25 cents a thousand. The republican agricultural tariff bloc spht on each vote. Only two controversiss oft arose over the toba rates propossd were approved without roll calls. The committee majority re- ceded from its recommendations for du- ties of $2.35 a pound on unstemmed wropper tobacco and $3 on such tobacco stemmed, accepting the house figures of 3210 and $2.75, respectively. = Senalor Pomerene, democrat, Ohio, movad to cut the $2.10 duty to $1.85, but his nmend- ment was rejected. Senator Shortridge, republican, Cali- fornia, opposed a committee amendment striking out the honse-duty of $1.a pound on Turkish tobacco and gave notice thut when the bill reached the senate he would seek to have the duty restored. 1l said large quantitiés of this tobaceo had Leen produced in his state during the war and could be produced with proper tarif pro- tection. Senator Simmons, - democrat, North Carolina, led the fight in 1avor of the committee amendment. Other committee rates approved wore: 35 cents a pound on unstemmed fillor to- bacco ; fifty cents a pound on such tobac- o It stemmed and 35 cents a pound on scrap tobaceo. Paris, June 26.—Prinde Albert Ho- nore Charles, of the. principality of Mo: naco, dfed here today at 5 o'clock. Prince Albert of Monaco, ruler of ‘the smallest principality in the worid, with= in -whose eight square miles is the fa- mous international gaming town of Monte Carlo, was well known in the Unjted States as a sportsman and scien- tist. - One of his old friends was tha late Colonel W. F. (Buffalo Bill) Cody, on_whose ranch in Wyoming he went hunting years ago. The prince made three visits to this country, the first in 1868, as a sailor in the Spanish navy, when he obtained a three months' leave of absence, the sec- ond in 1913, when he passed consider- able time in the west; and the third in April, 1921, when’he received the Alex- ander Agassiz gold medal from the N tional Academy of Science and & wsimi- lar medal from the Nationa] Geographi- cal soclety for his resedrches in oceano- graphy. He was also -an enthusiastio.- pale- ontologist,” but held -that the. sea. held few, if. any, secrets of the antiquity of man, ’ 3 > .Ono of the prince’s most valuable con- tributions to submarine knowlédge was his charting of the drift of both Gérmian and . allied mines irthe Ni and Eng- lish channels. - Printe Albert was born Nov. 13, 1848, and ‘succceded his father, Prince Chafles 11T in 1889. He' was twice married, first fo Laldy aty Dougias. Hamilton of Eng- land in 1869 and second, to the Dowager Duchess | de Richelien in 1889. ‘A son by his first wife, Prince Louis, who was a soldier in the French army, is expected to succeed him. oMnaco is a French protectorate. moment co schedule and all NO MUSIC, NO EULOGY AT e ‘FUNERAL OF WM. ROCKEFELLER Tarrytown, N. Y., June 26.—With sim- ple ceremony, the body ~of William Rockefeller, brother of.'John D. Rocke- felier, and one'of America’s wealthiest men, was laid_away in.a receiving vault in Sleepy Hollow ‘cemetery this: after- noon. - The body will"be left I until the mausoleum,- planned 'and started by Mr. Rockefeller before his: d_e}lh, is com- pleted. 1 oL . The only service was the reading of the Episcopal ritual. There was no mu- sic and no eulogy; in deferenze o Mr. Rockefeller's - oft-repeated wish. The service was held in' the . music room of Rockwood Hall, the Rockefeller home. at North Tarrytown, with only members of the family and a few friends to hear. The Rev. Charles Baldwin of St. Mary's Episcopal church, “Scarborough, oficiat- ed. SECRET SERVICE MEN ARE GUARDING MORSE DOCUMENTS Portiand. Me., June 26.—A freight car load of correspondence and books, seiz- #d by the federal government at the time of the indictment -of Charles W. Morse and chhers on the chirge of conspiracy to defraud the United Statés arrived her today from Washington. It was closely guarded by secret service men, who will maintain their vigil while it is in the federal couht house. The shinment was made at the re- quest of counsel for Morse and Rupert M. Much, of Augusta. to be used in op- Dosing their removal from Main to the southern district of New York when their hearing is resumed Friday before Com- missloner Arthur Chapman SENATOR SNEED'S STATEMENT ABOUT HERRIN MINE - RIOT IMPOSSIBLE FOR KAISER TO GET AWAY FROM DOORN 26.—Agprehension former Kaiser Wil fam attemat to slip away from Doorn and re-enter Germany in the event of s royalist rising following the assassin- ation of Foreign Minister Rathenau, ac- eording to the correspondént of the Daly ¥ail at The Hague. The writer. however, quotes J. B. Kan, Herrin, Tlis., June 26 (By the A. P)— Suggestions- that- the opening .of the ill- fated strip mine of the Southern Tilinois Coal company was backed by tue coal op- erators of the state and that “the United States Steei. Trust was also assisting” the owner of the mine, W. J. Lester, was contained in a statement tonight by Senator W..J. Sneed, a sub-district min- ers' official. “Statements were made Lendon, June sts in Holland 1 5o by many," gecretary of the Dutch home office, as | gnoqq said, “that the ‘steel trust was as- saying that such apprehension s ing in the opefiing of the Illinois groundless . | mines on a non-union basis.” ‘We have no evidence that the kais- | mo slaughter was termed a “horrible has any such intention” he said. | yoi by Senator Sneed. -He again de- nd the survelilence maintained around | 70q the Southern Illinois company was g0 close that it would be im-| U 0 e artair. possible for him to get away even it hel “Mr. Lester ahd his company should be made to pay dearly for this outrage éven to the extent of taxing them for the next ten ‘years and making it im- possible for him to ever again fasten info any community such stigma as has come to Williamson county, through his efforts and which every American citizen should and does resent,” the statement wished.” WILFUL MURDER VERDICT AGAINST WILSON ASSASSINS London, June 26 (By the A. P.)—A verdict of wilful murder against James! Connolly and James O'Brien was return- M this afterncon by the coroner's jury | concluded. ™ the inquest into the killing of Field = Marshal Sir Henry Hughes Wiison, as-| DEMURRER TO INDICTMENT sassinated last Thursday. The two men IN ALCOHOL CONSPIRACY CASE accused did not attend today's hearing, Hariford, June 26.—Demurrer. to the indictment in the case against Walter . Anderson and William 1. Keogh, of Bridgeport. charged with conspiracy to sell sixty-four cans of alcohol was ar- gued in the federal court hera today, be- fore judge Thomas. Attorneys fc:. the arcused arsued that the indicmest did not charge any conspiracy to commit a crime, basing the contention on the wording of the prohibition amiendment which does mot £ay one shall not sell in- toxicating liquor, but rather that ona #ball not sell it for beverage purposes. on_adviee of counsel The witnesses add~d little to the de- tails aiready published 6f the murder wnd of the pursuit of the two men un- ler arrest SHOT MARRIED WOMAN WHO REFUSED TO ELOPE WITH HIV| J.. June 26—FEnraged. the police may, because the wife of Al- exander Gree, at whose home he had ived for several years, refused to elope with him Bayonne, N Francis Kiwiatowsk! today (I was pointed cut by them tkat the In- shot the woman five times and then|cictment did not charge conspiracy to turned the gun on himself, sending a|szei]l without a permit. bullet into his head. The two will die, At- hospital authorities said. terney George M. Cohen replied for the government. Briefs will be filed. Peter Emery, of Bridgeport, Was fined . L, opened quietly $50 for haypg materials for maxing L o g B e The 23rd week of the strike in thej Blackstone Valley, westerday. . e e Members of the Gulf and Pa- cific Federations Vote 93 and 95 Per Cent. San_Franeiseo, . June . 26.—Approxi mately: 93° per cent of the shop men on the Southern'Pacific company system on the coast and in the Gulf states have voted for a strike against recent wage decreases, while 95 per cent of the Union Pacific " and "Santa Fe shop men have voted to go out, it was announced to- day by L. S. Gordon? secretary of the Southern Pacific Federation of Shop Em- ployes. The federation includes 20,000 shop workers. — OVERWHELMING MAJORITY IN FAVOR OF A WALKOUT Detroit, June 26.—(By the A. I)— Early returns on the strike vote taken by the United Brotherhood, of “Mainten- ance of Way Employes and Railway Shop Laborers following the recent wage cut ordered by the United States rail- road labor board, indicate an ‘“over-- whelming majority” in favor of a walk- out, conditional, however, upon similar action by other crafts affected by board reductions, it was announced -here to- night at the general headquarters cf the maintenance men. Tabulation of the ballots started this morning and it was said about 40,600 had been checked. It was added the vote was considered “fairly. representative.’ Exact figures were withheld under in- structions from E. F. Grable, gran1 pres- ident, now in Chicago conferring with the leaders of other unions whose member- ships have been affected by the wage cuts and who, it was said, would consider taking some joint action in protest. Some of the membership, according to officials, favers striking irrespective of the action taken by other wunians, but the greater percentage, it was emphasized, | favors -a strike only in the event oth werkers participate. SENATE COMMITTEE ADVOCATES CONTINUED OCCUPATION OF HAITI ‘Washington, June 25.—Indefinite con- tinuance of American military occupation of Haitl, but'with a reduction of the ma- rine force, was recommended in an unan- imous report. presented today by the spe- cial senatecommittee which for 1nonths has been. investigating American admin- is'tration in Haiti and Santo Domingo. <The compmittee deferred annotincament of ‘nts findings on Dominican affairs “in view of ‘the negotiations happily bezun between the state department and the Dominican leaders looking to the termin- ation of military government ia Santo Domingo. declaration that. early withdraw: |, al of or drastic reduction in the Am marine n’ force in Halti would be' followéd gertainly by brigandage and revolution was made in the report signed by: Senator MeCormick, republican, Ii- nofs, chairman ; and Senators Oddie, re- publican, Nevado; Pomerene, democrat, Ohio, and Jones, democrat, New Mexico, who have held protracted hearings and recently toured Haiti and Santo Domingo. The committee found that on the whole American administration in Haiti had been of * great benefit to the Haitians was. so regarded, it said, by a vast ma- jority. The American record, however, was. described as one both of “failure and achievement,” the report stated, adding that thére had been some “blunders” and a few ‘instances of cruelty against natives by members of the military force. “In ‘brief under the the report £ald, “the peace of the republic, the solv- ency. of its’ govérnment ‘and the security of its peoplé have been established for the ‘first time in many years. -In justification- of American: intervan- tlen; the report sald that “the chronic anarchy-into which Haitl had fallen, the exhaustion of its credit, the threatened in- térventlon of the German governinent and the actual landing of the French naval forces, all 'imperiled the Monroe-Doctrina ] rnment of the United States 'tb take the successive steps set forth to establish ‘order in Haiti, to heip institute’ 2 ‘government_as nearly rapre- sentative as 'might be, and to assure the collaboration of the governments of the Uhited States afd Haiti for the future mafutenance’ of peace and the develop- ment of the Haitian people.” “Your- committes believes,” the report continued, “that doubtless the American representatives might have done better and that they have made mistakes, which in the light of. experience they would not make again;.that not.only did the treaty fail to take cognizance of certain reforms essential to. Haltian “progress, but that in the choice of its agents and the determ- ination of their responsibilities, the gov- ernment of the United. States was not always happy.”- . American intervention, the report raid, has however been marked by ‘constrie- tive service” to the Haitian people and the . committee - said there- “must be: co- operation by literate - Haitians with the | Rairoad Shop Hen | | B. and. R. Knight," Inc., in\the Pawtux- American officials. ‘High praise was given the marine corps for its work in Haiti in the report which by marnes and ‘local gendarmie, only a few of which were declared proven, while many charges were declared false and “others basedon hearsay testimcny by illiterate natives. MARCH OF STRIKING 3 MINERS WAS PREVENTED Fairmont, W. We., June 26.—A march of striking miners and their sympathizers fromMonogah, a mining village near here, to Fairmort, was prevented- to- day by C. Prank Keeney, district pres- ident of the United Mine Workers of America, accroding to reports to city and county authorities. He - persuaded the men to go home. BILL FOR REDUCTION ¢ OF IMMIGRATION QUOTAS Washington, June 26.—Reduction of immigration quotas to be admitted to the United _States 'from three per cemt. to two pef cent., effective July 1, 1923, is provided for in a bill introduced today by Chairman Johnson of the house im- migration committee. / ACCEPTS TASK OF FORMING A NEW CABINET IN POLAND Warsaw, June 26.—Arthur Sliwinski. vice president of the Warsaw municipal- ity, has accepted the task of forming a cabinet to succeed that of Premier Po- nikowski, which resigned on June 6. " There were 13.0 wool auction sale It was a poor s bales offered at the London yesterday. ’ dealt at length wth charges of cruelty | f [ -Physician issued an -statements. ‘Winchester Company and the Simmons place “fs next-annuai ‘conference of the X onference of ‘Social Work. Y., committed suicide at a local sanator- fum in-Stamford by hanging. To Pag: Particular Attention Federal authorities - are investigating the disappearance of a quantity of lquor from the ‘appraisers’ stores/of the Unit- ed States customs in Boston. Mrs. Hazel Hirsh, Released on Bail, Takes Wounded Hus- That His Wife Shot Him—Several Details of the Af- fair Must be Cleared Up Before theMSIly"fil ne Eye of Mrs. Hirsh ouses of B. New Haven, June —Patrol of the Connecticut coast line and blockade of the ports against: rum runners who are alleged to' havebrought into the state $50,000 worth of liquor in the last few days,“constituted the action decided up- on by officials of the customs and pro- hibition departments ‘at a meeting held at ‘the federal building yesterday. The patrolling will be done by the former &sub ‘chasers now forming the prohibi- tion' navy under command of Captain Charles Thropm. - United States District Attorney George H. Cohen and United States Collector. of Customs James J. MoGovern of Bridgeport were actively present at the conference. It was stated that considerable liquor smuggling was being put over in Long Island sound and particularly on the Connecticut shore at and between the ports of New Lgndon and New Haven. et Valley have agreed to. vacate the, premises on or before June 30. ; According. to the department of agrical- ture the condition -of -the: Egyptian -cot- ton crop In May is satisfactorysbecause of favorable weather. | Shooting Can be Determined—One Shows Bruise. Freeport, N. Y.. June 26.--(By tho A. knows I did everything possible to aveld P.)—The- mysterious shooting of Oscar|his being shot by trying to save him. I A. Hirsh, wealthy electiical contractor,)do not care to go into other mat as on the lawn of Reine Dav: foriner | that seems to be the sole matter of in< mevie actress, late Saturday night, took |terest to the public now. « “Mr. Hirsh is back from the. hespital another turn today w Mrs. Hazel Hirsh, released on ball afi~- having been|and is living home the same as usual T accused of shooting her nusband, took|am doing everything to murse him bagk tim home from the Mineola hospital to|to full health. I trust the public will ex- nurse him Lech tu healib. cuse me from any further statement, as it must realize the position in which .1 Both Mr. and Mrs, Hirsh denied the had pulled the trigger in a scuffie, which | am placed by this unfortunate aocl- e had followed their departure irom a 1 party given by Miss Davies, but neither Assistant District Attorney Elvan X, said who had fired the ehot—whether; Edwards, who has charge of the inves- Mr. Hirsh or'a thjrd party. tigation stated that, so far, his inquir- In her first public statement since tha|les had shown no traces of anything but party broke up in a wild scramble as the |8 quiet Saturday night party on the Da- shot was heard on the quiet street, Mrs. | Vies' lawn before the shooting. H Hirsh said that, far_from firing the shot, | hewever, that there were several, she was doing “everything possible to|Which must be cléared up real story of the shootifig preveat it. termined. Hirsh, who is well known. in the tow: theatrical colony, defended his wife. One, he said, concerned the finding of two revolvers. Hirsh, the proseculo? “You don't think I'd bes fool enough said, admitted owning bote. to come back to a wife who had shot ’ me,"do you?" he was quoted by his at-| One is a .32 calibre and the éther.a torne; 1f she was the kind of a wo- calibre, One shot had . b%en fired man who would shoot, would she be the|from each gun. Hirsh was hit in the be the kind I could shield? If she shot|mouth and threat by the bullet from me, I certainly would not have attempt-|the smailer weapon, Mr. Edwards as’ ed to shield her.” serted. Both guns were-found on the “I have been asked to make a state-|lawn, which became the center of as ment,” said Mrs. Hirsh this afternoon, |excited gathering as Hirsh fell. } “but in my condition- at thig time I do| The other bothersome point.. Mr. Ed: not wish to say anything other than|wards =aid; concerned Mrs, Hirsh.-- She this: “It is silly for ranyone to #nink|appearsd at a hearing bfore a. poiice that I would do anything to harm.my|judge with one eye injured. Whils it M4 husband. Our relations have been too|not appear to be a regular “black cye’t close. it was cut and discolored. So far ho at- & tempt has been made to explain it, Mr, Belglum reports that | during/ the first three months: this vear' exports showed an increase of 176,594 tons over the same period last year. i Accordingite Controller of tha Currency Crissinger, national bank deposits- be- tween March 10 and May ‘b increased $376,550,000. No move. was made in Westport to take before a justice of the peace the persons who were arrested by the state police in raids' for liquor. SAYS RUSSIA HAS MADE NO CHANGE IN POLICY Captain George D. Wamilton, of the Fifth Marines was killed at Gettysburg, Pa., when his airplane crashed to earth in a tail spin. His horbe was in Wash- ington, D. C. The Hague, June 26 (By the A. P.)— Maxim Litvinoff, head of the Russizn delegation, declared upon his arrival here today that the. Russians had made no change in their external and internal policy since the Genoa conference and hoped to_find conditions at The Hague meeting more favorable for an arrange- ment of credits. The governments at Genea, he said, were willing to admit the princlple ‘that Russia ‘should have cred- its, but nobody there was able to assume definite obligzations and andemake to afford Russia the credits required. He 'hoped to find financial and com- mercial groups at The Hague, which would have the authorization of their governments to make definite proposal The Hague conference in his opinion, would begin where the Genoa conference énded, taking the agreements reached at Genoa as a basis for further negotia- tions, . ¥ Nicolai ‘Lenine, Litvinoff asserted, was merely suffering from a nervous break- down’; he would not be succeeded by a triumvirate or other . substitutes, and was expected back to work in a month or two. He denied that Joffe was in Holland, saying heé was in Petrograd: Litvinoff painted a rosy picture of the present- day Russia, which he described as far different from what it waj when the Genoa conference convened. Then famine was rampant, now the harvest is promiging, even to a surplus of grain for exportation.” ‘As ‘proof of the in- creased popularity of the government, he cited ‘the immense . demonstrations at Moscow' for the present regime during the-trial of’the Social revalntionaries. “Nearly all Moscow puicicipated In these mettings,’ including’ workmen, sol- dlers. ' “peasants” ‘he remarked, Ten thousand pesos (185,000 American money). have been semt from Mexico City” into_the ‘Cuernavaca hills, to ran- som .A. Bruce Bielaski, who was seiz- ed by Mexlcan bandits. the be de- Although the picket limes _at the Pa- cifice mills, in Lawrence, Mass., were large yesterday morning, they were or- derly and the crowd was undemonstra- tive except for a little booing. 25 Dr. Eugene Schriber, whe was kid- nepped in Macon. Ga.. and ordered to quit- that city, was well known in- Bos- ton as a physician before removing to Jacksonville, Fla., in 191% The Postal Telegraph commereial cable system has bought from the .government of Newfoundland, the ‘submarine ‘ cable from Canso, Nova Scotla, to Newfound- land. husband knows 1 was not respon- sible in any way for his being shot, and State pollce made 12 ralds in Connee- ticut Sunday afterndon. and evening on places alleged to-have been violating' the prohibition laws. Twelve persons were arrested in the raids. COMMONS VOTES CONFIDENCE IN GOV'T IRISH POLICY The Palestine Development Conncil of New York announced that $1,000,000 has been guaranteed by Jews in this country to harness the water -supply of the Jord- an. river, Palestine: % London, June 26 (By the A. P.)—Af- ter a debate, which was not so heated or jous -ms’ was expected, the government tonight .won a virtual vote of confidence on its policy, when a “die- hard” motion proposed by Sir Frederick Banbury, - unionist, for .a reduction of the chief secretary for Ireland's Dl'll:;y - o ng ac 95, a n% NO IMPROPER MANIPULATION - OF MEXICAN PETROLETM _ New, York. June 26_Last week's pys rotechnics in Mexican P ere Tesumed in. more Spectasular m‘n _ ek establishing a new N record at 204 1-2, an extreme addvance 23 1-4 points, and closl 3 4 gain of 13 3-4 points. R James Fay, ‘of Harwick, reported to The further rise of “Mex Pate” fols police y an of lowed Teperts -of «fin ofs - with subpose for d" hold-up men early yesterday-at a railroad underpass while returning home from Palmer, Mass. . - :‘I’tflfll.ed over the “week- ect that the authorities.of the found .. dér: “Some ‘peop) seem to think that the questions of pri- vate property and debts should be taken up, befors the question of credits.” To “this’ Litvinoff 'replied: “Well, we think just the opposits. ~Of course, We are ready.to discuss anything, but if we cannot " reach ; 2n_agreément on credits, we Taight be obliged to revert to our mmf'c‘uma which” we abandoned at Genoa. in a spirit of concession. This was a reference to ~the soviet claims for damages caused by foreign interventién. © " T M. Litvinoff proceeded to explain the decree promulgated at Moscow since the Genoa convention, which he maintained gave foreigners and Russians the right to own property, except land, provided the property was acquired after the pass- e was careful to 2dd, however, -that decree does mot affect ‘property already matlonalized. Combination of the Interests of .the ‘Winston - Spencer Churchill, secretary for the' colonies; in -his statement on Irish affairs, made it clear that the im- perial government would -expeéct the pro- visional -government, row. that it had se- cured the people’s mandate, to take the necessary steps to assert its ‘complete authority, and with équal frankness em- Hirdware Companies was announcad n Nev: Haven as having been enterel in- te. . the movement, but according in m:; circles,: no_stall o & mm"‘ ? on - state: ', the co able y = TR . Shares of tha Pan-Amery:3n company, which.owns. through its vast stock hoid! participated in the rise, mast_six p ghw&’i‘ m Transactions in' Mexican . - proximated 40,000 shares, snd the over in ‘the two Pan-Ametican amounted to 100,000 shsres. - Aside from. the_intermi shown by railg, and a holdings of clearing “héuse banks ahd pyfparations undet way to.meet. Julv interast and dividend caused a gradual hardening ofcall mon- ey rateg from 4 to 5 1-2-per cent. ', e i A proclamation has been issued in an extra of the Canada Gazette prohibiting the exportation' of gold coin, gold bullion and fine gold bars until July Y, 1923, phasized that the -British .government would not allow the coercion of Ulster by the south—in fact, that failure to ob- serve the treaty ‘would*mean the Brit- ish- government- dom of action. , Premier Lloyd eGorge in a -brief speech, winding up the debate, repeated the familiar arguments in support of the government policy and contended that the Irish provisional govérnment now had the people. of Ireland ‘behind it. and what it did, failed~to'‘do, would be the real test of whether it was it to gov- ern. The "question of - Field Marshal Wil- son's murder did_not figure in the de- bate as largely as might have been an- ticipated. Home . Secretary Shortt was. able “to show that the ministers and others from whom - police protection. had been with- drawn had acquiesced.in the withdraw- al. The fishing schooner Desife, ~ which safled from Gloucester, Mass., Saturday on a trip for swordfish was back ves- terday badly damaged after striking a submerged object 48 miles southwest of Highland Light on Sunday. résuming complete free- A barn. 30 by 25.feet, was. knooke{ ten feet from its foundation at South- bridge, Mass., when a string of freight cars ran off the'end of a siding, from which the bumper-had been temporarily removed. WARD'S LAWYERS CALL FOR MINUTES OF GRAND JUEY Joseph C. Pelletier, former. district attorney of Middlesex county, =~ Mass., filed in federal court a denial of all the allegations contained in the petition zeeking his disbarment In the United States_ district cour White. Plajns, N.. Y., Juna 26.—Su- preme Court Justice Morschauser iate te- day signed an order giving the district attorney five ‘days to supply Walter S. Ward's lawyers @ copy of tha minutes of he grand - jury’ which indicted him for the first degres murder. The oider .was signed after Justice Morschauser had read a lengthy -afidavit from District At- torney Weeks protesting against the mo- 0 the defendant and his counsel,” read one section ‘of. Mr. Weeks' affidavit, “re- fused. to divulge the mature of the ai- leged blackmail and deponent has used every means within his power and has Spent largs. sums of money endeavoring to prove the de(enannl‘ix story of selt-de- vithout" avai i B arcd that the motion to see the,grand jury minutes was an attempt to force him to go to trial be- fore he was ready and he u-ened“thn under no circumstances would he “sur- his rights.” m"x:‘he-r order was filed iln tha, county £ st before it was close it ?fl:\ed”\:auus'g Mr. Weeks had left the court house, will not be served on him until tomorrow. REQUESTS RULING ON SALE OF LIQUOR ON SHIPS ‘Washington, June 26.—Secretary Mel. lon has formally, requested Attarney General Daugherty for a ruling as o the legality of the sale of liquor_ on pink board vessels outside the three limit, it was stated today at the. treas- ury. It has been officially held by coun- sel for the prohibition enforcement .uni¢ that the treasury lations, drawn, do not prohibit such ABANDON ATTEMPT TO- REACH g PEAK OF MOUNT EVEREST William T. Sheehan,. who Is alleged to . have -victimized ‘banks _in_ several cities in New York state and New. Eng- land by a check forging scheme, is be- ing .held In Attlebgro, Mass, on a charge of grand larcency for the police of Buffalo. ¢ London, June 26.—(By The A. P.)— Mount Everest has again baffled the best efforts of man. The Calcutta correspondent of the Daily Telegraph today confirms previ- ous reports that Brigadier General C. G. Bruce, head of tle present' expedi- tion, has been .forced to the conclusion that persistence in the effort to scale the peak would only result in useless tragedy. General Bruce abandon further dition in which Congressman Copley, of Aunrora, WL, following an investigation of post-war conditions in Germany declared the Ger- man government has solved the workers’ problems in taking over dwellings and fixing the rent scale. , as nmow sales,” bat the rultng when made will definitely ‘de- termine the question. & Request for the ruling, it was’ mid, was made at the urging of Prohibftion Commissioner Haynes and ani reply from Mr. Daugherty was in order to settle.finally the g P precipitated by lolphus Busch, ' 34, in connection - with the' shipping. /board's practice of operating bars at e Accompanying the mm ot ficlals said, was a brief pre by licitor Mapes A bill thorizing a loan of §350,- 000,000 was passed in the Canadian house of commons without debate. The funds will be used to retire outstanding loans and treasury bills. was most reluctant to attempts, but the con- the -two last climbing parties returned, the advice of his med- ical officers and the certainty of worse| weather conditions daily forced him to a decision, sags the writer. Major H. T. Morshead the worst suf- ferer from frostbite, G. L. Mallory and another ‘member of the party also were badly bitten, and several others less se- verely., . ‘The correspondent quotes *“one of the greatest authorities on Himalayas” as saying that Bruce's “glorious failure” has proved conclusively that the sum- mit {s almost unattainable. The -au- thoritative view’in India is that if any expedftion started earlier in the season it might be - barely. possible to reach ‘within a thousand feet of the top, but that the last lap could only be covered by almost superhuman effort, under un- precedently favorable weather condi- tions and bv men who faced the cer- tainty that they would never return, Counsel for Willlams Creasy of Cov- ington, K: who is in Mineola jail charged with the murder of Miss Edith Lavoy, school teacher, stated that he was prepared to prove conclusively that tha young woman had taken her own life. A. Bruee Bielaski, former chlef of the investigation bureau .of the American department of justice, is reported to have been kidnapped and held for ranson near Cuernavaca, in the state- of . Morelos, Mexico, together with Manuel Barcena, an attorney of Mexicala. CONGRESSMAN VOIGT CONTINUES HIS FILIBUSTER Washington, June 26.—After laying in cold storage all day the Voight filibuster broke out again in ‘the house tonight, abruptly halted proceedings and forced adjournment until tomorrow. A ‘Wisconsin * republican, m,::gng the filibuster without help, demanded a roll call at the opéhing, which showed 284 members present, or 33 more than | the largest mumber veting Saturday. Thereafter he held back permitting the grain- futures: bill, the only measure up during the day, to jog along. But when it went from the committee of the whole to the house praper with fourteen amend- . ments; Mr. ‘Volgt demanded a separate vote on each. Tha bells brought 263 members scur- rying to the chamber, to vote on the first of the fourteen, Then quite unexpected- iy, Mr. Voigt withdrew his demand and the house cheered. : A moment later, however. just as the bijl was up for passage, the Wisconsin representative called for the reading of | drowned. the enfrossed copy of the 16 Dages. Tt| Hope had almost been abands S had mot been engrossed -and the houselthe men by Captain Jeffrey mm“”'“" i auit four of his crewd;ho P re.:;a and - brought -to Halifax. e ooner, f WINCHESTEE AND SIMMONS which was a prospective contender for[ufe may imperil th terénce; . th COMPANIES CONSOLIDATED |the international fishermen’s races mext|Point out that :::n can be 1o fall was reported a hopeless wreck. - |conversationz about lénding money opening credits untll ‘'some satisfaction treasury which excepted shipping board along with forsign craft,. so sto turn any position. the’ attorney gens might take. Action by the state convention of tho Fraternal Order of Eagles in Waterbury on Saturday endorsing the old-ags pe; sion movement inaugurated by the Na- tional Aerie of the order a year ago is understood to mean that in the coming year the local aeries in this state will continue their support of-the plan. RUSSIA WANTS CREDITS BEFORE ANYTHING ELSN The Hague, June 26 (By the A. P.)— Boh:evik Russia wants credité " before anything else. . This incement of the Russian delegation, which “arrivad here today, in his first statement to the press, and it ‘has created consternation among the representatives ‘of ‘ths Eurb- pean countries here, ‘because they virtually agreed to discuscs credits of all. after some tentative aceord had been reached on the questions of private property and Russian debts. Some of the delezates believe ahevits 1n: this: el eont théy ONLY ONE OF THE CREW OF THE PURITAN DROWNED The case of Henry 5. Morse. son of Charles W. Morse, charged with using the United States mails in an attempt to defraud, was continued to- July when called before United States Com- ;m!sloner Lavery in Bridgeport yester- ay. La Have, N. 8, June 26.—The schoon- or Spray arrived today with fifteen of the sixteen missing men of the Glouces ter schooner Puritan ‘which was wreck- ed off Sable Island June 23. Only one of the crew, Cristopher Johanson, was . Captain George D. Hamilton, of Wash- ington, and: Sergeant G. R. Martin, of Buffalo. N. Y., were killed in Gettys- burg, Pa. when the army airplane in which. they were eircling 3,000 feet above the Gettysburg baStlefield went into a tail spin and crashed to the earth. \ sistence “of "the “bol St. Louls, Mo.,, June 26.—Following announcement in New Haven today that; DEATH OF PRINCE YORIGITO the Winchester company- and the Sim- HIGASHI-FUSHIMI OF JAPAN | Harold F. McCormick, chairman of the executive board of the International Harvester company, whose recent opera- tion in Chicago, performer by Dr. Vietor D. Lespinasse, noted specialist in glandu- lar operations, attracted wide attention, left the Wesley Memorial hospital Sun- day. Neither Mr. ' McCormick nor his mons, Hardware company had consolidat- < 5 ed, the Simmons company issued a; Tokio, June 26.—(By t _ statement here saying “the companies|Prince Yorihito Higashi-Fushimi, scion have entered into a contract to combine |of one of the oldest princely familics their interest under a common manage-|and admiral in the Japanese navy, died ment and hereafter will ©oe operated |this mofning at Hayama. prince is be- Jointly.” 3 lieved to have been suffering from can- The Simmons company is one of the | cer, complicated by an-attack ‘of influén- . companies in the world. | za. He was 55 Vears old, The Ru have that as they have only they cannot #plit info all go together 6 the-