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VOL. LXIV—NO. 161 WERCA WIL B0 " DN, SAYS HARDING Laws Must be Enforced, in Address Before Huge Crowd at Marion—Declares Government Must Suppress Men- aces Pending Their Effacement by Public Opinion— —Pershing Advocates Fearless Use of Strong Arm of Law in Communities Which “Openly Sympathize With Ruthless Murder of Inoffensive People in Exmue of Right to Earn;Livelihood.” Marten, Ohlo, July 4-—With an em- United States government is thinking phatic declaration that the constitution [ Sa¥ing, but I a0d laws sponsored by ithe majority must be enforced, President Hlarding addres- | construction or misapplication. sing his “triends and nefghbors” who as-| “There is very.much of sembled at the Fair Graunds here today o celebrate his home-coming, declared |an hat “menaces do arise” which must be ppressed by the government pending their effacement by publk: opinion. Coupled with this assertion was the prediction that “America‘will go on" and hat the fundamentals ofi the republic and all fts liberties will be jpreserved.” During his address the president ched on prohibition, discussed the of “a free America” not anly to abor “without any others leave, but to bargain collectively,” reviewed the history of Marion, which is celebrating;its 100th sirthday anniversary, and told¢a number »f incidents of his earler life. He spoke rom a grandstand filled with ‘“home folks” and visitors from surrounding ter- itory. Massed in front of him was 8 suge crowd. 1t was estimated there were at least 25,000 persona’ in the en- lire throng. The weather was unusually ool On thelr arrival at the{Falr Grounds the president and Mrs. Hagding were giv- n an ovation, while frequently during nis address the executivelwas interrupted by applause. General Pershing, whe also delivered wn address, was loudly applauded when he advocated “feariped’ use of “the strong arm of the law in communities chich ‘openly sympathize with ruthless murder of inoftensive people in the exe: tise of the right to earn 2 livelihood. President Harding joined in the hand- dapping which followed this statement. The president mestioned the 18th Amendmert In connectfon with his adyo- mey of strict law enforcement. De- daring that “majorities, restrained to protection. of minorities, ever must e, he added. inst@nce, made the time seem opportune, I invit to confer about the abolition of twelve-hour work dav. I did mot to protlaim the purpose in advancs, Imagine my surprise, yea, barons to “shake them down" deflcit in campaign funds of 1920 ion, just among ourselves. .1 know not his own community. ed, he isn't a good cltizen. \ “A century sounds like a long wh at first impression, but after ail. it only, a_little while. activities toda; tributed to human progress century. in a /shorter time i ing. which ploneered the way. tations. fully resisted. * ¢ * * in which to achieve, and is yet only rery America and must be sustained by the | ment preceded the national beginning, . overnment and public opinion, else con- | *“But there i ampt for the law will rery foundations. umile, told how he, “a - green outh.” once rode into Marion from the lfitle while. searby town of Caledonia , his former H Some, on a “stubborn mule” 'At another | ~The Marion 1 first saw. in 1883.h: lunction he remarked that “back in 1895 \+ dropped iInto the express office to ses | “wome of the fellows” there about a civic ebration pression was that of very much a city. lost. Probably Marion was sresident sald he would “welcome the day when I can come back to stay with rou_permanently.” "Some of you think it's a fine thing to % president” he remarked. ‘“Keep on hinking it—you'll find the situation very lifferent when you wake up. On the program for “informal remarks” Tharles G. Dawes, former director of the budget bureau, spoke briefly, concluding the observation that the president “bas & strong cabinet, but the cabinet s 2 stronger Harding. Brief speeches were made by Comptrol- ®r of the Curremcy Crissinger, George B Christian, secretary to the president wnd Brigadier General Sawyer, the pres-' dent’s physician. All are residents of Marton Shortly before noon today the presi- fent strolled down to the Marion Star bullding from the home of his father, Dr. G. T. Harding. Climbing the stairs to bis father’s office on the second floor, the president made a long-hand draft of his \ddress. Across the hall was the room which he occupled for years as editor of the Star—his old desk and chair in its tustomary place. Before leaving the bullding the presi- fent went into every department greet- ing each employe by name as he shook bands. The president and Mrs. Harding spent the evening quietly at Dr. Harding Some with members of the family and a lew frisnds who dropped in to cail. The fext of President Harding's pre- sared tollows: My s and Nelghbors: It is ox- seedingly good to come home and meet with ycu again and join you in the cen- tennial celebration of the founding of Marion. Frankly, it would be prefer- bl to come simply as & Marionita and peak &8 one, beeawse it is possible for me to feel a pecullar intimacy toward vuch an oceasion. ’ “1 cannot justify a claim to any great part tn making the Marion of today, but s & newspaper worker for more than a third of & century I have done a ot of sheering, which is no less essential to e forward movement in a community than it 1s in football or baseball. Amid the cheering and boosting I did niy share ® ctsarving and recording. and 1 could relaie things interesting to me, proba- bly Interesting you of Marion, but they would seem rather trivial to (hat larger sommunity, which is habituated to ex- pect home form of broadcasting to ev- sry presidential utterance. “An interesting reminder of the inss sapable responsibility for stterance came to me a year ago. b £ in 3 brief vacation in the moantains of|dreams of the Inspired founders. I I had seen nothing greater. Surely larger than then, and twice ten times important in ifs relationship to world of human activities. to greater activities. It is not for me We are an outstanding industrial of 1922, and wish for it attainments in the century‘to come. day of the nation. One forty-six years have “bamsed prophetic beginning ' and since __t! it, will be and introspection and circumspection. thers. “In our international relations all well. which 110 one nation could do alone. “Frankly, we have broader world relationship, but we have firmly to all the fundamentals to whi world with American ideals. 1 mean recognizes our commitment to justice be no less resolute than our determinati toward whom we remain aloof, except sympathy and ‘a very. . practical thereof, and_exampl: #w Hampshire. and my generous hast|the fifteen-starred flag the other day, the sald we must g0 to the nearby viliage |flag of 112, unfurled over Fort McHen: which had been his boyhood home, and|ry. during the attack in which Francis Spangled Ohfo made the fifteenth star. and I|You can little guess the contrast between obably | the blue fleld with fifteen’ stars and the Sixty days lster there|same fleld with the forty-eight glittering’| same to my desk a newspaper published . stars of today. all fastened by popular in Peking. China. with & verbatim re-|gon and brightened by popular hope. mest the peopls, who would be assem-|Scott Key wrote “The bied. We motored down the mountain, | Bannes we had a most agreéable meet spoke eftemporanecusly for Afteen minutes. Star print of the speech. “Of courss thers was nothing which 1 @14 not say sincerely. of that “My thousht is that. ordinarily, there| OFEANIC law has heen preserver and i A B e i At o Wit 1o- ', e, pomstifatiip amblguities removed. Where there has ;| been enlarged federal authority, the stati pride in the manifest|been amended to mee the popular will. [ der these. liberty has its fuilest fruition, all of our own people and|Our representative form of constitutional ! and maintain to in what thelgovernment is responsive to the will T confess being human enough to wish to talk of the intimate things relating to Marion, without mis- the latter, maybe it will not be unseemly to relate Several weeks ago, When the returning tide of industrial activity| some forty or fifty captains >f tne great iron and steel industry to dine with me, cause I dislike the tendency to promise! jured. excessively and accomplish- inadequato my amuse- ment, to read {n an important Metropuli- tan number that I was dining '.l}e sz:hel‘enzxy had been remedied and the plane e or the “It would be good to talk about Mar- ing more interesting to any man than 1t he, isn't interest- There are coiinu- nities in the world tem or twenty cen- taries old not half so important in world perhaps they have c7msl finitely less| in all their time than Marion ‘has in one that, for the Marion we boast has been|Jacent lands. =, - ally only @ half century in the max> “I mean no disparagement of the older and earlier citizenship of sturdy qualities Theirs was a great and highly essential ‘;vorkdmnzhxhl: the way for the present day civilfzation. : of It required strong men and noble women are several indications of the diminished to turn wilderness into worth-whiie habi- Malaria and ague sorely tried human bodies even.though souls cheer- “I said a century seemed a long time Iittle while. - Tha nation lacks four years “The eighteenth amendment denles to a | of beasting & century and a half, butf, minority a tancled sense of personal lib- | discovery came four centuries ago, and, a but the amendmant is the will of |'century and & half of colonial deveiop: a rather more personal undermine our | reason for tlie ‘little while' views, I be- came a citizen of N-M;n}[: forl:‘yem ago, Tieparting frequently from the prepared | 2lmost to a day and have béen a. resi- wxt of his spesch, Mr. Hudlnx,p with a | dent of the county. just about fifty years. village | And it all has the seeming of being but a Yet I could aimost quality less than 4,000 Deople. but my first im- iwhich I feared I Should be hopelessly s countriefied Thre was a burst of applause when the | 45 [ felt, but 1-did not know. It was my viewpoint, my limited vision, which kept me from knowing. You see, I came from the farm and village, and the county seat of 4,000 loomed big in my vision, because lovked ten times as large as it dees today, though the Marion of today is ten times the “The early Marion had only the view- point of the courly civic and - trading centec, unti]l industrial genius flashed on the screen the pioture of factory produc- tlon, balane of trade in larger circles, and the attending advancements incident detail the expansion and transformation. and commercial community today, and I join you in the very‘great pride in the Marion accentuated growth, magnified importance and larger social, educational, moral and patriotic “Let me turn my thoughts to the natal hundred -~ and patriotic thing to stop for retrospection take stock about our keeping of _‘the legacy bequeathed by the :founding fa- They are securer today, with mere assuring prosnects of peace than ever be- fore in the history of the republic. New guarantses have recently bsen added. by the very process of exéhanging viewpoints and bringing the spokesmen of great na- tions to the conference table, and for the exchange of views, and to resolve to do the greafer those fine and nobler things viewpoint than the founding fathers; we must have because human progress has altered our held they committed 1fs. We cannot be aloof from the world, but we can impress the say It, becatise it Is seemly to say®it, the world believes today in American na- tional unselfishness as never before and to preserve our liberties. Even Russia, proof looks upon America as friend “But-let us turn #pecifically to intro- " spection, take stock among ourselves. Ma- Drosideniial| terially, we have surpassed the widest the full coneord of union. This gre 'Beck Guest at Pasis. - Paris, July 4.—Solicitor General James M. Beck of the American department o Justice was the ‘guest of the _ high French officials at a luncheon “at + | Inter-"Alliedclub here. DISREGARD FOR LAW ik AMERICA’S GREATEST PROBLE Ocean Gréve, N. T, July 4—"Disre- Eand for the law s the greatest problem .t Americg now faces, constituting a. ‘menace wl:-k it unchecked, spells an- archy and ruin” declared United States ' smzor‘_x;:nmt, Wisconsin, I an ad> ress made today at Ocean Grove Ing . Dendence Day celebration. “| ing Cannon. } Senator Lenroot urged observunce of A the Voletead law and deslored tns ten | New York, July 4—One death afd dency of the peopls to split into yroups. | 185 thafi a score of minor. injuries was Declating his bellef in the rights of la- | the unusually smail toll #or the celebra- bor to organize, he said: . tlon of the Fourth today in the Metro- “The shocking occurrences recently in |Politan distriot. 5 the coal strike region in lllinons should | Ralph Reynolds, 27, of Port Chester, arouse us to action. To quit work is [N. Y. was kifed when he atremped to @ right, but labor must understand that |192d an iron cannon with.giant crackers, the right work is just as sacred. Neith-|H® was ramming the cannion in & small er tyranny of capital. nor tyranny of |shed in the rear of his home. The ex- labor will be tolerated in America.” |Dplosion ripped his body to pieces and Senator Frelifghuysen, New Jersey, | blew out the side of the shed. ' presided and also made acpatriotic ad-| Ernest Taylor, 17, Manhattan, lost the or|dress. Bishop Joseph F. Berry, calad |index finger of his' right hand when a the méeting to order. giant firecracker which he was light- ing exploded prematurely. CONGEESSMAN HERRICK e accldents were reported from the e X each resorts where hundreds of thous- T.WHEN PLANE FELL nds Sent the day. The only fatality of aw; vi _Memphis, Tenn., July 4.—Representa- aruwnlu‘n;ycr?:lfi R;.:é'fi;"’i.‘:’"p.‘l’ tive Herrick, of Oklahoma, who Jeft|erson, N. J. It s believed he was seised Memphis this morning in an airplane for| with o ¥ ‘Than Score of Minor Injt | Mem ramps. He sank before other efl,Par_ry, Okla., was slightly injured when| bat his"plane feil mear Hamlin, a short dis.| " ould reach him. tance from Lynne. hel It was stated that Mr. Herrick's injur- fes were ‘confined to bruises. 1, G. Per- son an aviator, also was slightly in- IRISH IRREGULARS ARE BOMBARDED London, July 4.—A Dubln despatch to the Times savs: “Tonight the rem- nant of the irregfar strongholds in up- per Sackville street is being bombarded with ‘heavy guns.”" The Dublin correspondent of the Press Assoclation, telegraphinks early n the evening, says that the national forces are making steady progress. The battle of O'Connell street continued with vary- ing intensity throughout .the day,. the firing on_the whole, . being much heavier than yesterday. In the afternoon the post office was rushed and captured by a bombing par- ty, twenty irregulars being taken. . The correspondent says it is persist- ently rumored that De Valera has left Hammam's hotel. , Fifteen irregulars are believer to-have surrendered under the white flag'at this hotel and it is reported -that Countess Markieviaz was captured *whils tnop- According to advices, engine trouble developed and the plane was landed in a field near Hamlin. The trouble appar- hopped off again, but crashed into a tree and. fell. The plane was wrecked ac- | cording to-the message. SNAKES USED TO CLEAR H GOLF LINKS OF MOLES 1: Coatesville, Pa., July 4.—Black snakes sceking a comfortable home, rent and tax free ‘are Invited to'the golf links of the Coatesville Colntry club. Along the sides of: the course underbrush-has been per- mitted to grow thiek. and tempting rock piles with full southern exvosures have an| been placed’ to lure the snakes from ad- An educational campaign has been in- augurated among golfers With an aversion | {N&: to reptiles in order that there may be no| -Durlng the course of the day. continues repitition of the-death# by violence which | the correspondent, there have been flerce came to two of the organization's pets. duels between national troops lying in the road behind light barrtcades and Shipers from windows and roofs, There DOVE 222 FEET INTO OCEAN FROM PLANE |Strength of the irregular forces . and Z that théy will no longer attemot to fight Asbury Park, N.' J, July 4—Chasles |from al their. positions simultaneously. N. Fitzgerald, plunged from' the wing of | The deserted appearance of the Gresham an anmplane, going seventy miles an-hour | Suggested that the hote] had heen evacu. from a height of 232 feet into the .ocean | at uspecting that. the _place 8 ltoday and suffered - internal ined, and later republicans we zgerald .was taken to his hotel where | 88ain seen: firing from the windows. surgeons .reported him in a precarious| The irregulars iconcentrated: their at- condition. tention specially on threatensd points, . moving about in under-ground tunnels. A farge number - of irregulars: are known to have left the O'Connell area..Crowds in the city still watched the fighting: in one ocase natlonal snipers were firing clear over the heads of the spectators at Hammam's hotel. o The evacuation of Barry's hotel near Parnell square was a complete surprise ; it was quietly deserted Sunday or Mon- dsiy by .a hundred irregulars, with about thirty women acting as cooks and typists. - 1t ampears. they lacked arms sufficlent to .resist n big attack, and therefore slipped away in twos and threes through a breach into an adjoin- ing building. N L R A A AT the majority. responsive to the expres- sion of deliberate public opinion. It must be %0 to endure. Majorities, restrained to the protection of minorities, ever must rule. “The constitution and the laws spon- sored by the majority must be enforced. ad | It ddes -not matter who opposes. If an opposing majority has a just objection, in| the. rising tide of. public opinion will change the law. Theére is no abiding lib- erty under any other plan. “I mean to sound no note of pessimism. This republic is secure. Manages do arise, but public opinion will efface them Meanwhile, government must repress them. The eighteenth amendment denies o {to @ minority a fancied sense of person- al liberty, but the amendment is the will of America and must be sustained by the a5 | BOvernment and public opinion else con- tempt for the law will undermine of very foundations. “The. foremost thought in the Con- stitution {s the right to freedom and the pursuit of happiness. Men must be free to live and achieve. Liberty is gone in America when any man is denied by anybody the right to work and live by to|that work. It does not matter who de- nles. “A free American has the right to labor without and other’s leave. It would be no less an abridgement to deny men to! bargain collectively. Governments cannot tolerate any class or grouped domination through force. It will be a sorry day when group domination is reflected in our laws. Goverfilient, and the laws which government is charged with enforcing, he | must be for all the people, ever aiming at a | the common good. “The tendencies of the presént day are to| not surprising. War stirred the passions of men and left the world in upheaval. There have _been readjustments and liquidations, and more remain to be is| made. In the making there has been the clash of interests, .the revelatiéns of greed, the perfectly natural tendency to(be'placed in the Vancouver museum. defend seif-interests. It has developed in — groups and blocs, and magnified class in- | GREENWIO clinations. ~But'the readjustment {s mo ¥ less inevitable; el it Is worla-wide. 1t 3 s the problem of humén kind. ' Your gov- AT 0 evnrnenflm:%‘u‘m 21d, with patience, i;gr?m:'%a??mffl b s Wwith tolerance, willy sympathy. It has|ghot in g cafe here late Saturday night, sought to mitigats. the burdens It has|gieq today in the Greenwich hospital. sought the merging of vieWpoints to make | Betore-.his death -he signed a statement the way easter. It believes the America |saying that he was shot accidentaly by of our opvortunity and unchailenged se- James Briggs while he lnd-Bflg‘g ‘were cur‘ll}' affords the way to solution. “fooling.”. . Briggs had -been. at liberty ch | dn war we give all 'we possess, all-our | ynder bonds of $7.500, but after Doran lives,. mllc our “resources, everything, 1o | died he. was rearrested on @ charge of in. make Sure our national survival. - Ourvomntary manslaughter and locked up to | preservation in peace is no leas important. | pending ‘an inquiry by Coroner J. 1 It calls for every pateiotic offering. be- | Phelan. The coroner will ‘hold an' in cause dangers from within are more diffi- | quest here tomorrow. cult'to ‘meet than”the alien ene.r,, | The bullet -entered Doran's left side s “::,":;‘&mfiuflm O aacuon, after and penetrated his Hver. ‘He was’24 s in e pr lency, is that o8 | (e greatsst. traltor. to is soueirs fo e TnIeAR Rl Jobyen s Din, miather ¢ Auh in | WHo 'appeals fo' prejudice and inflames BoE T passion, when sober judgment and honest | FORMER MAYOR OF Speech are so necessaty to firmly estab- lished tranquiiity and security. FORT LEE DEAD “I leave you that thought on this cen- g, tennial day_because. ifs lesbon wiil have [ ,ort Lee. N, 1. July 4—Danier E. Me- ;.:;n{u a :vpund, Soany s, mvl‘cuflenl ing%d ‘at his home :“::a ton;‘htr.‘ Mr. © happiness of the community, it will | gy 3 | stve many a-menice In the national,iite. [1,°AT%Y bed been U1 tor some tme. Te “I'have no fear about the republic. We febd ye not orly. ‘atronger’but Wwe are morally | geo ©orsl services will be held Fri- better than when“we began, " If there. is séeming excess of exploitation, profiteer- ing, ' dishonesty -and “betrayal, it is only because.we are grown the larger, and' we know th_elils:of life, and read of them more than the good that is done.’ I do not - wonder that the ignocant and iily- | informed are made destless by the mag- nified. stories of- public abuses and pro- claimed privilege.. We need ‘truth, enly the truthi, the wholesome trath, as the highest aid to.-Americanization and the menifestation of highest patriotism.- * i“America wiil go-on, The fundamentals of the republic and all, its liberties will be preserved and government must maintain ‘the supreimacy of law and authority. Un- HUGE INDIAN TREATY BOWL IS DISCOVERED Vancouver, B. C,, July 4—An Indian treaty bowl, weighing 600 pounds, and sald to be the largest in existence, was found at Nimkish, 100 miles north of here. The relic which is said to be more than 500 years old, is 15 feet long, and, ac- cording to archaeologists, was made by Indians using’ stone tools and axes. The bowl, which was the center of an interest- ing Indlan ceremony, was called by the aborigines “the mother of the Five Tribes.” 4 These tribes would meet to discuss hunting laws and tribal boundaries, and such occasions the bowl was filled with some kind of liquor. After the conference of chiefs of the respective. tribes, they would take a smaller bow! and, filling it with the liquor would take it back to their councilors. 1If the terms agreed on for \a treaty were approved by theso councilors, ‘the liquor was accepted but if the councilors objected to any ‘of the terms. the liquor was returned and the véssél ‘was laid under’ the neck of the idol, this constituting .an ultimatum. The bowl was found by aparty engag- ed in removing a totem pole attached to the side of an old house. The: relic will MAN DIES - ' U FROM BULLET WOUND RIGHT 'HAND -BLOWN OFF BY CANNON . Waterbury, July -4.—Benjamin - Lyon 49, of 315 East Main street, lost his cight hand at the wrist here today when a toy cannon which he was about to dis- charge, exploded. LN Dr. John §. Hardman, . Greenwich, “Conn., July Dr. John S. Hardman, until recently_on the- staf of & lccal sanatorium died in_Stamford. today. « He had recently ‘' been. under treatment in a New York hospital. The body” was sent fo Oswego, N. Y. for reveal the giory of liber- of _ty's institutions. "| near Montagnino's Home. Moving Along on New Hav- | was in a weakenea condition, his ‘why- COnlinlu'al 7 s Prospects for a larger cotton crop than last year wero seen in the first forecast Held 3 rther Negotiations With e - t e ore seon b he fr Towcast | Held Up Pending Further New Haven, July 4.—Holiday tramic Mrs. Thomas Cheney, the Mexiean born wife of an American employed by an American company operating in the Tam- pico oll region, was killed by Mexican bandits, June 29. . This week 1s to develop some definite : o 5 Tis handled on s normel basie 103aY | plan as to the fats of the. pending tarlft For Men to Quit Work Until Every Resource Has E B, Yo Tt RO e o 0 st acorog 4 decmon b oo : the general offices, The following state- | bY Tepublican leaders in informal con- Exhausted—Maintenance of Way Chairmen Are ment was. issued: ) o - 1 - : A i 35 Hartord alieotd Feports 5 crmtinach | Ten Xew York Comeal lscomouven| Structed:to Take Up Disputes With Individual Roads— seven from Cleveland and three from - i et o meshinieat dopas, | Blhit; Taa, shovs' ‘were sent to the| Employes Directed to Continue At Work Under Wages ment forces. - Additional skilled mechan- :xm;w :‘!m yorks at Dunkirk, ¢ o+ lcs have been hired and put o work un- |N- ¥, to be rt odm d l IIIIIC & m‘ Jul e 8- ger the new rates awarded by the labor by Board ly 1. .3 d, effective July fist. and a large | Clerks at varlous points adong the Nor-| Chicago. July 4—(By the A, P.)- The, dfa: Beit bt % umber, Of @Pplications continue to be |folk & Western railroad went on strike | hreatened extension o;’u...mgn :( rall- When wfl“‘“‘d"'":"" *"‘ 2 received. § & uni - 3 m oortk Ir.he holiday, /there were more | offices at Roanoke Wednesday. averted today throuzh' the (fforts of|that they were ready w postpone thelf - by ?{e";.:‘* "flzflhflh&mw members ‘of the United States railrcad | strike, Bierably: mbrs s oared et board and officials of the United Mante-| = With this ecrisis safely passed. hoth nezmber ‘on the first shife after the atry nance of Way Employes and Railrcad| Tallroad executives and cfficers of he Was deciared on Sae ,‘“ P Shop Laborers, shop_crafts now on strike admitted to- ‘Passenger servies Post; it v - nigt that the first reml test of stremgth ing mlntun;ndo: r:“:t "1 b {! Logl "Wm:::‘l:“ht :5 g. Pml?:: ‘:.‘;"r:sn,~ of 'the striking shopmen wili oecur to- A e dent of the maintenance of way orgapi-|Morow morning when the whistles blow. il R TR A zation, “after he and his excative coun-| B. M. Jewell, head of che rauleay em- TS SEARCHING INQUIKY cil had ‘conferred fhroughoat -the day|Dployes department of the ;merican Fed. INTO OIL INDUSTRY with Chairman- Ben W. Hooper, of the|eration of Labor. has cun‘onicd <haf § S8 S tabor board, and W. L. (en'men, ja- | practically 100 per cent of his 230908 Jupanese admiralty fssued a formal statement .flatly denying recent reports that Japan was evading the Washington naval treaty by increasing construction of auxiliary vessels. Washington, July 4—Searching in- gt e L quiry into thefinancial accounts and general business operations -of more than 350 oll companies, including practicarly gvery ‘refining producing and marke:ing concern in the country, Is.mad: senate manafacturers’ commitice | Bosion baseball teams will be made by questionnaires sent out and made pub-| District Attorney Ruston of Kings coun- He yesterday by Senator Lafollette, Wis- | ¥ ¢ consin, committee chairman. The informa- tion sought by-the committee, in conmec tion with the, investigation it is conduct. ing into the ofl industry and business methods, the questionnaires say, should be in the possession - of tie committce by July 15. In each instance the gues- tionnaires were accompanied by letters explaining that the Information was re- quested under a senate resolution, and would be made a vital part of -he in- quiry. Financial schedules for ‘the oil industry, special reports on organiza- tion -and business of companies in the ofl industry and price scheduics for the oil industry for the period January 1, 1920, to June 30, 1922, each with blank spaces to be filled in by the recipient aro made a part of the questionnaires. Refinerles, wholesale, and tank wagon members had abeyed.ldhp":.;\ks un.:.\: e ‘Maintenance of way chalrmen were|Carriers have assert many instructed_to" proceed to *ake up miainte-| Who waiked out last Sadirday were nance of way disputes with the indi-|merely going for a holiday over vidual roads, and in case za agreement ;‘«;nr:n of July "fm::" oe back on the . is mot reached, to refer tne matter ta|Job tomofrow morning. the labor board. These disputes inciude| Mr. Jewell today replied to the pro the”wage cut recently autiorized by the | nouncement of the labor boirl of yes labor board for maintenance of way em- | terday “outlawing” his organizatin B3 | T, changes in maint:nance of way ;flsmnxb::::’ 1‘!‘];(-!”-:1 the Shopusesls 3% o " been “outlaws R and the coniracting oat of track|but the board itself had been “ouK G contine | board asserted that that body had “Tis | to “negotiate a un::lkmnl ::urrm iabor board effective July 1, but 1o maks| Shopmen and the carriers a any revigion in rates retfoastive to Jyly | his intention of dealing only “with 1."and to withhold strike vrdess pending|roads in making a ntte:l"."’ o3 ¥ the carrying, ut of these matter. The fourth day of the s -:nf £ 0T It was also announced that an mme- | passed quietly. The n*mufl‘;n’ = % diate ruling from. the labor board wiii| organization here was practicaly SO0 be sought absolving membacs from do- |Serted and the holiday's effct SRS ing any work formerly done by members onat:; :fl"‘t'e :'I'ml‘mml' r;":""fl"n N of other organizations on strik:. * e 3 iaintatned One-of the conditfons-€s trstponsment |that their shop forces were heing 0:‘0; of the strike was that the Tndiana Ifar-)mented by the strikers themssives, bor' Belt rafiroad cancel it comtracts|were returning to work Thes Rt with an outside agency to 4o lrack werk | ments were deried “-l;y‘ v: e"s‘::_be - leged: war criminals acquitted Dr. Oscar | and officials of the road were simmoned | Violence " eobnecion Wil SO (L Michelsohn of Berlin, named in-the allied | before the meeting and agized to do|was sanfhed lodey o rrmnaflflm-":( or retall prices, are to be given with a|llst and accused 'of ill freafing prisoners | this, maintaining. however = that such ers, sithough & mumber of Tall - view, Senator Lafollette explained, of|of war. - Z = e contracting was lawful. worl e“ g g roade leatning the spread between the selling 2 2 Postponement of the maintenames of :uh g el ey B M‘ o and service station prices of gasoline and| ' Charles Bedcher Waren, American way walkout was accomplisacd ¢n'y af. | Shops S X sy nces fof’ “phe Tods Between pricss for| passador to Japan, = Edwin B. Denby, |ter @ most strenuous day.. Mr. O % other precas and members of s execitive eo FLORIDA EMPLOYES Acmfl e oil and, finished{products also ars|s ited & 57 tor " : ’ - ; Mm m&»m‘:w A THE NEW WAGE SC Investigation of the bottls. thre Ebbets Field between games double-header played by Brooklyn and The strategy board of tHe striking tex- tile operatives at Manchester, N. H., an- nouniced that it had accepted an invita- tion for a conference with representatives of the Amoskeag - Manufacturing com- pany. Members were directed t3 work under the wages ordered by The body of Rebert Wallacs (“Tiny™) Maxwell, literally. was buried under a mass of flowers in a chapel at Chicago, The tributes:game from major leagus baseball clubs and persons in all walks of e, “ o R T 4 The supreme court at Leipsic Germany which has jurisdiction in the cases of al- “The questiohnatres-cali upon the ol concerns. td - state thelr Wanking. connes Hlons, théle sarrent debts, thérr Shost and bond obligations, manageraent personnel|. and any Inter-corporate’ relations, _“The financial schedule” said a_stat ment by Chairman Lafollotts, “is intend- ed’ to. develop the financial condition of the companfes in'the various branches | SUIFASIS of the -oil business during the period 2 ~ mentioned, also to bring vt the profits. - “The -schedulé organizatidn «nd busi-| Colenel Farrand Sarye, cammandant of ness is intended to develop the interccr-| CAmP Devens: was. tn;i:n i bk Porite relations, it any, existitz between | mand of the newly forme n: fim;y the various companiss enzag brigade, headquarters of which will be ofl business, also to develop -ny established at Fort Constitution, Ports- mon stock ownership that might est!mouth, N.. H. together with any strong connection ex- isting by virtue of any inaancial rela- tionship.” Special ‘inquiry into the stosic hoid! of oil companies is made in th2 question- nalres which call for the names and ad- dresses and amount of stock .of every stock-possessor holding In person or in trust one per cent. or more of the stock of each company. Trusteeships and vot- ing trusts, loans, and borrowings also are required, together with statements of the fixed and current assets, investments, re- turns from affliated companies. pipe line and refining plant values, dividends paid, and a mass of other information. er Inquired 3 “if-which, fr=wE¥=mnouRCE=Showed o¥er —— ~-— ninety -per cent.'in favor of & walkout. | Jacksonville, Fla. July 1.—mfl Armed with strike orders to 2.700 cheir-|nance of way employes of the Fiort men, the maintenance of wav officers| East Coast rallroad have signod a gt went into conference with Chairman|contract based on ths sca’s fixed by i Hooper and Mr. McMenime: rallroad labor board. according fo & After a lengthy conference the main-) statement issued by J. P. Leckwith, viee tefiance of way men withdrew to discuss|president of. the road. The statement the matters, then assembicd with the|added that the men have withdraws two board members. A -wait of an hour |from thelr national organization, forme was occasioned while officials of the In-|ing a mew union of their own. —_—— URGES SCHOOL CLINICS TO CHECK DISEASE Boston, July 4—The schools must ful- fill their real duty to pupils and the com= munity by “training for complete living* Dr. Charles H. Keene, director of the Bureau of Health Education, Harrisburg, Pa, sald in an address tonight befors the National Education Association hers. 5 Properly trained physicians, educational i authoritles and parents now agreed, he il added, that a mere checking of the spread of contaglous diseases and & phys- ical examination of puplls was met enough. “This means that there must be finance ed, organized and administered by the public school a real supervision of the ieal The British steamer Wataneds, Captain Herbert Smith, docked at New Bedford with 4,000 tons of Welsh anthracite coal. It 'is reported to be the first cargo ‘of atnhracite coal from a foreign country G. A. R| VETS PLAN ALL-AMERICAN CONCLAVE Des Moines, Ia, July 4—Patriotic groups throughout the country today be- gan preparations for a great all-Amer- ican conclave in Des Moines next Sep- tember in which nine patriotic organiza- tiohs will ossemble for the national en- campment of the Grand Army of the Tte- public. Today has been set by the general ex- ecutive committes of the encampment for the issuance of the general encampment call to every state in the union. The nine organizations represented in%this call are: The Women's Reliet Corps, Sons of Vet- erans, Daughters of Veterans, Sons of Veterans' Auxlliary, Lales of the G A. R., National Association of Union E-Prison- ers of War, National Association of Vicksburg Veterans, Grand Army of the Republic and National Assoclation of Army Nurses. More than 75,000 of-thelr members are expected to attend the gathering Septem- ber 24 to 28. Invitations are also being sent ‘to headquarters of every patrlotic Massachusetts | Pody Of in America not officlally allle ot I o declsion suthorizes | With the G. A R., urging that they be Bonk Commissioner Jossph. C. Allen to | represented by special delegations to transter -$188,201:60, ~standing to the |Participate In the patriotic ceremonles to credit of the Christmas club in the com- | be enacted during the conclave. mérclal . branch of the Hanover Trust| The G. A. R. encampment this year will company, to the saving department of [be of unusual significance, officials here that bank.’ 5a1d todsy. ‘This s to bo one of the Wage demands of the carpenters’ union for an increase from $5 cents to 31 an hour were granted at Springfield by six large contracting firms whose men quit work Saturday. It is said that a few firms will negotiate with their men ‘Wednesday. . Louls B. Bayard, a former intercollegi- ate golf champlon, died at his home in Short Hills, N. Y. He was graduated from Princeton in 1895. ~ His, daughter, Martha Bayard, is a well known tennis player, standing seventeenth in the wo- men’s national ranking list. WOMAN BEATS WAY ON FREIGHT TBAIN health of school children going this out-of-date comcept of med! spection and including in its only diagnosis of contaglous of physical defects, but including removal. . = of these defects through schools elinies it necessary; the training and restorss tion to health of the physically defactive through special classes; the control of sanitary conditions in school, and installation of a hyglens arrangement the daily schedule of classes” Dro Keene said. “This necessitates specially trained and interested school physicians and school nurses, and a proper training of the school staff, so that they may know that Jast great satherings of the. veterans of | the teacher's function ls mOTE LR e the Civil wu" mamwm be un.";;rd l::-F l"":lfer oty iaciutis .m" “'”"-_ last” opportunities the younger al - | bullding nimations will :have to learn’ the spirit | 10 health, a “training fof complete H¥e of these old flghters.” it was stated. ing: - + 5 j “We must make the spirit of the '60s T 3 live atter. the last surviving member of | NEW HAVEN ROAD PREPARES i the Grand Army has passed.” George & FOR STRIKE BEEAKERS Hamilton, secretary of the general exec- . Wfive committee said today. More than| New Haven, July 4.—A more serioug 25,000 blue coated . veterans and their ! turn in the strike situation as regards the g thirty fite and drum corps will seek this | New Haven district of the New York, = year to make a lasting impression on | New Haven and Hartfoid raliréad may patriotic America.” be expected in case the maintenanes of way men decide to quit work n,'-n the shopmen, and such a turn is not SELF-GOVERNING ESQUIMAU g g nmbnlu--m COMMUNITY IN ALASEA | workers personally, a strong sentiment favoring such & move is seen to exist. Two passenger cars and a baggage car are on a siding at the Cedar Hill yarde = Lee Nickerson, ten years old, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Njckerson, of Bel- fast, Me., was drowned there while bathing near the upper. bridge in com- pany with another boy. The lads got caught fn the strong current, but the other boy was rescued by help from the shore. Jacksonville, Fla., July 4—With her hair_shingled and attired in a suit of overalls: Mrs. Mary MoGrew, forty, of Washingtor, Ti. C.. who claimis to-ba H:a widow of a o wealthy Seattle resl es- tate operator and land owner, was held in the Duval county jail hers today charged with having beaten her way on a freight train. 3 Mrs. McGrew was arrested late. yes- terday by railroad: special agents who found her in the company of two male hoboes in a gondola car loaded -with rock on a ‘train arriving from "Atlanta. Mrs, McGrew said that after the death of her husband in Augusta, Ga., four and thos 4 s a half years ago, she went to Washing- MIDNIGHT FLYER DEAD ton: &nd obtained employment in the gov-| ! ernment - printing- office. ~ She <later went| Atlantle City, N. J, Jily. 4—The list in training in a hospital. she said; but|of fatalities as the result of the wreck becoming ‘dissatisfied declded' to come o, Sunday night at Winslow Junction of the Florida. Accompanied by a girl named| yignight Fiyer” on the Philadeiphia and e aan oo oot saao M| B et ey, Coav g acstes] 10 i ; al 0! B A Austin gave up the trip‘a few days later, | Zovn s, 108 Aot O train, ., T but Mrs. McGrew made her way to At-{, o T, Yh bhiladelphia. g A e~ || < The condition of Louls Kolker, a pas- and there in-automobiles and wagons. ! 2 Sha spént one might In'the Salvation|SeReF. Was pronounced tonight by, his }Arm home at Atlanta, she said. whoPifal attaches RS critical, =t blfl - o‘;l’: iriterded to beat his way to Florida and |Was held for D aat oA Toils who 'volunteered ‘o accompany. her. She, day, Mrs. Besslo ler, ane ri cut her hair, obtined .a suit of overalls|Gutiohn, all of Philedelphia, also among and they boarded the freight train in the|the more seriously injured, were sald to have shown some ' {mprovement toda: outskirts: of the city.” The second man arrested’ here they met on the train. although they still were in a serious con- dition. Ths usual sentence here for beating| R one's way-on a train is sixty days at{ Eighteen others af the hospital are ex- : pected to recover, the county prison farm. CONDUCTOR OF WRECKED i Chicago, July 4—Completing a six thousand mile journey from Point Hope, ‘Alaska, which consumed three months | 2nd Will be used as sieeping quarters and six days—two months and eight the strike breakerd_it la -ma rs have had new wooden days of which were spent in ‘mushing” a | :‘m “';r;h‘.‘:xy pess % : thousana miles behind a dog sled through | DAL i DISATLY, Tor RIS CRSCRETEY the snow—Rev. Willlam A. ThOMas |y, each car there are 30 bunks. A Episcopal Missionary . at Point Hape, | oo “CL SO0 MRl B0 o0 M ant three hundred miles north of the Aretic | al.away. Men in the yards said @ Circle, bfings a remarkable story of @|yngerstood that the mefi were to b seif-governing Esquimau community | in this =~ 2 which has been successtully carried on at | -~ Committees from _ the engineers. Point Hope for the past six years. firemen, who are not striking, Bave Under the tutelege of the missionaries | around the shoné It was =aid, to equal ml!rl:’a has ;e:n u::lbllluhed the engineers on I:Inry iuunm ot nginemen were [among the Tigaras, who annually in|work that ordinarily woul Gt M;‘ s et iratne. which | fown meeting elect among themielves the | smopmen. . Written or Sors W2ve Sid hot have the air. hose coupled and|omelik, or c\mcll of leading men, who, in | from Chief Stone, head of the engi that he was wiring brotherhood membees | turn enact the local 1aws and see to their | here to the efrec: that engineers ing, ons claim. being that Montagn'na| not to. take out any such trains unless'enforcement améng the thousind natives | of the work of the men on strike. came out of his home. with a revolver and | they received written instructions {rom |wno fnhabit the region. This democracy was shot by Splasani before he could use|the rallway superintendents relieving|,¢ the frozen north even has its own his weapon, ' The police also say they|tnem of all responsibllity for the safety | yropinition law, which was adopted three wers told that the Spiasani brothers took | of the frains. Failure to couple the hose | S0 %0 o "iho Sronibition amendment Montagnina's revoiver from him and shot | properly was said to be due to the strike | Loy 24onted in the United States, says bl with hls own weapon. The thrce| aftecting (he-inspection forces. - e men had been quarreling on the stre S i AR T Y, Thomas. Montagnino, | piack ‘Hall—Mr. and Mrs. Matthew G. [, ThS e oo gl Sty e who was 50 years old, died before reach- | Ty and family of New York have opened M“mmed“ K yhar &b hAeE the freakc ing the hospital. - » * %% Fineir country home at Black Hall for the | (00 @ € o5, o e Dassu = S TER summer. Mrs. Kly was Mise Marion Co- | i) yag been glven the younger gen- | Hunter notl Clinton.—Lindsay M. Fletcher has been | lins and !s the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | W0 C" Wb 0 oot thtough ‘31 years! ar. the mén elscted vice grand of Menuncatuck lodge, | Atwood Coilins of 1010 Asylum- street, No. 62, L 0.0 F., of Guliford. o) Hartord, .- STAMFORD. GROCER SHOT AND KILLED ENGINEERS PROTEST “CONDITION OF TRAINS Stamford, July 4—Ignatius Montag- nino, a wholesale grocer of this city, was shot and Killed on the street late last night. ‘Augustus Splasani. former. busi- ness partner of the dead man, was arrest- ed as the assailant of Montagnino. Frank Spiasani, a brother, aleo was held peyiing the coroner's.inquest.. From various persone the police have received_different vefsions of the shoot- Cleveland, 0., July 4.—A complication_ threatening to'inivolve the locomotive en< gineers in the rail shopmen's strike, acose today when Warren S. Stone, president of the Brotherhood - of Locomotive En< ginegrs, sald he had fecelved eight tele- TWO DROWNED IN LONG ISLAND Stamford, July 4.—James and Russell Harvey, both drowned this afternoon in- eound at Halloween park ‘were in bathing with W.