The evening world. Newspaper, July 22, 1922, Page 2

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NOWES FORAT, YSAND FISH: HAS NLY $16 IN CASH Personal and Household Debts Show in His Statement— F G. Gaffey Receiver. RYAN CRASH NO SURPRISE. WALL STREET FORESAW END." IN NATURE OF OPERATIONS ISH IRREGULAR, Early Conservatism Succeeded by Plunging With Fortune Made in War, : Nett ue a ky nor his at same orne " any statement to make exda itive to his voluntary ban STUTZ MOTORS HIS PET. FLANKS BROKEN ' a titlon: fied: yemtore show aca ’ tr t 1 Nabilitles of $32,4 and Ran Corner in Stock—De- RETREAT 10 CORK cannot MAL.ERS. wo vent ao Mr fiance of Exchange Factor (in; tavhia atateenenb tied sesterany in Collapse. oS Pubs ereditors aw Habe nelp financial in Fires Started by Republicany ver the manage By R. R. Batson. Evacuating Limerick Did [ment of bis aftairs to protect: their A lifting of eyebrows and « § Li } Joans tte h famous Stutz corner restive shrug of shoulders Is the re Great Dama It was int 1 the banking creditors sponse Wall Street, taken by and ~ will not be Injured in any way throu ae sroceedingn, large, has given to the announceme DUBLIN uly sociated PP large, has given to the an ment | i. July A at Tate HeALEMING Ronmnell awa: ALN that Allan A. Ryan haa been forced] Press).—With both flanks of the Re-Jijand appointed Wrancia’ G. Caftey to file a petition in bankruptey with {Publican insurgent army broken, | former United States Attorney, re liabilities aggregating more than| through yosterday’s capture of Water-}eriver for Tyan, under a bond of § 42,000,0 ome of the mo _|ford and Limerick, the Irreguinr |“! 17d Parker, Marshall, Miter, $32,000,000, Some of the more em- 1 Peach / rrogulary china & Randall, No. 61 Broad boldened murmur, "I told roops to-duy were reported to he re w were named counsel for t! The stosk market reccived! the treating in the direction of Cork. receiver, Guthrie, Jerome, Rand & nouncement without a quiver They are believed to number many] Kresel, No. 87 Wall Street, appeared shares in which Ryan had been vital-|thousands of soldiers, sufficiently o Ryan's attorneys in filing the peti v ev rn rms s aon ly interested remained unaffected equipped with all arms except arti ATOR THD UnRGGUOS? Gredltora. Ate. For more than two years the know- | lery, and they are expected to give the Charles M. Schwab, Chairman of the Ing ones in the financial district have|National army forces considerable | Board of Rethiehem Steel Company, , : trouble in guerilla actions, but it is}to whom $209,595 18 due on “eredit been redictin, a financial disaster a hi r ke ne ; feast foit, ROL though they will make a deter-|halance owed Allan A. Ryan & for Ryan, They knew, or at lea +|mined stand before reaching Cork rah yun of No, 30 East that he had permitted yalor to get the} ‘Telograph lines from Cork were et, his wife, with claims for better part of discretion, He not} Dartly restored yesterday. Messages ities due and eash advanced” only opposed the “powers that be," {fetching Dublin indicated that the elty 19; Coleman du Pont, whose ae to Watt {%2* Comparatively quiet, but there ]claim is for $66,000, representing a he-flouted thomopenty. And to Wa anxiety among the Inhabitants, |Mfth Interest in "$880,000 Hability: In Street Ms financial doom was writ as ur the clty may soon become [Johnstown Syndiente for purc plain as the handwriting on the wall ene of fighting Jolinstown, Va, traction stock sppeared to Belshazzar, who, at his} ‘The National forces are «ud to con- | Samuel Untermyer, to whom $45,000 Riblical feast, used sacred vessels/trol Limerick except for a few in- [18 due for “egal feos." taken from the temple at Jerusalem.\surgent snipers, The city is reported| In diversity of debts Mr. Ryan has Ryan at his intended financial feast] to have suffered little from bombard-|!t on any bankrupt that ever filed Mrs, Carroll Wainwright, formerls used a vessel, stock of the Stutz| ment, but was greatly damaged by] Schedule in a local court, Literally yuld, sailed to-day with her hust Motors Company, listed in a temple] fires set by the trregulars when tuey| he owes the butcher, the baker and] They will go to Paris for a visit of known as the New York Stock Ex-|were compelled to ev te. King|the candlestick maker as well as the| bride, who was Miss Vera sinel change John's Castle, said to have been pur-| ice man and every other dealer fur- The recent marringe 0 ( For many years ‘Allan Ryan was] pose! d by the Nationalist gun-|nishing his household, except the} the fashionable world and was 1 known In Wall Street as “one of the] ners, vernment wishing to pre- | coal man, Even the Telephone Com-| Ceremony was performed tn tho i boys.” othing of the radical was|serve historic architecture, was almost] pany did not escape before others than Mr. and M suspected to be lying dormant within} destroyed. The Republicans are al-|~ Mr. Ryan, whea in trouble, em- him. He was the son of a father who|leged to have deliberately fired it. ployed the most competent legal a t times had given to the financlal Many business buildings were de-| sistance, and undoubtedly got valu- s s district a few unexpected jolts, but} stroyed by fires which spread from]able advice, but he owes for it. In Editor White wW x young Ryan was everywhere regarded |the Strand and other barracks, 4%-/ addition to a debt of $45,000 to Sam- fr oH as a man who would never kick over|nited by the irregulars. Most of the] uel Untermyer, who handled his af- insurgent soldiers apparently escaped through holes in the walls of adjoin- ing buildings, making house-to-house tunnels from the central posts to the the traces. Prior to the war Ryan acted as a member of the Stock Exchange who appeared to be satisfied to do nothing fairs in the Stutz Motors corner dif- ficulty, Mr. Ryan owes $15,000 to Jerome, Rand & Kresel, the law firm that prepared and filed his Mr. and Mrs. Carroll ll Wainwright To Visit George Gould and Bride Miss Edith Gould, daughter of George ton the White Star liner) Hemerie. month or two with Mr. Gould and his oF N.Y, MM Lakewood was a sensation in 1 d for about ten weeks, ‘The week of May, but it was mid-July V's closest friends learned of it, s Executin’, But Gets “ive Branch Instead more than execute orders, or some-| outskirts of the city. t etitios : Dyin S All , ;: 1 Be ee reat cmc teh |, THO. Republicans’ are cheraed with | Deneraptsy, petition) Other: _unsee g tatement AL Ready, He Says, but Got small way. He was regarded as the| having looted the stores of Limerick. | "60, “( ce Reprieve Until! S:ndown—Allen Seeks Peace. personification of cautiohsneds and) The loss in said to amount to several] jy Altman & Co., toilet articles, MP! ‘ 4 conservatism. thousand pounds. $57.98 EMPORIA, Kan., Juiy 22.-—William Allen White and Gov. Henry J. But during the war boom tn stocks == 2 _ | Arnold, Constable & Co., dry goods,} Allen, political pals and inseparable chevaliers of mercy on European Allan Ryan began to extend his mar- a ket commitments, and with this|$551 a share. He even went to the] Ac y, of the: Holy Cnitd Suffern, | Yattlefields, to-day vowed eternal personal friendship but verbally kicked seeming disregard of caution there|¢xtreme of obtaining a court decision} N.Y. tuition Par AEF ed each other’s pet hobby in the face a 4 diol . 7 came great wealth. His fortune grew |t© enforce such a settlement. lionel Bendel, Ine, clothing, Mra P ¥ face as peace dickers over their disagrec- in amazing manner, And with growth| Such tactics were unheurd of. And] “Host & Co., clothing for children, mention the: Maneas) Tndusthial Court Nesan in fortune there apparently came lack alas Ryan Anabela son was free-| $157.75. ‘| White, after midnight ond early> of discretion. y predicted by the knowing ones.| urns Bros., coal anid wood, $478.80. Raa li Ena At any rate, Allan Ryan appeared| “They will get him," the wise ones] Muck, Starr & Frost, Jewelry, $3,- TROIEIRE ityarerpces: wit stilt! ute White continued. to have developed his ambition along| S/d: "There Is no excape fe 260. Court Judges J. \ 1 Libor leaders cheered White, Tele- who ts so deflant of the pov Nuekley School, tuition, $60.20 Walter Huggins, peace ciussaries of Sams, letters and phone calls poured with the extent of his wealth. He ry} Rrooks Bros, wearing appurel $1 : : began to assume charge of the for- Lhe Roariiinoneciatel ; 095.89. y ‘| the Governor, obstinately announced He the ai from fellow editors, tunes of a number of Industrial com- . Lehane A Dali Latah Mm b, duces, $13 c 0 . a Deane snd outers: eee iene Of which was Stutz Mo.|ave his troubles, After his Stutz HR orenae me Ga caks ea aioe bie eee of the card In his window to) Occasionally a box of flowers. came tors. There were many others. But packs yep iirowy off 28 Nate York] Bunyard. flowers, $106.45 ver cent. sympathy" for striking}in to the Gazette office e Mata: mn tock Exchange it was bid up to a] Bliss & Brother, meat and vegetables, | sliopmen. “T got my last co: Co Stutz Motors was his pet, at least i i amy mmunication from from a stock market standpoint. market vulue of about $700 a shure] $1,478. BO = aaah “And, by Gad. T ain't going to stay Henry Ganse, m lawyer, and sit in the outside murket. He had '. one H. Berg. plumbing, $28 20 Sr Many of the largest Interests In the Beeete AS DROTSMS | mca Berger. vast clothing dressed up another day f vo [8inging hymns waiting for the pro- Street did not regard Stutz Motors] Siecred 4 corner, a successful one, Tage C, Berger. valet, clothing repairs, “1 up another day for executin cession to start,"’ White said, in tell as highly as Ryan did. They began| OUt found himself in a position where OE ian ik Gon aliverware: Gao 1" the “Celebrity of Empory."]ing how he waited for Thu to sell It short, or to sell stock they|h°,nud 4 latwe part of his fortune) Chamber of Commerce, dues, §1 White waited all day yesterday tor ani An ‘olive branch th did not own in the expectation that}? UP In the stock and, with his} Charles & Co., kroceries, $708.08, arrest on charge of violating picket- it would go to a lower market level principal exchange taken away from] Canterbury Sehool, New Milford, LO ying tement wiitte But they were selling into what Wall | him he could not dispose of It. A large} Conn., tultion, $3.187.58 Ing clauses of the Industrial Courtland was ina Ivsutitul trane ot mney yn Baits part of his fortune began to have] Cushman’s Rakery, $69.50. Law by ing. thes i Babes benut I min Street terms ‘a bag.” Ryan secured | Part) Of his fortune ee Be ee te ciantion, He displaying the strike sympa-|when notice cams enrieve Wad or owned for his own account, or} way paper hee Td pot dispose of. | DF. Joseph Connery,” $30, thy card. been grated until suudow the account of his friends. every share| 't as baner he co ‘ot dispose of.1 Community Club, Suffern, N. Y.,] Instead, the Governor's emissartes|,,1¢'8 Gov. Allen's next move," in- of outstanding stock, But he was, is troubles did not end here. Hel iuog, $2. 7 2 timate friends of WI ‘te de |, and Gf course, perfectly willing to Toan| hd become the financial sponsor for] “Cathollc Club, dues, 883, bore an olive branch, it was reported, }Emporia, showin cards in sympathy stock to short sellers that they them-]SUch concerns as the Continental} Clinical Laboratory, medical services, | after it was declared Goy. Allen per-]With strikers in every window, eehoer Candy Company, the Ryan Petroleum ; aie selees Talent more Pe cverd cies the! Company, Morton Petroleum Com-|* De Pinna, wearing appar! for ra. |®Hdlly altenipted to make peace but fae a EETAUce ot EET Maes w et noose aroun; elr necks. y - . Di » , , ‘ ndust ‘ Hy Pears Ryan did not Know that|P&ny and several others, His stock|Ryan, $114. couldn't get White on the phone. warrant ‘ee the persons he was pinching In the|°Wnership In these and other com-| Driccer & Co.. Jewelry, $8. The Governor cinimed the “situa-| Emporia associates or White + s. eltn ul § D Oe a 1 Lite i market corner he engineered included| Panies was large. But he suddenly! 2°) Ditton & Co. bodks and sta-|tion has nothing ‘o do with free}declared they “wouderd Ww wues some of the most powerful interests] found that his holdings in these and} onory. $134.08. ‘ ah apdlilinerty, something back of it all," pointin: Inthe financial district, Tf he dig}other companies were not of loanable | err:4s confectionery, $4.74 apeech (and) iverty, Of the: pray RA loue that While andl Allen. aie: en « know, and it has since been declared | Value at banks; that his sources off yranciscan Missionaries of Mary, re-] White asserted. “Our fathers fought | ing different Gubernatorial cundidite that he really did know, he apparently | Credit hud suddenly dried up. Ngtous articles, $509, for free speech at Bunker Hill andlin the State primary did not give the well-konwn tinker'’s autos Saaily sock such @ shape} Dr. ace Godfrey Freeman, serv-] Gettysburg, and to restrict any man] At the same time Victor Murdork dain: at, when his credit was exhausted, | ices, $1,125. . from honest expression of opinion} who cut loose fioim the tanous st Stutz Motors began to climb in mar-|he was forced to place his assets In] Franklin Simon & Co., wearing ap-| merely because there is a strike in|umvirate of “Victor und Bry ti t value. It finally got to within a oe Rania ioe: & commmalttee of bankers, baghet Brothers, shoes, §47 Kansas is unwise.” Me" when he wept at the famous comparatively few points of $400 a pa Biase Lene which had once been} fraser, drugs, $97.10. | “[ am not courting arreat, but|1912 Chicago Republican Convention share, The powerful interests who|#!¥e" & market valuation of more! Dorothy Gray, medical supplies,| standing firm for free speech and free [lined up back of White. » Nad been locked in the corner could | than $700 a anhaytostnedaey ae $61.08, 0 ere 0 3 “8 8c 2 do nothing. They found they must “] C. G, Gunther's Bons, furs, $201, Dr. H. M. Biggs, professional services, pay the piper, And Ryan proved to share, The Continental Candy Com-| Hygela Ice Co., lee, $77.86. $15,000, ; pany, in which Allan Ryan was the} Mra, H. Hernstadt, corsets, $187.40, B le an expensive piper to pay. dominant interest, went into the} Joseph Company, nurse's — outfit, echt Zone, Hamanes, Sh iby DEFIED STOCK EXCHANGE AND/hunds of a receiver. Other com-| $115.26. ipeatent oninnte sanitan. instown, Pa., BIG INFLUENCES. panies in which he was heavily In-] {nollmood Club. dues. $165. Federal Motors Company, interest in Governors of the New Yorle Stock| terested begun to suffer heavy re-| yord & Taylor, wearing apparel, | Nt on contract, $100,000, Exchange, on which the stock was| Verses: $428.86, Pat rire peels Fi Jisted, took a hand in the proceedings. | POWERLESS TO SWING DURANT] Lowia & Conger, furniture, 1,711.88, | Radio Corporation, radiogram, $4.40. It was charged at the time that the MOTORS DEAL, Dr. E. B, Morrison, dentistry, $685. |, hk Ryan & Co., reason why they took action was that} Knowing ones in Wall Btreet ee ties eovivn ; 1 George F. Lewis, by assignment from some of the memberg of the Govern-| greeted these announcements with the] forse dry goods, $UA02 71 ' Jerome, Rand & Kresel, $5,000, ing Committee were atpong those who] air of those who hud predicted wisely.| ‘T. J. Marshall, fs) ‘The list of assets was summarized $117.50, were caught short of the stock. They had seen the handwriting on the] McBride, theatre tickets, $177.41. as: Cash on hand, $16; household However that may be, Allen Ryan,| wall and they foretold the downfall] New York Telephone Compnay, §29.15.] goods, $3,150; other personal prop- as a member of the Exchange, on|of Ryan's financial Babylonia, Plaza Hotel, theatre tickets, $207.80, erty, $150; stocks, bonds, &e., $529.- June 28, 1920, was called to appear| But although Allan Ryan had been| V'ollce Club, dues, 048; Insurance policies, $7,419; un- before the Governing Committee to] forced to resign his directorship in} Riding Club, dues, $178.50 liquidated claims, $5,600; Stock Ex- hing, $196.41 clothing, $4 tutoring school, tuition, answer charges that he was guilty of conduct inconsistent with equl- table principles of trade. He refused to appear. change seat, $98,000, GIRL, 8, VANISHES; most of the large companies in which he had been Interested, he gave final battle in January of this year when tt was allowed to become known that he Rosenbaum, $33.75. Rees & Rees, tulloring, $23. Not only that, he virtually charged in public] was to act in a brokerage capacity| st. Joseph's Day Nursery, dues, $3 $500 REWARD OFFER statements that he was the victim of|for stock of the new Durant Motors| SheMfeld Farme Company, — dafry, a a frame up, This was an amazing|Company. But his wealth and in-| $244.74. . , thing for a member to do, and par-| fluence had been #o far undermined Bastien: bale dressing, $9 Disappeared After Being ticularly for @ son of such a man as|that his market power proved to bo Med, ister, shed, #1 nati ee 5 Co ft "Thomas Fortune Ryan, who had been | nil. E we a Bioge, atarnae, 17.00, Accuse d of 5¢ ent Thef it considered one of Wall Streets Old| ‘The financial district, or the powers] Bnteyy Mowe HE os a Two Months’ Search Vain. Guard. that be in Wall Street, at first ex-] pinany, Jewelry toa DOU SO PBLE Miku Ryan was sxtelind’from the| pected areat thinguiot AllawA. Ryan.| Stents Gis diet thio pele Sasi Hekate eas ld Stock Exchange, but not a bit abash-| perhaps because he was the son of Wright Laundry, $814.77. of $500 for information that may lead ed he not only refused to accept the|such an able father, Wardley & Smythe, Mowers, $214.25. to the finding of Lsther Paige, eight, £98,000 for which his Stock Exchange But now that the petition In bank- H. Content, due on account stock} who has been missing for nearly two seat was sold, but he filed sult against|ruptey with liabilities of more than] transaction, $16,575 onthe, the Stock Exchange for $1,000,000, $82,000,000 hax been filed, the mur-|, Foster & Gibson. br e due on stock] The disappearance ts laid to the fact His belligerency, so amazing to the}mur 1s, as in Belshazzar’s time, |‘ 24) Be ee eases h that she nd been wccused by her «old timers in Wall Street, carried him ‘‘Mene, mene, ‘ekel, upsharin,”’ or, w. ry Ce ‘amu inal ons, $18,700, Sa een aa Ratings : rae further, In spite of the plainly inti- translated, “he was weighed in the| Guaranty Trost Company and. Alvin{to make gool the Mh SRE BAR Shy yoated threats against him, he forced balance and found wanting. Untermyer, trustess, expenses, taxes] It is thought may have feared to fie shorts jm Stutz stock to settle | And Wall Street chuckles, and commissions, $2,014.15, return home, PRESIDENT CALLS SENATORS IN PLAN TO END RAIL STRIKE (Continued from First Page.) guaranteed employment no what settlement was negotiated. Sec- retary of War Weeks brushed thie aside with the statement that these newcomers would be absorbed with- out difficulty In the event of a return to work of the 400,000 strikers. Whether the Government {s plan- ning legal steps to end the rail strike, matter as reported, tas not been confirmed by Attorney nera) Daugherty. All he would say was that the coal strike had linked itself closely to the rail paralysis by making many of the roads short of fuel, up hat the Government was seeking to prepare for every eme ney in dealing with both controversies. — T Attorney General emphasized that, as the pro- duction of coal is essential to trans- portation, the Government has the same ‘Tight to protect men engaged in the coal industry as to proteot the mails in Interstate commerce, 1922, COAL MINES OPE IN PENNA. UNDER GUARD OF TROOPS Disreg { Union to Extend Strike to Pumpmen, Operators ie WASHINGTON, Pa., July 22.—The soft coal mines of Southwest Pennsyl- vania were opened under a guard of 1,000 troor Final p: mine fion of fuel | threats whieh rs to-day arations made by begin actual produc- tely. despite open en circulated. w owners te ne ave b vic receiver Capt, Smit nental head iarters here Strikers were vd to have dyna- mited the home of Thomas Coster of aon! tmoveland County, when he f » heed warnings that he quit we the Penfiield Mine No of th Ke one | Company Coster und h ily excaped Injury Bloodhounds are being used by State police in u acarch for those re ponsible for wrecking a freight en- eine and five cars of vr on the Dun- lap branch of the Monongahela Rail- road early to-day, causing serious in- tury to James Sutton, a brakeman ‘Trafflc probably will be tied up all day, State militia oceumed strategic points throughout this region unde cover of darkness before dawn, with- in a moment's call of all areas where disturbances 1 heen threatened upon any attempt to start the mine ‘nachinery, {die since union miners walked out nearly four months ago, The cecupation bore all resemblance to a military “setaure. Field head- quarters were set up near here by Col. E. je jr., hero of the World War and commanding officer of the 1,100 State fore Troops vere stationed in five coun- ties at places where their ‘moral presence’? was thought to have a quieting influence against any attempt to hinder reopeaing of the mines: Meanwhile Ohio State military forces had encamped just across the Ohio River and reports were received that armed guards in the Northern West Virginia area—only a few miles from here—have been increased, pre- liminary to a concerted effort to re- sume coul production throughout this entire region. The Pennsylvania occupation was carried out simultaneously in five counties, south and west of Pitts- burgh. Washington, on the edge of the occupied area, was selected as head- quarters, because it provides easy trunsportation to Fayette, Westmore- land und Washington counties where disorders are most feared. No troops have been sent into Fay- ette, though it has been the centre of disorders up to this time. Camps have been opened on the borders, however, and troops can be rushed in at short notice. Mines in that area am now heavily patrolled by private armed guards, it was sald, and officials in charge of the occupa- tion feared unnicessary invasion by, troops would only provoke trouble. Three hundred and fifty soldiers are encamped in the Cokeburg region, where important mines ure located, Units are also encamped near Ebens- burg and Conemaugh, Cambria County, and Heilwocd, Indiana County SS DAUGHERTY RULES U. S. HAS POWER TO KEEP MINES OPEN VASHINGTON im July 2 f legal A com- action to o the coal Iete pro; neo rot t sti c s@ike has been prepared by the De- partment of Justice The Government will apply to the no) strike the priaciple that the n ing of cos! 4 the ame status as the rot of the mails jaund of interstaie commerce Guided by this princtply Attorney feneral Daugherty has al! bis plans tiece for sweeping court action to protect coal producers wlio obey the President's injunction to reopen thelr nines. Attorney General Daugherty has obtained the indorsement of Senator Cummins and other Senatorial legal xperts of his position. In announe- ing the principle and forecasting action following @ conference Senator Cummins, Mr, Daugh- td: ‘If the Government has the power ind authority, as {t has, to protect uch engaged in transporting the nails or engaged in interstate com- m ft also has the power to pro- tect those engaged In the production of uny commodity Indispensable to the transportation of the mails or the movements of interstate commerce.’ It said at the Department of Commerce that details of the Ad- ministration’s scheme for local com- mittees in the various producing dis- tricts, working under a central com- mittee in Washington might be made public late to-day. ‘Thirty or forty producing operators are expected to meet with Secretary Hoover on Monday to consider the Administration's plan. The operators, {t was said, would in general be the same who attended the recent meet- ing. al with erty was ae MEETING MONDAY SEEKS TO BRING END TO COAL STRIKE WASHINGTON, July 22.—In an effort to bring about resumption of mining operations in the anthracite coal fields, a conference In which John L. Lewis, head of the United Minc | Workers, is expected to participate! 30,000 MINERS RESUMED WORK JUNE 1 TO DATE Penna. Labor Board Says 270,198 Are on Strike and 9,597 Shopmen. HARRISBURG, Pa., July 22. Thirty thousand striking miners have gone back to work since June 1, according to reports from the ten State Employment Offices in the State, the Department of Labor and ‘Industry announced to-day. There were 270,198 miners out on strike in Pennsylvania to-day, according to the reports Exeluding Altoona, Erle, burgh and whe: Pitts- Philadelphia districts, onditions made it impos- tain the exact situa- were reported out in connection with the railroad shop- men's strike, . PENNSYLVANIA R TO APPEAL RULIN OF LABOR BOARD Line Ord -d to Hold Election for Representatives Adjust Wages. Gen, W. W. Atterbury, Vice Presi- dent of the Pennsylvania Lines tn charge of operations, issued a state- ment to employees of the Pennsyl- vania to-day that there would be an immediate appeal to the Suprem Court of the United States from the decision of the Circuit Court of Ap- peals that the United States Railroad Labor Board was justified in orderine the Pennsylvania to hold a new elec- tion among its shopmen for represon- tatlves to deal with the corporations as to wages and shop conditions. The statement concluded » stronger proof or more prac al demonstration of the mutual {sfaction of the present relationship between management and employees on this railroad could be offered than the fact that in the recent emergency and under the most trying circum stances 90 per cent. of all employees und 65 per cent, of the shop crafts have stood loyally by the public in the Pennsylvania service."” The decision from which the rail road is to appeal was the result of an action by System Federation No. 90. This federation demanded the right. as an organization, to participate in the conferences by which the recent agreements between the railroad and Its workers were reached, Heads of some of the more tmpor- tant railroads said that to-day, the beginning of the fourth week of the shopmen’s strike, they are better pre- pared to deal with the walkout than they were a week after it started The most they will admit is that pas- senger and freight service In some instances has been impaired. Food and milk supplies for New York have not been affected. will be held Monday, either in Seran- ton, Pa., or New York John ¥. Durkan, Mayor of Scran- ton, announced this to-day, after he had conferred with President Harding regarding the situation Mr. Durkan Js one of five Mayors from the anthracite region who have been negotiating with miners’ repre- sentatives and operators for a re- sumption of operations. He said he gives a rare and did not know whether operators rt would be present delightful quality ————— — impossible to LABOR FEDERATION duplicate. TO SUPPORT COAL AND RAIL STRIKES WASHINGTON, July The J support of the entire American unit Federation of Labor the striking miners and shopmen to- day as the result of action taken by legislative representatives of all the labor unions. The following telegram was sent to President Lewis of the miners ert M. Jewell of the shopmen muel Gompers: “It was the unanimous conclusion that we telegraph you In the name of the conference that the strike has our full sympathy and support and that we wish you every success in an honorable adjustment of the present controversy. “Reports made to the conference from various sections of the country indicate a rising public sympathy in favor of the men who are fighting fo right and justice."* ——- INDIANA GOVERNOR CALLS MEETING OF was pledged to ani by MINERS AND OWNERS INDIANAPOLIS, July 22. sentatives of Indiana miners and oper. ators were invited to-day by Gov. Mc- Cray to meet in a Joint Wage Con ference here next Tuesday in an at tempt to settle the coal affects the Indiana bituminous field, The Governor addressed letters Phil H. Penna, diana Bituminous Coal Operators’ As sociation, and John Hessler, Preaiden of District No. 11, United Mine Work- ers of America, asking them to mee here Tuesday for a conterence to con- sider bringing the strike tn this State to an end Arbitration of the differences be tween the miners and operators woul be suggested, .—Repre- strike as it to secretary of the In- the Governor indicated. GERMANY ACCEPTS TERMS OF ALLIES ON MORATORIUM Assents to All Conditions Im- posed by Reparations Commission, PARIS, July 22 (Associated Prese), —Germany has formally accepted the demands of the Allied Committee on Guarantee: which were presented at Berlin last ‘Suesday. In « letter the Reparations Commis- sion received to-day, Chancellor Wirth that Germany, after profound deliberation, had decided to accept the conditions for the duration of the moratorium which the German vernment assumed would soon be granted Regarding dum shows tee stated control, the memoran- the Guarantees Commit stipulated for the appointment of to the Ger- nee, one deal other super- two delegates accredited Ministry of Fin with receipts and the man ing nditures Ge exp ment under- delegates, at measures are man takes to acquaint the sq presented to the Reichstag, with first the budget estimates for the coming fiseal year; second, all bills pertain- ing to financial measures; third, all requests for additional or supple mentary credits to those provided for n the budget, with the exception of credits for less than 500, marks; fourth, the monthly statements of ex- penses be applied against credits the budget, and fifth, at fixed regular dates re- the t me time as tie to granted in atements garding t measures adopted for economy any en d by the recently appointed under tary of State for economy The memorandum demands right for the committee's dele the tes to investigate whether the expenditures of any Department of the Ministry of Finance exceed the credits author ized for it. The delegates will a point a representative to accompany the tr g auditors from Min- nance throughout Germany istry of I . rol, as outlined, ts to be effective Noy. 1, 1922 Concern the floating debt, the German Government, it is stip. ly must submit to the delegates, at all requested, statements showing the exact standing of the floating debt and the measures for payment adopt- ed by the Ministry of Finance to cover expenses. @ times Cigarette It's toasted. This one extra process Guaranteed by Fe Morin pee - Notic ce tx Advertisers « Dis be copy and release ordere for cit Ne cei das, Morning World or ‘The Sreaing Wort slater 4.0. ML. the day prece publi cau be thaerted” only as ry perms wad in order of recelpt at Tae World Office. 9 aining engravings to be Wade by Tho Worit nu be received by 1 P, Me Display advertising copy for the Supple- ment Sections of ib tay World must bo received by 1 7. M {ion and release muy! 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