The evening world. Newspaper, September 4, 1922, Page 2

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2 elie ee. THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1922, fo Seren UNOFFICIAL MOVES PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE FUNERAL OF MICHAEL COLLINS, IN DUBLIN WAR WAGE LEVELS SECRETARY DAVIS ; United States Senators Pepper and Reed of Pennsylvania came after an all-day session of the operators which resulted in thenr accepting the com- promise proposed by the Senators. and a three-hour session of miners and operators, In tho joint confer ence the miners also accepted the proposition and an agreement wi 2 Fexched subject to the action of the]. . . . A =4% : ; + 4 miners’ convention, in, | soordanse Success in Coal Settlement Continuation Would Bring } vu, Prompts New Attempts Prosperity, He Adds, With eennee Ci ene an ae for Mediation. Peace in Industry. The contract in force Mareh 31, Raa hae 1922, to be extended to Aug, 81, 1923 By David Lawrence. MOOSEHEART, Ill, Sept. 4.— sea Production of coal to begin at (Special Correspondent of The Eve American labor has made great he Miners 4nd, operaiors 6 Soin ting World.) strides in the past year, Secretary, | \ in a recommendation to Congress WASHINGTON, Sept qu Davis of the Labor Department do- | clared to-day in a Labor Day ad~ dress. In spite of unemployment, he declared, it has fought off all attempts to de » Wage levels set up during nd that legislation be forthwith enacted creating a separate Anthracite Coal 5 Commission with authority to inveatt-|Shopmen’s strike may be expected this gate and report promptly on every] week. The Federal Government is not phase of the industry.”” content with the “The -ontinuance of production] after the extension date to be upon such term: ‘as the parties may ag upon in the light of the report of the Commission." right).—Further efforts to settle restraining orders obtained from the courts to vent violence and interruption of rail way traffic, (nofMfeial moves to m diate are a natural corollary of the situation, The success of mediatic in the hard coal strike and the poac 1 TO RUSH COAL BILLS fi! ending of the soft coal controver SS SS e made even more necessary th nA j ; THROUGH THIS WEEK | finding of some common ground for iis wody-of the sinin trowel OF the Trinh Sree: State Government tacehuwn arriving al caisson, wrapped in the tri-color of the Free State. Beside it stood a military guard a the settlement of the shopmen ry EY eC he cask vas taken to th “athedra a Congress to Enact Borah | trike. the City Hall amid throngs of mourners, and also lying in state in tue City Hall, It GE INSHOES REORN UDG GUY: Eia)l) ENG sone 0b iy Res CAR en (to eRe Cet ieurey forthe ase siees 1 ‘ of the church before being laid to rest near that of Arthur Griffith, ais close associate ms : Unless cars are available to move . a ar and Cummins Measures. | ne coal that is produced, the ending] 48 Viewed there by thousands from all over Erin, ‘The casket rested upon a gun in the fight for Irish libe WASHINGTON, Sept. 4.—Con-]of the coal strikes will have heen the wa a a war cri- sis. Workingmen “grown accustomed to comforts in life not tasted before,’* he added, will now find them pre= served throughout the future. STATE DOBUN: “Despite the pressure of tremen- dous mass of unemployed, despite the efforts of @ few reactionary employers who selfighly sought to take advan- age of the stress of labor and tho tion, we have kept the general level of w Ss up,"’ he declared. “LE ene m safe in saying the average com- gressional leaders are preparing to|futile. The entire attention of th: ‘6 s 99 t pensation of the man w ae ce ition of the man who toils to- cc tan ming ns aT CHIEF LAYS |‘Rally Under Union Standard,” {DF VALERA DIREGTS |INCENDIARY SOUGHT |'<'"e eta this week. The Cummins and Borah} attorney General Daugherty’s state it was u year ago, and some have re- 1H LYING PANS A PROTOS a 9 ceived an increase. bills, dealing with the coal strike are} ment to the Federal Court In Chicago I G Pl t ° ‘ 1 an in . f a . Cummins’s bill gives the} that 1,000 thal athe had to be an t ; 5 oe ; M bids 4 Interstate Commerce Commission |Mufed do not square with the 0 Stone and Lewis Want Peace man who in the words of the Scripture added powers with respect to priority] timistic expressions from ch head ) ‘earns his bread with the sweat of his fave." he man who swings a ham- of profitsering. The Borah bill cre-|about normalcy on their roads. The ss sont ee ey : 5 Continuation ‘or ‘Hie: ss valk ates a national commission. executives have been issuing state- ON NATIONAL BUI Organize! Is Keynote of Federation Head in Labor Day REPORT IN DUBLIN prone on of gh rare levele, Discussion of the Daugherty injune- | ments galore in an effort to induce Addres Only in This W y Can Struggle Be W on; tion may feature the discussion of the |strikers to come back to work, it be- prosperity in the United States, be- = et : . cause it would increase the Nation's strike situation. Representative Hud-|ing assumed that the strikers will War Decried in Any Form b, Stone and Lewis. (Continued from First Page.) a Pr eiisea | HEAT = consuming power. ‘There have been dieston, Alabama, is expected to. in-]grow panicky and flock back to their! Could Pay 10 Per Cent. More Sa a eS, Munition Laden Ship Froim|aove som the windows and fled.| industrial conflicts, he sald—referring troduce during the week his anti-in-| posts as ey, ab ai ir jobs being) But for 186 Regulations, WASHINGTON, Sept. 4.—Calling upon union men to “rally more com: Hambure Captured Off Those who did not do so died, to the mines, rail and textile strikes. junetion bill, ious irae eee bliin ed aia ; le = ut SHOU nOE Of © He Says pletely under the standards of the unions,’ Samuel Gompers, Pre: is se ii Not a single survivor who ques-| which have meant ‘incalculable loss, malfeasance in office the use by offi-|the strikers is not so ensily broken e Says. sateth ; ye NOP suld supplement the watch-| and loss that ‘will reach ev tae American Fede! Labor, last asted his 20) arbo tioned could supplement the wateh reach every man, cials of the injunction in an attempt|and the Government knows exactly mee Federation of Labor, last night broadcasted his Cork Harbor. man's report. Residents living in the] woman and child in America. The to curtail the rights of free speech | how bad are transportation conditions. Rational putes of employ ree Diessage vicinity declared the fire flashed from] prerequisite of prosperity is industrial § or iree assembly. Two fundamentals, however, inter i p ehinhah is! Ho suid 5 o DUBLIN, Sept. 4.—Eamon de Val-|the building with such force that peo-| peace einen: pose themselves in the situation—the|'esponsible for the presenv railroad Organize! Organt Orgunize In) ferent situation {n Industry. Let us}era ne Childers eved] ple living two miles away were tele hese strikes give deplorable op- EXTRA HELP TO GET _fratiroads cannot be compelled to take]situation, Prank H. Alfred, President bes Unio} hope this vicious attack will cease and|to 1 pated in a battle near] phoning for details within three min-| portunity to the passions of unscrup- back their old employees unless they] of the Pere Marquette Railroad, says lis is my messix assure permanent industrial peace in| Kilworth, County Cork, on Saturday. | utes. ulous men on both sides of each con- MINES IN SHAPE wisn to do so of their own free willfin a statement just issued, which fol- Sage America: on Labor America During the confMict, in which Na-| «f was the last man to get out} troversy. They open the way to the and the striking shopmen cannot be|lows ROE Toby vente thee) “It may be well to declare, how-|tional troops defeated a greatly said N. 1. Davis, a tall middle-|eruel and calculating, the blood- SCRANTO) Pa., Sept. 4.—Col- [forced to go-back to work under con-! "I believe there is not a railroad | SOPK Lsseigs pea Rag Ms ever, tuat just so long as the great | superior mber of irregula a 1 carpenter from Corbin, Ky thirsty and irresponsible - yorable to therr eithe: ne cor at co} ot afford | | int wir against the terests persist hetr > ruard of seventeen of the latter kept know about the fire is th er conde : ins - bi lieries in this section put on extra] ditions unfavorable to them, Neither[in t) untry that could not afford | ition movement in partioulae and ta fecrents: Persists in their unholy aun ne atte opt AIT know about the fire is that] Arter condemning instances of vio 4] e the il rn the United States Labor Board nor a]to pay lis shop craftsmen 10 per cent, || : : tempts to destroy labor unions close wateh over a farmhouse from} four men were behind me—but they | ter n the rail and mine strikes, P help to-day to get the mines ready for} Fiiion injunctions can directly force|tmore were it not for the obnoxious | °°! it senera so long will the present struggle which the two Republican leaders ar the door, [don't know] he said: 4 resumption of operations next Mon-] either side to yield national rules of employment. There], ie of this war certain facts stand] tinue, for organized labor proposes | believed to have directed the opera-]who they were: They seemed to be] “\We must and will find means to e day. As the endurance fight drags on.Jare 186 of these rules, which were] ry) pba rent GR Wo worker ht to the end for its own prese--[tlons. They were coughing, I] settle these industrial disputes with- S Resolutions were adopted to-day by |iowever, the condition of railway|d’awn up by the representatives Of | 4, ave uttered least in the ante | vation and for the protection of mil-| CORK. Sept. 4 (Associated Press) smoke got them before the] out recourse to the futile arbitrament ] members of the Old Forge local} wauipment coupled with the spread ct |!bor during war times, and the wim} aioe war are the workers who gre 088 of workers and their families." | —It officially announced that 300 of force f United Mine Workers, opposing the | acts of violence will compel the Fed-|Seems to have hecn the creation moat tharbuehis oFe 1 See ary of Labor Davis also issued |itregulars, with ten machine guns,| “It's hard to say where the men] {am a firm believer in the ulti- 4] acceptance of an agreement with the | oa; Government, a. the agency of the|the most jobs that could ben spent reveal organized in their. re Day message, in which he|tWo armored cars and a treneh mor-|came from, I was here only five} mate fairness and justice of mankind. i operators ending next August. The public. welfare, ‘to take a hand and] This principle of ability to pay seems “It is Gqually sppurent that the peace from different} ‘ar, attacked Macroom from o'clock| days. Some of the boys came before]] believe that no differences between Y local demands the new contract run bring Federal ‘gonee Inte play to have been ignored entirely Workers: Who’ sign muttered Hien ‘0 law can be too drastic, | * ree morning ea 1 a0 2008) I did. A few had just arrived, Some,]employer and employe are so great ) “Le ig ariel ba ramteas a . kK ¢ § d s' Sitawi tao weve ‘i a s| hen they were repulsed in disorder. Jyou know, didn’ Ne ito: ie ai a 4 merits: 1984 Here again are two opposing influ Let us take @ few concrete In-| whose wages have been cut to the |" MW t TURAL DRT tne aie: [Due (cusulita are sie ta nese RUES| SoM? caice oe ee emaneetiey, cane Dever tate noa at E Between 10,000 and 15,000 cars are | ices the railway executives and|St#nces in connection with the na-|jread line and below, whose hours ¢ end to brutality in any con- hh NSN Ne right names so wide that it cannot be bridged, if 4 now in the hard coal region ready tol Pris ‘them the conservative cle-|tional shop craft agreements and thet tianor have becn inordinfutely leneth. he said here can be no} fered several casualties. The Nation-1 «1 was sleeping with some of my|both sides will gather around the a be loaded. UM taHs an erAmiurigan busi hese. ward working rules. This is the way] ¢nea—are the ones who mre unor for bloodshed or destruc jon|@l8 lost two men Killed and two} ejothes on. L heard a yell and I]council table in a spirit of earnest - ee Hina car eto Rig protection were) Hey Operate, Take the case of a loco- | ganized or weakly organized in Nae es It is a challenge to our eS eam 4 med at recapture |Lumned foratiie door, he are a: co-operation."* i motive waich has been held in shop | Whole scheme of government and to le uttack was aimed at recaptur-Higwed me out. [ was the last living a ENGINES CRIPPLED _ [realty granted there would be enougil eiuie of a broken stay bolt, Under | wottt, jeuniaed “workers haw re whole American, Spirit" ing a position the Irregulars evacuated {OWS THe Cutt Was the rt wid e1 cruited to bre Ve strike, 0 3 St fs weathered the wit meet % nefore the recent advance s . AND ‘TRAINS STONED] 7 2ycrulted to Decal the stike, and}the national agreement and the rules |forees, ever ready to go forward and | Meantine operatives of the depart-|Petore the recent advance of the Na-)ingicate how the fire moved TELEPHONE BEATS he. advocates 0 vernment opera-Tiaid cown, there are no less than | sind or] ment—armed with extraordinary pow- | tonals “No, T won't call it fire. It was a Peering idk who a [ iat Comme there. ar 1an'| confront the enemies of labor and of |? a with extraordinary pow= [Una cont, 4A aeitish ae-| "NO, HNon't cal SUICIDE ATTEMPT mat , 4 € different operations, as follows: | Kumanity and to carry on to success {et under the Daugherty injunction— a Tes 1s greased lightning Epidemic of Disorders Is|aist me former conse sonia onty [the eab carpenter and his helper | INMANIY, and to Curry on 10 sce TT et against Labor Day mectings of co" wenterday ‘selznd a steamer] "3iany gethowe who Yeaped from the] || ————— mean delay and no urance of nor eo ting board si i ni | Strikers: oughe ne Col cone Ree ution Of) Vindows were bh so badly ey Reported by Yards at ET eae eiatlGs eee Ne an net anor and hin} Hon of Wrong and the establishment |sttikers throughout the country, In-tecu narbor. ‘The captured vesnel| Windows were hurt so badly they Wrote Son of Intent; He Pp t eves ot : me, Fal Sos Rely A i} he 4 es and his| of stice, timation were given by department was bound r th west cc tof Ir were unable to move and poli and ‘ort vis. Along with the idea of furnishing} helper take off the Jacke sound for the coast of Ire them to safety. Oth-| Notified Chicago Police. n their quarters, were] CHICAGO, Sept. 4.—A telephonic carried out by police and firemen Who} message from Rochester, N. ¥., saved ne Jotficials that steps had heen taken to ned | Prevent defendants in the injunction sing strikers in violation ie unorganized workers, figh single-handed, if at all, are w scattered and helpless in their unequa! | from addr fireme n dragge evcome ection it is being urged that the] 3, The pipemen remo overnme us the entire army, 1 i © machinist necessary, to enforce the injunetions| the cunning PORT JERVIS, N. Y., Sept. 4.— Stoning of a train from Cleveland in land and was reported to have cleared from Hamburg. ‘The steamer was taken to Dublin and handed to the pipe. 1 helper remove ket the mountains near this Erie divi-|which have been issued agains'| % The ox-welder and helper burn] POS asainst the organized em eh te core eet | cecnaeae the Provisional Government ponnee mol ees york was going|the life of Mrs, Lillian Seaman early, sional point and an epidemic of dis-| strikers who may perpetrate acts off out the sta Minin experiangaeor this fou hante® to aly te waaveata Lara eras ira rae seins DANG on a crowd of several hundred moen,|to-day. The police found her uncon~ t orders among locomotives were re-| Violence. It is u short step to the) 6. Phe boltermaker and helper take) nistabor war compel the to Orders have been issued to Federal fouth of Donegal, They destroy supposed to have been striking shop-| scious from the effects of gas, Sev~ i ported to-day by road officials, use of troops on trains irrespective} out Che staybolt . | [recognize how completely they are| District Attorneys to watch all Labor |farin Bridge between Donegal men, stood on a cliff overlooking the] eral days ago Mrs. Seaman wrote her j - 7 of whether prospectt violators off 7. The bollermaker and helper put} enrown upon their own ources in] Day #emonstrations for possible vio-}ypount Ct os, cut the telegraph |Ullding and hurled stones ut the in-}son Ralph in Rochester informing Yardmaster Wallace sald that since} the injunctions are actually known to]! thy steybolt. the struggle to maintain and improve | lutions of the tnjunction. Wires, blocked ihe roads with treea, | wred and the rescuers until driven} yim that by the time he received the midnight every big engine suddenly | be in the pathway of trains or thought] 8. ‘The running board bracket is re-Tineiy standard of living and soci:!| Union leaders were preparing for almuded stores. in Dunkinely and am by a squad of police. letter she would be dead, had to be taken back into the yard] to be. pibeed hy Fnneniaike and helper status legal combat against the injunction, |jushed’ an armored car near Bruclish, identity of only ono of the} He called the Chicago police. At for repairs. In most cases, he said,| Federal troops are bound to be w j J The junning pone fastened on) “vpvery contest with the owners and|to be staged when Attorney eerie Faativar lead men has been established. Helthe hospital where she was taken it had been found the airbrakes would] in large numbers before the strike 1] PY, * fal carpenter and Sal by gp {Manipulators of industry accentuates | Oaugherty appears before” the ii is J. 8 Karr, thirty seven, of Baltl-| Mrs, Seaman refused to explain, q not work, oil cups had been broken] settled, but there is a disinclination ‘ Be i pinced “by OQ) ihe truth that the workers have bur] ‘ago District Court in an effort to]. more. The bodies of the others wer oe i or fires would not draw properly to use troops unless the Government bent set oan tae arty have been | feW outside their own ranks who sym- [have It made permanent, [t will Wx 3,000 U.S. MARSHALS [act removed trom the smoking ruins SAVES SELF AS HE ) The Cleveland train arrived with) actually is in control of the roads.) jy 4 AS this onerauon "AGKOLO pathize with them in their determina-| ‘ttacked on the ground that it rows] KEEP CLOSE WATCH Joni late afternoon and they were TOUCHES LIVE WIRE { three windows broken. The crew re-} And in such circumstances the strik-|bojcrmaker and his helper could hy of tion to emancipate mankind or sup-| trikers of two guarapteed constitu 1“ ON LABOR HOLIDAY harred Srypnd rece ss Hory saa: Ge ] i ported a volley of stones had pattered|ers ure not likely to Interrupt traffic, ony ait tila work alone and in tese| port them in thelr efforts ional rights in curtailing the right The loss is placed by railroa _— against the cars early this morning./ put are represented as more than Three locomotives had to be brought] eager to effect a settlement. of public mbly and preventing tume he uncounted victories that or Gials at $220,000. Electrician Has Narrow Escape ct eo € pfs from manoeuvring Ci 29 > Myr - ie € as disce ‘ed at 5 o'clock Electrocution in Power ’ “Our @oremen's time is Leing|Ranizeed labor wins, the few tempo- mo . iets a 6 their) Ready Throughout Country Ms th Jail aieonyen a ESarclon’ rom Electrocation 4 out here before one could be found] The moment Government control] wasted in the classification of thelrary setbacks that labor experiences, | 3'0UPS _ fo. Ston Wiolations of | morniig ty a Negepieres. He ; which would work. starts, the shopmen will return tol work, There is a lack of co-operation] sry aloud the Divine truth that justice |. - pe p (ail oe Hs hn Reine hee ies George B, Wagner, an electrician em- 1 Erie police are patrolling the tracks] work. The moment troo) used tol petween the crafts whieh is unneces-|for those who toil can only cone Injunction. ae Within fivG mintitee te entite|(Meren Dy the New Rats Santee ak bed } with sawed-off shotguns, protect trains which are run by thelr} sarily costly, due to this fact, An-|through the Workers’ own. efforts, C CHICAGO, Kept. 4.—The dawn of yee) Within NYG TRAE one ene | Bort Morris power stations ts in tApeeia { present owners, the acts of violence} other instanee, which is typical, is} their own organization, their own per iialigr “Day, Ani the) S20 dy eee ae ae oe eae ee a ee tioa tk Ket ’ STRIKING RAIL MEN probably will cease, but labor lenders} where an injector fails. ‘The ta- | sistency if the railway shopmen's strike found che thel nme Had streaal paces out ospita who are not given to exaggeratcd] tion in this instance is as follow ‘Now is the time for the workers to 5.000 United States Marshals mobil- {007 0 0Cy Teen ne or Wagner, who was working about # PARADE IN BOSTON] tatoments predict that the backs off 1. Ths pipeman and” helper” are| ity. more. completely under Uh oe cal reat "the: Government's] ina few minutes ater, | | Wagner, he nat svespsrtad suave the strikers will be stiffened and they i in to tpeouple the: pines standard of the unions trike injunction and prepared | to] Aine i ee hiding: tad, been [come tn contact with & ‘high tension * Nye rl wi € 7 C of 2. The achinist and helper re-] «Now is the time for the renee to! cep a-close wateh on labor demon ld ' r ‘| wire that was carrying 22,! fe t Rain Fails to Halt March of |! refuse even more stanchly Shes t eeue b Now ts the time for the workers tc Keep a close wateh on labor de ied us a burrucks and commissary | Mie NT we to the floor and the cons 253 return to their jobs. move the injec Lee nice nize thoroughly and compactly, strations throughout the count ao ieetaianeurences Chinen Ninety Se Lue momen tha exetaes Labor Unions. Then it will bea question of get a ene a Nniat and helper make) ang with the spirit of solidarity that Chicago union pie eas ay I ind he was hurled from the wire and : petent. workmen, On this] repairs to injecto: comes from organization in. a nob anized programme had he ac Ty hold upon {t broken, BOSTON, Sept. 4.—-Rain did not} ting sompetent Jnot information is| 4 The plpaman and telpor then} Comes from organiition tn a nob Moe yanoe of tiie. Hallday, ERIE CLERKS WARNED iiis hold upon tt Prevent union lubor from displaying | question, President Harding has been| Couple the pipes movement for a noble purpose 5 (Continued from First Page.) eee he annual hotday| BACK ON JOBS BY OCT. 1 ——— aie bavi », Preside! rding has been y aaie Rad’ Works ro} is a al 0) a 5 as pee . . ae Lint id Se erent eas ORI ahereue ey, Mand conjectures of | “In this instance, each craft jas its] ¥en & nt ‘a Se hee Nt - cht with it new acts of violence WEST POINT eo HOGS BAtROW roug! cl ay and downtown | give! e gue ¢ bss i helper and th. foreman of each craft | PO’ speaks even the | privilege was not extended to the fair- ; ssions of bitter re- . . Although a special review of the Wes ‘ . ne day, sve ougand mel erested parties point. He] Pelper and th: P ongest battalions of lubor's exptoit- |” nd further expressi Has Not Wages and WH Fill, Sig iot nates Beieete sorunae_ Peveral Shoueiud ment sil lint renee pasie ob Shree oat | tad his time taken up to classify the | Stone ft battalion ‘ f bel A exploit: | ways, entment on the part of labor leaders Strikers’ Places. Bois Mee oh Me tint ot tosis alee and a few women were in line. The]has only his exp rar] Work and assign the workers to the] ers will retreat In disorder before the} Bernard Darwin of the English golf{ivainst the Federal injunction BCRANTON. Pa, Sept. dictfem-| on eace ine Neo Vork Chapteky Bat « striking railroad shopmen formed one}atrike to go on, for he was told thary iy ob, The standard joke} seried sweeping ranks of humanity's }eqm withdrew from further play in|” hereabouys of B. M. Jewell, |, ° NTON, Pa., Sep ; nitartes, the New York Chapter, n= large secti Among their placard: tection were furnished there 5 4 whereshouy bers of the Brotherhood of y| bow Division, Veterans’ Assoctation, F large eection: = Amang Placards ti¢ protection : cbout the plumber with his helper | hosts a downpour to-day. James D. Stand-[y..q.. of shoperafts strike, re ‘i sd by, the Brie Rail-| will be accorded the honor when they { were atenth week and going strong," would be plenty of men WINDS: to) eee ee ete ne oihx mvctecl, “Ormunieo!” Oraanidel Oreunizel” | Ucore metal: ble dlaving vornpanion, Clerks were notified by,.th and “Thin! over on Eleection Day mine coal. He inyited the op tap, comes to the house, looks over A call to workers of the Nation to] aiso withdrew hained unknown youd to-day that if they did not re-| visit West Point next Sunday, Sept. 10, Ky., the failure of The favorite tunes of the bands|to reopen their mines under those con bait At Louisy i2 \ 0 oO yefore Oct r T y" and “The Batti ' the job, and with his helper returns{organtze in the “war for honorable] The summaries of the cards forla reed train wreckers to remove a ts nto w his betore Oe, 1 the 2a were: “Tammany” and “The Battle | ; nut very little increase In coal 4 sh seiigan wrens dustria’ 1ce” was sounded by |g, ; ey reall bi A places would be filled by others. ft: eat ditions, but very sii ini to his shop to get a Stills neb, [industrial peaae ww fou ted by | xuturday and to-day, with total score, ioraiy device preven the. taped on | Panee) WoMla che ea BRD: icra carta Gree ROA IRO cent iceaean ee (eee els , | is Mustrated every minute in our busy Jother national unton leaders in Labor | rotows: fistow ofa Touloyite and Nasnvilted The Exe announced it had not) FUNERAL D . Ns Le Liyae a-) Mr. Harding is personally oppose] raiiyoad shops under national agree-]Day messages as preparations were “ke: ante 6—withe ir of cars load ‘1 ed wages In accorda = bor organizations, with industrial and), Nazing any railroads, He has only Tees nore completed for the fight ast. the |, See reaps ae eee ee apcumcline' laa ruling of the United States Railroad] = THE HOME FUNERAL Detar Seuerauon Gf Lavon Inv in parmatted aiming aus far to sAUe) —o restrictive rail strike injunction o withdrew. J. D. Standish, Detroit,Imait cars were derailed but the |#bor Board . Seatentes inesprnsietr ib =. c of as Congress for 3 lined by Attorney General Daugh- Le eat bate mba gy _ lu most of the cities of the Dominion to hie penttiong SHeasdel in congress 11 BANKER’S 3ON KILLED tain oy Attorney’ 0 maa : ene ay Srila’ Weis aches remainett yn_the tracks and ARMY FLYER OFF I ‘a bean (Abend tI y e de trations een ph ae 7 7 n al strik A aight, New York, 77—87—Ithere were no injuries When if] day. ase Toth 4 mnonatrations not to exercise it, The drift of events BY FALL FROM BICYCLE] were in the air 164. Herbert Jaques, Brookline, 81 Seven men were under arrest at FOR PACIFIC COAST 1 tempts on the part of the more radi-;However, ie slowly In that direction ompers's stand was upheld in the] 716s, W, H. Gardner, Buffalo,}ijyetna, La., a suburb of New Or- cal elements, notably In Toronto, to] unless wome mediation can be devised| Bradford trelmni’s Wheol sbllwen | messuges of Warren &. ptone, Vroal- |s1—a5—168 wins, charged with having beaten and ; i a pba ‘ a ' © weeks to pre on hogue Car Tracks. tent of the Brotherhood of Locomo- SPs . ; anos |(Stsa, . 5 . stage counter celebrations during the next two week) v i socom R. D. Rooks, Providence, 83—85 ashed the throat of a roundhouse]Seeond Attempt for One 3 MONTREAL, Sept. 4.—Nearly 30,-] vent it. Bradford Ireland, seventeen, son of} tive Engineers, and John L. Lewis, 1i¢3 H. B, Heyburn, Louisville, nigves Stop Trip 000m resent very on aa Shaiaa O. epes etary) of the] President of the United Mine Work-|g5 ing, Ht Kenworthy, Provi-| At Carbondale, Ill. an Tlinots Cen- Stoy p- men, representing every organ- =i LA ohniee GawpRran Na, Gian wine 5—178 yy ' ers of America ized trade in Montreal, turned out to-| MEN IN MASKED AUTO aia bush Avenue, Brooklyn, tled Inst alght { day in the biggest Labor Day parade FIRE ON RAIL GUARDS |!» Unger's IMosnital, Pat * this city has seen from the effects of injurios message of le as a move “humanity JACKSONVILLE, Sept. 4.—Lieut LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. ttempts| James H. Doolittle, army aviator, ox-|§ ight after 10 dence, SI—S1—16 ancis Quimet, Boston, 76 ral employee was beaten Other incidents {neluded Stone ment by labor t D—Loat, Thureday evenin nd ‘onyx circle pl % “4 an % p ects to hop off to lf wd H, sohnston, St. Paul, 82 touwrocie: ( it ‘Trinidad, Col., and | pect | be or ‘Ay. and @ oward social ore 1 ot}o'clock from the beach at Neptune ‘at Rockaway 1740. { ‘ — F Atter One Te aui| Hit’ When he fell from his bieyelo near]! nis a : alt t) , i J. J. Beadle, Philadelphia, 74—] Montgomery. Alas. and the b ACI t | i i mc te B pol at. Neptunes: Bar Rockaway 140) \ 7 Mis sannmer heme in chogue eco WO THUSE Nave, ose civil] ge a9 freight cars and buldi at Denison, |near here, confident thi " —— —— = FIRST INJUNCTION TEST Cineinnatt Vara rie youth fell when hs levete aWit-Pization perish.” we declared, “swar.| 8°” Kennedy, ‘Tutsa, st—80—161. [tex dinner to-morrow. ight on he shore| IN MACHINIST'S ARREST] CINCINNATI, Sept. 4-24. group or ded om tho eur tracks, Me wan musi) tte sed lun ut ut te sion herman Uilen, HAIGH | “aeyeral strikers were arrested at/of the Vnetic at Sun Diego, Cal, j nin a curtained atitomobils he hospital but did not regain con-| forever banished by the workers who. . chicago : ) connection with] than 2,200 miles away ” fired a bullet into w bullding x | sclousness, ut fhe Dehest of diplomats and priti-| RAymond J. Daly, Chicago, 86-84 Manieby ui “ihop worker, | ‘The wirplane in which the aviator I HE W ORLD’S HARTFORD, Conn., Sept. 4.— r Railroad's conch yards here to —_—> ers, hay Kes 1 their blood | 47° the Kil be i ‘lice |flew Saturday from Kelly Wield, San e } John Hanrahan, machinist, arrested {day and severa} railroad guards, who WN OF THE DAY IN] and borne the burden of page 1. H, Hoyt, New York, 84—87—171. J who was shot ¢rom ambush, Police Sears (ps cksonville, + dis Ha rlem Office! for alleged tampering with a New |occupled the building, narrowly escaped AGO, Liberty we must lave or life iiself|A: T- Buffinton, Fall River, 86—with-[said the men conte tance of 1,080 miles, without a x i York, New Haven and Hartford loco- | being struck. 4.—Chieago, centre} wil) be futile drew to-day, ©. L. Maxwell, Tren —_ motive, will furnish the first test case| The guards returned the fire and are , KILLED. ora of the opinion that one of the autolst tor W t Nation-wide railroad shopmen’s|™ powis, in his message ton, §3—85—16 FALLS OFF CYCI piss"? by the motor, ¥ Now Located at \ dicted “a stopped to give first start to-day and re ris were > observed Labor Day to-day witt ra niles: SSHittan tear Just after he had stopped to g for the start to an i h in the East of the injunction obtained |i. ‘hit, hecause w scream of pain was] eu the customary union celebration, Acpouttie to the end." “We stand with — Wohi % ° x ity a oman Who had been thrown | that the storm last night over Tampa t ve. he by Attorney General -Daugherty in|) \* ars ine t ee that Terated PCOlMMINS Unbroken and we will con 7 8. Gardner Cal rien tnotoreyele, Michael Peturls of) fe no be 7 o ‘ ” heard ax the machine w iven raplily [the headquarters of the six federat ¢ rer eaice ls Pinte, | Bent Pea linicer Bay would have no bearing on th s Chicago. away. ‘The guards pursued the auto-!shop crafts one or two minor offic tinue to stand in sold phalangy until York, 8%--7 ah, 1 Yonkers wis thrown from his own nive” A Ta olan only one stop en Near 125th St, He will be arraigned before a Fed- |mobile for some dixtunee, but lost t t ity, but the whereabouts of} the end of the fight, p pet bn §2--S2—-104. BK Ds }ioreyele and killed yesterday tn Mount 1 Commissioner to-day, trail, SI. Jewell continued to be a mystery. Jus hut withdrew to-day Hope Villuge, Westchester County, route, at San Antonio, for fuel, | HOTEL THERESA BUILDING Will ring a dif. Winel

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