COAL RATIONING TO BEGIN AT ONCE SAYS MIL HOOVER Now Eaflaad and NwrtkwM* to W Carad F«r-MUe UMIi tlaa Gat First Call Waahlnston. July II.—PtmUnI H«rdin> laid the ooal-railway situa tion Wfort the ■>—b«r» of M* CaMa «t today, thi* bains tha fourth nnlin rf tha Cabinet la two week* to ha de moted almoit mtlaly to a diaeseaion rf tha itrikea la thaaa two Indue tries Outalsndias In tha atrikr davalupSMnt la Washington today, I* tha aaassaoe maat by Herbert C. Hoovar, gmatory si Oommarce, that tha ttevenuasnt would basin immadlataly to ratios tha scanty coal sapply. Tha raMsaads will be look ad after first and thaa othar public stWttaa, ind Mr Hoover «oM that tha Otoat takes regies, as wad as tha North - vast, and New tn|tnd, would fellow, naless thara to an sppeoc labia prodst tion of coal vary »hortly. Mr. Hoovar •as baan conferring tha |HMt few day* srlth tha Intaratsta Owsma Com aitoalon rrtrardlns tha railroad situa tion aa to coal auppliaa. and drtaih of tha prosram will ba announced In a lay or two. Henry Cabot Lodge (R), Senator 'rem Maaaarhuaatta, eonfarrsd with '-ha Praaidant today on the coal sltua :ion In New Fnrland Ha pointed out that New Rngland moat aoon have uiditional supplies or factories thara would basin to cloae. Tha Senator *lso taw Mr. Hoover on the nubjoct. Mr. Hoover aald that England to »hipping mat over hare In Inereaning yolosie. Within the laat few daya, he Mia. nw.uww iam 01 inippinK nan wen ,-ontracted for to brine coal over hare. Hi« adrift to New England waa to la port from England. If New Eng land would draw upon England for furl, the situation thn>ugh<>ut the .-•untry would be measurably relieved. He laid British coal la costing from W.BO to I7.7B a ton at tidewater here. The price of coal In western Ken tucky. where the operator* refused to ">-operat<- with Mr. Hoover, hat bwB >Mo*ted to |7 a ton, and Mr. Hkiwi *aid that protests wr to Wttf 'mm Kentucky firms against this price. He said that S2.B0 a ton would Se a fair price and that the state au thorities should correct the situation. That the President Is still marking rime before naming a proposed coal rommissioner to sec whether the coal perstor* are going to be able to sup ply enough coal to minimise the short age next week, was evident today, but A the coal is not forthcoming, "more drastic" action is indicated. In a 'etter to William S. Sproul. Governor ■1 Pennsylvania. President Harding Mild It has seemed to me that time to ap raise the situation, the opportunity X) measure the unquestioned fairness -f the propoaal, and sense the obliga tions involved, and a period in which to resume production, would either avoid drastic st -ps on the one hand 'if clearly justify them on the other. The commission will come in due time. There is sn authority above all work ers and operators, and that authority *.he American public—must have an agency of effective apprehension. w u»v "HOI MM III hmu pimciB nnuiil Sf vested in the proposed commission, -which the president nay*, "will come 'n due time," wen? not indicated, though the executive has made It plain on several occasion* that every TMOurce at his command would be •Mad to pro tact the publte against a «<"riou* coal shortage. The railway and coal strikes are considered very much similar by offi cial Washington. Both are menac ing the public welfare. One Cabinet officer said: "Coal cannot be produced if there are no cars to haul ft" The railway «trfke has caused a shortage of cars to carry coal and production has fallen. Harry M. Dauirherty, Attomey Oeneral indicated that charges have Seen made that the railroad and coal strikes are the result of a conspiracy between the two unions in these re spective industries. It is charged that the strike*, though aimed at the rail roads and coal mine operator*, must a reuse the public in order to gat pres sure to bear Upon the employer* to make a favorable agreement with their help. Mr. Dangherty said his tepartinent is watching for evident t* substantiate these charges "It seems to me," said little Uura'i mother, "that everything I tall you gees hi one ear and oat the other." "Wall, dat's what I dot two sari for" asU Laura.—Boston Transcript. MAP TO COST 1100,000,000 Chart of U. S„ Biggaat in World, to U Dmmm to HYwi The UrfMt map in th« world, eoat Ing approximately HOOflOQjOOO and requiring morr titan half ■ century to I complete, is being produced by the I geological survey of the United | State* Department of the Interior. | : Forty-three per cent of this rtpraaan-) j tlon of America haa bean finished and 1 , a bill I* pending In Congress which, If j ! enacted Into law, will appropriate j ; 917,000,000 to complete the undoftak-1 j lag. An additional fund of ! 000 la In proapoct aa an aggravate, , allotment from various 8 la tea Tweaty | year* will to required to ftalah thta i i coatly production, which waa atartad' j In ttM. I Thia map, when com plated, will boi .S000 lachea wide. To faeUltate ttol j convenient carriage of Mm tepagraph : I ic figure In one"* pa*bat It la betagl published In forma anown aa goad ' ) ranglea. When • *artiaa of tto | United Stataa baa been surroyod, tto corresponding aheet la priated la j the** handy veat-pocket edltlona. I "rtiree thousand of throe quadraagiaa . have been printed aad mapa made available to the public at a nominal coat. A quadrangle cover* approxi mately 226 square milaa and Uncle Sam make* an investment ranging from I3.0OO to M.000 for *adl ■ac tional figure of the "lay of tto land." The 1100,000,000 map, when com pleted, will prove uaeful to public utilitiaa. Industrial concerns, aviators, mining and metallurgical boarda, government bureau*, tranaportation companies, and highway engineer*. Already these sectional map* ar* be in* widely used the geographical sur vey selling 42.72S.7H ropie* within on* year. The receipt* therefrom amount ing to I4C.7SS.71I, were turned into the Treasury Department. The making of any map, aapecially one aa large and detailed a* this one, entail* the uae of many and varied instruments and the time of many men - Illustrated World. TfATCS FlTtCG WIDE OfTN TO THE SUDDENLY RICH William Thomas Adams, Mill Mechanic Bequeathed $750, 000, Receive* Offer* to Tie Matrimonial Knot by Basket ful. Elizabeth City. July 22.—William Thorn** Adam*, who wk* recently no tified while at work in a hosiery mill here that he had been bequeathed three-quarters of a mi'lion dollars by an English relative, will get his name in the American Biography of Noteworthy Citiiens a* the result of the audden good lock whereby he ap parently ri*ea overnight from a mill mechanic to a member of America'* plutocracy. Mr. Ad*ms received a letter Wed nesday afternoon from the National Pre** Bureau, of New York City, raking for a sketch of his life from which a biography could be written Strangely enough, the letter wa* ad dressed to Mrs. Adams despite the I fact that the recipient is a bachelor forty years old. The Bureau, Mr. Adam* concludes, addressed it in that fashion on the assumption that he could not have escaped matrimony fog I these many weeks after the new* of his sudden fortune had been broad i < asted over the country by the papers. | Thooirh he isnt married, Mr. Adams ha* ha* tentative offers of I matrimonv in letters by the baaketful from every section of the United Stat«», from member* of the fair sex ranging from in the teen* to admitted age* of pait forty years. He says, however, that he doesn't figure on getting married by the correspondence method, but will pick out some girl not so brazenly anxious to slip the marital noose about his .leek. The news of the ■ mill mechanic's unexpected wealth has also reached the ears of various promoters and j. stock sellers in sundry sections of the I United States, and he is daily be i seiged with letters calling his atten ' tion to "wonder*®!" investment op 1 portunitie*. He declares positively : that he is not interested in these ' Rchemes to increase—or make away | with—his money,'and says that, when he gets it in hand, he expect* to have enough for the rest of his life. In fact, he is evidently not deeply anxious , for matrimony or investment* either. I Too much publicity concerning your romance is unpleasant. Tour other wives may rsad about it and raise a row. ROCK FELLER BREAKS A LIFE-LONG CUSTOM Lata Cwnim Tmkm His Pictuft Ml OccAftioB of Mtk AnnivtrMry Ttrrytm, N. Y.. July t*.—li John D. Roekfeller. paulnf the Indhn lurnmir of hi* lift on hltt vut nUI* in the PMUtlco HHU, at laat lotting lown th* tartars he hae alwaya mia >4 againat pkotovMpkm and re portaraT Thin la • question which has baa* Interesting newspaper profeaaion irir since th* world's richest man on i raaant Runday permitted rsmarm men la snap Mm to their heart's con tent after they had aanaa nlad to Follow Ma Into church for so it tee. U|. Roekfeller. who hears the repu tation of being one of the moat lUMMky mm in AMarica, may be hactwlag MW lenient in his atti tude toward photographers, but aa yet he haa riven en indication of tak ing wpoitaw Into Ma confldance. An effect to interview Mr. Rock foliar as the recent occasion of his Mth Mrthds anniversary—made, aa usual, through a third party repre senting the household—brought the raaponae ' "Impossible." A* no re porters aa yet have succeeded In •tunning the well-guarded rates of the Roekfeller home, the modern Croesus goes unInterviewed. Even to hi* fellow townsmen the little man, sligM of frame, who ap pears in mldanminer In leather waist - roat, overcoat and muffler, la vary much of an enigma. Tarry town points out to each visiter the home of John D. Roekfeller, urges the visitor to go up and aae where Roekfeller Uvea, talka eonatantly •bout Roekfeller—but rarely aaes him itself ' very 'floom no iirryujwnfTi in inxidr the gates which f-uard the big home back in the hills. Oner in awhile they Hv John D. come down town and lit in hi* machine while a chauffeur "net Into a hank or a store—bat Tarrytown almost never talk* to it« richeat citizen. He cornea and iroaa —there ia excitement while he Is iowntown. Hnd discussion after warda. And that ia all of Tarwfc, :nwn'i claim on Ita moat famnthi fltl ten. Ever aince the oil king celebrated ni* 84th birthday. Tarrytown haa been •eethinr over the queation of who ia ita oldest citiaen. There ia no quea tion aa to the moat famous. An ancient who aita in front of the if hardware atore, juat around the ■omer from the atation, concedes first place to John D. The ancient admits he Is only M. Rut an Italian has asserted hia grandfather is *8—and there ia a Farmer who lavs claim to 00. Still, even in the face of odds. Tarrytown itanda loyally behind Ita prominent ■itiaen, and announcea to the world [hat ita oldest citiaen today ia none nther than the man who made oil famous. But the town maintains that Mr. Ruckfeller is still a youngster in tpirita. "Any man who plays golf as fre quently as he does." be "lock at IMM a share. The purchase of not leee than one thooe and acres for the development It determined and In addition to a mo dern hotel it b proposed to provide complete facilities for pleasure and recreation, including golf course, tennis courts and other recreation ground*, a great lake and other at tractions. It is stated that there are now about thirty-five of the deaired two hundred subscriber* already on the stock list. The temporary organisation effect ed last night is aa follows: R. M. Hancs, vice president of the Wachovia Bank and Trust Company, president; ■ W. N. Reynolds, president of the R. J. Reynold* Tobacco Company, chairman of the hoard of directors; H. E. Fries and H. G. Chatham, vice presidents; Richard G. Stockton, secretary snd C. T. Lineback, treasurer. The board of directors of the tem I porary organization is composed of I n boot twenty-five of the-initial sub -i ribers to the stock of the company, including the sbove officers. A committee wilt start work at once to complete the stock list, after which a permanent organisation will he perfected. FORD BlflLDS OWN WINDSHIELD GLASS 4 Depart* From Customary Method* and Applies Ford Principles. The Ford Motor Company, Detroit, , ha* begun to manufactura its own plate glass, and already ha* in opera tion the first modern irlas* house ever ; equipped especially to make glas* fori automobile*. A* is customsry when taking over; the maaufacture of a nrw product, Ford ha* applied hi* own principle* of i production, and, a* a consequence the method* and machinery u*ed in mak ing Ford glsss are a radical departure from established practice. The Ford continuous conveyor system feature* ' the operations *o that from the time the glass leave* the furnace until it become* a polished wind*hield, it i* always moving. Ola** making, when viewed in the Ford plant, look* to be very simple. The raw material* are introduced into the furnace where they become a molten mas*. Drawn from the fur nace in a semi-liquid state, the glass passes under a roller, which gives it width and thicknesi. and on to a mov ing conveyor. This carries it for 464 feet thru a gradually cooling fur nace. At the end, it is cut and placed on another conveyor which carries it thru the poinding and polishing, after j which it i* reedy for nse. This add* a new link to the fast growing chain of Ford industries which are being e*tabli*hed and expanded from time to time in line with the Ford policy to achieve complete inde-j pertdence of outside material source* in manufacturing Ford products, and at the same time are the mean* byj which Ford i* enabled to use In the production of motor cars, tractor and> tractors material of unusually highj quality and sell them at the famous' Ford prices. * i m Klanamen to Discard R*falia in Public Atlanta, Gl, July It —Th* Knights of the Ku Klux Klan Iwn bean nr J»r«d to discard their masks, rAw and other regalia except when In their lodg* room a. It was ennoonced hare tonight at hsadqMsrtsrs of the organise tWa. The orier was first marie public in a tetter to Goveraer Harwich of Georgia from K. T. Clarke, Imperial Wlaerd, m >1, hat later H was stated the irder was general. NAMING THE BABY "IWt Hu4ic«p Km Cbiy far Ufa," PU*d* Author What'* In • nam*? Aak anybody who haa but (hr« itamr Aak any umi iM man wfca ha* bwn blaaaad with iflMMt* nam* III according wHk hi* phyalqaa »r general characteristics. And yo* how few awthara raally appra.uata tha value of • guod km whan christening thatr ufYaprr r. As a guide to parrata aad ta hatp i hem in ehooaing »uiuhle aaaaaa, and laatirf nnr», Alaaaadar M< Qcmm haa writtoa aad published a I'ttto hook undar tha title, "Hoar ta Name Baby Without Handicapping It lot Ufa." Tha author, although a hachator, has heea able to giva saaM r«ry good advtoa. | "A Wias mothar to usually wtIItag to listen to anyoae wbo has eoaatrae live auggastiona about tha walfara af her babes," writos Mr. MeQueoa, aad to aid bar In making tha vMal doctaioa "(torra rules of nsmiag art givea: 1. Tha nan* should ha worthy. 2. It should have a goad aaaaniag. 8.- It shoald be original. 4. It "hoald ha easy to pranoaaea. 5. It ahaaid ba distinctive. «. It should fit tha family name. 7. It shoald indicate tha sax. "A worthy name shoald ba baaad upon the dictates not only of affac tion but of sound judgment. If tha child Is regarded as a gift of God. •urely It to worth taming wan," ad visaa the author. The second rule, that tha name should have a good meaning, to baaad upon the fast that every name haa a meaning For inathnce, t>e nam* Mary means "star of the sea or bittern***." Think of the many Mary* you know. Is either one of theaa meaning* applicable? The name Geraldine means a leader in war. The namr ('.«•<> r*r means "earth man.'* and the name Bernard mean* bold aa a bear." !» George Bernard Shaw an "earth man," "bold aa a baar?" Ami m we find the name Ctwtan. meaning a prince The name Elisabeth, meaning "consecrated to God." The name John, meaning "graciow rift of God - Frank, meaning "free;" Anna, meaning "gracious," Helen, meaning "bright aa the *un." Catherine, mean, ing "pure and clean" and William, meaning "protector." "The initials of a name should not form unpleasing or undigniftad words," caution* the writer, "Sydney Alfred Lee is aure to be nicknamed "sally," since his initiala are 8. A. L." — New York Herald. GROWING CROPS SOLD WITH FARMS Increased Sale* Said to be Dua to New Method of Transfer New York, June 21.—Growing crops included with the farms, ac count for the big increase in the sale of fsrtn properties this sesson, ac cording to one of the farm real estate agencies. Pnrracrly. the s^ency says, there were few transfers of farm property in the spring after the season of spring planting was closed. Men who wanted farms would not buy them then" because they could not get their crops started in time to proride them selves with either a winter's supply or assure themselves of an inceMe from their products in the harvesting season. But these handicaps have been over come, it is said, by including grow ing crops with farm properties sold In the spring and summer and harvest ed crops with farms sold in the winter. "Growing crops included with the farnia," aaid the representative at ine real estate agency, "account for the big increase in oar boaineee. We ■re now selling the farms with grav ing ere pa, building* and all eqeip Under the new system the bvysr get* not only land and buildings, bet all the tools, stock, cattle, poultry, ■wine, and horses, and also the giww ing cropa. Instead ef faeiag the prospect of a v/inter in which he would have to hoy Ms food, he Met the craps In sight which wt food for his family, feed Ms »nd even provide grata far Ms try." . to Mis. and MM get la