GOVERNMENT WILL PROTECT MINER* WILLING TO WORK Fas elected lutton dirisii The cam pa Ion. doe In i CARRANZA FEUD UT l*i MEXICO CITV Texas.? Beports wert ?om? the border to th? [ng had brokeh cat h ween the Obregon aw) Washington. ? The government serr ed blunt notice on soft coal miners j and operators that interference with coal production would not be tolerated Warning that- legal prosecution would be employed to thwart conspl racies by either side and troopg ieql wherever necessary to .protect minerj willing to work, came from the depart ' ment of justice after members of th< cabinet had -considered every phase of the fuel, situation. admittedly, crttl eal, in view of the abrupt breakinj off of negotiations. ? . ? I LADY ASTOR WINS SEAT IN ?HITI8H PARLIAMENT | $ Plymouth, ^England.? Lady Astor, I wife of Viscount Astor, parliament from the I of Plymouth. attracted wide attsn measure to Lad* but unconveation methods sad hq replies to (jnestion. [who was formerly Mist of Virginia, Is th< children, a fact whici eaone occasion dur KTITY o defea't anii-tobacco In its first issue, Th lenses Dr. Clarence True Wilson, sec retary of the temperance board o: the Methodist Episcopal church, i leading, prohibition worker of Wash tngton. Dr. Wilson is charged wit! riandering Amerioan soldiers when hi sharped that "young men trained a' (reat expense by the government httf bo he led oat of the fighting rank* t< have cigarettes stuffed Into their mouths before they could stand TO ind bold . a gun.' This is . characterized bv The De fender "as cruel a heed the honor American soldier." 100,000 JEWS MARCH THROUGH N Y. STREET! ? r Hiew Tort? New ,ToA today wit ceased its greatest pefrade of. am one people? more than 100,000 Jewia) men ao4 woman Tnarnhlnt to an lie Did Hebrew dirge, in protest against 'alleged massacres of their people fa S". w the lowest East side to oaraegM hall Jb lfce heart of fixe metropolis the cortege continued uninterruptH from 1 o'clock in the afternoon untf tone after.#* - ' tf7X JSWifffiaSfcT* war, lei ' the procession; ''?^ '? l * irtf i'i ? ** _ -'-vV>^r?Tl 'ARTV national politica' the Labor Partj !?? created bi pies of a political, social andAldi?trla WITH )CIALM ' Mexico City/*r-Dedaring there ii "nio legal foundation nor principle oi International law" upon. Jirhlch the United States bases its demand foi the immediate release of William 0 Jenkins, United States consular tfgenl at Puebla, the Mexican government through Hilarto Medina, undernsecre tary of foreign relation a, stated 11 was impossible to accede to the re quest of the American state depart NO ACTION TAKEN LOOKING TOWARDS RAILWAY STRIKE ?' ? y. , - Cleveland, Ohio.r? No actioii look lag toward a railroad strike by th? foar railroad brotherhoods was taken by theBOO general chairmen meeting here to act on Director General ol Railroad Eines' offer of time and one !ialf for slow freight service, and no rote was taken on the proposition although a motion to vofc on h to en ./ ' - ' ? : I SAY8 AMERICA MU8T STOP \ MING EEWER FOR EUROM I ii?v ?*m?. i, Va? "America meat stop Mug a aewer Into whiA Europe is dropping all it* undesirables; thli sountry must not develop into an . an archist cafe far thOibom* throwers ol | $? other world." This was the deo [laratlon of Vice President Thomas R Marshall hefeWhen he appeared at a meeting arranged- by ?&& fraternal otder. .tjffg5 I Spoking of the social unrest, llr arvhall said: "There Is a slump in' the patriotism the tAiherlcan people at this time, e glow of patriotism that shoes tkfpugh the war is now faded, and men are looking it; each other wttft doubtful eyes. Use the doubtful eyes, i but use them In watching the I. W. I w? the bomb throwers and the reds who may And lodgment In or.r cities to such extent that they rERY PLAH 4 WHICH Government*!, ft* low Inoreaae in Prloe scr Reconaideration. ] F. ..?An abrupt end cam# >U to settle the nation* SJr peaceful agree. IMhRv^ 'i operators spent a bleak afternoon in embitter,. bt the government pro sper Cent wage Increase, i Administrator Garfield, rejected' it an ad ever* J thflt-wae forthcoming rence dissolved, sine die. .was definitely accepted ? went home and, where t coal strike, conditions, >m, miners or operators, likewise, in official quar S'.V-.v - ? - .???> jh. 1 ? ifc-irieuw.- ; - lident John U U*}b, d rtte- itaeXC [led off in' injunction Lever act A control, idly : at the 9. So die j.-the i&Jnf Basle!-? A dispatch from Belgrade &as been received by the Lalbact (Austrian) corresponderce bureau stating that the Italian government iiaa informed the government ot Jugo slavia that Italy would observe the decision reached by the Paris peace aonference with regard to the Dalma tian question and would "itsef prevent any attempt in the direction of Sap 5a to by Gabriele d'Annunzio. NEW SITE SECURED FOR . CUBAN-AMERICAN COLLEGE Atlanta, Ga.? ?'+ . IL . ' ? ?'/ r"'_ New Yoi^.?A~ hunger strike was eonpled with a "silence" strike by radicals at Ellis island in an effort tohave removed an iron barrier sep arating them from visiting relatives. , 5 The barrier was erected after dis covery that several reds planned to es cape by changing clothes with friendi, ^ ?er some visitors batL' paeaed revolvers to the radios^. i . : MEXICAN NEWSPAPERS ARE ^ 7 ' ? RETICENT AND CAUTIOUS ed apathetically ^papers, furnished sstra edition for PUBLIC HEALTH COMMITTEE REC- ; OMMENDS CHANGES IN 8TATE HEALTH POLICY. a OH CF SPECIFIC NEEDS Every- County Having a Population of - 16,000 Should Hava .Hospital and Smaller Ones Should Combine. . Chapel Hill? Reporting to &? forth Carolina clnb of thepUnirersity fti North Carolina onits campus plan (or state reconstruction, in which It is following the lead of Governor Blck stt'a state reconstruction conunL the committee on public Ileal th, J. S. Terry, of Rockingham, chairman, strongly recommended changes In the public health policy of the State. Specific needs outlined by the coz?v mittee included county hospitals throughout the state, -county he departments with whole time officers and nurses,, t&e teaching sanitation and hygieqe in all st controlled ' schools with necessity preparation of teachtim-.to give the proper instruction, aa