(pufrfllmh ilillimi), il!> )■ mm
vouiw oNi; mnun im.
KHUSIVII
JUWMETWtE
'CMCKOS Ml «XT
•<*» *
AIM PoUt—. Oninns,
■ Bay*ra Alloc Potatoes, Onion*,
| K Pay 91 for s
SPRING CHICKENS LEAD
THE HENS A GAY RACE
F Vegetable* occupy the center of the
itage an the local market and buyers |
are after anything that eeaei fro* the ,
garden. They are randy to gay farmtrs
II ta M centa for watermelon!, |l gar
haahel for number one Iriah petatoei
and IS gar bnahel far dry onlana.
Os eoarae, spring chlckena are atlll |
ta grant d*Mud. Buyer! are gaying
farmer! from SI to SO ceata for nlco
frisra. Seventeen and one-half to M '
caata la canalderod a good price for old
hena. fat bona naturally are In groat- 1
oat demaad.
I
Hie prone at priee for gauntry hama <
la M to W cents, while farmora may (
aspect from M tr ft ceata far then!- |
dors, aceordiag to the prices being paid ;
by L )L L. Jeffrey!, and are believed
th# prevalent price! on the local mar-
TO UTIEMPT FLIGHI i
ACROSS MM i
• i
_ _ i
On Day, One Stop Trip Frora i
Jacksonville To San
Diego Planned
■ 1 I
BAN ANTONIO, Tea. Aug. A—(By '
the Aaaoctatod Preaa). —A one-day one-
Nap flight frim Jacksonville, Fla., to
Baa Diego, Calif., la the aim of Lieut.
Jamas H. Doolittle, who left Kelly Field
hare thla morning in hia special da
■ovUlasd airplane la which he will at
tempt the trip.
Tm definite data for the tcanaoon-
Uaaatal trip has apt boon set. Doolittle
plane ta taba to the air about dunk
aema evening next week for an all-night !
flight ta Baa Antonio, spend knit an
koar here taking on fuel and resume kla
flight, reaching Baa Diago before dank.
Doolittle's airplane la aa ordinary one,
mga da Hart! land with a #7» gallon
gasoline and M gallon oil capacity. The
fuel is sufficient for a 1 joo mile flight.
While the venture la being made un
der authority ffem the chief of the air
service, Lieutenant Doeiittel ia paying
his own expanses. Air service offi
cial! hire said the trip Is practicable
and that tha filar will he aided by the
moonlight, gals coast lino and the lights
of the larger cities es Pensacola, Now
Orioaaa, Beaumont, and Houston. The
officials say that success in the flight
weald moan that la time of ws'ty the en
tire air Dost of tha Visited States could
ha moved across the continent ia one
day, ia aa emergency
wrem'
SEEK ICOHFEHEHCE
Want To Present To President
Harding Ttoir View* of
Shop Craft Strike
T o .
i CLEVELAND, Aug. 4 —LsclsUttvo
representatives of throe of the four
railroad brotherhoods ia Washlngtsn
worn requested by telegraph tonight to
uTrango a conference between President
Harding end Iks chief executlvys of the
brotherhoods fat the purpose of peasant
tga to the president their views in con
nection with the present strike es rail
road shop crafts. „
A telegram was "sent direct to Presi
dent Harding tonight by the three local
chief executives es tha brotherhoods
asking for s conference.
The scatter has keea under consider
alien since yesterday by Warren 8.
Maas, president es the Brotherhood of
Kagiaeera; W. 0. Lee, president of tha
► brotherhood of railroad trainmen end U.
B. Robertson, president of the brother
hood of firemen nnd englnemen bnt he
emase of failure ta get a reply for Joint
action from L. C. Sheppard, prceldcnt of
Alke order of railway conductors, the
other member of tha “Big Pour," It was
decided tonight to ask for tho confer
ence through tho legislative representa
tives of tho oaginears, trainmen and
firemen.
(ALEXANDER HEADS
PEANUT GROWERS
ICOTUIND NECK. * -J H
- Alexander, Jr. of Scotland Neck has been
K elected president of the Peanut Grew-
era’ Rnebnnge. Since the organisation of
Ike exchange Hr. Alexander has served
mast effleloatly sad faitkfally as s di
raster sad kps worked untiringly for
the success of this co-operative ssee
aiatioa
Mr. Alexander rails on every ritisea
for their support and co-operation. The
saecees of tho Poaaut Grower*' Ex
change mean* th* saeeoes of th* people.
The earning capacity of th* Northern :
had Western Stale* per capita Is shoot I
four times that of th* Southern Stales
at present.
In the reign of (baric* i, even th*
tadtes doffed their bqpdgoar in salats-
Oea.
f
BP fMk 888 yBB §
|b| Bai B ■ BB ■ ImbMhvbiP i B |\| Ai 1 ift I W..
H B B B B 818 B .-i . 888 *'B«. ■' B^
j| B It m ■ Wb Halh W ■BL/m f Abb W W * B
l " a bbb iBFBBr Bib JB bbb ■ A w w ■nbb
.": :. . i| !FXjr'>a*3rfci'£.tsf'?%'lsK;
Senate Minority Urges
Acceptance of Ford Otter
, - *j ! ,1, l j H;;
For CBtagPMg To TriM Proponnl us Norri* WooM Suhjoct It “To
Vast CManllM of Aowricttn Pcopltlke Ro
' port A44«; No Mora SnbnMy
■■■■■■ ' i» i T-
WASHINGTON, Aug. 4.—-(By th#
Assoaiated Press) —Aeceptanr* of Henry
PoN's offer for purchase and leas*
of the governemnt's vast nitrate and
water power projects at Muss!* Shoals,
Ala., ,wa* urged by Republican and
Democratic senators comprising a min
ority of th* Sanat* Agyiculatura Com
mittee la a report sabmitted today to
tha Renat*. Strong protest was entered
by th# senators against th* acceptance
•f th* government ownership and ope
ration piaa proposed by Senator Nor
ris, of Nebraska, tha committos's chair
man.
The report was presented by Sector
Ladd, Republican. North Dakota, In bo
half of th* Pord proponents on tho
committee whoso signatures wore at
tached. It estimated that the govern
ment had last throe millions dollars
at Musct* Shoal* ante* tho Armis
tice, by failure to develop and
quickest wap ta stop these" losses is
to accept Hsnry Ford’s offer for th*
purchase aad ions* of tho government's
Muscle Shoal* properties.”
“Certain objections to the Pord offer
seem apparent," tha report said, “bat
w* insist witbsut fear of successful
contradiction that nano of tho objec
tions to th* Ford offer can b* remedied
or solved by government 'ownership
and operation—by th* government go
ing into th* power business or enter
ing th* uncharted and haxardeus ft*N
if operating nitrate plants at Musd*
Mhoais in th* prodnetiea of nitrogen*
and other rosnmerciat fertilisers using
electro chemical r*y*lH*~ ***” eom
merctal ouccess of whjch iaVpet-con
troversial-^
“for Coajfrcst te adopt such a policy
when Henry\ Pord'a offer makes it
unnecessary lor th* government to do
so," it Continued, “would subject Con
gress to th* juot coad* nutation aad
reproach of all sahor-mladod poapls."
The boliaf was expressed that every
member es th* Senate would agro* with
tha committee reference
to the acceptance of Mr. Ford'* proposal
when they consider tha “present fuel
and transportation emergencies ia the
light of “development of such groat
hydro-electric power as is faaad at
Kasai* Shoals, adding “that it I* th*
only certain aad ' permanent relief in
th* fatar* from th* present paralysis
as Americas industry.”
Th* report called attention to chargoa
that aeceptanr* of Mr. Feed's tender
would give him a goeonuaont subsidy
In the development of power and the
manufacture as fertiliser and said:
“It bos boon slaiamd that the Pord
offer constitutes u xuhsidy to Mr.
Pord. If It |s a subsidy, it is not such
• subsidy M it proposed by the admin i
lit rati on in the Bhip Subsidy BilL"
, Tho report thoa sited • comparioon I
b«t**«° lb. Ladd bill and that pro
posing federal reliaf for the mere bant
marine, showing that the termer railed
for an expeadtture of 145.M0.0M while
latter repaired an expaaditure of
|J j;, Otwi.nod
In that connection, it wax coatended.
one measure would take the goeernment
out of the shipping buein.ee while the
other woald take it out of the fertiliser
and power business. It was also argued
ia that connection that the Ladd hill
would cost the goesrament "'approxi
mately nothing" a year while the “chip
subsidy hitr would necessitate an an
nual expeudiutre of |iI.M*JKIO
"If the Ford proposal Is aat to he
supported on tho groaads of subsidy.”
lbs report ashed, “bow con tho Amori
coa people support o*ch a subsidy to
ship ope rotors os is hors proposed T** '
Referring to tho retstiooship claimed
between Muscle Shoals development sad
tho fool end transportatiou emergen
slot, tho report sold:
“No electrical railway and oo indus
try aenrad by water supply con aeffer
sufArnston oh secount of e fuel supply,
bocXuoe hydro-electricol power, both in
He production end distribution, is
practically fro# of oil labor troubles.
Fuel and transportation ore tbs big
national problems which now distress
our people Muscle Shoals, with the
Ford offer eccopted, may furnish on
opportunity for the Senate U discover
how such fuel oud transportation eon j
bo, at least in port, avoided in the!
future/*’
The report compered In detail the j
Ladd end Norris bills pending in the
Senate. Tho Ford offer ns represented
by the Ladd bill, the report said, “tohes
the government out of the fertiliser
and power business” while the Nebros
ka member’s bill “sets tbs goeernment
up in the fertiliser end power busi
nfii " *
The Norris proposal requires direet
appropriation by Congress of $*4,000,
000 without including any estimate for
the proposed dams in tbs upped Tenn
essee lUver. •“With no guaranteed re
turn of either the principal or interact
on somo.”\4 woe cold On the other
hand, tho report argued. Musrle Shoals
could be deeeleped by Mr. Ford nodor
the Ladd bUI. by a government bond
Issue. If desired. the interest and
sinking fund paymoaAa mode by Mr.
Ford will moot Interest on xurh bonds
and retire them at the end of lease
period, except during the short con
■trortien and power loading period.
“Been tboo. of us who ore in favor
of government ownership and ppera
tign," said the report, "must caneodo
that the Muscle Shoals cose is one
fraught with the gravest danger of
heavy losses if the government under
takas (o work out the fertiliser problem
(hero. No advocate of goeernmoot
ownership and operation eon dtoreont
the fool that the Mnasle Hh Mils coo. ie
not n good oat to oolect In testing out
tho polity of goeernment ownerehlp and
i operation. The danger* s*d the did-
aa 'g-w: ~i I .ii.,jBC—BCSSBi , r . .i-nrzrx:-::
GOLDdBORO, NORTH CAMOUKA, SATURDAY MORNING, AUG I. 1«R.
cutties, many as )h*m specialised aad
technical, ilnvolVtng problem! 'in the
held es commercial chemistry, warn us
to be conservative and prudent with th*
, people'* money at Muscle Shoals/*
An agricultural beneAt to th* coun
try by development es th* nheals
properties by Mr. Ford, th* report
> asserted, will include a large scale pro
duction of fertilises “produced in an
art that is developing rapidly, and
which will reduce th* cost of fertiliser/*
After reviewing conflicting testimony
taken by th* committee on th* question
of how much present fertiliser costs
could be reduced nt Muscle Shoals, ih*
report asserted!
“To our minds the evidence ia eon
vincing that there are modern electro
chemical process*! which, applied at
Muscle Rbaals, will reduce the coat of
fortillaora, hut If there is any doubt
on that score th* United States should
stay out of th* business.
“Mr. Pord has agreed to pursue a
plan of research and ta adopt th* re
sults from hi* investigations which
will compel him to Introduce ih* boot
available methods, end he has tha acc
essary capital ta do so.
“W*| therefor*, believe that among
th* costly problems which Mr. Ford will
have to salvo at Muscle Rbools, will
be th* selection of the moot economical
nitrogen fixation process, and there
for* it Is conceivable that Mr. Ford
will be obliged to .Sithsr redesign Ni
trate Ptaat No. S and possibly scrap
aad rebuild the entire nitrogen process
. equipment.
“Now, since Henry Ford has th* cash
snd has offered to spend It to mert
the#* contingencies and dangerous fin
social risks as w* here describe, then
; speaking far pyraelvet, w* are willing
, ta let him have a chance to do it, but
w* nr* not willing for th* United
I States ta have th* opportunity to en
gage In any such speculative Industrial
■ venures."
i “A fair cansideration of all 4h*
i facts," the report declared, “loads ua
| mtstakably to th* conclusion that uqder
I th* Ford offer th* cost of fertiliser de
i liverod to th* fnrmer can be materially
l reduced.”
I Tha report added that from th* pros
i cut fertiliser industry the former
i might expect but litti* in the reduction
i es prices.
"Thee* interest* even d*Cling* Us
i opportunity to us» th* government's
r nitrate plant* Iron as cost to them, aad
' ta bo allowed withoat paying the gov
- ernment e penny for the use of them
to earn alac per cent on their invented
I operating capital befere paying th*
(Cratinued ea Page Two)
SERIOUS FQKST FIRES
MIMS NORTHWEST
Thousands of Men Are Fighting
a Losing Battle Against
the Flames
SPOKANE, Wash., Aug. 4—From the
Rocky Mountains in Montana ts the Co
lumbia river In Washington and up te
one hundred miles from the Canadian
border, thousands of man art fighting
forest dree, which with nature appar
ently elding with them, have, according
to Theodora Goodyear, assistant staid
forester, rendered Washington eery
helpless before them
Calls far help are going pnheeded in
many Instances, with the Are wardens
lighting the worst Ares and letelng tho
othoys to hunt themselves out.
On* firs Aghter la Idaho was kit ed
yesterday whan 0 burning os
him.
seres of Ana govern
ment ePprlvats stands of timhor have
bran burned over or ore on Are. Gloclsr
National Pork, the Blarhfrat Forest,
! »nd tbs Ksniksu Forest are affected.
Horton Tells Fans
In East Carolina
To Lay Off Umps
KINSTON, Aug. 4•— The lordly um.
pire bad come back rtilo his own to
day. In the Eastern Carolina league
he was monarch ot oil he sureeyed,
sod the fans war esMgally pledged not'
to lynch, asaobtt or* defame him. Ths
league directors and Judge Horton, the I
president, some days ago asked the
public ts lay off of the umpires, and
the press heralded their wishes to thsi
fans The latter have acqules.ed
gracefully, and for some days tho tell
ers of bqUs and strikes and boss«s of
the base 11 nos have lead happily .like
other parsons
1 Beery umpire lo ths outfll" wanted
to resign, It «|S sold, when the di
-1 rectors met. Rome hod narrowly es
' raped mobbing Others were sieh of
the stuff ths fans threw at them. In
-1 rinding bottles Even old Rube Bran
don, meet popular of them oil, had hod
' his troubles, and the players generally
1 loss Rubs. About tho only ana who
J emerged unruffled was Mr. Putnam,
' who wasn't o regular any way sod who
' told his entire where to get off. Thera
' will he more umpire-baiting in the
I: Eastern Carolina this season. Ths fans
I bars hare promised to Sudd down ths
•inure ohttreparade a 4 thodr fsMowe
- - ■
I I Jumping at com! unions lands you hi
•Is hole.
C ALL TROOPS TO
GUARD 3 M E N
STATE PRWON
RALEIGH, N. C-. A»g. ri—Ae a
i matter as peasantkrti due *e the
zm i
county, th* Parham machine gnu
romgsny as Iks North ( a ratios Na-
Uanul guard ha* haoa ordered In Ra
leigh ta graced thro* negro prison
ers rushed In Mate's prison her*
thla morning after Choir or root My
connection wMh th* attack aa a
white woman aad thb»aborting at
her husband near Banthera Flora
thla morning.
“Wo da not contemplate any
I ran hi* though th* dreemataar**
testify every prevention, “dodldrod
8 J. Bnahoo, warden of th* Mate
prison, tonight. (
4' ■ -w - ■ 111 —V ■■ *+■+
snsiipK
OFiDMisnm
HIS BEER ITTMKD
H ' Y
Roads Juml Agree That
Labor Bmi4 Authority
Supreme in Future
SENIORITY NOT
WORRYING HARDING!
*
WASHINGTON, Aug 4 -Th# major
purpose of administratioa intervention
in the mil strike was nee implished, n
White House spokesman declared to
day, when both rail executives and
shop rrsft unions agreed to consider
authority of the railroad labor board
at supreme in future sen trove r«i*s.
This aspect of President Harding's
proposals for a settlement of the strlkef
is viewed by the admtnistrntipn as I
paramount. The fedt that the execu-i
lives rejected the President's seniority
proposal was said to by secondary ia I
the White House view. ■ /
This autlin* of th* Administration j
attitude mad* available today etrengh
toned tha hslitf that far th* moment!
ao further government move affecting
th* rondadt as railroads was ta ho
ogpestod.
lliP
j Jiff is {■■Mf f¥ 1 Ilf ijf Ml
United SUUb arid JapRR Hflc
Already Been ExpetttUng
Hour Indemnity a
LONDON, Aug. 4. —The Wrthjhgtoa
government for 14 ysaru has been ex
peeling its share of th* Boxer In
demnities from China for tha benefit
aad support as Chinos# student* in th*
United States. Japan has now cam*
forward with s similar proposal, and
Qreat Britain mar follow suit •
A departmental committee, of which
Sir John Jordan, former British minister
at Peking, is chairman, is considering
th# Idas of Great Britain foregoing her
Indemnity installment, da* this year,
provided China *sp«nd it far education
al purposes at hom*. Tha government
is thought to he favorably inclined. Ja-
pah also has said shs was prepared to
forego her shore of tho Chinese money
under ths same stipulation.
Thera is no quosti.pn of foregoing the
'right to tho Boxer indemnity, either by
Japan or Great Britain, and if tho pres
ent proposals materialise ths two gov
oraments would see that tho manor l»
stcuslly need by the Chinese authorities
for ths stipulated educational purposes.
Tho Boaer Indemnities were exacted In
IMI by tho powers for the attacks In i
Chino In lIVV and IMO upon foraignera
and native Christiana. A totel of ill
; countries, including Groat Britain, tho
United Rtstea, France, Italy, Bussia and i
Japan, receive yearly allotments. The
extinction dots of th a indebtedness Is
IMA.
CO-OPS EMC
TO GET HUSK PRICES
musmmaimramamm
BffHevt That Top Notch Price*
Will Be Paid fJrowcm for
Beast Claag of Weed
"V.
• RALEIGH, Aug. 4.—With ths open
ing sales OO the Lake City teba.ee mar
ket bringing an average of $Bl.Bl par ;
j W>« hundred pounds, directors of ths
Tbhscco Growers’ Co-operative Ass or is
i lion ere rejoicing that in South Carolina
!os in Kentucky, the growurt reooiee j
double the price which woo gieen them
on lost year's opening markets.
Ij' The directors of ths nseoeistton are ''
rgnfldeot that ths organ I sod growers
with a highly dsvslsped leaf department,
r ample storage plants and redying fsrilt
• ties to turn out 1.000,000 pounds of
■ tobacco daily, will be enabled to racura
| better prices than those unorganised
t farmers whs are grading thslr tobacco
i ,h * First time and are ralliag without
, • lor gge or redry log facilities.
• It Is generally expected that the r»-
’ ceiriag points of |hs association will
1 open next week throughout tho South
• Carolina halt. Oesr 1,0 00 new members
' I "** U> *
| tiou durte. the Mg «■■»!» imMlra
i t* Mw reran of route acts mads ht Raf.
I »»H hradß—tw. Afura i s
Co-operative Will Take
fS No Contract, After 15th,
( mr_|. i!j Ji m\
MMibcruhip Campaign in Eaatern Carolina Belt Will Clow Next [
Tuesday Week; Muck Diana tin faction Reported
Among Unorgnnixed Growers
.
Aug 4.—Th# membership
' campaign of the Tobacco 11 re were Co
operative Association in th* Eastern
Carolina belt will close Tuesday, Au
gust lbth, and no more contracts for
this year's crop will be acceptM after
that date, according to today's an
nouncement from association headquar
ters at Raleigh.
Th* recent landslide of South Car
olina Growers'to th# big co-operative,
the general disaatisfactlon of th*
growers who decided to “writ and see,"
and tho subsequent signing of eon
tracts by many farmers during a brief
r*-op*ning pf. the membership lists by
th* association this week now places
from 6ft to 70 per cent of South Caro
alina tobacco with the farmers organi
sation ia that State, according to lat
est estimates. Although priees an the
auction market continue to bold steady
all reports Indicate that the offerings
have rapidly declined in volume. In
tehest center* *a th* opening as th* |
co-operative warehouses on ,'Monday ,
TWO Mlli MSB
Oil DBCKETjtXT TEAM
Howard Brown, 17-Y«ar-Old
Hoy, Will Be Triod for
killing l'e«kani
I Two murd*t cases are docketed i for
I th* coming session of Wayne eoupty
I criminal court which will ho convened
by Judge Oliver H Alloa aa August SI.
Reward Brown, who la charged with
I th# killisig of Albert Beshirs. April *d,
Ila out *a a It.ooo head Releasing him
! fa sufficient bond was recommended by
Ip* grand Jury when a true hill was
found against him.
Jos Holt, eolorvd, who ia ekargod with
murdering Cara Robinson, colored oa
th* night of -Aoguat It. IRSO, aad who
has boon at large most of thin time ia
now In jail awaiting trial. HU edaq
has boon on th* docket six times, but
like She -suieees mt Robert R*ura aad
ta* spider, it seems the sheriff SdC
ceeded In getting him. If th* written
Widens* as Ltxsio Burt is sustaiaod It
would sppens that Joe |a bound too
Ih* prswuiod land.
There are Id other eases so fsr SU tbs
docket. They rang* through larceny.
• mbsxslomont. fopgory, and selling
whiskey. Th# p%s* of Com MqffflguMi,
nllagod king of the bootleggers, is kttoOg
LOREE MIMS TO KEEP
com. me to rams
Detachments as 8k op Me
chsitim gent To Roo4o •
In Virginia
NEW YORK. Aug. d.-Bparrad by
reports that gov*rn*n as the Greet
Lakes stataa ware preparing te d*snand
Federal spermtion of rdilroadx whisk
Haul coal mined from th* Northwest,
rail rx**utiv*x I* th* M*trop*Utdn
! trim, today scat thro* d*tachm*ats as
shop mechanics ta th* relief as rands
! Ik .'Virginia, West Virginia aad Kea
, tacky.
All w*r* sent ta tk* Chesapeake and
Ohio. Louisvili. and Nashville. Norfolk
I snd Western and Virginian, wkiek k*d
appealed to L. F. Lor**, chairman efi
th* Eastern mil conference, far man |
power with which to keep equipment
Jta repair aad cral trains moving to >
* Imho Cri* ports.
| Th* first quota of non-union m*n
I taken from shop* of ths Delawag* and'
Hudson, of which Mr. Loro* Is prdsl
dent, was reported by him to hav*
j reached Richmond. Virginia, today.
NEXT PEACE MOVE IS
! UP TO eOVERNMENT
Each Side Apparently Able To
Stand Firm on Strike l»-
)w«h Indnltnitely
. — „ . |
CHICAGO, Aua Daaplt# rrporta
from Warhington that th* aovcrnmcnl
would tat* no further action ka tha
I atrika of railway shopman at Ilia proa
ant lima, untun leader* and rail aiacu
tlwaa" tonight raltaratad formor aaaar
] Ilona that tha noat mava ao far aa
pane* la roacarnad will ha up to tha
■wvarnmaat aulharitlaa.
Tha railroad with htp Judge Frank A. Danieia restraining a
I I school election la Dudley aad Casey
1 township far the purpose of coasal
idating, haa bean made pormaaeat, tt
> was learaedlaal night Tha injunction
* waa requested by a grasp of ettiaoaa oa .
i the grounds that os e-fourth of tha frec
’ holders of tho two dietricte had aat
• oigaed tho petition far the elecOos, aad
Jadgo Dsaleis found this ta he the
caoa.
New, a petition hae been signed by
practically all the free-heiders In »*h
-1 orts and Casey school distriata lag the
1 purpose of cetteoHdatloa, aad will ha
brought before tha county board as sdu
\ f,tlon Tb* districts of fiwvoa "Trjggj.
’ sjara
fore the oWaMan and ft wfll ha ready
i for oocupaaey early It tho M- Can
, struct too of Mia teecwoed bu tiding sb*
I has begun. Other con.oHAaftaus tha
>. anponntaadont anaounood laat otghT'
I Ware tha Pleasant Greet, Bdmawdoou.
Mid Flhirlllc dlatricta
'wupramoi
i SPECIIL COMMISSI
. AdmintetnUon Effort To End
Cool Strike Wotting
Cloroknd Moot
WaBHINOTOH. Aag. 4r-Pmridoat
Harding probably will without appolat
amat of a opnotal reams!aalou ta effoot
a aottlamont of tho coal etriko uatll
after tho aonfemace la Cboalaod Moa
day of mtoera sad epe rater, gram tho
oentrel romguGUsw field*. It ws, Is
dtentod tonight in administration clr-
Canaid.rabb importoace was undor
latoad to ho attached hg tho odmlaJa
tratios to tha oatooßM of tho Obve
, load conference la relation with tho ,
National fuel eitaatloa. '
v MiWgtgaUam |a th*
i coal dispute abo will await tho reeaH
1 of tho Clog* load meting, o fit dais ha
i liwvw.
Moaawhilo, supplemental ardors worn
'.iesuod by v the Inters tote Commerce
Comn, lesion giving hitumiaoud coal for
household uses end for mea afoot are
of food and modiriao priority status,
while the central distribution commit
tee completed the formation of Ita reg
ional committees.
! LONG ISLAND IS
TO BAR STRIKERS
NEW YORK, Aof. T.—Tha U| ta
land Kallraad through Prraldaat Tatar*
announrad today that undar no dream
I alaacaa waold It taka hock tha man who
want an atrtko from tha vorioua ahapa
on July |.
Tha only old amptppoaa who haaa •
'banco ta gat hack ara thoaa man wha
wara truatod workar* and wolkad out
I haeaoap thay bad to follow aoloa or*
) dors, ha *aJ4.
Hla auumtnt daclarad that oil tha
•hap* ora worktec with vary foU faro to.
ntITALLUfO CATCH BASINA
KINSTON, Ao* 4.—lmmaoao catrh
baalna aad hi* aaaror Data ara halo*
tnstallad la Norfhcaat Klnalan to drain
that •rrtloa of tha rltp, sow bain* par
ed Loko* that hare formod aftar arary
hard rain will dlaappaar, and asaa of
mud at tha aaatara and* of aoaornl of
tha principal avaauaa will no* ho os-
I>.ric>. rd again Officials any that
! wfth tha aocnplatiaa at this work Klaa*
•Aa Will bo tha hast "aawarad" taw*
' *• »ko Stata Tha adaaMntec of Tho
' Adkln " a crash which dmina a port of
ikt chy. may ha ooa*tfb*od shortly.
• and this will HMra an r»rTl~t mrayai
I at Uam.
MEMBER OP
ASSOCIATED PRESS
NIC! PITH CMX
CASE AGAINST TILTOI
DISMISSED BY MAYOR
OTHER DEVELOPMEIITS
Nine Defendants Taxed WHk
Coats, $1.41, For Rotmtng
Minus IMS Togs
ORDERS ENFORCEMENT
CUT-OUT ORDINANCE $
Jnot before leaving far a brief eaca
tloa trip te Swan there, daring which
time he hae designed city Engineer
Whitman ta aerve a. acting city »•„«.
er, Mayer- Acting City' Manager
i yesterday aftaraoen announced that ho
taboo •steps to ebon up tho city hall and
"wnka up" the police depardbegt. v
Tullrdayt activitiee at tha city hall
wora featured by tho Hupogltlon of
trial cotta ogainst nine d.fvidaoU
found guilty of operating tart Without
IMS license Cages against two defen
daats. Bah Wataea aad J* P. bhnSaa.
were die mi seed and W B. Graham hat
ed an appeal ta a higher ceort. Three
i defendanu ware fined (|.W aad oaota
r#r riding bicycles ea tha tidwwaik aad
one. Faison Pollock, draw a si ml lag dee
far helag drank
Blow base BMlWtad Chats
Mlaaaaor dlsmtsaad thf case against
(lend actor Wiley Tiltah, In charge as a
shifting train -fa*. tha BauAetw. who
waa ap yesterday far hrfbgkaw a Mpfiag
of boa cara oa Oka CeatgadlMfik taaffa
out of heart. V,
Th# erdlaaneoa feqatrw Ihßfi th«h*«fide
must do thafr shjftliui hmali
hours of si a and eight ta
-»<* between four tad V fit mTSm
noon, unless grunted pergftdE So 4#
otherwise. Whoa the
Ihe duties of acting
notified the loci agents
of this regulation aad
thai Ihe law would bo rnflflM HE.
ductor Tilton, bowtvor, aGM| fIL
souri lhot ha had not
the new wrinkle ead hie A; fife,
a warning
tkr sffen.e
la th# maaattaM, the MagfEllHttb
- bailing tha eeadortag
had • most salutary tffMi
to he raapeottag thu
itcnetai obnoalouaneas dgrtgX* ' tjSft
h. Centre etrewt tracks
dy been curtailed to omJSX $«
rity statu tea. WlMf' W
Maay ftilm cjajhfl
Beaidag the taw dafagdfista
>u wt *tth liseagM
W flWhrTTcy,Ws oa the cSs®?^.
Mayer stated that additional ItMaS"
•