.1 -. -MASS IilEETJHG AT AUDITORIUM SUNDAY 3 P. M. FOR TUBERCUtOSIS HOSPITAL fine New WITCH IABZIk" ; WEATHER: Fair , Saturday - Sunday fair, lightly wsrmtr. eirver Ml fNf (. (MM 1 Mm mtrstfasi aa mU ' mMm atesw mm. VOL CX. NO. 738. TWELVE PAGES TODAY. RALEIGH, N. C, SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 15, 1919. TWELVE PAGES TODAY. PRICE FIVE CENTS. 0ii s.anc JUL )t:.i CONFERENCE OPENS TO BRING ABOUT PEACE IN SOFT ' Secretary of Labor Wilson Sub mits Three Plans To secure Proposed Peace AGAINST 30-HOUR WEEK AND 60 PER CENT. RAISE Says That Demand Is "Impoi ible" ; People The Ones Who Must Pay d They Are Not Shylocks, " He : Declared .; Character of The Three Pro ' posals Presented; Adjourn tnent Till Today For Miners y and Operators To Separately Dl(nj"vThemT"-"": Washington, Not. 14. (By the As sociated Press.") Demands of coal roin ra for a thirty-hour week and a 60 par cant increase in wages, and an un yieldlngTpositfonby the operators alike 'w.ra declared "imDoesible" by Secre tary Wilton in opening today the con farenet called to bring peace to the ' Bituminous fields of the nation. To obtain thia peace the secretary pro- Dosed three plans of procedure-. Declaring that the Washington wage agreement still is legally in force Mr. Wilson told the operators and miners that the people of the United States wore not "Shylocks" and do not want to exact "the technical provisions of ' a . . .. . . i i i. - bond when me conditions unuer wuku tha bond was mad hse changed." - He added that "if any great ehange la made ia the contract the people of tha United States are the ones who will have to pay," and throughout hit J remarks emphasised the public interest lia the coal settlement. I. . Tha Tare Proposals. The three proposal expected to aid 'the two factions in arranging the new wage agreement wefe act forth by the labor secretary a"follow: ; First negotiation through joint wage scale committees representing all dis tricts! second, negotiation through con current sessions of committees from the various districts, and third, nego tiation tret of an agreement ia, th . central competitive fields and then of agreement for vther ttelds .wtur tnat , of the central district as a basis. . After hearing Secretary .Wilson, tha toafereneo adjourned until II o'elock tomorrow to permit tha" miners and Operator to discuss separately the' plan which would, b moat acceptable (to each. -r ' -.,-. ' Indication of Conflict. ' Indieation of a conflict on tha scope " af the aareement to' be negotiated in ' solving the question of recognition of non-union, workers developed at tn outse of.' tha conference and became more apparent in tha two group meet ings which followed, v Discussion in the"' miners' , caucus which followed th-eonferenee session hinged on the question whether opera tors -representing both, union and non union fields, would be Included in the conference,-and the effect any agree ment reached by tha conference might have in those field where the miner do not have eoatracta with tha opera- tor. ' Although officers of tha United Mine Workera refused to -make any statement following their meeting, it waa learned that the plan for a nation' - wida conference waa favored, but be fora any proposal ia agreed to Secre tary Wilson will be asked to make clear to tha conference that tha rights of organized labor are to be protected in those districts where the mining unions are not recognized by tha coal com panies. ', - , Opera tors' Point of View. The operators, however, did not look with favor on any agreement covering nil fields. Tha Washington wage agree ment for tha first time, tha .operators asserted fixed tha same data for tha expiration of contracts between miners and operator in nil parts of the coun try. Tear of tha power this arrange ment give tha worker to bring about n natioa-wid strike wae expressed by tha operators, who indicated a desire to return to the old plan f bating nil wags seal eon tracts on tha agreement reached in tha central competitive fields. .- Owner of mines outside of tha can trai competitive fields conferred before tha opening of tha conference and op position was expressed to participation in tha negotiations. - ... , ,,-. May Ba P retracted Session. Owing to the likelihood of protracted discussion of tha scope ol the confer ence before even the demands of tha miner ars brought into lean- many on both aide of the controversy predicted today that tb sessions might continue for eevernl weeks. t Both miner and operator asserted tonight thai Secretary Wilson' address would have a powerful affect ia bring ing closer together tha extremes of both sides. Tha secretary's address which waa heard by approximately 50 member of the conference in absolute silence, waa delivered alowly and ap parently with deep feeling and convic tion. Tha only applause of tha session greeted Mr. Lewit when ha entered the hall about fifteen minutes late. Aate Car Service. ' After determining tha machinery for adjusting labor disputes, tha Heat be came involved in a mora bitter fight, cantering about extension of the in terstate commerce commission's author ity in regulating ear service, which was carried into the. night Meeiba. ' Before tha' fight became- aharp, however, the House 'without objection approved a - (Continned Pago Two) ". j COAL FIELDS ORDERLY CHAOS IN nroT.4A Tin nf Miners Resume Work in Some Districts, In Others New Walk-outs Occur Charleston, West Va., Nov 14. The coal strike situation in the . southern mining fields of West Virginia, waa ia a ' tt of "orderly -ebaas, - accord lag to -ststenwnt liueiLtonignt atIhe heidunsrtert of the Kanawha Coal Operators .Association. While" miners are reported to have resumed operations ia some ' districts. In others where men were at work yes terday, walkout occurred again today, Five "unauthorized" strikes were in crotfrsu in, the . Kanawha fields, pre venting the resumption of operations in thirteen mines. Reports to the association ahowed that lets than CO per cent of ' the Kanawha mines wore operating and these hsd a amall working force. At severs! mines where the normal work lng forces number several hundred lest than fifty men reported for worn, was stated. Two large mines at Leevalc, in the Big Coal Biver district, which were operating yesterday, ware forced to shut down today when toe several hundred miners - voted to walk out. Attempts of union leaders to put the men back to work failed. The situaitoa nt Blair, m the Little Coal Biver District, waa reported to be aerious. Six mines were closed in this teetion by aa "Unauthorized" strike of more than aix hundred miners. They nu ...... .....i i.. i. k.iii..i and preventing other men from enter ing the mines At Sharlow, in the Coal Biver Da trict, thirty miners voted to remain on strike; and preventing three mines from resuming. The miners are reported to (rave told the operators that the "union officers had their etriksuow they would Miner at Mil burn and Bamsge arc also reported to have voted not to obey tha union order to return to work. The men at Milburn demand "more money" before they will go to work it was said, Radicals at Bamaga are said to control the situation and arc, - preventing re sumption of operations. ARTIFICIAL REGULATION OF LAWS OF ECONOMY Governor of Nebraska's Sea sons For Ignoring Proposed ; '" H. 0. L. Conference ,. Lincoln, Mel.. Nov. 14. -Aaaoanelng in a letter to United States Attorney Ocaersl Palmer that he had decided to postpone, probably indefinitely. conference requested by Mr. Palmer between Federal, State and other efrt eiale on the high cost of living prob lem Governor McKelvie aaid there waa no way of telling "the amount of injury that has been dona Nebraska nrodneert oy tha ill-advised agitation of those who would lead tha country to believe that it is possible to effect nn artificial regulation of the laws of economy. -I have no doubt that tha decline in tha price of hoars and corn has cost Nebraska " farmers at leaat $90,000,000 and yet no benefit has seemed to the consumer because of this decline,' the Governor wrote.: ; The conference was to have been held her November 25, and tha Governor's letter-waa in reply to a telegram from Mr. Palmar asking if the meeting eoold be postponed until December S, to per mit turn sttc-naaace. EX-POSTMASTER SHORE OF KERNERSVILLE DEAD Winston-Salem, Nov. - 14. Ex-Post master Henry T. Shore, ef Keraera villa, died at his homo there today, after a brief illness. Ha waa one of the town best citizen and ia tnr vived by hi wife, three sons. Presi dent Ned Shore, ef tha Carolina Cadil lac Company; Bobert Shore, assistant to tha treasurer of the Reynolds To bacco ' Company, and Edgar Shore, of Kensss City. Mo., and on daughter. Mis Helen Shore, of Kenersville. The accessed waa on of tha officials and most active worker of the Moravian church In his home town. The funeral eervicet will ba held 1 in tha church there at 1:30 Saturday afternoon; -con ducted by Bishop Rondthaler. Inter ment will be ia the Moravian grave yard in Keraersville. Conditio of President Wilson. Washington, Nov. 14 Preeident WU on was permitted to lit up for a short time again -today, the fourth day in succession. J3r. Franeis X, Pereum, the Philadelphia specialist, ia expected to pay his regular weekly visit to the Whit House tomorrow to cheek op on tha patient' program. u- Vi, ;.'!? ! Coal Miner to Bean ana Work. Cheyenne. Wyo- Nov. ' 14. Seven thousand coal miner in Wyoming are to return to work at one following a satisfactory aettlemeat of the eoatro vsryty between anion ' leaders and the operator her lata today. The terms of settlement provide tha aaea am , to return to work en tile wage seals adopt ed later for us in tb central competi tor neid. PRINCE OF VALES AT NAVAL ACADEM Praises U. S. Navy's Work In ine war and Plants Tree; Warmly Welcomed LEFT WASHINGTON LAST NIGHT FOR WINTER RES0R W1H- Remain There Incognito ' , Till Tnesday When He Be turns To New York; Sails Tor England Saturday Next Visited Cardinal Gibbons and Mrs. Marshall Yesterday I Washington, Nov. 14. The Prince of Wales left "We hfngion tonight accom panied only by hit immediate personal, tail for a three day stay in a southern winter resort, where he proposes to r lie appearance will be Tuesday, when he sTTTves -n--NewriVrk toemain. there until he sail for England the following Saturday.- The Prince called today oa Mrs. Marshall, wife of the Vice Preai dent, who haa been slightly indisposed. Visited Cardinal Cibboaa. On-' -urn from a trip to the Naval academy at Annapolis, Maryland, he paid a visit to Cardinal Gibbons, the venerable head of the Roman Catholic Church in America. He waa received by the Cardinal in the. rectory of St. Patrick's church and chatted with him for ten minutes. Afterwards he drove to the Belmont, Home where1 he dined privately. Greeting at Naval Academy. At the door of the rectory the Prince waa greeted by James Burns, a veteran of the Boer War and' a former trooper ia the 10th Boyal Hu tsars "the Prince's own." Burns told the Prince that lie had formed one of the guard of honor at the wedding of his father and mother, Tb Prince discarded his military uni form in honor of hi visit to Annapolis, snd wore the costume of a ecptain in the Boyal Navy. , At tha Naval - Academy - ha was introduced to thr famous cheers of the Academy. When ha entered the great memorial ball wher the 2,000 midship men were assembled. "Mike" Curley. the school cheer leader, jumped to the plat, form and called for "Four Navies and three Princes." The big- building shook at th tear thaWololwed. f ? v After a brief address to th midship men in which he paid - tribute to the achievements of the American navy in the war, the Prince planted a memorial tree in front of Bancroft Hall. GEORGIA WOMEITS CLUB ENDORSE EQUAL SUFFRAGE. Columbus, Ga- Not. 14. Woman suffrage which for two' years has been an issue before the Georgia Federation of Women a clubs waa endorsed here tonight at tha Federation annual eon vention. The vote was 85 to 4a. The prohibition enforcement campaign of tha government waa also endorsed by the convention which opened here Wed nesdayand will come to a close totnor- Now Attempt to Take Petrograd. Helaingfors. Thursday.' Nov. 13. (By the ' Associated Press.) The Baltic State Conference at Dorrwt baa been advised that Finland ha decided to aid General, TudenKeh with 80,000 volun teers in a new attempt to take Petro grad within the next few weeks. , Newspaper Office Closed. . Seattle, Wash- Nov. 14 Federal offi cer today again aeixed and closed the office -and plant of the Seattle Union Beeord, a daily newspaper. - - , i. Bolshevik Saccea la Stasia. London, : Nov. 14. The Bolsheviki captured Yam burg, sixty-eight mile Southwest of Petrograd .thin afternoon, according ih a wlrelesa dispatch re ceived here this evening from Moscow, R.R. Conclusions Reached On Most of The More Important ' ',y Issues: . Washington, Nov. , 14. (Lead Day Railroad Conference.) Conferees, rep reseating the railroad administration and head of the 'four great Bail road brotherhoods, oa the latter demand for revision of employee working con dition, appeared confident tonight they would complete their work tomorrow. Todaya sesiloa, th fifth, was aaid to have developed no difficulties of import- ae further than the queation at time ana a naif for evertime-of trainmen in road service which still, remain unset tled. , . -V Minor differences, railroad adminis tration officials said, have been practi cally all dkpoaed of end tentative con clusion have been reached on most of tli mora important issues.' These same officials, however, admitted that not in frequently ia ueh conferences, smooth running machinery suddenly has gone awry but they hastened to explain fliat they anticipated nothing of tha aort ia th preeeat sessions.-1 - - - ' Three bur davs at Pineh urst. d Am1. hill rlr ftnd rcP Berkghir (res and sale. Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Nov. IS, 20, 21. - (adT) CONFERENCE NEARLY THROUGH U. S. JUDGES REFUSE TO RELEASE LARGE AMOUNT OF WHISKEY N0W IN BOND New York, Nov. 14 Federal Judge John O. Boee, of Baltimore, late to day dismissed an application of the Maryland Distillery Company for an injunction which would have released for sale large quantities of whiskey now in bond. Judge Rote was the third Federal jurist to sustain the prohibition law here today in suits brought before them LOUISVILLE DISTILLERS SELL AND MAKE THEMSELVES LIABLE Louisville, Ky., Nov. 14 Two local distilleries sold whiskey openly in Louisville today at $75 a ease, re gardless of the war-time prohibition Taw. Hundred! 'bf ordert, filed before July 1, when the war-time law went into effect, It .wat aaid, were being filled by these distilleries which re sumed sales following the granting of an Injunction. t, them, yesterday, by Federal Judge Evans, restraining the government from interferring with the sale of nearly a million gal lons of "floor stock" whiekey. R. R. WORKERS WIN Secure Incorporation of Plan For Voluntary Concilia tion of Labor COMPULSORY ARBITRATION PROVISION IS REJECTED House Also Defeats Anti Strike Provision and Plan Written Into Measure By X. 0. Committee, Described As "Middle Ground"; Vote Was 151 To 75 Washington, Nov. 14 Bailway work r (cored, a complete victory in th House today through incorporation ef their nlsn for voluntary eoucllintlon of labor dispute in tha Each: railroad bilL The House rejected a plan of comDulsorr arbitration, including aa anti-strike provision, and also tha plan written into the bill by the House in terstate Commerce Committee, which was described a a "middle ground between that ' adopted and eompulaory arbitration. No direct veto oa the anti- strike proposal was taken. On both votes tha proponent or tne union s plan won By large majorities, First, by H vote of 161 to 70, the House substituted the union s plan lor com Dulsorv arbitration and then, lei to 101, cast aside th committee plan for that indorsed by the workers, final action came after practically the entire day had been devoted to debate of the three plans, and after adoption of the workers plan, renewed effort to in' elude an auti-ttrika provision met with defeat through parliamentary tactics. Digest of R. R. Employes Flan. The plan approved by the railroad employes which waa drafted Jy Repre sentative Sweet, Republican, of Iowa, and offered ia tha House by Bepresen tative Andersen. Republican, of Minne sota, would legalize the machinery used by the railroads and their employea be fore and during Federal control .or the settlement of disputes, with com mic tions on labor disputes being added to consider eases appealed from the joint boards that first consider them. In brief, the plan divides the railroad workers into three elasses and for each it ettabliihes aa adjuttnient board and an appeal commission. No penalty against strike or lockouts is imposed, and membership, on all six of the boards would be restricted to the work ers and their employers, and dividend equally between them. . Both the roads nsd , the employes would be directed by the plan, aa writ ten into the bill, "to exert every reas onable effort and adopt every available mean to avoid an interruption" of traffic, and to thia end the three boards of adjustment would b created, these being substantMlIy the same St those existing under the railroad administra tion. Tha ' three adjustment board would each deal with dispute of certain elatset of the fourteen railway union. One board would include representa tive of ' the four big brotherhoods th engineers, the firemen, the conduc tors and the trainmen t another would include the machinists, th boiler-mak ers ins Diacssmnns, ine ear men, roe sheet metal worker and the electrical workers; and the third would include th telegraphers, tba switchmen, th rail way clerks, aad tb way and shop lab orers. Railway executives would nam four, tlx and four representative re spectively, a members of these board. Corresponding to each board there also would b set up a commission to eontlder appeals which would ba sent to them by half th members of a board. The commission would be of tb same site aa the boards, with tb select method of choosing members obtaining, but with duality of membership be tween board and commissions pro hibited.' Headquarters ' of all aix tribunal would be in Washington. . Award ef Nobel Prise. Stockholm, Nov.-34. The Nobel Prise for physic for 1918 ha been awarded to Professor Max Planck, of Berlin University.- The physic prise for 1919 haa been given to Professor 8tark, of Grief -wald University. 1 " Th chemistry prise for 1919 roe to Professor Frits Hsber, of Berlia Uni versity. The chomistry prize for 1919 ill be held over until next year VICTORY IN ESCH HEARING ON ARMY AND GUARD BILLS Begins Today and Gen. Francis Macon Arrives in Washing ington To Testify NATIONAL GUARD MEN AGAINST BAKER ARMY BILL Opposed To Universal Training and Standing Army of Half Million Men ; favor Creation of, National Guard Council; features Pointed Out; De velopments About N. C. . Newt aV Observer Buresu, 60S : District National Bank Bldg. By R. E. POWELL. (Special Leased Wire.) Washington, D. C, Nov. 14. Major General FrnneU Macon, retired, of. Hen-, demon, arrived here this afternoon and will be the first of fifteen representative frienda of the national guard to testify before- a joint military affair umm. tee on the merits of the new army bill and the bill offered by the national guard. General Macon will begin hit testimony before the committee tomor row morning. The line of testimony thst will be opened "before" "thf "committee by Oenetal Macon will costume probably the fol lowing days and will be concluded when Mnjor General O'Hyan, of New York's fumous Twenty-Seventh, concludes the inning for the advocates of ths national guard association's bill. in general, the fifteen friends of the national guard, who have been asked to come here by Chairmaa Wadsworth of the Senate military affairs committee, will oppose the Baker-March army bill providing for universal training and a standing army of a half suillioji mea. Hearings before the eonunlttee on this bill be Ran a few weeks age with Secre tary Baker and were concluded today when General Pershing finished hi tes timony. For National Ooard CeanciL The attack on the Universal Training festure of the Baker-March bill will also be opened with the testimony of General Mneon. This line of argument will be followed with the recommenda tion that Congress create a national guard council in order that th national euard itself, if continued, may paniei pat in ths overhead administration of th militia, the ma at waiea is a term ined bv th constitution. . "Neither to raise nor maintain the organisation ef the militia through or by compulsory training or compulsory service is required,' General Maeon pointed out today, "but to meet the reasonable requirements of military pre Ipsredness, training of the young man hood of America is essential to ine nerfeet safety of the nstioa. In time of peace a professional army no large that it eannot b maintained oy volun tary enlistment is too larga for democracy, though." Position of War Department. The contention of Secretary Baker and General March has been, consist ently, that the country needs a stand ing army ef a half million men nnd in order to have this nrmy, the universal training feature proposes , to obtain enlistments in virtually the same man ner aa men were obtained for the National army. The testimony of Gen' ersl Pershing, which has just been con cluded, varied much with that of hit chief, and Gen. March In that he thought an army of 273,000 large enough for th safety of the nation. Objections to Militia. One of tH objection to the organisa tion of the militia, which frienda of the guard will advocate before tha com mittee. - baa been the vesting of author ity to appoint officers, and to train the militia with the State. These limita tions present no obstacle to aa efficient organization for the national guard, ac cording to General Maeon. - They are in , fact, advantageous said he. "because this keeps the organis ations closer to the people and preserves (Continued en Pag Two.) E Canvass of The Situation In ;Senate Last Night Was of Uncertain Nature , Washington, Nov. 14. 8ueees for the movement to shut down tb peaea treaty debate by a cloture aeemed likely to night to remain in doubt until ths elerksall th roll on th question) to morrow ia th Senate. Thirty Republicans signed tha 'peti tion for cloture, and party leader de clared that more would vote for K. There was no doubt, leader asserted. thst the Republican aid of tha cham ber would contribute mors than it share of th two-thirds majority nseet aary to invoke the .eloture rule. ' Among th Democrat, however, there waa more uncertainty growing out of a question of policy involving tha whole administration program of parliament ary action on th treaty. Democratic Leader Hitchcock was understood to in cline away from the cloture proposal, and although some Democratr aaid they would not - follow him, a far . greater number reserved their decision. - Vie President Marshall ia expected to be in th chair, when the ouestioa automatically come to ft vote an hour after th Senate meet tomorrow and it was considered possible that he might remove Democratic - objection bv so construing th eloture rule thst it will not npsst tb administratioa f laaav . CLOTUR P IN SENATE TODAY THREATENED INVASION OF TWO THOUSAND III; MEMBERS A. L ON DUTY MEMBERS OF AMERICAN LEGION THREATENED WITH DEATH IN RADICAL LETTER. Spokane, Wash, Nov. 14. Eight local members of the American Le gion were threatened with the fate of former soldiers killed at Centralis Tuesday in a letter received at Local American Legion headqaartera through the mail. . The letter, purporting to be signed by an official of the "Inuiistrial Workert of the World," was type written and the letter head waa torn off. It was mailed here yesterday. With fifty-eight alleged member of the Industrial Worker : of the World in the local jail Charged with criminal syndicalism, police officers literature laid to amount to nearly a ton. It included a new booklet by Jamea Rowan, former National Secretary of the L W. W. Timber Worktr-' Union, who is at liberty oa bond following hit convection in Chicago LWW. ease. What the police believe was the beginning of a German soviet wss discovered, they declared, ia the ar rest of C. K. qnast. Quaat ia being held for further investigation. Orders forbidding "Workers meet tans" called for Saturday ard Sunday evenings at Turner hall were sent directors of the German Turnvereia today by Commissioner J. H. Tilsley, of the department of public safety, who warned them criminal actions would he brought unlets meetings of L W. W. and kindred organixatioaa were barred from the kali. AGAINST ELEVEN Latest - Developments In The Armistice Day Outrage By I. W. W. . Centralia, Wash., Nov. 14. (By tho Associated Press.) Arrangements were made today to file murder charge agaiaat eleven men tea of whom have been arretted following the attack of allaged member of th Industrial Work ers of the World on the Ann 1st io day parad yhich resulted ia th death of four former service men. Public memo rial services for the four victims of th shooting were held today under the aus pice of the American Legion. Search was continued in nearby town for sixteen alleged 'Industrial Workers ef th World, who were reported en route to Centralia bearing arms. Th failure 6f the coroner" jury to fix responsibility for the deaths of th four former soldiert, C. V. Cunning ham, assistant eoanty attorney, declared would not affect the eases of th 1. W, W. held in jail. He said the prosecu tion had witnesses who were in th front ranks of the parade and who insist thots wers fired from the I. W. W. hall before any of the aiarehsra started to ward the building. Dr. Frank I. Bickford testified at the coroner's inquett that one of the march era had put bia foot against the door of the I. W. W. hall before a ahot turd been fired. Cunningham waa of the opto ion Pr. Bickford failed to hear tb first shot and saw only the crowd of march era moving toward the hall. Bert Bland, aa alleged member or tne I. W. W., who, aeoerdiag to Cunning ham, will bo charged with murder in connection with th shooting, is being sought in nearby towns. He ie the only one not in Jail of the elevea to t charged with th murder. PUSSY-FOOT JOHNSON GETS MUCH ADVERTISING Attitude df Students in London Who Hazed Him Changed To Admiration London. Nov. 14. (By Th Atsoci- sted Press.) William K. "Pussy Foot" Johnson, the Americas prohibitionist, who campaign in England was rudely interrupted Thursday by a band of stu dents, today as a result of hi attitude toward the adventure, M ose 01 tne most talked of and popular-figures of the day. He commanded the biggest headlines in today a newspspers, ana the snneral - verdict of th headline written wa that he it "a good (port." . Mr. Johnson could not have desired a better advertisement than Thursday's incident for hia campaign against th liquor traffic, aad hia future - publle appearance likely will eommand atten tion by reason of the fact that be baa announced himself aa considering th hazing ha underwent a good joke. Tha students who marched about vith him yesterday, upsetting trains ia a goodly part of the West 2nd, now propose to tender Mr. Johnson a banquet aad pre sent to him their tributes of respect. . Tb opposition- - t the anti -saloon organiser in London, it is aaid, ha been bated oa the feeling that it waa impertinent for aa American prohibi tionist to coma across sea to lector Ik, inglish on what they should do MURDER CHARGES Authorities at Spokane Ar range For Arms and Ammu nition Held in Readiness; Guardsmen Mobilize - NATIONAL GUARDSMEN Ar COLORADO CAPITOU Request Tor Troops at State ' House Came From Office of Oor. Shonp; All Suspects To Be Arrested; Employes of Baltimore Dry Docks and Shipbuilding Co "Bore 11:01' To Rid Plant of .Radicalai Anarchistic" DeveU . - opments Elsewhere - Spokane, Wash.. Nov. 14. Members of the American Legion here were being sworn in at special policemen this even ing to meet wha was- declared to b at Invasion of on thousand to two thou and member of th Industrial Workers of the World, due to arrive her to night from Montana snd other parts of the Northwest. Arrangements were being'tnad with officer at Fort George Wright here for arm aad ammunition for the Amer . ican Legion deputy sheriffs, who were to be held in readiness for -immediate ' action. Major Thomas O. Aston com-, . msnder of tha third battalion of tha National Guard, announced he had tele graphed Adjutant General Moss recom mending that tho two local companies of guardsmen be mobilized. All I. W. W. suspect ar to be ar- rested, according to aa agreement rear had at a conference here lata to day between Commander Tilsley, of the Department tf Publle. Safety, Chief of Police Weir, Sheriff Beid and other fleer, aad representative of tha American Legion. After jail have been tiled, prisoner will b hold elsewhere uader guard, - ' Natioaal Trwap Gaartl CapltoL' Denver, Cot. Nov. 14. Aa a meat ure of precaution during the present period of unrest, a detail of National Guardsmen, armed with rifles and bar onet was placed on guard at Colorado' stat house today. Fifteen mea, un- , dor Major Marshal!, were assigned to ths duty. Tha request for the guard from Governor Shonp s office. Rid Bslto. Plaat ef Radicals. " Baltimore, Md Nov. 14. (By The Associated Press.! Loyal employes of rthe Baltimore Dry-Docks and Ship building Company took a hand a littla "boring from within' on the Reds la their rank today with the result thst leaders of the workmen feel euro that any se-called radical leader will be ab. sent after tomorrow which ia pay -da v. After a red circular urging the work ers to ns and take poasestion of tha plsnUfor themselves, had beea found there, the plant auperintendent at thj aooa hour today called tb workmen to- . gether and laid the situation befor them. The mea pledged themselves ta rid the plant -of Beds, without outside aid, aad in tha next few hours the vigl- lantet had rounded up all the Bed propaganda literature which had beea Circulated among their fellows. Tha circular, headed "Tour shop" bore thia inscription: , "This is propaganda leaflet Number - 3, issued by th communist 1 party of America, 1219 Blue Avenue, Chicago." 1 Quantities of tb inflammatory docu ment were turned in to company head quarters aad destroyed, and heads of the workmen' com mittee informed th management that they would undertake to have their raaka cleared of Bed whea th whistle blow for tomorrow' doting. 1 Troop Mobilising at Spwksaa. Spokane, Waah Nov. 14. Orders fo the mobilization of the two companies ef the Natioaal Ouardsmea were issued tonight by Major Thomas C. Alton. L W. W. TROUBLE AT MINING TOWN NOW IDLE, Taeoma, Wath Nov. 14. Reports were received by the authorities here tonight that a concentration of L W. W, was being attempted at Cumberland a mining town in King county that point being chosen for its isolation and th fact that the miners st present ar net working. ' . LARK IN AND GITLOW " . HELD BY GRAND JURY. New York, Nov 14. James Larkin, labor leader, and Benjamin Gitlow, a former assemblyman, charged with aK voeating criminal anarchy, were held for the grand jury late today by Chief Magistrate MeAdoo. Befor announcing hi decision, Mr. MeAdoo scathingly de nounced th aetivitie of radical in this country. . . . - 1 ii-11 ADMISSION TO REICHSTAG BUILDING REFUSED HINDENBURO Berlin, Nov.. J4. Paa-Grmaa stu. dents today refaaad to permit field mar shal Voa Hindenburg to enter th Reichstag building to testify befor tha sub-cammHten which is investigating war responsibilities, snd forced the field Marshal' chauffeur to return with tha former Commander in Chief to his, home. ', . ' . - .