CHARLOTTE 32 PAGES TODAY SUNDAY EDITION AND EVENING CHRONICLE "GREATER CHARLOTTE'S HOME NEWSPAPER" CHARLOTTE, N. C, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 4, 1921. THE CHARLOTTE3 NEWS f Consolidated THE EVENING CHRONICLE I.May 8, NEWS TERMINATION OF IE IS XTttE STRIKE NOW CERTAIN Employes of Norcott and Brown Mills Will Go to Work Tuesday. SO VOTED SATURDAY. Mill Owners Display Disin terested Attitude as to Decision. All cotton mill workers in Char lotte, Concord and Kannapolis will return to their jobs Tuesday morn ing, thereby bringing to a termina tion the strike which has been in progress for three months and which, at one time, involved 8,000 people. Meeting in, their mill com munities Saturday night, the work ers voted to go back to work, accept ing the terms as previously laid down by mill owners. Tuesday was selected as the date for returning to work because Monday is Labor Day. L. M. Earnhardt and F. J. Sloop, leaders of- the strikers in Concord, an nounced last night that they would not press their previous demands for re employment by the Brown and Nor cott mills. These two men had been operatives in these mills, of the John ston chain, prior to the strike. Be cause of their activity as-union leaders, officials of these plants refused to re employ them when workers voted, to go back last Tuesday. The other opera tives of the two mills held out in sup port of their leaders and the strike of employes of these plants has con tinued. Earnhardt and Sloop went to -Norcott and Brown mill officials last night and asked if they would be al lowed to return to work. When inform ed that they would not. both said they would not press their case further, pre ferring not to stand in the way of a set tlement of the difficulty. Announcement of the termination of the strike in Charlotte, Concord and Kannapolis came from mill owners and union leaders at Con cord late last night. Mill officials here denied any knowledge of the reMilt of employes' meetings and local textile union men could not be communicated with. Employes of the Narcott and Brown mills, the center of the recent disturb aiic-.s m Concord, will return to work I uesday morning. acfiordiff-t.-nfr illation regarded as reliable received by The Charlotte News at 11:30 o'clock last night over long-distance telephone. It was understood that operatives in these two mills of the Johnston chain voted Saturday night to go hack to their .vbs Tuesday morning, accepting the terms as laid down by the mill management last week. The Norcott mill has been running with a limited froce iring the past week.- The Brov.iv mill -s, been closed. The use of a full complement of workers in these two mills wil end the strike entirely in so far as the Johnston chain of seven mills is concerned. Information was not available last night as. to what if any action opera tives 'm other cott'on mills here and in Concord had taken with reference to terminating the strike. Opinion of per sons familiar with latest developments was that all would vote to return to work, however, and it is generally be lieved that Tuesday or Wednesday will witness the final termination of the three months' struggle and that all the mills will be running with a full force. A disinterested attitude was display ed by a number of cotton mill officials who were communicated with by The News last night. Officials of mills which have been running with a limited force said They were not interested in the vote of operatives because they had as many workers as they desired at the present Tim", market conditions not necessi tating a full force. OPERATIVES HELD MEETINGS Reports from cotton mill and textile union circles last night was that opera tives were meeting to consider whether they would return to their jobs, uncon ritionally accepting the terms as pre viously specified by mill owners, or to ontinue on strike. That they will not ' -ntinue the strike' is regarded as cer tain. Interest is centered now only in i ri m i t- news as to their decision. It was understood that the local mill ( -huts will report back to a committee of strikers' representatives to meet in Chfirlotte Monday. Announcement as to 'he dt-fision of the workers may be ex lifted by union officials following this gathering, it was reported. Another re port was to the effect that the workers would make no announcement, quietly notifying their employers that they wish to return to work and reporting at the mills as soon as the places are open. The strike is ended, though. Union officials Saturday virtually admitted this fart and nnlv the next .two or three days will be required to get all the, operatives back on their jobs. De- snito Pitirpsswl satisfaction Of some (Continued on l'age Thirteen.) HARDING AND DAWES TO DISCUSS BUDGET Washington, Sept. 3. President Har ding and Director of the Budget Dawes will devote much of their week-end on the Mavflower to an expression of the departmental estimates for the next fis- enl year. A small party of guests iicenrnnanipd thp President and Mrs. Harding on the trip, which started to flight. Throughout the trip down the Poto mac River and the Bay, the President will keep in touch with the AVeSt Vir ginia situation by wireless. The party will return Tuesday morn i ri'' a raflin. mesaae-o from the Mayflower trmiv. ctiii fVio little vessel was off Upper Cedar Point and that good weath r prevailed. .f;KBiRiEXT IS REACHED. Mexico City, Sept. 3. The presidents of American oil companies having large interests in Mexico reached an agree ment with the Mexican government n.tion and other ques tions in dispute. The negotiations bad been in progress all week. spanishReverses Imperilling T hvrf -- j Of Ruling Mod 5 s London, Sept. 3. Sr v e verses in Morocco are ing King Alfonso's throne, g to a dispatch to The Sunda.v press from a correspondent on the iranco Spanish frontier. A wave of rev olutionary feeling is reported to be sweeping Spain. News of the grave domestic sit uation, which has been intensified by the revelation that the Spanish forces in Morocco have lost 18,000 men, are leaking out of Spain de spite the rigid censorship. The cemsorship lias been unable to hide the fact that the Spanish army in Morocco is in serious pred icament. The Spanish forces con centrated at Melilla are being vio lently attacked and fighting is re ported in progress on the outskirts of the city. If Melilla falls, the new Spanish cabinet may fall and the throne will then face even a more serious menace than that which con fronts it at present. Republican opposition in Spain to the Moroccan war has been intensi fied by the serious Spanish losses. Already there have been out breaks of political rioting in some parts of Spain. Railway lines were attacked and torn up at Bilboa. The Spanish public is apparently losing faith in Premier Maura anil War Minister Lacierva. Anti-dynastic speeches are being made by Socialists and Communists almost within the shadow of the King's palace at Madrid. Mutinies are be coming niore and more common at the embarkation points where the troops leave for Morocco. INDUSTRY SHOWS QUICKENED STEP Slow But Steady Recovery of Nation s Business Gen erally Forecast. By HARDEN COLFAX Staff Correspondent of The News, Copyright, 1921, by Aews l'ublishiug Co. "Washington, Sept. 3 The year swings into Labor Day with American in dustry at last in quickened step. Un employment is definitely on the wane. Secretary Davis' estimated army of more than 5,000,000 idle has shrunk since the fiures were announced. Credit is easier than it has been at any time since t-he peak of high prices. The c4st of living has tumbled far. The rail roads are making money and mills and factories are gradually coming back to something resembling normal working conditions. Definitely, the writer believes, the worst of the industrial crisis is behind ?"Measured by the impassionate fig ures of workers employed, a nation wide survey of industry as of Septem ber 1 shows it. In the Middle-west, especially,- and in Chicago, the figures re heatening. The great iron and steel centers show revival; coaU metal mining, lumber and agriculture are look ing up. Manufacturing, last to receive the impetus of revival, is beginning slowly to show a healthier tone. INCREASED PAYROLLS Industries employing about a million and half workers show an increase of more than twenty thousand in their payolls over the number employed a month ago. This number is largely in the Middle-west. In the Eastern cities generally, there was no further increase in unemployment and a measurable ad dition to the army of workers is ex pected this month. It begins to look a if the hope of business that fall would see a revival is a hope coming true, although the upward swing will be gradual and not spectacular. Slowly and healthily business is getting better. Some time within the next few days the Government will announce the re sult of its survey of unemployment con ditions as of August 31. That ..survey, taken monthly since January, has been a succession of thirty-day reverses for the working man and industry gener ally. It cover 1,428 concerns engaged in' 14 maior industries; is made at the same plants each month and therefore affords an accurate view of a cross section of American business. Since January the decrease in em- (Continued on Page Sixteen.) ONE IS KILLED AND MANY ARE INJURED Binghamton, N. Y., Sept. 3. One passenger, John Eldridge, was killed and a score of others were injured, many of them believed to be seriously hurt, when the second section of tra;n Xo. 3, on the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, jumped tiv? track at Appalachian, 14 miles west tf this city, this afternoon. The train is known as the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western "flyer." Five cars left the track and rolled down a steep embankment. They turn ed completely over once and then landed right side up. The shock was terrific to the passen gers, they bMng. tossed about in let rolling cars, nearly all of them receiv ing scratches and bruises while others suffered severely from more harmful in juries. BRITISH CABINET IS CONSIDERING REPLY ondon( Sept. 3. The British cabinet tonight was considering the reply of Eamonn De Valera to the latest Bri tish note. Lloyd-George ,ln Scotland on his vacation, sent down to Downing tjtr-t ronies of the communication and the other members of the government discussed it in private- On Wednesday next, the Cabinet will meet with the Premier at Inverness, cjpntinnd. Thev will make the long in,,mav mther than have Lloyd-George who is badly in need of a rest, come to t r.n The presence of their sov oroit-n Kine George, in Scotland that o,, rin flin relieve the Cabinet mm isters of any embarrassment they might feel at making such an unusuai ronnrted that Robert Barton Trish M. P. who carried the reply tv, Dail Eireann to Lloyd-George rold remain in Scotland and await the Cabinet's decision and reply. rrv, tYt of De Valera's letter, which was said to be shorter than his others nA r. i1 for another conference, was to be given out for publication at S 'o'clock tomorrow night. BUild Ml ILL CR Y IS FORWARD Federation of Labor Presi dent Sends Labor Day Greetings to Unions. NEED CO-OPERATION. Reactionary Forces Among Employers Are Slowly Be ing Brought Around. Washington. Sept. 3. The battle cry of labor is "forward" in these times when the "loyalty and solidarity of all our people is passing through the test of fire," Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, de clared toinight in a Labor Day mes sage addressed to "the wage earners of America." 'The reactionary forces among em ployers are slow to turn their minds to constructive effort," Gompers declared, but "we will not be driven back." Gompers' message follows: "To the wage earners of America: "Greetings: "We meet to observe this Labor Day at a time when the citizenship, the un derstanding, the loyalty and the solidar ity of all our people is passing through the test of fire. ' "We meet at a time when the great need is to stand together. "We are confronted by unemploy ment. Nearly six millions of our peo ple have no work. "The reactionary forces among em ployers are slow to turn their minds to constructive effort. IN JUNCTION IS ARI SE "They are slow to learn that the in junction, as abused in industrial dis putes, is an unlawful, unfair, ineffec tive, tyrannical weapon. "They are slow to learn that the so called individual contract as a measure of industrial disfranchisement is a badge of enslavement which American workers will not accept. "They are slow to learn that the de struction of our -movement is impossi ble, either through the infamous mis named open shop campaign or by any other device. 'But though they are slow to learn, they do. "Every advance of labor marks an advance in the education of employers. "The con structive ability of our move ment is called upon to the utmost" to bring the full flood of life back to our industries under conditions of freedom, with the DemocrajUc ideal dominating everywhere. "We will not be driven back. We will go forward. The light that has come into the life and work ofour peo ple can never be shut away from them. There must be more, and more, and more more for every coming tomor row. TIMES SEVERELY TRYING "The times of today are severely try ing. Thev are not of our making, but thev are for our redemption. "We must organize for our task. The unorganized are helpless. They can helo neither themselves nor their fel Tows. Their strength, their skill, their inspiration, are lost until they orga nize. "Our first great task is io organize- to bring together the unorganized, to unite and federate the organized, to bring together in strength of united thought and action all of our people ev erywhere. "Man today wins no victories alone he overcomes no injustice by himself, he contributes nothing to the tide of progress, fcr democracy, for freedom, for a better life for all, is the battle of all. It must be fought by all and all must be urited. "Organize for the five-million mark organize for justice, for freedom, .for the great struggle to right wrongs, for the triumph of service over tyranny and greed. "Take the message of organization everywhere. Unite in the service of humanity, for the good of our people and the greater glory of our country. Organize for the five-million mark On this Labor Day begin the forward march. AWARD KENILWORTH COMPANY DAMAGES Asheville, Sept. 3. The Kenilworth Development Company has been award ed $125,000 by the Government for physical and martial idamages to Kenil worth Hotel, which has been operated as an army hospital and later by the Public Health Service since January 19, 1918. We like little children 'cause they fear out after they eit what they want. Joe Kite's uncle wuz hanged years ago fer what would have been one o' th most puzzlin' an successful murders vpr committed in til State li n wrap up a scythe in hadn tried newspaper GO URGES FEDERAL F ORCE TROL TAKING CON IN WEST VIR Miners from the Kentucky Side Now: Are Gathering on States' Border. AVIATORS ARE KILLED Newspaper Correspondents, Seeking "Local Color," Slightly Wounded. Charleston, W. Va., Sept. 3- -Four havii army aviators are reported to been burned to death when an armv airplane crshed near Poe, in Nicho'.ia county, tonight. Three other planer are known to have crashed without loss of life. Two fell at Beckley and one at Seebert. Major Thompson, commanding tho air forces, was without information on the reported deaths. He said aviators, who were flying with the plane thn fell, saw it descend in flames. SEVERAL HUNDRED GATHERED. Williamson, W. Va., Sept. 3. The c'ourt here tonight took on the ap pearance of a military headquarters as citizen volunteers gathered in response to the hasty summons of Sheriff A. C. Pinson for additional help to repel the invasion of Mingo county by several hundred armed miners, who are pour ing into this county from Kentucky. The situation tonight was growing more serious. Three Mingo county of ficials have been wounded in the battle at Merrimac, five miles from here. which started early Saturday foreno jn and has been continuing since then. Riflemen in the Kentucky hills have been pouring a deadly fire into Mer- imac most of the day. Pike county, Kentucky, authorities. according to reports reaching here, are closing in on the rear of the miners' army and have fought two engage ments, according to the reports. Positions east and west of tha ridge on which the miners are now strung out are being held by several hundred Mingo county officials who are co-operating . with the Kentucky deputies and an encircling movement s in progress. Kentucky authorities informed Sher iff Pinson that there' were between 500 and 600 miners in the attacking partv. Meanwhile, Sheriff Vinson s defend ers are being recruited" hourly and re inforcements being sent to Merrima;. FEDERAL TROOPS KilPfiRTF.D TO BE IN COMT$3C.ffNTR0Lk ehwrlOTtqnWpTlraT troops were reported to be m complete control in the West Virginia mine war zone tonight. ' The civil strife that has hatbea Mingo county in blood for a week was believed ended by the intervention cf Uncle Sam. Quiet was reported to night from several sectors and it wis believed the miners. generally were lay ing aside their arms. Miners leaving the war zone will be allowed to proceed to their homes, it was believed. This was indicated late today when 400 miners, who surreo dered to soldiers at Madison and Sharpies, were given their freedom af ter they had turned over their . fire arms. MINERS SURROUNDED. The force of miners still in the field was practically surrounded by troops. Iroops pushed across Boone countv had taken up a position behind the miners. Troops going out from Lo gan were on the other side of the mountain, in front of the miners. Among the forces that arrived at Logan tonight for possible service was a detachment from the Chemical War fare Section at Edgewood, N. ' J., ar senal. They were equipped with bombs and hand - grenades containing tear as. Officers said there was very little possibility of these being used. CORRESPONDENT HAS BEEN SHOT AT TWICE By HAROLD D. JACOBS. United Press Staff Correspondent. Huntington, W. Va., Sept. 3. I have been a part of West Virginia's civil war I have been shot at by both sides once at point blank range, and have been a prisoner. The experience of a little group of newspaper correspondents and their guides in Beech Top Mountain, in whicl there were five more or less casualties. probably gives a better insight to the general public on conditions in this region than any other occurrence since the miners started to march into Logan county. The story can only be told by using the pronoun rather freely. I am writing this' from- Huntington for two reasons: Bectuse I was order d out of the town of Logan by the state constabulary and because it would have been necessary to come here any way to escape the censorship imposed in that place by the same agency. I have traveled the length and breadth of the battle zone, both with miners and Federal troops. I have never received greater courtesy than in their hands. This is the tale, of four reporters experience with the state constabulary and mine guards, deputies, who are bat tling with the miners along the Boone Logan line. WOMAN IX PARTY Miss Mildred Morris, of the Interna tional News Service; Boydon Sparks of The New York Tribune; Donald Craig of The New York Herald, and the writer left St. Albans late yesterday with th first Federal troop train into the Coal River valley and, after spending the night in Madison, arrived in Sharpies today. The others wished to duplicate my experience in 'listening" to a battle close to the miners' firing line. I went with them. We hired a young elec trician named Nicholas Ball to flivver us up Beech Creek valley toward the battle front. We drove possibly two miles into the hills, then abandoned the car and proceeded on foot. We hiked about an equal distance up the narrow tortuous ravine before we heard the fir in sr. We afterward learned it was on Blair (Continued on Pare Sixteen.) ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL Washington, Sept. 3. President Hard iner todav announced the recess ap- :i pointment of John W. H. Crim, of New jersey, as iusoioiant smviuj GNIA Efforts To Unionize Mingo Fields Cause Dire Troubles Two West Virginia Editors Explain Causes Leading Up to Declaration of Martial Law; Each Side is Guilty; Operators Own 'Government' Unions Rebel Against. Although their ramifications are complex, and the question of right or wrong may never be satisfactorily settled, the underlying causes of the "insur rection" in the Southwestern coal counties of West Virginia are simple enough. The mine owners of certain counties determined to maintain the principle of the "open shop" and to repel any effort made to organize their present day workers. - Miners from the adjoining counties, where the workers are thoroughly organized, determined to organize the Mingo district. The mine owners in the past have detectives, as guards for the mines and frankly to drive out any union organ izer who might attempt to cross the dead line. Union miners, unable to cope with some time ago to march in armed force not to enter. Out of this simple set of circumstances, dire troubles have grown. Death has stalked the winding, crooked roads of the wild West Virginia hills. Union men have been shot down in the restricted district. Mine detectives and deputy sheriffs have been shot to death from by arrrd groups. Charges and counter-charges have as well as union miners have demanded be taken out of the state. A law against the employment of private guards as officers was passed at the last session say it has been complied with. The miners say all the county officials in the affected districts are under the thumb of the mine owners and "do their will. The miners claim many grievances that, when they went on strike some time ago, they were evicted from their homes and compelled to live in tents during a cold winter. Outrages nd reprisals have followed venge has its part in the march of upon some of the gunmen and particularly upon bherm uon Chahn, called by them "a college bred gunman," elected to office by the mine owners. Tn the following dispatches irom insight into the difficulties is given, and in need of clarification. Underlying Causes Union Failures of Bv WALTER ELY CLARK. KilHrir Charleston Mail, Rep. Copyright, 1021, by Sewn Publishing Co. Charleston, W. Va-, Sept. 3. Insurrectionary war has gripped the Southwestern coal counties. It has been difficult from the first to see anv solution but force. This has not for some rune been a "labor trouble." It has been re hellion against the government. The underlying cause of the insur rection is the non-success oi euoiL to unionize the coal miners of Logan and Mingo counties. When the efforts of the United Mine Workers' organ izers were resisted by tne operaiois, the trouble began. At hrst mucn -vio lent language was used on Dom biuea. Later the controversy tooK tne ioim of physical violence. Union pickets sought to intimidate the miners. Op orators retaliated by forcibly attempt ing J.-run the, organizers out of the camps. Agents oi tne -anion tnu men sympathizers began to destroy prop erty, and the owners retaliated with force. Tn the Mingo field, unionization was partially accomplished. The two sides to the controversy differ in their statements as to just what pei-centage of the whole number of workers joined the union, but those who did join were HismisspdV from the service ox me coal comiTanies. Matters then went from bad to worse, until military, law n 1-.,- 4Vn 1o ct woe rmr in n r re iiv liic c-ur v. May. In spite of all, the Mingo ana Logan mine owners claim they are working up to the limit oi tneir orders for coal. Miners m union fields, like those of Kanawha, Boone and Raleigh counties, are receiving wages ot irom u cems yci uv n I rf 4-.-, wov VlMlf imward undpr contract between tne operators and the United Mine Work prR of America. Owing to the business dpnression and comparatively inactivity in manufacturing tnrougnoui uie countrv, the coal business has been bad this year. Yet all the principal rviinnc in thp union districts, as well : in Uoeran and Mingo, have been working on at least part time ana orvma nf them on full time. 11 IS not true that the present marcn oi rmed miners is an incident ot unem ployment. Hundreds, if not tnousanas, of miners are participating in the in surrection who left jobs on which tney were employed at full time or such time as returned them wages of forty dollars per week up- LAWS LIGHTLY FELT. Throughout the coal districts, gen erally speaking, the restraints of law are not very strongly felt. In many settlements, the whole population is either engaged. in the mining industry or is directly dependent on it. - In many places, the sheriffs and deputy sheriffs are sympathetic with the miners' union and hostile to non-unionism. In Mingo county, during the efforts to unionice, it was found that even where. peace officers were faithful in the discharge of their duties, juries could not be obtained who would be faithful to their oath. It is not diffi cult to see, under such conditions, how a little lawlessness may grow to large proportions until a condition is reach ed in which the whole force of the government is challenged. A great majority of the miners from non-union fields, who started on any armed march across the state toward Logan and Mingo ten days ago, were employed at the time. A short time before several hundred of them had visited Charleston in a body, demand ing of the Governor that the state constabulary forces be withdrawn from Mingo county and martial law lifted. He refused. Preparations for mobiliz ing the miners were begun soon after. What the armed insurrectionists are fighting for is best judged by what they say. The marchers say that they are going into Mingo county for the purpose of ridding the country of Baldwin Felts detec tives or private mine guards, whom they denounce as thugs; and of de feating the purposes of martial law in that county. Insurrection feeds on itself. Officers of the United States Army, sent here for an investigation be fore deciding upon a course of action, found the insurrectionists beyond all reason. The movement grew under their very eyes. Mob hysteria reigned. NARROWLY AVERT EXPLOSION. Havana, Sept. 3. The explosion of the American Tanker, Lake Elmsdale, with 16,000 gallons of gasoline aboard, was narrowly averted when harbor po lice discovered that the entire vessel, aft, had been saturated with coal oil. Two firemen, an American and a Brit isher, are under arrest today. employed "gunmen," or Baldwin-Felts the mine guards Individually, determined into the counties they had been warned ambush or captured and held prisoner flown thick and fast. Many non-union, that the "gunmen" of the mine owners of the legislation. The mine owners against the mine owners. They say thicK upon each other s heels. Re the miners who would vent their wrath two able west lrginia editors, a clear admittedly the Mingo situation is one Mine Operators of County in Control By II. C. OGDEN. Editor Wheeling Intelligencer, Rep. Copyright, 1921, by Kews Publishing Co. Wheeling, W. Va., Sept. 3. The pres ent disturbance in certain mining coun ties of West Virginia is a phase of a contest that has been going on for a number of years for the purpose, on the part of the United Mine Workers, of organizing the miners in Logan, Mingo and McDowell counties, and on the part of the mine operators of resisting such organization. The situation is made acute by the fact that the miners in Yayette and Kanawha counties arfe organized, and these miners resent bitterly the meth ods that have been used to prevent unionization of the miners in the ad joining counties. Roth sides havl been high handed; both have been lawless and both have committed the gravest crimes from arson to murder. The mine operators in McDowell, Mingo . and Logan counties control the politics of those counties, elect the ; county officers and name the judges and sheriffs. They have fortified themselves further by the employ ment of a large number of armed guards who have, in many cases, been made deputy sheriffs, and they have used these guards indiscrim inately. Union organizers going into these counties have been assaulted and union miners have been killed. Peaceful citizens, mistaken for un ion organizers, have been many times brutally beaten and run out of these counties. Union miners claim that non-union conditions are maintained by a reign of terror and, on the other hand, the oper ators claim that their men would work peaceably and quietly if not interfered with bv the outside interests. The con troversy has gone.. into the politics of the state. A candidate suported by the mine workers, came within a few votes of securing the Republican nomination for Governor last year. The situation has been further complicated by the failure of the legislature and Governor to carrv out pledges to abolish the pri vate man-guard system maintained by the coal operatorsThe Republican state platform contained a distinct pledge to that effect and Gov. Morgan sat in the convention at which the platform was adopted. At the last session of the leg islature. a bill forbidding the employ ment of privately paid guards as law officers, designrxl to wipe out the odiour. private mine guard , organizations, was introduced in the state senate ana re ported favorably, but, through powerfu; influences, with which Gov. Morgan was closely associated, Avas re-committed and died in committee. The murder or feia Hatfield and Ed Chambers, prisoners at the very door of the McDowell county courthouse bv men who wore the naag ps of denutv sherifls. further embitter ed the union miners. They petitioned Clov. Morcran to call an extra session of the legislature to enact legislation against the mine guards. Gov. Morgan refused, and thereupon the present ciem onstration followed. Gov. Morgan has undoubtedly, lost the confidence of the union miners generally. Unfortunately his eamnaisrn for the Governorship wa lareelv suDorted and financed by rich coal companies. It is very plain that the mine guard system, as operated in those coal counties, should he aoonsnea and that the laws made by the people should be enforced by agents chosen oy the people, and not mercenary hirelings It is nronahie tnat, u cwmm situation, maintained by the coal com nani-xj throueh their control or punn officers, was ended, the coal mines would be unionized, though this wouia not nec essarily follow. hotelTatThdrenite WILL BE IMPROVED Statesville. Sept. 3. The directors ct the Davis White Sulphur Springs Hi tel Company met at the hotel at Hid denite Thursday night and voted to sell $15,000 worth of 7 per cent prefer red stock in the company, the money to be used to improve the hotel and grounds. It is the plan to put in private baths all over the hotel, build a concrete swimming pool, and in manv ways beautify and. improve the building and grounds. The season this year under the management of J. J. and W. R, Rogers, experienced hotel ists, has been very successful iid plans for continued growth are being made. North and South Carolina: Generally fair and continued warm Sunday and Monday RUSSIAN ISERY IS UNSPEAKABLE MILLIONS SUFFER Hunger of the Sort That; Makes Beasts of Men is Seen Everywhere. " FLEE DREAD FAMINE,' Death Stares irom Thous T. . ,1 I I n I I . I ,T , anus Ul AAUllUVV AJ ; Death by Degrees. By ANNA LOUSE STRONG. Special CorrestM!iident of The Inter national News Service. Copyright, 1921, by The Interna tional News Service. Moscow, Sept. 3. I have just completed the most horrible jour ney of my life; horrible not be cause of the hardships, privations, difficulties of travel, but because of the unspeakable misery I found in that vast area traversed in my 54-hours' voyage from Warsaw to this capital. For that area swarms with millions of men, women and children refugees, driven from their homes upon a wild, though aimless flight by the dread of the famine and plague now ravaging Russia. Death stared at me out of a thou sand hollow eyes death by degreesj Hunger of the sort that turns humani, into beasts, makes them snatch witl;1 woinsn greea at pieces or tree-rind oi a couple ot dnedup berries: disease that devours the body almost befort; one's very eyes; despair that make:;1 mothers with puny banes hanging limpi ly in their arms, throw themselves upon railroad tracks and beg the trait crew to go on and thus make an en3 to their misery these things I hay seen, not at isolated spots, but alt along that barren desert thick witlf living corpses. 1 With that misery land behind mel as I saw the turrets of ancient Mosco looming, grim and grey, in the dis tance, I wondered what I should fin here, in' the heart of the bleedm Muscovite giant that was but yestei day the world s granary. SACRIFICE AND DEVOTION. I found this capital a place oj sacrifice and devotion, of feverish, uri tiring labor. Here,- too, is misery o unfathomable depth; here, too, are hun dreds of thousands upon whom th forerunners of death have ive set thi'; nf thousrOdj lildren . wl?vL ghastly mark; hundreds of men, women and ch only a miracle can save. But wit'1 the last remnants of their swiftljf1 fading vital force, they devote then? selves vith almost fanatical fervor t the titanic undertaking of relief. Then is not one among them that feels bu' that there are millions worse off; out irf the sun-scorched steppes of Samarj 40,000,000 are slowly dying; probablj one-tenth doomed to sure death. T those it is that these pitiable sufferer in Moscow are devoting their thought and labors. Over it all hovers a spirit that wii live in the annals of mankind aa phenomenon of human fellow-feelinj Underneath, latent but now and the forced to the fore by the spectre c despair, runs a sub-current of mingle rage and defiant tenacity. OccasiorJ ally, it vents itself in surprisingly mil languufe. Thus, a gaunt, fiery-eyej official, a man high in the councils cj the Soviets who, like the very highey of them, labors unceasingly from daw: to dusk and through half the nighv helping in the relief work, said: j 'Tou are- sickened by the sight Nc; this distress, and you wonder hoS! Russia, our great Russia, could com.; to this pass. I will tell you how. Ther: is but one answer, and it is as positive and irrefutable as life or death. WORLD BLOCKADE BLAMED. "The answer is: 'The world's bloci' ii ade, which enters its fourth year.'" ,! But ;t is only occasionally that sucj expressions are heard. Moscow, its rulers and its populatiorl has no time to discuss causes and req sons. Everybody thinks only of saV ing what is to be saved, and all-peij vding is the determination to demon strate to the world, now that the floo! gates of tha world's supplies are a! last opening though, alas, too late t( save all that Russia can "help herself j only if she gets the needed supplies. I As I write this, the first doctors arjj' returning from the Kazan and Slnj birsk districts. They bring word q what they have seen there, and thei) talcs show that the suffering in th; actual famine areas except that th black ally of, strvation, the pest, ha not yet laid its hands upon the majoi. ity of the refugees. The doctors brought with them spec;; mens of ground bark, black, crusty Cii. bread, and splintery ground roots whicr' make up the "meat" for the sufferer causing dysentery and other disease -j Thousands upon thousands have betj existing on this diet for two months! They brought Avith them, too, a spe' men of the fatty mountain clay, in on' district the sole sustenance for tw hundred thousand 'persons. :, The unfortunates who eat this "n? tuie food" know the terrific sufferin. it causes. It poisons the intestines b a slow, gradual process, causing grij. ing pains and terrible headache whilj the stomach swells steadily. Thei know it, and yet they eat it again anl again, for it is all there IS to eat. ! In other districts thousands havj swollen to weird proportions, due t! drinking too much water to satisfj their cravings. Food and clothing also are urgent! needed everywhere in Russia. Th American .relief workers have come i; the nick of time. .; The authorities reported today tha there are now three epidemics raging cholera, typhoid and dysentery. v Between January and August there were 112, 5S2 cases of cholera, j KING CONSTANTINE SUFFERS RELAPSI Athens, Sept. 3. King Constantino -who was stricken with illness while vij; ; ting the Greek front in Anatolia, ha; suffered a relapse, said a dispatch fror, i Smyrna today. i ' The Greeks have penetrated Philuk ; 30 miles from Angora, former Turkish i Nationalist capital, i 1