University of South Carolina Libraries
Vk A .JSSlftL ? * , |lm'V^\. "i |r/j >V V *v The FoKt Mill Times Established in 1891. FORT MILL, S. C., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1919 $1 25 Per Yeai ____________________________ BUILD MANY MILES : , PUBLIC HIGHWAYS i i 30 MILES ARE EXPECTED TO 1 ( BE COMPLETED BY FIRST 4 DAY OF DECEMBER. \| HIGH HOPE FOR COMING YEAR: Department Is Notified of Shipment ( of 27 Three-Ton Trucks for Dis- i tribution Among Counties. I ' Columbia. The state highway department plans . t to construct 400 miles of roadway ' j during 1920. During 1919 contracts for 181 mile* jt have been awarded, the cost approx- | i imatlng $1,750,000. In addition to j? this amount of roadway, nine bridges > of an average length of 135 feet are ; t under process of construction. ; < Surveys for approximately 590 miles j of roadway have been completed dur- I . ing the present month and by Decent- , ber 1 the surveys will be about G30 , miles. Plans for 350 miles of roadway will have been completed by Jan- |, nary 1, 1920. ( During 1919. f>3 grade crossings have | been eliminated and four other roads have been so changed as to render ( them safer for travel. Crossings were eliminated in verious parts of the state, several of them being between Greenwood and Hodges. The department anticipates that 1920 will be a good year for road building. The present outlook is that I nothing will hinder construction and the department hopes to Increase the < amount of work done every year un- ' til the state highway system is a | reality. < The department lias been notified 1 that 27 three ton Packard trucks have I been shipped to the state by the war i ucpsnmeni in wasningion | : |l Interest In Red Cross 9enl Sale. "The strongest force of the Red Cross Christmas seal is felt in the 1 communities in which It is sold." said Hr. Charles J. llatfleld, managing di- I! rector of the National Tuberculosis | association, recently in discussing the j ' j| 1919 Red Cross seal sale which will j he held from December 1 to Decern- j< ber 10, "because it develops the local ' I fight against the disease by educating | I the people." Through a budget system adopted < by tho National Tuberculosis associa- i tion and tho 1.000 state and local or ganizationH affiliated with it. about 92 per rent of tho funds raised by any i state are spent there to tight tin- ' great whits plague at homo. \ Estimate of Cotton Crop. The American cotton crop this venr. exclusive of lifters, will ha 10.1:10.000 bales, according to the annual forecast of Cooper & Griffith, well known cotton Arm of Greenville The estimate Is made up from reports from the correspondents of this Arm i throughout the cotton belt. The crop for South Carolina is forecasted as 1.288.000 hales. This forecast has been made annually by Cooper & Griffith since 1010. ^ New Legion Posts. The Allendale post is the latest post of tho American Legion of South Car olina. Application for this post was received at sfnte headquarters. Springfield and Saluda are tho latest towns in which organizers have been appointed. Towns without a post can communicate with stato headquarters t 't in Columbia where information about I the organization of a post, and author- , n ity to organize same, can be obtained, j Assistant Adjutant General. Capt. P. G. Marshall of Columbia who saw service overseas with the I S Thirtieth division and who was mustered out of the service with the rank of captain, has been made temporary J assistant adjutant, general by Brig. Oen. W. W. Moore, and ('apt Marshall immediately began work. lie fills the place made vacant by the re- i eent resignation of MaJ. John D. Frost. Bad Woek for Enlistments. Out of a total of 71 applicants for ' the United States navy at the central recruiting office here during the week only nine were accepted. This was a big drop from previous enlist ments, but is accounted for by the more rigid examinations. Of the nine accepted seven were first enlistments, one was a previous service enlistment and ono w is a fa ransfer to the fleet* naval reserve. ? Columbia furnished Jbree of tho men. ' Charleston one. Am&rson one. SparI $ tanburg three and Rflck Hill ono. Wan* Cnk. ZX" ailroad com- j peal to B. L. :cr of the railtlanta, asking ted on cotton only fumigation and the must be sent alnst the boll nder the em- J 11 not accept I eachers' Meeting Closes. With the election of officers for 1020. the hearing of reportB of rari- j >U3 committees, the adoption of resoutions having to do with the status if the teaching profession, the awardng of the attendance cup permanenty to Dillon county, and the announcenvnt that 1,078 teachers had been en ollod, the annual meeting of the south Carolina Teachers' association ame to a elose. The meeting was characterized hroughout by a spirit of earnestness ind zeal that augurs well for the atainment of some of the ideals outined in resolutions dealing with the j status of the profession. With or- ' tanizations of teachers vere mention- ] (1 in resolutions adopted, the intenion to strike to attain objectives was ' Unclaimed specifically 3uyers Take Notice. The director of sales announces hat the quartermaster general of the irmy has issued instructions to the ( superintendents of the 25 army quarermaster retail stores now operating ( tnder his direction to decline to ac opt after December 10 any order for ( ;oods carried by the army quartermas- ( er retail stores which calls for deliv- j ?ry of goods by parcel post. The quartermaster general of the ( irmy has taken this action to relieve lie mails, usually congested during ( he Christmas season, of the addition- | j it nurtfcn entailed hv tronsnnrtatinn j if the stocks sold by the army stores "?n mail order. t The army quartermaster stores will ontinue to accept hulk orders placed , iv municipalities. municipal selling igeneies, and community buying associations for commodities offered for sale through the retail stores. Such >rders are delivered bv freight 1 l 3ubtic to Pay Portion. I The supreme court handed down an opinion relieving the Columbia Rail- < way. Gas and Klectric company of | payment c?f a large proportion of the rxpenses Incurred by the public service commission of South Carolina in the recent investigation of pas rates in Columbia. Kxpenses approximated STOno. Of this umount. 5834 07 was paid by the company as per diem and personal expenses of the commission, but. protested about 52.300 in the bill rendered for the audit of the company's books by expert accountants, stenographic work. etc. Will Sell Cheap Reef. , The war department surplus prnpertv division is new offering for sale fresh frozen beef at Chicago quotalions for medium steer, lowest range, less one-fifth or 20 per cent of the Chicago market prire on the day car l? delivered. This is the best bargain the govern ment has to offer and sales will made to butchers, jobbers, municipalities, institutions, hotels and restaurants without limit. Pershlnp on Inspection Tour. Washington. -(Special) ? General | Pershing's threo month inspection of ( the military facilities of the nation will tnkt< him first to Camp Lee. Virginia. on December 4. the itinerary issued shows. Ho will visit Camp Itrncg. N. on the fifth. Camp .lackson. S C . December fith. and Charleston. S. C., December 7th. Active in Road Building. Nine counties in South Carolina have already applied for their full allotment of federal aid funds for highway construction and now are building roads out of countv funds independently of the state highway commission. it was announced by the J highway commission. Tlmse counties are Greenville. Cherokee. Spartanburg. Greenwood. : Laurens. Pickens. Chester. Union and McCormick. Baptist Drive a Success. Scattering reports from all sections of the state up until a late hour indl ! rate a sweeping victory for South Carolina Ha of lets in Iheir $7.' 000.0(10 campaign. From every association and every church so far heard from the allotment has been oversubscribed with the exception of possibly two churches. Mary of the associations renorted oversubscriptions with from 12 to 21 churches yet to hand in their figures. n.eeDing Fit Cemnaign. The state hoard of health exhibit to young men and hoys, known as the keep fit exhibit, is being parried to many of the hitrh schools and Y M. C. A.'s of the state. James H. Grauel, field director of the campaign for the state board, reports that up to the present time over 1.100 men and hoys have viewed the exhibit and read the literature. The presentation of this effort for physical fitness nmong the boys and i young men of South Carolina is in the care of Dr. C. V. Akin. Census Enumerator* Want?H Julian S. Wolfe. supervisor of ren us of the seventh congressional distr'ct, with offices at Orangeburg has just received word from the department of census that the pay for enumerators in the census work which will start January ^2. l!>?ft. has been rroatlv Increased, ftnd will he nearly double what the pay was in 1310. Mr Wolfe is very nr.xious to secure apollcants to the rural sections of Richland. Sumter and Lee counties, ?ersons interested should write Mr. Wolfe at once ANNUAL BUDGET OF $5,000,008,009' SIXTY-SIXTH CONGRESS MEETS PROMPTLY ON THE HOUR IN I FIRST REGULAR SESSION ^ PRESIDENT IS NOT NOTIFIED I 3robable That Peace Treaty Question {? Will be Carried Forward into 1920 Campaign as one Vital Issue. Washington. ? The record billion P lollar congresses of ordinary peace g :imes faded into the past when Sec- g etary Glass, presenting the annual ! C estimates, proposed appropriations of r practically live billion dollars for con- I g lucting the peace time activities of ? he government during the fiscal year 0 L 931. i 1 According to these figures, it will ost more tlian five times as much to onduct tlie peace-time affairs of gov- | ?rnment as it did in the year immed- /e aieiy preceding me world war. ;a The greatest individual estimates 'or expenditures. of course. go to tlie irmy and the navy. The yearlj in- J< lerest on the war debt, however, is 51.017..">00.000. which sum alone is greater than all the appropriations for 11 ill purposes whatsoever of any peace- "? :iine congress. All in all, the estimates justify the I predictions made on the floor of con- LI ?ress during consideration of the war tax bill, that the present generation would not see the government con- jf lueted at an expense of less than four billion a year. The estimated appropriations for the principal government departments were presented us follows: Legislative (congressI $9,025,297.26; ? executive (white house and govern- *'1 meat departments) $149,111,463.77; 11 judicial $1,634,190; army $9S9.578,657.80; navy $642,031,804.80; pensions T! R215.1)30.000; public works $283,921.- ;><] R10.17; miscellaneous $833,717,6.37 96; pi foreign intercourse $11,243,250.91. -n The total of all estimates is $4,865.- T! 410,031.62, the greatest sum ever ask- >t i>d of any congress when the country m was not actually at war. n b> PALMER OPPOSES FURTHER COAL STRIKE CONFERENCES, '.h ;? WashinRton.-? Attorney Cone ml Pal- VVI mcr railed upon the American people '' to "refuse to be stampeded by threats of lack of coal into concessions which th will insure unreasonably high prices >a In all commodities for at least three iv! years to come." t>l A statement of the Rovernment's he attltuda was made by the attorney fo general in a telcRram to the Chamber sc t)f Commerce at Moberly, Mo., front cr which had come a request that an \Y other conference of operators and w miners be called. pc 30.000 TONS OF BEET SUGAR MOVING THIS WAY w 111 New York.?Thirty thousand tons of American beet supar front the central states now is moving into the Atlantic coast states to relieve in part the acute sugar famine In the eastern zone. This supply, the sugar equalization board announced, will serve to mitigate the shortage this month. but adequate relief must wait until ' Cuban sugar, the natural sources of supply for the Atlantic seaboard, ^ commences to move in volume, which may be expected in January. The '* American beet sugar crop is being ' marketed in the central west in quantities to Justify the "loan" of the 30.- '* 000 tons to the east. It was said. "l FORD-NEWBERRY CONTEST UP SOON IN THE SENATE Washington. ? Simultaneous with the legal proceedings at Grand Rap m ids an effort will be made in the sen " t J] ate to hasten action on the resolution of Senator Pomerene democrat, Ohio for a senatorial investigation of the m Ford-Xewberrv contest in Michigan u QUICK END COMES TO STRIKE D OF KANSAS CITY SWITCHMEN Kansas City. Mo.?As suddenly and unexpectedly as it began. the stnkf ^ of 1.500 railroad switchmen in the lo ^ cal yards, was called off. The action was taken at a secret ^ meeting when it was understood a proposition sponsored by more conservative members to end the walk out. was put to a vote and rn-ried. Dissatisfaction with the present ^ wage scale was responsible for thi , strike It is said. NEW INDUSTRIAL CONFERENCE D HOLDS ITS FIRST SESSION Washington.?Seventeen men. widely known in business and public life It representing no particular group as l>1 such, but acting for the people as a l'r whole, assembled here to confer on ' the country's industrial situation. The conference, the appointment of which was announced from the white house ^ November 20. was designed to accom |V plish^w^it the recent national Indus ,( MRS. AGNES MENEFEE Mrs. Agnes Menefee, after four ars' service in the woman's Batlion of Death," during which time e was wounded twice and decorated the czar w.th the Cross of St. :orge and another medal, arrived in e United States as the wife of an nerican artillery officer and will ike her home with him at Covingn, Ky. "WIS RRdRFS RdVFRNMFNT jerators Intimate Governmental Refusal to Allow Increase in Price Would Bear Reconsideration. Washington. An abrupt end came all attempts to settle the nationide coal strike by peaceful agree ent. Miners and operators spent a blenk hunksgiving afternoon in embitter 1 debate over the government pro>sal for a 14 per cent wage increase, ade by Fuel Administrator Garfield lie miners rejected it nnad every her proposal that was forthcoming, id the conference dissolved, sine die. no proposal was definitely accepted ' the operators. Participants went home and where e break left coal str'ke conditions, ) one of them, miners or operators, nuld say. Likewise, in official quar rs. there was sienee. Acting President John L. Lewis, ol o mine workers though refusing tc y one word as to the strike itself liich theoretically was called off in icdience to federal court injunction tiding It a violation of the Lover act r war time food and fuel control ored the government roundly at tin inclusion of the conference. Sj did illiani Green, secretary of the mini orkers. Operators, though accepting the ivrrnment proposal definitely. In J tter of explanation to Dr. Garfield hlch they made public, Intimated at the governmental refusal to al w price increases would bear re msiderat ion. "ALY WILL ARIDE BY DALMATIAN DECISION Basle. ?A dispatch from Belgrade is been received by the I*aibacl: Vust riant correspondence bureau ating that the Italian government ?s informed the government of J ug ? lavla that Italy would observe thf clsion reached by the I'aris peacf inference with regard to the Dalma an question and would itsef prevent lv attempt in the direction of Bap to by Gabriele d'Annunzio. EOPLE MUST NOT MAKE PRESENTS TO PRESIDENT Washington. Republican congress en plan to revive the resolution sub ifting an amendment to the const! itinn niinkll.lt: ? t- ?? - - . .... i-.iM.ii'ii iiik in.- i-ri'.*'<iom irnin meptlng gifts from foreign ruler* hoy believe all that i* nrcssarj' t' ako the proposition effective is tion of enough states to ratify It. ROFITEERS BEING SEVERELY PUNISHED IN GREAT BRITAIN London ? Groat Britain's stupendous Tort to grapple with profiteering l? ist disclosed by the work of 1 .fiOf ibunals which have prosecuted 7 n."' Tenders and secured 1 ?.20 con vie ons. with fines aggregating Resides setting up these local trib inls have been established in speci >d areas of England, Scotland anil "ales In addition central commit es also have been formed to inves gate supposed trusts or monopolies ENVER JURY DECIDES THAT ANYBODY MAY STEAL LIGUOR Denver. Col.?Declining to accept le Judge's ruling that whiskey ha.? roperty rights and can be stolen, i iry in the West Side criminal courl eed two prisoners charged witt eallng a quantity of booze. The attorney for the defendants de ared that, with prohibition effective iroughout the nation, whiskey had nt roperty rights In the statutes of th? >untry and, therefore, could not b< itolen." DRASTIC CUT III | THE USE Cf COHL I COAL COM T" ITT EE AT ATLANTA TAKES DESPERATE STEPS TO AVERT DISASTER. ^ WAR TIME RESTRICTIONS ON1, if Manufacturing Plants and Factories Put on a Forty-eight Hour Basis By Order of the Committee. Atlanta. Ga.?Orders drastically re-! strieting the use of coal by the south were issued by the regional coal committee to take effect at once. Wat E time restrictions were virtually reiu- t nugurnted by the new order. | The order was necessary, the committee pointed out. to conserve the I now rapidly diminishing fuel supply Stores, manufacturing nlant? una ? warehouses are restricted in the use " of heat and light to hours between '? a. in. and 4 p. m. Manufacturing plants and factories are put on a 4S-hour a week h.isis i?v I the coniniittee's orders. I The committee allowed sevral exceptions. Drug stores, for the sale of drugs only, and restaurants are allow- I ed to maintain their present schedule. hut must curtail their lights r?t per cent. Itarher shops are allowed to remain open between the hours of S a. m. and t> p. m. * General office lights may remain on 1 after 4 p. m where the operation of 1 vital industries is involved. Railroad stations, telephone, and tel- ^ egraph and newspaper offices are ex | ? empted from the light restrictions. On Saturday the time of closing is extended to !? p. m. for stores selling ' food and wearing apparel. _ * SESSION MAY LAST FOR NEARLY ALL NEXT YEAR. ? Washington. ? Congress returns to r work with the prospect of being kept ^ on the job until the presidential campaign next fall. . I i No formal working program had J been mapped out by members of the | t house and senate, returning here after ^ i lit day recess, but the general view was inai the railroad hill and tho resolution declaring tho war at an ond would comn hoforo tho senate for iinmodiato consideration. Tho hotiso will pot tho usual assortmont of sip- 5 ' propriation hills, and ;i flood of pon1 oral hills and resolutions. The Mex | ' loan situation is oxpootod to oonio to 1 tho front at tho opening. I ; LODGE PROFESSES HOPE x | FOR EARLY SETTLEMENT : Washingotn.- Senator Ixvlgo. Ro- ] ! pnhlionn loador of tho sonato, deelar( od in a statomont ho hoped to sou | I prompt notion t ikon on tho iroatv, ( hut that if President Wilson still rofusod to aooept rosorvations those do- ^ torminod to "Amoric un'ze" it stood roady to moot him on that issue hoforo tho people. "If tho president desires to have I prompt ratification of tho treaty with Germany ho has only to accept the reservations as thov stand Wo desire final action, as 1 have said, hut action must ho based on the accept- " t ance of tho reservations as they are." 1 , AUTHORITY TO CALL OUT TROOPS PROMPTLY GRANTED , Ch'capo Authority to mil out state 1 troops whenever necessary in connee*ion with the strike of trainmen ' n"d yardmen in Knn?as f'ltv was conferred upon Adintant O'oeral ("lark of Mlssour* hv Governor Frederick It. Gardner. of that staff. THE PRFS|n^e*T IS MAKINC, SAT ISP Ar.TORY PROGRESS i! * Wo ?h i"c'.on <i<?if W'ts-on :s ' , nroer^ss'nt; snfl?fnofor;)v, it was ao. pounced at the wh'fo house following the wooklv v's't nf n- i' v tt?r?"iru 1 MIMF"A cyn-rrrr, TO r> f TI I o m TO WORK UNOr R PROTECTION i Wasinhp'on. Developments in the i provrnnu-nt's efforts to insure an ? adenu>te fuel snnnlv for the country t awaited the outcome of affemn's of soft coal operators to induce miners > r f '' ***1 ( > "'or'' f >r '? *? . 1 *< <"? - of 14 per coot and assurances <>f fedcral protection. Not'eos of tills wnjfn I advance sueRested by Fuci Administrator Garfield were posted at tb" mines immediately following the Thanksglv'ne holiday LABOR CONFERENCE HAS COME TO AN END AT WASHINGTON ' Washington?The first international labor conference held under the t t provisions of the treatv of Versailles, i was concluded here and adjourned subject tolhe call of the governing body. i i It Is understood generally that the > next meeting would he late In 1920 at i the seat of tho league of nations. i . Delegates fron 41 countries have atiteuded the concfrence sessions. NORMAN H. DAVIS . >\ k# v\- A && ;>**?*% . * - ) Norman H. Davis of Tennessee, one ti f the financial advisers of the Amer- Ii can peace delegates at Paris. has teen made assistant secretary of the ? reasury to succeed L. S. Rovve. unni n war ir riii pn si pun iuiilu linn iu iiullu ni i_t*u il ti ^bove Enthusiasm of Liquor Dealers u Looms the Solemn Warning of Future Punishment. n f] Now Orleans.. Whiskey, four per J rent beer, wines, cordials, in short, '' n omplete barroom assortments of li- 1 jnor were purchased freely in New a >rleans following the granting of an njunction by Federal Judge Foster v vhicli in effect held the war-time pro- c libition act unconstitutional. ^ Less than an hour after Judge Fos- ' er had enjoined federal authorities a !rom interfering with the sale of bond- " h1 whiskies ih compliance with the ' letition of the Herman Leiser Liquor a Company barrooms were serving li- '' liior in steadily varied assortments. '' Judge Foster, in his decision to ^ ;rant the Injunction, ruled that the 1 .vorld war came to an end when Hon-' ;ress adjourned recently without re- '' lectlng the peace treaty with tier- '' uany. He maintained that when President Wilson vetoed the Volstead c ivar-time prohibition enforcement bill Dctober 2S, 1IU9, the president de lared the army and navy forces do mobilized. ' 5AYS AMERICA MUST STOP < BEING SEWER FOR EUROPE v Richmond, Va. "America must stop 1 being a sewer into which Kurope is v lropping all its undesirables; this v H j nn.'M mil <n'vi'iii|) mil) an autre hi st cafe for Die homh throwers of ' lie other worhl." This was the dee. .nation of Vice President Thomas It. 1 Marshall here when he appeared at a " meeting arranged hy a fraternal trder. L MEXICO REFUSES TO RELEASE CONSULAR AGENT JENKINS $ Mexico city Declaring there is v 'no legal foundation nor principle of ? international law" upon which the I'nlted Strifes bases its demand for t the immediate release of William () / Jenkins, United States consular agent . at Pnehla. the Mexican government 1 through llilario Medina, under-score- , tary of foreign relations, stated it was impossible to acc? de to the re- ? rpiest of the American state depart . merit. NO ACTION TAKEN LOOKING TOWARDS RAILWAY STRIKE C Cleveland, Ohio- N'o action looking toward a railroad strike hy the f ur railroad brotherhoods was taken r bv the 51)0 general chairmen meeting ' here to act on Director General of ^ Railroad Hines' off r of time and em- < half for slow freight service, and no vote was taken on the proposition, li fp'hough n motion to vote on it was adopted. t AMERICAN PEACE DE ' FATION I ARRANCING TO LFAVE PARIS Par's Any delay which may event ually he found necessary in Die n\ liT't-o of ratifications romi'rei! t > mo h<> Gorman peace tr? tty into nfect p w !1 not chang" the plans of the Atner- < !<-an peace ?!ol' eation. It w is learned. t I'nder Secret irv of St \to I' tile and r the other delegates will If ivo Paris ( in tlif evening of Itecomber I Only a couple of experts w 11 he left p hfro for tho purposf of compl ting the r work in hard. ( EXTREME PFNALTY IS PAID "| BY MEXICAN REVOLUTIONIST HI Paso, Texas General Pfllpe Anrele*. Mexican revolutionary loader \ and fanifd throughout the world as a military genius, was executed by a f Carranza fiang squad at Chihauhua t City early, following his ennvietion p. with two companions on charges of * rebellion against the Mexican gov v eminent, according to a telegraphic t report from Chihuahua City. General Angeles wax sentenced to t death by four Carranza generals. , J&i e' .MOTHER AMERICAN KILLED IN MEXICO LOSE ON HEELS OF JENKIN8 AFFAIR COMES REPORT OF MURDER OF OIL EMPLOYE. 0 OFFICIAL FR3N0UKCEMEM imes Wallace. Riding a Mule Which Shied at Machine Gun. is Shot and Killed by Mexican Soldier. Washington. . Another American limit red m Mix f t. close on the nprisonnient of Consular Agent Jenins. coupled with reports of revolunn in Mexico City, w.th farrunzu in ittl't to IJneretaro. add< d complextes wli i'ii seemed to force the already I'll so M.x can sitnat on toward the nig expectcil breaking point. There were no otTlcial pronounceicnts for the guidance of public opln?n as to what act.on T any the Amor an governtnent might be eontemplat'g. but adtninl -tr.it ion officials, by liiication. wi re willing to show that lie government is taking a tirni posiion. considering the eventualities, and 1 prepared to ill il with them, once course is rh< sen Anothet nf "the l.i t straws." as ne officer put it. was laid on with lie official report (>f the murder of aines Wallace, an Xnierican oil man, v a Carran/.a soldier n? ar Tampico. 'he state department summarized its d vices In this formal statement: "According to the department's ad ices, the officer in charge of troops amped in the vie tnty claimed that Vallace had provoked the murder, 'he d? partnient has been informed as result of an investigalion. that a litle on which Wallace was riding to lie pltiee of his employment shied t a maehine gnu which it was passtig. overturning the gnn The sol lier immediate! v shot Wallace, the nllet striking him in the neck and illing him instanJlv " The Wallace r< furred to is believed icre to l?e W. M Wallace, an ctnloye of the tin!;' Ketininr. Company IOVEHNMENT WILL PROTECT MINERS WILLING TO WORK Washington The governtnenf servd blunt notice on soft coal miners tul operators th it interference with oal production would not lie t derated. Warning that legal pro cent ion rould he employed to thwart consplaeies hv either side and troops sent ."herever necessary to protect miners billing lo work, came from 'lie departlent of jn tire after members of the ilit 11 At i.-.a . ... I.... i >f t ho fuel siti- ' > !. : i' I t i) 11? 111 v oriti ill, in view of i'ii* abrupt breaking ff of IlOgOt i.-lliofl-: .ADY ASTOR WINS SEAT IN BRITISH PARLIAMENT Plymouth, Pnglun I l.ndv Astor, Unorican horn wife of Viscount Astor, vas elected t i |>.i ? ! i.-iin -rit from thn Sutton division of Plymouth. Th?* campaign attracted wide utter.ion, duo in largo inoasuro to Padv kstor's nat innality. hut unron vent ion1 - do t io,rn it' noih.nls and her rirled and w ttv replies to rpiostionrs. 1/,-idv \-tor who was formorl.v Minn s'annio Panghorne of Virginia. Is thn nothor i't ' x > h Idn n, a fact which ho boasted ol on ono occasion durng hor canvass IRRFf.ON AMI PARRANZA EEUD BREAKS OUT IN MEXICO CITY San \?itop o T< x i ; Reports worn ret v- I !io*-o from tho loodor to thn ffoi ? 'hat f'r ' or had broken out In i -x no (' 'v h'fw? ..n thn Obregon and 'arrin/a factions Pre id? nt P ! ran/a is reported to iavn fl <1 to < Ml' P' r .i' o (Jfw r ' (' !>' ' <! */i1os is roportrrt o b li ;i'l :v-r !?< (' irranza troops . nrnTITV O^ l""rMTOR WHO COKT.rIVrr> TH1 DEPTH BOMB. \V i b >n T>.f? navv d^n-irtmnnt ftor m ' 1'nior tbo soorof all dnr? i" th? w >r r?> ntlv IP""inc"(l tho i'?r-f tnvontT who onrf>,v' i! '''f 'it'i ho*nh w^'rh was ho most of.wt v" \vin">o :-K"lnst tho tirnvin suhmav'nos T'?p man is 'hostnr T V "!:l'-r of Vc\v^rt. R. I fn is o-'v t'.'rf "'x now It" aK-O is osn-'ns '-'o f " th" tvpo of m'no plantd In th" North S.vi to hcm in tho forninn flrrt l"H FPp WILL NO LENGTHY NEGOTIATIONS WITH MEXICO. Washington Although furthor in'rstipatlon of farts w'11 he madr, thr tmerlmn frovrrnmrnt has no intenion of rrccdinR from its position in hr Jrnk;ns caso. admin'strat'on offi 'sis declared. Thr povemmrnt, thev aid. is prepared for "thr next stop" t-hich may tike thr form of an ultima* urn to thr Mrxican povernment. Administration officials Ind'eated hat the negotiations with Mexico rould not be prolonged. t